#princess victoria louise of germany
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Crown Prince Wilhelm of Prussia with his sister Victoria Louise, Duchess of Brunswick and her husband Ernest August, Duke of Brunswick
#crown prince wilhelm of prussia#princess victoria louise of germany#ernest august duke of brunswick#german imperial family#prussian royal family#hanoverian royal family#house of hohenzollern#house of hanover
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Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany with his only daughter Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia âŠ
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Family portrait of Prince and Princess Louis of Battenberg, with their children Princess Louise of Battenberg, Princes George and Louis of Battenberg and Princess Andrew of Greece and Denmark, and grandchildren Princesses Margarita and Theodora of Greece, 1910.
#victoria of hesse#victoria of hesse and by rhine#louis iv#princess alice#princess alice of the united kingdom#queen victoria#victoria#prince albert#albert#victorian#victorian era#germany#hesse#rhine#battenberg#mountbatten#princess#marchioness#royal#royalty#history#portrait#photo#louis of battenberg#alice of battenberg#louise of battenberg#george of battenberg#margaret of greece#theodora of greece
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~ ROYALS AND THEIR SIGNATURES ~
Part 2/3
----------------------------------------------------------
Queen Olga of Greece(Olga Constantinovna)
Queen Louise of Denmark(Louise of Hesse-Kassel)
Empress Victoria of Germany(Victoria, Princess Royal)
Queen Marie of Romania(Princess Marie of Edinburgh)
Grand Duchess Elisabeth Feodorovna(Princess Elisabeth of Hesse)
Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich
Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna
Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna
Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna
Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna
#queen olga of greece#olga constantinovna#queen louise of denmark#louise of hesse-kassel#victoria princess royal#empress victoria of germany#queen marie of romania#princess marie of edinburgh#grand duchess elisabeth feodorovna#elisabeth of hesse#tsarevich alexei#grand duchess anastasia nikolaevna#grand duchess maria nikolaevna#grand duchess tatiana nikolaevna#grand duchess olga nikolaevna#signatures
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#kaiserin augusta victoria#empress augusta victoria#princess viktoria louise of prussia#prince joachim#german empire#german monarchy#imperial germany
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Princess Victoria Louise was the only daughter of Wilhelm II, the last Keiser of Prussia (one of her children was Frederica of Hanover, Queen of the Hellenes); Duchess Cecilie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin was the daughter of Frederick Francis III, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg -Schwerin and Grand Duchess Anastasia Mikhailovna Romanova. She became the last Crown Princess of Germany when she married the first son of Wilhelm II. Cecilie never reigned.


Sisters-in-law, Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia and German Crown Princess Cecilie, Crown Princess of Prussia
#russian history#romanov dynasty#german royalty#Crown Princess Cecilie of Germany#Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia#Grand Duke Frederick Francis III of Mecklenburg Schwerin#Grand Duchess Anastasia Mikhailovna#Emperor Wilhelm II
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Continuing our historical smash or pass(this one is my fav): Victoria Princess Royal Louise. Queen of Prussia and Empress of Germany who took over when her husband Frederick got sick and senile!
Pass but respectfully cuz sheâs just not my type
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The Indignant Pawn, Chapter XVIII: The Eternal Promise
Description: You are Y/n Y/l/n- formerly known as Princess Helena, the runaway princess.
You're an assassin for hire who only agrees to find the worst of London's criminals at the business end of your knife; until a mysterious woman hires you to end the likes of Ciel Phantomhive, the King of the Underworld. You find yourself trading your weapons for your abandoned family crest in order to infiltrate his home as none other than Princess Marie-Louise, your twin sister. What's to happen when you find that the young Earl is more than a callous businessman?
OVERALL STORY WARNINGS: sexual assault (once in the prologue), objectification, misogyny, death, detailed description of blood/gore, detailed description of murder, lying, impersonation, theft, weapons, detailed panic attacks, symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, kissing
Authorâs Note:Â Hi everyone! This is the last chapter of The Indignant Pawn! Thank you so much for reading and following along on this story! It means the world to me and Iâm so happy that I was able to complete this for you, and so soon. I ended up having more time than I thought, and I was so inspired. I couldnât start to study for finals without completing this, unfortunately. Please let me know how you feel about the ending. Itâs been years in the making.Â
One more thing, I opened commissions! If you're remotely interested, please check out this post!
Happy Reading!
- Dan
â PREVIOUS CHAPTER
MASTERLIST Â
. . .
MAY 12TH, 1892
SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN, GERMANY
It was early noon and you were already exhausted.Â
Last night, the GlĂŒcksburg Castle staff separated you and Ciel the moment your steamship docked at the port. They pulled you apart before you could share much of a goodbye; taking you to the castle in different carriages and in separate routes before showing you to separate quarters. In accordance with common wedding superstition, you werenât to see Ciel until the wedding ceremony, the next day.Â
Instead, your company was the bridal party, handpicked by Queen Victoria. The Hesse sisters occupied the full length of the brunch tableâs left side, talking amongst themselves. Â
Despite being married across the continent, they still came in a set of four, the beautiful and elegant daughters of your late Aunt Alice. The eldest, Victoria, was about ten years your senior, married to Louis of Battenberg, the adventurous one. She was engaged in some emphatic discussion with her sister, Elisabeth, one of the most beautiful women in Europe, the papers liked to say.
Elisabeth turned down numerous dukes and princes before Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich captured her heart.Â
The other two sisters were Irene and Alix, both were shy and withdrawn, at least by comparison to their siblings. Irene was content to let her elder sisters engage the European press, enjoying her serene marriage with Prussian Prince Henry. Meanwhile, Alix was still engaged to Nicholas II of Russia. She was unpopular with the Russian public, but a noted beauty.
âI believe our gowns are soft blue or some shade of periwinkle, are they not?â Victoria of Hesse said ponderously, adding a half-spoonful of sugar into her tea. She had your deceased auntâs pleasant smile and joking eyes-- at least from what you remembered of Aunt Alice.
âIâm sure I donât know,â Elisabeth replied, âGangan had our modiste send over my measurements and that was all. Do you know, Marie?â she asked, turning the tableâs attention back to you.Â
âNo; Gangan handled all of the wedding planning,â you hoped your tone was light enough to portray amusement. âI havenât so much as seen my gown, much less yours.â It was true. Nina merely sent your measurements to your Matron of Honor, Aunt Beatrice, and that was all. You were even unsure if the wedding was going to take place at the castle or a traditional church.Â
âWe should hope it is a more vibrant color than blue, no?â Grand Duchess Maria chimed in, seated at the right of the table by Lizzie. You managed to convince your grandmother to allow the Midfords to attend the wedding, so long as you strictly referred to their familial relationship, rather than past engagement. Not to mention, Ciel needed stand-ins in the wedding procession for his parents.
