| France. | Germany. | Spain. |
| Louis XIV., 1643. | Charles VI., 1711. | Philip V., 1700. |
| Louis XV., 1715. | | |
| Prussia. | Russia. |
| Frederick William, 1713. | Peter the Great, 1689. |
| | Catherine I., 1724. |
| POPES.—Clement XI., | 1700. Innocent XIII., 1721. | Benedict XIII., 1724. |
| Denmark. | Sweden. |
| Frederick IV., 1699. | Charles XII., 1697. |
| | Frederick I., 1720. |
| Archbishops. | Chancellors. |
| T. Tenison, 1694. | William Cowper, 1714. |
| W. Wake, 1715. | Lord Macclesfield, 1718. |
| | Lord King, 1725. |
| First Lords of the Treasury. | Chancellors of the Exchequer. | Secretaries of State. |
| 1714. Halifax. | 1714. R. Walpole. | 1714 { Stanhope. |
| 1715. Carlisle. | 1717. Stanhope. | { Townshend. |
| 1715. R. Walpole. | 1718. Aislabie. | 1716 { Stanhope. |
| 1717. Stanhope. | 1721. R. Walpole. | { Methuen. |
| 1718. Sunderland. | | 1717 { Sunderland. |
| 1721. R. Walpole. | | { Addison. |
| | | 1718 { Stanhope. |
| | | { Craggs. |
| | | 1721 { Townshend. |
| | | { Carteret. |
| | | 1724 { Townshend. |
| | | { Newcastle. |
Probability of a restoration of the Stuarts.
England had been slow to accept the principle of succession by parliamentary instead of hereditary right; since 1688 the struggle had been continuous, it had reached a crisis in the closing years of Queen Anne. The triumph of the Whigs, secured to them by the constant successes of the War of Succession, had rendered them over-confident, and an act of foolish severity had been followed by their complete overthrow. The natural inclinations of the Queen, and the weakness of her character, which rendered her constantly liable to be subjugated by the influence of those around her; the talents and intriguing ambition of St. John, and the energy and compactness of the Jacobite body resting upon the general Conservative feeling of the nation, had rendered the return of the Stuarts to the throne a very probable event. A few weeks only were wanting for the completion of the plot, and James Edward would probably have been received as heir to the throne, and the work of the Revolution have been undone. The unexpected illness of the Queen, the rapidity and energy with which the Hanoverian Lords of the Council had carried out what was virtually a coup d'état, had destroyed these hopes. When the Lord Treasurer's staff was placed in the hands of the Duke of Shrewsbury, all hope of carrying out this counter-revolution with the aid of the executive was at an end. Although he had more than once faltered in his allegiance to the Whig party, it was now well understood that he was endowed with something not far short of a dictatorship, for the express purpose of carrying out the enactments of the Act of Succession. Everything was done as arranged by that Act. There was no difficulty with regard to the regency; sealed packets containing the names of those who were to act as the Council of Regency, chosen by the Protestant successor, Council of Regency. were in his hands. On their being opened, the names of eighteen Lords, almost exclusively of the Whig party, were found, who, together with the seven great officers named in the Statute, were to act, under the title of Lords Justices, as an interim Government until the arrival of the new King. It is to be observed that the name of the Duke of Marlborough was not among them.
Peaceful accession of the King.