User:PeterSymonds/Princess Helena of the United Kingdom

Princess Helena
Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein
Burial
SpousePrince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein
IssuePrince Christian Victor of Schleswig-Holstein
Albert, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein
Princess Helena Victoria
Princess Marie Louise
Prince Harold
Names
Helena Augusta Victoria
HouseHouse of Oldenburg
House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
FatherAlbert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
MotherVictoria

The Princess Helena (Helena Augusta Victoria; Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein by marriage;[1] 25 May 18469 June 1923) was a member of the British Royal Family, the third daughter of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.

Helena was educated by private tutors chosen by her father and his close friend and adviser, Baron Stockmar. Her childhood was spent with her parents, travelling between the variety of royal residences in England and Scotland. The intimate atmosphere of the royal court came ended December 14 1861, when her father died, and her mother entered a period of intense mourning.

In her teenage years, Helena began a flirtation with Prince Albert's German librarian, Carl Ruland. Although the nature of the relationship is largely unknown, Helena's romantic letters to Ruland survive. After the Queen found out, she dismissed Ruland in 1863 and he moved back to his native Germany. Three years later, on July 5 1866, she married the impoverished German Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein. The couple remained in England, in calling distance of the Queen, who liked to have her daughters nearby, and Helena became the Queen's helpmeet with her youngest sister, Princess Beatrice. However, after Queen Victoria died, on 22 January 1901, she saw relatively little of her surviving siblings.

Helena was the most active member of the royal family, carrying out an extensive programme of royal engagements at a time when royalty was not expected to appear so often in public. She was also an active patron of charities, and was one of the founding members of the Red Cross. She was also founding president of the Royal School of Needlework, and president of the Royal British Nurses' Association. As president of the latter, she was a strong supporter of nurse registration against the advice of Florence Nightingale.[2] She became the first member of her family to celebrate her 50th wedding anniversary in 1916, but her husband died a year later. Helena outlived him by six years, and died aged 77 at Schomberg House, on 19 June 1923.


Early life

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Princess Helena (right) with her brother Prince Alfred. Helena was Alfred's favourite sister.

Helena was born at Buckingham Palace, the official royal residence in London, on 25 May 1846.[3] She was the third daughter of the reigning British monarch, Queen Victoria, and her husband Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Albert reported to his brother, Ernest II, the Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, that Helena “came into this world quite blue, but she is quite well now”.[4] He added that the Queen “suffered longer and more than the other times and she will have to remain very quiet to recover.”[5] Albert and Victoria chose the names Helena Augusta Victoria. The German name for Helena was Helenchen, later shortened to Lenchen, the name which Helena was invariably referred to by members of the royal family.[6] Helena was baptised on 25 July 1846 at the private chapel at Buckingham Palace.[7] Her godparents were Frederick William, the hereditary Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz; Hélène, Duchess of Orléans (for whom her grandmother Princess Victoria, Duchess of Kent stood proxy); and Princess Augusta, Duchess of Cambridge.[8]

Helena was a lively and outspoken child, and reacted against brotherly teasing with a punch on the nose.[9] Her early talents included drawing. Lady Augusta Stanley, a lady-in-waiting to the Queen, commented favourably on the three-year old Helena's artwork.[6] Like her other sisters, she could play the piano to a high standard at an early age. Other interests included science and technology, shared by her father Prince Albert, and horse riding and boating, two of her favourite childhood occupations.[10] However, Helena became the middle daughter following the birth of Princess Louise in 1848, and her abilities were overshadowed by her more artistic sisters.[11]

Helena's father, Albert, the Prince Consort, died on 14 December 1861. The Queen was devastated, and ordered her household, along with her daughters, to move from Windsor to Osborne House, the Queen's Isle of Wight residence. Helena's grief was also profound, and she wrote to a friend a month later: “What we have lost nothing can ever replace, and our grief is most, most bitter...I adored Papa, I loved him more than anything on earth, his word was a most sacred law, and he was my help and adviser...These hours were the happiest of my life, and now it is all, all over.”

