Anne | |
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Queen Anne, in a 1705 portrait by Michael Dahl | |
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Reign | 8 March 1702 – 1 May 1707 |
Coronation | 23 April 1702 |
Predecessor | William III & II |
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Reign | 1 May 1707 – 1 August 1714 |
Successor | George I |
Spouse | Prince George of Denmark |
Issue | |
Prince William, Duke of Gloucester | |
House | House of Stuart |
Father | James II & VII |
Mother | Lady Anne Hyde |
Born | 6 February 1665 16 February 1665 (N.S.) St. James's Palace, London |
Died | 1 August 1714 12 August 1714 (N.S.) Kensington Palace, London |
(aged 49)
Burial | Westminster Abbey, London |
Queen Anne (6 February 1665 – 1 August 1714)[1] ascended the thrones of England, Scotland and Ireland on 8 March 1702, succeeding her brother-in-law and cousin, William III of England and II of Scotland. Her Catholic father, James II and VII, was deemed by the English Parliament to have abdicated when he was forced to retreat to France during the Glorious Revolution of 1688/9; her brother-in-law and her sister then became joint monarchs as William III & II and Mary II. After Mary's death in 1694, William continued as sole monarch until his own death in 1702.
On 1 May 1707, under the Acts of Union 1707, England and Scotland were united as a single sovereign state, the Kingdom of Great Britain. Anne became its first sovereign, while continuing to hold the separate crown of Queen of Ireland and the title of Queen of France. Anne reigned for twelve years until her death in August 1714. Therefore she was, technically, the last Queen of England and the last Queen of Scots.
Queen Anne's life was marked by many crises, both personal and relating to succession of the Crown and religious polarisation. Because she died without surviving children, Anne was the last monarch of the House of Stuart. She was succeeded by her second cousin, George I, of the House of Hanover, who was a descendant of the Stuarts through his maternal grandmother, Elizabeth, daughter of James I and VI.[2]
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Anne was born at St. James's Palace, London, the fourth child and second daughter of James, Duke of York (afterwards James II and VII), and his first wife, Lady Anne Hyde. Her paternal uncle was King Charles II, who ruled the three kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland. She was baptised into the Anglican faith at the Chapel Royal at St. James's, and her older sister, Mary, was one of her godparents. The Duke and Duchess of York had eight children, but Anne and Mary were the only ones to survive into adulthood.[2][3]
As a child, Anne suffered from an eye infection. For medical treatment, she was sent to France, where she lived with her grandmother, the Queen Dowager, Henrietta Maria, at the Château de Colombes near Paris. Following her grandmother's death in 1669, Anne lived with an aunt, Henriette Anne, Duchess of Orléans, who had two daughters of her own, Marie Louise and Anne Marie d'Orléans. On the sudden death of her aunt in 1670, Anne returned to England. Her mother died the following year.[4]
In about 1673, Anne made the acquaintance of Sarah Jennings, who became her close friend and one of her most influential advisors.[5] Jennings later married John Churchill (the future Duke of Marlborough), who was to become Anne's most important general.[6]
In 1673, Anne's father's conversion to Roman Catholicism became public when he married a Catholic princess, Mary of Modena, who was only six and half years older than Anne. On the instructions of Charles II, Anne and her sister Mary were raised as Protestants.[7] They were brought up separated from their father in their own establishment at Richmond, London, and their education was focused on the teachings of the Anglican church.[8] As the King had no surviving legitimate children, the Duke of York was next in the line of succession, followed by his two surviving daughters, Mary and Anne. Over the next ten years, the new Duchess of York had ten children, but all were either stillborn or died in infancy, leaving Mary and Anne second and third in the line of succession after their father.
On 28 July 1683, Anne married in the Chapel Royal the Protestant Prince George of Denmark, brother of King Christian V of Denmark (and her second cousin once removed through Frederick II). Though it was an unpopular union, it was one of great domestic happiness.[9] Sarah Churchill became Anne's Lady of the Bedchamber. By Anne's desire to mark their mutual intimacy and affection, all deference due to her rank was abandoned and the two ladies called each other Mrs. Morley and Mrs. Freeman.[6][10] Within months of the marriage, Anne was pregnant but the baby was stillborn. Anne recovered quickly,[11] and gave birth to two daughters in quick succession, Mary and Anne Sophia.
