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Alfred "the Great" House: Wessex Lived: 849-899 | 880s-899 | Ealhswith | • Defeat the Danes decisively at the Battle of Eddington. • Became known as the "Father of the English Navy". • He is said to have been sent to Rome at the age of four, where he was confirmed by Pope Leo IV. |
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Edward the Elder House: Wessex Lived: 874~877-924 | 899-924 | Ecgwynn / Ælfflæd / Eadgifu | • Brought back, under English control, the whole of the Danelaw. • He captured the eastern Midlands and East Anglia from the Danes in 917 and became ruler of Mercia in 918 upon the death of Æthelflæd, his sister. • He died leading an army against a Welsh-Mercian rebellion, on 17 July 924 at Farndon-Upon-Dee. |
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Æthelstan "the Glorious" House: Wessex Lived: 895-939 | 924-939 | none | • First English sovereign ever to be crowned on the King's Stone at Kingston-upon-Thames in 925. • Defeated combined force of Scots, Welsh and Vikings at the battle of Brunanburh in 938. • His legal reforms built on those of his grandfather, Alfred the Great. |
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Edmund I "the Magnificent" House: Wessex Lived: 921-946 | 939-946 | Ælfgifu of Shaftesbury / Æthelflæd of Damerham | • Combated the Norse Vikings in Northumbria and subdued them in Cumbria and Strathclyde. • Won Strathclyde but ceded the territory to King Malcolm I of Scotland in exchange for a treaty of mutual military support. • During his reign, the revival of monasteries in England began. |
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Eadred House: Wessex Lived: 923-955 | 946-955 | none | • Fought and bettered Eric Bloodaxe, who had established himself as King of Northumbria at York. • Afflicted with some lingering physical malady, and was, "constantly oppressed by sickness." • He succeeded his elder brother, who was stabbed to death at Pucklechurch. |
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Eadwig
House: Wessex Lived: 940-959 | 955-959 | Ælfgifu | • Ran afoul of the influential Bishop Dunstan (future Archbishop of Canterbury and future saint), early in his reign. • He died, possibly of the Wessex family ailment, when he was only 20. • His marriage to Ælfgifu was set aside on the grounds he and his wife were "too related". |
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Edgar "the Peaceful" House: Wessex Lived: 943-975 | 959-975 | Æthelflæd / Ælfthryth | • He was formally crowned in 973 and received the ceremonial submission of all the other kings in Britain. • Recalled (St.) Dunstan from exile and made him Archbishop of Canterbury. • Blackstone mentions that he "standardised measure throughout the realm". |
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Edward the Martyr House: Wessex Lived: 962-978 | 975-978 | none | • Succeeded to the throne as a boy of 12. • He was murdered by members of Æthelred's household at Corfe Castle in 978. • He is today recognized as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Roman Catholic Church, and the Anglican Communion. |
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Æthelred "the Unready" House: Wessex Lived: 968-1016 | 978-1013 and 1014-1016 | Ælfgifu of York / Emma of Normandy | • His reign was plagued by poor advice and suspicions of his complicity in half-brother Edward's murder. • Invasions by the Danish Vikings forced him to abandon his throne in 1013. • He was only about ten years old when his half-brother Edward was murdered, giving him the crown. |
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Sweyn I "Forkbeard" House: Denmark Lived: 960-1014 | 1013-1014 | Gunhild of Wenden / Sigrid the Haughty | • Became king of Denmark in 985. • Caused Æthelred to vacate his throne in favor of a safe haven in Normandy. • The father of Cnut the Great. |
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Æthelred "the Unready" House: Wessex Lived: 968-1016 | 1014-1016 | Ælfgifu of York / Emma of Normandy | • His reign was plagued by poor advice and suspicions of his complicity in half-brother Edward's murder. • Invasions by the Danish Vikings forced him to abandon his throne in 1013. • He was only about ten years old when his half-brother Edward was murdered, giving him the crown. |
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Edmund II "Ironside" House: Wessex Lived: 990-1016 | 1016-1016 | Edith of East Anglia | • Led the defense of the city of London against the invading Cnut Sveinsson. • Defeated the Danish forces at Oxford, Kent, but was routed by Cnut's forces at Ashingdon, Essex. • His burial site is now lost. During the Dissolution of the Monasteries, any remains of a monument or crypt were destroyed. |
