The king of England in 1800 was George III. He had become king in 1760 and was the king during the American Revolution. He married Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz and had a large family. His health declined and eventually his son became the regent of the county until his father died in 1820. George III was King of Great Britain, and seperately, King of Ireland from 1760 until 1800. On 1st January 1801 the crowns of Great Britain and Ireland were united and his title then became King of Great Britain and Ireland.
He was not "King of England" as there had not been a monarch with that title since 1707.
In the 1700s, if that is what you mean, there were a lot of rulers. The first were William III and Mary II. Next after them was Anne and after Anne was George I. Then there was George II and the last one was George III.
Here is the website that you can type in that I found this information from. There is an entire list filled with the dates and period each King or Queen lived in!!!
http://gwydir.demon.co.uk/jo/history/
Hope this helps!!!
Nobody "ruled England" in 1760; since the crowns of England and Scotland were united in 1707, England had become part of The United Kingdom of Great Britain.
In 1760, King George II had been King of The United Kingdom since 1727.
He died on 25 October 1760 and was succeeded by his son, King George III.
Answer Queen Elizabeth I of England reigned from 17th November 1558 until her death on 24th March 1603.
George III 1760-1820
George IV 1820-1830
William IV 1830-1837
Victoria 1937-1901
:)
George III (1760-1820).
William the III ruled with his wife Anne.
George III
England had a total of 33 prime ministers between the years 1800 and 1900. The prime minister in the year 1800 was Henry Addington and in the year 1900 was Robert Gascoyne-Cecil.
they earnt money
1800-1900 1800-1900
1900.
cars were made close to 1900.. In 1800 there were no cars!
paleo amercains
No. The Peacock throne was in Iran.
1900
Population of Philippines 1800 to 2010
1800's
If you mean the throne of England, it was Charles II.
19 th century.