When Charles II died in 1685 (possibly converting to Catholicism on his deathbed), Anne's father became king as James II and VII.[12] James was not well received by the English people, who were concerned about his Catholicism.[13] Anne shared the general concern, and continued to attend Anglican services. Her sister had married William of Orange in 1677, and William and Mary were living in the Netherlands, leaving Anne and her family the only members of the royal family attending Protestant religious services in England.[14]
In early 1687, within a matter of days, Anne had another stillborn child and her husband and two young daughters caught smallpox. Both of Anne's daughters died. Rachel Wriothesley, Lady Russell, wrote that George and Anne had "taken [the deaths] very heavily ... Sometimes they wept, sometimes they mourned in words; then sat silent, hand in hand; he sick in bed, and she the carefullest nurse to him that can be imagined."[15] Later that year, she suffered another stillbirth.
Public alarm at James's Catholicism increased when his wife, Mary of Modena, became pregnant for the first time since James's accession. In a letter to her sister Mary, Anne raised suspicions about the pregnancy, and implied that the Queen was not pregnant at all but faking it. She wrote, "they will stick at nothing, be it never so wicked, if it will promote their interest ... there may be foul play intended."[16] The following month, Anne became dangerously ill, perhaps after a miscarriage or because of worry over the Queen's pregnancy, and left London to recuperate in the spa town of Bath, Somerset.[17]
The Queen gave birth to a son (James Francis Edward) on 10 June 1688, and a Catholic dynasty became more likely.[18] Anne was still at Bath, so she did not witness the birth, which fed the belief that the child was spurious; Anne may have left the capital deliberately to avoid being present, or because she was genuinely ill,[19] but it is most probable that James desired the exclusion of all Protestants, including his daughter, from affairs of state.[20] "I shall never now be satisfied", Anne wrote to her sister Mary, "whether the child be true or false. It may be it is our brother, but God only knows ... one cannot help having a thousand fears and melancholy thoughts, but whatever changes may happen you shall ever find me firm to my religion and faithfully yours."[21]
To scotch rumours of a suppositious child, James had 40 witnesses attend a Privy Council meeting, but Anne claimed she could not attend because she was pregnant herself and then declined to read the depositions because it was "not necessary".[22]
In November 1688, Anne's brother-in-law, William of Orange, invaded England with the intent to dethrone the unpopular King in what became known as the "Glorious Revolution". Forbidden by James to pay Mary a projected visit in the spring of 1688, Anne did correspond with her and was no doubt aware of William's plans to invade the country. On the advice of the Churchills (Anne's conduct during this period was probably influenced a great deal by them)[23] she refused to side with James after William landed and wrote instead to William, declaring her approval of his action. Churchill abandoned the king on the 24th of that month, Prince George on the 25th, and when James returned to London on the 26th, he found that Anne and her lady-in-waiting had done likewise the previous night.[24] He put the women under house arrest in the Palace of Whitehall. However, escaping from Whitehall by a back staircase they put themselves under the care of the bishop of London, spent one night in his house, and subsequently arrived on 1 December at Nottingham, where the princess first made herself known and appointed a council. Then she travelled to Oxford, where she met Prince George in triumph, escorted by a large company. Like Mary, she was reproached for showing no concern at the news of the king's flight, but her justification was that "she never loved to do anything that looked like an affected constraint." She returned to London on 19 December, where she was at once visited by her brother-in-law William.
In 1689, a Convention Parliament assembled and declared that James had abdicated the realm when he attempted to flee, and that the Throne was therefore vacant. The Crown was offered to Mary, but accepted jointly by William and Mary, who thereafter ruled as the only joint monarchs in British history.[25] The Bill of Rights 1689 settled succession to the Throne; Anne and her descendants were to be in the line of succession after William and Mary. They were to be followed by any descendants of William by a future marriage.
On 24 July 1689, Anne gave birth to a son, William, who, though ill, survived infancy. As William and Mary had no children, it looked as though Anne's son would eventually inherit the crown.
Soon after their accession, William and Mary rewarded Churchill by granting him the Earldom of Marlborough. Their subsequent treatment of the Marlboroughs, however, was not as favourable. In 1692, suspecting that the Duke of Marlborough was a Jacobite, Mary dismissed him from all his offices. The Duchess of Marlborough was subsequently removed from the royal household, leading Princess Anne to angrily leave her royal residence for Syon House, the Duke of Northumberland's home. Princess Anne was then stripped of her guard of honour, and the guards at the royal palaces were forbidden to salute her husband.[23]
When Mary II died of smallpox in 1694, William III and II continued to reign alone. Anne then became his heir apparent, since any children he might have by another wife were assigned to a lower place in the line of succession. Seeking to improve his own popularity (which had always been much lower than that of his wife), he restored Princess Anne to her previous honours, allowing her to reside in St. James's Palace. At the same time William kept her in the background and refrained from appointing her regent during his absence.
