
Beginning with the accession of James I to the Scottish throne in 1406, the Royal House of Stuart was plagued by incredible, almost supernatural, misfortune. From the battle of Flodden field, through the executions of Mary, Queen of Scots and Charles I, King of England, to the exile of James II in 1688 during the Glorious Revolution, the tragedy of the Stuarts seemed to be re-enacted by each generation. But with the birth in 1720 of Charles Edward Stuart--the "Bonnie Prince Charlie" of romantic legend--the final act had at last begun.In this widely acclaimed biography--the first based on comprehensive research among previously untapped sources--Frank McLynn brings to life the elusive and enigmatic "Prince in the Heather." McLynn's ten years of work in such diverse libraries as the Vatican Archives in Rome, majors collections in the United States, France, and Spain, and the Royal archives in Windsor (where the Stuart Papers are housed) has enabled him to present an entirely new interpretation of the life and career of Charles Edward Stuart. Following the Prince from his birth and unhappy childhood in the Stuart's exiled court in Rome, through his rise as the charismatic "Young Pretender" and the crushing defeat at Culloden, to his exile and death in Italy, McLynn illuminates episodes in the Prince's life hitherto obscure or deliberately concealed. What emerges is truly the stuff of classical tragedy--a leader of promise brought down by a combination of ill-luck and his own fatally flawed character.Potentially the Stuart family's best hope to regain the throne of England, Bonnie Prince Charlie inherited the cunning and seductive charm of Charles II, the stubborn bravery of James II, and the rugged physique of his Scots ancestors. But, increasingly dominated by self destructive character traits and the complex politics of his age, he ended his life a sad, drunken figure, dissolute and physically wasted. When his death came on 31 January 1788--the anniversary of the execution of his great-grandfather Charles I--the Stuart line effectively ended.
This biography investigates the life and political trajectory of Charles Edward Stuart to determine how a figure of significant promise devolved into a symbol of failed dynastic ambition. Frank McLynn, a historian specializing in the Stuart era, utilizes a decade of archival research to construct a comprehensive portrait of the prince. By synthesizing documents from the Vatican, Windsor, and various international collections, the author argues that the prince's downfall resulted from a collision between complex 18th-century European geopolitics and his own deteriorating psychological state.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and scholars frequently cite this work as a definitive, research-heavy account that successfully strips away the romanticized myths surrounding the Jacobite cause. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous look at the political and personal failures of the Young Pretender.
Page Count:
656
Publication Date:
1991-09-05
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192828568
ISBN-13:
9780192828569
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