Will you be watching Victoria with us this January? I’ll be recapping the show each Monday, just like last season. If you missed any of those recaps, you can read them all here! (And you can find the first season of the show on Amazon, both in DVD and streaming form, over here!)
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Jewels on Film: VICTORIA (Episode 7, “Young England”)
Several months have passed since the end of the last episode, and Victoria is SICK and TIRED of being pregnant. Albert’s half listening, half cracking up at the puns in the latest issue of Punch. We get our first “we are not amused” from Victoria in retort.
While Victoria waits to give birth already, both of her kingly uncles — Ernst of Hanover and Leopold of Belgium — have descended on London. They have a little sneering showdown at their club. They’ve both come in anticipation of the royal birth, but Leopold’s there awaiting a christening, while Ernst appears to hope for a less joyous outcome. If Victoria and the baby both die — like Leopold’s first wife and child — Ernst becomes Britain’s king. (This visit didn’t happen. Ernst only returned to the UK once after becoming King of Hanover, to attend the wedding of Princess Augusta of Cambridge in 1843.)
In a garrett elsewhere in London, we get our first glimpse of Edward Oxford, Victoria’s would-be assassin, who is plotting away — and we get hints that we’re supposed to believe that the Hanoverians have a hand in his plans. (The Oxford attempt actually happened in June 1840; this episode takes place in October/November 1840.)
Peel advises his BFF, Prince Albert, to watch out for the King of Hanover, reminding him that Ernst is next in line to the throne.
Victoria, wearing a bit of hair jewelry and a pendant necklace, wishes that people waited until after the birth to send baby gifts — she feels like it’s all tempting fate.
And then another Ernst arrives back on English shores, too. Albert’s brother has groomed his carefully-contoured sideburns just for Harriet, clearly. (This trip is fictional; Ernst did not come to England for his niece’s birth.)
Emma, Harriet, and their aggressive forehead pendants are a little shocked to see him. (FUN FACT: some believe that ferronnieres were originally used to cover up marks caused by syphilis. And guess what the real-life Ernst was suffering from in the late 1830s and early 1840s??? Very convenient.)
Emma scurries off, and Ernst pitches some major woo. Harriet remains married.
Even though she’s accessorized with a rather nice pendant necklace, Victoria is BORED. She wants to go for a drive in the park.
The Duchess of Kent, who is wearing her daytime tiara hair-comb thing with a choker necklace purchased in 1993, is worried that the horses will bolt. Victoria ignores her.
Meanwhile, Oxford indulges in a spot of target practice.
But first: a fake-out. Victoria’s drive is interrupted by a delusional man who is in love with her and wants to whisk her away to a house in Paternoster Row. He just wants to free her from “the German tyrant.” Not the BEST way to approach a monarch, unless you’re looking to relocate to a nineteenth-century asylum.
After hearing about the attempted attack, Albert tells Victoria that he thinks she should stay at home from now on. She bristles at the idea.
Victoria wears diamonds and the wee little Albert Brooch for an audience with Uncle Hanover at the palace. He brings up the possibility of Albert serving as regent (and, by extension, Victoria dying in childbirth) in front of Victoria, which seems like exceedingly bad manners indeed. She dismisses him; he issues a vague threat and then leaves.
Albert finds out that the man who approached Victoria has been sending letters for years and calls Lehzen in to reprimand her for not nipping the problem in the bud sooner.
Days are supposed to have passed since Ernst’s arrival, but Harriet’s still wearing the same gown and jewels. He plays the piano sadly. She’s still married.
Much to Albert’s chagrin, Victoria insists on going out for her daily drive. He decides he’d better go with her.
And, of course, Oxford chooses this particular day to try to kill them. (Victoria was four months pregnant when the Oxford attempt actually took place, not about to give birth.)
Back at the palace, Victoria’s doctor checks her over…
…while the Duchess of Kent and King Leopold chastise her for being careless. The Duchess of Kent thinks Hanover must have masterminded the assassination plot — after all, he was suspected of murdering his valet.
(This story is true! Well, it’s true that there were suspicions, anyway. Ernst was indeed a suspect in the death of his valet, Joseph Sellis, in 1810. But the story is pretty complicated, and no one was ever able to prove that Ernst had any involvement. Regardless, it became one of the many scandals that was widely-believed about Ernst, who was disliked intensely by the British people.)
