The tumultuous sagas of the British Monarchy
are deeply reflected in the country's history and an understanding
of who's who will help on your visit to the many historic sites around
Britain and the abbeys and cathedrals where the many Kings and Queens
of Britain are buried.
Saxons & Danes
The Normans
The Plantagenets
The Houses of Lancaster & York
House of Tudor
House of Stuart
House of Hanover
Saxons & Danes
Throughout the Dark Ages, England was ruled as separate kingdoms, until Alfred the Great, King of Wessex united them. However for a long period England passed from Anglo-Saxon and Danish rule, known as Danelaw.
The Saxon Kings:
Alfred the Great
871-899
Edward the Elder 899-924
Athelstan 924-939
Edmund I 939-946
Edred 946-955
Edwy 955-959
Edgar 959-975
Edward the Martyr 975-978
Ethelred II 978-1016
Edmund II 1016
The Danelaw:
Svein, King of Denmark 1013-1014
Canute I King of Denmark & Norway 1014-1035
Harold I 1035-1040
Canute II 1040-1042
Saxon Restoration:
Edward the Confessor 1042-1066
Harold II 1066
The Normans
When Harold was killed in the Battle of Hastings in 1066, the victor
William of Normandy took the throne and the Norman Conquest that followed
brought about huge social change throughout England and Wales.
William I (the Conqueror) 1066-1087
William II 1087-1100
Henry I 1100-1135
Stephen 1135-1154
The Plantagenets
During the Plantagenet dynasty, another powerful Norman line, England's
power and influence steadily grew. This was the era of the crusades,
it was when King John signed the Magna Carta and when Edward I, known
as Longshanks and Hammer of the Scots, built many great castles and
brutally established English rule in Wales and Scotland.
Henry II 1154-1189
Richard I (the Lionheart) 1189-1199
John 1199-1216
Henry III 1216-1272
Edward I 1272-1307
Edward II 1307-1327
Edward III 1327-1377
Richard II 1377-1399
Houses of Lancaster & York
The civil war known as the War of the Roses was thought between these
two Plantagenet households. Both held strong claims to the throne,
which passed between them during this time. This period was also when
Richard III allegedly murdered his young nephews, Edward V, the rightful
heir and young Richard, in the Tower of London.
House of Lancaster
Henry IV 1399-1413
Henry V 1413-1422
Henry VI 1422-1461 and 1470-1471
House of York
Edward IV 1461-1470 and 1471-1483
Edward V, (uncrowned) 1483
Richard III 1483-1485
House of Tudor
Henry
Tudor of Welsh descent, ended the War of the Roses by defeating Richard
III at the Battle of Bosworth, establishing one of England's most
tempestuous dynasties, noted for its religious strife and prominent
monarchs, Henry VIII with his many wives, ‘Bloody' Mary I and Elizabeth
I, the virgin Queen.
Henry VII (Tudor) 1485-1509
Henry VIII 1509-1547
Edward VI 1547-1553
Mary I 1553-1558
Elizabeth I 1558-1603
House of Stuart
When Elizabeth dies without a heir the line passed to the royal Scottish
house, the Stuart dynasty, which was to combine Scotland, England
and Wales and later divide the nation in the Civil War under Charles
I. After Charles was executed by Parliament, Oliver Cromwell established
a Republic. This was abandoned and the monarchy was restored under
Charles II, only to be sunk in crisis again under James II.
James I (James VI of Scotland) 1603-1625
Charles I 1625-1649
Charles II 1660-1685
James II (James VII of Scotland) 1685-1688
William III (of Orange) & Mary II (1689-1694)
William III of Orange 1694-1702
Anne 1702-1714
House of Hanover
Despite the Catholic descendants of James II laying claim to the
British crown, George of Hanover, a German who spoke no English, but
was the nearest Protestant claimant to the throne, was made king.
The Hanoverian dynasty successfully established itself in which time
Britain's territories were widened throughout the world. The Golden
Age of the British Empire came under Queen Victoria, Britain's longest
ruling monarch. Saxe-Coburg was the house of her husband Prince Albert,
taken by her son and heir. 
George I 1714-27
George II 1727-1760
George III 1760-1820
George IV (formerly Prince Regent) 1820-1830
William IV 1830-1837
Victoria 1837-1901
House of Saxe-Coburg
Edward VII 1901-1910
House of Windsor
The name of Saxe-Coburg was changed to Windsor by George V in 1917,
choosing a more English sounding name, when the nation was at war
with the Germans. His successor Edward VIII abdicated the throne after
less than a year, to marry American Ms. Wallis Simpson. The current
monarch Queen Elizabeth II is his niece.
George V 1910-1936
Edward VIII 1936
George VI 1936-1952
Elizabeth II 1953 to present |