Death and state funeral of Queen Victoria
{{Short description|none}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox event
| title = Death and state funeral of Queen Victoria
| image = Queen Victoria's funeral procession.jpg
| caption = Queen Victoria's funeral procession
| date = {{ubl|{{Start date|1901|01|22|df=y}}|(death)|{{Start date|1901|02|02|df=y}}|(state funeral)}}
| location = {{ubl|Osborne House|(place of death)|St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle|(official ceremony)}}
| participants = British royal family and members of various other royal houses
| burial = {{ubl|{{Start date|1901|02|04|df=y}}|Frogmore Mausoleum, Windsor Great Park}}
}}
Victoria, Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Empress of India, died on 22 January 1901 at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight, at the age of 81. At the time of her death, she was the longest-reigning monarch in British history. Her state funeral took place on 2 February 1901, being one of the largest gatherings of European royalty.
Description
File:Queen Victoria on her deathbed, 1901.jpg
{{Excerpt|Queen Victoria|Declining health and death|paragraphs=3|files=0|hat=no}}
On 25 January, her body was lifted into the coffin by her sons Edward VII and Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught, and her grandson the German Emperor Wilhelm II.St Aubyn, p. 598 She was dressed in a white dress and her wedding veil.Longford, p. 563 An array of mementos commemorating her extended family, friends and servants were laid in the coffin with her, at her request, by her doctor and dressers. A dressing gown that had belonged to her husband Albert, who had died 40 years earlier, was placed by her side, along with a plaster cast of his hand, while a lock of John Brown's hair, along with a picture of him, was placed in her left hand concealed from the view of the family by a carefully positioned bunch of flowers.Hibbert, p. 498 Items of jewellery placed on Victoria included the wedding ring of John Brown's mother, given to her by Brown in 1883.{{Cite ODNB |title=Victoria (1819–1901), queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and empress of India |url=https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-36652 |access-date=2022-09-20 | year=2004 | doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/36652 | isbn=978-0-19-861412-8 |language=en| last1=Matthew | first1=H. C. G. | last2=Reynolds | first2=K. D. }}
= State funeral =
File:Westminster Abbey 1901 Queen Victoria funeral service.jpg.]]
The state funeral of Queen Victoria took place on Saturday, 2 February 1901, in St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle; it had been 64 years since the last burial of a monarch.
In 1897, Victoria had written instructions for her funeral, which was to be military as befitting a soldier's daughter and the head of the army,{{Cite ODNB|title=Victoria (1819–1901), queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and empress of India|url=https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-36652|access-date=2022-09-20|year=2004|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/36652|isbn=978-0-19-861412-8|language=en|last1=Matthew|first1=H. C. G.|last2=Reynolds|first2=K. D.}} and feature white dress instead of black.Hibbert, p. 497; Longford, p. 563 Victoria left strict instructions regarding the service and associated ceremonies and instituted a number of changes, several of which set a precedent for state (and indeed ceremonial) funerals that have taken place since. First, she disliked the preponderance of funereal black; henceforward, there would be no black cloaks, drapes or canopy, and Victoria requested a white pall for her coffin. Second, she expressed a desire to be buried as "a soldier's daughter".{{cite book|last1=Rappaport|first1=Helen|author-link=Helen Rappaport|title=Queen Victoria: a biographical companion|date=2003|publisher=ABC-CLIO|location=Santa Barbara, CA}} The procession, therefore, became much more a military procession, with the peers, privy counsellors and judiciary no longer taking part en masse. Her pallbearers were equerries rather than dukes (as had previously been customary), and for the first time, a gun carriage was employed to convey the monarch's coffin. Third, Victoria requested that there should be no public lying in state. This meant that the only event in London on this occasion was a gun carriage procession from one railway station to another: Victoria having died at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight, her body was conveyed by boat and train to Victoria Station, then by gun carriage to Paddington Station and then by train to Windsor for the funeral service itself. File:The Passing of a Great Queen.jpg
The rare sight of a state funeral cortège travelling by ship provided a striking spectacle: Victoria's body was carried on board HMY Alberta from Cowes to Gosport, with a suite of yachts following conveying the new king, Edward VII, and other mourners. Minute guns were fired by the assembled fleet as the yacht passed by. Victoria's body remained on board ship overnight before being conveyed by gun carriage to Gosport railway station the following day for the train journey to London. Victoria broke convention by having a white draped coffin.
