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Henry Benedict Stuart
Henry Benedict Stuart
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Henry Benedict Thomas Edward Maria Clement Francis Xavier Stuart, Cardinal Duke of York (6 March 1725 – 13 July 1807), also known as the Cardinal of York,[2] was a cardinal, and was the third and final Jacobite heir to publicly claim the thrones of Great Britain and Ireland, as the younger grandson of King James II of England. One of the longest-serving cardinals in history, Henry spent his whole life in the Papal States and became the dean of the College of Cardinals and cardinal-bishop of Ostia and Velletri. Unlike his father James Francis Edward Stuart (The Old Pretender) and elder brother Charles Edward Stuart (The Young Pretender or Bonnie Prince Charlie), Henry made no effort to seize the thrones. After Charles's death in 1788, Henry became known by Jacobites as Henry IX and I, but the Papacy did not recognise Henry as the lawful ruler of Great Britain and Ireland and instead referred to him as the "Cardinal Duke of York".[3] He was most widely known as the Duke of York, a title in the Jacobite peerage granted to him by his father.

Key Information

Early life

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Henry Benedict Stuart, age 13, by Louis Gabriel Blanchet (1738)

Henry was born in exile at the Palazzo Muti in Rome on 6 March 1725 and baptised on the same day by Pope Benedict XIII,[4] 37 years after his grandfather James II and VII lost the thrones, and ten years after his father's failed attempt to regain it. His father was James Francis Edward Stuart, known to his opponents as "the Old Pretender". His mother was the Princess Maria Klementyna Sobieska, granddaughter of the Polish King and Lithuanian Grand-Duke, John III Sobieski. Henry was apparently an intelligent child who could spell and write better than his older brother Charles. More introverted than Charles and more cautious in his approach to problems, Henry was described as pious and mild-mannered.[5]

A young Henry Benedict Stuart (painted ca. 1729–1732), bearing a striking resemblance to his elder brother Charles Edward Stuart

Henry went to France in 1745 to help his brother, Prince Charles Edward Stuart ("Bonnie Prince Charlie", or "the Young Pretender") prepare the Jacobite rising of 1745. Attached to the French Royal Army, he was in nominal command of a cross-channel invasion force of some 10,000 men that never made it out of Dunkirk, and subsequently served under Maurice de Saxe at the siege of Antwerp. After the defeat at the Battle of Culloden (1746), Henry Stuart returned to Italy, aged 21.

Ecclesiastical career

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On 30 June 1747 Pope Benedict XIV conferred the tonsure on him and created him Cardinal-Deacon of Santa Maria in Campitelli in a special consistory held on 3 July 1747. On 27 August 1747 he was promoted through the four minor orders by Benedict. He received the subdiaconate on 18 August 1748 and diaconate on 25 August 1748. His elder brother Charles, who was in France at the time, was not in favor of the ecclesiastical honors as he believed they would only serve to further religious prejudice against the Stuarts.[6]

As the cardinalate was a rank rather than one of the priestly orders, Charles hoped that Henry might yet make a politically advantageous marriage, and was dismayed to discover that his brother had been ordained a priest on 1 September 1748.[4] Later that month, Henry was made Cardinal-Priest, retaining his diaconal church. In 1751, he was made Arch-Priest of St. Peter's Basilica.[4]

His revenues from the many ecclesiastical preferments he enjoyed were enormous. His income from abbeys and other pluralities in Flanders, Spain, Naples and France amounted to 40,000 Pounds in British money at the time. He also held sinecure benefices yielding revenues in Spanish America. He owned territory in Mexico, which contributed largely to his income.[7]

Louis XV of France bestowed on the Cardinal the abbeys of Auchin and St. Amand as compensation for having had to evict his brother pursuant to the terms of the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle.[6]

In December 1752 his titular seat was changed to Santi Apostoli; and in 1758 the Pope named him Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals. The responsibilities of this office included administering all property, fees, funds and revenue belonging to the College of Cardinals, celebrating the requiem Mass for a deceased cardinal, and charge of the registry of the Acta Consistoralia. He participated in the 1758 papal conclave, which elected Pope Clement XIII. In October of that year, Henry was made titular Archbishop of Corinth. The following year, he resigned the title of Santa Maria in Campitelli to assume that of Santa Maria in Trastevere; however, he retained the Church of Santi Apostoli in commendam.

He was made Cardinal-Bishop of Frascati on 13 July 1761.[8] He was appointed Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals on 26 September 1803, then also succeeding to the See of Ostia and Velletri. He lived and worked in Frascati for many years, descending each afternoon in his carriage to Rome, where his position as vice-chancellor entitled him to the Palazzo della Cancelleria.

Henry was the last claimant to the British throne to touch the sick to cure them from the King's Evil.