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Cnut
House: Denmark Lived: 995-1035 | 1016-1035 | Aelfgifu of Northampton / Emma of Normandy | • Took control of virtually the whole country in 1015, except for the city of London. • Consolidated his power by eliminating all claimants to the throne from the House of Wessex. • He claimed the crown of Norway in Trondheim in 1028. |
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Harold I "Harefoot" House: Denmark Lived: 1016~1017-1040 | 1035-1040 | Ælfgifu | • Assumed regency at the death of Canute in the stead of his half-brother, Hardicanute. • His mother, Ælfgifu was rumoured to have secretly adopted the newborn children of strangers and pretended to have given birth to them. • His nickname "Harefoot", referred to his speed, and the skill of his huntsmanship. |
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Harthacnut
House: Denmark Lived: 1018-1042 | 1040-1042 | none | • Launched an expedition to claim the throne, but his half-brother died before he could arrive. • Levied a punishing "fleet-tax" on the people to pay for the expenses of his invasion. • Even though he had been invited to take the throne, on arriving in England he took no chances and came with an invasion force. |
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Edward the Confessor House: Wessex Lived: 1002-1066 | 1042-1066 | Edith of Wessex | • Greatest achievement was the construction of a new Westminster cathedral. • His Norman "affinity" produced great displeasure among the Saxon nobles. • He was canonised in 1161 by Pope Alexander III. |
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Harold II "Godwinson" House: Wessex Lived: 1022-1066 | 1066-1066 | Edith Swannesha / Ealdgyth | • In 1063, commanded a brilliantly conducted campaign against the Welsh. • Allegedly swore an oath of fealty to William of Normandy, relinquishing any personal claim to the throne. • Killed during the Battle of Hastings. |
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William I "the Bastard" or "the Conqueror" House: Normandy Lived: 1028-1087 | 1066-1087 | Matilda of Flanders | • Victorious on October 14 at Hastings. • Instituted "The Domesday Book" in 1085 as a survey of land ownership to assess property and establish a tax base. • As part of his efforts to secure England, he ordered many castles built, allowing Normans to retreat into safety when threatened with rebellion. |
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William II "the Red" or "Rufus" House: Normandy Lived: 1058-1100 | 1087-1100 | none | • Earned the nickname Rufus either because of his red hair or his propensity for anger. • Left for the Holy Land on the first Crusade. • In 1091 he repulsed an invasion by King Malcolm III of Scotland, forcing Malcolm to pay homage. |
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Henry I
House: Normandy Lived: 1068-1135 | 1100-1135 | Edith otherwise Matilda of Scotland / Adeliza of Louvain | • His brothers signed a mutual accession treaty barring him from the crown. • He was drawn into controversy with expanding Church over "Lay investiture" - the king's selling of clergy appointments. • His only legitimate son and heir, William Adelin, drowned in the White Ship disaster of 1120, throwing the royal succession into doubt. |
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Stephen
House: Blois Lived: 1096-1154 | 1135-1154 | Matilda of Boulogne | • Promised to recognize his cousin Matilda as lawful heir, but like many of the nobles, was unwilling to yield the crown to a woman. • Failed to keep law and order as barons increasingly seized property illegally. • Captured at the battle of Lincoln in 1141, he was abandoned by many of his followers and lost control of Normandy. |
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Matilda "Empress" House: Blois Lived: 1102-1167 | 1141-1141 | Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor / Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou | • After three years of armed struggle, she gained the upper hand at the Battle of Lincoln, in February 1141. • Her only legitimate brother had been killed in the disastrous Wreck of the White Ship in late 1120. • She was declared heir presumptive by her father, Henry I, after the death of her brother on the White Ship, and acknowledged as such by the barons. |
