Enlightenment · Europe · Politics
1788
Onset of George III's Madness
November 1788
The king began to talk incessantly, froth at the mouth, and converse with trees in Windsor Park. His doctors, baffled, restrained him in a straitjacket and blistered his skin. Parliament debated a regency. He recovered by spring. His illness - perhaps porphyria, perhaps something worse - would return. Each crisis raised the specter of his son the Prince of Wales assuming power, a prospect that terrified Tories.