She seemed well-suited to the royal table, easily carrying conversations with the Hesse sisters, and winning over the Grand Duchess. Maria was advertising her and your Uncle Alfredâs son, Alfred II, for Lizzie to consider marrying. They were the Duke and Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, and they were looking for a bride for their second son. Lizzie would make a better duchess than you did a princess.
âIf itâs a baby blue, I think it could look quite elegant,â Irene said. âEspecially if the gentlemen wear deep navy and with chartreuse accents.â
âThatâs exactly what I thought!â Lizzie smiled. âThat color scheme is perfect for the spring.â Her word of agreement seemed to encourage shy Irene. Lizzie navigated these situations flawlessly, engaging the outspoken, and encouraging the quiet. You respected her ability to infuse cheerful care into every conversation she was a part of, even if it was these sort of superfluous topics.
After all, this was the sort of aimless conversation you had been entertaining all morning. It was endless torture with a side of tea and miniature pastries and finger sandwiches that the other women hardly touched. You wouldâve taken the pain that came after Mey-Rinâs grazing bullet over entertaining this group of frivolous women.Â
âGood morning, everyone!â Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom entered, carrying a wooden box with both hands. By the tension in her shoulders, it seemed heavy.
Beatrice was your youngest aunt; Queen Victoriaâs youngest child. She was Victoriaâs known confidante; living with her for years as her secretary. Beatrice and her husband, Henry of Battenberg, made home with Victoria since their early marriage.
And for the next several days, she was to serve as your Matron of Honor.
You were satisfied with that choice, as well. Out of all your grandmotherâs daughters, Aunt Beatrice was the most motherly. Marie was fond of her â she was a bridesmaid at her wedding in 1885. You were always most partial to your Aunt Louise, the Duchess of Argyll, but much to your silent chagrin, she was not a part of the wedding party.Â
The table rose, everyone dropping into a shallow curtsey, though Duchess Mariaâs was too quick to be genuinely respectful. Your aunt was too humble to comment on it and make an unnecessary scene. Instead, Beatrice took measured strides towards you, exchanging knowing smiles with the rest of the table.
âGood morning, Aunt Beatrice,â you greeted, swiftly kissing one another on the cheek. âThank you for being here,â you said, though you doubted the queen gave her the option.
âOf course,â she smiled fondly, setting the heavy box on the table.Â
âMarie, Aunt Beatrice had to secure your âsomething borrowedâ as it were,,â Victoria of Hesse explained. She gestured to the guard behind Beatrice with the slightest chin tilt. Of course, all traveling jewels from the royal vault needed to be accompanied by a guard and a gun.
âGo on, Marie,â your aunt encouraged, setting the thick wooden box down. âWe all spent ages in the vault picking the right one for you.âÂ
You smiled. You hoped it looked more grateful than nauseous as you unclasped the box. Crimson velvet insulated the boxâs interior, cushioning the imposing tiara that sat inside. The diamonds sparkled, cut into long, pointed off spikes. Small circle-cut diamonds lined each spike.
This tiara was a piece your grandmother obtained as a gift at the beginning of her reign in 1837, originally commissioned by her uncle, King William IV for his wife.Â
âQueen Adelaideâs Diamond Fringe,â Aunt Beatrice said, though you knew the name. It was one of the oldest installments in the Royal Collection. Likely sensing your surprise, your aunt chuckled, âit did not take much convincing on the Queenâs part. Not after I insisted it would look best with your wedding gown.â
Reluctantly, you used the cloth included in the box to pick up the tiara, inspecting it more closely. The diamonds sat on the heads of two generations of royal women: Queen Adelaide, Queen VictoriaâŠand now, you. An imposter. Royalty by blood, but of course, not by private association. Â
âItâs lovelyââ you began to say, until your cousin interrupted you.
Elisabeth of Hesse gasped, âAunt Bea! Youâve seen her dress!â The rest of the table expressed their overlapping speculations, was it lace or tulle? Was the neckline straight across or Queen Anne?
âElisabeth, Victoria, she would never hint at such a secret, thereâs no point in accosting the woman,â Grand Duchess Maria scoffed, taking a cavalier sip out of her tea. She was jealous.Â
âYou will see it tomorrow!â Beatrice replied, laughing. The reminder of tomorrow forced another jolt of anxiety down your spine, but you used the energy to laugh as well. âIn the meantime, I was also tasked with escorting you to your fitting, Marie. I do apologize for cutting your breakfast short, ladies.â
âThatâs all right,â you smiled, carefully putting the priceless tiara back into its box. The moment you clasped the box, Beatriceâs guard took hold of it. After a reverent bow to the room, he took his leave, likely going to put the tiara into GlĂŒcksburg vault.
 At least you could escape this useless chatter.Â
. . .
Given that your day was nothing short of exhausting, you should have had an easier time falling asleep. Yet, you paced Marieâs quarters, restless. It was unsettling to be around all of her recent belongings; letters, left behind clothing, books, her violin. It was as if she was truly on a short vacation in England.
A new lump of guilt rose in your throat.
But more importantly, you wanted to see Ciel. Strangely, after only a day of separation, you missed him.
Having lived together for the past several months, you were accustomed to being around him. Even if some of the time you spent together was quiet, and you only felt his presence at your side.
âI was sent to escort you to my Lordâs room, Miss Y/n,â Sebastianâs voice came from behind you.Â
Instinctively, you turned on your heel and reached for the closest weapon possible, a small pair of scissors off your vanity. They were hardly big enough to cut thread with. You brandished the scissors in Sebastianâs general direction, but failed to find the voiceâs source at first glance. The butler blended with the shadows, wearing nearly all black. He chuckled mirthlessly.
His red eyes were certainly glowing in the dark.Â
âYes, Sebastian?â You asked impatiently, putting the scissors back on the table. They wouldnât be of much help to you, anyway. Nothing would beâ not against some⊠being⊠that caught bullets.Â
âMy Lord requests your presence in his quarters. Unfortunately, youâve made him care for you. Considerably,â he said. You hated his smile, the light tone his voice took. You would prefer he yell, or scowl, or frown. Anything to replace the patrronizing look that you knew so well.Â
âMade him?â You questioned. Your eyebrows knitted together indignantly as you crossed your arms. What was he insinuating?
âYes,â the butler said bluntly. âYouâve become an unfortunate distraction. A scourge to his soul.â His⊠soul?
âThankfully, that is not for you to decide. Any opinion you have is irrelevant to us, Sebastian.â You said, turning your back to him to find flats to slip on. You never knew Sebastian to lie; he certainly wasnât holding back at that moment.
âI simply want you to be aware that my loyalties will always fall with my master,â Sebastian replied, the undertones in his voice clear enough. If there is a life and death situation tomorrow, I will let you die, if I can.