At Windsor, when the royal coffin was loaded atop the gun carriage for the procession and the artillery horses took the weight, granddaughter of Queen Victoria Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone said the day was very cold and "nothing in the world would make them start". An attendant Royal Guard from HMS Excellent was shortly then ordered to haul the gun carriage with ropes instead,{{cite news |author= |date=1901-03-19 |title=Our cable Dispatches: Miscellaneous |page=1 |work=The Royal Gazette |location=City of Hamilton, Pembroke Parish, Bermuda |quote=Portsmouth, March 16.—Amidst the firing of a royal salute of the assembled fleet, and hearty cheers from the concourse of people gathered at all points of vantage, the steamer Ophir with the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York on board started at about four four o'clock this afternoon on the voyage which is not to terminate until their Royal Highnesses shall have made a tour of the world. King Edward and Queen Alexandra on board the royal yacht Victoria and Albert, accompanied by eight torpedo boat destroyers escorted the Ophir a few miles out. Before the departure of the royal party, King Edward conferred the Victoria medal on the Blue Jackets of H.M.S. Excellent who dragged the funeral gun-carriage of Queen Victoria after the horses became unmanageable at Windsor railway station.}} a disruption which subsequently became state funeral tradition.{{Cite web|title=Memorials and Monuments in Portsmouth - Field Gun Carriage|url=http://www.memorialsinportsmouth.co.uk/others/excellent/field-gun-carriage.htm|access-date=2021-06-05|website=www.memorialsinportsmouth.co.uk|archive-date=19 September 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220919023841/http://www.memorialsinportsmouth.co.uk/others/excellent/field-gun-carriage.htm|url-status=live}} She further observed that the Royal Artillery, responsible for the horses and the gun carriage, "were furious... humiliated beyond words" by the incident.{{Citation|title=Victorian Ladies 2/2 Princess Alice & Queen Victoria's Funeral|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qS4hAbHLszw|language=en|access-date=2021-06-05|archive-date=5 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210605044129/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qS4hAbHLszw|url-status=live}}
Victoria's children had married into the great royal families of Europe and a number of foreign monarchs were in attendance, including Wilhelm II of Germany as well as the heir-presumptive to the Austro-Hungarian throne Archduke Franz Ferdinand.{{cite web |url=http://www.thamesweb.co.uk/windsor/windsorhistory/royalfunerals/qvicfuneral01.html |title=The Funeral at Windsor of Queen Victoria. The Royal Windsor Website.com by ThamesWeb |website=Thamesweb.co.uk |access-date=2017-01-22 |archive-date=18 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161018223811/http://www.thamesweb.co.uk/windsor/windsorhistory/royalfunerals/qvicfuneral01.html |url-status=live }}
== Funeral service ==
The service in the afternoon of Saturday 2 February at St George's Chapel followed the liturgy of the Burial Service in the Book of Common Prayer and was the first royal funeral for which a printed order of service had been produced. The organisation of the service lay with the Dean of Windsor and the Lord Chamberlain, with the active participation of the Archbishops of Canterbury and York.{{cite book |last=Range |first=Matthias |date=2016 |title=British Royal and State Funerals: Music and Ceremonial since Elizabeth I |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Kn1FDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA271 |location=Woodbridge, Suffolk |publisher=Boydell Press |page=268 |isbn=978-1783270927 |access-date=19 March 2023 |archive-date=4 August 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230804110721/https://books.google.com/books?id=Kn1FDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA271 |url-status=live }} The music started with the first of the funeral sentences by William Croft and Psalm 15 to a setting by William Felton. After the lesson came further funeral sentences sung as anthems; Man that is born by Samuel Sebastian Wesley and Thou knowest Lord by Henry Purcell. The Lord's Prayer in Latin by Charles Gounod, and the anthem How blest are they by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky followed. After the Garter Principal King of Arms had proclaimed the Queen's styles and titles, the anthem Blest are the departed by Louis Spohr was reportedly followed by the Dresden amen. The inclusion of so much music by foreign composers was unprecedented and was not repeated in later royal funerals where British music predominated. At the end of the service, a funeral march attributed to Ludwig van Beethoven but actually by Johann Heinrich Walch was played instead of the traditional "Dead March" from Saul because Victoria was known to dislike Handel's music and was reported to have forbidden its use at her funeral.Range 2016, pp. 270-273File:The Lying in State - C384 - Victoria Memorial (cropped).jpg]]
