The Last Hanover: The Life and Reign of Queen Charlotte

Chapter 1
  • (This is my first timeline, so please, any criticism is welcome! Sorry for the rough start!)
    458px-Princess_Charlotte_Augusta_of_Wales_and_Leopold_I_after_George_Dawe.jpg

    HRH Princess Charlotte of Wales and her husband, HSH Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, by William Thomas Fry, 1816 or 1817.

    November 5, 1817, 12:03 a.m: After a heated debate with the other doctors and all but barging into the delivery room, Dr. John Sims, with the use of forceps, delivered of Princess Charlotte of Wales ‘a large and handsome boy, said to resemble the royal family’. After a minute described by the midwife as 'painfully long and silent', the child finally began to cry. After a few days of a worrisome fever, Princess Charlotte was reported hale and hearty and recovering well. She and her husband, Leopold, decided the child would be named George after his grandfather and great-grandfather the King [1].

    In Italy, Charlotte’s mother Caroline rejoices at the birth of a grandson -even though it took her a letter from her daughter’s husband to find out [2]-, and is sure that her descendants will sit comfortably on the British throne in the foreseeable future. Upon this realization, she shows more common sense than she’s previously shown and breaks away from her servant and rumored lover, Bartolomeo Pergami [3], writing to him that ‘any scandal brought upon her would sit poorly upon her poor Lotte [Charlotte] and ruin her chances’.

    Despite the birth of a son to his highly popular daughter and son-in-law, the Prince Regent [4] isn’t held in too high of a regard in his country. His spending on the Brighton Pavilion, the typhus epidemic in Scotland [5] and his affair with the married Marchioness of Hertford [6] have made him unpopular, and the birth of a grandson has people focusing more on that George’s reign than his, something the pompous Regent is not a fan of. The line of succession seems fairly assured now, but rumors are going out: the Prince Regent, realizing his daughter and grandson could not inherit Hanover [7], had sent out his youngest brother Adolphus [8] to find wives for his brothers, William and Edward Augustus [9], to produce sons and keep the crown within the family [10]. Reasonable, right? However, it’s being reported that the Prince Regent has also given Adolphus another mission: to find a new future Queen for England (aka a new wife for George).

    As the year draws to the close, people are left looking forward to the christening of their new prince, and wondering what exactly his grandfather and namesake is planning to do...

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    [1] I mean really, what other name was this kid going to have? Don’t worry, his middle names are at least a little interesting.

    [2] OTL, Charlotte heard of her daughter’s death in childbirth from a passing courtier as George IV hadn’t bothered to send anyone to tell her about their child’s death, so it’s not too much of a stretch that he wouldn’t tell her about their grandchild being born. He’s sketchy in any timeline.

    [3] After she was more or less forced into exile by her husband, Caroline moved to Italy where "she employed Bartolomeo Pergami as a servant. Pergami soon became Caroline's closest companion, and it was widely assumed that they were lovers". In 1817, she moved to "Villa Caprile near Pesaro. Pergami's mother, brother and daughter, but not his wife, joined Caroline's household"

    [4] Future George IV

    [5] The exact dates of the epidemic on 1817 are unknown, but it didn’t seem unreasonable for people to still be angry about it if it wasn’t still going on in November of that year.

    [6] Isabella Anne Seymour-Conway, Marchioness of Hertford (1759 – 12 April 1834)

    [7] Hanover was the Electorate and later kingdom held by the British kings from George I to William IV OTL; due to a male-only succession law, when Victoria succeeded to the throne, it passed to Ernest Augustus, The Duke of Cumberland. TTL, when Charlotte inherits, it will in theory pass to George IV’s next living male relative, his younger brother Frederick, the Duke of York and Albany.

    [8] OTL Duke of Cambridge and grandfather to Queen Mary of Teck, wife of George VI.

    [9] OTL William IV and The Duke of Kent, father of Queen Victoria, respectively.

    [10] Frederick, the Duke of York and Albany, and his wife Princess Friederike of Prussia had been married in 1791, but “after three years, it had become apparent that the Duke and Duchess of York would have no issue” (Mary Beacock Fryer, Arthur Bousfield & Garry Toffoli: Lives of the Princesses of Wales (1984)), so it’s reasonable to assume that William and Edward are gonna need to step up and take one for the weirdly anti-marriage House of Hanover team.
     
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    Chapter 2
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    Portrait of HRH William, the Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews, and Princess Adelheid of Saxe-Meiningen by Sir David Wilkie

    On February 10, 1818, the young Prince George was baptised by the Most Revered and Right Honorable Archbishop of Canterbury in the drawing room of Claremont House [1] and was given the names ‘George Leopold Frederick Alexander’ for his grandfather and great-grandfather, father, and two godfathers. His godparents were his grandfather the Prince Regent; HM Queen Charlotte [2]; Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia (represented by HRH The Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh); Alexander I of Russia [3] (represented by HRH The Duke of York); Auguste, the Dowager Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld [4]; and Queen Catherine Pavlovna of Wurttemberg [5] (represented by HRH The Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh). Three days later in the Throne Room of Buckingham Palace, Leopold is officially made His Royal Highness Leopold, The Duke of Kendal [6], in -according to the Letters Patent- ‘honour of the birth of his son with the Princess Charlotte, beloved only daughter of the Prince Regent’. Likewise, his son is now HRH Prince George of Kendal by royal decree, even though it is noted that he is not made a prince of the United Kingdom at the time.

    Everyone is pleased to see this continuation of what Queen Charlotte describes in a letter to her daughter Charlotte (Queen Dowager of Wurttemberg) [7] of ‘proper bloodlines’, as all of Europe has been shaken by the death of Charles XIII of Sweden five days before and the succession of his adoptive son Charles XIV, better known as Jean Bernadotte, a French general and former intimate of Napoleon [8].

    Two days after the christening, Richard Rush, the new ambassador from the United States [9], is officially presented to the court, and comes bearing a gift for the Kendals: a set of ‘American’ foxhound puppies, descended from the breeding dogs of George Washington. Charlotte, in a moment of humor, names the dogs ‘Monroe’ and ‘Kortright’ (the surname of the United States president and the maiden name of his wife). The young couple immediately take to Mr. Rush, who declares in a letter to his president that he sees “our relations with our former masters improving greatly under the instillation of such a mistress”. In London, the Royal Coburg Hall [10] is raised in honor of the birth of Prince George in May, and it’s opening performance of ‘The Merry Wives of Windsor’ is attended by Charlotte and Leopold to great acclaim; Leopold later takes full patronage of the theatre and calls it one of his ‘dearest and most close held projects’.

    Announcing that he has done his duty to his brothers and found them wives, Adolphus, the Duke of Cambridge marries his second cousin Princess Auguste of Hesse-Kassel on May 8th in Kassel, followed by another ceremony on June 1st at Buckingham Palace.

    Two months later, on July 11, the entire royal family, including the Kendals (as Charlotte, Leopold, and baby George are now known) is in attendance at the double wedding of William, the Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews, to Princess Adelheid of Saxe-Meiningen and Edward Augustus, the Duke of Kent and Strathearn, to Princess Viktoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld in the drawing room of Kew Palace [11]. Only four years older than her new niece Charlotte, Adelheid makes a great impression on the family with her ‘amiable and easy going charm’; she even makes a scandal by warmly welcoming her husband’s nine illegitimate children into her home, a move that wins her full approval from Charlotte, who loves her Fitzclarence cousins well [12]. There is no need for friend-making between Charlotte and her new aunt Viktoria, however; as the sister of Charlotte’s husband Leopold, Charlotte has been writing to Viktoria for two years now and feels she knows her well. There are rumors that she and Leopold were the ones to set the widowed Viktoria up with Edward (they’re totally true) [13]. Charlotte is devastated when her new aunts leave with their husbands to set up homes in Hanover, where the living is cheaper, but resigns herself to the promise of visits and weekly letters.

    Only a week after the wedding, there is another royal announcement: Her Royal Highness Charlotte, The Duchess of Kendal, is pregnant with her second child.
    (It is noted at this time that the Prince still has his brother, the Duke of Cambridge, traveling through Germany with his wife to 'make new alliances', though noticed that he was ordered only to stop and visit with families with unmarried daughters).

    In August, elections for Parliament are held; the Tories continue to hold power, despite losing a few seats, and Lord Liverpool keeps his government intact. The Prince Regent, a devoted Whig and known friend of Charles Fox [14], is devastated; Charlotte, a fellow devoted Whig, is upset to say the least, and Leopold, of a more conservative view [15], is cautiously optimistic. Within weeks of the election, it is noted that the Lord Liverpool has paid a visit to Claremont House and has been invited back for tea by Princess Charlotte. It is also noted that the Prince Regent is not happy about this little tête-à-tête, particularly as it is rumored that Ambassador Rush was also present as this meeting (he wasn’t). A few weeks after the election, the Prince Regent cautiously approaches Liverpool about saving money - by cutting the allowance of the Kendals and his wife Caroline. (Caroline hasn’t been involved in the elections or anything at this point, he just figures he might as well go all in). Jenkinson, noted for his ‘smooth dealings’ with the Prince Regent, keeps his answer short and sweet: we will not cut the allowance of the most popular people in the kingdom while they are expecting their second baby - who, by the way, is your grandchild. The Prince Regent slinks away to be comforted in the arms of the Marchioness of Hertford, and the Kendals continue on with their allowance.

    Leopold becomes particularly popular by taking up the patronage of the Royal Humane Society, as well as beginning work to find work and homes for soldiers of the War of 1812 and the Napoleonic wars, and funding care and residences for the soldiers too wounded to work. Likewise, Charlotte takes up charities devoted to war widows and orphans, and creates the Princess Charlotte School, devoted to educating young girls in embroidery and womens’ arts in order to help them find work to support themselves and their families. She later hires the top student of the first graduating class, a Miss Mary Gillray, to serve as governess to her children.

    Shortly after, it is announced that Auguste, the Duchess of Cambridge, will be hiring a student from Princess Charlotte's school as a governess for her household as well; she is pregnant and everyone is ecstatic.

    On October 20, Richard Rush helps create the Treaty of 1818, which establishes the boundary between the U.S. and British North America from the Lake of the Woods to the Rocky Mountains, creating the Northwest Angle. The treaty marks the United Kingdom's last permanent major loss of territory in the United States and the United States' only permanent significant cession of North American territory to a foreign power; all in all, it’s a win for both parties [16]. Charlotte herself writes to congratulate Rush on his treaty, stating “I should so like with all my heart to know the Americans as friends and allies, as I admire their spirit and industriousness, and pray this treaty will give me an opportunity to do so in the future”. Jenkinson returns for tea at Claremont at least once a month, and privately reports to a friend that he finds Charlotte to be “the best of women” and her husband to be “entirely English in his outlook, and as good a man to be had as one could wish for”. His words about the Prince Regent -who continues to push cutting everyone’s allowances while sinking money into the pit that is Brighton Pavillion- are not fit for repetition.

    Queen Charlotte, after a long and lately sad life, dies on November 17 [17] sitting in an armchair of her sitting room at Kew Palace, holding the hands of her son the Prince Regent and her grandson-in-law Prince Leopold (Prince Charlotte, so close to her due date, had been banned from travel). She is buried in St. George’s Chapel at Windsor two weeks later, to the mourning of the country; her husband, deaf, blind, and insane, is not informed of her death. Her jewels were specifically left to Princess Charlotte, though they were claimed by the Prince Regent for ‘safekeeping’ until his daughter was well enough to come and claim them.

    In a sadly ironic twist, the Court Circular announces the pregnancies of HRH The Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews and the HRH The Duchess of Kent at the same time as it announces the death of their long-serving queen.

    On December 3 at 5:01 in the afternoon, Charlotte officially does her duty to the country -with a lot less drama and danger this time around- and delivers a second son, whom she and Leopold decide to name William for his great-uncle, the Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews. The entire country rejoices: they now have a pretty, happy, charming heiress with a handsome, happy, charming husband and two handsome healthy little princes to secure the succession nicely (the Prince Regent is entirely forgotten in this equation by literally almost everyone, as the whole country is doing their best to forget him at this point). On the same day, Illinois is admitted to the union as the 21st state of the Union; Richard Rush is pleased to report to Charlotte and Leopold that the new capital city of the new state -in a sign of friendship- has been named ‘Williamsfield’ [18] by the populace, in honor of the prince sharing their ‘birthday’.

    The year draws to the close with rumours that the Duke and Duchess of Kendal are building up a party of followers -led by Jenkinson and Rush- swirling through the court. They deny it, of course, but one cannot ignore the fact that many of the government are starting to support Princess Charlotte over her father, some secretly, some not so secretly. Everyone is waiting for Charlotte to come and claim her jewels from her father, who swears that yes, he still has them and they are totally safe, and why are you asking about it. Charlotte and Leopold’s popularity continues to grow, there's a new alliance with the United States, and there are expected to be another three royal babies by spring. It’s an interesting time for Britain.


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    [1] Claremont was the country home in Surrey bought for Charlotte and Leopold by Parliament upon their marriage in 1816.

    [2] Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the wife of George III (who, being insane by this point, obviously isn’t going to be a godparent) and thus great-grandmother to baby George.

    [3] A controversial choice for the time, but the Russians helped the British beat Napoleon not too long before, and Leopold made his contribution to the war by serving in the army of his dear buddy, you guessed it, Alexander I. He was also a quasi-relative as his younger brother Grand Duke Konstantin was married to Leopold’s sister Julianne (even though they’d been separated for seventeen years at this point).

    [4] Mother of Leopold and the OTL grandmother / matchmaker of Victoria and Albert.

    [5] Queen of Wurttemberg, conveniently sister to George’s godfather Alexander I, and the matchmaker of Charlotte and Leopold. Her husband was also a first cousin of Charlotte through their mothers, so she’s another quasi-relative.

    [6] The OTL plan was to make Leopold the Duke of Kendal, but Charlotte died before this could happen. After the christening of his son and the future King of Great Britain seemed like a good time to get it done.

    [7] Weirdly enough also the stepmother-in-law to Catherine Pavlovna, and godmother to Princess Charlotte (there clearly weren’t a lot of names to pick from in the Hanover family). After her husband’s death, Charlotte continued living in Wurttemberg (who could blame her) until her death in 1828.

    [8] This is 100% OTL; Jean was elected to be the successor to the king in 1810 by the Riksdag of the Estates in Örebro. Fun fact, he was married to the first love of Napoleon, Desiree Clary. Pay attention to them, they’re coming back.

    [9] One of President James Madison’s best friends, Rush had started out as the Comptroller of the Treasury, before becoming the youngest Attorney General to take office and acting as the Secretary of State while John Quincy Adams was in Europe. During his time as acting Secretary of State, Rush concluded the Rush-Bagot Convention, demilitarizing the Canadian boundary on the Great Lakes. He served as Minister to Britain for eight years OTL and was extremely popular for his “gentlemanly ways”.

    [10] The Royal Coburg Hall was the original name of what has become the Old Vic Theatre OTL.

    [11] They were set to be married at Windsor, but while traveling from London to Windsor, Queen Charlotte “decided to spend a few days at the Dutch House, but since she was ill with dropsy she was unable to continue her journey and the wedding occurred in the drawing room of the Dutch House”.

    [12] OTL Adelheid did completely accept her husband’s nine illegitimate children, born of his longtime liaison with actress Dorothea Jordan (they had ten children but one son died in 1817). Charlotte’s relationship with them is unknown but she was said to have developed an affection for William’s oldest son, George Fitzclarence, before her marriage, so she clearly knew them fairly well and since she was a good person, I’m assuming she loved her cousins.

    [13] OTL Leopold set up Viktoria and Edward, so it’s not too much of a stretch that he’d bring his beloved Charlotte into the scheme.

    [14] Charles James Fox (January 24, 1749 - September 13, 1806), a Whig politician and his notedly notorious and scandalous private life. An intimate of the Prince Regent and the famous Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, Fox was famed for his ‘rakishness’, drinking, and gambling, and eventually married a former mistress of the Prince Regent.

    [15] Leopold was know for being a ‘liberal conservative’, it’s reasonable to believe he would have been more of a fan of Jenkinson than Fox.

    [16] This is the OTL Treaty of 1818, which did set the boundaries of British Canada and the northern United States at the 49th parallel north.

    [17] At the time of her death, Charlotte was the longest serving British consort in history, with a reign of 57 years and 70 days. She is currently the second longest serving consort in history, after HRH The Duke of Edinburgh.

    [18] Obviously this is OTL Springfield, Illinois. It was only seven years old at this point, so I figured it wouldn’t be too much drama to change it; not to mention everyone is trying to play nice now and it’s a smart political move, given Charlotte’s stated affection for the States.
     
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    Chapter 3
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    Princess Charlotte of Wales by George Dawes
    “1819 was really the beginning of the end, as far as the relationship between George IV and his daughter. The death of his mother, the birth of her children, their shared dislike of the Duke of Kent, the pressures they felt as the heirs to the throne; all these events that had left them ripe for reconciliation were soured by the end of the year, with such a chance never to return.” - Melanie Bailie, Charlotte I (2015)

    1819 does not begin well for Charlotte. On January 9th, her dear friend, Catherine Pavlovna, the Queen of Wurttemberg, dies of erysipelas complicated by pneumonia, sending Charlotte and Leopold into mourning for the loss of “our most dear Katya, the one without whom none of our happiness could have occurred” as Charlotte wrote in her condolence letter to Catherine’s husband, Wilhelm. Charlotte also writes to her aunt, The Queen Dowager of Wurttemberg [1], asking her to send her news of her goddaughter, Catherine's youngest child, born only eight months before her mother's death [2], and sends a golden bracelet for her goddaughter that Catherine had given to Charlotte upon her marriage.

    Two months later, on March 16th, 1819, Charlotte and Leopold’s second son, William, is baptised in the drawing room of Claremont House, again with the Most Revered and Right Honorable Archbishop of Canterbury officiating. He is given the names ‘William Francis George’, for his great-uncle and namesake, his paternal grandfather, and his maternal grandfather and great-grandfather. His godparents are HRH The Duke of Clarence (in Hanover, waiting for the birth of his first child with his wife, he is represented by The Earl Grey, a longtime friend of the couple); HH The Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld [3] (represented by the Lord Holland [4]); HRH The Dowager Duchess of Brunswick [5] (represented by the Marchioness of Cholmondeley [6]); HRH Princess Augusta Sophia of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland [7]; Wilhelm of Wurttemberg [8] (represented by Baron Stockmar [9]); and HSH Princess Antoinette of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Duchess Alexander of Wurttemberg [10] (represented by Lady Glenbervie [11]).

    Ten days after the baptism, Auguste, the Duchess of Cambridge, delivers a son, named -what else?- George at Cambridge House in Germany. There is only one day of celebration in the royal family before the sad news comes from the Duke of Clarence: on March 27, his wife delivered of a daughter, named Charlotte, two months before her time after catching pleurisy. Their daughter only lived long enough to be hastily baptised before dying only hours after her birth. The family is devastated by loss, causing Auguste to write to her niece Charlotte that ‘My happiness in my Georgie is halved by the knowledge that he and your own boys have lost a dear, darling cousin in the Clarence girl... oh, poor Adelheid!’. The royal family does not go into mourning per the Regent’s orders (he is said to have famously stated “Twas only a girl, and God knows we have more than we need of those!” [12], but his biographers dispute the accuracy of this statement), but in defiance, cancels their social engagements and sends letters of condolence to Adelheid and William.

    Charlotte, officially out of mourning for her friend and lost cousin, prepares to join in the season in May, and sends word to her father that she would like her grandmother's jewels to wear for a ball being given by a dear friend, The Marquess of Westminster [13]. George does not reply. Charlotte sends word again, trying to be reasonable - he is the Regent, after all, and that does entail some work and business. Her letter probably slipped through the cracks. Again, George does not reply. After a third somewhat strongly worded letter, George finally replies: the jewels are being cleaned and reset, his gift to his dear daughter, and are obviously unavailable, so sorry. Charlotte concedes -writing to her aunt / sister-in-law Viktoria that she “felt guilty for being so cross when he was doing me a kindness... we do not yet know how to be a father and daughter”- and resigns herself to wearing her old jewels.

    To cheer her up and “adorn the brightest jewel of Britain", on May 2nd, their third wedding anniversary, Leopold gives Charlotte a stunning emerald and diamond parure consisting of a diamond and emerald diadem, emerald necklace, earrings and brooch [14]. Charlotte is delighted and wears the set proudly throughout the season, starting with the ball being given that very night in honour of their anniversary by the Prince Regent (George's relationship with Charlotte may not be the best but he’ll be damned if he misses an excuse to party). Later in life, out of all her jewels, these remain her favorite and in her will, she bequeaths the set to the Crown; it is still in use by the current Queen today.

    Three weeks after their anniversary, Charlotte and Leopold are informed of the birth of their cousin-niece (gotta love those weird family connections), born on May 24th to the Duke and Duchess of Kent and Strathearn. In a dramatic turn of events, the little princess was born on English soil, and not Hanoverian, where her parents had been residing. Always a little too sure in his pride and claim to the throne, and never quite understanding that there were six people ahead of him in line to the throne or appropriate family interactions in general, Edward rushed his pregnant wife home from Hanover a month before her due date, in order for their child -whom he was certain would one day “sit upon the British throne”- to be born in England [15]. Edward’s comments to “look at his daughter well, for she would be Queen of England” (he’d been all but shouting them to anyone who would listen) [16] are not happily tolerated by any of the family members, particularly the Prince Regent and his daughter, the actual future Queen of England. As Charlotte tells Leopold, she holds “no anger or blame for our poor niece, who could not choose her father”, but she is none too pleased with her uncle’s “remarkable ability to forget the existence of the seven people, including himself, between the crown and this little girl”.

    Only three days after the birth of the little Kent princess (still unnamed), another royal George enters the fray, born to the Duke and Duchess of Cumberland [17] in Berlin on May 27th. Though they are not generally any better liked than the Duke of Kent, the family is more warm to this birth, since Cumberland, it seems, can count better than his brother and has kept his mouth shut regarding the succession [18].

    The Duke of Kent aside, the royal family seems to be playing well together as the Season reaches it’s close in June. On June 30th, Charlotte and Leopold attend the last ball of the season, the one promised to be the grandest of all, being given by Lord Holland, their dear friend. Baby William had begun to develop a fever in the days prior so the couple had officially cancelled, but the day of he was improving and the governess, Miss Mary Gillray -Gilly, as she had become known in the family- swore that she’d sit up with him, so they decided to go and simply surprise everyone. Wearing her new parure from Leopold, a radiant Charlotte swept into the ballroom at eight, to the delighted cheers of the company. Most of the company, at least. Directly across the room, a mature but comely woman went white with shock, her hands flying to her throat and chest in an attempt to cover her jewels. The woman was Elizabeth, Marchioness Conyngham, and the jewels were Queen Charlotte’s, given to Lady Conyngham by her lover, the Prince Regent [19]. The liaison was new - that night was her ‘announcement’ as it were, showcasing the prince’s favour by his mother’s diamonds when she was sure that his daughter -the rightful owner of said diamonds- was sure to be away. Charlotte noticed, of course, and went briefly red, then white. But those who were expecting a dramatic scene were both disappointed and impressed in their future queen’s restraint. Charlotte pointedly ignored the Marchioness, who fled at the first socially acceptable opportunity. Leopold was seen to be in furious conversation with Lord Holland at one point in a corner, but other than that, the evening passed without incident. All of society was waiting, however, to see if Charlotte would react.

    She did not disappoint.

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    [1] Wilhelm’s stepmother and thus Catherine’s stepmother-in-law. Since she stayed in Wurttemberg after her husband’s death, it doesn’t seem to be too much of a stretch for this Charlotte to be close with and get along fairly well with her stepson, to the point where she can step in with his kids.

    [2] HRH Princess Sophie of Wurttemberg, born June 17, 1818. She’s gonna be a big deal in this timeline, so remember her.

    [3] Ernst, The Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld and later the first Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (January 2, 1784 – January 29, 1844), the oldest brother of Leopold and famous OTL as the father of Albert, The Prince Consort.

    [4] Henry Vassall-Fox, Lord Holland. The brother of Charles Fox, the dear friend of Charlotte, and a major figure in Whig politics in the early 19th century, and OTL another dear friend of Charlotte and Leopold.

    [5] Born HRH Princess Louise of Orange-Nassau, she was a great-granddaughter of George II through her grandmother Anne, the Princess Royal. She was the oldest sister of Wilhelm I of the Netherlands and the widow of Charlotte’s uncle Karl, the Hereditary Prince of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, and lived in London for part of her widowhood.

    [6] A Lady of the Bedchamber to Charlotte’s mother, Caroline

    [7] The sixth child and second daughter of George III and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, she never publicly married but was believed to have been secretly married to Sir Brent Spencer, an equerry of the Prince Regent.

    [8] The widower of Catherine Pavlovna and the King of Wurttemberg, he was also the stepson of Charlotte’s aunt, the Princess Royal.

    [9] The private secretary, physician, comptroller of the household, and political advisor of Leopold; known OTL as an advisor and unofficial marital counselor to Victoria and Albert.

    [10] The second eldest sister of Leopold, she was married to Duke Alexander of Wurttemberg, the maternal uncle of Wilhelm I of Wurttemberg, Tsar Alexander I of Russia, and Tsar Nicholas I of Russia.

    [11] Catherine Douglas; the ‘Mistress of the Robes’ to Charlotte’s mother Caroline, even though she remained in London while Caroline was living in exile.

    [12] OTL George IV never made any such comment, but it seems well within his character for there to be a historical did-he-or-didn’t-he over him making one like this.

    [13] Richard Grosvenor, the 2nd Marquess of Westminster and father to the first Duke of Westminster; a Whig politician and the richest man of the time. At his death, his estate was valued at under £800,000 (equivalent to £67,820,000 as of 2016).

    [14] OTL this set was given to Queen Victoria by Albert in 1845

    [15] This happened OTL. Edward forced his then seven months pregnant wife to endure rough travel from Hanover to Dover, where they arrived on April 23, and then onto Kensington Palace before Victoria’s birth.

    [16] This is also OTL. Not a bright guy, Edward.

    [17] Oh, they are so much drama, it’s wonderful. Ernest Augustus, The Duke of Cumberland, was without a doubt one of the most hated people of the time. His wife, Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, probably tied with him for that spot, at least in the family. She had been married twice before and widowed twice - her second widowhood struck everyone as very convenient, since she’d been looking for divorce her husband for her lover Cumberland when he very graciously up and died one night out of the blue. Even though she was a niece of Queen Charlotte, Ernest’s mother, the Queen hated her and was convinced she poisoned her husband (it doesn’t help Freddie’s case that she also jilted Ernest’s brother, the Duke of Cambridge, back in the day). Freddie came to the marriage with six children from her previous two, and she and Ernest had had a stillborn daughter in 1817 and a miscarriage in 1818 before the birth of their only surviving child, George.

    [18] TTL, as of now, George Cumberland has a snowball’s chance in hell at the British throne and his dad knows it. He does, however, have a fighting chance at the males-only Hanover throne, considering he and his dad come right after the Duke of York (no children), the Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews (currently no legitimate children), and the Duke of Kent (currently only one daughter).

    [19] OTL their relationship officially began in 1820, but she was believed to be the Prince Regent’s lover by 1819, so I’m just bumping up the announcement of their ‘love’ by a few months. This woman was wild, by the way. The daughter of a banking mogul, she was considered vulgar, shrewd, greedy, and unsuited to aristocratic society; she was also a lover of the future Emperor Nicholas I of Russia before her liaison with George.
     
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    Chapter 4
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    Within a week of the ball, Lady Conyngham is blacklisted from every home and event in society. No one can prove Charlotte said or did anything to ensure this, but nobody is saying that she didn’t do anything either. As one court wit sums up in a letter: “Lady Conyngham shall reign for a few years, dependant on the whim of the Prince Regent. Our Duchess [Charlotte] shall reign for many, dependant on the whim of God. I am not a betting man by nature, but even I know which horse to back in such a race”.

    Charlotte is furious, the Marchioness is pissed, everyone is picking sides, and for the first time in his life, George is staying out of the conflict. While it's noted that he hasn't given up Conyngham and was heard to be comforting her about his “beastly daughter”, another source claimed that George, upon being told of his daughter's behavior at the ball, remarked upon her “damn fine nerves and spirit". Perhaps in awe of her damn fine nerves and spirit, the Prince Regent isn't even pretending he isn't avoiding his daughter anymore; he's making an active effort to do so now and if you help him, there's major brownie points in it for you. George cannot avoid Charlotte forever, however, and the two are forced together at the christening of the Kent princess on July 24 [1]. Like any other event in this family, the actual event -the christening- is quickly pushed to the background for the real star - family drama. The Duke and Duchess of Kent are furious because the Prince Regent vetoed several of their chosen names for their daughter, including Georgina, Charlotte, and Augusta. The baby is eventually -after several minutes of the Kents glaring at the Prince Regent over the fount and the Archbishop of Canterbury all but audibly wishing to be anywhere but there- christened as Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent, and is to be known as Princess Victoria. Charlotte, standing as godmother to her baby niece, remains silent on the matter. On the one hand, she feels badly for the Kents, having been a victim of her father's capriciousness most of her life. On the other hand, her uncle still hasn't stopped declaring that his daughter will sit on the throne as Queen of England, and now his wife is joining him, albeit in a slightly more subtle way: promoting the marriage of Charlotte's son George and baby Victoria. So while she feels for her cousin-niece-goddaughter, Charlotte is pretty done with the Kents right now and not in a giving mood.

    Taking advantage of finally being in the room with her father, as everyone else gathers round to admire the pretty Princess Victoria, Charlotte corners her father and engages in what the Duchess of Kent later described as a “furious storm of whispering, finger pointing, and foot stamping from Lotte [Charlotte]”. After enduring the barrage for as long as he and his pride can stand -one witness estimates two minutes, another less than that- the Prince Regent begins in some furious not-quite-whispering and foot stamping of his own, ending with a very loud cry that Charlotte was “a most hateful and unfeeling child, who had best watch her step most closely so as not to find herself and her family barred from his generosity, and sent penniless to Coburg where they belonged!” To her credit, the Duchess of Kent proudly reported that “Dear Lotte did not cry at such horrible words, as I would have no doubt done, but merely nodded, turned, and left the room, Leo following after.” She also unironically noted that “the whole outburst really quite put a damper upon the rest of the day, and I fear we will never look upon poor Drina’s [Princess Victoria’s] christening without remembering it”.

    The Prince Regent was finally spurred into the conflict after the confrontation with Charlotte. A week after the christening, Lord Liverpool pays a visit to Claremont to inform Charlotte that her father seems to be ready to follow through on his threat. Only hours after the christening, The Prince Regent convened a cabinet meeting to discuss an investigative report of an adulterous affair, involving Charlotte’s mother Caroline and her servant Bartolomeo Pergami (despite her brave words after George of Kendal’s birth, Caroline had never quite been able to give him up, and they had only separated for weeks before coming together -pun intended- again [2]). Despite reports that Princess Caroline is involved with her servant, which George swears are from a source they can totally trust, the cabinet concluded that the trial of Caroline for adultery would be an embarrassment to the nation and advised the Prince Regent to drop it and take pride in his daughter and grandsons. George did not want to drop it, and fiercely whispered to Liverpool as he exited that “I shall not see my daughter come any closer to the throne, nor her mother either. I shall remove them both and give England and Hanover such a son as they have never seen!”[3]. Politically minded Leopold realizes that this is Liverpool taking their side; Charlotte realizes her father was never on hers. Furious at the whole situation, Charlotte does something stupid: she writes a letter to her mother.

    (Now officially there is an official who’s entire government career is built on reading Charlotte’s letters to Caroline and informing the regent of anything ‘inappropriate or disloyal’. Unofficially, the guy shows up, reads the first three lines of the letters, and calls it a day).

    This letter is full of Charlotte’s grief and rages against her father and his behavior, and contains warnings for her mother considering her father’s plans against her. Caroline, being somewhat savvy if not particularly wise, sees an opportunity and makes sure her agents in London release the letter - in her defense, she does have them change some of the language and make it seem as though it came from a court official than the heiress presumptive, but she still has it printed and distributed throughout England.

    Unbeknownst to Caroline, this is a bad time to be waving around the fact that the King is blowing millions of dollars on his mistress, pissing off his popular heir, and stealing inheritances. Since the end of the Napoleonic wars four years earlier, the country had been in several periods of famine and chronic unemployment, made worse by the introduction of the Corn Laws. The Manchester Patriotic Union -a group known for parliamentary reform and a sincere devotion to the rights of their ‘Good Princess Charlotte- receives a copy of Caroline’s letter. Having already organized a demonstration by the well-known radical orator Henry Hunt, the letter detailing the “abuses of privileges and rank by the Prince Regent, not yet called to kingship by God and yet ruining his fair Britannia” as Hunt described, is the perfect fuel to the fire.

    Shortly after the beginning of the meeting but well enough in for Hunt to really reign down some abuses -including the favorite of histories, “By God’s ungrace, His Royal Lowness, the Prince Regent”- local magistrates stir themselves to do their job and arrest Hunt for disturbing the aforementioned Lowness’ peace. The Yeomanry decide the best way to do go about breaking up the crowd listening to Hunt is to simply charge straight through it; they knock down a woman and trample a small child, but at least they get their man. In the crowd, however, the Yeomen get separated and have to be rescued by the 15th Hussars, thereafter known as the Peterloo Regiment, who follow their comrades’ lead and charge into the crowd with sabres drawn, killing 15 people and injuring an estimated 700. The event is called Peterloo, in an ironic attempt to compare it to the Battle of Waterloo, which had occurred four years before. [4]

    The massacre is damming, to say the least. Surprisingly, no one blames Charlotte, who “simply told the truth” as one couturier noted. Her parents bear the brunt of the blame, particularly the Prince Regent. He, however, finds it worth it, writing to his mistress that “A massacre might well be worth a proper prince”. The event has destroyed what little remained of Caroline’s popularity and credibility; she is public enemy number one and even Lord Liverpool is unable to halt the Prince’s now well-known desire to divorce Caroline and remarry. The Duke of Cambridge is once again sent out wife-hunting, Caroline is enraged and powerless, Charlotte is humiliated and abandoned - no politician will come near her now that she has but little time left as the heir.

    Not everyone has given up on Charlotte, though. A surprise ally comes through for the young princess in September in the form of HRH Maria Carolina of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, the Duchess of Berry. Daughter-in-law to Charles X of France, this Italian princess packs a pedigree that even the Hanovers are in awe of: she is a granddaughter of the last Holy Roman Emperor, a niece to the Emperor of Austria-Hungary and the Grand Duke of Tuscany, daughter of the King of the Two Sicilies, and half-sister to the Queen of Spain. Only two years younger than Charlotte, the Duchesse was known for her strong personality, clever mind, and patronage of the arts. It was a royal friendship made in Heaven. Boldly writing to Charlotte after the birth of her daughter, the Princess Louise d’Artois and the first surviving grandchild of Charles X, Maria Carolina asks her to “stand in as godmother to her dear little Louisette, as there is none I so admire as you, and no one I would more beg God for my daughter to resemble”. [5]

    Charlotte, who loves children, is touched and pleased at the idea of another goddaughter, and of a new friend (Leopold is pleased at the politics of Charlotte being godmother to the granddaughter of a King of France, seeing how it could further the somewhat uneasy post-Napoleon alliance of the country). Charlotte consents, writing to Maria Carolina that she would “be most honored and pleased to stand as a sponsor to the dear little Princess... only please, I beg of you, add my name amongst hers, so she may never forget the one across the Channel who loves her so dearly”. The little French princess is duly christened Louise Marie Thérèse Charlotte, and receives a stunning pearl parure from her godmother, who writes to her once a month for the rest of her life. The friendship between Maria Carolina and Charlotte is fast and firm, and only stronger when Charlotte sends a ring to the Duchesse d'Angoulême, Maria Carolina’s sister-in-law and the daughter of the doomed Marie Antoinette [6]. The ring, long thought lost, belonged to Marie Antoinette, Charlotte explains, who sent it to England with her friend the Duchesse de Polignac, who left it in the safekeeping of Charlotte’s grandmother Queen Charlotte [7]. Having inherited the jewel, Charlotte writes that she considers it her duty to see it returned to it’s proper owner per her grandmother’s wish and begs pardon for not sending it sooner.

    Charlotte’s popularity in France soars and her stock abroads rises to dizzying heights; the future Queen of England is praised for her kindness and generosity, and devotion to “furthering friendships long ignored by her predecessors” (both of whom are very much alive). Everyone is more or less willing to forgive and forget the Peterloo incident where she is concerned; even the die-hard Anglicans, who turn up their noses at their princess standing as godmother to a Catholic baby, are forced to admire her “Christian tolerance and generosity”. One newspaper even goes so far as to poll if a new baby prince would be preferred to the Good Princess; shockingly, a majority of those polls prefer their Charlotte to a new, unknwn Prince.

    Wisely, Charlotte and Leo stay cloistered at Claremont for the rest of the year, preferring to spend time with their sons than with the increasingly split court. The Kents decide to go to the sea-side, the Clarences remain in Hanover, and the Duke of Cambridge continues on his dreary wife-hunt (shockingly, a la Henry VIII post-Jane Seymour, no proper princess wants to touch the Prince Regent with a ten foot pole. They’re all secretly rooting for Charlotte). The years closes with Charlotte rising, her father plotting, and the Kendal family set to grow again in more ways than one. As always, politics reign supreme in this fair little England, and as one historian would later describe, “the French Christening was the last easy win in Charlotte’s life”.


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    [1] OTL she was christened on June 24th, but I pushed it back a month to increase the drama.

    [2] Caroline never gave up Pergami, and in 1817 they were described by a visiting nobleman as “to all appearances man and wife, never was anything so obvious."

    [3] George was trying to do this OTL after Charlotte’s death, and even went so far as to send noblemen to Italy to gather evidence of Caroline’s adultery with Pergami so he could divorce her. It didn’t happen then either.

    [4] The Peterloo Massacre was real and it was devastating; Charlotte’s letter obviously never happened OTL but it seemed a good way to tie everything together nicely.

    [5] These two women had no known interaction OTL but they are both badasses, only two years apart, both in increasingly unstable countries, and both about to reign. They were made to be best friends. Pay attention to Maria Carolina, she’s coming back.

    [6] Marie-Thérèse Charlotte of France (December 19, 1778 – October 19, 1851), Madame Royale, Duchesse d’Angoulême. Eldest child and daughter of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI, she was the only one of the family to survive the Reign of Terror. Later married to her first cousin, the Duc d’Angoulême, son of Charles X and King of France and Navarre for 20 minutes.

    [7] OTL Marie Antoinette didn’t send any jewelry to Queen Charlotte that I know of, but Marie Antoinette’s dear friend the Duchesse de Polignac was in England at the beginning of the Reign of Terror and Charlotte and Marie Antoinette were fairly good friends (Charlotte had rooms readied for the French royal family to stay in during the Reign of Terror if they escaped), so it didn’t seem too out there and felt like a good way for Charlotte to win points with the French. And yes, the ring at the top of the post is the ring Charlotte returned and yes, it really did belong to Marie Antoinette.
     
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    Chapter 5
  • 142127.jpg

    Miniature of Charlotte, The Duchess of Kendal, sent to her friend, Dowager Duchesse de Berry in 1820
    The Duchesse de Berry carried the miniature with her all her days, and admonished her children to remember and revere "her dearest sister and only true friend"


    January 1820 does not open well for the British royal family. In Surrey, Charlotte is ill and is forced to remain in bed - Leopold being the “only being on earth who can bend HRH’s remarkable will to his own”, as her doctor notes. Ever active, bedrest is particularly displeasing to Charlotte. The one bright spot in these days, besides her adored boys, is the birth of eight puppies to her beloved American Foxhounds, Monroe and Kortright. The first male puppy is named Rush, for the ambassador who gifted them their dogs; the other puppies are named Bolt, Dash, Chase, Fly, Skip, Blitz, and Flee (Charlotte has a sense of humour). Little George immediately bonds with Dash, to the point where as soon as the puppy is weaned, he is never separated from his little master again. Likewise, Chase bonds with little William, as they both enjoy snoozes in the sunlight and warms snuggles with Mama Charlotte. Rush and Fly are gifted to the Duke and Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews, Skip and Blitz are gifted to the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, and Flee -the runt- attaches herself to Leopold, who pretends to roll his eyes at her but -as Charlotte notes to a friend- ‘carries her about quite tenderly himself when she grows tired, and allows her to sit in his lap as he writes - since he fears her hurting herself trying to jump up into his lap otherwise’.

