The house's origins date from when the
royal forest of
Windsor was divided up in the 13th century. A substantial house was certainly built there in the reign of King
Henry VII. George and her mother,
Caroline of Brunswick, had long been estranged and his relationship with their daughter was little better. As was not unusual at the time, his solution was to marry off this problematic daughter as soon as possible. An engagement with
William II of the Netherlands was made in 1814, but this was soon broken off. Charlotte became infatuated with the minor prince
Augustus of Prussia, despite his being seen as below the station of a likely future Queen of the United Kingdom. The fact he was already married would have been its own hindrance too. In July 1814, George dismissed her loyal servants, expelled her from her previous home at
Warwick House, and forced her to move to Cranbourne, with a staff of his choice. The Prince Regent had been increasingly unpopular with the people, whilst Charlotte and her
Whig sympathies were seen as populist reformers. Her incarceration was also unpopular, drawing attention from the
Romantic poets
Byron and
Shelley. Charlotte also attracted the attention of
Prince Leopold of
Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. After gaining the Prince's permission to court her at Cranbourne, Charlotte was released from her house arrest in January 1816 and they were married at
Carlton House in May. The marriage was a tragic one though, and little over a year later, Charlotte died in childbirth. As the only surviving legitimate grandchild of
George III, and thus the only clear royal heir, this dynastic crisis led to "a mad dash towards matrimony by most of her bachelor uncles", a race to provide a further heir that in turn led to
Queen Victoria. ==Cranbourne Tower==