User:CybJubal/sandbox/TableTest6
Appearance
Table test for other things I want to have tables for.
Darts
[edit]PDC World Cup of Darts
[edit]Eurovision
[edit]Eurovision Song Contest
[edit]Junior Eurovision Song Contest
[edit]Year | Host city | Venue | Top three | Last place | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winner | Runner-up | Third | ||||||
2003 | Copenhagen | Forum København | Croatia "Ti si moja prva ljubav" – Dino Jelusić (134 points) |
Spain "Desde el cielo" – Sergio (125 points) |
United Kingdom "My Song for the World" – Tom Morley (118 points) |
Poland "Coś mnie nosi" – Katarzyna Żurawik (3 points) | ||
2004 | Lillehammer | Håkons Hall | Spain "Antes muerta que sencilla" – María Isabel (171 points) |
United Kingdom "The Best Is Yet to Come" – Cory Spedding (140 points) |
Croatia "Hej mali" – Nika Turković (126 points) |
Poland "Łap życie" – KWADro (3 points) | ||
Latvia "Balts vai melns" – Mārtiņš Tālbergs and C-Stones Juniors (3 points) | ||||||||
2005 | Hasselt | Ethias Arena | Belarus "My vmeste" – Ksenia Sitnik (149 points) |
Spain "Te traigo flores" – Antonio José (146 points) |
Norway "Sommer og skolefri" – Malin (123 points) |
Malta "Make It Right!" – Thea and Friends (18 points) | ||
2006 | Bucharest | Sala Polivalentă | Russia "Vesenniy jazz" – Tolmachevy Sisters (154 points) |
Belarus "Noviy den" – Andrey Kunets (129 points) |
Sweden "Det finaste någon kan få" – Molly Sandén (116 points) |
Macedonia "Vljubena" – Zana Aliu (14 points) | ||
2007 | Rotterdam | Rotterdam Ahoy | Belarus "S druz'yami" – Alexey Zhigalkovich (137 points) |
Armenia "Erazanq" – Arevik (136 points) |
Serbia "Piši mi" – Nevena Božović (120 points) |
Greece "Kapou berdeftika" – Made in Greece (14 points) | ||
2008 | Limassol | Spyros Kyprianou Athletic Center | Georgia "Bzz.." – Bzikebi (154 points) |
Ukraine "Matrosy" – Viktoria Petryk (135 points) |
Lithuania "Laiminga diena" – Eglė Jurgaitytė (103 points) |
Bulgaria "Edna mechta" – Krastyana Krasteva (15 points) | ||
2009 | Kyiv | Palace of Sports | Netherlands "Click Clack" – Ralf Mackenbach (121 points) |
Russia "Malenkiy prints" – Ekaterina Ryabova (116 points) |
Belgium "Zo verliefd (Yodelo)" – Laura Omloop (113 points) |
Romania "Ai puterea în mâna ta" – Ioana Anuța (19 points) | ||
Armenia "Barcelona" – Luara Hayrapetyan (116 points) | ||||||||
2010 | Minsk | Minsk-Arena | Armenia "Mama" – Vladimir Arzumanyan (120 points) |
Russia "Boy and Girl" – Sasha Lazin and Liza Drozd (119 points) |
Serbia "Čarobna noć" – Sonja Škorić (113 points) |
Ukraine "Miy litak" – Yulia Gurska (28 points) | ||
2011 | Yerevan | Karen Demirchyan Complex | Georgia "Candy Music" – Candy (108 points) |
Netherlands "Teenager" – Rachel (103 points) |
Belarus "Angely dobra" – Lidiya Zablotskaya (99 points) |
Latvia "Moondog" – Amanda Bašmakova (31 points) | ||
2012 | Amsterdam | Heineken Music Hall | Ukraine "Nebo" – Anastasiya Petryk (138 points) |
Georgia "Funky Lemonade" – Funkids (103 points) |
