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3. The Mad King Georges - Greg Hallett and Spymaster

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Queen Caroline <strong>and</strong> <strong>King</strong> George II<br />

Wihelmine Charlotte Caroline, Margravine of Br<strong>and</strong>enburg-Anspach (1<br />

March 1683–20 November 1737), had been orphaned early on. Her father<br />

Johann Friedrich, Margrave of Br<strong>and</strong>enburg-Ansbach (18 October 1654–<br />

22 March 1686), had died when she was three <strong>and</strong> her mother Caroline<br />

Wilhelmina Dorothea, Eleanor Erdmuthe Louisa of Saxe-Eisenbach<br />

(13 April 1662–19 Sept. 1696) died when she was 1<strong>3.</strong><br />

When the parents die young the daughters often grow up sexy<br />

as a survival adaptation. Caroline grew up “intelligent, cultured <strong>and</strong><br />

attractive, much sought after as a bride”.<br />

She (22) married (22 August 1705) Augustus Guelph Hanover,<br />

Elector of Hanover (21), who became heir to the throne of Britain as<br />

George II after his father became <strong>King</strong> of Britain on 1 August 1714.<br />

<strong>King</strong> George II. Queen consort Caroline.<br />

53


60 How To Take Over <strong>The</strong> World<br />

<strong>The</strong> Mistresses – can’t live with them, can’t live without them<br />

Females have a tendency to throw themselves at a prince. Mothers <strong>and</strong><br />

older sisters also have a tendency to throw their young female charges in<br />

the same direction. This is called presenting them to court. <strong>The</strong> young<strong>and</strong>-dumb<br />

Prince George William Frederick Hanover (1738–1820)<br />

had been entertained by women for some time <strong>and</strong> often these were the<br />

daughters of a Lady of the Bedchamber, who in turn were commonly<br />

married to politicians.<br />

As such, British politics was run by whispers from the bedroom<br />

for centuries. Policies were influenced by sexual indiscretions<br />

then, just as they are ruled by sexual indiscretions now, with<br />

wars being created out of royal paedophilia <strong>and</strong> its cover-up<br />

(Iraq: 20.0<strong>3.</strong>2003).<br />

Prince Regent George (21) had been having an affair with Lady<br />

Sarah Lennox (15), six <strong>and</strong> a half years his junior. This began in 1759.<br />

By current st<strong>and</strong>ards this is child sex abuse. How this came about was<br />

typical of British royal bedchamber Freemasonry politics.<br />

Lady Sarah Lennox’s parents had died <strong>and</strong> her sisters had introduced<br />

her to court with plans she would marry the future <strong>King</strong>. <strong>The</strong> history of<br />

this goes back to <strong>King</strong> Charles II (1630–1685), who was also a prolific<br />

rooter with a serious case of the clap. <strong>The</strong> Lennox family were direct<br />

descendants of <strong>King</strong> Charles II, via one of his illegitimate children – the<br />

Duke of Richmond – <strong>and</strong> they were an exceptionally good-looking bunch.<br />

Lady Sarah Lennox [Jnr.] was the daughter of Lady Sarah Cadogan<br />

<strong>and</strong> Charles Lennox. Charles Lennox, 1st Duke of Richmond (29 July 1672<br />

–27 May 1723), was the illegitimate child of Charles II <strong>and</strong> his mistress<br />

Louise de Kérouaille (1649–14 November 1734). 5 A well-known French<br />

spy for Louis XIV, she was hated in Engl<strong>and</strong>. Nevertheless, <strong>King</strong><br />

Charles II made her ‘Baroness of Petersfield, Countess of Fareham<br />

<strong>and</strong> Duchess of Portsmouth’ (cause they sounded good) on 19 August<br />

1673, once their child had proved to be healthy for a year. She was the<br />

only ever Duchess of Portsmouth. <strong>The</strong>ir son was then created Duke of<br />

Richmond, Earl of March <strong>and</strong> Baron of Settrington on 9 March 1675 at<br />

the age of three. Henry VIII had also used the title ‘Duke of Richmond’<br />

for one of his illegitimate sons.<br />

5 Kérouaille is variously spelt Queroul, Keroual, Keroel, Querouailles <strong>and</strong> then corrupted<br />

to Carwell <strong>and</strong> Carewell.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Mad</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Georges</strong><br />

