Princess Alexandra of Denmark,
born “Alexandra Caroline Marie Charlotte Louise Julia”, was the second child
and eldest daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark and Princess Louise of Hesse-Kassel. She was born on December 1, 1844 in the Yellow Palace, a town
house near the Amalienborg Palace in Copenhagen. Her siblings include: King
Frederick VIII of Denmark, King George I of Greece, Crown Princess Thyra of Denmark, and Empress Maria Feodorovna of Russia (born Princess Dagmar of Denmark).
At the time of Alexandra’s birth,
her father was simply Prince Christian of
Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg from the fairly unknown House of
Glücksburg. In 1852, a succession crisis in the monarchy of Denmark erupted
when King Frederick VII, the last Danish sovereign of the older Royal branch of
the House of Oldenburg, was unable to produce a child and heir. Before his
death, he had made Denmark a constitutional monarchy and since he had no
successor, a conference of European kingdoms was called together to decide on
the future of the Danish succession. The members of the conference decided to
select Prince Christian as the next Danish king since his family was a junior
branch of the House of Oldenburg. So, Christian was named the heir to the
Danish throne when Alix was just eight years old. In 1842, he married his
second cousin, Louise of Hesse-Kassel, the niece of a previous king of Denmark,
Christian VIII. They had six children in total, including Alexandra, who all
made impressive marriages into the royal families of Europe (just like Queen Victoria’s
children), earning him the epithet “the father-in-law of Europe”.
The Family of Christian IX (left to right): Dagmar, Frederick, Valdemar, King Christian IX, Queen Louise, Thyra, George, and Alexandra (1862) |
Alexandra, or “Alix”, as her
close family members called her, lived quite modestly for a member of royalty
since her family did not have a huge amount of wealth due to Prince Christian’s
relatively minor royal standing at the time. Alix shared a bedroom with her
younger sister, Dagmar (the future Empress of Russia), in the chilly attic of
the Yellow Palace and did chores, unlike most royal children, such as setting
the table and making her own clothes. Alix and her sisters shared a love of
music and sewing with their mother, took swimming lessons with Nancy Edberg
(the women’s swimming forerunner of Sweden), and were occasionally told bedtime
stories by Hans Christian Anderson. Though Danish was Alexandra’s native tongue
and she was born a Lutheran, she learned English at a young age from the
English chaplain at Copenhagen. She was also confirmed into the Anglican Church
after her father became next in line for the throne and was devoted to religion
for the entirety of her life. When her father was named King Frederick VII’s
heir in 1852, he was given the grand title of “Prince of Denmark” and moved his
family to a new, much finer home – that of Bernstorff Palace. Though the
family’s status had been elevated dramatically, their wealth remained the same
and they did not partake in court life at Copenhagen while Frederick was still
on the throne.
Princess Alexandra of Denmark (Richard Lauchert, 1863) |
As Alexandra matured into a gorgeous, elegant, and fashionable auburn beauty, in
England, Queen Victoria and her husband, Prince Albert, were searching for a
suitable bride for their eldest son and heir to the throne, Albert Edward,
Prince of Wales. The eldest Danish princess was actually not the Queen’s first
choice because at the time, Denmark was at odds with Prussia over issues
surrounding the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein. Because Queen Victoria had
many German relatives and came from a German background herself, this made
Alexandra a rather problematic but still acceptable bride for the Prince of
Wales. Eventually, the other candidates for Albert Edward were discarded and it
was decided that Alix would become the new Princess of Wales. Alexandra met
Albert Edward on September 24, 1861 at Speyer when his sister, Victoria, Princess Royal, introduced the two. Albert Edward was not an intellectual or
hard-working young man, unlike his siblings, but he was known for his charm, dexterity,
and cordiality. “Bertie”, as he was known in his family, was a disappointment
to his parents because he wasn’t anything like his intelligent and influential
father. In fact, his mother saw him as flippant, careless, and reckless. Though
he was not handsome (he had a short, tubby frame and his mother’s weak chin
that he hid with a beard), he had a strong reputation as a playboy and engaged
in numerous love affairs with various women throughout his life. Women were
attracted to his “infectious gaiety”, his easy-going nature, and his
approachability. Alix liked the Prince of Wales upon their first meeting and he
returned her affections. The betrothal was then solidified and marriage plans
began to take place while Bertie went to Ireland to gain some military
experience. During his time here, he spent a few nights with an actress named
Nellie Clifden and when his parents found out, a dismayed Prince Albert (whose
health was failing at the time) travelled to Cambridge to chastise his son for
his behavior. Two weeks later, Albert died on December 14, 1861 at the age of
forty-two from what was said to be typhoid fever. Queen Victoria was never the
same after her beloved consort’s death and blamed Bertie for his father’s early
demise for the rest of her life. She even wrote to her eldest daughter: “I
never can, or shall, look at him without a shudder.”
