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Prince Rupert of the Rhine

Prince Rupert of the Rhine, Duke of Cumberland, KG, PC, FRS (17 December 1619 (O.S.) / 27 December (N.S.)[1] – 29 November 1682 (O.S.) 9 December 1682 (N.S)) was an English army officer, admiral, scientist, and colonial governor. He first came to prominence as a Royalist cavalry commander during the English Civil War.[a] Rupert was the third son of the German Prince Frederick V of the Palatinate and Elizabeth, eldest daughter of King James VI and I of Scotland and England.

Prince Rupert
Count Palatine of the Rhine
Duke of Cumberland
Earl of Holderness
Portrait by Peter Lely
Born(1619-12-17)17 December 1619 (O.S.)
Prague, Bohemia
Died29 November 1682(1682-11-29) (aged 62) (O.S.)
London, England
Burial6 December 1682 (O.S.)
IssueDudley Bard (1666–1686)
Ruperta Howe (1671–1740)
HousePalatinate-Simmern
FatherFrederick V, Elector Palatine
MotherElizabeth Stuart
ReligionCalvinist
OccupationSoldier, statesman, privateer, and scientist

Prince Rupert had a varied career. He was a soldier as a child, fighting alongside Dutch forces against Habsburg Spain during the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648), and against the Holy Roman Emperor in Germany during the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648). Aged 23, he was appointed commander of the Royalist cavalry during the English Civil War, becoming the archetypal "Cavalier" of the war and ultimately the senior Royalist general. He surrendered after the fall of Bristol and was banished from England. He served under King Louis XIV of France against Spain, and then as a Royalist privateer in the Caribbean Sea. Following the Restoration, Rupert returned to England, becoming a senior English naval commander during the Second Anglo-Dutch War and Third Anglo-Dutch War, and serving as the first governor of the Hudson's Bay Company. He died in England in 1682, aged 62.

Rupert is considered to have been a quick-thinking and energetic cavalry general, but ultimately undermined by his youthful impatience in dealing with his peers during the Civil War. In the Interregnum, Rupert continued the conflict against Parliament by sea from the Mediterranean to the Caribbean, showing considerable persistence in the face of adversity. As the head of the Royal Navy in his later years, he showed greater maturity and made impressive and long-lasting contributions to the Royal Navy's doctrine and development. As a colonial governor, Rupert shaped the political geography of modern Canada: Rupert's Land was named in his honour, and he was a founder of the Hudson's Bay Company. Rupert's varied and numerous scientific and administrative interests, combined with his considerable artistic skills, made him one of the more colourful public figures in England of the Restoration period.

Parents and ancestry

Rupert's father was Frederick V of the Palatinate, of the Palatinate-Simmern branch of the House of Wittelsbach. As Elector Palatine, Frederick was one of the most important princes of the Holy Roman Empire. He was also head of the Protestant Union, a coalition of Protestant German states. The Palatinate was a wealthy state, and Frederick lived in great luxury.[2]

Frederick's mother, Countess Louise Juliana of Nassau, was daughter of William the Silent and half-sister of Maurice, Prince of Orange, who as stadtholders of Holland and other provinces were the leaders of the Dutch Republic.[3]

Rupert's mother was Elizabeth Stuart, daughter of King James VI of Scotland and I of England. Thus Rupert was nephew of King Charles I of England and Scotland, and first cousin of King Charles II of England and Scotland, who made him Duke of Cumberland and Earl of Holderness. His sister Electress Sophia was the mother of George I of Great Britain.[4]

Rupert was named in honour of Rupert, King of Germany, a famous Wittelsbach ancestor.[5]

Early life and exile

 
Rupert (right) with his elder brother, Charles I Louis, Elector Palatine (left), in a 1637 portrait by Anthony van Dyck

Rupert was born in Prague, Bohemia, in 1619, and was declared a prince by the principality of Lusatia.[6] His father had just been elected king by the largely Protestant estates of Bohemia. This was perceived as an act of rebellion by the Catholic House of Habsburg, who had been kings of Bohemia since 1526, and initiated the Thirty Years' War. Frederick was not supported by the Protestant Union, and in 1620 was defeated by Emperor Ferdinand II in the Battle of White Mountain.[7] Rupert's parents were thus mockingly termed the "Winter King and Queen".[8] Rupert was almost left behind in the court's rush to escape Ferdinand's advance on Prague, until courtier Kryštof z Donína (Christopher Dhona) tossed the prince into a carriage at the last moment.[9]

Rupert accompanied his parents to The Hague, where he spent his early years at the Hof te Wassenaer (the Wassenaer Court).[10] Rupert's mother paid her children little attention even by the standards of the day, apparently preferring her pet monkeys and dogs.[11] Instead, Frederick employed a French couple, Monsieur and Madame de Plessen, as governors to his children. They were raised with a positive attitude towards the Bohemians and the English, and as strict Calvinists. The result was a strict school routine including logic, mathematics, writing, drawing, singing, and playing instruments.[11]

As a child, Rupert was at times badly behaved, "fiery, mischievous, and passionate" and earned himself the nickname Robert le Diable, or "Rupert The Devil".[12] Nonetheless, Rupert proved to be an able student. By the age of three he could speak some English, Czech, and French, and mastered German while still young, but had little interest in Latin and Greek.[11] He excelled in art, being taught by Gerard van Honthorst, and found mathematics and science easy.[11] By the time he was 18 he stood about 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) tall.[13]

Rupert's family continued their attempts to regain the Palatinate during their time in The Hague. Money was short, with the family relying upon a relatively small pension from The Hague, the proceeds from family investments in Dutch raids on Spanish shipping, and revenue from pawned family jewellery.[14] Frederick set about convincing an alliance of nations—including England, France and Sweden — to support his attempts to regain the Palatinate and Bohemia.[12] By the early 1630s Frederick had built a close relationship with King Gustavus of Sweden, the dominant Protestant leader in Germany. In 1632, however, the two men disagreed over Gustavus' insistence that Frederick provide equal rights to his Lutheran and Calvinist subjects after regaining his lands; Frederick refused and set off to return to The Hague. He died of a fever along the way and was buried in an unmarked grave.[15]

Rupert had lost his father at the age of 13, and Gustavus' death at the Battle of Lützen in the same month deprived the family of a critical Protestant ally. With Frederick gone, King Charles proposed that the family move to England; Rupert's mother declined, but asked that Charles extend his protection to her remaining children instead.[16]

Teenage years

 
Rupert as a young man visiting the court of his uncle, King Charles I of England, by Anthony van Dyck

Rupert spent the beginning of his teenage years in England between the courts of The Hague and his uncle King Charles I, before being captured and imprisoned in Linz during the middle stages of the Thirty Years' War. Rupert had become a soldier early; at the age of 14 he attended the Dutch pas d'armes with the Protestant Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange.[17] Later that year he fought alongside him and the Duke of Brunswick at the Anglo-German siege of Rheinberg, and by 1635 he was acting as a military lifeguard to Prince Frederick.[18] Rupert went on to fight against imperial Spain in the successful campaign around Breda in 1637 during the Eighty Years' War in the Netherlands.[19] By the end of this period, Rupert had acquired a reputation for fearlessness in battle, high spirits and considerable industry.[18]

In between these campaigns Rupert had visited his uncle's court in England. The Palatinate cause was a popular Protestant issue in England, and in 1637 a general public subscription helped fund an expedition under Charles Louis to try to regain the electorate as part of a joint French campaign.[19] Rupert was placed in command of a Palatinate cavalry regiment,[20] and his later friend Lord Craven, an admirer of Rupert's mother, assisted in raising funds and accompanied the army on the campaign. The campaign ended badly at the Battle of Vlotho (17 October 1638) during the invasion of Westphalia; Rupert escaped death, but was captured by the forces of the Imperial General Melchior von Hatzfeldt towards the end of the battle.[21]

After a failed attempt to bribe his way free of his guards,[22] Rupert was imprisoned in Linz. Lord Craven, also taken in the battle, attempted to persuade his captors to allow him to remain with Rupert, but was refused.[22] Rupert's imprisonment was surrounded by religious overtones. His mother was deeply concerned that he might be converted from Calvinism to Catholicism;[23] his captors, encouraged by Emperor Ferdinand III, deployed Jesuit priests in an attempt to convert him.[23] The emperor went further, proffering the option of freedom, a position as an Imperial general and a small principality if Rupert would convert.[24] Rupert refused.[25]

Rupert's imprisonment became more relaxed on the advice of the Archduke Leopold, Ferdinand's younger brother, who met and grew to like Rupert.[26] Rupert practised etching, played tennis, practised shooting, read military textbooks and was taken on accompanied hunting trips.[24] He also entered into a romantic affair with Susan Kuffstein, the daughter of Count von Kuffstein, his gaoler.[27] He received a present of a rare white poodle that Rupert called Boy or sometimes Pudel, and which remained with him into the English Civil War. Despite attempts by a Franco-Swedish army to seize Linz and free Rupert, his release was ultimately negotiated through Leopold and the Empress Maria Anna; in exchange for a commitment never again to take up arms against the emperor, Rupert would be released. Rupert formally kissed the emperor's hand at the end of 1641, turned down a final offer of an imperial command and left Germany for England.[28]

Career during the First English Civil War

Rupert is probably best remembered today for his role as a Royalist commander during the English Civil War.[29] He had considerable success during the initial years of the war, his drive, determination and experience of European techniques bringing him early victories.[30] As the war progressed, Rupert's youth and lack of maturity in managing his relationships with other Royalist commanders ultimately resulted in his removal from his post and ultimate retirement from the war.[31] Throughout the conflict, however, Rupert also enjoyed a powerful symbolic position: he was an iconic Royalist Cavalier and as such was frequently the subject of both Parliamentarian and Royalist propaganda,[32] an image which has endured over the years.[33]

Early phases, 1642–1643

 
Charles I (in blue sash) holding a council of war at Edgecote on the day before the Battle of Edgehill. Rupert, seated, commanded the King's cavalry.

Rupert arrived in England following his period of imprisonment and final release from captivity in Germany. In August 1642, Rupert, along with his brother Prince Maurice and a number of professional soldiers, ran the gauntlet across the sea from the United Provinces, and after one initial failure,[34] evaded the pro-Parliamentary navy and landed in Newcastle.[35] Riding across country, he found the King with a tiny army at Leicester Abbey, and was promptly appointed General of Horse, a coveted appointment at the time in European warfare.[30] Rupert set about recruiting and training: with great effort he had put together a partially trained mounted force of 3,000 cavalry by the end of September.[36] Rupert's reputation continued to rise and, leading a sudden, courageous charge, he routed a Parliamentarian force at Powick Bridge, the first military engagement of the war. Although a small engagement, this had a propaganda value far exceeding the importance of the battle itself, and Rupert became an heroic figure for many young men in the Royalist camp.[37]

Rupert joined the King in the advance on London, playing a key role in the resulting Battle of Edgehill in October. Once again, Rupert was at his best with swift battlefield movements; the night before, he had undertaken a forced march and seized the summit of Edgehill, giving the Royalists a superior position.[38] When he quarrelled with his fellow infantry commander, Robert Bertie, however, some of the weaknesses of Rupert's character began to display themselves. Rupert vigorously interjected—probably correctly, but certainly tactlessly—that Lindsey should deploy his men in the modern Swedish fashion that Rupert was used to in Europe, which would have maximised their available firepower.[39] The result was an argument in front of the troops and Lindsey's resignation and replacement by Sir Jacob Astley. In the subsequent battle Rupert's men made a dramatic cavalry charge, but despite his best efforts a subsequent scattering and loss of discipline turned a potential victory into a stalemate.[40]

After Edgehill, Rupert asked Charles for a swift cavalry attack on London before the Earl of Essex's army could return. The King's senior counsellors, however, urged him to advance slowly on the capital with the whole army. By the time they arrived, the city had organised defences against them.[40] Some argue that, in delaying, the Royalists had perhaps lost their best chance of winning the war, although others have argued that Rupert's proposed attack would have had trouble penetrating a hostile London. Instead, early in 1643, Rupert began to clear the South-West, taking Cirencester in February[41] before moving further against Bristol, a key port.[42] Rupert took Bristol in July with his brother Maurice using Cornish forces and was appointed governor of the city.[43] By mid-1643, Rupert had become so well known that he was an issue in any potential peace accommodation—Parliament was seeking to see him punished as part of any negotiated solution, and the presence of Rupert at the court, close to the King during the negotiations, was perceived as a bellicose statement in itself.[44]

Later stages, 1644–1646

 
George Digby, by Sir Anthony Van Dyck; although a less successful soldier, Digby was an increasingly powerful political rival to Rupert within the Royalist court during the second half of the English Civil War

During the second half of the war, political opposition within the Royalist senior leadership against Prince Rupert continued to grow. His personality during the war had made him both friends and enemies. He enjoyed a "frank and generous disposition", showed a "quickness of... intellect", was prepared to face grave dangers, and could be thorough and patient when necessary.[45] However, Prince Rupert lacked the social gifts of a courtier, and his humour could turn into a "sardonic wit and a contemptuous manner": with a hasty temper, he was too quick to say whom he respected and whom he disliked.[46] The result was that, while he could inspire great loyalty in some, especially with his men, he also made many enemies at the Royal court.[47] When Prince Rupert took Bristol, he also slighted the Marquess of Hertford, the lethargic but politically significant Royalist leader of the South-West.[48] Most critically, he fell out with George Digby, a favourite of both the King and the Queen. Digby was a classic courtier and Rupert fell to arguing with him repeatedly in meetings.[49] The result was that towards the end of the war Prince Rupert's position at court was increasingly undermined by his enemies.

