George V (born May 27, 1819, Berlin—died June 12, 1878, Paris) was the last king of Hanover (1851–66), the only son of Ernest Augustus, king of Hanover and Duke of Cumberland.
His youth was passed in England and in Berlin until 1837, when his father became king of Hanover. He lost sight in one eye during a childhood illness and in the other by an accident in 1833. Blindness debarred him from a knowledge of the world; he formed a fantastic conception of the dignity of the house of Welf and had ideas of founding a great Welf state in Europe. From his accession in November 1851 he was constantly disputing with the diet, contrary to whose wishes he refused Prussia’s demand for the unarmed neutrality of Hanover during the Austro-Prussian War of 1866. This led to an immediate Prussian invasion, the surrender of George’s army on June 29, 1866, and Prussia’s formal annexation of Hanover in September. The king subsequently lived in Austria or in France. He died in Paris and was buried in St. George’s Chapel, Windsor. His son, Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland (1845–1943), continued to maintain the claim of his house to the kingdom of Hanover.