    The Kents, having gone to Devon for a sea holiday over the Christmas season (their unpopularity making it a rather lonely one), settle into Woolbrook Cottage in Sidmouth and send letters to the Kendals to bring the boys and the dogs and come join them; particularly, as Viktoria writes, so that “dear little Geo and Drina can get to know one another”. Charlotte’s illness provides a handy refusal, as does her comment that her son, at two years old, has no interest in meeting ‘Cousin Drina’ and therefore has more sense than the Duke and Duchess of Kent put together. Leopold only tells the Kents about her illness, however, for the sake of family peace. Or as close as peace gets to in this family. The Cambridges enjoy a family holiday with the Clarences in Hanover (Adelheid still ‘so sad’ from a miscarriage in September, as Auguste reports to Charlotte, but ‘so kind to little Georgie and the Fitzes’, William’s illegitimate brood having joined them in Hanover at Adelheid’s invitation). The Yorks spend the holidays apart, as they spend most of their time, but exchange friendly New Year’s wishes, their interaction for the year. In London, the Prince Regent thoroughly enjoys the charms of Lady Conyngham, now officially his mistress and still in possession of Queen Charlotte’s jewels.

    It seems as though everything will continue on in this manner when the roof of their entire world caves in. On January 23rd, Edward, the Duke of Kent and Strathearn, dies at Woolbrook Cottage of pneumonia [1]. Charlotte and Leopold barely have time to make it to Devon to comfort Viktoria when the news comes from London six days later: mad, sad King George III has died and officially been succeeded by Charlotte’s father, now the mad, bad George IV. She is ordered to return to London with her family, effective immediately, for the public mourning of her grandfather. While the now dowager Duchess of Kent is left out of this invitation, Charlotte bundles up her sister-in-law / aunt and niece / cousin with her household and brings them to London, along with the Duke’s body. Coming with them is the Duke’s former equerry, Sir John Conroy [2], now comptroller of the Duchess of Kent’s household. Baron Stockmar, the comptroller of the Kendal household, immediately dislikes the man, informing his master that “The Irish will have their revenge indeed should this man be allowed to remain in England and in such a position”.

    Leopold agrees, but now is not the time. He has to save all his mental prowess to push for Charlotte being made the Princess of Wales in her own right, to truly cement her status as the rightful heir to the throne. And hey, if he comes Prince of Wales as her consort, who is he to complain? Surprisingly, Parliament agrees with Leopold and pushes for Charlotte to be made the suo jure Princess of Wales as George IV’s heir (Leopold will be left Duke of Kendal and happy about it, thank you very much). George is having none of it. Officially, he gives out the reason that it is inappropriate to distribute titles while the court is in mourning for his father and brother - it’s quite possibly the first time he has ever respected court protocol in his life, but he makes a good case and the subject is dropped for the moment.

    On February 15th, Charlotte receives even distressing news: the Duke of Berry, husband of her dear friend Maria Carolina, has been assassinated in France by a Bonapartist saddle maker the day before. The Duchesse has just discovered she is pregnant and the pressure to deliver a son is on; with the death of her husband and the infertility of the Duchesse d'Angouleme, the House of Bourbon is set to die out in the male line with the Duke. Charlotte rallies to her friend and sends letters of condolence that Maria Carolina will later call “her lifeline in those dark times”. The same day as she hears this distressing news, Charlotte receives happier news in an explanation for her illness the last few months: she is pregnant with her third child. She and Leopold hope for a girl since “boys need sisters” as he tells the Dowager Duchess of Kent (and, as he remarks to Baron Stockmar, “kings need consorts” [3]).

    King George III is buried on February 16 in St. George’s Chapel, the entire country -remembering the bright, ambitious young king and not the sad invalid he became- in genuine mourning; his son is buried the same day, with significantly less mourning [4]. The day after the funerals, Charlotte makes the official announcement of her pregnancy, to the joy of the country. Her popularity soars, a move that does not endear her any further to her father, who’s already meager popularity is turning sour. By royal command, one of his first acts is to have his estranged wife Caroline’s name removed from the Book of Common Prayer [5]; Charlotte, defiantly, continues praying for her mother, even if she is the only one who does so (Caroline’s popularity took a real hit after the Peterloo massacre, especially since she’s given up any pretense of pretending to behave). George is also pushing forward with the divorce and has come up with a new ‘out’: since he is now King, he can retroactively revoke permission for his marriage to Caroline. He can also petition for divorce on the grounds of abandonment, since he hasn’t seen his wife in years (of course, he is the innocent party in this scenario). Either way, George IV is beginning to greatly favor his ancestor Henry VIII in more ways that one - as often remarked upon, never conclusively documented remark has him saying to his brother The Duke of York that he’ll “behead Caroline for treason over Peterloo and then marry as he pleases”.

    As though enough is not going on in England, on February 23rd, a plot later to be known as the Cato Street Conspiracy to murder the cabinet of the kingdom as well as Lord Liverpool and place Charlotte on the throne, is revealed. (‘I hardly see why one would need me dead to place our Princess of Wales [Liverpool insisted on using what he saw as Charlotte’s proper title until the day he died] on our throne’ he would later write to a friend). Any common idiot can figure out that Charlotte -particularly given her notable dislike of ‘revolutionaries’ after the murder of her friend the Duchesse de Berry’s husband- is not involved. George IV, however, is no common idiot. He says nothing about Charlotte’s possible involvement - in her defense or against it. Thanks to the gossiping toadies of the vengeful Lady Conyngham, he does not need to. Charlotte’s name is blackened as a ‘greedy, grasping troublemaker’ and ‘her mother all over again’ and the loving people of London find themselves wondering if maybe, just maybe, their lovely Lotte has gotten mixed up in something she shouldn’t have. Not that anyone blames her, mind, but fratricide and revolution do tend to put a blot on the reputation. She and Leopold retreat back to Claremont, where George IV likes them to be, and takes the Kents with them; they also take a spy, though they don’t know that yet - as far as they’re all concerned, he’s obviously on their team. In fairness, he’s a triple crosser, so even he’s not sure what team he’s playing for at this moment. Even later historians will be forced to wonder: what in the actual world was John Conroy trying to accomplish at Claremont in 1820?


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    [1] This is his OTL death as well

    [2] We all know who this guy is; and yes, he’s as much of a prick this time around

    [3] Not sure if he ever said this about his OTL daughter, Charlotte of Belgium, but I wouldn’t be surprised

    [4] They shared a funeral OTL as well - George IV had to pinch pennies for his Brighton monstrosity, after all

    [5] This is also OTL. 95% of the interactions between George IV and Caroline will be OTL because you just can’t make up drama that good
     
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    Tidbits: Scene from Lotte & Leo (1)
  • Not a proper post, and I'm sorry for that - but to hold you all over while you're waiting, we're gonna preview some of the drama about to go down (as made in a TTL movie); I've seen other timelines with little mid-story posts like this, loved them, and wanted to try one!


    Scene from the 2016 film Lotte & Leo starring Jessica Chastain (Charlotte, The Duchess of Kendal), Colin Farrell (Leopold, The Duke of Kendal), Helena Bonham Carter (Viktoria, Dowager Duchess of Kent), Mark Sheppard (Sir John Conroy), among others.


    [Scene opens on Viktoria, Dowager Duchess of Kent, in the morning room of Claremont. She is sitting alone, dressed in black, and embroidering. The door opens and Sir John Conroy enters - she does not look up and continues her sewing. Her expression is strained.]

    [After a pause]


    Conroy: You ignore me now, then?

    Viktoria: You should not speak to me thus. They could hear.

    Conroy: And what shall they hear, if I am only speaking to myself, as certain ladies no longer deign to respond to me? [He goes to the fireplace near where Viktoria is sitting and turns, his back to her, as he looks at the trinkets on the mantle]

    Viktoria: [frustrated - they’ve obviously had this conversation before] She is my sister in law, the niece of my dead husband, and the future Queen of -

    Conroy: The future Queen of Nothing! [He slams his fist on the mantle -Viktoria jumps- and turns to face Viktoria]. You know she will never be queen.

    Viktoria: [becoming distressed, starts to put embroidery down] You should not say such things, John! It is not safe! You will damn me, and my daughter and my -

    Conroy: [coming to her, going on his knees before her and grabbing her hands] Have I not always protected you, Marie? Have I not always kept you safe? Did I not defend you from Edward time and again?

    Viktoria: [teary, distressed] Yes, of course, but John -

    Conroy: This, all of this, is for you and Victoria, Marie. It will keep you safe, safer than that girl and your brother ever could. You will be the mother of the ruler of Great Britain [quick glance at her abdomen], and no one will ever touch you again.

    Viktoria: But John, poor Lotte and Leo have been so kind -

    John: It is easy for liars to be kind to those who help further their lies. I have saved us, Marie, by removing them. They will be fine - Lotte and her children will be a princess and princes of Saxe-Coburg; they will not hurt for having lost Britain. The King will not harm them, only remove them from the line of succession - as he should. I have it within my power to place us where no one can ever touch us. The King will be generous, and the next ruler - dependant on your children as his heirs - even more so. Everything is before us. [bowing his head and kissing her fingers] Do not doubt me now.

    Viktoria: [sighing, eyes closed, she is resigned to her fate] Never.

    [There is a sound in the hallway - John, moving swiftly stands just in time for Charlotte, The Duchess of Kendal to open the door. Her eyebrow raises as she takes in the scene - Conroy breathing hard from his passionate speech, Viktoria flushed and teary and refusing to make eye contact. John and Charlotte stare at each other for a moment, silently taking a measure of each other].

    Charlotte: Conroy.

    Conroy: My lady [bows to Viktoria and goes to leave through the door when he catches Charlotte’s eye again - there is another pause before he lowers his head in a half semblance of a bow before passing her in the doorway and leaving the room].

    [Charlotte is silent as she walks to the mantle, where several trinkets and knick-knacks have been knocked down from Sir John’s earlier fist slam. Obviously nervous, Viktoria fidgets, clearly trying to think of something to say.]

    Viktoria: Lotte, I -

    Charlotte: [quietly, still facing away] Have a care, Victoire.

    Viktoria: I - I beg your pardon?

    Charlotte: [turning back to face Viktoria, holding a miniature of Viktoria and her daughter in her hands, staring down at it] I do not like your Conroy, Victoire. He reminds me of my father: full of lies dressed as promises. He’ll only disappoint you [pause as Charlotte lifts her eyes to meet Viktoria’s] if he doesn’t damn you. [Viktoria blanches, as it becomes obvious that Charlotte heard at least a portion of the previous conversation.] Spiele nicht mit Feuer - do not play with fire, my dear. It's a game you never win.

    Viktoria: [becoming flustered and angry] Sir John is a dear, dear friend - I trust him implicitly. He is nothing but loyal to us. Is my trust no longer good enough for you, sister?

    [The two women stare at each other for a moment, before Charlotte turns back to place the miniature of Viktoria and her daughter back on the mantle]

    Charlotte: I love you, Victoire, as my sister and my aunt by marriage. That bond is a strong one. [She looks over her shoulder at Viktoria, her face unreadable] But if you try to touch my blood, sister, I’ll burn you both to the ground. [Charlotte leaves the room, slamming the door slightly behind her. In the silent room, Viktoria lowers her face into her hands, shaking].

    [End scene]​

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    *Viktoria, Duchess of Kent, was born HSH Princess Marie Luise Viktoria - which is why Conroy is calling her 'Marie' in the scene

    Hope you enjoyed this little tidbit! (Not giving anything away and saying it is what officially happened, but it is how the person who wrote this movie TTL saw it going down!)
     
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    Chapter 6
  • “It is so sad to be here, but when one does not consider the most unfortunate circumstances that brought us here, life at Claremont is simply delightful. Lotte and Leo are simply too, too wonderful for words - we all live so happily and easily amongst each other, it is as if we have all made a contract to allow only peace and goodness into these darling halls. The children are divine - little Geo is fast making friends with Drina, which does so warm my heart, as I knew it was Edward’s fondest wish and remains ours. Little Will -named for your own darling husband- much resembles Lotte in looks and personality and I shall dare say will make a very fine second son. Even in March, usually so beastly here in England, is lovely here in the fields and meadows of Claremont; after breakfast and tea, we often take walks around the gardens, which have become Lotte’s project and look very fine...”

    Letter from the Dowager Duchess of Kent to the Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews,

    March 9, 1820



    “It is very crowded at Claremont since the Kents have arrived. One barely has room to think.”

    Letter from the Duchess of Kendal to the Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews,

    March 10, 1820

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------​

    March 1820 opens rather... crowdedly for the Kendals of Claremont. The Duchess of Kent has moved in and is, as Mary Gillray (Charlotte and Leopold’s adored nanny) comments, “very hard to miss”. She has brought with her the Princess Victoria (supposedly the future queen consort, a reference that still makes Charlotte grind her teeth), Princess Feodore of Leiningen [1], Lady Flora Hastings [2], Baroness Luise Lezhen [3], Sir John Conroy, and other servants - not wanting to “take up all the help at Claremont”. Just how long she will be staying is still a question. Every time someone broaches the subject, she starts crying about how kind they are to let her, a poor friendless widow in a strange country, seek shelter with them. It’s a good act, but it’s slowly wearing on everyone’s nerves. The household quickly becomes divided down a very firm line: John Conroy is either the worst human being to ever exist and should, in Charlotte’s words, “be horsewhipped until some sense appears or he disappears - whichever occurs first”, or is the greatest and kindest and most wonderful human being in the world and the only true friend to the Dowager Duchess of Kent and her daughter.

    (Shockingly, the Dowager Duchess of Kent is the only one on the latter team. )

    Aside from the division between Team Horsewhipping and Team St. John, the month of March passes fairly quietly at Claremont. Forbidden by her doctors from any exercise more vigorous than a slow walk and forbidden by Leopold and her own common sense from going into London, Charlotte takes to the gardens: in a private move of defiance, she plants daffodils all over the estate, which still grow there today [4].

    In April, things start to pick up -and not in the way Charlotte wanted them to-: on the second day of April, a Proclamation signed by “order of the Committee of Organisation for forming a Provisional Government” appears in Glasgow, Scotland, calling for a worker’s strike. The next day, the strike begins with an estimated 60,000 people stopping work. Over the next week, the leaders of the committee attempt to claim Carron Ironworks and take the weapons inside, amidst brief skirmishes with British troops sent to put down the rebellion. By the eleventh day of April, the rebellion is over, the malcontents imprisoned, and a list of Killed & Wounded list the casualties as “18 casualties, including an 8 year old boy, and a 65 year old woman. At this time 6 were noted as dead”. While this doesn’t directly affect the Kendals of Claremont, this does strike a blow at Charlotte’s father and give Charlotte yet another look at the effects of the economic depressions caused by the Napoleonic wars. Unable to do much, she makes a vow to only wear and use fabrics made in Britain by British subjects - she does away with her Brussels lace and French silk for the rest of her life, and will only wear gowns made from British fabrics. She starts by placing a massive fabric order in Glasgow three weeks after the strike (it does not win her many points with her father’s government but the Glaswegians appreciate it and develop a fondness for the Duchess.

    On April 15th, Wilhelm, The King of Wurttemberg (and widower of Charlotte’s dear friend Katya [5]) marries for a third time to his cousin, Princess Pauline of Wurttemberg. Charlotte is not happy about this but understands the man needs a son - and that being nasty to Pauline will most likely limit her contact with her goddaughter Sophie - and sends a gift.

    On the 25th, a beginning is announced as the ‘Radical War’ in Scotland is ending: the Dowager Duchess of Kent is pregnant and due in late October. She is overjoyed -weepily so- and announces that she wants a boy, to “take up the mantle of his dear, honorable father and serve her and his beloved Britain”. Leopold is happy about the idea of a nephew or niece (can’t have too many Coburgs, after all) and anything that makes his sister happy makes him happy. Charlotte, who can count [6], merely raises a brow as she wishes Viktoria congratulations on her pregnancy. Keeping the peace, Charlotte does not respond to Viktoria’s comments that they will have two children so close together and guaranteed to be friends.

    (Viktoria has stopped mentioning the possibility of Drina marrying George, however, and that is starting to concern Charlotte because if her shooting down that idea for several months didn’t do it, she is not sure she likes whatever actually managed it).

    On the last day of April, Charlotte travels alone to London per her father’s commands to watch the deaths of the Cato Street conspirators - “to show that you are and hope to remain our loyal and loving daughter” as George IV’s barely-on-the-edge-of-civil letter states. On May 1st, the pregnant Charlotte stands in an open window in Newgate prison situated directly behind the platform erected for the executions. She famously refuses a chair, remarking that “she is not yet such a tyrant that [she] can sit whilst men die”. Arthur Thistlewood is the first man to come up to die. When asked for his final words, he turns back to face Charlotte and shouts out “LONG LIVE THE PRINCESS OF WALES”. Charlotte looks at the man -the warden of Newgate reports that he would rather face the axe himself than have such a look directed at him- shouts back in a strong voice “LONG LIVE THE KING”.

    This exchange is repeated by the next four of the condemned, with Charlotte answering the same every time. At the end of the day, she is reported as being “pale but maintaining her dignity” and she returns home to Claremont. In his diary that day, Leopold simply writes “My poor, poor Lotte. Long live the Princess of Wales.”

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    [1] Viktoria’s daughter from her first marriage. OTL married the Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg and was the grandmother of Auguste Viktoria, the last German Empress.

    [2] Lady-in-waiting to the Dowager Duchess of Kent, made famous in 1839 when her ‘scandalous pregnancy’ (reported to be caused by an affair with Sir John Conroy) turned out to be a cancerous growth in her abdomen. As Queen Victoria had helped spread the pregnancy rumors, when the real cause of Flora’s death became known, it cost her popularity points.

    [3] OTL Queen Victoria’s governess and later domestic adversary of Prince Albert.

    [4] In case you didn’t know, daffodils are the national flower of Wales. (Charlotte definitely knows).

    [5] Grand Duchess Yekaterina Pavlovna of Russia, who introduced Charlotte and Leopold

    [6] To calculate due dates, medical professionals have this thing called Naegele’s rule, where in order to calculate a due date, you count back three months and add seven days from the date of conception. For Viktoria to be due in October, she had to have conceived in late January (Officially she is due October 25, which means she in theory conceived on January 18). Charlotte, who can count, realizes this. I don’t know about many of you, but most people with pneumonia (like the Duke of Kent in late January of 1820), are not down to make babies.
     
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    Chapter 7
  • Two_green_bags.jpg
    In this iconic caricature, George and Caroline are depicted as a pair of fat green bags, a clear reference to the green bags that contained the evidence collected against Caroline by the Milan commission. George is much fatter than Caroline, and his bag is girded by a garter belt, part of which hangs down in the manner of a limp penis.

    After the events of May, the Kendals are looking for some good news - literally anything even remotely good at this point. After the executions in London, the rest of the month was spent trying to figure out ways to murder John Conroy and not get arrested. (Personally, Charlotte's pretty sure that as long as they get a judge and jury who had met Conroy, they'd be given a pardon and probably a medal). He has slowly earned the wrath of everyone in the house (aside from the Duchess of Kent) in the following ways:
    • Made ungentlemanly advances towards Miss Mary Gillray, the governess and nanny to the Kendal princes (earning her wrath, Charlotte's, and surprisingly Stockmar's)

    • Attempted to accuse Mary of stealing Charlotte's silver (which she was quite obviously and in full view of the staff polishing in the kitchen to help out during the princes' naptime)

    • According to Mary, he deliberately stepped on and broke Prince George's favorite toy (a toy soldier in the uniform of the Izmailovsky Regiment of the Russian army, which his father had served in during the Napoleonic wars and which George's godfather, the Emperor of Russia, had specifically made for him. Lieutenant Alexander -the doll- was saved with emergency surgery by Baron Stockmar and the local carpenter, though his face will always bear a crack)

    • Pushed Prince William down and away from Princess Victoria when he tried to toddle over to play with her (Conroy denied it and said he had been trying to catch the prince when he tripped)

    • Called Prince George "a most stupid and unfortunate heir" to Lady Flora Hastings within Mary's hearing

    • Yelled at a housemaid for "stealing biscuits" during tea because there was not the exact number of biscuits he wanted at the table (because he and the Duchess had already eaten three each when this count went down)

    • Spilled a bottle of Irish whiskey over Stockmar's medical journals 'accidentally' after Stockmar was heard questioning how long the Kents would be staying at Claremont

    • Refused members of the royal family audiences with the Dowager Duchess of Kent to express their grief, citing her delicate condition and sorrow (Charlotte, who observed Viktoria in the pink of health playing with her daughter and spaniels in the garden those same days, remarked that Viktoria's delicacy and sorrow struck at the most interesting moments)

    • Refused to allow Stockmar to see the Duchess of Kent's accounts when she asked to borrow money from the Kendals

    • Was, according to Stockmar, "all together too informal, rude, and sure of himself amongst royalty" (a hard thing to do in the Kendal household, where Charlotte prefers informality whenever possible and appropriate)

    • Was obviously drunk in the presence of ladies multiple times

    • Continued to spout the Duke of Kent's belief that Princess Victoria would sit the throne

    • Refused to bow when being introduced to Miss Mary Fitzclarence and was heard later to scoff at the idea of "his Duchess" interacting with a "mere bastard"

    • Kicked Leopold's beloved little dog, Flea, after she "tried to bite him", leaving her with two broken ribs ("Flea can barely bite her food" Charlotte angrily wrote to a friend afterwards. Stockmar again came to the rescue and helped care for Flea while she was healing, and Leopold carried her around for weeks after she had healed, refusing to trust her to the floors where Conroy walked)

    • Made "ungallant" remarks about Charlotte's mother to Lady Flora Hastings and the Duchess of Kent

    • Pointedly refused to answer any questions made by any of the Claremont household regarding his wife and children. When finally cornered about it by Leopold, he merely answered that his life was in service to his Duchess, and his wife knew her place. (This statement won no brownie points with Leopold or Charlotte)

    • Was considered by all to be far too “intimate” with the Dowager Duchess, taking private teas with her lasting several hours a day and allowing no communication to reach her save through himself or his cronies (some household staff and Lady Flora)
    Every time such an incident has been brought up to the Dowager Duchess as grounds for his dismissal, however, she has grown distraught and fainted. For fear of her distress harming her delicate condition, Leopold has forbidden the Kendal household to speak a word of Conroy leaving to Viktoria until after the birth of her child. (Officially, Charlotte stands with her husband on this - unofficially, she has the due date circled on her calendar).

    Good news comes in three to Claremont in the first week of June, when it is announced that the Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews is expecting a baby in February [1]. Charlotte, knowing how much Adelheid has wanted a child of her own, is overjoyed and sends forth a twenty page letter full of congratulations and advice and love. The Dowager Duchess of Kent, miffed at the idea of not being the newest pregnant lady in the family -not to mention that the Clarence baby, boy or girl, will take precedence over her own children-, sends a page. Coming with the news is Charlotte’s cousin, Miss Mary Fitzclarence, the bastard daughter of Charlotte’s uncle the Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews, so rudely treated by Conroy. Mary Fitzclarence [2] -known in the family as Maffie- had come to be employed more or less as a lady in waiting to the Duchess of Kendal (Charlotte having never really had a proper lady in waiting before, using housemaids and Mary Gillray when needed, never really treats Maffie as a lady in waiting and instead makes her an adored companion. Maffie will later write in her memoirs that the most stressful thing Charlotte had allowed her to do was open and organize letters and even then apologized for asking Maffie to do it). Another happy event -surprising to all except Charlotte- occurs at the end of June: Christian Stockmar formally proposes to Miss Mary Gillray, with the full blessing and consent of the Kendals. Plans are made for them to marry in July at the little St George's Church in nearby Esher - only family and close friends in attendance, and the little Kendal princes to serve as pageboys. Mary having no father, Leopold graciously offered to give her away. There were tears and laughter and champagne all around. (The Dowager Duchess of Kent was heard to have expressed a confused wonder at such excitement being made over “a servant’s marriage”, and Sir John Conroy all but rolled his eyes at Leopold’s offer).

    Another good piece of news occurs when Sir John Conroy leaves for London in the middle of the month, supposedly to see about acquiring “a proper household of her own” for the Dowager Duchess and her children - one that was not based in Surrey. Despite Viktoria’s moping, the rest of the household settles in nicely to the quiet and peace. The trooping of the color having been cancelled that year [3], there's no reason for them to leave Claremont, and at this point, Charlotte would have to be dragged kicking and screaming. And very ill. This is by far her most difficult pregnancy and she’s barely tolerating it at Claremont as is. The news that her mother has returned to England to claim her rights as Queen consort and take part in the scheduled coronation in July of next year has put everyone on edge and has rather put a damper on the joy of the previous events.

    (Obviously, this good news turns out to be terrible, all bad, horrible, awful, and no good news, but nobody knows just yet).​

    On the 5th of July, a bill is introduced into Parliament "to deprive Her Majesty Queen Caroline Amelia Elizabeth of the Title, Prerogatives, Rights, Privileges, and Exemptions of Queen Consort of this Realm; and to dissolve the Marriage between His Majesty and the said Caroline Amelia Elizabeth". Despite the efforts of George Canning [4] and Charles Grey [5], both devoted to Charlotte and her rights, a motion to abandon the bill and investigation was rejected in June, and the bill had been announced as passed through “most regretfully” by Lord Liverpool. Charlotte hears about this bill on the 6th, when her friend General Charles Fox [6] comes to call on Claremont to warn her of the bill. Introduced by George IV in the beginning of June, the bill charges that Caroline had been unfaithful to George, and thus forfeited her rights to be his queen and wife. It is the wife part that has caught everyone’s attention - for George has not only provided ample evidence in two green evidence bags of Caroline’s infidelity [7] with Bartolomeo Pergami, he provided a bag of evidence devoted to the claim that Caroline’s infidelity had begun on their wedding night. George is now swearing before God and country that he never slept with Caroline on their wedding night, as he was too drunk; she instead took two male servants for lovers on their wedding night while George slept off his drink. He only slept with her on the second night of their marriage one time - making the chances of Charlotte being his legitimate child and heir “only one in three, and only if one assumes the licentiousness and lewdness of the aforementioned Caroline Amelia Elizabeth did not extend past her wedding night, as all her behaviors since that day have conclusively informed us that they have and continue to do so”. The bill is effectively to be a public trial of Caroline - by voting on whether or not to pass the bill, the members of Parliament would be both jury and judges. Should Parliament find Caroline guilty of the charges and pass the bill through, Fox informs the Kendals, they will also find Charlotte illegitimate and thus remove herself and her children from the line of succession. Caroline’s popularity, while still better than George’s (not like that’s hard to do), has sagged in the aftermath of the Peterloo Massacre, and Charlotte’s has been affected by the Cato Street Conspiracy. It is unknown if the people will prefer to keep their beloved Princess Charlotte when they could have a new Prince of Wales, whose legitimacy would be assured having been assumedly born of an honorable and faithful mother. George also has an ace up his sleeve: he apparently has the two servants who claim to have slept with Caroline on their wedding night ready and willing as witnesses, both of whom happen to favor Charlotte in looks.

    This news is hard on an ill, pregnant woman and Charlotte -after politely thanking Fox for his friendship and for telling her- promptly faints. She is taken to their bedroom, where Leopold himself cares for her - no one else is allowed to enter their apartments at this time and “see poor Cherie in her natural grief, her filial loyalty having been so violated and her foundation so very shaken” as Leopold would later write to his brother Ferdinand. The next week becomes what future historians, historical fiction authors, and screenwriters will call “a true display of love and devotion”: Leopold more or less sets up shop in the bedroom with Charlotte. He has a little ‘desk’ made that he can sit across his lap on the bed or in a chair, and he uses that to catch up on correspondence. He reads to Charlotte letters of sympathy and her favorite books -including Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen-, as well as works by David Hume, Adam Smith, Voltaire, and Rousseau. (Leopold does not agree with many of the viewpoints espoused by the latter two but it’s a good way to see the views of the ‘revolutionaries’ in a safe way, and they do make some fair points about rights and education that he is willing to concede. He’s a big fan of Voltaire’s “enlightened despotism” theory”[8]). He and Charlotte take their meals privately during this time in their room and take tea in their private sitting room with the boys each day. After a week, Charlotte more or less re-enters the rest of the house and the grounds but everybody is killing themselves to make sure she takes it easy. Being informed of Charlotte’s state by Charles Fox, Caroline attempted to come out to Surrey to see her daughter, though she was blocked by George IV. Concerned that his daughter was truly ill (and his bill the cause of it), George sent his own physician to check on her along with an invitation to come spend the winter with him after the birth of her child and the restoration of her health. Which is really a command, because George is trying to play the grieving father who loves his daughter and grandchildren dearly, and is being forced by his own conscience to declare her illegitimate for the good of the realm. It’s a good act - not a great one and not enough to get by the Kendals, but good enough that a lot of the public is starting to look twice at the whole situation.

    An unexpected ally comes forth to stay at Claremont at this time in the form of Charlotte’s aunt by marriage, the Duchess of York and Albany [9]. Not having ever been close with her niece by marriage (having retired to Oatlands and more or less giving up communication with the British royal family by the time Charlotte was born), Frederica has decided this is as good a time as any to make friends and take a stand against her brother-in-law. “George was always a fool,” she famously declared upon entering Claremont, “and Caroline even more of one. I see why many think you’re not their daughter - you’re far too clever, darling. You’re the picture of your grandfather before he went mad, any fool can see it. Since I’m not a fool, I know it for a fact”. Settling into Claremont with her numerous dogs, Frederica brings a new, albeit eccentric, joy to the household: George and William are immediately devoted to their great-aunt, who clearly adores them, and spends hours telling them (most untrue) fantastic stories about great English heroes. Her common sense attitude is just what Charlotte needs to really get back to herself; she will later write to Maria Carolina, the Duchesse de Berry, that “in the most surprising way, this hitherto unknown aunt has become the dearest friend and companion. We are all only to call her Auntie Fred, and the boys adore her completely, as do I. She has the most wonderful nature, one of equal parts sense and goodness, that soothes my soul and eases my mind.” The friendship that springs up between Auntie Fred and Charlotte in this time is a true meeting of like souls, and Charlotte would later credit her aunt for helping her recover and giving her the strength and wisdom to carry on. Years later, in the midst of her reign, Charlotte would write to her eldest daughter that “All the advice I give you, lovy, comes from my dear Auntie Fred, who gave it to me at a most troubling and sad time... whenever I find myself in doubt, I simply think back to her words: It is what it is, darling, and you must do what you must do, and it will be what it will be. Fretting about it doesn’t change a whit of it.”

    The return of John Conroy to Claremont in the middle of July does very little to make anyone feel better, and Leopold makes it very clear to Viktoria that if Conroy so much as looks wrong at Charlotte, he is out, hysterics or no. He also instructs Stockmar to discreetly look into the Dowager Duchess’ finances after his wedding after Viktoria asks him for money to pay her debts again - he loves his sister very much but with the succession crisis going on and the threat of losing everything, Leopold’s not parting with a penny more than he absolutely has to. The only good bit of news coming with Conroy is that he has secured a ‘living situation’ for the Dowager Duchess at Kensington Palace, where the Kent family will take up rooms following their renovation. He’s also secured a decent bump in her allowance, which is concerning to all as he’s only a good negotiator when he has something up his sleeve. He also comes with the news that he has been named the comptroller of the household of the Princess Sophia, one of Charlotte’s maiden aunts also living at Kensington. This is unsettling, to say the least, but there is little one can do about it, and Charlotte is choosing to focus on the wedding of Gilly and Stockmar rather than her aunt’s poor financial choices.

    On the 21st of July, Miss Mary Gillray marries Christian Stockmar in St George's Church in Esher, with a surprising number of royalty (the Duke and Duchess of Kendal, and the Duchess of York and Albany) attending, along with Mary’s family up from Bethnal Green. As promised, little George and William Kendal solemnly serve as the bride’s pageboys and are very well behaved during the ceremony. Afterwards, the couple embark on a honeymoon to none other than Oatlands, given over to them generously by Auntie Fred, who declares herself quite taken with the pair (she has, at this point, more or less moved in with the Kendals and, aside from Kents, no one is complaining). When the Stockmars return from their honeymoon in the first week of August, Christian sets right to work going through the Duchess’ books. It’s not easy to do - John Conroy is notoriously possessive of anything related to his work for or with the Duchess. Stockmar doesn’t manage to get his hands on the books until the 10th of August, when Conroy abruptly travels to London, leaving all but the bare necessities behind. When he returns on the 16th of August, Stockmar already has the books back in his room. It is not until the 21st of August, when Conroy again leaves for London, that Stockmar can finish reading them. It all looks too clean and even - there is no explanation, even one remotely plausible, for the Duchess’ lack of money. One would have to be an absolute fool or absolutely trusting to look at books like these and not realize something was up. And Stockmar is pretty sure where the Duchess of Kent falls on that scale.

    On the 17th of August, the trial against ‘Queen’ Caroline begins in London - the Duke of Sussex, one of Charlotte’s more notorious uncles, asks to be dismissed on the grounds of consanguinity [10], though the Duke of York decides to remain. This comment earns a snort and a head shake from Auntie Fred, who remarks that her “poor husband never did know which horse to back” [11]. The first motion in the case is made by the Duke of Leinster [12] to dismiss the bill entirely - it loses, 206 to 41.

    On the 19th of August, the prosecution case, led by the Attorney General for England and Wales, Sir Robert Gifford, begins with the claim that Carolien was and has committed adultery with Bartolomeo Pergami, thus rendering her unfit to be Queen or wife to the King. Gifford asserts that Caroline and Pergami “shared a bedroom, were seen in each other's presence arm-in-arm, and were heard kissing. The Queen, he stated, changed clothes in front of Pergami and ate her meals with him. He said that Pergami was a married man, but although his child, sister, mother and brother lived in the Queen's household, his wife did not”. [13]

    On the 21st of August, Sir Gifford continues with his attack, stating that “Pergami and Caroline had been seen together on a bed in a state of undress; she had sat on Pergami's knee in public; she had taken baths accompanied only by Pergami”. [14]

    On the 22nd of August, Sir Gifford comes to the piece de resistance of his argument, the one everyone has been waiting for: the question of Charlotte’s legitimacy. Caroline -who has been refusing to attend- is called forth as a witness. When asked if she had slept with two manservants on her wedding night instead of her husband, she denies it. When asked if she was unfaithful to her husband before their separation in any way that could have affected the paternity of her child, Charlotte, she denies it. When asked if she recognizes the names of Charles Bartlett and Nicholas Ayles, she denies it. When the two men are brought into the courtroom as expert witnesses, no one is sure what it going on in this trial. When the two men swear under oath before God and witnesses that they did indeed sleep with the-then Princess of Wales on her wedding night while the Prince of Wales was passed out drunk, no one is sure what is going on in this monarchy. Regarding the scandal of the trial, Leigh Hunt wrote to Percy Bysshe Shelley, "The whole thing will be one of the greatest pushes given to the declining royalty that the age has seen." [15]

    On the 28th of August, Charlotte delivers her third child after a long and grueling delivery - a little girl, to be named Charlotte for her mother at Leopold’s request, for “how could we not want another Lotte in the world?”.

    On the 29th of August, Stockmar bursts into Charlotte and Leopold’s bedroom with John Conroy’s books - the real ones that Conroy had cleverly hidden in a slit in the binding of the cooked books, found by Stockmar that very morning after re-reading the books for the thirteenth time. Conroy has definitely been embezzling money from the Duchess, most likely for gambling and drink, but that is not what has Stockmar bursting into the bedroom of a woman one day after she gave birth. In June and July, Conroy received large payments in sums totaling almost 2,000 pounds from a source only titled as ‘GH’. While he kept most of the money (and even funneled some of it back to the Duchess’ account in a sense of ‘loyalty’), he made two sets of large payments out from the funds. The first set of payments occurred in the middle of June, when Conroy was in London. The second set of payments occurred on the 16th of August, the day before the Queen’s trial began. Both sets of the payments were made to Charles Bartlett and Nicholas Ayles.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------​

    [1] They were already back and living in Bushy House, London, at this time. It is here where their child will be born.

    [2] Mary Fitzclarence, fourth child and second daughter of The Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews and Dorothea Jordan. OTL married Sir Charles Fox (see [6]) and served as the housekeeper of Windsor Castle for most of her life.

    [3] The trooping of the color was cancelled from 1811 to 1820 because of King George III's illness, except for in 1813, when it was performed for the Queen.

    [4] A British Tory statesman, served as Prime Minister from April to August 1827. Resigned from office as the President of the Board of Control in 1820 in opposition to the treatment of Queen Caroline during the debate of the Pains and Penalties Bill. Was also rumored to have been a lover of Caroline’s.

    [5] The 2nd Earl Grey, famous for his relationship and illegitimate daughter with the famous Duchess of Devonshire, Georgiana Cavendish. Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1830 to 1834.

    [6] Illegitimate son of Henry Richard Vassall-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland, through a liaison with Lady Webster, whom Lord Holland would later marry. Major in the Grenadiers and a Whig politician later in life. OTL married Miss Mary Fitzclarence (see [2]).

    [7] This was all OTL. “The day after Caroline’s return to England, George submitted the evidence to the Houses of Parliament in two green bags. The contents of the bags were identical; one copy was presented to the House of Lords by the Prime Minister, Lord Liverpool, and the other was presented to the House of Commons by the Foreign Secretary, Lord Castlereagh.”

    [8] Voltaire was a champion of enlightened despotism in the late 1700s and served as an influence for Emperor Joseph II of the Holy Roman Emperor and Catherine the Great of Russia, both of whom considered themselves “enlightened absolute monarchs”.

    [9] Princess Friederike Charlotte of Prussia, only daughter of Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia and his first wife, Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Lüneburg. OTL Friederike died on August 2nd, 1820 but it's my timeline and I like her so she's sticking around and filling in as a crazy aunt to the Kendal kids

    [10] The Duke of Sussex was the brother-in-law of Caroline, as well as her maternal first cousin. He was also trying to avoid pissing off Charlotte in this timeline, because the last thing he needs is the possible Queen furious with him and in a position of power.

    [11] The Duke of York and Albany was a notorious gambler and was notoriously in debt due to his addiction to cards and racehorses. He also has no sense of self preservation in this timeline a la The Duke of Sussex when it comes to the possibility of Charlotte’s wrath. Or his wife’s.

    [12] Augustus Fitzgerald, the 3rd Duke of Leinster. Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Ireland for most of the 19th century, holding the post for 61 years from 1813 until 1874

    [13] OTL claims from the trial

    [14] OTL claims from the trial

    [15] This is also OTL - Hunt didn’t mince words
     
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    Tidbits: Scene from Lotte and Leo (2)
  • I just graduated from school so I'm doing that whole 'interviews' thing because society dictates that I get one of those job things, so it's been hard to get through a proper post in the last few days. To tide you all over, and because I love stuff like this, here's another little tidbit:



    Scene from the 2016 film Lotte & Leo starring Jessica Chastain (Charlotte, The Duchess of Kendal), Colin Farrell (Leopold, The Duke of Kendal), and Ben Barnes (Christian Stockmar)


    [Scene opens on Charlotte, in a plain white nightdress, sitting up in bed holding her newborn daughter in her arms. The baby, who is sleeping, is wrapped in a white cloth embroidered with daffodils and edged with lace. Leopold sits to the side and partially behind Charlotte, dressed in a simple white linen shirt and dark trousers. His arm is wrapped around his wife, his cheek resting against her temple]

    Charlotte: What shall we name her?

    Leopold: Charlotte.

    Charlotte: [dazedly, she's still gazing at the baby] Hmmm? [Turning to look at Leopold, she sees his smile; catching his meaning, she returns his grin and gently bumps her shoulder against his chest] Oh.