âWell, youâve been such an obedient servant, thus far,â you mirrored his obsequious tone, pairing it with your own reprimanding smile. âYou ought to keep your Lordâs best interests in mind. Not to worry, Sebastian, I can handle myself.â
âHappy to hear it, Miss Y/n,â Sebastian replied, bowing with a hand over his heart. The gesture was as genuine as Duchess Mariaâs greeting to your aunt had been. Â
âMy Lord ordered me to escort you. There are guards in the hallway,â the butler explained. His eyes brightened, daring you to decline him.Â
You scoffered in disbelief, shaking your head. It was precaution from Diegoâs warning, you assumed. âFine.â
You left the room first, surprised that there was no guard fixed outside your door. Though you knew where you were going, Sebastian led you to the guest wing. Instinctively, you remembered where to step so as not to cause the wooden floor to complain.
Every few paces, Sebastian would have you pause to let a guard pass. Apparently, he sensed them much sooner than you did.Â
Do some reading about the supernatural after all of this is over with, you reminded yourself. The thought was ridiculous, but there was no harm in investigating. Besides, Sebastian was becoming too unmistakable to continue ignoring.Â
The moment you knocked on Cielâs door, Sebastian disappeared. Your fiancĂ© opened the door. Before he could speak, you hugged him tightly, hiding your face in his nightshirt. You breathed in his familiar scent, letting your eyes flutter closed. Your fingers grabbed fistfulls of his shirt, bunching the material around his back. Ciel hardly managed to close the door behind you, locking it to be safe.
âI waited to see you all day,â Ciel said simply, brushing strands of your hair behind your ear when you looked up at him. He pressed a greeting kiss on your cheek. âMy groomsmen insisted we explore the city. It was quite a hindrance.â
âWell, I was stuck in a flock of blushing bridesmaids,â you laughed humorlessly. âIf I so much as started saying your name, they would throw some fitâ something about bad luck.â
âIf simply saying my name is bad luck, seeing me must be absolutely damning,â Ciel quipped smugly. He guided you to sit on the edge of his bed, shamelessly regarding you. You returned the favor, your gaze catching on the way his collar bones protruded under his loose nightshirt.
You thought about the last time he sat on the edge of his bed with you present, climbing into his lap, pleasuring yourself against the hardness in his trousers. Technically, you wore more that evening than in this current moment. All you wore was a white nightgown. Nothing under it, nothing over it. It was made of satin, as sheer as a curtain.
Ciel made a respectable effort to look at your face only.Â
âTomorrow night, we will be wed,â you said meaningfully, feeling your face flush.Â
âYes,â Cielâs response was impatient, âwe will be.â He hated to wait, but he was never one to do something so significant haphazardly. If you were to consummate, you had to be married. But this time tomorrow, you would be.Â
An amused smile tugged at your lips, âmy Aunt Beatrice was giving meâŠanecdotes about her wedding night.â The interaction had been excruciating during your gown fitting, but now you thought it was rather humorous. Beatrice was a few years past 30â she had three children, another on the way, so it was rumored.
Ciel cringed at the thought of your relative telling you about what takes place behind a coupleâs locked door. As if he had no clue, and didnât want to know. You knew he knew. âAnd I thought nothing could be worse than my own cousin.â
While your eyebrows knit, initially figuring he was referring to Lizzie, but you took a sigh of relief upon realizing that he was speaking of Edward Midford, her brother. He was Cielâs best man.
âBetter than Sebastian,â you quipped. However, your smile faltered at the thought of the butler. Marrying Ciel meant you were resigning yourself to a life with a powerful, supernatural servant who wanted you dead. If given the chance, he would kill you.Â
âY/n?â Ciel frowned, mirroring your disheartened expression.Â
âItâs nothing. I justâŠI suppose Iâm tired,â you said unconvincingly.Â
You rested your head on the side of his arm. âBeing hereâŠseeing my aunt and cousins. Living in my sisterâs room....â It wasnât the full truth, but certainly wasnât a lie. There was an unwavering pit in your stomach. A premonition that something was about to go terribly amiss.Â
âWeâre taking the first steamship tomorrow night,â Ciel replied, running his thumb over your knuckles. It was a habit he picked up from you, the way you liked to ground yourself through small, repetitive motions. âI assumed being here would be difficult for you.â
âWhere are we going?â The destination of your honeymoon was supposed to be a surprise, one left to Cielâs careful planning. However, you were never one for surprises, and you would be away for about a month. You deserved to know where you were going to be for such a long span of time.
Ciel replied in French, âQuelque part oĂč il y a du vin, des champs de lavande et une grande tour, ma chĂšre.â He rarely used his second language, considering you couldnât understand it and he was in the midst of perfecting his German, but it was attractive. You flushed at his graceful accent, the way the complex language suited his voice.Â
âCielâŠâ you started, chuckling fondly.Â
âEt quand nous y serons, nous ferons des choses innommables les uns avec les autres,â Ciel continued, gauging your reaction. He kissed your cheek and slightly below your jaw before moving your hair out of the way to press a peck on the nape of your neck. The more you were intimate, the more you noticed his fixation with your neck.Â
As Ciel turned to face you completely, his hand released yours to settle on your bare thigh. You moved further up the bed to make space.
His voice dropped to a whisper, ânous avons tous deux attendu si longtemps.â Your arms erupted with goosebumps as you pulled him closer, his lips centimeters from your own.Â
For all you knew, he could be stringing nonsense into sentences, but it didnât matter. It sounded perfect, his tender touch giving way for a new warmth to spread in your stomach.
Your fingers tangled into his hair as you pulled him down against the bedspread with you. The kiss was breathless and all-consuming. It ignited every nerveâ down to your toes. You could feel Cielâs warmth through his shirt, and you were consciously aware of everywhere your skin touched his. His legs bracketed yours.Â
Giving you a moment to catch your breath, he kissed the center of your throat, your drumming pulse point. He paused, an amused grin playing at his lips.Â
âWhat is it?â You managed.Â
âDo you recall the last time we were in a position like this?â
After a beat of silence, you laughed. âOur dispute! When I nearly broke your nose and ran away.â Even when you hated Ciel, you couldnât bring yourself to meaningfully injure him.Â
Ciel hummed in confirmation, though his dubious look suggested he thought your recollection of the altercation was self-serving. âAnd you still looked like you wanted to kiss me. Even when I held a knife right here,â his fingers grazed over the scar on your throatâ a superficial wound above your left carotid.Â
âYes⊠just like this,â you smarted, pulling him close to steal an innocent peck from his lips.
âYes, I suppose just like that,â Ciel conceded, rolling his eye.Â
âWhatâs more, you couldnât bring yourself to press harder,â you added teasingly, pulling him back in for a long kiss, treating this opportunity to be intimate with your fiancĂ© as if it was your last.
