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Quick Quiz: Weird British Royalty

Question: In the early 18th century, what group were the English afraid would try to restore the throne to Queen Anne’s exiled Roman Catholic half-brother, James Edward, the Old Pretender?
Answer: In the early 18th century, the English feared that Jacobites would try to restore the throne to Queen Anne’s exiled Roman Catholic half-brother, James Edward, the Old Pretender. The Jacobites were supporters of the exiled King James II and his descendents after the Glorious Revolution.
Question: What Saxon kingdom in southwestern England did Alfred the Great technically rule over?
Answer: Alfred the Great ruled as king of Wessex, a Saxon kingdom in southwestern England, from 871-899.
Question: Which group of three oddly matched royals are buried together?
Answer: Charles I, Henry VIII, and Jane Seymour are all buried under the same marble tile in St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle. Henry VIII and Jane Seymour intended for their bodies to be moved to a separate tomb, but Henry’s children never completed the building project.
Question: What appendage is the body of King Charles I missing?
Answer: The body of King Charles I, buried in St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle, is missing its head. Charles I was beheaded after being convicted of treason during the English Civil War.
Question: Which of these is not alleged to be among King George V’s last words?
Answer: King George V’s last words are under much contention. After his death, the palace stated that his last words were an inquiry about the state of the kingdom; his doctor wrote that his last words were “God damn you,” after receiving a shot; a pervasive rumour holds that the king’s last words were “Bugger Bognor!” upon being told he would recuperate in the seaside town of Bognor Regis.
Question: What kind of people from foreign nations did Alfred the Great invite to join his court?
Answer: Alfred the Great invited scholars from foreign nations to join his court. These scholars assisted Alfred in learning Latin so that he could translate Latin books into English for the benefit of his subjects, who by his day had for the most part lost all knowledge of the Latin language. 
Question: What was the cause of George V’s death?
Answer: It was publicly revealed in 1986 that King George V’s death was assisted by his physician, Lord Bertrand Dawson. Upon realizing that the king was gravely ill, Dawson wrote in his private diary: “I therefore decided to determine the end and injected (myself) morphia gr. 3/4 and shortly afterwards cocaine gr. 1 into the [king’s] distended jugular vein.”