Inverness Scotland and Culloden, the Jacobites

Inverness is where you go to see Loch Ness and Culloden’s Moor where the Jacobites (believers that the son of James II from his second marriage should have inherited throne) led by Bonnie Prince Charlie challenged the brother of the king of England, George II, To a battle in a soggy and marshy terrain against modern Canon warfare on the English side. The story I didn’t know was that the followers of Charlie had almost marched into London and had a some chance of dethroning George. But they decided to go back to Scotland and on the way had some very successful battles. They almost won the crown but George’s brother a mass far superior weaponry.

jacobite is from the Latin form of the name James, Jacobus. It refers to the followers of the royal family from the second marriage of James II.

The first time I ever had haggis. It was actually pretty delicious even each time I tried after this
This marks where the Jacobites Gathered for the battle. On the other side there is a corresponding red flag for the English
This is the Moor. but it is filled with sunken, marshy areas where, evidently, the Scottish troops had problems advancing

what Family tree shows is that when there were no more heirs through the first marriage of James II of England (Scottish by ancestry and the king of Scotland), they decided to grab George from Hanover who didn’t speak English. What I didn’t know until I saw this tree is that he was a blood descendent of James I And was not just picked from some obscure claim. George was the beginning of the house of Hanover which continues to this day.

An important cultural site
I never tried this but I’m not really excited about doing so
The Inverness ocean Inlet which connects to Loch Ness. After seeing the map and the area itself I can imagine that when the ocean level here was very high some large fish could swim into the loch and grow and then become an extremely large fish or mammal or whatever to be viewed 400 years ago as a “monster”. So the story is not far-fetched and I believe there is some truth to it but I suspect it was just a very big fish or mammal which couldn’t get out of the loch. The other sightings were probably just large fish. In the late 1800s it’s pretty clear that everybody else’s sightings were just made up stories.

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