Yup, that's why I used quotes.
Ah, now, I was rushed and had straight-off read the kquote)'first'(unquote) as another way of nouning the (quote)First(unquote), then basically forgotten that in the hurry to complete the reply I separately also used (quote)'first'(unquote) as a "let us call it a First, even though it isn't" meaning without even realising that's the way you might have intended it, or indeed that I was copying your choice of punctuation (for a same/different thing, regardless).
Reading it back (a habit, to see if I'd typoed/thinkoed, as I revisit a thread and scroll up a little to make sure I'm remembering what I/others just said
anyway I spotted the possible ambiguous repetition of two differing uses by the same markup (plus regretting I hadn't had time to add other clarifications regarding territorial extent, and that the whole Tudor clan was Welsh in origin, anyway!), and so accept entirely your new clarification that you meant what I alluded to and I was just doing your own rambling postcript for you...
(Don't mind me, I was in Stirling the other day, and I had a bit of time (between the occasional rainfalls) to go round the town and back'o'the'wall pathways so I've got quite a lot of refreshed knowledge about the Stewarts (various Jameses and Mary in particular) freshly rerattling around in my head, dying to come out, plus the likes of Baird & Hardy.)
Anyway, Britain (and Ireland) of Victoria's reign was a bit different. Though I think 'bad folk memories' of Elizabeth I, Mary T and/or Mary QOS (according to personal interpretations at the time) probably had to be overcome for the Victorian ascension. While positive thoughts (locally to these isles) about Victoria almost certainly smoothed the acceptance of the current Elizabeth (II of England) even if the modern trend towards more constitutional monarchy was already headed firmly into the passively benign nature of monarchy rather than "burn the catholics/protestents/whoever" reputations of her various antecedants.
(Which wasn't entirely female-led, but most people would know enough more about Elizabeths and Mary, and of course Victoria, than most of their male kinsmen/etc, who were monarchs: the multitudes of James, Georges and any of the Henrys except perhaps the VIII
th. The same rarity value at the moment that still distinguishes POTUS 44 (and many British PMs), such that doesn't necessarilly apply to most of the other 42 before him except for actual "He did(/did not) do this..." facts or those with notable origins and/or fates in their own right. Bush Sr rather fades away, in my memory (even with GW1, he seems now just an interegnum figure between Reagan and Clinton), while remembering Carter is always amazingly good in the right themed-round in
Pointless when names such as Polk don't satisfy the proper criteria for relative obscurity...
But don't mind me. Just found myself a nice spot to enjoy the sun (such as it is) and type a bit more nonsense for the benefit of no-one...