Episodios

  • We're back after a brief hiatus! In this episode, we're taking a look at the life of Jacquetta of Luxembourg. She was mother to Elizabeth Woodville, grandmother to Elizabeth of York, great-grandmother to Henry VIII, and her descendants still hold royal thrones to this day. She found herself in the throes of the Hundred Years War, the Wars of the Roses, accusations of witchcraft, court politics and so much more.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • This is the final episode in my coverage of Queen Victoria!


    We pick up where we left off: the death of Albert and Victoria's isolation and seclusion as she mourns the love of her life. This section of her reign arguably sees the most drastic and significant changes--the British Crown comes in possession of India, eight of Victoria's nine children marry into royal or noble families across Europe, and Victoria overtakes her grandfather as the longest reigning monarch in British history, a title she would hold until 2015 when she would be surpassed by her own descendant, Queen Elizabeth II. In this episode, we explore her relationship with John Brown, her Golden and Diamond Jubilees and her role in colonialism in the 19th century.


    The Broad Chronicles is an independently produced and edited podcast. If you'd like to reach out for business or advertising inqueries, please email the show at [email protected]


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • ¿Faltan episodios?

    Pulsa aquí para actualizar resultados

  • We pick up the coverage of Queen Victoria in this episode of the Broad Chronicles.


    Victoria was born in 1819, the third child of her mother, and the first legitimate child of her father, Prince Edward, the Duke of Kent. Her father passed away when she was only 8 months old, leaving Victoria in the care of her mother and his former equerry Sir John Conroy.Victoria was raised in extremely sheltered and isolated conditions and her mother was frequently in conflict with her uncles. The Duchess of Kent in Sir John Conroy frequently tried to bully Victoria into giving them more power over her, which was something she fiercely resisted. Victoria's uncle, William the 4th managed to live until 1 month after Victoria's 18th birthday. Victoria was quick to establish her independence from her mother and, at the age of 19, was crowned queen of the United Kingdom


    Victoria ascended the throne upon the death of her Uncle, King William IV, and met her first Prime Minister, Lord Melbourne, who she became very close to, sometimes to the point that the media referred to her as “Mrs. Melbourne”. Within her first years of her reign, Victoria was at the center of two major scandals: the Hastings Affair and the Bedchamber Crisis. In the Hastings Affair, she accused the one of her mother’s ladies in waiting, Lady Flora Hastings, of being pregnant out of wedlock by none other than her former archenemy, John Conroy. It was not a good look for Victoria when it came out that Lady Flora was not only innocent, but was dying of cancer.


    In The Bedchamber Crisis, Victoria ran into a bit of trouble due to her attachment to Lord Melbourne. When the new PM, Robert Peele, a Tory, took office, it was customary for him to expect to replace Victoria’s Whig-leaning ladies-in-waiting with ladies supportive to his cause. Victoria refused, and Peele ultimately resigned as Prime Minister. This was scandalous because Victoria, as a constitutional monarch, was expected to refrain from showing political opinions or leanings.


    Victoria soon married her cousin, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. The pair had a relatively happy marriage. Victoria was strongly devoted to her husband, and the pair went on to have 9 children together. Albert was a hardworking and ambitious man, which was to his advantage throughout his wife’s many pregnancies. He put into place several reforms in the running of the royal household, designed and oversaw the construction of the residences of Balmoral Castle and Osborne House, and launched the Great Exhibition of 1851. This phase of Victoria’s reign also included changes such as the Cold Mine Act, the Irish Potato famine, the Crimean War, and another revolution in France. 


    On a personal note, Victoria’s mother died in the spring of 1861, leaving the queen desolate. Meanwhile, the first of their children, Vicky, married Prince Frederick William of Prussia, while their oldest son, Prince Bertie, lived on the wild side. This caused great distress to both Victoria and Albert, who went to chastise his son over his behavior. Upon his return home from the visit, Albert fell gravely ill. It soon became apparent that Albert’s condition was critical and he ultimately succumbed to his illness in December of 1861. Victoria became a widow at the age of 42.


    The Broad Chronicles is an independently produced and edited podcast. If you'd like to reach out for business or advertising inqueries, please email the show at [email protected]


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • On this episode of the Broad Chronicles, I got a little over ambitious and decided to cover Queen Victoria, and well, that one episode has turned into three. In this particular section, we look at the circumstances of Victoria's birth (which end up being very similar to her cousin Charlotte, from episode 1) all the way up to Victoria's coronation as queen.


    Queen Victoria was born under similar circumstances to Charlotte--George III had no legitimate grandchildren to inherit the throne, and a bunch of unmarried sons, so Edward, the Duke of Kent set off to make a match with Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld's sister, Victoire. The pair had a brief but companionable union which produced their only daughter, Victoria. Victoria's father died when she was less than a year old, leaving her German-born mother the sole guardian of the future queen. For 18 years, Victoria was kept under the strict eye of her mother and her domineering companion, John Conroy, until she finally ascended to the throne.


    The Broad Chronicles is an independently produced and edited podcast. If you'd like to reach out for business or advertising inqueries, please email the show at [email protected]


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • On the very first episode of the Broad Chronicles, we cover the would-be queen of the United Kingdom, Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales.


    Charlotte was the only daughter of the Prince Regent, later George IV, and his estranged wife, Caroline of Brunswick. Born of her father's need for debt relief funds and the nation's need for an heir, Charlotte was a firecracker of a young woman who found herself constantly in the middle of her parents' bickering and the pawn in her father's political schemes. Ultimately, Charlotte would make a love match in Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, but her life was cut tragically short due to complications from childbirth.


    The Broad Chronicles is an independently produced and edited podcast. If you'd like to reach out for business or advertising inqueries, please email the show at [email protected]


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.