Henry is described as a beatific, abstemious, wealthy, celibate aesthete who lived to a great age, 'inoffensive and respectable' to the end.[9]

French Revolution and later life

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Henry Benedict Stuart by Maurice Quentin de La Tour (1746/47), long thought to be of Charles Edward Stuart

At the time of the French Revolution, he lost his French Royal benefices and sacrificed many other resources to assist Pope Pius VI. This, in addition to the seizure of his Frascati property by the French, caused him to descend into poverty,[10] which resulted in the sale of the Stuart Sapphire. The British Minister in Venice arranged for Henry to receive an annuity of £4,000 from George III of Great Britain. Although the British government represented this as an act of charity, Henry and the Jacobites considered it to be a first instalment on the money which was legally owed to him. (For many years the British government had promised to return the English dowry of his grandmother, Mary of Modena, but never did so.)

The Vatican had recognised James Francis Edward Stuart as James III and VIII as the King of Great Britain and Ireland. After his death in 1766, the Vatican did not recognise his son (Henry's brother) Charles, who had converted to Anglicanism in 1750. The Vatican had not, however, overtly recognised the Hanoverian monarchs. However, in November 1792 the Vatican first referred to George III as the King of Great Britain and Ireland instead of the Elector of Hanover. This resulted in a protest by Henry, who suggested the insult would result in him not visiting Rome again.[11]

Despite their general anti-clericalism and hostility to the Bourbon monarchy, the French Directory suggested to the United Irishmen in 1798 to elevate Henry as King of the Irish (Henry IX).[12][13] This was in the course of General Jean Joseph Amable Humbert landing a force in County Mayo for the Irish Rebellion of 1798, and trying to rally the Catholic population: a significant number of Irish priests supported the Rising, even though Humbert's army had been veterans of the anti-clerical campaign in Italy.[13] The French hoped Henry could lead a French client state in Ireland; however, Wolfe Tone, the Protestant republican leader, vetoed the scheme.[13] Henry returned to Frascati in 1803. In September of that year he became the Dean of the College of Cardinals and hence Cardinal Bishop of Ostia and Velletri,[10] though he still lived in the episcopal palace at Frascati. He died there on 13 July 1807, aged 82, simultaneously the 60th anniversary of his appointment as the Cardinal Deacon of his titular church, and the 46th anniversary of his elevation to the rank of Cardinal Bishop.

Personal life

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Henry Benedict Stuart by Anton Raphael Mengs (1756)

Some modern historians have speculated whether Henry was homosexual.[1] Contemporary accounts include the writings of Hester Lynch Thrale[14] (1741–1821), and the diplomat and writer Giuseppe Gorani [it; fr][15] (1740–1819). Gorani admitted to having gathered evidence insufficient to confirm his suspicions either way, but drew attention to the number of handsome clerics that were to be found in Henry's palace. The historian Andrew Lang alluded to James's comment that his younger son would never marry although many marriages had been planned for him.[1]

The writer Gaetano Moroni[16] provides the lengthiest account of Henry's close attachment with his majordomo Giovanni Lercari [it; nl] (1722–1802), whom Henry was said to have "loved beyond measure". This led to serious tensions between the cardinal and his father James, who in 1752 tried to have Lercari dismissed from Rome. Henry reacted by attempting to secure his financial independence, and refused to return to Rome from Bologna without Lercari by his side. A public scandal was narrowly avoided by the intervention of Pope Benedict XIV.[17] It was agreed that Lercari would leave the household, and he was later made Archbishop of Genoa.

Things became easier after the death of James in 1766. From 1769 onwards Henry remained close to Angelo Cesarini, a nobleman from Perugia, who under Henry's protection won various honours, was made canon of the cathedral in Frascati, and in 1801 became Bishop of Milevi. Henry died with Cesarini at his side, as for the past 32 years. Cesarini was later buried in the church of Santa Maria in Vallicella.

These relationships may have had a romantic element.[18]

Legacy

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Monument to the Royal Stuarts, left aisle of Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome

Under his will, which he signed as "Henry R" (i.e. Rex or king), he was succeeded in all his claimed British rights by his nearest blood-relative and friend, King Charles Emmanuel IV of Sardinia. Like his successors, Charles Emmanuel neither asserted nor renounced his Jacobite claims.[citation needed]

In his will he left the Crown Jewels of the United Kingdom to the Prince of Wales, the future George IV.[19][20]

Henry, his brother, his father and his mother are buried in the crypt of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican. There is a monument to the Royal Stuarts on one of the columns in the basilica proper, designed by Antonio Canova. The monument was originally commissioned by Angelo Cesarini, executor of Henry Benedict's estate. Among the subscribers was George IV.[citation needed]

The monument was restored at the expense of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother in the 1940s.[21]

Arms

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During the pretence of his father and brother, Henry claimed a coat of arms consisting of those of the kingdom, differenced by a crescent argent[22] or white crescent.

