King William III

Standard Name: William III, King
Used Form: William of Orange

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Textual Production Aphra Behn
After James II had fled the country in 1688, AB received a flattering invitation from Gilbert Burnet (who in 1682 had tried to divide her from Anne Wharton on moral grounds) to welcome the new...
politics Hester Biddle
By this stage in her life she had been imprisoned fourteen times over a period of fifty years. The Society of Friends gave her permission for her journey.
Mack, Phyllis. Visionary Women: Ecstatic Prophecy in Seventeenth-Century England. University of California Press.
389
Once abroad, she first visited James II
Residence Mary Ann Cavendish Bradshaw
Ancestors bearing the same name as her father had first bought the Blarney Castle in County Cork estate in 1688 (after Donogh McCarthy, fourth Earl of Clancarthy , had forfeited it for supporting James II
Family and Intimate relationships Brilliana, Lady Harley
Lady Harley tried but failed to get Edward elected to parliament at the age of eighteen. Later he held the seat for Hereford. He commanded a troop of horse in the parliamentary army, and was...
Residence Elizabeth Burnet
During the reign of James II , Elizabeth Berkeley and her husband lived abroad at her persuasion, near the court of William of Orange (the future William III of England) at The Hague in the...
Wealth and Poverty Sarah Butler
This SB , whom her editors believe not to be the writer, received a pension from the British crown under William III , but it ended on the king's death, and she later experienced debtors'...
Material Conditions of Writing Sarah Butler
After the death of King William in March 1702 and the termination of a pension paid by him to the woman who may possibly have been SB the future novelist, she wrote two petitions from...
Textual Features May Crommelin
She treats there the atrocities suffered by her Protestant Huguenot ancestors in France in the seventeenth century, and the part played by her family in British history as supporters of William III .
Crommelin, May. “Introduction”. Orange Lily, edited by Philip Robinson, Ullans Press, p. vii - xi.
x
Textual Features May Crommelin
The book is headed with romantic lines from Thomas Davies [sic] about successive migrants and visitors to Ireland, from the brown Phoenician to the iron Lords of Normandy.
Crommelin, May. Orange Lily. Ullans Press.
1
The next epigraph comes from Burns
Dedications Alicia D'Anvers
ADA 's first published work, A Poem upon His Sacred Majesty , His Voyage to Holland, was licensed for publication; it appeared by January 1691, dedicated to Queen Mary .
English Short Title Catalogue. http://estc.bl.uk/.
Greer, Germaine et al., editors. Kissing the Rod. Virago.
376
Textual Production Alicia D'Anvers
It bore the author's name and a subtitle: By Way of a Dialogue between Belgia and Britannia.ADA aimed to drum up support for the anti-French views which William III was to expound at a...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Maria De Fleury
Her poem is Miltonic in style, with frequent echoes of Paradise Lost, although written in couplets. Accepting a designation applied to her by ideological enemies, MDF opens by comparing herself to the biblical Deborah...
Textual Production Margaret Fell
MF composed one of the last of her writings included in her collected works: To King William (personally delivered to the king by Susan Ingram ); the others were To Edmund Waller, and An...
politics Margaret Fell
In organising the Fund she was interested in promoting social cohesion among Quakers as well as relieving hardship.
Kunze, Bonnelyn Young. Margaret Fell and the Rise of Quakerism. Macmillan.
87
George Fox continued to frequent Swarthmoor, and at the time of the Restoration (May 1660) was...
politics Margaret Fell
Following the death of Charles II, when MF had just spoken with him (fruitlessly) about a decade after their previous meeting, she had an interview with James II in February 1685; she later sent an...

Timeline

1662: An Act of Settlement confirmed that poor...

Building item

1662

An Act of Settlement confirmed that poor relief could be received only in one's parish of settlement (that is, in one's birthplace).

23 October 1677: The marriage of the future monarchs William...

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23 October 1677

The marriage of the future monarchs William and Marywas now declared.

30 June 1688: A letter was signed by national leaders inviting...

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30 June 1688

A letter was signed by national leaders inviting William of Orange to assume the throne of England.

8 November 1688: William of Orange (husband of James II's...

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8 November 1688

William of Orange (husband of James II 's elder daughter, Mary ) landed near Torbay in Devon with a view to gaining control of Britain.

18 December 1688: William of Orange entered London (the same...

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18 December 1688

William of Orange entered London (the same day that James II finally left it) and held court at St James's Palace.

February 1689 to October 1791: The Williamite War was waged in Ireland between...

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February 1689 to October 1791

The Williamite War was waged in Ireland between supporters of the deposed James II (who landed at Kinsale on 12 March 1689 with substantial French forces) and supporters of William of Orange (who had assumed...

13 February 1689: James II having fled the kingdom the previous...

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13 February 1689

James II having fled the kingdom the previous December, and his place been taken by his elder daughter and her husband, they assumed the throne jointly as King William III and Queen Mary II ...

10 May 1689: William and Mary were crowned. Bishop Burnet...

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10 May 1689

William and Mary were crowned. Bishop Burnet preached the coronation sermon.

27 July 1689: John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee,...

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27 July 1689

John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee , led a force of Scottish Highlanders loyal to James II against William ite English soldiers in the pass of Killiecrankie.

25 November 1689: The House of Commons accepted the final wording...

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25 November 1689

The House of Commons accepted the final wording of the Revolution Settlement, or what became known as the Bill of Rights, the nearest thing to a British constitution.

12 July 1690: William III heavily defeated James II at...

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12 July 1690

William III heavily defeated James II at the battle of the Boyne in Ireland, in which 62,000 men fought.

October 1690: William III addressed the General Assembly...

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October 1690

William III addressed the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland , speaking against extremism in the newly established national church. The more radical Covenanting Cameronians thereupon split from the main body.

12 July 1691: At the battle of Aughrim in county Galway,...

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12 July 1691

At the battle of Aughrim in county Galway, William III 's forces in Ireland (having just taken the town of Athlone with fearful destruction) won a decisive victory over those of James II ...

October 1691: Following William III's victory over James...

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October 1691

Following William III 's victory over James II at the Battle of the Boyne the previous summer, the Treaty of Limerick severely curtailed the rights of Irish Roman Catholics to practise their religion, own property...

28 December 1694: Queen Mary died of smallpox during a severe...

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28 December 1694

Queen Mary died of smallpox during a severe epidemic, leaving her husband, William , to reign alone.

Texts

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