candidate, George of Hanover. 
   Anne's reign may be considered successful,  but  somewhat  lackluster  in 
comparison to the rest of the Stuart line. 1066 and All That, describes  her 
with its usual tongue-in-cheek manner: "Finally the Orange... was  succeeded 
by the memorable dead queen,  Anne.  Queen  Anne  was  considered  rather  a 
remarkable woman and hence was usually referred to as Great Anna,  or  Annus 
Mirabilis. The Queen had many favourites (all women), the most memorable  of 
whom were Sarah Jenkins and Mrs Smashems, who were the  first  wig  and  the 
first Tory... the Whigs being the first to realize that the Queen  had  been 
dead all the time chose George I as King." 
                               THE HANOVERIANS 
  The Hanoverians came to power in difficult circumstances that looked  set 
to undermine the stability of British society. The  first  of  their  Kings, 
George I, was only 52nd in line to the throne, but  the  nearest  Protestant 
according the Act of Settlement. Two descendants of James  II,  the  deposed 
Stuart King, threatened to take the throne and were supported  by  a  number 
of 'Jacobites' throughout the realm. 
  The Hanoverian period for all that,  was  remarkably  stable,  not  least 
because of the longevity of its Kings. From  1714  through  to  1837,  there 
were only five, one of whom, George III, remains the longest  reigning  King 
in British History. The period was also one of political stability, and  the 
development of constitutional monarchy. For vast tracts  of  the  eighteenth 
century politics were dominated by the great Whig families, while the  early 
nineteenth century saw Tory domination. Britain's  first  'Prime'  Minister, 
Robert Walpole, dates from this period, while  income  tax  was  introduced. 
Towards the end of the  reign,  the  Great  Reform  Act  was  passed,  which 
amongst other things widened the electorate. 
   It was in this period that Britain came to acquire much of  her  overseas 
Empire, despite the loss of the American colonies, largely  through  foreign 
conquest in the various wars of the century. At the end  of  the  Hanoverian 
period the British empire covered a third of the globe while  the  theme  of 
longevity was set to continue, as the longest reigning  monarch  in  British 
history, Queen Victoria, prepared to take the throne. 
                                                             THE HANOVERIANS 
                                                                 1714 - 1837 
                                                   GEORGE I       = 
Sophia Dorothea, dau. of Duke of Brunswick and Celle 
                                                   (1714–1727) 
                                                                    GEORGE 
II     =    Caroline, dau. of Margrave of 
(1727–1760)         Brandenburg-Anspach 
                                  Augusta of                        = 
Frederick Lewis, 
                                  Saxe-Gotha-Altenberg            Prince of 
Wales 
                        GEORGE III    =   Sophia Charlotte of 
(1760–1820)        Mecklenburg-Strelitz 
GEORGE IV                                                  WILLIAM IV 
                                      Edward,            =   Victoria 
(1820–1830)                                                  (1830–1837) 
                                         Duke of Kent         of Saxe- 
Coburg 
                                                     VICTORIA 
                                                     (1837–1901) 
                             GEORGE I (1714-27) 
   George I was born March 28, 1660, son of Ernest, Elector of  Hanover  and 
Sophia, granddaughter of James I. He  was  raised  in  the  royal  court  of 
Hanover, a German province, and married Sophia, Princess of Zelle, in  1682. 
The marriage produced one son  (the  future  George  II)  and  one  daughter 
(Sophia Dorothea, who married her  cousin,  Frederick  William  I,  King  of 
Prussia). After ruling England for  thirteen  years,  George  I  died  of  a 
stroke on a journey to his beloved Hanover on October 11, 1727. 
   George, Elector of Hanover since 1698, ascended the throne upon the death 
of Queen Anne, under the terms of the 1701 Act  of  Settlement.  His  mother 
had recently died and he meticulously settled his affairs in Hanover  before 
coming to England. He realized his position and  considered  the  better  of 
two evils to be the Whigs (the other alternative was  the  Catholic  son  of 
James II by Mary of Modena, James Edward Stuart, the Old Pretender).  George 
knew that any decision was bound to offend at  least  half  of  the  British 
population. His character and mannerisms  were  strictly  German;  he  never 
troubled himself to learn the English language, and spent at least  half  of 
his time in Hanover. 