Armenia "Sweetie Baby" – Compass Band (98 points) |
Albania "Kam një këngë vetëm për ju" – Igzidora Gjeta (35 points) | ||
2013 | Kyiv | National Palace of Arts | Malta "The Start" – Gaia Cauchi (130 points) |
Ukraine "We Are One" – Sofia Tarasova (121 points) |
Belarus "Poy so mnoy" – Ilya Volkov (108 points) |
Macedonia "Ohrid i muzika" – Barbara Popović (19 points) | ||
2014 | Marsa | Malta Shipbuilding | Italy "Tu primo grande amore" – Vincenzo Cantiello (159 points) |
Bulgaria "Planet of the Children" – Krisia / Hasan & Ibrahim (147 points) |
Armenia "People of the Sun" – Betty (146 points) |
Croatia "Game Over" – Josie Zec (13 points) | ||
2015 | Sofia | Armeets Arena | Malta "Not My Soul" – Destiny Chukunyere (185 points) |
Armenia "Love" – Mika (176 points) |
Slovenia "Prva ljubezen" – Lina Kuduzović (112 points) |
Macedonia "Pletenka – Braid of Love" – Ivana Petkovska / Magdalena Aleksovska (26 points) | ||
2016 | Valletta | Mediterranean Conference Centre | Georgia "Mzeo" – Mariam Mamadashvili (239 points) |
Armenia "Tarber" – Anahit and Mary (232 points) |
Italy "Cara Mamma (Dear Mom)" – Fiamma Boccia (209 points) |
Serbia "U la la la" – Dunja Jeličić (14 points) | ||
2017 | Tbilisi | Olympic Palace | Russia "Wings" – Polina Bogusevich (188 points) |
Georgia "Voice of the Heart" – Grigol Kipshidze (185 points) |
Australia "Speak Up" – Isabella Clarke (172 points) |
Cyprus "I Wanna Be a Star" – Nicole Nicolaou (45 points) | ||
2018 | Minsk | Minsk-Arena | Poland "Anyone I Want to Be" – Roksana Węgiel (215 points) |
France "Jamais sans toi" – Angélina (203 points) |
Australia "Champion" – Jael (201 points) |
Wales "Perta" – Manw (29 points) | ||
2019 | Gliwice | Gliwice Arena | Poland "Superhero" – Viki Gabor (278 points) |
Kazakhstan "Armanyńnan qalma" – Yerzhan Maxim (227 points) |
Spain "Marte" – Melani García (212 points) |
Malta "We Are More" – Eliana Gomez Blanco (29 points) | ||
2020 | Warsaw | TVP Headquarters | France "J'imagine" – Valentina (200 points) |
Kazakhstan "Forever" – Karakat Bashanova (152 points) |
Spain "Palante" – Soleá (133 points) |
Germany "Stronger with You" – Susan (66 points) | ||
2021 | Paris | La Seine Musicale | Armenia "Qami Qami" – Maléna (224 points) |
Poland "Somebody" – Sara James (218 points) |
France "Tic Tac" – Enzo (187 points) |
Netherlands "Mata Sugu Aō Ne" – Ayana (43 points) | ||
2022 | Yerevan | Karen Demirchyan Complex | France "Oh maman!" – Lissandro (203 points) |
Armenia "Dance!" – Nare (180 points) |
Georgia "I Believe" – Mariam Bigvava (161 points) |
Malta "Diamonds in the Skies" – Gaia Gambuzza (43 points) | ||
2023 | Nice | Palais Nikaïa | France "Cœur" – Zoé Clauzure (228 points) |
Spain "Loviu" – Sandra Valero (201 points) |
Armenia "Do It My Way" – Yan Girls (180 points) |
Ireland "Aisling" – Jessica McKean (42 points) | ||
Upcoming | ||||||||
2024 | Madrid | Caja Mágica | To be determined | To be determined |
United Kingdom monarchs
[edit]English monarchs
[edit]All dates in New Style Gregorian Calendar.
