Charlotte, Princess of Wales

Charlotte, the Princess of Wales was born on January 7th. 1796 at
Carlton House in London. 



own picture taken in 2023



Family

She was the daughter of the later King George IV. In 1811 he became
regent. Her mother was Caroline of Brunswick.

Her paternal grandparents were King George III and Queen Charlotte.
Yes Bridgerton :-) 

Her maternal grandparents were Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of
Brunswick and Princess Augusta of Great Britain.

Wellington called her father the worst man he had ever met in his
whole life, the most, selfish, the most false ... almost with no extenuating
circumstances." 

💡

Princess Charlotte was a member of the royal famil of Hanover. 



own picture taken in the royal palace of Brussels in 2017



Childhood


Charlotte Augusta wasn't exactly lovingly raised. Her parents, who
live together as husband and wife for no more than three weeks,
separated shortly after she was born. They also did nothing to keep
up appearances. The parents grossly neglected her upbringing. She
was constantly outsourced to governesses and sour aunts. Her father,
who of course would have preferred a son, hardly ever came to see her.
Her mother was banished from court.


Education


At the age of eight, Charlotte had still not learned to read or write.
Thanks to her grandfather George III, the princess finally received a
decent education. Since she was very unlikely to have another brother,
he felt that her upbringing could not be merely that of a woman, but as
heir to the crown.

When King George III was declared incapacitated, it was her grandmother
Queen Charlotte who tried to teach the sensible but untamed girl
etiquette and discipline.

Charlotte showed a total lack of self-control as a child. She reacted very
impulsively and capriciously, boyishly rough in all her intensity. A small
volcano that could literally erupt. Stamping feet in anger or uncontrollable
laughter. No manners for a princess.

Love 


The Prince Regent and his advisers decided that Princess Charlotte should
marry William, Hereditary Prince of Orange, son and heir-apparent of
Prince William VI of Orange. Such a marriage would increase British
influence in Northwest Europe. However Charlotte didn't like him. 
She found him extremely ugly with expressionless eyes.

Marriage meant an escape from the paternal yoke and financial
independence for her, but not at any price if it depended on Charlotte.
She just didn't have the right temperament for that. As the future
Queen of Britain, 

Charlotte did not want to live in the boring Netherlands. She wondered
if people were having a good time there. She threatened to break
off the engagement if the marriage contract did not include a clause
allowing her to stay in England. She was supported in this by lawyers
from the Whigs who were in the opposition.

After an argument with Willem, Charlotte wrote without much
detour in a farewell letter that she considered the engagement
completely and forever over. 

William himself seemed to prefer to resign himself to the humiliation
rather than win over his rebellious princess again. He was more
concerned about his father's reaction than about the breakup as such.

Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha had thus a strong reason
to stay a little bit longer in London. However he didn't see the Princess
a lot. Once he drunk tea with her at Warwick House.

Meanwhile on 10 June 1814, Charlotte signed the marriage contract.
Charlotte had become besotted with a Prussian prince whose identity
is uncertain; according to Charles Greville, it was Prince Augustus,
although historian Arthur Aspinall disagreed, thinking that her love
interest was the younger Prince Frederick. 

When King George IV learned of this, he punished his daughter
Charlotte. Her ladies-in-waiting were dismissed, and the princess
herself was imprisoned in Cranbourne Lodge in Windsor Great Park,
where she was not allowed to see anyone but the old queen. 

She escaped in the middle of the night and sought refuge with her
mother Caroline. That made the king even angrier. Soon after,
Caroline left for the continent.


Marriage


In January 1815 her decision was made. Couldn't be more miserable,
unhappy and worse off than in her place of exile. Charlotte hadn't
thought about it overnight: she had spent ten months quietly
thinking about it. Leo was allowed to cross the Channel without an
official invitation, he had her permission.

Charlotte began writing letters to Leopold herself in secret, sending
her portrait and a lock of hair to assure him of her feelings. She had
now truly and truly set her heart and mind upon him and him alone.
However, her patience was tested. In October 1815, she finally got
his long-awaited letter back, with a miniature portrait and a proposal.
She was over the moon. "You open to me a whole new life, new ideas,
new hope." she wrote jubilantly.

Leopold traveled to the United Kingdom. On February 24, 1816,
he was granted the title of Royal Highness and later that year was
inducted into the Order of the Garter. Leopold took up residence in
the Princely Pavillion in Brighton in anticipation of the marriage.

