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Posts Tagged ‘british royalty’

Your Wedding Resources For The Day

April 28th, 2011 Mandy No comments

  • The Royal Channel at YouTube
  • Google RealTime
  • Google Blog Search
  • Mandy’s Royal Twitter
  • Clarence House (Twitter)
  • The British Monarchy (Twitter)
  • MandysRoyalty at Facebook (for discussion)
  • W&K Official Wedding Page
  • Google News
  • The Guardian’s coverage of the wedding
  • CNN’s Wedding Special
  • Wedding news from The Washington Post
  • MSNBC Today: The Royals

Check out my “Blog Fellows” column at the right for a complete list of royal/British bloggers.

You are also welcome to take a gander at the Royal Wedding Stamp covers. A limited number of these covers are also signed by Baron Fellowes of Stafford – famous actor, novelist, film director and screenwriter who has portrayed King George IV as Prince Regent twice, and is perhaps better known as the creator of ITV’s critically acclaimed Downton Abbey.

click for larger image

The covers cost just £12.95 unsigned, or £24.95 signed by Baron Fellowes. Visit www.buckinghamcovers.com to find out more and order online, or give them a call on +44(0)1303 278 137.


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Tags: british royalty, Kate Middleton, Prince William, resources, Royal Wedding

Royal Wedding Stamp Cover

April 19th, 2011 Mandy No comments

click for larger image

There will be hundreds of souvenirs produced to mark the Royal Wedding. But these are different. Exclusive. Handmade. Limited. Created by world leading designers. These products have been independently rated as one of the must-have royal wedding collectables of 2011 in the Sunday Express.

This is a limited edition design by award winning designer Cath Buckingham, featuring Royal Mail’s fantastic Royal Wedding stamps, the official royal crest and a specially designed Westminster Abbey postmark, which is where the wedding will take place.

A limited number of these covers are also available signed by Baron Fellowes of Stafford, famous actor, novelist, film director and screenwriter who has portrayed King George IV as Prince Regent twice, and is perhaps better known as the creator of ITV’s critically acclaimed Downton Abbey.

The covers cost just £12.95 unsigned, or £24.95 signed by Baron Fellowes. Early ordering is advised as Buckingham Covers often sell out pre-release. Visit www.buckinghamcovers.com to find out more and order online, or give them a call on +44(0)1303 278 137.

Tags: british royalty, Engagements, Kate Middleton, Prince William, Weddings

The Coburg Conspiracy – Review

October 26th, 2010 Mandy No comments
Prince Albert wearing a black frock coat with ...

Image via Wikipedia

Richard Sotnick is a man on a mission. Curious about the Saxe-Coburg-Gotha family (from which the House of Windsor derives), Sotnick decided to thoroughly research them after a fateful meeting with Lord Mountbatten.

Lord Louis Mountbatten, an Admiral of the Fleet and the last Viceroy of India, met the author during a formal dinner in 1979. Discussing his family history, Mountbatten said pointedly, “You have to remember that, in my youth, European affairs were family business.”

Lord Louis was correct, of course. His sister Louise became Queen of Sweden, and other relations included monarchs of Germany, Denmark, Norway, and Romanov Russia. His nephew, Prince Philip, became the consort of Britain’s future Queen Elizabeth II.

Intrigued, Sotnick decided to trace the roots of Europe’s – and especially Britain’s – reigning houses. They all had one thing in common: all were branches of the Coburg family.

To better understand the Coburgs and the society in which they lived, Sotnick learned how to read and translate the Gothic German script in which the family’s letters and diaries were written in the nineteenth century. That research has culminated in “The Coburg Conspiracy”.

This book lays bare the marriage machinations within the Coburg dynasty that eventually launched the union of their Prince Albert to Britain’s Queen Victoria. Controversially, Sotnick questions and confronts rumours surrounding Albert’s paternity, the lifestyle of his charismatic uncle Leopold, and the indifference of his father, Ernst.

It was widely known that Victoria was a deft matchmaker for her own children, but Sotnick wanted to know who arranged the meeting between the Queen and Albert that made the tiny Duchy of Coburg the paterfamilias of power and influence. Thanks to Sotnick’s impressive and tirelessly researched book, we now know much more about the history of the world’s royal roots.

Purchased at Amazon.com for $26. Click here for your copy!

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Tags: Books, british royalty, Lord Louis Mountbatten, reviews, Richard Sotnick

William and Harry Need To Prepare

January 8th, 2010 Mandy No comments

From the Telegraph:

Prince William has echoed the environmental beliefs of his father at a charity event. Should the Princes take an active role in how Britain is run?

Speaking as a teacher, I think the Princes – especially William – need a better education first. Being well-educated in this day and age is of immeasurable value. This is what we tell our children, and the Princes should be no exception. Their money and position gives them carte blanche to attend only the finest institutions, and they should not take that for granted.

