(Redirected from George III of Great Britain)
'George III' (George William Frederick;
4 June 1738 –
29 January 1820) (
New Style dates) was
King of Great Britain and
King of Ireland from
25 October 1760 until
1 January 1801, and thereafter of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland until his death. He was concurrently
Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, and thus Elector (and later King) of Hanover. The Electorate became the
Kingdom of Hanover on
12 October 1814. He was the third British monarch of the
House of Hanover, and the first of Hanover to be born in
Britain and speak
English as his first language.
[1] In fact, he never visited
Germany.
George III's long reign was marked by a series of military conflicts involving his kingdom and much of the rest of Europe. Early in his reign, Great Britain defeated
France in the
Seven Years' War, becoming the dominant European power in
North America and
India. However, many of its American colonies were soon lost in the
American Revolutionary War, which led to the establishment of the
United States. Later, the kingdom became involved in a series of wars against
revolutionary and
Napoleonic France, which finally concluded in the defeat of Napoleon in
1815. In addition, during George's reign the realms of Great Britain and
Ireland were joined, forming the
United Kingdom.
Later in his reign George III suffered from recurrent and, eventually, permanent
mental illness. This baffled medical science at the time, although it is now generally thought that he suffered from the blood disease
porphyria. Recently, owing to studies showing high levels of the poison
arsenic in locks of King George's hair, arsenic is also thought to be a possible cause of King George's insanity and health problems. After a final relapse in 1810, George's eldest son,
George, Prince of Wales ruled as
Prince Regent. Upon George's death, the Prince of Wales succeeded his father as George IV. George III was the grandfather of
Queen Victoria.
Early life
''His Royal Highness'' 'Prince George of Wales' was born in
London at
Norfolk House and was the son of
Frederick, Prince of Wales, and the grandson of
George II. Prince George's mother was
Augusta of Saxe-Gotha. As Prince George was born two months premature and was thought unlikely to survive, he was baptised the same day by the Rector of St James's.
[2] He was publicly baptised by the
Bishop of Oxford,
Thomas Secker, at Norfolk House on
4 July 1738 (New Style). His godparents were the
King of Sweden (for whom
Lord Baltimore stood proxy), the
Duke of Saxe-Gotha (for whom the
Duke of Chandos stood proxy) and the
Queen of Prussia (for whom Lady Charlotte Edwin, a daughter of the
Duke of Hamilton, stood proxy).
George grew into a healthy child but his grandfather George II disliked the Prince of Wales and took little interest in his grandchildren. However, in 1751 the Prince of Wales died unexpectedly from a lung injury, and Prince George became
heir apparent to the throne. He inherited one of his father's titles and became the
Duke of Edinburgh. Now more interested in his grandson, three weeks later the King created George
Prince of Wales.
[3] In the spring of 1756, as George approached his eighteenth birthday, the King offered him a grand establishment at
St James's Palace, but George refused the offer, guided by his mother and her confidante,
Lord Bute, who would later serve as
Prime Minister.
[4] George's mother, now the Dowager Princess of Wales, mistrusted her father-in-law and preferred to keep George separate from his company.
Marriage
In 1759 George was smitten with
Lady Sarah Lennox,
[5] daughter of the
Duke of Richmond, but Lord Bute advised against the match and George abandoned his thoughts of marriage. "I am born for the happiness and misery of a great nation," he wrote, "and consequently must often act contrary to my passion." Nevertheless, attempts by the King to marry George to Princess
Sophia Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel were resisted by him and his mother.
[6][7]
The following year, George succeeded to the Crown when his grandfather, George II, died suddenly on
25 October 1760. The search for a suitable wife intensified. On
8 September,
1761, the King married in the
Chapel Royal, St James's Palace,
Duchess Sophia Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, whom he met on their wedding day. A fortnight later, both were crowned at
Westminster Abbey. George remarkably never took a mistress (in contrast with both his Hanoverian predecessors and his sons), and the couple enjoyed a genuinely happy marriage.
15 They had 15 children – nine sons and six daughters.
Early reign
The first few years of George's reign were marked by political instability, largely generated as a result of disagreements over the
Seven Years' War.
[8] The favouritism which George initially showed towards
Tory ministers led to his denunciation by the
Whigs as an autocrat in the manner of
Charles I.