    Leopold: She looks like you [gently traces the baby's cheek with his finger]. And why shouldn't we name her Charlotte? She'll be named after the greatest Queen in British history - not a bad namesake.

    Charlotte: If they let me become Queen. [sighs and frowns, resting her head against Leopold's shoulder]

    Leopold: [kisses her forehead] You will be Queen, my love.

    Charlotte: Not if Parliament finds me to be... You must admit, it's not implausible that my mother... [speaking faster, clearly upset as she sits up] And yes, I favor Grandpapa but he and my mother's mother were brother and sister - and everyone knows my father was drunk, there are two dozen witnesses to it - but my mother swears... [teary, looking down, devastated, she whispers] I don't know who I am anymore, Leo. I don't know what to believe.

    Leopold: You are Charlotte Augusta, the bravest, strongest, fiercest woman I know. The woman who stood down the whole of the British royal family to marry me. You are my wife, and my heart and my soul. You are my Queen, whatever Parliament finds. [Kisses her firmly] And if they decide against us, I will find us another kingdom. I hear the Greeks ate getting restless. And you're very popular in America. [Charlotte laughs and rests her head back against the crook of his neck, smiling as she closes her eyes.]

    [A quiet moment passes]


    [The door swings open and Christian Stockmar rushes in, clutching two green books and a sheath of crinkled, stained papers. The door slams against the door, startling the little family and causing the newly-named Princess Charlotte of Kendal to begin crying. As Charlotte comforts the baby, Leopold glares daggers at Stockmar for the interruption]

    Leopold: Christian, what is the meaning of this -
    Stockmar: [bowing to the couple as he comes to stand before them in the bed] Your Royal Highnesses, forgive me. This could not wait. [He hands the books and papers to Leopold, who is still upset and clearly not in a mood to read them]

    Leopold: It's Conroy's books. You found nothing in them last time and the time before that. [Charlotte passes their daughter to Leopold, takes the papers from his hands and begins reading them as Leopold rants, absently rocking the baby at the same time]. The man is a fiend, a proper bloody fiend, and God knows he's a prime example of the worst kind of officer and human being, but we must accept his books are as they are. Perhaps he is simply just a bad manager. Perhaps George is not paying Victoire the allowance she was promised. They've never liked her anyway and now that there's no one to control him - you can't put anything past that rotten, spoiled, selfish son of a -

    Charlotte: [still looking at the papers] Leo!

    Leopold: Sorry, darling.

    Charlotte: No, not about that. This - look at this. [She holds out the paper to him, her finger resting under a line that reads: "June 19 - £200 to Charles Bartlett. £200 to Nicholas Ayles. '' After a moment, her finger slides down a few rows to another line, which reads "August 16 - £200 to Charles Bartlett. £200 to Nicholas Ayles".]

    Leopold: [under his breath] Ach du lieber Gott... [he looks up from the papers to Charlotte, who’s entire demeanor has changed. Her back is straight, her eyes are clear - she is radiating confidence. She is ready for a war. He smiles at this, and turns to look at Stockmar, still standing at the foot of their bed]

    Stockmar: [beaming - he’s helped his master and mistress and he knows it] And Her Royal Highness, The Princess of Wales will be ... ?

    Charlotte: [she gives a proud grin at her title as she pulls off the covers and steps out of the bed] Going to London, to speak with some men about some money. And about what is mine.

    Stockmar: Very good, my lady. I’ll inform the coachman.

    Leopold: [still sitting in the bed, holding the baby close as she watches Charlotte sit at her vanity and begin to fuss with her hair. Grinning, he leans in close to the baby and whispers] A very great queen to be named after, indeed.
     
    Chapter 8
  • 744700-1521560436.jpg

    Princess Charlotte, The Duchess of Kendal. Circa 1819, ALFRED EDWARD CHALON

    "The betrayal of Charlotte’s father -the ‘GH’ in the infamous Conroy records- was the first domino to fall in the setting off of The Quarrel. It was always referred to the 'The Quarrel' by their descendants, though many modern biographers believe "The Separation" is a more accurate title, as Charlotte and Leopold quarreled "frequently and without fear of losing the love and affection of the other" according to the memoirs of one of their daughters-in-law. 'The Quarrel' was the grandest of them all - for it not only touched upon themselves, but their household and their families, forcing battlelines that would remain for generations and resentments that would fester for decades." - Melanie Baillie, Charlotte I (2015)

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~​

    In the aftermath of Stockmar's discovery, a question arises: was Viktoria, Leopold's beloved sister, complicit in John Conroy’s schemes, and if so, just how complicit was she? Unsurprisingly, the couple take different sides to this issue. Leopold is adamant that Viktoria would never do such a thing, nor had she know of such a thing being done by a member of her household, allowed it to continue. Charlotte is decidedly less confident in Viktoria's innocence. There would be no point, she declares, in John Conroy going to all that trouble to get her and her children disinherited without a bigger payoff that whatever her father could give him - George IV’s gratitude only goes so far, after all, and that ‘so far’ is fairly short by most standards. (It’s obviously George IV paying off Conroy, they unanimously decide, because who else would have the means, desire, and sheer nerves to disinherit the beloved heiress to the throne?). Once Charlotte and her children were removed, all between the Kent children and the crown would be her father (unlikely to conceive another heir, despite whatever lies he’s selling to the princesses of Europe), the Duke of York (Auntie Fred shot that down years ago and, given his mistreatment of Charlotte, has sworn to outlive him to stop any options of a little York heir), and the Duke of St. Clarence and Andrews (a reasonable threat, given Adelheid’s pregnancy, but also manageable, given her history of miscarriage and early births). Being the man who brought the Kent children to the throne would be a much bigger coup than being the man that allowed a king to divorce his wife. Being the stepfather of the King or Queen of England would be even bigger. Charlotte does not hesitate to let Leopold know exactly how sure she is that Viktoria and Conroy are intimate, nor does she forget to mention her own remarkable ability to count backwards. She might call him a naive fool. Similarly, Leopold does not hesitate to inform Charlotte that he does agree with his sister’s commentary on her mother, and that is is entirely plausible that her father deliberately chose a man he knew Charlotte dislikes to do his dirty work and thus cause a riff between her and her entirely loyal sister-in-law, who Leopold trusts implicity. He might also call her insane, and imply that if she can be so easily deceived, it is she who is the naive fool. Charlotte definitely throws things; Leopold definitely shouts. All in all, this lays the foundation for the infamous ‘Quarrel’.

    The truth of the matter is never truly resolved - at least, not in a manner known to history. The Duchess of Kent certainly never publicly confessed. Charlotte and Leopold left no documentation about ‘The Quarrel’, in either of their journals or letters. Indeed, there is not a scrap of evidence in any archives of either of them ever mentioning it. There is scant documentation of either of them ever even alluding to it. Almost 200 years later, Sofia Coppola, the award winning director and screenwriter of Lotte & Leo, a movie about the couple, would state her own difficulties writing the scene regarding ‘The Quarrel’: “We know what they were fighting about, obviously. We know how bad the fight was - how long it went on, how deep it went. But we don’t know how they felt about it. It’s like they erased it - they literally never mention it in any of their surviving documents. The whole scene had to be based off of the memoirs and comments of others.” Back in 1820, Auntie Fred herself weighs in on the matter, writing to the Duchess of Cambridge that “In truth, it does not matter the level of mischief the Duck [her unkind name for the Dowager Duchess of Kent] has gotten herself into. The matter of fact is that her man, who she has praised to the skies, has betrayed them [Charlotte and Leopold]. Duck is therefore guilty by association. And knowing these Hanover tempers as we do, I’m sure you join me in not wishing to take her place one whit. God help her when our good Lotte takes her throne - I certainly shall not.”

    A remarkable trait of Leopold not often noted is his ability to compartmentalize. Even while laying the foundation of the Quarrel, and reverting back to some Army language that makes Mary Gillray Stockmar (who does not speak German or Russian but understands tones and gestures just fine) blush and Auntie Fred laugh, Leopold organizes their departure to London in record time. Only hours after the discovery of the records, Charlotte and Leopold are on the road, with a visibly uncomfortable Gilly and Stockmar (Auntie Fred having been left behind at Claremont to keep an eye on the children and the still oblivious Viktoria). The carriage ride is completely silent aside from the occasional cries of baby Lottie, who her mother has brought along (having no time to hire a wet nurse just yet). Stockmar will later comment when teasingly invited on an exploratory trip of the Arctic “I’ve been there - eight hours in a carriage with a frigidity your Artic couldn’t touch”. Upon arrival in London bright and early the next morning, Charlotte and Leopold stop at Gloucester House, where her aunt and uncle, the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh welcome them [1]. They only remain at Gloucester House for an hour and a half -enough time to wash, change, and eat- before Charlotte, Leopold and Stockmar head out again. The first stop on their list: the Prime Minister. Liverpool is shocked to see the Princess of Wales (as Charlotte will always be to him) out and about so soon after giving birth, but that’s nothing compared to his shock regarding the documents they show him. They allow his secretary to make copies of the documents to show the rest of the government, and take a light tea before leaving. This moment seals Liverpool’s hatred for George IV and his admiration for Charlotte; until the day he dies, Liverpool will be the official Vice President of the Charlotte Fan Club (the president, despite the Quarrel, will always be Leopold) [2].

    The next stop on their list is Thomas Denman, Caroline’s lawyer, who considers these books ‘a godsend’ and Charlotte ‘a most proper daughter’. Denman is followed by John Copley and Robert Gifford, the Solicitor General for England [3] and Wales and the Attorney General for England and Wales respectively [4]. Leopold allows himself a slight chuckle at the looks on their faces and notes that ‘lawyers sell their scruples in school and their consciences in court, but their souls are always for sale’. The two men fall over themselves assuring the heiress (now uncontested in their minds) that they were simply performing their duties to the best of their ability, as their loyalty to Britain demanded, and they had never felt any animosity towards her or believed the charges, they were just serving the Crown, and they would be honored to serve her just as ably when she takes the throne, and she will remember that, won’t she?

    (When she takes the throne, only Copley is still alive and Charlotte does remember him and his service to her father - Copley never suffers under her reign, but he will later remark that he never left her presence without feeling the need for a stiff drink)

    A quick visit is paid to Charlotte’s childhood friend and support, the Duke of Leinster, who stood up for her mother in court and voted to veto the bill. He is not shown the books but is thanked for his loyalty and invited to bring his family to Claremont whenever he desires [5]. She also surprises him by asking him to do her a favor: the next time he goes to Ireland, to find a native Irish speaker to come and tutor her son, Prince George of Kendal, in the language. Charlotte is determined that her son not only speaks diplomatic languages such as German and French, but that he can communicate with any of his subjects from any part of his realm in their own tongue. She will also be hiring a Scotsman to teach her son Gaelic and a Welshman to teach him Welsh - though these tutors will not be needed for a few years, she wants to find them as soon as possible in order to have them on hand when George starts his lessons. Charlotte will take the language lessons alongside her son and while she may never become fluent, she hopes to at least become conversational. And -if Leicester could be a dear-, would he mind telling as many people as he possibly could about her plans for her son’s language lessons, in order to assure the people of her son’s suitability as a future king? Leicester happily agrees and will later remark that ‘her courage at such a moment is nothing short of kingly. Henry V could have learned much from Charlotte I!”

    The day is ending, and Leopold wants to return to Gloucester House. They have seen everyone he thinks they needed to see - the copies of the books are in all the right hands, everyone who needs to know has been informed. Charlotte disagrees. She orders the coachman to Buckingham House, where she kisses Leopold goodbye and tells him not to wait up for her. Clutching the books to her chest, she enters the palace, and demands to be taken to her father. The secretaries and aides de camp are unable to put her off and after thirty minutes, she finds herself waiting in what was once her grandmother’s sitting room. George IV enters, cheerful and welcoming - the sins he has committed against his daughter do not enter into his mind. He chides her for traveling so soon after giving birth but thanks her for being so good as to bring his first granddaughter to London for him to see, knowing his busy schedule will not allow him to travel to Claremont for some time. Charlotte accepts his kiss and his greetings, and talks with him of the baby for a moment. It is, both their diaries and later statements will agree, one of the few nice, easy meetings of their relationship. When George asks what she is holding, Charlotte shows him the books. And it is here that the historical record of the meeting ends - what was said, what excuses were made, apologies given- all are unknown. Charlotte and George never spoke of the books or their meeting regarding them. The meeting lasts for several hours and when Charlotte returns to Gloucester House late that evening, the Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh notes that ‘she looks so terribly pale, her eyes so bruised and sad - rather like her father died than she had a meeting with him’.

    Two days after Charlotte’s day of meetings, she and Leopold and the Stockmars return to Claremont with baby Lotte. Liverpool addresses Parliament and announces that the bill has been withdrawn, due to “a lack of evidence, falsehood from all quarters, and the unjust treatment of their beloved heiress, the Duchess of Kendal, a good Christian woman if one was ever found”. The divorce of George IV and Caroline is tabled; it will no doubt rise up again one day when George is feeling a little more cocky and Caroline is a little more unpopular. The legitimacy of Charlotte will never again be questioned.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------​

    [1] Prince William Frederick, The Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh (a nephew of George III and first cousin to George IV) and Princess Mary, The The Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (daughter of George III, sister of George IV, and aunt / godmother to Charlotte). William Frederick supported Caroline of Brunswick against George IV in the Pains and Penalties trial. Mary was close to George IV and hated Caroline; when Caroline left for Italy, Mary congratulated George "on the prospect of a good riddance. Heaven grant that she may not return again and that we may never see more of her.". She was close to Charlotte, however, and would - I believe - take offense at someone trying to disinherit her niece.

    [2] Auntie Fred is the secretary of this club, Stockmar is the treasurer, and Mary Gillray is head of public relations.

    [3] Robert Gifford, 1st Baron Gifford. Sat in the House of Commons as the representative of Eye from 1817 - 1824. Served as Solicitor General between 1817 and 1819 and as Attorney General between 1819 and 1824.

    [4] John Singleton Copley, 1st Baron Lyndhurst. Entered parliament as member for Yarmouth in the Isle of Wight in 1817. In December 1818, Copley was made King's Serjeant and Chief Justice of Chester. He became Solicitor General on 24 July 1819 and was knighted in October, became Attorney General in 1824, Master of the Rolls in 1826 and Lord Chancellor in 1827. Became 1st Baron Lyndhurst in 1827.

    [5] Augustus Fitzgerald, 3rd Duke of Leinster. Previously mentioned. Born in 1819, married Lady Charlotte Augusta Stanhope, daughter of the 3rd Earl of Harrington, in 1818. His oldest son, Charles Fitzgerald, was born in March 1819 - eight months before Prince George of Kendal. Their friendship is entirely my own invention.


    I'm back and officially a registered nurse! Thank you guys for your patience and loyalty - it means the world to me! Be sure to register as an official member of the Charlotte Fan Club!
     
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    Chapter 9
  • baby+victoria.jpg

    Portrait of Princess Charlotte of Kendal, 1822.

    Upon the return of the Kendals to Claremont, the battle lines of the Quarrel are clearly drawn. In front of the children, Charlotte and Leopold are as loving and warm as ever. Away from the children, they do not speak to each other. It does not help Leopold’s mood that, aside from the still oblivious Victoire and the newly returned Conroy, the entire household is firmly in Charlotte’s camp. Even his loyal Stockmar has been forced to admit in his journal that “The Duchess of Kent does not inspire confidence in the idea that she was innocent in Conroy’s plans - their previous closeness makes it hard to believe that she would be completely unaware of his plots. Even had she not known the extent, she knew something.” His wife is less subtle: “She’s guilty as sin or I’m the Pope, Holy Mother, and Queen of France all in one.” In the first week of September, tentative plans are being made for baby Charlotte’s christening next month. The princess -now known as Lolly in the family, thanks to her brother’s mispronunciation of Lottie- is in need of godparents, and despite the Quarrel, it is up to her parents to choose them. Leopold’s idea of Victoire as godmother earns him a side-eye glare from his wife that adds at least three weeks to the duration of the quarrel. There does not seem to be an end in sight to this stalemate. It certainly does not seem like it can get any worse.

    (It most certainly does get worse).​

    On September 5th, whilst the Claremont household is sitting to tea (Charlotte, Auntie Fred, and Maffie on one couch, with Gilly on a chair close to them, Leopold and Stockmar on another couch, and Victoire and Conroy alone at a table), John Singleton Copley [1], Lord Privy Seal [2], and three members of the Grenadier Guards [3] arrive. They are there with a royal warrant to arrest Sir John Conroy under “suspicion of treason; of plotting to deny our beloved Heiress, The Princess Charlotte, Duchess of Kendal, of her hereditary rights and those of her children; of plotting to sow dissent between his majesty and his heir; of bribery, corruption, and perjury”. He is to be conveyed to Newgate prison immediately, to await being called to answer the charges laid against him by a special court specifically convened for this purpose. This goes about as well as can be expected: Victoire breaks into hysterics, Auntie Fred applauds, and Conroy begins shouting. He shouts as he stands his ground in front of the tea table shouts as he tries to flee (knocking Mary Gillray Stockmar and Mary Fitzclarence to the ground in his haste), shouts at the guards attempt to subdue him, shouts as it takes all three guards and Leopold to subdue him (Leopold won’t lie, punching Conroy felt really good), and then shouts threats and curses on Charlotte as he dragged from the room, the most infamous one being: “I would have set a child far better than your mewling weaklings on the throne, and been praised for it!”.

    But Copley and the Lord Privy Seal aren’t done yet. After Conroy is bound and removed to the waiting carriage, they turn to Victoire, still in hysterics. She is also to come, to be placed under guard at Kensington Palace, to wait to be questioned about being an accessory to Conroy’s crimes; specifically, trying to see Charlotte and her children disinherited in favour of Princess Victoria and the yet unborn Kent child. She is not being arrested - officially, Victoire is only being questioned. Now it is Leopold’s turn to shout and rage about the dishonour, the shame of causing a fright to a pregnant woman with no evidence of such a crime, to accuse unjustly a member of the Royal Family. Charlotte, it is noted, says nothing. Historians are later divided on the exact reason behind this silence. The fanatic fans of Charlotte say that she had nothing to do with the arrest of Victoire, and was simply silent from shock, as happens to us all. The rabid anti-Charlotte factions insist that she not only knew of the arrest, she arranged it and planted the false evidence necessary to get Victoire arrested. The middle faction agree that Charlotte definitely knew something, how much of something cannot be decided, but didn’t believe that Victoire would be in any real danger. Centuries later, the famous Charlotte historian, Melanie Baillie would write: “It was a power move at its core - Charlotte was letting Victoire know exactly what she was capable of doing in regards to protecting her family; what she could make happen to Victoire if she moved against Charlotte again. At this point, the innocence or guilt of the Duchess of Kent was irrelevant. This was Charlotte’s first use of her future queenly power, her first clear order: do not touch me or mine.” This is a definite moment in the Quarrel: Leopold is convinced that Charlotte told her father to have Victoire questioned, that she believes his sister is guilty to the point where she will get the law involved, and that she might have given information in such a way as to make Victoire look guilty (Leopold won’t out and out say that Charlotte lied to get Victoire arrested, but he definitely thinks she chose her words in her conversation with George IV very carefully when it came to Victoire’s guilt). Charlotte is angry that Leopold is not entirely on her side, that he thinks she lied to get Victoire arrested, and that he refuses to see that his sister is guilty by association if not by action. She is definitely not telling what she did or did not say during her conversation with her father.

    In the end, Victoire is only held for questioning for three days. After a rigorous examination by Copley, the Lord Privy Seal, Robert Gifford [4], and Thomas Denman (having offered his services as Victoire’s legal representation) [5], Victoire is deemed to have officially been innocent in the crimes of Sir John Conroy. Key word being officially. Conroy himself continues to wait in Newgate prison for his trial. Having nowhere else to go (her rooms in Kensington Palace being ‘remodeled’), Victoire returns to Claremont, where she takes to sulking and hiding in her rooms. Her one interaction with Charlotte upon her return involves language so fierce that Stockmar only records it in his journal as “unfit for a sailor to use to a criminal, never mind a Duchess to a future Queen”.

    The aforementioned state of the Quarrel continues on through September, only broken by one happy moment in September. Charlotte’s dear friend, the Duchesse de Berry, gives birth to a son on September 29th. Leopold and Charlotte both consent to be godparents to little Henri, and Leopold sends his new godson a beautifully illustrated book of German fairy tales that Henri will one day pass onto his own children and grandchildren [6]. Maria Carolina is honored by the Kendals’ obvious love for her son and writes an effusive letter thanking them for agreeing to be his godparents, and inviting them to Paris for the baptism or simply to visit. To Charlotte, Maria Carolina -herself belonging to a difficult family- writes privately that she takes Charlotte’s side in the Quarrel, but asks if being right is worth losing her relationship with her husband? Her advice, seconded by Auntie Fred and the Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews in separate conversations, is to let Victoire hang herself. Charlotte gives no response to this advice but does leave off demanding Leopold acknowledge his sister’s guilt.

    On October 1st, Princess Charlotte of Kendal is officially christened in the drawing room at Claremont House by the Most Revered and Right Honorable Archbishop of Canterbury as ‘Charlotte Elizabeth Augusta Sophia’. Her godparents are Auntie Fred (who holds her namesake at the font and cries throughout the ceremony, though she vehemently denies it), HIM Empress Yelizaveta of Russia [7] (represented by Miss Mary Fitzclarence), HSH Countess Sophie of Mensdorff-Pouilly [8] (represented by Baroness Mary Stockmar), HH The Elector of Hesse [9] (represented by Baron Stockmar), HRH The Duke of Sussex [10] (represented by his son, Augustus d’Este [11]), and HSH Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha [12] (represented by his brother, The Duke of Kendal). The christening is derailed by Victoire, who sits in the corner and glares at Charlotte throughout the ceremony, and makes a very loud comment on how unfortunate it was that she, as the baby’s highest ranking paternal aunt, was not allowed to stand as godmother. She also spends the luncheon afterwards sulking and refusing to speak to anyone aside from the Archbishop - a popular story claims that Victoire announced that her niece was “insulted by the pack of bastards, commoners, and liars” at her christening and she would not further insult her niece by conversing with “such a low sort of people”. It’s one of those stories that if it is not true, it should be, and numerous historical writers and filmmakers run wild with the line.
    `
    Augustus d’Este, Charlotte’s cousin, comes to stay with Kendals at this time - a great friend to both Leopold and Charlotte, it is believed that he, as a relative outsider to the issues, can help settle the Quarrel. Victoire’s behavior at the christening, which Charlotte views as a slap in the face, does not make his job any easier. His sudden attraction to his cousin, Mary Fitzclarence, does not help him focus either. Charlotte, Auntie Fred, and Gilly take a particular joy in throwing the young pair together whenever possible. Even Leopold -though still not conversing with Charlotte whenever he can avoid it, and still officially on Victoire’s team- aids in Augustus’ courting of Mary, teasing him that when they have a son, it must be named Leopold in his honor. As for Mary, she is shy of the attention from her handsome cousin, and worrisome regarding losing her position (a very fine one, all things considered) in Charlotte’s household if she marries. The courtship proceeds slowly, and is considered a bright spot in the dreary days of the Quarrel.

    On October 27th, the Dowager Duchess of Kent is delivered of a handsome, large baby boy whom she names Edward, for “his dear departed Papa”, and who automatically becomes the Duke of Kent. It is noted by Auntie Fred that the child "most strongly resembles his mother - lucky for Duck!"

    On October 30th, the official results of the trial of Sir John Conroy are announced: he has been found guilty of all charges, and sentenced to death by hanging. On October 31st, it is announced that the high traitor, Sir John Conroy, has escaped from prison. No one is quite sure exactly how this came about - the guards blame the head guard, the head guard blames the warden, the warden blames... well, publicly, the warden has egg on his face; privately, the warden blames a certain higher-up. A very higher up. The highest higher up. Conroy’s family, in shame, make haste back to Ireland and take up residence with Lady Conroy’s father [13] - where the children change their surname to their maternal grandfather’s in order to try and escape the utter scandal. They survive on a meager pension from the Duchess of Kent (and a larger one from the Duchess of Kendal [14]).

    Unrelatedly, on October 31st a ship bound for Australia sets sail, bearing a certain passenger by the name of John Ponsonby [15].


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------​

    [1] Remember him? John Singleton Copley, 1st Baron Lyndhurst. Entered parliament as member for Yarmouth in the Isle of Wight in 1817. In December 1818, Copley was made King's Serjeant and Chief Justice of Chester. He became Solicitor General on 24 July 1819 and was knighted in October, became Attorney General in 1824, Master of the Rolls in 1826 and Lord Chancellor in 1827. Became 1st Baron Lyndhurst in 1827.

    [2] John Fane, 10th Earl of Westmorland. Served as Lord Privy Seal for 35 years from 1798 to 1833.

    [3] A regiment of the King’s personal guard, established in 1656. Also known as the 1st Regiment of Foot Guards.

    [4] He’s back too. Robert Gifford, 1st Baron Gifford. Sat in the House of Commons as the representative of Eye from 1817 - 1824. Served as Solicitor General between 1817 and 1819 and as Attorney General between 1819 and 1824.

    [5] Previously the lawyer of Queen Caroline

    [6] Yes, you read that correctly.

    [7] Born Duchess Luise of Baden, she was the wife of Alexander I of Russia. Her life was generally pretty sad - she was in love with her husband early on, who neglected her. She first found refuge for her loneliness in a close intimate friendship with the beautiful Countess Golovina. Later, she started a romantic liaison with Alexander's best friend Prince Adam Czartoryski. She had two daughters, Mariya and Yelizaveta, who both died young, and were believed to be the offspring of Czartoryski. She’s a very loving godmother to little Charlotte ITTL, and considers her one of the few bright lights of her life.

    [8] Born HSH Princess Sophie of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, she is the eldest sister of Leopold and Victoire.

    [9] Wilhelm II of Hesse. A great-grandson of George II of Great Britain through the Princess Mary, he is a second cousin once removed of Charlotte. Famous for his marital issues and fertility.

    [10] Charlotte’s uncle who excused himself from the trial of her mother on the grounds of consanguinity. Here she’s rewarding him for this loyalty and showing her own to him by making him a godfather of her eldest daughter.

    [11] Charlotte’s first cousin, born Mr. Augustus d'Este. The son of the Duke of Sussex by his first (unequal) marriage to Lady Augusta Murray, he is considered legitimate but not in line to the throne or his father’s titles due to the fact that his parents’ marriage contravened the Royal Marriages Act 1772, since it was not approved by the king. Augustus d'Este is the earliest recorded person for whom a definite diagnosis of multiple sclerosis can be made - His symptoms began at age 28, with a sudden transient visual loss after the funeral of a friend. during the course of his disease he developed weakness of the legs, clumsiness of the hands, numbness, dizziness, bladder disturbances, and erectile dysfunction. By 1843 he was experiencing persistent symptoms including tremor and nocturnal spasms, and in 1844 he began to use a wheelchair. In his last years he was confined to his bed. He kept an optimistic view of life, however. He never married OTL but he’s a nice guy who’s gonna have a rough time of it, so I figured he might get some happiness with Maffie. And I’m a hopeless romantic.

    [12] The elder brother of Leopold, he married Princess Mária Antónia von Koháry in 1815 and established the Catholic branch of the Saxe-Coburg und Gotha dynasty. Pay attention, he’s coming back.

    [13] Major-General Benjamin Fisher, he was previously Conroy’s commanding officer in the Royal Artillery.

    [14] Charlotte’s not heartless. And Victoire's not rich enough to really be handing out pensions that people can live on. Since, you know, her secretary was robbing her blind.

    [15] For those of you who haven’t caught on, John Conroy’s full name was John Ponsonby Conroy. Not the brightest guy, J.C., but it'll get him to Australia.
     
    Chapter 10
  • bugs-1024x587.jpg

    Christmas card of Frederica, The Duchess of York and Albany, 1820

    After everything that has happened over the year, the Kendals are quite ready to bid goodbye to 1820. Having been invited to come spend the holidays in London before Lolly’s birth, Charlotte and Leopold decide it would do them -and their popularity- good to be seen in London society as a united front with her father, hopefully putting to death the last of the rumors of Charlotte’s illegitimacy. (This decision is reached in the form of notes, stand-ins via Stockmar and Gilly, and short, clipped conversations). The Quarrel is still on, and not helped by Victoire’s temper tantrums and snits. Now the mother to the unofficial throne of Hanover (barring any sons by Adelheid and William, which Victoire declares in a letter to her sister Sophie to be “as likely as frost in Hell, given his age and her poor health”), Victoire has gotten herself on a rather high horse. There has been no more conversations regarding Victoria of Kent and George of Kendal getting married - Victoire is now looking for ‘bigger fish’ for her daughter and is considering Prince Wilhelm of the Netherlands, the second in line to the Dutch Throne [1]. Leopold is ready to admit that his sister is difficult, annoying, and even tempting to slap at this point, but he still holds firm that she cannot be guilty of the crimes Charlotte has accused her of. Charlotte is not willing to let go - Victoire almost ruined her future and the future of her children, and Charlotte knows in her bones that she is guilty. Entirely aware of the drama she creates, Victoire enjoys egging it on, deliberately picking fights with Charlotte to run away and whine to Leopold. Stockmar makes a note in his diary of “possibly needing to remove weapons from the home, if this behavior continues, or I fear for the safety of the Duchess of Kent”. For those wondering, the young Duke of Kent continues to strongly favour his mother, to the point where anyone looking for a hint of paternal features is sure to be disappointed.

    In the last week of November, a surprising announcement makes it way to Claremont: it has been decided that the Duke and Duchess of Kendal require a London residence, in order to “keep them closer to the hearts of the King and People” (translation: to make George IV look like less of a terrible person and win him some brownie points through his popular daughter), and the King has decided to award them the Dutch House in Kew Palace for the purpose [2]. The Dutch House becomes a dear place in their hearts (never coming close to Claremont, however) and Charlotte’s second son, William (who was later awarded the house on his marriage), would write of it: “Dear old Dutch House - an island of simplicity and home amongst the mess and muck of London”.

    Like anything else that’s been happening in the last year to the Kendals, Christmas plans do not come easily. Still miffed at her ‘ill treatment’ by Charlotte, Victoire is on the fence about coming to London with the Kendals for Christmas at all. Only after hearing that her and Leopold’s niece, Marie of Wurttemberg [3], will be coming to spend Christmas with them does Victoire relent. On the first day of December 1820, the whole household packs up and moves to London for the winter season, where they settle in nicely. Anxious to show what a good father he is, George IV has spared no expense in having Kew Palace refurbished for his daughter’s family, and the result in quite pleasing - “Almost like George gives a damn” as Auntie Fred states. Marie of Wurttemberg, Leopold and Victoire’s niece, makes a very pleasing impression and is immediately accepted into the family circle (she also, having been informed of the situation by her mother, is careful to take a middle line in the Quarrel). Unmarried, attractive, the niece of the Tsar of Russia through her father and the future consort of Great Britain through her mother, Marie is a catch that needs to be caught. Excited at such a happy prospect to occupy their time - Augustus d’Este, now Charlotte’s private secretary, and Mary Fitzclarence are moving forward, but very slowly- , Charlotte, Auntie Fred, and Gilly set out to find a match for Marie. It doesn’t take long.

    A few days after their arrival in London, Charlotte, Mary Fitzclarence, and Auntie Fred take Marie to meet Adelheid, the Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews, confined to Bushy House in the last months of her pregnancy [4]. Staying with Adelheid this Christmas season is her mother and younger brother, the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen [5]. Handsome, thoughtful, and kind, Bernhard is a year younger than Marie, and ready to fall in love. Which he does, about thirty seconds after Marie walks through the door. It takes her a bit longer - a minute and nineteen seconds- but it’s fairly obvious by the end of the first meeting that there is definitely going to be a second one. Charlotte and Leopold are both pleased - not only is Bernhard of proper rank and title for Marie, he’s a “wonderful young man” in Leopold’s words, and clearly in love with her. Even Bernhard’s fierce mother, Luise Eleonore [6], declared herself “absolutely enchanted” after meeting Marie. Even Victoire’s meddling - she believes her niece can do better than a mere German duke, related only by marriage to the British royal family - does not affect the relationship. Marie and Bernhard continue to meet whenever possible, chaperoned appalling, Victoire complains in a letter to Marie’s mother, by Charlotte, Auntie Fred, Adelheid or the Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews, who all more or less leave the young couple to their own devices.

    It turns out Victoire has another suitor in mind for Marie - George IV. It’s not from auntly fondness either - Victoire is sure that if her niece could become Queen of England and give the King a son, Victoire would be in for life. Aunt to the Queen of the United Kingdom, great-aunt to the new King, and mother of the King of Hanover is quite a coup, it must be admitted. And George IV would be very grateful, she’s sure, to whoever provided him with such a pretty, suitable, not-Caroline wife, so there might even be more perks. He definitely would be grateful but as George points out to Victoire when she brings him this proposal, Parliament has made it pretty clear he’s still married. He’s going to fight it, obviously, but not right now and certainly not till after his coronation in June. Victoire’s plan backfires spectacularly: not only does Bernhard take the news as a challenge and put more effort into winning over Marie, Marie is not pleased with her aunt’s interference and settles firmly into Charlotte’s camp. And Charlotte herself, no longer surprised by Victoire’s nonsense, remarks in her hearing that “as an aunt herself, she could never hope to insult a niece by offering to make her a second wife - a concubine- to a married man.” Leopold takes it all with a sigh and a shot of whiskey and wonders if it’s too late to run away to the colonies.

    On December 23rd, later known as The Night of Engagements, Charlotte and Leopold throw a fabulous ball, their first in Dutch House. It is also a tentative step to reconciliation - they manage to spend the whole night in each other’s company without sniping, silence, or shouting. At the beginning of the evening, it is announced with all due form that the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen has made an offer to the Duchess Marie of Wurttemberg, which has been accepted. Champagne and congratulations are passed around freely, and it sets off the right tone for the rest of the evening. But the romance of the night is far from over. After using their attendance at the party to get approval from his father, Mary’s father, and the King (the uncle to both the bride and groom, who while not in line to the throne think it wise to not anger him), Augustus proposes to Mary exactly at the stroke of midnight in the corner of the library in Dutch House - she accepts. The engagement is privately announced to Charlotte and Leopold after the party, who are overjoyed, and Auntie Fred, who offers to stand as godmother to their first child - provided it’s a boy (Girls are much too much trouble, she declares, smiling fondly as Prince George of Kendal pushes down Princess Victoria of Kent in the corner of the room). Victoire is pointedly uniterested in “the marrying of bastards” and scuttles off to send a letter to Australia. Don’t ask who it’s going to, that’s rude. Charlotte and Leopold are even feeling kindly toward each other when it’s all said and done, and the cracks of the Quarrel are beginning to slightly be shored up.

    1820 ends just as dramatically as it had begun, and everyone is left wondering what 1821 - and the coronation of George IV - will bring.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    [1] Willem III of the Netherlands. Queen Victoria OTL called him “an uneducated farmer”, the New York Times called him “the greatest debauchee of the age”, and everyone else called him Billy the Brute. Erratic, autocratic, cruel, and capricious - you know he’s coming back in a big way ITTL.

    [2] Dutch House is the only remaining building of the previous Kew Palace complex on the River Thames in London. It was offered to the Dowager Duchess of Kent OTL for a home but she refused it, calling it “an old house quite unfit for the princess and me to occupy, being very inadequate in accommodation and almost destitute of furniture”. William IV had plans to expand it that never came about. OTL it was unused until Queen Victoria moved Dutch House and Queen Charlotte’s cottage to Kew Gardens for her diamond jubilee.

    [3] Marie of Wurttemberg, daughter of Duke Alexander of Wurttemberg and Antoinette of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. Her father was the brother of Empress Mariya Feodorovna (Sophia Dorothea of Wurttemberg), making Marie first cousin to Emperor Alexander I and Emperor Nicholas I. Her father served in the Russian army from 1800 to 1832, and served as the Governor of Belarus, where Marie grew up. Her mother was the second daughter of Duke Francis of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld and Countess Auguste Reuss-Ebersdorf, and the older sister of Leopold and Victoire. OTL Marie married her uncle Ernest II after his divorce from Louise of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg and became stepmother to Ernest and Albert, and generally had a sucky life. As that’s gross and I’m not a fan (and neither is Charlotte), we have done away with that and given Marie a much nicer destiny.

    [4] Her OTL child, Princess Elizabeth of Clarence, was born six weeks premature on December 10, 1820. Here, Adelheid’s pregnancy is going to last a little longer.

    [5] Bernhard II, The Duke of Saxe-Meiningen (1800 - 1882). Succeeded to the dukedom with he was only three after his father’s death; his mother ruled as his regent till he came of age in 1821. OTL was forced to abdicate after siding with the Austrians in the Austro-Prussian war.

    [6] Born Luise Eleonore of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, this woman was awesome. When her husband died in 1803, Luise Eleonore ruled as her son’s regent until he came of age in 1821. It’s said that “she ruled with energy, courage, and good sense during the Napoleonic Wars, which for the next decade ravaged the Saxon states”. Despite having her duchy marched over by Russian and French soldiers, Luise Eleonore refused to flee and firmly stayed put in her castle throughout the wars. After her son took over, she retired and spent time in England with her daughter, Adelheid.



    I know this wasn't my best one, but I'm just trying to get 1820 wrapped up so we can get into the drama of 1821!
     
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    Chapter 11
  • 1280px-Coronation_of_George_IV.jpg

    The Coronation of George IV, 19 July 1821
    [Sixth from the left in the bottom row of seats, you can see Charlotte, Duchess of Kendal (gold and white gown) and her husband, the Duke of Kendal]

    The year of Our Lord, 1821, is ushered in at Dutch House with all due ceremony. George of Kendal, allowed to stay up, watches the clock eagerly for midnight to arrive (and falls asleep on a couch at 9:30). The rest of the company celebrate in the drawing room of Dutch House with champagne, music, and gifts. Leopold himself makes a big move towards dismantling the Quarrel by giving Charlotte a small, diamond ring. While this gift seems a little... simple for a couple of their ways and means (Victoire of Kent, still there and still causing trouble, remarks it "awfully mean of her brother to show Lotte exactly what she deserves"), it has a big meaning. It is the wedding ring of Charlotte's namesake grandmother, with her grandparents' initials and wedding dates engraved on the inside [1]. Sent to Leopold by Charlotte’s aunt, the Princess Royal, it is a peace offering and a reminder of the love he holds for her. Charlotte is touched by this and immediately puts the ring on her right ring finger (her left being taken up with her own wedding band) - years later, as Queen, she will declare the ring part of the Royal Jewels. It will be used as the wedding ring of every future queen consort and queen regent from then onwards, including the current Queen. But Leopold is not done with his gifts yet: he has secured himself and Charlotte permission to travel to Bernhard and Marie's wedding in Saxe-Meiningen in April, with a stop off in Paris on the way to meet her dear friend Maria Carolina. The accepted view is that this is the beginning of the end of the Quarrel, and a married couple is reunited through a gift of love from another married couple, and so on and so forth.

    The less well known (but more used, bruised, and slightly abused in historical fiction mediums throughout the next 200 years) version is slightly different. The ring is still given, the accord is still made, but a third party plays into the true ending of the Quarrel: Princess Victoria of Kent - Drina in the family. The story goes as such: Charlotte, coming into the nursery to check on her children, finds Drina crying in her bed. Asking her niece and goddaughter what is wrong, Drina replies that she is crying because her Auntie Lotte does not love her anymore and must think her a bad girl. Since Drina is a) not stupid (despite later life choices that one must squint at sideways to see the logic in), and b) has been around through the Conroy & Co drama, her little three year old brain has realized that Charlotte is pissed. As later renowned psychologist Marie Bonaparte [2] will point out, children of this age believe the world is centered around them. So Drina's thought process is fairly easy to follow: adults are pissed, ergo they are pissed at her and think she is bad. Since Drina more or less worships her Auntie Lotte and Uncle Leo, this last few months has been hard on her. Charlotte, feeling guilty for letting her anger make her niece / cousin / goddaughter upset, apologizes and assures Drina that she's not mad at her and thinks she's a wonderful little girl. This makes Drina happy - so happy that she asks her aunt, very innocently, if Auntie Lotte is not angry with her, is angry with Mama over writing to Sir John? At this point, Charlotte gets Leopold involved in the conversation. While not one to take the word of a toddler as damning evidence against his sister, Leopold is at least willing to explore the possibility of Victoire's less than innocence. Her bad behavior the last few months has really worn down his patience, and he figures this will put the whole issue to bed one way or the other. The story goes that Stockmar is set to reading Victoire's mail, while Leopold himself searches Victoire's rooms and comes across a portfolio filled with letters from a certain J.C., recently 'displaced' to Australia, and full of advice on protecting and advancing the rights of her children. Straight out of the pen of the escaped traitor Sir John Conroy, it's fairly damning stuff.

