List of monarchs in the British Isles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

This is a list of the monarchs of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, that is, the monarchs on the thrones of some of the various kingdoms that have existed in the British Isles, namely:

To see the rulers of certain states prior to the formation of the Kingdoms of England, Scotland and the principality of Wales, see:

James VI  of Scotland and I of England, united the Crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland in a personal union, later merged into a single Kingdom of Great Britain by the Act of Union 1707.
James VI of Scotland and I of England, united the Crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland in a personal union, later merged into a single Kingdom of Great Britain by the Act of Union 1707.

Royal titles are complicated because in some cases names of kingdoms are used that did not officially come into existence until later, or came into existence earlier without immediate adoption of the royal title.

In 1328, on the death of the French king, Charles IV, Edward III (nephew of Charles IV) claimed the French throne. While Tudor monarchs continued to claim France and not actually have this based on occupation, the British Stuarts were pensioners of the House of Bourbon just as the Scottish Stewarts were of the House of Valois in opposition to the Plantagenets' actual possession of France. This was to prove the undoing of title, since passing the Test Act and Edict of Fontainebleau revived old tensions; the British and French peace established under James Stuart and Henry Bourbon could not sustain itself. Subsequent Hanoverian monarchs until the Act of Union 1800, had no intimate dealings with the title, but were concerned with their native Brunswick. The French Revolution then rendered a rather Whiggish opinion on the Crown of France to be true, although there was a minor Tory outrage over relinquishing the traditional title. (See English claims to the French throne.)[clarify]

  • Note that the numbering of English monarchs starts afresh after 1066 (although this affects only the Edwards). The numerical system prefers the divided national approach; thus James II of England was also James VII of Scotland and William III of England was also William II of Scotland. After the Union, the ordinal has been the English number (for "George", "Edward" and "Elizabeth") and, until recently, there was no formal rule (see List of regnal numerals of future British monarchs).
  • All Scottish monarchs held the title King of Scots or Queen of Scots, with the exception of the last three: Mary II, William III and Anne I used the style "of Scotland" rather than "of Scots".
  • In October 1604, one year after James VI of Scotland had become King of England, he decreed that the Royal Title would use the term Great Brittaine to refer to the "one Imperiall Crowne" made up of England and Scotland[1]. However using that title is problematic because unified offices of state for Great Britain, were not in total cohesion until the Act of Union 1707 which established the Parliament of Great Britain. Nor was the united crown generally referred to as "imperial", but accentuated the decrees of Henry VIII who declared himself equal in deference with Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. Some historians thus refer to all monarchs up to 1707 as monarchs of England and Scotland, but for simplicity's sake, the whole realm is considered British because of the Celtic nature behind the Renaissance Tudor-Stuart Establishment and "Britannia's" empire overseas. Courtiers upon the death of Elizabeth, considered James to be a new Brutus of Troy. What further undermined this sense of "British", was separatist Jacobitism amongst the Scots until the union with Ireland. Nevertheless, people in parlance refer to rulers of Great Britain as English in reference to rebellions associated with the Scottish, Irish and Americans.
  • In different documents, the terms Kingdom of Great Britain and United Kingdom of Great Britain feature, even documents as official as the Act of Union 1707. Most historians presume the United was meant to be descriptive, indicating a union as a form of unity by marriage rather than coercion. For clarity and because the United is far more strongly associated with the later name United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland produced in the Act of Union 1800, the 1707 Kingdom is generally referred to as the Kingdom of Great Britain.

Succession to the many thrones often did not pass smoothly from parent to child; lack of heirs, civil wars, murders and invasions affected the inheritance in ways that a simple list does not show. The relationships that formed the basis for claims to throne are noted where we know them, and the dates of reign indicated.