The Queen relied on her elder daughter Princess Alice as an unofficial secretary, but Alice needed an assistant of her own. Though Helena was the next eldest, she was considered unreliable by Victoria because of her inability to go long without bursting into tears.[12] Therefore, Louise was selected to assume the role in her place,[13] Alice was married to Prince Louis of Hesse in 1862, after which Helena assumed the role—described as the “crutch” of her mother's old age by one biographer—at her mother's side.[14] In this role, she carried out minor secretarial tasks, such as writing the Queen's letters, helping her with political correspondence, and providing her with company.[15]

Marriage

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Marriage controversy

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Princess Helena began an early flirtation with her father's former librarian, Carl Ruland. Ruland was appointed to the Royal Household in 1859, on the recommendation of Baron Stockmar, and he was trusted enough to teach German to Helena's brother, the young Prince of Wales.[16] When the Queen discovered that Helena had grown romantically attached to a royal servant, he was promptly dismissed back to his native Germany, and he never lost the Queen's hostility.[17]

Following Ruland's departure in 1863, the Queen looked for a husband for Helena. However, as the middle child, the prospect of a powerful alliance with a European royal house was low.[18] Her appearance was also a concern, as by the age of fifteen, she was described by her biographer as chunky, dowdy and double chinned.[19] Furthermore, Victoria insisted that Helena's future husband had to be prepared to live near the Queen, thus keeping her daughter nearby.[20] Her choice eventually fell on Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein, however, the match was politically awkward, and caused a severe breach within the royal family. Schleswig and Holstein were two territories fought over between Prussia and Denmark during the First and Second Schleswig Wars. In the latter, Prussia and Austria defeated Denmark, and gave the annexed Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein, formerly the personal property of Danish kings, to Christian's family. Therefore, the marriage horrified Alexandra, Princess of Wales, the daughter of King Christian of Denmark, who exclaimed: “The Duchies belong to Papa.”[21] Alexandra found support in the the Prince of Wales and Princess Alice, who openly accused her mother of sacrificing Helena's happiness for the Queen's convenience.[22] She also argued that it would reduce the Crown Princess of Prussia's already low popularity in Berlin.[23]. Among the other opposers were Prince Alfred and Prince George, Duke of Cambridge, but the Queen was ardently supported by her eldest daughter, Victoria, Crown Princess of Prussia, who had been a personal friend of Christian's family for many years.[21]

 
Princess Helena and Prince Christian, part of a series of photographs following their engagement in 1865

Despite the political controversies and their age difference—he was fifteen years her senior—Helena was happy with Christian and was determined to marry him.[24] As a younger son of a reigning duke, the absence of any foreign commitments allowed him to remain permanently in England—the Queen's primary concern—and she declared the marriage would go ahead.[25] Relations between Helena and Alexandra remained strained, and Alexandra was unprepared to accept Christian as either a cousin or brother.[26] The Queen never forgave Alice for accusations of possessiveness, and wrote of the Waleses shortly afterwards: “Bertie is most affectionate and kind but Alix [pet name for Alexandra] is by no means what she ought to be. It will be long, if ever, before she regains my confidence.”[27]

Engagement and wedding

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The engagement, which was declared on 5 December 1865, caused the Queen further problems when the Prince of Wales threatened to boycott the ceremony.[28] However, Princess Alice intervened, acted as peacemaker, and persuaded him to attend, despite her own opposition to the union.

The wedding was a reasonably happy occasion, and the Queen allowed the ceremony to take place at Windsor, albeit the Private Chapel rather than the grander St George's Chapel, and relieved her black mourning dress with a white mourning cap which draped over her back.[29] The main participants filed into the chapel to the sound of Beethoven's Triumphal March, creating a spectacle only marred by the sudden disappearance of Prince George, the Duke of Cambridge, who had a sudden gout attack. Christian filed into the abbey with his two supporters, Prince Edward of Saxe-Weimar and Prince Frederic of Schleswig-Holstein, and Helena was given away by her mother, who escorted her down up the aisle with the Prince of Wales and eight bridesmaids.[30] Christian looked older than he was, and one guest commented that Helena looked as if she was marrying an aged uncle. Indeed, when he was first summoned to England, he assumed that the widowed Queen was inspecting him as a new husband for herself rather than as a candidate for one of her daughters.[31] The couple spent the first night of their married life at Osborne House, before honeymooning in Paris, Interlaken and Genoa.[32]