In 1695, William sought to win Princess Anne's favour by restoring Marlborough to all of his offices. In return, Anne gave her support to William's government, though about this time, in 1696—according to James, in consequence of the near prospect of the throne—she wrote to her father asking for his leave to wear the crown at William's death, and promising its restoration at a convenient opportunity.[26] The unfounded rumour that William contemplated settling the succession after his death on James's son, provided he were educated a Protestant in England, may possibly have alarmed her.[27]
By 1700, Anne had been pregnant at least eighteen times; thirteen times, she miscarried or gave birth to stillborn children. Of the remaining five children, four died before reaching the age of two years. Based on her foetal losses and physical symptoms, a medical historian has diagnosed disseminated lupus erythematosus.[28] Other suggested causes are rhesus incompatibility, diabetes, and intrauterine growth retardation.[29] Rhesus incompatibility, however, generally worsens with successive pregnancies, and so may not fit with the pattern of Anne's pregnancies, as her only son to survive infancy, William, Duke of Gloucester, was born after a series of stillbirths.[30]
Anne's sole surviving child, William, Duke of Gloucester, died at the age of eleven on 29 July 1700, precipitating a succession crisis.[2] William and Mary had not had any children; thus, Anne was the only individual remaining in the line of succession established by the Bill of Rights 1689. If the line of succession were totally extinguished, then it would have been open for the deposed King James or his son James Francis Edward Stuart (the "Old Pretender") to claim the Throne.
To preclude a Catholic restoration, Parliament enacted the Act of Settlement 1701, which provided that, failing the issue of Princess Anne and of William III by any future marriage, the Crown would go to Sophia, Electress of Hanover, and her descendants. Sophia was the granddaughter of James I and VI through his daughter Elizabeth, who was the sister of Anne's grandfather Charles I. Dozens of genealogically senior claimants (including Sophia's elder sister) were disregarded due to their Catholicism. Anne's father died in September 1701. His widow, Anne's stepmother, the former Queen, wrote to Anne to inform her that her father forgave her and remind her of her promise to seek the restoration of his line. Anne, however, had already acquiesced to the new line of succession created by the Act of Settlement.[31]
William III died on 8 March 1702 and Anne was crowned Queen on 23 April 1702.[32] She was immediately popular.[33] In a speech to the Parliament of England she disassociated herself from her late Dutch brother-in-law and said, "As I know my heart to be entirely English, I can very sincerely assure you there is not anything you can expect or desire from me which I shall not be ready to do for the happiness and prosperity of England."[34] Almost as soon as she succeeded to the throne, Anne became embroiled in the War of the Spanish Succession. This war, in which England supported the claim of Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, to succeed to the Spanish Throne, would continue until the last years of Anne's reign and dominated both foreign and domestic policy.
Soon after her accession, Anne appointed her husband Lord High Admiral, giving him control of the Royal Navy. Anne gave control of the army to Lord Marlborough, whom she appointed Captain-General.[35] Marlborough also received numerous honours from the Queen; he was created a Knight of the Garter and was elevated to the rank of duke.[36] The Duchess of Marlborough was appointed to the posts of Groom of the Stole, Mistress of the Robes, and Keeper of the Privy Purse.[37]
She re-instituted the tradition of touching for the King's evil that had been eschewed by William as "papist superstition".[38]
In passing the Act of Settlement, in 1701, the English Parliament neglected to consult with the Parliament of Scotland or Estates of Scotland, which, in part, wished to preserve the Stuart dynasty and its right of inheritance to the Throne.[39] The Scottish response to the Settlement was to pass the Act of Security, a bill which stated that—failing the issue of the Queen—the Estates had the power to choose the next Scottish monarch from amongst the numerous descendants of the royal line of Scotland. The individual chosen by the Estates could not be the same person who came to the English Throne, unless various religious, economic and political conditions were met. Though it was originally not forthcoming, Royal Assent to the act was granted when the Scottish Parliament refused to impose taxes and threatened to withdraw Scottish troops from the Duke of Marlborough's army in Europe.
