JACOBITES

jăkˈəbītsˌ, adherents of the exiled branch of the house of Stuart who sought to restore James II and his descendants to the English and Scottish thrones after the Glorious Revolution of 1688. They take their name from the Latin form (Jacobus) of the name James. Theoretical justification for the Stuart claim was found in the writings of the nonjurors, who maintained the principles of hereditary succession and the divine right of kings. But the Stuarts' continued adherence to Roman Catholicism, the rash and incompetent leadership of their military ventures, and the duplicity of foreign courts cost the Jacobite cause much support.

After James II's Ouster

When William III and Mary II ascended the throne after the flight of James II to France, strong Stuart partisans remained to offer rebellion. However, the death (1689) of John Graham, Viscount Dundee, at Killiecrankie ended armed resistance in Scotland, and William III quashed Jacobite hopes in Ireland by his victory over James's forces at the battle of the Boyne (1690). Thereafter the exiled English court in France became a center of intrigue for men like Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke, and others like him who were out of favor in London. At home many Roman Catholics, high churchmen, and extreme Tories adhered to the Stuart cause.

Under the Old Pretender

At the death (1701) of James II his son James Francis Edward Stuart, the Old Pretender, was recognized as James III by the courts of France and Spain and proclaimed by the Jacobites. An invasion of Scotland in 1708 by the new claimant proved totally abortive. Each subsequent attempt also failed, and in each the Jacobites were the dupes of French or Spanish policy. After the death (1714) of Queen Anne and the accession of the Hanoverian George I, there was the rising known by its date as "the '15." Led by the incompetent John Erskine, 6th earl of Mar, it ended in the disastrous battles of Preston and Sheriffmuir. The Old Pretender, discredited by failure, retired first to Avignon and finally to Rome. Spain supported another Jacobite invasion of Scotland in 1719.

Under Bonnie Prince Charlie (the Young Pretender)

After the failure of the 1719 invasion of Scotland, hope lay dormant until the Old Pretender's son Charles Edward Stuart (the Young Pretender or Bonnie Prince Charlie) reached manhood. Acting on the assumption that renewed French hostility toward England would bring support for a Jacobite invasion, the prince rashly sailed for Scotland, raised the clans in what was called "the '45," and won an initial victory at Prestonpans in Sept., 1745. An advance into England stalled at Derby for lack of support from English Jacobites and French allies.

Despite Charles's objections, his council of war voted to retreat, an action skillfully managed by Lord George Murray. Disaster followed for the Jacobites at the battle of Culloden Moor (1746). Charles escaped to France, and Stuart hopes were extinguished, although a claimant to the throne lived on until 1807, in the person of Henry Stuart, Cardinal York. Jacobite sympathies lingered, particularly in Scotland and Ireland, where Jacobitism had been practically synonymous with national discontent, but the movement ceased to be a serious political force.

Bibliography

Jacobite activities gave rise to much ballad literature and were the theme of such later literary works as Sir Walter Scott's Rob Roy, Waverley, and Redgauntlet, W. Thackeray's Henry Esmond, and R. L. Stevenson's Kidnapped. See also studies by G. P. Insh (1952), G. H. Jones (1954), J. C. M. Baynes (1970), F. McLynn (1981, 1985, and 1998), and C. Petrie (rev. ed. 1988).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Jacobites  - 1342 results

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...politics 34 3 The Church in Danger: the Jacobites and the general election of 1710 59...7 Popery and the Pretender: the Jacobites and the election of 1713 144 8 The...Harley ministrys negotiations with the Jacobites, 1710-14 182 Conclusion 194...
...ideological and cultural world of the Jacobites, this book would still be in gestation...destruction of material wherein the Jacobites revealed their innermost thoughts, fears...sources for the inner history of the Jacobites and their cause thus derive from the...
...Anyone who studies the affairs of the Jacobites in Rome...reported in 1736 to have been sent by the Jacobites to Florence to kill a British spy...reconsidered the position in regard to the Jacobites. Advised by his Minister, the formidable...
...mainly Jacobite and the figure of 80 Jacobites in the 1713-14 Parliament which has...group of Hanoverian Tories, as committed Jacobites and enemies to the Hanoverian succession...October 1714: I see that the number of the Jacobites, who before the death of the Queen was...
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journal articles on: Jacobites  - 72 results