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Henry Benedict Stuart (6 March 1725 – 13 July 1807), known as the Cardinal , was a Roman Catholic cardinal and the final Jacobite to the thrones of , , and , styled by supporters as Henry IX and I after his brother Edward Stuart's death in 1788. The younger son of the exiled and his wife , he was born at the Palazzo Muti in and baptized the same day by . Created a cardinal at age 22 on 3 July 1747, he was ordained a in 1748 and advanced through ecclesiastical roles, including archbishop of Corinto in 1758, bishop of in 1761, and bishop of Ostia e Velletri in 1803, which positioned him as dean of the .
Residing mainly in the at locations including , Albano, , and the episcopal palace in , Stuart maintained a modest funded by papal stipends and contributions from British Catholic sympathizers. He participated in four papal conclaves (1758, 1769, 1775, and 1799–1800) and contributed to 's ransom during the French occupation in 1798, but eschewed active political intrigue in favor of his clerical duties and patronage of arts and music. With no legitimate heirs due to his vows of , his death at ended the direct male Stuart line, buried initially at Santa Andrea della Valle before reinterment in .

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Henry Benedict Thomas Edward Maria Clement Stuart was born on 6 March 1725 at the Palazzo Muti in , the primary residence of the exiled Stuart court under papal hospitality. He was the second son of (1688–1766), who claimed the thrones of , , and Ireland as James III and VIII following the deposition of his father James II in the of 1688, and (1702–1735), a Polish princess and granddaughter of King John III Sobieski, whose marriage to James Francis Edward in 1719 had been arranged to bolster Jacobite alliances on the continent. The Stuart dynasty traced its male-line claim through James II (1633–1701), the last Catholic monarch to reign over , , and before his flight amid Protestant to his pro-Catholic policies and the birth of a male heir, which threatened to perpetuate a Catholic succession. James II's ousting led to the invitation of the Dutch William III and Mary II, establishing the post-Stuart , while the Jacobite cause persisted through foreign courts, sustained by French and later Roman support despite repeated military failures, such as the 1715 and 1745 risings. Henry Benedict's elder brother, Charles Edward Louis John Casimir Sylvester Severino Maria Stuart (1720–1788), known as the Young Pretender, embodied the ongoing dynastic pretensions, leading the 1745 Jacobite invasion of Britain that ended in defeat at Culloden in 1746. Maria Clementina's death in 1735, when Henry Benedict was ten years old, stemmed from complications following a amid a strained marriage marked by her temporary abandonment of the family in 1725–1727 due to religious and personal conflicts, though she later reconciled and resided primarily in a in . The family's reliance on papal pensions and hospitality underscored their status as disinherited royals, with Henry Benedict's upbringing in embedding him within a Catholic milieu that prioritized and dynastic legitimacy over prospects of restoration.

Education and Formative Influences

Henry Benedict Stuart spent his childhood and youth in the exiled Stuart court's residences, primarily at the Palazzo Muti in , as well as in Albano and , where he received his early education amid the Jacobite entourage. Like his brother Charles Edward, he was tutored by Scottish expatriates in , receiving a suited to princely status, including languages, history, and , though specific curricula details remain sparse in contemporary accounts. From an early age, Stuart displayed pronounced piety, surpassing the devotional practices of his parents, and , whose strong Catholic faith profoundly shaped his worldview in the insular, faith-centered environment of the papal court. The death of his mother in 1735, when he was ten, intensified his introspective tendencies and clerical inclinations, fostering a preference for ecclesiastical pursuits over the military ambitions his father initially envisioned for him. Surrounded by clerics, diplomats, and lingering Jacobite supporters, Stuart's formative years instilled a dual commitment to dynastic legitimacy and religious , evident by his early expressions of intent to enter the priesthood despite familial pressures to support the Stuart claim militarily. This environment, marked by exile's constraints and Rome's spiritual influence, oriented him toward the Church as both personal calling and political refuge, diverging from his brother's adventurous path.

Jacobite Involvement

Support for the 1745 Rising

In late 1744, Henry Benedict Stuart traveled from to France to assist his elder brother, , in organizing support for an anticipated Jacobite invasion of Britain. This effort aimed to restore their father, , to the thrones of , , and amid growing dissatisfaction with the Hanoverian regime. By July 1745, as Charles secretly departed for to initiate the rising on 19 August, Henry remained in to coordinate potential reinforcements from the French . Commissioned into the , he took command of troops stationed at , positioned as a staging point for a diversionary that would draw British forces away from the campaign. However, French commitments elsewhere, including the ongoing , prevented the Dunkirk force from embarking, limiting Henry's role to standby readiness rather than active combat. Following the Jacobite defeat at the on 16 April 1746, evaded capture and reached on 20 September, where Henry greeted him upon arrival in . With the rising crushed and no further French intervention forthcoming, Henry returned to later that year, abandoning direct military involvement in the Stuart cause at age 21. His contributions, though preparatory and unfulfilled, underscored the brothers' shared commitment to the Jacobite enterprise, reliant on foreign alliances that ultimately faltered due to geopolitical constraints.

