List of British monarchs ::: Project ETERNITY

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This is a list of British monarchs, that is, the monarchs on the thrones of some of the various kingdoms that have existed on, or incorporated, the island of Great Britain, namely:

  • England (united with Wales from 1536) up to 1707;
  • Scotland up to 1707;
  • The Kingdom of Great Britain (when England & Scotland united in 1707);
  • The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (when Great Britain and Ireland united in 1801)
  • The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (The UK after the Irish Free State was formed and became a separate kingdom in the 1920s).
  • Since 1559 English monarchs have had the title Supreme Governor of the Church of England.

    In 1328, on the death of the French king, Charles IV, Edward III (nephew of Charles IV) claimed the French throne. British monarchs then styled themselves "King/Queen of France" until Act of Union, which led to the creation of the United Kingdom in 1801. By then France had been a republic for ten years. See: English Kings of France

    For the small kingdoms which existed prior to the formation of England, Scotland or Wales, see:

  • Mythical British Kings
  • Bretwalda
  • List of rulers of Wales
  • Kings of the Picts
  • Kings of Dalriada
  • Kings of Strathclyde
  • Kings of the Isle of Man and the Isles
  • Kings of the Isle of Man
  • Kings of East Anglia
  • Kings of Essex
  • Kings of Kent
  • Kings of Sussex
  • Kings of Wessex
  • Kings of Mercia
  • Kings of Northumbria
  • Complications over Title and Style

    Royal titles are also complicated because in some cases, names of kingdoms are used that did not officially come into existence until later, or came into existence earlier without immediate adoption of the royal title.

  • For example, in October 1604, one year after James VI of Scotland had become king of England, he decreed that the Royal Title would use the term Great Brittaine to refer to the "one Imperiall Crowne" made up of England and Scotland. However using that title is problematic because the 'state' of Great Britain was only created in the Act of Union 1707. Nor was the united crown generally referred to as 'imperial'. Furthermore, monarchs continued to use ordinals attached to the two previous kingdoms, for instance James VII/II. To avoid confusion, historians in general thus refer to all monarchs up to 1707 as monarchs of England and Scotland (so explaining their two ordinals where they existed), with the monarch's title at all times accurately following the official name or names of the state or states they reigned over, where it differed from the official royal title. (Hence though many English and British monarchs claimed France as part of their official title, that had no reality in substance, so it isn't used.) After the Union, the ordinal has either been the English number, or the greater of the two numbers - the results have been the same and there is no formal rule.
  • In different documents, the terms Kingdom of Great Britain and United Kingdom of Great Britain feature, even documents as official as the Act of Union 1707. Most historians presume the United was meant to be descriptive (indicating a union as a form of unity by marriage rather than coercion). For clarity and because the United is far more strongly associated with the later name United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland produced in the Act of Union 1800, the 1707 kingdom is generally referred to as the Kingdom of Great Britain.
  • Similarly, though the Irish Free State ceased to be part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1922, neither the full name of the United Kingdom nor the royal title was changed until the Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act, 1927. In this instance historians generally retrospectively date the coming into being of the modern United Kingdom to December 1922, even though in this case the formal change did not occur for another five years.
  • The list of monarchs below cannot be exhaustive. For succession to the many thrones often did not pass smoothly from parent to child; lack of heirs, civil wars, murders and invasions affected the inheritance in ways that a simple list does not show.

    The relationships that formed the basis for claims to throne are noted where we know them and the dates of reign indicated.