Monarchs of England Monarchs of Scotland
Name Reign Notes Name Reign Notes
The House of Wessex The House of Alpin
Kenneth I 843–858 First King of the Picts and the Scots
Donald I 858–862 Kenneth I's brother
Constantine I 862–877 Kenneth I's son
Alfred the Great 871–899 Recognised as leader of all free Englishmen under the Treaty of Wedmore, 878
Áed 877–878 Kenneth I's son
Eochaid 878–889 Áed's nephew
Jointly with Giric ?
Giric 878–889 Áed's first cousin ?
Donald II 889–900 Constantine I's son
Edward the Elder 899–924 Alfred's son
Constantine II 900–943 Áed's son
Ælfweard 924 Edward's son, king of Wessex only
Athelstan 924–939 Edward's son, the first de facto king of all England
Edmund I 939–946 Edward's son
Malcolm I 943–954 Donald II's son
Edred 946–955 Edward's son
Indulf 954–962 Constantine II's son
Edwy the Fair 955–959 Edmund's son
Edgar the Peaceable 959–975 Edmund's son
Dub 962–966 Malcolm I's son
Cuilén 966–971 Indulf's son
Kenneth II 971–? Malcolm I's son
St Edward the Martyr 975–978 Edgar's son Amlaíb ?–977 Indulf's son
Kenneth II 977–995 2nd reign
Ethelred the Unready 978–1013
1014–1016
Edgar's son
Constantine III 995–997 Cuilén's son
Kenneth III 997–1005 Dub's son
Malcolm II 1005–1034 Kenneth II's son
Edmund Ironside 1016 Ethelred's son
The Danish Kings
Both the Saxon and Danish royal houses claimed the English throne, 1013 to 1016. Denmark and England had the same king from 1016 to 1042.
Sweyn Forkbeard 1013–1014  
Canute The Great 1016–1035 Sweyn's son
Duncan I 1034–1040 Malcolm II's grandson
Harold Harefoot 1035–1040 Canute's son
Harthacanute 1040–1042 Canute's son Macbeth 1040–1057 Kenneth III's granddaughter's husband
The West Saxon Restoration
St Edward the Confessor 1042–1066 Ethelred's son
Lulach 1057–1058 Kenneth III's great-grandson, Macbeth's stepson and cousin
The House of Dunkeld
Malcolm III 1058–1093 Duncan I's son
Harold Godwinson 1066 Edward the Confessor's brother-in-law, also descended from Alfred's brother Ethelred
Edgar the Atheling 1066 Grandson of Edmund Ironside
The Normans
After the Norman Conquest in 1066, numbering of kings (a French tradition never used by the English prior to that date) begins.
William I, the Conqueror 1066–1087 Distant kinsman of Alfred the Great
William II, Rufus 1087–1100 William I's son, descendant of Alfred the Great
Donald III 1093–1094
1094–1097
Duncan I's son
Duncan II 1094 Malcolm III's son
Edgar 1097–1107 Malcolm III's son
Henry I 1100–1135 William I's son, descendant of Alfred the Great
Alexander I 1107–1124 Malcolm III's son
David I 1124–1153 Malcolm III's son
Stephen 1135–1154 William I's grandson
Malcolm IV 1153–1165 David I's grandson
The Angevins or Plantagenets
The Royal House name changed to reflect Matilda's marriage to Geoffrey Plantagenet.
Matilda (Empress Maud) 1141 Henry I's daughter, Edmund Ironside's great-great-granddaughter
Henry II 1154–1189 Matilda's son
William I 1165–1214 David I's grandson
Richard I, the Lionheart 1189–1199 Henry II's son
Monarchs of England and Ireland
In 1199, John, already Lord of Ireland, inherited the English throne. The title "Lord of Ireland" was used until it was replaced by "King of Ireland" in 1542.
John "Lackland" 1199–1216 Henry II's son
Alexander II 1214–1249 William I's son
Henry III 1216–1272 John's son
Alexander III 1249–1286 Alexander II's son
Edward I "Longshanks" 1272–1307 Henry III's son
Margaret 1286-1290 Alexander III's granddaughter, never inaugurated
The House of Balliol
When Margaret died in 1290 there was no clear heir. King Edward I of England adjudged the claims of Robert Bruce, 5th Lord of Annandale and John Balliol in Balliol's favour.
John 1292–1296 David I's great-great-great-grandson
The House of Bruce
When John Balliol rebelled, the Wars of Scottish Independence commenced, during which Robert the Bruce became King.
Robert I 1306–1329 David I's great-great-great-great-grandson
Edward II 1307–1327 Edward I's son
Edward III 1327–1377 Edward II's son
David II 1329–1371 Robert I's son
The House of Balliol
For a period of time, both Edward Balliol and David II claimed the throne.
Edward Balliol 1332–1336 John Balliol's son
The House of Stuart
Engaged to the Dauphin at age five, Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots was thus brought up in the French court where she became "Marie Stuart, Reine de l'Écosse," etc., to render the sound of 'Stewart' into French as accurately as possible. Mary kept the French spelling on her return to Scotland in 1560.
Robert II 1371–1390 Robert I's grandson
Richard II 1377–1399 Edward III's grandson
Robert III 1390–1406 Robert II's son
The House of Lancaster
Henry Bolingbroke deposed Richard II, and the Royal House name came to reflect Henry's father's title, Duke of Lancaster.
Henry IV 1399–1413 Edward III's grandson
James I 1406–1437 Robert III's son
Henry V 1413–1422 Henry IV's son
Henry VI 1422–1461
1470–1471
Henry V's son
James II 1437–1460 James I's son
James III 1460–1488 James II's son
The House of York
The Houses of Lancaster and York had fought the Wars of the Roses, and the Yorkists took the throne.
Edward IV 1461–1470
1471–1483
Edward III's great-great-grandson
Edward V 1483 Edward IV's son
Richard III 1483–1485 Edward IV's brother
The House of Tudor