   The pale little 54 year-old man arrived in  Greenwich  on  September  29, 
1714, with a full retinue of German friends, advisors and servants  (two  of 
which,  Mohamet  and  Mustapha,  were  Negroes  captured  during  a  Turkish 
campaign). All were determined to  profit  from  the  venture,  with  George 
leading the way. He also arrived with two mistresses and no  wife  -  Sophia 
had been imprisoned for adultery. The English population was unkind  to  the 
two mistresses, labeling the tall, thin Ehrengard Melusina  von  Schulenberg 
as the "maypole", and the short, fat Charlotte Sophia  Kielmansegge  as  the 
"elephant".  Thackeray  remarked,  "Take  what  you  can  get  was  the  old 
monarch's maxim...  The  German  women  plundered,  the  German  secretaries 
plundered, the German cooks and  attendants  plundered,  even  Mustapha  and 
Mohamet... had a share in the booty." 
   The Jacobites, legitimist Tories, attempted to depose George and  replace 
him with the Old Pretender in 1715. The rebellion was a dismal failure.  The 
Old Pretender failed to arrive in Britain  until  it  was  over  and  French 
backing evaporated with  the  death  of  Louis  XIV.  After  the  rebellion, 
England settled into a much needed time of  peace,  with  internal  politics 
and foreign affairs coming to the fore. 
   George's ignorance of the English language and  customs  actually  became 
the cornerstone of his style of rule: leave England to it's own devices  and 
live in Hanover as much as possible. Cabinet positions became of the  utmost 
importance;  the  king's  ministers  represented  the  executive  branch  of 
government, while Parliament represented the legislative. George's  frequent 
absences required the creation of the post of Prime Minister,  the  majority 
leader in the House of Commons who acted in the king's stead. The first  was 
Robert Walpole, whose political mettle was tried in 1720 with the South  Sea 
Company debacle. The South Sea Company  was  a  highly  speculative  venture 
(one of many that was currently plaguing British economics  at  that  time), 
whose investors cajoled government participation. Walpole resisted from  the 
beginning, and after the venture collapsed and  thousands  were  financially 
ruined, he worked feverishly to restore  public  credit  and  confidence  in 
George's government. His success put  him  in  the  position  of  dominating 
British politics for the next 20 years, and the  reliance  on  an  executive 
Cabinet  marked  an  important  step  in   the   formation   of   a   modern 
constitutional monarchy in England. 
   George avoided entering European conflicts by establishing a complex  web 
of continental alliances. He and his Whig  ministers  were  quite  skillful; 
the realm managed to stay out of war until George II declared war  on  Spain 
in 1739. George I and his son, George II,  literally  hated  each  other,  a 
fact that the Tory party used to gain political strength. George I,  on  his 
many trips to Hanover, never placed the  leadership  of  government  in  his 
son's hands, preferring to rely on his ministers when he  was  abroad.  This 
disdain between father and son was a blight which became a tradition in  the 
House of Hanover. 
   Thackeray, in The Four Georges, allows  both  a  glimpse  of  George  I's 
character, and the circumstances under which he  ruled  England:  "Though  a 
despot in Hanover, he was a moderate ruler in England. His aim was to  leave 
it to itself as much as possible, and to live  out  of  it  as  much  as  he 
could. His heart was in Hanover. He was more than fifty-four  years  of  age 
when he came amongst us: we took him  because  we  wanted  him,  because  he 
served our turn; we laughed at his uncouth German ways, and sneered at  him. 
He took our loyalty for what it was worth;  laid  hands  on  what  money  he 
could; kept us assuredly from Popery and wooden shoes.  I,  for  one,  would 
have been on his side in those days. Cynical, and selfish,  as  he  was,  he 
was better than a king out of  St.  Germains  [the  Old  Pretender]  with  a 
French King's orders in his pocket, and a swarm of Jesuits in his train." 
                             GEORGE II (1727-60) 
   George II was born November 10, 1683,  the  only  son  of  George  I  and 
Sophia. His youth was spent in the  Hanoverian  court  in  Germany,  and  he 
married Caroline of Anspach in 1705. He was truly devoted to  Caroline;  she 
bore him three  sons  and  five  daughters,  and  actively  participated  in 
government affairs, before she died in 1737. Like  his  father,  George  was 
very much a German prince, but at the age of 30 when George I  ascended  the 
throne, he was young enough to absorb the English culture that  escaped  his 
father. George II died of a stroke on October 25, 1760. 
   George possessed three passions: the army, music and  his  wife.  He  was 
exceptionally brave and has  the  distinction  of  being  the  last  British 
sovereign to command troops in the field (at Dettingen  against  the  French 
in 1743). He inherited his father's love of opera, particularly the work  of 
George Frederick Handel, who had been George I's court musician in  Hanover. 
Caroline proved to be his greatest  asset.  She  revived  traditional  court 
life (which had all but vanished under George I,  was  fiercely  intelligent 
and an ardent supporter of Robert Walpole. Walpole continued in the role  of 
Prime Minister at Caroline's  behest,  as  George  was  loathe  keeping  his 
father's head Cabinet member. The hatred George felt towards his father  was 
reciprocated by his son, Frederick, Prince of Wales, who died in 1751. 
