, 1911 On 6 May 1910,
Edward VII died, and George became king. He wrote in his diary: George had never liked his wife's habit of signing official documents and letters as "Victoria Mary" and insisted she drop one of those names. They both thought she should not be called Queen Victoria, and so she became Queen Mary. Later that year, a radical propagandist,
Edward Mylius, published a lie that George had secretly married in Malta as a young man, and that consequently his marriage to Queen Mary was bigamous. The lie had first surfaced in print in 1893, but George had shrugged it off as a joke. In an effort to kill off rumours, Mylius was arrested, tried and found guilty of
criminal libel, and was sentenced to a year in prison. George objected to the
anti-Catholic wording of the Accession Declaration that he would be required to make at the opening of his first parliament. He made it known that he would refuse to open parliament unless it was changed. As a result, the
Accession Declaration Act 1910 shortened the declaration and removed the most offensive phrases. , 1911
George and Mary's coronation took place at
Westminster Abbey on 22 June 1911, Later in 1911, the King and Queen travelled to India for the
Delhi Durbar, where they were presented to an assembled audience of Indian dignitaries and princes as the
Emperor and Empress of India on 12 December 1911. George wore the newly created
Imperial Crown of India at the ceremony and declared the shifting of the Indian capital from
Calcutta to Delhi. He was the only Emperor of India to be present at his own Delhi Durbar. As he and Mary travelled throughout the subcontinent, George took the opportunity to indulge in
big game hunting in Nepal, shooting 21 tigers, 8 rhinoceroses and a bear over 10 days. He was a keen and expert marksman. On a later occasion, on 18 December 1913, he was part of a shooting party that shot over a thousand
pheasants in six hours (about one bird every 20 seconds) while visiting the home of
Lord Burnham. Even George had to acknowledge that "we went a little too far" that day.
National politics of King George V and Queen Mary by Jean Desboutin, 13 March 1914 George inherited the throne at a politically turbulent time.
Lloyd George's
People's Budget had been rejected the previous year by the
Conservative and
Unionist-dominated
House of Lords, contrary to the normal convention that the Lords did not veto
money bills.
Liberal Prime Minister
H. H. Asquith had asked the previous king to give an undertaking that he would create sufficient Liberal peers to allow the passage of Liberal legislation. Edward had reluctantly agreed, provided the Lords rejected the budget after two successive general elections. After the
January 1910 general election, the Conservative peers allowed the budget, for which the government now had an electoral mandate, to pass without a vote. (
Bertram Mackennal, sculptor) Asquith attempted to curtail the power of the Lords through constitutional reforms, which were again blocked by the Upper House. A constitutional conference on the reforms broke down in November 1910 after 21 meetings. Asquith and
Lord Crewe, Liberal leader in the Lords, asked George to grant a dissolution, leading to a second general election, and to promise to create sufficient Liberal peers if the Lords blocked the legislation again. If George refused, the Liberal government would otherwise resign, which would have given the appearance that the monarch was taking sides – with "the peers against the people" – in party politics. The King's two private secretaries, the Liberal
Lord Knollys and the Unionist
Lord Stamfordham, gave George conflicting advice. Knollys advised George to accept the Cabinet's demands, while Stamfordham advised George to accept the resignation. Like his father, George reluctantly agreed to the dissolution and creation of peers, although he felt his ministers had taken advantage of his inexperience to browbeat him. After the
December 1910 general election, the Lords let the bill pass on hearing of the threat to swamp the house with new peers. The subsequent
Parliament Act 1911 permanently removed – with a few exceptions – the power of the Lords to veto bills. George later came to feel that Knollys had withheld information from him about the willingness of the opposition to form a government if the Liberals had resigned. The 1910 general elections had left the Liberals as a minority government dependent upon the support of the
Irish Nationalist Party. As desired by the Nationalists, Asquith introduced
legislation that would give Ireland Home Rule, but the Conservatives and Unionists opposed it. As tempers rose over the Home Rule Bill, which would never have been possible without the Parliament Act, relations between the elderly Knollys and the Conservatives became poor, and he was pushed into retirement. Desperate to avoid the prospect of civil war in Ireland between Unionists and Nationalists, George called a
meeting of all parties at Buckingham Palace in July 1914 in an attempt to negotiate a settlement. After four days the conference ended without an agreement. Political developments in Britain and Ireland were overtaken by events in Europe, and the issue of Irish Home Rule was
suspended for the duration of the war.