Charles II’s other mistress, Nell Gwynne 6 (2 Feb. 1650–14 Nov. 1687),<br />

was referred to as “pretty witty Nell”. She called Louise de Kérouaille<br />

“Squintabella”, <strong>and</strong> when she was mistaken for Squintabella in her<br />

carriage she stuck her head out the window <strong>and</strong> said, “Pray good people<br />

be civil, I am the Protestant whore”. <strong>The</strong>reafter she was popular <strong>and</strong><br />

cheered rather than jeered.<br />

Nell Gwynne grew up in her mother’s bawdyhouse <strong>and</strong> her mother<br />

died by falling drunk into a stream. Nell couldn’t read or write, but had<br />

the right wit. At 15 she sold oranges in the pit of a London theatre <strong>and</strong><br />

carried on her mother’s trade by acting as a pimp between the actresses<br />

<strong>and</strong> the men in the audience. At the time, actresses were pretty much<br />

prostitutes on show, <strong>and</strong> by 15 Nell was an actress/prostitute.<br />

Through selling oranges <strong>and</strong> then becoming one of the better<br />

actresses, she (15) became the successive mistress of Sir Charles Sedley<br />

(1639–1701), Lord Buckhurst (1638–1706), <strong>and</strong> then <strong>King</strong> Charles II<br />

(1630–1685) in 1669. He was 39. She was 19. Later she was also the<br />

mistress of the Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722), whom Winston<br />

Churchill claims ancestry to, although through the wrong line.<br />

Nell had two sons with <strong>King</strong> Charles II . . . Charles Beauclerk (1670–1726)<br />

<strong>and</strong> James Beauclerk (1671–1680). When Charles was six years old his<br />

father <strong>King</strong> Charles II came to visit them at their home <strong>and</strong> Nell called<br />

out, “Come here you little bastard<br />

Nell Gwynne.<br />

<strong>and</strong> say hullo to your father”.<br />

<strong>King</strong> Charles II protested <strong>and</strong> Nell<br />

replied, “Your Majesty has given<br />

me no other name by which to<br />

call him”. Charles II was lost for<br />

words, made a shameful grunting<br />

cough which Nell interpreted as<br />

“Burford?” <strong>and</strong> her illegitimate<br />

son was then made the Earl of<br />

Burford <strong>and</strong> later Duke of St.<br />

Albans once others caught on to<br />

the ‘shameful grunting cough’<br />

by grunting “Burford” with their<br />

h<strong>and</strong> over their mouths.<br />

6 Gwynne is variously spelt Gwyn, Gwynn or Gwin. She was born Eleanor Gwynne.<br />

6


6 How To Take Over <strong>The</strong> World<br />

Most peerages can be traced back to a prostitute. If a title sounds<br />

good, it probably originates from a prostitute. If it sounds awkward, it<br />

was probably earnt.<br />

Nell was not above getting one over. When Charles II’s third<br />

mistress Mary ‘Molly’ Davis was due in the <strong>King</strong>’s bed she slipped a<br />

diuretic into her drink <strong>and</strong> pissed herself laughing thereafter. Here’s<br />

how it was written up in 1715 by Captain Alex<strong>and</strong>er Smith in <strong>The</strong> secret<br />

History of the Lives of the Most Celebrated Beauties. 7<br />

“Nell Gwin [once the favorite mistress of <strong>King</strong> Charles II]<br />

having Notice that Miss Davis was to be entertain’d at Night,<br />

by the <strong>King</strong> in his Bed Chamber, she invited the Lady to a<br />

Collation of Sweetmeats, which being made up with physical<br />

[medicinal] Ingredients, the Effects thereof had such an<br />

Operation upon the Harlot, when the <strong>King</strong> was Caressing<br />

her in Bed with the amourous Sports of Venus, that a violent<br />

<strong>and</strong> sudden Looseness obliging her Ladyship to discharge her<br />

Artillery, she made the <strong>King</strong>, as well as her self, in a most<br />

lamentable Pickle; which caused her Royal Master to turn her<br />

off, with the small Pension of a Thous<strong>and</strong> Pounds per Annum,<br />

in consideration for her former Services, in the Affairs of<br />

Love; after which she never appear’d again at Court.”<br />

Lady Sarah Lennox was the great-gr<strong>and</strong>daughter of the more<br />

serious mistress of <strong>King</strong> James II, the French Catholic spy Louise de<br />

Kérouaille (1649–1734).<br />

Lady Sarah Lennox (14 Feb. 1745–August 1826) 8 was the seventh of<br />

eight children. She had five sisters up to 22 years older. <strong>The</strong>ir father (18)<br />

