She believed that the wealthy, royals, and nobles stayed at the top, then the people who owned businesses were the middle class, and lastly all the poor folks who worked all their lives were classified as the working class. The Queen said the lower classes “earn their bread and riches so deservedly that they cannot and ought not to be kept back” (Ellis 611). This was entirely unfair for everyone; nobody could move up or down in classes they were stuck there forever generation after …show more content…
“She was related to the royal houses of nearly every major European power, with the exceptions of France and Spain. Though the English constitutional arrangement denied her powers in foreign affairs, she ruled her family with an iron hand that helped keep Great Britain away from the intrigues of European politics” (Queen 7).
The Queen is important because the lasting impression she left on the world today, she took chances to make her empire better than it has ever been. She is apart of the greatest expansion in history. She had colonies in India, Africa, North America, Canada, Australia, and the South Pacific; the sun never truly sat on her empire.
Another thing is that “Both the Queen and her husband vigorously encouraged the formation of a strong coalition between the Whigs and the Peelite Tories” (Victoria 8). So a new ministry needed to be formed “One of the most significant acts of the new ministry was to bring the United Kingdom into the Crimean War in 1854, on the side of the Ottoman Empire and against Russia” (Victoria 8).
Queen Victoria and her husband Albert also supported the repeal of the Corn Laws, which was the law of grain to increase. The harvest was bad and the prices of grain shot up, and that is why poverty shot up during the Victorian