Name Reign (Coronation date, if known) |
Portrait | Duration of reign | Birth Date, location, parents |
Marriage(s) | Death Age at death |
House |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
William I William the Conqueror 25 December 1066 (25 December 1066) — 9 September 1087 |
20 years, 259 days | c. 1028 Château de Falaise Son of Robert the Magnificent and Herleva of Falaise |
Matilda of Flanders c. 1051-2 10 children |
9 September 1087 Rouen 58–59 years |
Normandy | |
William II William Rufus 26 September 1087 (26 September 1087) — 2 August 1100 |
12 years, 311 days | c. 1056 Normandy Son of William I and Matilda of Flanders |
Unmarried | 2 August 1100 New Forest 43–44 years | ||
Henry I Henry Beauclerc 5 August 1100 (5 August 1100) — 1 December 1135 |
35 years, 119 days | c. 1068 Selby Son of William I and Matilda of Flanders |
Matilda of Scotland 11 November 1100 1 child Adeliza of Louvain 29 January 1121 No children |
1 December 1135 Saint-Denis-en-Lyons 66–67 years | ||
Stephen Stephen of Blois 22 December 1135 (22 December 1135) — 25 October 1154 |
18 years, 308 days | c. 1096 Blois Son of Stephen II of Blois and Adela of Normandy |
Matilda I of Boulogne 1125 3 children |
25 October 1154 Dover 57–58 years |
Blois | |
Henry II Henry Curtmantle 19 December 1154 (19 December 1154) — 6 July 1189 |
34 years, 200 days | 5 March 1133 Le Mans Son of Geoffrey V of Anjou and Empress Matilda |
Eleanor of Aquitaine 18 May 1152 8 children |
6 July 1189 Chinon 56 years, 123 days |
Plantagenet–Angevin | |
Richard I Richard the Lionheart 3 September 1189 (3 September 1189) — 6 April 1199 |
9 years, 216 days | 8 September 1157 Beaumont Palace Son of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine |
Berengaria of Navarre 12 May 1191 No children |
6 April 1199 Châlus 41 years, 210 days | ||
John John Lackland 27 May 1199 (27 May 1199) — 19 October 1216 |
17 years, 146 days | 24 December 1166 Beaumont Palace Son of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine |
Isabella of Gloucester (ann. 1199) 29 August 1189 No children Isabella of Angoulême 24 August 1200 5 children |
19 October 1216 Newark Castle 49 years, 300 days | ||
Henry III Henry of Winchester 28 October 1216 (28 October 1216) — 16 November 1272 |
56 years, 20 days | 1 October 1207 Winchester Castle Son of John and Isabella of Angoulême |
Eleanor of Provence 14 January 1236 5 children |
16 November 1272 Westminster 65 years, 46 days |
Plantagenet | |
Edward I Edward Longshanks 20 November 1272 (19 August 1274) — 7 July 1307 |
34 years, 230 days | 17 June 1239 Palace of Westminster Son of Henry III and Eleanor of Provence |
Eleanor of Castile 1 November 1254 16 children Margaret of France 10 September 1299 3 children |
7 July 1307 Burgh by Sands 68 years, 20 days | ||
Edward II Edward of Caernarfon 7 July 1307 (25 February 1308) — Abdicated 20 January 1327 |
19 years, 198 days | 25 April 1284 Caernarfon Castle Son of Edward I and Eleanor of Castile |
Isabella of France 24 January 1308 4 children |
21 September 1327 Berkeley Castle 42 years, 270 days | ||
Edward III Edward of Windsor 25 January 1327 (1 February 1327) — 21 June 1377 |
50 years, 148 days | 13 November 1312 Windsor Castle Son of Edward II and Isabella of France |
Philippa of Hainault 25 January 1328 14 children |
21 June 1377 Sheen Palace 64 years, 220 days | ||
Richard II Richard of Bordeaux 22 June 1377 (16 July 1377) — 29 September 1399 |
22 years, 100 days | 6 January 1367 Bordeaux Son of Edward the Black Prince and Joan of Kent |
Anne of Bohemia 14 January 1382 No children Isabella of Valois 4 November 1396 No children |