In its turn, the English Parliament—fearing that an independent Scotland would restore the Auld Alliance with France—responded with the Alien Act 1705, which provided that economic sanctions would be imposed and Scottish subjects would be declared aliens (putting their right to own property in England into jeopardy), unless Scotland either repealed the Act of Security or moved to unite with England. Eventually, the Estates chose the latter option, and Commissioners were appointed by Queen Anne to negotiate the terms of a union between the two countries. Articles of Union were approved by the Commissioners on 22 July 1706, agreed to by an Act of the Scottish Parliament passed on 16 January 1707 and an act of the English Parliament passed on 6 March 1707. Under the Acts, England and Scotland became one realm, a united kingdom called Great Britain, on 1 May 1707.[40]
Queen Anne's reign was further marked by the development of a two-party system as the new era of parliamentary governance unfolded and matured. Anne personally preferred moderate Tories, but "endured" the Whigs.
Because of Anne's personal preferences, her first ministry was primarily Tory. It was headed by Sidney Godolphin, 1st Baron Godolphin and Anne's favorite John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, both moderate Tories. However, it also contained such high Tories as Daniel Finch, 2nd Earl of Nottingham, and Anne's uncle Laurence Hyde, 1st Earl of Rochester.[41] Marlborough and Godolphin kept up connections to the Whigs through the Speaker of the House of Commons, Robert Harley.
The Whigs vigorously supported the War of the Spanish Succession and became even more influential after the Duke of Marlborough won a great victory at the Battle of Blenheim in 1704. Most of the High Tories, who had opposed British involvement in the land war against France, were gradually removed from office. Godolphin, Marlborough, and Harley, by now a Secretary of State, who formed the ruling "triumvirate", were forced to rely more and more on support from the Whigs, and particularly from the Junto Whigs whom Queen Anne particularly disliked. In 1706, Godolphin and Marlborough forced Anne to accept Lord Sunderland, a Junto Whig and Marlborough's son-in-law, as Harley's colleague as Secretary of State.
Although this strengthened the ministry's position in Parliament, it weakened the ministry's position with the Queen, as Anne became increasingly irritated with Godolphin and with her erstwhile favorite, the Duchess of Marlborough. The Queen turned for private advice to Harley, who was uncomfortable with Marlborough and Godolphin's turn towards the Whigs and was moving closer to supporting the Tory "blue water" policy on the war. She also turned to Abigail Hill, a cousin of the Duchess who became more amenable to Anne as her relationship with Sarah deteriorated.[42]
The division within the ministry came to a head in February 1708, when Godolphin and Marlborough insisted that the Queen had to either dismiss Harley or do without their services. When the Queen seemed to hesitate, Marlborough and Godolphin refused to attend a cabinet meeting on 8 February. When Harley attempted to lead business without his erstwhile colleagues, several of those present, including the Duke of Somerset refused to participate until Godolphin and Marlborough returned.
Her hand forced, the Queen dismissed Harley on 11 February. But Godolphin and Marlborough's victory was a hollow one, as their personal relationship with Anne would never recover from the blow. Furthermore, they found themselves increasingly at the mercy of the Junto leaders. Whereas previously they had been able to determine war policy largely as they liked, their total parliamentary dependence on the Whigs meant that they had to consult with Junto leaders Lord Somers and Lord Halifax. This dependence on the hated Junto only increased the Queen's dislike of the ministry.
In July 1708, the Duchess of Marlborough came to court with a bawdy poem that implied a lesbian relationship between Anne and Abigail. The Duchess wrote to Anne telling her she had damaged her reputation by conceiving "a great passion for such a woman ... strange and unaccountable".[43] Anne was dismayed, and wrote to the Duke of Marlborough asking that his wife "leave off teasing & tormenting me & behave herself with the decency she ought both to her friend and Queen".[44]
Anne's husband, Prince George of Denmark, died in October 1708.[45] His leadership of the Admiralty was unpopular amongst the Whig leaders. As he lay on his deathbed, some Whigs were preparing to make a motion requesting his removal from the office of Lord High Admiral. Anne was forced to appeal to the Duke of Marlborough to ensure that the motion was not made.
Anne was devastated by the loss of her husband, and the event proved a turning point in her relationship with her old friend, Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough. The Duchess arrived at Windsor shortly after George had died, and forced the Queen to leave the castle and move to St. James's Palace against her will. Anne pleaded to be left alone, and resented the Duchess for insisting that the grieving Queen be attended at all times.
