The Royal Stuart Society was founded in 1926 and has an international membership.
The Society’s specific Objects as laid down in its Constitution are:
- to be open to all who have an interest in the members of the Royal House
of Stuart, their descendants and supporters
- to promote research in and
further knowledge of Stuart history
- to uphold rightful Monarchy and oppose
Republicanism
- to arrange such commemorations, lectures and other activities
as shall advance these objectives
The Society is therefore of a monarchist and traditionalist character and
with a specific interest in the Royal House of Stuart and research concerning
the Royal House and Stuart history.
Within these parameters, the Society regards itself as a ‘Broad Church’ and
applications for membership will be welcomed from all who support its objects
and ethos as shown above.
The Society gladly recognises that those who form its membership are likely
to have a varied range of particular interests. For some it will primarily
be support for the institution of monarchy and the upholding of monarchical
institutions against attack from their opponents. This support may favour,
for instance, the legitimist stance based on hereditary principles and exemplified
in the Jacobite movement and tradition after 1688. Adherents of this position
will look with favour on the senior and direct hereditary heirs of the Royal
House of Stuart although as our page on ‘Succession’ makes clear,
none of those heirs has claimed any or all of the thrones of the British
Isles since 1807. Other members of the Society will support or find acceptable
the ‘parliamentary’ monarchy created by the Act of Settlement
(1701) and now embodied in the reigning House of Windsor. For all there will
be a consensus based on the desirability of having a monarchy rather than
a republic. Closely linked with support for monarchy, members are likely
to favour organised society in these islands being of a Christian, civilized
and traditionalist nature. In a more general way they will favour co-operation
with other credible monarchist bodies such as the International Monarchist
League to support monarchical forms of government worldwide.
For many members of the Society, a key emphasis will lie with the achievement
of historical accuracy and credible interpretations of events, policies and
outcomes in studies relevant to the Stuarts and the periods of their primary
significance by high quality scholarship. In this connection, the flourishing
state of Jacobite studies from 1688 to 1807 has inestimably benefited the
Society. Such members may themselves be academics or people with a significant
interest in historical work concerning the Stuarts. These members may be
actively engaged in original research and also in challenging errors of fact
or interpretation where unsubstantiated or biased interpretations have previously
been accepted. They will be especially interested in the programme of high
quality lectures and publications organised and produced by the Society and
shown on the ‘Forthcoming Events’ and ‘Publications’ pages
of this website. By arrangement with publishers, the Society is often able
to offer newly published books on Stuart history to its members at discounted
prices. Such books and others may also be reviewed in our annual ‘Royal
Stuart Review’ which all members receive.
Other members may have as their foremost interest the fascinating
and complex world of Stuart iconography and symbolism found in the portraiture,
glassware and medals which enabled the Stuarts to communicate with their
subjects and supporters both as reigning and exiled monarchs in an age without
means of mass communication. A number of recognised experts in these fields
are members of the Society and other members are serious collectors. Beyond
that there is the reviving interest in the music of the Stuart Court and
period both in the British Isles and in exile in France and Italy and the
consequent resurgence of enthusiasm for composers such as Gibbons, Lawes,
Lanier, Blow, Couperin and Fede. Linked to these interests is the Society’s
programme of visits to places of Stuart interest such as Ham House, Restoration
House (Rochester), Chiddingstone Castle and the Library at Windsor Castle.
For the majority of members, it is clear that interest lies not so much
in any one of these subjects but in a combination of them all. Membership
of the Society therefore attractively represents the opportunity to support
monarchical institutions and traditionalist values in the context of academic
excellence, the visual and musical Arts and good fellowship.
This is the only official site of the Royal Stuart Society and the Society has conferred no authority on any other site of similar name.
This site is maintained by Cravenplan
Computers Ltd
Original design of the site is by WaylandDesign

King Charles I and Queen Henrietta Maria with the Prince of Wales (later King Charles II) and Princess Mary by Van Dyck (Goodwood House, Chichester)
The music heard on this summary page is "King James II's March". This and many other pieces following the exiled court from St. Germain through Lorraine and Urbino to Rome, can be heard on a compact disc (JAN D205), entitled "Kings over the Water".
It can be obtained from:
Janiculum, 4 Scarth Road, London, SW13 0ND, tel: 0208 8876 6901, fax: 0208
8395 3919, email: janeclark@intune.co.uk.
Cost: £12.50 including package and posting.
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