Prince Rupert (born Dec. 17, 1619, Prague, Bohemia [now in Czech Republic]—died Nov. 29, 1682, London, Eng.) was the most talented Royalist commander of the English Civil War (1642–51). His tactical genius and daring as a cavalry officer brought him many victories early in the war, but his forces eventually were overcome by the more highly disciplined Parliamentary army.
Rupert’s father was Frederick V, elector Palatine and king of Bohemia (as Frederick I); and his mother, Elizabeth Stuart, was a daughter of King James I of England. In 1620, two years after the outbreak of the Thirty Years’ War, the family was driven from Bohemia to the Dutch Republic, where Rupert grew up. The high-spirited youth became a favourite of his uncle, King Charles I, when he visited the English court in 1636. Rupert fought against the imperial forces in the Thirty Years’ War in 1638, but he was captured at Vlotho on the Weser River and held captive in Austria for three years.
Soon after his release Rupert went to England. He joined Charles I shortly before the outbreak of the Civil War in August 1642. At the age of 23 he received command of the cavalry, and during the Royalist offensive of 1643 and early 1644 he led his swift-moving troops in a series of brilliant successes. He took Bristol in July 1643, relieved Newark, Nottinghamshire, in February 1644, and seized most of Lancashire in June. On July 2, however, he was severely defeated by Oliver Cromwell at Marston Moor, Yorkshire. Despite this setback, Rupert, who had been made Duke of Cumberland and Earl of Holderness in January 1644, was appointed commander in chief of the king’s armies in November 1644. The promotion only sharpened the hostility between Rupert and several of the king’s counsellors, particularly Lord Digby (afterward 2nd Earl of Bristol). These dissensions continually frustrated Rupert’s attempts to organize a coordinated campaign. He captured Leicester in May 1645 but was badly beaten at Naseby, Northamptonshire, on June 14. When he surrendered Bristol to the Parliamentarians in September, Charles abruptly dismissed him from his command. In July 1646, following the king’s surrender to the Scots, Rupert was banished by Parliament from England.
Rupert took charge of the small Royalist fleet in 1648 and began to prey on English shipping. He was chased by the Parliamentary admiral Robert Blake from Kinsale, County Cork, to Lisbon and on into the Mediterranean Sea. Driven from the Mediterranean, Rupert resumed his piratical activities in the Azores and the West Indies (1651–52). In 1653 he returned with only one ship and a few prizes to France, where Charles II, the son and successor of Charles I, had his court in exile. After quarreling with Charles, Rupert went into retirement in Germany. Nevertheless, after Charles gained the English throne in the Restoration of 1660, Rupert was made a privy councillor and given naval commands in the second and third Dutch Wars (1665–67 and 1672–74). He became the first governor of the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1670. During the years before his death, Rupert dabbled in scientific experiments and introduced the art of mezzotint printmaking into England.