Forty-five Rebellion
Learn about this topic in these articles:
effect on Pitt
- In William Pitt, the Elder: Early political career
…Jacobite rising of 1745 (the Forty-five Rebellion), Pitt gained new stature as the one effective statesman.
Read More
place in British history
- In United Kingdom: The Jacobite rebellion
…Jacobite rebellion of 1745–46 (the Forty-five). Since Britain was now at odds with France, the latter power was willing to sponsor an invasion on behalf of the Stuart dynasty. It hoped that such an invasion would win support from the masses and from the Tory sector of the landed class.…
Read More - In Scotland: Jacobitism in the Highlands
…the rebellion of 1745 (“the Forty-five”) led by the Old Pretender’s son Charles Edward, the Young Pretender, crippled invasions originating in France that had in any case less than an even chance of success. The government was not always sufficiently prepared for invasions, but the generalship of John Campbell, 2nd…
Read More
role of Jacobite army
- In Jacobite
The final rebellion, the Forty-five Rebellion, has been heavily romanticized, but it was also the most formidable. The outlook in 1745 seemed hopeless, for another French invasion, planned for the previous year, had miscarried, and little help could be expected from that quarter. The number of Scottish Highlanders prepared…
Read More