Nonfiction
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xv, 587 pages : illustrations, maps, portraits ; 24 cm
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Originally published: London : Bloomsbury, ©2016
Rome -- Versailles -- Paris -- Fontenoy -- Brittany -- Flanders -- Edinburgh -- Eriskay -- Culloden House -- Glenfinnan -- Auld Reekie -- Perth -- Gray's Mill -- Netherbow Port -- Canongate -- The Mercat Cross -- Prestonpans -- Holyroodhouse -- The Abbey: part one -- The Abbey: part two -- Vilvoorde -- South -- Fontainebleau -- England -- Newcastle upon Tyne -- Lancashire -- Manchester -- Lichfield -- Montrose -- Derbyshire -- Derby -- Stafford -- London -- Exeter House -- Packington -- Clifton Moor -- Carlisle -- Scotland -- Falkirk -- Stirling -- Perth -- Moy Hall -- Aberdeen -- Inverness -- The Spey -- Culloden -- Nairn -- Culloden to Nairn -- Drumossie Muir -- Ruthven -- Church Street, Inverness -- Albano -- Coradale -- Fort Augustus -- Skye -- Kennington Common -- Glenmoriston -- The Tower -- Cluny's cage -- United Kingdom
The 1745 Jacobite Rebellion was a turning point in British history. It continues to be obscured by fiction and myth, as personified by the heroic, gallant but doomed 'Bonnie Prince Charlie' pitted against the heartless victor, 'Butcher' Cumberland. In the years 1745-46, nothing was certain. While utilizing past and recent scholarship, this account draws extensively on a wealth of contemporary sources, revealing the thoughts and feelings of the most important participants and local eyewitnesses as these extraordinary events played out