Simple life

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Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein

Helena and Christian were devoted to each other, and led a quiet life in comparison to Helena's other sisters.[33] Following their marriage, they took up residence at Cumberland Lodge in Windsor Great Park, the traditional residence of the Ranger of Windsor Great Park, the honorary position bestowed on Christian by the Queen. When staying in London, they lived at the Belgian Suite in Buckingham Palace.[34] The couple bore five children: Christian Victor in 1867, Albert in 1869, and Princesses Helena Victoria and Marie Louise in 1870 and 1872 respectively. Her last two sons died early; Frederick Harold died eight days after his birth in 1876, and an unnamed stillborn son in 1877. Princess Louise, Helena's sister, commissioned the French sculptor Jules Dalou to sculpt a memorial to Helena's dead infants.[35]

The Christians were granted a parliamentary annuity of £6000 a year, which the Queen requested in person.[36] In addition, a dower of £30,000 was settled upon, and the Queen gave the couple £100,000 which yielded an income of about £4000 a year.[37] As well as that of Ranger of Windsor Park, Christian was given the honorary position of High Steward of Windsor, and was made a Royal Commissioner for the Great Exhibition of 1851. However, he was often an absentee figurehead at the meetings, instead passing his time with playing with his dog Corrie, feeding his numerous pidgeons, and embarking on hunting excursions.[38]

Helena, as promised, lived close to the Queen, and both she and Beatrice performed duties for the Queen. Beatrice, whom Victoria had groomed for the main role at her side, carried out the more important duties, and Helena took on the more minor matters that Beatrice did not have time to do. Helena was assisted by her unmarried daugter, Helena Victoria, to whom the Queen dictated her journal in the last months of her life.[39] When not at the Queen's side, or working on behalf of the numerous charitable causes she represented, Helena joined Christian in enjoying a peaceful life, free of the marital and offspring problems that her other sisters endured.

Helena's health was not robust, and she was addicted to the drugs opium and laudanum.[40] However, the Queen did not believe that Helena was really ill, accusing her of hypochondria encouraged by an indulgent husband.[41] Queen Victoria wrote to Victoria, Crown Princess of Prussia complaining that Helena was inclined to “coddle herself (and Christian too) and to give way in everything that the great object of her doctors and nurse is to rouse her and make her think less of herself and of her confinement”.[42] Not all of her health scares were brought on by hypochondria; in 1869, she had to cancel her trip to Balmoral Castle when she became ill at the railway station. In 1870, she was suffering from severe rheumatism and problems with her joints. In July 1871, she suffered from congestion in her lungs, an illness severe enough to appear in the Court Circular, which announced that it had caused distress to the royal family.[43] In 1873, she was forced to recuperate in France as a result of illness, and in the 1880s she travelled to Germany to see an oculist for her eyes.[44]

Royal duties

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Nursing

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Florence Nightingale, against whom Helena promoted nurse registration

Helena had a firm interest in nursing, and became President of the British Nurses' Association (RBNA) upon its foundation in 1887. In 1891, it received the prefix “Royal” in 1891, and received the Royal Charter the following year.[45] She was a strong supporter of nurse registration, an issue that was opposed by both Florence Nightingale and leading public figures.[45] In a speech Helena made in 1893, she made clear that the RBNA was working towards “improving the education and status of those devoted and self-sacrificing women whose whole lives have been devoted to tending the sick, the suffering, and the dying”.[46] In the same speech, she warned about opposition and misrepresentation they had encountered. Although the RBNA was in favour of registration as a means of enhancing and guaranteeing the professional status of trained nurses, its incorporation with the Privy Council allowed it to maintain a list rather than a formal register of nurses.[46]

Following the death of Queen Victoria in 1901, the new Queen, Alexandra, insisted on replacing Helena as President of Army Nursing Service.[47] This gave rise rise to a further breach between the royal ladies, with King Edward VII caught in the middle between his sister and his wife.[48] Lady Roberts, a courtier, wrote to a friend: “matters were sometimes very difficult and not always pleasant.” However, in accordance with rank, Helena agreed to resign in Alexandra's favour, and she retained presidency of the Army Nursing Reserve.[47] Though thought to be merely an artefact created by society ladies,[49] Helena excercised an efficient and autocratic regime — “if anyone ventures to disagree with Her Royal Highness she has simply said, ‘It is my wish, that is sufficient.’”[50]