First World War On 4 August 1914, George wrote in his diary, "I held a council at 10:45 to declare war with Germany. It is a terrible catastrophe but it is not our fault. ... Please to God it may soon be over." From 1914 to 1918,
Britain and its allies were at
war with the
Central Powers, led by the
German Empire. German Kaiser
Wilhelm II, who for the British public came to symbolise all the horrors of the war, was the King's first cousin. George's paternal grandfather was
Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha; consequently, the King and his children bore the German titles Prince and Princess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha and Duke and Duchess of Saxony. Queen Mary, although born in England like her mother, was the daughter of the Duke of Teck, a descendant of the German
Dukes of Württemberg. George had brothers-in-law and cousins who were British subjects but who bore German titles such as Duke and Duchess of Teck, Prince and Princess of Battenberg, and Prince and Princess of Schleswig-Holstein. When
H. G. Wells wrote about Britain's "alien and uninspiring court", George replied: "I may be uninspiring, but I'll be damned if I'm alien." On 17 July 1917, George appeased British nationalist feelings by issuing a royal proclamation that changed the name of the British
royal house from the German-sounding
House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to the
House of Windsor. He and all his British relatives relinquished their German titles and styles and adopted British-sounding surnames. George compensated his male relatives by giving them British peerages. His cousin
Prince Louis of Battenberg, who earlier in the war had been forced to resign as
First Sea Lord through anti-German feeling, became Louis Mountbatten, 1st Marquess of Milford Haven, while Queen Mary's brothers became
Adolphus Cambridge, 1st Marquess of Cambridge, and
Alexander Cambridge, 1st Earl of Athlone. in German uniforms in May 1913 In
letters patent gazetted on 11 December 1917, the King restricted the style of "Royal Highness" and the titular dignity of "Prince (or Princess) of Great Britain and Ireland" to the children of the Sovereign, the children of the sons of the Sovereign and the eldest living son of the eldest son of a Prince of Wales. The letters patent also stated that "the titles of Royal Highness, Highness or Serene Highness, and the titular dignity of Prince and Princess shall cease except those titles already granted and remaining unrevoked". George's relatives who fought on the German side, such as
Ernest Augustus, Crown Prince of Hanover, and
Charles Edward, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, had their British peerages suspended by a 1919
Order in Council under the provisions of the
Titles Deprivation Act 1917. Under pressure from his mother, George also removed the
Garter flags of his German relations from
St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle. When Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, George's first cousin, was overthrown in the
Russian Revolution of 1917, the British government offered
political asylum to the Tsar and his family, but worsening conditions for the British people, and fears that revolution might come to the British Isles, led George to think that the presence of the
Romanovs would be seen as inappropriate. Despite the later claims of
Lord Mountbatten of Burma that Prime Minister
David Lloyd George was opposed to the rescue of the Russian imperial family, the letters of Lord Stamfordham suggest that it was George V who opposed the idea against the advice of the government. Advance planning for a rescue was undertaken by
MI1, a branch of the British secret service, but because of the strengthening position of the
Bolshevik revolutionaries and wider difficulties with the conduct of the war, the plan was never put into operation. Nicholas and his immediate family remained in Russia, where they were
killed by the Bolsheviks in 1918. George wrote in his diary: The following year, Nicholas's mother,
Marie Feodorovna, and other members of the extended Russian imperial family were rescued from
Crimea by a British warship. ,
Henry Rawlinson,
Herbert Plumer, George V,
Douglas Haig,
Henry Horne,
Julian Byng. Two months after the end of the war, the King's youngest son,
John, died aged 13 after a lifetime of ill health. George was informed of his death by Queen Mary, who wrote, "[John] had been a great anxiety to us for many years ... The first break in the family circle is hard to bear but people have been so kind & sympathetic & this has helped us much." In May 1922, George toured Belgium and northern France, visiting the First World War cemeteries and memorials being constructed by the
Imperial War Graves Commission. The event was described in a poem, "
The King's Pilgrimage" by
Rudyard Kipling. The tour, and one short visit to Italy in 1923, were the only times George agreed to leave the United Kingdom on official business after the end of the war.
