Saturday 4 January 2020

KING GEORGE 111 OF THE UNITED KINGDOM AND HIS BLACK WIFE QUEEN CHARLOTTE



THE MARRIAGE OF KING GEORGE 

On 8 September 1761 King George III married Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, whom he had first met less than six hours before the wedding, in the Chapel Royal of St James’s Palace.
king-george iii -royal-weddings
Remarkably, the two feel deeply in love and both remained faithful throughout their 57 years of marriage.
George had been come king on 25 October 1760, at the age of 22. It was now seen as imperative that the young man take a bride, and this was proving difficult. They needed a highly born lady, preferably not one from England since that could cause all kinds of power plays, but also one that would not be seen as giving ‘too’ much influence to a foreign nation by her access to the king.
George III (1738-1820),_by_Jean-Étienne_Liotard
The king, his mother, and his advisors thus chose 17-year-old Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz because she was from a twee north German duchy that had very little political importance, and she would most likely have “no experience or interest in power politics or party intrigues”.
The bride-to-be was duly sent for, and arrived in London on the day of her wedding. Alas for the initial impression, the bride was considered to be “ugly” by many people who saw her, since she “had a dark complexion and flared nostrils”.
Queen_Charlotte_1761
George liked her well enough, though.
The couple were jointly crowned on 22 September at Westminster Abbey, after which they lived primarily Buckingham House (now Buckingham Palace), Kew, and Windsor Castle, with St James becoming the site of official governmental business. George didn’t like to travel, so they spent the rest of their lives in the area, with occasional trips to the seaside at Weymouth.
Her mother-in-law made things difficult for her at first, but Charlotte’s early and abundant reproductive success helped her gain confidence in her marriage. She gave birth to her first son on 12 August 1762, only 11 months after her wedding, and she would eventually fill the royal nursery with 15 children. Only two of the infants, their two youngest sons Octavius and Alfred, died in childhood.
murphy_-_george_iii_and_queen_charlotte_with_their_thirteen_children
In spite of suggestions that parents didn’t bond with their children in earlier times because of the risk of death, especially upper-class parents who let others care for their children most often, parents were just as likely to love their offspring in days of yore as today. George and Charlotte were very loving parents whom witnesses described as having “their Children always playing about them the whole time”. They were emotionally distraught by the loss of their boys, and mourned for them for the rest of their long lives.

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