The first real meeting between Leopold and Charlotte was a success.
She found him very charming. The couple spent some wonderful days
and evenings in Brighton at the end of February 1816, full of long
conversations and plans for the future. It didn't take more time to know
they were made for each other.

On 10 March 1816, King George IV granted his permission for the
marriage. He announced the wedding as one made of love. 

The marriage took place on May 2, 1816. The ceremony was in the evening.
The envious Prince Regent had organized a private wedding for his daughter.
 A ride in her carriage through the park was supposed to satisfy the spectators.






King Leopold I of Belgium
Royal Palace Brussels
Own picture taken in 2017


Honeymoon


After the wedding, the couple traveled to Oatlands, the residence of the
Duchess of York, a few miles from London.


Claremont


Claremont was the nation's wedding gift to the young couple. It was
an Italian, classical country house, surrounded by a very large English
park with old trees and ponds. Leopold could grow flowers and plants to
his heart's content, as he had learned from his father in Coburg.

They spent sixteen blissful honeymoon months walking, reading,
studying, riding horses, playing whist and making music, sitting side
by side in the same chair. They were together all the time, almost
completely detached from the cannaille of the big world and became
more and more attached to each other.

Charlotte was proud to be married to Leopold and henceforth
signed her letters with Charlotte Princess of Saxe-Coburg. Leopold's
family became her family, despite the difference in status.

On 7 January, the Prince Regent gave a huge ball there to celebrate
Charlotte's 21st birthday, but the Coburgs did not attend, having returned
to Claremont and preferring to remain there quietly. At the end of April
1817, Leopold informed the Prince Regent that Charlotte was again
pregnant, and that there was every prospect of the Princess carrying
the baby to term.


Death


Charlotte was believed to be due to deliver on 19 October, but as October
ended, she had shown no signs of giving birth, and drove out as usual
with Leopold on Sunday 2 November.

On the evening of 3 November, her contractions began. As the fourth of
November became the fifth, it became clear that Charlotte might be
unable to deliver the child. 

At nine o'clock in the evening of 5 November, Charlotte finally gave
birth to a large stillborn boy. Efforts to resuscitate him were in vain, and
the noble observers confirmed that it was a handsome boy, resembling
the Royal Family. 

They were assured that the mother was doing well, and took their leave.
An exhausted Charlotte heard the news calmly, stating it was the will of
God. She took some nourishment after her lengthy fast and seemed to be
recovering. Leopold, who had remained with his wife throughout,
apparently took an opiate and collapsed into bed.

Soon after midnight, Charlotte began vomiting violently and complaining
of pains in her abdomen. Sir Richard was called, and was alarmed to find
his patient cold to the touch, breathing with difficulty, and bleeding. 

He placed hot compresses on her, the accepted treatment at the time for
postpartum bleeding, but the blood did not stop. He called in Stockmar
and urged him to bring Leopold. Stockmar found Leopold difficult to
rouse, and went to see the Princess, who grabbed his hand and told
him, "They have made me tipsy." Stockmar left the room, planning
to try again to rouse the Prince, but was called back by Charlotte's
voice, "Stocky! Stocky!" He entered the room to find her dead.

She died on 6 November 1817 at the age of 21. 

Afterwards


The Prince Regent was prostrate with grief, and was unable to attend
his child's funeral. Princess Caroline heard the news from a passing
courier, and fainted in shock. On recovering, she stated,
"England, that great country, has lost everything in losing my ever
beloved daughter."

Even the Prince of Orange burst into tears at hearing the news, and
his wife ordered the ladies of her court into mourning.

She was buried at the Royal Vault at St George's Chapel in 
Windsor Castle. 

The greatest effect fell on Prince Leopold.  He has never recovered the
feeling of happiness which had blessed his short married life.

Leopold remained a widower until remarrying in 1832 to
Louise of Orleans when he had become King of the Belgians. 

His youngest daughter, later known as Empress Carlota of Mexico,
was named in honour of his lost wife.




Dressing the Georgians


In 2023, Buckingham Palace organized an exhibition in the Queen's Gallery:
Dressing the Georgians. There I saw  the red cloak that Princess Charlotte
wore in the theater she visited with her husband Prince Leopold.It was nice
to see that special cloak that close!


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Who is who? de Liedekerke family!

House of Wittelsbach - Between crazyness and excellence

Who was Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan?