Ernest Augustus I of Hanover
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ernest Augustus I, King of Hanover (5 June 1771 – 18 November 1851), also (1799-1851) the Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale, was the fifth son and eighth child of King George III of the United Kingdom and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz.
He served as the fourteenth Chancellor of Trinity College, Dublin from 1805 to 1851.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Field Marshal His Royal Highness The Prince Ernest Augustus, KG, KP, GCB, GCH, Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale and Earl of Armagh, later His Majesty Ernest Augustus I, King of Hanover and Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, was born at Buckingham Palace. He received tutoring at home before proceeding to the University of Göttingen in Germany in summer 1786 along with his younger brothers, Prince Adolphus and Prince Augustus.
[edit] Military career
In 1791, he and Prince Adolphus went to Hanover to receive military training under the supervision of Field Marshal von Freytag. He learned cavalry drill and tactics under Captain von Linsinger of the Queen's Light Dragoons. He proved to be an excellent horseman and good shot, despite his short-sightedness. After only two months of training, von Freytag was so impressed by the prince's progress that he gave him a place with the cavalry as captain. The King, also impressed by his son's prowess, allowed him to remain.
In March 1792, the Army officially commissioned Prince Ernest Augustus with the rank of colonel in the 9th Hanoverian Light Dragoons. The following year, he gained the command of the 1st Brigade of Cavalry. He served in Flanders during 1793-95 in the War against the French, under his elder brother the Duke of York, then commander of the combined British, Hanoverian and Austrian forces. [He lost his left eye] During the Battle of Tourcoing (Battle of Cayghem) (18 May 1794) his left arm was injured by a passing cannonball, and when the sight of his left eye failed later on, he blamed the cannonball. Doctors, however, blamed 'a tumour', and it is significant that his son went blind at 13. Prince Ernest returned to Britain for the first time since 1786 to convalesce. He returned to the continent the following year, and commanded the rear guard of saw sharp action during the British army's retreat through the Netherlands. The Duke of York had reduced him to command of a mere regiment,at which he complained bitterly to the Prince of Wales. However, his royal status won him [He gained] promotion to lieutenant general in 1798 and to general in 1803. On 29 March 1813, he became a field marshal. He served as honorary colonel of the 15th (The King's) Regiment of (Light) Dragoons (Hussars) from 1801 to 1827 and as colonel of the Royal Horse Guards from 1827 to 1830.
[edit] Duke of Cumberland
On 29 August 1799, George III created Prince Ernest Augustus Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale and Earl of Armagh. The Duke of Cumberland became a Knight of the Garter in 1786. His elder brother, the Prince Regent (later King George IV), created him a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath in 1815. In 1831, the Duke of Cumberland became a Knight of St. Patrick. Finally, upon his ascension to the Hanoverian throne in 1837, he became Sovereign and Grand Master of the Royal Guelphic Order.
[edit] Marriage
On 29 May 1815, the Duke of Cumberland married his first cousin, Frederica (2 March 1778 – 29 June 1841), the daughter of Charles II, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. She was also the former wife of Prince Ludwig of Prussia and the widow of Friedrich Wilhelm, Prince of Solms-Braunfels. Queen Charlotte opposed the marriage, even though her future daughter-in-law was also her niece. From her first two marriages, the new Duchess of Cumberland had eight children; from her marriage to Ernest, she had a further three children, only one of whom survived — a son, who would become George V of Hanover.
[edit] Politics and popularity
The Duke of Cumberland had a reputation as one of the least pleasant of the sons of George III. Politically an extreme Tory, he opposed the 1828 Catholic Emancipation Bill proposed by the government of the Prime Minister, the Duke of Wellington. He also opposed the 1832 Reform Bill.
Rumor strongly suggested that he had murdered his valet, though the accepted verion, as found by a coroner's verdict, is that the valet had attempted to assassinate him and then had cut his own throat. Other horrific stories told about the duke included rumors of incestuous relations with Princess Sophia, his sister. He is also alleged to have made an indecent assault on Sarah, Lady Lyndhurst, the wife of Lord Lyndhurst, three-time Lord Chancellor. Many of these tales are attributed by historians to Whig politicians (the Duke was a Tory) attempting, with some success, to discredit him.
