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  1. VES is an international school that offers a high-quality British-style curriculum for expatriate and local children. Learn about its programs, admissions, achievements, and community on its website.

  2. www.victorias.frVICTORIA'S

    La façon la plus rapide et la plus naturelle d'apprendre une langue. Dégagez votre temps, une semaine par ci, une demi-journée par là ... Nous dégagerons votre horizon en vous redonnant des perspectives en anglais ! En individuel ou en groupe, cours particuliers ou blended avec la plateforme Cambridge, la plus qualitative du marché.

  3. Victoria English offers bespoke mental health training packages for managers and employees in South Wales. Learn how to support mental health and wellbeing in the workplace with engaging case studies, videos and reflective questions.

    • Overview
    • Lineage and early life

    Victoria was queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1837–1901) and empress of India (1876–1901). Her reign was one of the longest in British history, and the Victorian Age was named for her.

    What was Victoria’s childhood like?

    Victoria’s father died when she was a baby. She was raised by her mother at Kensington Palace and had a lonely childhood until she became queen at the age of 18.

    When did Victoria marry?

    Victoria married her first cousin Albert, prince of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, on February 10, 1840.

    What were Victoria’s children’s names?

    On the death in 1817 of Princess Charlotte, daughter of the prince regent (later George IV), there was no surviving legitimate offspring of George III’s 15 children. In 1818, therefore, three of his sons, the dukes of Clarence, Kent, and Cambridge, married to provide for the succession. The winner in the race to father the next ruler of Britain was Edward, duke of Kent, fourth son of George III. His only child was christened Alexandrina Victoria. After his death and George IV’s accession in 1820, Victoria became third in the line of succession to the throne after the duke of York (died 1827) and the duke of Clarence (subsequently William IV), whose own children died in infancy.

    Britannica Quiz

    The Victorian England Quiz: Art, Literature, and Life

    Victoria, by her own account, “was brought up very simply,” principally at Kensington Palace, where her closest companions, other than her German-born mother, the duchess of Kent, were her half sister, Féodore, and her governess, Louise (afterward the Baroness) Lehzen, a native of Coburg. An important father figure to the orphaned princess was her uncle Leopold, her mother’s brother, who lived at Claremont, near Esher, Surrey, until he became king of the Belgians in 1831.

    Victoria’s childhood was made increasingly unhappy by the machinations of the duchess of Kent’s advisor, Sir John Conroy. In control of the pliable duchess, Conroy hoped to dominate the future queen of Britain as well. Persuaded by Conroy that the royal dukes, “the wicked uncles,” posed a threat to her daughter, the duchess reared Victoria according to “the Kensington system,” by which she and Conroy systematically isolated Victoria from her contemporaries and her father’s family. Conroy thus aimed to make the princess dependent on and easily led by himself.

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  4. Victorian era, the period between about 1820 and 1914, corresponding roughly to the period of Queen Victoria’s reign (1837–1901) and characterized by a class-based society, a growing number of people able to vote, a growing state and economy, and Britain’s status as the most powerful empire in the world.

    • Susie Steinbach
  5. Aug 29, 2022 · Head Coach, Alcohol-Free Lifestyle; Founder, After the Crisis Coaching; This Mind Senior Coach, Breast cancer survivor/advocate; Best-selling author, The Addiction Diaries.

    • Alcohol-Free Lifestyle - with James Swanwick
  6. However, of the words and phrases in common usage during the Victorian era (including many with much older origins), a large proportion have since fallen out of use and revisiting some of them provides a fascinating insight into Victorian life and psychology.

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