Online Encyclopedia

ALICE MAUD MARY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 662 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

ALICE MAUD

MARY  ,
See also:
GRAND-DUCHESS OF HESSE-
See also:
DARMSTADT (1843-1878), second daughter and third child of Queen Victoria, was born at Buckingham Palace, on the 25th of
See also:
April 1843 . A
See also:
pretty, delicate-featured child—" cheerful, merry, full of fun and
See also:
mischief," as her elder
See also:
sister described her—fond of gymnastics, a good skater and an excellent horsewoman, she was a general favourite from her earliest days . Her first years were passed without particular incident in the home circle, where the training of their children was a
See also:
matter of the greatest concern to the queen and the prince consort . Among other things, the royal children were encouraged to visit the poor, and the effect of this training was very noticeable in the later
See also:
life of Princess Alice . After the
See also:
marriage of the Princess Royal in 1858, the new responsibilities devolving upon Princess Alice, as the eldest daughter at home, called forth the higher traits of her character, and brought her into still closer relationship with her parents, and especially with her
See also:
father . In the summer of r86o, at Windsor Castle, Princess Alice first met her future
See also:
husband, Prince Louis of Hesse . An
See also:
attachment quickly sprang up, and on the prince's second visit in November they were formally engaged . In the following
See also:
year, on the announcement of the contemplated marriage, the House of
See also:
Commons unanimously voted a dowry of !30,000 and an annuity of I6000 to the princess . In December 1861, while preparations were being made for the marriage, the prince consort was struck down with typhoid fever, and died on the 14th . Princess Alice nursed her father during his short illness with the utmost care, and after his
See also:
death devoted herself to comforting her
See also:
mother under this terrible blow . Her marriage took place at
See also:
Osborne, on the 1st of
See also:
July 1862 . The princess unconsciously wrote her own biography from this period in her constant letters to Queen Victoria, a selection of which, edited by Dr .

Carl Sell, were allowed to be printed in 1883 . These letters give a

See also:
complete picture of the daily life of the duke and duchess, and they also show the intense love of the latter for her husband, her mother and her native
See also:
land . She managed to visit England every year, and it was at her
See also:
special request that when she died her husband laid an
See also:
English flag upon her coffin . In the war between Austria and Prussia in 1866, Hesse-Darmstadt was upon the side of the Austrians; Prince Louis accompanied his troops to the front, and was duly appointed by the grand-duke to the command of the
See also:
Hessian division . This was a time of intense trial to the princess, whose husband and
See also:
brother-in-law, the
See also:
crown prince of Prussia, were necessarily fighting upon opposite sides . The duke of Hesse also took
See also:
part in the
See also:
principal battles of the Franco-Prussian war, while the duchess was actively engaged in organizing hospitals for the
See also:
relief of the sick and wounded . The death of the duke's father, Prince Charles of Hesse, on the loth of March 1877, was followed by that of the grand-duke on the 13th of
See also:
June, and Prince Louis succeeded to the
See also:
throne as Grand Duke Louis IV . In the summer of 1878 the grand-duke and duchess, with their
See also:
family, came again to England, and went to
See also:
Eastbourne, where the duchess remained for some time . She returned to Darmstadt in the autumn, and on the 8th of November 1878 her daughter, Princess Victoria, was attacked by diphtheria . Three more of her children, as well as her husband, quickly caught the disease, and the youngest, " May," succumbed on the 16th . On the 7th of December the princess was herself attacked, and, being weakened by
See also:
nursing and anxiety, had not strength to resist the disease, which proved fatal on the 14th of December, the seventeenth anniversary of her father's death . She
See also:
left one son and four daughters .

See Carl Sell, Alice: Mittheilungen aus ihrem Leben and Briefen, &c . (Darmstadt, 1883), with English

See also:
translation by the Princess Christian, Alice:
See also:
biographical sketch and letters (1884) . (G . F .

End of Article: ALICE MAUD MARY
[back]
ALICANTE
[next]
ALIDADE (from the Arab.)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.