|
 James
Edward Stuart, The
Old Pretender |
The
Two Pretenders
OR
Jacobite Rebellion!
|
Charles
Edward Stuart, 'Bonnie Prince Charlie', The
Young Pretender |
The Two Pretenders of the title were James Edward Stuart, known as
the Old Pretender, and his son Charles Edward Stuart, the Young
Pretender. Both were determined to take their place - in their
opinion, their rightful place - on the British throne. Both
Pretenders, in their own way, were a bit of a disaster. Both relied
on their undoubted popularity with the Scots, but were sadly lacking
when it came to organisation or common sense! The
Old Pretender was James Edward, the son of James
II of England and his second wife Mary of Modena. His life
began under a cloud of suspicion as his mother was judged to be too
old for childbearing and James was said to have been a child of Sir
Theophilus Oglethorpe and had been smuggled into the Queen's
bedchamber in a warming-pan. Not an auspicious start for a
royal Prince! His
father King James II was something of a problem when he came to the
throne as he was a devout Catholic and his subjects were devout
Protestants. James II was hated by the people and was
forced to flee to France with his Queen and his son in 1688.
 James
II tried to turn Ireland against his successor King
William III with the help of French troops but he was defeated
at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. He is reputed to have said to
Lady Tyrconnel in Dublin after the battle, "Madam, your
countrymen have run away" and received the reply, "Sire,
your Majesty seems to have won the race!" In
1715 his son, James Edward, soon to be called the Old Pretender,
attempted to supplant King
George I on the throne, again with the aid of the French. This
Jacobite Rebellion failed miserably which perhaps is not surprising
as the Pretender didn't arrive in England until it was all
over! He retired once more to France. Before
the "Rising" in 1745, Bonnie Prince Charlie, the Young
Pretender conferred with his supporters at Westbrook Place in
Godalming, Surrey. His ghost has been seen walking the paths of
Westbrook many times at twilight. Bonnie
Prince Charlie landed on the west coast of Scotland in July 1745,
accompanied by NINE men and a few arms! This uprising suffered
from three great problems: bad timing, bad organisation and false
hope.
Bonnie
Prince Charlie had a few successes (Prestonpans
was one) but not enough preparation, however nevertheless, he
continued to march south. In September he was in Manchester
and in an effort to get English recruits to his cause, a drummer boy
and a whore were sent to drum-up recruits but they failed!
Only 200 men joined his forces. Charles had to retreat back to
Scotland and was finally routed at the battle of Culloden
by the Duke of Cumberland in 1746. Charles
escaped from the battlefield and lurked for six months in the
Western Isles under the care of loyal followers like Flora MacDonald
and the Kennedy brothers. Flora escorted the Prince, disguised as
her maid, to safety where they sheltered, and then went ' over the
sea to Skye'. The
Kennedy brothers, although pitifully poor, never betrayed Charles
although there was a price of £30,000 on his head.
In 1746 Price Charlie left for France aboard a French frigate and ended his
life, a querulous drunk, in Rome in 1789. Thus
ended the Stuart dream of sitting once more upon the British throne.
The
final mystery of the '45 Rebellion is of the treasure of Loch Arkaig.
The French sent £4000 in gold Louis coins to the Prince, but
finding no one to meet them, the French left this hoard on the shore
of Loch nan Uamh and left! It is said that the rest of the
gold was buried beside Loch Arkaig where it still may be! The
popular songs, "Will ye no come back again" and "Over
the sea to Skye" were written many years later when there
was not the slightest chance of his returning. ©
E.P.C |