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  1. Victoria's Empire is a three-part British travel series that was first broadcast on BBC One in 2007. It was written and presented by comedian and actress Victoria Wood . Wood travelled around the world in search of the history, cultural impact and customs which the British Empire placed on the parts of the world it ruled.

  2. Queen Victoria. Queen Victoria is associated with Britain's great age of industrial expansion, economic progress and, especially, empire. At her death, it was said, Britain had a worldwide empire on which the sun never set. Victoria was born at Kensington Palace, London, on 24 May 1819. She was the only daughter of Edward, Duke of Kent, the ...

  3. 15 de ago. de 2020 · Queen Victoria died at the age of 81 on 22 January 1901 at 6.30 pm. She passed away at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight, surrounded by her children and grandchildren. This included the future King, Edward VII and Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany. Her death marked the end of an era where many of her subjects knew no other monarch.

  4. Victoria's Empire: With Victoria Wood, Les Hiddins, Freddie McGregor, Lindsay Perigo. Victoria Wood is on a mission: to visit the most intriguing places in the world named after Victoria, Queen of the old British Empire.

  5. Engines of Change: Directed by Paul Bryers. With Susan Bennett, Maxine Berg, David Hardiman, Lawrence James. At the start of the Victorian era, urban migration was beginning to swell the population of cities under the Industrial Revolution.

  6. Magazines will focus on different decades of Victoria's life from 1819 to 1901. Objective: Students will examine the role that racism played in the expansion of the British Empire under the rule ...

  7. When the future Queen Victoria was born at Kensington Palace in 1819, she was fifth in line to the throne. However, by the time she was 18, a quick succession of deaths among her relatives accelerated her to accession. She accepted the crown as an inexperienced teenager; when she died, aged 81, she was known as ‘the Grandmother of Europe’.