A policeman briefs Peel and Albert on the investigation into Edward Oxford. (FUN FACT: Robert Peel established London’s Metropolitan Police in 1829 while serving as home secretary; that’s why they’re sometimes still called “bobbies” today!)
This particular bobby tells them that they found a letter telling Oxford to await instructions from Hanover. Albert panics.
King Ernst cannot believe that no one wants to hang out with him at the club. He complains to Peel, who sort of shrugs — what does he expect, given the evidence? (FUN FACT: King Ernst really did have a disfiguring scar over his eye, because he took a saber to the face during a battle in 1793.)
Meanwhile, the bobbies are interrogating Oxford, who is madder than a box of frogs. He’s clearly decided that this is Batman, and he’s the Joker. The police figure out that Oxford’s guns weren’t actually loaded, and he wrote the letters “from Hanover” himself.
Victoria is upset when she finds out that Oxford may be found not guilty by reason of insanity. She wears the same jewelry from an earlier scene here, and repeats it again for an audience with Uncle Ernst. He crows about the fact that he wasn’t involved with the Oxford plot, and then brags about shredding the Hanoverian constitution, so he can punish an attacker any way he sees fit. Lovely. (FUN FACT: He really did toss out the constitution in Hanover. My Hanoverian ancestors ended up shipping off to America. Thanks, King Ernst!)
She rather coolly informs Ernst that she’s a better monarch than he could ever hope to be and strides purposefully out of the room. This scene would have been a great historical mic drop if it had really happened — but, of course, it didn’t. He wasn’t anywhere near Britain at this point in time.
Same jewelry, different dress as Vic ‘n Al sit down to their correspondence. They argue a little about Lehzen, and then Peel comes in. Oxford’s heading to Bedlam at Her Majesty’s pleasure — which means he’ll be locked up as long as she wants. (This really happened; he was incarcerated for decades, and he eventually ended up in Australia.)
Sidenote: Where in the world is Lord Melbourne??? Peel’s STILL not the Prime Minister. Melbourne didn’t really just pack up his broken heart and stop governing. (I miss you, Rufus!)
To prove she’s not afraid, Victoria drags Albert with her for another drive. It all goes swimmingly.
That evening, Ernst and Harriet rendezvous. She lets him take down her hair — but just the back, and the forehead jewelry stays firmly in place. Maybe that thing is glued on??? Harriet ends up giving him a lock of her hair as a love token. She keeps the ferronniere, naturally.
Victoria is balancing a plate of sweets on her belly as Leopold attempts to give her some insight about his experience with Princess Charlotte — precisely what she wants to hear, I’m sure. But she ends up sharing her snack with him, and they have a little bonding moment. Jenna Coleman rather hilariously eats her way through this entire scene.
(One bone to pick here: Leopold tells Victoria that he converted to Catholicism when becoming King of the Belgians, but that never happened.)
Victoria goes in to labor. She’s freaked out by all of the prominent men waiting just outside the door — that old relic of the warming-pan rumors during the birth of James II’s son. She tells Albert to clear them all out.
And then, to the complete, unmitigated delight of the Duchess of Kent, Victoria calls for her mother.
(A little historical fact-checking: the baby was born on the afternoon of November 21, 1840; Albert was present at the birth; a group of high-ranking men were waiting in the next room, and Lord Melbourne was among them; the door was left open between the rooms. Directly after the birth, Albert went downstairs and represented Victoria at a Privy Council meeting for the first time.)
Church bells ring out to herald the birth of the baby princess. Albert proposes that they should name her Victoria, “after a great queen.” (The baby’s full name? Victoria Adelaide Mary Louisa. She shared names with her mother and maternal grandmother, both Victoria/Victoire; Queen Adelaide; Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester; and Prince’s Albert’s mother, Louise. She would go on to become Empress of Germany.)
Jewels on Film: VICTORIA (Episode 5, “The Queen’s Husband”)
The episode opens with a close-up of Victoria’s engagement and wedding rings. It looks like the production has attempted to replicate the real ring that Albert gave Victoria when they were engaged: a golden snake ring with an emerald set in its head. It seems like an extremely strange choice to us now, but snakes were popular design emblems in nineteenth-century jewelry, because they represented eternity and everlasting love.
