King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra had six children. Of the five who reached maturity, only one, the future King George V, has received much attention from biographers. The eldest son, Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence, a backward youth and a subject of scandal, died before he was thirty. The three princesses, Louise, Princess Royal and Duchess of Fife, the lifelong spinster Victoria, and Maud, Queen of Norway, were never well-known to the British public during their lifetime. In this detailed and fascinating account, John Van der Kiste has drawn upon previously unpublished correspondence from the Royal Archives, Windsor, to reveal for the first time the part this hitherto neglected group of characters played in supporting the royal family and crown during a period of transition from the Victorian age to the uncertain twentieth century.
King George II and Queen Caroline
John van der Kiste
bookThe Romanovs
John van der Kiste
bookSurrey Murders
John van der Kiste
bookWest Country Murders
Nicola Sly, John van der Kiste
bookThe Plymouth Book of Days
John van der Kiste
bookDevon Murders
John van der Kiste
bookSomerset Murders
Nicola Sly, John van der Kiste
bookThe Little Book of Devon
John van der Kiste
bookQueen Victoria's Children
John Van der Kiste
audiobookbookGeorge V's Children
John van der Kiste
bookSons, Servants and Statesmen : The Men in Queen Victoria's Life
John van der Kiste
bookWilliam John Wills : Pioneer of the Australian Outback
John van der Kiste
book