KING
GEORGE IV
Unveiled 26th November
1831
Sculpted by Sir Francis Chantry,
this bronze statue of George IV was erected to
commemorate the kings visit to Edinburgh in 1822.
It was funded by public subscription under the
chairmanship of Lord Meadowbank. It stands at
the junction of George
Street and Hanover
Street.
George IV was the
first Hanoverian monarch to visit Scotland and
his triumphant arrival in Edinburgh, clad in
tartan and tights, was orchestrated by the great
Scottish Novelist Sir Walter Scott.
George IV (George Augustus Frederick) was the son
of George III and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz whom George
Street and Charlotte Square are respectively named. He ascended
the throne on 28th January 1820 and was crowned king of the United
Kingdom of Great Britian and Ireland at Westminster Abbey on
19th July 1821.
As Prince of Wales and monarch he led a flambouant
lifestyle and had several mistrisses. It is reported that everytime
he was intimate with a woman he kept a lock of her hair in an
envelope, at the time of his death on 28th June 1830 there were
7,000 such envelopes.
He was always in debt and relied on Parliament for financial help.
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