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Caroline of Brunswick


 

Duchess Caroline of Brunswick (17 May 17687 August 1821) as Queen Caroline was, technically, Queen Consort of King George IV of the United Kingdom from 29 January 1820 to her death.

Biography

Caroline was born on 17 May 1768 at Braunschweig (Brunswick) in Germany, daughter of Karl William, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and Princess Augusta of the United Kingdom, eldest sister of King George III. She married the British king's eldest son, her first cousin, on 8 April 1795 at St. James's Palace in London. Her new husband, the future George IV then Prince of Wales, regarded Caroline as unattractive and unhygienic; he also suspected that she was not a virgin when they married. For her part, she found him equally unattractive, and the prince's correspondence reveals that the couple only had sexual intercourse three times during their marriage. Princess Charlotte Augusta, George's only legitimate child, was born from one of these unions on 7 January 1796. The Prince and Princess of Wales never lived together afterwards, and appeared separately in public.

Related Topics:
17 May - 1768 - Braunschweig - Germany - Karl William - Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel - Princess Augusta - King George III - 8 April - 1795 - St. James's Palace - London - George IV - Princess Charlotte Augusta - 7 January - 1796

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Caroline was prevented from seeing her daughter on a day-to-day basis, and was eventually banished in 1799 to a private residence ('The Pagoda') in Blackheath, where she allegedly had affairs with the politician George Canning and the admiral Sir Sidney Smith. Following an investigation into her personal affairs by her husband, she left the country and went to live abroad, running up large debts throughout Europe and taking other lovers. During this period, the couple's daughter, who had married Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, died after giving birth to her only child, a stillborn son.

Related Topics:
1799 - Blackheath - George Canning - Sir Sidney Smith - Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg

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Her estranged husband's accession to the Throne in 1820 brought Caroline back to Britain in 1820, whereupon he began divorce proceedings against her. The Pains and Penalties Bill 1820 was introduced in Parliament in order to strip Caroline of the title of Queen and dissolve her marriage to the King. The bill was defeated, but Caroline was still in exile, and she was turned away from the coronation. Despite the King's best attempts, Caroline retained a very strong popularity amongst the masses.

Related Topics:
1820 - Pains and Penalties Bill 1820

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On the night of the coronation, Caroline fell ill, vomiting, with an erratic pulse. She died three weeks later. The exact cause of her death has never been ascertained, not least because Caroline herself, knowing she would die, had said that no autopsy was to be carried out.

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Even up till her last moments, she was being reported on by a man named Stephen Lushington, who conveyed his insights to the King?s loyal supporter Lord Liverpool. Exactly why this deathbed surveillance was carried out remains unclear, and the surviving documentation is patchy in the extreme. Her death took place on 7 August 1821. She legally remained Queen of the United Kingdom, but she was buried in her native Brunswick.

Related Topics:
Lord Liverpool - 7 August - 1821

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