Training with the country’s armed forces is, of course, admirable and right. When kingship calls upon William, however, he needs to be educated across the board in everything from political science to conservation. The military is only a part of the responsibilities, just as art and geography are only part of the education.

Will the Prince be ready? Should Harry be at the forefront with him?

What are your thoughts?

british royals message board, prince william royalty

Tags: british royalty, Constitutional, Prince William, TRH Princes William and Harry

Being Queen of Hearts isn’t all it’s cracked up to be

April 10th, 2009 Mandy No comments

Inspired by Robert Lacey’s Royal: Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II Chapter 1

The possibility of losing one’s monarch at the hands of a lunatic induces panic. So when a royal figure survives an attack, especially with sangfroid, there’s relief all around. There’s a surge of public sympathy and support for the royal family and people express amazement at how cool their monarch can be.

Then, there’s a bit too much of a good thing. The media and the public get bored with cool, steely resolve after a while and get cranky. Queen Elizabeth II has experienced both the praise and the pouts of the people because of her grace under fire. As it turns out, it’s an experience that’s all in the family….

Read more…

Tags: british royalty, HM Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Albert, Queen Victoria

Book Review – An Uncommon Woman

November 23rd, 2008 Mandy No comments

Love royal history? Then here’s a great book for you – the true story of Empress Friedrich of Prussia, formerly the Princess Royal of England. Her story brings together the English and the German thrones, but then unwittingly rips them apart (as seen at Amazon.com).

An Uncommon Woman – The Empress Frederick: Daughter of Queen Victoria, Wife of the Crown Prince of Prussia, Mother of Kaiser Wilhelm

You will feel great sympathy towards Vicky, the Empress Frederick, who was an unfortunate hostage to the intrigues of the German court. Sympathy will soon give way to awe at her courage and determination to do her best while having to perform the impossible: being all things to all people.

Vicky was seen as the catalyst for change in Germany. Her parents, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert did not like the autocratic, militaristic way in which Emperor Wilhelm I was running Prussia. Instead, they visualized a united German nation with a government much like that of England. Their plan was to sow seeds of liberalism and constitutional monarchy through their daughter and her marriage to Wilhelm’s son, Prince Frederick (Fritz). In preparation for the eventual match, Vicky was schooled in politics and German life by Prince Albert. Eventually, she and Fritz would be Emperor and Empress of Prussia, and could bring about German unity.

Little did Vicky know that upon arriving in Berlin, she was at a disadvantage from the start.

As the daughter of Queen Victoria, she was encouraged to retain her Englishness yet was expected to be a Prussian wife and princess. Her efforts to raise her eldest son Willy as Prince Albert had raised her backfired. Her tendency to over-criticize (a trait passed on from Victoria) turned the young Wilhelm away, and he grew up under his thoroughly Prussian grandfather Wilhelm. Otto von Bismarck had seen his own chance to manipulate the future emperor, and along with the groveling royal court, Willy was turned into a bombastic power fanatic.

Her relationship with Fritz was not seen as loving, but as an English princess scheming to Anglicize the House of Hohenzollern. Vicky was painted as “die Englanderin”, unfaithful to Germany and a demon on the shoulder of her husband, whom she ‘manipulated’.

Hopes that Fritz’s mother, Empress Augusta, would watch over Vicky were dashed. Augusta was known to be very liberal and free-thinking, unusual for royal women of the time. In her they thought they had an ally, but both the Queen and Vicky would be sorely disappointed. The once-progressive Augusta had seen her marriage to Emperor Wilhelm unravel over the years, and as a result she became a bitter, self-absorbed woman. She gave Vicky little support in her new role.

When they finally became Emperor and Empress, Vicky and Fritz had precious little time to implement any real changes. Fritz died from cancer of the larynx three months into his reign. Upon his passing, Vicky was left alone and devoid of support or influence. Your heart cries at the unfairness of brilliant minds wasted, while Willy becomes Kaiser Wilhelm II – egotistical, manipulative, and dangerous.

Thankfully, Vicky did not live to see the destruction of the Hohenzollern dynasty when Wilhelm II pulled Germany and England into a devastating world war. After fighting his own relations across Europe, he headed into exile, never to see the throne again. Albert’s catalyst did indeed create a change, but not in the way he had expected. Germany would be unified, but the reigning royal house would fall from power, never to recover.

MandysRoyalty.org

Tags: Books, british royalty, Europe, Germany, Prussia, reviews

Royalty on Yahoo! Messenger

May 31st, 2008 Mandy No comments

Over the summer I will be available for real-time question and answer sessions. I use Yahoo! Messenger as “mandysroyalty” (of course!), so drop me a line anytime!

Mandy on Yahoo!

Tags: british royalty, FAQs, live help, Technology
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