The Coburgs of Belgium

The Coburgs of Belgium

The Coburgs of Belgium

Theo Aronson

0,00 €
IVA incluido
Consulta disponibilidad
Editorial:
Thistle Publishing
Año de edición:
2015
Materia
Biografía: realeza
ISBN:
9781910670644

Selecciona una librería:

  • Donde los libros
  • Librería 7artes
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

The Coburgs, remarked Bismarck, were 'the stud farm of Europe'; if unkindly phrased, there was nevertheless some truth in the jibe. Within three generations of the foundation of the Belgian Royal House in 1831, Coburgs had tarried into almost every royal family in Europe. Perhaps the most extraordinary thing about the throne of Belgium is that it ever came into being: created after the successful rebellion against the Dutch, handed to an imported German prince, it was hoped, without much enthusiasm, that it would weld together a new nation of disparate and quarrelsome elements. It has survived to the present, in an era which has seen older and seemingly more secure dynasties vanish. The first Coburg of Belgium, Leopold I, as that 'Dear Uncle' to whom Queen Victoria was so abjectly devoted in the early years of her reign. Cheated by the death of his first wife, Charlotte, Princess of Wales, daughter of George IV and Queen Caroline, from becoming Prince Consort to the Queen of England, the resilient Leopold of Saxe-Coburg not only became the constitutional monarch of Belgium but married the daughter of the King of France. With this the Coburgs were well launched on a climb from their petty German principality to position of enormous world power. Leopold I's son, Leopold II, vastly enriched the family fortunes by his avaricious plunder of the Congo and scandalised Europe with his sexual promiscuity. In fact, not until the reign of 'Albert of the Belgians' (1909-34) and his beloved Queen Elisabeth, did the royal Coburgs prove themselves a very endearing family.

Artículos relacionados

  • Edward VII
    Christopher Hibbert
    To his mother, Queen Victoria, he was 'poor Bertie,' to his wife he was 'my dear little man,' while the President of France called him 'a great English king,' and the German Kaiser condemned him as 'an old peacock.' King Edward VII was all these things and more, as Hibbert reveals in this captivating biography. Shedding new light on the scandals that peppered his life, Hibbert ...
  • A Vida E O Ilustre Martírio De Sir Thomas More
    Thomas Stapleton
    No final do século XV, nascia na Inglaterra aquele que seria uma de suas maiores mentes, uma luz para a formação intelectual, moral e espiritual de todos de seu tempo e dos tempos que viriam após sua morte: Thomas More, hoje Santo. Ou melhor, Santo desde tenra idade, seguiu com grande sucesso a carreira de advogado, galgando os mais elevados degraus da vida pública, indo desde ...
    Disponible

    23,85 €

  • Catherine the Great
    Henri Troyat / Joan Pinkham
    ...
    Disponible

    22,12 €

  • Anna of Denmark, Queen of England
    Leeds Barroll / J. Leeds Barroll
    Anna of Denmark, Queen of England A Cultural Biography Leeds Barroll 'The scholarship is impeccable, the argument new, and the case convincing. I am tempted to think that Barroll has here in effect invented a genre of 'cultural biography.''--Catherine Belsey In the well-entrenched critical view of the Jacobean period, James I is credited with the flowering of culture in the e...
  • Writings Of Agnes Of Harcourt
    Sean Field
    Agnes of Harcourt is an important though little-known 13th-century author. Born into a leading Norman noble family, she became an abbess at the new royal Franciscan abbey of Longchamp, founded just outside of Paris by Isabelle of France, sister of Louis IX. In the 1280s Agnes wrote a substantial biography of Isabelle of France, as well as a brief letter detailing Louis IX’s inv...
    Disponible

    113,41 €

  • Henry I
    Judith A. Green / Judith AGreen
    ...
    Disponible

    74,15 €

Otros libros del autor

  • Crowns in Conflict
    Theo Aronson
    A detailed account of when Europe’s kings went to war...The years immediately before the First World War saw the last great flowering of European monarchy. Although sovereigns no longer ruled by divine right, their prestige and positions remained almost intact. The glittering centrepieces of national life, those crowned and anointed monarchs were still widely regarded as mystic...
    Disponible

    12,96 €

  • The Golden Bees
    Theo Aronson
    Napoleon III, being accused on one occasion of having nothing of the Great Napoleon about him, replied with as much exasperation as wit, that he did, on the contrary, have his relations. This book is a domestic chronicle of the incredible Bonaparte family, a greedy, amorous, quarrelsome and hot-blooded Corsican clan who provided nineteenth-century Europe - and America - not on...
  • Crowns in Conflict
    Theo Aronson
    The years immediately before the First World War saw the last great flowering of European monarchy. Although sovereigns no longer ruled by divine right, their prestige and positions remained almost intact. The glittering centerpieces of national life, those crowned and anointed monarchs were still widely regarded as mystical, unassailable, divinely guided. And, with the majorit...
  • Kings over the Water
    Theo Aronson
    Of all royal lost causes, none has a stronger fascination than that of the Stuart Pretenders to the British throne. For well over a century, four successive Stuart kings laid claim to the crown. The first was James II, deposed in 1688 by his daughter, Mary, and her husband, William of Orange; then came James III (the Old Pretender) and his son, Charles III (Bonnie Prince Charli...
  • Queen Victoria and the Bonapartes
    Theo Aronson
    'What do you say to the wonderful proceedings in Paris, which really seem like a story in a book or a play?' wrote Queen Victoria to her uncle, King Leopold of the Belgians, in December 1851. Prince Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, nephew of the great Napoleon Bonaparte, had made himself dictator of France, stealing the limelight of the European stage to open the first act of a play t...
  • Royal Ambassadors
    Theo Aronson
    Here, in all their pomp and colour and excitement, are described the visits of various members of the British royal family to Southern Africa between the years 1860 and 1947. These royal visitors were: Queen Victoria's second son, the fifteen-year-old Prince Alfred, in 1860; twenty years later, two of his nephews, Prince Albert Victor and Prince George, the midshipman sons of ...