   Walpole retired in 1742, after establishing the foundation of the  modern 
constitutional monarchy: a Cabinet responsible to a Parliament,  which  was, 
in turn, responsible to an electorate. At that  time,  the  system  was  far 
from truly democratic; the electorate was essentially the voice  of  wealthy 
landowners  and  mercantilists.  The  Whig  party  was  firmly  in  control, 
although legitimist Tories attempted one last Jacobite  rebellion  in  1745, 
by again trying to restore a Stuart to the  throne.  Prince  Charles  Edward 
Stuart, known as the Young Pretender or Bonnie  Prince  Charlie,  landed  in 
Scotland and marched as far south as Derby,  causing  yet  another  wave  of 
Anti-Catholicism to wash over England. The Scots  retreated,  and  in  1746, 
were butchered by the Royal Army at Culloden  Moor.  Bonnie  Prince  Charlie 
escaped to France and died in Rome. The Tories became suspect due  to  their 
associations  with  Jacobitism,  ensuring  oligarchic  Whig  rule  for   the 
following fifty years. 
   Walpole managed to keep George out of continental conflicts for the first 
twelve years of the reign,  but  George  declared  war  on  Spain  in  1739, 
against Walpole's wishes. The Spanish war extended  into  the  1740's  as  a 
component of the  War  of  Austrian  Succession,  in  which  England  fought 
against French dominance in Europe. George shrank away  from  the  situation 
quickly: he negotiated a hasty peace with France, to  protect  Hanover.  The 
1750's found England again at war  with  France,  this  time  over  imperial 
claims. Fighting was intense in Europe, but North  America  and  India  were 
also theatres of the war. Government faltering in  response  to  the  French 
crisis brought William Pitt  the  Elder,  later  Earl  of  Chatham,  to  the 
forefront of British politics. 
   Thackeray describes George II and Walpole as such, in  The  Four  Georges 
"... how he was a choleric little sovereign; how he shook his  fist  in  the 
face of his father's courtiers; how he kicked his coat and wig about in  his 
rages; and called everybody thief, liar, rascal with whom he  differed:  you 
will read in all the  history  books;  and  how  he  speedily  and  shrewdly 
reconciled himself with the bold minister, whom  he  had  hated  during  his 
father's life, and by whom he was served during fifteen  years  of  his  own 
with admirable prudence, fidelity, and success. But for Robert  Walpole,  we 
should have had the Pretender back again." 
                          GEORGE III (r. 1760-1820) 
   George III was born  on  4  June  1738  in  London,  the  eldest  son  of 
Frederick, Prince of Wales, and Princess Augusta of  Saxe-Gotha.  He  became 
heir to the throne on the death  of  his  father  in  1751,  succeeding  his 
grandfather, George II, in 1760. He was the  third  Hanoverian  monarch  and 
the first one to be born  in  England  and  to  use  English  as  his  first 
language. 
   George III is widely remembered  for  two  things:  losing  the  American 
colonies and going mad. This is far from the whole  truth.  George's  direct 
responsibility for the loss of the colonies is not great. He  opposed  their 
bid for independence to the end, but he did not develop the  policies  (such 
as the Stamp Act of 1765 and the Townshend duties of 1767 on tea, paper  and 
other products) which led to war in 1775-76 and which  had  the  support  of 
Parliament. These policies were largely due  to  the  financial  burdens  of 
garrisoning and administering the vast expansion of territory brought  under 
the British Crown in America, the costs of a series of wars with France  and 
Spain in North America, and the loans given to the East India Company  (then 
responsible for administering India). By the  1770s,  and  at  a  time  when 
there was no income tax, the national debt required an annual revenue of  Ј4 
million to service it. 
   The declaration of American independence on 4 July 1776, the end  of  the 
war with the surrender by British forces in 1782, and the defeat  which  the 
loss of  the  American  colonies  represented,  could  have  threatened  the 
Hanoverian throne. However, George's strong defence of what he  saw  as  the 
national interest and the prospect of long  war  with  revolutionary  France 
made him, if anything, more popular than before. 
   The American war, its political aftermath  and  family  anxieties  placed 
great strain on George in the 1780s. After serious bouts of illness in 1788- 
89 and again in 1801, George became permanently deranged  in  1810.  He  was 
mentally unfit to rule in the last decade of his reign;  his  eldest  son  - 
the later George IV -  acted  as  Prince  Regent  from  1811.  Some  medical 
historians have said that George III's mental instability was  caused  by  a 
hereditary physical disorder called porphyria. 
   George's accession in 1760 marked a significant change in royal finances. 
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