The Whigs used the Prince's death to their own advantage. With Whigs now dominant in parliament, and Anne overbowed by the loss of her husband, they forced her to accept the Junto leaders Lord Somers and Lord Wharton into the cabinet. Their power was, however, limited by Anne's insistence on carrying out the duties of Lord High Admiral herself, and not appointing a member of the government to take Prince George's place. Undeterred, the Junto demanded the appointment of the Earl of Orford, another member of the Junto and one of Prince George's leading critics, as First Lord of the Admiralty. Anne flatly refused, and chose her own candidate, the moderate Tory Thomas Herbert, 8th Earl of Pembroke on 29 November 1708.
Pressure mounted on Pembroke, Godolphin and the Queen from the dissatisfied Junto Whigs, and Pembroke was forced to resign after less than a year in office. Another month of arguments followed before the Queen finally consented to put the Earl of Orford in control of the Admiralty in November 1709.
As the expensive War of the Spanish Succession grew unpopular, so did the Whig administration. Harley, now in opposition, was particularly skillful in using the issue of the cost of the war to motivate the electorate. The Queen, increasingly disdained by her ministry's policy of "no peace without Spain", finally took the opportunity to dismiss Godolphin in August 1710. The Junto Whigs (Sunderland, Somers, Wharton, and Orford) were also removed from office, although Marlborough, for the moment, remained as commander of the army. In their place, she appointed a new ministry, headed by Harley, which began to seek peace with France. Harley and the Tories were ready to compromise by giving Spain to the grandson of the French King, but the Whigs could not bear to see a Bourbon on the Spanish Throne.[46] In the parliamentary elections which soon followed, Harley used government patronage to create a large Tory majority.[47]
The dispute was resolved by outside events. The elder brother of Archduke Charles (whom the Whigs supported) died in 1711 and Charles then inherited Austria, Hungary and the throne of the Holy Roman Empire. To give him also the Spanish throne was no longer in Great Britain's interests. But the proposed Treaty of Utrecht submitted to Parliament for ratification did not go as far as the Whigs wanted to curb Bourbon ambitions.[48] In the House of Commons, the Tory majority was unassailable, but the same was not true in the House of Lords. Seeing a need for decisive action—to erase the Whig majority in the House of Lords—Anne created twelve new peers. Such a mass creation of peers was unprecedented. Indeed, Elizabeth I had granted fewer peerages in 44 years than Anne did in a single day.[49] This allowed for ratification of the Treaty and thus ended Great Britain's involvement in the War of the Spanish Succession.[50]
Anne was rendered unable to speak by a stroke on 30 July 1714, and handed the treasurer's staff of office to Charles Talbot, 1st Duke of Shrewsbury, without a word.[51] She died of suppressed gout, ending in erysipelas, at approximately 7 o'clock on 1 August 1714. She was buried in the Henry VII chapel on the South Aisle of Westminster Abbey but her body was so swollen and large that it had to be borne in a vast almost-square coffin.[52]
Anne died shortly after the Electress Sophia (8 June, the same year); the Electress's son, George I, Elector of Hanover, inherited the British Crown.[2] Pursuant to the Act of Settlement 1701, the crown was settled on George as Electress Sophia's heir, with the possible Catholic claimants, including Anne's half-brother James Francis Edward Stuart, ignored. However, the Elector of Hanover's accession was relatively stable: Jacobite risings in 1715 and 1719 both failed.[53]
Scottish and English Royalty |
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House of Stuart |
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Anne |
William, Duke of Gloucester |
The reign of Queen Anne was marked by an increase in the influence of ministers and a decrease in the influence of the Crown. In 1708, Anne became the last British Sovereign to withhold the Royal Assent from a bill (in this case, a Scots militia bill). Preoccupied with her health (she may have suffered from porphyria), Anne allowed her ministers, most notably Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Mortimer, as well as her favourites (Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough and Abigail Masham) to dominate politics.[5] The shift of power from the Crown to the ministry became even more apparent during the reign of George I, whose chief advisor, Sir Robert Walpole, is often described as the "first Prime Minister."[54]
Assessments of Anne as fat, constantly pregnant, under the influence of favourites, and lacking political astuteness or interest may derive from chauvinist prejudices against women.[55] The age of Anne was one of artistic, literary, and scientific advancement. In architecture, Sir John Vanbrugh constructed elegant edifices such as Blenheim Palace and Castle Howard. Writers such as Daniel Defoe, Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift flourished. The political and diplomatic achievements of her governments and the stability of her reign, which was free from constitutional conflict between monarch and parliament, indicate that she chose ministers and exercised her prerogatives wisely.[56]
Although Anne and her reign have no direct bearing on the style personally, at the time Queen Anne architecture style became popular in the late 19th century, her name connoted a sense of Old World elegance and extravagant, ornate details. Her name also remains associated with the world's first substantial copyright law, known as the Statute of Anne (1709), which granted exclusive rights to authors rather than printers.[57] In the United States, the North American theater of the War of the Spanish Succession is known as Queen Anne's War. The American city of Annapolis, Maryland, which originally bore several other names, was given its present name in 1694 by Sir Francis Nicholson, in honour of the then Princess Anne. Princess Anne County, Virginia, and Princess Anne Street in Fredericksburg, Virginia, were named for her before her accession to the throne. Queen Anne's County, Maryland, was named for her during her reign in 1706. Upon its capture from the French in 1710, the Acadian capital of Port-Royal was renamed Annapolis Royal in honour of the Queen.
