George Vi

Edward VIII

Edward VIII was King of the United Kingdom for 326 days in 1936 before abdicating to marry Wallis Simpson. As Duke of Windsor, his exile, Nazi Germany visit and unresolved relationship with the royal family made him one of the most controversial modern British monarchs.

Born
1894 CE
Died
1972 CE
Role
King of the United Kingdom

King of the United Kingdom (1894–1972)

Portrait of Edward VIII in 1930s royal attire
Quick facts

Profile details

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Also known as
Duke of Windsor
Facts

Edward VIII timeline facts

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1894–1910
The golden prince

Edward grew up as the eldest son of the future George V, charming and intensely public, yet increasingly resistant to the discipline expected of a king.

1920s–1930s
Social concern

Edward's expressed concern for unemployment and the social conditions of industrial workers gave him a populist reputation that was real in feeling if inconsistent in action.

1937–1945
The Duke of Windsor

Edward and Wallis married in France in 1937, visited Nazi Germany and met Hitler, and spent the war years in the Bahamas in a colonial appointment that kept Edward safely away from Europe.

Post-1972
What the abdication meant

Edward VIII's abdication established that the monarchy could survive a king's departure and that the institution mattered more than any individual occupant.

Life Journey

The king who chose the woman over the throne

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1894–1910

The golden prince

Edward grew up as the eldest son of the future George V, charming and intensely public, yet increasingly resistant to the discipline expected of a king.

1914–1918

World War I

Edward served as a staff officer during World War I, repeatedly frustrated by being kept away from direct action by those responsible for keeping the heir alive.

1920s

Imperial tours

Edward's tours of the empire in the 1920s made him an internationally celebrated figure, his youth and informality generating genuine enthusiasm in ways that formal royal visits rarely achieved.

1920s–1930s

Social concern

Edward's expressed concern for unemployment and the social conditions of industrial workers gave him a populist reputation that was real in feeling if inconsistent in action.

1934–1936

Wallis Simpson

Edward's deepening relationship with the American divorcée Wallis Simpson created the crisis that would end his reign within months of his accession.

December 1936

Abdication

Edward abdicated on 11 December 1936 after Britain and the Dominions rejected his plan to marry Wallis Simpson while remaining king.

1937–1945

The Duke of Windsor

Edward and Wallis married in France in 1937, visited Nazi Germany and met Hitler, and spent the war years in the Bahamas in a colonial appointment that kept Edward safely away from Europe.

1945–1972

Decades of exile

The Windsors spent the post-war decades in Paris, conducting a social life among the wealthy while the Duke sought the recognition and role that the royal family and successive governments declined to provide.

Post-1972

What the abdication meant

Edward VIII's abdication established that the monarchy could survive a king's departure and that the institution mattered more than any individual occupant.

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British Monarchs lineage
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British Monarchs
1066 CE–present

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Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

Sources & Further Reading

Reliable reference works, archives and reading paths connected to this profile.

Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Edward VIII,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Edward VIII,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Edward VIII,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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