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Dave Ryan of Caliver Books writes:


Swordsmen of the King

Swordsmen of the King
Charles I's Nephews Rupert and Maurice at War
Jeffrey James
ISBN: 978-1-85818-689-4
234mm x 156mm
184 pages
Paperback
£14.99 GBP

Swordsmen of the King tells the rousing story of Charles I's German nephews Rupert and Maurice during the English Civil War (1642-46): men dubbed by critics at court the King's Swordsmen, and by their opponents the Bloody Cavaliers. Author Jeffrey James analyses the battles and campaigns they fought, drawing on first-hand accounts to evoke the experience of seventeenth-century warfare. He vividly describes the course of the battles and the sieges at which the princes served, the fates of the men they led, and of the enemies they faced. The action is set in the context of Civil War politics, exploring tensions between the princes' family (ruined by the Thirty Years War), the English Parliament at Westminster and the Royal Court at Oxford.

Rupert stands out in histories of the period, attracting criticism and applause in equal measure. Swordsmen establishes him as not only a dashing and talented cavalry commander, but also as a man whose aggressive prosecution of the war shocked contemporaries, and whose apparent haughty disregard for the opinions of others created tensions within the Royalist High Command. Maurice has received less focus in the past than his elder brother. James seeks to raise his profile, highlighting the prince's open, inclusive style of leadership. and describing in detail his early successes. Rehabilitation can only go so far; the younger prince's later failures compared badly with Rupert's string of successes elsewhere. By the summer of 1644, Rupert had reached the pinnacle of his fame, while Maurice, recovering from illness, had seen his fortunes plummet. Rupert's steamroller invasion of the North led to a defeat of monumental proportions, plunging the Prince into a deep depression. While Rupert licked his wounds, Maurice redeemed himself, playing a decisive role in defeating Parliamentarian field armies in Cornwall and Berkshire, setting the stage for the fateful campaign of 1645.

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