Charles Lennox, 2nd Duke of Richmond (18 May 1701–8 Aug. 1750),<br />

married (4 Dec. 1719) their mother (15) Lady Sarah Cadogan<br />

(18 Sept. 1706–25 Aug. 1751) at <strong>The</strong> Hague, Holl<strong>and</strong>.<br />

She then became Lady Sarah Lennox [Snr.], Duchess of Richmond.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y had their first daughter, Caroline, then Lady Sarah Lennox Snr.<br />

7 Captain Alex<strong>and</strong>er Smith was a pseudonym. It was published in 1715, 1716, <strong>and</strong> 1730<br />

<strong>and</strong> variously called <strong>The</strong> secret History of the Lives of the Most Celebrated Beauties; <strong>The</strong><br />

School of Venus; Cupid Restor’d to Sight, Court Intrigues; An Account of the Secret Amours<br />

of our British Nobility <strong>and</strong> Others, with the most celebrated Beauties, <strong>and</strong> most famous Jilts,<br />

from the Restoration to the Present Time; <strong>and</strong> currently as <strong>The</strong> School of Venus: A History of<br />

Cuckolds <strong>and</strong> Cuckold Makers.<br />

8 No day in August 1826 is given for the death of Lady Sarah Lennox [Jnr.].


68 How To Take Over <strong>The</strong> World<br />

Destroying Foreign Monarchies<br />

1. Using the British Monarchy to destroy the rest of Europe’s monarchies.<br />

2. Using the British Monarchy to destroy the African monarchies<br />

(with complete success).<br />

<strong>3.</strong> Using the British Monarchy to destroy the monarchies of the<br />

colonies (with complete success).<br />

4. Using the British Monarchy to destroy Native American Indian<br />

heirachy (with complete success).<br />

MAD (Medically Assisted Murder)<br />

5. Killing off monarchs <strong>and</strong> regents to guide history with greater control.<br />

6. Killing off monarchs <strong>and</strong> regents for their foreign takeover.<br />

7. Keeping the monarchs in a state of ill health so the advisors<br />

would make all the decisions – then influencing those advisors or<br />

embedding their own advisor.<br />

8. Developing madness in the monarch as a holding pattern for the<br />

Crown so the world could be developed without their interference. 0<br />

Document Fraud<br />

9. Consulting the monarch just after they had been medicated.<br />

10. Placing a prince regent as titular head with no experience,<br />

consulted, but not acted upon.<br />

11. Altering parliamentary documents at the onset of illness to serve<br />

all of the above.<br />

12. Altering parliamentary documents just prior to death to serve all of<br />

the above.<br />

Breeding<br />

1<strong>3.</strong> Ensuring the monarch’s partners lacked personality, were shy,<br />

dimwitted <strong>and</strong> pliable, with an IQ <strong>and</strong> EQ low enough to ensure that<br />

the next generation of monarchs would be even easier to control.<br />

14. Ensuring the monarch’s partners had a shameful history, such as<br />

from illegitimate stock, so they could be manipulated in exchange<br />

for silence over their histories.<br />

15. Ensuring the monarch’s partners would be ugly so no one would look<br />

too closely at the children to check for consistent fathering.<br />

16. Killing monarchs that were not illegitimate, especially those that<br />

closely resembled their father.<br />

0 <strong>The</strong> Freemasons’ American Independence is a case in point.<br />

Prince ‘Alfred’ Ernest Albert, the Duke of Edinburgh <strong>and</strong> Duke of Saxe-Coburg <strong>and</strong><br />

Gotha (6 August 1844–31 July 1900).


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Mad</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Georges</strong><br />

17. Ensuring the monarch’s partners had syphilis <strong>and</strong>/or a history of<br />

homosexuality.<br />

18. When the monarch was sufficiently dumb, arranging a marriage<br />

with a commoner (<strong>King</strong> George VI <strong>and</strong> Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon).<br />

19. Developing transgender qualities amongst royals <strong>and</strong> providing them<br />

with a transgender partner (<strong>King</strong> Edward VIII <strong>and</strong> Wallis Simpson).<br />

