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  1. George IV, Brixton, a former public house on Brixton Hill in south London. GEORGE 4, version of GEORGE computer operating system. George IV Bridge, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK; an elevated street. George IV State Diadem, part of the British Crown Jewels.

  2. George IV, né George Augustus Frederick à Londres le 12 août 1762 et mort le 26 juin 1830 au château de Windsor, est roi du Royaume-Uni de Grande-Bretagne et d'Irlande et de Hanovre du 29 janvier 1820 jusqu'à sa mort. Du fait de la maladie mentale de son père, le roi George III, George est prince-régent de 1811 à son accession au trône.

  3. George IV August Frederik van Hannover (Engels: George Augustus Frederick; St. James's Palace, 12 augustus 1762 – Windsor Castle, 26 juni 1830) was koning van het Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië en Ierland en koning van Hannover van 1820 tot 1830. Hij was prins regent voor zijn vader van 1811 tot diens dood in 1820 en stond vooral ...

  4. King George IV's Royal Family Order was rather ornate in appearance, and the frame that surrounded his portrait was of diamond oak leaves and acorns. The badge was worn on "a blue ribbon on the left shoulder", as noted in Letters of Queen Victoria. 1st series I p.16.. [2] Examples of the order in the Royal Collection are in at least three different designs (items RCIN 441442, [3] RCIN 441443 ...

  5. Literature. George IV appears as a character in Rodney Stone by Arthur Conan Doyle (1896), where he is shown as an irresponsible spendthrift, wildly self-indulgent and given to self-delusion, but not without some kindly impulses. In Bernard Cornwell 's novel Sharpe's Regiment, which is set during the Regency period, he is portrayed as fat ...

  6. George al IV-lea al Regatului Unit. Portret de Sir Thomas Lawrence, 1822. George al IV-lea ( George Augustus Frederick; 12 august 1762 – 26 iunie 1830) a fost rege al Regatului Unit al Marii Britanii și Irlandei și al Hanovrei din 29 ianuarie 1820, până la moartea sa.

  7. George IV died in 1830, [2] and the statue was placed on an empty plinth in Trafalgar Square in December 1843, which was expected to be on a temporary basis, however it has remained there ever since. [2] It was unveiled to little ceremony, with The Times describing it as "somewhat suddenly erected". [6] It was the first statue erected on one of the pedestals, which were installed three years ...