Alice had lived through many changes in her long life – and the restoration of King Charles II in 1661 wasn't the last of the political convulsions that she saw. Charles II had no legitimate children, so when he died in 1685 it was his Catholic brother James who came to the throne. His brief reign went downhill quickly.
James II |
Seven influential Protestants wrote to the Protestant prince William of Orange – who was James' nephew and married to his daughter Mary – inviting him to invade and promising they would rise in support. One of the seven was Alice's first cousin Thomas Osborne, Lord Danby.
He was the boy who survived the roof collapse in York in 1638 because he was looking for his cat under the table. He had a long and chequered career as a stateman – he was impeached twice. He had led the government of Charles II during the 1670s and been made Earl of Danby in 1674. He was a fierce opponent of Catholics and Nonconformists, and a keen supporter of an alliance with the Dutch Republic. In fact, he had negotiated the marriage of William of Orange with Charles II's niece Mary in spite of her father's opposition. But he didn't have a talent for friendship. Pale, lean and sickly looking, he needed his government position to make money and he stayed in power by corruption. People said he was proud, ambitious, false, revengeful and greedy. He had been brought down in 1678 and ended up in the Tower of London for five years. But he was back in the House of Lords for 1688.
Thomas Osborne 1st Duke of Leeds (1632-1712) |
William of Orange landed at Brixham in Devon with a large army on Guy Fawkes' Day 1688. Lord Danby kept his word. As William began to advance east, Lord Danby and his men – including Henry Belasyse, the son of Sir Richard Belasyse of Potto – took York and Hull. (Lord Danby's reward was to be made Marquess of Carmarthen in 1689 and Duke of Leeds in 1694).
James' support collapsed and William and Mary became joint rulers of England and Scotland. But the Catholic Irish stood out for James and for two and a half years, until William secured victory over James, Ireland was once again submerged in bloody conflict.
The war in Ireland ended in October 1691. The three kingdoms were now under a constitutional monarchy and Ireland would be dominated by a Protestant élite for the two centuries that followed.
William of Orange (William III of England) (1650-1702) |
Note
These events are known as the Glorious Revolution and the Williamite War.
For sources of this series of blogposts, see Alice Wandesford in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms
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