The Wedding of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales and Alexandra of Denmark (William Powell Frith, 1863) |
Almost a year after his first
meeting with Alix, Bertie proposed on September 9, 1862 at the Royal Palace of
Laeken, which was the home of his great-uncle, King Leopold I of Belgium. Alix
left Denmark to arrive in England on March 7, 1863 where the British people
greeted the beautiful and shy Princess exuberantly. Her popularity with
Bertie’s future subjects was extremely high from the moment she first set foot
on English soil, for the people were delighted to see the first marriage of a
Prince of Wales in sixty-eight years. On March 10, 1863, the eighteen year-old
Alix married the twenty-one year old Prince of Wales at St. George’s Chapel in
Windsor Castle. The ceremony was a small and quiet affair for a royal wedding
because the Queen (and thus, the court) was still in mourning for Prince
Albert. The gorgeous Honiton lace gown that Alix wore for her wedding was the
first royal wedding gown to be photographed and published in papers thoughout
the world. The Prince and his new Princess of Wales left Windsor after the
wedding festivities for their honeymoon at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight.
But even after Bertie became a married man, he did not give up his endless
tirade of love affairs with women such as Lillie Langtry, Jennie Jerome, and
Daisy Greville. Alexandra remained a devoted wife to her husband, despite her
knowledge of his infidelities, and confidently shrugged off his affairs, later saying:
“He loved me the most.”
Albert Edward, Prince of Wales and his bride, Alexandra of Denmark (1863) |
After the honeymoon, the
newlyweds made Marlborough House in London their main residence with
Sandringham House in Norfolk as their country retreat. The couple was known for
their extravagant parties and their tendency to socialize to the extreme, which
the Queen frowned upon. The Queen disapproved of a few other things her daughter-in-law
did, such as hunting, which she tried to discourage Alix from to no avail. Alix
would often come into conflict with her regal mother-in-law and members of the
British royal family regarding her political views because she detested the
Germans due to Denmark’s tense past with Prussia. But overall, the Princess of
Wales was seen as “dignified and charming” in public and “affectionate and
jolly” in private. She liked to dance and ice skate and was known for her skill
as a horsewoman and a tandem driver. Her favorite hobbies were woodcarving and
photography. Alexandra also performed numerous public and charitable tasks and
events in her mother-in-law’s place without complaint, something the Queen
greatly appreciated. She became a popular trendsetter when it came to fashion,
as all the ladies copied her style of dress. Since Alix had a small scar on her
neck, she would wear chokers or high necklines to cover the blemish, which unintentionally
became a fashion standard that lasted for almost fifty years. In 1867, Alix
fell seriously ill with rheumatic fever and although she recovered, the disease
left her with a permanent limp. However, her style of walking became so popular
(as with everything she did, wore, and said) that high-society women mimicked her
limp to such an extreme that it became a trend known as the “Alexandra limp.”
Alexandra of Denmark, Princess of Wales (Franz Xaver Winterhalter, 1864) |
Though Alexandra got along with
her mother-in-law quite well, their relationship was somewhat strained at
times. Alix, like Princes Diana, was popular with the British people from the
time of her wedding as, “her beauty captivated many of her subjects, but her
enormous charm made them love her”. Since Queen Victoria remained out of the
public eye after her husband’s death, Alix and her husband became the new faces
of the monarchy. The people also loved Alix for her dignity and uncomplaining
nature when it came to her husband’s infamous sexual reputation. For a good
period of time, Alix was actually the most popular member of the royal family.
On some occasions, crowds would cheer her and summarily boo her husband. It is
suggested that the Queen was sometimes at loggerheads with her daughter-in-law
because she was envious of Alix’s instant popularity. Alix resented the unsolicited
counsel the Queen constantly gave her and her husband over both their public
and private lives, such as the names of their own children. In total, Alix had
six children with Bertie with just their youngest child dying in infancy:
The Family of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales and Alexandra of Denmark (1884) |
- Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale (1864-1892) died of pneumonia at the age of twenty-eight while engaged to Mary of Teck
- George V, King of the U.K. (1865-1936) married: Princess Mary of Teck – had issue
- Louise, Princess Royal (1867-1931) married: Alexander Duff, 1st Duke of Fife – had issue
- Princess Victoria (1868-1935) died unmarried and without issue
- Princess Maud, Queen of Norway (1869-1938) married: King Haakon VII of Norway – had issue
- Prince Alexander John (1871) died hours after his birth
Alexandra of Denmark, Princess of Wales (1881) |
The birth of Alexandra’s third
child, her oldest daughter Louise, had a profound effect on the Princess of
Wales both emotionally and physically. It was feared that Alix would die after
the difficult birth, for she fell ill with rheumatic fever after the delivery.