. . .
MAY 13TH, 1892
SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN, GERMANY
You didnât recognize yourself in the mirror.Â
Mey-Rin and Nina made elegant work with your makeup; darkening your eyebrows, painting on a blush that made your cheeks look flushed, a lipstick that made your lips appear bitten. After all, obvious makeup was considered fraudulent and deceptive; the work of women who worked street corners, Queen Victoria would say.Â
Nina twisted your hair into a French twist updo, leaving curled strands out in the front. Queen Adelaideâs Fringe Tiara felt heavy on your head, fastened to your hair with pins. It dug into your scalp, the pain made it impossible for you to forget that it sat there.
Your gown was surprisingly simplistic; it was whiter than snow, free of any lace or bead detailing. Instead of was a sheen of satin, the lustrous fabric beautiful without being flamboyant. Your sleeves, controversially, were off the shoulder, meeting in a seam in the middle of your chest.Â
To hide the gruesome scar on your arm, you wore matching white gloves that reached your elbows. They were out of season, but there was no way for you to hide the old wound otherwise.Â
Under such a heavy dress and tiara, you were ready to collapse. Your preparation team had you awake before the sun rose, giving you a small breakfast before stuffing you into a carriage and taking you to the church to get dressed. It was a prayer room made into a makeshift dressing areafor your purposes; security did not want to risk the wedding party arriving at the ceremony in carriages, per tradition. Instead, everyone in the wedding had to get to the church at inane hours to let the guards watch every doorway and window for intruders, once again taking separate carriages in different routes. Â
You took a deep breath in, trying to settle your nerves. You were marrying the man you loved, someone who understood you in a way that no one since Baxter did. OnlyâŠnow your life was to belong to the monarchy once more. This wedding ceremony was more symbolic and full of circumstance than romance. It wasnât yours and Cielâs. It was Europeâs.Â
Not to mention, Diego warned you that Mariana had a plan. MarianaâŠit was still strange to have a real name for the woman. A reason why she was determined to kill you both, but more importantly, Ciel. You couldnât allow that, even if he did kill her husband.
No matter how security prepared, she was still a threat. She would try to kill the both of you until either she succeeded, or you killed her first. Still, you knew that every possible measure was made. Sebastian would protect Ciel to the bitter end, regardless. That was what mattered.Â
There was nothing more for you to do besides having the wedding. You laughed at your reflection. You looked like a princess, but what raced through your mind â murder, death threats, the leader of a foreign drug empire â were not regal bride concerns in the least.Â
And you looked much more calm than you felt. At least you could contain your inner turmoil; stuff it down, sort your worries into neat categories. Impending doom, a death threat, a potentially supernatural butler. Hide it all behind the image of a jubilant princess who balanced the weight of a diamond tiara and a dagger all the same.Â
Besides, there was no other option. Ciel had an earldom to run, a business to support, an Underworld to terrorize. He was too proud to live in middle class America. He would detest waking up every morning, and that would soon become a hatred for waking up with you. All you could do was marry, and support each other in your new royal family role. Dispel evil together. Dispel Mariana if she attempted to challenge you. Maybe even have a child or two.Â
You squeezed your eyes closed, thinking about last night. All you needed to do was complete the day, and you would be together. In every way a couple could be together.
There was a stiff knock at the door, forcing you to open your eyes and paint a pleasant expression on your face. âCome in.â
âMarie,â Christian, your eldest brother, entered. You figured he would be walking you down the aisle â giving you away â instead of your father. No one told you, but you had the good sense to expect it. It was well-known that Queen Victoria disliked your father. She didnât care for Prince Christian I, matching your mother, Princess Helena, with him because she couldnât find a proper European house to marry her middle child into.Â
Meanwhile, it was no secret that Victoria favored your brother. The Queen adored him for studying at Wellington College as she wanted, and she found nothing more befitting of a prince than serving in the military. Christian recently returned from an expedition in Isazi as an officer in the British Army. His skin was still lightly tanned from being in South Africa for so long. He wore his uniform and full officer decorations. Other men in the service were likely doing the same; Edward Midford and his father, Lord Scotany.
âChristian,â you were unsure how Marie greeted him, and your hesitance showed. There was a beat of silence as he regarded you.
Christian raised his eyebrow, âwhy did you do away with Christle?â He was referring to that puerile nickname you both used for him as children.Â
Marie still referred to him as Christle at this age? He was a military official!
âYouâve been acting differently lately, Marie. Are you sure you love Phantomhive? Is this what you want to do?â Christian asked, worry furrowing his eyebrows. He looked like you when you were apprehensive, the same level stare, pursed lips.Â
âHow am I different?â You asked. It was easy to act around Queen Victoria and your motherâ anyone who spent more time worrying about themselves or their positions to really understand the difference between you and your sister. But Christian was more complicated. He was your authority figure while your mother was opening hospitals abroad and your father worked. Christian spent plenty of time playing with Marie, admonishing you for being lax in your duties as a child. As the eldest, he was 16 the second time you ran away, 15 the first.Â
You felt like you were nine years old again, getting admonished for refusing to ride a horse side saddle, or for getting mud all over your dress before the family portrait.Â
âYouâreâŠacting quite like Thora,â Christian said, his militant eyes practically staring into your soul. You tried not to grimace at your old nickname.Â
He wasnât accusing you; his voice was thoughtful or concerned, if anything. âAunt Beatrice was worried, too. I onlyâŠâ he paused. âI only want to ensure that this marriage is what you want. You will always be my younger sister, even if Iâm supposed to be giving you away.â
The honorable Prince Christian never changed.
âIf Iâve been somberâŠI donât mean to be,â you replied. âIâŠthe past few months of my life have been terrifying. I know you were away in Africa but there was a death threat sent to court. On my life. The Phantomhive manor was even attacked, months ago,â you rolled down your glove to show him the injury. If you could persuade your brother, no one would question you.Â
Christian sighed, his face unchanging. The military seemed to desensitize him to these sorts of wounds. He inspected the healed scar, and nodded once. âIt healed well. Phantomhiveâs medic is rather talented,â he admitted gruffly. The irony being, that the medic was Sebastian, a monster who wanted you dead.Â
You pulled the glove back over your forearm. Christian didnât argue with you, but you knew he was unconvinced. Before he could speak, the quick notes of Mendelssonâs Wedding March reverberated throughout the church, preceded by soul-shattering chords. That was your cue to join the procession.Â
Christian glanced at the clock to confirm the time was right. âWe have to join the others,â he offered his arm. You laced yours with his, and two servants you didnât know picked up your gownâs long train.Â
When you joined the procession from behind, the first of the wedding party was already walking down the aisle. First was Queen Victoria, accompanied by her secretary and two guards; the Officiant; Lord and Lady Scotany as they filled in for Cielâs deceased parents; your parents; Ciel and his groomsmen. You and Christian joined from the hall behind the doors to the Sanctuary, so you didnât see any of them before they walked.Â
Instead, you saw the middle of the procession: your bridesmaids, the Hesse sisters, Cornelia, and Aunt Beatrice. Cornelia was one of your bridesmaids because her husband, Edward, was Cielâs best man. It was more of a formality, than a show of closeness between you.Â
After them was the ring bearer and the flower girl, respectively. While you expected Victoria to insist the roles be fulfilled by your younger cousins, she allowed Ciel to fill those positions from his own friends and family. He asked little Beatrice Moore and her betrothed, Theodore Ambrose, the next Earl of Granard. Beatrice was still giggling at the fact that she shared a name with a real princess, your Aunt Beatrice.
