John Everett Millais.
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Queen Victoria's husband was her first cousin Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Victoria's mother and Albert's father were brother and sister. Albert and Victoria's common uncle Leopold (who was King of Belgium) thought that they would make a good pair. Because Leopold was like a father to Victoria she agreed to meet with Albert and his elder brother Ernest when they were all teenagers. Several years later Leopold wanted Albert to visit England again, and Victoria gave in. During this trip Victoria fell in love with Albert and proposed to Albert.
the Victoria and Albert museum
The Crystal Palace was built in Hyde Park London to house the Great Exhibition of 1851. It was the brainchild of Prince Albert, Queen Victoria's husband.
Queen Victoria married Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha on 10 February 1840.
Millius
John ebrit millious It's actually John Ebrit Millius
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John Everett Millais showed his works in the Victoria and Albert Museum at 17. He was a member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, a group of English painters, poets, and critics, founded in 1848.
It was named after Queen Victoria's husband; Prince Albert
Yes, they were both 42 when ALbert died. Queen Victoria was actually about 2 months older than Albert.
Queen Victoria with German husband, Prince Albert, was the first English monarch to have a Christmas Tree. This happened in England in 1840.
it was fictional. it was added in the movie to show albert's devotion to victoria.
If you're talking about Queen Victoria then her husband was her cousin Prince Albert.
Victoria and Albert - 2001 TV is rated/received certificates of: Singapore:PG
Prince Albert mostly spoke German, and perhaps a bit of English to his wife 'queen Victoria'.This is a very good question. I came away from the movie "Young Victoria"with the feeling that much of the dialogue in the movie, in reality, would have taken place in German, particularly between Victoria and her mother (of Saxe Coburg) and between Victoria and Albert. Generally a mother passes her first language to her children and I doubt that would be different in this case, particulary when a German-speaking (half) aunt and maids were prominent in Victoria's early years. And frankly - all that English between Leopold and Victoria's cousins in Belgium and Saxony, is fantasy stuff. It wouldn't happen now and English didn't have its current prestige in the 1830s.
Albert