Whatever may be the usual practice of Prussian Princes, it is not every day that one marries the eldest daughter of the Queen of England. The question therefore must be considered as settled and closed. The Letters of Queen Victoria: Third Series - Stran 227avtor: Victoria (Queen of Great Britain) - 1907Celotni ogled - O knjigi
| Victoria (Queen of Great Britain) - 1907 - 738 strani
...William's part as to where the marriage should take place, and she suspects this to be the mere gossip or the Berliners. Whatever may be the usual practice...settled and closed. . . . 1 First Lord of the Admiralty. 2 The marriage took place at the Chapel Royal, St James's. VOL. III. X 322 REINFORCEMENT OF LUCKNOW... | |
| 謝觀 - 1908 - 558 strani
...expects at least to see them in original. Queen Victoria to the Earl of Clarendon. WINDSOR CASTLE, 26tt October 1857. The Queen returns these letters. It...therefore must be considered as. settled and closed. . . . Queen Victoria to the Earl of Clarendon. WINDSOR CASTLE, 12th November 1857. The Queen thanks... | |
| Victoria (Queen of Great Britain) - 1908 - 548 strani
...entertain the possibility of such a question as the Princess Royal's marriage taking place at Berlin.* The Queen never could consent to it, both for public...therefore must be considered as settled and closed. . . . Queen Victoria to the Earl of Clarendon. WINDSOR CASTLE, 12th November 1857. The Queen thanks... | |
| Marjory Hollings - 1911 - 466 strani
...Berlin that the marriage should take place in Germany, but, as the queen wrote to Lord Clarendon, " Whatever may be the usual practice of Prussian Princes,...that one marries the eldest daughter of the Queen of England."1 Lastly, in 1893, King George and Queen Mary were married in the Chapel Royal, and afterwards... | |
| George Herbert Perris - 1912 - 538 strani
...over to marry the Princess Royal of Great Britain IN England is too absurd, to say the least. . . . Whatever may be the usual practice of Prussian Princes,...therefore, must be considered as settled and closed." union and freedom. Prince Frederick and his wife, with their relations in some of the smaller Courts,... | |
| Empress Victoria (consort of Frederick III, German Emperor) - 1913 - 414 strani
...like an insult. She wrote in her emphatic, italicising way to Lord Clarendon, the Foreign Secretary : "The Queen never could consent to it, both for public...therefore must be considered as settled and closed." In view of all this and of what was to befall the Princess Royal in the land for which she even then... | |
| 1914 - 904 strani
...like an insult. She wrote in her emphatic, italicising way to Lord Clarendon, the Foreign Secretary: "The Queen never could consent to it, both for public...therefore must be considered as settled and closed." In view of all this and of what was to befall the Princess Royal in the land for which she even then... | |
| George William Erskine Russell - 1915 - 322 strani
...order to be married to the late Emperor Frederick, the Queen refused with emphatic displeasure : " Whatever may be the usual practice of Prussian Princes,...marries the eldest daughter of the Queen of England." No doubt, in all official and diplomatic correspondence, " Great Britain " has been, since the union... | |
| Octavius Francis Christie - 1928 - 374 strani
...laughing." 8 To say she was German would be ridiculous ; she looked on the Germans as an inferior nation : "Whatever may be the usual practice of Prussian Princes,...marries the eldest daughter of the Queen of England." And yet her sensibility or sentimentality were, as Mr. Lytton Strachey says, such as might be natural... | |
| Octavius Francis Christie - 1928 - 370 strani
...laughing." 8 To say she was German would be ridiculous; she looked on the Germans as an inferior nation : "Whatever may be the usual practice of Prussian Princes,...marries the eldest daughter of the Queen of England." And yet her sensibility or sentimentality were, as Mr. Lytton Strachey says, such as might be natural... | |
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