Queen Victoria had nine children, and their lives and personalities helped shape royal families across Europe.

How many children?

  • Queen Victoria and Prince Albert had nine children, born between 1840 and 1857.
  • They had five daughters and four sons , with 17 years between the eldest and youngest.

Their names and basic details

  • Victoria, Princess Royal (1840–1901), called “Vicky,” later German Empress and Queen of Prussia.
  • Albert Edward (1841–1910), “Bertie,” became King Edward VII of the United Kingdom.
  • Alice (1843–1878), later Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine.
  • Alfred (1844–1900), Duke of Edinburgh and later Duke of Saxe‑Coburg and Gotha.
  • Helena (1846–1923), Princess Christian of Schleswig‑Holstein.
  • Louise (1848–1939), a talented, artistic princess who became Duchess of Argyll.
  • Arthur (1850–1942), Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, a professional army officer.
  • Leopold (1853–1884), Duke of Albany, who suffered from haemophilia and died young.
  • Beatrice (1857–1944), the youngest, long‑term companion and helper to Queen Victoria.

Victoria as a mother

  • Victoria found pregnancy and babies physically and emotionally difficult, even while wanting a large family.
  • She was often distant with infants but became warmer as the children grew older and could converse with her.

Their wider impact

  • Through strategic marriages, her children linked Britain’s monarchy to Germany, Russia, and other European royal houses, earning Victoria the nickname “grandmother of Europe.”
  • Issues like haemophilia in some descendants, traced through Leopold, became a famous example of hereditary disease in royal bloodlines.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.