20. Consistent inbreeding so commoners would never want to be the<br />

monarch.<br />

Sex<br />

21. Supplying the monarch’s illegitimate children for royal incest.<br />

22. Supplying the monarch’s illegitimate children for paedophilia <strong>and</strong><br />

homosexuality.<br />

2<strong>3.</strong> Supplying the monarch with under-aged children for child sex<br />

abuse (under 16 years old).<br />

24. Supplying the monarch with under-aged children for paedophilia<br />

(under 13 years old).<br />

Freemasonry<br />

25. Killing the monarch’s enemies whenever they were not part of the<br />

Freemasons’ programme.<br />

War<br />

26. Using the half-brothers <strong>and</strong> half-sisters of the monarchs to act as<br />

agents of war.<br />

27. Using their half-brothers <strong>and</strong> half-sisters to act as double agents in<br />

those wars.<br />

28. Training their relatives as the warring enemies of Engl<strong>and</strong>.<br />

29. Having all these relatives meet behind the scenes prior to the war,<br />

during the war, <strong>and</strong> after the war (Churchill, Hitler <strong>and</strong> Stalin).<br />

30. Breeding warring relatives as body doubles for use during the war<br />

<strong>and</strong> assisting their escape at the end of the war (Hitler <strong>and</strong> his<br />

doppelgängers).<br />

<strong>King</strong> Edward II (25 April 1284–21 Sept. 1327) ruled for the last 20 years of his life <strong>and</strong><br />

was a Welsh-born homosexual whose partner was the Gascon knight Piers Gaveston.<br />

According to Dr Stubbs, <strong>King</strong> Edward II was “the first king after the conquest who was<br />

not a man of business”. <strong>King</strong> Edward II was murdered for failing to defeat the Scots at<br />

Bannockburn. <strong>The</strong> Scottish records claim he was killed by being run through with a<br />

stiletto introduced to his anus by loyal English servants. A stiletto is a long flexible blade<br />

which soon became the favourite tool of proctologists. <strong>The</strong> stiletto shoe has since been<br />

used as a murder weapon, as has the humble umbrella.<br />

69


70 How To Take Over <strong>The</strong> World<br />

31. Providing British training for these relatives.<br />

32. Having the British relative train the foreign relative in a major<br />

historical event. <strong>The</strong> historical event would be a training exercise<br />

with a predetermined outcome <strong>and</strong> everyone else fooled. 3<br />

3<strong>3.</strong> Using these British-trained relatives to create revolutions <strong>and</strong> civil<br />

war in their own countries.<br />

34. Using these British-trained relatives to overthrow their own<br />

monarchies <strong>and</strong> thus serve the Freemasons’ goals.<br />

In <strong>King</strong> George III’s case, point 8 applies. <strong>Mad</strong>ness was developed in<br />

the fifth year of his reign (poison by arsenic) <strong>and</strong> sustained for the next 35<br />

years, causing ever-decreasing influence until his reign became untenable.<br />

During his first five years, <strong>King</strong> George III appointed five prime<br />

ministers, after which his political interference was curtailed through<br />

poison. He ended up trusting Lord North (1770–March 1782) <strong>and</strong> North’s<br />

policies resulted in the American War of Independence (1776–81).<br />

<strong>The</strong> world did develop without <strong>King</strong> George III’s interference.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Freemasons did gain independence for America, then took over<br />

America <strong>and</strong> made it a ‘Freemasonry State’ – the United Freemasonry<br />

States of America – financially bankrupt <strong>and</strong> without an identity.<br />

<strong>The</strong> United States went bankrupt on 1 January 1788 from its War<br />

of Independence debt. <strong>The</strong>reafter <strong>King</strong> George III treated all American<br />

citizens, white <strong>and</strong> black, as slaves on the “plantation” called America.<br />

When the United States formed each State passed this debt onto<br />

its new citizens, soon after named on their birth certificates with full<br />

capitalised letters. This signified the new US citizens were chattles of<br />

their Federal Districts, the United States, Great Britain <strong>and</strong> the British<br />

Monarchy. Americans would thereafter be paying for the War of<br />

Independence debt through taxation <strong>and</strong> with their lives through the<br />

war draft.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Freemasons had gained control of America by bankrupting it<br />

<strong>and</strong> using this eternal debt to fund the <strong>King</strong> (in his ignorance) <strong>and</strong> all<br />

suceeding monarchs. Since the Freemasons were heavily into the occult,<br />

this suited them down to the ground. Having the population legally born<br />

into debt, payable by death, took away much of the guilt sending them<br />

to war as cannon fodder. Born dead, it was the commoner’s duty to die.<br />

3 Churchill’s training of Stalin in the Sydney Street Siege is a case in point.


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Mad</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Georges</strong><br />

