Famous love letters from the past 500 years go on show at Britain’s National Archives
The London exhibition includes a letter from Oscar Wilde’s lover asking Queen Victoria for a pardon and King Edward VIII’s abdication letter

Love is, famously, a many-splendoured thing. It can encompass longing, loneliness, pain, jealousy, grief – and sometimes joy.
As Valentine’s Day approaches, the many facets of passion are going on display in “Love Letters”, a public exhibition at Britain’s National Archives that covers five centuries.
Curator Victoria Iglikowski-Broad says the documents recount “legendary romances from British history” involving royalty, politicians, celebrities and spies, alongside voices of everyday people.
“We’re trying to open up the potential of what a love letter can be. Expressions of love can be found in all sorts of places, and surprising places.”
They also take many forms. The exhibition ranges from early 20th-century classified ads seeking same-sex romance to sweethearts’ letters to soldiers at war and a medieval song about heartbreak.

There is also “one of our most iconic documents”, Iglikowski-Broad says, referring to a poignant letter to Queen Elizabeth I from her suitor Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester.