William IV of the United Kingdom
William IV, William Henry (
August 21,
1765 -
June 20,
1837), King of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and
King of Hanover (
June 26,
1830-
June 20,
1837, was nicknamed the "sailor king". He was the third son of
George III and succeeded his brother
George IV.

He joined the
Royal Navy in
1779 and served in the
Americas and the
West Indies. He was made
Duke of Clarence in
1789,
Admiral of the Fleet in
1811 and
Lord High Admiral in
1827. He lived with the Irish actress
Dorothy Jordan from
1791-
1811 and they had ten children. On
July 13,
1818 he married Princess
Adelaide, daughter of the Duke of
Saxe-Meiningen, but their two daughters both died in childhood, thus leaving William without any legitimate children.
In contrast to his brother, William was unassuming and discouraged pomp and ceremony although he was occasionally taken to periods of "strange behaviour". While this did little to counteract the generally low opinion of the monarchy, William did not create the embarrassment of his predecessors. His accession to the throne in
1830 took him almost by surprise (his elder brother,
Frederick, Duke of York, having died only three years earlier), and he was given to riding around in his carriage making his presence known to the ordinary people - almost like the "walkabouts" practised by today's royal family.
As monarch, William played a role in the crisis surrounding the
Reform Act of 1832. Initially it appeared that he supported parliamentary reform, even though the
House of Lords had previously rejected the Bill in
1831 and
1832. When the
Whigs returned to power under
Lord Grey in 1831 with an increased majority the King had agreed to create fifty new peerages to force the Bill through but when the Bill came into the Lords the King tried to withdraw from creating the peerages. The government resigned and after an abortive attempt to form a new government around
Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, the King acceded to the passage of the Bill, setting in motion the transfer of constitutional power from the monarch to parliament.
William was also the last monarch to choose a
prime minister in opposition to the wishes of parliament; he dismissed
William Lamb in
1834 and gave the Tories under
Robert Peel an opportunity to form a government. As Peel headed a minority in the
House of Commons it was impossible for him to govern, and the Whigs returned to power in April,
1835.
King William IV died on June 20, 1837 and is buried at
Windsor Castle. His death without a legitimate male heir separated the rule of the UK and Hanover. His niece
Victoria ascended the throne of Great Britain and Ireland, but was barred by
Salic law from ruling
Hanover, which passed to William's brother
Ernest, Duke of Cumberland.
{| border=2 align="center"\n|-\n|width="30%" align="center" rowspan="2" |Preceded by:
George IV\n|width="40%" align="center" |
King of the United Kingdom\\n|width="30%" align="center" |Succeeded by:
Victoria\n|-\n|width="40%" align="center"|King of Hanover\n|width="30%" align="center"|Ernest Augustus I'''\n|}
Category:British monarchs\n\n\n\n