Monarchs of England |
Monarchs of Scotland |
Name |
Reign |
Notes |
Name |
Reign |
Notes |
The West Saxons |
The House of Alpin |
|
Kenneth I |
843–858 |
First King of the Picts and the Scots |
Donald I |
858–862 |
Kenneth I's brother |
Constantine I |
862–877 |
Kenneth I's son |
Alfred the Great |
871–899 |
Recognised as leader of all free Englishmen under the Treaty of Wedmore, 878 |
Áed |
877–878 |
Kenneth I's son |
Eochaid |
878–889 |
Áed's nephew
Jointly with Giric ? |
Giric |
878–889 |
Áed's first cousin ? |
Donald II |
889–900 |
Constantine I's son |
Edward the Elder |
899–924 |
Alfred's son |
Constantine II |
900–943 |
Áed's son |
Ælfweard |
924 |
Edward's son, king of Wessex only |
Athelstan |
924–939 |
Edward's son, the first de facto king of all England |
Edmund I |
939–946 |
Edward's son |
Malcolm I |
943–954 |
Donald II's son |
Edred |
946–955 |
Edward's son |
Indulf |
954–962 |
Constantine II's son |
Edwy the Fair |
955–959 |
Edmund's son |
Edgar the Peaceable |
959–975 |
Edmund's son |
Dub |
962–966 |
Malcolm I's son |
Cuilén |
966–971 |
Indulf's son |
Kenneth II |
971–? |
Malcolm I's son |
St Edward the Martyr |
975–978 |
Edgar's son |
Amlaíb |
?–977 |
Indulf's son |
Kenneth II |
977–995 |
2nd reign |
Ethelred the Unready |
978–1013
1014–1016 |
Edgar's son |
Constantine III |
995–997 |
Cuilén's son |
Kenneth III |
997–1005 |
Dub's son |
Malcolm II |
1005–1034 |
Kenneth II's son |
Edmund Ironside |
1016 |
Ethelred's son |
The Danish Kings
Both the Saxon and Danish royal houses claimed the English throne, 1013 to 1016. Denmark and England had the same king from 1016 to 1042. |
Sweyn Forkbeard |
1013–1014 |
|
Canute The Great |
1016–1035 |
Sweyn's son |
Duncan I |
1034–1040 |
Malcolm II's grandson |
Harold Harefoot |
1035–1040 |
Canute's son |
Harthacanute |
1040–1042 |
Canute's son |
Macbeth |
1040–1057 |
Kenneth III's granddaughter's husband |
The West Saxon Restoration |
St Edward the Confessor |
1042–1066 |
Ethelred's son |
Lulach |
1057–1058 |
Kenneth III's great-grandson, Macbeth's step-son and cousin |
The House of Dunkeld |
Malcolm III |
1058–1093 |
Duncan I's son |
Harold Godwinson |
1066 |
Edward the Confessor's brother-in-law |
Edgar the Atheling |
1066 |
Grandson of Edmund Ironside |
The Normans
After the Norman Conquest in 1066, numbering of kings (a French tradition never used by the English prior to that date) begins. |
William I, the Conqueror |
1066–1087 |
Distant kinsman of Alfred the Great |
William II, Rufus |
1087–1100 |
William I's son, descendant of Alfred the Great |
Donald III |
1093–1094
1094–1097 |
Duncan I's son |
Duncan II |
1094 |
Malcolm III's son |
Edgar |
1097–1107 |
Malcolm III's son |
Henry I |
1100–1135 |
William I's son, descendant of Alfred the Great |
Alexander I |
1107–1124 |
Malcolm III's son |
David I |
1124–1153 |
Malcolm III's son |
Stephen |
1135–1154 |
William I's grandson |
Malcolm IV |
1153–1165 |
David I's grandson |
The Angevins or Plantagenets
The Royal House name changed to reflect Matilda's marriage to Geoffrey Plantagenet. |
Matilda (Empress Maud) |
1141 |
Henry I's daughter, Edmund Ironside's great-great-granddaughter |
Henry II |
1154–1189 |
Matilda's son |
William I |
1165–1214 |
David I's grandson |
Richard I, the Lionheart |
1189–1199 |
Henry II's son |
Monarchs of England and Ireland
In 1199, John, already Lord of Ireland, inherited the English throne. The title "Lord of Ireland" was used until it was replaced by "King of Ireland" in 1542. |
John "Lackland" |
1199–1216 |
Henry II's son |
Alexander II |
1214–1249 |
William I's son |
Henry III |
1216–1272 |
John's son |
Alexander III |
1249–1286 |
Alexander II's son |
Edward I "Longshanks" |
1272–1307 |
Henry III's son |
Margaret |
1286-1290 |
Alexander III's granddaughter, never inaugurated |
The House of Balliol
When Margaret died in 1290 there was no clear heir. King Edward I of England adjudged the claims of Robert Bruce, 5th Lord of Annandale and John Balliol in Balliol's favour. |
John |
1292–1296 |
David I's great-great-great-grandson |
The House of Bruce
When John Balliol rebelled, the Wars of Scottish Independence commenced, during which Robert the Bruce became King. |
Robert I |
1306–1329 |
David I's great-great-great-great-grandson |
Edward II |
1307–1327 |
Edward I's son |
Edward III |
1327–1377 |
Edward II's son |
David II |
1329–1371 |
Robert I's son |
The House of Balliol
For a period of time, both Edward Balliol and David II claimed the throne. |
Edward Balliol |
