Yes, Queen Victoria's surname was Guelph and she was from the House of Hanover.
No, Queen Victoria's surname was not Hanover. Hanover was the name of royal branch she belonged to. Before she married her surname was Guelph, but afterwards it was Saxe-Coburg und Gotha.
Cheryl's surname is Cole, before she was married she was called Tweedy.
The mothers surname before married
Your mother's maiden name is her last name (surname) before she married.
Please be more specific.
Your maiden name is the surname you had before you got married.
Please identify which country and which queen you mean.
Their surname before they were married (and therefore took husbands surname, assuming they were married and chose to do so). Your mother's maiden name is her surname before she got married for the first time and took her husband's surname.
Queen Victoria, was the daughter of the Duke of Kent. Her official title before her eighteenth birthday (at which time she ascended the throne) was Alexandrina Victoria, Princess of Kent. While she was indeed a Hanoverian her surname officially was "Kent". After her marriage to Albert, Prince of Saxe Coburg and Goetha the (Queen) proclaimed her and her offsprings name to be styled "Saxe-Coburg". Remaining so until her grandson King George V anglicized the royal families name as "Windsor". Hanover. Hanover Wrong! She was from the House of Hanover Her surname was Guelph
No, the surname is typically the family name passed down from one generation to the next, while the maiden name is the surname a woman has before she gets married.
Well, obviously her parents gave her her first name, and she got the surname Wilson when she married Miller Wilson, but they are divorced now. Her surname before she got married to Miller was Aitken.
It was Cheryl Ann Tweedy.