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  1. 28 de mar. de 2024 · House of Windsor, the royal house of the United Kingdom, which succeeded the house of Hanover on the death of its last monarch, Queen Victoria, on January 22, 1901. The dynasty includes Edward VII (reigned 1901–10), George V (1910–36), Edward VIII (1936), George VI (1936–52), Elizabeth II (1952–2022), and Charles (from 2022).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 28 de jun. de 2017 · The House of Windsor came into being in 1917, when the name was adopted as the British Royal Family's official name by a proclamation of King George V, replacing the historic name of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. It remains the family name of the current Royal Family.

  3. 26 de oct. de 2023 · The foundation of the British royal family can be traced back to the early mediaeval period, during the reign of Alfred the Great, who ruled the Kingdom of Wessex in the late 9th century. Alfred ...

  4. The Windsors became recognised as the royal family of multiple independent countries, a number that shifted over the decades, as some Dominions became republics and Crown colonies became realms, republics, or monarchies under a different sovereign.

    • 17 July 1917; 106 years ago
    • George V
  5. 4 de jun. de 2022 · Each royal has used the Windsor family name since then. The advent of the First World War, therefore, came as a new origin for the royals, forcing them to modernise. Related articles

    • 2 min
  6. 8 de sept. de 2022 · The House of Windsor was created in 1917 when George V relinquished all German titles from the British Royal Family and this included changing the families last name from Wettin and house name from Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to Windsor, after the Monarch's ancestral home, Windsor Castle. The Monarchy came from the German house of Saxe ...

  7. 22 de ene. de 2018 · Queen Elizabeth II confirmed the royal Windsor name in a declaration following her accession in 1952. But in 1960 Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip announced yet another name change. Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark, whose mother had been Alice of Battenberg, had already Anglicized his name to Philip Mountbatten when he married Elizabeth in 1947.