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Henry II "Curtmantle" or "Fitzempress" House: Anjou Lived: 1133-1189 | 1154-1189 | Eleanor of Aquitaine | • He survived wars, rebellion, and controversy to successfully rule one of the Middle Ages most powerful kingdoms. • Four knights took the king at his word and murdered Beckett in his own cathedral on December 29, 1170. • Toward the end of his reign, he struggled to find ways to satisfy all his sons' desires for land and immediate power. |
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Henry the Young King
House: Anjou Lived: 1155-1183 | 1170-1183 | Margaret of France | • Crowned King during his father's reign as co-ruler. • Died before his Father and co-ruler, thus not counted in the numerical succession of kings of England. • His father bullied several papal legates into marrying him to Louise VII's daughter Margaret at five years and three years old respectively. |
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Richard I "Lionheart" House: Anjou Lived: 1157-1199 | 1189-1199 | Berengaria of Navarre | • He joined the Third Crusade and departed for the Holy Land in 1190. • Upon his return from crusade, he crushed a coup attempt by his brother John. • Has reputation as a great military leader and warrior. |
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John "Lackland" House: Anjou Lived: 1166-1216 | 1199-1216 | Isabel of Gloucester / Isabella of Angoulême | • In 1185, Henry II sent him to rule Ireland, unsuccessfully. • His quarrel with the Church resulted in England being placed under an interdict in 1207. • His nickhame came from his father making light of his modest inheritance prospects. |
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Henry III
House: Plantagenet Lived: 1207-1272 | 1216-1272 | Eleanor of Provence | • His acquiescence to the demands of Rome initiated a backlash of protest from his subjects. • Agreed to the Provisions of Oxford, a document placing the barons in virtual control of the realm. • In 1230 he attempted to reconquer the provinces of France that had once belonged to his father, but the invasion was a debacle. |
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Edward I "Longshanks" or "the Hammer" House: Plantagenet Lived: 1239-1307 | 1272-1307 | Eleanor of Castile / Margaret of France | • He added to the bureaucracy initiated by Henry II to increase his effectiveness as sovereign. • He negotiated a treaty whereby Margaret, Maid of Norway and legitimate heir to the Scottish crown, would be brought to England to marry his oldest son. • He established Parliament as a permanent institution and thereby also a functional system for raising taxes. |
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Edward II
House: Plantagenet Lived: 1284-1327 | 1307-1327 | Isabella of France | • During his failed reign, baronial rebellion opened the way for Robert Bruce to win at Bannockburn and reconquer much of Scotland. • Parliaments of 1310 and 1311 imposed restrictions on his power and exiled his companion Gaveston. • A weak king, he was deposed by his wife Isabella in January 1327. |
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Edward III
House: Plantagenet Lived: 1312-1377 | 1327-1377 | Philippa of Hainault | • After three years of domination by his mother and Roger Mortimer, he instigated a palace revolt in 1330 and assumed control of the government. • During his long reign, feudalism dissipated as mercantilism emerged. • During his reign, the Black Death struck England with full force, killing a third or more of the country's population. |
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Richard II
House: Plantagenet Lived: 1367-1400 | 1377-1399 | Anne of Bohemia / Isabella of Valois | • He remarried in 1396, to Isabella of Valois, daughter of Charles VI of France, to end further struggle with France. • Deposed in 1399, he was murdered while in prison, the first casualty of the Wars of the Roses. • As a young king, he played a major part in the successful suppression of the Peasant's Revolt of 1381. |
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Henry IV
House: Lancaster Lived: 1366~1367-1413 | 1399-1413 | Mary de Bohun / Joanna of Navarre | • He invaded England while the king was on campaign in Ireland, usurping the throne. • Usurping the throne lead to continual rebellion, and significant concessions to The House of Commons. • The first of the House of Lancaster, descended from Edward III's third surviving son, John of Gaunt. |
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Henry V
House: Lancaster Lived: 1386~1387-1422 | 1413-1422 | Catherine of Valois | • French King Charles VI refused his dowry - leading this King to declare war, opening yet another chapter in the Hundred Years' War. • Defeated the French at the Battle of Agincourt in October 1415. • This king features in three plays by William Shakespeare. |
