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  1. Johanna Clara Louise Lehzen (3 October 1784 – 9 September 1870), also known as Baroness Louise Lehzen, was the governess and later companion to Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. Born to a Lutheran pastor, in 1819 Lehzen entered the household of the Duke of Kent , fourth son of King George III .

    • Baroness
  2. Drama. Was Queen Victoria really forced to fire her governess Baroness Lehzen? Baroness Louise Lehzen was Queen Victoria's governess, friend, ally, companion and advisor. But she...

    • Eleanor Bley Griffiths
  3. Louise Lehzen. Lehzen was a very good friend of Victoria. They had been with each other from Victoria being as young as five years old when Lehzen became her tutor and Governess. Due to the Kensington System, Lehzen was required to be with Victoria until she was dismissed by the Duchess of Kent at midnight.

  4. 3 de oct. de 2019 · It is believed that Lehzen was chosen as Victoria’s governess as she was German and may have been easier to control as she needed the position and was far from home. Luckily for Victoria, this was not the case and Lehzen as she was known always put Victoria first, making sure she was told to be wary of her mother and Conroy’s intentions.

  5. 30 de sept. de 2018 · by Susan Flantzer. © Unofficial Royalty 2018. Painted by Carl Friedrich Koepke for Queen Victoria in 1842; Credit – Wikipedia. From 1824 – 1842, Baroness Louise Lehzen was the governess and then adviser and companion to Queen Victoria who called her Lehzen.

  6. In Victoria: Lineage and early life. …governess, Louise (afterward the Baroness) Lehzen, a native of Coburg. An important father figure to the orphaned princess was her uncle Leopold, her mother’s brother, who lived at Claremont, near Esher, Surrey, until he became king of the Belgians in 1831. Read More.

  7. Lehzen remained a close companion of Queen Victoria, until she was pensioned off to Germany in 1842 after clashing with the queen's husband, Prince Albert. Queen Victoria visited her former governess twice during family trips to Germany and the two maintained a regular correspondence until Lehzen's death in 1870.