|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Court studies and Jacobitism have both received considerable
attention from historians in recent years, yet so far no attempt
has been made to provide a comprehensive examination of the
Jacobite court in exile after the revolution of 1688-9. This book
takes a completely fresh look at the Stuart court in France during
the years when the Jacobite movement posed its greatest threat to
the post-revolution governments in London. The Stuart court at
Saint-Germain-en-Laye is revealed as not only large and well
financed, but also magnificently located in a spectacular royal
palace vacated only recently by Louis XIV and in very close contact
with the French court at Versailles - yet maintaining the
traditions, organisation and ceremonial of the English court at
Whitehall. The book also shows how the Stuart court in France came
to an end, and explains why and how it has since been so badly
misrepresented.
For nearly half of the eighteenth century, the exiled Stuart Court
provided an important British presence in Rome. It acted as a
surrogate embassy for the many Grand Tourists passing through the
city - Hanoverian Whigs as well as Tories and Jacobites - and as a
significant social and cultural centre. This book presents the
first complete study of the Court of the exiled Stuart King James
III, offering a significant reassessment of its importance and of
the lives of the Stuarts and their courtiers, and their relations
with the Popes, cardinals and princely families of Rome. Edward
Corp's interdisciplinary approach also reveals the Stuarts'
patronage of leading portrait painters, their influence on the
development of Italian opera, and the impact of their Court
buildings on relations with their supporters. This book will be
essential reading for everyone with an interest in Jacobitism,
Italian culture and the eighteenth-century Grand Tour.
For nearly half of the eighteenth century, the exiled Stuart Court
provided an important British presence in Rome. It acted as a
surrogate embassy for the many Grand Tourists passing through the
city - Hanoverian Whigs as well as Tories and Jacobites - and as a
significant social and cultural centre. This book presents the
first complete study of the Court of the exiled Stuart King James
III, offering a significant reassessment of its importance and of
the lives of the Stuarts and their courtiers, and their relations
with the Popes, cardinals and princely families of Rome. Edward
Corp's interdisciplinary approach also reveals the Stuarts'
patronage of leading portrait painters, their influence on the
development of Italian opera, and the impact of their Court
buildings on relations with their supporters. This book will be
essential reading for everyone with an interest in Jacobitism,
Italian culture and the eighteenth-century Grand Tour.
|
You may like...
Endless Love
Alex Pettyfer, Gabriella Wilde, …
Blu-ray disc
(1)
R51
Discovery Miles 510
|