Victoria and Albert are in the middle of some very romantic private time until — oops! — Lehzen accidentally walks right in. Time to move the Baroness to a different part of the palace, clearly.
Victoria, wearing pearl earrings, a brooch, and her new rings, strolls with Albert through the palace gardens. They discuss his place in the order of precedence, and then they end up talking about their future children.
We get an earring close-up during the conversation. Albert’s excited to be a father one day. Victoria is less thrilled about the idea — she remembers what happened to her cousin, Princess Charlotte. (Also, there’s a weird moment where they make a “do you know the muffin man?” joke, so that song’s in my head now. Thanks a lot, show.)
Victoria gets down to the business of reigning in the same earrings and a different gown/brooch. (Another continuity error? I don’t think any time is supposed to have passed.) Albert offers to help, but she asks him just to play her something on the piano instead. His day gets even worse when his private secretary corrects the way he pronounces strange English words, like “Leicester.” Albert does NOT like Englishmen correcting him.
Frustrated, Albert starts pacing through the palace, picking at this and noticing dust on that. He passes by the rest of the Courtier Gang hanging out by the portrait of Elizabeth I, drinking tea while Ernst sketches Harriet Sutherland. These are their hilarous faces as they realize that Albert is on the verge of a tantrum.
Victoria heads it off by calling for Albert to come and help her out. Appropriately, she’s wearing the little hair combs that sort of look like crowns while she works. He’s pretty disappointed, though, when he realizes that she just wants him to blot her signature, not read and comment on any of the state papers.
Later, as Victoria dresses for a state dinner, Albert comes in and takes over the job of fastening her diamond necklace from her dresser. For the second episode in a row, Vic’s wearing her diamond fringe tiara, a piece she really owned.
They plan to make sure that Albert takes proper precedence over Victoria’s royal uncles at the dinner. (She handled this in real life with a royal warrant.)
As they leave, we get a good look at the diamond comb in the back of Victoria’s hair.
When they arrive at dinner, Albert is announced as “His Royal Highness” — he really did receive an upgrade from HSH to HRH just before he married Victoria.
Emma Portman and Lord Alfred Paget are all dolled up for the dinner. Lord Alfred even has a miniature of Victoria around his neck…
And curiously, his dalmatian, “Mr. Bumps,” has a matching one on his collar. Albert asks if all English dogs wear jewelry; Alfred explains that the dog was so jealous of his miniature that he got him one of his own. Albert goes away grumbling to Ernst and mutters one of my favorite lines of the episode: “Dogs wear jewelry! The pianos are out of tune! And all the people talk about is the weather!” Indeed, Albert, indeed.
Things get even grimmer for Albert when Victoria, bowing to the pressure of tradition, lets Uncle Sussex take precedence over Albert and lead her into dinner.
Harriet Sutherland, who goes in to dinner with the flirtateous Prince Ernst, appears to be wearing a replica of the Cambridge Lover’s Knot Tiara, which is a pretty strange choice on the part of the production.
The Duchess of Kent urges Albert to hurry up and get Victoria pregnant already, because the royal uncles won’t be able to ignore him once he’s the father of a future king. (Real-life Albert really couldn’t have hurried any more than he did; Victoria was pregnant pretty much immediately after the wedding.)
Albert plays broody German piano music; Ernst interrupts and urges his brother to get on the baby-making bandwagon, because things will be much better when there’s a little Vic or Al running around. Albert’s still frustrated. He wants to carve out his own role.
Meanwhile, Victoria gets advice on dealing with Uncle Sussex from Emma, whose forehead pendant has grown so large that it’s even bigger than her brooch.
We get a good look at Victoria’s little earrings as she asks Emma whether Sussex has a mistress. Emma surprises her with the news that Sussex is happily married — but that his wife, Lady Cecilia, isn’t recognized because their marriage was in contravention of the Royal Marriages Act.
(In real life, Victoria knew about all of this, and she gave Lady Cecilia her own title, Duchess of Inverness, shortly after she married Prince Albert.)
