Ten Royal Weddings to Remember
For centuries, British monarchs have had their marriages tested by war, infidelity, politics and diplomatic intrigue
- By Sarah Zielinski
- Smithsonian.com, March 21, 2011, Subscribe
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George IV and Maria Fitzherbert
Maria Fitzherbert (born Mary Anne Smythe) was already 28 and a rich widow in 1784 when she met George, a young prince with a penchant for older women. When she declined to become his mistress, George proposed. But Maria again declined on the grounds that he was barred from marrying a Catholic like herself. George stabbed himself and told Maria that only marrying her would induce him to live. Maria agreed but fled to France the next day. However, 15 months later she returned and married the prince. The illegal marriage didn’t stay secret for long, and the prince soon strayed. By 1794, he told Maria that their relationship was over, though he never divorced her and continued to support her. The next year, in deep debt, he married Princess Caroline of Brunswick after Parliament promised to increase his allowance. The marriage was a disaster, and he refused to recognize Caroline as queen when he ascended the throne in 1820.
Victoria and Albert
Victoria met her cousin Albert six days before her 17th birthday and was entranced by the handsome and clever young man. After she became queen in 1837, her ministers pressured her to marry, and she proposed to her love in 1839 (no one could propose to the queen). They wed the next year and though Albert was never made king, their marriage was a true partnership, with Albert acting as regent during Victoria’s nine pregnancies. When he died in 1861, possibly of stomach cancer, Victoria went into permanent mourning, wearing black for 50 years until she died in 1901, Britain’s longest reigning monarch.
Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson
The dapper, charming, partying Prince Edward met Wallis Simpson and her husband in 1931, and by the end of 1933 she had become his mistress. The besotted Edward ascended to the throne in January 1936 when his father, George V, died, but any thoughts he had of making Wallis his queen were soon dashed. The government and church were opposed, and there were fears the people would rise up and dispose of the monarchy entirely if Edward married Wallis, a divorced American still married to her second husband (she wouldn’t divorce him until October of that year). The prime minister, Stanley Baldwin, informed the new king that he must choose between his bride and his crown. On December 11, Edward abdicated and six months later, now titled the Duke of Windsor, he married Wallis.
George VI and Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon
A five-year-old Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon first met the 10-year-old Prince Albert (“Bertie”) at a children’s Christmas party in 1905. She gave him the cherries from her cake. They met again 15 years later, and he proposed in 1921. She turned him down, not wanting a royal life. He persisted, however, and she finally agreed, marrying him in 1923. They unexpectedly became king and queen when Albert’s older brother, Edward, abdicated his throne. The happy family with two young daughters helped to restore public confidence in the monarchy, shaken by his brother’s actions. Albert, titled George VI, died in his sleep in 1952 and his daughter, Elizabeth, took the throne and reigns to this day.
Charles and Diana
The marriage of Charles, Prince of Wales, and Lady Diana Spencer did not have an auspicious beginning: she laughed when he proposed. By the time of their wedding on July 29, 1981, Charles had already been in a relationship with the married Camillia Parker-Bowles for years. Diana would give birth to two boys—William and Harry—and later devote herself to charitable causes. But the marriage fell apart by the 1990s, and Charles started looking into divorce after the publication of a tell-all book by author and Diana confidante Andrew Morton. In 1992 Charles and Diana formally separated, and they divorced in 1996. Diana died the next year in a Paris car crash. Charles married Camilla in 2005. Despite the soap opera nature of the tragic love triangle, the British public still supports the monarchy. However, in a 2010 poll, 45 percent of respondents thought that Prince William should become the next king instead of Charles.
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Comments (7)
Kinda skipped over Liz & Phil, didn't we? I'd love to hear the details of how England had to "de-Greek" him, as the queen once shared with Nia Vardalos.
Posted by Nancy on April 22,2011 | 04:54 PM
Great article, but Victoria wore black for 40 years, not 50, unless you count the first 10 years she was buried...
Posted by lewarcher on April 22,2011 | 11:32 AM
I will remember Diana as long as I am alive.
Posted by Sana Ullah on April 14,2011 | 02:05 AM
Diana is truly missed and was such a good mother
Posted by Eileen Mathews on April 11,2011 | 05:42 PM
Not the best Mother of the Groom dress I've ever seen - and beautiful Diana's dress has way too much frou-frou!
Posted by Mary M. Abramson on April 11,2011 | 04:34 PM
Lady Diana was a amazing woman , I hope that Prince William & Kate are blessed with a wonderful marraige.
Posted by Dixie Durcan on April 7,2011 | 08:25 PM
Princess Diana was SOOOO pretty!!
Posted by Becca on March 25,2011 | 05:51 PM