The Lancastrian Henry Tudor reclaimed the throne from the Yorkists.
Henry VII 1485–1509 Edward III's great-great-great-grandson
James IV 1488–1513 James III's son
Henry VIII 1509–1547 Henry VII's son, Edward IV's grandson
James V 1513–1542 James IV's son
Mary I 1542–1567 James V's daughter
Edward VI 1547–1553 Henry VIII's son
Jane 1553 Henry VII's great-granddaughter. Not always recognised officially as queen[1][2]
Mary I 1553–1558 Henry VIII's daughter
Elizabeth I 1558–1603 Henry VIII's daughter
James VI 1567–1625 Mary I's son
Monarchs of England, Scotland, and Ireland
In 1603, James VI of Scotland inherited the English throne upon the death of Elizabeth I in what is known as the Union of the Crowns. From then until 1707, England, Scotland, and Ireland had shared monarchs.
The House of Stuart
Name Reign Notes
James I (England)
James VI (Scotland)
1603–1625 Son of Mary, Queen of Scots; great-great-grandson of Henry VII of England; first to be styled "King of Great Britain" (1604)
Charles I 1625–1649 James VI & I's son
The Period of Interregnum, (Commonwealth and Protectorate)
England had no king from 1649 to 1660, but the constitutional status of the government was never clear. For example, the Long Parliament, up until its dissolution on 20 April 1653, was commonly recognised as a Republic. It, however, styled itself as a Commonwealth. Following the dissolution of the Rump, a Nominated Assembly was formed. Not until Cromwell accepted the Instrument of Government on 15 December 1653 did the constitutional status of the regime change. From then on Oliver Cromwell was styled as Lord Protector, ruling through two Protectorate Parliaments. In 1659, Richard Cromwell abdicated, returning power to Parliament until the Stuart Restoration in 1660.
Name Reign Notes
Oliver Cromwell 1653–1658  
Richard Cromwell 1658–1659 Oliver Cromwell's son
The House of Stuart (restored)
Name Reign Notes
Charles II 1660–1685 England
1649-1651 and 1660–1685 Scotland
(1649–1685 de jure)
Charles I's elder son (crowned at Scone, in Scotland, 1651). He officially dated his reign from his father's death
James II (England)
James VII (Scotland)
1685–1689 Charles I's younger son
Mary II 1689–1694 James II's elder daughter
Joint sovereign with her husband, William III, II and I
William III (England)
William II (Scotland)
William I (Ireland)
1689–1702 Charles I's grandson
Jointly with his wife, Mary II
Anne 1702–1707
(full reign: 1702–1714)
James II's daughter
Monarchs of Great Britain and Ireland
In 1707, the Act of Union merged the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotland into the Kingdom of Great Britain.
The House of Stuart (continued)
Name Reign Notes
Anne 1707–1714
(full reign: 1702–1714)
James II's daughter
The House of Hanover
Under the Act of Settlement 1701, the English (thus, the successor British) throne could only be held by a Protestant. Sophia of Hanover, the nearest such relative, thus became statutorily designated as the next heir. She died shortly before Anne, and her place was taken by her son, who thus founded the House of Hanover (aka Guelph and Brunswick).
George I 1714–1727 James I's great-grandson
George II 1727–1760 George I's son
George III 1760–1801
(full reign: 1760–1820)
George II's grandson
Monarchs of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
In 1801, the Act of Union combined the Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland into the United Kingdom.
The House of Hanover (continued)
Name Reign Notes
George III 1801–1820
(full reign: 1760–1820)
George II's grandson
George IV 1820–1830 George III's son
William IV 1830–1837 George III's son
Victoria 1837–1901 George III's granddaughter; William IV's niece
The House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
The Royal House name was changed to reflect Victoria's marriage to Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, but she herself remained a member of the House of Hanover.
Edward VII 1901–1910 Victoria's son
George V 1910–1917
(full reign: 1910–1936)
Edward VII's son
The House of Windsor
The name of the Royal House changed from Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to Windsor in 1917 due to anti-German sentiments during World War I.
George V 1917–1927
(full reign: 1910–1936)
Edward VII's son
Monarchs of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
In 1922, the Irish Free State left the United Kingdom. The name of the Kingdom was amended in 1927 to reflect the change. Between 1927 and the passage of the Republic of Ireland Act in 1949 George V, Edward VIII, and George VI were also styled "King of Ireland".
The House of Windsor (continued)
Name Reign Notes
George V 1927–1936
(full reign: 1910–1936)
Edward VII's son
Edward VIII 1936 George V's son; abdicated
George VI 1936–1952 Edward VIII's brother (and George V's son)
Elizabeth II 6 February 1952-Present George VI's daughter; also queen of 15 other sovereign kingdoms.

  1. ^ Proclaimed Queen on 10 July 1553, but deposed by Mary I 9 days later.
  2. ^ Lady Jane is commonly listed as House of Tudor, despite her surname not being Tudor
  • A mnemonic verse lists the Kings and Queens of England then Great Britain then the United Kingdom.

Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.