1 In May 1762, George replaced the incumbent Whig ministry of
the Duke of Newcastle with one led by the Tory Lord Bute. The following year, after concluding the
Peace of Paris ending the war, Lord Bute resigned, allowing the Whigs under
George Grenville to return to power. Later that year, the British government under George III issued the
Royal Proclamation of 1763 that placed a boundary upon the westward expansion of the American colonies. The Proclamation's goal was to force colonists to negotiate with the Native Americans for the lawful purchase of the land and, therefore, to reduce the costly frontier warfare that had erupted over land conflicts. The Proclamation Line, as it came to be known, was extremely unpopular with the Americans and ultimately became another wedge between the colonists and the British government that would eventually lead to war. With the American colonists generally unburdened by British taxes, the government found it increasingly difficult to pay for the defence of the colonies against native uprisings and the possibility of French incursions.
[9] In 1765, Grenville introduced the
Stamp Act, which levied a
stamp duty on all documents in the British colonies in North America. Meanwhile, the King had become exasperated at Grenville's attempts to reduce the King's prerogatives, and tried, unsuccessfully, to persuade
William Pitt the Elder to accept the office of Prime Minister.
[10] After a brief illness, which may have presaged his illnesses to come, George settled on
Lord Rockingham to form a ministry, and dismissed Grenville.
[11]
Lord Rockingham, with the support of Pitt, repealed Grenville's unpopular Stamp Act, but his government was weak and he was replaced in 1766 by Pitt, whom George created
Earl of Chatham. The actions of Lord Chatham and George III in repealing the Act were so popular in America that statues of them both were erected in
New York City.
[12] Lord Chatham fell ill in 1767, allowing the
Duke of Grafton to take over government, although he did not formally become Prime Minister until 1768. His government disintegrated in 1770, allowing the Tories to return to power.
[13]
The government of the new Prime Minister,
Lord North, was chiefly concerned with discontent in America. To assuage American opinion most of the custom duties were withdrawn, with the exception of the tea duty, which in George's words was "one tax to keep up the right [to levy taxes]".
[14] In 1773, a
Boston mob threw 342 crates of
tea, costing approximately £10,000, into Boston Harbour as a political protest, an event that became known as the
Boston tea party. In Britain, opinion hardened against the colonists, with Chatham now agreeing with North that the destruction of the tea was "certainly criminal".
[15] Lord North introduced the
Punitive Acts, known as the Coercive Acts or the Intolerable Acts by the colonists: the Port of Boston was shut down and legislative elections in the
Colony of Massachusetts Bay were suspended. Up to this point, in the words of Professor Peter Thomas, George's "hopes were centred on a political solution, and he always bowed to his cabinet's opinions even when sceptical of their success. The detailed evidence of the years from 1763 to 1775 tends to exonerate George III from any real responsibility for the
American Revolution."
[16]
On George's accession, he ended hereditary revenues of
Crown lands when he surrendered the
Crown Estate to
Parliament in return for a fixed
civil list payment - the income retained from the
Duchy of Lancaster.
[17] The King surrendered to Parliamentary control the hereditary excise duties, post office revenues, and ‘the small branches’ of Hereditary Revenue including rents of the Crown lands in England, (which amounted to about £11,000) and was granted a
Civil List annuity of £800,000 for the support of his household and the expenses of Civil Government, subject to the payment of certain annuities to members of the royal family. Although the King had retained large Hereditary Revenues, his income proved insufficient for his charged expenses because he used the privilege to reward supporters with bribes and gifts.
[18] Debts amounting to over £3 million over the course of George's reign were paid by Parliament, and the Civil List annuity was then increased from time to time.
[19]
American Revolutionary War
The
American Revolutionary War began when armed conflict between British regulars and colonial militiamen broke out in New England in April 1775. A month later,
delegates of the thirteen British colonies drafted a peace proposal known as the
Olive Branch Petition. The proposal was quickly rejected in London because fighting had already erupted. A year later, on
July 4 1776 (
American Independence Day), the colonies declared their independence from the Crown and became a new nation, the "United States of America". The
Declaration was a long list of grievances against the British King, legislature, and populace. Amongst George's other offences, the Declaration charged, "He has abdicated Government here... He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people." George was indignant when he learned of the opinions of the colonists. In the war the British captured New York City in 1776, but the grand strategic plan of invading from
Canada failed with the surrender of the British Lieutenant-General
John Burgoyne at the
Battle of Saratoga. In 1778,
France (Great Britain's chief rival) signed a treaty of friendship with the new United States. Lord North asked to transfer power to Lord Chatham, whom he thought more capable. George, however, would hear nothing of such suggestions; he suggested that Chatham serve as a subordinate minister in Lord North's administration. Chatham refused to cooperate, and died later in the same year.
