Top 10 Crazy / Insane Royal Family Memeber
10.
George III of the United Kingdom
King George III ruled Great Britain and Ireland
for some 59 years of his life.
While he was somewhat gifted in the military
campaign aspect defeating France in extended
engagements once during Napoleon's reign and
once during the Seven Year War, his biggest
loss, besides his marbles, was that of the
American Colonies.
Born in 1738, he didn't start losing his mental
health until later in life, supposedly from
arsenic poisoning.
If someone was trying to kill him, they should
have tried harder.
9.
Peter III of Russia
Less well known than his wife who took his
throne, Peter III was Emperor of Russia for
about six months in the mid 1700s.
But he held questionable, at least to the
court nobles, allegiances while his wife Catherine
II courted those same nobles and took his
throne in a bloodless coup.
It was said that he was insane but that he
was also relieved to no longer have the throne
-- perhaps he really was crazy.
Whether he was crazy can be disputed; however,
along with a couple other people who could
potentially question Catherine's ascension
to the throne, Peter was found a few months
later mysteriously dead.
8.
Princess Alexandra Amalie of Bavaria
This German daughter of King Ludwig I of Bavaria
never married and was quite an accomplished
literary figure in her homeland.
While not clinically insane, she did display
OCD tendencies and thought she swallowed a
glass piano.
It was probably the crinoline under the period
dress of the mid 1800s that caused her hips
to look big, not the piano.
7.
Ludwig II of Bavaria
Insanity runs in the family, just ask Princess
Alexandra's nephew, Mad King Ludwig II of
Bavaria.
While he was declared clinically insane by
his cabinet members in 1886, it was doubted
as to whether he was actually bonkers.
He did have troubles with shyness, childish
behavior and flights of fancy including building
many castles such as Neuschwanstein Castle.
And though his sanity was questioned, his
common sense was definitely lacking when he
decided it not best to flee when his cabinet
members tried to depose him not once but twice.
6.
Otto of Bavaria
Ludwig II's brother, Otto, became King of
Bavaria at the age of 38 after his older brother
was deposed and died a day later.
However, Otto was confined to Fürstenried
Palace due to his actual mental illness; meanwhile
a regent ruled in his stead.
Supposedly the Wittelsbach family were all
rather eccentric, some more so than others
as in the case of Otto, Ludwig and Alexandra.
5.
Juana of Castile
Joan the Mad was crazy about her husband,
Phillipe the Handsome.
She was known as being obsessed with her husband
even after his death.
Perhaps this was why she never actually ruled
Castile -- because she was crazy and a necrophiliac.
While she was busy mourning her husband, continually
caressing his rotting corpse, which she brought
with her on a tour of Spain in the 1500s,
her father and son wanted to rule for her.
She was rendered essentially powerless and
locked away for the rest of her life.
Love will drive a person mad!
4.
Charles VI of France
Known as Charles the Mad, many historians
think King Charles VI of France suffered from
schizophrenia.
Shortly after an attempted murder of a friend
in 1392, Charles took an army after the supposed
perpetrator only to turn on his knights killing
one and injuring others before being dragged
off his horse and falling into a coma.
Because he acted bonkers, he was later removed
from power but not dethroned since he lived
for some 30 years after his first fit of the
crazies.
3.
Carlos II of Spain
Inbreeding can only make genetic and mental
defects stronger as in the case of Juana the
Mad's descendant King Carlos II of Spain.
He was severely disfigured from birth with
a huge elongated head, a misshapen body and
a jaw that could not close so he could eat.
Meanwhile, he was relegated to being an idiot
from birth since he was hardly taught anything
and only went from an infantile brain to idiocy
in his older years.
Carlos' relatives all died leaving him the
throne and an over-bearing mother to rule
in his stead.
However, he thought of himself as bewitched
because of his suffering, while in today's
world most of what he suffered would have
been recognized as being cause by inbreeding.
2.
Afonso VI of Portugal
"The Glutton" took ill at the age of three
and was left partially paralyzed on his left
side as well as mentally unstable for the
rest of his life.
Afonso was delighted when he saw his older
two siblings die as teenagers declaring "Hurray!
Now I will be King of Portugal!"
Unfortunately the future King was a little
loose in the head loving savagery and loving
food to the point of being called a glutton.
In his final days like many of the other monarchs
on this list, he was confined -- it was said
he wore a groove in the floor from pacing
since he couldn't do anything else.
1.
Charles IX of France
Unlike Afonso, King Charles IX of France actually
took out his savagery on others in his court,
including once on his sisters as well as on
other humans and animals.
Due to a disfiguration, he was dubbed the
Snotty King and was given to fits of rage
and sadism though he was a Mama's Boy.
In 1561 at the age of 10, Charles took the
throne after all the other eligible heirs
died -- through no fault of his.
Like Carlos, it was his overbearing mother
that ruled long after her regency ended when
he came of age.
Never cutting the strings might drive any
man crazy!
