She was the great-grandmother of Europe. Her descendants sit on thrones across the continent to this day. But Princess Louise of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg was all but written out of history.
'Fascinating, rigorously researched and vividly told...[a] groundbreaking biography.' - Dr Anna Whitelock
'An invaluable study of the little-known Princess without whom the course of British and European history would have been so very different.' - Robert Hardman
In 1846, the eyes of the British royal family fall on the small village of Pfeffelbach in western Germany. It is here, in a church that is crumbling before them, that the mother of Prince Albert, Queen Victoria's husband, was laid to rest and forgotten about. And it is time to bring her home.
Married off at 16 to the 33-year-old Duke Ernst Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Louise bore two sons, Ernst and Albert, but her unhappy marriage led to her banishment, divorce, and loss of her children. She died alone at just 31, her reputation destroyed by court gossip and political intrigue. Was she a fallen woman, or a victim of royal machinations? And was Prince Albert truly Ernst's son?
Princess Louise played a crucial role in the rise of the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, but while her son Albert entered history, she was removed from it. Based on a decade of original research, A Royal Outcast is the first English-language biography to explore the life and legacy of Princess Louise of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg - the woman the royal family tried to bury to save Prince Albert's reputation.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
'Fascinating, rigorously researched and vividly told, this groundbreaking biography sheds new light on a little-known royal scandal involving the mother of Prince Albert, consort of Queen Victoria and its legacy for the House of Windsor.' -- Professor Anna Whitelock 'A wonderful and important book that changes our perception of Princess Louise forever. The parallels to Princess Diana's fate, who married the descendant of Albert and Louise, are uncanny.' -- A.N. Wilson 'The story of the Prince Consort's mother, Louise, needed to be told. A young, soon to be wayward bride, her far from monogamous husband, a vengeful mistress publishing her scandalous memoirs, all this is to be found and more in this well-researched and fascinating book by Ulrike Grunewald.' -- Hugo Vickers 'An invaluable study of the little-known Princess without whom the course of British and European history would have been so very different.' -- Robert Hardman
Sprache
Verlagsort
Illustrationen
Illustrations, black and white
Dateigröße
ISBN-13
978-1-80399-868-8 (9781803998688)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
ULRIKE GRUNEWALD is a journalist and editor at German television channel ZDF. She holds an MA in Public Relations and a PhD in History. Her thesis on Prince Albert's mother Louise was published in 2013. Grunewald has edited, written and directed acclaimed documentaries on German history, the House of Windsor and political topics, winning multiple awards.
EDWARD MALTBY is a freelance translator from Sheffield. He has worked from French and German into English for fifteen years. Information about his work can be found at maltbytranslation.com.