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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by cajunscot View Post
    You miss my meaning; Scottish Jacobites saw the French as allies in their struggle to reclaim the throne, and a number of Scots served in the armies of the French king, whose soldiers also wore a white cockade.

    White cockades were worn by royalist supporters in France through the Revolution.

    So yes, it is appropriate.

    T.
    French troops were also present at Culloden's battle.


    Best,

    Robert
    Robert Amyot-MacKinnon

  2. #2
    macwilkin is offline
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ancienne Alliance View Post
    French troops were also present at Culloden's battle.


    Best,

    Robert
    Indeed they were -- Fitzjames' Horse, piquets drawn from the Irish Brigade and the Royal Écossois, just to name a few.

    T.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by cajunscot View Post
    Indeed they were -- Fitzjames' Horse, piquets drawn from the Irish Brigade and the Royal Écossois, just to name a few.

    T.
    Thank you !

    I suppose we don't have any paintings of these uniforms... ?


    Best,

    Robert
    Robert Amyot-MacKinnon

  4. #4
    macwilkin is offline
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ancienne Alliance View Post
    Thank you !

    I suppose we don't have any paintings of these uniforms... ?


    Best,

    Robert
    http://books.google.com/books?id=n5t...age&q=&f=false

    T.

  5. #5
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    I understand all your statements and I'm familiar with the time period and the traditional Scot/French alliances.

    I guess what I'm saying is, that the wearing of the white rosette or cockade by a French gentleman would normally show the association of that gentleman with the French royalists or Bourbon causes. If that French gentleman was in Scotland during the Jacobite uprising, would that gentleman be showing his association with the French forces that were there to support Prince Charles or was he actually showing his support of Prince Charles regardless of the gentleman's place of birth?

    Was a Scottish Jacobite serving in the French king's forces (in France) and wearing the white rosette or cockade, showing his Jacobite sympathies or just wearing his employers colours? How did the Jacobite cause take the colour white? Did they copy the French or did the French copy them?

    There are records of Scottish mercenaries serving in armies all across Europe long before the Jacobite cause, how did they show their association to their country? Other than the kilt of course.
    Last edited by Dixiecat; 11th January 10 at 02:48 PM. Reason: lost formatting

  6. #6
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    Cock Up Your Beaver

    Quote Originally Posted by Dixiecat View Post
    I understand all your statements and I'm familiar with the time period and the traditional Scot/French alliances.

    I guess what I'm saying is, that the wearing of the white rosette or cockade by a French gentleman would normally show the association of that gentleman with the French royalists or Bourbon causes. If that French gentleman was in Scotland during the Jacobite uprising, would that gentleman be showing his association with the French forces that were there to support Prince Charles or was he actually showing his support of Prince Charles regardless of the gentleman's place of birth?
    A gentleman would not change the cockade in his hat simply because he was moving about Europe. It would seem to be extremely unlikely that a French gentleman would be in Scotland during the rebellion of 1745-1746 under any but military circumstances.

    Something that has to be remembered is that servants would inevitably wear a cockade of the livery colours of their employer, not necessarily their national colours. A gentleman might wear a cockade of national or political affiliation, but he was just as apt to wear one that matched his coat or waitscoat.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dixiecat View Post
    Was a Scottish Jacobite serving in the French king's forces (in France) and wearing the white rosette or cockade, showing his Jacobite sympathies or just wearing his employers colours?
    He was wearing the colours of the French king.
    Quote Originally Posted by DIXIECAT View Post
    How did the Jacobite cause take the colour white?
    Surely you know the story of Prince Charles and the "White Rose"?
    Quote Originally Posted by Dixiecat View Post
    Did they copy the French or did the French copy them?
    Neither. They occurred quite independent of each other.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dixiecat View Post
    There are records of Scottish mercenaries serving in armies all across Europe long before the Jacobite cause, how did they show their association to their country? Other than the kilt of course.
    Generally speaking, at least in the 18th century, they didn't. They served in "Scottish" regiments, and were generally led by exiled Scottish officers, but they wore the uniform of the nation under whose flag they were fighting.

    When Burns wrote "Hey Johnny Lad, Cock Up Your Beaver!" he was satirizing the young men who were willing to spout bellicose politics, but who lacked the courage of their words to "cock their beavers" (beaver being a common term for a hat, and a cocked hat being one with a cockade).
    Last edited by MacMillan of Rathdown; 11th January 10 at 07:08 PM.

  7. #7
    macwilkin is offline
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    In the case of the Royal Ecossais, there are some depictions of soldiers wearing French uniforms with Jacobite blue bonnets and white cockades.

    T.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by cajunscot View Post
    In the case of the Royal Ecossais, there are some depictions of soldiers wearing French uniforms with Jacobite blue bonnets and white cockades.

    T.
    Is it possible that they are wearing their blue bonnets in lieu of the standard French fatigue cap?
    By Choice, not by Birth

  9. #9
    macwilkin is offline
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bigkahuna View Post
    Is it possible that they are wearing their blue bonnets in lieu of the standard French fatigue cap?
    Stuart Reid, in The Scottish Jacobite Army 1745-46, quotes the transcript of the trial of Lt. William Oliphant, in which a witness said that Oliphant was wearing the uniform of officers of Drummonds' regiment, complete with "blue bonnets and white cockades" when captured at Culloden. (p. 62-63).

    T.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown View Post
    and a cocked hat being one with a cockade).
    The term cocked hat refers to the brim being turned up into a bi-corn or tri-corn. Its meaning is independent of the presenence or absence of a cockade.
    Ken

    "The best things written about the bagpipe are written on five lines of the great staff" - Pipe Major Donald MacLeod, MBE

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