Death masks help recreate face of Bonnie Prince Charlie
De-aged image offers likelife image of how prince may
have looked during unsuccessful Jacobite rising of 1745
PA Media
Fri 18 Aug
2023 07.27 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/aug/18/death-masks-recreate-face-of-bonnie-prince-charlie
The face of
Bonnie Prince Charlie has been recreated using death masks that depict him as
he would have looked during the Jacobite rising of 1745.
The prince,
who was renowned for his good looks, has captivated a new generation of
interest through the TV show Outlander.
A team at
the University of Dundee’s Centre for Anatomy and Human Identification has
produced what is said to be the most lifelike replica of the prince’s face so
far.
It shows
him with blond ringlets, wearing a white shirt, and with blotchy patches on his
skin, as he would have looked at the time of the Jacobite rising – his
unsuccessful attempt to restore his father, James Francis Edward Stuart, to the
British throne.
Death masks
of the prince were photographed and mapped by researchers, so 3D models could
be produced with state-of-the-art software, allowing experts to de-age the
prince.
Barbora
Veselá, a master’s student who initiated the project, said: “I have looked at
previous reconstructions of historical figures and was interested as to how
these could be done differently.
“I wanted
to create an image of what he would have looked like during the Jacobite
rising. There are death masks of Bonnie Prince Charlie that are accessible,
while some are in private collections.
“We also
know that he suffered a stroke before he died, so that made the process of age
regression even more interesting to me.”
In 1745, at
the age of 24, Prince Charles Edward Stuart sought to regain the Great British
throne for his father, the exiled King James III of England and Ireland and
VIII of Scotland.
Despite
some initial successes on the battlefield, his army was defeated by government
forces at the Battle of Culloden, near Inverness, in April 1746.
Bonnie
Prince Charlie spent the next five months as a fugitive before fleeing to
France and living on the continent for the rest of his life. His endeavours
created one of the most romanticised periods of Scottish history.
When the
prince died after a stroke, aged 67, in Palazzo Muti, Rome, a cast of his face
was taken, which was common for notable figures at the time.
Researchers
examined copies of the masks, at Inverness Museum and Art Gallery and The
Hunterian at the University of Glasgow, and created a composite over several
months.
Veselá took
photographs from all around the masks and used photogrammetry software to
establish a 3D model using almost 500 images.
She said:
“It has been a pleasure to work with these artefacts. The access I have been
given has been incredible. There are moments, when you are working with the
masks, that it suddenly strikes you that this was once a living person.
“Beauty is
a very subjective thing but Bonnie Prince Charlie does have distinctive
features, such as his nose and his eyes, that encourage you to study him.
Hopefully this recreation encourages people to think about him as a person,
instead of just a legend.”
The work
will feature as part of the University of Dundee’s annual master’s show, which
opens to the public on Saturday.
The myths of Bonnie Prince Charlie and the Jacobites
Published
23 June
2017
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-40258979
Most people
have heard of Bonnie Prince Charlie and the Jacobites but their story is often
only vaguely known or misunderstood.
The 1745
Jacobite Rebellion was a turning point in British history.
Charles
Edward Stuart believed the British throne was his birthright and planned to
invade with his Jacobite followers and remove the Hanoverian
"usurper" George II.
A new
exhibition on the Jacobites at the National Museum of Scotland is the largest
in more than 70 years, with over 300 objects on show combining National Museums
Scotland's collection with material on loan from around the UK and Europe.
Exhibition
curator David Forsyth reveals some of the hidden depths to one of the most
tumultuous periods in Scotland's history.
Bonnie Prince Charlie - a mythical figure?
The above
classic "shortbread tin" image depicts Bonnie Prince Charlie as a
highland hero, sweeping into the ballroom at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in
Edinburgh.
In fact the
painting, by John Pettie, dates from 100 years after Charles Edward Stuart died
and was inspired by an episode from Sir Walter Scott's historical novel
Waverley.
Charles did
hold court at Holyrood for about six weeks in 1745 but expressly forbade his
supporters from excessive celebration of the victory at Prestonpans.
His court was
said to be business-like as Charles and his advisors planned the next steps in
the campaign, eventually taking the decision to march south for London.
