Image for The Viceroy's Daughters

The Viceroy's Daughters

Part of the Women in history series
See all formats and editions

Irene (born 1896), Cynthia (b.1898) and Alexandria (b.1904) were the three daughters of Lord Curzon, Viceroy of India 1898-1905.The three sisters were at the very heart of the fast and glittering world of the Twenties and Thirties.

Irene had love affairs in the glamorous Melton Mowbray hunting set.

Cynthia ('Cimmie') married Oswald Mosley, joining him first in the Labour Party before following him into fascism.

Alexandra ('Baba'), the youngest and most beautiful, married the Prince of Wales's best friend Fruity Metcalfe.

On Cimmie's early death in 1933 Baba flung herself into a long and passionate affair with Mosley and a liaison with Mussolini's ambassador to London, Count Dino Grandi, while enjoying the romantic devotion of the Foreign Secretary, Lord Halifax.

The war finds them based at 'the Dorch' (the Dorchester Hotel) doing good works.

At the end of their extraordinary lives, Irene and Baba have become, rather improbably, pillars of the establishment, Irene being made one of the very first Life Peers in 1958 for her work with youth clubs.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Phoenix
1842126199 / 9781842126196
Paperback
01/08/2002
United Kingdom
English
x, 454 p., [32]p. of plates : ill.
20 cm
general Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2000.
This is Stella Tillyard's Aristocrats, transferred from the 18th century to the England of the 1920s and '30s Based on unpublished letters and diaries, this is a portrait of British upper-class life in the first half of the 20th century Part of the Women in History promotion Contains new revelations about Oswald Mosley, Nancy Astor and the Cliveden Set, Lord Halifax, and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor 'Compulsively readable and immaculately researched, The Viceroy's Daughters is popular social history at its very best' Mail on Sunday.
This is Stella Tillyard's Aristocrats, transferred from the 18th century to the England of the 1920s and '30s Based on unpublished letters and diaries, this is a portrait of British upper-class life in the first half of the 20th century Part of the Women in History promotion Contains new revelations about Oswald Mosley, Nancy Astor and the Cliveden Set, Lord Halifax, and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor 'Compulsively readable and immaculately researched, The Viceroy's Daughters is popular social history at its very best' Mail on Sunday. BGH Biography: historical, political & military