You settled behind the children. Little Beatrice nearly missed her cue because her eyes were locked on your tiara and seemingly endless gown. Beatrice waved at you vigorously, causing you to smile. âMarie! You look so beautiful!â She exclaimed, shooting Theodore an irritated look when he tapped her shoulder and reminded her to walk with him.Â
One of the servants handed you a bouquet of flowers, alstroemerias with white roses, and baby's breath incorporated. It was your turn to walk down the aisle with your brother, but you couldnât help but wish it was Baxter at your side. That this wedding had less people, a tiara that didnât weigh more than your brainâŠ
Smile. You urged yourself not to buckle under the weight of everyoneâs states. Everyone stood for the entire wedding procession, given that Queen Victoria was standing as well. No one sat while the highest-ranking royal stood.Â
First, you passed the servants and guards in the furthest pews from the altar. Mey-Rin dabbed at her tears from under her glasses, Finny waved, Baldroy nodded once. Nina smiled at you, gesturing for you to keep walking in time with the music. You had paused for a half second, attempting to find Sebastian. The awkward timing forced Christian to stop his stride to let you catch up.Â
You didnât see Sebastian, and you were unsure if that caused you more anxiety, or alleviated it.
Strictly-screened journalists and press members were in the pews in front of the servants. Their cameras clicked, lenses immortalizing the moment. You smiled for them, struggling to find a place to look.
The music echoed throughout the Sanctuary, overly cheerful. It was the same chords repeating on the grand organ behind the altar.Â
Closer to the altar were the aristocratic and the royal guests. Several faces stuck out to youâ your Aunt Victoria, the Queenâs eldest child; brother, Albert; Aunt Louise; Mateo and Valentina Bianchi ; the heirs to the English throne, Uncle Edward and Alexandra of Denmark.Â
You caught Lizzieâs emerald gaze; she was in the front row, to the side. She looked at you before pointedly looking ahead of her. Look at the man you love. The rest of the world will simply fall away. She was too empathetic for her own good, sometimes.Â
As you took your concluding steps towards the altar, you finally looked at Ciel. She was right. Your heart flipped immediately, taking in his deep navy suit. He had a white rose tucked pinned over his chest, his signature flower. The tie tucked into his jacket was a soft pink; pale enough that you thought it was white at first glance. The rest of the wedding party coordinated with him, the bridesmaids wearing the same pink, and the groomsmen the same blue.
Ciel didnât smile broadly, but you knew better than to fixate on that. Instead, the corners of his lips turned upwards. He took in your appearance slowly, as if he were fixating on a painting. Inspecting every detail with the intensity of someone trying to commit each brush stroke to memory.
At the altar, you took your place across from Ciel. Christian stood behind you, to the officiantâs side. Aunt Beatrice took your bouquet for you.
All you needed to do was finish the ceremony, and you would have the man across from you all to yourself for the next month. Just you, him, Carl, and the servants abroad in some beautiful place. There was no royal tourâ all you needed to do was attend Alix of Hesse and Nicholas IIâs wedding in Russia as guests.
The thought of such solitude was elating. It helped your smile widen naturally, though your cheeks were beginning to sting.
The music quieted into a small, soothing tune that the officiant could speak over.Â
âWelcome, everyone,â the officiant said. He was an agind man with kind blue eyes and a thoughtful smile. There was a gold wedding band on his left ring finger, matching his red and gold robes. âPlease be seated. Thank you all for joining us on this joyous day and cloudless afternoon.âÂ
âEvery one of you today has been invited today because you, in one way or another, shaped the lives of these lovely individuals standing before me, Her Highness Princess Marie Louise of Schleswig-Holstein and Lord Ciel Phantomhive.â
Not hearing your name hurt you more than you thought it would have.Â
âFor those of you I have not had the chance to meet, my name is Reverend Arthur Green. I have officiated the pastâŠsix⊠royal weddings,â he said with a flourish, making a show of counting. There were scattered laughs in the audience in response. Green was close with the Queen, who sat in a distinguished throne to the side of the author with her Munshi, Abdul Karim. Notably, not all of her children were presentâ likely for security reasons.Â
Reverend Green continued, âwe were all taken by surprise by this sweeping love connection, but seeing the way these two beautiful souls regard one another, their love is strong and true.âÂ
You felt your face redden, matching the new flush over Cielâs cheeks.Â
âI have vows prepared for both the bride and groom,â Green announced. Neither of you expressed a desire to write your own vows, and you doubted the Queen would have let you. She was reluctant with royalty expressing such passionate feelings in public, preferring to preserve the dignified appearance her Royal Mob upheld.Â
âPlease repeat my words, Your Highness,â he requested, forcing you to refocus.Â
You repeated. âI, Marie, take thee, Ciel Phantomhive, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better or for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish; and I promise to be faithful to you until death parts us.â
Ciel repeated the same vow, having the same reluctance with saying your name. No, Marieâs name.Â
This is just the beginning, Y/n.
Ciel broke into a broader smile, yours matching his. His blue eye seemed even darker in the sunset. When you looked at him, you saw your honeymoon, your future, your husband. Your closest friend and confidante. Your heart fluttered, your mouth was dry. More than anything, you wanted to kiss him.
When you looked at him, you forgot about the weight of the tiara on your head.
âYour Highness, do you promise to love, honor, cherish, and protect Lord Phantomhive, forsaking all others, and holding only unto him forever?â Reverend Green asked.
âYes!â You said more enthusiastically than you meant to. The guests laughed, and out of the corner of your eye, you caught Lizzieâs amused grin. You cleared your throat, âyes, I do.â
âAnd Lord Phantomhive, do you promise to love, honor, cherish, and protect Her Highness, forsaking all others, and holding only unto her forever?â
âIndeed, I do,â Cielâs reply was much calmer than yours, but his face was full of love. It made your eyes sting, as if you could cry. You tried to blink the forming tears away. You thought about what his lips feel like, how his arms feel when they wrapped around you to combat your surfacing feelings.
