Available Formats
Queen Victoria and her Prime Ministers: A Personal History
By (Author) Anne Somerset
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
2nd July 2025
27th March 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Political leaders and leadership
European history
Political control and freedoms
Biography: historical, political and military
942.081092
Paperback
640
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 52mm
580g
It is generally accepted that Queen Victoria reigned but did not rule. This couldnt be more wrong.
In Queen Victoria and Her Prime Ministers, Anne Somerset masterfully traces Victorias political evolution, from headstrong teenager to seasoned octogenarian. This book demonstrates her passionate involvement in state affairs, and casts fresh light on her relationships with her ten prime ministers.
Victoria herself acknowledged that when it came to likes and dislikes of her prime ministers, she had them very strongly. She showed girlish adoration for her first Prime Minister, the worldly-wise Lord Melbourne, whose delightful conversation and kindly guidance enchanted her. Later in her reign, Benjamin Disraeli who flattered her shamelessly, tirelessly praising her sagacity and judgement and filling her life with poetry, romance and chivalry became her favourite.
While she developed a powerful bond with several of her Prime Ministers, in other cases the relationship fell little short of mutual detestation. Victorias keenest antipathy was reserved for Disraelis great rival, the Liberal William Gladstone. When he became prime minister for a fourth time at the age of 82, Victoria declared it a bad joke that this dangerous old fanatic should be thrust down her throat.
Queen Victoria and Her Prime Ministers charts the bitter clashes and affectionate interactions Victoria had with her ten premiers in often hilarious detail. Drawing extensively on unpublished sources such as material from the Royal Archives and never-before-seen prime ministerial papers, it casts a fresh and highly illuminating perspective not just on Victoria, but on the exceptionally able politicians who served her in government.
EARLY PRAISE FOR QUEEN VICTORIA AND HER PRIME MINISTERS:
'Fascinating an exhilaratingly impressive account'
Daily Telegraph, *****
Impressively well-researched
The Times
'Magnificent, disturbing and innovative This wonderful book is the result of immense research in ministers private papers as well as in the royal and national archives
Spectator
This book is a moving, meticulous and original explosion of the constitutional myths weve inherited'
Literary Review
The author skilfully unpicks the human dynamic that coloured many political decisions, a tale not without resonance today'
Country Life
Anne Somerset was born in 1955 and read History at King's College, London. Her first book, The Life and Times of William IV, was published in 1980. This was followed in 1984 by the bestselling Ladies-in-Waiting: From the Tudors to the Present Day, an acclaimed biography of Elizabeth I in 1991, and Unnatural Murder: Poison in the Court of James I: The Overbury Murder in 1998. Her most recent work is The Affair of the Poisons: Murder, Infanticide and Satanism at the Court of Louis XIV.