Georgian Britishness: How ;;Britishness;; was Defined During the Reigns of the First Three Hanoverian Kings (1714-1820)
Great Britain;Britishness;King George I;King George II;King George III;Bonnie Prince Charlie;William Pitt (the Elder);Lord Burlington;Thomas Arne;James Thornhill;Prince of Wales;Duke of Cumberland;Hanover;Music;Redcoats;Neo-Palladianism;History
This thesis explores the development of ;;Britishness” or a British identity during the ;;long” eighteenth century in Great Britain during the reigns of the first three Hanoverian kings, also known as the ;;Georgian Kings”, George I (r. 1714-27), George II (r. 1727-60), and finally George III (r. 1760-1820) – looking at how the term British as an identity came to be fostered through the British monarchy, Redcoat regiments within the British Army, neo-Palladian architecture, and the development of British music. In order to understand how ;;Britishness” came to be, this thesis takes on a chronological approach by examining the evolution of the British monarchy under the governance of the three Georgian Kings, and how by the reign of each Georgian king came forth a gradual crystallization of a British identity, which is illustrated in the military, architecture and music. With this came the stability of the British monarchy, which is currently, the reigning monarchy of the present-day United Kingdom.
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Georgian Britishness: How ;;Britishness;; was Defined During the Reigns of the First Three Hanoverian Kings (1714-1820)