Rupert continued to impress militarily. By 1644, now the Duke of Cumberland and Earl of Holderness, he led the relief of Newark and York and its castle. Having marched north, taking Bolton and Liverpool along the way in two bloody assaults,[50] Rupert then intervened in Yorkshire in two highly effective manoeuvres, in the first outwitting the enemy forces at Newark with speed; in the second, striking across country and approaching York from the north.[51] Rupert then commanded much of the royalist army at its defeat at Marston Moor, with much of the blame falling on the poor working relationship between Rupert and the Marquess of Newcastle,[52] and orders from the King that wrongly conveyed a desperate need for a speedy success in the north.[53]

In November 1644, Rupert was appointed general of the entire Royalist army, which increased already marked tensions between him and a number of the King's councillors. By May 1645, and now desperately short of supplies,[54] Rupert captured Leicester, but suffered a severe reversal at the Battle of Naseby a month later.[55] Although Rupert had counselled the King against accepting battle at Naseby, the opinions of Digby had won the day in council: nonetheless, Rupert's defeat damaged him, rather than Digby, politically.[56] After Naseby, Rupert regarded the Royalist cause as lost, and urged Charles to conclude a peace with Parliament. Charles, still supported by an optimistic Digby, believed he could win the war. By late summer, Prince Rupert had become trapped in Bristol by Parliamentary forces. Faced with an impossible military situation on the ground, Rupert surrendered Bristol in September 1645, and Charles dismissed him from his service and command.[57]

Rupert responded by making his way across Parliamentary held territory to the King at Newark with Prince Maurice and around a hundred men, fighting their way through smaller enemy units and evading larger ones.[58] King Charles attempted to order Rupert to desist, fearing an armed coup, but Rupert arrived at the royal court anyway.[58] After a difficult meeting, Rupert convinced the King to hold a court-martial over his conduct at Bristol, which exonerated him and Maurice.[59] After a final argument over the fate of his friend Richard Willis, the governor of Newark, who had let Rupert into the royal court to begin with, Rupert resigned and left the service of King Charles, along with most of his best cavalry officers.[60] Earlier interpretations of this event focused on Rupert's concern for his honour in the face of his initial dismissal by the King;[59] later works have highlighted the practical importance of the courts martial to Rupert's future employability as a mercenary in Europe, given that Rupert knew that the war by this point was effectively lost.[61] Rupert and Maurice spent the winter of 1645 in Woodstock, examining options for employment under the Republic of Venice, before returning to Oxford and the King in 1646.[62] Rupert and the King were reconciled, the Prince remaining to defend Oxford when the King left for the north. After the ensuing siege and surrender of Oxford in 1646, Parliament banished both Rupert and his brother from England.[63]

Reputation

 
Rupert was a common figure of Parliamentarian propaganda, depicted here, with his dog Boy, pillaging the town of Birmingham

Rupert's contemporaries believed him to have been involved in some of the bloodier events of the war, although later histories have largely exonerated him.[citation needed] Rupert had grown up surrounded by the relatively savage customs of the Thirty Years' War in Europe.[64] Shortly after his arrival in England he caused consternation by following similar practices; one of his early acts was to demand two thousand pounds from the people of Leicester for the King as the price of not sacking Leicester.[65] Although in keeping with European practices, this was not considered appropriate behaviour in England and Rupert was reprimanded by the King.[64]

Rupert's reputation never truly recovered, and in subsequent sieges and attacks he was frequently accused of acting without restraint. Birmingham, a key arms producing town, was taken in April 1643,[66] and Rupert faced allegations—probably untrue—of wilfully burning the town to the ground (see the Battle of Camp Hill).[67] Shortly afterwards Rupert attempted to take the town of Lichfield, whose garrison had executed Royalist prisoners, angrily promising to kill all the soldiers inside.[67] Only the urgent call for assistance from the King prevented him from doing so, forcing him to agree to more lenient terms in exchange for a prompt surrender.[68] Towards the end of the war, practices were changing for the worse across all sides; a rebellious Leicester was retaken by the Prince in May 1645, and no attempt was made to limit the subsequent killing and plunder.[69]

Rupert was accordingly a prominent figure in Parliamentary propaganda. He faced numerous accusations of witchcraft, either personally or by proxy through his pet dog. Boy, sometimes called Pudel; a large white hunting poodle, accompanied Rupert everywhere from 1642 up until the dog's death at Marston Moor and was widely suspected of being a witch's familiar. There were numerous accounts of Boy's abilities; some suggested that he was the Devil in disguise, come to help Rupert. Pro-Royalist publications ultimately produced parodies of these,[70] including one which listed Rupert's dog as being a "Lapland Lady" transformed into a white dog;[71] Boy was able, apparently, to find hidden treasure, possessed invulnerability to attack, could catch bullets fired at Rupert in his mouth, and could prophesy as well as the 16th-century soothsayer, Mother Shipton.[72] Similar stories from the period relate to Rupert's pet monkey. Like his dog, the monkey was featured in newsprint of the day and was also reputed to have shapeshifting powers, being able to disguise itself behind enemy lines.[73]

Second English Civil War and Interregnum

 
Rupert at the start of the Interregnum, after William Dobson.

After the end of the First English Civil War Rupert was employed by the young King Louis XIV of France to fight the Spanish during the final years of the Thirty Years' War.[74] Rupert's military employment was complicated by his promises to the Holy Roman Emperor that had led to his release from captivity in 1642, and his ongoing commitment to the English Royalist faction in exile.[75] He also became a Knight of the Garter in 1642. Throughout the period Rupert was inconvenienced by his lack of secure income, and his ongoing feuds with other leading members of the Royalist circle.[76]

Service in the French army

Rupert first travelled to the Royal court in exile at St Germain but found it still dominated by the Queen and her favourite, Rupert's enemy Digby.[77] Instead, Rupert moved on, accepting a well paid commission from Anne of Austria to serve Louis XIV as a mareschal de camp, subject to Rupert being free to leave French service to fight for King Charles, should he be called upon to do so.[77] In 1647, Rupert fought under Marshal Jean de Gassion against the Spanish. After a three-week siege, Rupert took the powerful fortress of La Bassée through quiet negotiations with the enemy commander—an impressive accomplishment, and one that won him favour in French court circles.[78] Gassion and Rupert were ambushed shortly afterwards by a Spanish party; during the resulting fight, Rupert was shot in the head and seriously injured. Afterwards, Gassion noted: "Monsieur, I am most annoyed that you are wounded." "And me also," Rupert is recorded as replying.[79] Gassion was himself killed shortly afterwards, and Rupert returned to St Germain to recuperate.[79]

Service in the Royalist navy

In 1648, the relatively brief Second English Civil War broke out, and Rupert informed the French King that he would be returning to King Charles's service.[80] The Parliamentary navy mutinied in favour of the King and sailed for Holland, providing the Royalists with a major fleet for the first time since the start of the civil conflict; Rupert joined the fleet under the command of the Duke of York, who assumed the rank of Lord High Admiral.[81]

Rupert argued that the fleet should be used to rescue the King, then being held prisoner on the Isle of Wight, while others advised sailing in support of the fighting in the north. The fleet itself rapidly lost discipline, with many vessels' crews focussing on seizing local ships and cargoes.[81] This underlined a major problem for the Royalists—the cost of maintaining the new fleet was well beyond their means. Discipline continued to deteriorate and Rupert had to intervene personally several times, including defusing one group of mutinous sailors by suddenly dangling the ringleader over the side of his vessel and threatening to drop him into the sea. Most of the fleet finally switched sides once more, returning to England in late 1648.[82]

Then, following a degree of reconciliation with Charles, Rupert obtained command of the Royalist fleet himself. The intention was to restore Royalist finances by using the remaining vessels of the fleet to conduct a campaign of organised piracy against English shipping across the region.[83] One of the obstacles that this plan faced was the growing strength of the Parliamentary fleet and the presence of Robert Blake, one of the finest admirals of the period, as Rupert's opponent during the campaign.[84]

 
Rupert's maritime campaign in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean and Caribbean Seas, 1650–1653

Rupert's naval campaign formed two phases. The first involved the Royalist fleet sailing from Kinsale in Ireland to Lisbon in Portugal. He took three large ships, HMS Constant Reformation, the Convertine and the Swallow, accompanied by four smaller vessels.[85] Rupert sailed to Lisbon taking several prizes en route,[86] where he received a warm welcome from King John IV, the ruler of recently independent Portugal, who was a supporter of Charles II. Blake arrived shortly afterwards with a Parliamentary fleet, and an armed stand-off ensued.[87] Tensions rose, skirmishes began to break out and King John became increasingly keen for his Royalist guests to leave. In October 1650, Rupert's fleet, now comprising six vessels, broke out and headed into the Mediterranean.[88] Still pursued by Blake, the Royalist fleet manoeuvred up the Spanish coast, steadily losing vessels to their pursuers.[89]

The second phase of the campaign then began. Rupert crossed back into the Atlantic and, during 1651, cut west to the Azores, capturing vessels as he went. He intended to continue on to the West Indies, where there would be many rich targets.[90] Instead he encountered a late summer storm, leading to the sinking of the Constant Reformation with the loss of 333 lives—almost including Rupert's brother, Prince Maurice, who only just escaped[91] — and a great deal of captured treasure. Turning back to regroup, repair and re-equip in early 1652, Rupert's reduced force moored at Cape Blanc, an island near what is now Mauritania.[92] Rupert took the opportunity to explore and acquired a Moorish servant boy, who remained in his service for many years. Rupert also explored 150 miles up the Gambia River, taking two Spanish vessels as prizes and contracting malaria in the process.[93]

Rupert then finally made a successful crossing into the Caribbean, landing first at Saint Lucia, before continuing up the chain of the Antilles to the Virgin Islands. There the fleet was hit by a hurricane, which scattered the ships and sank the Defiance, this time with Prince Maurice on board.[94] It was a while before Maurice's death became certain, which came as a terrible blow to Rupert. He was forced to return to Europe, arriving in France in March 1653 with a fleet of five ships.[95] It became clear, as the profits and losses of the piracy campaign were calculated, that the venture had not been as profitable as hoped. This complicated tensions in the Royalist court, and Charles II and Rupert eventually split the spoils, after which Rupert, tired and a little bitter, returned to France to recuperate from the long campaign.[96]

In 1654, Rupert appears to have been involved in a plot to assassinate Oliver Cromwell, an event that would then have been followed by a coup, the landing of a small army in Sussex, and the restoration of Charles II. Charles himself is understood to have rejected the assassination proposal, but three conspirators—who implicated Rupert in the plan—were arrested and confessed in London.[97]

Rupert's presence at the royal court continued to be problematic; as in 1643, he was regarded by Edward Hyde (later Earl of Clarendon) and others as a bellicose figure and an obstacle to peace negotiations; in 1655 Rupert left for Germany.[98]

Service in Germany

 
Rupert's largest and most famous mezzotint work, The Great Executioner, considered by critic Antony Griffiths to be "one of the greatest mezzotints"

After his quarrel with the Royalist court in exile, Rupert travelled to Heidelberg to visit his brother Charles Louis, now partially restored as Elector Palatine, where the two had an ambivalent reunion.[99] Charles Louis and Rupert had not been friendly as children and had almost ended up on opposite sides during the Civil War. To make matters worse, Charles Louis had been deprived of half the old Palatinate under the Peace of Westphalia, leaving him badly short of money, although he still remained responsible under the Imperial laws of apanage for providing for his younger brother and had offered the sum of £375 per annum, which Rupert had accepted.[100] Rupert travelled on to Vienna, where he attempted to claim the £15,000 compensation allocated to him under the Peace of Westphalia from the Emperor. Ferdinand III warmly welcomed him, but was unable to pay such a sum immediately—instead, he would have to pay in installments, to the disadvantage of Rupert.[101]

Over the next twelve months, Rupert was asked by the Duke of Modena in Northern Italy to raise an army against the Papal States—having done so, and with the army stationed in the Palatinate, the enterprise collapsed, with the Duke requesting that Rupert invade Spanish held Milan instead.[102] Rupert moved on, having placed his brother Charles Louis in some diplomatic difficulties with Spain.[102] Rupert travelled onwards, continuing to attempt to convince Ferdinand to back Charles II's efforts to regain his throne.[103]

In 1656, relations between Rupert and Charles Louis deteriorated badly. Rupert had fallen in love with Louise von Degenfeld, one of his sister-in-law's maids of honour.[104] One of Rupert's notes proffering his affections accidentally fell into the possession of Charles Louis' wife Charlotte, who believed it was written to her. Charlotte was keen to engage in an affair with Rupert and became unhappy when she was declined and the mistake explained. Unfortunately, Degenfeld was uninterested in Rupert, but was engaged in an affair with Charles Louis; this was discovered in due course, leading to the annulment of the marriage.[105] Rupert, for his part, was unhappy that Charles Louis could not endow him with a suitable estate, and the two parted on bad terms in 1657, Rupert refusing ever to return to the Palatinate again and taking up employment under Ferdinand III in his Kingdom of Hungary.[106]

Interest in art

During this period Rupert became closely involved in the development of mezzotint, a "negative" or intaglio printmaking process which eventually superseded the older woodcut process. Rupert appears to have told a range of associates that he had conceived of the mezzotint process through having watched a soldier scrape the rust from the barrel of his musket during a military campaign. John Evelyn credited Rupert as the inventor of the technique in 1662, and Rupert's story was further popularised by Horace Walpole during the 18th century.[107] Considerable academic debate surrounds the issue, but the modern consensus is that mezzotint was instead invented in 1642 by Ludwig von Siegen, a German lieutenant-colonel who was also an amateur artist. Siegen may or may not have met Rupert: Siegen had worked as chamberlain, and probably part-tutor, to Rupert's young cousin William VI, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel, with whom Rupert discussed the technique in letters from 1654. Rupert did, however, become a noted artist in mezzotint in his own right. He produced a few stylish prints in the technique, mostly interpretations of existing paintings, and introduced the form to England after the Restoration, though it was Wallerant Vaillant, Rupert's artistic assistant or tutor, who first popularised the process and exploited it commercially. Rupert's most famous and largest art work, The Great Executioner, produced in 1658, is still regarded by critics such as Arthur Hind and Antony Griffiths as full of "brilliance and energy",[108] "superb" and "one of the greatest mezzotints" ever produced;[109] other important works by Rupert include the Head of Titian and The Standard Bearer.[110]

