Academic literature on the topic 'Crown Princess Victoria'

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Journal articles on the topic "Crown Princess Victoria"

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Kollander, Patricia. "Constitutionalism or Staatssreich? Bismarck, Crown Prince Frederick William, Crown Princess Victoria and the Succession Crisis of 1880-85." European Review of History: Revue européenne d'histoire 8, no. 2 (August 2001): 187–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13507480120074251.

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Engelstad, Audun. "Watching Politics." Nordicom Review 29, no. 2 (November 1, 2008): 309–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/nor-2017-0193.

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Abstract What can fictional television drama tell us about politics? Are political events foremost related to the personal crises and victories of the on-screen characters, or can the events reveal some insights about the decision-making process itself? Much of the writing on popular culture sees the representation of politics in film and television as predominately concerned with how political aspects are played out on an individual level. Yet the critical interest in the successful television series The West Wing praises how the series gives insights into a wide range of political issues, and its depiction of the daily work of the presidential staff. The present article discusses ways of representing (fictional) political events and political issues in serialized television drama, as found in The West Wing, At the King’s Table and The Crown Princess.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Crown Princess Victoria"

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af, Klinteberg Kristina. "Diadem och identitet : En studie kring identiteter i kejsarinnan Josephines pärl- och kamédiadem." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Konstvetenskapliga institutionen, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-438810.

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This paper, on the identities shown in one of the cameos in Empress Josephine’s pearl and cameo diadem, has first of all focused on the mythological characters, and thereafter raised the question if these are to be seen as an allegory for people from the time. The process of identi-fication has followed the three levels in Panofsky’s method for analysing art, where the first and second levels consist of already known material from the Bernadotte Library, Royal Palace in Stockholm and the jeweller house of Chaumet (former Nitot et Fils) in Paris.                      To decipher both the mythological individuals and the possible allegories, that is the third level, the iconology itself, the thoughts and methods of  Göran Hermerén on the rise and fall of allegories along with Leora Auslander’s solutions using visuals comparisons, when no written material is available, have provided the academic framework for the study.                                When comparing the cameo with pieces of art from the time, the subject fits the description of the Roman mythology’s love goddess Venus and her son Cupid, the lovechild fathered by Mars. Moving on to allegories, well-known material shows that Emperor Napoleon was keen to be portrayed as the god of war Mars and Empress Josephine as Venus.  A portrait of special interest to the study, a rather private painting by Parent from 1807, which is probably still unknown to most people, shows how Josephine is depicted with a recently deceased grandchild, a young boy how was also the nephew of Napoleon’s, a close relative to them both, and in the line of  succession to the throne, while Napoleon still was Emperor. This picture has an expression which is close to the one of Venus and Cupid, and it is also made to look like a cameo. These portraits were known at the time when Napoleon gave the diadem to Josephine in 1809.                                                       Among portraits from the Napoleonic era, there has earlier only been one known painting, even if in two examples, where the diadem is shown. It is a miniature of Empress Josephine, a work from her final period at Malmaison, 1814. However, another miniature picturing the daughter Hortense in the very same piece of jewellery, from 1812, has now become known. In both these examples, the depicted cameo has a hight measuring only millimetres, why a discussion on the execution and the rendering has to be done with restraint. But in the daughter´s portrait there is a certain attempt to show the outlines of the central cameo that differs from the later painting of the Empress. This may be an indication of how much more important it was for the daughter to relay the picture of her mother and the memory of her son, in 1812, than it was for Josephine in 1814, after the divorce, probably after the fall of Napoleon too, when she was no longer his Venus, and there was no longer a throne for any of her grandsons to inherit.         Therefore, in short, the chosen methods give the answer that the mythology depicted is a scene of Venus and her son Cupid, and the allegorical interpretation of Venus is the Empress herself. The child in shape of Cupid here, may well be read as one of her daughter’s sons, at the time a much longed-for heir to the throne of Napoleon I.
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af, Klinteberg Kristina. "Ett diadem och dess ikonografi : En studie av kejsarinnan Josephines pärl- och kamédiadem i porträtt mellan 1812 och 2010." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Konstvetenskapliga institutionen, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-438793.

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The main purpose of this study of a pearl and cameo diadem, given by Napoleon to his first wife Josephine in 1809, is to follow its representation in portraiture from Paris in 1812 to Stockholm in 2010, and explore how the iconography develops during these 200 years. From the earlier years, the diadem is found only in miniatures, then after coming to the new royal family in Sweden, the Bernadottes, it is given a role of an heirloom representing history and families in grand paintings, arriving to the present well-known wedding hairpiece, covered by modern media, where the diadem is more of a crown than the open, forehead-covering piece of fashion jewellery it was during the Napoleonic era in France. The portraits from 1812, 1814, 1836, 1837, 1877, 1976, 2000/2003 and 2010 also portray a development of the female role model of its time. Just like the hair piece attains an iconography which comprises not only the highest dress codes but also a possibility of status transformation for the people involved in ceremony, the role of the country’s First Lady is about to change into a higher, more egalitarian position of present days.
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Books on the topic "Crown Princess Victoria"

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Pub, Victoria Personalized Journal. Victoria : PRINCESS Victoria. Unique Personalized Notebook Gift for Victoria - Golden Crown Design , Thoughtful Cool Present for Victoria: Princess Victoria's Journal. Independently Published, 2020.

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Book chapters on the topic "Crown Princess Victoria"

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"Marriage, Family and Nationality.Letters from Queen Victoria and Crown Princess Victoria 1858–1885." In Royal Kinship. Anglo-German Family Networks 1815-1918, edited by Karina Urbach. Berlin, New York: Walter de Gruyter – K. G. Saur, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783598441233.117.

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Hetherington, Naomi, and Richa Dwor. "Selection of Letters Between Queen Victoria and the Crown Princess of Prussia (1861)." In Nineteenth-Century Religion, Literature and Society, 135–41. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351272162-29.

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McCreery, Cindy. "Two Victorias? Prince Alfred, Queen Victoria and Melbourne, 1867–68." In Crowns and Colonies, 51–76. Manchester University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781784993153.003.0003.

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Ford, Eugene. "The Rage of Thai Buddhism, 1975–1980." In Cold War Monks. Yale University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300218565.003.0009.

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This chapter considers how the December 2, 1975 abolition of the Lao monarchy, one immediate outcome of the Pathet Lao victory, had tremendous psychological impact in Thailand. This was due in large part to its troubling implications for Buddhism. Because of the centuries-long symbiotic relationship between the Lao Buddhist hierarchy and the Lao monarchy, the fates of the two institutions seemed closely intertwined. Indeed, the Pathet Lao's destruction of the monarchy (the Lao king, queen, and crown prince were sent to a reeducation camp, where they subsequently died) seemed to Thailand's Buddhist elders equally as much an attack on Buddhism itself. That the new communist government of Laos also chose to disband the Thammayut monastic order, which it saw as an agent of Thai imperialism in the country, only confirmed such fears.
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