    Now obviously, there's not a lot of documentation backing up this second scenario. To the disappointment of scholars and historians everywhere, no one wrote down a word for word transcription of this event, even Auntie Fred (who's eventual brutally honest and remarkably witty memoirs will remain a top read for all history fans). So, there's a decent chunk of people who are iffy that this ever went down. But there's evidence if you know how to look for it. In her diaries, Victoria of Kent will write of "an incident, when I was but three or four, with Auntie Lotte..." and "a crime of a child that Mama held over me for many years, something that I resolved to never doing to my own little ones". Leopold will mention in a letter to his sister Antoinette that "Having realized the extent of her [Victoire's] mischief, I now write to you to ask if you could invite her to visit you, so that she might remove herself from our home...". Auntie Fred chimes in by writing in a letter to her sister-in-law, Auguste, The Duchess of Cambridge, that "perhaps now with cold weather coming, certain creatures shall depart- perhaps to Australia? Ducks do so long to fly south, after all - or at least, that is what I'm told they write". There is no public falling out over Victoire's secret being discovered but all historians can agree that after January of 1821, the British royal family becomes decidedly cooler to her.

    Adelheid, the Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews, delivers of a healthy, happy baby girl on the 14th of February, who will always be known as "Valla" in the family in honor of her birthday [3]. Victoire, sure now of her son's future as the King of Hanover, writes a condescending note of congratulations, but refuses to come and visit Bushy House for "an unremarkable girl of unremarkable parents, who will simply be family of the King of Hanover" as she remarks to Flora Hastings. This apparently sends William on a violent rant of epic proportions, ending with "Ducks with no common sense, sticking their damned heads into the barrels of guns and not expecting us to bloody well blow it off!" (Auntie Fred's nickname has spread and she is loving it). The little Clarence princess is baptized on March 1st in the drawing room of Bushy House, with the names 'Elizabeth Georgiana Louise Mary'. Her godparents include the King, Charlotte, her maternal uncle, Duchess Marie of Wurttemberg, the Duke of Sussex, and her maternal grandmother. Despite the remarks of the Duchess of Kent, Princess Elizabeth of Clarence will become a remarkable figure in history, known for her diplomacy, charitable endeavors, and devotion to education. She will help fund a university, start a nursing corps, build churches, fund archeological expeditions, and become a champion for the advancement of women in the Carolean era. On the other hand, Victoire's pride and joy, the young Duke of Kent and heir to Hanover, will become... well, you'll see. The same day as Princess Elizabeth's christening, Mary Fitzclarence and Augustus d'Este are married, also in the drawing room of Bushy House (why waste a perfectly good family gathering and a priest?). In a moment of generosity - perhaps spurned by the fact that with the Duchess of Kent's recent behavior, George IV is no longer the most disliked member in the family, and he'd like to keep it that way-, the King grants Augustus the title "Baron of Romney" [4]. The new Lord and Lady Romney travel to Rye to stay at Lamb House, a gift from the groom's father [5].

    The Kendals, the Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews, and the Kents board a ship three days after the wedding / christening (Auntie Fred having elected to stay home with Adelheid and Princess Elizabeth), and sail to Calais, landing on March 5th. They then travel onto Paris, arriving two days later on the 7th. In Paris, the Kendals are welcomed warmly. Charlotte’s love for the Duchesse de Berry and her children have won her admiration in Paris, and her charm and gaiety endear her to the Parisians even more. The Duchesse d’Orléans [6], having a special fondness for the British, remarked that “Madame Kendal is that most rare thing in our world: exactly what she presents herself to be. If she was a man, they would call her a prince among men; she must settle then for being a jewel among women”. Maria Carolina is thrilled to see her dear friend in the flesh at last, and the two women waste no time making up for lost time. It is rumored that it was on this trip that the idea of a marriage between Maria Carolina’s son, Henri, and Charlotte’s daughter is first mentioned. Obviously, the eldest daughter of the Queen of an O.G. Protestant nation can’t marry a future Catholic King of France. Obviously. Right? Leopold and the Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews are both also popular in France, both finding an unexpected friend in the Duc d’Orléans [7], whose wife has joined the Charlotte fan club. Indeed, the only person not having a good time in Paris is the Duchess of Kent. Having offered her daughter Victoria for the Comte de Chambord, Victoire finds herself rather put in her place by Maria Carolina, who responds that “her son must marry a daughter of a monarch, one who will bring pride and prestige to France”. Literally translated: Hell to the no.

    The bachelor of the hour, five month old Henri, Comte de Chambord, gives no opinion.​

    After two weeks in Paris, the British royal party is forced to go on the move again, though not without much weeping and tearful promises of reunion on the way back from Germany. On the 21st of March, the royal group sets out towards Meiningen, the capital of Bernhard’s duchy. After another week of travel, they arrive on the 28th of March. On the first of April, the marriage of Her Royal Highness the Duchess Antoinette Friederike Auguste Marie Anna of Württemberg and His Highness Bernhard Erich Freund, The Duke of Saxe-Meiningen is celebrated will all due pomp and ceremony in the castle chapel at the Schloss Elisabethenburg. Marie’s pageboys include her two young cousins, the Princes of Kendal, and one of her bridesmaids is the Princess Victoria of Kent. Other members of the extended Saxe-Coburg clan attend: Leopold’s brother Ferdinand and his wife Maria Antonia and their two sons [8], The Duke of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha and his long-suffering wife with their own two sons [9], Marie’s parents and siblings, and even the Grand Duchess Anna Feodorovna, Marie’s long-suffering and somewhat scandalous aunt [10], who instantly becomes good friends with Charlotte. The Conroy Affair is not mentioned - in public, that is, though it soon comes about that most of the family is rather on Charlotte’s side in the matter. Luise, the Duchess of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha, particularly is on Charlotte’s team - her second son, Albrecht, is another of Charlotte’s godchildren, and one that Charlotte is particularly devoted to. Albrecht and George of Kendal become close in their time in Germany, the youthful foundation of a friendship that will last them the rest of their lives. Albrecht is not so liked by his cousin Drina, who is learning to put on airs and graces with her mother’s influence, and pushes Albrecht away from her during play, remarking “Only kings and princes” (presumably meaning that she will only play or interact with kings or future kings). This statement will prove to be terribly (and for Victoria, rather unfortunately) ironic in about forty years.

    At the end of April, the Kendals, Kents, and the Duke of St. Andrews return to England, stopping off for another visit in Paris for five days, before finally returning to London at the beginning of May. The Kendals, now fully reconciled, settle in nicely into Dutch House with Auntie Fred, the Stockmars, and the d’Estes, newly returned from their honeymoon. While the Duchess of Kent still has not received a London residence (Charlotte is almost positive that her father is convinced that if he holds out long enough, Victoire will just give up and go back to Germany), they have been given Queen Charlotte’s cottage on the grounds of Kew Palace as a residence. Victoire, naturally, has a lot of complaints. Particularly about her being treated according to her rank as the mother of the heir of Hanover. This comment starts to wear on the patience of the current King of Hanover, who is said to remark to his mistress that “if one must put a bastard on the throne of Hanover, better a Clarence than a Conroy”.

    With all this familial harmony, all the British royal family is missing is it's cherry of chaos on the top of the drama sundae: Caroline, the erstwhile Queen.

    The betting pools are split neatly down the middle on whether or not Caroline will actually dare to show up for the Coronation; Charlotte is pretty sure she will but is hoping her mother has learned her lesson about angering the King and screwing with her daughter's future. Charlotte even sends a letter to her mother to that effect. Too bad Caroline doesn't heed a word of it. Nor a word of Liverpool's advice to not go to the coronation. Nor a word of Auntie Fred's advice, the Duke of York's advice, the Duke and Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews' advice, or her own nephew's [11] advice. Even the advice of Bartolomeo Pergami (yep, he's still around) is ignored. She is Queen, damn it, and will be crowned as such.

    On July 19th, the drama is palpable in the air. No one really cares about the coronation itself at this point; as the new Lord Romney, formerly Augustus d'Este, writes in his diary "the coronation is but the plate of the dish - the meeting is the meat of it". In an attempt to cheer Charlotte, Leopold gives her a gift: he has recovered from Lady Conyngham (with the King's blessing) Queen Charlotte's jewelry in its entirety, as was promised to Charlotte in the Queen's will. (Officially, the King brought it up and had Lady Conyngham return the 'borrowed' jewels in exchange for new ones and a popularity boost for the King. Unofficially, Lady Conyngham can count and does not care to anger the future sovereign any more than she has to, and brings up the jewel swap to the King herself). Either way, Charlotte is touched and thrilled and wears her diamond collet necklace, earrings, and the diamond ring from her grandmother's marriage. For her tiara, she chooses her ruby and diamond strawberry leaf tiara [12], a Christmas gift from her father the previous year. Armed in her diamonds and new golden gown, she is ready for whatever the day will bring. Lolly and William will be staying at home with Mary Stockmar, but George will, by the decree of his grandfather, attend the coronation.

    As expected, the coronation is a hot, hot mess.​

    First of all, George IV spends the entire ceremony making eyes at, winking at, nodding at, and generally paying more attention to Lady Conyngham than the ceremony, winning him absolutely no brownie points. Victoire of Kent is bored, bored, bored, to the point where she is caught rolling her eyes and yawning during the ceremony, which wins her absolutely no brownie points. In truth, only Prince George of Kendal wins brownie points for being absolutely and adorably serious when he kneels before his grandfather to swear his oath of allegiance. The winner of the most lost brownie points of the day, however, is Caroline of Brunswick, the erstwhile and now uncrowned Queen of the United Kingdom. Caroline, not being invited to the coronation and repeatedly told not to show up by a great many important people, shows up. Barred from the doors at both the East and West Cloister, she tries to come in through Westminster Hall, and ends up stopped by the guards, bayonets held under her chin, until the doors are slammed in her face. Not one to be cowed by a slammed door, Caroline begins banging on the doors and shouting to let her, the Queen, inside. She then tries to go through the Poets’ Corner entrance, where she is thankfully dissuaded by Sir Robert Inglis, who finally persuades her to return home. This scene is the talk of the coronation, and it costs Caroline many of her popularity points with the common people, who want “no foolish Queen” and even jeer at her carriage as it drives away. [13] Her bad behavior has finally caught up with her, and now everyone is deserting her. Utterly ashamed by mother’s behavior (one witness reports that Charlotte “winced with every blow upon the door, and blushed deeper with every shout”), Charlotte herself remarks to Auntie Fred that “she cannot recognize her own mother as Queen after such behavior, which is so low that one could expect more of a drunken madam in a bad house”.

    Caroline’s not done yet - when she gets home that night, she takes milk of magnesia and laudanum, citing pain. Her pain continues to get worse as the week goes on, and she even rewrites her will, burns her papers, and designs her tombstone. It will read “Here lies Caroline - The Injured Queen of England” [14]. However, the tombstone is not yet needed - within weeks, Caroline is up and in fighting form, ready to cause more mischief [15]. In deference to her poor health, however, the Queen retreats back to Italy ‘to rest her injured nerves’, Bartolomeo Pergami in tow.

    The rest of 1821 passes much more smoothly, now that the Quarrel is finished and the coronation is -thankfully- over. Charlotte becomes the royal Patroness of the British Ladies' Society for Promoting the Reformation of Female Prisoners, a rather scandalous appointment that she thoroughly enjoys. Leopold tries to convince another family member - literally any other family member anywhere in the family tree- to take Victoire off their hands. Victoire continues to plot and plan as the future mother of the King of Hanover. The Clarences settle in nicely, enjoying their new daughter. The Romneys (formerly the d’Estes) announce in October that Mary is having a baby, due in April of 1822. In Germany, the new Duke and Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen announce that they too are having a child, in February of 1822. Auntie Fred continues to write her scandalous memoirs and play with the Kendal children - her achievement of the year is when Lolly says her first word: Fred. It is announced that in 1822, the King will undertake a trip to Scotland, and would like the Kendals to join him - this fits perfectly with Charlotte’s educational plan, having decided to introduce George to Welsh, Scots Gaelic, and Irish, and needing to find tutors to do so. 1822, it seems, will be an interesting year for the Kendals.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    [1] This is 100% OTL and too cute to not include it. OTL the ring went to Queen Charlotte’s oldest daughter, the Princess Royal, and then to Queen Victoria. Here, the Princess Royal is helping Leopold out of the nice hole he has dug for himself and has sent it to him for Lotte.

    [2] OTL she was married to Prince George of Greece and Denmark, and became famous as protegee of Sigimund Freud and a great sexual researcher and psychoanalyst. ITL, she goes the same route work-wise and is a big enough deal to offer commentary on damaged royal children (aka all of them). Check her out, she’s awesome.

    [3] OTL, Princess Elizabeth of Clarence was born six weeks prematurely on December 10, 1820. Here, she’s been a little more patient. Her middle names have also changed (OTL she was Elizabeth Georgiana Adelheid) to reflect her godfather and uncle, the King; maternal grandmother; and maternal aunt and godmother. Because I can.

    [4] Romney is for Romney Marsh, a 100 square miles of wetlands between Kent and East Sussex. Because his dad is the Duke of Sussex.

    [5] Lamb House was built in 1722 by James Lamb, a wealthy wine merchant and local politician; In the winter of 1726 King George I took refuge at the house after his ship was washed ashore at nearby Camber Sands. In 1897, it belonged to the author Henry James. ITL, The Duke of Sussex is stepping up for his kid and giving them a lovely little retreat, even though they’ll stick with the Kendals most of the time for now. Even pseudo-royals need rental properties, guys.

    [6] Maria Amalia of Naples and Sicily (April 26, 1782 - March 24, 1866). Niece to Marie Antoinette and aunt to Maria Carolina, Duchesse de Berry. She was engaged to Marie Antoinette’s son, the Dauphin of France, before his death and later married Louis Philipe, the Duc d’Orleans. During the first years of their marriage, they lived under British protection in Palermo, Sicily. OTL Maria Amalia did not approve of Louis Philippe's acceptance of the French crown and reportedly described it as a catastrophe.

    [7] Louis Philippe, The Duc d’Orleans and OTL later the King of the French, and uncle by marriage to the Duchesse de Berry. The son of Philippe Égalité, the infamous Premier Prince du Sang who voted for the death of Louis XVI. Proposed to Charlotte’s aunt, the Princess Elizabeth of the United Kingdom, in 1808, who had to turn him down to his Catholicism.

    [8] Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kohary (OTL King Consort of Portugal) and Prince August of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kohary (OTL father of Ferdinand I of Bulgaria)

    [9] Prince Ernst of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (OTL the Duke of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha) and Prince Albrecht of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (yep, that one).

    [10] Born Princess Juliana of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. Married to Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich, grandson of Catherine the Great, at 14 years old. Separated from Konstantin in 1801 and was divorced from him in 1820 after nineteen years of separation. Had two illegitimate children from two relationships during her seperation, Eduard Edgar Schmidt-Löwe and Louise Hilda Agnes d'Aubert. Upon her death in 1860, her great-niece by marriage wrote to Juliana’s nephew: “Condolences must be universal, because Aunt was extremely loved and respected, because much involved in charity work and in favor of the poor and underprivileged.”

    [11] Karl II, The Duke of Brunswick, son of Caroline’s brother Friedrich Wilhelm. Inherited the Duchy from his father in 1815 at the age of 11; he was put under the guardianship of George IV at the time and raised in London. He reached his majority at the age of 19 and took over the government in 1823. Karl is a touch smarter than his aunt but just as good at starting both family and international drama.

    [12] OTL this was made for Queen Victoria by Prince Albert in the 1840s, but here George IV is really feeling the pressure to make nice with his daughter and gave her a bit of bling.

    [13] This whole scene is entirely OTL - even I can’t come up with something this dramatic

    [14] Again, completely OTL. I, for one, applaud Caroline, The Queen of Petty

    [15] Yeah, I'm keeping her around. George IV is just a bit too keen to remarry for Caroline to die just yet.
     
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    Chapter 12
  • Charlotte_3.jpg

    'Their Royal Highnesses, The Duke and Duchess of Kendal' by George Clint, circa 1823.
    Gifted to the Royal Academy of Music by the Duke and Duchess to celebrate the opening of the school.

    1822 starts out the way many years have been starting out for the British Royal Family: with babies. In January, it is announced from Hanover that Charlotte’s aunt, the Duchess of Cambridge, is pregnant with her second child. On February 22nd, Charlotte’s brother and sister-in-law, Ferdinand and Maria Antonia of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kohary, are delivered of a daughter, named Princess Maria Antonia Auguste Juliana Charlotte Franziska of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha Kohary, [1] whose godparents include the Duke and Duchess of Kendal, the Emperor and Empress of Austria, and the Duchess of Parma, formerly the Empress of France [2]. On February 23rd, the Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen delivers a healthy baby boy, named Ernst Georg Alexander, and titled from birth as the Hereditary Duke of Saxe-Meiningen [3]. This enigmatic heir will make his mark on history as a defender of chivalry, an avid protector of women and children, a collector of rare books, and the namesake of a particular species of Cassowary, which a friend compared him to, remarking that “Ernst is also quick with unexpected claws”. In early April, it is announced that Adelheid, the Duchess of Clarence and St. Andrews, is pregnant again and expecting sometime in the autumn. “May it be a boy!” Charlotte exclaims when she is informed of the news, receiving death glares from Victoire, who has become quite settled in her position as mother to the future King of Hanover, thank you, and is not excited about the possibility of her son being usurped (through a totally legitimate male cousin who conveniently comes ahead of him in the line of succession as dictated by the laws of Hanover). On April 24th, the Lord and Lady Romney welcome a small but lovely daughter, named The Hon. Emma Augusta Charlotte d’Este [4]. Emma d’Este will make her own mark on history as a famous royal diarist and commentator, her records providing ample evidence on the later Carolean and Georgian eras, as well as some very private royal scandals. “Someone give Emma a sword,” her cousin George of Kendal was said to teasingly remark when he came across her writing in her diary, “it shall do far less harm then her pen!”. On July 19th, the Princess Augusta Caroline Charlotte Elizabeth Mary Sophia Louise of Cambridge is born in Hanover [5]. Charlotte happily stands as godmother to all of them, and adds to her ever-growing list of godchildren [6] (Augustus d’Este will later joke that one of his hardest tasks as Charlotte’s secretary was keeping track of her godchildren and their birthdays and confirmations, which she always celebrated with a letter and a beautiful gift).

    Leopold himself is busy as well at this time: on May 23rd, he takes George to the launching of HMS Comet at Deptford Dockyard, letting the eager George smash the bottle of champagne against the ship’s prow. This is, Leopold later claims, the start of George’s love affair with the navy. Later that same month, Leopold, Lord Burghersh [7], French harpist Nicolas Bochsa [8], and the Duke of Wellington [9] (an interesting pairing of personalities if there ever was one) join together to found the Royal Academy of Music. On each of the founders’ birthdays (February 2, May 1, August 9, and December 16) each year since the founding, a free concert is performed by the students. Leopold will remain the royal patron of the Royal Academy of Music until his death. This patronage will be taken up by his second son, William, an accomplished violinist, said by a contemporary to be “unfortunately royal, for were he not, he could live by his bow”.

    In May, another announcement comes: Charlotte herself is pregnant again, expecting in late autumn.
    On August 8th, ahead of her father’s trip to Scotland and technically against the advice of her doctors and husband, Charlotte herself takes young Prince George on another defining royal visit. She and her son arrive in time for the groundbreaking of St. David's College in Lampeter, Wales. Charlotte having donated a majority of the money needed to fund the school, she has been named it’s patroness, and is thanked in the speech by the Bishop of St. David’s [10]. Charlotte responds with a hastily learned sentence in Welsh, which will later serve as the school’s motto: Gair Duw Goreu Dysg (The Word of God is the Best Learning). This is the first of Charlotte’s many stage plan in winning popularity in Wales, and it goes off brilliantly: having come in person to the groundbreaking of the first institution of higher education in Wales, which she helped fund, and spoken Welsh (a sentence, yes, but more than any of her predecessors have done since who knows when), and made an effort to speak to the Bishop and many of the parishioners, Charlotte has established herself in the minds of the people of Wales as their princess. (Ironically, Scotland and Ireland with both later have the same thoughts, and it will become a running joke between the governments as to whom she loves best). George of Kendal himself is fascinated by the ceremony and the strange language, and is seen begging his mama to repeat the ‘funny words’ she spoke to him so that he too can say them. It is at this ceremony that Charlotte is introduced to a man who will define her son’s future: Llewellyn Lewellin [11], newly graduated from Oxford and a native of Wales. While Llewellyn does not join the royal household for almost a year after this meeting, it is generally agreed upon that this is the meeting that convinced Charlotte to hire him to be her son’s Welsh tutor and, later, religious studies tutor and personal chaplain. Twenty five years after this meeting, Llewellyn will still be corresponding with his ‘dear charge’ in Welsh, asking after the Prince’s children - the same dear charge will sign all of his personal letters from childhood to his death as ‘Siôr’, the Welsh for ‘George’.

    George cries upon leaving Lampeter, according to legend, as he and his mother make way to Edinburgh, to meet the King on his royal Scottish tour. Set up by Sir Walter Scott, the tour begins on the 12th of August and continues to the 29th of August [12]. Charlotte and George of Kendal arrive early on the 17th of August, in time to attend a levee at Holyrood Palace with the King and the rest of the Kendals. Clad in bright red Royal Tartan, Charlotte’s father having ‘embraced’ his Stuart heritage, the royal family makes quite a sight. Auburn haired Charlotte and George Kendal, particularly the latter with his dark slanting eyes, are declared to be ‘the image of the Stuarts. This image does wonders for the royal family’s popularity in Scotland, and George IV does his best to present himself as a loving grandfather and pater familias (it doesn’t quite sell, but he does love his grandchildren and this makes it a touch easier for him to show it). Charlotte and young George even manage to win over the irascible Alastair Ranaldson MacDonell, The Chief of Clan MacDonell of Glengarry [13]. Thoroughly charmed by Charlotte during a reel, MacDonell dramatically ends the dance by declaring himself to be “my lady’s liege servant of life and limb” at the Caledonian Hunt Ball. To the surprise of those who know him (and his dramatic statements), it is a declaration that MacDonell will hold to for all his life, and preach unto his descendants. To the young Prince George of Kendal, MacDonell gifts two West Highland terrier puppies, promptly named ‘Noble’ and ‘Glenna’ [14], and a bunch of wildly inappropriate stories of Highland derring do. To Leopold, MacDonell gifts a bottle of whiskey and a warning to ‘mind well my Princess’. (Leopold is not a fan, but George of Kendal will fondly remember ‘Mac’ to the end of his days). In 2018, a direct descendant of the Chief, a Lady Charlotte Alexandra Rebecca MacDonell, will deliver to the Royal Charlotte and Leopold Museum a letter from Charlotte to her ancestor, in which she praises his loyalty and thanks him for his aid in sending a tutor to her son.

    The visit wraps up nicely and everyone goes home where there is, of course, yet another scandal awaiting them. Taking advantage of everyone being out of town, Victoire has decided that it really has been too long since she pissed off the people her lifestyle is dependant on. She has continued writing to Sir John... Ponsonby, a ‘friend’ who is ‘traveling’ through Australia, and sends him money in every letter, to help with his ‘travels’. She has sent a letter inviting Mr. Ponsonby to come to Hanover - under her personal protection as the mother of the future king. Mr. Ponsonby, who can at least count the number of people looking to kill him if eggs before they hatch, declines the offer, but promises to come and serve her ‘faithfully as my only Queen’ once her son takes the throne. Of course, Ponsonby is not Conroy, Victoire protests when the contents and recipient of her letter are revealed. Their last name is different. Obviously. And since Sir John Conroy has been deemed a traitor -insert death glares at Charlotte-, Victoire would never dream of communicating with him. Obviously. The feud between Charlotte and Victoire racks up another notch, Leopold steps up his effort to find literally anyone to take Victoire off his hands, and in Australia, John Ponsonby ‘borrows’ a ship filled with goods and money. He’s going to return it. Obviously.

    On September 25th, Adelheid is delivered of twin boys at Bushy Park [15]. The first boy, named William for his father, is small and sickly and passes from the world as he enters into it. The second boy, named George for his grandfathers, is small as well, but heartier than his brother and after a few anxious hours, looks fit for survival. The new heir to Hanover has been born. He is hurriedly christened the same day as his birth, and named ‘George William Augustus Leopold’ - for his grandfathers, his father, his uncle and godfather, and his first cousin by marriage and godfather. The entire family is ecstatic for the Clarences - William and Adelheid are devoted and loving parents to little Elizabeth, and their joy in another child is such that one would have to be heartless to not be happy for them. Auguste, the Duchess of Cambridge, writes a letter of congratulations that is twenty pages long, and Charlotte is so happy for them that she weeps every time she sees her new godson.

    Victoire is, of course, spitting blood. Her son has been unjustly usurped - how this has happened, no one can quite explain, but Victoire is sure of it [16]. And she is going to get her son a crown, come hell or high water.

    The Kendal household is at an all-new level of tension. Victoire is convinced that Charlotte and Leopold maliciously betrayed her and their nephew by standing as godparents to the throne-stealing Prince George of Clarence. Charlotte is convinced that Victoire has decided that the best way to get her son onto the throne is to drive everyone ahead of him in the succession insane, and thinks her “dearest sister” should go sit at the bottom of a lake. For a good long while. Leopold thinks he needs a drink. At the end of November, the fragile peace in the Kendal household is shattered with two almost simultaneous events. On November 22nd, after a short labor, Charlotte is delivered of a second daughter, whom she and Leopold decide to name Mary for Charlotte’s aunt, the Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh. Victoire, with her usual tact, is miffed that the baby is not named for her. On November 23rd, after being suddenly seized with an intro-susception of the bowels, Edward, the Duke of Kent and until recently heir to Hanover, dies [17].

    Victoire falls into a fit of grief so severe that later Charlotte will write to the Duchess of Cambridge that “we feared for her sanity - she had to have someone with her at all times, for in her grief, she was prone to such fits and flights that her person and very life was at risk”. Her only comfort was her daughter, Drina, whom she tries to keep by her side constantly. (Drina actively hates this and will later quite literally run from anyone showing any form of negative emotions, remarking to her husband that “having served as Mama’s comfort after the death of my brother, I no longer have any comfort to give anyone else”). At Charlotte’s request, Victoire and Leopold’s brother Ferdinand and his wife Maria Antonia come to England to care for Victoire, who has turned against the Kendals completely and has become convinced that Charlotte is responsible for the death of her son. She attacks Mary Gillray Stockmar in the nursery one evening, shrieking that she knows that Gilly poisoned her son on Charlotte’s command, and would make her confess if she had to kill her for the confession. Victoire begins screaming every time she sees George and William of Kendal, “long keening notes of grief that rend one’s heart with their sorrow and turn one’s blood cold with the note of madness in them”, as Auntie Fred writes to the Duchess of Cambridge. Adelheid’s name can no longer be mentioned in Claremont with Victoire shrieking. She goes so far as to threaten the new Princess Mary, remarking ominously to Ferdinand that Charlotte should “know her pain, and would soon enough have her own poison turned against her”. Christmas passes quietly and uncelebrated at Claremont.

    Clearly, Victoire can no longer remain with the Kendals. It is Maria Antonia who offers up a solution. Victoire can come to Vienna with Ferdinand and Maria Antonia and stay in a private wing of their palace, or even travel to their palace in Lower Austria with a nurse should she wish more privacy. Once she is suitably recovered, she can go to Coburg and stay with her brother, Ernst. Victoire and Leopold’s brother, Ernst, and his wife Luise are having issues. As in, sleeping with everything that moves, barely speaking, not even tolerating each other issues. Separation is imminent. Maria Antonia proposes that Victoire if moved to Coburg to stay with Ernst and Luise, she can possibly serve as a quasi-mother to their two young sons, Ernst and Albrecht. Charlotte is wary of the idea of sending Victoire to a home with two young boys - despite their difficult relationship, Charlotte is not cruel [18]. When the idea is proposed to Victoire, however, she expresses interest in it. She does not want to be in England any longer and the idea of going to Hanover is physically repulsive. Vienna holds no memories, and she and Ferdinand have been close since childhood. The plan is set, when a final issue comes up: Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent. As a Princess of Great Britain and Ireland, which is not technically playing well with Austria, there are issues with Drina accompanying her mother to Vienna. In addition, the question of Drina’s guardianship has never been fully answered. As the head of the family, George IV believes he has custody of the princess. Victoire believes she does, as she possesses a document from her husband granting guardianship of Drina to her. The document was unwitnessed, however, and is very legally questionable. Not to mention, given Victoire’s state of mind, no one is exactly pushing for her to be in charge of her four year old daughter. A compromise is struck: George IV formally grants guardianship of Drina to Leopold and Charlotte, who promise to reunite Drina and Victoire when Victoire’s health is recovered.

    In early January of 1823, Ferdinand and Maria Antonia return to Vienna with Victoire, seventy trunks of luggage, and a nurse hired from a respected sanitorium in tow. On January 22nd, Charlotte and Leopold’s newest daughter is quietly baptised as ‘Mary Adelaide Louisa’. Her godparents include the Duchess of St. Clarence and Andrews, the Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh, The Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg [19], the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen (represented by Baron Christian Stockmar), the Duke of Cambridge, and Duke Alexander of Wurttemberg (represented by Augustus d’Este) [20]. Mary will later be considered the most beautiful of the Kendal girls, and the one most similar to her mother. Later in January, another lightning bolt hits the Kendal household. Augustus d’Este, attending the funeral of a friend, is struck with sudden blindness [21]. The blindness dissipates after a few hours, but everyone is concerned, particularly since the doctors have no explanation. Strange symptoms began to plague him intermittently throughout the year, including weakness of the legs and hands, numbness, dizziness, and even bladder disturbances. These symptoms will never again leave Augustus, and will recur more and more frequently and severely throughout the remaining years of his life. As his symptoms worsen, he tries to leave Charlotte’s service. She releases him from his duties but keeps him on her payroll as an ‘advisor’ - Mary Fitzclarence d’Este, Lady Romney, takes over the physical portion of her husband’s job and incidentally becomes the first female royal Secretary. Around this time, Llewelyn Lewellin joins the Kendal household and begins teaching Welsh to Charlotte and George.

    The Kendals do not attend any events until March, out of mourning for the young Duke of Kent. In March, they attend the official opening of the Royal Academy of Music, where they are welcomed with enthusiastic applause. After the performance, the Duke of Wellington takes the Kendal children backstages and introduces them to Nicolas Bocsha, who teaches the wide-eyed George of Kendal how to strum a harp. The Duke himself hands the violin to young William, who will later recall the moment as “the beginning of his love of the violin”. Young Lolly is too small for instruments but is enchanted by the music and attempts to clap her hands in time. “It is such a dear memory, one that is unfortunately very unknown: the Beef himself, Old Wellington, patiently showing little Will how to finger the strings, Lolly on his lap.” The Duke of Wellington will thereafter consider himself an honorary godfather to the Kendal children, who will all fondly remember him as such, and despite political differences, he and Charlotte will always be united in their love of her children.

    In July, Robert Peel ensures the passage of five Acts of Parliament, effectively abolishing the death penalty for over one hundred offences. Despite his Tory allegiance, Peel finds an ally for his acts in Charlotte, who remarks that “we mete out death far too quickly, for offenses that could be corrected, to men who we value less than horses” [22]. The Judgement of Death Act allows judges to commute sentences for capital offences other than murder or treason to imprisonment or transportation. This act earns a wry smile from Charlotte, who remarks that Sir John Conroy did not flee his punishment after all - he was simply ahead of the law in transporting himself to the colonies.

    On the 23rd of September, the Burmese attack the British on Shalpuri, an island close to Chittagong, claimed by the East Indian Trading Company. This is the start of what will be the costliest and longest war of British involvement in India. One week later, the fifth pregnancy of Charlotte, the Duchess of Kendal, is announced. At this point, people are starting to bring up the question about Charlotte being named Princess of Wales again - Caroline, still in Italy with Pergami ‘attending’ her, is still clearly not going anywhere so for now, George is not having any more legitimate children. George again declines, remarking to Lord Liverpool that “if she is made Princess of Wales in her own right, what shall her husband be called?”. “The Duke of Kendal, sir” is the infamous reply [23].

    In Vienna, Victoire begins to recuperate, and is able to spend time with her Kohary nephews, remarking sadly that her own Edward would have enjoyed them so. The news of Charlotte’s new pregnancy is not well received; Maria Antonia writes, in all sincere sweetness, to the Kendals that “I do not think you should ask Victoire to stand as godmother”.

    1823 ends rather quietly for the British royal family. George IV retreats further into his building and his beloved Lady Conyngham. Charlotte and Leopold spend a quiet Christmas with their children and Auntie Fred. The Clarences enjoy Christmas at Bushy House with their two children and give thanks for their blessings. The Cambridges celebrate in Hanover, along with the Cumberlands. Caroline and Bartolomeo Pergami ring in the new year in their usual fashion. In Vienna, Victoire celebrates Christmas with the Koharys, and sends gifts and letters to Drina at Claremont; she also sends a letter to Charlotte and Leopold regarding Drina’s guardianship that goes unanswered. She also sends letters and gifts to Australia, but that’s nobody’s business. John Ponsonby celebrates the holidays by burning a ship and robbing another. The Stockmars travel to the spa in Baden, officially to take the waters for a cure, and unofficially to give Gilly time to recover from a miscarriage in November. “One must pray for peace and serenity in this coming year”, Leopold writes to a friend in Russia, “for God knows we have had little of it these last two”.

    Credit where it's due, it's a very good prayer. It’s also not going to be answered.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    [1] OTL she was named Viktoria for her aunt and cousin, but given their low stock at the moment, the Koharys decided to name her for her mother and maternal grandmother

    [2] Marie Louise, former wife of Napoleon, who was made the Duchess of Parma after the fall of the French Empire.

    [3] OTL Bernhard’s son was named Georg, but there’s just too many of them in this TL. ITL, Ernst is named for Ernst I, the Duke of Saxe-Coburg and ancestor of the Dukes of Saxe-Meiningen, Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, Saxe-Coburg, Saxe-Romhild, Saxe-Eisenburg, Saxe-Hildburghausen, and Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld.

    [4] OTL Augustus d’Este never married or had children. The name Emma comes from his sister, named Augusta Emma d’Este. Because similar to Georges, there’s too many Augustas running around.

    [5] This was her OTL name.

    [6] For those of you keeping track, Charlotte’s godchildren include George Fitzgerald (currently the Marquess of Kildare and later Duke of Leinster, son of Charlotte’s friend Augutus Fitzgerald), Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent, Prince Albrecht of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha, Princess Louise d’Artois, The Comte de Chambord, Princess Sophie of Wurttemberg, Princess Elizabeth of Clarence, Princess Maria Antonia of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kohary, The Hereditary Duke of Saxe-Meiningen, The Hon. Emma d’Este, Princess Augusta of Cambridge, and Prince George of Clarence.

    [7] John Fane, later the Earl of Westmorland

    [8] Robert Nicolas-Charles Bochsa, a French harpist and opera composer, famous for his scandalous romance with opera singer Anna Bishop.

    [9] Yes, that Duke of Wellington. He was a keen violinist, who was determined to make the Academy a success. Pay attention, he’s coming back.

    [10] Thomas Burgess. English author, philosopher, Bishop of St David's and Bishop of Salisbury. OTL he funded and endowed St. David’s College in Lampeter in order to educate Welsh clergy to be able to preach to their flocks, and do so in Welsh. Burgess opposed Catholic Emancipation, leading to several clashes with leading figures. The Duke of Wellington told him sharply that he would do far more to strengthen the Protestant faith by staying in his diocese and minding his flock than he could by bombarding the Government with political pamphlets. Burgess disagreed.

    [11] The Very Rev. Llewellyn Lewellin. Welsh cleric and academic, OTL the first principal of St David's College and the first Dean of St David's.

    [12] This was an OTL trip and I just couldn’t leave it out. George IV in a kilt, you guys. C’mon.

    [13] Colonel Alexander Ranaldson MacDonell of Glengarry. His haughty and flamboyant personality gave Walter Scott the basis for his wild Highland clan chieftain Fergus Mac-Ivor in the novel Waverly. During George IV’s visit to Scotland, MacDonell made several scenes regarding the fact that Lowlanders were allowed to be in the Celtic society welcoming the King.

    [14] OTL Queen Victoria owned a Collie named Noble - I loved the name and wanted to see it carry on. And yes, Glenna is for Glengarry. And yes, MacDonell is being petty by giving West Highland terriers and I love it.

    [15] OTL Adelheid’s stillborn twin boys were born at Bushy Park in May of 1825. Since it doesn’t say anywhere how far along the pregnancy was, I chose to give her a few more months in the pregnancy and one surviving son.

    [16] As previously stated, Hanover has a strict agnatic line of succession, meaning only males could inherit. As a son born of a legitimate marriage of a man further ahead in the line of succession, George of Clarence takes precedence over Edward, The Duke of Kent.

    [17] OTL it was Adelheid and William’s second daughter, Elizabeth of Clarence, who died of intussusception of the bowels. The symptoms look remarkably similar to poison - abdominal pain, vomiting, and bloody stools.

    [18] Maria Antonia and Ferdinand have two sons at this point, Ferdiand and August, as do Ernst and Luise, Ernst and Albrecht.

    [19] Born Princess Lovise Auguste of Denmark, daughter of Christian VII of Denmark and Princess Caroline Matilda of Great Britain, making her a first cousin once removed of Charlotte.

    [20] Husband of Leopold’s sister Antoinette, brother to Empress Mariya Feodorovna of Russia.

    [21] OTL this happened in December 1822, but there’s a lot going on then already, so I simply moved it forward a month. This is the start of Augustus’ multiple sclerosis symptoms.

    [22] This is a reference to the 1776 quote by the Marquess of Halifax: "Men are not hanged for stealing horses, but that horses may not be stolen".

    [23] This is a reference to George VI’s refusal to title the-now Elizabeth II as the Princess of Wales in her own right.
     
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    Tidbits: HistoricalAlternative.com
  • And as an apology for taking so long to update, here's a fun little tidbit:




    [Pre-1900s Forum on HistoricalAlternative.com]

    Title: WI Charlotte I had died in childbirth in 1817?

    Ljgismyqueen: So guys, hear me out - what if Charlotte I had died in childbirth in 1817 with her son George? How would history have changed? Would the Duchess of Kent have schemed herself into her forced retirement? What would have happened to Leopold?

    Factuallyrelevant: Well, obviously we would have lost the Carolean Era - so you’d have to completely rewind history to November 5, 1817 and start from there. The Bourbons would have probably lost the French throne, the Bonapartes might have gotten France back, Ireland would probably no longer belong to the United Kingdom, God only knows what would have become of Russia, the Civil War might have come out very differently - and that’s just what I can think of off the top of my head. Victoire definitely would still scheme, but without Charlotte to block her, she might have gotten away with it longer. By removing Charlotte and her children from the line of succession, Victoria of Kent would have been much higher up in the line of succession and possibly have made a much better marriage - maybe to the King of the Netherlands, like her mother wanted for her. Leopold is tricky: he loved Charlotte, without a doubt. The loss of her and his child might break him completely. But he’s a Coburg at the end of the day - maybe he would have ended up with Greece or Belgium, which means he would have had to remarry. If he does that and you really want to stab his wife in the heart, have him name their first daughter after Charlotte. OTL Charlotte and Leopold were really one of the two only successful Coburg marriage of that generation, aside from Ferdinand and Maria Antonia - it’d be hard to be the second wife following that. Depending on what country he took (if he takes one), he’d most likely marry a Russian Grand Duchess or a French princess. Still leaves Britain up in the air, though.