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...affinities--those between Milton and the Jacobites. To be sure, the history of Jacobitism...that crisis. Within that controversy, Jacobites may not have engaged with Paradise Lost...Milton appear schematic--if not crude. Yet Jacobites, like Bentley, would inflect Miltons...
...Prestonpans (1745), when it appeared that the Jacobites just might manage to restore the Stuart...conviction that all Highlanders were Jacobites--occasionally inflated by more bigoted...into the analogy that all Scotsmen were Jacobites--the association between the Highlanders...
...and on the social consequences of the Jacobites defeat. He provides a clear explanation...constituted a minority of the rebellious Jacobites in 1715, because the Tories in Scotland...explores the conditions that put the Jacobites at great military disadvantage. Government...
...refer surreptitiously to a Scots king, by Jacobites to refer to a Stuart king, and members...smuggling. It contained both Whigs and Jacobites, united by a variety of anti-establishment...road to Reformation. To royalists and Jacobites he stood for rightful Stuart kingship...
...civilised rational present. Hence the Jacobites are treated with nostalgia and accepted...approach is different. In her writing, the Jacobites do not even represent a notional threat...profit as irrelevant. In particular, the Jacobites frequently emphasized the cyclical nature...
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magazine articles on: Jacobites  - 42 results

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Could the Jacobites have won by Jeremy Black...promises of support from the English Jacobites and no idea of when the French would...in the Low Countries to confront the Jacobites. An army under Field Marshal Wade assembled...
...Energetically supported by the leading Jacobites in exile, his negotiations with Louis...attract visitors to his Court -- whether Jacobites already in exile, others impatiently...rather than to the pensions of those other Jacobites who had gone into exile, James also ensured...
...push on to Scotland and link up with the Jacobites under Lord Dundee. He also opposed making...published by William III who, like the Jacobites (but for different reasons), favoured...Lauderdales and Middleton; the English Jacobites, who were numerically predominant at...
...time and he has succeeded. He readily admits that Churchill lived on the margins of treason when it came to relations with Jacobites. He was known for notorious cupidity and rapacity and has always had detractors, the most famous of whom was. of course, Macaulay...
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THE BLOOD CURSE OF THE JACOBITES; for More Than 250 Years, the Descendants...Attainder imposed on the leading Jacobites who were out in the 1689, 1715 and...all descendants of the attainted Jacobites. Now there are growing calls for...
Jacobites Just Cant Handel the Truth. Byline: ALLAN MASSIE...the cruel severity with which he treated the defeated Jacobites after the battle. One might also think the choice rashly...that at the time. NOWADAYS many Scots may be sentimental Jacobites. Indeed, the late Victorian Liberal Prime Minister Lord...
...Treasures Have Come Scotlands Way If the Jacobites Had Prevailed on a Bleak Highland Battlefield...It usually takes the form: What if the Jacobites had not turned round at Derby but had...provokes a second What if...? Suppose the Jacobites had won that battle. What then? A few...
NO KILTS IN OUR CASTLE; EXCLUSIVE Historic Scotland Bans Jacobites. Byline: By KURT BAYER A COUPLE dressed as Jacobites were barred from Stirling Castle after officials branded them a security risk. Police were called to remove Martin Morrison...
...adventure with The Birmingham Post and JacoBites, the latest savoury snack sensation from Jacobs. New JacoBites come in three delicious flavours and...different snack experience, choose Jacobs JacoBites -available in the cracker aisle at Asda...
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encyclopedia articles on: Jacobites  - 40 results

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JACOBITES jak bits , adherents of the exiled branch of the...the courts of France and Spain and proclaimed by the Jacobites. An invasion of Scotland in 1708 by the new claimant...Each subsequent attempt also failed, and in each the Jacobites were the dupes of French or Spanish policy. After the...
...Monophysite church of Egypt. For many centuries the Jacobites were under Muslim dominion. Most Jacobites live in Iraq, while their patriarch resides...having practices and rite in common with the Jacobites. These "Syrian Catholics" number about as...
MURRAY, LORD GEORGE 1694 1760, Scottish general. He took part in the risings of the Jacobites in 1715, 1719, and 1745. Although he foresaw the hopelessness of the 1745 uprising, he was one of Charles Edward Stuarts ablest...
MAR, JOHN ERSKINE, 6TH (OR 11TH) EARL OF 1675 1732, Scottish nobleman, leader of the Jacobites . He was nicknamed "Bobbing John," probably because of his political vacillation. He succeeded his father as earl in 1689 and in...
...battlefield in Stirling, central Scotland, near Dunblane. It was the scene, Nov. 13, 1715, of an indecisive battle between the Jacobites under John Erskine, 6th earl of Mar, and George Is forces under John Campbell, 2d duke of Argyll...
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