The RBNA gradually went into decline following the Nurses Registration Act 1919; after six failed attempts between 1904 and 1918, the British parliament passed the bill allowing formal nurse registration.[51] What resulted was the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), and the RBNA lost membership and dominance. Helena supported the proposed amalgamation of the RBNA with the new RCN, but that proved unsuccessful when the RBNA pulled out of the negotiations.[49] However, she remained active in other nursing organisations, and was president of the Isle of Wight, Windsor and Great Western Railway branches of the Order of St. John. In this position, she personally signed and presented many thousands of certificates of proficiency in nursing.[52]

Needlework

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Helena was also active in the promotion of needlework, and became the first president of the newly established School of Art Needlework in 1872, and in 1876, it acquired the “royal” prefix, becoming the Royal School of Needlework. In Helena's words, the objective of the school was: “first, to revive a beautiful art which had been well-nigh lost; and secondly, through its revival, to provide employment for gentlewomen who were without means of a suitable livelihood.”[53] As with her other organisations, she was an active president, and worked to keep the school on an even level with other schools. She personally wrote to Royal Commissioners requesting money; for example, in 1895, she requested and acquired £30,000 for erecting a building for the school in South Kensington.[54] Her royal status helped in its promotion, and she held Thursday afternoon tea parties at the school for society ladies, who wanted to be seen in the presence of royal personages such as Princess Helena. When the Christmas Bazaar was held, she acted as chief saleswoman, generating long queues of people anxious to be served personally by her.[55]

 
Princess Helena in a formal photograph

Helena was anxious to help children and the unemployed, and began hosting free dinners for their benefit at the Windsor Guildhall. She presided over two of these dinners, in February and March 1886, and over 3000 meals were served to children and unemployed men during the harsh Winter that year.[55] Through her charitable activities, she became popular with the people; one contemporary newspaper wrote that “the poor of Windsor worshipped her”.[56]

Author

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Among Helena's other interests was writing, especially translation. In 1867, when the first biography of her father, the Prince Consort was written, the author, Sir Charles Grey, notes that the Prince's letters were translated (from German to English) by Helena “with surprising fidelity”.[57] Other translations followed, and in 1887 she published a translation of The Memoirs of Wilhelmine, Margravine of Beiruth. It was noted by the Saturday Review that Helena gave an English version thoroughly alive, with a sound dictionary translation and a high accuracy in spirit.[58] Her final translation was undertaken in 1882, on a German booklet called First Aid to the Injured, originally published by Christian's brother-in-law. It was republished several times until 1906.[59]

Bergsträsser affair

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A copyright issue arose after the publication of letters written by Helena's sister, Princess Alice. In Germany, an edition of Alice's letters was published in 1883, by a Darmstadt clergyman called Dr. Carl Sell, who chose a selection of her letters made available to him by the Queen. When it was done, Helena wrote to Sell and requested permission to publish the German text into English, and it was granted, but without the knowledge of the publisher, Dr. Bergsträsser. In December 1883, Helena wrote to Sir Theodore Martin, a favoured royal biographer, informing him that Bergsträsser was claiming copyright of Alice's letters, and on that basis, was demanding a delay in the publication of the English edition. Martin acted as an intermediary between Helena and Bergsträsser, who claimed to have received many offers from English publishers, and that the chosen one would expect a high honorarium.[60]

Bergsträsser was persuaded to drop his demand for a delay in publishing, and modify his copyright claims in return for a lump sum of money. However, the Queen and Helena refused, claiming that the copyright actually belonged to the Queen, and that only Sell's original preface was open to negotiation. The royal ladies considered Bergsträsser's claims “unjustified if not impertinent”, and would not communicate with him directly.[61] Eventually, Bergsträsser came to England in January 1884, willing to accept £100 for the first 3000 copies and a further £40 for each subsequent thousand copies sold.[61] Martin chose the publisher John Murray, who after further negotiations with Bergsträsser, printed the first copies in mid-1884. It sold out almost immediately, but for the second edition, Murray replaced Sell's biographical sketch of Princess Alice with the 53-page memoir written by Helena. The problem of royalties to Sell was thus avoided, and the fact that Helena gave her name to the memoir to her sister attracted greater interest in the book.[62]

