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Lord Melbourne's sole task was to boost Victoria's spirits in the days before the wedding. It was normal, he assured her, to feel anxious. When she reminded him of her former determination to remain single, he said getting married was natural; it was her job as monarch that was "very unnatural." There was also a quiet need to shine and feel pretty.
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Jan 1, 2013 · Flirtatious, attractive and feisty, she refused to marry a German prince. Instead, she chose Lord Lorne, the son of the Duke of Argyll. This turned out to be a mistake - the marriage was...
Their mutual affection led to Victoria’s Whig partisanship. On May 7, 1839, during the crisis over the “bedchamber question” (the queen insisted her attendants be Whig ladies), Melbourne resigned but soon resumed office when Peel could not form a government.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Jan 29, 2017 · Although many people have been rooting for Lord Melbourne and Victoria to end up together, history decided a different fate for the pair. Rufus Sewell, the actor who plays Lord M, joins us...
Feb 6, 2018 · As we find ourselves in the middle of the second season of Victoria, it seemed as good a time as any to take a look at Queen Victoria's relationship with her first Prime Minister, Lord Melbourne. The ITV/PBS show has depicted a dynamic in which the young queen was in love with her PM -…
Melbourne was Prime Minister when Queen Victoria came to the throne (June 1837). Barely eighteen, she was only just breaking free from the domineering influence of her mother, the Duchess of Kent, and her mother's adviser, Sir John Conroy.
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Still just a girl, Victoria leaned heavily on her two most trusted advisors: her uncle Leopold, King of the Belgians, and Lord Melbourne, the Prime Minister. Victoria hung on Melbourne’s every word, possibly seeing him as a father figure.