Post-war reign reached its territorial peak in 1920. Before the
First World War, most of Europe was ruled by monarchs related to George, but during and after the war, the monarchies of Austria, Germany, Greece, and Spain, like Russia, fell to revolution and war. In March 1919, Lieutenant-Colonel
Edward Lisle Strutt was dispatched on the personal authority of the King to escort the former Emperor
Charles I of Austria and his family to safety in Switzerland. In 1922, a
Royal Navy ship was sent to Greece to rescue his cousins
Prince and
Princess Andrew. Political turmoil in Ireland continued as the Nationalists
fought for independence; George expressed his horror at government-sanctioned killings and reprisals to Prime Minister
Lloyd George. At the opening session of the
Parliament of Northern Ireland on 22 June 1921, the King appealed for conciliation in a speech part drafted by General
Jan Smuts and approved by Lloyd George. A few weeks later, a truce was agreed. Negotiations between Britain and the Irish secessionists led to the signing of the
Anglo-Irish Treaty. By the end of 1922,
Ireland was partitioned, the
Irish Free State was established, and Lloyd George was out of office. George and his advisers were concerned about the rise of socialism and the growing labour movement, which they mistakenly associated with republicanism. The socialists no longer believed in their anti-monarchical slogans and were ready to come to terms with the monarchy if it took the first step. George adopted a more democratic, inclusive stance that crossed class lines and brought the monarchy closer to the public and the working class—a dramatic change for the King, who was most comfortable with naval officers and landed gentry. He cultivated friendly relations with moderate
Labour Party politicians and trade union officials. His abandonment of social aloofness conditioned the royal family's behaviour and enhanced its popularity during the economic crises of the 1920s and for over two generations thereafter. The years between 1922 and 1929 saw frequent changes in government. In 1924, George appointed the first Labour Prime Minister,
Ramsay MacDonald, in the absence of a clear majority for any one of the three major parties. George's tact in appointing the first Labour government (which lasted less than a year) allayed the suspicions of the party's sympathisers that he would work against their interests. During the
General Strike of 1926, George advised the government of
Conservative Stanley Baldwin against taking inflammatory action, and took exception to suggestions that the strikers were "revolutionaries" saying, "Try living on their wages before you judge them." . Clockwise from centre front: George V,
Baldwin (
United Kingdom),
Monroe (
Newfoundland),
Coates (
New Zealand),
Bruce (
Australia),
Hertzog (
South Africa),
Cosgrave (
Irish Free State), and
King (
Canada). In 1926, George hosted an
Imperial Conference in London at which the
Balfour Declaration accepted the growth of the
British Dominions into self-governing "autonomous Communities within the British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another". The
Statute of Westminster 1931 formalised the Dominions' legislative independence and established that the succession to the throne could not be changed unless all the Parliaments of the Dominions as well as the Parliament at Westminster agreed. In the wake of a
world financial crisis, George encouraged the formation of a
National Government in 1931 led by MacDonald and Baldwin, and volunteered to reduce the
civil list to help balance the budget. In 1934, George bluntly told the German ambassador
Leopold von Hoesch that Germany was now the peril of the world, and that there was bound to be a war within ten years if Germany went on at the present rate; he warned the British ambassador in Berlin,
Eric Phipps, to be suspicious of the Nazis. In 1932, George agreed to deliver a
Royal Christmas speech on the radio, an event that became annual thereafter. He was not in favour of the innovation originally but was persuaded by the argument that it was what his people wanted. By the
Silver Jubilee of his reign in 1935, he had become a well-loved king, saying in response to the crowd's adulation, "I cannot understand it, after all I am only a very ordinary sort of fellow." George's relationship with his eldest son and heir,
Edward, deteriorated in these later years. George was disappointed in Edward's failure to settle down in life and appalled by his many affairs with married women. In 1935, George said of his son Edward: "After I am dead, the boy will ruin himself within 12 months", and of Albert and Elizabeth: "I pray to God my eldest son will never marry and have children, and that nothing will come between Bertie and Lilibet and the throne". ==Declining health and death==