A recent biography, "Wicked Ernest", suggests that Cumberland did indeed murder his valet and have a son by his sister. Other historians have not yet taken this position
[edit] King of Hanover
On 20 June 1837, King William IV died, and his niece, Victoria, the only child of the late Duke of Kent, the fourth son of George III, succeeded as queen of the United Kingdom. However, Salic Law still prevailed in Hanover, meaning that William's legitimate male heir, the Duke of Cumberland, became King of Hanover. Hanover and Great Britain thereby gained diverging royal houses.
[edit] Domestic affairs
On June 28, 1837, King Ernst entered his new domain, passing under a triumphal arch. For the first time in living memory (Hanover had had only one royal visit, in 1821, in the past three reigns totalling almost 77 years), Hanover would have a ruling monarch resident in the nation.
One matter that the King gave his early attention to was the constitution. Hanover had received its first constitution, granted by the Prince Regent, in 1819; this did little more than denote Hanover's change from an electorate to a kingdom, granted by the Congress of Vienna. The Duke of Cambridge, as King William's viceroy in Hanover, recommended a thorough reorganization of the Hanoverian government. The King gave his consent in 1833; the Duke of Cumberland's consent was neither asked nor received.
On taking the throne, King Ernst was advised by a Hanoverian lawyer, von Falcke, that the constitution was subject to challenge for failure to obtain the then-heir presumptive's consent. King Ernst convened a panel of jurists, who upheld von Falcke's position. In November 1837, the King issued a patent, declaring the constitution void, but upholding all laws passed under it. Elections to the Estates of Hanover would continue as before 1833.
In carrying the King's Patent into effect, the Cabinet required all officeholders (including university professors) to renew their oaths of allegiance to the King. Seven professors at Göttingen University, which was inside the Kingdom, refused to take the oaths, and agitated for others to protest against the King's decree. Since they did not take the oaths, the seven lost their positions, and the King expelled three (including Jacob Grimm, one of the two Brothers Grimm) from Hanover. Only one of the seven was a citizen of Hanover--and that one was not expelled. In the final years of the King's reign, the three were invited to return.
The King's actions appeared to have caused little public protest, perhaps because the net effect of the decree was to cause a reduction in taxes. The King received a deputation of Göttingen citizens, who, fearing student unrest, applauded the dismissals.
The King took great interest in plans to modernize the country. His support led to modern sanitation in the city, modern gas lighting, and the development of a new residential quarter. He had the plans altered in 1841, after Queen Frederica's death, to leave standing the Altes Palais, where the two had lived since arriving in Hanover. His interest and support of the railroads led to Hanover becoming a major rail junction, much to the nation's benefit.
The King proved to be a conscientious worker, rarely leaving the country, and proved to be popular. Hanover was little affected by the revolutions of 1848--a few small riots were put down by the cavalry without bloodshed. Afterwards, the King granted a new constitution.
[edit] Relations with England
Ernest Augustus is supposed to have asked the advice of the Duke of Wellington as to what course he should take after Victoria's accession, with Wellington supposedly saying "Go, before they pelt you out." One measure of the new King of Hanover's unpopularity in Britain is the fact that "To Hanover" tokens, showing the new King slinking off to his new domain on one side, and with Victoria on the other, were soon struck, and continued to be struck (mostly as game pieces) for most of the rest of the century.[1]
One decision the new King had was whether, in his capacity as Duke of Cumberland, to swear allegiance to Victoria in the House of Lords. Lord Cottenham, the Lord Chancellor, is supposed to have stated that he would refuse to administer the Oath of Allegiance to the King, as a foreign sovereign. In point of fact, the King appeared in the House of Lords, before his departure for Hanover, and subscribed to the Oath before the Chief Clerk as a matter of routine.
Almost immediately upon going to Hanover, the King became involved in a dispute with his niece. Victoria, wishing to have her mother near her--but not too near her--asked the King to give up his apartments at St. James's Palace in favor of the Duchess of Kent. The King, wishing to retain apartments in London in anticipation of frequent visits to England, and reluctant to give way in favor of a woman who had frequently fought with his brother, King William, declined, and Victoria angrily engaged a house for her mother. At a time when the young Queen was trying to pay off her father's debts, she saw this as unnecessary expense. Her grudge against the King increased when the King refused, and advised his two surviving brothers to similarly refuse, to give precedence to Prince Albert, on the grounds that standing of the various royal families had been settled at the Congress of Vienna, and the King of Hanover should not have to yield to one who the King described as a "paper Royal Highness." While Prince Albert was given precedence next the Queen, this only applied in the United Kingdom, not elsewhere in Europe.
