"KING CHARLES III" WAS CONSIDERED BY THE CATHOLICS TO BE THEIR ONLY LEGITIMATE SOVEREIGN FROM 1766 TO 1788. |
The British Secret Service sent Queen Elizabeth II to "Purgatory" in Balmoral Castle in order to keep the Scots in the Union, and distract the SHEEPLE on that imprisoned island from the war in UKraine . . . and soaring food and fuel prices!!
Queen Elizabeth II could easily have lived to be 101 like her mother. Her Corgis were therapeutic, and her only concern in life was their welfare. She was not smothered with a pillow in her sleep like King George VI . . . but "vaccinated" against Covid-19.
King James II (1633–1701). Misruled from 1685 to 1688. |
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Mother and child: Mary of Modena holding the warming pan plot Prince of Wales. |
His real mother was anonymous "Mrs. Gray" from Ireland, who was promptly shipped off to a convert in Paris after the birth of her baby!
The young "Old Pretender" (1688–1766). |
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Maria Clementina Sobieska (1702–1735). |
"Bonnie" Prince Charlie was determined to dethrone King George II who was considered a usurper by the Catholics. He marched on London in 1745, but lost his nerve and turned back about 125 miles from the capital.
"Bonnie" Prince Charlie (1720–1788). |
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The "Young Pretender" haranguing his wild Highlanders before their march on London. |
Marching south with the "Young Pretender" was a young physician named Hugh Mercer. Dr. Mercer escaped to the colonies and became physician to Colonel George Washington!
"Fighting Physician" Hugh Mercer
(1726–1777). |
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George Washington leading the charge at the Battle of Princeton, January 3, 1777. |
The attempt to dethrone King George II was a disaster and "Bonne" Prince Charlie escaped back to Roma. When his father went to 'Purgatory" in 1766, he was recognized by the Catholics as the legitimate "King Charles III."
A portrait of "King Charles III" circa 1785. |
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The Jacobite monument in St. Peter's Basilica. |
Amazingly, after the death of "King Charles III" in 1788, his younger brother was recognized as "King Henry IX." Both Pretenders had several illegitimate children, but only a legal heir could be a de jure king.
In the deadly "game of thrones," any one of them could have been fobbed off as a future emperor of the "Holy Roman" Empire States of America, Inc.
Vital links
References
Aronson, Theo. Kings Over the Water: The Saga of the Stuart Pretenders. Orion Publishing Company, London, 1979.
Haile, Martin. Queen Mary of Modena: Her Life and Letters. J.M. Dent & Co., London, U.K., 1905.
Lafosse, Michael Roger. The Forgotten Monarchy of Scotland. Elements Books, Shaftesbury, Dorset, U.K., 2000.
Petrie, Sir Charles. The Jacobite Movement. Eyre & Spottiswoode, London, 1959.
Copyright © 2022 by Patrick Scrivener
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