The both of you already loved, honored, cherished, and protected each other. Youâd do it forever, if thatâs what the Fates had in store for you.
Reverend Green nodded at Theodore, preparing the child to get ready for his cue to bring your wedding rings up to the altar.Â
Theodore nodded aggressively in response, tightening his grip on the small cushion with your rings. The audience laughed, but you couldnât make yourself look away from Ciel to survey their responses any longer.
Green grinned, his eyes brimming with tears as well. At least you werenât alone in your tragically sentimental feelings. âNow, if there is anyone present, who can show just cause why these two persons may not be joined in matrimony, speak now, or forever hold your peace,â he declared, naturally assuming that no one in the audience would protest.Â
The gasps and screams forced you to look away from Ciel and into the audience as it rippled, devolving into chaos. They dove away from a singular woman who stood, aiming a small purse gun at the altar.Â
Guards sprang into action, their guns unlocking, but they couldnât shoot with terrified guests fleeing and hiding. Mey-Rin argued with a soldier, likely in an effort to take his weapon and fire. She was the best shot there, but you assumed the guards refused to let her bring a weapon in.
You didnât need to look longer to know what was about to happen. You refused to let it.Â
Before you knew what you were doing, you moved. You pulled yourself out of Christianâs restrictive grip, and pushed Ciel to the ground, just as the woman shot. The shot sounded throughout the Sanctuary, amongst the course of screaming guests, shouting guards and crying guests.Â
You remained standing, merely feeling a searing warmth rip through your left chest. It was nothing like Mey-Rinâs grazing bullet. In fact, it hurt less. It was hot like nothing youâve ever touched, but it didnât hurt. Not even the hot stove you touched by accident as a child compared to the sensation in your chest.Â
Ciel managed to pull himself off the ground, startled by your hard shove. Heâd tripped down the short steps and hit his head, but otherwise, he seemed unharmed. You would have been relieved, had he not been staring at you in panic.
âY/n,â he managed, horrified.Â
But you name was lost amid the chaos. Before you dared look down, you took a quick survey of the rest of the Sanctuary. Queen Victoria and most of the guests fled or hid, guards shielding their escape. Edward sprung in front of Cornelia, the Reverend, Theodore, and Beatrice. The children cried for their parents, who were likely forced to leave with the guards.Â
Reverend Green trembled behind the altar, bear hugging young Beatrice and Theodore, the Hesse sisters and Aunt Beatrice fell to the floor, covering their heads. Your brother stood before them, gun drawn. Royalty received crisis training for situations like this.Â
Mariana was gone, having used the chaos to make her escape.
âEdward, take the kids!â Cornelia demanded, âget them to their parents.â
âI will not leave you,â Edward Midford insisted, his voice trained to be steady in the face of danger. He was a soldier, like Christian.Â
âI-I can,â Reverend Green said, trembling. âCome on, children. We mustâ we must, go.â He tried to let go of them, but Beatrice held on, hiding her face in the manâs robes.Â
âIâll make sure nothing happens to them,â Green assured Cornelia, but neither child seemed interested in leaving.
âY/n!â Ciel shouted, his face red as if heâs been trying to capture your attention. He put his hand on your shoulder, but he was trembling. His gaze alternated between your chest and your face, and you made the mistake of looking down at your fresh wound. At the fresh crimson blood that blossomed on the left side of your dressâs bodice. It was in the middle of your left breastâ the third or fourth rib you assumed.Â
âOh,â you managed. Your legs buckled, but Ciel caught you and carefully helped you to the floor. He tore his jacket off and pressed it against the wound, hard enough for you to cry out in pain. The ease that he pressed indicated that the bullet fractured your ribs. Ciel sensed that the wound gave way too easily and paled.Â
You took a difficult breath in, shivering despite the warm bullet in your chest. Your teeth chattered.
Pain, tenderness, difficulty breathing, you told yourself. Baxter always said that self-assessment came first. It was a small gun. The best you could hope for was a fractured rib, but the way your chest gave way to Cielâs pressure suggested it was shattered.Â
âWhy can a shattered rib be dangerous, Y/n?â Baxter asked.
Massive bleeding from ruptured blood vessels, bone fragments from the rib can puncture a lung⊠or my heart.
Air could build around the lung and cause a tension pneumothorax⊠assuming the bullet didnât puncture the lung and do that already.
âCiel, keep the pressure steady,â Cornelia said. You forgot she was a nurse. Maybe you had a chance, if it wasn't a tension pneumothorax. But you never had that kind of luck. âHelp me check for an exit wound,â she said to someone on your right side. The three of them lifted your torso up, and confirmed that you were also bleeding out from the back. They ripped the satin from your gown and used another manâs jacket to slow that bleeding while Ciel held pressure on your front.Â
âWe need a carriage to get her to a hospital,â Cornelia declared, checking your pulse.
âI-I think the guests took them all,â Lady Scotany said, âAlexisâ go check. For a guard, a doctor, a commoner with a carriage, anyone.â With a grim nod, Alexis Midford ran with Baldroy and Mey-Rin.Â
âMarie, I know it hurts but I need you to do your best to breathe. And wiggle your fingers,â Cornelia said, but you were more concerned with Ciel. His hands were soaked with your blood, despite Aunt Beatrice continuously giving him new material to help stop the bleeding with.Â
âMarie!â Cornelia repeated. When you didnât respond, she turned to Ciel. âCiel, you need to tell her to breathe,â she said, âshe will listen to you.â
You were Marie, even when you had a bullet in your chest. It was a cruel joke.
Were you not breathing? Was that why your lungs were aflame? Was that why your throat was constricting? Was that why your vision coated in white, and your ears rang like church bells?
Ciel trembled, but he nodded. âLook at me,â he ordered, âbreathe. You need to breathe.â Breathing hurt. It hurt more than any pain you ever experienced in your life. It hurt more than your arm. Inhaling hurt more than the bullet itself hurt.Â
âT-tryingâŠâ you managed.
âYouâre doing well, Marie, itâs okay,â Lizzie said, sniffling. Your head was in her lap, though you were unsure when she showed up. âJ-just focus on breathing.â
My ribs are broken. I probably have a tension pneumothorax, you wanted to cry out. But your voice wasnât cooperating. You could feel your rationality slipping out with the same urgency blood bubbled from your wound.
Cornelia cut your bodice open, cutting through the dress and corset. Finny gave his jacket to Lady Scotany to drape over the right side of your chest, for your modesty. As if that was the most concerning part of the situation.Â
âTake a deep breath in,â Ciel said, repeating Corneliaâs words. You shivered, struggling to do as told. Your lungs were already fullâ as if you took an inhale prior, held it, and tried to inhale again, all without exhaling.Â
âAbnormal lung sounds,â Cornelia drew back to watch your chest as you struggled to breathe. âAsymmetrical expansion of the chest,â she mumbled gravely.