Later life

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Quiet life

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Helena's favourite son, Prince Christian Victor, died in 1900, followed shortly by her mother, Queen Victoria, at Osborne House on 22 January 1901. The new King, King Edward VII, did not have any close relations with his surviving sisters, with the exception of Princess Louise. Helena's nephew, Prince Alexander of Battenberg (later Marquess of Carisbrooke) recorded that Queen Alexandra was jealous of the royal family, and would not invite her sisters-in-law to Sandringham.[63] Moreso, Alexandra never fully reconciled herself to Helena and Christian following their marriage controversy in the 1860s.[64]

File:Princess Helena on at Sheffield copy 1906.jpg
Princess Helena visiting Sheffield in 1906

Helena saw relatively little of her surviving siblings, and continued her role as a support to the monarchy and a campaigner for the many charities she represented.[65] Christian also led quiet life, although despite old age, he represented the King at a number of foreign functions, including the Silver Wedding anniversary of Kaiser Wilhelm II.[65] During the Edwardian years, Helena visited the grave of her son, Prince Christian Victor, who was killed in 1900 during the Second Boer War. She was met by South African Prime Minister Louis Botha, but Jan Smuts refused to meet her, partly because he was bitter that South Africa had lost the war and partly because his son had died in a British Concentration Camp.[66]

Later years

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Edward VII died in 1910, and the First World War began four years after his death, and Helena devoted her time to nursing, and her daughter, Princess Marie Louise, recorded in her memoirs that requests for news of loved ones reached Helena and her sisters. It was decided that the letters should be forwarded to Queen Margaret of Sweden, as Sweden was neutral during the First World War. It was during the war that Helena and Christian celebrated their Golden Wedding anniversary in 1916, and despite the fact that Britain and Germany were at war, the Kaiser sent a congratulatory telegram through the Queen of Sweden.[67] George V and Queen Mary were present when the telegram was received, and the King remarked to Helena's daughter, Marie Louise, that her former husband, Prince Aribert of Anhalt, did her a service when he turned her out. When Marie Louise said she would have run away to England if she was still married, the King said, “with a twinkle in his eye”, that he would have had to intern her.[68]

In 1917, in response to the wave of anti-German feeling that surrounded the war, George V changed the family name from Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to Windsor. He also disposed of his family's German titles and styles, so Christian, Helena and their daughters simply became Prince and Princess Christian; Princess Helena Victoria and Marie Louise with no territorial designation. Helena's surviving son, Albert, fought on the side of the Prussians, though he made it clear that he would not fight against his mother's country.[69] In the same year, on 8 October, Prince Christian died at Schomberg House. Her last years were spent arguing with Commissioners, who tried to turn her out of Schomberg and Cumberland Lodge because of the expense of running her households. They failed, as clear evidence of her right to live in those residences for life was shown.[70]

 
Princess Helena's grave at Frogmore (second from left) in the Schleswig-Holstein burial plot

Princess Helena, Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein, died at Schomberg House on 9 June 1923.[71] Her funeral, described as a “magnificently stage-managed scene” by her her biographer Seweryn Chomet, was headed by King George V. The regiment of her favourite son, Prince Christian Victor, lined the steps of St. George's Chapel at Windsor Castle. Although originally interred in the Royal Vault at St George's, on 15 June 1923, her body was reburied at the Royal Burial Ground at Frogmore, a few miles from Windsor, after its consecration on 23 October 1928.[72]

Legacy

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Helena was devoted to nursing, and took the lead at the charitable organisations she represented. She was also an active campaigner, and wrote letters to newspapers and magazines promoting the interests of nurse registration. Her royal status helped to promote the publicity and society interest that surrounded organisations such as the Royal British Nurses' Association. The RBNA still survives today with Baroness Cox as president.[73]

