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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Queen_AnneQueen Anne - Wikipedia

    Anne, Queen of Great Britain (1665–1714), queen of England and Scotland (1702–1707), Ireland (1702–1714) and of Great Britain (1707–1714) Queen Anne style architecture, an architectural style from her reign, and its revivals. Queen Anne style furniture. Queen Anne (play), a 2015 play on Anne's life.

  2. Queens regnant of Scotland. Monarchs of Great Britain. 18th-century Scottish monarchs. 18th-century English monarchs. Queens regnant in the British Isles. 18th-century queens regnant. Hidden categories: Commons category link is on Wikidata. Wikipedia categories named after English royalty.

  3. Anne, Queen of Great BritainQueen Anne – "Queen Anne" already redirects here. It's the common name by an overwhelming stretch, about 1,540,000 results versus 9,300 results for "Anne Queen of Great Britain". That is a gargantuan 99% per cent decrease. Victoria, Queen of the United Kingdom redirects to Queen Victoria, so there is precedent.

  4. Queen Square, Bloomsbury, London – There is a statue in the square of Queen Charlotte, wife of King George III, but the square itself was built in 1708 and named for Anne. Queen Square, Bristol, UK – This was the first residential square built outside London, in 1702. Anne paid a visit to the site during construction.

  5. Monarchs. Anne became Queen of England, Queen of Scotland, and Queen of Ireland in 1702. She became Queen of Great Britain when the new kingdom started in 1707. (Ireland was a separate kingdom, so Anne was Queen of Ireland and the later kings of Great Britain were each themselves King of Irel

  6. Queen Anne of Great Britain. Anne (February 6, 1665 – August 1, 1714) became Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland on March 8, 1702, succeeding William III and II. Her Roman Catholic father, James II and VII, was forcibly deposed in 1688; her brother-in-law and her sister then became joint monarchs as William III-II and Mary II, the only ...

  7. In another proclamation on 5 June, Anne listed the Scottish members (16 peers and 45 commissioners) by name who would join their English counterparts in the respective British assemblies and, without issuing new writs of summons, the Queen scheduled the First Parliament of Great Britain to "meet and be holden" on 23 October 1707.