Charles Stuart, Duke of Cambridge (1677) explained

See also: Charles Stuart, Duke of Cambridge (born 1660).

Charles Stuart
Duke of Cambridge
House:Stuart
Father:James, Duke of York
Mother:Mary of Modena
Birth Date:7 November 1677
Birth Place:St James's Palace, London
Death Date: (aged days)
Death Place:St James's Palace, London
Burial Date:13 December 1677
Burial Place:Westminster Abbey

Charles Stuart (7 November 167712 December 1677) was the first of two sons and third of seven children born from the marriage between James, Duke of York (later James II of England & VII of Scotland) and Mary of Modena. He was styled Duke of Cambridge, but never formally created so, as he died aged one month.

Life

At the time of his birth at St James's Palace, Charles was the second surviving child of James and Mary, a sister, Catherine Laura, having died the previous year. Another sister, Isabella, one year older than Charles, died at the age of four in 1681. At the time of Charles's birth, his uncle, Charles II of England, had no legitimate children and his queen consort, Catherine of Braganza, was reaching the age of 40 and it was clear that she would have no children and that the Duke of York would succeed as King.

Because all of James's sons with his first wife, Anne Hyde, were dead, the newborn Charles was in direct line to the throne, a possibility that caused concern in England and Scotland because both James and Mary were Catholics and the majority of people wanted a Protestant monarch. Like so many of his brothers and sisters, the infant lived for a little more than a month, dying on 12 December the same year he was born. Charles was buried in Westminster Abbey, on 13 December 1677. His younger brother was James Francis Edward Stuart, The Old Pretender.

Arms

During his short life, Charles bore a coat of arms, as a grandson of a British sovereign, consisting those of the kingdom, differenced by a label argent of five points ermine.[1]

Ancestry

|-

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Marks of Cadency in the British Royal family. 27 December 2011.