Career following the Restoration

 
Frances Bard, Rupert's mistress, by Peter Lely

Following the Restoration of the monarchy under Charles II in 1660, Rupert returned to England, where Charles had already largely completed the process of balancing the different factions across the country in a new administration.[111] Since most of the better government posts were already taken, Rupert's employment was limited, although Charles rewarded him with the second highest pension he had granted, £4,000 a year.[112] Rupert's close family ties to King Charles were critical to his warm reception; following the deaths of the Duke of Gloucester and Princess Mary, Rupert was the King's closest adult relation in England after his brother, the Duke of York, and so a key member of the new regime.[113] Rupert, as the Duke of Cumberland, resumed his seat in the House of Lords.[113] For the first time in his life, Rupert's financial position was relatively secure, and he had matured. Near-contemporaries described how "his temper was less explosive than formerly and his judgement sounder".[114] Rupert continued to serve as an admiral in the Royal Navy throughout the period, ultimately rising to the rank of "General at Sea and Land".[115]

Restoration statesman

Rupert was appointed to the King's Privy Council in 1662, taking roles on the Foreign Affairs Committee, the Admiralty Committee and the Tangier Committee.[116] Accounts vary of Rupert's role in all these committees of government. Samuel Pepys, no friend of Rupert's, sat on the Tangier Committee with him and later declared that all Rupert did was to laugh and swear occasionally: other records, such as those of the Foreign Affairs Committee, show him taking a full and active role in proceedings.[114]

In 1668, the King appointed Rupert to be the Constable of Windsor Castle.[117] Rupert was already one of the Knights of the Garter, who had their headquarters at the castle, and was a close companion of the King, who would wish to be suitably entertained at the castle.[118] Rupert immediately began to reorder the castle's defences, sorting out the garrison's accommodation, repairing the Devil's Tower, reconstructing the real tennis court and improving the castle's hunting estate.[119] Rupert acquired his own apartments in the castle, which were recorded as being "very singular" with some decorated with an "extraordinary" number of "pikes, muskets, pistols, bandoliers, holsters, drums, back, breast, and head pieces", and his inner chambers "hung with tapisserie, curious and effeminate pictures".[120] King Charles II and Rupert spent much time together over the years hunting and playing tennis together at Windsor,[121] and Rupert was also a close companion of James, the Duke of York.[114] Rupert was considered by Pepys to be among the four best tennis players in England.[122]

Rupert became romantically engaged to Frances Bard (1646–1708), the daughter of the English explorer and Civil War veteran Henry Bard.[123] Frances claimed to have secretly married Rupert in 1664, although this was denied by him and no firm proof exists to support the claim.[124] Rupert acknowledged the son he had with Frances, Dudley Bard (1666–86), often called "Dudley Rupert", who was schooled at Eton College. In 1673, Rupert was urged by Charles Louis to return home, marry and father an heir to the Palatinate, as it appeared likely that Charles Louis's own son would not survive childhood. Rupert refused, and remained in England.[125]

Career in the Restoration navy

 
The Four Days' Battle, 1–4 June 1666, by Abraham Storck, during which Rupert's new aggressive fleet tactics were first applied

For much of the 17th century, England was embroiled in conflict with commercial rival Holland through the Anglo-Dutch Wars.[126] Rupert became closely involved in these as a senior admiral to King Charles II, rising to command the Royal Navy by the end of his career. Although several famous admirals of the day had previously been army commanders, including Blake and Monck, they had commanded relatively small land forces and Rupert was still relatively unusual for the period in having both practical experience of commanding large land armies and having extensive naval experience from his campaigns in the 1650s.[127]

At the start of the Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665–1667), Rupert was appointed as one of the three squadron commanders of the English fleet, under the overall command of the Duke of York, taking HMS Royal James as his flagship.[128] As the commander of the White Squadron, Rupert fought at the Battle of Lowestoft in 1665, breaking through the enemy defences at a critical moment; Rupert's leg was injured in the battle, an injury that caused him ongoing pain.[129] Recalled to accompany the King during the plague that was sweeping London, Rupert continued to argue in favour of the fleet's seeking a set-piece engagement with the Dutch that would force the Dutch back to the negotiating table.[130] The following year, Rupert was made joint commander of the fleet with Monck and given the opportunity to put this plan into practice. In June 1666, they fought the Dutch at the Four Days' Battle, one of the longest naval battles in history; the battle saw the new aggressive tactics of Rupert and Monck applied, resulting in "a sight unique till then in sailing-ship warfare, the English beating upwind and breaking the enemy's line from leeward."[131] However, the Four Days' Battle was considered a victory for the Dutch, but the St. James's Day Battle the following month allowed Rupert and Monck to use the same tactics to inflict heavy damage on the Dutch and the battle resulted in a significant English victory.[132] The Dutch however would see a favourable end to the war with the decisive Raid on the Medway.[133]

Rupert also played a prominent role in the Third Anglo-Dutch War (1672–74). This time Louis XIV of France was a key English ally against Holland, and it was decided that the French would form a squadron in a combined fleet.[134] The English fleet had been much expanded, and Rupert had three ships, HMS Royal Charles, HMS Royal James and HMS Royal Oak, equipped with a high-specification, annealed and lathe-produced gun of his own design, the Rupertinoe. Unfortunately the cost of the weapon—three times that of a normal gun—prevented its wider deployment in the fleet.[135] The French role in the conflict proved a problem when Charles turned to the appointment of an admiral. Rupert's objection to the French alliance was well known, and accordingly the King appointed the Duke of York to the role instead.[136] Rupert was instead instructed to take over the Duke's work at the Admiralty, which he did with gusto.[136] The Allied naval plans were stalled after the Duke's inconclusive battle with the Dutch at Solebay.[137]

 
The Battle of Texel, by Willem van de Velde the Younger, a Dutch victory which marked the end of Rupert's career as a sea admiral

The English plan for 1673 centred on first achieving naval dominance, followed by landing an army in Zeeland. The King appointed the Duke as supreme commander, with Rupert as his deputy, combining the ranks of general and vice admiral of England.[138] During the winter of 1672, however, Charles—still (legitimately) childless—decided that the risk to the Duke, his heir, was too great and made Rupert supreme Allied commander in his place.[139] Rupert began the 1673 campaign against the Dutch knowing the logistical support for his fleet remained uncertain, with many ships undermanned.[140] The result was the Battle of Schooneveld in June and the Battle of Texel in August, a controversial sequence of engagements in which, at a minimum, poor communications between the French and English commanders assisted the marginal Dutch victory.[141] Many English commentators were harsher, blaming the French for failing to fully engage in the battles and Rupert—having cautioned against the alliance in the first place—was popularly hailed as a hero.[142] Rupert finally retired from active seagoing command later that year.[143]

Rupert had a characteristic style as an admiral; he relied upon "energetic personal leadership backed by close contact with his officers";[144] having decided how to proceed in a naval campaign, however, it could be difficult for his staff to change his mind.[144] Recent work on Rupert's role as a commander has also highlighted the progress the prince made in formulating the way that orders were given to the British fleet. Fleet communications were limited during the period, and the traditional orders from admirals before a battle were accordingly quite rigid, limiting a captain's independence in the battle.[145] Rupert played a key part in the conferences held by the Duke of York in 1665 to review tactics and operational methods from the First Anglo-Dutch War, and put these into practice before the St James Day battle.[146] These instructions and supplementary instructions to ships' captains, which attempted to balance an adherence to standing orders with the need to exploit emerging opportunities in a battle, proved heavily influential over the next hundred years[146] and shaped the idea that an aggressive fighting spirit should be at the core of British naval doctrine.[147]

After 1673, Rupert remained a senior member of the Royal Navy and Charles's administration. Rupert allied himself with Lord Shaftesbury on matters of foreign policy, but remained loyal to King Charles II on other issues,[125] and was passionate about protecting the royal prerogative. As a consequence, he opposed Parliament's plan in 1677 to appoint him to Lord High Admiral—on the basis that only the King should be allowed to propose such appointments—but noted that he was willing to become Admiral if the King wished him to do so.[148] The King's solution was to establish a small, empowered Admiralty Commission, of which Rupert became the first commissioner.[149] As a result, from 1673 to 1679 Rupert was able to focus on ensuring a closer regulation of manning, gunning and the selection of officers. He was also involved in setting priorities between the different theatres of operations that the Royal Navy was now involved in around the world.[150] Rupert was also appointed to the supreme position of "General at Sea and Land", effectively assuming the wartime powers of the Lord High Admiral.[151]

Later life

 
An older Rupert, painted in 1670 by Sir Peter Lely

After the end of his seagoing naval career Rupert continued to be actively involved in both government and science, although he was increasingly removed from current politics.[152] To the younger members of the court the prince appeared increasingly distant—almost from a different era.[153] The Count de Gramont described Rupert as "brave and courageous even to rashness, but cross-grained and incorrigibly obstinate... he was polite, even to excess, unseasonably; but haughty, and even brutal, when he ought to have been gentle and courteous... his manners were ungracious: he had a dry hard-favoured visage, and a stern look, even when he wished to please; but, when he was out of humour, he was the true picture of reproof".[153] Rupert's health during this period was also less robust; his head wound from his employment in France required a painful trepanning treatment, his leg wound continued to hurt and he still suffered from the malaria he had caught while in the Gambia.[154]

Colonial administration

Rupert had demonstrated an interest in colonial issues for many years. On arriving in England in 1660, he had encouraged the government to continue his own exploration of the Gambia in an attempt to find gold, leading to Robert Holmes's expedition the following year.[155] Rupert was an active shareholder in the Company of Royal Adventurers Trading into Africa that was established as a result in 1662.[155] The company continued operations for the next eight years, with backers including the King, the Duke of York and the Royal Society, with operations including engaging in the West African slave trade until it folded in 1670.[156] The company's operations merged with those of the Gambia Merchants' Company into the new Royal African Company, with a royal charter to right to set up forts and factories, maintain troops, and exercise martial law in West Africa, in pursuit of trade in gold, silver, and slaves; Rupert was the third named member of the company's board.[157]

By then, however, Rupert's attention had turned to North America. The French explorers Pierre-Esprit Radisson and Médard des Groseilliers had come to England after conducting a joint exploration of the Hudson's Bay region in 1659;[158] there their account attracted the attention of the King and Rupert.[159] Rupert put an initial investment of £270 of his own money into a proposal for a fresh expedition and set about raising more; despite setbacks, including the Great Fire of London, by 1667 he had formed a private syndicate and leased the Eaglet from the King for the expedition.[160] The Eaglet failed, but her sister vessel, the Nonsuch, made a successful expedition, returning in 1669 with furs worth £1,400.[161] In 1670, the King approved the charter for "The Governor and Company of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson's Bay" that would form the Hudson's Bay Company, which was granted a trading monopoly in the whole Hudson Bay watershed area, an immense territory named Rupert's Land, with Rupert appointed the first Governor.[161] Rupert's first company secretary was Sir James Hayes and Radisson named the Hayes River, in present-day Manitoba, in his honour. The company continued to prosper, forming the basis for much of the commercial activity of colonial Canada. Rupert's role in colonial commerce was marked by his being asked to lay the cornerstone of the new Royal Exchange in 1670, and being made one of its first councillors.[162][b]

Science and the Royal Society

 
Rupert was a founding member of the Royal Society, which, as shown in this 1667 engraving celebrating its creation, mirrored his wide interests in science and technology.

After Rupert's retirement from active seafaring in around 1674, he was able to spend more time engaged in scientific research and became credited with many inventions and discoveries, although some subsequently turned out to be the innovative introduction of European inventions into England. Rupert converted some of the apartments at Windsor Castle to a luxury laboratory, complete with forges, instruments, and raw materials, from where he conducted a range of experiments.[120]

Rupert had already become the third founding member of the scientific Royal Society, being referred to by contemporaries as a "philosophic warrior",[164] and guided the Society as a Councillor during its early years.[165] Very early on in the Society's history, Rupert demonstrated Prince Rupert's drops to King Charles II and the Society, glass teardrops which explode when the tail is cracked; although credited with their invention at the time, later interpretations suggest that he was instead responsible for the introduction of an existing European discovery into England.[166] He demonstrated a new device for lifting water at the Royal Society, and received attention for his process for "painting colours on marble, which, when polished, became permanent".[167] During this time, Rupert also formulated a mathematical question concerning the paradox that a cube can pass through a slightly smaller cube; Rupert questioned how large a cube had to be in order to fit.[168] The question of Prince Rupert's cube was first solved by the Dutch mathematician Pieter Nieuwland.[168] Rupert was also known for his success in breaking cypher codes.[169]

Many of Rupert's inventions were military. After designing the Rupertinoe naval gun, Rupert erected a watermill on Hackney Marshes for a revolutionary method of boring guns, however his secret died with him, and the enterprise failed.[170] Rupert enjoyed other military problems, and took to manufacturing gun locks;[171] he devised both a gun that fired multiple rounds at high speed,[171] and a "handgun with rotating barrels".[172] He is credited with the invention of a form of gunpowder, which when demonstrated to the Royal Society in 1663, had a force of over ten times that of regular powder; a better method for using gunpowder in mining;[171] and a torpedo.[172] He also developed a form of grapeshot for use by artillery.[172] Rupert also focussed on naval inventions: he devised a balancing mechanism to allow improved quadrant measurements at sea,[171] and produced a diving engine for retrieving objects on the ocean floor.[172] While recovering from his trepanning treatment Rupert set about inventing new surgical equipment to improve future operations.[173]

Other parts of Rupert's scientific work lay in the field of metallurgy. Rupert invented a new brass alloy, slightly darker in hue than regular brass[174] involving three parts of copper to one part of zinc, combined with charcoal;[175] this became known as "Prince's metal" in his honour—sometimes also referred to as "Bristol Brass".[176] Rupert invented the alloy in order to improve naval artillery,[177] but it also became used as a replacement for gold in decorations.[174] Rupert was also credited with having devised an exceptional method for tempering kirby fish hooks,[178] and for casting objects into an appearance of perspective.[171] He also invented an improved method for manufacturing shot of varying sizes in 1663, that was later refined by the scientist Robert Hooke, one of Rupert's Royal Society friends during the period.[171]