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Henry VI
House: Lancaster Lived: 1421-1471 | 1422-1461 | Margaret of Anjou | • Coming to the throne a child, he was king of both England and France, but a protector ruled each realm. • He and his wife were captured in 1465 and imprisoned in the Tower of London until 1470. • In 1452, he had a mental breakdown and became completely unaware of everything that was going on around him, even to respond to the birth of his own son and heir, who was christened Edward. |
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Edward IV
House: York Lived: 1442-1483 | 1461-1470 and 1471-1483 | Elizabeth Woodville | • He deposed his cousin Henry after defeating the Lancastrians at Mortimer's Cross in 1461. • Extorted a non-aggression treaty from Louis XI in 1475 which amounted to a lump payment of 75,000 crowns, and an annuity of 20,000. • First of the House of York, claimed the right to the throne through Edward III's second surviving son, Lionel of Antwerp. |
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Henry VI
House: Lancaster Lived: 1421-1471 | 1470-1471 | Margaret of Anjou | • After being disposed - was briefly restored to power in September 1470. • He and his wife were captured in 1465 and imprisoned in the Tower of London until 1470. • In 1452, he had a mental breakdown and became completely unaware of everything that was going on around him, even to respond to the birth of his own son and heir, who was christened Edward. |
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Edward IV
House: York Lived: 1442-1483 | 1471-1483 | Elizabeth Woodville | • He deposed his cousin Henry after defeating the Lancastrians at Mortimer's Cross in 1461. • Extorted a non-aggression treaty from Louis XI in 1475 which amounted to a lump payment of 75,000 crowns, and an annuity of 20,000. • First of the House of York, claimed the right to the throne through Edward III's second surviving son, Lionel of Antwerp. |
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Edward V
House: York Lived: 1470-1483 | 1483-1483 | none | • Reigned only two months before being deposed by his uncle, Richard. • Imprisoned and murdered in the Tower with his brother. • Possibly the shortest-lived male monarch in English history (exact date of death is uncertain). |
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Richard III "Crouchback" House: York Lived: 1452-1485 | 1483-1485 | Anne Neville | • He was the last king of the House of York and the last of the Plantagenet dynasty. • He is the subject of the play by William Shakespeare. • His tomb was recently discovered under a city council car park in Leicester. |
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Henry VII
House: Tudor Lived: 1457-1509 | 1485-1509 | Elizabeth of York | • Proclaimed King after the Battle of Bosworth in 1485 left previous ruler slain in the field. • He created the Committee of the Privy Council, (a forerunner of the modern cabinet) and established the Court of the Star Chamber. • Became king after defeating Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, ending the Wars of the Roses. |
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Henry VIII
House: Tudor Lived: 1491-1547 | 1509-1547 | Catherine of Aragon / Anne Boleyn / Jane Seymour / Anne of Cleves / Catherine Howard / Catherine Parr | • Left matters of state in the hands of others, most notably Thomas Wolsey, Archbishop of York. • Caused the separation of the Church of England from Roman Catholicism in persuit of annulment from first wife. • With his break from the Roman Catholic Church, he became the Supreme Head of the Church of England and of the Church of Ireland. |
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Edward VI "the Pious" House: Tudor Lived: 1537-0 | 1547-1553 | none | • Betrothed to his cousin, Mary Queen of Scots, but deteriorating English-Scot relations prohibited their marriage. • A highly intellectual and pious boy who fell prey to the machinations of his powerful Council of Regency. • The son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour. |
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Mary I "Bloody Mary" House: Tudor Lived: 1516-1558 | 1553-1558 | Philip II of Spain | • Her first act was to repeal the Protestant legislation of her brother, hurling England into a phase of severe religious persecution. • Her reign saw nearly 300 people burned at the stake for heresy. • Managed to wrest support and the throne from Lady Jane Grey, whom had been named by Edward VI as his successor. |