The problem with being right all the time, meant that you had also diagnosed yourself correctly. And this diagnosis was fatal without near-immediate treatment.
âWhat does that mean?â Ciel insisted. âCornelia!â He shouted, but the nurse didnât meet his gaze.Â
âIt probably means itâs aâŠtension pneumothorax,â Cornelia admitted.
âShe got away,â you heard Baldroy say from a distance, returning with Lord Scotany. He shouldered his coat off to let Lady Scotany put it beneath the exit wound on your back. âGuards were too concerned with gettinâ the royals to safety. Took all the carriages, too.â
âWhat does that mean, Cornelia?â Ciel shouted.
âWhere is Sebastian?â Lizzie asked, trying to keep her voice level. She removed the heavy tiara from your head and gently smoothed her fingers over your hair.
âSebastian?â Lady Scotany asked. âHeâs getting another carriage. We need to get her to the hospital.âÂ
You wanted to laugh. With Sebastian getting the carriage, you were surely going to bleed outâ or die of hypoxiaâ whichever came first. You were going to die in front of an altar. In a church. At your own wedding.
âCornelia!â Ciel yelled.Â
âCiel, shut up and let me work!â Cornelia put her ear to your chest again.Â
âAir is building around the outside of her lungs, rather than inside because the bulletâ or a bone fragment punctured it,â Christian said, pitying yourâŠhusband? FiancĂ©?Â
âThe air puts pressure around the punctured lung, and that strains that lung and her heart. Since the lung is punctured, air keeps getting stuck when she inhales, so there is no room for it to expand when she breathes,â your brother explained.
Your lung definitely collapsed. The well-meaning pressure Ciel put on the wound couldnât be helping, either.
âHyperresonant chest percussion,â Cornelia noted under her breath. Her concerned frown deepened.
âCornelia, her neck,â Christian added calmly. He kneeled at your other side, across from Ciel, light fingers touching your throat, feeling for your trachea. âTracheal deviation to the right and distended neck veins.â
âTension pneumothorax,â they said in synchrony, sharing a look.Â
âSo what can we do?â Lizzie cried out.Â
âDying,â you mumbled, fully believing that these were your final moments. The procedure you needed was impossible on the floor of the church. If Sebastian was tasked with the carriage, you werenât going to get there in time. And he was why you were shot, in the first place.Â
He caught bullets. He wanted you deadâŠit was simple. Bloody demon.
Thatâs what he was, wasn't he?
âWe need a large bore needle!â Christian exclaimed.
âA needle? Whatever for?â Lizzie cried out.
âTo evacuate the air,â Cornelia said, âbut we donât have the right kind here.â
âSo what do we do?â
âYou are not dying, you utter imbecile,â Ciel insisted, steady tears streaming down his face. You werenât sure if he noticed that his forehead was bleeding, much less the salty tears streaming down his cheeks. âShe was bloody aiming at me.âÂ
You wanted to reach out and wipe the tears off of his face, but your arm was limp at your side, refusing to obey. You could wiggle your fingers, but you couldnât quite muster the strength to lift the limb. You tried again, but your arm fell to your side uselessly.
You could hear your heartbeat in your ears, pounding in your brain. It was a welcome change from the terrible ringing.
âIâm s-..sorry,â you managed, but it was a lie. If you hadnât pushed Ciel, it might have hit him. If the man you loved died from your inaction, you wouldnât be able to forgive yourself for it.
You felt there was a constrictive corset around your brain, tightening and tightening. Your breathing was rapid, in out, in out, in out. You could feel your head throb in time with your heart. With every inhale you managed, you got less air.Â
But even so, you would do it again.Â
âTheyâre not going to have the right needle here, we have to burp the wound.â Cornelia said. âOtherwise, sheâll suffocate before the carriage gets here.â
âBurp the wound?â Ciel asked incredulously.Â
âThe air caught in the pleural space wonât come out safely and sheâll suffocate if we donât let air escape the opening thatâs already there. Ciel, you need to step aside for a moment,â Cornelia explained.
âButâ but, sheâs still bleeding! IâmâŠstopping the bleeding! She will bleed out if I stop!â Ciel argued, looking from his bloody hands on the wound to your paling face. Back and forth once more.
âSheâs going to die of hypoxia if you donât let the air out of the lung cavity, Ciel.â Christian said. âYou need to move, or I will move you.â Christian was much taller than Ciel. It wouldâve been as simple as moving a chess piece.
Ciel moved reluctantly, and switched spots at your side with Christian.Â
Cornelia moved the blood-soaked dressing from the wound, and you caught a quiet rush of air before she put fresh dress fabric over it once more. It was only a little easier for you to breathe before it grew difficult again. However, she quickly removed the dressing when she noticed you beginning to strain. The nurse repeated the process in tandem with your discomfort.Â
You shivered, watching the world above youâ Cielâs face, Lizzieâs, your brotherâs. The world was brighter, it was blurry. And then it was refined. It was vibrant, and then it wasnât. Vibrant, clear, blurry, brightâŠ
Was this what Baxter saw? you wondered.
âNo, Y/n. Itâs not your time, yet.â Baxter said. âYou need to wait. You need to try to live. The docâs cominâ in a carriage with his supplies. He will be there. Just hold on. Weâre all here for you every step of the way. You will not die.â
Earnest Baxter.
You refocused on Ciel. His face was clear, and vibrant. And then it was blurry. It was bright. He was still bleeding. He was still handsome.
You put all of your focus into your next words. âI love you,â you managed. Your eyes fluttered closed, it was getting too hard to concentrate and keep them open.Â
âNo, donât you dare say that!â Ciel demanded. âYou will not die. I donât know what Iâd do without you,â his fingers felt warm on your face, they smelled like blood. Your eyes fluttered open again. You smiled weakly.Â
You werenât sure what you would do without Ciel, either.Â
âItâsâŠnot my intent to butâŠâ that might be out of my hands.
This was supposed to be the day you eternally promised yourselves to one another, but apparently, plans sometimes went awry. Sometimes, the determined widow got her happy ending.
But you won too. All because the last face you were going to see was the face of the man you loved.
âSurgeonâs here! Heâs got supplies!âÂ
Hold on, Y/n.
. . .
