Royal Order of Victoria and Albert
Royal Order of Victoria and Albert |
|
The four grades of the Order |
Awarded by The Sovereign, on the advice of Government |
Type |
Order of Chivalry |
Day |
NA |
Eligibility |
Female members of the British Royal Family and female courtiers. |
Awarded for |
A national order of chivalry |
Status |
Defunct; not awarded since the death of Queen Victoria, 1901 |
Sovereign |
Queen Elizabeth II |
Principal Commander |
Sovereign |
Former grades |
NA |
Statistics |
Established |
1862 |
First induction |
ND |
Last induction |
ND |
Total inductees |
ND |
Distinct recipients |
ND |
Precedence |
|
Ribbon of the Royal Order of Victoria and Albert |
The German
Empress Victoria wearing the Order, along with the Prussian Luise Order (also an order only for women)
The Royal Order of Victoria and Albert was a British Royal Family Order instituted on 10 February 1862[1] by Queen Victoria, and enlarged on 10 October 1864; 15 November 1865; and 15 March 1880. No awards were made after the death of Queen Victoria.
The order had four classes and was only granted to female members of the British Royal Family and female courtiers. For the first three classes, the badge consisted of a medallion of Queen Victoria and Albert, The Prince Consort, differing in the width and jewelling of the border as the classes descend, whilst the fourth substitutes a jewelled cipher. All four were surmounted by a crown, which was attached to a bow of white silk moiré ribbon. The honour conferred no rank or title upon the recipient, but recipients were entitled to use the post-nominal letters "VA".
The last holder of the Order, Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone, died in 1981. Like other British Orders which have fallen into disuse, it has never been formally abolished. Each British monarch since Victoria has become Sovereign of the Order upon accession to the throne. The current monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, thus has been Sovereign of the Order since 1952.
Recipients
First Class
British Royal Family
Foreign
Second Class
British Royal Family
Foreign
- Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna of Russia (the Queen's grand-daughter)
- Princess Charlotte, The Hereditary Princess of Saxe-Meinigen (the Queen's grand-daughter)
- Princess Irene, Princess Henry of Prussia (the Queen's grand-daughter)
- Princess Viktoria, Princess Adolphe of Schaumburg-Lippe (the Queen's grand-daughter)
- Princess Marie Amelie, The Duchess of Hamilton, Princess of Baden
- Princess Marie Louise, Princess Aribert of Anhalt (the Queen's grand-daughter)
- Princess Sophie, The Crown Princess of Greece (the Queen's grand-daughter, later Queen of Greece)
- Princess Margaret, Princess Frederick Charles of Hesse (the Queen's grand-daughter)
- Princess Helena Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein (the Queen's grand-daughter)
- Princess Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg (the Queen's grand-daughter, later Queen of Spain)
Household
Third Class
Fourth Class
- Lady Hamilton-Gordon
- Edith Codrington, Lady Codrington
- Adelaide Biddulph, Baroness Biddulph
- Lady Elizabeth Phillipa Biddulph
- Flora C.I. Macdonald
- Hon Mrs. Ferguson
- Hon Horatia C. F. Stopford
- Hon Emily Sarah Cathcart
- Lady Cust
- Mrs Magdalen Wellesley
- Lady Ponsonby
- Ina Erskine McNeill (Duchess of Argyll)
- 1889: Lady Geraldine Somerset ("as a mark of appreciation of her long and devoted service to the Duchess of Cambridge")
- Harriet Lepel Phipps
- Caroline Fanny Cavendish
- Mrs. Georgina Townshend Wilson
- Lady Cowell
- Hon. Mrs. Mallett
- Hon. Mrs. Grant
- Ethel H. M. Cadogan
- Mrs. John Haughton
Sources
References
- ↑ British Imperial Calendar, 1900
- ↑ "Obituary" (Obituary). The Times (London). Friday, 4 November 1881. (30343), col F, p. 16.
- ↑ "The Dowager Lady Churchill" (Obituaries). The Times (London). Wednesday, 26 December 1900. (36335), col E, p. 3.
- ↑ "Court Circular" (Court and Social). The Times (London). Monday, 28 January 1889. (32607), col F, p. 9.
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