Sylvia Leonora, Lady Brooke, Ranee of Sarawak (born The Hon. Sylvia Leonora Brett, 25 February 1885 – 11 November 1971), was an English aristocrat who became the consort to Sir Charles Vyner de Windt Brooke, the third and last of the White Rajahs of Sarawak.

Sylvia Leonora
Portrait by Paul Tanqueray, 1930
Ranee of Sarawak
Tenure24 May 1917 – 1 July 1946
Grand Master of The Most Excellent Order of the Star of Sarawak
Tenure1 August 1941 – 1 July 1946
Born(1885-02-25)25 February 1885
No. 1, Tilney Street, Park Lane, Central London
Died11 November 1971(1971-11-11) (aged 86)
SpouseCharles Vyner Brooke
IssueLeonora Margaret Brooke
Elizabeth Brooke
Nancy Valerie Brooke
Names
Sylvia Leonora Brett
HouseWhite Rajahs (by marriage)
Brett Family
FatherReginald Brett, 2nd Viscount Esher
MotherEleanor van de Weyer

Early life

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Sylvie Brooke (1916)

Brett was born at No. 1 Tilney Street, Park Lane,[citation needed] Central London, the second daughter of Reginald Baliol Brett, the 2nd Viscount Esher, KCB. Her mother Eleanor was the third daughter of the Belgian politician and revolutionary Sylvain Van de Weyer and his wife Elizabeth, who was the only child of the great financier Joshua Bates of Barings Bank. Sylvia grew up at the family home, Orchard Lea, at Cranbourne in Winkfield parish in Berkshire. Her paternal grandmother Eugénie Meyer was French, born in Lyons.[1]

Sylvia Brett grew up in a troubled household. She was ignored by her courtier father, who was far more interested in flirting with young men than being a parent. Sylvia and her sister Dot had to suffer starvation of affection, and she decided to "electrify the world" when she grew up.[2]

Ranee of Sarawak

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Brett married Rajah Vyner of Sarawak at St Peter's Church, Cranbourne, Berkshire, just before her 26th birthday on 21 February 1911. They first met in 1909 when she joined an all-female choral orchestra, established by Vyner's mother.[3] She first visited Sarawak in 1912,[3] where her husband-to-be (from 1917) ruled a 40,000-square-mile (100,000 km2) jungle kingdom on the northern side of Borneo with a population of 500,000, an ethnic mix of Chinese, Malays, and the headhunting Dayak. Brett was invested with the titles of Ranee of Sarawak on 24 May 1917 and Grand Master of The Most Illustrious Order of the Star of Sarawak on 1 August 1941.[citation needed] Vyner died in 1963.

Brett was distraught that her eldest daughter, Leonora, under Islamic law, could not take the throne; as a result she hatched various plots to blacken the name of the heir apparent, Anthony, the Rajah Muda.[3]

She was known for having Machiavellian machinations, which agitated the British Colonial Office. Brett always had designs on her husband's succession because her daughters, as women, were not eligible to become rulers of Sarawak. "Her own brother described her as a “female Iago” because she was the family nuisance and great schemer."[2]

Richard Halliburton, the celebrated adventurer, met her as he circumnavigated the globe in 1932 with his pilot, Moye Stephens. She became the first woman in Sarawak to fly when the pair gave her a flight in their biplane, the Flying Carpet. Halliburton narrates an account of the visit in his book of the same name.[4]

Sylvia Brett enjoyed dressing up in sarongs and exotic jewelry and decorated her London home with spears, totem poles.[5]

Brett was the author of eleven books, including Sylvia of Sarawak and Queen of the Head-Hunters (1970).[3] She also contributed short stories to publications such as John O'London's Weekly, for example "The Debt Collector", in the Summer Reading Number June 29, 1929.

Fort Sylvia in Kapit, Malaysia, is named in her honour.[6]

Children

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Brett was survived by three daughters:

Sister

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Brett's elder sister Dorothy Brett (1883–1977), known as Brett, went to the Slade School of Art in 1910 and became friends with painters Dora Carrington (1893-1932) and Mark Gertler (1891–1939), and then with salon hostess Lady Ottoline Morrell (1873–1938) and the Bloomsbury group, living for a while at Garsington Manor. In 1924 she went to live on a mountain ranch near Taos, New Mexico, with D.H. Lawrence and his wife Frieda, partially fulfilling Lawrence's dream of establishing an artists' colony.

Ancestors

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Hignett, Sean: Brett, From Bloomsbury to New Mexico, A Biography; Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1984 p.10 'Dorothy Brett... became convinced that this camp follower [their grandmother, Eugenie] was a mistress of Napoleon and that the Emperor himself may have been her great-grandfather... almost certainly a family fancy'
  2. ^ a b "The wild, debauched world of Sylvia Brett, "Queen of the Headhunters"". thestar.com. The Star. Retrieved 11 November 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d "The girl who would be queen", The Daily Telegraph, 2/6/2007
  4. ^ Halliburton, Richard (1932). The Flying Carpet. Indianapolis, Indiana: The Bobbs-Merrill Company. pp. 297–312.
  5. ^ Becker, Alida (August 2014). "Best Exotic Kingdom". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 November 2018.
  6. ^ Tun Jugah Foundation – Fort Sylvia Archived 22 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Princess Pearl (aka Elizabeth Vyner Brooke) – IMDb
  8. ^ Princess Baba, at IMDB

Further reading

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  • Maurice V. Brett (ed.), Journals and Letters of Reginald Viscount Esher, Vol I: 1870–1903, London, 1934.
  • Margaret Brooke, My Life in Sarawak, 1913.
  • Sylvia of Sarawak: An Autobiography, 1936.
  • Sylvia, Lady Brooke, Queen of the Headhunters, 1970.
  • Philip Eade, Sylvia, Queen Of The Headhunters: An Outrageous Englishwoman And Her Lost Kingdom, (352 pages), Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2007. Lynne Truss, reviewed Eade's book in The Sunday Times, 17 June 2007.
  • Sean Hignett, Brett: From Bloomsbury to New Mexico, A Biography, London, Hodder & Stoughton, 1984.
  • R.H.W. Reece, The Name of Brooke: The End of White Rajah Rule in Sarawak, 1993.
  • Steven Runciman, The White Rajahs: A History of Sarawak from 1841 to 1946, Cambridge University Press, 1960
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Sylvia Brett
Brooke family
Born: 25 February 1885 Died: 11 November 1971
Regnal titles
Preceded by Ranee of Sarawak
1917–1946
Monarchy abolished