Anne was played by Margaret Tyzack in the 1969 BBC TV drama series The First Churchills, which depicted Queen Anne's life from her childhood to her death, in the context of her friendship with Sarah and John Churchill. Elizabeth Spriggs portrayed her in the 2004 BBC drama documentary Wren: The Man Who Built Britain. In the 1984 comedy Yellowbeard she was played by Peter Bull (in his last film role) as a fat, senile woman, dominated by Sarah Churchill.
Anne is a character in the novel The Man Who Laughs by Victor Hugo, and was portrayed on screen by Anna Kallina in the 1921 Austrian silent adaptation Das Grinsende Gesicht and by Josephine Crowell in the 1928 silent adaptation. She is also a character in the play Le Verre d'eau by Eugène Scribe; Gunnel Lindblom portrayed her in the 1960 Swedish TV adaptation Ett Glas vatten, Liselotte Pulver in the 1960 West German film adaptation Das Glas Wasser, Judit Halász in the 1977 Hungarian TV adaptation Sakk-matt, and Natalya Belokhvostikova in the 1979 Soviet film adaptation Stakan vody (Стакан воды).
A statue of Anne stands outside the main entrance to St. Paul's Cathedral, London.
Royal styles of Queen Anne of Great Britain |
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Reference style | Her Majesty |
Spoken style | Your Majesty |
Alternative style | Ma'am |
The official style of Anne before 1707 was "Anne, by the Grace of God, Queen of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, etc." (The claim to France was only nominal, and had been asserted by every English King since Edward III, regardless of the amount of French territory actually controlled.) After the Union, her style was "Anne, by the Grace of God, Queen of Great Britain, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, etc."
Anne's arms before the Union were: Quarterly, I and IV Grandquarterly, Azure three fleurs-de-lis Or (for France) and Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or (for England); II Or a lion rampant within a tressure flory-counter-flory Gules (for Scotland); III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent (for Ireland). After the Union, the arms of England and Scotland, which had previously been in different quarters, were "impaled," or placed side-by-side, in the same quarter to emphasise that the two countries had become one Kingdom. The new arms were: Quarterly, I and IV Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or (for England) impaling Or a lion rampant within a tressure flory-counter-flory Gules (for Scotland); II Azure three fleurs-de-lys Or (for France); III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent (for Ireland). She used the motto Semper eadem (always the same).
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Name | Birth | Death |
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Mary | 2 June 1685 | 8 February 1687 |
Anne Sophia | 12 May 1686 | 2 February 1687 |
William, Duke of Gloucester | 24 July 1689 | 29 July 1700 |
Mary | 14 October 1690 | 14 October 1690 |
George | 17 April 1692 | 17 April 1692 |
Charles | 15 September 1698 | 15 September 1698 |
In addition, there were eight still-born children and four miscarriages.[60]
All of Anne's children bore the titles of Prince(ss) of Denmark and Prince(ss) of Norway.[61]
Anne, Queen of Great Britain
Born: 6 February 1665 Died: 1 August 1714 |
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Regnal titles | ||
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Preceded by William III/II |
Queen of England Queen of Scotland 8 March 1702 – 1 May 1707 |
Act of Union 1707 |
Queen of Ireland 8 March 1702 – 1 August 1714 |
Succeeded by George I |
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Act of Union 1707 | Queen of Great Britain 1 May 1707 – 1 August 1714 |
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British royalty | ||
Preceded by William and Mary mutual heirs |
Heir to the English and Irish Thrones as heiress apparent 28 December 1694 – 8 March 1702 |
Succeeded by Sophia of Hanover by Act of Settlement 1701 |
Heir to the Scottish throne as heiress apparent 28 December 1694 – 8 March 1702 |
End of title | |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by Prince George of Denmark |
Lord High Admiral 1708 |
Succeeded by The Earl of Pembroke |