Will Kürlich Kerl
Banned
What happens if Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland carried Hemophilia C instead of Hemophilia B as in OTL?
What happens if Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland carried Hemophilia C instead of Hemophilia B as in OTL?
The thing is, Carrying A or B means half your male children have haemophilia. Carrying C means none have it. You have to get cousins to marry before the disease shows up.The absence of Hemophilia B in the gene pool would have many buttterflies for the royal families of the UK, Germany, Russia and Spain.
Having Hemophilia C, Queen Victoria might easily (perhaps) have died during labor or after giving birth. Interestingly, having Hemophilia C would also indicate that Queen Victoria was of Ashkenazi Jewish descent.
For further information:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haemophilia_C
So Queen Victoria dies in childbirth on 21 November 1840, and Victoria Princess Royal takes the throne as a newborn infant. It looks like things are going to get very interesting - what do you think would happen next?The absence of Hemophilia B in the gene pool would have many buttterflies for the royal families of the UK, Germany, Russia and Spain.
Having Hemophilia C, Queen Victoria might easily (perhaps) have died during labor or after giving birth. Interestingly, having Hemophilia C would also indicate that Queen Victoria was of Ashkenazi Jewish descent.
For further information:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haemophilia_C
The absence of Hemophilia B in the gene pool would have many buttterflies for the royal families of the UK, Germany, Russia and Spain.
Having Hemophilia C, Queen Victoria might easily (perhaps) have died during labor or after giving birth.
Interestingly, having Hemophilia C would also indicate that Queen Victoria was of Ashkenazi Jewish descent.
For further information:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haemophilia_C