[20] Great Britain was then at war with France, and in 1779 it was also at war with
Spain.
George III obstinately tried to keep Great Britain at war with the revolutionaries in America, despite the opinions of his own ministers.
Lord Gower and
Lord Weymouth both resigned rather than suffer the indignity of being associated with the war. Lord North advised George III that his (North's) opinion matched that of his ministerial colleagues, but stayed in office. Eventually, George gave up hope of subduing America by more armies. "It was a joke," he said, "to think of keeping Pennsylvania". There was no hope of ever recovering New England. But the King was determined "never to acknowledge the independence of the Americans, and to punish their contumacy by the indefinite prolongation of a war which promised to be eternal."
[21] His plan was to keep the 30,000 men garrisoned in New York, Rhode Island, in Canada, and in Florida; other forces would attack the French and Spanish in the West Indies. To punish the Americans the King planned to destroy their coasting-trade, bombard their ports, sack and burn towns along the coast (like
New London,
Connecticut), and turn loose the Indians to attack civilians in frontier settlements. These operations, the King felt, would inspire the Loyalists; would splinter the Congress; and "would keep the rebels harassed, anxious, and poor, until the day when, by a natural and inevitable process, discontent and disappointment were converted into penitence and remorse" and they would beg to return to his authority.
[22] The plan meant destruction for the Loyalists and loyal Indians, and indefinite prolongation of a costly war, as well as the risk of disaster as the French and Spanish were assembling an armada to invade the British isles and seize London.
In 1781, the news of
Lord Cornwallis's surrender at the
Siege of Yorktown reached London; Lord North's parliamentary support ebbed away and he subsequently resigned in 1782. After Lord North persuaded the king against abdicating,
[23] George III finally accepted the defeat in North America, and authorised the negotiation of a peace. The
Treaty of Paris and the associated Treaty of Versailles were ratified in 1783. The former treaty provided for the recognition of the United States by Great Britain. The latter required Great Britain to give up
Florida to Spain and to grant access to the waters of
Newfoundland to France. When
John Adams was appointed American Minister to Britain in 1785, George had become resigned to the new relationship between his country and the United States, "I was the last to consent to the separation; but" he told Adams, "I would be the first to meet the friendship of the United States as an independent power."
[24]
Constitutional struggle
With the collapse of Lord North's ministry in 1782, the Whig Lord Rockingham became Prime Minister for the second time, but died within months. The King then appointed
Lord Shelburne to replace him.
Charles James Fox, however, refused to serve under Shelburne, and demanded the appointment of the
Duke of Portland. In 1783, the House of Commons forced Lord Shelburne from office and his government was replaced by the
Fox-North Coalition. The Duke of Portland became Prime Minister; Fox and Lord North, Foreign Secretary and Home Secretary respectively, really held power, with Portland acting as a figurehead.
5
George III was distressed by the attempts to force him to appoint ministers not of his liking, but the Portland ministry quickly built up a majority in the House of Commons, and could not easily be displaced. He was, however, extremely dissatisfied when the government introduced the India Bill, which proposed to reform the government of India by transferring political power from the
Honourable East India Company to Parliamentary commissioners.
[25] Immediately after the House of Commons passed it, George authorised
Lord Temple to inform the House of Lords that he would regard any peer who voted for the bill as his enemy. The bill was rejected by the Lords; three days later, the Portland ministry was dismissed, and
William Pitt the Younger was appointed Prime Minister, with Temple as his Secretary of State. On
17 December 1783, Parliament voted in favour of a motion condemning the influence of the monarch in parliamentary voting as a "high crime" and Temple was forced to resign. Temple's departure destabilised the government, and three months later the government lost its majority and Parliament was dissolved; the subsequent
election gave Pitt a firm mandate.