1332–1336 |
John Balliol's son |
The House of Stuart
Engaged to the Dauphin at age five, Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots was thus brought up in the French court where she became "Marie Stuart, Reine de l'Écosse," etc., to render the sound of 'Stewart' into French as accurately as possible. Mary kept the French spelling on her return to Scotland in 1560. |
Robert II |
1371–1390 |
Robert I's grandson |
Richard II |
1377–1399 |
Edward III's grandson |
Robert III |
1390–1406 |
Robert II's son |
The House of Lancaster
Henry Bolingbroke deposed Richard II, and the Royal House name came to reflect Henry's father's title, Duke of Lancaster. |
Henry IV |
1399–1413 |
Edward III's grandson |
James I |
1406–1437 |
Robert III's son |
Henry V |
1413–1422 |
Henry IV's son |
Henry VI |
1422–1461
1470–1471 |
Henry V's son |
James II |
1437–1460 |
James I's son |
James III |
1460–1488 |
James II's son |
The House of York
The Houses of Lancaster and York had fought the Wars of the Roses, and the Yorkists took the throne. |
Edward IV |
1461–1470
1471–1483 |
Edward III's great-great-grandson |
Edward V |
1483 |
Edward IV's son |
Richard III |
1483–1485 |
Edward IV's brother |
The House of Tudor
The Lancastrian Henry Tudor reclaimed the throne from the Yorkists. |
Henry VII |
1485–1509 |
Edward III's great-great-great-grandson |
James IV |
1488–1513 |
James III's son |
Henry VIII |
1509–1547 |
Henry VII's son, Edward IV's grandson |
James V |
1513–1542 |
James IV's son |
Mary I |
1542–1567 |
James V's daughter |
Edward VI |
1547–1553 |
Henry VIII's son |
Jane |
1553 |
Henry VII's great-granddaughter. Not generally noted as officially queen[1][2] |
Mary I |
1553–1558 |
Henry VIII's daughter |
Elizabeth I |
1558–1603 |
Henry VIII's daughter |
James VI |
1567–1625 |
Mary I's son |
Monarchs of England, Scotland, and Ireland
In 1603, James VI of Scotland inherited the English throne upon the death of Elizabeth I in what is known as the Union of the Crowns. From then until 1707, England, Scotland, and Ireland had shared monarchs. |
The House of Stuart |
Name |
Reign |
Notes |
James I (England)
James VI (Scotland) |
1603–1625 |
Son of Mary, Queen of Scots; great-great-grandson of Henry VII of England; first to be styled "King of Great Britain" (1604)
|
Charles I |
1625–1649 |
James VI & I's son |
The Period of Interregnum, (Commonwealth and Protectorate)
England had no king from 1649 to 1660, but the constitutional status of the government was never clear. For example, the Long Parliament, up until its dissolution on 20 April 1653, was commonly recognised as a Republic. It, however, styled itself as a Commonwealth. Following the dissolution of the Rump, a Nominated Assembly was formed. Not until Cromwell accepted the Instrument of Government on 15 December 1653 did the constitutional status of the regime change. From then on Oliver Cromwell was styled as Lord Protector, ruling through two Protectorate Parliaments. In 1659, Richard Cromwell abdicated, returning power to Parliament until the Stuart Restoration in 1660. |
Name |
Reign |
Notes |
Oliver Cromwell |
1653–1658 |
|
Richard Cromwell |
1658–1659 |
Oliver Cromwell's son |
The House of Stuart (restored) |
Name |
Reign |
Notes |
Charles II |
1660–1685 England
1649-1651 and 1660–1685 Scotland
(1649–1685 de jure) |
Charles I's elder son (crowned at Scone, in Scotland, 1651). He officially dated his reign from his father's death |
James II (England)
James VII (Scotland) |
1685–1689 |
Charles I's younger son |
Mary II |
1689–1694 |
James II's elder daughter
Joint sovereign with her husband, William III, II and I |
William III (England)
William II (Scotland)
William I (Ireland) |
1689–1702 |
Charles I's grandson
Jointly with his wife, Mary II |
Anne |
1702–1707
(full reign: 1702–1714) |
James II's daughter |
Monarchs of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
In 1922, the Irish Free State left the United Kingdom. The name of the Kingdom was amended in 1927 to reflect the change. Between 1927 and the passage of the Republic of Ireland Act in 1949 George V, Edward VIII, and George VI were also styled "King of Ireland". |
The House of Windsor (continued) |
Name |
Reign |
Notes |
George V |
1927–1936
(full reign: 1910–1936) |
Edward VII's son |
Edward VIII |
1936 |
George V's son; abdicated |
George VI |
1936–1952 |
George V's son |
Elizabeth II |
6 February 1952- |
George VI's daughter; also queen of 15 other sovereign kingdoms. |
|