    Sempereadem: The new heir to the throne / rulers would have been possibly Frederick, The Duke of York and Albany (if he doesn’t die on time), and then William IV and his children with Adelheid. Considering the personalities of George and Elizabeth, Britain could do worse than to have one of them inherit. And it would keep Hanover and Britain united for longer, which would be interesting, with Prussia’s ambitions and all.

    Elizabella Antoinette: George IV might be able to get his divorce from Caroline of Brunswick and possibly get a new heir. A big issue with the divorce originally was that it would delegitimize Charlotte and her heirs - no Charlotte to delegitimize, no issue. He could marry Duchess Marie of Wurttemberg (OTL the Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen), like Victoire wanted. They might get a kid - depending on how bad his laudanum addiction gets and if Lady Conyngham lets Marie within 100 feet of George.

    Ljgismyqueen: Is there any way of Edward, the Duke of Kent, inheriting the throne? Or even Victoria?

    Letthemgrumble: @Ljgismyqueen if all of William and Adelheid’s children die, then technically - but there’s still no way Edward the Fatherless would get to take the throne, given the questionability of his paternity. Even Leopold couldn’t sell that mess. And it’s the same for Victoria, given her later emotional states and neediness and all. Plus, with either of them taking the throne, there is a huge chance that the Duchess of Kent would be the regent, which means she would bring back Sir John Conroy in a heartbeat. That would definitely get everybody kicked off the throne. Great way to bring the Stuarts back in, I guess, or get the Cumberlands onto it.
     
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    Family Trees (1823)
  • House of Hanover: 1823

    HM George, The King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, King of Hanover (June 4, 1738 - Jan. 29, 1820)
    m. Sept. 8, 1871 HSH Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (May 19, 1744 - Nov. 17, 1818)
    1. HM George, The King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, King of Hanover (Aug. 12, 1762) m. April 8, 1795 HH Princess Karoline of Brunswick (May 17, 1868)
    a. HRH Charlotte, The Duchess of Kendal, Princess of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Jan, 7, 1796) m. May 2, 1868 HRH Leopold, later The Duke of Kendal, Prince of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (December 16, 1790)
    i. HRH Prince George of Kendal, Prince of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Nov. 5, 1817)
    ii. HRH Prince William of Kendal, Prince of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Dec. 3, 1818)
    iii. HRH Princess Charlotte of Kendal, Princess of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Aug. 28, 1820)
    iv. HRH Princess Mary of Kendal, Princess of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Nov. 18, 1822)​
    2. HRH Frederick, The Duke of York and Albany (Aug. 16, 1763) m. Nov. 23, 1793 HRH Princess Friederike Charlotte of Prussia (May 7, 1767)
    3. HRH William, The Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews (Aug. 21, 1765) in a relationship with Dorothea Jordan (Nov. 21, 1761 - July 5, 1816) from 1791 - 1811 [1]*; m. July 11, 1818 HH Princess Adelheid of Saxe-Meiningen (Aug. 13, 1792) [2]
    a1*. Mr. George Fitzclarence (Aug. 29, 1794) m. Oct. 18, 1819 Mary Wyndham (Aug. 29, 1792)
    i. Miss Adelaide Fitzclarence (Aug. 28, 1820)
    ii. Miss Augusta Fitzclarence (July 29, 1822)​
    b1*. Mr. Henry Fitzclarence (March 27, 1795 - Sept. 1817)
    c1*. Miss Sophia Fitzclarence (Aug. 1796)
    d1*. The Rt. Hon. Mary Fitzclarence d’Este, Lady Romney (Dec. 19, 1798) m. March 1, 1821 Augustus d’Este, Lord Romney (Jan. 13, 1794)
    i. The Hon. Emma d’Este (April 24, 1822)​
    e1*. Mr. Frederick Fitzclarence (Dec. 9, 1799) m. May 19, 1821 Lady Augusta Boyle (1801)
    f1. The Rt. Hon. Elizabeth Fitzclarence Hay, The Countess of Erroll (Jan. 17, 1801) m. Dec. 4, 1820 The Rt. Hon. William Hay, The Earl of Erroll (Feb. 21, 1801)
    i. Lady Ida Hay (Oct. 18, 1821)
    ii. William Hay, Lord Hay (May 3, 1823)​
    g1*. Mr. Adolphus Fitzclarence (Feb. 18, 1802)
    h1*. Miss Augusta Fitzclarence (Nov. 17, 1803)
    i1*. Miss Augustus Fitzclarence (March 1, 1805)
    j1*. Miss Amelia Fitzclarence (March 21, 1807)
    a2. HRH Princess Charlotte of Clarence (March 27, 1819 - March 27, 1819)
    b2. Stillborn child (September 5, 1819)
    c2. HRH Princess Elizabeth of Clarence (Feb. 15, 1821)
    d2. HRH Prince William of Clarence (Sept. 25, 1822 - Sept. 25, 1822)
    e2. HRH Prince George of Clarence (Sept. 25, 1822)​
    4. HM Charlotte, Queen Charlotte of Württemberg (Sept. 29, 1766) m. May 18, 1797 HM Friedrich, The King of Württemberg (November 6, 1754 - October 30, 1816)
    a. Stillborn daughter (April 27, 1798)​
    5. HRH Edward, The Duke of Kent and Strathearn (Nov. 2, 1767 - Jan. 23, 1820) m. July 11, 1818 HSH Princess Viktoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (Aug. 17, 1786)
    a. HRH Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent (May 24, 1819)
    b. HRH Edward, The Duke of Kent and Strathearn (Oct. 27, 1820 - Nov. 23, 1823)​
    6. HRH Princess Augusta Sophia of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (Nov. 8, 1768)
    7. HRH Elizabeth, The Landgravine of Hesse-Homburg (May 22, 1770) m. April 7, 1818 HH Friedrich, The Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg (July 30, 1769)
    8. HRH Ernest Augustus, The Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale (June 5, 1771) m. May 29, 1815 HSH Duchess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (March 3, 1778)
    a. Princess Frederica of Cumberland (January 27, 1817 - January 27, 1817)
    b. Stillborn daughter (April 1818)
    c. Prince George of Cumberland (May 27, 1819)​
    9. HRH Augustus, The Duke of Sussex (Jan. 27, 1773) m. April 4, 1793 Lady Augusta Murray (Jan. 27, 1768)**
    a**. Augustus d’Este, Lord Romney (Jan. 13, 1794) m. March 1, 1821 Miss Mary Fitzclarence (Dec. 19, 1798)
    i. The Hon. Emma d’Este (April 24, 1822)​
    b**. Miss Augusta d’Este (August 11, 1801)​
    10. Adolphus, The Duke of Cambridge (Feb. 24, 1774) m. June 1, 1818 HH Princess Auguste of Hesse-Kassel (July 25, 1797)
    a. HRH Prince George of Cambridge (March 26, 1819)
    b. HRH Princess Augusta of Cambridge (July 19, 1822)​
    11. HRH Mary, The Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (April 25, 1776) m. July 22, 1816 HRH William Frederick, The Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh (Jan. 15, 1776)
    12. HRH Princess Sophia of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (Nov. 3, 1777)
    13. HRH Prince Octavius of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (Feb. 23, 1779 - May 7, 1783)
    14. HRH Prince Alfred of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (Sept. 22, 1780 - Aug. 20, 1782)
    15. HRH Princess Amelia of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (Aug. 7, 1783 - Nov. 2, 1810)

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    House of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha: 1823

    HH Franz, The Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (July 15, 1750 - Dec. 9, 1806) m. March 6, 1776 Princess Sophie of Saxe-Hildburghausen (Feb. 22, 1760 - Oct. 28, 1776) [1]; m. June 13, 1777 Countess Auguste Reuss of Ebensdorf (Jan. 19, 1757)
    1. HSH Sophie, Countess von Mensdorff-Pouilly (Aug. 19, 1778) m. Feb. 22, 1804 Count Emmanuel von Mensdorff-Pouilly (Jan. 24, 1777)
    a. Count Hugo Ferdinand von Mensdorff-Pouilly (Aug. 24, 1806)
    b. Count Alfons von Mensdorff-Pouilly (Jan. 25, 1810)
    c. Count Alfred Karl von Mensdorff-Pouilly (Jan. 23, 1812)
    d. Count Alexander von Mensdorff-Pouilly (Aug. 4, 1813)
    e. Count Leopold Emmanuel von Mensdorff-Pouilly (March 18, 1815)
    f. Count Arthur August von Mensdorff-Pouilly (June 19, 1817)​
    2. Antoinette, Duchess Alexander of Württemberg (Aug. 28, 1779) m. Nov. 17, 1798 Duke Alexander of Württemberg (May 5, 1771)
    a. Marie, The Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen (Sept. 18, 1799) m. April 1, 1821 Bernhard, The Duke of Saxe-Meiningen (Dec. 17, 1800)
    i. Ernst, The Hereditary Duke of Saxe-Meiningen (Feb. 23, 1822)​
    b. Duke Paul of Württemberg (Oct. 24, 1800 - Sept. 7, 1802)
    c. Duke Alexander of Württemberg (Dec. 20, 1804)
    d. Duke Ernst of Württemberg (Aug. 11, 1807)
    e. Duke Friedrich of Württemberg (April 29, 1810 - April 25, 1815)​
    3. HIH Juliana, Grand Duchess Anna Feodorovna of Russia (Sept. 23, 1781) m. Feb, 26, 1796 Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich of Russia (May 8, 1779), annulled March 20, 1820. In a relationship with Jules Gabriel Émile de Seigneux from 1807 - 1808 [1]*; in a relationship with Rodolphe Abraham de Schiferli from 1812 - 1837 [2]*
    a1*. Eduard Edgar Schmidt-Löwe (Oct. 28, 1808)
    a2*. Luise Hilda Agnes d'Aubert (1812)​
    4. Stillborn son (1782)
    5. HH Ernst, The Duke of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Jan. 2, 1784) m. July 31, 1817 Princess Luise of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg (Dec. 21, 1800)
    a. HH Ernst, The Hereditary Prince of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha, Duke of Saxony (June 21, 1818)
    b. HSH Prince Albrecht of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha, Duke of Saxony (Aug. 26, 1819)​
    6. HSH Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kohary (March 28, 1785) m. Nov. 30, 1815 Countess Maria Antonia Koháry de Csábrág et Szitnya (July 2, 1797)
    a. Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kohary, Duke of Saxony (Oct. 29, 1816)
    b. Prince August of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kohary, Duke of Saxony (June 13, 1818)
    c. Princess Maria Antonia of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kohary, Duchess of Saxony (Feb. 14, 1822)​
    7. HRH Viktoria, Dowager Duchess of Kent and Strathearn (Aug. 17, 1786) m. Dec. 21, 1803 HSH Emich Karl, The Prince of Leiningen (Sept. 27, 1763 - July 4, 1814) [1]; m. July 11, 1818 Edward, The Duke of Kent and Strathearn (Nov. 2, 1767 - Jan. 23, 1820) [2]
    a. HSH Karl, The Prince of Leiningen (Sept. 12, 1804)
    b. HSH Princess Feodore of Leiningen (Dec. 7, 1807)
    c. HRH Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent (May 24, 1819)
    d. HRH Edward, The Duke of Kent and Strathearn (Oct. 27, 1820 - Nov. 23, 1823)​
    8. Princess Marianne of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (Aug. 7, 1788 - Aug. 23, 1794)
    9. HRH Leopold, The Duke of Kendal, Prince of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Dec. 16, 1790) m. May 2, 1868 HRH Princess Charlotte of Wales (Jan, 7, 1796)
    a. HRH Prince George of Kendal, Prince of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Nov. 5, 1817)
    b. HRH Prince William of Kendal, Prince of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Dec. 3, 1818)
    c. HRH Princess Charlotte of Kendal, Princess of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Aug. 28, 1820)
    d. HRH Princess Mary of Kendal, Princess of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha (Nov. 18, 1822)​
    10. Prince Franz of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (Dec. 12, 1792 - Jan. 3, 1793)


    Key:
    Bold - ruling monarch / duke / etc

    * - Illegitimate relationship / child born of illegitimate relationship
    ** - Marriage technically illegal under the Royal Marriages Act of 1772
     
    Last edited:
    Chapter 13

  • 479439.jpg

    Schloss Rosenau, Coburg

    "Oh, that this year would end - it seems every time one takes a step forward, be it politics or personal, there comes a nasty wind to knock us two steps back" -

    Letter from The Duchess of Kendal to The Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen
    November 30, 1824​

    The year of 1824 is ushered in grandly at Claremont, with a holiday ball and party that extends to Charlotte’s birthday six days later. From Mary and Augustus d’Este, she receives two gifts: a book of poetry and the news that they are expecting a second child. Despite his illness, Auntie Fred notes, Augustus seems determined to give it the old Hanover try at repopulating the world in his own image. “At least they make lovely children” she remarks in a letter to Auguste, Duchess of Cambridge, who will herself note that Emma d’Este is a “lovely, lively little girl, devoted to Missy [Princess Mary of Kendal] and Lolly [Princess Charlotte of Kendal]”. From France, her friend Maria Carolina sends some of Voltaire’s works in the original French, as well as a locket containing a new portrait of Louise and Henri. Among her gifts, Charlotte receives a book of Welsh lore from Llewelyn Lewellin, now firmly settled in as a member of the Kendal household as George’s Welsh tudor and a sometime-chaplain. Charlotte’s Welsh is improving, though slowly, and young George Kendal has taken to it like a duck to water. Leopold is not interested, William and Lolly learn a few sentences to please their mother, and Auntie Fred surprisingly becomes fluent in a short period of time. “The benefit of not retaining any foolishness is to leave one’s brain open to Welshness” she famously quips. Auntie Fred in particular is fond of the Welsh cleric and teases him mercilessly about a cleric giving a book of mythology as a gift.

    Leopold wins the birthday gift giving game, however - thanks to good money management, careful investments, and general Leopold shrewdness, he has convinced the King and government to sell him Falkland Palace in Scotland for a song [1]. It’ll cost a few more tunes - more like an opera or two - to fully fix up the palace, but that’s what Leopold’s pennies have been saved for. It will serve as another step in Charlotte’s plan to immerse herself and her heirs in the affections and understanding of the countries that make up the United Kingdom. In Scotland, upon hearing the news, dear old Mac - better known as The Chief of Clan MacDonell of Glengarry - sets to work finding a Gaelic tutor for the royal family, "to set them up properly in Falkland".

    From Victoire in Austria, Charlotte receives a letter containing absolutely no well wishes, and full of complaints and demands, including:
    • Mary Gillray Stockmar be removed immediately from Charlotte’s service, having contributed “most maliciously” to the death of Victoire’s son
    • That Emma d’Este be removed from the royal nursery and not allowed to play with Drina of Kent, being the daughter of ‘mere bastards brought up from Mr and Miss by sheer familial kindness’
    • That Drina’s status as a Princess of Great Britain and Hanover be maintained properly at all times (how this is to be done is not stated)
    • That Charlotte and Leopold immediately denounce the Clarences and stop all relations with them, as they “obviously” murdered Victoire’s son and displaced her daughter in the line of succession deliberately
    • That Drina of Kent, still under the guardianship of the Kendals, be sent to Austria immediately and returned to the care of her mother
    Victoire’s letter -and demands- go unanswered by the Kendals. In Austria, Ferdinand sends his own letter to his brother, officically to announce the birth of his third son, named Leopold for his uncle [2]; unofficially, it is to warn Leopold that “Victoire will not let this go lightly - she is insistent upon her rights and her daughter.”

    For the rest of Britain, however, the year is not starting so well. 1824 begins with a crushing blow to British forces in the Gold Coast, fighting the Ashanti for control of the coast, and leading to the death of the British governor of the protectorate, Sir Charles MacCarthy. MacCarthy’s dishonor isn’t done however - his skulled is rimmed with gold and used as a drinking cup by Ashanti rulers [3]. The British were overrun, suffered losses, and ran out of ammunition. Almost all the British forces were killed immediately; only around 20 managed to escape. This is the start of the first Anglo-Ashanti war, and the story of MacCarthy’s golden rimmed drinking skull will be used to further British hatred for years to come. (Auntie Fred remarks privately that since MacCarthy’s skull was obviously empty, having attempted to take on the Ashanti with 500 soldiers, it was nice of the chiefs to fill his skull for him). Charlotte and Leopold themselves meet with Alexander Gordon Laing [3] when he arrives in London with the official dispatches of the situation, and Charlotte sets to work setting up a foundation to give financial aid to the widows and children of the men lost in the beginning of the war, while Leopold and Stockmar set about getting donations. Auntie Fred sponsors twenty girls from the families to go through training at Charlotte’s governess school every year for the rest of her life; for the next three generations, the young members of the British and Hanover royal families will be cared for by ‘Frederica girls’, as they are known.

    February passes in a patriotic fervor that goes on into March, when the First Anglo-Burmese War begins, following border clashes in Arakan. This is a little more awkward for the Kendals - part of the British casus belli is a desire to deny the French access to the Burmese harbors and limit their already extensive influence. Given Charlotte’s friendship with the mother of the heir presumptive to the throne of France, she keeps a rather low profile regarding this war. There is an ugly moment when someone (rumored to be an agent of the still-wrathful Victoire) shouted at a bazaar opening that Charlotte was feeding British military secrets to the French through her friendship with Maria Carolina - the crowd becomes agitated to the point where Charlotte was more or less removed from the scene rather forcibly by her guards. Her popularity definitely takes a hit from the scene, and she is not a fan. Rather defiantly, Charlotte continues to be loyal to Maria Carolina, writing to her friend that “the politics of men cannot touch upon the love of women, and all my love, my dear friend, goes to you and yours”. Her loyalty to her friend is touching, but Leopold is thinking that there’s a smarter way to win points than by more or less sticking their tongues out at the people’s opinions. He takes advantage of the visit of Hendrik Fagel and Anton Reinhard Falck to have a few conversations with the good gentlemen of the Netherlands, sent to sign the Anglo-Dutch treaty of 1824. Nothing official, of course. Just some conversations. Maybe a few ideas are exchanged. Maybe some diplomatic policies that will eventually affect that entire future of Europe are tossed about. Nothing serious, mind you.

    The royal family gets a boost in popularity on April 29th, when Charlotte -after a hellish labor of 13 hours- delivers her fifth child at Dutch House, a small son who enters the world with “two shrill cries, followed by a solemn stare that reminded one of his grandfather in it’s ferocity” as Christian Stockmar later records. Leopold, in a letter to his sister Juliana, is more candid: “The little one is all Hanover - he seems unimpressed with us so far”. A week later, on May 6th in the sitting room of Dutch House, Prince Frederick Ernest William George of Kendal is baptized. His godparents include the Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh [5], the Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz [6] (represented by Lady Romney), Princess Sophia of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland [7], the Crown Prince of Prussia [8] (represented by The Hon. Henry Fox [9]), the King of the Netherlands [10] (represented by the Duke of Leinster [11]), and the Queen of the Netherlands [12] (represented by Miss Augusta Fitzclarence [13]). The King and Queen of the Netherlands as godparents is Leopold’s idea, taken up enthusiastically by George IV and the government, as a way of sweetening the deal of the new treaty. Charlotte is okay with the godparents - Auntie Fred says nice things about Wilhelmine, and Charlotte is really a little too weak to be arguing diplomacy at this moment in time. The new baby is a “rather serious little fellow” charitably writes the Baroness Stockmar, now officially serving as the governess and direct supervisor of two nursemaids. Frederick - later known as “His Royal Coldness” and “The Stone Duke” - will later be considered a bad combination of both of his parents’ best traits: “having inherited the ferocity and ambition of the Coburgs, he also inherited the pride and stubbornness of the Hanovers, with a special chill all his own” as a later biographer will write. “I’d call him a cold bastard,” Frederick’s brother William would once apparently comment (the accuracy of the comment is debated by historians) “but to call him a bastard would be a slander on my gracious mother”.

    After the news of Charlotte and Leopold’s newest son reaches Austria, “a magnificent scene erupts in the apartments of the Dowager Duchess of Kent”, as a member of Maria Antonia’s household writes to Baron Stockmar. Victoire begins to “wail and scream about the cruelty and betrayal of her brother by having a son when her own had been murdered by his wife’s family - probably with her help, the Duchess insists.” Maria Antonia attempts to downplay the scene when she writes to Charlotte afterwards, writing that “Victoire, through no fault of yours or hers, found her natural joy quite dampened, as I am sure you can understand, by the memory of her own dear lost boy. She became quite moved by the idea. If you don’t mind a bit of advice, my dearest, from one who loves you both - please don’t write to her of the baby, or ask her to be godmother. She is also quite pleased at your care of dear Drina but cannot help but miss her darling girl, as I’m sure you can understand, and eagerly looks forward to her reunion with her child”. “Dear diplomatic Antonia - what a pity we cannot set her loose for our own sake and reap the benefits of her understanding ourselves!” Charlotte writes in the margins of the letter before showing it to Leopold. The question of Drina returning to her mother has again been forced onto the Kendals, which Leopold neatly dodges by writing to Maria Antonia that while he would be happy to reunite his niece and sister, with Charlotte recovering from Frederick’s birth and their upcoming obligations, he cannot commit to a meeting until at least July, possibly later. Recovering from childbirth, Charlotte misses the official entrance on May 18th of King Kamehameha II of Hawaii and his Queen Consort Kamāmalu, and the reception held on the 28th for the couple. She is impressed by King Kamehameha’s refusal to enter Westminster Abbey [14], and intrigued by the royal couple. On June 4th, she, Auntie Fred, and Leopold accompany the King and Queen to the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane, making quite a stir amongst the attendees. Charlotte will later write that she found the royal couple “most intriguing - terribly exotic. The dear king was so interested in everything in England, and his queen - one could not doubt her great love for her king”. Auntie Fred wrote her own memories of the evening, commenting on the tongue tattoo of the Queen and wondering where she could get one of her own [15].

    Three days later, on June 7th, Charlotte and Leopold attend a grand reception at Buckingham House, held by the King to commemorate the signing of the Anglo-Dutch treaty. At the reception, it is also privately whispered that as a cherry on top of the treaty, the Duke of Kendal has unofficially betrothed his eldest daughter to the eldest grandson and heir presumptive to the King of the Netherlands [16]. The Duchess of Kendal - having refused her own Dutch marriage to choose her own husband, the aforementioned Duke - is believed to be the reason that the betrothal is unofficial. A biographer of Princess Charlotte “Lolly” of Kendal will later write that “The Duchess of Kendal, having escaped her own forced noose, was unlikely to agree to stick her four year old daughther in one. Charlotte was too clever to not see the political advantage of keeping the Dutch close to British interest - despite her wishes, she knew that a marriage between the Comte de Chambord and Lolly would never be allowed. Charlotte was also too clever to put her eggs in one basket. In 1824, Charlotte and Leopold only had two daughters, ages four and two, in an era where child mortality was common. An unofficial betrothal bought time and promised much while giving nothing - a perfect type of engagement for a Coburg-Hanover daughter”. There is no mention of the female Coburg-Hanover bargaining chip, Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent, in this biography, nor at the time of the unofficial engagement.

    In July, the visiting Queen Kamāmalu and King King Kamehameha II of Hawaii die six days apart from each other of measles. On July 18, the bodies were stored in the crypt of St Martin-in-the-Fields church while awaiting transportation back to Hawaii [17] - Charlotte and Leopold represented the royal family at a brief service for the couple in the church. Two days after the service, the Kendals are traveling for the summer - not to Claremont, as Charlotte had been wanting, but to Coburg. It has been selected as a nice neutral meeting ground for the reunion of Victoire and Drina. God knows it’s not a nice neutral place for anything else, the Duke of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha and his wife Luise having separated a few months before. Charlotte does not bring along the d’Estes, as Augustus is having another attack of his illness and they have retreated to Lamb House in Rye for the foreseeable future; Auntie Fred has elected to stay with them for the time being as well, refusing to even consider traveling to “little Coburg”. Instead, she brings along two new members of her household: Miss Augusta Fitzclarence and Miss Augusta d’Este, known better in the family as Aggie and Gusta, new maids in waiting for their cousin. The Koharys will be attending the reunion as well, along with Marie and Bernhard from Saxe-Meiningen and their children (their son Ernst having been joined in March by a daughter named Eleonore [18]). The general theory is the more people around, the better - not a bad theory by any means, but not a particularly wise one when it comes to this family.

    The first meeting is as dramatic as everyone expects. Victoire falls to her knees, gathers her daughter in her arms and wails about her love for her only child (in front of her other two children, invited to Coburg for the reunion [19]) and how they shall never be separated again, with intense side glares at Charlotte during the entire encounter. Charlotte responds by ignoring Victoire and greeting Karl and Feodore, the latter of whom she has not seen since she returned to Leiningen after her mother had moved to Vienna (Karl and Feodore, for what it’s worth, have taken neutrality as their official party line in the Victoire-Charlotte debacle). Charlotte has a possible match in mind for her pretty niece, but she’s certainly not going to say a word where Victoire can hear her about the whole thing. Maria Antonia, trying desperately to keep the peace, invites everyone to retire to the garden for a picnic lunch while the children play. Victoire, refusing to give an inch now that she’s gotten her mile, insists on bringing Drina to the lunch and sitting the child next to her. Drina remembers this day bitterly later in her diaries, remarking that “all the other children scampered off to play with Baroness Stockmar and the Fitzclarence cousins, whilst I remained with Mama and the adults. I was pleased to see her, of course, but my childish heart was stung at being left out”. After lunch, the adults scatter to their own devices - Charlotte and Maria Antonia, long distance friends for years, take advantage of the informality to spend time with the children. Charlotte, in particular, devotes attention to her godson Albrecht - the “poor little motherless lamb” as she refers to him. (Unofficially, Charlotte is on Luise’s team in the separation, and later Albrecht will fondly remember his aunt and “the kindness always shown by her to my mother”).

    Luise is not invited.​

    It is in these hacyclon days in Coburg that a friendship is sealed that will affect the entire face of Europe in generations to come: George of Kendal and Albrecht of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha. Two years apart, the two boys are, at first glance, as different as water and oil. Their mutual aunt, Maria Antonia, would describe them as thus: “Georgie, dear thing, is all Hanover charm and Coburg wit, with Lotte’s joie de vivre and Leo’s natural authority... Albrecht, quiet and sweet and so watchful, more likely to read than to run, unless Georgie leads him to it”. This friendship will survive familial disputes, marriages, miles of separation, losses, victories, and politics, and will later be the subject of several books, as well as feature heavily in every biography written about both members of the pair.

    Back in England, on August 24th, Mary d’Este has delivered at half past five in the afternoon of a “healthy, hearty, gurgling little boy”. He is named Augustus William Frederick, for his father, maternal grandfather, and great-aunt Frederica, who was at Mary’s side all through the labor and the first person after his father to hold him. Augustus d’Este the Younger (called Auwi by his loving family) will be known for his collection of Chinese artifacts, his vast and much loved collection of animals, his generous heart, and having his hair turn completely white by the age of twenty-two.

    The summer speeds away in the warm Coburg sunshine, and when the first week of September rolls around, everyone is of agreement that the visit -while very good- is ready to end. Bernhard and Marie, four months pregnant with her third child, are the first to leave, promising to come visit Charlotte and Leopold in London after the baby is born. and sending love to Adelheid and William and their children. (Obviously not in Victoire’s earshot, because Marie really just does not feel like physically throwing down with her aunt at this moment in time). The Kendals prepare to leave themselves, packing up their belongings - as well as Drina’s. Charlotte has been hoping for a peaceful leave-taking but since that’s obviously not going to happen, they have come prepared. During the trip, George IV had been persuaded by a certain son-in-law to write a letter demanding the return of the Princess Alexandrine Victoria of Kent to England at the end of the trip, where she will maintain a permanent basis with her aunt and uncle, who are also her legal guardians, until the time comes for her to marry. Why, you may be asking, has Leopold taken such a blatant stance against his sister in this? Well, he does love Drina and is willing to admit that Victoire probably isn’t the best guardian at this moment or mental state. Also, he’s remembered how to count and decided that SIX Hanover-Coburg marital bargaining chips are infinitely better than five, and since God only knows what Victoire will cook up for Drina’s marital prospects, it really is better that Leopold with his vast understanding of politics and all-consuming desire to see a Coburg under every crown be allowed to make such decisions.

    But of course, no one is actually saying that last bit out loud. Leopold is just all thinking it. Really loudly.

    As expected, this sets off another of Victoire’s emotional scenes, but this time Leopold is not budging. He’s willing to compromise, mind you, provided the compromise suits him. Drina is returning to England. Victoire is welcome to return to England and rejoin their household. Victoire absolutely refuses to do so. It is Brother Ernst, surprisingly, who has absented himself from the drama during the visit, who offers up a solution. As his wife has maliciously abandoned him and their sons and given into her promiscuous ways - and yes, that is the official party line in Coburg - , he is in need of a grande dame of the realm. Victoire should move to Coburg to take over that role, and also provide maternal love and care to little Ernst and Albrecht. Coburg is not the hostile territory to Great Britain that Austria is (truthfully, George IV and the British government tend to forget Coburg exists a good majority of the time), so Drina can come and visit as often as she pleases, and of course, Victoire can and should go as often as she pleases, and even take the boys with her when she does. Ferdinand and Maria Antonia, a little worn out with all their ‘understanding’, are on board. Charlotte and Leopold are on board. Drina, for whom the bloom is off the rose in the whole maternal situation, is on board. Victoire accepts, acknowledging in a letter to a certain pirate that her situation “would be infinitely better and more respected and of real worth” in Coburg than in London. As the Kendals are preparing to depart Coburg, a letter arrives from Paris: the King of France, Louis XVIII, has died. His brother, the Comte de Artois, has succeeded to the throne as Charles X. His son, the Duc de Angoulême, has become the Dauphin. As the Dauphin and Dauphine have no children, the succession then falls to the Comte de Chambord, Charlotte’s godson.

    After some debating that delays their time in Coburg even longer, His Majesty’s Government states that, should she feel it appropriate, The Princess Charlotte, Duchess of Kendal, has their agreement in making a private, personal call in Paris on the royal family there to convey condolences, given the friendship between the royal families [20]. Emphasis on the words ‘private’ and ‘personal’. Charlotte and Leopold agree - not that Leopold really got a vote in this situation, as Charlotte was going hell or high water to see her friend after spending what feels like hell in Coburg -, and travel quietly to France. They are greeted as private citizens at Tuileries Palace, where their warm friendship with the French royal family is renewed. Madame Dauphine will write in her diary that “We saw today the Kendals, dear Lotte and Leopold, and their five (!) little ones, along with their poor little niece - such a pity for her, for I fear given her unusual circumstances, her future shall be rather unsettled. Perhaps a marriage to a cousin will be best” (Yes, she sees the irony in the statement, and no, Madame does not give a damn). Leopold, never one to miss an opportunity, sets to work with Maria Carolina, more ambitious than people give credit for, on planning the future dynasties of Europe. Any match between Charlotte of Kendal and the Comte de Chambord is shut down fairly quickly, as is the suggestion of Princess Louise and Prince George. (As Auntie Fred will note in her diary “The British-French marriages seem to always result in someone dying” [21]). However, Leopold has a few more aces to play. Drina of Kent, for example, could do nicely for the Comte de Chambord - she is a British princess but not the daughter of the future Queen, so the government would in theory be less picky about her conversion. Unfortunately for Leopold, after Victoire’s visit to Paris in 1821, that ship has sailed, wrecked, and sunk to the bottom of the ocean. But that’s okay - he’s got other options: the Princes and Princess of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Koháry, who are related to the future British Queen but not British, and already Catholic. Their mother’s noble birth makes them unacceptable to marry the last son of the French Bourbons - but Maria Carolina has got other relatives of her own: namely, the Princes and Princesses of Orléans [22]. Their family is next in line to the French throne should her son have no male issue, and Maria Carolina has already planned for that contingency by betrothing her daughter Louise to the Orléans’ heir, Ferdinand Philippe. Ferdinand Philippe has sisters, however, who could do nicely for Leopold’s nephew Ferdinand. Granted, it’s a tenuous marriage alliance and neither of the parents of the children being discussed have agreed (or even been brought into the loop), but it could work.

    After two weeks in Paris, Charlotte and Leopold return to England, going immediately to Claremont where they will remain for the rest of the year in quiet, familial seclusion. The d’Estes and Auntie Fred rejoin them in November from Romney. November is not a good month for the British: in the third week of November, 400 families are left homeless from the Great Fire of Edinburgh. Charlotte and Leopold not only send money and food, Charlotte personally sees to helping find shelter for the families, while Leopold sends a note to his architect on the scene that the families left homeless in the fire shall be offered employment either restoring or working at Falkland Palace, and shall be allowed to reside there for as long as needed, or there will be a severe royal dressing down coming his way. On the 23rd of November, literally two days after the fire has ended, there is a great storm in the English channel that devastates Sidmouth, Weymouth, and Lyme Regis, washing away the ferry from the Isle of Portland and destroying the quays at Weymouth.

    It’s an unsurprising end to a year that’s had a very “one step forward, two steps back” feeling to it, as Charlotte describes it.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------

    [1] It was actually bought by John, 3rd Marquess of Bute in 1887, but when Leopold does real estate, Leopold does real estate.

    [2] Prince Leopold Franz Julius of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Koháry, born January 31, 1824. Famously offered as a possible spouse for Isabel II of Spain, he later made a morganatic marriage to concert pianist Constanze Greiger.

    [3] This is entirely OTL - even I couldn’t make this up.

    [4] Alexander Gordon Laing, British explorer and the first European to reach Timbuktu. He more or less got the hell out of Dodge when it came to the situation in Ghana, only to die five weeks after leaving Timbuktu.

    [5] William Frederick, the Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh, brother to Princess Sophia Matilda. A nephew of George III, he was originally intended to marry Charlotte of Wales; after she refused him, he married his cousin Princess Mary of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and became Charlotte’s uncle through marriage. He was rather pompous and known to ‘keep more state than the king’. The general public opinion of him is shown by his nickname, "Silly Billy”.

    [6] Born HH Princess Marie of Hesse-Kassel, she was the sister to Auguste, Duchess of Cambridge; she was also descended from the British royal family through her grandmother Mary, The Landgravine of Hesse, a daughter of George II.

    [7] The fifth daughter of George III and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, and the favorite paternal aunt of Charlotte, Duchess of Kendal. She never married officially but according to legend, she was a lover of and possibly married to General Thomas Garth, her father’s equerry and a guardian to Princess Charlotte of Wales before her marriage; she also supposedly was the mother of Thomas Garth the Younger, the son of General Thomas Garth. (There’s also a theory that she was having an incestous relationship with her brother, the Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale, but it’s icky and I don’t want to get into so I won’t).

    [8] Friedrich Wilhelm IV, the later King of Prussia. Known as “the romanticist”, he was famous for the buildings he built in Potsdam and Berlin. He’s also a nephew of Auntie Fred through her half-brother, Friedrich Wilhelm III.

    [9] Henry Edward Fox, the eldest legitimate son of Lord Holland and the future Lord Holland. Only six years younger than Charlotte, ITTL he’s a good friend of hers. He’s also coming back, so pay attention.

    [10] Willem I of the Netherlands. He started out as the Prince of Orange and declared the Netherlands a kingdom in 1815 after being urged to do so by the Congress of Vienna. He was distantly related to the British royal family through his grandmother, Anne, The Princess Royal, daughter of George II. His first wife, Wilhelmine of Prussia, was the half-sister of Auntie Fred.

    [11] Augustus Fitzgerald, 3rd Duke of Leinster. Previously mentioned. Born in 1819, married Lady Charlotte Augusta Stanhope, daughter of the 3rd Earl of Harrington, in 1818. His oldest son, Charles Fitzgerald, was born in March 1819 - eight months before Prince George of Kendal. Their friendship is entirely my own invention

    [12] Born HRH Princess Wilhelmine of Prussia, she was the fourth child of Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia and Friederike Luise of Hesse-Darmstadt. Unpopular for her retiring and reserved nature, she was interested in painting and was eventually inducted as an honorary member to the Royal Academy of Fine Arts. She’s a half sister to Auntie Fred through their father, Friedrich Wilhelm II.

    [13] Sister of Mary Fitzclarence d’Este, illegitimate daughter of William, The Duke of Clarence and St. Andrews, and Dorothea Jordan. She’s coming back, just saying.

    [14] In the words of Bill Mai'oho, the curator of the Royal Mausoleum of Hawaii, "Liholiho, King Kamehameha II, refused to step in there, because he wasn't blood-connected. These were the kings, and he felt he had no right to walk around their caskets. He didn't even step foot [sic] in there, he didn't want to desecrate their burial places with his presence or his feet stepping in that area." (Nu'uanu, O'ahu -- A Native Place: Pohukaina)

    [15] The Queen had her tongue tattooed in 1823 as a sign of mourning after the death of her mother-in-law, Queen Keōpūolani.

    [16] Better known as Willem III. Yes, that Willem III. Leo’s getting a jump on his “Coburg under every crown” plot.

    [17] This is true - they were placed in the crypt of St Martin-in-the-Fields church until August 1824 when their bodies were returned to Hawaii on HMS Blonde. There is no record of them having a service performed in the church, but I figured it would be nice to give them a moment of respect from Charlotte and Leopold.

    [18] HH Princess Eleonore Adelheid Marie Antoinette of Saxe-Meiningen, born March 15, 1824. Named for her paternal grandmother, paternal aunt, mother, and maternal grandmother.

    [19] Karl, The Prince of Leiningen and his sister Princess Feodore. ITTL since Karl turned 18 in 1822, Feodore has been alternating between living in Leiningen with him and her governess Luise Lezhen, and living in Austria with Ferdinand and Maria Antonia and her mother. For those of you wondering, she prefers Leiningen.

    [20] George IV was actually very kind to the exiled Bourbons while he was Prince Regent, and even granted them permanent right of asylum and extremely generous allowances. The original offer of asylum had come from his mother and Charlotte’s namesake, Queen Charlotte, who was very dear friends with Marie Antoinette.

    [21] Auntie Fred is not wrong here. The last two French-British marriages had been Henrietta Maria of France and Charles I of England (who was infamously beheaded by his government), and Princess Henrietta of England and Philippe, The Duke of Orléans (Henrietta was supposedly poisoned by Philippe’s lover, the Chevalier de Lorraine, but most likely died of gastroenteritis). Other English-French dumpster fire marriages include Eleanor of Aquitaine and Henry I (he literally locked her up for sixteen years) and Isabella of France and Edward II (she may or may not have had him murdered).

    [22] The Duchess of Orléans is Maria Carolina’s paternal aunt, born Princess Maria Amalia of Naples and Sicily.
     
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    Chapter 14
  • cms_22913_2.bro

    Portrait of The Duke and Duchess of Kendal at Claremont, believed to be painted by Princess Feodore of Leiningen

    In January of 1825, Claremont is host to a bevy of royal visitors: Princess Feodore of Leiningen, her brother the Prince of Leiningen, Duke Alexander of Wurttemberg [1], and Prince Maximilian Karl of Thurn und Taxis [2]. Also in London for the winter and invited to come visit Claremont [3] fairly often are the Duke and Duchess of Cumberland and Teviotdale with their son. The latter is really a bit of a shock, given their reputations both at home and abroad [4], but Charlotte is deciding to let bygones be bygones and give her aunt and uncle a chance. Ernest and Charlotte never quite see eye to eye on politics, or truthfully much else, but he appreciates the effort made by his niece and does his best to be a good guest and a good uncle to her; famous for his cavalry skills, Ernest becomes one of Charlotte’s preferred riding companions. Frederica, the Duchess, is 18 years older than her niece - who is conveniently the same age as Frederica’s oldest daughter. While she’s got her own vices and sins, being unkind has never been one of them, and Frederica does her best to take Charlotte under her wing and becomes very maternal to her. Charlotte appreciates the kindness of her aunt and uncle, even though she takes it with a grain of salt and realizes that at least part of it comes from wanting to butter their bread for her eventual reign. Still, she likes Frederica and her visiting daughter, Princess Auguste of Solms-Braunfels [5], and George of Kendal enjoys playing with George of Cumberland. She can see giving them the Viceroyalty of Ireland or something similar; a nice high title with little power attached to it. Leopold’s feelings toward Ernest come somewhere above hatred while his feelings toward Frederica land somewhere around lukewarm: he doesn’t mind having some extra allies in the British royal family and beyond, given Frederica’s other children scattered about Germany.

