Lineage

English and British Monarchs Timeline

Explore the English and British monarchs timeline from William the Conqueror in 1066 to Charles III today. Follow the kings and queens in order, grouped by dynasty, reign, and royal house.

42 rulers listed
1066 to present
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Kings and Queens Timeline from 1066 to Present

Portrait of William I in Norman royal armour

MONARCH 1

William I

1066–1087 · Norman

William the Conqueror seized the English throne in 1066 and transformed the kingdom’s aristocracy, landholding, and government.

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Portrait of William II in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 2

William II

1087–1100 · Norman

William Rufus ruled with energy and controversy, consolidating royal authority but dying suddenly in the New Forest.

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Portrait of Henry I in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 3

Henry I

1100–1135 · Norman

Henry I strengthened royal administration and legal order, but his death without a clear male heir triggered succession conflict.

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Portrait of Stephen of Blois in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 4

Stephen

1135–1154 · Blois

Stephen’s contested accession led to civil war, remembered as the Anarchy, before the succession passed to the future Henry II.

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Portrait of Henry II in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 5

Henry II

1154–1189 · Plantagenet

Henry II founded the Angevin empire and reshaped royal justice, though conflict with Thomas Becket shadowed his reign.

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Portrait of Richard I in medieval crusader armour

MONARCH 6

Richard I

1189–1199 · Plantagenet

Richard the Lionheart became famous for crusading and warfare, spending comparatively little of his reign in England.

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Portrait of King John in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 7

John

1199–1216 · Plantagenet

John lost major continental lands and faced rebellion that forced him to seal Magna Carta in 1215.

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Portrait of Henry III in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 8

Henry III

1216–1272 · Plantagenet

Henry III ruled for over half a century, facing baronial unrest and setting the stage for stronger parliamentary traditions.

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Portrait of Edward I in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 9

Edward I of England

1272–1307 · Plantagenet

Edward I expanded English power into Wales, campaigned in Scotland, and left a major mark on law and government.

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Portrait of Edward II in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 10

Edward II of England

1307–1327 · Plantagenet

Edward II’s troubled reign included military defeat, factional politics, and eventual deposition.

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Portrait of Edward III in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 11

Edward III of England

1327–1377 · Plantagenet

Edward III revived royal authority and launched the Hundred Years’ War, shaping England’s medieval military identity.

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Portrait of Richard II in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 12

Richard II

1377–1399 · Plantagenet

Richard II’s artistic court and increasingly autocratic rule ended when he was deposed by Henry Bolingbroke.

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Portrait of Henry IV in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 13

Henry IV

1399–1413 · Lancaster

Henry IV founded the Lancastrian line after seizing the throne, but his reign was challenged by rebellion and instability.

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Portrait of Henry V in medieval royal armour

MONARCH 14

Henry V

1413–1422 · Lancaster

Henry V became England’s warrior king, winning the Battle of Agincourt and renewing English claims in France.

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Portrait of Henry VI in medieval royal attire

MONARCH 15

Henry VI

1422–1461, 1470–1471 · Lancaster

Henry VI’s weak rule and mental illness helped drive the Wars of the Roses between Lancaster and York.

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Portrait of Edward IV in Yorkist royal attire

MONARCH 16

Edward IV

1461–1470, 1471–1483 · York

Edward IV restored Yorkist power through battlefield success and firmer kingship after years of civil war.

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Portrait of Edward V as a young prince

MONARCH 17

Edward V

1483 · York

Edward V’s reign was brief and uncrowned; he is remembered as one of the Princes in the Tower.

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Portrait of Richard III in late medieval royal attire

MONARCH 18

Richard III

1483–1485 · York

Richard III’s short reign ended at Bosworth Field, where the Tudor era began.

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Portrait of Henry VII in Tudor royal attire

MONARCH 19

Henry VII

1485–1509 · Tudor

Henry VII founded the Tudor dynasty, stabilised the crown, and ended the Wars of the Roses.

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Portrait of Henry VIII in Tudor royal attire

MONARCH 20

Henry VIII

1509–1547 · Tudor

Henry VIII broke with Rome, transformed the English church, and remains one of the best-known monarchs in British history.

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Portrait of Edward VI in Tudor royal attire

MONARCH 21

Edward VI

1547–1553 · Tudor

Edward VI’s reign advanced Protestant reform, though he died before reaching adulthood.

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Portrait of Mary I in Tudor royal attire

MONARCH 22

Mary I

1553–1558 · Tudor

Mary I attempted to restore Catholicism and became known to later Protestant memory as ‘Bloody Mary’.

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Portrait of Elizabeth I in Elizabethan royal regalia

MONARCH 23

Elizabeth I

1558–1603 · Tudor

Elizabeth I presided over a powerful and culturally influential reign, balancing religion, politics, and international rivalry.

