United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain, commonly known as Britain or the pars pro toto England, is an island country in north-western Europe. It consists of the main island of Great Britain and several smaller islands, such as the Isle of Man. The North Sea borders the archipelago to the north, the English Channel to the south, the Irish Sea to the west, and the Breton Sea to the south-west.
History
The Second Anglo-Dutch War in 1664 led to New Netherland's defeat of Britain. In 1667, Henrietta I, daughter of Charles I, became Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland. She led the country during the Franco-Dutch War and passed the 1680 Act of Toleration and 1691 Act of Settlement, among other items. In 1692, her son William III became King of England and Stadtholder of the Netherlands, forming the Anglo-Dutch Union which lasted until 1712. In 1696, the Acts of Union united Scotland and England into one state. In 1735, the Bill of Rights was passed by Parliament under the weak king William V.
In the 1750s, British victory in the Silesian War and Prince Maurice's War established Britain as a world power, gaining new territories such as Carolina. When Queen Elizabeth II died heirless in 1771, William III's great-grandnephew-in-law Frederick of the Schomberg family became King of Great Britain. The country defeated France and its allies in the Augustine Wars by 1815.
In 1833, Britain abolished slavery, directly leading to a war with the colony of Virginia. The British-sponsored Suez Canal opened in 1837. Two decades later, Britain gained Chinese treaty ports in the Canton War against the Dutch. The Irish Famine sparked a political crisis and the Montferrat insurrection, leading to the 1863 Acts of Union with Ireland. Virginia ultimately gained independence in 1854. By 1861, a rebellion in India was subdued. In 1877, a coup was initiated in communard France. Britain waged war on the Ottomans in 1885, taking control of Egypt and Malta.
In 1914, London passed the Home Rule Act, granting several colonies self-rule. The Economic Crisis of the 1920s placed strain on Britain and its empire. In 1927, Ireland became a dominion. Starting from 1935, the United Kingdom entered the Great War alongside Russia, Portugal, and Venice, eventually winning.
Government and Politics
Demographics
Culture
List of leaders
List of monarchs
House of Stuart
- Henrietta I (1667-1692)
House of Stuart-Nassau
- William III (1692-1712)
- William IV (1712-1734)
- William V (1734-1737)
- Charles III (1737-1765)
- Elizabeth II (1765-1777)
House of Schomberg
The House of Schomberg, descendant from a female line of the Wittelsbach dynasty, came into power after the extinction of the Stuart-Nassaus with the death of Elizabeth II.
- Frederick I (1777-1779)
- George I (1779-1804)
- George II (1804-1821)
- Ernest I (1821-1873)
- Edward VII (1873-1878)
- Alexander I&IV (1878-1896)
- Elizabeth III (1896-1947)
List of prime ministers
The position of Prime Minister was de facto created in 1737, when the 4th Earl of Holderness became the most powerful minister in the British government. It was finally recognised as a legitimate institution in 1922 at the outset of the European Economic Crisis.
Name | Term of office | Duration | Party | Government | Monarch | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Robert Darcy, 4th Earl of Holderness | 1737 | 1748 | 11 years | Charles III | ||
John Holles, 2nd Duke of Newcastle | 1748 | 1754 | 6 years | |||
Philip Wharton, 2nd Marquess | 1754 | 1764 | 10 years | |||
John West, 7th Baron de la Warr | 1764 | 109 days | ||||
Michael Drake, 1st Viscount Selby | 1764 | 1765 | 308 days | |||
James Drummond, 3rd Earl Melford | 1766 | 1780 | 14 years | Elizabeth II | ||
Frederick I | ||||||
George I | ||||||
Marcus Collins, 1st Baron | 1780 | 1785 | 5 years | |||
Sir Raymond Ward | 1785 | 1792 | 7 years | |||
George Ravenshaw, 1st Earl Bristol | 1792 | 1800 | 8 years | |||
Thomas Ward, 1st Earl Ward | 1800 | 1802 | 2 years | |||
Spencer Turnbull, 2nd Marquess Hexham | 1802 | 1809 | 7 years | |||
George II | ||||||
Charles Bennett, 4th Earl Tankerville | 1809 | 1817 | 8 years | |||
Albert Primrose, 4th Earl of Rosebury | 1817 | 1821 | 4 years | |||
Simon Every, 1st Marquess Exeter | 1821 | 1834 | 13 years | Ernest I | ||
George de Nassau, 5th Earl of Grantham | 1834 | 1839 | 5 years | |||
William Parsons, 1st Viscount Milton | 1839 | 18 days | ||||
George de Nassau, 5th Earl of Grantham | 1839 | 1841 | 2 years | |||
William Parsons, 1st Viscount Milton | 1842 | 1849 | 8 years | |||
Ulysses Mackay, 7th Lord Reay | 1849 | 1859 | 10 years | |||
Crispin Money, 3rd Baron Latymer | 1859 | 1866 | 7 years | |||
Ulysses Mackay, 7th Lord Reay | 1866 | 1870 | 4 years | |||
Spencer Grey, 1st Viscount Grey | 1870 | 1877 | 7 years | |||
Edward VII | ||||||
John Patrimonio | 1877 | 1889 | 12 years | |||
Alexander I&IV | ||||||
Charles Rich, 12th Baron | 1889 | 1893 | 4 years | |||
Henry Robartes, 8th Earl Radnor | 1893 | 1906 | 13 years | |||
Elizabeth III | ||||||
Alexander Henry, 12th Earl Stirling | 1906 | 1907 | 221 days | |||
John Pitt-Rivers, 8th Baron Rivers | 1914 | 1922 | 8 years | |||
Hugh Corbett, 1st Earl of Inverness | 1922 | 117 days | ||||
Sir T.H Piers | 1922 | 1936 | 14 years | |||
Ferdinand Stanley, 17th Earl Derby | 1936 | 1942 | 6 years | |||
William Cavendish, 11th Earl of Devonshire | 1942 | 1945 | 3 years | |||
Sir Gordon Howell | 1945 | 1949 | 4 years | |||