The 'Monmouth Rebellion' of
1685, also known as the 'Pitchfork Rebellion', was an attempt to overthrow the
King of England,
James II, who became king when his elder brother,
Charles II, died on
6 February 1685. James II was unpopular because he was
Roman Catholic and many people were opposed to a "
papist" king.
James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, claimed to be rightful heir to the throne and attempted to displace James II.
The rebellion ended with the defeat of Monmouth's forces at
Battle of Sedgemoor on
6 July 1685 (often, rather incorrectly, said to be the last
pitched battle on English soil). Monmouth was
executed for
treason on
15 July, and many of his supporters were executed or
transported in the
Bloody Assizes of
Judge Jeffreys.
Duke of Monmouth
Monmouth was an illegitimate son of Charles II. There had been rumours that Charles had married Monmouth's mother,
Lucy Walter, but no evidence was forthcoming, and Charles always said that he only had one wife,
Catherine of Braganza.
Monmouth was a
Protestant. He had been appointed Commander-in-Chief of the
British Army by his father in 1672 and
Captain-General in 1678, enjoying some successes in the
Netherlands in the
Third Anglo-Dutch War. Monmouth's military reputation, and his
Protestantism, made him a popular figure in England. An attempt was made in 1681 to pass an
Act of Parliament to exclude James Stuart, Charles II's brother, from the succession and substitute Monmouth, but Charles outmanoeuvered his opponents and dissolved Parliament for the final time. After the
Rye House Plot to assassinate both Charles and James, Monmouth exiled himself to
Holland, and gathered supporters in
The Hague.
So long as Charles II remained on the throne, Monmouth was content to live a life of pleasure in Holland, while still hoping to accede peaceably to the throne. The accession of James II put an end to these hopes.
Prince William of Orange, although also a Protestant, was bound to James by treaties and would not accommodate a rival claimant. He suggested Monmouth should take a commission with
Emperor Leopold in his fight against the
Turks. Monmouth, however, at the urging of his fellow exiles, moved to take the Crown of England by force.
From Lyme Regis to Sedgemoor
In May
1685, Monmouth set sail for
South West England, a strongly Protestant region, with three small ships, four light field guns and 1500 muskets. He landed with 82 supporters, including
Lord Grey of Warke, and around 300 men, at
Lyme Regis in
Dorset on 11 June. Monmouth had been promised a large army and universal support by his supporters in the Hague, thinking that on landing he would be able to march unopposed to London. King James was soon warned of Monmouth's arrival: two
customs officers from
Lynne arrived in London on 13 June having ridden some 200 miles post haste.
Instead of marching on London, he marched north into
Somerset, picking up a disorganised group of around 6,000, mostly
nonconformist,
artisans and farmer workers armed with farm tools (such as
pitchforks): one famous supporter was a young
Daniel Defoe. Monmouth proclaimed himself king at
Taunton on 18 June, and continued north, via
Bridgwater and
Shepton Mallet (
23 June), hoping to capture the city of
Bristol (which at that time was the second largest and second most important city in the country, after London). Meanwhile, the
Royal Navy captured Monmouth's ships, cutting off all hope of an escape back to the continent.

Route of Monmouth's army
After unsuccessful attempts on Bristol and
Bath, including inconclusive skirmishes with a force of
Life Guards commanded by
Louis de Duras, 2nd
Earl of Feversham (an elderly nephew of
Turenne who had spent some time in English service and later became a
Knight of the Garter) at
Keynsham on 26 June and
Norton St Philip on 27 June, Monmouth's forces turned back.
