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Jacobite
Wars

The
Jacobite Wars: Scotland and the... Military Campaigns of
1715 and 1745. This book is a detailed exploration of the Jacobite
military campaigns of 1715 and 1745, set against the background
of Scottish political, religious and constitutional history.
The author has written a clear and demythologized account of
the military campaigns waged by the Jacobites against the Hanoverian
monarchs. He draws on the work of recent historians who have
come to emphasize the political significance of the rebellions,
which had been dismissed by earlier historians, showing the
danger faced by the Hanoverian regime during those years of
political and religious turbulence. The Jacobite rebellions
of 1715 and 1745 occurred within the context of the 1707 Act
of Union, acquiring the trappings of a national crusade to restore
Scotland's independence. James Edward Stuart promised consistently
to break the Union between Scotland and England if he became
King. The rebellions also had great religious significance:
the Jacobite cause was committed to restoring a Catholic dynasty
to the throne and was therefore supported by the small number
of Catholics in the country, and also the Episcopalians, who
were together set against the Presbyterians. The failure of
the rebellions, culminating in the Battle of Culloden, coincided
with the national identity of Scotland becoming associated with
Presbyterianism and North Britain. John L. Roberts presents
the view that the political vulnerability of Hanoverians would
explain the strength of Government reaction to the 1745 rebellion,
especially in the Scottish Highlands, and the ferocity of its
retribution, which has long been lamented in popular Scottish
culture.
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