Random  | Best Random Tools

  • George I of Great Britain on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#1) George I of Great Britain

    • Notable Figure

    Before he became a British king, George I was the Elector of Hanover in what is today modern Germany. In 1682, George's mother arranged for him to marry the very wealthy Sophia Dorothea of Celle, a Germanic noble. The marriage was unhappy from the start, especially since George felt it was totally within his rights to have mistresses, whom he flaunted in front of his young bride.

    But things got worse when Sophia tried to find her own love story and began a relationship with Philip Christoph von Königsmarck, a Swedish count.

    When George confronted his wife about the relationship, things got heated, and he actually physically attacked Sophia and began beating her. When brutish George left Hanover to assume his new role as King of Great Britain in 1714, he did so without Sophia at his side: he divorced her in 1694 and virtually imprisoned her for the rest of her life.

    The fact that Königsmarck was murdered for his love for Sophia only makes the story all the more tragic.

  • Isabella of France on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#2) Isabella of France

    • Noble person

    Queen Isabella of France was around 12 years old when she married King Edward II of England in 1308. Though the relationship had happy moments in the beginning, Edward's obsession with a number of male favorites - first Piers Gaveston and then Hugh Despenser - put a strain on the marriage.

    Isabella began an affair with Roger Mortimer, and with his help she launched a successful coup against her husband. Edward was soon imprisoned, and in 1327 died mysteriously.

  • Christian VII of Denmark on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#3) Christian VII of Denmark

    • Notable Figure

    Princess Caroline Matilda of Great Britain - George III's youngest sister - was married off to King Christian VII of Denmark at the tender age of 15 in 1766. But she found no happiness in her new kingdom. In fact, Christian was suffering from severe mental instabilities that pushed their fragile relationship to the edge.

    Among Christian's behavioral problems was his cruel streak - including the time he let Caroline Matilda know what he thought of her by mounting his new wife's portrait prominently in the bathroom.

    He was also known for his sexual addictions and paranoia. Though Dr. Johann Friedrich Struensee was called in to treat the king, he instead took the reins of government, enacted Enlightened reforms, and even began a relationship with the young queen.

    Things did not end well for either of them: Struensee was ousted and executed and Caroline was sent into exile and died at the age of 23.

  • Henry VIII of England on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#4) Henry VIII of England

    • Notable Figure

    If there was any royal who could never figure out the secret to marital bliss, it was Henry VIII, the King of England from 1509 to 1547. He divorced two wives, killed two more, and lost one to the ravages of early modern childbirth. Of his doomed marriages, perhaps the most tragic, was to Catherine Howard.

    Henry married Catherine when he was 49 and she was only 16 or 17. The huge age discrepancy mirrored a discrepancy in lifestyle, too.

    By the time he married Catherine, Henry was a shadow of the golden prince he had once been: he was now obese and inactive, thanks to an old jousting wound. Catherine, by contrast, was in the prime of her youth and allegedly looked elsewhere for romantic fulfillment. After being accused of having an affair with Thomas Culpepper, Catherine Howard's downfall was swift and decisive - the teenaged queen was beheaded on February 13, 1542.

    Catherine wasn't the only one of Henry's wives to end up on the chopping block. He had his second wife, Anne Boleyn, beheaded only a few years earlier.

  • George IV of the United Kingdom on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#5) George IV of the United Kingdom

    • Notable Figure

    George III's eldest son and heir - also named George - was more interested in wooing mistresses, commissioning stunning buildings, and accumulating gambling debts than he was in royal duty. So his father had to strong-arm George the younger into marriage by agreeing to pay off his debts if he'd take a short trip down the aisle and marry a suitable bride. George eventually agreed.

    The arranged marriage was a total disaster. The chosen bride was the prince's first cousin, Caroline of Brunswick. It was hate at first sight, and the wedding night of April 8, 1795, was a mess - George was drunk for the whole thing, because he couldn't stomach the idea of going through it sober.

    The couple stayed together long enough to get pregnant, and Caroline gave birth to Princess Charlotte nine months after the wedding. The couple separated and, once George became king in 1820, he shocked Britain by attempting to divorce his wife.

  • Henry II of England on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#6) Henry II of England

    • Notable Figure

    One of the great romances of the medieval world was the relationship between King Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine. Sparks flew when they first met: Henry was the young, handsome future king of England, and Eleanor was the beautiful, captivating wife of the king of France. But they didn't let a little thing like Eleanor's marital status stand in their way - she got an annulment in 1152, and Henry and Eleanor married a few weeks later.

    Though their marriage was royal, it also was open to the same strains as any other. Henry's eye wandered, and by the 1170s the marriage was beyond the point of repair. He even installed a mistress at his side. Bitter, brilliant, and bold, Eleanor convinced her sons to rebel against their father in 1173.

    Henry put down the rebellion, and, not trusting his shrewd wife, had her locked away for the last 16 years of his life. When her sons Richard and then John inherited the throne, she again became a critical actor in the royal court until her own death in 1204.

