Clay Lane

Posts in The Copybook credited to ‘Clay Lane’

295
The Interregnum to Anne Clay Lane

A quick overview of the Kings and Queens of England from the Interregnum in 1651 to Queen Anne in 1702.

Below is a brief overview of the Kings of England from the Interregnum in 1649, when for eleven years England was a republic, to Queen Anne in 1702, the last of the Stuarts and the first ruler of Great Britain.

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296
Anne to George III Clay Lane

A quick overview of the Kings and Queens of England from Queen Anne in 1702 to George III in 1760.

Below is a brief overview of the Kings of England from Queen Anne in 1702, the last of the Stuarts and the first ruler of Great Britain, to the reign of George III and the upheavals of the French Revolution in 1789 and American independence in 1776.

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297
George III to Victoria Clay Lane

A quick overview of the Kings and Queens of England from George III in 1760 to Victoria in 1837.

Below is a brief overview of the Kings of England from King George III in 1760, who lost the American colonies but encouraged the Industrial Revolution, to Queen Victoria in 1837, in whose day Britain became a worldwide trading Empire and ushered in the modern world.

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298
Victoria to George VI Clay Lane

A quick overview of the Kings and Queens of England from Victoria in 1837 to Elizabeth II in 1952.

Below is a brief overview of the Kings of England from Queen Victoria in 1837, Empress of India and the first ruler of a truly modern, industrialised Britain, to Elizabeth II in 1952, Queen regnant of a sovereign nation weary of its European neighbours’ thirst for superpower.

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299
Henry IV to Henry VI Clay Lane

A quick overview of the Kings of England from Henry IV in 1399 to Henry VI in 1422.

Below is a brief overview of the Kings of England from Henry IV, who acquired the throne almost by accident when trying to regain the title of Duke of Lancaster, to Henry VI, who forfeited the crown of France won by his famous father.

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300
Pirates at Penzance Clay Lane

The people of Penzance in Cornwall did not think an Algerian corsair much better than a French warship.

It may seem quaint that Cornish villagers ran home to lock up their daughters when they heard of shipwrecked sailors on the beach. But this was 1760, when everyone was braced for a French invasion in the Seven Years’ War, and when Algiers was the centre of a miserable human-trafficking industry which specialised in ‘goods’ from Christian Europe.

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