A recently-published book from Random House says that Britain's
Queen Victoria may have been illegitimate, possibly undermining the whole Royal
Family's legitimacy. If true, hundreds of genealogy books, royal lineages, and
various websites would need to be re-written.
In his book "The Victorians," biographer A.N. Wilson
alleges that Victoria's mother, Princess Victoire of Leiningen, had a lengthy
affair with her Irish-born secretary, Sir John Conroy, and that he, rather than
Prince Edward, the Duke of Kent, was Victoria's real father.
Wilson based his argument partly on medical data. Records show
that the illness porphyria
a hereditary disorder of body metabolism once ran in the Royal Family, but
there is no evidence that Victoria carried it or passed it to her descendants.
Wilson also writes that Victoria was a carrier for the disease hemophilia, although
medical records tracing her mother's ancestors for 17 generations show no evidence
of the disease, suggesting Victoria inherited it from Conroy.
It is an interesting speculation, but please remember that it
is just that: only speculation. Buckingham Palace said it would not comment
on the allegation. To my knowledge, no DNA testing is under consideration in
this matter; the ramifications might be more than the biographer had in mind.
You can learn more about "The Victorians" at the Random
House Web site: www.randomhouse.com/catalog/search/display/index.pperl/0-09-179421-8.html
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