Mnemonic verse of monarchs in England
A mnemonic verse listing the monarchs ruling in England since William the Conqueror was traditionally used by English schoolchildren in the era when rote learning formed a major part of the curriculum.[1]
The verse as it is commonly set out lists the monarchs ruling in England since the Norman Conquest, with some omissions (see below). The failure to mention any pre-Conquest Saxon kings, and the presentation of the monarchs of a variety of kingdoms (England, then the joint crown of England and Scotland, then Great Britain, then Great Britain and Ireland, then Great Britain and Northern Ireland) as existing in one unbroken line arrogated to an "English" or "British" throne, ensure the simple flow of the mnemonic but also reflect a Whiggish view of history.
The main part of the verse is largely constant, but the stanza from the 20th century has many variations, of which some are presented below. Alan Bennett's staging of the verse in Forty Years On works around the issue by stopping at Victoria.[2]
Americans were introduced to a brief snippet of the mnemonic in the film King Ralph.
The verse
(Can be sung to the tune of "Good King Wenceslaus".)
-
- Willie, Willie, Harry,[3][4] Stee,[5]
- Harry, Dick, John, Harry three;
- One, two, three Neds, Richard two[6]
- Harrys four, five, six... then who?
- Edwards four, five, Dick the bad,
- Harrys twain VII VIII[7] and Ned the Lad;[8]
- [9]Mary, Bessie[10], James the Vain,[11]
- Charlie,[12] Charlie, James again...
- William[13] and Mary, Anna Gloria[14],
- Four Georges I II III IV, William and Victoria;[15]
-
- Edward seven next, and then
- George the fifth in 1910;
- Ned the eighth soon abdicated
- Then George the sixth was coronated;
- After which Elizabeth
- And that's the end until her death.[16]
Alternatives to last 6 lines (Edward VII onwards)
-
- Edward seven, George and Ned [or Ted],
- George the sixth, now Liz instead.
-
- Eddie, Georgie, Ned the Eighth;
- George the sixth, Elizabeth.
-
- Edward, George, and both again,
- Now Bessie Two and that's the end.
-
- Edward, George, the same again
- And now Elizabeth doth reign
-
- Ned, George, Ned, and George again,
- And Bessie two, long may she reign!
-
- Edward, George, then Ned the eighth
- Quickly goes and abdicat’th,
- Leaving George, then Liz the second,
- And with Charlie next it’s reckoned.
-
- Edward seven, Georgie five,
- Ed eight, George six, Liz two, alive.
-
- Edward seven, Georgie five,
- Edward, George, and Liz alive.
-
- Edward the seventh stands on his own
- George, then Ned gave up the throne
- George we love, the people say
- And Elizabeth the second is Queen today.
Alternative to last 4 lines (Edward VIII onwards)
-
- Ned went when Mrs Simpson beckoned
- Leaving George and Liz the second.
Alternative to last 2 lines (Elizabeth II)
-
- And if you've not lost your breath
- Give a cheer for Elizabeth.
Alternative as used in Forty Years On (1976 Production)
-
- (posted by Colin Jackson - from that production)
- Willie, Willie, Harry, Stee
- Harry, Dick, John, Harry Three
- One Two Three Neds, Richard Two
- Henrys Four Five Six, Eds Two
- Dick, then Henrys seven and eight
- Ned, Jane, Mary and Elizabeth.
- James, two Charlies, James again
- William and Mary, Anne the Plain
- Four Georges from Hanover
- William Four, Victoria.
Alternative as used in Horrible Histories
Similar wording is used as the chorus of the Kings & Queens song in Horrible Histories (2009 TV series):
-
- William, William, Henry, Stephen, Henry, Richard, John,
- Henry, Ed, Ed, Ed, Rich Two, then three more Henrys join our song.
- Edward, Edward, Rich the Third, Henry, Henry, Ed again,
- Mary One, Good Queen Bess, Jimmy, Charles and Charles and then
- Jim, Will, Mary, Anna Gloria,
- George, George, George, George, Will, Victoria.
- Edward, George, Edward, George Six,
- And Queen Liz Two completes the mix.
Another Mnemonic on the same subject
(Can be sung to the tune of "William the First was the First of Our Kings".)
-
- First William the Norman
- Then William his son
- Henry, Stephen, Henry
- Then Richard and John
-
- Next Henry the Third
- Edwards One, Two and Three
- And again after Richard
- Three Henrys we see
-
- Two Edwards, Third Richard
- If rightly I guess
- Two Henrys, Sixth Edward
- Queen Mary, Queen Bess
-
- Then Jamie the Scotsman
- Then Charles whom they slew
- Yet received after Cromwell
- Another Charles too.
-
- Next James the Second
- Acceded the Throne
- Then good William and Mary
- Together came on
-
- Not till Anne, Georges Four
- And Fourth William all passed
- Came the reign of Victoria
- Whose longest did last
-
- Then Edward the Peacemaker
- (He was her son)
- The fifth of the Georges
- Was next in the run
-
- Edward the Eighth
- Gave the Crown to his brother
- Now God's sent Elizabeth
- All of us love her.
Another alternative
-
- Willie willie Harry Steve
- Harry Dick John Harry 3.
- Edward 1 2 3 Dick two
- Harrys 4 5 6 then who?
- Edward 4 5 Dick the bad,
- Harrys twain and ned the lad.
- Mary Bessie James you ken
- Charlie Charlie James again.
- William and Mary Anne of Gloria,
- Georges (4) Will 4 Victoria.
- Edward 7 Geargie 5
- Edward George and Liz (alive)
Mnemonics detailing the Royal Houses of England and Great Britain
-
- No Plan Like Yours To Study History Wisely
- Never Play, Letting Your Trousers Slip Half-Way
- Neighbors Persuaded Lovely Yvonne To Shut Her Window
- (Norman, Plantagenet, Lancaster, York, Tudor, Stuart, Hanover, Windsor.)
As the Houses of Lancaster and York were really branches of the House of Plantagenet, the first mnemonic can be simplified to No Plan To Study History Wisely.
See also
Notes and references
- ^ British Monarchs: Kings and Queens of England, Scotland and Wales
- ^ English Monarchs -- Anon
- ^ or "Henry", throughout
- ^ omitted: Maud (Matilda) (deposed)
- ^ Sources have "Stee" here; "Steve" also fits, but is an inferior rhyme
- ^ or "Edwards One, Two, Three, Dick Two"
- ^ or "Hanks seven and eight"
- ^ or "then Ned" or "then Ed the Lad" or "Ed six the lad"
- ^ omitted: Lady Jane Grey (uncrowned)
- ^ or "Lizzie"
- ^ or "James ye ken" or "James you ken"
- ^ omitted: the English Interregnum; republicans may cough at this point
- ^ or just "Will"
- ^ or "Anne O'Gloria"
- ^ or "Then four Georges, Will, Victoria" or "Four Georges, William and Victoria"
- ^ or "Has the throne, until her death."