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  1. George I of Great Britain is a featured article; it (or a previous version of it) has been identified as one of the best articles produced by the Wikipedia community. Even so, if you can update or improve it, please do so .

  2. Princess Augusta of Great Britain. Princess Augusta (Augusta Frederica; 31 July 1737 – 23 March 1813) was a member of the British Royal Family, a granddaughter of George II and sister of George III. [1] In 1763 she married Charles, prince of the House of Brunswick, of which she was already a member. She had seven children.

  3. George was a German ruler, spoke poor English, and remained interested in governing his dominions in continental Europe rather than in Britain. He thus entrusted power to a group of his ministers, the foremost of whom was Sir Robert Walpole , and by the end of his reign in 1727 the position of the ministers – who had to rely on Parliament for support – was cemented.

  4. 19 October 1721. ( 1721-10-19) – 7 March 1722. ( 1722-03-07) The 5th Parliament of Great Britain was summoned by George I of Great Britain on 17 January 1715 and assembled on the 17 March 1715. When it was dissolved on 10 March 1722 it had been the first Parliament to be held under the Septennial Act of 1716. [1]

  5. Sophia Dorothea of Celle. George II (George Augustus, 10 November 1683 – 25 October 1760) was a British king. He was born in Germany. He was the last British monarch born outside of Great Britain. New British law in the early 1700s showed that only his fathers mother, Sophia of Hanover and her Protestant children to inherit the British throne.

  6. 4 de nov. de 2016 · Deutsch: Georg I. von Großbritannien war seit 1692 Kurfürst von Braunschweig-Lüneburg und zusätzlich von 1714 bis zu seinem Tod König von Großbritannien und Irland. English: George I of Great Britain was Prince-Elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg ("Hanover") from 1692 and additionally King of Great Britain and Ireland from 1714 until his death.

  7. Great Britain. Four stripes of white, horizontal, diagonal, and vertical on a blue field, with a red cross in the middle. The flag of Great Britain, commonly known as King's Colours, the first Union Flag, [1] [2] the Union Jack, or the British flag, was used at sea from 1606 and more generally from 1707 to 1801.