    Prince Frederick of Kendal delivers his first word on the last day of January, something that will come to be considered a defining moment of his personality: “No”. [6]

    In later generations, Charlotte will be remembered amongst royal biographers as “The Matchmaker of Europe”, particularly for her somewhat out-of-the-box matches between family members. A prime example of this is her plot to marry her niece, Feodore of Leiningen, to her cousin, Prince Maximilian Karl of Thurn und Taxis. Now, Max is an interesting case amongst the royal families of Europe in that he is equally too royal to marry someone who isn’t royal and not royal enough to marry a really up-there royal. Through his mother, Duchess Therese of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, he is a nephew of the Duchess of Cumberland and Teviotdale and, through marriage, the King of Prussia; he is also a second cousin once removed to Charlotte through Duke Karl Ludwig of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. So maternally, he’s got the goods, bloodline-wise. It’s his paternal ancestry that’s a bit less purple - while being technically Princes, they don’t actually rule over anything except a lot of money and the post office of the Austrian Empire. His sister Maria Theresia’s husband, Prince Paul Anthony Esterházy of Galántha, is the current Austrian ambassador to the United Kingdom, so this trip is a nice family reunion for Max. Feodore -despite being a niece to the future Queen and King (consort) of the United Kingdom- is low enough on the royal food chain to nicely qualify for Max. Leopold is particularly on board with the scheme, as the Thurn und Taxis family is one of the richest in Europe and could help work some impressive influence in Austria in combination with Leopold’s sister-in-law, Maria Antonia (one of the other richest people in Europe), should the need arise. Feodore, happy at the idea of being out from her mother’s sphere of influence and tantrums, helps the cause nicely by falling in love with Max rather quickly. Max, charmed by Feodore and knowing that the niece of the future Queen of England is about as high as he can aim, proposes almost as quickly.

    There’s another reason Max proposes almost as quickly as he learns Feodore’s name: he may have a competitor on the rise, and it’s not one that he can beat. As February begins, it is announced in London that the wife of the King (calling her ‘Queen’ is just a political mire at this point, since she’s married to the King but was not crowned and isn’t technically claimed by him) is ill in Italy, where she has been languishing in bad health for some time. On February 5th, George IV receives a letter from his ‘most interesting’ erstwhile sister-in-law, the Dowager Duchess of Kent. She has heard of his... well, of Caroline’s indisposition, and she’s writing to offer her concern and condolences. Rumors quickly arise that there’s more to Victoire’s letter: she’s already got a new Queen in mind for him, whenever he’s done with grieving. There will be a theory in later generations that Victoire first offered herself as the new Queen. One of Victoire’s biographers will defend the theory, writing that “she saw herself as fairly well-connected, was known to the King, not unpleasing in face or figure, and had already proved herself capable of having children with men of uncertain virility not once, but twice. English law at the time forbade the marriage of a man to his brother’s widow - but one might still wonder what might have come out of the marriage of Victoire and George IV” [7]. English law aside, Victoire was already thirty-nine at this time, and had not made herself popular amongst her husband’s family.

    Regardless of what is or isn’t offered up in her letter, it’s fairly clear who Victoire is considering for the new Queen: her daughter Feodore, already conveniently in England to be inspected at the King’s disposal. While the original letter is not preserved (one of George IV’s few wise moves), a follow up letter from Victoire survives where she mentions Feodore wishing to pay a call on the King when she comes to London, writing that the King would find “her manner pleasing, her features lovely, and her manner entirely German, having inherited the health of my family. Sweet, affable, and charming, I do not doubt that she would serve as a balm to the abuses of ruling that prevail upon your Majesty’s nerves”. Nobody misses the subtle reference to Feodore’s ‘health’ and therefore fertility, which could provide the King with his longed-for son. And hey, if Victoire enacts her desired revenge on Charlotte and Co. by becoming mother to the new Queen of England and grandmother to the boy who usurps Charlotte’s position, well, all’s fair in love and war, right?

    The letter results in a marriage for Feodore, but not the one that Victoire intended. Almost as soon as the news of the letter reaches Claremont, they are sending out their own news: Karl of Thurn and Taxis has proposed to Feodore and been accepted, the union blessed by her brother and liege lord the Prince of Leiningen. Ironically, the news of the letter seems to spurn on another turn of bad luck for Victoire: Caroline is reported to be improving in Italy, supposedly commenting that Victoire must find another crown, as she would relinquish hers only to her daughter. As soon as one engagement is announced, another one occurs: Karl, Prince of Leiningen, to Princess Auguste of Solms-Braunfels. Charlotte and Frederica of Cumberland had actually planned on Auguste and Alexander of Wurttemberg but that ship quickly sails when Karl makes his interest known and Alexander politely (and in truth, rather happily - Auguste is nice and all, but not his type) steps aside. This is another coup for the House of Leiningen, as Auguste is the niece of the King of Prussia through her aunt Luise [8]. The Cumberlands stay on until March, when the Kendal family moves back to London, and they return to Hanover, taking Auguste with them, while Karl with the still single Duke Alexander returns to Leiningen to prepare for his wedding. Feodore reluctantly goes to Austria to see her mother and spends the whole time hiding in her rooms.

    In March, the sloop Anne is captured by a combined Spanish, Danish, and American naval force in the Caribbean, ending Roberto Cofresí’s reign of piracy in the Caribbean. Hailed as "the last of the West India pirates" in the report of his death, Roberto is quickly dethroned by none other than Sir John Ponsonby Conroy. Conroy, in his flagship Lady May, has been making a name for himself amongst the shores of Asia, Africa, and Australia in the last few years, and feels the time is right to move his enterprise to the Caribbean. The truly begins the reign of ‘Pirate King Conroy’, the man who will make himself the bane of navies across the seas, who supposedly sails with sails as black as his broken heart, who carries a locket containing the portrait of his Lady May, his one true love. (For those of you wondering, he still has a wife in Ireland and a rotation of concubines to make the Ottomans jealous, but these ruin the romance of the legend and tend to be ignored).

    On March 21st, the Kendals and Auntie Fred attend the premiere of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9, conducted by Sir George Smart [9]. Another of his pieces will performed to months later at the wedding of Princess Feodore of Leiningen and the Prince of Thurn und Taxis in Vienna - due to diplomatic issues, the Kendals are unable to attend, but send the handsome gift of a Broadwood piano and a painting of Claremont that remains in the art collection of the Thurn und Taxis family to this day.

    In June, Charlotte scores political points for generations to come: the Cotton Mills Regulation Act, heartly supported by herself and Leopold, passes, setting a maximum twelve hour work day for children under sixteen. Charlotte had wanted to outlaw work for children under sixteen but accepts, for the moment, that this is not feasible and takes the win where she can get it. She also begins hiring more and more ‘common’ children and teenagers to serve in her households at Claremont and in London, to be properly trained as ladies maids and housekeepers and pages and butlers before seeing that they get well-paying places amongst her friends and family. She also encourages noble friends to put the system in place in their own residences. One young man, later Sir William Bonde, starts off his career as a kitchen boy in Claremont and rises under the Kendals’ patronage to serve as the chief physician to the Duke of York. There are a few scuffles in the new system - some children do not respond well to their new station and retaliate by running away or stealing (those are turned over to serve in Auntie Fred’s household, where most become so charmed by her that they remain in her household until her death), and a few unfortunates try to steal some private papers to sell off to make some quick money (these are caught by Stockmar before anything can be sold - they are usually stealing the wrong sort of private papers anyway), but generally the system works well for all involved. Baroness Stockmar, born poor Miss Mary Gillray and a beneficiary of Charlotte’s social work, in particular appreciates the system and oversees the running of it for the rest of her life. Generations later, the Crown will enact the Mary Gillray Stockmar award to be given for ‘outstanding social work amongst young people’.

    In July, the Kendals attend the wedding of Karl and Auguste in Amorbach. Lolly and Missy (officially Princess Charlotte and Mary of Kendal) serve as bridesmaids to Auguste, while George and William serve as pages alongside their cousin George of Cumberland. Despite the ‘low’ ranking of the couple, the wedding is a veritable gathering of royalty: the Crown Prince and Princess of Prussia [10], the King and Queen of Wurttemberg [11] with their children [12], the Saxe-Coburgs (both German and Austrian lines), the Cumberlands, and various other royalties attend. The Crown Prince of Prussia hits it off rather well with Leopold - they are both well educated Germans who enjoy debating the finer points of Romanticism [13] as well as the benefits of a reestablishing the Holy Roman Empire or the College of Electors, a common theme amongst Romanticists. The Crown Princess and Charlotte get off on a decidedly less friendly foot, thanks to Elisabeth Ludovika’s rabid anglophobia - the conversation is recorded by a bystander as being polite but chilled, leaving Charlotte a bit frustrated and hurt (she’s not used to people not liking her). Refusing to be defeated, Charlotte sets out to make Elisabeth Ludovika her new best friend, a process spanning the next two years. Someone Charlotte is not determined to make her best friend during this trip is Victoire, the Dowager Duchess of Kent, who has chosen to be pissed that her son is marrying someone Charlotte introduced him to instead of being thrilled that her son is marrying a first cousin to the future King of Prussia.

    One new friendship does blossom during this visit: Prince George of Kendal is said to have spent several hours in the company of Princess Sophie of Wurttemberg, later reporting to his tutor that “she is quite nice” and asking his mother if they might not visit Sophie when they next come to see Karl and Auguste.

    In August, a financial crisis hits Britain: a Scottish adventurer named MacGregor manages to cause the first modern stock-crash after issuing a £300,000 loan through the bank of Thomas Jenkins & Company for the, as it turns out, fictitious Central American republic of Poyais. This eventually leads to the closure of six banks in London and sixty smaller banks throughout the English countryside - only an infusion of gold reserves from the Bank of France save the Bank of London from complete collapse. Leopold and Charlotte - who very wisely keep their money in many amounts in many banks throughout Europe - escape with some loss but are relatively unscathed; others lose everything. One good thing comes out of the crisis: economic reforms that eventually strengthen the market, including removing the monopoly enjoyed by the Bank of London and allowing banks to compete for government contracts and business. After the crash, the rest of the summer and autumn pass fairly smoothly. A highlight comes for young Prince George of Kendal when he is allowed to attend the inaugural row of the newly established Lady Margaret Boat Club at St. John’s College - club history states that it is Prince George who offers their motto ‘Si je puis’ (If I Can) when asked what it should be [14]. On August 29th, King João VI of Portugal recognizes his son Pedro as the independent Emperor of Brazil following Pedro’s declaration of Brazilian independence three years before. Charlotte, despite her general liberal beliefs, is horrified at this ‘roundabout revolutionary monarchy’ and refuses to send a letter of congratulations to the new Imperial couple upon their victory - she supposedly remarks that if a child of hers ever rose up against her in such a manner, she would die of a broken heart and be done with it rather than live with the shame of being a mother unrespected by her children (despite her relationship with her father, Charlotte has never tried to oust him from power, and respects him as her father if not as a monarch) [15]. The only victory in the situation as far as Charlotte is concerned is Great Britain’s separate treaty with the newly established nation, renewing favorable commercial rights and forcing Brazil to agree to abolish the slave trade with Africa within four years.

    On December 1st, Emperor Aleksandr Pavlovich of Russia dies from typhus in Taganrog. His brothers, Konstantin and Nikolai, dispute in typical Romanov fashion which of them will become the new tsar, but with an interesting twist: each brother wants the other one to accede. Konstantin eventually wins by losing the crown and confirms his resignation of his rights from Warsaw; on December 25th, Nikolai becomes Emperor Nikolai Pavlovich I, Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russians. One day later, Russian army officers lead a force of 3,000 men in revolt against Nikolai, led by Prince Sergei Trubetskoy amongst others. After a fruitless day of attempted parleys, Nikolai handles the revolt by ordering three artillery pieces to fire upon the rebels, killing many of the rebels and quickly ending the revolt. Traumatized by the revolt on his first day as Emperor, Nikolai quickly becomes determined to restrain Russia under his rule and begins censoring education, publishing, and many other forms of public life. In England, Charlotte and Leopold are sad at the loss of their dear friend, godfather to their eldest son, and send a loving letter of condolences to his widow, the dowager Empress Yelizaveta Alekseyevna. (They are also aghast at the political situation quickly shaping up in Russia but can’t do much about that right now). Prince George of Kendal sends his own letter to Yelizaveta Alekeseyevna, enclosing a small wooden Russian soldier sent to him by Emperor Aleksander on his last birthday with a note that he hopes his soldier will make her feel safe.

    *********

    Princess%2BCharlotte%2Bfrom%2BAutobio%2Bof%2BCornelia%2BKnight%2Bvol1%2B1861.jpg

    (Sketch of HRH The Duchess of Kendal by Mrs. Maria Callcott)

    “Her humanity and kindness to all who were in distress or affliction surpass belief, and I never knew a person less selfish.”
    - Miss Cornelia Knight, lady companion to Charlotte, Duchess of Kendal

    1826 begins with an announcement from Claremont: Charlotte is pregnant with her sixth child, due in the summer. This starts a round of cheerful joking amongst the newspapers of London, with one publishing a ‘Cure for Childlessness’ under which is written ‘Drink the waters of Claremont’. The nation is pleased at the thought of yet another heir to the throne, and surprisingly no one is more pleased than the old King himself. He’s been slowing down in the last few years and has been making an effort with his grandchildren - despite all his faults, no one can deny George IV cares for the Kendal children deeply. He is remembered amongst the older Kendal children as a ‘very fat, kind old man - very sickly but always ready to play to the best of his ability, always generous with gifts, always ready to speak with us as though we were most important to him’ [16]. The wild child of the British Royal Family is growing old at last, and even if George IV himself won’t admit it, everyone else is aware of it. Despite Caroline’s continuing poor health and decline, no one has mentioned remarriage for the King. On February 24th, a great celebration ball is held in London to celebrate the Treaty of Yandabo, which marks the end of the first Anglo-Burmese war. At the ball, George IV ceedes the first dance -always led by himself and a partner of his choosing- to Charlotte and Leopold, causing a flurry of whispers that the king is ill, is dying, has already died by the time the news has spread.

    In March, the King proves he’s still alive and kicking and ready to surprise. The famous elephant and London performer, Chunee, is to be put to death after turning violent and aggressive due to an annual “paroxysm” [17]. This news is devastating to children throughout England, particularly the Kendal children, raised to love all animals in “the menagerie called Claremont” as one visitor calls it. The story goes that Princess Charlotte of Kendal, upon a visit with her indulgent grandfather, went to him in tears and begged him to save the poor ‘Lelephant’ for her, even offering him her few coins of pocket money to help pay for the elephant’s care. Her elder brothers and younger sister quickly follow her lead and offer up their own meager savings if ‘Grandpapa King’ will help save Chunee. Always ready to be praised and be a hero, George IV nobly agrees to save the elephant. Chunee is bought and paid for the day before his scheduled second execution (the first having been a failed poisoning attempt), and relocated to the Tower of London. Still experiencing the musth that condemned him in the first place, Chunee is aggressive and violent and generally makes the King regret his choice. The future looks bleak for Chunee and after a week of not being fed or watered as no one dares approach him, one particularly brave soul, Sir Thomas Raffles, enters Chunee’s enclosure to find the elephant docile and friendly once again [18]. When Sir Thomas later helps start the Zoological Society of London a few weeks after the event, the Society takes Chunee’s outline as their emblem. One of the Society’s first acts will be to move Chunee to a new, stronger enclosure in Regent’s Park, where he will live happily for another twenty years.

    While Chunee is saved, others are not so lucky in the coming months: King João VI of Portugal dies on the tenth of March of suspected poisoning, having fallen ill six days earlier. No one knows for sure who would poison the king, but there is a great deal of suspicion flying about. Some suspect the Hieronymites, whose monastery the king originally became ill at; others begin to look suspiciously at Pedro's younger brother, Miguel, who some believe is now the rightful new King of Portugal - Miguel included [19]. On May 14th, Empress Yelizaveta Alekseyevna of Russia dies in Belyov on her return to St. Petersburg from reclaiming her husband’s remains in Taganrog. Her last letter, written to her mother, states "Do not worry too much about me, but if I dared, I would like to follow the one who has been my very life" [20]. Her will is published on the first of June and while most of her belongings are left to the Russian Imperial family, she leaves a few bequests to George and Charlotte of Kendal. For George, her husband’s godson, she leaves a pair of Aleksandr’s diamond cufflinks [21], his copies of Rousseau, and the small wooden soldier he had sent her the year before; for Charlotte, her goddaughter, she leaves a pearl drop necklace [22] and an emerald and diamond brooch [23]. On May 28th, after only 79 days of ruling, the new King Pedro IV of Portugal, Emperor of Brazil, renounces his crown in Portugal as he is aware that a reunion of the two countries would not be tolerated. He abdicates in favour of his eldest daughter after forcing in a new constitution, who becomes Maria II and is betrothed to her uncle the Infante Miguel. This is all in name, however, as Pedro finds himself unable to step back and actually allow his daughter and brother to rule as he said he wanted them too. It’s not looking too great for the monarchy of Portugal and Leopold himself writes to his brother Ferdinand that “should the whole situation last even a year, I shall be most surprised” [24].

    On the nineteenth of June, the Tories take an increased majority over the Whigs in the general election, to Charlotte’s private displeasure. She has learned to tolerate both sides of politics and, thanks to her friendship with Liverpool, has even come to appreciate certain Tories and certain Tory policies, but in her heart, Charlotte will always be a Whig. Leopold does his best to keep their son and heir, George, from listening too closely to either Liverpool or Charlotte during their political debates as he believes the crown should remain above such things. This tends to backfire on Leopold as George takes this as a sign to ignore political parties and loyalties in general and instead focus on the person themselves, an excellent philosophy in idea if not in practice.

    In June, a scandal rocks Europe that changes the face of royal marriages for generations. Prince Wilhelm of Prussia, second son of King Friedrich Wilhelm IV, has been in love with his second cousin once removed Princess Elisa Radziwill for years. While the King supports the marriage, there is opposition from the Mecklenburg relatives of his late wife Luise and the court has recently been flooded with allegations that Elisa’s Radzwill ancestors bought their princely title from Emperor Maximilian I of the Holy Roman Empire. Despite his best efforts to see Elisa adopted by Emperor Aleksandr of Russia or her maternal uncle Prince August of Prussia to improve her rank, the court refuses to accept the marriage and the King finds himself demanding that Wilhelm renounce any possibility of marriage with Elisa and instead become engaged to Princess Auguste of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, a niece of the Russian Emperor. Before Wilhelm can make his announcement, however, there is another demand on his honor: Elisa is revealed to be pregnant. In “the one bold brave move of [his] life”, as he will later describe it, Wilhelm and Elisa go before his father and beg to be allowed to be married [25]. His father is instantly under pressure to disown his son completely and strip him of his wealth and titles, leaving him and Elisa to survive on the charity of her family. Friedrich Wilhelm III dithers and delays on making a move because, hey, it’s his son and he in his heart supports the marriage. The young couple are not married but no one is talking about Wilhelm marrying Auguste anymore, so the entire court of Berlin is in a waiting game at this point.

    Before a decision can be forced by the court, an outlier comes into play: Charlotte of Kendal. Having been apprised of the situation by Auntie Fred and Frederica of Cumberland (Prince Wilhelm’s paternal and maternal aunts respectively), Charlotte feels she has a pretty good understanding of the situation when she makes her first move. Charlotte sends a letter to Wilhelm and Elisa congratulating them on their future marriage and sending her regrets that she can not attend their wedding - with absolutely no sarcasm or irony. She sends them a gift of a tea service painted with daffodils, her unofficial emblem, as a wedding gift. She offers to stand as godmother to their first child whenever it is born (Charlotte is too much of a lady to say what everyone is already guessing), and hopes that on her next visit to Germany they can meet. In short, with one letter, Charlotte makes it very clear that she is on their team. And with Charlotte leading the charge, more support comes pouring in: Auntie Fred sends a letter to her younger brother the King of Prussia, chiding him to support his son; Frederica sends a public letter when she recalls “several conversations” where her sister Luise, Friedrich Wilhelm’s wife and Wilhelm’s mother, spoke of her fondness of Elisa and the nobility of the Radziwills; the Crown Prince and Princess of Prussia (herself having Radziwill ancestry in a maternal line) publicly go to the King and ask him to support the marriage. The Crown Princess’ sisters in Austria, Bavaria, and Saxony spur their husbands to give support [26]. The Dukes of St. Andrews, Cumberland, Cambridge, and Sussex write in their support for the couple. From France, the Dowager Duchesse de Berry extends her support as well, offering to send for the young couple and bring them to Paris and out of ‘beastly Berlin’. The ‘Elisa Faction’, as Charlotte and cohorts become known, quickly comes to encompass most of Europe. When the Mecklenburgs attempt to bully Charlotte into standing down, she quickly cuts them to their knees, reminding them of several of their own marriages that are not quite up to royal snuff [27]. Charlotte even offers up a way to soothe feathers in Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, where the official story is that Wilhelm jilted Auguste for a commoner: let Marie, Auguste's sister, marry Prince Karl of Prussia, Wilhelm's younger brother. They have been in love for the past two years and merely waiting on an engagement from Auguste and Wilhelm to be allowed to be married [28]; now that that's dead in the water, they should be allowed to marry and quickly to repair the rift between the families. Both vehemently anti-British, they will never give forgive Charlotte for supporting the Radziwill marriage, even if she helped bring their own about - they are married seven months later on January 26, 1827. Even the Emperor of Russia, publicly besieged by the popular support for Elisa amongst the nobility and royalty of Europe, and privately charmed by his wife [29], eventually gives up his opposition, though he will not support the match.

    Years later, a biographer will accuse Charlotte of attempting to create a ‘coterie of royal women’ to ‘rule Europe around the traditional masculine authorities’, and cite this situation as proof. While this can never be proven or disproven, it is noted that Charlotte created deep personal relationships with most of the royal women in Europe throughout her reign, either as friends or relatives. One of the more surprising of these friends is Elisabeth Ludovika, Crown Princess and later Queen of Prussia. A rabid Anglophobe, Elisabeth Ludovika resisted Charlotte’s friendship since their meeting the year before, remarking to her husband that she “could not bring herself to forgive her Englishness”. Charlotte’s selfless defense of Elisa, however, is Elisabeth Ludovika’s tipping point. Raised in the loving court of Bavaria to value family, Elisabeth Ludovika cannot resist Charlotte’s kindness and warmth to her sister-in-law, particularly when she herself was afraid to take the first step to defend Elisa and Wilhelm [30]. A unique friendship springs up between the two: Elisabeth Ludovika finds herself devoted to Charlotte while retaining her Anglophobia, remarking to her sister Sophie that Charlotte “is very much one of our people, not English at all in her temperament or outlook”. Charlotte herself takes Elisabeth Ludovika’s views with a grin and finds her to be “a truly lovely friend, well educated, warm, and as dear to my heart as any sister could be”. Years later, when asked by a grandchild why she had gone out of her way to help Elisa and Wilhelm, with no obvious benefit to herself, Charlotte shrugged and replied “I too had once risked losing my love, and I had wished for someone to stand in my corner. After being so blessed, how could I not do what I had wished someone had done for me? Besides,” she added with her famous grin “we really did have to do something about that Mecklenburg meddling”.

    June in the rest of Europe passes about as peacefully as it does in Prussia. On June 15th, Sultan Mahmud II of the Ottoman Empire forces the disbandment of the Janissary corps after their revolt against him. They are replaced by a more modern military unit, which Mahmud orders to be drilled in the European style. Because Mahmud cannot catch a break, a week later on June 21st, the combined Egyptian and Ottoman forces attempt to enter Mani, part of rebelling Greece, and fail, despite having twice the number of men of the Greeks. Leopold, always watching for a new opportunity, remarks to Charlotte that the Greeks might just surprise them all and reclaim their independence. They will need a king if they do, of course, and will most likely choose him from amongst an already reigning family to ensure protection from a Major Power, like Great Britain. It’s just a comment on a political situation - of course.

    Meanwhile in Prussia, after almost two months of debate, King Friedrich Wilhelm III makes his decision: Wilhelm and Elisa are to be married, fully and equally, with his support. Elisa will take the style and title of Her Royal Highness Princess Wilhelm of Prussia, with the royal style and title extending to any children born of her marriage with Wilhelm. (He also at this time makes a comment to a minister that it is truly a pity that Charlotte is not Prussian or they would surely rule all of Europe by now). On the 30th of July, Prince Wilhelm of Prussia marries Princess Elisa Radziwill in the chapel of Schloss Pfaueninsel, the King’s summer residence, with the entire -mostly grumbling- court of Berlin in attendance.

    On the last day of July, Charlotte delivers her third daughter, named Augusta - Charlotte had wanted to name her Caroline, for her mother and her dear friend the Dowager Duchesse de Berry, but George IV refused and instead offered up ‘Georgiana’ for himself. Leopold helped them reach a compromise by offering up Augusta, the name of George’s grandmother and Leopold’s mother as well as Charlotte’s middle name. Like everything in this family, even naming a child is fraught with drama, and Charlotte and her father are still tense weeks later. Baptised a week later in the drawing room of Kew Palace by the Reverend Llewellyn Lewellin, she is named ‘Augusta Elizabeth Sophia’ for her paternal grandmother and godmothers. Her godparents include the Crown Princess Elisabeth Ludovika of Prussia (represented by represented by Miss Augusta d’Este), Princess Sophia of Gloucester and Edinburgh [31], The Duchess of Cambridge [32], The Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz [33] (represented by Leopold), Duke Alexander of Wurttemberg (represented by The Hon. Henry Fox), and Prince Wilhelm of Prussia (represented by Lord Romney). The newest little Kendal princess will be known later in life as ‘Leopoldina’, a tribute to her uncanny resemblance to her father in both looks and temperament; she will take this name in pride and sign her private letters with it from her childhood on. Her brother William will later joke that Leopold’s true heir is Augusta and the “five that came before her mere practice”. It is at Augusta’s christening that a good bit of news is announced: The Hon. Henry Fox, future Lord Holland, has proposed to Charlotte’s cousin Auguste d’Este and been accepted [34].

    They marry two months later at St George's Hanover Square Church, attended by the royal family and a great number of Whig politicians - the presence of the Whig politicians is an unfavorable reminder of the political leanings of the King and his heir, and causes much negative commentary amongst the Tories. The new Hon. Mrs. Henry Fox receives Mount Albion House in Ramsgate, Kent, as a wedding present from her father - it will serve as the country home of the Fox family for generations to come. Augusta’s niece, The Hon. Emma d’Este, will recall later in life that “Uncle Fox was, even then to my young eyes, quite devoted to Aunt and to us - we children spent many weeks at Mount Albion with them when Father’s health demanded Mother’s attention”. A political opponent generations later will remark “It is damnably hard removing Foxes from Kent - their mother den is at Mount Albion, and it is there that they draw their strength”.

    The rest of the year passes by quietly, with the Foxes celebrating Christmas at Holland House with the Kendals in attendance (having chosen to spend the winter at Kew Palace). The Romneys return to Lamb House for the winter, where Augustus’ health continues to decline. On December 11th, Empress Maria Leopoldina of Brazil dies following a miscarriage a few days before. Charlotte - who still finds the whole Brazilian monarchy to be sketchy- is sorry to hear of Maria Leopoldina’s death and the grief it causes to her children, and sends a consoling letter to the new Queen of Portugal offering her condolences. One of Maria Leopoldina’s friends, Mrs. Maria Graham [35], is recently returned from Brazil where she stood as the tutor to the now-Queen of Portugal. It is the Queen of Portugal, in reply to Charlotte’s letter, who recommends Mrs. Graham as tutor to the Kendal princesses. Mrs. Graham - soon to be Mrs. Callcott in her second marriage - accepts the position happily. Her new husband, the landscape artist Augustus Callcott, is retained as a painting tutor for the Kendal children, a situation suiting everyone.

    **********

    4_elisas_mutter.jpg

    HRH Princess Wilhelm of Prussia (nee Princess Elisa Radziwill)

    As the new year of 1827 begins, England is struck with a tragedy. Frederick, The Duke of York and Albany and the erstwhile husband of Auntie Fred, dies of dropsy on January 5th in London. He leaves his entire estate of Oatlands (and a massive pile of debts to be paid) to his wife, Friederike, with a note flippantly stating “Perhaps I shall bring you more joy in death than I did in life” [36]. He is buried two weeks later at St. George’s Chapel in Windsor in a private funeral attended by the royal family, his unpopularity and gambling debts making a private funeral “much wiser”. In his memory, his great-nephew, Prince William of Kendal, will later name one of his racehorses “Freddie York” - like his namesake, the horse will “win all the races that don’t matter and lose all the ones that do”.

    Everyone in Europe, it seems, is awaiting the birth of Elisa and Wilhelm’s child in Prussia - if it is a girl, nothing will really change. If it is a boy, he could be the next king of Prussia (as the Crown Prince and Princess still have no son), and the Elisa faction might be called upon again to persuade the courts of Europe to accept the young prince as a possible heir. On February 7th, Prussia receives it's newest princess at 4:32 in the morning, the time dutifully recorded by her father in his journal. Princess Luise Elisabeth Charlotte of Prussia is named for her paternal and maternal grandmothers, her paternal aunt, and her godmother in England. She is baptised two days after her birth in the palace chapel of the Charlottenburg Palace in Berlin, with all of the Prussian royal family in attendance. “What a very healthy child she is, for one supposedly born a month before her time” Luise’s aunt, Princess Karl of Prussia (formerly Marie of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach,), remarks bitterly in a letter to her mother. All is not joy, however - the birth of her daughter has weakened Elisa’s health dangerously and it is several months before she can even walk in the gardens unaided. Elisa’s health will never fully recover after the birth of her daughter and she will spend many winters at spas both in Germany and abroad trying to repair it. The King in Prussia is delighted with his newest granddaughter, the only one in Prussia [37], and spends many hours holding the little princess. Charlotte sends her new goddaughter a blanket embroidered by her own hand with daffodils and violets [38], a cameo brooch, and a book of German fairytales, with her own notes and commentary lovingly written in the margins.

    On March 1st, Charlotte and her son George are back in Wales, for the official opening of the college. Young George gives a speech in halting Welsh to the 26 students, asking them to “do well and remember God”, and Charlotte gifts the college with a stained glass window for St. David’s chapel, emblazoned with her personal coat of arms and the College’s motto “Gair Duw Goreu Dysg” [39]. The Principal of the College, The Reverend Thomas Price [40], gives a blessing in Welsh before the beginning of the first class, which Prince George of Kendal proudly reports to his mother and tutor that he understood “nearly all of”. This is a signal to Charlotte that it is time to continue furthering her son’s education, with the Gaelic and Irish tongues of Scotland and Ireland. On March 7th, a scandal erupts in England following the Shrigley abduction. 15 year old heiress Ellen Turner is abducted by and forcibly wed to Edward Gibbon Wakefield in Gretna Green before being taken to Calais, where the authorities finally catch up with them [41]. The marriage is annulled by Parliament and Wakefield and his brother are sentenced to three years in prison; Charlotte, in a rare fit of temper, erupts at the sentence, furiously telling a friend that were she Queen they would be condemned to a life of rowing or shipping to the deadly new colony of Australia, to send forth a message about how England protected it’s girls to any who thought to repeat the offense. Ironically Edward Wakefield becomes active in prison reform upon his release, and is even appointed to committees created by Charlotte to look into the matter [42].

    On April 9th, an era in British politics comes to end when Robert Jenkins, the 2nd Earl of Liverpool, resigns as the Prime Minister following a severe cerebral hemorrhage [39]. Though he and Charlotte were often on opposing sides in politics, he was always kind to her and she considers him a true friend and is devastated at his poor health and retirement. She sends him a bouquet of flowers from Claremont and a long letter extolling his virtues and begging him to recover, “for we must have one sensible Tory in England, sir, and I know you to be the best of them”. Liverpool is touched and remarks to his wife “See what a Princess of Wales we possess!”. On April 10th, George Canning, often considered the most brilliant politician of his era, becomes the Prime Minister [43]. Charlotte and Leopold are excited about Canning’s appointment, with Leopold remarking “Here is a man with which we can achieve much!”. It’s not only politics in England experiencing an upheaval. On May 10th, in Brunswick, Charlotte’s cousin Karl II of Brunswick declares that the constitution enacted during his minority, limiting his powers, is invalid. Karl’s minority had been spent in London, under the supervision of his guardian, the Prince Regent, better known as George IV. (During his time in London, Karl did not endear himself to his cousin Charlotte, though she was and remains fond of his younger brother Wilhelm). His age of majority was decided to be nineteen; when Karl was eighteen, the Prince Regent rushed through the aforementioned constitution which limited Karl’s powers, redefined his duchy and hereditary lands, and his income as head of the house of Este-Guelph [44]. Austria supports Karl in his claim that the constitution is invalid, going so far as to call England an “usurper” and starting a whole new diplomatic mess. The German Confederation attempts to play peacemaker and recommends that Karl accept the constitution - Karl recommends that the Confederation mind their own business and continues to rule as an absolute monarch, continuing one thousand years of Guelph tradition. Shockingly, popular opinion quickly turns against Karl. His brother Wilhelm, living quietly in Prussia at the time and serving as a major in their army, manages to become the most popular member of the House of Brunswick by simply breathing and not being Karl.

    On the 6th of July, the United Kingdom, Russia and France sign the Treaty of London, calling upon the Greeks and Ottomans to cease their hostilities. To Leopold’s joy, the Great Powers have decided to come in on the side of the Greeks and support their independence, though he is disappointed by the stipulation that the Sultan would remain the overlord of the independent Greek state (a confusing situation that no one looks too closely at) [45]. The Ottomans decline to accept the treaty, however, believing that they could win based on their superior naval power compared to the three biggest powers in Europe at the time [46]. Prime Minister George Canning does not have long to celebrate his new piece of diplomatic brilliance, however: in poor health since the funeral of the Duke of York some months before, Canning dies on August 8th at Chiswick House after a period in office of only 119 days. This record will be broken in later generations by the poor soul who only lasts 2 days, but he’s not even a twinkle in an eye at this point, so the title of Shortest Serving Prime Minister is safely Canning’s for the time being [47]. The Kendals attend his funeral at Westminster Abbey, and Charlotte sees to it that her father pays an allowance to Canning’s widow and young son in recognition of his years of service, and George IV even makes Canning’s widow “Viscountess Canning of Kilbrahan” for her husband’s services to the Crown [48]. On the 31st of August, twenty three days after the death of the man who could have been the greatest Prime Minister in history, Frederick John Robinson, 1st Viscount Goderich is appointed Prime Minister, and is generally considered one of the most disappointing Prime Ministers in history. “Poor Goderich,” Auntie Fred was said to sighed, “it is so terribly hard to be a flawed man following a brilliant one” [49].

    The waters of Claremont continue to provide powerful, as one court wit reports: on the first day of September, Charlotte’s seventh pregnancy is announced. A popular poll is taken up regarding the baby’s gender and name - for a girl, Amelia is the front-runner for Charlotte’s deceased aunt; for a boy, Arthur or Alfred. Septimus or Septima are often suggested as well [50], with Leopold remarking to his son George “You must be renamed Primo, then, as you as the first”. Some political soul begins publishing pamphlets predicting the reign of Septimus the First, Prince of the United Kingdom, King of Greece. While Leopold publicly denounces this, in private he remins quiet on the matter, remarking only “It would be odd to place a fourth son so high above his elder brothers” [51].

    On October 20th, the Battle of Navarino occurs in Navarino Bay on the west coast of the Peloponnese peninsula. Despite the confidence of the Ottomans regarding their navy, it turns out that thinking you’re the baddest in the sea does not make it so. The Ottoman navy is crushed by the united navies of the United Kingdom, Russia, and France - 3,000 men are killed and more than 60 ships are sunk or destroyed in the battle [52]. The fledgling Greek Republic is saved, for the moment. Sir Edward Codrington, the Commander in Chief of the Mediterranean Fleet, is applauded as a hero, though the battle was actually more the result of him attempting to coerce the Ottomans into compliance with the Treaty of London.

    On November 24th, voting is completed in elections for France’s members of the Chamber of Deputies. The results are not good for the royal family: the Ultraroyalistes, supporters of the King, have lost their majority of 223 seats and instead now hold 180 seats, the same as their opponents the Doctrinaires [53]. Charles X is furious and the rest of the French royal family are uneasy to say the least; no one has forgotten the Revolution. Maria Carolina, Duchesse de Berry, writes to Charlotte that “I fear to step outside even into the garden, remember the stories told to my family by the ones who survived the terror of before. My poor Henri - what shall he inherit? France must be returned to her glory but I fear that we cannot return with the government so turned against us. I must save my son and his inheritance, and I fear doing what I know I must, as I know the King will hate it so”. It is on this note that the year of 1827 comes to a close: with everyone wondering what they must do next in this world that seems to no longer run smoothly.

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    [1] Alexander was the second son of Leopold’s sister Antoinette and a first cousin to Emperors Aleksandr and Nikolai Pavlovich of Russia through his father. OTL he married Princess Marie d'Orléans and founded the Catholic branch of the House of Wurttemberg.

    [2] Maximilian Kar, 6th Prince of Thurn and Taxis, later head of the private Thurn-und-Taxis-Post and one of the richest men in Austria. He’s a cousin to Charlotte and the British royal family through his mother, Duchess Therese of Mecklenburg-Strelitz

    [3] The Duke and Duchess of Cumberland were living mainly in Berlin at this time; they would return to England OTL in 1826 after Parliament increased the Duke’s allowance for the education of his son, Prince George. As the Cumberlands are low in the line of succession here and dropping lower, they will continue to mainly live in Germany until someone decides to bankroll them back to London.

    [4] As previously discussed, the Cumberlands were not as pure as the newfallen snow, or even the driven snow. Ernest Augustus was just a generally sketchy person and suspected of murdering his valet, among other things, and Friederike was accused of murdering her second husband to be with Ernest Augustus. They had a very happy marriage by all accounts, though.

    [5] Princess Auguste Luise Therese Mathilde of Solms-Braunfels, born July 25, 1804. OTL she married Albrecht, Prince of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt.

    [6] Should give you a pretty clear indication of what kind of person he is going to be. (There’s no records of royal children’s first words that I can find, but I figured they had to say them at some point, and Frederick should have one moment of being funny in his lifetime).

    [7] This is entirely my own invention, there is no proof that the Dowager Duchess of Kent ever made or even considered an offer of this kind, or an offer regarding her daughter Feodore and George IV. That being said, for those of you wondering what the marriage of Victoire and George IV would have been like, my answer is: bad.

    [8] Duchess Luise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, sister of Friederike, Duchess of Cumberland, and wife of Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia. OTL Mother to Friedrich Wilhehlm IV, Empress Aleksandra Feodorovna of Russia, and Wilhelm I of Germany.

    [9] Sir George Smart was one of the chief musical leaders and organizers in England, and was instrumental in making Beethoven’s music known to England.

    [10] The future Friedrich Willhelm IV of Prussia and his wife, Elisabeth Ludovika of Bavaria.

    [11] Wilhelm I of Wurttemberg, Charlotte’s cousin by marriage, and his third wife, Pauline Therese of Wurttemberg.

    [12] Princess Marie of Wurttemberg, Princess Sophie of Wurttemberg, Princess Katharina of Wurttemberg, and Karl, the Crown Prince of Wurttemberg. In 1826, Pauline Therese will deliver their second son, Prince August, OTL born Princess Auguste.

