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ANNE
(1702-14 AD)
Anne, born in
1665, was the second daughter of James II and
Anne Hyde. She played no part in her father's
reign, but sided with her sister and
brother-in-law (Mary II and William III) during
the Glorious Revolution. She married George,
Prince of Denmark, but the pair failed to produce
a surviving heir. She died at 49 years of age,
after a lifelong battle with the blood disease
porphyria.
The untimely death of William III nullified,
in effect, the Settlement Act of 1701: Anne was
James' daughter through his Protestant marriage,
and therefore, presented no conflict with the
act. Anne refrained from politically antagonizing
Parliament, but was compelled to attend most
Cabinet meetings to keep her half-brother, James
the Old Pretender, under heel. Anne was the last
sovereign to veto an act of Parliament, as well
as the final Stuart monarch. The most significant
constitutional act in her reign was the Act of
Union in 1707, which created Great Britain by
finally fully uniting England and Scotland
(Ireland joined the Union in 1801).
The Stuart trait of relying on favorites was
as pronounced in Anne's reign as it had been in
James I's reign. Anne's closest confidant was
Sarah Churchill, who exerted great influence over
the king. Sarah's husband was the Duke of
Marlborough, who masterly led the English to
several victories in the War of Spanish
Succession. Anne and Sarah were virtually
inseparable: no king's mistress had ever wielded
the power granted to the duchess, but Sarah
became too confident in her position. She
developed an overbearing demeanor towards Anne,
and berated the Queen in public. In the meantime,
Tory leaders had planted one Abigail Hill in the
royal household to capture Anne's need for
sympathy and affection. As Anne increasingly
turned to Abigail, the question of succession
rose again, pitting the Queen and the Marlborough
against each other in a heated debate. The
relationship of Anne and the Churchill's fell
asunder. Marlborough, despite his war record, was
dismissed from public service and Sarah was
shunned in favor of Abigail.
Many of the internal conflicts in English
society were simply the birth pains of the
two-party system of government. The Whig and Tory
Parties, fully enfranchised by the last years of
Anne's reign, fought for control of Parliament
and influence over the Queen. Anne was torn
personally as well as politically by the
succession question: her Stuart upbringing
compelled her to choose as heir her half-brother,
the Old Pretender and favorite of the Tories, but
she had already elected to side with Whigs when
supporting Mary and William over James II. In the
end, Anne abided by the Act of Settlement, and
the Whigs paved the way for the succession of
their candidate, George of Hanover .
Anne's reign may be considered successful, but
somewhat lackluster in comparison to the rest of
the Stuart line. 1066 and All That, describes her
with its usual tongue-in-cheek manner:
"Finally the Orange... was succeeded by the
memorable dead queen, Anne. Queen Anne was
considered rather a remarkable woman and hence
was usually referred to as Great Anna, or Annus
Mirabilis. The Queen had many favourites (all
women), the most memorable of whom were Sarah
Jenkins and Mrs Smashems, who were the first wig
and the first Tory... the Whigs being the first
to realize that the Queen had been dead all the
time chose George I as King."
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MORE
INFORMATION
Anne's Genealogy
A guide to the monarch's ancestors and offspring.
These trails can lead you through the history of
Europe's royal houses and to some unexpected
places.
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