A Scottish hero?
Charles
Edward Louis John Casimir Sylvester Maria Stuart was born in Rome in 1720,
about 32 years after his grandfather - James VII and II - the last Roman
Catholic monarch of Scotland, England and Ireland - had been deposed from the
throne.
Many years
later Charles would also die in Rome.
During his
life he spent just 14 months on British soil, in 1745-6, and a brief
clandestine return visit in 1750.
Charles was
raised as a king-in-waiting, successor to his father, James, who was the
deposed king's son.
He was
installed by his father with the chivalric orders of both Scotland and England,
depicted in the painting above - the Order of the Thistle and the Order of the
Garter.
James, who
still believed himself to be the king, appointed Charles as his Prince Regent
in 1743, authorised to act for his father in all things.
He was
resolved to reclaim the thrones of Scotland, England and Ireland for his
father.
A Bonnie Prince?
The earlier
portraits of Bonnie Prince Charlie show the popular perception of a handsome
and charming young man.
Contemporary
accounts of the prince appear to confirm this.
In later
life, these qualities faded.
The above
sketch shows the prince as an old man (about 56) and perhaps the overriding
sense is one of disappointment.
He lived
for another 42 years after the battle of Culloden of 1746 but was never able to
muster support for any further attempts to claim the throne.
Charles
became increasingly frustrated and in time embittered by lack of support and
betrayal, as he saw it, by his own father and his younger brother, Henry
Benedict.
With James'
blessing and support, Henry joined the Catholic Church.
This was a
grievous blow to Charles, who would wish to distance the Stuarts from the
Catholic faith in order to generate support in England.
He even
converted to Anglicanism during a clandestine visit to London in 1750.
Charles
never spoke to his father again.
Who were the Stuarts?
The story
of the Jacobites is often reduced to Bonnie Prince Charlie and the 1745
rebellion, with limited consideration of what Charles was actually fighting
for.
Behind that
is the Stuart claim to the three kingdoms.
The Stuart
dynasty had ruled Scotland since 1371.
With the
accession of James VI of Scotland to the throne of England at the Union of the
Crowns in 1603, the Stuarts expanded their kingdom.
This was
still the age of 'divine right' monarchy - the Stuarts believed they were
answerable only to God.
The ampulla
(pictured above) was a sacred object that held the holy oil to consecrate
Charles I during his Scottish Coronation in 1633.
Charles, a
firm believer in divine right monarchy, was executed at the end of the English
Civil War.
The Stuart
line was restored with Charles II, who ruled until his death in 1685.
Why were the Stuarts deposed in the first place?
Charles II
was succeeded by his younger brother, James VII of Scotland and II of England.
James had
secretly converted to Catholicism, as the revelation of his faith would jar
with an increasingly Protestant Britain.
The
Holyrood Altar Plate (above) is a set of devotional items James used in
Edinburgh.
The birth
of a male heir raised the prospect of a continuing Catholic succession.
His
Protestant daughter Mary was no longer his heir.
A Dutch
force led by Mary's husband, William of Orange, was invited to England to
restore Mary to her rightful place.
The '45 was actually the last of five Jacobite
challenges going back to 1689
,
A warrant
for an inquiry into the Glencoe massacre, signed by King William III
The
so-called Glorious Revolution, which installed William and Mary on the throne,
resulted in James's flight to exile in France.
James then
tried to reclaim his throne, with what was effectively the first Jacobite
rising in 1689.
It led to
violence in Ireland, where James' (largely Catholic) supporters were finally
beaten at the Battle of the Boyne and in Scotland where, despite a victory at
Killiecrankie, military conflict proved inconclusive.
The
Scottish Parliament agreed to adopt William as their king in favour of James.
The
Highlands, where the clan chiefs' old oaths were to the Scottish Stuart line,
had been the focal point of rising in Scotland.
So the
chiefs were ordered to swear fealty to their new king, William.
All did
this bar the MacDonalds, who missed an arbitrary deadline.
Many were
killed by a government force billeted with them, an act which appalled many and
increased Jacobite support.
The Glencoe
Massacre of 1692 is one of the most notorious episodes in Scottish history and
the outcry over it alarmed King William.
