Prince George (George III.), conduct on demise of his father, i. [78];
changes in his establishment, [80], [86], [94];
extraordinary suspicion of the Duke of Cumberland, [105], [106];
created Prince of Wales, [114];
new appointments in his household, [226];
divisions in his tutorship, and connected with affairs in Ireland, [289], et seq., [292];
affair of the pretended memorial, written by Horace Walpole, [298], [305];
marriage proposed with a princess of Brunswick, ii. [36];
opposition to the coalition of Fox and Bedford, [47];
attains the age of majority, [204];
proposed separation from his mother, [207], [221], et seq.;
new household established, [258];
enters on political life by interfering in the formation of a ministry, iii. [25];
animadversions on his education, [39];
influence of Lord Bute, [121];
secret politics of his court discovered, [237].

Prince of Wales, Frederick, vide [Wales].

Princess of Wales, vide [Wales].

Prize Bill, debates on, ii. [78].

Protestant ascendency, vide [Ascendency].

Protester, a new anti-ministerial paper, its history and first appearance, i. [345].

Prussia, Frederick, King of, account of his successes and reverses in the campaign in Germany, of 1760, iii. [289-297].
See also [Frederick].

Prussia, accommodation with that state, ii. [152];
new treaty, [197];
its politics previous to the German war, [219], [238], et seq.;
pacific politics of Frederick, [240];
his political and military character, [244];
successes of Frederick in Bohemia, iii. [12], et seq.;
new treaty with, [110].

Publications, licentious, prohibited by the police in 1758, iii. [98].

Pulteney, Lord, political character and connexions, ii. [78], [79];
speech on the treaties, [119].