14 February 1400 Pontefract Castle 33 years, 39 days | ||
Henry IV Henry Bolingbroke 30 September 1399 (13 October 1399) — 20 March 1413 |
13 years, 172 days | c. April 1367 Bolingbroke Castle Son of John of Gaunt and Blanche of Lancaster |
Mary de Bohun 27 July 1380 6 children Joan of Navarre 7 February 1403 No children |
20 March 1413 Jerusalem Chamber 45–46 years |
Lancaster | |
Henry V Henry of Monmouth 21 March 1413 (9 April 1413) — 31 August 1422 |
9 years, 164 days | 16 September 1386 Monmouth Castle Son of Henry IV and Mary de Bohun |
Catherine of Valois 2 June 1420 1 child |
31 August 1422 Château de Vincennes 35 years, 349 days | ||
Henry VI Henry of Lancaster First reign: 1 September 1422 (6 November 1429) — 4 March 1461 |
First reign: 38 years, 185 days |
6 December 1421 Windsor Castle Son of Henry V and Catherine of Valois |
Margaret of Anjou 23 April 1445 1 child |
21 May 1471 Tower of London 49 years, 166 days | ||
Edward IV Edward of York First reign: 4 March 1461 (28 June 1461) — 3 October 1470 |
First reign: 9 years, 214 days |
28 April 1442 Rouen Son of Richard, 3rd Duke of York and Cecily Neville |
Elizabeth Woodville 1 May 1464 10 children |
9 April 1483 Westminster 40 years, 346 days |
York | |
Henry VI Henry of Lancaster Second reign: 3 October 1470 — 11 April 1471 |
Second reign: 191 days |
6 December 1421 Windsor Castle Son of Henry V and Catherine of Valois |
Margaret of Anjou 23 April 1445 1 child |
21 May 1471 Tower of London 49 years, 166 days |
Lancaster | |
Edward IV Edward of York Second reign: 11 April 1471 — 9 April 1483 |
Second reign: 11 years, 364 days |
28 April 1442 Rouen Son of Richard, 3rd Duke of York and Cecily Neville |
Elizabeth Woodville 1 May 1464 10 children |
9 April 1483 Westminster 40 years, 346 days |
York | |
Edward V Edward 9 April 1483 (not crowned) — 25 June 1483 |
78 days | 2 November 1470 Westminster Son of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville |
Never married | c. 1487 16–17 years | ||
Richard III Richard of York 26 June 1483 (6 July 1483) — 22 August 1485 |
9 years, 164 days | 2 October 1452 Fotheringhay Castle Son of Richard, 3rd Duke of York and Cecily Neville |
Anne Neville 12 July 1472 1 child |
22 August 1485 Bosworth Field 32 years, 324 days | ||
Henry VII Henry Tudor 22 August 1485 (30 October 1485) — 21 April 1509 |
23 years, 243 days | 28 January 1457 Pembroke Castle Son of Edmund Tudor and Lady Margaret Beaufort |
Elizabeth of York 18 January 1486 6 children |
21 April 1509 Richmond Palace 52 years, 83 days |
Tudor | |
Henry VIII Henry Tudor 22 April 1509 (24 June 1509) — 28 January 1547 |
37 years, 282 days | 28 June 1491 Palace of Placentia Son of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York |
11 June 1509 1 child Anne Boleyn 25 January 1533 1 child Jane Seymour 30 May 1536 1 child 6 January 1540 No children Catherine Howard 28 July 1540 No children Catherine Parr 12 July 1543 No children |
28 January 1547 Palace of Whitehall 55 years, 214 days | ||
Edward VI Edward Tudor 28 January 1547 (20 February 1547) — 6 July 1553 |
6 years, 160 days | 12 October 1537 Hampton Court Palace Son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour |
Never married | 6 July 1553 Greenwich Palace 15 years, 267 days | ||
Jane Lady Jane Grey 10 July 1553 (not crowned) — 19 July 1553 |
9 days | c. 1537 Daughter of Henry Grey and Lady Frances Brandon |
Lord Guildford Dudley 25 May 1553 No children |
12 February 1554 Tower of London 16–17 years | ||
Mary I Mary Tudor 19 July 1553 (1 October 1553) — 17 November 1558 |