The above
document is a warrant for an inquiry into the massacre, signed by King William
III.
The
commission of inquiry, perhaps unsurprisingly, found there was nothing in the
king's instructions to warrant the slaughter.
This is an international story
After being
deposed in 1688, James VII and II went into exile for the rest of his days,
along with his family, including the infant prince, James Francis Stuart.
He was
welcomed as a guest of his cousin, King Louis XIV at Saint Germain-en-Laye,
which the French king had vacated to move into Versailles.
From there,
the Stuarts established a court in exile, receiving visitors, conducting
international relations and dispensing honours.
When James
VII and II died in 1701, Louis recognised his son as James VIII and III, King
of Scotland, England and Ireland.
This was
not a title King William acknowledged.
Further
challenges to the British throne were mounted in 1708, 1715 and 1719.
After the
failure of the 1715 rising, the death of Louis XIV and the Treaty of Utrecht
between Britain and France, James was obliged to leave France, settling in Rome
in 1719.
Charles
Edward Stuart was born there the following year.
Was this a war between Scotland and England?
The truth
is rather more complex.
The suit
pictured above belonged to Sir John Hynde Cotton, a leading Jacobite Tory MP
from Cambridgeshire.
He acquired
or was gifted this on a visit to Edinburgh about 1743.
There was
Jacobite support and sympathy in England although, to Charles Stuart's chagrin,
that did not translate into significant military or overt political support in
the 1745 rebellion.
In
addition, promised military aid from France and Sweden failed to materialise.
Nevertheless,
the Jacobite army that took the field at Culloden near Inverness - the decisive
battle of the '45 - was not solely Highland. It also had Irish and French units.
So a Scottish civil war between highlanders and
lowlanders?
This Gaelic
bible pictured above belonged to a soldier who served with the Argyll militia,
raised by the Clan Campbell to fight on the side of the government forces
There was
considerable opposition to the Jacobites within Scotland.
Bonnie
Prince Charlie held court at Holyrood Palace for six weeks in 1745 but, just
the length of the Royal Mile away, Edinburgh Castle remained a fortified
government garrison throughout.
Glasgow
remained loyal to the Hanoverians, who were by now on the thrones of Scotland
and England.
This
division is sometimes simplified to Highlanders and Lowlanders but there was
strong Jacobite support in Aberdeen, Perth and Fife, and indeed some
Highlanders fought on the government side.
The Gaelic
bible pictured above belonged to a soldier who served with the Argyll militia,
raised by the Clan Campbell to fight on the side of the government forces.
It was also
not a matter of Protestant v Catholic in Scotland - many of Charles' most
prominent Scottish supporters were actually Episcopalian.
Who defeated Charlie?
He is
vilified in the popular historical memory for the brutal crackdowns across the
Highlands after Culloden, when the traditional right to bear arms and the
wearing of tartan and were suppressed as the British government resolved to
wipe out the social, cultural and military infrastructure of clan society,
which was perceived as a source of loyalty to the Stuarts.
Some
Lowlanders welcomed the Duke, and he was granted the freedom of both Glasgow
and Edinburgh.
How was Charles remembered?
This is a
letter from Robert Burns, accepting an invitation to attend a "Steuart
Society dinner" on Hogmanay 1787, on what turned out to be Charles Edward
Stuart's last birthday.
By now,
Jacobitism was no longer a threat to the House of Hanover, more almost a
gentleman's club, still toasting the kings-over-the-water but, politically and
militarily spent.
By this
time, after the brutality of the post-Culloden years, efforts were being made
to assimilate or rehabilitate (depending on your point of view) the reputation
of the Highlander into the emergent British imperial identity, with the
revoking of the ban on tartan and the incorporation of the Highland regiments
into the British Army.
Charles
died in 1788, leaving his younger brother, Henry, Cardinal York as the last
male heir in the Stuart succession.
Despite
being in no position to prosecute the claim, he never renounced it and
commissioned rather regal objects like the above Caddinet - a type of serving
dish for bread which was traditionally only used by monarchs.
After
Henry's death in 1807, Charles was reinterred and the three now rest together
in the crypt of St Peter's Basilica.
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