= Lying-in-state and interment service =
After the funeral service in St George's Chapel, Queen Victoria's body lay in state there for two days, under a military guard, before joining that of Prince Albert in the nearby Royal Mausoleum at Frogmore at Windsor Great Park.Longford, p. 565; St Aubyn, p. 600File:Tomb of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.jpg
The interment at the Frogmore Mausolem took place on 4 February. The procession from St George's Chapel was accompanied by massed military bands playing funeral marches, but in the final part of the journey, pipers played a lament, the Black Watch Dead March. Arriving at the mausoleum, the choir of St George's sang Yea, though I walk from Sir Arthur Sullivan's oratorio, The Light of the World. This was followed by the funeral sentences by Wesley and Purcell that had been sung at the funeral, Lord have mercy by Thomas Tallis and Gounoud's Lord's Prayer. A hymn, Sleep thy last sleep, preceded the concluding prayers read by the Dean of Windsor, after which Sullivan's anthem, The face of death and Sir John Stainer's Sevenfold Amen concluded the service.Range 2016, pp. 275-276
A tomb effigy of Victoria had been sculpted by Baron Carlo Marochetti in 1861 as a companion piece to his marble effigy of Prince Albert. Victoria's sculpture was finally installed next to Albert's in the mausoleum later in 1901.{{cite web |url=https://victorianweb.org/sculpture/marochetti/21.html |title=The Queen Victoria and Prince Albert Sculptures at Frogmore Mausoleum |last=Marsden |first=Jonathan |date=7 May 2014 |website=victorianweb.org |publisher=The Victorian Web |access-date=12 November 2023}}
Funeral guests
The list below is from a report in The London Gazette.{{London Gazette |issue=27316|date=22 May 1901|supp=y}}
=Immediate family=
- The King and Queen of the United Kingdom, the late Queen's son and daughter-in-law
- The Duchess of Cornwall and York, the late Queen's granddaughter-in-law
- The Princess Louise, Duchess of Fife and the Duke of Fife, the late Queen's granddaughter and grandson-in-law
- The Princess Victoria, the late Queen's granddaughter
- {{flagicon|Denmark}} Princess and Prince Charles of Denmark, the late Queen's granddaughter and grandson-in-law
- {{flagicon|Saxe-Coburg-Gotha}} The Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (Duchess of Edinburgh), the late Queen's daughter-in-law
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Romania}} The Crown Prince of Romania, the late Queen's grandson-in-law (representing the King of the Romanians)
- The Hereditary Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, the late Queen's grandson-in-law and half-great-nephew
- {{flagicon|Saxe-Coburg-Gotha}} Princess Beatrice of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, the late Queen's granddaughter
- The Duke and Duchess of Connaught and Strathearn, the late Queen's son and daughter-in-law
- Princess Margaret of Connaught, the late Queen's granddaughter
- Prince Arthur of Connaught, the late Queen's grandson
- Princess Patricia of Connaught, the late Queen's granddaughter
- The Duchess of Albany, the late Queen's daughter-in-law
- Princess Alice of Albany, the late Queen's granddaughter
- {{flagicon|Saxe-Coburg-Gotha}} The Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (Duke of Albany), the late Queen's grandson
- The Empress Frederick's family:
- {{flagicon|German Empire}} The German Emperor, the late Queen's grandson
- {{flagicon|German Empire}} The German Crown Prince, the late Queen's great-grandson
- {{flagicon|Saxe-Meiningen}} The Hereditary Prince of Saxe-Meiningen, the late Queen's grandson-in-law (representing the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen)
- Prince Heinrich XXX of Reuss-Köstritz, the late Queen's great-grandson-in-law (representing the Prince Reuss Younger Line)
- {{flagicon|Prussia}} Prince Henry of Prussia, the late Queen's grandson
- {{flagicon|Schaumburg-Lippe}} Princess and Prince Adolf of Schaumburg-Lippe, the late Queen's granddaughter and grandson-in-law (representing the Prince of Schaumburg-Lippe)
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Greece|state}} The Duke of Sparta, the late Queen's grandson-in-law
- Prince Frederick Charles of Hesse, the late Queen's grandson-in-law
- Grand Duchess Alice of Hesse and by Rhine's family:
- Princess and Prince Louis of Battenberg, the late Queen's granddaughter and grandson-in-law
- {{flagicon|Grand Duchy of Hesse}} The Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine, the late Queen's grandson
- Princess and Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein, the late Queen's daughter and son-in-law
- Prince Albert of Schleswig-Holstein, the late Queen's grandson
- Princess Helena Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein, the late Queen's granddaughter