5
William Pitt

Gold guinea of George III, dated 1789
For George III, Pitt's appointment was a great victory. The King felt that the scenario proved that he still had the power to appoint Prime Ministers without having to rely on any parliamentary group. Throughout Pitt's ministry, George eagerly supported many of his political aims. To aid Pitt, George created new peers at an unprecedented rate. The new peers flooded the House of Lords and allowed Pitt to maintain a firm majority. During Pitt's ministry, George III was extremely popular. The public supported the exploratory voyages to the
Pacific Ocean that he sanctioned. George also aided the
Royal Academy with large grants from his private funds. The British people admired their King for remaining faithful to his wife, unlike the two previous Hanoverian monarchs. Great advances were made in fields such as in
science and
industry.
However, by this time George III's health was deteriorating. He suffered from a mental illness, now widely believed to be a symptom of
porphyria.
[26] A study of samples of the King's hair revealed high levels of
arsenic, a possible trigger for the disease.
[27] The King may have previously suffered a brief episode of the disease in 1765, but a longer episode began in the summer of 1788. George was sufficiently sane to
prorogue Parliament on
25 September 1788, but his condition worsened and in November he became seriously deranged, sometimes speaking for many hours without pause. With his doctors largely at a loss to explain his illness, spurious stories about his condition spread, such as the claim that he shook hands with a tree in the mistaken belief that it was the King of Prussia.
[28] When Parliament reconvened in November, the King could not, as was customary, communicate to them the agenda for the upcoming legislative session. According to long-established practice, Parliament could not begin the transaction of business until the King had made the
Speech from the Throne. Parliament, however, ignored the custom and began to debate provisions for a regency.
Charles James Fox and William Pitt wrangled over the terms of which individual was entitled to take over government during the illness of the Sovereign. Although both parties agreed that it would be most reasonable for George III's eldest son and heir-apparent, the Prince of Wales, to act as Regent, they disagreed over the basis of a regency. Fox suggested that it was the Prince of Wales's absolute right to act on his ill father's behalf; Pitt argued that it was for Parliament to nominate a Regent.
[29] Proceedings were further delayed as the authority for Parliament to merely meet was questioned, as the session had not been formally opened by the Sovereign. Pitt proposed a remedy based on an obscure
legal fiction. As was well-established at the time, the Sovereign could delegate many of his functions to Lords Commissioners by
letters patent, which were validated by the attachment of the
Great Seal. It was proposed that the custodian of the Great Seal, the
Lord Chancellor, affix the Seal without the consent of the Sovereign. Although such an action would be unlawful, it would not be possible to question the validity of the letters patent, as the presence of the Great Seal would be deemed conclusive in court. George III's second son, the
Prince Frederick, Duke of York, denounced Pitt's proposal as "unconstitutional and illegal". Nonetheless, the Lords Commissioners were appointed and then opened Parliament. In February 1789, the Regency Bill, authorising the Prince of Wales to act as Prince Regent, was introduced and passed in the House of Commons. But before the House of Lords could pass the bill, George III recovered from his illness under the treatment of Dr
Francis Willis. He confirmed the actions of the Lords Commissioners as valid, but resumed full control of government.
French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
After George recovered from his illness, his popularity, and that of Pitt, greatly increased at the expense of Fox and the Prince of Wales.
[30] The
French Revolution, in which the
French monarchy had been overthrown, worried many British landowners.
France subsequently declared war on Great Britain in 1793, and George soon represented the British resistance. George allowed Pitt to increase taxes, raise armies, and suspend the privilege of the writ of ''
habeas corpus'' in the war attempt.
As well-prepared as Great Britain may have been, France was stronger. The
First Coalition (which included
Austria,
Prussia, and
Spain) was defeated in 1798. The
Second Coalition (which included Austria,
Russia, and the
Ottoman Empire) was defeated in 1800. Only Great Britain was left fighting
Napoleon Bonaparte, the
First Consul of the
French Republic. Perhaps surprisingly, a failed
assassination attempt of
May 15,
1800 was not political in origin but motivated by the
religious delusions of his assailant,
James Hadfield, who shot at the King in the
Drury Lane Theatre during the playing of the
national anthem.
Soon after 1800, a brief lull in hostilities allowed Pitt to concentrate on
Ireland, where there had been an uprising in 1798. Parliament then passed the
Act of Union 1800, which, on
1 January 1801, united Great Britain and Ireland into a single nation, known as the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. George used the opportunity to drop
the claim to the Throne of France, which English and British Sovereigns had maintained since the reign of
Edward III. It was suggested that George adopt the title "
Emperor of the British and Hanoverian Dominions", but he refused.