    [13] Romanticism was a movement that encompassed most of the 19th century, and was characterized by its focus on emotion and individualism, as well as reverence of all the past and nature, preferring medieval influences rather than classical ones.

    [14] Completely my own invention of how the motto was arrived at, although OTL it was and remains the motto of the club.

    [15] From what I can tell, almost everyone looked a little sideways at Pedro in this situation.

    [16] OTL Queen Victoria reported that the King was very kind to her as a child whenever she met him (the general issue seems to have been her mother). And let’s be fair, even George IV wasn’t a completely heartless bastard - he loves his grandchildren.

    [17] Chunee was a famous performing elephant in London who was eventually put down in 1826 due to the annual paroxysm or violent behavior. Better known as musth, it is a periodic condition in which male elephants become increasingly aggressive and violent due to a random increase in reproduction hormones.

    [18] In India, domesticated elephants experiencing musth are chained for a week and neither fed nor watered. After one week, they return to their normal natures and are safe to release back to their herd. Here, they just happened upon a way to fix the musth by sheer dumb luck.

    [19] In the 1990s, Joao’s bowels were exhumed, rehydrated, and tested for poison. The results showed enough arsenic to kill two people, confirming that he was murdered with poison. Rumors that the Infante Miguel, Joao’s second son, had murdered his father were common at the time, and he was sketchy enough that it wasn’t a huge leap to believe them.

    [20] This was her OTL last letter to her mother and I just couldn’t leave it out

    [21] Again, entirely my own creation. I just wanted George to have something nice from his godfather. The cufflinks shown are from Imperial Russia, however, and show the double eagle of the Romanov family.

    [22] The pearl drop necklace is from the portrait shown of Yelizaveta Alekseyevna; I have no idea what happened to it after this portrait was painted.

    [23] This brooch did belong to the Imperial family of Russia and was sold by the Bolsheviks with their other jewels after the fall of the empire.

    [24] It actually lasted almost two years but backfired spectacularly shortly thereafter.

    [25] OTL Wilhelm gave up Elisa and married Auguste of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, with whom he had a very unhappy and bitter marriage. Here, he’s going to get some happiness because I can.

    [26] The Bavarian girls married incredibly well - Karolina Auguste married Franz II of Austria, Amalie Auguste married Johann I of Saxony, Sophie married Archduke Franz Karl of Austria (heir to his brother Ferdinand; their son was Franz Josef I of Austria), Maria Anna married Friedrich August II of Saxony (older brother of the Johann), and Ludovika married Duke Maximilian Josef in Bavaria.

    [27] These include Duchess Therese of Mecklenburg-Strelitz and Karl Alexander, Prince of Thurn and Taxis (parents of the aforementioned Maximilian Karl); Duchess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (later Duchess of Cumberland) and Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Solms-Braunfels; and Adolf Friedrich II, Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, and his third wife Princess Christiane Emilie of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen. The last one is pretty far back in the day but Charlotte is pulling out all the stops. (And yes, for those of you wondering, Frederica of Cumberland is totally fine with using her second marriage as an example of a not-up-to-snuff marriage; she uses it as an example of a not-up-to-snuff marriage for her own children).

    [28] Marie and Karl had met in Frankfurt in 1824 and been smitten. King Friedrich Willhem III, Karl’s father, was immediately in favor of the match; Marie’s maternal grandmother, Empress Mariya Feodorovna of Russia, was still considered the family authority at the time and was less impressed at the idea of her granddaughter marrying a third son. The Russians first proposed that Marie could marry Wilhelm and her sister Auguste could marry Karl, as they were closer in age and Wilhelm was said to prefer Marie to Auguste. Friedrich Wilhelm III refused, as this ignored the feelings and preferences of both his sons. Marie and Auguste’s mother was partially behind the OTL plan to defame Elisa Radzwill, although she was hoping for a different outcome: she wanted Wilhelm to marry Elisa morganatically, thus leaving the heirs of Karl and Marie to inherit. Finally, Marie was allowed to marry Karl without any restrictions or conditions imposed on Wilhelm, and they were married on March 26, 1827.

    [29] Aleksandra Feodorovna, born Princess Charlotte of Prussia, and by all accounts very close to her brother Wilhelm. OTL I can’t find any proof that she either supported or was against Wilhelm and Elisa, so here she’s going to take advantage of the growing support and gently nudge her husband towards helping her brother.

    [30] Again, I could not find anything showing that Elisabeth Ludovika was either for or against Wilhelm’s marriage to Elisa. In TTL, she’s for it because she’s a nice person and wants her brother in law to be happy, but she’s been keeping quiet because she’s worried that she won’t have a son and Wilhelm and Elisa will inherit the throne. Her husband’s status is likewise unknown but it is noted that during a visit to see Elisa’s family “As the King and the princes prepared to leave, the King warmly embraced and kissed Elisa to which she burst into tears. The two princes [Prince Friedrich Wilhelm and Prince Karl] were also clearly affected with sympathy for her”. Elisabeth Ludovika’s anglophobia was broken by kindness OTL as well. While she was at first against her nephew’s marriage to Victoria, the Princess Royal of Great Britain, Victoria’s care for Elisabet Ludovika in the first days of her widowhood touched her and Elisabeth Ludovika even left all of her jewels to her when she died.

    [31] Princess Sophia Matilda of Gloucester, a niece of George III through his brother William Henry, the Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh. She never married and held the office of Ranger of Greenwich Park.

    [32] Auguste of Hesse-Kassel, the Duchess of Cambridge, married to Charlotte’s uncle Adolphus, the Duke of Cambridge. She is six months younger than her niece by marriage, Charlotte, and TTL they are very close, despite the Cambridges living in Hanover year-round.

    [33] Georg, The Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. He was the first cousin once removed of Charlotte - his father was the brother of her grandmother and namesake, Queen Charlotte. He was also the brother of Friederike, the scandalous Duchess of Cumberland and Teviotdale.

    [34] OTL it was his older brother, Charles Fox (born before their parents’ marriage so he couldn’t inherit their father’s title), who married into the royal family via Miss Mary Fitzclarence (TTL Lady Romney). OTL Augusta d’Este married Thomas Wilde, Lord Truro, in 1845; Henry Fox married Lady Mary Augusta Coventry in 1833.

    [35] Maria Dundas Graham Callcott, a British travel writer, children’s author, and illustrator.

    [36] OTL The Duke of York and Albany outlived his wife by seven years.

    [37] Friedrich Wilhelm III had four granddaughters at this point: Grand Duchess Mariya Nikolaevna of Russia, Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia, Grand Duchess Aleksandra Nikolaevna of Russia, and Duchess Luise of Mecklenburg-Schwerin.

    [38] Daffodils being Charlotte’s unofficial emblem and violets being the official flower of February, when Luise was born.

    [39] The Word of God is the Best Learning

    [40] The Reverend Thomas Price, historian and a major Welsh literary figure. Price was also "an essayist, orator, naturalist, educationalist, linguist, antiquarian, artist and musician". OTL the first principal of St. David’s was Llewelyn Lewellin but he’s a little tied up at the moment educating the future King.

    [41] This is all OTL - Ellen Turner later married a wealthy neighbor and had a daughter.

    [42] This is also all OTL - Wakefield was a leader in prison reform upon his release.

    [43] George Canning was a British Tory statesman who occupied numerous senior positions in the government before becoming the Prime Minister. His policies as Foreign Secretary formed the basis of British foreign policies for generations.

    [44] This is entirely OTL - George IV was indiscriminate in screwing over family members, it seems.

    [45] This was the OTL phrasing of the treaty, which is a little confusing to me and I assume to the Greeks.

    [46] 100% OTL

    [47] The title is still Canning’s OTL - he is the shortest serving Prime Minister to die in office. If you can guess which Prime Minister I ‘killed’ off to steal his title, I’ll give you brownie points and naming rights for a child of the couple of your choosing (not Charlotte and Leopold, but any other couple mentioned in this TL).

    [48] Canning left behind three children: William, who drowned in 1828; Harriet; and Charles, who was only fifteen at his father’s death. His wife Joan was made Viscountess Canning in 1828, with a special remainder to the heirs male of her late husband.

    [49] Goderich was unable to hold Canning’s government together after his death and OTL resigned after 144 days in office.

    [50] Septimus and Septima mean ‘seven’ and are a play on the name of Charlotte’s uncle Octavius, who was named thus as he was the eighth son of his parents.

    [51] This is ironic as Leopold himself was a third son who, as King of the Belgians, ranked higher OTL than his older brothers.

    [52] This is what happened OTL, down to the number of deaths.

    [53] The Ultraroyalistes were usually members of the nobility who supported Catholicism as the only religion, the Bourbons, and traditional class hierarchies. The Doctrinaires basically supported the opposite of all of that.
     
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    Chapter 15

  • Arthur%2BWilliam%2Bat%2BAge%2BSeven%2BWeeks%2C%2B1850.jpg

    “Oh this year - what a year! You see, we were right to name him as we did - one must be a conqueror to survive being born in a year such as this!”
    HRH The Duke of Kendal to his sister-in-law HSH Princess Maria Antonia of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kohary, December 1828

    Oh what a year the year of 1828 will be remembered as. Starting off in France, on the 4th of January, Jean Baptiste Gay, vicomte de Martignac, becomes the minister of the interior and the de facto head of the cabinet. Martignac will achieve many things in his time in office, including abolishing censorship of the press. Officially he’s there to help promote compromise between the political parties - unofficially, he’s a sop that Charles X is planning on getting rid of as soon as politically convenient. Martignac is choosing to focus on the official reasons, however. And he sees what he thinks is a perfect situation to work on compromise. The Comte de Chambord, heir presumptive to the throne following his uncle, needs a governor to head his household and education. So far, he's been educated by his aunt Marie Therese and by Jesuits - this is considered by the growing liberal movement to be "a damning education for a king in a modern era" [1].

    Not quite stupid enough to beat his head on the conservative Catholic brick wall that is the Marie Thérèse, Dauphine of France, Duchesse de Angoulême, Madame Royale, fille de France [2], Martignac goes to the second best option: Maria Carolina, Duchesse de Berry, and mother to the heir presumptive, and explains his concerns. Unsurprisingly, Maria Carolina declines to really get involved - she is currently content to leave the day to day of her children’s upbringing in the hands of Madame Royale, while she continues on her late husband’s art patronages - not his political ones. Rather like her great-great-aunt, Marie Antoinette [3], Maria Carolina has been content to stay out of politics thus far and hasn't seen much reason to get involved. The conversation does start some wheels turning, however, and gets Maria Carolina thinking. If Martignac thinks she has some influence - well, maybe he's not wrong. She writes to Charlotte on the issue and receives the following reply: Charlotte adds her voice to Maria Carolina's concerns, writing to her in early January: "It is not only the Lord who loves a joyful giver, dear heart; you must soon do what must be done for your boy, so that it shall feel natural to him, that his nature may grow alongside these beliefs and the beasts may detect no hint of falsehood in this in him. Giving his education unto them and they shall surely give his country unto him and trust unto you to guide him properly. As for Madame Royale, be kind - she has no child of her own to love and therefore loves yours as her own. One cannot fault her in this love. Allow Madame to direct Dieudonné [4] in religion, for one cannot fault her faith. Surely this shall suit all parties, for he must be a new king of an old faith and country."

    (Charlotte will gain a reputation for international political 'meddling' but receive little praise for the outcomes of her meddling, a fact much commented upon by later biographers - indeed, Martignac will later comment that had he had the option, he would have written directly to Charlotte).

    Despite Charlotte's encouragement, however, Maria Carolina won't be jumping in and making political waves just yet. For now, she's set her sights on what she thinks is a reasonable first goal and is dipping her toe in the water.

    And so, she calls upon Louis Philippe, Duc d 'Orléans, and reveals a turn for political thinking that impresses her uncle deeply. Oh, she’s been spending her time amongst artists and the intelligentsia, but she’s been talking and thinking and -most importantly- listening during these art shows and operas. The details of the conversation are not recorded, but the outcome is thus: Maria Carolina's daughter, Louise, will marry Louis Philippe's son and heir Ferdinand Philippe. Not only will this keep her beloved daughter in France, it will serve to bind Orléans to Maria Carolina: should anything happen to Henri, Orléans' son can inherit the throne with the last Bourbon princess as the mother to his heirs, neatly tying the dynasties together [5]. Maria Carolina will also see to it that Orléans' other children will be "well matched and placed throughout Europe in such positions as to bring honor and glory unto their House" (being related to almost all of Catholic Europe, this is a promise she can be pretty confident of coming through on). Finally, she shall put it to the King to allow the sons of the Duc, whom His Majesty is friendly with and attempting to be friendlier with [6], to be companions to the Comte de Chambord. In return, Orléans will make no plays for the throne against her son, regardless of any... political situations that may occur.

    Orléans, surprisingly, agrees to this deal and upholds it faithfully on his end, despite chiding from his spinster sister that "You give up the possibility of everything for a promise of something!". As he sees it, there's very little to lose: should Maria Carolina’s plans fail or her son die, he can go forward with his own plan with his son married to the Bourbon heiress -with the Bourbon blessing- and his own reputation more or less intact among the royal families of Europe. Should Maria Carolina succeed, he can enjoy seeing the prestige of the House d ’Orléans rise to its proper place, enjoy seeing his son still married to the Bourbon heiress, and enjoy having influence over the next generation or two of kings of France.

    It’s a pretty good deal, all around. And Charles X is having - well, most of it. He does agree that the Orleans boys would make suitable household members for the Dauphin, and allows that they can join him in outdoor pursuits and lessons - lessons that will continue under the Comte's conservative Jesuit tutors. As to the matter of the engagement between Louise and Ferdinand Philippe - Charles is not saying no, but he’s not signing a betrothal contract either. As he generally gives the Duc to understand, he's fine with the marriage, barring any insane political situations that would require Louise's marriage abroad for the good of France. And thanks to some well placed words on Maria Carolina's part, Charles X even goes so far as to promise to remember Louis Philippe's children, as "our most close and dear cousins", in any political marriage schemes. It's a big win for the first time politician and Maria Carolina is feeling pretty good about herself and her influence.

    Around this time, Infante Miguel of Portugal, the new regent for that country, stops in London on his way home from Vienna [7]. He is met at the dock by the Duke of Clarence, the Duke of Kendal, and other leading members of the English court. The Duke of Wellington is hoping that this visit will help get Miguel to see the virtues of constitutional monarchy like his brother Pedro did and accept the framework for Portugal [8]. A little backstory on Miguel: he’s previously been exiled from Portugal for supporting absolutism. Since his exile, he has been chilling in Vienna learning more about the joys of absolutism and screwing over everyone in sight from the modern Machiavelli, Prince Metternich, also known as the man who got that Italian upstart Napoleon married to an honest to God Austrian archduchess [9]. Miguel has always been clever and he has been paying attention during his time in Vienna, and now he’s back and ready to roll. At the behest of the government, Miguel is feted throughout London with banquets, concerts, pheasant hunts, and visiting public works - he is even invited out to Claremont for a few days, where he and Leopold spend “many hours talking frantically in their Austrian German” as Auntie Fred records. Miguel was introduced to Leopold’s brother and sister-in-law in Vienna, and brings gifts and letters from them to the Kendals [10]. He will report that he finds the Kendals “charming, charming, charming” and Charlotte in particular as “an example of both womanhood and royalty, a rose among thorns”; he will even invite them to visit Portugal once he’s settled in there and eventually attend his wedding to his niece, the Queen. Charlotte herself will remark in her diary that Miguel is “very cultured, charming, and clever - most passionate about Portugal”. Overall, the young couple and the regent seem to get on very nicely - oh, they find Miguel a touch traditional and he finds them a little too liberal, but nothing that can’t be covered over with politeness and courtly manners. Leopold even invites him to stand as a godparent to their new child.

    (They will all be backtracking these good feelings pretty quickly: Miguel call Leopold ‘an unmanned creature’ and Charlotte herself everything but a child of God, while Charlotte will publicly decry him as a modern Nero and Leopold will only refer to Miguel “that damned man” for the rest of his life). At the end of January, he is feted with a magnificent banquet and ball by George IV at Windsor Castle and closes the ball by dancing with Charlotte and giving her “a magnificent diamond bow brooch”. He leaves for Portugal on February 9th on the Portuguese frigate Pérola, arriving in Belem on February 22, having never quite made his new political plans clear [11].

    Back in London, while George IV refuses to consider making his daughter the Princess of Wales - Wellington having picked up where his predecessor left off in this particular issue -, he is eventually worn down and agrees to grant Charlotte “the revenues of the Duchies of Cornwall and Rothesay” [12], while avoiding granting her the titles. It’s not her rightful titles but it is her income being doubled, so the Kendals are taking it as a win. It is due to that increase in income that the Kendals decide to travel to Scotland at the end of January, despite Charlotte’s pregnancy - they want to inspect the work to Falkland Palace, and use a portion of their new income to help speed up the work. The Kendals settle into Holyroodhouse Palace [13] where Aeneas Ranaldson MacDonell, the son of the infamous Chief Alexander of Clan MacDonell (who had earned himself such fame during Charlotte’s previous visit to Scotland) joins the household as an aide de camp to Leopold and the unofficial Scots language tutor to the children. A month later, the Chief himself dies, his estate mortgaged and encumbered [14], and his large family now destitute. Charlotte uses some of her new income to purchase the entire Glengarry estate for a song (amazing how people will give a future Queen a hell of a discount), which she immediately gives back to MacDonell’s son and heir. “Mac was ever loyal and dear to my heart,” she told his son when the young man fell to his knees to thank her for her kindness “Such things should be rewarded - all I ask is an invitation to his adored Glengarry”. Charlotte also takes three of Mac’s daughters -Caroline, Marsali, and Euphemia- into her household to serve as maids in waiting, and promises their mother to help find good marriages or positions for the other girls. The tradition of the MacDonell’s being loyal to the crown is cemented here, and will continue to current times - indeed, there will even be a MacDonell ‘remarkably close to the crown’ in the future. But that comes later.

    On the thirteenth day of March, Miguel, the regent of Portugal (who really, really does not like being reminded he is only the regent), dissolves the Cortes without calling new elections, as stipulated in the Constitutional Charter. A decent chunk of important people take this as a sign that Miguel should be King and request that he revoke the Constitutional Charter, which he technically may have never signed anyway [15].

    Despite plans to return to London in time to give birth, Charlotte remains at Holyroodhouse until April 30th, where her fourth son is born at dawn. The people of Scotland are ecstatic - this is the first time a member of the royal family has been born in Scotland since Robert, Duke of Kintyre and Lorne, in 1602 [16]. The baby’s name is, of course, instantly under discussion. The King sends a statement to Charlotte that makes it clear that the names James and Charles “cannot be considered to be accepted by us, as they bear the marks of a history that we would not see returned” [17]. George IV offers up Alfred as an optional name, while Auntie Fred throws out Robert or Francis. In the end, Leopold and Charlotte decide to give their son a royal Scottish name “from her glorious past, that cannot offend anyone” as she remarks cheekily to the Duchess of Cambridge. The new prince is to be named Alexander, for Alexander III of Scotland [18]. There will be a rumor in coming years that Leopold actually used the name for Alexander the Great, with an eye to the Greek throne for this son. (It's totally true, for those of you wondering).

    On the twelfth day of May, the little prince is baptised in the private chapel at Holyroodhouse by Llewelyn Lewellin, now private chaplain to the Kendals, with the names ‘Alexander Arthur Leopold’. His godparents include the Duke of Wellington, as thanks for his efforts on Charlotte’s behalf (the Old Beef personally travels to Scotland for the christening and insists on holding the baby at the font - and no, he doesn’t cry. He’s got allergies, damn it) [19]; the Prince of Leiningen (represented by the new Laird of Glengarry); Prince Wilhelm of Brunswick (represented by Baron Stockmar) [20]; Princess Wilhelm of Prussia (represented by Miss Marsali MacDonell) [21]; the Queen of Wurttemberg (represented by Baroness Stockmar) [22]; and Princess Maria Antonia of Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Kóhary (represented by Lady Romney). As a christening gift, the little prince is named the patron of the Royal Free hospital by his grandfather, which was founded the day before his birth by William Marsden. While his parents officially take charge of the patronage for now, in later years, Alexander will be remembered for his devotion to this cause as well as his own interest in medicine - he will be one of the first royals to complete a degree, and the first to complete a medical degree. On May 9th, the Sacramental Test Act is passed by Parliament, allowing Catholics the option to serve as government officials for the first time in years. Charlotte, a friend to Catholics, is thrilled at this news and writes to Wellington that “to have such an Act passed under your leadership is a glittering jewel in your service, sir”.

    Summer for the rest of the world comes in varying degrees of good, however. In France, the political tensions are rising - Charles X’s blatant dislike of Martignac is becoming more, well, blatant, and there’s rumors that he’s looking to remove the minister as soon as he can think of someone to take his place. Hard to find good ultra-royalist help these days, you know. Martignac is choosing to continue to keep his head down and hope for the best. It’s a good strategy, in theory. In Coburg, Victoire, the Dowager Duchess of Kent, takes to her new role as Landsmutter like a duck to water, and takes her nephews under her wing before her bags are unpacked. She takes over the boys completely, giving them an equally smothering and indulgently demanding relationship that will backfire in every way you can imagine, and then some more. Her particular favorite is the outgoing, charismatic, vivacious Ernst, the copy of his father, Victoire’s adored brother and “savior”. She cares less for Albrecht, who far more resembles his mother - Victoire has gotten territorial about the boys and if she had her way, Luise would never been mentioned in Coburg again (as it happens, the Duke of Coburg also feels this way, so it’s pretty rare that Luise is mentioned). In Lichtenberg, Luise settles in as the Landsmutter, and waits to see her sons. (She’s also spending time with her new secret husband, Baron Alexander von Hanstein, but that’s still very hush hush at the moment).

    In Saxe-Meiningen, Marie and Bernhard are saddened by the death of their fourth child and second son, named Georg for his paternal grandfather, at six months old. It’s not all bad news, however: in Leiningen, Karl and Auguste welcome their second daughter, named Anna [23]. (Victoire views this as bad news, however, as this is their second daughter that is most definitely NOT named for her - the first is named Friederike, for her maternal grandmother). And in Thurn and Taxis, Feodore and Maximilian Karl welcome their first child, a son named Karl Leopold, after two years of miscarriages. Leopold and Charlotte stand as godparents to the new little mite, unaware of all the scandal that is coming in his future. Let’s just say, he is a prime example of the fact that unimaginable wealth combined with poor impulse control does, in fact, have consequences.

    It's Portugal who wins the "Worst Summer of the Year'' award, or "Best" depending on your political views. It's a great time to be an absolutist. On May 3, 1828, nobles who had been nominated by Pedro to the new Chamber of Peers invite Miguel to convene a new cortes consisting of the Three Estates with a view to deciding the legitimate succession to the throne. At the aforementioned Cortes in June, the Bishop of Viseu proposed that Miguel should assume the crown since "...the hand of the Almighty led Your Majesty from the banks of the Danube to the shore of the Tagus to save his people...". On June 23, Miguel -the regent and fiance for the actual Queen, Maria- has decided that his current situation is really not working for him any longer and has claimed the throne for himself. Legally, he has a bit of an argument: the Fundamental Laws of Portugal state that anyone who makes war on Portugal and becomes a sovereign state loses their rights to the Portguese throne, i.e. Miguel’s brother Pedro and thus his niece / fiancee Maria [24]. On July 7th, Miguel is proclaimed as the absolute ruler of Portugal, and on July 15th, the Cortes of the Three Estates closes. Except for a few easily squashed rebellions, some exiled liberals, and the island Terceira, all of Portugal seems to be supporting the new King.

    In a romantic move that will be the fodder for barely accurate historical movies and novels for generations, Miguel sweeps in at the last minute and marries Princess Ludovika of Bavaria. He had previously asked for her hand after he met her in Vienna at her sister Sophie’s wedding [25] - her father refused, partially due to Miguel’s exile and the reasons therefore, and partially because he had plans to marry her to a kinsman, Duke Maximilian Josef in Bavaria. Ludovika is not keen on the proposed match at all, having seen her older sisters become an Empress, Queens, and an Archduchess. Miguel has barely taken the throne before he sends, in rather forceful language, to Ludovika’s half brother, Ludwig I of Bavaria (her father having passed in the meantime) [26]. Miguel all but begs to be allowed to marry Ludovika, offering an alliance, money, whatever Ludwig could ask for. Miguel also writes to Maximilian Josef - who was on board with this plan from day one - and offered one of his two unmarried sisters, Isabel Maria or Maria da Assunção, in place of Ludovika, as well as his “undying friendship and devotion”. He writes to the Emperor of Austria, Ludovika’s brother-in-law, asking for his aid in this matter. He writes to Charlotte and Leopold (who, given the whole political situation, refuse to even open the letter). He writes to the Pope. Miguel, knowing that Ludovika was a comfort to her mother and that at least part of the reason for her arranged marriage to Maximilian Josef was to keep her close, writes to the Dowager Queen of Bavaria, offering her a home at his court, in any palace she should choose, to be in constant attendance on her daughter and never parted from her “for more than a few hours, should your heart desire so”. Like most of the things in his life at this moment in time, this goes Miguel’s way. The betrothal between Ludovika and Maximilian Josef is broken off, and Miguel and Ludovika are married in Lisbon on the first day of September in a double wedding with his sister Maria da Assunção and Maximilian Josef [27].

    (In credit to Miguel, the marriage with Ludovika will be one of the few things he does right in his life - they will remain utterly devoted to one another through feast and famine, and he will repeatedly praise her as “a pearl amongst stones”.)

    (Maximilian Josef and Maria da Assunção will tolerate each other politely until his death, at which point she will go on living her life as she wishes to, and rather contentedly at that.)

    On October 5th, the court is plunged into mourning following the death of Charlotte’s beloved aunt, the dowager Queen of Wurttemberg. Charlotte is heartbroken at the loss and writes to her step-cousin, the King of Wurttemberg, “my heart is simply breaking at the knowledge that she is no longer here, that never again shall I receive a letter or anything from her”. Unbeknownst to Charlotte at the time, the last part is not quite true. But more on that later. On October 7th, the erstwhile Queen of Portugal, Maria, arrives in London seeking asylum. Unfortunately the government of the Duke of Wellington still officially supports Miguel’s government, even though everyone’s slowly backing away from outright support and quickly moving into “how the hell do we stop him”, so help isn’t very forthcoming [28]. Charlotte invites Maria to privately stay at Claremont for a few weeks while she sorts out her plans and will later write to Maria Carolina in France that “my heart simply breaks for her, poor darling, without friend or mother, with that horrible father and treasonous uncle, all alone in the world”. It is believed that this period of time in London is what laid the lifelong foundation of friendship between Maria and Lolly, Charlotte’s eldest daughter - for the rest of their lives, they will exchange letters and gifts and meet whenever possible. Maria, for her part, will also remain devoted to Charlotte, remembering her kindness and taking it upon herself to write and thank her for “[her] fine example of Queenship, which I draw inspiration from each day”. On October 25th - October being quite a busy month this particular year, as Auntie Fred notes - , the St. Katharine Docks are opened in London, the opening attended by the King himself. It is not a popular event - some 1,200 houses and the medieval St. Katharine Hospital had been destroyed to make way for the docks, which cost over 2 million pounds to build and are unable to accommodate big ships, making their success unlikely [29]. Clever Leopold takes this as a chance for some good public relations and starts a campaign in his son George’s name to help find new homes for the former tenants, some of them even coming to live and work on the Claremont estate, and Charlotte herself vows to fund another hospital. The Queen of Portugal even pledges to send money for the hospital, once she recovers her treasury. (Nothing is spoken of the other Queen of Portugal, the former Ludovika of Bavaria, who has been making a name for herself as a particularly grand Queen and definitely does not offer to send money to people who do not support her husband).

    On November 16, Great Britain, France, and Russia form the London Protocol, an agreement that creates an autonomous Greek state, encompassing the Morea and the Cyclades, under Ottoman suzerainty. This protocol leaves out central Greece, Crete, and other islands involved in the uprising or under Greek control, so it’s no surprise when Kapodistrias, the governor of the Hellenic State, isn’t terribly ecstatic about the whole thing. (The Protocol ends up being amended in six months when everyone realizes what a bad idea it was, and then it will be amended again a year later. And then one last time because turns out third time is not the charm in international country wrangling [30]). The rest of the month manages to pass fairly quietly for the Kendals. On December 4th, the country plunges into mourning following the death of the Earl of Liverpool, Robert Jenkinson, former Prime Minister and dear friend to Charlotte, putting a depressing end to the year for the Kendals. Liverpool leaves his entire library to Charlotte, who will ensure that it never leaves the royal family by ‘bequeathing’ it to the royal trust she will create later in her reign. The library remains at Claremont to this day, bearing a plaque in memory of it’s original owner, located in the sunny room where he so often came and counseled his beloved Princess.

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    732

    HMFM Ludovika, The Queen of Portugal and the Algarves, circa 1829

    As 1829 dawns, Charlotte receives a new title on the occasion of her thirty-third birthday: she is made Princess Royal, a title previously held by her aunt and namesake. It’s not Princess of Wales, but it is a ‘unique’ title, given only to the eldest daughter of the monarch to hold for her entire lifetime. Perhaps, one politician allows himself to propose, in lieu of being made a suo jure Princess of Wales, female heirs apparent can be made Princess Royal. (He offers up no solution for what to do when the heiress has a living aunt who already holds the title). It’s a fair idea, but not one that will be adopted, in case anyone is wondering. The title comes at an important moment - Caroline, Charlotte’s wild child mother and George IV’s erstwhile wife, has become ill, truly ill this time, and the prognosis isn’t looking very good [31]. Many see Charlotte’s title as George’s unofficial way of announcing that he has finally accepted Charlotte as his heir and, even if Caroline dies, has given up on his various remarriage schemes. George himself is starting to feel worn down, in truth, and frankly the idea of a wife after so many years of mistresses feels a little ridiculous. (Lady Conyngham herself will remark she’s more of a nurse than a mistress or a wife at this point, but nowhere that George can hear her).

    Lady Conyngham and Charlotte have managed to find an accord in the last few years that makes them mostly able to tolerate each other - Lady Conyngham is quite good at counting, after all, and Charlotte does appreciate the care and comfort that Lady Conyngham gives her father. They have even united over a shared project in the last few months: the courtship of Euphemia MacDonnell, Charlotte’s lady in waiting, by Lady Conyngham’s youngest son Albert. The heir to his wealthy maternal uncle, Albert [32] is quite the catch - and has been quite caught by the lovely Euphemia, whom a later friend will describe as “pretty enough to make one only want to marry a Scottish lass, should she be a true representative of them!”. The young couple are married at the end of February in St Anne's Church, the parish church attended by the Kendals when they are in residence at Kew Palace. Euphemia and Albert will become the parents of thirteen children who will all feature in the coming Carolean Era of history as interesting, wealthy, and sometimes scandalous (okay, a lot of times scandalous - there’s at least one more royal mistress in this family tree, another marquess, and quite a few politicians).

    In March, the second London protocol is signed - now Greece is to be an independent nation, under the rule of Christian Prince chosen by the powers, but will still recognize the suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire and pay an annual tribute of 1.5 million Turkish piastres. The Ottoman Empire is forced to recognize the Protocol in the Treaty of Adrianople, but their recognition isn’t worth much - the Great Powers are already moving towards more independence for Greece, and are already scouting about for a Christian Prince. Leopold, of course, has a Christian Prince quite in mind - his one year old son, Alexander, conveniently sharing a name with one of the greatest Greeks in history. (He’d also be on board with William or even Frederick getting the throne, but he’s rather latched onto the Alexander idea at the moment [33]). However, selling a one year old as a monarch is a bit of a job, even for Leopold, so at the moment he’s willing to admit that Greece is a bit of a pipe dream. He does insist on adding Greek to the studies of his remarkably polyglot children, even the girls - just to enhance their understanding of the Classics, mind you. Ironically, Alexander will be considered the worst of the children at Greek - the best will be his elder sister and Leopold’s favorite, Augusta. For those of you wondering, the most impressive polyglot of the Kendal offspring will be George (speaking eight languages fluently in adulthood and four conversationally), followed by Augusta (six languages fluently and four conversationally).

    Also in March, the Duke of Wellington continues to prove that he’s still a badass by engaging in a duel with George Finch-Hatton, the Earl of Winchilsea, over Catholic Emancipation and Wellington’s foundation of the secular King’s College. Supposedly, Wellington misses his opponent on purpose, who -not being enough of a fool to kill the greatest war hero of the time- returns the favor by deliberately shooting upwards [34]. Honor is satisfied on both sides, and the event becomes a fun little footnote in history - it even gives rise to a popular saying, “Wells and Finches”, coming to describe a fight for no good purpose [35]. Charlotte, however, is fairly irritated at the whole situation. She finds it foolish and a grand waste of time - she also has a deep dislike for Finch-Hatton, who she will refer to as “that very loud bird” in private, in reference to his habit for loudly and vehemently arguing in Parliament [36]. Charlotte’s irritation at the man seems to have been passed on - years later, her son George will dryly remark, when Finch-Hatton attempts to correct him on a matter of diplomacy, “I, sir, aim before I shoot, and thus find that I hit my target”.

    In April, the Catholic Emancipation Act is passed, despite the misgivings of Wellington and his top man, Robert Peel. Even Leopold is vaguely worried about this, as he feels a lot of emphasis has been placed on the divine right of the Anglican kings of England [37]. Those prophesying doom and the death of the monarchy, however, are doomed to disappointment. Those prophesying the fact that the act will lead to massive political reforms and have long reaching effects into the twentieth century and beyond... well, modern historians give them brownie points. Most contemporaries lump them in with the death and doom weirdos, though. Around this time, German composer Felix Mendelssohn arrives in London, where he will remain until September. In June, the Kendals will attend his overture A Midsummer’s Night Dream which Auntie Fred will pronounce ‘rather German for an English play’ (she’s technically lived in England longer than she lived in Germany, so she feels she gets to make commentary like this [38]).

    Everyone is feeling particularly patriotic this June - at the beginning of the month, HMS Pickle captured the armed slave ship Voladora off the coast of Cuba. It was a daring sea battle, full of British pluck and bravery, as the HMS’s crew of thirty triumphed over the Voladora’s crew of sixty, only losing four men in the process. The Voladora is taken to Havana and delivered to the Spanish governor there, and the enslaved Africans are set free [39]. What is not made public is the fact that the HMS Pickle had a bit of competition trying to take the Voladora - the ship was also being followed by “a fearsome thing, with black sails and a Jolly Roger with a maid on either side” - the infamous Lady May, captained by the even more infamous Sir John Conroy. Conroy’s been spending the last few years cruising the Carribean, having been run out of Ottoman waters - according to legend, he was paid to lead a siege on the Greeks, sold out naval plans to the aforementioned Greeks, and absconded with a favored concubine of a high ranking government official. He still carries that locket, though, and plays up the lost Lady May angle whenever he can. (A new tidbit has recently been added to the rumor: separated from his Lady May, he was unable to save his son from a murderous aunt, jealous at her lack of such a son. Twenty pounds to whoever can guess the originator of that particular tale). HMS Pickle could not capture both the Lady May and Voladora, and thus made do with the latter - the rest of the royal navy is put on high alert to “sink the damn thing on sight”. Yes, that is the official order. Sir George Cockburn also deeply hates Conroy, as he hates all pirates and any who shames his beloved navy [40]. (Charlotte breathing down the man's neck about catching Conroy has absolutely nothing to do with it, just so you know). Also at the beginning of June, the Swan River Colony is founded in Western Australia, neatly securing the western third of the landmass. The Swan River Colony will later be better known as the cities of Perth and Kendal [41]. Finally, to round out the patriotic feelings of June, Robert Peel - sometime political ally of the Duke of Wellington, and privately referred to by Charlotte as “Lord Eel” for his political slipperiness - establishes the Metropolitan Police Service in London, whose members will later be affectionately known as Bobbies.

    This becomes the first summer where Drina of Kent is allowed to go to Coburg and spend the summer with her mother. Charlotte is vehemently against this - time has hardened, rather than softened, her and Victoire’s stances, and Charlotte is convinced that once Victoire has Drina, she will not let her go. Leopold privately agrees with Charlotte, though he makes a public show of personally esorting Drina to Coburg. Where he has a private conversation with his brother, regarding some debts related to some... female companions. Leopold makes it clear that if Ernest does not see Drina returned by the first week of September, Leopold will not only return to get her, he will see to it that any payment to those female companions is cancelled, and then, God only knows what they might say. Ernst, not as dumb as he looks, gets the message. As for Drina, the summer will drag on - she finds her mother’s attention smothering and there is ‘a lack of life’ in Coburg, compared to her life in London - no concerts, no ballets, no heated political debates in the library (despite best efforts of Charlotte and Leopold, all the children who grow up in the Kendal household will fondly remember falling asleep to Charlotte and Leopold debating, sometimes with each other, sometimes with others). In later years, Drina will come to appreciate Coburg more - but that will be under a vastly different scene ruled by a different Duke. For now, she makes the best of it, playing with her dolls [42] and riding out with Ernst and Albrecht, and doing her best to make sure her mother doesn’t see her pouting when the letters from London come in - this last thing backfires on Drina tremendously, as it convinces Victoire that Drina much prefers Coburg to London and is infinitely happier there, a ‘fact’ she gleefully shares in a letter to Leopold. Drina’s little calendar in her diary making off the days until September is obviously her way of marking how many days she has left to enjoy Coburg.

    The fragile peace existing in French politics gets more fragile in August - Charles X appoints Jules de Polignac, Prince de Polignac, as the new minister of foreign affairs. In three months, he will become the minister of the cabinet. Jule de Polignac is the ultra of the ultra-royalists - his mother, Gabrielle, served as the Governess of the Children of France to Marie Antoinette’s children and was one of her closest friends. He has served as the French ambassador to England for the last six years, and is even married to an Englishwoman, the Hon. Charlotte Parkyns [43] - his family has known the British royal family socially for years now [44]. Rumor has it that part of Polignac’s devotion to the ultraroyalist cause is because he believes the Virgin Mary is sending inspiration to him [45]. Removing the middle-ground Martignac for the obviously ultra monarchist Polignac makes it pretty clear where Charles X stands politically, and nobody is exactly loving it. Except, obviously, Charles X and Polignac. As for the rest of the world, who seem to be remembering the Revolution a bit better than the Bourbons, they watch anxiously. In London, Charlotte orders the refurbishment of Kew House, the abode attached to Kew Palace - she confesses to Mary Gillray Stockmar that she is getting it ready for “Dear Lina and her children, should they need it” [46]. She’s not alone in this worry - in Naples, Spain and Austria, preparations begin to quietly be made should the Bourbons escape to any of their countries as well, and George IV’s government sends a strongly worded letter to France begging the king to not do anything hasty. To which Charles responds by continuing blindly on his course. Because he’s a Most Christian King of France, damn it, and he answers to God, who clearly is on board with this plan. To show how determined he is in this plan, Charles X publicly announces the support of France for the Portuguese monarchy under Miguel I [47]. (Which goes over about as well as can be expected in France’s more liberal circles).

    Around this time, another fun little diplomatic snag occurs in Portugal. While Miguel is the king according to the official party line, Maria remains an heir of sorts (depending on your views of the legal ramifications of the creation of Brazil [48]) - in fact a great many of her faction are hoping that Miguel will be, ahem, removed from the scene either by divine or human intervention, and Maria will simply sweep back onto the throne free of challengers. That’s about to be nipped in the bud, however - Ludovika is announced to be three months pregnant.

    (For those of you wondering, Miguel does not extend his previous offer to Charlotte and Leopold to stand as godparents. He’s a little miffed that they aren’t supporting him in his ‘take what I want and make it mine’ plan. And that they did not make him a godfather to Alexander. And that whole Maria living in London thing).