- Princess Marie Louise of Schleswig-Holstein, the late Queen's granddaughter
- The Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll and the Duke of Argyll, the late Queen's daughter and son-in-law
- Princess Henry of Battenberg, the late Queen's daughter
- Prince Alexander of Battenberg, the late Queen's grandson
- Other descendants of the late Queen's paternal grandfather, King George III and their families:
- The Duke of Cambridge, the late Queen's first cousin
- The Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz's family:
- {{flagicon|Mecklenburg-Strelitz}} Duke Adolphus Frederick of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the late Queen's first cousin twice removed (representing the Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz)
- Princess Mary Adelaide, Duchess of Teck's family:
- The Duke of Teck, the late Queen's first cousin once removed
- Prince Francis of Teck, the late Queen's first cousin once removed
- Prince Alexander of Teck, the late Queen's first cousin once removed
- Baron Alphons von Pawel-Rammingen, husband of the late Queen's first cousin once removed
- The Hon. Aubrey FitzClarence, the late Queen's double first cousin twice removed
=Extended family=
- The Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, the late Queen's half-nephew
- Count Edward Gleichen, the late Queen's half-great-nephew
- The Duke of Schleswig-Holstein, the late Queen's half-great-nephew
- {{flagicon|Belgium}} The King of the Belgians, the late Queen's first cousin
- {{flagicon|Saxe-Coburg-Gotha}} Prince Philipp of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, the late Queen's first cousin once removed
- {{flagicon|Saxe-Coburg-Gotha}} Prince Leopold Clement of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, the late Queen's double first cousin twice removed
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Portugal}} The King of Portugal, the late Queen's first cousin twice removed
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Saxony}} The Duke of Saxony, the late Queen's first cousin twice removed (representing the King of Saxony)
- {{flagicon|Württemberg}} Duke Robert of Württemberg, the late Queen's first cousin twice removed (representing the King of Württemberg)
=Other foreign royalty=
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Greece|state}} The King of the Hellenes
- {{flagicon|Denmark}} The Crown Prince of Denmark (representing the King of Denmark)
- {{flagicon|Sweden|1844}} The Crown Prince of Sweden and Norway (representing the King of Sweden and Norway)
- {{flagicon|Austria-Hungary}} Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria (representing the Austrian Emperor)
- {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia (representing the Russian Emperor)
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Italy}} The Duke of Aosta (representing the King of Italy)
- {{flagicon|Thailand|1893}} The Crown Prince of Siam (representing the King of Siam)
- {{flagicon|Baden}} The Hereditary Grand Duke of Baden (representing the Grand Duke of Baden)
- {{flagicon|Kingdom of Bavaria}} Prince Arnulf of Bavaria (representing the Prince Regent of Bavaria)
- {{flagicon|Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach}} Prince Edward of Saxe-Weimar (representing the Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach)
- {{flagicon image|Flag of Germany (3-2 aspect ratio).svg}} The Prince of Waldeck and Pyrmont
- The Prince of Hohenzollern
- {{flagicon|Khedivate of Egypt}} Prince Mohammed Ali Tewfik (representing the Khedive of Egypt and Sudan)
- {{flagicon|Saxe-Altenburg}} Prince Ernst of Saxe-Altenburg (representing the Duke of Saxe-Altenburg)
- The Thakore Sahib of Morvi
=Nobility=
- The Duke of Norfolk
- The Duke and Duchess of Buccleuch
- The Duke of Northumberland
- The Duke of Beaufort
- The Duke of Montrose
- The Duke of Portland
- The Marquess of Londonderry
- The Earl Waldegrave
- The Earl of Clarendon
- The Earl of Pembroke
- The Earl of Harewood
- The Earl of Haddington
- The Earl Cawdor
- The Earl Howe
- The Earl of Kintore
- The Earl of Gosford
- The Earl of Denbigh
- The Countess of Lytton
- The Viscount Valentia
- The Viscount Galway
- The Viscount Wolseley
- The Lord Roberts
- The Lord Belper
- The Baron Lawrence
- The Lord Colville of Culross
- The Lord Churchill
- Earl of Kerry
- Earl of March
- Lord William Cecil
- Victor Cavendish
See also
Bibliography
- {{cite book|first1=Matthias|last1=Range|title=British Royal and State Funerals|publisher=Boydell Press|year=2016|url=https://boydellandbrewer.com/9781783270927/british-royal-and-state-funerals/}}
References
{{reflist}}
{{State funerals in the United Kingdom}}
{{Queen Victoria}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Victoria, Queen, Funeral of}}
Category:1901 in the United Kingdom
Category:Deaths by person in England
Category:European court festivities
Category:February 1901 in the United Kingdom