Peg Hughes

 
Actress Margaret Hughes, Rupert's mistress in later life, by Sir Peter Lely, c. 1670

Towards the end of his life Rupert fell in love with an attractive Drury Lane actress named Peg Hughes. Rupert became involved with her during the late 1660s, leaving his previous mistress, Frances Bard, although Hughes appears to have held out from reciprocating his attentions with the aim of negotiating a suitable settlement.[179] Hughes rapidly received advancement through his patronage; she became a member of the King's Company by 1669, giving her status and immunity from arrest for debt, and was painted four times by Sir Peter Lely, the foremost court artist of the day.[180]

Despite being encouraged to do so,[179] Rupert did not marry Hughes, but acknowledged their daughter, Ruperta (born in 1673 and who later became Mrs Emanuel Howe).[181] Hughes lived an expensive lifestyle during the 1670s, enjoying gambling and jewels; Rupert gave her at least £20,000 worth of jewellery during their relationship, including several items from the Palatinate royal collection.[182] Margaret continued to act even after Ruperta's birth, returning to the stage in 1676 with the prestigious Duke's Company at the Dorset Garden Theatre, near the Strand in London. The next year Rupert established Hughes with a "grand building" worth £25,000 that he bought in Hammersmith from Sir Nicholas Crispe.[181] Rupert seems rather to have enjoyed the family lifestyle, commenting that his young daughter "already rules the whole house and sometimes argues with her mother, which makes us all laugh."[181]

Family

Rupert died at his house at Spring Gardens, Westminster, on 29 November 1682 after a bout of pleurisy, and was buried in the crypt of Westminster Abbey on 6 December in a state funeral.[183] Rupert left most of his estate, worth some £12,000, equally to Hughes and Ruperta.[184] Hughes had an "uncomfortable widowhood"[184] without Rupert's support, allegedly not helped by her unproductive gambling.[185]

Presents from Rupert such as his mother's earrings were sold to the Duchess of Marlborough, while a pearl necklace given by Elector Frederick to Electress Elizabeth was sold to fellow actress Nell Gwynn. Hughes sold the house in Hammersmith to two London merchants: Timothy Lannoy and George Treadwell—it was then purchased by the Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach and became known as Brandenburg (or Brandenburgh) House.[184]

Ruperta later married Emanuel Scrope Howe, future MP and English general,[184] and had five children, Sophia, William, Emanuel, James and Henrietta. Through William's daughter, Mary, Rupert is an ancestor of the Bromley baronets.

Rupert's son, Dudley Bard, became a military officer, frequently known as "Captain Rupert", and died fighting at the siege of Buda while in his late teens.[186]

Legacy

According to Ian Gentles:

Charles I's nephew. Prince Rupert of the Rhine, was a famed warrior who won hardly any battles on land or sea. Beloved by his men for his death-defying courage and his high sense of military honour, he was nonetheless a bad tempered and arrogant leader. His defects of character became more accentuated with age. Yet he remains one of the most romantic figures in English history, admired for his reckless cavalry charges, and his equally reckless naval charges against the much stronger Parliamentary, and later Dutch, fleets....The prince alienated many because he was frequently irascible, tactless, impatient, and—most seriously—a poor judge of character.[187]

Prince Rupert's memory is well-attested in the geography of Canada. The lands of the Hudson's Bay Company, being all the land drained by rivers flowing into Hudson Bay, were known as Rupert's Land from 1670 until 1870. The Anglican Diocese of Rupert's Land, based in Winnipeg, Manitoba,[188] is the relic of this period, as are Prince Rupert Avenue, Rupert Avenue, and Rupertsland Avenue in Winnipeg.[189]

Elsewhere in Canada, the city of Prince Rupert, British Columbia, the community of Prince Rupert in the city of Edmonton, Alberta and the Rupert River in Quebec are all named after the Prince. Rupert's Bay on St Helena may also be named after him. In Bristol, there was also a street, Rupert Street, and formerly a public house, The Prince Rupert in Rupert Street, named to commemorate Prince Rupert.[190]

Genealogical table

Rupert's relationship with the House of Stuart (selective chart)[191]

In fiction

  • Prince Rupert is the protagonist of Poul Anderson's alternative history/fantasy book A Midsummer Tempest, where the Prince, with the help of various Shakespearean characters who are actual persons in this timeline, eventually defeats Cromwell and wins the English Civil War.
  • Prince Rupert is the key character in the King Crimson song Lizard from their 1970 album of the same name. The 23-minute suite includes several sections, one named Prince Rupert Awakes and another The Battle of Glass Tears (an artistic reference to the battle of Naseby) in turn including a sub-section called Prince Rupert's Lament.
  • Prince Rupert appears in The Oak Apple and The Black Pearl, volumes 4 and 5 of The Morland Dynasty, a series of historical novels by author Cynthia Harrod-Eagles. He is assisted during the Civil War by the staunchly Royalist fictional Morland family, and is father to the illegitimate Annunciata Morland, with whom he has a complicated relationship.
  • Prince Rupert and his sister Elisabeth are minor characters in Eric Flint's 1632 series books Grantville Gazette IV and Grantville Gazette VI
  • Prince Rupert is the protagonist of Margaret Irwin's novel The Stranger Prince and appears in her later novel The Bride. Both novels deal with the Civil War period.
  • Prince Rupert is the subject of Samuel Edwards's biographical novel The White Plume, published by William Morrow and Company Ltd. in 1961, a semi-fictional account of his life from his late teens until his marriage to Peg (Margaret Hughes).
  • Prince Rupert's Tower is the name given to a Georgian lock-up in the Everton area of Liverpool. Rupert stayed in the area during the siege of Liverpool.[192]

Film and television

See also

Notes

  1. ^ His full title was Rupert, Count Palatine of the Rhine, Duke of Bavaria, Duke of Cumberland, Earl of Holderness (German: Ruprecht Pfalzgraf bei Rhein, Herzog von Bayern).
  2. ^ In 1869 control of the territory of the Hudson's Bay Company reverted to the British and Canadian governments.[163]

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  3. ^ "Digitaal Vrouwenlexicon van Nederland". 17 September 2019.
  4. ^ "Sophia of Hanover Dies | History Today".
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  6. ^ Spencer, p.1.
  7. ^ Spencer, p.11.
  8. ^ Spencer, pp.16–17.
  9. ^ Spencer, p.14.
  10. ^ Spencer, p.15.
  11. ^ a b c d Spencer, p.20.
  12. ^ a b Spencer, p.23.
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  35. ^ Wedgwood, p.107.
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  108. ^ Hind, p.263.
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  112. ^ Kitson, p. 132.
  113. ^ a b Kitson, p. 133.
  114. ^ a b c Kitson, p. 139.
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  117. ^ Spencer, p. 326.
  118. ^ Spencer, p. 327.
  119. ^ Spencer, pp. 327–9.
  120. ^ a b Spencer, p. 331.
  121. ^ Spencer, p. 329.
  122. ^ Spencer, p. 330.
  123. ^ Spencer, pp. 310–1.
  124. ^ Spencer, p. 311.
  125. ^ a b Kitson, p. 296.
  126. ^ Kitson, p. 152.
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  128. ^ Kitson, p. 154.
  129. ^ Kitson, p. 175.
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  138. ^ Kitson, p. 257.
  139. ^ Kitson, p. 259.
  140. ^ Kitson, p. 261.
  141. ^ Kitson, pp. 288–9.
  142. ^ Kitson, p. 289.
  143. ^ Warburton, pp. 505–6.
  144. ^ a b Kitson, p.179.
  145. ^ Kitson, p.155.
  146. ^ a b Kitson, p.316.
  147. ^ Kitson, p.319.
  148. ^ Kitson, p.302.
  149. ^ Kitson, p.274.
  150. ^ Kitson, p.297.
  151. ^ Kitson, p.348.
  152. ^ Spencer, p. 362.
  153. ^ a b Spencer, p. 313.
  154. ^ Spencer, pp.303–5.
  155. ^ a b Kitson, p.137.
  156. ^ Spencer, p. 340
  157. ^ Kitson, p.238.
  158. ^ Spencer, p.338.
  159. ^ Spencer, pp.339–340.
  160. ^ Spencer, p.341.
  161. ^ a b Spencer, p.342.
  162. ^ Spencer, p.344.
  163. ^ . Pathfinders and passageways: The exploration of Canada. Library and Archives Canada. 7 December 2001. Archived from the original on 5 February 2007. Retrieved 1 May 2007.
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  182. ^ Spencer, pp. 320, 367.
  183. ^ Kitson, p.310.
  184. ^ a b c d Spencer, p.366.
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  186. ^ Spencer, p.367.
  187. ^ Ian Gentles, "Prince Rupert: The Last Cavalier" English Historical Review (2009) 124#506, p 174-175.
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  189. ^ MHS Resources: History in Winnipeg Streets. Manitoba Historical Society. Accessed 24 January 2022.
  190. ^ Article on the Bristol's Lost Pubs website ()
  191. ^ Fergusson, p. 141.
  192. ^ "The Siege of Liverpool".

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  • Coxe, John Redman. (1814) The Emporium of Arts and Sciences, Volume 3. Philadelphia: J. Delaplaine.
  • Croft, Hallard T, Richard K. Guy and K. J. Falconer. (1994) Unsolved Problems in Geometry. New York: Springer.
  • Dalton, Anthony. (2010) River Rough, River Smooth: Adventures on Manitoba's Historic Hayes River. Toronto: Dundurn.
  • Dircks, Henry. (1867) Inventors and Inventions.
  • Endsor, Richard. (2009) Restoration Warship: The Design, Construction and Career of a Third Rate of Charles II's Navy. London: Anova Books.
  • Fergusson, Bernard (1952). Rupert of the Rhine. London: Collins.
  • Granger, James. (1821) A Biographical History of England: From Egbert the Great to the Revolution. London: William Baynes.
  • Griffiths, Antony. (1996) Prints and Printmaking: An Introduction to the History and Techniques. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Highfill, Philip H., Kalman A. Burnim and Edward A. Langhans. (1982) Volume 8 of A Biographical Dictionary of Actors, Actresses, Musicians, Dancers, Managers and Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660–1800. Southern Illinois University Press.
  • Hind, Arthur M. (1963) A History of Engraving and Etching: From the 15th Century to the Year 1914. New York: Dover.
  • Hone, William. (1841) The Year Book of Daily Recreation and Information: Concerning Remarkable Men and Manners, Times and Seasons, Solemnities and Merry-makings, Antiquities and Novelties on the plan of the Every-day Book and Table. Tegg.
  • Kitson, Frank. (1999) Prince Rupert: Admiral and General-at-Sea. London: Constable.
  • Lewis, Michael. (1957) The History of the British Navy. London: Pelican Books.
  • Newman, P. R. (2006) Atlas of the English Civil War. London: Routledge.
  • Palmer, Michael A. (2007) Command at Sea: Naval Command and Control Since the Sixteenth Century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard.
  • Purkiss, Diane. (2001) Desire and Its Deformities: Fantasies of Witchcraft in the English Civil War. in Levack, Brian P. (ed) New Perspectives on Witchcraft, Magic, and Demonology: Witchcraft in the British Isles and New England. London: Routledge.
  • Purkiss, Diane. (2007) The English Civil War: A People's History. London: Harper.
  • Salaman, Malcolm. (2005) The Old Engravers of England in Their Relation to Contemporary Life and Art, 1540–1800. Kessinger Publishing.
  • Spencer, Charles. (2007) Prince Rupert: The Last Cavalier. London: Phoenix. ISBN 978-0-297-84610-9
  • Urbanowicz, Gary. R. (2002) Badges of the Bravest: A Pictorial History of Fire Departments in New York City. Turner Publishing Company.
  • Warburton, Eliot. (1849) Memoirs of Prince Rupert, and the Cavaliers. London: R. Bentley.
  • Wedgwood, C. V. (1970) The King's War: 1641–1647. London: Fontana.

Further reading

  • Ashley, Maurice (1976). Rupert of the Rhine. London: Hart Davis, MacGibbon.
  • De Viet, Rens (2010). . MA Thesis. Rotterdam: Erasmus University. (in Dutch)
  • Irwin, Margaret (1937) The Stranger Prince: The story of Rupert of the Rhine. New York: Harcourt, Brace.
  • Kitson, Frank (1994). '.'Prince Rupert: Portrait of a Soldier. London: Constable. ISBN 0-09-473700-2.
  • Morrah, Patrick (1976). Prince Rupert of the Rhine. London: Constable.
  • Petrie, Charles (1974). King Charles, Prince Rupert, and the Civil War: From Original Letters. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
  • Thomson, George Malcolm (1976). Warrior Prince: Prince Rupert of the Rhine. London: Secker and Warburg.
  • Wilkinson, Clennell (1935). Prince Rupert, the Cavalier. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott.