Illegitimate Royalty<br />

<strong>The</strong> pain of porphyria is severe <strong>and</strong> opiates are almost m<strong>and</strong>atory. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

were extensively prescribed to the British royals, who were not known<br />

for their physical endurance but more for their weediness. Long-acting<br />

opioids were the preferred treatment, creating permanently drugged<br />

royals (PDR) which made them, or their female partner, available to any<br />

who could bribe or manipulate their way into the royal bedchamber.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first of these were royal-conception-bed-partners until a son<br />

was born. Once a son was born, these were followed by royal bedpartners<br />

with syphilis or the shamed royal partner who was generally<br />

kept behind the scenes.<br />

This was the case with Prince consort Albert. With Prince consort<br />

Philip a mistake was made <strong>and</strong> he conceived the first child Charles,<br />

hence Prince Charles will never be king.<br />

Those who suffer from the madness of porphyria have a tendency<br />

to murder their own lovers <strong>and</strong> this is sometimes taken out on the exlovers<br />

of their children. This explains much of English royal history.<br />

<strong>The</strong> royals were then more or less permanently drugged. This<br />

stopped the parents or the children from noticing that half the siblings<br />

were the product of different fathers <strong>and</strong> were not alike. This was further<br />

augmented by alcoholism, ugliness, dimwittedness, a low IQ, a low EQ,<br />

<strong>and</strong> a paucity of education.<br />

Even in more modern times, Queen Elizabeth II received seven <strong>and</strong><br />

a half hours of education each week (aged 6–10) followed by ten hours<br />

of education each week (aged 11–18).<br />

Much of the rest of the time during the war (13–19 yrs), Princess<br />

Elizabeth sat in on War Cabinet meetings. To complaints that she<br />

shouldn’t be asked to sit in when men’s deaths were discussed, Churchill<br />

resorted to the comment, “And if the war lasts for twenty years, how will<br />

she know what to do?” His comment bypassed <strong>King</strong> George VI’s mental<br />

incompetence <strong>and</strong> also explains Elizabeth’s signature on the paperwork<br />

for Syngman Rhee’s death in 1952 when her father was still <strong>King</strong>.<br />

Syngman Rhee was the President of South Korea <strong>and</strong> created the<br />

Syngman Rhee boundary line with Japan on 18 January 1952. He refused<br />

the terms of a peace treaty offered by Britain <strong>and</strong> was then shown his<br />

death certificate with Princess Elizabeth’s signature on it. Instead, <strong>King</strong><br />

7


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Mad</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Georges</strong><br />

To save the House of Hanover/British Monarchy from further<br />

embarrassment a prize was thrown open to the whole British medical<br />

establishment to cure <strong>King</strong> George III’s mental illness <strong>and</strong> he became<br />

a guinea pig for all <strong>and</strong> sundry. Towards the end of this medical freefor-all,<br />

witches <strong>and</strong> witchdoctors were allowed access to the <strong>King</strong> as<br />

long as some doctor would vouch for them. Doctors were setting up in<br />

Harley Street <strong>and</strong> hanging out shingles touting they would vouch for<br />

any medical colleagues from the far reaches of the colonies that had<br />

accidentally lost their medical credentials – for a small fee.<br />

Harley Street then became the premier location for Pommy medical<br />

specialists <strong>and</strong> spies, often with one above the other, as was James Bond’s<br />

father, John Ainsworth-Davis, at 69 Harley Street, London (1924–32).<br />

<strong>King</strong> George III was swamped with a daily syrup of sheep’s balls,<br />

bat’s brains <strong>and</strong> crushed spiders from Devon. Due to his hardy German<br />

constitution <strong>and</strong> cast-iron stomach he managed to survive all these<br />

treatments, <strong>and</strong> according to the wizards of Harley Street, he recovered<br />

from his mental illness totally under his own steam <strong>and</strong> without<br />

anyone’s assistance.<br />

<strong>The</strong> royal proctologist (arse doctor) commented: “His Majesty’s<br />

illness has been remarkable for the fact that no symptom was ever<br />

recorded in his stools.” <strong>The</strong>y were either recorded in the faeces or urine,<br />

<strong>and</strong> in <strong>King</strong> George III’s case they were in his urine <strong>and</strong> denied through<br />

his faeces.<br />

Suppressed by the royals <strong>and</strong> medics was the fact that the reward<br />

was paid out. It was paid to a witch from Penzance from the southwest<br />

tip of Engl<strong>and</strong>. She claimed to have consulted the <strong>King</strong> <strong>and</strong> said:<br />

“He’s got bloat. I’ll give him the same thing I give the cows.” She then<br />

administered a remedy. It worked <strong>and</strong> she was immediately paid off <strong>and</strong><br />

dispatched home . . . but a record was kept.<br />

<strong>The</strong> cure was most likely leaves of Bearberry (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi).<br />