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Portrait of James I in Stuart royal attire

MONARCH 24

James I

1603–1625 · Stuart

James VI of Scotland became James I of England, uniting the crowns and beginning the Stuart era in England.

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Portrait of Charles I in Stuart royal attire

MONARCH 25

Charles I

1625–1649 · Stuart

Charles I’s clashes with Parliament led to civil war, defeat, and his execution in 1649.

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Portrait of Charles II in Restoration-era royal attire

MONARCH 26

Charles II

1660–1685 · Stuart

After the Interregnum, Charles II restored the monarchy and presided over a politically agile Restoration court.

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Portrait of James II in Stuart royal attire

MONARCH 27

James II

1685–1688 · Stuart

James II’s Catholicism and centralising instincts helped provoke the Glorious Revolution.

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Portrait of Mary II in late 17th-century royal attire

MONARCH 28

Mary II

1689–1694 · Stuart / Orange

William and Mary ruled jointly after the Glorious Revolution, establishing a stronger constitutional balance between crown and Parliament.

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Portrait of William III in late 17th-century royal attire

MONARCH 29

William III

1694–1702 · Orange

After Mary’s death, William III continued alone, focusing heavily on European war and the balance of power.

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Portrait of Queen Anne in early 18th-century royal attire

MONARCH 30

Anne

1702–1714 · Stuart

Anne became the first monarch of Great Britain after the 1707 union of England and Scotland.

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Portrait of George I in Hanoverian royal attire

MONARCH 31

George I

1714–1727 · Hanover

George I began the Hanoverian era and ruled in partnership with an increasingly powerful parliamentary system.

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Portrait of George II in Hanoverian royal attire

MONARCH 32

George II

1727–1760 · Hanover

George II was the last British monarch to lead troops in battle and reigned during Britain’s expanding imperial power.

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Portrait of George III in British royal attire

MONARCH 33

George III

1760–1820 · Hanover

George III ruled through the American Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars, and major constitutional strain.

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Portrait of George IV in Regency-era royal attire

MONARCH 34

George IV

1820–1830 · Hanover

George IV is remembered for extravagance, patronage of the arts, and the culture of the Regency period.

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Portrait of William IV in early Victorian-era royal attire

MONARCH 35

William IV

1830–1837 · Hanover

William IV’s reign saw the Great Reform Act and a changing relationship between monarchy and Parliament.

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Portrait of Queen Victoria in formal royal attire

MONARCH 36

Victoria

1837–1901 · Hanover / Saxe-Coburg and Gotha

Queen Victoria’s long reign became synonymous with industrial growth, empire, and the social tone of the Victorian age.

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Portrait of Edward VII in Edwardian royal attire

MONARCH 37

Edward VII

1901–1910 · Saxe-Coburg and Gotha

Edward VII ushered in the Edwardian era and played a visible diplomatic role in pre-war Europe.

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Portrait of George V in early 20th-century royal attire

MONARCH 38

George V

1910–1936 · Windsor

George V guided the monarchy through the First World War and renamed the royal house Windsor.

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Portrait of Edward VIII in 1930s royal attire

MONARCH 39

Edward VIII

1936 · Windsor

Edward VIII abdicated in 1936, producing one of the most dramatic constitutional crises of the modern monarchy.

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Portrait of King George VI in formal royal attire

MONARCH 40

George VI

1936–1952 · Windsor

George VI restored stability to the crown and became a central wartime figure during the Second World War.

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Portrait of Queen Elizabeth II in formal royal attire

MONARCH 41

Elizabeth II

1952–2022 · Windsor

Elizabeth II reigned through decolonisation, constitutional evolution, and profound social change over seven decades.

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Portrait of King Charles III in formal royal attire

MONARCH 42

Charles III

2022–present · Windsor

Charles III became king in 2022, inheriting a modern constitutional monarchy shaped by continuity, scrutiny, and change.

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Frequently asked questions

Who was the first British monarch?

Queen Anne is usually counted as the first monarch of Great Britain after the 1707 union of England and Scotland. The longer royal sequence often begins with William I in 1066, when the Norman Conquest reshaped the English crown.

Who was the first English monarch in this timeline?

This timeline begins with William I, who became king after the Norman Conquest in 1066.

What is the difference between English and British monarchs?

English monarchs ruled before the 1707 Act of Union. British monarchs formally begin with Queen Anne after England and Scotland united as Great Britain.

Why are some reigns disputed or interrupted?

Some reigns are complicated by civil war, deposition, joint monarchy, or rival claims to the throne. Henry VI, Edward IV, and William III and Mary II are examples of monarchs whose reigns reflect those political breaks.

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