A. G. Stapleton writes that George III "felt that his true dignity consisted in his being known to Europe and the world by the appropriated and undisputed style belonging to the British Crown."
As part of his Irish policy, Pitt planned to remove certain legal disabilities that applied to
Roman Catholics after the Union. George III claimed that to emancipate Catholics would be to violate his coronation oath, in which Sovereigns promise to maintain Protestantism.
1 The King declared, "Where is the power on Earth to absolve me from the observance of every sentence of that oath, particularly the one requiring me to maintain the Protestant Reformed Religion? … No, no, I had rather beg my bread from door to door throughout Europe, than consent to any such measure. I can give up my crown and retire from power. I can quit my palace and live in a cottage. I can lay my head on a block and lose my life, but I cannot break my oath." Faced with opposition to his religious reform policies from both the King and the British public, Pitt threatened to resign.
[31] At about the same time, the King suffered a relapse of his previous illness, which he blamed on worry over the Catholic question.
[32] On
14 March 1801, Pitt was formally replaced by the
Speaker of the House of Commons,
Henry Addington. As Addington was his close friend, Pitt remained as a private advisor. Addington's ministry was particularly unremarkable, as almost no reforms were made or measures passed. In fact, the nation was strongly against the very idea of reform, having just witnessed the bloody French Revolution. Although they called for passive behaviour in the United Kingdom, the public wanted strong action in Europe, but Addington failed to deliver. In October 1801, he made peace with the French, and in 1802 signed the Treaty of Amiens.
George did not consider the peace with France as "real"; in his view it was an "experiment". In 1803, the two nations once again declared war on each other. In 1804, George was again affected by his recurrent illness; on his recovery, he discovered that public opinion distrusted Addington to lead the nation in war, and instead favoured Pitt. Pitt sought to appoint Fox to his ministry, but George III refused as the King disliked Fox, who had encouraged the Prince of Wales to lead an extravagant and expensive life.
Lord Grenville perceived an injustice to Fox, and refused to join the new ministry.
5
Pitt concentrated on forming a coalition with Austria, Russia, and
Sweden. The
Third Coalition, however, met the same fate as the First and Second Coalitions, collapsing in 1805. An invasion by Napoleon seemed imminent, but the possibility was extinguished after
Admiral Lord Nelson's famous victory at the
Battle of Trafalgar.
The setbacks in Europe took a toll on William Pitt's health. Pitt died in 1806, once again reopening the question of who should serve in the ministry. Lord Grenville became Prime Minister, and his "
Ministry of All the Talents" included Charles James Fox. The King was conciliatory towards Fox, after being forced to capitulate over his appointment. After Fox's death in September 1806, the King and ministry were in open conflict. The ministry had proposed a measure whereby Roman Catholics would be allowed to serve in all ranks of the Armed Forces. George not only instructed them to drop the measure, but also to make an agreement to never set up such a measure again. The ministers agreed to drop the measure then pending, but refused to bind themselves in the future. In 1807, they were dismissed and replaced by the Duke of Portland as the nominal Prime Minister, with actual power being held by the
Chancellor of the Exchequer,
Spencer Perceval. Parliament was dissolved; the
subsequent election gave the ministry a strong majority in the
House of Commons. George III made no further major political decisions during his reign; the replacement of the Duke of Portland by Perceval in 1809 was of little actual significance.
Later life

George, Prince of Wales, acted as Prince-Regent from 1811 to 1820
In 1810, already virtually blind with cataracts and in pain from rheumatism, George III became dangerously ill. In his view the malady had been triggered by the stress he suffered at the death of his youngest and favourite daughter,
Princess Amelia.
[33] As the Princess's nurse reported, "the scenes of distress and crying every day…were melancholy beyond description."
[34] By 1811, George III had become permanently insane and lived in seclusion at Windsor Castle until his death. He accepted the need for the
Regency Act 1811,
[35] to which the
Royal Assent was granted by the Lords Commissioners, appointed under the same irregular procedure as was adopted in 1788. The Prince of Wales acted as Regent for the remainder of George III's life.
Spencer Perceval was
assassinated in 1812 (the only British Prime Minister to have suffered such a fate) and was replaced by
Lord Liverpool. Liverpool oversaw British victory in the Napoleonic Wars. The subsequent
Congress of Vienna led to significant territorial gains for Hanover, which was upgraded from an electorate to a kingdom.

