© Cheryl Bolen
Unlike his hedonistic
eldest son, England's King George III (1738-1820) did not philander. He settled
down with his German-born wife, Charlotte (1744-1818), at age 23, and she
proceeded to bear him 15 children over the next 20 years. He did not take mistresses.
He lived frugally. And he derived great pleasure from his large brood--until
the boys became men, that is.
Eleven of the
children would reach old age. Two boys would die before the age of 5, and his
youngest daughter died while in her twenties. Of the 15, eight were boys and
seven were girls. Two of the sons would rule England and another who would rule
Hanover.
The younger brothers
are less famous and tend to blur, even though they each led distinctly
different lives. The girls, too, all seem to run together. Perhaps that is
because their lives were all rather the same--as bland as their parents.
The living conditions
of King George's daughters came to be known as The Nunnery. That is because
none of them was allowed to marry at the age when most young ladies take
husbands. Three of the daughters would eventually marry--but not until they
were past the age of child bearing.
Princess Sophia |
Starved for the male
companionship that was so lacking in their lives, one of the sisters, Sophia
(1777-1848), got pregnant by her father's 56-year-old equerry and secretly gave
birth without any member of her household being any the wiser. (The little boy
was placed in a foster home.)
Augusta (1768-1840) married the Duke of
Saxe-Coburg, and Elizabeth married the Prince of Hesse-Homburg when she was 48
years of age. The only other sister to marry was Mary, who married the Duke of
Gloucester, whose husband's father was her father's brother.
Frederick, Duke of York |
The boys were raised
in pairs, sharing domiciles and tutors. For example, the Prince of Wales and
his brother Freddie (later Duke of York) were exactly a year apart, and they
were never separated from one another. Freddie was the king's favorite son, and
when it became clear his elder brother was a bad influence on him, the king
sent Freddie to Germany.
The third son,
William, later the Duke of Clarence and later still, King William IV, was sent
to sea at an early age and, unlike his regent brother, was somewhat coarse. He
lived as man and wife for more than 20
years with the actress Mrs. Jordan, who bore him 10 children. Their children
took the FitzClarence surname.
The next son, Edward
(1767-1820), later known as the Duke of Kent, lived for many years with a
French widow. He was a stern military man. After the regent's daughter,
Princess Charlotte, died in childbirth in 1817, he would be one of the brothers
scurrying to take a legitimate wife in order to father a child who would
inherit the English throne. He married a young Saxe-Coburg widow who had
already borne two children. She bore a daughter, Victoria, who would succeed
her Uncle William as ruler of England in 1837.
Duke of Kent (Victoria's father) |
Ernest (1771-1851),
the fifth son, became King of Hanover. He was the only brother to never have a
weight problem.
Another of the
brothers to undergo an illegal marriage (as the Prince of Wales had done with
Mrs. Fitzherbert in 1785) was Augustus (1773-1843). When he was 20 he secretly
married Lady Augusta, who bore him two children, but the marriage was
invalidated in 1801 because it violated the Royal Marriage Act.
The last brother to
live past childhood, Adolphus (1774-1850) was known as the Duke of Cambridge.
Son Alfred, who was
born in 1780, died at age 2. At his death, the king said, "I am very sorry
for Alfred, but if it had been Octavius, I should have died too." Months
later, Octavius, who was born in 1779, became ill after being vaccinated for
smallpox, and he never recovered. His father was almost inconsolable over the
loss of his next-to-youngest son.
How curious that a
monarch who fathered eight legitimate sons had not a single grandson to serve
as king. More odd still was that when George III’s only legitimate grandchild, Princess
Charlotte, died when he was 78, there was not a single legitimate grandchild of
George III.— Cheryl Bolen’s
37th book, Ex-Spinster by Christmas, is her latest release. Watch for Miss Hasting’s Excellent London Adventure in May.
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