George (; 8 August 1832 – 15 October 1904) was king of Saxony and member of the House of Wettin.
Early life
George was born in the Saxon capital, Dresden. He was the second son of King John of Saxony and his wife, Princess Amalie Auguste of Bavaria (1801–1877), daughter of King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria.
Marriage
On 11 May 1859 at Belém Palace in Lisbon, George married, Infanta Maria Anna of Portugal, eldest surviving daughter of Queen Maria II of Portugal and her consort, Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha-Koháry, and the younger sister of King Pedro V of Portugal. Maria Anna died young and George stayed unmarried for the rest of his long life.
Issue
{| class="wikitable"
! Name || Birth || Death || Notes
|-
| Marie Johanna Amalie Ferdinande Antonie Luise Juliane || 19 June 1860 || || died in childhood, no issue
|-
| Elisabeth Albertine Karoline Sidonie Ferdinande Leopoldine Antonie Auguste Clementine || 14 February 1862|| || died in childhood, no issue
|-
| Mathilde Marie Auguste Viktorie Leopoldine Karoline Luise Franziska Josepha|| 19 March 1863 || || died unmarried, no issue
|-
| Frederick Augustus Johann Ludwig Karl Gustav Gregor Philipp || 25 May 1865 || || married Archduchess Louise of Austria (1870–1947), had issue
|-
| Maria Josepha Luise Philippine Elisabeth Pia Angelica Margarethe || 31 May 1867|| || married to her second cousin Archduke Otto Franz of Austria (1865–1906), had issue
|-
| Johann Georg Pius Karl Leopold Maria Januarius Anacletus || 10 July 1869|| || married first Duchess Maria Isabella of Württemberg (1871–1904) and second Princess Maria Immaculata of Bourbon-Two Sicilies (1874–1906)
|-
| Maximilian Wilhelm August Albert Karl Gregor Odo || 17 November 1870 || || ordained as a Roman Catholic priest
|-
| Albert Karl Anton Ludwig Wilhelm Viktor || 25 February 1875 || || died unmarried, no issue, the result of injuries sustained in a carriage crash caused by Prince Miguel of Braganza
|}
Military career
George served under his brother Albert's command during the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and in the Franco-German War. In the re-organisation of the army which accompanied the march towards Paris, his brother the Crown Prince gained a separate command over the 4th army (Army of the Meuse) consisting of the Saxon XII corps, the Prussian Guard corps, and the IV (Prussian Saxony) corps and George succeeded him in command of the XII corps.
King of Saxony
thumb|2 Mark coin with the portrait of King George (coined 1903)
Prince George was a Generalfeldmarschall before his ascension. It gradually became clear that George's elder brother, Albert (1828–1902), and his wife, Queen Carola (1833–1907), would not have any children, thereby making George the heir presumptive to the throne. He succeeded Albert as King of Saxony on 19 June 1902, albeit for just a brief two-year reign. On 15 October 1904 he died in Pillnitz and was succeeded by his eldest son, Frederick Augustus III (1865–1932), who was deposed in 1918.
King George was a controversial figure. He divorced by royal decree his eldest son from his daughter-in-law, Crown Princess Luise. Luise's flight from Dresden was due to her father-in-law's threatening to have her interned in a mental asylum at the Sonnenstein Castle for life.
Honours and awards
thumb|Coat of Arms of the King of Saxony
Ancestry
See also
- Rulers of Saxony