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Philip
House: Tudor Lived: 1527-1598 | 1554-1558 | Mary I of England | • Married (2 days after their first meeting) and ruled with Mary I. • With his Queen's death, he lost his rights to the English throne and ceased being King of England and Ireland. • Under the terms of their marriage treaty, he was to enjoy Mary's titles and honours for as long as their marriage should last. |
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Elizabeth I "the Glorious" or "the Virgin Queen" House: Tudor Lived: 1533-1603 | 1558-1603 | none | • Survived several overthrow/assination plots before executing Mary, Queen of Scots. • Resisted the Spanish Armada, establishing England as the world's leading naval power. • Her reign was renowned for the flourishing of English drama, led by playwrights such as William Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe. |
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James I "the Vain" House: Stewart Lived: 1566-1625 | 1603-1625 | Anne of Denmark | • Ruled Scotland for 29 years before becoming English monarch. • Guy Fawkes and other Catholic dissenters were caught attempting to blow up the House of Lords on a day in which this king was to open the session. • Following the death of Elizabeth I in 1603 without issue, this Scottish king succeeded to the English throne. |
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Charles I "the Martyr" House: Stewart Lived: 1600-1649 | 1625-1649 | Henrietta Maria of France | • Executed for treason in 1649. • He attempted to force a new prayer book on the Scots, which resulted in rebellion. • He believed in the divine right of kings and thought he could govern according to his conscience alone. |
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Charles II "the Merry" House: Stewart Lived: 1630-1685 | 1660-1685 | Catherine of Braganza | • During his reign the modern concept of political parties formed from the ashes of the Cavaliers and Roundheads, as Parliament held sway over the throne. • His era is remembered as the time of "Merry Olde England". • There was no reigning monarch before his restoration in 1660. Instead, from 1653, Oliver and Richard Cromwell held power as Lords Protector. |
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James II "the Be-shitten" House: Stewart Lived: 1633-1701 | 1685-1688 | Anne Hyde / Mary of Modena | • Within months of his accession, he had to crush a rebellion of Protestants who rallied around his nephew James, son of Charles II. • His attempts to force Catholicism on England and regain royal prerogative doomed his reign. • He was the last Roman Catholic monarch to reign over the Kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland. |
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Mary II
House: Stewart Lived: 1662-1694 | 1689-1694 | William III | • Her husband maintained a long-lasting affair with Elizabeth Villiers, one of her ladies-in-waiting. • The daughter of James II and Anne Hyde. She was married to William of Orange. • Convinced her husband to dispose James II ensuring him that that she did not care for political power. |
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William III
House: Stewart Lived: 1650-1702 | 1689-1702 | Mary II | • With Parliament's agreement, he and his Queen acceded as co-rulers. • Soundly defeated James II forces at the Battle of Boyne. • Ruled alone after his wife, Mary II, died of smallpox in 1694. |
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Anne
House: Stewart Lived: 1665-1714 | 1702-1714 | George of Denmark | • Was the last sovereign to veto an act of Parliament, as well as the final Stuart monarch. • The most significant constitutional act in her reign was the Act of Union in 1707, which created Great Britain. • Despite seventeen pregnancies by her husband, Prince George of Denmark, she died without any surviving children. |
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George I
House: Hanover Lived: 1660-1727 | 1714-1727 | Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick-Lueneburg-Celle | • His character and mannerisms were strictly German; he never troubled himself to learn the English language. • His frequent absences required the creation of the post of Prime Minister who acted in the king's stead. • After the death of Queen Anne with no living children, he was the closest heir to the throne who was not a Roman Catholic. |
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George II
