If Prince Frederick had succeeded his father in 1760 instead of the young, inexperienced, and dysfunctional George III, would the American revolution in the 1770s have taken place?
Would the French revolution in the 1780s have taken place?
Would the rebellions of the 1790s and 1803 occurred in Ireland?
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The first of two volumes, this informative and insightful book on the first 30 years of the reign of King George III revives Ireland’s treasured tradition of annals to explore its rich and complex history.
It shows how political developments in Ireland were strongly influenced by events in Britain, its Empire, and the American colonies. Through the prism of a medical academic, it reveals evidence that the premature demise of Prince Frederick, heir to the British and Irish monarchies, may have occurred at the behest of his father George II possibly as the result of poisoning. It examines how George III’s long serving prime minister Lord Frederick North may have been his half-brother, and together they were responsible for Britain losing its thirteen American colonies. It discusses how George III’s chronic psychiatric illness was due to a bipolar affective disorder, which probably preceded his ascent to the throne, and impacted on his cognitive functioning as king for the next sixty years.
€40.00