Hanoverian Medal, awarded by George V to his troops fighting in that battle. Obverse The Crown Prince succeeded his father as the
King of Hanover and
Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg as well as
Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale, in the
Peerage of Great Britain and
Earl of Armagh, in the
Peerage of Ireland, on 18 November 1851, assuming the style George V. From his father and from his maternal uncle,
Duke Charles of Mecklenburg, one of the most influential men at the
Prussian court, George had learned to take a very high and autocratic view of royal authority. As the
Austro-Prussian War started, the Prussian government sent a dispatch on 15 June 1866 demanding that Hanover enter into an alliance with them and Hanoverian troops submit to their authority or face war. Despite previously having concluded that Hanover could not win an armed confrontation with Prussia, George remained protective of his throne and refused the ultimatum. The Prussian interest in the land bridge between the two parts of Prussia seemed to leave him little hope. Queen Marie with their children stayed at
Marienburg Castle for a year, but then followed her husband. They initially lived in Vienna, where George bought a house that is now the Czech Embassy, but in 1868 bought a summer villa in
Gmunden, Austria, which they soon used as their main residence. From exile he appealed in vain for the European great powers to intervene on behalf of Hanover. From 1866 to 1870, George V maintained the
Guelphic Legion partially at his own expense, hoping that a Franco-Prussian war would lead to the reconquest of his kingdom. In Paris he had the magazine
Situation published, which daily attacked the new order of things in Germany in the most violent terms and fueled France's hatred of a Germany that was becoming more and more Prussian. Much to his disappointment,
Napoleon III lost the
Franco-Prussian War in 1871. All of this ultimately led to Prussia suspending financial compensation that had already been promised and confiscating his private assets. The
Minister President of Prussia Otto von Bismarck had the sequestered assets, the so-called
Guelph Fund, managed by a special Prussian commission in Hanover and used the proceeds "to combat Guelph activities". While in exile, he was appointed an honorary full
general in the
British Army in 1876. ==Death==