<strong>The</strong> Romans, Italians, Yugoslavs, Chinese <strong>and</strong> Welsh all used it <strong>and</strong> it<br />

was listed in the Welsh <strong>The</strong> Physicians Myddfai by the 1200s. William<br />

Turner had translated herbal names into English in 1548 <strong>and</strong> John<br />

Garfield had translated scientific terms in J. Renou’s Dispensary in 1657,<br />

but British physicians in their proud ignorance were the last to know<br />

<strong>and</strong> it didn’t appear in the London Pharmacopoeia until 1788.<br />

73


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Mad</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Georges</strong><br />

77<br />

<strong>King</strong> George III,<br />

George Frederick<br />

Hanover, Prince of Wales<br />

(4 June 1738–29 Jan. 1820).<br />

Paintings, cartoons<br />

<strong>and</strong> wax model<br />

(immediate left).


78 How To Take Over <strong>The</strong> World<br />

For the Freemasons the control of the British Monarchy was the key<br />

to controlling the rest of the world <strong>and</strong> creating it in their own image.<br />

<strong>King</strong> George III (4 June 1738–29 January 1820) was <strong>King</strong> of Great<br />

Britain <strong>and</strong> Irel<strong>and</strong> (25 October 1760–1765/88/89/1810/20) . . . but<br />

Great Britain was not enough. At the height of his madness he decreed<br />

Hanover (Germany) a kingdom <strong>and</strong> on 12 August 1814 he became the<br />

first (insane) <strong>King</strong> of Great Britain <strong>and</strong> Hanover (Germany).<br />

This was followed by his son <strong>King</strong> George IV (29 Jan. 1820–26 June 1830)<br />

who was already Prince Regent in Feb. 1789 (officially from 1811)<br />

<strong>and</strong> his brother <strong>King</strong> William IV (26 June 1830–20 June 1837).<br />

<strong>King</strong> George IV (1820–30)<br />

<strong>The</strong> Prince of Wales (12 Aug. 1762–26 June 1830), later George IV, was<br />

known for drinking, gambling <strong>and</strong> womanising. Nicknamed ‘Prinny’<br />

from youth, his mistresses included:<br />

1. Mary (‘Perdita’) Robinson (b. 1758).<br />

In early 1780, he (17) sent her £20,000<br />

<strong>and</strong> she (21) became his mistress. <strong>The</strong><br />

affair was over within the year.<br />

2. Grace Dalrymple Elliot (b. 1758).<br />

Although she kept other lovers<br />

<strong>3.</strong><br />

simultaneously, they had an illegitimate<br />

daughter, Georgina Frederica Augusta<br />

Seymour (b. March 1782).<br />

Elizabeth Bridget Armistead/Billington<br />

(1780–84), opera singer.<br />

4. Olga Alex<strong>and</strong>rovna (neé Zubova)<br />

5.<br />

Zherebtsova (b. 1766–d. 1849).<br />

Elizabeth Milbanke, Lady Melbourne (1780–84). Her fourth son,<br />

George Lamb Milbanke (b. July 1784), was fathered by Prince George.<br />

Her second son, William Lamb, Viscount Melbourne (b. 1779),<br />

became Prime Minister (1834–41) which was not uncommon for<br />

the half-brothers of an illegitimate monarch’s son. 5 Lord Melbourne<br />

then became mentor to Queen Victoria. His brother George was<br />

Queen Victoria’s first cousin as they shared the same gr<strong>and</strong>father,<br />

<strong>Mad</strong> <strong>King</strong> George III.<br />

5 Winston Churchill fits into this category. <strong>The</strong> question is, do Prime Minister Tony Blair<br />

<strong>and</strong> Prince Andrew share the same father in Lord Porchester?<br />

Prinny, <strong>King</strong> George IV.


94 How To Take Over <strong>The</strong> World<br />

Nathan Mayer.<br />

Viktoria. Victoria.<br />

Victoria.<br />

Edward VII.<br />

Nathan Mayer.<br />

Viktoria.<br />

Edward VII.<br />

Churchill.<br />

Jenny Jerome.<br />

Nathan Mayer Rothschild <strong>and</strong> Princess Viktoria conceived Queen Victoria.<br />

Nathan Mayer Rothschild <strong>and</strong> Queen Victoria conceived <strong>King</strong> Edward VII.<br />

<strong>King</strong> Edward VII <strong>and</strong> Jenny Jerome conceived Winston Churchill.

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