Copypasted from Medieval Unsourced Duplicates discussion
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Dr. James Donald Town PRO
Today at 7:52 AM
This reply is for Leanne Minny (Volunteer Curator).
Leanne:
. . .
The explanation of my relationship with King George III is complicated so I will write to you at a proper address when I receive it.
James Town
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Leanne Minny (Volunteer Curator) C
Today at 9:15 AM
Hi Dr. James Donald Town, The only thing I have queried on King George III is that his son has 2 sets of parents - so they either should be merged or the second set detached or deleted.
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Dr. James Donald Town PRO
Today at 10:06 AM
Leanne:
I do not know about King George's parents, it is his children that interest me. I recently read that he was credited with over 56 illegitimate offspring.
I was a family physician and had a patient who was suffering physically as a result of her occult upbringing and demonic and satanic forces. I know you will think I am nuts, but hear me out.
Finally, when I and a host of specialists could find no physical cause for her incapacitating distress, she admitted to using dark forces, in she fact was schooled privately to use the black arts. She was forced to stick pins, one with a white head, the other black, into the tip of her tongue and made to speak without moving her tongue, to let evil forces take over her speech.
Finally she was able to escape the hold of the occult.
She was of German descent and I learned that she was brought up with intimate knowledge of the royal families of Europe as far back as Frederick the Great. And maybe even further.
My dad's brother lEdward William (1895 -1959 ) looked so very much like King George VI. When I was a child, I have memories of his picture on a magazine stand that looked like the image on our coinage of the King at the time.
This woman informed me, after telling her this that King George had several illegitimate children three of them by a relative of mine whom I later discovered was Sarah
Short. This woman confirmed that Thomas (1772-1843) was the only male child of the king. The other two were female, Mary (1774- ) and Elizabeth (1776- ) who married William Witton.
Several people have remarked at the resemblance of my "Uncle Ted" to King George and his brother Edward in photographs. In fact my wife believes that Monte, Uncle Ted's son, resembles an earlier Price of Wales, I can't remember who.
That is why there are two mates for Sarah. One legitimate, the other a "partner" although I am sure I will have great difficulty proving this relationship, even though I have had my Y-DNA tested.
Quite a story, but I am sure it is not the only one like it through history.
Jim
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Leanne Minny (Volunteer Curator) C
Today at 10:12 AM
Hi Jim,
I suggest starting a discussion from the profile and add your sources.
Leanne
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Maven B. Helms PRO
Today at 11:22 AM
George III is *not* known for infidelity - quite the opposite, he was supposedly monogamously faithful to his wife even though he only met her on their wedding day.
On the other hand, his father (Frederick, Prince of Wales, dvp), grandfather (George II, King of Great Britain and Ireland), great-grandfather (George I, King of Great Britain and Ireland) *and* sons played the field quite readily.
That led to a crisis when George IV, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland's only legitimate child, Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales, died in 1817 of complications of childbirth (the child was stillborn, and the doctor shot himself). His brothers all dismissed their mistresses and hastened to get married, if they weren't already, and the winner of this somewhat macabre race was the fourth son, Duke Edward Augustus Hannover, Prince, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, who produced one daughter - https://www.geni.com/people/Queen-Victoria-of-the-United-Kingdom/60.... (The fifth son, Ernest Augustus I King of Hanover, inherited Hanover because they had a Salic clause.)