In appearance, Helena was described by John Van Der Kiste as plump and dowdy; and in temperament, as placid, and business-like, with an authoritarian spirit. On one occasion, during a National Dock Strike, the Archbishop of Canterbury composed a prayer hoping for its prompt end. Helena arrived at the church, examined her service sheet, and in a voice described by her daughter as “the penetrating royal family whisper, which carried farther than any megaphone”, remarked: “That prayer won't settle any strike.”[74] Her appearance and personality was criticised in the letters and journals of Queen Victoria, and biographers followed her example.[75] However, Helena's daughter, Princess Marie Louise, described her as:


Music was one of her passions, and in her youth she played the piano with Charles Hallé, and Jenny Lind and Clara Butt were among her personal friends.[74] Her determination to carry out a wide range of public duties won her widespread popularity.[77] She twice represented her mother at Drawing Rooms, where guests were instructed to present themselves to Helena as if they were presenting themselves to the Queen.[78]

Helena was closest to her brother, Prince Alfred, who considered her his favourite sister.[79] Though described by contemporaries as fearfully devoted to the Queen, to the point that she did not have a mind of her own, she actively campaigned for Women's Rights, a field the Queen abhorred.[80] Nevertheless, both she and Beatrice remained closest to the Queen, and Helena remained close to her mother's side until the latter's death. Her name was the last to be written in the Queen's seventy-year old journal.[81]

Issue

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Prince and Princess Christian had six children:

Name Birth Death Notes
Prince Christian Victor Albert Ernest Anthony 14 August 1867 29 October 1900 His mother's favourite son; killed in 1914 during the First World War
Prince Albert John Charles Frederick Arthur George 28 February 1869 13 March 1931 Succeeded as head of the House of Oldenburg in 1921
Princess Victoria Louise Sophia Augusta Amelia Helena, "Helena Victoria" 3 May 1870 13 March 1948 Remained a spinster. One of her last public appearances was at the wedding of the future Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh
Princess Francesca Josepha Louise Augusta Marie Christina Helena, "Marie Louise" 12 August 1872 8 December 1956 Married 1891; Prince Aribert of Anhalt; no issue
Prince Frederick Christian Augustus Leopold Edward "Harold" 12 May 1876 20 May 1876 Died an infant at eight days old
An unnamed stillborn son 7 May 1877 7 May 1877 Stillborn

Titles, styles, honours and arms

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Princess Helena's coat of arms (18581917)

Titles and styles

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Honours

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Arms

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In 1858, Helena and the three younger of her sisters were granted use of the royal arms, with an inescutcheon of the shield of Saxony, and differenced by a label argent of three points. On Helena's arms, the outer points bore roses gules, and the centre bore a cross gules. In 1917, the inescutcheon was dropped by royal warrant from George V.[86]

