Trawling old newspapers
for some bits of information saw an item from late in 1868 about Albert Edward,
Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII, being taken out by a rampant stag while
hunting in the Forest of Compiegne north of Paris.
Although unhorsed, he had
only minor injuries, was able to remount and continue the hunt. This was intriguing in that it was very close
in date to fifty years later when The Armistice was signed in a railway
carriage in the forest to bring World War One to an end.
But what if the stag had
done for him? There are many and various
possibilities. One in the period is that
the political fall out and other matters may have meant that the
Franco-Prussian War may not have occurred as it did. Doubtless Germany may have come to be united,
but it may have been at another time and on a different basis.
There were his two sons to
succeed him, both very young, Albert Victor and George, whose upbringing and
education may well have been different if Queen Victoria had taken charge. Also a much greater role may have been played
by his younger brothers.
The next in line to Edward
was Alfred, Duke of Saxe Coburg and Gotha, who died in 1900. The next son was Arthur, Duke of Connaught
and Strathearn, who married Princess Louise of Prussia. The next then was Leopold, Duke of Albany,
who had haemophilia and died young.
It was Edward who came to
be closely associated with France and popular in Paris because of his
appreciation of its many and various delights.
It is argued that as King after 1901 he may have been a moving force in
the shift of British foreign policy to support for and alliance with the French
as opposed to our traditional dislike and opposition.
If either Alfred or Arthur
had managed to strike up and maintain a level of friendship and closeness with
Emperor Wilhelm of Germany, not only might the 1914 war have been different, it
may not have happened at all.
If only it had been a
bigger stag.
I'm reminded of 'the little gentleman in black velvet'.
ReplyDeleteWhen it comes to regicide, bigger is not necessarily better..
My wife and I were discussing something similar but on a much more mundane level only recently.
ReplyDeleteWe are all here through the merest coincidence, the fact of our parents meeting each other. The throw of a dice.