External links

    Political offices
    Preceded by Master of the Horse
    1653–1655
    Succeeded by
    Preceded by Lord High Admiral
    1668–1682
    In commission
    Lord Capell as First Lord
    Title next held by
    King Charles II
    Honorary titles
    Preceded by Constable of Windsor Castle
    1668–1682
    Succeeded by
    Lord Lieutenant of Surrey
    1675–1682
    Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Berkshire
    1670–1682
    Peerage of England
    New creation Duke of Cumberland
    1644–1682
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    prince, rupert, rhine, prince, rupert, redirects, here, city, prince, rupert, british, columbia, other, uses, prince, rupert, disambiguation, duke, cumberland, december, 1619, december, november, 1682, december, 1682, english, army, officer, admiral, scientist. Prince Rupert redirects here For the city see Prince Rupert British Columbia For other uses see Prince Rupert disambiguation Prince Rupert of the Rhine Duke of Cumberland KG PC FRS 17 December 1619 O S 27 December N S 1 29 November 1682 O S 9 December 1682 N S was an English army officer admiral scientist and colonial governor He first came to prominence as a Royalist cavalry commander during the English Civil War a Rupert was the third son of the German Prince Frederick V of the Palatinate and Elizabeth eldest daughter of King James VI and I of Scotland and England Prince RupertCount Palatine of the RhineDuke of CumberlandEarl of HoldernessPortrait by Peter LelyBorn 1619 12 17 17 December 1619 O S Prague BohemiaDied29 November 1682 1682 11 29 aged 62 O S London EnglandBurial6 December 1682 O S Westminster AbbeyIssueDudley Bard 1666 1686 Ruperta Howe 1671 1740 HousePalatinate SimmernFatherFrederick V Elector PalatineMotherElizabeth StuartReligionCalvinistOccupationSoldier statesman privateer and scientistPrince Rupert had a varied career He was a soldier as a child fighting alongside Dutch forces against Habsburg Spain during the Eighty Years War 1568 1648 and against the Holy Roman Emperor in Germany during the Thirty Years War 1618 1648 Aged 23 he was appointed commander of the Royalist cavalry during the English Civil War becoming the archetypal Cavalier of the war and ultimately the senior Royalist general He surrendered after the fall of Bristol and was banished from England He served under King Louis XIV of France against Spain and then as a Royalist privateer in the Caribbean Sea Following the Restoration Rupert returned to England becoming a senior English naval commander during the Second Anglo Dutch War and Third Anglo Dutch War and serving as the first governor of the Hudson s Bay Company He died in England in 1682 aged 62 Rupert is considered to have been a quick thinking and energetic cavalry general but ultimately undermined by his youthful impatience in dealing with his peers during the Civil War In the Interregnum Rupert continued the conflict against Parliament by sea from the Mediterranean to the Caribbean showing considerable persistence in the face of adversity As the head of the Royal Navy in his later years he showed greater maturity and made impressive and long lasting contributions to the Royal Navy s doctrine and development As a colonial governor Rupert shaped the political geography of modern Canada Rupert s Land was named in his honour and he was a founder of the Hudson s Bay Company Rupert s varied and numerous scientific and administrative interests combined with his considerable artistic skills made him one of the more colourful public figures in England of the Restoration period Contents 1 Parents and ancestry 2 Early life and exile 3 Teenage years 4 Career during the First English Civil War 4 1 Early phases 1642 1643 4 2 Later stages 1644 1646 4 3 Reputation 5 Second English Civil War and Interregnum 5 1 Service in the French army 5 2 Service in the Royalist navy 5 3 Service in Germany 5 4 Interest in art 6 Career following the Restoration 6 1 Restoration statesman 6 2 Career in the Restoration navy 7 Later life 7 1 Colonial administration 7 2 Science and the Royal Society 7 3 Peg Hughes 8 Family 9 Legacy 10 Genealogical table 11 In fiction 11 1 Film and television 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Bibliography 16 Further reading 17 External linksParents and ancestry EditRupert s father was Frederick V of the Palatinate of the Palatinate Simmern branch of the House of Wittelsbach As Elector Palatine Frederick was one of the most important princes of the Holy Roman Empire He was also head of the Protestant Union a coalition of Protestant German states The Palatinate was a wealthy state and Frederick lived in great luxury 2 Frederick s mother Countess Louise Juliana of Nassau was daughter of William the Silent and half sister of Maurice Prince of Orange who as stadtholders of Holland and other provinces were the leaders of the Dutch Republic 3 Rupert s mother was Elizabeth Stuart daughter of King James VI of Scotland and I of England Thus Rupert was nephew of King Charles I of England and Scotland and first cousin of King Charles II of England and Scotland who made him Duke of Cumberland and Earl of Holderness His sister Electress Sophia was the mother of George I of Great Britain 4 Rupert was named in honour of Rupert King of Germany a famous Wittelsbach ancestor 5 Early life and exile Edit Rupert right with his elder brother Charles I Louis Elector Palatine left in a 1637 portrait by Anthony van Dyck Rupert was born in Prague Bohemia in 1619 and was declared a prince by the principality of Lusatia 6 His father had just been elected king by the largely Protestant estates of Bohemia This was perceived as an act of rebellion by the Catholic House of Habsburg who had been kings of Bohemia since 1526 and initiated the Thirty Years War Frederick was not supported by the Protestant Union and in 1620 was defeated by Emperor Ferdinand II in the Battle of White Mountain 7 Rupert s parents were thus mockingly termed the Winter King and Queen 8 Rupert was almost left behind in the court s rush to escape Ferdinand s advance on Prague until courtier Krystof z Donina Christopher Dhona tossed the prince into a carriage at the last moment 9 Rupert accompanied his parents to The Hague where he spent his early years at the Hof te Wassenaer the Wassenaer Court 10 Rupert s mother paid her children little attention even by the standards of the day apparently preferring her pet monkeys and dogs 11 Instead Frederick employed a French couple Monsieur and Madame de Plessen as governors to his children They were raised with a positive attitude towards the Bohemians and the English and as strict Calvinists The result was a strict school routine including logic mathematics writing drawing singing and playing instruments 11 As a child Rupert was at times badly behaved fiery mischievous and passionate and earned himself the nickname Robert le Diable or Rupert The Devil 12 Nonetheless Rupert proved to be an able student By the age of three he could speak some English Czech and French and mastered German while still young but had little interest in Latin and Greek 11 He excelled in art being taught by Gerard van Honthorst and found mathematics and science easy 11 By the time he was 18 he stood about 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m tall 13 Rupert s family continued their attempts to regain the Palatinate during their time in The Hague Money was short with the family relying upon a relatively small pension from The Hague the proceeds from family investments in Dutch raids on Spanish shipping and revenue from pawned family jewellery 14 Frederick set about convincing an alliance of nations including England France and Sweden to support his attempts to regain the Palatinate and Bohemia 12 By the early 1630s Frederick had built a close relationship with King Gustavus of Sweden the dominant Protestant leader in Germany In 1632 however the two men disagreed over Gustavus insistence that Frederick provide equal rights to his Lutheran and Calvinist subjects after regaining his lands Frederick refused and set off to return to The Hague He died of a fever along the way and was buried in an unmarked grave 15 Rupert had lost his father at the age of 13 and Gustavus death at the Battle of Lutzen in the same month deprived the family of a critical Protestant ally With Frederick gone King Charles proposed that the family move to England Rupert s mother declined but asked that Charles extend his protection to her remaining children instead 16 Teenage years Edit Rupert as a young man visiting the court of his uncle King Charles I of England by Anthony van Dyck Rupert spent the beginning of his teenage years in England between the courts of The Hague and his uncle King Charles I before being captured and imprisoned in Linz during the middle stages of the Thirty Years War Rupert had become a soldier early at the age of 14 he attended the Dutch pas d armes with the Protestant Frederick Henry Prince of Orange 17 Later that year he fought alongside him and the Duke of Brunswick at the Anglo German siege of Rheinberg and by 1635 he was acting as a military lifeguard to Prince Frederick 18 Rupert went on to fight against imperial Spain in the successful campaign around Breda in 1637 during the Eighty Years War in the Netherlands 19 By the end of this period Rupert had acquired a reputation for fearlessness in battle high spirits and considerable industry 18 In between these campaigns Rupert had visited his uncle s court in England The Palatinate cause was a popular Protestant issue in England and in 1637 a general public subscription helped fund an expedition under Charles Louis to try to regain the electorate as part of a joint French campaign 19 Rupert was placed in command of a Palatinate cavalry regiment 20 and his later friend Lord Craven an admirer of Rupert s mother assisted in raising funds and accompanied the army on the campaign The campaign ended badly at the Battle of Vlotho 17 October 1638 during the invasion of Westphalia Rupert escaped death but was captured by the forces of the Imperial General Melchior von Hatzfeldt towards the end of the battle 21 After a failed attempt to bribe his way free of his guards 22 Rupert was imprisoned in Linz Lord Craven also taken in the battle attempted to persuade his captors to allow him to remain with Rupert but was refused 22 Rupert s imprisonment was surrounded by religious overtones His mother was deeply concerned that he might be converted from Calvinism to Catholicism 23 his captors encouraged by Emperor Ferdinand III deployed Jesuit priests in an attempt to convert him 23 The emperor went further proffering the option of freedom a position as an Imperial general and a small principality if Rupert would convert 24 Rupert refused 25 Rupert s imprisonment became more relaxed on the advice of the Archduke Leopold Ferdinand s younger brother who met and grew to like Rupert 26 Rupert practised etching played tennis practised shooting read military textbooks and was taken on accompanied hunting trips 24 He also entered into a romantic affair with Susan Kuffstein the daughter of Count von Kuffstein his gaoler 27 He received a present of a rare white poodle that Rupert called Boy or sometimes Pudel and which remained with him into the English Civil War Despite attempts by a Franco Swedish army to seize Linz and free Rupert his release was ultimately negotiated through Leopold and the Empress Maria Anna in exchange for a commitment never again to take up arms against the emperor Rupert would be released Rupert formally kissed the emperor s hand at the end of 1641 turned down a final offer of an imperial command and left Germany for England 28 Career during the First English Civil War EditRupert is probably best remembered today for his role as a Royalist commander during the English Civil War 29 He had considerable success during the initial years of the war his drive determination and experience of European techniques bringing him early victories 30 As the war progressed Rupert s youth and lack of maturity in managing his relationships with other Royalist commanders ultimately resulted in his removal from his post and ultimate retirement from the war 31 Throughout the conflict however Rupert also enjoyed a powerful symbolic position he was an iconic Royalist Cavalier and as such was frequently the subject of both Parliamentarian and Royalist propaganda 32 an image which has endured over the years 33 Early phases 1642 1643 Edit Charles I in blue sash holding a council of war at Edgecote on the day before the Battle of Edgehill Rupert seated commanded the King s cavalry Rupert arrived in England following his period of imprisonment and final release from captivity in Germany In August 1642 Rupert along with his brother Prince Maurice and a number of professional soldiers ran the gauntlet across the sea from the United Provinces and after one initial failure 34 evaded the pro Parliamentary navy and landed in Newcastle 35 Riding across country he found the King with a tiny army at Leicester Abbey and was promptly appointed General of Horse a coveted appointment at the time in European warfare 30 Rupert set about recruiting and training with great effort he had put together a partially trained mounted force of 3 000 cavalry by the end of September 36 Rupert s reputation continued to rise and leading a sudden courageous charge he routed a Parliamentarian force at Powick Bridge the first military engagement of the war Although a small engagement this had a propaganda value far exceeding the importance of the battle itself and Rupert became an heroic figure for many young men in the Royalist camp 37 Rupert joined the King in the advance on London playing a key role in the resulting Battle of Edgehill in October Once again Rupert was at his best with swift battlefield movements the night before he had undertaken a forced march and seized the summit of Edgehill giving the Royalists a superior position 38 When he quarrelled with his fellow infantry commander Robert Bertie however some of the weaknesses of Rupert s character began to display themselves Rupert vigorously interjected probably correctly but certainly tactlessly that Lindsey should deploy his men in the modern Swedish fashion that Rupert was used to in Europe which would have maximised their available firepower 39 The result was an argument in front of the troops and Lindsey s resignation and replacement by Sir Jacob Astley In the subsequent battle Rupert s men made a dramatic cavalry charge but despite his best efforts a subsequent scattering and loss of discipline turned a potential victory into a stalemate 40 After Edgehill Rupert asked Charles for a swift cavalry attack on London before the Earl of Essex s army could return The King s senior counsellors however urged him to advance slowly on the capital with the whole army By the time they arrived the city had organised defences against them 40 Some argue that in delaying the Royalists had perhaps lost their best chance of winning the war although others have argued that Rupert s proposed attack would have had trouble penetrating a hostile London Instead early in 1643 Rupert began to clear the South West taking Cirencester in February 41 before moving further against Bristol a key port 42 Rupert took Bristol in July with his brother Maurice using Cornish forces and was appointed governor of the city 43 By mid 1643 Rupert had become so well known that he was an issue in any potential peace accommodation Parliament was seeking to see him punished as part of any negotiated solution and the presence of Rupert at the court close to the King during the negotiations was perceived as a bellicose statement in itself 44 Later stages 1644 1646 Edit George Digby by Sir Anthony Van Dyck although a less successful soldier Digby was an increasingly powerful political rival to Rupert within the Royalist court during the second half of the English Civil War During the second half of the war political opposition within the Royalist senior leadership against Prince Rupert continued to grow His personality during the war had made him both friends and enemies He enjoyed a frank and generous disposition showed a quickness of intellect was prepared to face grave dangers and could be thorough and patient when necessary 45 However Prince Rupert lacked the social gifts of a courtier and his humour could turn into a sardonic wit and a contemptuous manner with a hasty temper he was too quick to say whom he respected and whom he disliked 46 The result was that while he could inspire great