Definition of Hanoverian line

1. Noun. The English royal house that reigned from 1714 to 1901 (from George I to Victoria).


Lexicographical Neighbors of Hanoverian Line

Hanna
Hannah
Hannah Arendt
Hannes Alfven
Hannibal
Hannover
Hannover's canal
Hannukah
Hannukkah
Hanoi
Hanoian
Hanoians
Hanot's cirrhosis
Hanover
Hanoverian
Hanoverian line (current term)
Hanoverians
Hans Adolf Krebs
Hans Albrecht Bethe
Hans Arp
Hans Bethe
Hans C. J. Gram
Hans Christian Andersen
Hans Christian Oersted
Hans Conrad Julius Reiter
Hans Eysenck
Hans Fischer
Hans Geiger
Hans Holbein
Hans Island

Literary usage of Hanoverian line

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Short History of England by Edward Potts Cheyney (1918)
"... and that Louis XIV of France would then support him in an attempt to get back his 1 The Hanoverian line of kings was as follows: George I, ..."

2. Chapters in the History of Popular Progress by James Routledge (1876)
"FRESH CENTRES OF HISTORY: THE Hanoverian line. Three Central Facts in History from 1714—Landing of George I.—Root of the Succession—Absurd Arguments as to ..."

3. The Archaeological Journal by British Archaeological Association (1875)
"William, Patriarch of the Luneburg and Hanoverian line, had four sons, who succeeded him in rotation and died unmarried ..."

4. The Government of the British Empire by Edward Jenks (1918)
"4), which secured the Crown to the Hanoverian line. But the Jacobites, or Tories, very nearly brought off a counter-revolution on the death of Anne; ..."

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