List of British Royal Consorts (Hanover): Difference between revisions
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| [[File:FX Winterhalter - Luise von Baden geb. von Preußen (ÖaL 1856).jpg|125px]] | | [[File:FX Winterhalter - Luise von Baden geb. von Preußen (ÖaL 1856).jpg|125px]] | ||
| '''{{wp|Princess Louise of Prussia}}'''<ref>At just sixteen, {{wp|Princess Louise of Prussia|Louise}} is the youngest woman to become a royal consort in {{wp|British}} history when she married [[William V and II of the United Kingdom and of the Netherlands|King William V]] in 1856. Aside from this, at fifty-five years long, she is also the longest-serving {{wp|British}} royal consort. Otherwise, the oldest woman to become a royal consort is {{wp|Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel}} who only became queen consort at fifty-two years old.</ref> | | '''{{wp|Princess Louise of Prussia}}'''<ref>At just sixteen, {{wp|Princess Louise of Prussia|Louise}} is the youngest woman to become a royal consort in {{wp|British}} history when she married [[William V and II of the United Kingdom and of the Netherlands|King William V]] in 1856. Aside from this, at fifty-five years long, she is also the longest-serving {{wp|British}} royal consort. Otherwise, the oldest woman to become a royal consort is {{wp|Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel}} who only became queen consort at fifty-two years old. Rather fittingly, she is also the shortest-serving royal consort at no more than a year long.</ref> | ||
| 7 June 1840<hr>Daughter of {{wp|William I, German Emperor}}<br/> and {{wp|Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach|Princess Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach}} | | 7 June 1840<hr>Daughter of {{wp|William I, German Emperor}}<br/> and {{wp|Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach|Princess Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach}} | ||
| 26 August 1856 | | 26 August 1856 |
Revision as of 19:10, 28 December 2023
Picture | Name | Birth | Marriage | Became consort | Coronation | Ceased to be consort | Death | Resting place | Tenure | Spouse |
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George I[1] | 30 October 1683 Son of George I, Elector of Hanover and Princess Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick-Lüneburg-Celle |
22 July 1705 | 1 May 1707 Creation of the Kingdom of Great Britain |
Not crowned | 25 October 1760 77 years, 89 days |
Westminster Abbey | 53 years, 177 days | Mary III | |
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Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz[2] | 19 May 1744 Daughter of Duke Charles Louis Frederick of Mecklenburg, Prince of Mirow and Princess Elisabeth Albertine of Saxe-Hildburghausen |
8 September 1761 | 12 October 1766 Spouse's accession |
5 May 1767 | 17 November 1818 74 years, 126 days |
St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle | 52 years, 36 days | George II and III | |
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Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel | 17 May 1768 Daughter of Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and Princess Augusta of Great Britain |
8 April 1795 | 29 January 1820 Spouse's accession |
Not crowned | 7 August 1821 53 years, 72 days |
Brunswick Cathedral | 1 year, 190 days | George III and IV | |
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Princess Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen[3] | 13 August 1792 Daughter of Georg I, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen and Princess Louise Eleanore of Hohenlohe-Langenburg |
13 July 1818 | 26 June 1830 Spouse's accession |
8 September 1831 | 20 June 1837 Spouse's death |
2 December 1849 56 years, 311 days |
St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle | 6 years, 359 days | William IV |
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Princess Louise of Prussia[4] | 7 June 1840 Daughter of William I, German Emperor and Princess Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach |
26 August 1856 | 26 August 1856 Marriage to the monarch |
Not crowned | 30 January 1913 Spouse's death |
23 April 1923 84 years, 141 days |
Westminster Abbey | 55 years, 235 days | William V and II |
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Princess Sophia of Prussia[5] | 14 June 1870 Daughter of Frederick III, German Emperor and Princess Victoria of the United Kingdom |
22 August 1887 | 30 January 1913 Spouse's accession |
5 March 1913 | 5 January 1923 Spouse's death |
13 January 1932 61 years, 213 days |
George and Sophia Memorial | 9 years, 340 days | George IV and V |
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Princess Margaretha of Sweden[6] | 25 June 1899 Daughter of Prince Carl, Duke of Västergötland and Princess Ingeborg of Denmark |
11 July 1925 | 11 July 1925 Marriage to the monarch |
Not crowned | 7 July 1951 Spouse's death |
4 January 1977 77 years, 193 days |
Westminster Abbey | 25 years, 361 days | Frederick |
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Lauren Bacall[7] | 16 September 1924 Daughter of William Perske and Natalie Bacall |
15 March 1946 | 7 July 1951 Spouse's accession |
20 September 1951 | 15 January 1997 Spouse's abdicaton |
12 August 2014 89 years, 330 days |
Westminster Abbey | 45 years, 182 days | Charles III |
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Christy Turlington[8] | 2 January 1969 Daughter of Dwain Turlington and Maria Elizabeth |
14 June 1995 | 15 January 1997 Spouse's accession |
20 March 1997 | 13 October 2017 Spouse's abdication |
Living 55 years, 182 days |
20 years, 271 days | Thomas |
- ↑ Unlike other royal consorts, at the time of his marriage, George was a sovereign ruler in his own right as the Elector of Hanover. Consequently, much like Spain's King Philip II, George was, over the course of his marriage, jure uxoris King of the United Kingdom and also stadtholder of the Dutch Republic.
- ↑ Prior to the ratification of the Congress of Vienna in 1815, Charlotte was officially styled as a princess consort of Orange as the spouse of the ruler of the Dutch Republic. However, with the formation of the new United Kingdom of the Netherlands, she was officially styled as queen consort in light of the elevation in titles. Likewise, she was also elevated from being Hanover's electress to queen consort.
- ↑ .With a difference of twenty-seven years, Adelaide is the royal consort with the largest age difference with her husband. On the other hand, both George I and Princess Louise of Prussia are tied for the smallest age difference with their respective spouses from whom they are only three years apart in age.
- ↑ At just sixteen, Louise is the youngest woman to become a royal consort in British history when she married King William V in 1856. Aside from this, at fifty-five years long, she is also the longest-serving British royal consort. Otherwise, the oldest woman to become a royal consort is Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel who only became queen consort at fifty-two years old. Rather fittingly, she is also the shortest-serving royal consort at no more than a year long.
- ↑ As per a mutual agreement between the couple, Sophia, as well as her husband King George V, are the only ones to have not been buried in the United Kingdom. Instead, they were buried at the George and Sophia Memorial in Ottawa, Canada.
- ↑ As of current, Margaretha was and remains the only British royal consort to have not been the first wife of the monarch, with Margaretha instead being the second wife of King Frederick whose marriage to his first wife Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia was annulled in 1919 before Frederick himself later married Margaretha in 1925.
- ↑ Having never converted to Anglicanism throughout her entire life, Lauren Bacall is therefore the only British royal consort to ever be of the Jewish faith. In addition, she is also the longest-lived British royal consort, having lived until the age of eighty-nine.
- ↑ As a result of the passing of the Succession to the Crown Act 1995, Christy Turlington remains to date the only British royal consort to ever be of the Roman Catholic faith. Beforehand, as per the Royal Marriages Act 1772, British monarchs were prevented from marrying Roman Catholics with the ensuing punishment being disqualification from the line of succession to the throne.