5 years, 122 days | 18 February 1516 Palace of Placentia Daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon |
Philip II of Spain 25 July 1554 No children |
17 November 1558 St James's Palace 42 years, 272 days | ||
Elizabeth I Elizabeth the Virgin Queen 17 November 1558 (15 January 1559) — 24 March 1603 |
44 years, 128 days | 7 September 1533 Palace of Placentia Daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn |
Never married | 24 March 1603 Richmond Palace 69 years, 198 days | ||
James I James VI of Scotland 24 March 1603[a] (25 July 1603) — 27 March 1625 |
22 years, 4 days | 19 June 1566 Edinburgh Castle Son of Henry Stuart and Mary, Queen of Scots |
Anne of Denmark 23 November 1589 7 children |
27 March 1625 Theobalds House 58 years, 281 days |
Stuart | |
Charles I Charles Stuart 27 March 1625 (2 February 1626) — 30 January 1649 |
23 years, 310 days | 19 November 1600 Dunfermline Palace Son of James I and Anne of Denmark |
Henrietta Maria of France 1 May 1625 9 children |
30 January 1649 Palace of Whitehall 48 years, 72 days | ||
First Interregnum | ||||||
English Council of State 14 February 1649 — 30 April 1653 4 years, 76 days | ||||||
Oliver Cromwell as Lord Protector 16 December 1653 — 3 September 1658 |
4 years, 262 days | 25 April 1599 Huntingdon Son of Robert Cromwell and Elizabeth Steward |
Elizabeth Bourchier 22 August 1620 9 children |
3 September 1658 Palace of Whitehall 59 years, 131 days |
Cromwell | |
Richard Cromwell as Lord Protector 3 September 1658 — 25 May 1659 |
265 days | 4 October 1626 Huntingdon Son of Oliver Cromwell and Elizabeth Bourchier |
Dorothy Maijor 1649 No children |
12 July 1712 Cheshunt 85 years, 282 days | ||
English Council of State 25 May 1659 — 28 May 1660 1 year, 4 days | ||||||
Stuart Restoration | ||||||
Charles II Charles the Merry Monarch 29 May 1660 (23 April 1661) — 6 February 1685 |
24 years, 254 days | 8 June 1630 St James's Palace Son of Charles I and Henrietta Maria of France |
Catherine of Braganza 21 May 1662 No children |
16 February 1685 Palace of Whitehall 54 years, 253 days |
Stuart | |
James II James VII of Scotland 6 February 1685 (23 April 1685) — Deposed 23 December 1688 |
3 years, 322 days | 24 October 1633 St James's Palace Son of Charles I and Henrietta Maria of France |
Anne Hyde 3 September 1660 8 children Mary of Modena 21 November 1673 7 children |
16 September 1701 Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye 67 years, 327 days | ||
Second Interregnum | ||||||
Convention Parliament 31 January 1689 — 22 February 1689 22 days | ||||||
Second Restoration | ||||||
Mary II Mary Stuart Co-reigned with William III 23 February 1689 (21 April 1689) — 7 January 1695 |
5 years, 319 days | 10 May 1662 St James's Palace Daughter of James II and Anne Hyde |
William III of England 15 November 1777 No children |
7 January 1695 Kensington Palace 32 years, 242 days |
Stuart–Orange | |
William III William II of Scotland William of Orange Co-reigned with Mary II 23 February 1689 (21 April 1689) — 19 March 1702 |
13 years, 25 days | 14 November 1650 Binnenhof Son of William II of Orange and Mary, Princess Royal |
Mary II of England 15 November 1777 No children |
19 March 1702 Kensington Palace 39 years, 313 days | ||
Anne Anne Stuart 19 March 1702 (4 May 1702) — 12 May 1707[b] |
5 years, 55 days | 16 February 1665 St James's Palace Daughter of James II and Anne Hyde |
George of Denmark 7 August 1683 5 children |
12 August 1714 Kensington Palace |
Stuart |
British monarchs
[edit]All dates in New Style Gregorian Calendar.
