 Duke of Cumberland - Cavendish Square, London, UK
N 51° 30.990 W 000° 08.699
30U E 698084 N 5711128
This statue is located in the centre of the garden in Cavendish Square. The plinth is original but the horse and rider only appeared on 10th July 2012.
Waymark Code: WMJDRZ
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 11/05/2013
Views: 4
The statue represents the Duke of Cumberland on his horse. The plinth and
original statue appeared in 1770 but the statue was removed, leaving just the
plinth, in 1868. The removal was due to widespread disapproval of the Duke's
actions at the Battle of Culloden in 1746.
The inscription on the plinth reads:
William Duke of Cumberland
Born April 15 1727 Died 31 Octob 1765
The equestrian statue
was erected by
Lieutenant General
William Strode
in gratitude
for his private kindnefs
in honor
to his publick virtue
November the 4 Anno Domini 1770
For 144 years, from 1868 to 2012 the plinth was without a statue.
In July 2012 this statue, made from soap on a tubular frame, was placed here and
is a facsimile of the original. The plan was for the statue to be located here
from 10th July 2012 to 30th June 2013. Now, in November 2013, the statue is
still here and appears to not have deteriorated as quickly as planned even
though, weather wise, the year was not kind.
The statue is sculpted by the Korean artist Meekyoung Shin and a plaque in front
of the plinth tells us:
Meekyoung Shin
Written in Soap
A Plinth Project
10 July 2012 - 30 June 2013
Written in Soap: A Plinth Project is a new public art commisiion by the
Korean artist Meekyoung Shin.
This one-year project recreates in soap the original equestrian statue of
the Duke of Cumberland that sat on this plinth in the square from 1770 to
1868, and which was removed in the nineteenth century due to the widespread
disapproval of his actions in Scotland following his victory at the Battle
of Culloden in 1746.
The new work will make use of the Cavendish Square plinth for the first time
in 144 years and bring focus to the passage of time as the sculpture
weathers throughout the four seasons. As the sculpture erodes due to the
effects of the weather, the scented soap will disintegrate and release a
perfumed aroma. The detail of the statue will soften and fade over time,
symbolising the mutable meanings we attached to public monuments and our
history.
The
BBC website tells us about the evnts leading up to the Battle of Culloden
and afterwards:
Culloden is an evocative place for many people. Not
only is it the site of the last full-scale battle to take place on British
soil, and the last stand of an ancient royal dynasty which traced its
ancestry back to the Dark Age Gaelic Kingdom of Dal Riata and beyond, but it
is also the place where the Highland clan culture of Scotland sang its last
song. The Battle of Culloden in 1746 meant, quite simply, the end of an era
for Scotland.
Culloden Factsheet
The Battle of Culloden was fought on Drumossie Moor, to the north east of
Inverness, on April 16, 1746. It was the last of the great Jacobite risings
- popular attempts to reinstate a Stuart monarch on the throne of Britain -
and was led by Charles Edward Stuart, also known as Bonnie Prince Charlie or
the Young Pretender.
The term Jacobite comes from the name ‘Jacobe’, which is Latin for James - a
popular Christian name among Stuart kings. Charles was the son of the Old
Pretender, James Francis Edward Stuart, and grandson of the deposed James II
of England. He landed on the shores of Scotland in July 1745 in an attempt
to oust King George II and his Hanoverian line from the throne, which had
become the birthright of his family in 1603 when King James VI of Scotland
had travelled south to become King James I of England and Ireland.
Charles raised support for his rising amongst the Highland clans which were
devoted to the Jacobites, although not all clans were loyal to his cause and
many openly supported the Hanoverians. The majority of lowland Scotland is
also thought to have opposed the Jacobite rising of ’45, although they did
have many supporters there as well as in England and the continent -
traditionally in France. Many nobles supported the rising and Lord George
Murray and the Duke of Perth joined the Young Pretender’s ranks as
lieutenant-generals.
Charles and his gathering army reached Perth on September 4, 1745, where the
Young Pretender proclaimed his father, the Old Pretender, to be the rightful
King. He took Edinburgh on September 17 and won a decisive victory at
Prestonpans on September 21. Carlisle fell on November 15 after a short,
five-day siege, and the Jacobites marched on toward London through
Lancaster, Preston and Manchester. The army reached Derby on December 4, but
turned back to Scotland two days later on the advice of Lord George Murray
and several of the Highland Chiefs when it became clear that the
much-promised support of the French and the English Jacobites wasn’t
forthcoming. It was this retreat, against the wishes of Charles himself,
which many historians believe to have been the fatal move which defeated
Duke of Cumberlandthe ’45 rising.
Once back in Scotland Charles was victorious against the government forces
at Falkirk on January 17, 1746, and was involved in siege at Stirling
Castle. However, morale in the Jacobite camp was wavering and the Jacobites
retreated into the Highlands in early February as the Duke of Cumberland
advanced with a larger Hanoverian force. Charles then took Inverness from
the Earl of Loudoun and raided various others government strongholds in the
spring of 1746, as the Duke of Cumberland built and trained an army in
Aberdeen.
Charles was advised by his commanders to avoid direct conflict with
Cumberland’s army, and to pursue the guerrilla tactics which were so
effective in Highland warfare, however, Jacobite funds were running short
and desertion in the ranks was becoming more frequent. This was the context
in which the two armies met at Culloden Moor on April 16, 1746.
Cumberland made the first move by crossing the River Spey on April 12, with
the Jacobites on the other bank retreating without offering any fight. On
the night of April 15-16, Charles hoped to gain advantage by a surprise
attack on the Hanoverian camp near Nairn. The plan, however, was a failure
and the Jacobites retreated to Culloden - a place which Charles was strongly
advised not to chose as the site for a battle. When the Hanoverians advanced
onto the field the next day many of the Jacobites were exhausted after the
night-time raid on Cumberland’s camp.
The Jacobites were outnumbered around 9000 to 6000, and the ground was too
marshy to accommodate the Highlanders’ favourite tactic - the headlong
charge into the enemy’s ranks. Culloden did, however, lend itself more to
Cumberland’s strength in heavy artillery and cavalry. The artillery
decimated the clans as they awaited the command to charge. Many clansmen
fell simply because the command to charge came too late, as Charles waited
for the government troops to advance first, whereas the government troops
just kept firing in the light of their highly successful Bonnie Prince
Charliebombardment. When the command did come, the charge itself was
disorganised. The Hanoverians stood firm and blasted the Jacobite army into
retreat.
Many of the Highlanders headed for Inverness and were hunted down and killed
without mercy by Cumberland’s dragoons. Others, who headed into the
mountains, stood a better chance of survival, but the government troops were
thorough in their retribution. Many of the legends surrounding Culloden
involve the clans’ attempts to return to home and the severity of
government’s reaction. The ’45 was over and Bonnie Prince Charlie headed
back to the safety of France and a life of obscurity.
Identity of Rider: Duke of Cumberland
 Name of artist: Meekyoung Shin
 Date of Dedication: 12th July 2012
 Material: Other
 Unusual Features: Statue is made from soap allowing great detail to be carved.
 Position: All Hooves Planted
 Identity of Horse: Not listed

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