Spencer Perceval

George III

George III was King of Great Britain and Ireland from 1760 to 1820. His reign saw the American Revolution, the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, the Act of Union, and his later mental illness.

Born
1738 CE
Died
1820 CE
Role
King of Great Britain

King of Great Britain (1738–1820)

Portrait of George III in British royal attire
Quick facts

Profile details

Additional identity and tagging details that are not already covered in the introduction.

Also known as
Mad King George
Facts

George III timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

1738–1760
The English king

George was the first Hanoverian born in England, educated entirely in British culture, and determined to define himself as a British rather than German monarch from the start.

1783–1801
Pitt the Younger's ministry

The appointment of William Pitt the Younger gave George a minister capable of governing effectively for nearly two decades, stabilising both finances and politics.

1800
Act of Union with Ireland

The Act of Union with Ireland was a major constitutional act of George's reign, though his refusal of Catholic emancipation immediately undermined its integrating purpose.

Post-1820
A complicated reign

George III's sixty-year reign saw Britain lose America, defeat Napoleon, begin industrialisation, and develop modern parliamentary government — a record that resists simple judgment.

Life Journey

Sixty years of duty, loss, and eventual darkness

Follow the story in a more continuous narrative, with a reading mode that matches how much depth you want.

1738–1760

The English king

George was the first Hanoverian born in England, educated entirely in British culture, and determined to define himself as a British rather than German monarch from the start.

1760–1770s

Asserting royal influence

George worked to dismantle Whig dominance and reassert royal influence over the choice of ministers, creating political instability through a decade of rapid ministry changes.

1775–1783

American Revolution

George's firm resistance to American demands for independence drove the colonies to revolution and ultimate separation, the defining failure of his reign.

1783–1801

Pitt the Younger's ministry

The appointment of William Pitt the Younger gave George a minister capable of governing effectively for nearly two decades, stabilising both finances and politics.

1788–1789 and recurrent

Mental illness

George suffered a first episode of severe mental illness in 1788, recovering in 1789 but establishing a pattern of recurrent crises that worsened through the rest of his life.

1793–1815

French Revolutionary Wars

Britain's long struggle against Revolutionary and Napoleonic France dominated George's later reign, requiring a national effort that tested every institution of government.

1800

Act of Union with Ireland

The Act of Union with Ireland was a major constitutional act of George's reign, though his refusal of Catholic emancipation immediately undermined its integrating purpose.

1810–1820

Final incapacity

After the death of his daughter Amelia in 1810, George fell into permanent mental incapacity and spent his last decade blind, deaf, and confused at Windsor.

Post-1820

A complicated reign

George III's sixty-year reign saw Britain lose America, defeat Napoleon, begin industrialisation, and develop modern parliamentary government — a record that resists simple judgment.

Continue in context

Connected stories

Move from the profile into the wider events and settings this figure belongs to.

British Monarchs lineage
Lineage42 rulers
British Monarchs
1066 CE–present

Trace the English and later British monarchy from William I to today.

View lineage
Tertiary paths

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 George III,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for George III,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for George III,” accessed June 2026.Open source

A weekly route through history

Find out first about the latest published stories, feature notes and occasional Premium offers in one weekly email.