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JBS site ed. 2011 - K
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The Kings of England: 1509 to 1820.
The Kings and Queens of England received the loyalty of their subject in
various degrees. To understand the politics of the day, and the reasons
the people in the Winthrop fleet of 1630 felt threatened, and the reasons the
people of 1772 felt the English king was "foreign", it helps to understand the
line of succession of the monarchs of those times. We will set out what is
most helpful, and it with some color coding and boldface that may it easier to
follow.
Henry VII (TUDOR) (d. 1509) left children which included Margaret
and Henry VIII.
Henry VIII not only established the King of England as
firmly ruling the country, but also, Important to the history of England and New
England, Henry VIII broke England from the Roman Catholic Church and started the
Church of England. The Church of England, with the King of England as the head
of the Church, became the legally the established church, in which all persons
in England subjects were to worship and were to support by tithing of their
incomes. For the next two hundred years, internal dissention on who should
be the King of England was due in large part to the prevailing English view that
the Catholic religion was the "wrong" religion, and the attempts by later
monarchs to return the country to the Catholic religion.
Henry VIII, secured parliamentary authorization to will
the crown as he chose among the children of his various wives. With a disregard
of the niceties of law , he fixed the succession to be first this son Edward,
than his daughter Mary, then his daughter Elizabeth. When Henry VIII died
in 1547, this son Edward VI
(d. 1553 at the age of 16) carried forward the Church of England his father had
started, by authorizing the first Church of England Prayer Book. After
Edward's death the crown went to his sister Mary I . Mary I, known
as "bloody Mary" attempted to restore Catholicism and married the very Catholic
King Phillip of Spain. Fortunately, when Mary died in 1558, her successor
Elizabeth I restored calm and peace and order
to England.
Elizabeth I was a successful monarch, and a "tough act to follow:"
When Elizabeth died in 1603 she had no direct descendents.
With the death of Elizabeth, Parliament looked to find a new King or Queen.
Parliament looked backward in her line to the place where her father Henry VIII
and Margaret had been siblings. Margaret had married James IV of
Scotland (STUART). James IV of Scotland and Mary had left children
that included James V, King of Scotts who, in turn, left a child Mary, Queen of
Scotts, who, in turn had a son James VI of Scotland.
Thus, at the death of Elizabeth I the English crown was placed on James VI
of Scotland who became the king of England, known as James I of England,
(STUART) d. 1625. Thereby there became a union of
England and Scotland under the kingship of the same person.
James VI of Scotland and I of England died in
1625 . His son Charles I became king. After a troublesome session with
parliament, Charles I in 1629 resolved to rule without parliament and dissolved
it. Tumultuous times resulted, with justified fear that Charles I would
impose the Catholic religion on his subjects, would increase his use of his army
in enforcing his civil decrees on his subjects, and would increase taxes on the
populace. It was then that the Massachusetts Bay Colony settlers set out to form
a new colony in New England.
In the reign of Charles I, in 1642, that the English
Civil War began, with great violence and turmoil that turned the kingdom
upside down for four years, ending with the execution of Charles I in 1649.
With the death of Charles I, the crown went into
"limbo", while Cromwell became Lord Protector of the "commonwealth". The
commonwealth was formally established in 1653 and lasted from 1649 to 1660
The monarchy was restored at the death of Cromwell and the crown went to
Charles II (d. 1685). His son James became
James II.
One of his children was Mary, who had
married William II of Orange.
When James II died, Parliament ultimately decided to
ask his daughter Mary, who became Mary II (d. 1694)
to become Queen and have her husband be King (William II). When he died the
crown went by regular succession to Mary's son William III (ORANGE).
When William III of Orange died in 1702, the line of
succession reverted, under regular rules of succession back to
the Stuart line of James II, to wit:
to James II's daughter Anne I 1714
When Anne I died in 1714 she had no direct descendents.
Parliament then then looked backwards to the line
of James VI of Scotland and I of England,
James VI of Scotland and I of England had left a line that married into the
Electors of Hanover who ruled an area in what is today Germany. The Hanover
Elector at the time was George, who became George I of England I
(HANOVER) d. 1727
So with the death of George I in 1717, there succeeded
George II (d. 1760), and George III, who had a long reign,
through the American Revolution. the American war of 1812, and the Napoleonic
Wars, dying in 1820.
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