Victoria has an audience with two anti-slavery society members, and she invites Albert to be present. They ask Victoria if she will lend her support by official opening their upcoming convention. She offers her monetary support, but she notes that the sovereign can’t open the meeting, even though she would like to. Albert perks up at all of this.
Later, Victoria (who wears a carved brooch with a delicate pendant and earrings) calls Lehzen in for a chat. In a roundabout way, she asks Lehzen about ways to prevent a pregnancy for, oh, maybe a year. She doesn’t want to die in childbirth like Princess Charlotte did.
Lehzen, wearing a new little brooch at her neckline, is pretty embarrassed by the request. She reminds Victoria that she’s not exactly experienced in this area — she never married, and she got her baroness title from King George IV — but she whispers a folk remedy that she learned from her sister. According to Lehzen, Victoria should jump up and down ten times after she and Albert do the horizontal tango. (No wonder she was expecting so quickly.)
In the meantime, Albert has decided that he’s going to attend the anti-slavery convention and make a speech. This is a cause that Real-Life Albert championed; he was the President of the Society for the Extinction of Slavery. Albert really did make his first public speech at an anti-slavery meeting at Exeter Hall in London in June 1840.
While hanging out with Emma and Harriet in the Ferronniere Fan Club, Victoria reveals that she plans to do something about Sussex’s wife, Lady Cecilia Buggin (who actually went by the name “Lady Cecilia Underwood” until Victoria granted her a title). She’s going to give her a title in her own right. Emma gives Victoria the ultimate compliment: she says that she thinks Lord Melbourne himself couldn’t have thought of a better solution.
Victoria summons Sussex, who blathers about precedence and tradition until Victoria reveals that she wants to make his wife a duchess and welcome her at court.
We get a good look at Victoria’s little pearl earrings here, which also have seed pearls in their setting. It’s clear that she has Sussex over a barrel as soon as they agree that it’s important to recognize spouses.
Ernst and Harriet flirt over archery. Victoria casually mentions to Albert that Harriet’s husband is out of town. Oops! (I don’t think that the real Ernst and Harriet had any sort of relationship.) Later, Albert lectures Ernst about pursuing a married woman and tells him it’s time for him to head back to Germany.
In other Coburg brother-related developments, Albert, who is now getting along swimmingly with his private secretary, practices his speech for the anti-slavery convention.
That evening, everyone gathers in gala attire at the palace once more. Uncle Sussex introduces his wife, now Duchess of Inverness, to the Duke of Wellington. She’s fairly dripping in replica diamonds. (That’s Daisy Goodwin, the writer of the series, playing the Duchess.)
Victoria wears her lower-profile diamond tiara (which does not appear to be based on any real piece) to greet her uncle and meet her aunt. She’s won the battle: Sussex stays beside his wife, allowing Albert to accompany Victoria in to dinner.
Later, Ernst bids an awkward farewell to Harriet.
Victoria wears delicate earrings, a partially-hidden necklace, and hair jewelry to say goodbye to her brother-in-law.
The Duchess of Kent sees Ernst out under the watchful eye of Queen Charlotte’s portrait.
Albert may have ordered Ernst to head back to Germany, but that doesn’t mean he’s happy to see him go. Sidenote: Tom Hughes is a very good on-screen crier.
Ernst runs into Emma, Alfred, and Harriet on the way out. In a move pulled straight from a Victorian novel, Harriet casually drops her handkerchief at his feet as he leaves, giving him a token to remember her by.
Ahead of his big speech, Victoria helps Albert with his pronunciation (and his kissing techniques).
Victoria shows up “incognito” to hear Albert speak, but then she decides that her presence will draw attention to Albert, and heads back to the palace. (Adding “arrive incognito in a dramatic veil” to my bucket list, BTW.)
Albert’s speech is a success. Although this show plays fast and loose with history in basically every single episode, I do like that they’re giving us a view of some of the work that the real Prince Albert accomplished.
Even Sir Robert Peel is impressed. (I’m a little confused about the depiction of Peel’s attendance at this meeting — it seems, well, not entirely in line with the politics of the real man.)
Back at the palace, Victoria is thrilled that the speech went well, but later, Albert finds out that she’s been trying to delay motherhood. He explains that the only way to do so is to avoid their late-night canoodling sessions, and so she forget about the whole plan. Children ahoy!