loyalty in some especially with his men he also made many enemies at the Royal court 47 When Prince Rupert took Bristol he also slighted the Marquess of Hertford the lethargic but politically significant Royalist leader of the South West 48 Most critically he fell out with George Digby a favourite of both the King and the Queen Digby was a classic courtier and Rupert fell to arguing with him repeatedly in meetings 49 The result was that towards the end of the war Prince Rupert s position at court was increasingly undermined by his enemies Rupert continued to impress militarily By 1644 now the Duke of Cumberland and Earl of Holderness he led the relief of Newark and York and its castle Having marched north taking Bolton and Liverpool along the way in two bloody assaults 50 Rupert then intervened in Yorkshire in two highly effective manoeuvres in the first outwitting the enemy forces at Newark with speed in the second striking across country and approaching York from the north 51 Rupert then commanded much of the royalist army at its defeat at Marston Moor with much of the blame falling on the poor working relationship between Rupert and the Marquess of Newcastle 52 and orders from the King that wrongly conveyed a desperate need for a speedy success in the north 53 In November 1644 Rupert was appointed general of the entire Royalist army which increased already marked tensions between him and a number of the King s councillors By May 1645 and now desperately short of supplies 54 Rupert captured Leicester but suffered a severe reversal at the Battle of Naseby a month later 55 Although Rupert had counselled the King against accepting battle at Naseby the opinions of Digby had won the day in council nonetheless Rupert s defeat damaged him rather than Digby politically 56 After Naseby Rupert regarded the Royalist cause as lost and urged Charles to conclude a peace with Parliament Charles still supported by an optimistic Digby believed he could win the war By late summer Prince Rupert had become trapped in Bristol by Parliamentary forces Faced with an impossible military situation on the ground Rupert surrendered Bristol in September 1645 and Charles dismissed him from his service and command 57 Rupert responded by making his way across Parliamentary held territory to the King at Newark with Prince Maurice and around a hundred men fighting their way through smaller enemy units and evading larger ones 58 King Charles attempted to order Rupert to desist fearing an armed coup but Rupert arrived at the royal court anyway 58 After a difficult meeting Rupert convinced the King to hold a court martial over his conduct at Bristol which exonerated him and Maurice 59 After a final argument over the fate of his friend Richard Willis the governor of Newark who had let Rupert into the royal court to begin with Rupert resigned and left the service of King Charles along with most of his best cavalry officers 60 Earlier interpretations of this event focused on Rupert s concern for his honour in the face of his initial dismissal by the King 59 later works have highlighted the practical importance of the courts martial to Rupert s future employability as a mercenary in Europe given that Rupert knew that the war by this point was effectively lost 61 Rupert and Maurice spent the winter of 1645 in Woodstock examining options for employment under the Republic of Venice before returning to Oxford and the King in 1646 62 Rupert and the King were reconciled the Prince remaining to defend Oxford when the King left for the north After the ensuing siege and surrender of Oxford in 1646 Parliament banished both Rupert and his brother from England 63 Reputation Edit Rupert was a common figure of Parliamentarian propaganda depicted here with his dog Boy pillaging the town of Birmingham Rupert s contemporaries believed him to have been involved in some of the bloodier events of the war although later histories have largely exonerated him citation needed Rupert had grown up surrounded by the relatively savage customs of the Thirty Years War in Europe 64 Shortly after his arrival in England he caused consternation by following similar practices one of his early acts was to demand two thousand pounds from the people of Leicester for the King as the price of not sacking Leicester 65 Although in keeping with European practices this was not considered appropriate behaviour in England and Rupert was reprimanded by the King 64 Rupert s reputation never truly recovered and in subsequent sieges and attacks he was frequently accused of acting without restraint Birmingham a key arms producing town was taken in April 1643 66 and Rupert faced allegations probably untrue of wilfully burning the town to the ground see the Battle of Camp Hill 67 Shortly afterwards Rupert attempted to take the town of Lichfield whose garrison had executed Royalist prisoners angrily promising to kill all the soldiers inside 67 Only the urgent call for assistance from the King prevented him from doing so forcing him to agree to more lenient terms in exchange for a prompt surrender 68 Towards the end of the war practices were changing for the worse across all sides a rebellious Leicester was retaken by the Prince in May 1645 and no attempt was made to limit the subsequent killing and plunder 69 Rupert was accordingly a prominent figure in Parliamentary propaganda He faced numerous accusations of witchcraft either personally or by proxy through his pet dog Boy sometimes called Pudel a large white hunting poodle accompanied Rupert everywhere from 1642 up until the dog s death at Marston Moor and was widely suspected of being a witch s familiar There were numerous accounts of Boy s abilities some suggested that he was the Devil in disguise come to help Rupert Pro Royalist publications ultimately produced parodies of these 70 including one which listed Rupert s dog as being a Lapland Lady transformed into a white dog 71 Boy was able apparently to find hidden treasure possessed invulnerability to attack could catch bullets fired at Rupert in his mouth and could prophesy as well as the 16th century soothsayer Mother Shipton 72 Similar stories from the period relate to Rupert s pet monkey Like his dog the monkey was featured in newsprint of the day and was also reputed to have shapeshifting powers being able to disguise itself behind enemy lines 73 Second English Civil War and Interregnum Edit Rupert at the start of the Interregnum after William Dobson After the end of the First English Civil War Rupert was employed by the young King Louis XIV of France to fight the Spanish during the final years of the Thirty Years War 74 Rupert s military employment was complicated by his promises to the Holy Roman Emperor that had led to his release from captivity in 1642 and his ongoing commitment to the English Royalist faction in exile 75 He also became a Knight of the Garter in 1642 Throughout the period Rupert was inconvenienced by his lack of secure income and his ongoing feuds with other leading members of the Royalist circle 76 Service in the French army Edit Rupert first travelled to the Royal court in exile at St Germain but found it still dominated by the Queen and her favourite Rupert s enemy Digby 77 Instead Rupert moved on accepting a well paid commission from Anne of Austria to serve Louis XIV as a mareschal de camp subject to Rupert being free to leave French service to fight for King Charles should he be called upon to do so 77 In 1647 Rupert fought under Marshal Jean de Gassion against the Spanish After a three week siege Rupert took the powerful fortress of La Bassee through quiet negotiations with the enemy commander an impressive accomplishment and one that won him favour in French court circles 78 Gassion and Rupert were ambushed shortly afterwards by a Spanish party during the resulting fight Rupert was shot in the head and seriously injured Afterwards Gassion noted Monsieur I am most annoyed that you are wounded And me also Rupert is recorded as replying 79 Gassion was himself killed shortly afterwards and Rupert returned to St Germain to recuperate 79 Service in the Royalist navy Edit In 1648 the relatively brief Second English Civil War broke out and Rupert informed the French King that he would be returning to King Charles s service 80 The Parliamentary navy mutinied in favour of the King and sailed for Holland providing the Royalists with a major fleet for the first time since the start of the civil conflict Rupert joined the fleet under the command of the Duke of York who assumed the rank of Lord High Admiral 81 Rupert argued that the fleet should be used to rescue the King then being held prisoner on the Isle of Wight while others advised sailing in support of the fighting in the north The fleet itself rapidly lost discipline with many vessels crews focussing on seizing local ships and cargoes 81 This underlined a major problem for the Royalists the cost of maintaining the new fleet was well beyond their means Discipline continued to deteriorate and Rupert had to intervene personally several times including defusing one group of mutinous sailors by suddenly dangling the ringleader over the side of his vessel and threatening to drop him into the sea Most of the fleet finally switched sides once more returning to England in late 1648 82 Then following a degree of reconciliation with Charles Rupert obtained command of the Royalist fleet himself The intention was to restore Royalist finances by using the remaining vessels of the fleet to conduct a campaign of organised piracy against English shipping across the region 83 One of the obstacles that this plan faced was the growing strength of the Parliamentary fleet and the presence of Robert Blake one of the finest admirals of the period as Rupert s opponent during the campaign 84 Rupert s maritime campaign in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean and Caribbean Seas 1650 1653 Rupert s naval campaign formed two phases The first involved the Royalist fleet sailing from Kinsale in Ireland to Lisbon in Portugal He took three large ships HMS Constant Reformation the Convertine and the Swallow accompanied by four smaller vessels 85 Rupert sailed to Lisbon taking several prizes en route 86 where he received a warm welcome from King John IV the ruler of recently independent Portugal who was a supporter of Charles II Blake arrived shortly afterwards with a Parliamentary fleet and an armed stand off ensued 87 Tensions rose skirmishes began to break out and King John became increasingly keen for his Royalist guests to leave In October 1650 Rupert s fleet now comprising six vessels broke out and headed into the Mediterranean 88 Still pursued by Blake the Royalist fleet manoeuvred up the Spanish coast steadily losing vessels to their pursuers 89 The second phase of the campaign then began Rupert crossed back into the Atlantic and during 1651 cut west to the Azores capturing vessels as he went He intended to continue on to the West Indies where there would be many rich targets 90 Instead he encountered a late summer storm leading to the sinking of the Constant Reformation with the loss of 333 lives almost including Rupert s brother Prince Maurice who only just escaped 91 and a great deal of captured treasure Turning back to regroup repair and re equip in early 1652 Rupert s reduced force moored at Cape Blanc an island near what is now Mauritania 92 Rupert took the opportunity to explore and acquired a Moorish servant boy who remained in his service for many years Rupert also explored 150 miles up the Gambia River taking two Spanish vessels as prizes and contracting malaria in the process 93 Rupert then finally made a successful crossing into the Caribbean landing first at Saint Lucia before continuing up the chain of the Antilles to the Virgin Islands There the fleet was hit by a hurricane which scattered the ships and sank the Defiance this time with Prince Maurice on board 94 It was a while before Maurice s death became certain which came as a terrible blow to Rupert He was forced to return to Europe arriving in France in March 1653 with a fleet of five ships 95 It became clear as the profits and losses of the piracy campaign were calculated that the venture had not been as profitable as hoped This complicated tensions in the Royalist court and Charles II and Rupert eventually split the spoils after which Rupert tired and a little bitter returned to France to recuperate from the long campaign 96 In 1654 Rupert appears to have been involved in a plot to assassinate Oliver Cromwell an event that would then have been followed by a coup the landing of a small army in Sussex and the restoration of Charles II Charles himself is understood to have rejected the assassination proposal but three conspirators who implicated Rupert in the plan were arrested and confessed in London 97 Rupert s presence at the royal court continued to be problematic as in 1643 he was regarded by Edward Hyde later Earl of Clarendon and others as a bellicose figure and an obstacle to peace negotiations in 1655 Rupert left for Germany 98 Service in Germany Edit Rupert s largest and most famous mezzotint work The Great Executioner considered by critic Antony Griffiths to be one of the greatest mezzotints After his quarrel with the Royalist court in exile Rupert travelled to Heidelberg to visit his brother Charles Louis now partially restored as Elector Palatine where the two had an ambivalent reunion 99 Charles Louis and Rupert had not been friendly as children and had almost ended up on opposite sides during the Civil War To make matters worse Charles Louis had been deprived of half the old Palatinate under the Peace of Westphalia leaving him badly short of money although he still remained responsible under the Imperial laws of apanage for providing for his younger brother and had offered the sum of 375 per annum which Rupert had accepted 100 Rupert travelled on to Vienna where he attempted to claim the 15 000 compensation allocated to him under the Peace of Westphalia from the Emperor Ferdinand III warmly welcomed him but was unable to pay such a sum immediately instead he would have to pay in installments to the disadvantage of Rupert 101 Over the next twelve months Rupert was asked by the Duke of Modena in Northern Italy to raise an army against the Papal States having done so and with the army stationed in the Palatinate the enterprise collapsed with the Duke requesting that Rupert invade Spanish held Milan instead 102 Rupert moved on having placed his brother Charles Louis in some diplomatic difficulties with Spain 102 Rupert travelled onwards continuing to attempt to convince Ferdinand to back Charles II s efforts to regain his throne 103 In 1656 relations between Rupert and Charles Louis deteriorated badly Rupert had fallen in love with Louise von Degenfeld one of his sister in law s maids of honour 104 One of Rupert s notes proffering his affections accidentally fell into the possession of Charles Louis wife Charlotte who believed it was written to her Charlotte was keen to engage in an affair with Rupert and became unhappy when she was declined and the mistake explained Unfortunately Degenfeld was uninterested in Rupert but was engaged in an affair with Charles Louis this was discovered in due course leading to the annulment of the marriage 105 Rupert for his part was unhappy that Charles Louis could not endow him with a suitable estate and the two parted on bad terms in 1657 Rupert refusing ever to return to the Palatinate again and taking up employment under Ferdinand III in his Kingdom of Hungary 106 Interest in art Edit During this period Rupert became closely involved in the development of mezzotint a negative or intaglio printmaking process which eventually superseded the older woodcut process Rupert appears to have told a range of associates that he had conceived of the mezzotint process through having watched a soldier scrape the rust from the barrel of his musket during a military campaign John Evelyn credited Rupert as the inventor of the technique in 1662 and Rupert s story was further popularised by Horace Walpole during the 18th century 107 Considerable academic debate surrounds the issue but the modern consensus is that mezzotint was instead invented in 1642 by Ludwig von Siegen a German lieutenant colonel who was also an amateur artist Siegen may or may not have met Rupert Siegen had worked as chamberlain and probably part tutor to Rupert s young cousin William VI Landgrave of Hesse Kassel with whom Rupert discussed the technique in letters from 1654 Rupert did however become a noted artist in mezzotint