House: Hanover Lived: 1683-1760 | 1727-1760 | Caroline of Ansbach | • The last British sovereign to command troops in the field (against the French in 1743). • He declared war on Spain in 1739, against Prime Minister Walpole's wishes. • He was the last British monarch born outside Great Britain. |
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George III "the Mad" House: Hanover Lived: 1738-1820 | 1760-1820 | Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz | • He died blind, deaf and mad at Windsor Castle in 1820. • Bouts with madness and the way he handled the American Revolution eroded his support and the power of the Crown was granted again to the Prime Minister. • Both his life and his reign were longer than those of any of his predecessors. (Victoria and Elizabeth II have since lived and reigned longer.) |
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George IV
House: Hanover Lived: 1762-1830 | 1820-1830 | Maria Anne Fitzherbert / Caroline of Brunswick | • A patron of the arts who left many wonderful artifacts for posterity. • He managed to have his wife barred from his coronation, denying her queenship. • He served as Prince Regent during his father's final mental illness. |
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William IV "the Sailor King" House: Hanover Lived: 1765-1837 | 1830-1837 | Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen | • He supported Lord Grey's Reform Act of 1832 extended the voting franchise to middle class land owners. • He was the only European monarch of the age to survive the advent of democracy. • Since his two older brothers died without leaving legitimate issue, he inherited the throne when he was 64 years old. |
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Victoria
House: Hanover Lived: 1819-1901 | 1837-1901 | Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha | • Her husbands death in 1861 deeply affected her - she went into seclusion for more than 25 years. • During her reign, the empire doubled in size, encompassing Canada, Australia, India parts of Africa and the South Pacific. • The last British monarch of the House of Hanover. |
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Edward VII
House: Saxe-Coburg-Gotha Lived: 1841-1910 | 1901-1910 | Alexandra of Denmark | • He ruled peacefully (aside from the Boer War) and successfully during his short reign. • Aside from his sexual indiscretions, his manner and style endeared him to the English populace. • Although he was the son and heir of Victoria, he inherited his father's names and is therefore counted as inaugurating a new royal house. |
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George V
House: Windsor Lived: 1865-1936 | 1910-1936 | Mary of Teck | • During the great Depression he persuaded the heads of the three political parties to unite into a coalition government. • Under his reign the monarchy transformed from an institution of constitutional legality to the keeper of traditional values and customs. • The house name Windsor was adopted in 1917, during World War I. It was changed during his reign because of wartime anti-German sentiment in the United Kingdom. |
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Edward VIII
House: Windsor Lived: 1894-1972 | 1936-1936 | Wallis Warfield Simpson | • He left the throne in the same manner as James II - abdication in face of popular opposition. • Abdicated the throne after reigning a mere eleven months. • After private accusations that he held Nazi sympathies, he was assigned to the Bahamas as the islands' Governor. |
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George VI
House: Windsor Lived: 1895-1952 | 1936-1952 | Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon | • He visited troops, munitions factories, and bomb-damaged areas to support the war effort. • Before his reign, he suffered with a bad stammer in his speech, which exacerbated his shyness. • During his reign and after WWII - the United States and the Soviet Union rose as pre-eminent world powers and the British Empire declined. |
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Elizabeth II
House: Windsor Lived: 1926-2022 | 1952-2022 | Philip of Greece and Denmark | • Approved the transformation from Empire to Commonwealth. • Winston Churchill, who served four monarchs, was impressed and delighted by her knowledge and wit. • Britain's longest reigning monarch. |
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Charles III
House: Windsor Lived: 1948-present | 2022-present | Diana Spencer / Camilla Parker Bowles | • Both the oldest and the longest-serving heir apparent in British history. • The first British heir apparent to earn a university degree. • The oldest person to become monarch. |