He and his wife Mary were able to take over the throne of England and rule under a constitutional monarchy after King James II left England without a fight. King James believed he was a divine right monarch and had religious differences with Parliament. Parliament asked William of Orange to bring his army to England and overthroe King James. Catholicism was outlawed in England but James was attempting to reintroduce it since his second wife was Catholic. William and Mary took over as king and queen of England in 1688.
William was of the bloodline of the kings of England so he had a blood claim to the English throne. His great aunt Emma was the queen of England and her son Edward was the King of England. William was a first cousin, once removed of King Edward.
Better yet, though, King Edward promised both publicly and privately to name William the Conqueror as his successor to the English throne since Edward had no son of his own. But, on his deathbed, Edward succumbed to pressure from his wife's family, and instead named her nephew as his successor.
William's claim to the crown of England was as good, if not better, than all other contenders to the throne.
William's claim was that he was the first cousin of the late King (Edward the confessor
Claim the Throne was created in 2004.
William laid claim to the English throne after Edward died. He was a distant cousin of Edward and said that Edward had promised him the throne when visiting France in 1051. He even said his claim had been accepted by Harold Godwinson in 1064, when Harold had been blown onto the Norman shore by a storm. William invaded England to become King and claim the throne from Harold.
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Each family ,York and Lancaster ,believed that they had a legitimate claim to the throne of England.
they both invaded at the same time because they both had a claim on the throne (after Edward's death).
Atahualpa fought his brother to claim the Inca Empire Throne.
it was infact the catholics that challenged Elizabeth the firsts claim to the english throne.
The war split the kingdoms of France and England forever, with the latter never again staking a claim to the French throne.
England
Henry Hudson.
William duke of Normandy.