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1650-1702. King of Great Britain and Ireland 1689-1702.  
1650-1702. King of Great Britain and Ireland 1689-1702.  


Son to William II (Prince of Orange and stadtholder of the Netherlands) and his wife Mary (the sister of [[Charles II]] and [[James II]]). Later married to James II' oldest daughter, [[Mary II|Mary]]. He was invited to England by seven English politicians (both Tories and Whigs) to became the English monarch. They sent a Letter of Invitation in June 1688, which was both unclear given that they didn’t define what was expected from him, as well us illegal since they acted against the reigning king.
Son to William II (Prince of Orange and stadtholder of the Netherlands) and his wife Mary (the sister of [[Charles II]] and [[James II]]). Later married to James II' oldest daughter, [[Mary II|Mary]]. He was invited to England by seven English politicians (both Tories and Whigs) to became the English monarch. They sent a Letter of Invitation in June 1688, which was both unclear given that they didn’t define what was expected from him, as well us illegal since they acted against the reigning king. William III arrived to England on 5 November 1688.


== Sources ==
== Sources ==

Revision as of 11:28, 21 December 2022

1650-1702. King of Great Britain and Ireland 1689-1702.

Son to William II (Prince of Orange and stadtholder of the Netherlands) and his wife Mary (the sister of Charles II and James II). Later married to James II' oldest daughter, Mary. He was invited to England by seven English politicians (both Tories and Whigs) to became the English monarch. They sent a Letter of Invitation in June 1688, which was both unclear given that they didn’t define what was expected from him, as well us illegal since they acted against the reigning king. William III arrived to England on 5 November 1688.

Sources