    The Maria living in London thing has thankfully sorted itself out, however - in what can be one of the weirdest twists possible. Her father has recently remarried to Princess Amélie of Leuchtenberg, a granddaughter of the former Empress Josephine from her first marriage and the niece of the new Queen of Portugal, which is ironic given the Bourbon support of said Queen. Pedro decided to marry Amélie after hearing about her goodness and virtue - and the fact that she was, quite literally, the only princess in Europe willing to marry him after the stories of his treatment of his first wife got out [49]. Pedro decides to suck it up about ‘the stain of Amélie’s ancestry’ [50] and bites the marital bullet. The two were married on June 30th by proxy and Amélie left for Ostend shortly thereafter. It is here that she meets her stepdaughter - seven years her junior - and the two sail for Brazil. Luckily for Amélie, she and Pedro like each other, and her marriage promises to be happier than his previous one. Unluckily for Maria, her father can offer words of support but little else at this moment regarding the return of her throne. The rumor is that he is waiting to see the gender of his brother Miguel’s child: if it is a girl, Pedro will fight for Maria’s claim. If it is a boy, he will see about betrothing her to him - it’s only an eleven year age difference, after all [51]. In his defense, Pedro’s hands are fairly tied at the moment, politically. He would hope to count on Austria to come to Maria’s aide as she is the Emperor’s granddaughter [52], but the Empress is sister to Queen Ludovika of Portugal [53], so Franz is staying out of the matter - and frankly, slightly enjoying watching Pedro squirm [54]. He can’t count on his new wife’s family because the Leuchtenbergs barely have a pot to piss in and her maternal Wittselbach relatives are, once again, related to Queen Ludovika [55]. France has come out in support of Miguel, Spain is staying out of all of this (but if the chips are down, most likely will support Miguel [56]), Russia is laughing at these strange southern antics, and England is concerned but not willing to go to war. It’s not looking so good for Maria at the moment.

    Turning from European politics, at the end of September, African-American abolitionist David Walker publishes his Appeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World from Boston, Massachusetts. William Wilberforce, a leader in the British abolitionist movement who knows Leopold through their mutual work in the RSPCA [57], takes the liberty of sending a copy to the Kendals. The Duke and Duchess take turns reading it out loud to each other during their private tea time, and quickly pronounce themselves horrified. Not at the text, mind, but at the situation that created the text. Charlotte’s never really given much thought to slavery - the trading of slaves has been abolished since 1807 in the Empire, though slavery itself is not outlawed. She was, of course, thrilled when HMS Pickle released the slaves from the Voladora but never gave much thought to what would happen if they had not been saved. She writes back to Mr. Wilberforce, thanking him for ‘educational book’ and privately vows to Leopold that she will do ‘whatever she can, when the means are at her disposal’.

    It’s looking like that day is coming a whole lot sooner rather than later.

    Just because George IV is sinking doesn’t mean he’s repented his ways and learned to practice Christian charity and forgiveness. When he hears that his wife Caroline has reached out to the Dean of Windsor to discuss her eventual burial there, he quickly gets in touch with the Dean and puts a kibosh on the whole plan. If he has his way, ‘that woman’ won’t be buried in England - he’s forbidden her to set foot in the country and he doesn’t see how her not living changes that. Charlotte, of course, as the future Queen, takes issue with her mother not being allowed to be buried in the chapel of her choosing, but she’s willing not to press the issue. (As she sees it, she can have her mother reinterred in her own reign if she has to). When she broaches the subject of going to visit her mother in Italy, it becomes a whole other issue. George IV puts his foot down: no way, on God’s green earth, is his heir going out of the country while his health is the way it is. It’s actually a fairly good point and one that Charlotte could probably be brought around to see, if George had refrained from some of his more... intemperate language regarding her mother. And Charlotte. And women in general. And Italy. And - well, you get the idea. Either way, father and daughter part in the state of frustrated agitation to which they are so accustomed in their dealings with each other.

    To top off a year that began and is ending in strife, Lord William Bentinck, the Governor-General of India, issues Regulation XVII, declaring Sati to be illegal and punishable in criminal courts in Calcutta [58]. Sati -also called suttee- is the practice of a widow throwing herself onto her husband’s burning funeral pyre, commonly practiced amongst the Hindus of this time. Within three months, he will see this regulation extended to Madras and Bombay. Betnick also outlaws female infanticide, human sacrifices, and flogging as a punishment in the Indian Army. Betnick will not be remembered fondly by military men - who resent his cost cutting initiatives, as they cut right through military wages - but Charlotte will hold a special fondness for the man for the rest of his political career and even ask him to come and speak to her son and heir George of Kendal regarding India, it’s people, and the culture there, remarking to Betnick that “[George] must learn of all of his peoples - whom better than the one who has saved so many to educate him?”.

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    CharlotteofWales1.jpg

    Portrait of Charlotte, 1830

    The year manages to start off quietly internationally, something Leopold and Charlotte appreciate, as their private life is getting a bit busy. George is excelling in his language lessons and is something of a geography prodigy, but he is determined - or so Leopold swears - to never learn mathematics past simple addition and subtraction, and is given to daydreaming in ‘boring’ lessons, requiring some parental step in. Young William vacillates between playing his adored violin or riding his beloved horses. He’s already something of a horse trainer, and Charlotte has put him in charge of ‘bringing up’ his younger siblings when it comes to riding. Lessons inspire less passion, however, and William subscribes to the belief that if you don’t love it, you shouldn’t do it. (Leopold insists this tendency comes from the Hanover side - Charlotte, well exposed to Coburg stubbornness by now, disagrees). Lolly has developed an alarming tendency to cry when told ‘no’ or really anything negative, and Missy has developed an entirely Hanover tendency to shouting and digging in her heels when not getting her way - even hitting her cousin Elizabeth of Clarence over Christmas. Frederick remains... well, rather cold and aloof, Augusta resents any intrusion on her father’s attention, and Alexander has developed an ear infection that makes him scream ‘like a banshee’ as his merciless older brother reports. Drina, returned from Coburg, remains the easiest charge, even with temper tantrums that are growing in frequency - a ‘fun’ little trick she learned in Coburg. Credit where it’s due, Charlotte and Leopold take their parenting woes in stride, however. Nursery staff and tutors are expressly forbidden from even threatening to cane the children, a common ‘remedy’ for poor behavior. “Bad behavior must be explained to the darlings,” Charlotte is said to have informed a new staff member “in a way they can understand. They must understand how it displeases, both Mama and Papa, and God, and the nation. They shall receive a punishment devised by myself or the Duke, in proportion to the crime.” George IV will scoff at the ‘softness’ shown in bringing up a future monarch, and even Auntie Fred will protest ‘too gentle an approach to strong willed children’, but Charlotte and Leopold remain firm, and in the end, their method is successful.

    The Kendal nursery has nothing on what’s going on in Portugal, however. On February 5th, the future of the country is changed forever. After twelve hours of labor, Queen Ludovika delivers her first child, a daughter. Eighteen minutes later, she delivers her second child, The Prince Royal of Portugal, Duke of Braganza, and the child who definitely kills most of Maria of Brazil’s dreams of the throne [59]. Miguel is, of course, ecstatic. He was with his wife throughout the entire delivery, despite efforts of the midwives to remove him, and was the first person to hold both of his children. Two weeks after their birth, the twins are baptised in a glorious ceremony at the Church of Santo António de Lisboa - they are named Afonso, for Afonso the Great, the first King of Portugal, and Luisa, after her mother, at Miguel’s insistence. Luisa’s godparents are her maternal grandmother, the Dauphine of France, and her paternal uncle, Infante Carlos of Spain, the Count of Molina; Afonso’s godparents are Charles X of France, Ferdinand VII of Spain, and his paternal grandmother. And yes, the fact that Charles X of France and his daughter-in-law stood as godparents to the children of the newest absolutist monarch in Europe is causing the liberals - and most sane people with a long memory - a bit of fright. In Brazil, Pedro tries to make the best of a bad situation, and writes to his brother: he’s fine to let Miguel continue to ‘serve’ as the monarch, and even recognizes his children’s rights to that throne (an easy concession, as Pedro is in Brazil with nothing and Miguel is in Portugal, actively serving as the King), on one condition. Pedro proposes that his brother betroth his son Afonso to Maria, and thus tie their claims together - they will marry when Afonso is sixteen. Pedro is even willing to send Maria to Portugal to be raised - or finish being raised - alongside her fiance, under the supervision of Miguel’s wife. It’s an easy fix to a thorny problem and, even with the eleven year age gap, most of the world expects Miguel to jump at the chance [60].

    Not only does Miguel not jump, he waltzes Pedro’s offer away and over a cliff to die a cold, lonely death. The Prince Royal of Portugal, Duke of Braganza, and heir to his father -the only legitimate monarch of Portugal - will not marry his decade older cousin, thank you. He does not need to strengthen his claim to the throne that he is the acknowledged, legitimate, legal heir to. But Miguel acknowledges that Maria is a problem, and her claim needs to be dealt with. The solution is traditionally ascribed as having come from Miguel’s wife, Ludovika. (Her adored sister Sophie is currently pregnant with her first child, and Ludovika is pretty damned and determined to see one of her children marry a child of her sister’s [61]). Having come from a large family, she learned at a young age how to come up with... inspired solutions to issues. According to the official party line of the Miguelist court, the current succession goes as thus: Afonso, the Prince Royal; Infanta Luisa, his sister; Infanta Maria Teresa, Miguel’s oldest sister; and then the Infante Sebastián of Portugal and Spain, Maria Teresa’s son. Sebastián is the only son of Maria Teresa and her husband, the now deceased Infante Pedro Carlos of Portugal and Spain. Pedro Carlos was the eldest son of the Infante Gabriel of Spain and the Infanta Maria Ana of Portugal, making him a grandchild of Carlos III of Spain and Maria I of Portugal (and a first cousin to Miguel I). Pedro Carlos was raised in Portugal at his grandmother’s request after his parents’ deaths, and was made an Infante of Portugal by her. Therefore, his son, Infante Sebastián, holds the titles of Infante of Portugal and Spain, like his father (having been granted the title Infante of Spain by his great-uncle, Fernando VIII). Maria Teresa is a close ally to her brother, Miguel, and has become a fixture at his court; likewise, her son fully supports his uncle’s claim to the throne. Sebastián is currently nineteen, described as a handsome boy and a good personality, and in line to the thrones of both Portugal and Spain. Even Pedro in Brazil acknowledges Sebastián’s rights to the throne (significantly lower down in the line than Miguel’s version, but still there). So, Ludovika reasons, why not betroth Sebastián to Maria? It’ll give her rights acknowledged by the current regime, marry her to a suitable prince, and hey, should political situations change, make sure she’s married to a young man with claims to the throne. It’s not a win, but it’s not a total loss, and let’s face it, Pedro can’t really afford to do much more for his daughter at this point.

    The rest of the world, still shocked at Miguel’s refusal, is forced to consider the alternate proposal as... reasonable. Even the Maria diehards (led by Charlotte, Duchess of Kendal) think that the marriage between Sebastián and Maria is a good idea - he has a claim to the throne, he’s of the same dynasty, closer in age than the young Afonso. Obviously he’d make an ideal... consort. Maria’s grandfather, the Emperor of Austria, finds himself between a rock and a hard place: on one hand, love for family is the Habsburg bread and butter. It’s literally bred into them at this point (pun intended) [62]. On the other hand, the man who managed to survive Napoleon’s reign with his empire mostly intact isn’t known for a lack of practicality, even ruthless practicality at that. While he would prefer his granddaughter on the throne of Portugal, married to his nephew and her cousin to neatly tie things in a bow, Franz realizes that his preferences aren’t going to dictate the policy of Portugal - particularly as he tends to agree that Pedro did violate the Fundamental Laws and thus give up his claim, and Franz just isn’t very inclined to go to war to see Maria sit on the throne. The best he can do for his granddaughter is ensure that she makes a good marriage and ends up relatively happy. Franz gives his consent to the match with Sebastián - and starts scouting around the Habsburgs for a backup. Just as a precaution, of course. And he has some other Brazilian grandchildren who will eventually need to marry - and better than a Bonaparte. (For those of you wondering, Maria herself prefers Sebastián to an eleven years younger baby).

    Pedro finally concedes to the betrothal, but for now, Maria will be remaining in Brazil. Because he can.

    The chatter over the Portuguese engagements covers the chatter over the newest London Protocol, this one establishing full Greek independence and sovereignty away from the Ottoman Empire and setting the boundary lines at the Aspropotamos–Spercheios line. Some foolish soul floats the idea of offering the Greek throne to Leopold, which is immediately shot down by the British government [63] - and by the Greeks, who did not just escape one empire to join another. Less foolish souls throw out the Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale, or the Duke of Cambridge. The French and Russians have their own candidates, and the throne of Greece has quickly become the most wanted and the least wanted throne in the world. For now, Ioannis Kapodistrias continues on as the head of the Greek government while the search for a Christian Prince is on.

    It does not entirely cover the chatter regarding the newest news about the King’s health. George IV and his erstwhile wife have entered into a depressing race to see which one will depart their mortal coil first. Charlotte is still banned from going to see her mother in Italy, a fact which deeply hurts her. She does the best she can to make up for the fact, and sends the Stockmars to care for her mother. Auntie Fred does one better and travels to Italy privately and quietly - strictly, she will insist to her dying day, to give Charlotte some comfort. Indeed, Auntie Fred and Caroline spend her entire -short- visit bickering incessantly - they’ve known each other a long time, after all, and they haven’t had a face-to-face bicker in years [64]. Auntie Fred infamously takes Caroline to task for everything from dressing immodestly to living openly with Bartolomeo Pergami and shaming her daughter every day. At the end of this tirade, Auntie Fred finishes with “But married to George, I would have done the same thing, I’m sure”. It is, Baron Stockmar records, the only time he sees Caroline laugh the entire visit. She has been diagnosed with intestinal cancer and spends most of her time doped with laudanum to control the pain. When the laudanum doesn’t do the trick, Mary Gillray Stockmar will later tell Charlotte, the only thing that brought Caroline peace was hearing about Charlotte [65].

    The chatter definitely does not cover one of the biggest pieces of news in Protestant Europe in generations: on the last day of May, after seven barren years of marriage, the Crown Princess of Prussia is announced to be pregnant with her first child [66].

    Back in England, the Kendals have been forbidden from traveling to Claremont for the summer and are being kept in London. Charlotte, frustrated and furious at her father, her mother, and the situation they placed her in, throws herself into finishing her language lessons in both Scots and Irish Gaelic. The first thing she becomes fluent in are swear words. It is Leopold, who helps her best at this time - he takes her riding for hours, brings her new books and discusses philosophy with her, and simply holds her hand when she dissolves into tears at her situation. This period will reinforce the tenderness and affection that will last throughout their entire marriage. “Were I a man going to war - or a woman becoming a Queen, which is quite the same thing in truth,” Charlotte would later solemnly tell her wide-eyed grandchildren years later “There is but one man I would accept at my side, and that is your grandpapa”. It is also Leopold - with the help of the returned Stockmars, Auntie Fred, and the Marchioness Conyngham - who helps plaster over the rift between Charlotte and her father. Leopold starts by taking the whole Kendal family to Windsor Castle every few days to visit the failing king - Charlotte and George IV do not agree on much, but they can find common ground in love for her children. Then, Leopold begins only taking the older children with them on the visits as the King grows worse and cannot tolerate the noise and bustle of Frederick, Augusta, and Alexander. Well, Augusta and Alexander. Frederick isn’t really that interested in going, in all honesty, so it’s easiest to leave him at home as well. Then Leopold only takes himself, Charlotte, and young George for a few visits. George of Kendal will years later have a deep aversion to deathbeds and the dying that he attributes to these visits - there will only be three people in the world, it will turn out, who are able to get George of Kendal to stand by their deathbeds [67].

    Finally, Leopold convinces Charlotte to begin seeing her father by herself in the last few weeks of June. There are no records of what passes during these visits - even the doctors remove themselves from the rooms, at the King’s express order, and Charlotte never records or discusses what occurred between her and her father. The King’s private doctor will inform the Kendals and the Cabinet on June 24th that "the King's cough continues with considerable expectoration", he privately tells his wife that "things are coming to a conclusion ... I shall be released about Monday” [68]. Charlotte and Leopold remain at Windsor after this conversation, even as the king slides further into sedation and delirium from his ‘treatments’ [69]. At about three in the morning, the King passes a large evacuation of feces mixed with blood, and calls for help. Halford, servants, and the King’s daughter arrive “within five minutes of the call, according to the King’s private secretary. George IV Augustus Frederick, The King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, The King of Hanover, Defender of the Faith, dies at 3:15 in the morning of June 26, 1830, holding the hand of his daughter. According to some sources - though disputed by others - his last words are “my girl, this is death". At 3:25 in the morning, Her Majesty, Charlotte Augusta, the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, exits her father’s bedroom and is greeted by a room of kneeling government officials. “Gentlemen,” she states, her voice tremulous with exhaustion but strong and loud, “I come before you with grief and sorrow. The Nation has lost it’s King, and I have lost my father. I know that I can never hope to compare to the King my father. I ask for your guidance, gentlemen, in the coming times. And I swear this now, before you all: I will devote all the days of my life to my people and my country. I will never flinch from my duties, and I will never falter in my love of my people. So help me God.”

    It is Leopold who rises first, and who leads the first cheer.

    “The King is dead, long live the Queen. God save the Queen!”.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    [1] Not an OTL quote but seems to have been the prevailing OTL view

    [2] These are all her titles, and I am guilty of using them interchangeably.

    [3] Maria Carolina’s grandmother and namesake was the older sister of Marie Antoinette, making Maria Carolina and Marie Therese first cousins once removed.

    [4] Dieudonné means ‘god-given’ and was the last of Henri’s four names. Here, his mother and godmother use it as a pet name for the little miracle prince.

    [5] OTL they seem to have been unofficially betrothed until Louis Philippe took the throne, causing Louise’s family to marry her off elsewhere in retaliation. The logic for the marriage would have been the same as stated here.

    [6] Charles X tried to re-unite the lines of Bourbon and Orleans throughout his reign, awarding the Orleans family the style of ‘Royal Highness’ which they had been deprived of by Louis XVIII.

    [7] OTL he showed up closer to the end of December but there’s a lot going on already, so his ship went off course and bought us a little more time.

    [8] Also OTL - Pedro was on board with the constitutional monarchy plan, and helped create the Portuguese Constitution under his father. Miguel was... well, not so on board with the constitutional portion of the constitutional monarchy. As obviously explained by his expulsion to Austria.

    [9] “Metternich would later seek to distance himself from the marriage by claiming it was Napoleon's own idea, but this is improbable; in any case, he was happy to claim responsibility at the time” (Alan Palmer, 2014).

    [10] Obviously this is all my own creation as OTL Charlotte wasn’t around to be receiving presents - the Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Koharys did primarily reside in Vienna, however, so it’s not improbable that they would have met Miguel.

    [11] He never, that I could find, gave the British any indication that he would or would not accept a constitutional framework.

    [12] The traditional titles granted to the heir of Great Britain are The Prince of Wales, Earl of Chester, Duke of Cornwall, Duke of Rothesay, Earl of Carrick, Baron of Renfrew, Lord of the Isles and Prince and Great Steward of Scotland.

    [13] The official residence of the British monarch in Scotland to this day.

    [14] This happened OTL as well.

    [15] During his swearing in as regent, Miguel was presented with a written oath to defend the Constitutional Charter caused him "...confusion and [he] seemed unable or unwilling to read it.”. No one actually knew if he swore the oath, since there was no distinct enunciation of the words and no one actually saw him kiss the missal (the Duke of Cadaval conveniently obscuring the view of Miguel during this portion of the ceremony). Lord Carnarvon wrote of the conclusion of the scene: "During the whole proceeding...his countenance was overcast, and he had the constrained manner of a most unwilling actor in an embarrassing part. I read the approaching fate of the Constitution in his sullen expression, in the imperfect manner in which the oath was administered, and in the strange and general appearance of hurry and concealment."(Marcus Checke, 1969).

    [16] The fifth child and third son of James VI & I and Anne of Denmark; died at fourth months old. Fun fact: his full name was Robert Bruce Stuart.

    [17] James and Charles being the regnal names of the Stuarts, the dynasty on the British throne before the Hanovers came in. Charles I was beheaded, James II was kicked out, and James II’s descendants led several uprisings to try and reclaim the throne. George IV has a point here - the next time Charles will be used in the British royal family is for Charles Edward, the Duke of Albany, grandson of Queen Victoria, who got kicked out and stripped of his titles for being a Nazi.

    [18] Best known for concluding the Treaty of Perth, by which Scotland acquired sovereignty over the Western Isles and the Isle of Man. Had his heiress, Margaret of Norway, survived to marriageable age, Great Britain might have come into existence 400 years earlier through her planned marriage to Edward II.

    [19] OTL he stood as the godfather to Queen Victoria’s third son, named Arthur, with whom he shared a birthday. The ‘allergies’ are entirely my own intervention.

    [20] Charlotte’s first cousin through her mother and his father, he’s currently famous as the least hated member of the Brunswick family simply for breathing and not being his brother, Karl.

    [21] Yes, Charlotte’s returning the favor to Elisa and making her a godmother to Alexander.

    [22] Pauline Therese of Wurttemberg, daughter of Duke Louis of Württemberg and Princess Henriette of Nassau-Weilburg and the third wife of her first cousin, Wilhelm I of Wurttemberg. Mother to three children at this time: Catherine, Karl, and Auguste.

    [23] Anna was the given first name of Karl’s sister, Feodore. For those of you wondering, her full name is Anna Auguste Charlotte.

    [24] All OTL, including the laws. In the strictest legal interpretation, Miguel is actually in the right according to the fundamental laws of Portugal at the time.

    [25] Also all OTL - they had met during her sister Sophie’s wedding to Archduke Franz Karl of Austria in Vienna, became instantly smitten, and continued to see each other in Vienna after her father’s death until Ludovika returned to Bavaria.

    [26] OTL Miguel’s letter did not arrive until a few days after Ludovika’s marriage to Maximilian Josef - here, he gets his priorities straight and sends the letter first thing. Call it a Hail Mary pass - I’m a sucker for love.

    [27] OTL Maria da Assunção never married. She’s also getting a Hail Mary pass - just not a very good one.

    [28] This is all OTL as well, except Charlotte wasn’t around to offer Maria shelter, obviously.

    [29] Also all OTL - the St. Katharine docks were amalgamated with the London Docks in 1864 and were badly bombed during WWII. Ironically, the docks are now mainly dominated by private flats - similar to the ones destroyed for their original construction.

    [30] The three London protocols of 1828, 1829, and 1830, followed by the London Conference of 1832, which set the final boundaries of Greece and elected the new monarch.

    [31] As previously stated, OTL she was already several years dead at this time, having taken ill after the coronation of her husband. Here, she’s mostly survived off of spite and a desire to see her daughter take the throne.

    [32] He later changed his surname to Dension per the terms of his uncle’s will. In 1850, he became the first Baron Londesborough. OTL he first married The Hon. Henrietta Weld-Forester, in 1833. His great-granddaughter, Irene Denison, married Queen Victoria’s grandson Prince Alexander of Battenberg, later the Marquess of Carisbrooke.

    [33] OTL the throne of Greece would be offered to Queen Victoria’s second son, Prince Alfred - it was refused on the grounds that he was already heir to his paternal uncle’s duchy of Coburg. I’m fairly sure that Leopold slammed his head against a wall a few times when he was informed of this. The throne was also offered to Leopold himself in 1830, though he would refuse on the grounds of political instability.

    [34] A la Hamilton and Burr, with a much better ending, this was also OTL. Men’s egos have been soothed with guns a long time in a lot of ways, guys. Sometimes you gotta just call a man out on sketchy political issues and then go shoot the sky to get over it.

    [35] Obviously my own creation but you’ve got to admit, the phrase works.

    [36] Apparently, “In his place in the House of Lords [Finch-Hatton] violently opposed almost every liberal measure which was brought forward”.

    [37] This was actually a common belief around this time regarding Catholic emancipation - it wasn’t quite true, as there remained a large amount of continuity from the period before emancipation, but the Act did lead to a demand to reform Parliament by the Ultra-Tories, as mentioned in the next sentence. According to Eric J. Evans, “[An Ultra-Tory] in February 1830 introduced the first major reform bill, calling for the transfer of rotten borough seats to the counties and large towns, the disfranchisement of non-resident voters, the preventing of Crown office-holders from sitting in Parliament, the payment of a salary to MPs, and the general franchise for men who owned property. The ultras believed that a widely based electorate could be relied upon to rally around anti-Catholicism”.

    [38] Auntie Fred was twenty-four when she left Prussia and married Frederick, the Duke of York and Albany. She is currently 62, meaning that she has lived in England for 38 years at this time.

    [39] All OTL, including the release of the slaves.

    [40] You might remember Cockburn as the man with the balls to force his future king - William IV - out of his role of Lord High Admiral after he acted without the authority of the board of the Admiralty in 1828. That happened in this timeline too, so the fact that Charlotte is making him sweat should give you some insight into our girl. OTL it didn’t seem to affect Cockburn’s career -naval or political- that badly, and he ended up as the Admiral of the Fleet in 1851. For those of you wondering, Charlotte actually doesn’t resent his role in her uncle’s removal - once she’s Queen, she will tell him that she quite admired the audacity of it, and his honesty in doing so - as long he does not try to remove her from her roles.

    [41] OTL the cities of Perth and Fremantle. Australians, please don’t come for me! Captain Fremanle made the wise political decision ITTL to name the city for his future Queen and her husband.

    [42] Like her OTL counterpart, this timeline’s Victoria also has an extensive doll collection. Unlike her OTL counterpart, she normally plays with them with her cousins, Lolly and Missy of Kendal.

    [43] Charlotte was the widow of Comte Cesar de Choiseul, and the daughter of the 1st Baron Rancliffe. She and Jules have two young sons at this time, Alphone and Louis, both born in London. Charlotte is actually Jules’ second British wife - his first was a Miss Barbara Campbell, a Scotswoman.

    [44] ITTL, Charlotte and Leopold of Kendal are acquaintances with the Prince and Princess de Polignac, though they run on different political wavelengths. OTL and ITTL, Jules has been the French ambassador to London since 1823, giving him ample opportunity to know the British royal family and most of the nobility, many of whom were also friendly with his mother.

    [45] This rumor did exist OTL, but there is no proof that it was true and it is not mentioned in Polignac’s papers. I couldn’t leave out the possibility of the Virgin Mary interceding in French politics, though.

    [46] Her grandmother and namesake, Queen Charlotte, had done something similar at the outbreak of the French Revolution for Marie Antoinette and her children
    .
    [47] OTL Charles X never publicly came out in support for Miguel - the July Revolution occurred before he could come out publicly, though it seems that he was intending to - and his successor, Louis Philippe d’Orleans, sided against Miguel. Here, Charles has got his dander up and he’s looking to prove a point.

    [48] As previously stated, according to the Fundamental Laws of Portugal at the time, anyone who was sovereign of another nation or fought against Portugal in a war gave up their right to the Portuguese throne. When Pedro IV led Brazil in it’s war for independence, he checked off both of these boxes. Maria is considered guilty by association as far as Miguel is concerned, though a good lawyer with some common sense might be able to get her off those charges. If she could, you know, afford a good lawyer.

    [49] Pedro didn’t exactly take the crown for Best Husband Ever during his marriage to Maria Leopoldina of Austria. While he had never been faithful, during the first few years of their marriage, Pedro attempted to be discreet. He became infatuated with his latest mistress, Domitila de Castro, and became “increasingly rude and mean toward Maria Leopoldina, left her short of funds, prohibited her from leaving the palace and forced her to endure Domitila's presence as her lady-in-waiting”. When Maria Leopoldina died of a miscarriage, a popular story was that she died after being physically assaulted by Pedro. While obviously not true - as he was in another part of the country at the time of her death -, it says a lot that most people were still willing to believe the story.

    [50] Her Bonaparte descent was considered her sole “defect”, which Pedro was graciously willing to overlook. Real prince of a guy, that Pedro.

    [51] For those of you saying ‘ew’, in Pedro’s defense, there is precedent. Jose, the Prince of Brazil and heir to Maria I of Portugal, was married to his mother’s sister, the fifteen years old Infanta Benedita of Portugal. Jose himself was the product of an uncle-niece marriage. By all accounts, the marriage was actually fairly happy. Jose and Benedita had no surviving children, though they had two miscarriages. After Jose died, his brother Joao eventually became king - we know him better as Joao IV, the father of Pedro and Miguel.

    [52] Maria’s mother, Maria Leopoldina, was the fourth daughter of Franz I of Austria and his first wife, Maria Teresa of Naples and Sicily.

    [53] Franz I’s fourth wife, Caroline Auguste of Bavaria, the older half-sister of Ludovika from their father’s first marriage.

    [54] “The Austrian emperor, deeply offended by the conduct his daughter endured, withdrew his support for Brazilian concerns and frustrated Pedro I's Portuguese interests” (Roderick Barman, 1988). Say what you want about Franz, he was a devoted dad, and I for one appreciate his level of pettiness.

    [55] Amélie is Ludovika’s niece: her mother, Auguste of Bavaria, is Ludovika’s older half sister from their father’s first marriage. Meaning Amélie is also a niece of her husband’s former father-in-law, the Emperor of Austria, by marriage. Yay for royal intermarriage!

    [56] His mother, Carlota Joaqina, was born an Infanta of Spain, making Miguel a nephew of the current king of Spain. His sister, Maria Francisca, is currently married to the King’s younger brother and heir (and her uncle, because that’s how the Braganazas seemed to roll), Infante Carlos, Count of Molina.

    [57] Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals - ITTL Leopold serves as the head of the society and lends the ‘royal’ presence. His seat will eventually be taken over by his second son, William.

    [58] All OTL as well.

    [59] While Ludovika and Miguel did not have twins in their respective OTL marriages, four of Ludovika’s sisters were twins, giving her a genetic predisposition.

    [60] As previously discussed, situations like this have occurred before in the Braganza family, whose motto seems to have been: “When it doubt, marry”.

    [61] This desire was very real OTL as well, when it resulted in the flaming dumpster fire that was the marriage of Elisabeth of Bavaria and Franz Josef I of Austria. And eventually led to World War One.

    [62] Credit where it’s due, by this point, the Habsburgs have gotten slightly better about spreading the love, but for a while there, the family tree was more a family circle.

    [63] Obviously OTL there was not the whole Charlotte living and poised to become the next Queen issue when this was proposed, and Leopold actually considered taking the throne for a while before eventually refusing in May 1830.

    [64] They were sisters-in-law for years, guys, and married to two of the weirdest members of that generation of the British Royal Family. They have stuff to talk about.

    [65] Obviously my own creation, and it’s the hill I will die on.

    [66] I could not find any reason behind why Friedrich Wilhelm and Elisabeth Ludovika were barren - I found a few sites mentioning a stillborn child early in their marriage, but they provided no dates or further sources. Therefore, I’m stepping in and releasing my butterflies.

    [67] Obviously yes, one of the three people is a parent. But can you guess one of the other two in return for some more naming rights? Or matchmaking rights? Or event rights? Answer correctly and we’ll figure out a prize! *Please only send in answers by private message!*

    [68] This was all said OTL but Halford obviously said the first part to only the Cabinet.

    [69] Halford was judged very harshly at the time for his ‘treatment’ of the king, which was basically copious amounts of laudanum and opium.
     
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    Tidbits: Seven Sevenths
  • In honor of the birthday of our lovely Queen, I am releasing seven 'January sevenths', or seven excerpts from the future of Queen Charlotte's timeline. Enjoy!

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    January 7, 1836:
    Scene from the 2016 film Lotte & Leo starring Jessica Chastain (Charlotte, The Duchess of Kendal) and Colin Farrell (Leopold, The Duke of Kendal), among others, depicting Charlotte’s fortieth birthday.

    [Interior shot: Charlotte and Leopold's bedroom, early morning. She is sitting up in bed, reading papers and occasionally making a mark on a paper beside her on the bed. There are several dogs in the room.]

    [The door creaks open, and Leopold peeks in the room, grinning.]


    Leopold: Permission to enter, Your Majesty?

    [Charlotte looks up, beaming, as she sets down her paper and quill].

    Charlotte: [dramatically] Of course, good sir.

    [Leopold laughs and opens the door, revealing a rush of royal children, who stream through the opening and directly ro their laughing mother. They end up scattered on the bed with her, all chattering and giggling, with her eldest two sons standing next to the bed].

    Charlotte: [laughing] My goodness! I've been invaded!

    Augusta: [coughs loudly and frowns solemnly at her siblings from her position next to Charlotte] We must give Mama her birthday present now!

    [Leopold and Charlotte exchange a smiling look over their daughter's head as she bosses her siblings into her idea of order: it's still chaos, but the ranks have closed in a bit more].

    Augusta: [very seriously] Un, deux, trois - !

    [The children began singing "For She's A Jolly Good Fellow". It's not on key and nobody is in time - the dogs start howling halfway through, and Leopold is barely holding in his laughter. By the end of it, Charlotte's eyes have teared up and she is covering her mouth with her hands].

    Mary: Was that alright, Mama?

    Augusta: George was horribly out of tune, and Frederick wasn't even singing! And Alex forgot the words! [She's very clearly upset at her siblings' failures].

    Charlotte: [laughing and kissing Augusta's furrowed brow] Oh, we can forgive them for that, my love. [To Mary] It was perfect, darling. Exactly what I wanted for my birthday.

    Leopold: All right, you lot. I heard a rumor that there's a lovely breakfast being set up in the drawing room for Mama - go to it and we'll meet you there!

    [The children shuffle out of the room, followed by the dogs, leaving Leopold and Charlotte alone. He comes to sit next to her on the side of the bed and places a black velvet jewelry box in her hands].

    Leopold: My gift, ma chérie.

    [Charlotte opens the box to reveal a pearl choker with exactly forty pearls on it, separated by small round garnets. She gasps and traces one of the pearls with her finger before looking at her husband, eyes wide].

    Leopold: Garnets, for January. And pearls for you - the pearl of my world. Do you like it?

    Charlotte: It's the second best fortieth birthday present ever.

    [He looks startled at that, then looks at the door where their children have just exited, and laughs as he leans forward to kiss her. Scene ends.]

    *The necklace currently exists in the possession of Her Majesty, The Queen of Hanover.


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    January 7, 1844:

    “The wedding of Lady Emma d’Este and Viscount Lambton was celebrated today in the Chapel Royal of St. James’ Palace. It was attended by Her Majesty, The Queen; The Prince Consort; The Prince and Princess of Wales; and other members of the royal family. The bride was given away by her godfather, The Prince Consort, at her personal request.

    The wedding was followed by a birthday luncheon for Her Majesty The Queen, followed by a wedding supper and ball for the young couple.”

    -Court Circular regarding January 7th, 1844.

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    January 7, 1845:

    "Happy birthday to my dear Marie-Charlotte from your godmama! I am so sad to not spend our birthday together, but I hope you shall find this gift to your liking, and I shall greet you upon your return home.

    All my love,
    Charlotte, the Queen"

    -Birthday card from Her Majesty the Queen to her goddaughter, Marie-Charlotte Stockmar, on January 7, 1845.

    ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~​

    January 7, 1876:

    "I am writing to thank you, my dear Louisette, for your kind wishes to your old marraine [godmother] on her eightieth birthday. Eighty! I am quite ancient at this point, ma petite and thus shall take the liberty to wax on - who knows how many more birthdays I may be permitted to describe? It was a lovely, lovely day - all the children were here, and the grandchildren and great-grandchildren too! I felt quite a venerable mater familias. It is so funny, I find, and surely you must too, to see the traits of the ones we love resurface long after their original owners are gone in their descendants. I see my own Papa, his joie de vivre and charm, in my grandson Arthur. One of my Lotte's little granddaughters, Marianne, has the exact smile as my own grandmother - and her formidable will. I see my lion [Leopold] in so many of them... I must admit to a particular failing of a grandmama and confess to having a favorite: my little Leopold, dear Dina's [Augusta's] grandson. He is his namesake reborn and I confess, I find myself weeping to think of the similarities. Oh, how proud he would have been today, to see such a continuation of Coburgs!

    However, you did not write to hear an old woman's ramblings and I did not reply to send them to you. I must thank you for your darling gift - I very much admire your skill at embroidery, and received many compliments on my lovely shawl. It was so dear of you to use daffodils, my particular favorites, in the design."

    -Letter from Her Majesty The Queen to HRH Louise, Dowager Duchess of Orléans on January 7, 1876.

    ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~​

    January 7, 1940:

    “I remember my great-grandmother quite well, actually. Well, quite well, you know, for a child. I wasn’t ten when she died, but I remember... it was like God had died. The whole center of the world seemed to fall out. It was particularly stressful on my father, I remember. He adored her, absolutely adored her. She had this wonderful trick of making all of us - the grandchildren and the great-grandchildren - believe we alone were her favorite. We’d argue about it for hours.

    She had a marvel of a memory. Never forgot a word, a meeting, a moment. She could tell you the lineage of every courtier in the court, even when she was dying. She arranged most of their marriages, but still. She had a great sense of humor, too. I remember coming to see her before... well, before she was gone, and she was reading a book and laughing at some silly bit of nonsense in it. Not those delicate polite laughs either - real, proper laughing. She didn’t mince things, Grandmama Lotte... used to tell me “It’ll be what it’ll be, darling. No use fretting about it. You simply cannot let them see you fret.”

    We’re all still particular about her birthday, you know. Those of us left who knew her. She always made a big fuss on her birthday, insisted on everyone join in and come to Claremont. God knows how many times she had to expand the house to fit everyone. So we all try to meet together on that day. Actually, the family reunion has been on January 7th for as long as I can remember. I think she’d like it, especially since we’re here at Claremont. This is where she was happiest. Quite handy that you came during the reunion, Miss Brandon. You can jolly well knock out quite a few of your interviews, I imagine - and we’ll see to it that you get a tour of her things still here at the house.

    I’ll send in one of the other cousins - Auguste can give you much more information that I can, she’s the oldest one still around. Watch out for her cane, though - she’s got good aim with it if you’re not listening. She inherited that from Grandmama too.”

    -Excerpts from an interview by Anna Brandon with His Majesty The King regarding her biographical novel of his great-grandmother. Taken January 7th, 1940 at Claremont.
    [The author was in fact poked with the aforementioned cane in the following interview].


    ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~​

    January 7, 1996:
    "Students, alumnae, faculty, friends. We are here today to honor the two hundredth birthday of our great patroness, Queen Charlotte. In 1849, our founder, Elizabeth Jesser Reid, wrote to Her Majesty the Queen, asking for her aid in establishing a college for women. Her Majesty not only provided aid, she provided funding and served on the committee for the school until the end of her life, calling it "one the most fulfilling, lasting acts of her reign". Three of the Queen's granddaughters would later attend this college, as well as numerous of her descendants, including two of her great-great-great-granddaughters at this time.

    The Queen donated a portion of her private library to the college in the year of its founding, "to help it on its way", thus founding the Bedford College library. It is in memory of this first donation that we present the new Bedford College Queen Charlotte library."

    -Speech unveiling the new library at Bedford College by Dame Eleanor Mary Alden, alumna of Bedford College, novelist and biographer, on January 7th, 1996.

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    January 7, 2021:
    Long live the future Queen! It's a girl for the Duke and Duchess of York! Thanks to the Law of Succession of 1995, this little lass shall one day take the top spot in the monarchy, regardless of any brothers who may follow. She is the first child of the Duke and Duchess, who married in 2018.

    Update: Her names were revealed at 4:48 by Buckingham Palace to be Charlotte Alexandra Sophia. It seems the princess' name was chosen for her great-great-great-great-great-grandmother -say that five times fast - the famous Queen Charlotte, who shares her birthday with the little Princess. Her second name could be for her mother, the former Alexandra MacDonnell, and / or her paternal great-grandmother. Another namesake could be her father's distant cousin and close friend, the Tsarevich of Russia. Sophia is for her paternal aunt, who we expect to see as a godmother, as well as being her maternal grandmother's middle name. According to the little one's great-grandfather, the current King, she shall be titled as Her Royal Highness Princess Charlotte of York.

    -Post from Royal Musings blog, January 7th, 2021.
     
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