The Nineteenth Century through the reigning monarch's eyes
Queen Victoria's Journals
For those of us researching our ancestors the finding of a diary written by an ancestor would indeed be a red-letter-day.
For those of us researching our ancestors the finding of a diary written by an ancestor would indeed be a red-letter-day.
Not many of us are lucky enough to have access to such a resource. But in its absence we can read contemporary newspapers and magazines to get an understanding for the social influences on their world and what was happening around them.
Also of interest, to those researching the Victorian period, will be the journals written by the reigning monarch as they provide seven decades of royal history. Queen Victoria's Journals have been made available online in a partnership between ProQuest, the Royal Archives and the Bodleian Libraries. The result are high-resolution, colour images of every surviving volume of Queen Victoria's journals from her first entry in 1832 to close to her death in 1901.
Tracing the Victorian period through the eye's of the Queen this resource reflects the changes taking place in the nineteenth century as seen by Victoria herself.