Name Reign (Coronation date) |
Portrait (Coronation, when available) |
Royal cypher | Duration of reign | Birth Date, location, parents |
Marriage(s) | Death | Age | House |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anne Anne Stuart 12 May 1707 (4 May 1702)[c] — 12 August 1714 |
7 years, 93 days | 16 February 1665 St James's Palace Daughter of James II and Anne Hyde |
George of Denmark St James's Palace; 7 August 1683 5 children |
12 August 1714 Kensington Palace |
49 years, 177 days | Stuart | ||
George I George Louis 12 August 1714 (31 October 1714) — 22 June 1727 |
As Elector of Hanover |
12 years, 315 days | 7 June 1660 Leineschloss Son of Ernest Augustus of Brunswick-Lüneburg and Sophia of Hanover |
Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick-Lüneburg-Celle 1 December 1682 2 children |
22 June 1727 Osnabrück |
67 years, 15 days | Hanover | |
George II George Augustus 22 June 1727 (22 October 1727) — 25 October 1760 |
33 years, 126 days | 9 November 1683 Herrenhausen Palace Son of George I and Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick-Lüneburg-Celle |
Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach Herrenhausen Gardens; 2 September 1705 8 children |
25 October 1760 Kensington Palace |
76 years, 351 days | |||
George III George William Frederick 25 October 1760 (22 September 1761) — 29 January 1820 |
59 years, 97 days | 4 June 1738 Norfolk House Son of Prince Frederick and Augusta of Saxe-Gotha |
Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz St James's Palace; 8 September 1761 15 children |
29 January 1820 Windsor Castle |
81 years, 239 days | |||
George IV George Augustus Frederick 29 January 1820 (19 July 1821) — 26 June 1830 |
10 years, 149 days | 12 August 1762 St James's Palace Son of George III and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz |
Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel St James's Palace; 8 April 1795 1 child |
26 June 1830 Windsor Castle |
67 years, 318 days | |||
William IV William Henry 26 June 1830 (8 September 1831) — 20 June 1837 |
6 years, 360 days | 21 August 1765 Buckingham House Son of George III and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz |
Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen Kew Palace; 13 July 1818 2 children |
20 June 1837 Windsor Castle |
71 years, 303 days | |||
Victoria Alexandrina Victoria 20 June 1837 (28 June 1838) — 22 January 1901 |
63 years, 217 days | 24 May 1819 Kensington Palace Daughter of Prince Edward and Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld |
Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha St James's Palace; 10 February 1840 9 children |
22 January 1901 Osborne House |
81 years, 243 days | |||
Edward VII Albert Edward 22 January 1901 (9 August 1902) — 6 May 1910 |
9 years, 105 days | 9 November 1841 Buckingham Palace Son of Victoria and Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha |
Alexandra of Denmark St George's Chapel; 10 March 1863 6 children |
6 May 1910 Buckingham Palace |
68 years, 178 days | Saxe-Coburg and Gotha | ||
George V George Frederick Ernest Albert 6 May 1910 (22 June 1911) — 20 January 1936 |
25 years, 260 days | 3 June 1865 Marlborough House Son of Edward VII and Alexandra of Denmark |
Mary of Teck St James's Palace; 6 July 1893 6 children |
20 January 1936 Sandringham House |
70 years, 231 days | |||
Windsor[d] | ||||||||
Edward VIII Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David 20 January 1936 (not crowned) — Abdicated 11 December 1936 |
327 days | 23 June 1894 White Lodge Son of George V and Mary of Teck |
Wallis Simpson Château de Candé; 3 June 1937 No children |
28 May 1972 Neuilly-sur-Seine |
77 years, 340 days | |||
