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  1. Frederick Lewis, Prince of Wales Philippe Mercier (1689–1760) National Portrait Gallery, London Frederick Louis (1707–1751), Prince of Wales Jeremiah Davison (c.1695–1745)

  2. Friedrich Frederick Louis Ludwig Prince of Wales and Duke of Edinburgh of Great-Britain (Hannover) aka Hanover, von Hannover (1 Feb 1707 - certain 20 Mar 1751) 0 references. museum-digital person ID. 5754. 0 references. Oxford Reference overview ID. 20110803095833731.

  3. "Frederick Lewis, prince of Wales (1707–1751)" published on by Oxford University Press. We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website. By continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.

  4. Knapton studied with Jonathan Richardson and visited Italy before setting himself up as a picture expert as well as portrait painter. In 1750 he worked with George Vertue on a survey of the paintings in the Royal Collection and in 1765 was made Surveyor of the Kings Pictures. This huge group portrait is dated 1751, the year in which the Prince of Wales died (on the 21 March) and his youngest ...

  5. Frederick Lewis was born in Hanover, the first child of George Augustus, electoral prince of Hanover, later George II, King of Great Britain and Ireland (1683–1760). When his grandfather was proclaimed king in 1714 most of the family moved to England but Frederick, aged seven, was left behind in Hanover as a representative of the electoral family. By the time he was required to rejoin his ...

  6. The Kings and Queens of Britain (2 rev) Length: 303 words. (1707–51).Eldest son of George II and Queen Caroline; father of George III. For most of his life Frederick was at odds with his parents, and by the mid‐1730s he had become a willing tool of opposition politicians. Brought up in Hanover, he came to England in 1728.

  7. heir apparent to the British throne from 1727 until his death / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Frederick, Prince of Wales, born Frederick Louis; (1 February 1707 – 31 March 1751) was the son of George II and Queen Caroline of Ansbach and the father of King George III. Prince Frederick, ca. 1724.