Edward Mylius


Edward Mylius was a journalist jailed in 1911 for criminal libel for publishing a report that King George V of the United Kingdom was a bigamist.

Libel case

Mylius alleged in a Paris-based Republican paper The Liberator in 1910 that George V, who married Princess Mary of Teck in 1893, had previously married Mary, the daughter of Admiral Sir Michael Culme-Seymour, while serving in Malta as a young man. This would have been not only scandalous but also illegal, contravening the Royal Marriages Act 1772.
Normally royalty avoid suing over lies told about them, but in a break with precedent, the King decided that in this case, he had no choice. The rumours accused him of the crime of bigamy, and questioned the legal status of the Queen and the legitimacy of all their children. The King, with the advice of home secretary Winston Churchill, issued proceedings against Mylius for criminal libel and said he was prepared to go into the witness box to disprove the allegations. Sir Rufus Isaacs, the attorney-general, advised the king that it would be unconstitutional for him to give evidence in his own court.
Mylius was arrested for criminal libel and tried before the Lord Chief Justice of England and a jury. Sir Richard David Muir, prosecuting, showed that the claims about the King were a complete fiction. It was shown
Mylius was convicted and jailed for 12 months.
The King recorded his feelings on the affair in his diary.
His mother, Queen Alexandra, wrote to him
After Mylius was released from prison, he went to live in the US. There, beyond the reach of English libel law, he published another version of the claim, bolstered by finding a Hampshire Telegraph and Sussex Chronicle report of Mary Culme-Seymour dancing with the prince at a ball at Portsmouth Town Hall on 21 August 1891. She had testified at the trial that she had not seen him between 1879 and 1898.
The king's biographer, Kenneth Rose, acknowledged in his 1983 book that Mary had had "a slip of memory" but judged it "utterly irrelevant to the accusation of bigamy". This odd inconsistency is taken up by more recent writers investigating the allegations.

Ella Higginson's version

, poet laureate of Washington state, applied some poetic licence to the story of royal scandal. As Higgison tells it, when the young prince had to renounce this marriage, his beloved was given the royallest of exiles: near the City of Vancouver "in the western solitude, lived for several years -- the veriest remittance woman -- the girl who should now, by the right of love and honor, be the Princess of Wales, and whose infant daughter should have been the heir to the throne."
The International Socialist newspaper of Sydney, Australia, offered a new twist on this. Higginson's book Alaska: The Great Country, in which this story of pathos appears, had been acquired by the city's library in 1910. The newspaper mischievously opined that Lord Mayor Allen Taylor, as head of the City Council and thus responsible for its library, was as guilty as Mylius in publishing "the same statement with a cheerful disregard for the possibility of things", informing its readers that "the issuing of constitutes publication under the law":