Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General Quiz
GEOFFREY PARKER e a Revolução Militar: O caso da batalha de Culloden (1746)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6. “They
then came
running on in
The Gentlemen's Magazine Vol. XVI, 1746 page 209.
their wild Manner; and
upon the Right, where His
Royal Highness had placed him-
self, imagining the greatest Push would
be there, they came down three several Times
within a Hundred Yards of our Men, Tiring their Pis-
tols and brandishing their Swords but the Royals and
Pulteney’s hardly took their Firelocks from their Shoulders,
so that after those faint Attempts they made off; and the
little Squadrons on our Right were sent to pursue
them. General Hawley had, by the Help of
our Highlanders, beat down two, little
Stone Walls, and came; in upon
the right Flank of
their second
Line.”
7. “The right wing advanced
first as the whole line did much
Journals and Memoirs of the Young Pretender's Expedition
at the same time. The left wing did
in 1745, by Highland Officers in his Army. In: The Lockhart Papers
not attack the enemy, at lest did not
go in sword in hand, imagining they
would be flank'd by a regiment of foot
and some horse, which the enemy brought
up at that time from their second line or corps
de reserve. When the right wing were within pistol
shot of the enemy, they received a most terrible fire
not only in front but also in flank, by reason of those
who were posted near the stone walls, notwithstanding of
which they went in sword in hand, after giving their fire cross
to the enemy and were received by them with their
spontoons and byonetts.”
8. Journals and Memoirs
of the Young Pretender's Expedition PARKER, Geoffrey.
The military revolution:
in 1745, by Highland Officers military innovation and the rise of the west
in his Army. In: The Lockhart Papers. 1500-1800. Cambridge
University Press. 2nd ed., 1996.
FONTES
PRIMÁRIAS
FONTES
SECUNDÁRIAS
The Gentlemen's Magazine
Vol. XVI, 1746. pag 209.
REID, Stuart.
The Highland Clansman, 1689-1746.
Osprey Publishing. Oxford, 1997.
___Culloden Moor,
1746: The death of the Jacobite cause.
Osprey Publishing, Oxford, 2002.