No THE fourth
No, and neither is she The Queen of England.
She was Queen of England.
Elizabeth. She is Queen of the United Kingdom of which England is a part of.
There has not been a queen of England for 300 years. Queen Elizabeth II became queen of Great Britain in 1952
England and Ireland
The Fifth Queen was created in 1906.
Depends on what you mean by "Queen of England". Assuming we are working from 1066, the fifth queen consort was Eleanor of Aquitaine (b.1122, d.1204) who was the wife of Henry II (Curtmantle) and mother of Richard I (Lionheart) and King John (Lackland). The fifth queen regnant is a tricky one! Do you count the two uncrowned queens (Empress Matilda, daughter of Henry I and Lady Jane Grey, great grand-daughter of Henry VII)? If you do, then Mary II (r.1688-1694), daughter of James II, would be the fifth queen regnant. If you do not include Matilda and Jane, then the answer would be Queen Victoria (r.1837-1901).
The Queen of England.
No, and neither is she The Queen of England.
The queen name is Queen Elizabeth.That is the queen of England.
The Queen's grandmother was Queen Mary, consort of George Fifth.
No. She is the queen of England. England does not have a president. It is a monarchy, not a republic.
The last Queen of England was Queen Anne who became Queen of Great Britain on May 1st 1707 after the union of England and Scotland.
If you mean Queen Elizabeth I of England, it was Queen Mary I of England, her sister. If you mean Queen Elizabeth II, it was King George VI, her father.
No. Elizabeth II was and is Queen of England.
There is no Queen of England.
Queen Elizabeth II is queen of the United Kingdom, which includes England.