Product Details
Queen Victoria and the Discovery of the Riviera

Queen Victoria and the Discovery of the Riviera
By Michael Nelson

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Product Description

This book reveals Queen Victoria's rich experiences during her nine little-known visits to the Cote d'Azur. It contains lively anecdotes about those who accompanied her, including her dour Scottish gillie, John Brown, and the troublesome Indian Munshi. Brown - who did not like the Riviera and thoght Irish revolutionaries were plotting to assassinate the Queen there - amazed the locals by wearing a kilt together with a topee. The Queen played a key role in making the Riviera the leading holiday resort in Europe, and she had a major impact on the economy of the area. She arrived there for the first time in Spring 1882 when she was 62. That region, which she called a "paradise of nature", wrought a transformation to the last two decades of her life. Whenever she arrived on French soil, her face lit up and she shed many of the inhibitions of her life in England. She visited the Riviera more often than any other part of continental Europe. "Oh, if only I were at Nice, I should recover," she said as she was dying. Her guests there included extraordinary European royalty, such as the reprobate Leopold II of the Belgians, who married a former prostitute on his death-bed, and his daughters Louise and Stephanie, central characters in two of the greatest royal scandals of the 19th century. The text is illustrated with coloured French postcards making fun of the Queen (including one of her riding on a bottle of gin), and posters of the "belle epoque".


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #389669 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-01-12
  • Format: Illustrated
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 192 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
A well researched and equally well written study. --Contemporary Review


Customer Reviews

Lovely!5
I am surprised more hasn't been written about this lovely book, which is filled with beautiful details and descriptions. The most moving part for me was the chapter covering the death of Prince Leopold at Cannes and the extracts from Queen Victoria's letters, touching on that.
The book is quite unique in that really portrays Queen Victoria 'in holiday mode' rather than the comnon image of her, unsmiling and unamused. After reading it, I had a burning desire to follow the same routes that the Queen took...A really lovely read!!

Most Beautiful Princess