George VI Albert Frederick Arthur George 11 December 1936 (12 May 1937) — 6 February 1952 |
15 years, 58 days | 14 December 1895 Sandringham House Son of George V and Mary of Teck |
Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon Westminster Abbey; 26 April 1923 2 children |
6 February 1952 Sandringham House |
56 years, 54 days | |||
Elizabeth II Elizabeth Alexandra Mary 6 February 1952 (2 June 1953) — 8 September 2022 |
70 years, 215 days | 21 April 1926 17 Bruton Street Daughter of George VI and Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon |
Philip Mountbatten Westminster Abbey; 20 November 1947 4 children |
8 September 2022 Balmoral Castle |
96 years, 140 days | |||
Charles III Charles Philip Arthur George 8 September 2022 (6 May 2023) — Present |
2 years, 111 days | 14 November 1948 Buckingham Palace Son of Elizabeth II and Philip Mountbatten |
St Paul's Cathedral; 29 July 1981 2 children Camilla Parker Bowles Windsor Guildhall; 9 April 2005 No children |
Alive | 76 years, 44 days | |||
Heir apparent | ||||||||
William, Prince of Wales William Arthur Philip Louis |
21 June 1982 St Mary's Hospital Son of Charles III and Diana Spencer |
Catherine Middleton Westminster Abbey; 29 April 2011 3 children |
Alive | 42 years, 190 days |
Chief Mousers to the Cabinet Office and their Prime Ministers
[edit]Conservative Labour National Labour
Portrait of Chief Mouser | Chief Mouser | Tenure as Chief Mouser | Portrait of Prime Minister | Prime Minister Constituency (Birth and death years)
|
Tenure as Prime Minister | Party | Government | Monarch Reign
| |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Start | End | Duration | Start | End | Duration | ||||||||
Rufus of England "Treasury Bill" (co-served with Peter in 1929)
|
1924 | c. 1930 | 6 years | Ramsay MacDonald MP for Aberavon (1866–1937)
|
22 January 1924
|
4 November 1924
|
288 days | Labour | MacDonald I | r. 1910–1936
| |||
Stanley Baldwin MP for Bewdley (1867–1947)
|
4 November 1924
|
4 June 1929
|
4 years, 213 days | Conservative | Baldwin II | ||||||||
Ramsay MacDonald MP for Seaham (1866–1937)
|
5 June 1929
|
7 June 1935
|
6 years, 3 days | Labour | MacDonald II | ||||||||
Peter (co-served with Rufus in 1929) (co-served with Munich Mouser from 1937 to 1943) (co-served with Nelson in the 1940s)
|
1929 | 1946 | 17 years | National Labour | National I | ||||||||
National II | |||||||||||||
Stanley Baldwin MP for Bewdley (1867–1947)
|
7 June 1935
|
28 May 1937
|
1 year, 356 days | Conservative | National III | ||||||||
r. 1936
| |||||||||||||
r. 1936–1952
| |||||||||||||
Neville Chamberlain MP for Birmingham Edgbaston (1869–1940)
|
28 May 1937
|
10 May 1940
|
2 years, 349 days | National IV | |||||||||
Chamberlain War | |||||||||||||
Winston Churchill MP for Epping (1874–1965)
|
10 May 1940
|
26 July 1945
|
5 years, 78 days | Churchill War | |||||||||
Churchill Caretaker | |||||||||||||
Clement Attlee MP for Limehouse (1883–1967)
|
26 July 1945
|
26 October 1951
|
6 years, 93 days | Labour | Attlee I | ||||||||
Peter II | December 1946
|
21 June 1947
|
6 months | ||||||||||
Peter III | 27 August 1947
|
9 March 1964
|
16 years, 196 days | ||||||||||
Attlee II | |||||||||||||
Winston Churchill MP for Woodford (1874–1965)
|
26 October 1951
|
5 April 1955
|
3 years, 162 days | Conservative | Churchill III | ||||||||
r. 1952–2022
| |||||||||||||
Anthony Eden MP for Warwick and Leamington (1897–1977)
|
6 April 1955
|
9 January 1957
|
1 year, 279 days | Eden | |||||||||
Harold Macmillan MP for Bromley (1894–1986)
|
10 January 1957
|
18 October 1963
|
6 years, 282 days | Macmillan I | |||||||||
Macmillan II | |||||||||||||
Alec Douglas-Home (1903–1995)
|
18 October 1963
|
16 October 1964
|
365 days | Conservative (Scot.U.)