Matters came to a head when the King returned for a visit, as it would prove, his final one to England, in 1843. He was welcomed warmly, everywhere but at the Palace. At the wedding of Princess Augusta of Cambridge, he attempted to insist on a superior place to that of Prince Albert. The fifty-years-younger prince settled things with what Albert described as a "strong push", and carefully wrote his name on the certificate under the Queen's, so close to his wife's as to leave no space for the King's signature. The King apparently held no grudge, as he invited the Prince for a stroll in the park. When Albert demurred on the grounds that they might be jostled by crowds, the King replied, "When I lived here I was quite as unpopular as you are and they never bothered me."
Perhaps well for all concerned, the King soon thereafter injured himself in a fall, relieving both sides of any obligation to see each other. He was not seriously injured, and found time to take his place as Duke of Cumberland in the House of Lords, stating that he would not participate in any debates, unless the Devil prompted him.
The monarchs engaged in one more battle--over jewels left by Queen Charlotte. Victoria, who possessed them, took the position that they belonged to the English Crown; the King, that they were to go to the male heir, that is, himself. The matter was arbitrated, and just as the arbitrators were about to announce a decision in Hanover's favor, one of the arbitrators died, voiding the decision. Despite the King's request for a new panel, Victoria refused to permit one during the King's lifetime, and took every opportunity to wear the jewels, causing the King to fume, "The little Queen looked very fine, I hear, loaded down with my diamonds." The King's son and heir, King Georg, pressed the matter, and in 1858, after another decision in Hanover's favor, the jewels were turned over to the Hanoverian ambassador.
[edit] Death
Both he and Queen Frederica lie buried in a mausoleum in the Herrenhausen Gardens.
Ernest Augustus was also the Heir Presumptive of his niece from 20 June 1837 until 21 November 1840. On that date came the birth of his grand-niece Princess Victoria, Princess Royal who became Heiress Presumptive in his place.
A large equestrian statue of King Ernest Augustus may be found in a square named after him in front of the railway station in Hanover, inscribed with his name and the words (in German) "To the father of the land from his loyal people". It is a popular meeting place; in the local phrase, people arrange to meet under the tail (that is, of the horse which the King rides).
[edit] Titles, style, honours and arms
[edit] Titles
- 1771-1799: His Royal Highness The Prince Ernest Augustus
- 1799-1837: His Royal Highness The Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale
- 1837-1851: His Majesty King Ernst August I of Hanover, Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale
[edit] Issue
Name | Birth | Death | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
George V of Hanover | May 27, 1819 | June 12, 1878 | married 1843, HH Princess Marie of Saxe-Altenburg; had issue |
[edit] Further reading
Wardroper, John, Wicked Ernest, 2002. London, Shelfmark Books. ISBN 0-9526093-3-9
House of Hanover Born: 5 June 1771 Died: 18 November 1851 |
||
---|---|---|
Preceded by William IV |
King of Hanover 1837-1851 |
Succeeded by George V |
Preceded by New Creation |
Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale 1799-1851 |
Ernest Augustus II of Hanover (1878-1919) · George V of Hanover (1851-1878) · Ernest Augustus I of Hanover (1771-1851) · Prince Henry Frederick (1766-1790) · Prince William Augustus (1726-1765) · George of Denmark (1683-1708) · Prince Rupert of the Rhine (1644-1682)
Categories: Kings of Hanover | English and British princes | Heirs to the English and British thrones | House of Hanover | British Field Marshals | Dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg | Dukes of Cumberland and Teviotdale | Earls in the Peerage of Ireland | People associated with Trinity College, Dublin | Chancellors of the University of Dublin | Knights of the Garter | Knights of St Patrick | Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath | Knights Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order | Royal Fellows of the Royal Society | People from London | 1771 births | 1851 deaths