Half-Crown coin of George III, 1816. Click for notes.
Meanwhile, George's health deteriorated, eventually he became completely blind and increasingly deaf. He never knew that he was declared King of Hanover in 1814, or of the death of his wife in 1818. Over
Christmas 1819, he spoke nonsense for 58 hours, and for the last few weeks of his life was unable to walk. On
29 January,
1820, he died at
Windsor Castle. His favourite son, Frederick, Duke of York, was with him.
[36] His death came six days after that of his fourth son, the
Duke of Kent. George III was buried on
15 February in
St. George's Chapel, Windsor.
George was succeeded by two of his sons
George IV and
William IV, who both died without surviving legitimate children, leaving the throne to their niece,
Victoria, the last monarch of the House of Hanover and the only legitimate child of the Duke of Kent.
Legacy

Signature of George III, c. 1790
George lived for 81 years and 239 days and reigned for 59 years and 96 days — in each case, more than any other English or British monarch until that point. This record has been surpassed only once, by George's granddaughter
Queen Victoria. His longevity is being approached by
Elizabeth II, who will have lived longer as of mid-December 2007. George III's reign was longer than the reigns of all three of his immediate predecessors (
Queen Anne,
King George I and
King George II) combined.
While tremendously popular in Britain, George was hated by revolutionary American colonists (approximately one-third of the population in the colonies). The grievances in the
United States Declaration of Independence were presented as "repeated injuries and usurpations" that he had committed to establish "an absolute Tyranny" over the colonies. The Declaration's wording has contributed to the American public's perception of George as a tyrant. Another factor that exacerbated American resentment was the King's failure to intercede personally on the colonists' behalf after the
Olive Branch Petition. George was hated in Ireland for the atrocities carried out in his name during the suppression of the
1798 rebellion. British historians of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, such as
Trevelyan, promoted hostile interpretations of George III's life, however, scholars of the later twentieth century, such as
Butterfield and Pares, and Macalpine and Hunter, are more inclined to be sympathetic, seeing him as a victim of circumstance and illness. Today, the long reign of George III is perceived as a continuation of the reduction in the political power of monarchy, and its growth as the embodiment of national morality.
5
There are many cities and towns in former British colonies named ''
Georgetown''. These may be named either after George III or his son,
George IV. Statues of George III can be seen today in places such as the courtyard of Somerset House in London and in Weymouth, Dorset, which he popularised as a seaside resort (one of the first in England). A statue of George III was pulled down in New York at the beginning of the War of Independence in 1776 and two engravings of its destruction still exist (though one is wholly inaccurate).
The
British Agricultural Revolution reached its peak under George III. The period provided for unprecedented growth in the rural population, which in turn provided much of the workforce for the concurrent
Industrial Revolution. George III has been
nicknamed ''Farmer George'', for "his plain, homely, thrifty manners and tastes" and because of his passionate interest in agriculture.
[37]
George III in popular culture
George's insanity is the subject of the film ''
The Madness of King George'' (1994), based on the play ''The Madness of George III'' by
Alan Bennett. He was portrayed by
Nigel Hawthorne, who received the
Laurence Olivier Award and was nominated for an
Academy Award for his role. The film concerns George's second bout of insanity in late 1788 and early 1789, while those in the royal court, including his own son (played by
Rupert Everett) use this unfortunate situation as a way to sidestep regal authority.
The popular 1970s children's educational series ''
Schoolhouse Rock'' features a song entitled "No More Kings" which paints George III as a tyrant reluctant to allow the colonies out from under his boot. King George III appears in the novel ''
Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell'' by
Susanna Clarke, and the last episode of the
BBC Comedy ''
Blackadder the Third''. In
Douglas Adams's book, ''
Life, the Universe and Everything'', the character
Arthur Dent refers to trees as 'those things people think you're mad if you talk to? Like George the Third.'
[38] The
X-Files popularized a (fictional) anecdote stating that George III's diary entry on
July 4,
1776 read: "Nothing important happened today", also taking the quote for the title of its .
The music theatre piece ''Eight Songs for a Mad King'' by Sir
Peter Maxwell Davies depicts the increasing madness and eventual death of the king as he talks to birds.
George III is also a key character is several episodes of the anime
Le Chevalier D'Eon.