in his own right He produced a few stylish prints in the technique mostly interpretations of existing paintings and introduced the form to England after the Restoration though it was Wallerant Vaillant Rupert s artistic assistant or tutor who first popularised the process and exploited it commercially Rupert s most famous and largest art work The Great Executioner produced in 1658 is still regarded by critics such as Arthur Hind and Antony Griffiths as full of brilliance and energy 108 superb and one of the greatest mezzotints ever produced 109 other important works by Rupert include the Head of Titian and The Standard Bearer 110 Career following the Restoration Edit Frances Bard Rupert s mistress by Peter Lely Following the Restoration of the monarchy under Charles II in 1660 Rupert returned to England where Charles had already largely completed the process of balancing the different factions across the country in a new administration 111 Since most of the better government posts were already taken Rupert s employment was limited although Charles rewarded him with the second highest pension he had granted 4 000 a year 112 Rupert s close family ties to King Charles were critical to his warm reception following the deaths of the Duke of Gloucester and Princess Mary Rupert was the King s closest adult relation in England after his brother the Duke of York and so a key member of the new regime 113 Rupert as the Duke of Cumberland resumed his seat in the House of Lords 113 For the first time in his life Rupert s financial position was relatively secure and he had matured Near contemporaries described how his temper was less explosive than formerly and his judgement sounder 114 Rupert continued to serve as an admiral in the Royal Navy throughout the period ultimately rising to the rank of General at Sea and Land 115 Restoration statesman Edit Rupert was appointed to the King s Privy Council in 1662 taking roles on the Foreign Affairs Committee the Admiralty Committee and the Tangier Committee 116 Accounts vary of Rupert s role in all these committees of government Samuel Pepys no friend of Rupert s sat on the Tangier Committee with him and later declared that all Rupert did was to laugh and swear occasionally other records such as those of the Foreign Affairs Committee show him taking a full and active role in proceedings 114 In 1668 the King appointed Rupert to be the Constable of Windsor Castle 117 Rupert was already one of the Knights of the Garter who had their headquarters at the castle and was a close companion of the King who would wish to be suitably entertained at the castle 118 Rupert immediately began to reorder the castle s defences sorting out the garrison s accommodation repairing the Devil s Tower reconstructing the real tennis court and improving the castle s hunting estate 119 Rupert acquired his own apartments in the castle which were recorded as being very singular with some decorated with an extraordinary number of pikes muskets pistols bandoliers holsters drums back breast and head pieces and his inner chambers hung with tapisserie curious and effeminate pictures 120 King Charles II and Rupert spent much time together over the years hunting and playing tennis together at Windsor 121 and Rupert was also a close companion of James the Duke of York 114 Rupert was considered by Pepys to be among the four best tennis players in England 122 Rupert became romantically engaged to Frances Bard 1646 1708 the daughter of the English explorer and Civil War veteran Henry Bard 123 Frances claimed to have secretly married Rupert in 1664 although this was denied by him and no firm proof exists to support the claim 124 Rupert acknowledged the son he had with Frances Dudley Bard 1666 86 often called Dudley Rupert who was schooled at Eton College In 1673 Rupert was urged by Charles Louis to return home marry and father an heir to the Palatinate as it appeared likely that Charles Louis s own son would not survive childhood Rupert refused and remained in England 125 Career in the Restoration navy Edit The Four Days Battle 1 4 June 1666 by Abraham Storck during which Rupert s new aggressive fleet tactics were first applied For much of the 17th century England was embroiled in conflict with commercial rival Holland through the Anglo Dutch Wars 126 Rupert became closely involved in these as a senior admiral to King Charles II rising to command the Royal Navy by the end of his career Although several famous admirals of the day had previously been army commanders including Blake and Monck they had commanded relatively small land forces and Rupert was still relatively unusual for the period in having both practical experience of commanding large land armies and having extensive naval experience from his campaigns in the 1650s 127 At the start of the Second Anglo Dutch War 1665 1667 Rupert was appointed as one of the three squadron commanders of the English fleet under the overall command of the Duke of York taking HMS Royal James as his flagship 128 As the commander of the White Squadron Rupert fought at the Battle of Lowestoft in 1665 breaking through the enemy defences at a critical moment Rupert s leg was injured in the battle an injury that caused him ongoing pain 129 Recalled to accompany the King during the plague that was sweeping London Rupert continued to argue in favour of the fleet s seeking a set piece engagement with the Dutch that would force the Dutch back to the negotiating table 130 The following year Rupert was made joint commander of the fleet with Monck and given the opportunity to put this plan into practice In June 1666 they fought the Dutch at the Four Days Battle one of the longest naval battles in history the battle saw the new aggressive tactics of Rupert and Monck applied resulting in a sight unique till then in sailing ship warfare the English beating upwind and breaking the enemy s line from leeward 131 However the Four Days Battle was considered a victory for the Dutch but the St James s Day Battle the following month allowed Rupert and Monck to use the same tactics to inflict heavy damage on the Dutch and the battle resulted in a significant English victory 132 The Dutch however would see a favourable end to the war with the decisive Raid on the Medway 133 Rupert also played a prominent role in the Third Anglo Dutch War 1672 74 This time Louis XIV of France was a key English ally against Holland and it was decided that the French would form a squadron in a combined fleet 134 The English fleet had been much expanded and Rupert had three ships HMS Royal Charles HMS Royal James and HMS Royal Oak equipped with a high specification annealed and lathe produced gun of his own design the Rupertinoe Unfortunately the cost of the weapon three times that of a normal gun prevented its wider deployment in the fleet 135 The French role in the conflict proved a problem when Charles turned to the appointment of an admiral Rupert s objection to the French alliance was well known and accordingly the King appointed the Duke of York to the role instead 136 Rupert was instead instructed to take over the Duke s work at the Admiralty which he did with gusto 136 The Allied naval plans were stalled after the Duke s inconclusive battle with the Dutch at Solebay 137 The Battle of Texel by Willem van de Velde the Younger a Dutch victory which marked the end of Rupert s career as a sea admiral The English plan for 1673 centred on first achieving naval dominance followed by landing an army in Zeeland The King appointed the Duke as supreme commander with Rupert as his deputy combining the ranks of general and vice admiral of England 138 During the winter of 1672 however Charles still legitimately childless decided that the risk to the Duke his heir was too great and made Rupert supreme Allied commander in his place 139 Rupert began the 1673 campaign against the Dutch knowing the logistical support for his fleet remained uncertain with many ships undermanned 140 The result was the Battle of Schooneveld in June and the Battle of Texel in August a controversial sequence of engagements in which at a minimum poor communications between the French and English commanders assisted the marginal Dutch victory 141 Many English commentators were harsher blaming the French for failing to fully engage in the battles and Rupert having cautioned against the alliance in the first place was popularly hailed as a hero 142 Rupert finally retired from active seagoing command later that year 143 Rupert had a characteristic style as an admiral he relied upon energetic personal leadership backed by close contact with his officers 144 having decided how to proceed in a naval campaign however it could be difficult for his staff to change his mind 144 Recent work on Rupert s role as a commander has also highlighted the progress the prince made in formulating the way that orders were given to the British fleet Fleet communications were limited during the period and the traditional orders from admirals before a battle were accordingly quite rigid limiting a captain s independence in the battle 145 Rupert played a key part in the conferences held by the Duke of York in 1665 to review tactics and operational methods from the First Anglo Dutch War and put these into practice before the St James Day battle 146 These instructions and supplementary instructions to ships captains which attempted to balance an adherence to standing orders with the need to exploit emerging opportunities in a battle proved heavily influential over the next hundred years 146 and shaped the idea that an aggressive fighting spirit should be at the core of British naval doctrine 147 After 1673 Rupert remained a senior member of the Royal Navy and Charles s administration Rupert allied himself with Lord Shaftesbury on matters of foreign policy but remained loyal to King Charles II on other issues 125 and was passionate about protecting the royal prerogative As a consequence he opposed Parliament s plan in 1677 to appoint him to Lord High Admiral on the basis that only the King should be allowed to propose such appointments but noted that he was willing to become Admiral if the King wished him to do so 148 The King s solution was to establish a small empowered Admiralty Commission of which Rupert became the first commissioner 149 As a result from 1673 to 1679 Rupert was able to focus on ensuring a closer regulation of manning gunning and the selection of officers He was also involved in setting priorities between the different theatres of operations that the Royal Navy was now involved in around the world 150 Rupert was also appointed to the supreme position of General at Sea and Land effectively assuming the wartime powers of the Lord High Admiral 151 Later life Edit An older Rupert painted in 1670 by Sir Peter Lely After the end of his seagoing naval career Rupert continued to be actively involved in both government and science although he was increasingly removed from current politics 152 To the younger members of the court the prince appeared increasingly distant almost from a different era 153 The Count de Gramont described Rupert as brave and courageous even to rashness but cross grained and incorrigibly obstinate he was polite even to excess unseasonably but haughty and even brutal when he ought to have been gentle and courteous his manners were ungracious he had a dry hard favoured visage and a stern look even when he wished to please but when he was out of humour he was the true picture of reproof 153 Rupert s health during this period was also less robust his head wound from his employment in France required a painful trepanning treatment his leg wound continued to hurt and he still suffered from the malaria he had caught while in the Gambia 154 Colonial administration Edit Rupert had demonstrated an interest in colonial issues for many years On arriving in England in 1660 he had encouraged the government to continue his own exploration of the Gambia in an attempt to find gold leading to Robert Holmes s expedition the following year 155 Rupert was an active shareholder in the Company of Royal Adventurers Trading into Africa that was established as a result in 1662 155 The company continued operations for the next eight years with backers including the King the Duke of York and the Royal Society with operations including engaging in the West African slave trade until it folded in 1670 156 The company s operations merged with those of the Gambia Merchants Company into the new Royal African Company with a royal charter to right to set up forts and factories maintain troops and exercise martial law in West Africa in pursuit of trade in gold silver and slaves Rupert was the third named member of the company s board 157 By then however Rupert s attention had turned to North America The French explorers Pierre Esprit Radisson and Medard des Groseilliers had come to England after conducting a joint exploration of the Hudson s Bay region in 1659 158 there their account attracted the attention of the King and Rupert 159 Rupert put an initial investment of 270 of his own money into a proposal for a fresh expedition and set about raising more despite setbacks including the Great Fire of London by 1667 he had formed a private syndicate and leased the Eaglet from the King for the expedition 160 The Eaglet failed but her sister vessel the Nonsuch made a successful expedition returning in 1669 with furs worth 1 400 161 In 1670 the King approved the charter for The Governor and Company of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson s Bay that would form the Hudson s Bay Company which was granted a trading monopoly in the whole Hudson Bay watershed area an immense territory named Rupert s Land with Rupert appointed the first Governor 161 Rupert s first company secretary was Sir James Hayes and Radisson named the Hayes River in present day Manitoba in his honour The company continued to prosper forming the basis for much of the commercial activity of colonial Canada Rupert s role in colonial commerce was marked by his being asked to lay the cornerstone of the new Royal Exchange in 1670 and being made one of its first councillors 162 b Science and the Royal Society Edit Rupert was a founding member of the Royal Society which as shown in this 1667 engraving celebrating its creation mirrored his wide interests in science and technology After Rupert s retirement from active seafaring in around 1674 he was able to spend more time engaged in scientific research and became credited with many inventions and discoveries although some subsequently turned out to be the innovative introduction of European inventions into England Rupert converted some of the apartments at Windsor Castle to a luxury laboratory complete with forges instruments and raw materials from where he conducted a range of experiments 120 Rupert had already become the third founding member of the scientific Royal Society being referred to by contemporaries as a philosophic warrior 164 and guided the Society as a Councillor during its early years 165 Very early on in the Society s history Rupert demonstrated Prince Rupert s drops to King Charles II and the Society glass teardrops which explode when the tail is cracked although credited with their invention at the time later interpretations suggest that he was instead responsible for the introduction of an existing European discovery into England 166 He demonstrated a new device for lifting water at the Royal Society and received attention for his process for painting colours on marble which when polished became permanent 167 During this time Rupert also formulated a mathematical question concerning the paradox that a cube can pass through a slightly smaller cube Rupert questioned how large a cube had to be in order to fit 168 The question of Prince Rupert s cube was first solved by the Dutch mathematician Pieter Nieuwland 168 Rupert was also known for his success in breaking cypher codes 169 Many of Rupert s inventions were military After designing the Rupertinoe naval gun Rupert erected a watermill on Hackney Marshes for a revolutionary method of boring guns however his secret died with him and the enterprise failed 170 Rupert enjoyed other military problems and took to manufacturing gun locks 171 he devised both a gun that fired multiple rounds at high speed 171 and a handgun with rotating barrels 172 He is credited with the invention of a form of gunpowder which when demonstrated to the Royal Society in 1663 had a force of over ten times that of regular powder a better method for using gunpowder in mining 171 and a torpedo 172 