Notes

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  1. ^ When King George V dropped the royal family's German names, styles and titles, the couple simply became Prince and Princess Christian with no titular place
  2. ^ Chomet, p. 121
  3. ^ Chomet, p. 9
  4. ^ Bennet, p. 89
  5. ^ Quoted in Chomet, p. 10
  6. ^ a b Chomet, p. 11
  7. ^ "London Gazette Issue 20626". Retrieved 2008-01-28. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  8. ^ "London Gazette Issue 20627". Retrieved 2008-01-28. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  9. ^ Van Der Kiste, John. "Princess Helena". Retrieved 2008-01-28. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  10. ^ Chomet, p. 10
  11. ^ Chomet, p. 12
  12. ^ Packard, p. 102
  13. ^ Packard, p. 103
  14. ^ Packard, p. 104
  15. ^ Dennison, p. 204
  16. ^ Chomet, p. 17
  17. ^ Chomet, p. 19
  18. ^ Chomet, p. 37
  19. ^ Packard, p. 99
  20. ^ Van Der Kiste, p. 61
  21. ^ a b Packard, p. 113
  22. ^ Battiscombe, p. 77
  23. ^ Van Der Kiste, p. 65
  24. ^ Packard, p. 114
  25. ^ Van Der Kiste, p. 64
  26. ^ Battiscombe, p. 76
  27. ^ Van Der Kiste, p. 181
  28. ^ Packard, p. 115
  29. ^ Packard, p. 116
  30. ^ "No. 23140". The London Gazette. 17 June 1866. {{cite magazine}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  31. ^ Van Der Kiste, p. 72
  32. ^ Packard, p. 117
  33. ^ Chomet, p. 55
  34. ^ Chomet, p. 133
  35. ^ Packard, p. 192
  36. ^ Chomet, p. 52
  37. ^ Chomet, p. 54
  38. ^ Chomet, p. 59
  39. ^ Benson, p. 300
  40. ^ Packard, pp. 269–270
  41. ^ Packard, p. 193
  42. ^ Quoted in Chomet, p. 128
  43. ^ Chomet, p. 129
  44. ^ Chomet, p. 130
  45. ^ a b Chomet, p. 119
  46. ^ a b Chomet, p. 120
  47. ^ a b Chomet, p. 122
  48. ^ Battiscombe, p. 234
  49. ^ a b Chomet, p. 123
  50. ^ Quoted in Battiscombe, p. 233
  51. ^ "Registration of Nurses". Royal British Nurses' Association. 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  52. ^ Chomet, p. 124
  53. ^ Chomet, p. 124
  54. ^ Chomet, p. 125
  55. ^ a b Chomet, p. 126
  56. ^ Quoted in Chomet, p. 126
  57. ^ Chomet, p. 70
  58. ^ Chomet, p. 71
  59. ^ Chomet, p. 80
  60. ^ Chomet, p. 83
  61. ^ a b Chomet, p. 84
  62. ^ Chomet, p. 86
  63. ^ Van Der Kiste, p. 180
  64. ^ Battiscombe, pp. 75–78
  65. ^ a b Van Der Kiste, p. 182
  66. ^ Marie Louise, pp. 195–196
  67. ^ Marie Louise, pp. 141–142
  68. ^ Marie Louise, p. 142
  69. ^ Marie Louise, p. 43
  70. ^ Chomet, pp. 143–144
  71. ^ Chomet, p. 149
  72. ^ "Royal Burials at St George's Chapel, Windsor". St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle. 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  73. ^ "President's Message to the RBNA". Royal British Nurses' Association. 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-22.
  74. ^ a b "President's Message to the RBNA". Royal British Nurses' Association. 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-22.
  75. ^ Chomet, p. 30
  76. ^ Chomet, p. 87
  77. ^ Chomet, p. 40
  78. ^ "No. 22956". The London Gazette. 11 April 1965. {{cite magazine}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  79. ^ Van Der Kiste, p. 36
  80. ^ Longford, p. 395
  81. ^ Chomet, p. 4
  82. ^ "No. 24539". The London Gazette. 4 January 1878. {{cite magazine}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  83. ^ Van Der Kiste, John. "Princess Helena". Retrieved 2008-02-22.
  84. ^ "No. 26725". The London Gazette. 27 March 1896. {{cite magazine}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  85. ^ "No. 30730". The London Gazette (invalid |supp= (help)). 4 June 1917. {{cite magazine}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  86. ^ Heraldica – British Royalty Cadency

References

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  • Battiscombe, Georgina, Queen Alexandra (Constable & Company Ltd, London, 1969)
  • Bennet, D., Queen Victoria's Children (Gollancz, London, 1980)
  • Chomet, Seweryn, Helena: A princess reclaimed (Begell House, New York, 1999) ISBN 1-56700-145-9
  • Dennison, Matthew, The Last Princess: The Devoted Life of Queen Victoria's Youngest Daughter (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2007) ISBN 978-0-297-84794-6
  • Longford, Elizabeth, Victoria R. I. (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Second Edition 1987) ISBN 0-297-84142-4
  • Marie Louise (Princess Marie Louise of Schleswig-Holstein), My Memories of Six Reigns (Second edition, Penguin, Middlesex, 1959)
  • Packard, Jerrold M., Victoria's Daughters (St Martin's Griffin, New York, 1998) ISBN 0-312-24496-7
  • Van Der Kiste, John, Queen Victoria's Children (Sutton Publishing, Gloucester, 2006) ISBN 0-7509-3476-X
    • ‘Helena, Princess [Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein] (1846–1923)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 accessed 22 Feb 2008
  • Wake, Jehanne, Princess Louise: Queen Victoria's Unconventional Daughter (Collins, London, 1988) ISBN 0-00-217076-0