    Monarchs

    Monarchs of England Monarchs of Scotland
    Name Reign Notes
    The Saxons
    Offa 757-796  
    Egbert 802-839  
    Ethelwulf 839-856 Egbert's son
    Ethelbald 856-860 Ethelwulf's son
    Ethelbert 860-865 Ethelwulf's son
    Ethelred I 865-871 Ethelwulf's son
    Alfred the Great 871-899 Ethelwulf's son
    Edward I the Elder 899-924 Alfred's son
    Ethelweard 924 Edward's son
    Athelstan 925-940 Edward's son
    Edmund I 939-946 Edward's son
    Edred 946-955 Edward's son
    Edwy 955-959 Edmund's son
    Edgar the Peaceful 959-975 Edmund's son
    St Edward II the Martyr 975-978 Edgar's son
    Ethelred II 978-1013
    1014-1016
    Edgar's son
    Edmund II 1016 Ethelred II's son
    The Danish Kings
    For a period of time, both the Saxons and the Danish claimed the English throne.
    Sweyn Forkbeard 1013-1014  
    Canute the Great 1016-1035 Sweyn's son
    Harold I 1035-1040 Canute's illegitimate son
    Harthacanute 1040-1042 Canute's son
    The Saxon Restoration
    St Edward III the Confessor 1042-1066 Ethelred II's son
    Harold II 1066-1066 Edward the Confessor's brother-in-law
    Edgar Atheling 1066-1066 Grandson of Edmund Ironside
    The Normans
    After the Norman Conquest in 1066, numbering of kings (a French tradition applied to the Saxons only by historians) begins anew, although this affects only the Edwards.
    William I 1066-1087 known as William the Conqueror
    William II 1087-1100 William I's son
    Henry I 1100-1135 William I's son
    Stephen 1135-1154 William I's grandson
    The Angevins or Plantagenets
    The Royal House name changed to reflect Matilda's marriage to Geoffrey Plantagenet.
    Matilda (Empress Maud) 1141 Henry I's daughter
    Henry II 1154-1189 Matilda's son
    Richard I "Lionheart" 1189-1199 Henry II's son
    Monarchs of England and Ireland
    In 1199, John, already Lord of Ireland, inherited the English throne. The title "Lord of Ireland" was used until it was replaced by "King of Ireland" in 1542.
    John "Lackland" 1199-1216 Henry II's son
    Henry III 1216-1272 John's son
    Edward I 1272-1307 Henry III's son
    Edward II 1307-1327 Edward I's son
    Edward III 1327-1377 Edward II's son
    Richard II 1377-1399 Edward III's grandson
    The House of Lancaster
    Henry Bolingbroke deposed Richard II, and the Royal House name came to reflect Henry's father's title, Duke of Lancaster.
    Henry IV 1399-1413 Edward III's grandson
    Henry V 1413-1422 Henry IV's son
    Henry VI 1422-1461 Henry V's son
    The House of York
    The Houses of Lancaster and York had fought the Wars of the Roses, and the Yorkists took the throne.
    Edward IV 1461-1483 Edward III's great-great-grandson
    Edward V 1483 Edward IV's son
    Richard III 1483-1485 Edward IV's brother
    The House of Tudor
    The Lancastrian Henry Tudor reclaimed the throne from the Yorkists.
    Henry VII 1485-1509 Edward III's great-great-grandson
    Henry VIII 1509-1547 Henry VII's son
    Edward VI 1547-1553 Henry VIII's son
    Lady Jane Grey 1553 Henry VII's great-granddaughter
    Mary I 1553-1558 Henry VIII's daughter
    Elizabeth I 1558-1603 Henry VIII's daughter

    Name Reign Notes
    The House of Alpin
    Kenneth I 843-858  
    Donald I 858-862 Kenneth I's brother
    Constantine I 862-877 Kenneth I's son
    Aedh 877-878 Kenneth I's son
    Eochaid 878-889 Aedh's nephew
    Jointly with Giric
    Giric 878-889 Aedh's first cousin
    Jointly with Eochaid
    Donald II 889-900 Constantine I's son
    Constantine II 900-943 Aedh's son
    Malcolm I 943-954 Donald II's son
    Indulf 954-962 Constantine II's son
    Dubh 962-966 Malcolm I's son
    Culen 966-971 Indulf's son
    Kenneth II 971-995 Malcolm I's son
    Constantine III 995-997 Culen's son
    Kenneth III 997-1005 Dubh's son
    Malcolm II 1005-1034 Kenneth II's son
    Duncan I 1034-1040 Malcolm II's grandson
    Macbeth 1040-1057 Malcolm II's grandson
    Lulach 1057-1058 Kenneth III's grandson
    The House of Dunkeld
    Malcolm III 1058-1093 Duncan I's son
    Donald III 1093-1094
    1094-1097
    Duncan I's son
    Duncan II 1094 Malcolm III's son
    Edgar 1097-1107 Malcolm III's son
    Alexander I 1107-1124 Malcolm III's son
    David I 1124-1153 Malcolm III's son
    Malcolm IV 1153-1165 David I's grandson
    William I 1165-1214 David I's grandson
    Alexander II 1214-1249 William I's son
    Alexander III 1249-1286 Alexander II's son
    Margaret 1286-1290 Alexander III's granddaughter
    The House of Balliol
    When Margaret died, there was no clear heir. King Edward I of England took over and installed a puppet, John Balliol.
    John Balliol 1292-1296 David I's great-great-great-grandson
    The House of Bruce
    When John Balliol rebelled, the Wars of Scottish Independence commenced, during which Robert the Bruce became King.
    Robert I 1306-1329 David I's great-great-great-great-grandson
    David II 1329-1371 Robert I's son
    The House of Balliol
    For a period of time, both Edward Balliol and David II claimed the throne.
    Edward Balliol 1332-1338 John Balliol's son
    The House of Stewart
    Mary I changed the spelling to Stuart during her time in France, as the French did not have the letter 'w'.
    Robert II 1371-1390 Robert I's grandson
    Robert III 1390-1406 Robert II's son
    James I 1406-1437 Robert III's son
    James II 1437-1460 James I's son
    James III 1460-1488 James II's son
    James IV 1488-1513 James III's son
    James V 1513-1542 James IV's son
    Mary I 1542-1567 James V's daughter
    James VI 1567-1625 Mary I's son

