Showing posts with label Princess Alexandra of Denmark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Princess Alexandra of Denmark. Show all posts

Thursday, December 26, 2024

The Prince of Wales



The Prince of Wales (born HRH The Prince Albert Edward, later King Edward VII, 1841-1910) was the eldest son of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. In 1863, he married Princess Alexandra of Denmark (born HSH Princess Alexandra Caroline Marie Charlotte Louise Julia of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg, 1844-1925), the eldest daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark. Edward’s carte de visite is by Mayall; Alexandra’s is by Vernon Heath (1819-1895).


Saturday, June 8, 2024

Princess Alexandra of Denmark

Princess Alexandra of Denmark (1844-1925), who married Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (from 1901 King Edward VII), Queen Victoria’s eldest son, in 1863.



Carte de visite by the Danish court photographer [Peter Ludvig] Rudolf Striegler (1816-1876).



Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Another CDV

Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (1841-1910), from 1901 King Edward VII, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Emperor of India, etc. Carte de visite by Moritz Unna (1811-1871), who bought the photography studio of [Peter Ludwig] Rudolf Striegler (1816-1876) in 1863. Striegler introduced the CDV to Denmark in 1860, and in 1861 he was the Danish court photographer.


On the reverse of the image, someone has written the date 1869; another hand appears to identify the sitter as the Crown Prince of England in 1870. The image is problematic, though, as it seems to date from several years before, at a time when the prince had not yet grown the beard associated with most of his adult life.


He married Princess Alexandra of Denmark, the daughter of King Christian IX, in 1863, and thereafter made annual visits to Copenhagen to stay with his wife’s parents. The CDV could belong to the period immediately after his marriage, when Unna had just bought Striegler’s studio.


Unna had a rather sad life, failing to succeed as a painter, a bookseller, and, finally, a photographer. (He died in obscurity, after a period of illness that likely affected his photography business.)