Monmouth was counting on rebellion in
Scotland, led by
Archibald Campbell, 9th
Earl of Argyll, weakening the King's support and army. Argyll landed at
Campbeltown on 20 May and spent some days raising a small army of supporters, but was unable to hold them together while marching through the lowlands towards
Glasgow. The Earl and his few remaining companions were captured at
Inchinnan on
19 June and he was taken to
Edinburgh to be executed on 30 June. Expected rebellions in
Cheshire and
East Anglia also failed to materialise. The morale of Monmouth's forces started to collapse after news of the setback in Scotland arrived while the makeshift army was resting in
Frome on
28 June.
Monmouth retreated via Shepton Mallet, which no longer welcomed him, and
Wells. Eventually he was pushed back to the
Somerset Levels (where
Alfred the Great had found refuge in his conflicts with the
Vikings), becoming hemmed in at
Bridgwater on 3 July. Monmouth was finally defeated by Feversham (with
John Churchill, later
Duke of Marlborough, his second in command) on 6 July at the
Battle of Sedgemoor. Monmouth had risked a night attack, but surprise was lost when a musket was discharged. His untrained supporters were quickly defeated by the professionals, and hundreds were cut down by cannon- and musket-fire.
The battle of Sedgemoor is often referred to as the last battle fought on
English soil, but this is incorrect: the
Battle of Preston in
Lancashire was fought on 14 November 1715, during the
First Jacobite Rebellion, and the
Second Jacobite Rebellion saw a minor engagement at Clifton Moor near
Penrith in
Cumbria on 18 December 1745.
After Sedgemoor
Monmouth fled from the field of battle but was captured in a ditch on
8 July (either at
Ringwood in the
New Forest, or at
Horton in
Dorset). He was condemned to execution for committing
treason against the king, and beheaded at
Tower Hill on
15 July. It is said that it took eight blows of the axe from
Jack Ketch (a butcher and part-time headsman) to sever his head, finishing off the job with his butcher's knife.
The subsequent
Bloody Assizes of
Judge Jeffreys were a series of trials of Monmouth's supporters in which 320 people were condemned to death and around 800 sentenced to be
transported to the
West Indies.
James II took advantage of the suppression of the rebellion to consolidate his power. He asked Parliament to repeal the
Test Act and the
Habeas Corpus Act, used his dispensing power to appoint Catholics to senior posts, and raised the strength of the standing army.
Parliament opposed many of these moves, and on
20 November,
1685 James dismissed it. In
1688, when the birth of
James Francis Edward Stuart heralded a Catholic succession, James II was overthrown in a ''
coup d'état'' by William of Orange in the
Glorious Revolution at the invitation of the disaffected Protestant Establishment.
Literary References
The Monmouth Rebellion plays a key role in
Peter S. Beagle's novel
Tamsin, about a 300-year-old ghost who is befriended by the protagonist.
Arthur Conan Doyle's historical novel
Micah Clarke deals directly with Monmouth's landing in England, the raising of his army, its defeat at Sedgemoor, and the reprisals which followed.
Several characters in
Neal Stephenson's trilogy
The Baroque Cycle, particularly
Quicksilver and
The Confusion, play a role in the Monmouth Rebellion and its aftermath.
Dr. Peter Blood, main hero of
Rafael Sabatini's Captain Blood novel, was sentenced by
Judge Jeffreys for aiding wounded Monmouth rebels. Transported to the Caribbean, he started his career as a pirate there.
R. D. Blackmore's historical Novel
Lorna Doone is set in the South West of England during the time of Monmouth's rebellion.
The Royal Changeling, by
John Whitbourn describes the rebellion with some fantasy elements added, from the viewpoint of Sir
Theophilus Oglethorpe.
Aphra Behn's Ooranoko can be read as an allegory for the rebellion, with the titular slave playing Monmouth's role.
See also
★
British military history
★
UK topics
External links
★
Sedgemore Battle and the Monmouth Rebellion campaign (
PDF, 383K, 52 pages)
★
Somerset gateway: Monmouth Rebellion
★
Monmouth Rebellion: Dorset connections
★
HTV series following two children who get caught up in the rebellion (1972)
★
Book: Colyton, The Most rebellious Town in Devon (published 2003)
★
Open Door: James II and the Monmouth Rebellion (1685)
★
Battlefields Trust
★
Monmouth.org.uk