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Description

Contemporary poet and critic Leigh Hunt described George IV (1820-30) as a violator of his word, a libertine, over head and ears in debt, a disgrace, a despiser of domestic ties, the companion of demi-reps and gamblers without a single claim on the gratitude of his country, nor the respect of posterity. 

Characters



George IV – King of Great Britain, Ireland and Hanover (1820-30)

George III – King of Great Britain and Ireland (1760-1820), King of Hanover (1814-20)

Charlotte of Mecklenberg- Strelitz – Queen consort of Great Britain and Ireland (1761-1818), Queen consort of Hanover (1814-18)

Princess Charlotte of Wales – daughter of George and Caroline

Prince Frederick, duke of York – younger brother of George and one-time heir presumptive

Prince William – younger brother of George and eventual heir to the throne

Maria Fitzherbert – illegitimate Catholic wife of George

Caroline of Brunswick – legitimate wife of George

Mary Robinson – a lady-in-waiting for Queen Charlotte, love interest of George

Charles James Fox – Whig statesman and friend of George

William Pitt the Younger – Prime Minister (1783-1801, 1804-06)

Henry Addington – Prime Minister (1801-04)

Lord Liverpool – Prime Minister (1812-27)

George Canning – Prime Minister (1827)

Duke of Wellington – Commander at the Battle of Waterloo, Prime Minister (1828-30, 1834)

Robert Peel – Home Secretary, founder of the Metropolitan Police

Daniel O’Connell – political leader of Ireland’s Catholic majority, later an MP

Elizabeth Fry – Prison and social reformer

Henry Hunt – radical speaker and agitator

John Nash – Architect

James Gilray – contemporary cartoonist

Leigh Hunt – contemporary poet and critic

Richard Sheridan – Irish satirist

Napoleon Bonaparte – Emperor of France

Richard II – King of England (1377-99)

Charles II – King of England, Scotland and Ireland (1660-85)