Acknowledgements:
First of all, I want to thank everyone on Amino (who I unfortunately, didnât keep in contact with) for telling me that the first 2 chapters of this fic were worthwhile. Without motivation from them, I never would have felt inspired enough to keep developing this idea.Â
I also want to thank my best friend for listening to me rant about this piece. About the hours and hours of research about historical figures, laundry in the 1890s, makeup in the 1890s, speech, Victorian slang terms, hair, names, German breakfast food, types of tea, Victorian wedding traditions, serial killers, post-traumatic stress disorder, bilingualism, travel, everything. Even anatomy, dangerous chemicals, ages of me studying self-defense, waltz, and harp tutorials on YouTube. I even did the math-- Cornelia really is an 8th-generation New Yorker! I sat down and put a half hour into making a very preliminary family tree for her. Donât even get me started on how many times I watched the anime and took notes on the castâs speech and mannerisms. I even scoured Pinterest for reference pictures, outfit inspirationâŠeverything you could ever want. It all amounted to 300+ pins to my TIP board, and exactly 127,411 words.
I digress. My best friend is so motivating, and without her telling me not to force myself to write when I donât feel it, you guys wouldnât have gotten anything close to this quality of work. In fact, sheâs also a bit responsible for a scene in this chapter.
I also want to thank Sweet Anon, mylostleftfootsock, katherine101, for consistently reaching out to me in asks, DMs, and commenting. You all motivate me so much, and thereâs nothing quite like knowing that the story I write touches you. Without knowing people were really engaging with what I put out, writing would have taken a lot longer, if it happened at all.Â
Thank you all, so much. Iâm so grateful for every single read.
I can't wait to share my next projects with you. I'll even give you a few hints to make up for this ending: Ciel Phantomhive, ballerina!reader, fake courtship, serial killer. Do with this what you will <3
Love, Dan
#the indignant pawn#ciel phantomhive x reader#ciel phantomhive#ciel phantomhive x y/n#ciel phantomhive x you#black butler fanfic#anime fanfiction#historical fiction#historical romance
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Princess Marie Louise of Schleswig-Holstein, 1953. Born in 1872, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria, she had witnessed six British reigns by the time of this photo. She married Prince Aribert of Anhalt in 1891, their marriage was annulled in 1900 while she was on an official visit to Canada. She returned to England rather than Germany. She died in 1956 and is buried at the Royal Burial Ground at Frogmore, Windsor. Photo by Cecil Beaton.
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Awhđ„čđ


âI could not choose for a sister-in-law anyone I like better than Louise. She will make Arthur a most delightful wife. Each is the complement of the other, and I foresee that each will make the other supremely happy.â
âthe German Crown Princess, (nee Victoria, Princess Royal) on the fiancĂ©e of her younger brother Prince Arthur: Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia.
@abigaaal
#victoria princess royal#empress victoria of germany#princess louise margaret duchess of connaught#princess louise margaret of prussia#letters/diary entries/quotes
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Princess Victoria Louise, Duchess of Brunswick with her only daughter Princess Frederica of Hanover future Queen of Greece âŠ
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You did least favourite tiara, what about favourite tiaras?
Great idea! I think I'll prick my favourite tiaras from each country, and no commentary just so that this post doesn't ramble forever and ever. Just know that these are the ones that I like for either aesthetic or historical purposes. I'd say the best collections go to the British, Swedish, and Spanish in that order. Out of the fake monarchies Greece has some bangers in there:
Belgium đ§đȘ - Queen Astrid of Belgium's Nine Provinces Tiara (as a bandeau)
Brunei đ§đł - Anisha Isa Kalebic's Diamond Tiara
Denmark đ©đ° - Princess Louise of the Netherlands' Pearl PoirĂ© Tiara
Egypt đȘđŹ - Queen Nazli of Egyptâs Diamond Tiara
France đ«đ· - Empress Josephineâs Cameo Tiara (it's in the Swedish vault but it's French in every other way)
Germany đ©đȘ - The Prussian tiara (it's of German origin but is currently with the Spanish due to royal intermarrying)
Greece đŹđ· - Khedive of Egypt Tiara
Italy đźđč - Queen Margherita of Italy's Pearl & Diamond Tiara
Iran đźđ· - Empress Farah of Iranâs Turquoise Tiara
Japan đŻđ” - Imperial Chrysanthemum Tiara
Jordan đŻđŽ - Queen Noor's Sunburst Tiara
Lesotho đ±đž - 'Masenate Mohato Seeiso's wedding tiara
Liechtenstein đ±đź - Princess Maria Kinsky's Honeysuckle Tiara
Luxembourg đ±đș - Grand Duchess Marie AdĂ©laĂŻde of Luxembourg's Sapphire Tiara
Monaco đČđš - Princess Charlotte of Monacoâs Pearl Drop Tiara
The Netherlands đłđ± - Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands's Stuart Diamond Tiara
Norway đłđŽ - Princess Ingeborg of Sweden's Pearl Circle Tiara
Russia đ·đș - Grand Duchess Vladimir Tiara (of Russian origin but is with the Brits)
Spain đȘđž - Queen Victoria Eugenie of Spain's Fleur de Lys Tiara
Sweden đžđȘ - Nine-Prong Tiara
United Kingdom đŹđ§ - Girls of Great Britain and Ireland Tiara
BONUS - The Greville Emerald Kokoshnik đŹđ§
BONUS - The Swedish Aquamarine Kokoshnik đžđȘ
BONUS - Queen Desiree of Swedenâs Ruby Parure Tiara đ©đ°
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This is a colourization I did of Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia. Born in 13 September 1892 to German Emperor Wilhelm II and Empress Augusta Viktoria of Schleswig-Holstein. She was the 7th child and only daughter. In 1913 she married Ernest Augustus, Duke of Brunswick. They had 5 children together. During WWII her and her husband tried to encourage an agreement between the UK and Nazi Germany. After WWII the couple lived in Marienburg Castle till the death of the Ernest Augustus in 30 January 1953. In 1965 The Princess wrote an autobiography about her life. She died in 11 December 1980 and is buried in the Royal plots at Berggarten Mausoleum, Hanover.Â
#royalty#princess#hanover#prussia#princess of prussia#victoria louise#princess victoria louise of prussia#history#colorized#colorization
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5 beautiesđđ
Daughters of Queen Victoria đâšïž

FIVE DAUGHTERS OF QUEEN VICTORIA AND ALBERT PRINCE CONSORT đ„șđâšïž
#victoria princess royal#empress victoria of germany#princess alice grand duchess of hesse#princess helena#princess christian of schleswig-holstein#princess louise duchess of argyll#princess beatrice of battenberg
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Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia, Duchess of Brunswick, Germany 13.09.1892-+Daughter of the German Emperor Wilhelm II.with her son Ernst August.- 1914
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German Empress Augusta Victoria (Center) with her daughter Victoria Louise of Prussia, Duchess of Brunswick (right) and her daughter-in-law, Crown Princess Cecilie of Prussia (left)
#empress augusta viktoria of germany#crown princess cecilie of prussia#princess victoria louise of germany#german imperial family#prussian royal family#german history#prussian history#house of hohenzollern#house of hanover
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