She recovered but the fever heighted her otosclerosis, which she probably
inherited from her mother, as well as an abnormal bone growth in her middle
ear. This caused her to become increasingly deaf over the years and as a
result, she withdrew somewhat from her excessive socializing to spend more time
at home with her children. Alix’s relationship with her husband faltered a bit
after her numerous pregnancies and her serious bout with rheumatic fever (he
did not come to her bedside during her illness, instead choosing to continue to
socialize and flirt with other women) but they reconciled after he fell ill
with typhoid fever in late 1871. Her hatred for Germany and its people never
decreased and she protested against any political measures that supported
German interests or growth. When her eldest child, Albert Victor, died of
pneumonia shortly after his twenty-eighth birthday in early 1892, Alix grieved
so immensely that she never touched his room, keeping it preserved as a kind of
shrine for years to come. She was certainly never the same outgoing and
cheerful woman she had been before her son’s unexpected demise. She was also
close to her grandchildren in her later years and often watched over them and
cared for them in their parents’ place.
Albert Edward, Prince of Wales and Alexandra of Denmark (1896) |
On January 22, 1901, Queen
Victoria died and the fifty-nine year old Albert Edward became King Edward VII the
fifty-six year old Alexandra as his Queen Consort. A few days before Edward’s
coronation was scheduled to take place, he fell ill with appendicitis and was
so sick that Alexandra had to take his place at a military parade to keep the
public calm. The coronation was then postponed because Edward had to undergo an
operation to drain his infected appendix. After his recovery, Alexandra was
crowned alongside her husband on August 9, 1902. Alexandra did not partake in
political activities as Queen and her royal duties and activities did not
change much from those she performed as Princess of Wales. It is said that she
was prohibited from seeing her husband’s briefing papers and she was purposely barred
from a few of his foreign tours “to prevent her meddling in diplomatic
matters.”
Coronation Portraits of Edward VII and Alexandra of Denmark (Luke Fildes, 1901) |
The Anointing of Queen Alexandra (Laurits Tuxen, 1902) |
In 1910, while Alix was visiting her brother King George I of Greece
in Corfu, she was sent an urgent telegraph informing her that her husband had
fallen gravely ill. After receiving this news, she returned to England straightaway
to be by her consort’s side. In his later years, Edward had suffered from
bronchitis (he smoked twenty cigarettes and twelve cigars a day) and began to endure
numerous heart attacks in his final days. On May 6, 1910, surrounded by his
wife and children, King Edward VII died at Buckingham Palace at the age of
sixty-eight after just nine years on the throne. In his last few hours, Alix
had dispensed oxygen from a gas cylinder with her own hands to aid his
breathing. She grieved for her husband immensely after his death and shortly
after his passing, she said to a friend: “I feel as if I had been turned into
stone, unable to cry, unable to grasp the meaning of it all.” Edward was given
a grand funeral, which was attended by “the greatest assemblage of royalty and
rank ever gathered in one place” and was buried at St George’s Chapel in
Windsor Castle, where he had married Alexandra almost fifty years earlier.
Later in the year, Alix, now the Queen Dowager, moved out of Buckingham Palace
and back to her former home of Marlborough House while her son, George
Frederick, was crowned King George V of the U.K.
Alexandra of Denmark, Queen of the U.K. (1910) |
She maintained a quiet life in
her widowhood during her son’s tenure on the throne, dedicating her time to
charitable activities such as Alexandra Rose Day, a fundraising event for
hospitals where female volunteers sold fake roses to the disabled. When World
War I broke out, Alexandra’s hatred for the Germans reached a fever pitch. She
was vocal of her dislike of her nephew by marriage, Kaiser Wilhelm II, and
supported the removal of hanging banners of foreign princes who were part of
the Order of the Garter from St George’s Chapel. During the Russian Revolution
of 1917, the Bolsheviks executed Alix’s nephew, Tsar Nicholas II, and his
family. The Tsar’s mother and Alix’s sister, the Empress Dowager Maria, was
brought from Russia to England in 1919 by the Royal Navy to live with Alix for
some time. Before the war, Alix had been able to preserve her youthful beauty
but by the late 1910’s, her age began to show. She started wearing intricate
veils and heavy makeup to hide the reality of her faded loveliness but many of
her contemporaries said that this just made her face appear “enameled”. Her
health began to fail around this time and in 1920, a blood vessel in her eye
burst, which left her partially blind for a period of time. Her memory and
speech diminished in her final years and on November 20, 1925, the
eighty-year-old Queen Dowager succumbed to a fatal heart attack at her home of Sandringham
House. She was then buried beside her husband in St George’s Chapel.
Alexandra of Denmark, Queen Dowager (1923 |
She was survived by her only remaining
son, King George V, and her three daughters. George, who would reign until his
death in 1936, married his late brother’s fiancée, Princess Mary of Teck, in
1893 and had six children, including Edward VIII and George VI. Alix’s oldest
daughter, Louise, had married Alexander Duff, 1st Duke of Fife in
1889 and had two surviving daughters before her death in 1931. Alix’s middle
daughter, Victoria, remained unmarried and motherless for the entirety of her
life, instead choosing to remain as her mother’s companion (it is said that
Alix vigorously dissuaded Victoria from marriage for this specific reason).
Victoria died in 1935 at the age of sixty-seven. Alix’s youngest daughter,
Maud, married her maternal first cousin, Prince Carl of Denmark in 1896, who
became King Haakon VII of Norway in 1905. They only had one son, the future
Olav V of Norway, before Maud’s death in 1938.
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