  • Tamar of Georgia on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#7) Tamar of Georgia

    • Notable Figure

    Marrying someone not of her choosing proved to be disastrous for the fierce Queen Tamar of Georgia. Though she co-ruled with her father before his death and was his official heir, not everyone was excited about having a queen. Both nobles and members of her own family insisted that she find a man to rule at her side.

    So in 1185, the queen married Yuri Bogolyubsky. It was a huge mistake, and, between his drinking and affairs, he soon proved to be an unfit consort. Tamar kicked him to the curb and annulled the marriage in 1187. Enraged, he led a revolt against his ex-wife that she handily defeated. She went on to rule until 1213. 

  • Peter the Great on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#8) Peter the Great

    • Notable Figure

    Russia's Peter I may be remembered as "the Great" - but to his first wife Eudoxia, he was anything but. Eudoxia married the tsar in 1689 in a wedding that Peter's mother had brokered. Though the marriage produced three kids, Peter grew bored with his wife. In 1698, after nine years of marriage, Peter felt it was time to move on.

    So, he divorced Eudoxia and sent her to a convent. With his first wife out of the picture, Peter secretly married his peasant-mistress a few years later.

  • Margaret of Valois on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#9) Margaret of Valois

    • Noble person

    The wedding with perhaps the most directly awful consequences was that of Princess Marguerite de Valois and Henri de Navarre. They came from two sides of the tracks: Marguerite was the willful daughter of Catholic King Henri II of France and his calculating wife Catherine de Medici, and Henri was the Protestant King of Navarre.

    Their marriage in Paris on August 18, 1572, brought both Catholics and Protestants to the city to celebrate the royal nuptials. But the spirit of Christian unity was short-lived. On the night of August 24, the so-called St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre - on the orders of Marguerite's brother King Charles IX and her mother Catherine de Medici - made Paris's streets run red with the blood of thousands of slaughtered Protestants.

    Marguerite's new husband barely escaped with his life, and it was an ominous way to begin a new marriage. Indeed, the pair annulled their marriage in 1599.

  • Diana, Princess of Wales on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#10) Diana, Princess of Wales

    • Actor

    When the 20-year-old Lady Diana Spencer married Prince Charles - Queen Elizabeth II's eldest son and heir to the British throne - on July 29, 1981, it was celebrated as a fairytale wedding. But the marriage would quickly become a dark fable. Diana later described her wedding day as "the worst day of my life."

    Why? Because it was the beginning of a disastrous marriage that would change both their lives. Diana chafed at the strict, alienating protocols of royal life. Charles found romance with a mistress, and soon Diana was taking her own lovers. The couple aired their dirty laundry in public. When the royal couple separated in 1992 and divorced four years later, it was proof that royals don't always get to live "happily ever after."

  • Prince Albert Promoted Domestic Values But His Parents' Marriage Had Been A Hot Mess on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#11) Prince Albert Promoted Domestic Values But His Parents' Marriage Had Been A Hot Mess

    Prince Albert is best known for his loving marriage to Queen Victoria and his promotion of domestic values. But the marital bliss he shared with his British bride was new for him - his parents had actually been bitterly unhappy. His mother, Princess Louise, had married his father, Ernst I, when she was only 16. Though Ernst was a noted libertine, he did not tolerate a similar trait in his wife, even as his affairs put a strain on the marriage. Louise gave birth to two sons, but that did nothing to bring the couple closer together.

    When Louise took her own lover, it was an act Ernst could not forgive, and he divorced her in 1826 and forbade Louise from seeing her beloved children ever again. Louise was so desperate to see her children that she actually dressed up as a peasant once to blend into a crowd and watch them. Louise died in 1831 at the age of 30, still bereft at the loss of her sons.

  • Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon on Random Most Destructive And Abusive Royal Marriages In History

    (#12) Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon

    • Noble person

    Princess Margaret - Queen Elizabeth II's younger sister - was a popular fixture in British high society during her sister's reign. So her wedding to photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones on May 6, 1960, was the social event of the season. Unfortunately, the marriage was an emotional rollercoaster for both parties. Margaret and her husband were both vain and combative, and they brought out the worst in each other in their intense spats.

    Things got so terrible between the royal pair that Armstrong-Jones began leaving "hate notes" for his wife. Among the more ridiculous things he wrote: "You look like a Jewish manicurist and I hate you." Unsurprisingly, the marriage ended in divorce in 1978. 

New Random Displays    Display All By Ranking

About This Tool

For centuries, European royal families have been prevalent in intermarriage. In this small number of royal families, such a tradition can keep the royal lineage pure. Unhappy marriages are a common phenomenon in modern society, but royal marriages particularly attract public attention. From the royal family of England to the rulers of the Netherlands, almost no one can escape the scandal of marital dilemma. These tragic marriages were divorced or ended with public outrage.

The random tool tells stories of the 12 most destructive and abusive royal marriages that did not have a happily ever after, one of the most famous is the marriage of Diana, the Princess of Wales.

Our data comes from Ranker, If you want to participate in the ranking of items displayed on this page, please click here.

Copyright © 2024 BestRandoms.com All rights reserved.