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Was the “Kensington System” the worst way to raise a child? Or does it just get a bad rap? Let’s take a look at it…
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Images (from Wikimedia Commons, unless otherwise stated):
Portrait of Princess Victoria aged four by Stephen Poyntz Denning (1823). Held by the Dulwich Picture Gallery.
Portrait of Princess Victoria of Kent (later Queen Victoria, Empress of India) with her spaniel Dash after George Hayter (c.1866-1870). Held by the Royal Collection.
Portrait of Queen Victoria in her coronation robes by Henry Pierce Bone after George Hayter (1843). Held by the Royal Collection.
Portrait of Edward, duke of Kent by George Dawe (1818). Held by the Royal Collection.
Portrait of Victoria, Duchess of Kent by Richard Rothwell (1832). Held by the Royal Collection.
Portrait of Charlotte von Siebold by Franz Hubert Müller (1820). Held by the Institute for Ethics and History of Medicine.
Portrait of the duchess of Kent with her daughter, the future queen Victoria by Henry Bone after William Beechey (1824/5). Copy taken onto Wikimedia Commons from: www.telegraph....
Portrait of George IV in Coronation Robes by Thomas Lawrence (1821). Held by the Royal Collection.
Portrait of Queen Adelaide (Princess Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen) reduced version of a work by Sir William Beechey (c.1831). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Portrait of William IV When Duke of Clarence by James Lonsdale (1830). Held in Mark Masons’ Hall.
Portrait of Sir John Conroy by Henry William Pickersgill (1837). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Portrait of Ernest Augustus, King of Hanover by Edmund Koken (after 1842). Held by the Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum.
Portrait of Prince Adolphus Frederick, Duke of Cambridge by Sir William Beechey (1808). Held by the National Trust.
Self-portrait sketch by Princess Victoria of Kent (later Queen of the United Kingdom and Empress of India), (1835). Scanned from: Longford, Elizabeth (1964) Victoria R.I., London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, ISBN 0-297-17001-5, between pages 96 and 97.
Advertisement issued by Dr. Williams' Medicine Co. for Dr Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, active against a variety of conditions, including anaemia, rheumatism, neuralgia, tuberculosis, and hysteria. Showing an illustration of a young Princess Victoria before becoming Queen (c.1900). Held by the Wellcome Collection.
Portrait of William IV of the United Kingdom by Martin Archer Shee (1833). Held by the Royal Collection.
Portrait miniature of Louise, Baroness Lehzen by Carl Friedrich Koepke (c.1842). Held in the Royal Collection.
Portrait of Victoria, Duchess of Kent by Franz Xaver Winterhalter (1857). Held in the Royal Collection.
Quoted texts:
Matthew and Harrison, ODNB entry on Queen Victoria
Elizabeth Longford, ODNB entry on Victoire, Duchess of Kent
Also consulted, were:
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#Kensington #Victorian #History
4 окт 2024