Titles, styles, honours and arms
Titles
★ '
4 June 1738 –
31 March 1751': ''His Royal Highness'' Prince George of Wales
★ '
31 March 1751 –
20 April 1751': ''His Royal Highness'' The Duke of Edinburgh
★ '
20 April 1751 –
25 October 1760': ''His Royal Highness'' The Prince of Wales
★ '
25 October 1760 –
29 January 1820': ''His Majesty'' The King
Styles
In Great Britain, George III used the official
style "George the Third, by the Grace of God,
King of Great Britain,
France and
Ireland,
Defender of the Faith, etc." In 1801, when
Great Britain united with
Ireland, he took the opportunity to drop his claim to the French Throne. He also dispensed with the phrase "etc.," which had been added during the reign of
Elizabeth I. His style became, "George the Third, by the Grace of God, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Defender of the Faith."
Arms
Whilst he was King of Great Britain, George's
arms were: ''Quarterly, I Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or (for
England) impaling Or a lion rampant within a double-tressure flory-counter-flory Gules (for
Scotland); II Azure three fleurs-de-lys Or (for
France); III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent (for
Ireland); IV tierced per pale and per chevron (for
Hanover), I Gules two lions passant guardant Or (for
Brunswick), II Or a semy of hearts Gules a lion rampant Azure (for
Lüneburg), III Gules a horse courant Argent (for
Westfalen), overall an escutcheon Gules charged with the crown of
Charlemagne Or (for the dignity of Arch
treasurer of the
Holy Roman Empire)''.
When he became King of the United Kingdom, his arms were amended, dropping the French quartering. They became: ''Quarterly, I and IV Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or (for England); II Or a lion rampant within a double tressure flory-counter-flory Gules (for Scotland); III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent (for Ireland); overall an escutcheon tierced per pale and per chevron (for Hanover), I Gules two lions passant guardant Or (for Brunswick), II Or a semy of hearts Gules a lion rampant Azure (for Lunenburg), III Gules a horse courant Argent (for Westfalen), the whole inescutcheon surmounted by an electoral bonnet.'' In 1816, two years after the
Electorate of Hanover became a Kingdom, the electoral bonnet was changed to a crown.
Ancestors
Issue
| Name | Birth | Death | Notes[39] |
|---|
| George IV | 12 August 1762 | 26 June 1830 | married 1795, Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel; had issue |
| Frederick, Duke of York | 16 August 1763 | 5 January 1827 | married 1791, Princess Frederica of Prussia; no issue |
| William IV | 21 August 1765 | 20 June 1837 | married 1818, Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen; no legitimate surviving issue |
| Charlotte, Princess Royal | 29 September 1766 | 6 October 1828 | married 1797, Frederick, King of Württemberg; no issue |
| Edward Augustus, Duke of Kent | 2 November 1767 | 23 January 1820 | married 1818, Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld; had issue (Queen Victoria) |
| Princess Augusta Sophia | 8 November 1768 | 22 September 1840 | |
| Princess Elizabeth | 22 May 1770 | 10 January 1840 | married 1818, Frederick, Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg; no issue |
| Ernest Augustus I of Hanover | 5 June 1771 | 18 November 1851 | married 1815, Princess Friederike of Mecklenburg-Strelitz; had issue |
| Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex | 27 January 1773 | 22 April 1843 | married in contravention of the Royal Marriages Act 1772, (1) 1793 The Lady Augusta Murray; had issue; marriage declared void 1794; (2) 1831, The Lady Cecilia Buggins (later 1st Duchess of Inverness); no issue |
| Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge | 24 February 1774 | 8 July 1850 | married 1818, Princess Augusta of Hesse-Kassel; had issue |
| Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester | 25 April 1776 | 30 April 1857 | married 1816, Prince William, Duke of Gloucester; no issue |
| Princess Sophia | 3 November 1777 | 27 May 1848 | had issue |
| Prince Octavius | 23 February 1779 | 3 May 1783 | |
| Prince Alfred | 22 September 1780 | 20 August 1782 | |
| Princess Amelia | 7 August 1783 | 2 November1810 | Possibly married Sir Charles Fitzroy; had issue |
See also
★
List of British monarchs
★
American Revolutionary War
★
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
★
Peerages according to reign
★
List of mentally ill monarchs
Notes
1. George III The Royal Household
2. George III: A Personal History, , Christopher, Hibbert, Penguin Books, 1999,
3. Hibbert, pp.3–15
4. Hibbert, pp.24–25
5.