|
Douglas-Home | ||||||||
Peta | 8 May 1964
|
1973 | 9 years | ||||||||||
Harold Wilson MP for Huyton (1916–1995)
|
16 October 1964
|
19 June 1970
|
5 years, 247 days | Labour | Wilson I | ||||||||
Wilson II | |||||||||||||
Edward Heath MP for Bexley (1916–2005)
|
19 June 1970
|
4 March 1974
|
3 years, 259 days | Conservative | Heath | ||||||||
Wilberforce | 1973 | 3 April 1987
|
14 years | ||||||||||
Harold Wilson MP for Huyton (1916–1995)
|
4 March 1974
|
5 April 1976
|
2 years, 33 days | Labour | Wilson III | ||||||||
Wilson IV | |||||||||||||
James Callaghan MP for Cardiff South East (1912–2005)
|
5 April 1976
|
4 May 1979
|
3 years, 30 days | Callaghan | |||||||||
Margaret Thatcher MP for Finchley (1925–2013)
|
4 May 1979
|
28 November 1990
|
11 years, 209 days | Conservative | Thatcher I | ||||||||
Thatcher II | |||||||||||||
Humphrey | October 1989
|
13 November 1997
|
8 years | Thatcher III | |||||||||
John Major MP for Huntingdon (born 1943)
|
28 November 1990
|
2 May 1997
|
6 years, 156 days | Major I | |||||||||
Major II | |||||||||||||
Tony Blair MP for Sedgefield (born 1953)
|
2 May 1997
|
27 June 2007
|
10 years, 57 days | Labour | Blair I | ||||||||
Office vacant | 13 November 1997
|
11 September 2007
|
9 years, 303 days | Blair II | |||||||||
Blair III | |||||||||||||
Sybil | 11 September 2007
|
January 2009
|
1 year, 4 months | Gordon Brown MP for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath (born 1951)
|
27 June 2007
|
11 May 2010
|
2 years, 319 days | Brown | |||||
Larry (co-served with Freya from 2012 to 2014)
|
15 February 2011 Incumbent
|
David Cameron MP for Witney (born 1966)
|
11 May 2010
|
13 July 2016
|
6 years, 64 days | Conservative | Cameron–Clegg | ||||||
Cameron II | |||||||||||||
Theresa May MP for Maidenhead (born 1956)
|
13 July 2016
|
24 July 2019
|
3 years, 12 days | May I | |||||||||
May II | |||||||||||||
Boris Johnson MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip (born 1964)
|
24 July 2019
|
6 September 2022
|
3 years, 45 days | Johnson I | |||||||||
Johnson II | |||||||||||||
Liz Truss MP for South West Norfolk (born 1975)
|
6 September 2022
|
25 October 2022
|
50 days | Truss | |||||||||
r. 2022–present
| |||||||||||||
Rishi Sunak MP for Richmond (Yorks) (born 1980)
|
25 October 2022
|
5 July 2024
|
1 year, 255 days | Sunak | |||||||||
Keir Starmer MP for Holborn and St Pancras (born 1962)
|
5 July 2024 Incumbent
|
Labour | Starmer |
Association Football
[edit]FIFA World Cup
[edit]I know I already have a whole page dedicated to this, but I wanted one with more match information than awards.
Notes
[edit]- ^ James began his reign in Scotland as James VI on 24 July 1567 and was coronated as King of Scotland on 29 July 1567. His Scottish reign lasted 57 years and 246 days.
- ^ Queen Anne helped to pass the Acts of Union 1707, which united the kingdoms of England and Scotland into the United Kingdom of Great Britain. Her reign as British monarch lasted until her death on 12 August 1714.
- ^ Queen Anne was crowned 4 May 1702 when she was monarch of the Kingdom of England, the Kingdom of Scotland, and the Kingdom of Ireland.
- ^ King George V changed the name of the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to the House of Windsor on 17 July 1917. This change was made in response to anti-German sentiment in the British Empire during World War I.
- ^ No third place play-off was held in 1930, but FIFA ranks the USA as third and Yugoslavia as fourth based on the USA's superior goal difference.
- ^ a b There was no official World Cup final match in 1950. The tournament winner was decided by a final round-robin group contested by four teams. Coincidentally, one of the last two matches of the tournament pitted the two top-ranked teams, Brazil and Uruguay, against each other at Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.