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  1. Caroline’s mother, the Duchess of Brunswick, later moved into Ranger’s House (then named Brunswick House) next door to be close to her daughter. Caroline established a rival ‘court’ at Blackheath and was conveniently close at hand to attend the lying in state of Horatio Nelson in the Painted Hall at the Royal Hospital for Seamen in January 1806.

  2. 9 de ago. de 2019 · The tale of George IV and Caroline of Brunswick, surely the worst-matched royal couple in history, is one of secret wives, scheming mistresses, spying courtiers – and scandal galore. By 6am on 19 July 1821, Westminster Hall was packed with peers and privy counsellors, waiting to process to the Abbey for the coronation of their obese, ageing ...

  3. 23 de nov. de 2021 · In 1799, Montagu House was leased by the Crown to HRH Caroline of Brunswick. But the new location, close to her daughter, didn’t quite offer Caroline what she was looking for – or maybe it did. Princess Caroline, the much-injured but foolish and frivolous Consort of George IV., was living here at Montagu House.

  4. 25 de feb. de 2023 · In her will, Caroline requested that her coffin be inscribed with the words “Here lies Caroline of Brunswick, the injured Queen of England.” Footnote 93 Lord Liverpool wrote to Lord Sidmouth that this inscription could not be placed on her coffin “by an authority or consent of the government, nor be permitted whilst the coffin is in possession of the officers of government.

  5. 11 de jun. de 2018 · Caroline of Brunswick (1768–1821), queen of George IV. Caroline's marriage to her cousin George, prince of Wales , in March 1795 was a spectacular disaster. According to her own testimony, intimacy was confined to the first night, and certainly the couple separated after the birth of their daughter Princess Charlotte in January 1796.

  6. Caroline of Brunswick, known as ‘The Injured Queen’, may have written the poem while still Princess of Wales as an anguished, heartfelt plea to her husband George, Prince of Wales (later King George IV), while the estranged royal couple were entangled in a bitter and very public dispute over later discredited allegations that Caroline had borne a child out of wedlock.

  7. The famous painting of the ‘Trial of Queen Caroline’ by Sir George Hayter is in the National Portrait Gallery. On 5 June 1820 Caroline, who had been living abroad for the past six years, arrived unexpectedly in England to claim her right to be crowned queen. The government, under intense pressure from the king, reluctantly agreed to ...