    Monarchs of England, Scotland and Ireland
    In 1603, James VI of Scotland inherited the English throne upon the death of Elizabeth I. From then until 1707, England, Scotland and Ireland had shared monarchs.
    The House of Stuart
    Name Reign Notes
    James I (England)
    James VI (Scotland)
    1603-1625 Henry VII of England's great-great-grandson
    Mary of Scotland's son
    Charles I 1625-1649 James I's son
    The Commonwealth and Protectorate
    There was no King between Charles I's execution in 1649 and the Restoration in 1660. The nation's rulers were known as Lords Protector.
    Name Reign Notes
    Oliver Cromwell 1653-1658  
    Richard Cromwell 1658-1659 Oliver Cromwell's son
    Monarchs of England, Scotland and Ireland
    In 1659, Richard Cromwell abdicated. Anarchy existed until the Stuart Restoration in 1660.
    The House of Stuart
    Name Reign Notes
    Charles II 1660-1685 Charles I's son
    James II (England)
    James VII (Scotland)
    1685-1689 Charles I's son
    Mary II 1689-1694 James II's daughter
    Jointly with her husband, William III
    William III (England)
    William II (Scotland)
    1689-1702 Charles I's grandson
    Jointly with his wife, Mary II
    Anne 1702-1707 James II's daughter
    Monarchs of Great Britain and Ireland
    In 1707, the Act of Union combined the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotland into the Kingdom of Great Britain.
    The House of Stuart
    Name Reign Notes
    Anne 1707-1714 James II's daughter
    The House of Hanover
    Under the Act of Settlement, descendants of Sophia, Electress of Hanover, as the closest Protestant relatives of Anne, became entitled to the throne, and the Royal House name was changed when George, Elector of Hanover became King.
    George I 1714-1727 James I's great-grandson
    George II 1727-1760 George I's son
    George III 1760-1801 George II's grandson
    Monarchs of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
    In 1801, the Act of Union combined the Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland into the United Kingdom.
    Name Reign Notes
    George III 1801-1820 George II's grandson
    George IV 1820-1830 George III's son
    William IV 1830-1837 George III's son
    Victoria 1837-1840 George III's granddaughter
    The House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
    The Royal House name was changed to reflect Victoria's marriage to Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.
    Victoria 1840-1901 George III's granddaughter
    Edward VII 1901-1910 Victoria's son
    George V 1910-1917 Edward VII's son
    The House of Windsor
    The name of the Royal House changed from Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to Windsor in 1917 due to anti-German sentiments during World War I.
    George V 1917-1927 Edward VII's son
    Monarchs of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
    In 1922, the Irish Free State left the United Kingdom. The name of the Kingdom was amended in 1927 to reflect the change.
    The House of Windsor
    Name Reign Notes
    George V 1927-1936 Edward VII's son
    Edward VIII 1936 George V's son
    George VI 1936-1952 George V's son
    Elizabeth II 1952- George VI's daughter

    Mnemonics

    A useful rhyme for memorising the names of the English and UK monarchs since the Norman Conquest in chronological order:

    Willy Willy Harry Steve,

    Henry Dick John Henry three;

    Then three Edwards Richard two,

    Henry Four, Five Six then who?

    Edward four five, Dick the bad,

    Two more Henries, Ned the lad;

    Bloody Mary she came next,

    Then we have our Good Queen Bess.

    From Scotland we got James the Vain;

    Charlie one, two, James again.

    William and Mary, Anna Gloria,

    Four Georges, William, and Victoria.

    Edward, George, the same again,

    Now Elizabeth - and the end.

    A popular variation

    Willy, Willy, Harry, Steve,

    Harry, Dick, John, Harry Three;

    One, two, three Neds, Richard Two,

    Harries Four Five Six, then who?

    Edwards Four Five, Dick the Bad,

    Harries (twain) Ned Six (the lad);

    Mary, Bessie, James ye ken,

    Then Charlie, Charlie, James again

    Will and Mary, Anna Gloria

    Georges four, Will Fourth, Victoria

    Edward Seven next, and then

    Came George the Fifth in nineteen ten

    Ned the Eighth soon abdicated

    Then George the Sixth was coronated

    After which Elizabeth

    And that's all folks until her death

    The above version was featured in part in the movie King Ralph.

    (Compare with Chinese history mnemonics.)

    See also

  • UK topics
  • British monarchs family tree
  • English monarchs family tree
  • Scottish monarchs family tree
  • List of succession to the British throne
  • Britain

    Copyrights

    This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "List of British monarchs".


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