Loyal Exchange: the material and visual culture of Jacobite exile, c.1716-1760

Dr Georgia Vullinghs content

Dr Georgia Vullinghs

Thursday 17 November 2022, 17.30-18.30

‘Exile’ was fundamental to shaping the experience of Jacobitism – loyalty to the Stuart dynasty – during the eighteenth century. This talk considers how the Stuarts and their supporters used material and visual culture to negotiate exile and absence. Expanding on the work of Edward Corp, it explores the physical presence of the court of James VIII in Rome and how he and his family navigated the reality of their existence as exiled monarch. As a counterpart, this talk will also address the ways in which Jacobites, in dialogue with the Stuarts, used material and visual to connect with their preferred royal family. Objects were central to a network of exchange which sustained feelings of loyalty. Overall, it will be shown that material culture was central to overcoming both physical and intellectual exile by the Stuarts and their supporters during the eighteenth century.

 

Golden ring with miniature portrait

Gold portrait ring; the oval head with a portrait painted in watercolour on ivory of Princess Maria Clementina Sobieska (Image courtesy of National Museums Scotland)

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Dr Georgia Vullinghs is the Curator of Modern and Contemporary Scottish History at National Museums Scotland. Georgia completed her PhD from the University of Edinburgh in collaboration with National Museums Scotland on the material and visual culture of Jacobite exile. 

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