6. Hibbert, p.31
7. George was falsely said to have married a Quakeress named Hannah Lightfoot on 17 April 1759, prior to his marriage to Charlotte. If such a marriage had existed, then his marriage to Charlotte would have been bigamous and all of George's successors would have been usurpers. But no legal marriage to Lightfoot could have occurred: she had married Isaac Axford in 1753 and had died in or before 1759, and therefore could not have produced legitimate children from a marriage in April that year. George's marriage to Charlotte was therefore not bigamous. The "marriage" to Hannah Lightfoot was mentioned in the 1866 trial of the daughter of imposter Olive Wilmot, who claimed to be "Princess Olive". A forged marriage certificate produced at her trial was impounded in 1866 and studied by the Attorney General. It is now in the Royal Archives in Windsor Castle.
8. Hibbert, p.86
9. An American taxpayer would pay a maximum of sixpence a year, compared to an average of twenty-five shillings (50 times as much) in England. (Hibbert, p.122)
10. Hibbert, pp.107–109
11. Hibbert, p.111–113
12. Hibbert, p.124
13. Hibbert, p.140
14. Hibbert, p.141
15. Hibbert, p.143
16. George III and the American Revolution, , Peter D. G., Thomas, History,
17. ''Virginia Water, UK official website'', "The Crown Estate"
18. ''The Guardian'', "The royal family and the public purse", March 6, 2000
19. ''A Student's Manual of English Constitutional History'' by Dudley Julius Medley, pg. 501, 1902
20. Hibbert, pp.156–157
21. George the Third and Charles Fox: The Concluding Part of the American Revolution, , George, Trevelyan, , 1912,
22. Trevelyan, vol.1 p.5
23. Hillenbrad, William. ''Born in Battle: A History of the American Revolution.'' Troubadour Interactive, 2001. ISBN 1890642177
24. Hibbert, p.165
25. Hibbert, p.243
26. Purple Secret: Genes, "Madness" and the Royal Houses of Europe, , John C. G., Röhl, Bantam Press, 1998, ISBN 0-593-04148-8
27. King George III: and porphyria: an elemental hypothesis and investigation, , Timothy M., Cox, The Lancet, 2005
28. Hibbert, pp.262–267
29. Hibbert, p.273
30. Hibbert, pp.301–302
31. Hibbert, p.313
32. Hibbert, p.315
33. Hibbert, p.396
34. Hibbert, p.394
35. Hibbert, pp.397–398
36. Hibbert, p.408
37. http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/heritage/timeline/1773to1820_farmer.html
38. Life, the Universe and Everything, , Douglas, Adams, Pan Books Ltd, 1982,
39. Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy, Revised edition, , Alison, Weir, Random House, 1996,
References
★
★
George III: A Personal History, , Christopher, Hibbert, Penguin Books, 1999,
★
Purple Secret: Genes, "Madness" and the Royal Houses of Europe, , John C. G., Röhl, Bantam Press, 1998, ISBN 0-593-04148-8
★
George III and the American Revolution, , Peter D. G., Thomas, History,
★
George the Third and Charles Fox: The Concluding Part of the American Revolution, , George, Trevelyan, , 1912,
★
Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy, Revised edition, , Alison, Weir, Random House, 1996,
Further reading
★ Black, Jeremy. ''George III: America’s Last King''. New Heaven, CT; London: Yale University Press, 2006 (hardcover, ISBN 0300117329).
★
Private Lives: Curious Facts About the Famous and Infamous, , Mark, Bryant, Cassell, 2001,
★ Herbert Butterfield; ''George III and the Historians'' (1959)
online edition
★ G. M. Ditchfield. ''George III: An Essay in Monarchy'' (2003)
★
The 'insanity' of King George III: a classic case of porphyria, , Ida, Macalpine, Brit. Med. J.,
★
The Constitutional History of England Since the Accession of George the Third, 1760–1860, , Thomas Erskine, May, Longmans, Green and Co, 1896,
★ Richard Pares; ''King George III and the Politicians'' (1953)
online edition
★ Earl Aaron Reitan, ed. ''George III, Tyrant Or Constitutional Monarch?'' (1964) - 106 pages
★ J. Steven Watson; ''The Reign of George III, 1760–1815,'' 1960, the standard scholarly history
online edition
External links
★
Biography and signed documents
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