He also developed a form of grapeshot for use by artillery 172 Rupert also focussed on naval inventions he devised a balancing mechanism to allow improved quadrant measurements at sea 171 and produced a diving engine for retrieving objects on the ocean floor 172 While recovering from his trepanning treatment Rupert set about inventing new surgical equipment to improve future operations 173 Other parts of Rupert s scientific work lay in the field of metallurgy Rupert invented a new brass alloy slightly darker in hue than regular brass 174 involving three parts of copper to one part of zinc combined with charcoal 175 this became known as Prince s metal in his honour sometimes also referred to as Bristol Brass 176 Rupert invented the alloy in order to improve naval artillery 177 but it also became used as a replacement for gold in decorations 174 Rupert was also credited with having devised an exceptional method for tempering kirby fish hooks 178 and for casting objects into an appearance of perspective 171 He also invented an improved method for manufacturing shot of varying sizes in 1663 that was later refined by the scientist Robert Hooke one of Rupert s Royal Society friends during the period 171 Peg Hughes Edit Actress Margaret Hughes Rupert s mistress in later life by Sir Peter Lely c 1670 Towards the end of his life Rupert fell in love with an attractive Drury Lane actress named Peg Hughes Rupert became involved with her during the late 1660s leaving his previous mistress Frances Bard although Hughes appears to have held out from reciprocating his attentions with the aim of negotiating a suitable settlement 179 Hughes rapidly received advancement through his patronage she became a member of the King s Company by 1669 giving her status and immunity from arrest for debt and was painted four times by Sir Peter Lely the foremost court artist of the day 180 Despite being encouraged to do so 179 Rupert did not marry Hughes but acknowledged their daughter Ruperta born in 1673 and who later became Mrs Emanuel Howe 181 Hughes lived an expensive lifestyle during the 1670s enjoying gambling and jewels Rupert gave her at least 20 000 worth of jewellery during their relationship including several items from the Palatinate royal collection 182 Margaret continued to act even after Ruperta s birth returning to the stage in 1676 with the prestigious Duke s Company at the Dorset Garden Theatre near the Strand in London The next year Rupert established Hughes with a grand building worth 25 000 that he bought in Hammersmith from Sir Nicholas Crispe 181 Rupert seems rather to have enjoyed the family lifestyle commenting that his young daughter already rules the whole house and sometimes argues with her mother which makes us all laugh 181 Family EditRupert died at his house at Spring Gardens Westminster on 29 November 1682 after a bout of pleurisy and was buried in the crypt of Westminster Abbey on 6 December in a state funeral 183 Rupert left most of his estate worth some 12 000 equally to Hughes and Ruperta 184 Hughes had an uncomfortable widowhood 184 without Rupert s support allegedly not helped by her unproductive gambling 185 Presents from Rupert such as his mother s earrings were sold to the Duchess of Marlborough while a pearl necklace given by Elector Frederick to Electress Elizabeth was sold to fellow actress Nell Gwynn Hughes sold the house in Hammersmith to two London merchants Timothy Lannoy and George Treadwell it was then purchased by the Margrave of Brandenburg Ansbach and became known as Brandenburg or Brandenburgh House 184 Ruperta later married Emanuel Scrope Howe future MP and English general 184 and had five children Sophia William Emanuel James and Henrietta Through William s daughter Mary Rupert is an ancestor of the Bromley baronets Rupert s son Dudley Bard became a military officer frequently known as Captain Rupert and died fighting at the siege of Buda while in his late teens 186 Legacy EditAccording to Ian Gentles Charles I s nephew Prince Rupert of the Rhine was a famed warrior who won hardly any battles on land or sea Beloved by his men for his death defying courage and his high sense of military honour he was nonetheless a bad tempered and arrogant leader His defects of character became more accentuated with age Yet he remains one of the most romantic figures in English history admired for his reckless cavalry charges and his equally reckless naval charges against the much stronger Parliamentary and later Dutch fleets The prince alienated many because he was frequently irascible tactless impatient and most seriously a poor judge of character 187 Prince Rupert s memory is well attested in the geography of Canada The lands of the Hudson s Bay Company being all the land drained by rivers flowing into Hudson Bay were known as Rupert s Land from 1670 until 1870 The Anglican Diocese of Rupert s Land based in Winnipeg Manitoba 188 is the relic of this period as are Prince Rupert Avenue Rupert Avenue and Rupertsland Avenue in Winnipeg 189 Elsewhere in Canada the city of Prince Rupert British Columbia the community of Prince Rupert in the city of Edmonton Alberta and the Rupert River in Quebec are all named after the Prince Rupert s Bay on St Helena may also be named after him In Bristol there was also a street Rupert Street and formerly a public house The Prince Rupert in Rupert Street named to commemorate Prince Rupert 190 Genealogical table EditRupert s relationship with the House of Stuart selective chart 191 James I of England1566 1625Anne of Denmark1574 1619Henry Frederick1594 1612Elizabeth1596 1662Frederick V of the Palatinate1596 1632Charles I of England1600 1649Henrietta Maria of France1609 1669Charles I Louis of the Palatinate1617 1680Rupert1619 1682Maurice1621 1652Sophia of Hanover1630 1714Charles II of England1630 1685Mary1631 1660James II of England1633 1701Henry1640 1660George I of Great Britain1660 1727William III of England1650 1702Mary II of England1662 1694Anne of Great Britain1665 1714James Francis Edward1688 1766In fiction EditPrince Rupert is the protagonist of Poul Anderson s alternative history fantasy book A Midsummer Tempest where the Prince with the help of various Shakespearean characters who are actual persons in this timeline eventually defeats Cromwell and wins the English Civil War Prince Rupert is the key character in the King Crimson song Lizard from their 1970 album of the same name The 23 minute suite includes several sections one named Prince Rupert Awakes and another The Battle of Glass Tears an artistic reference to the battle of Naseby in turn including a sub section called Prince Rupert s Lament Prince Rupert appears in The Oak Apple and The Black Pearl volumes 4 and 5 of The Morland Dynasty a series of historical novels by author Cynthia Harrod Eagles He is assisted during the Civil War by the staunchly Royalist fictional Morland family and is father to the illegitimate Annunciata Morland with whom he has a complicated relationship Prince Rupert and his sister Elisabeth are minor characters in Eric Flint s 1632 series books Grantville Gazette IV and Grantville Gazette VI Prince Rupert is the protagonist of Margaret Irwin s novel The Stranger Prince and appears in her later novel The Bride Both novels deal with the Civil War period Prince Rupert is the subject of Samuel Edwards s biographical novel The White Plume published by William Morrow and Company Ltd in 1961 a semi fictional account of his life from his late teens until his marriage to Peg Margaret Hughes Prince Rupert s Tower is the name given to a Georgian lock up in the Everton area of Liverpool Rupert stayed in the area during the siege of Liverpool 192 Film and television Edit Rupert was portrayed by Timothy Dalton in the 1970 film Cromwell Harry Lloyd played Rupert in the 2008 TV drama The Devil s Whore Rupert was portrayed by Will Bowden in the 2015 Dutch film Michiel de Ruyter See also EditCanadian locations named after RupertNotes Edit His full title was Rupert Count Palatine of the Rhine Duke of Bavaria Duke of Cumberland Earl of Holderness German Ruprecht Pfalzgraf bei Rhein Herzog von Bayern In 1869 control of the territory of the Hudson s Bay Company reverted to the British and Canadian governments 163 References Edit Discover etcher mezzotinter painter Ruprecht van de Palts Spencer p 6 7 Digitaal Vrouwenlexicon van Nederland 17 September 2019 Sophia of Hanover Dies History Today Spencer p 2 Spencer p 1 Spencer p 11 Spencer pp 16 17 Spencer p 14 Spencer p 15 a b c d Spencer p 20 a b Spencer p 23 Dalton notes chapter 1 note 7 Spencer pp 19 21 Spencer p 25 Spencer pp 25 26 Spencer pp 28 9 a b Spencer p 30 a b Spencer p 35 Spencer p 37 Spencer pp 38 9 a b Spencer p 39 a b Spencer p 40 a b Spencer pp 40 1 Kitson p 67 Spencer p 43 Spencer p 41 Warburton p 103 Spencer p xiii a b Spencer p 55 Kitson p 17 Purkiss 2007 p 175 Spencer Spencer p 54 Wedgwood p 107 Spencer p 57 Wedgwood pp 115 6 Wedgwood p 127 Wedgwood p 128 a b Wedgwood p 129 Wedgwood p 165 Wedgwood p 170 Wedgwood p 219 Wedgwood p 172 Wedgwood pp 148 9 Wedgwood pp 148 149 Wedgwood p 149 Wedgwood pp 219 220 Spencer p 134 Wedgwood p 313 Spencer p 118 Wedgwood p 313 Wedgwood p 315 Spencer p 117 Spencer p 148 Wedgwood p 422 Wedgwood p 422 3 Spencer p 160 a b Wedgwood p 471 a b Wedgwood p 472 Wedgwood p 473 Spencer p1 69 Spencer p 173 Spencer p 176 7 a b Wedgwood p 112 Wedgwood p 122 Newman p 31 a b Spencer p 86 Spencer p 88 Wedgwood p 421 Purkiss 2001 p 276 Lapland Lady August 2011 DOI 10 5949 liverpool 9780859898591 003 0005 In book The Black Legend of Prince Rupert s Dog Purkiss 2007 p 377 Newsprint circa 1643 Kitson p 19 Kitson p 18 Spencer pp 189 242 243 254 a b Spencer p 180 Spencer p 186 a b Spencer p 187 Spencer p 192 a b Spencer p 193 Spencer pp 197 198 Kitson p 54 Spencer p 120 Kitson pp 50 69 Kitson p 69 Kitson pp 70 73 Kitson p 83 Kitson pp 86 87 Kitson p 93 Spencer p 225 Spencer p 227 Spencer pp 228 230 Spencer p 236 Spencer p 242 Spencer p 244 Spencer p 255 Spencer p 256 Kiston p 118 Kitson pp 118 9 Kitson p 119 a b Kitson p 120 Kiston p 121 Spencer p 248 Kitson p 122 Kitson p 123 Salaman p 60 Hind p 263 Griffiths p 85 Spencer p 252 Kitson p 130 Kitson p 132 a b Kitson p 133 a b c Kitson p 139 Andrew Marvell Martin Dzelzainis Annabel M Patterson 2003 The Prose Works of Andrew Marvell 1676 1678 Yale University Press pp 270 n 260 ISBN 978 0 300 09936 2 Kitson p 138 Spencer p 326 Spencer p 327 Spencer pp 327 9 a b Spencer p 331 Spencer p 329 Spencer p 330 Spencer pp 310 1 Spencer p 311 a b Kitson p 296 Kitson p 152 Kitson pp 312 3 Kitson p 154 Kitson p 175 Kitson p 180 Lewis p 100 Kitson p 212 De Viet pp 44 45 Kitson p 247 Spencer p 351 Endsor p 9 a b Kitson p 248 Palmer p 61 Kitson p 257 Kitson p 259 Kitson p 261 Kitson pp 288 9 Kitson p 289 Warburton pp 505 6 a b Kitson p 179 Kitson p 155 a b Kitson p 316 Kitson p 319 Kitson p 302 Kitson p 274 Kitson p 297 Kitson p 348 Spencer p 362 a b Spencer p 313 Spencer pp 303 5 a b Kitson p 137 Spencer p 340 Kitson p 238 Spencer p 338 Spencer pp 339 340 Spencer p 341 a b Spencer p 342 Spencer p 344 Hudson s Bay Company Exploring Westward 18th Century Pathfinders and passageways The exploration of Canada Library and Archives Canada 7 December 2001 Archived from the original on 5 February 2007 Retrieved 1 May 2007 Spencer p 265 Spencer p 267 Beckmann Francis and Griffiths p 244 Kitson p 299 a b Croft Guy and Falconer p 53 Spencer p 360 Hone pp 306 7 Granger p 407 a b c d e f Dircks p 220 a b c d Spencer p 271 Spencer p 305 a b Urbanowicz p 28 Coxe p 93 Brannt Krupp and Wildberger p 109 Spencer p 171 Granger p 344 a b Spencer p 318 Spencer p 318 Highfill Burnim and Langhans p 26 a b c Spencer p 319 Spencer pp 320 367 Kitson p 310 a b c d Spencer p 366 Highfill Burnim and Langhans p 26 Spencer p 367 Ian Gentles Prince Rupert The Last Cavalier English Historical Review 2009 124 506 p 174 175 MacDonald Wilma 1 January 1986 Anglican Archives in Rupert s Land Archivaria 246 251 ISSN 1923 6409 MHS Resources History in Winnipeg Streets Manitoba Historical Society Accessed 24 January 2022 Article on the Bristol s Lost Pubs website WebCite archive Fergusson p 141 The Siege of Liverpool Bibliography EditBeckman Johann William Francis and John Williams Griffiths 1846 A History of Inventions Discoveries and Origins Volume 1 London Henry G Bohn Brannt William Theodore Alfred Krupp and Andreas Wildberger 2009 The Metallic Alloys A Practical Guide BiblioBazaar LLC Coxe John Redman 1814 The Emporium of Arts and Sciences Volume 3 Philadelphia J Delaplaine Croft Hallard T Richard K Guy and K J Falconer 1994 Unsolved Problems in Geometry New York Springer Dalton Anthony 2010 River Rough River Smooth Adventures on Manitoba s Historic Hayes River Toronto Dundurn Dircks Henry 1867 Inventors and Inventions Endsor Richard 2009 Restoration Warship The Design Construction and Career of a Third Rate of Charles II s Navy London Anova Books Fergusson Bernard 1952 Rupert of the Rhine London Collins Granger James 1821 A Biographical History of England From Egbert the Great to the Revolution London William Baynes Griffiths Antony 1996 Prints and Printmaking An Introduction to the History and Techniques Berkeley University of California Press Highfill Philip H Kalman A Burnim and Edward A Langhans 1982 Volume 8 of A Biographical Dictionary of Actors Actresses Musicians Dancers Managers and Other Stage Personnel in London 1660 1800 Southern Illinois University Press Hind Arthur M 1963 A History of Engraving and Etching From the 15th Century to the Year 1914 New York Dover Hone William 1841 The Year Book of Daily Recreation and Information Concerning Remarkable Men and Manners Times and Seasons Solemnities and Merry makings Antiquities and Novelties on the plan of the Every day Book and Table Tegg Kitson Frank 1999 Prince Rupert Admiral and General at Sea London Constable Lewis Michael 1957 The History of the British Navy London Pelican Books Newman P R 2006 Atlas of the English Civil War London Routledge Palmer Michael A 2007 Command at Sea Naval Command and Control Since the Sixteenth Century Cambridge MA Harvard Purkiss Diane 2001 Desire and Its Deformities Fantasies of Witchcraft in the English Civil War in Levack Brian P ed New Perspectives on Witchcraft Magic and Demonology Witchcraft in the British Isles and New England London Routledge Purkiss Diane 2007 The English Civil War A People s History London Harper Salaman Malcolm 2005 The Old Engravers of England in Their Relation to Contemporary Life and Art 1540 1800 Kessinger Publishing Spencer Charles 2007 Prince Rupert The Last Cavalier London Phoenix ISBN 978 0 297 84610 9 Urbanowicz Gary R 2002 Badges of the Bravest A Pictorial History of Fire Departments in New York City Turner Publishing Company Warburton Eliot 1849 Memoirs of Prince Rupert and the Cavaliers London R Bentley Wedgwood C V 1970 The King s War 1641 1647 London Fontana Further reading EditAshley Maurice 1976 Rupert of the Rhine London Hart Davis MacGibbon De Viet Rens 2010 Vlootinstructies en de eerste twee oorlogen met Engeland in de zeventiende eeuw MA Thesis Rotterdam Erasmus University in Dutch Irwin Margaret 1937 The Stranger Prince The story of Rupert of the Rhine New York Harcourt Brace Kitson Frank 1994 Prince Rupert Portrait of a Soldier London Constable ISBN 0 09 473700 2 Morrah Patrick 1976 Prince Rupert of the Rhine London Constable Petrie Charles 1974 King Charles Prince Rupert and the Civil War From Original Letters London Routledge and Kegan Paul Thomson George Malcolm 1976 Warrior Prince Prince Rupert of the Rhine London Secker and Warburg Wilkinson Clennell 1935 Prince Rupert the Cavalier Philadelphia J B Lippincott External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert of Palatinate Simmern Duke of Cumberland A Dialogue or Rather a Parley betweene Prince Ruperts Dogge whose name is Puddle and Tobies Dog whose name is Pepper amp c 1643 Political officesPreceded byThe Duke of Hamilton Master of the Horse1653 1655 Succeeded byThe Duke of AlbermalePreceded byKing Charles II Lord High Admiral1668 1682 In commissionLord Capell as First LordTitle next held byKing Charles IIHonorary titlesPreceded byThe Viscount Mordaunt Constable of Windsor Castle1668 1682 Succeeded byThe Duke of NorfolkLord Lieutenant of Surrey1675 1682Preceded byThe Lord Lovelace Lord Lieutenant of Berkshire1670 1682Peerage of EnglandNew creation Duke of Cumberland1644 1682 Extinct Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prince Rupert of the Rhine amp oldid 1138887479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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