The Jacobite Rising of 1745 is well-known and much written
about. Far less well-known are the three risings that preceded it,
of 1708, 1715 and 1719. They are the subject of this book. Although
failures they are not unimportant, and the one in1715, in
particular, had a better chance of succeeding than the final
rising. The newly arrived Hanoverian dynasty was unpopular and
unsteady, the English troops were less than reliable, in Scotland
there was still intense bitterness over the Union and the abortive
Darien Scheme. Given a more decisive leader, the rebellion could
have triumphed. Instead, the sorry series of events which
culminated with the battles of Preston and Sheriffmuir guaranteed
that the luckless James Francis Edward, the Old Pretender, would
never be crowned at Scone, let alone in Westminster Abbey.
These rebellions may have inglorious in their results, but they
produced a numver of memorable incidents, some comic, some
harrowing, some even glorious: the ludicrous attempt on Edinburgh
Castle; James's escape from assassination when trying to reach the
French coast; Mackintosh of Borlum's great march; the state trials
and executions; the desperate last throw in the Pass of Glenshiel.
And there were strange actors in the drama: Argyle leading the
government troops and loathing the task of killing his
fellow-Scots; the ineffectual Mar and the scornful Sinclair;
Bolingbroke, for ever changing sides; the courageous Marischal and
the doomed Derwentwater; and like a grey shadow without substance,
James Stuart, 'who came too late and departed too soon'.
The sage of Jacobite intrigue, rebellion and failure which is
unfolded here offers a vivid picture of the clash between two
countries and two loyalties.
'A lively new study of three Jacobite risings preceding the '45
. . . As befits a military historian he is at his best in
describing the actual campaigns, bringing an agreeably lucid style
to bear on the complicated geographical patchwork of landings,
marches and fights' Antonia Fraser
'He writes with vigour, grace and wit, balancing his material
beautifully. He excels at brief, vivid character sketches . . .
recreated atmosphere so convincingly that this books grips like the
best sort of thriller' "Irish Times "
""
' . . . far the best written book I've read for ages' Nancy
Mitford
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