It's actually not your English, but rather your formatting and punctuation, which I suppose could be easily improved with a little extra effort.today's garbage says the German attack from the Meuse was known before it took place and it was not cowardly Petain who failed . Writing such things in full clearity are certainly beyond me , English being a second language and all
I guess I mixed up the Georges then.No, George III was extremely popular because he was perceived as an ordinary Englishman. He was nicknamed "Farmer George" because he was in the habit of walking around and going up to ordinary people for a chat. Of course later on he spent more time talking to trees, but that's another matter. It would make no more sense to dislike George III for being unEnglish than it would to dislike Elizabeth II for the same reason.
I've also read that due to the Reformation and their usual enemies, they were short of eligible candidates. Especially the Spanish Habsburgs were hit by this (and it turned out badly for them). France was the Habsburgs' major enemy, England an antagonist as well (at least after Henry VIII) and Portugal its ally. The Scandinavian kingdoms were all protestant, which basically only left their Austrian cousins or the middle and small principalities of Italy and Germany, who were of little geopolitical relevance to them.Why did the Hapsburgs inbreed so much compared to other royal houses?