Princess Louise was the fourth daughter and sixth child of Queen Victoria. She got married to the Duke of Argyle because all the other possibilities had political ramifications that the Queen wanted to bypass. It doesn’t seem that her marriage was particularly happy and they had no children. Her most notable creation is the sculpture she created, that still stands outside of Kensington Palace of her mother at her coronation.

The princess’s chart
In her time, she was considered a great beauty, Venus at her midheaven. She was born March 18, 1848, at Buckingham Palace, She was christened on May 13, 1848, at the Private Chapel in Buckingham Palace.
The problem with Sabik
The princess as a strong preponderance in Pisces in the 11th House of publicity. Which followed her to Canada when he husband got an appointment there, as she was supposed to have delivered a son, 10 Virgo 43, that was not her husband’s so her doctor adopted it. It is hard to say if this is true, as scandalous rumors seems to plaque the Royal Family, see her older brother whom the Fleet Street rags called “Jack the Ripper, ” and there was no truth to that.
She does have the Fixed Star Sabik opposite Mars that in Vivian Robson’s Fixed Star book gives her a tendency towards ” domestic disharmony, and trouble through love affairs.” In the Koch House System, this would put Sabik in the seventh house of relationships with other people which does work better than the Morinus where the star is in the eighth house and the relationship with other people’s self-interest because of her “unorthodox political views”, obviously her work with the suffrage movement.

A moment in time
Her ascendant 23 Taurus 19 gives her the symbol a “Couple in from of a tall monument,” which all about capturing that moment in time. Probably true for her now, for like her great beauty, all about her is faded and forgotten. She just misses a Grand Trine in Water and thus falls to Bucket with a Venusian handle which works well as she spent most of her life around her sister, Princess Beatrice, championing women’s suffrage, and working on her sculpture.. The princess took up this hobby when she was fifteen adamantly coaxing her mother the Queen’s consent to allow her enrollment at The National Art Training School. Louise became a very skilled painter and sculptress. Later in life, she sculpted a statue of her mother that is still on display (see above).
Further information on her is here.
