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Henry III grew to be a man, but not a very strong king. Fortunately for
the Green Bay Packers propety of GB Packers shirt Apart from…,I will
love this family, though not for the Welsh, Scots, or Jews, his son,
Edward, was one of the kick-assiest medieval princes/kings there were.
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As
the king’s son, he successfully put down a real threat to his father’s
crown, then as King Edward I, ramped up the power. In turn, his son,
Edward II was weak. The luck here was Edward II’s queen was one tough
cookie, who removed her husband from the throne and secured it for their
son, Edward III. This is the king where all the medieval chivalry stuff
comes from. Also, once he came of age, he made sure his mother and her
lover paid the price. The next hundred years were cousins fighting over
the crown.
As part of this familial fighting, a little known
descendant of William, his 11-x-Great-grandson ended the cousin wars in
battle. The first Tudor king, Henry VII. Henry’s daughter Margaret Tudor
married into the Scottish ruling Stewart family by marrying James IV,
King of Scots, so that when the Tudor line ended, the Stewarts assumed
the English throne with James I (VI of Scotland). This Hanoverian branch
of the family held the throne until 1901, when Victoria died.
Victoria’s husband, Albert, was a German too, the Saxe-Coburg-Gothas.
Their son, Edward VII, wasn’t king very long. About 9 years. But he did
help initiate the Entente Cordial, which led to the alliances that won
the two world wars. Despite surviving the anti-monarchist movements in
Europe, the monarchy was proving to be stale. First Edward VII, then his
son, George V (William’s 25-x-great-grandson, still in it!), changed
that. More adaptation. Pomp and circumstance! The people loved it. They
reinvigorated and reinvented the monarchy for a modern world and it
stuck. Sometimes, though, even the best efforts begin to wear thin. The
post-WWII world was very different than the early 20th Century. Though
George V’s son, George VI, was popular, as was his daughter, the current
Queen (William’s 27-x-great-granddaughter), there were some perceived
anachronisms in the new world. In the early 1950s, the new Queen’s
husband, Prince Philip took on a new role – He went to work at
modernising everything. More adaptation. From modernising the palaces,
getting rid of old fashioned activities (he would even cook his own
meals), focusing on public engagements and charities, he made the
monarchy relevant again.
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