Ongoing Commitment to the Stuart Cause

Following the failure of the , Henry Benedict Stuart remained in to rally support for his brother and organized a ship in 1746 to facilitate Charles's escape from . Despite shifting his focus to an ecclesiastical career upon returning to —receiving the and cardinalate in 1747—he never renounced his hereditary claims or the Stuart pretensions, maintaining the title and corresponding with Jacobite sympathizers through networks documented in the Stuart Papers. After the death of their father, , on 1 January 1766, Henry supported Charles's succession as Jacobite claimant, though papal recognition was denied; he issued a bearing his own image to assert dynastic continuity, inscribed with the motto Non desideriis hominum sed ("Not by the desires of men, but by the "), which lacked overt but symbolized enduring legitimacy. Upon Charles's death on 31 January 1788, Henry privately assumed the style Henry IX of and I of , becoming the final Stuart and reissuing the 1766 to reaffirm his position. Henry demonstrated ongoing royal prerogative through symbolic acts, such as wearing ermine trim and performing the traditional "touching" for scrofula (the King's Evil), issuing tokens to supplicants—a rite last conducted by a Stuart claimant after 1788, underscoring his self-conception as legitimate sovereign despite the movement's decline. He sustained a modest Jacobite court in exile, funded by benefices from Catholic powers including , , and the Spanish Americas, though some supporters criticized his and failure to secure heirs, viewing it as abandonment of the cause. Financial strains intensified after the severed pensions, leading King George III to grant him an annual £4,000 pension from 1800, framed as restitution for Stuart claims rather than political concession. By his death on 13 July 1807, active Jacobite agitation had ceased, with Henry leaving no direct heirs and the claim passing to distant relatives.

Ecclesiastical Career

Ordination and Elevation to Cardinalate

On 30 June 1747, conferred the clerical upon Henry Benedict Stuart, marking his formal entry into the ecclesiastical state. Three days later, on 3 July 1747, the same pontiff elevated the 22-year-old Stuart to the , appointing him Cardinal Deacon of Santa Maria in Campitelli in a secret consistory; this made him one of the youngest cardinals in history at that time. The elevation was influenced by Stuart's royal Jacobite lineage and the ongoing support of the for the Stuart pretenders, though it reflected his personal devotion to the Catholic faith cultivated during his education in . Stuart's brother, , strongly opposed the cardinalate, viewing it as an unwelcome binding of the Jacobite claim to the Roman Catholic Church, which could undermine prospects for dynastic alliances or Protestant reconciliation; this led to a rift between the brothers that persisted for years. Despite his cardinalatial status, Stuart delayed full to comply with requirements, as cardinals were not always . He was ordained a on 25 1748 and a the following week, on 1 September 1748, by which point he had transitioned to the rank of Cardinal . This step solidified his ecclesiastical commitment, positioning him for further advancement within the papal hierarchy while maintaining his Jacobite titular role as .

Diocesan Responsibilities and Church Administration

Upon his appointment as Cardinal-Bishop of on 13 July 1761, Henry Benedict Stuart assumed responsibility for the administration of the of Frascati, a position he held until 1803. In this role, he undertook pastoral oversight of the diocese's and , including conducting visits to remote parishes to ensure doctrinal adherence and spiritual welfare. Stuart reformed the local , enforcing stricter discipline and promoting among the priests. A key aspect of his diocesan administration was the establishment of a in , which he founded and endowed as a center for theological and scholarly . The institution featured a of approximately 12,000 volumes, including rare manuscripts and musical scores later transferred to the , and emphasized studies in , , , and literature. To support its operations, Stuart installed a modern equipped for and copper-plating, facilitating the production of educational materials. The also incorporated contemporary amenities such as hot and cold water systems, plumbed toilets, and recreational facilities, reflecting Stuart's commitment to practical improvements in clerical training. Beyond education, Stuart extended his administrative efforts to charitable and infrastructural works within the . He modernized of St. Sebastian, introducing an ambulance service to aid the sick, and constructed housing, a school, and a church in the impoverished La Molara district to support vulnerable communities. These initiatives earned him local affection, with residents dubbing him "Il Cardinale degli Organi" for his patronage of and organs. In broader church administration, Stuart served as Archpriest of from 1748 for 56 years, overseeing the maintenance, liturgical functions, and daily operations of the Vatican's central shrine. He also held the position of Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church from 1763 for 44 years, the longest tenure recorded, managing administrative records and procedures during periods of papal vacancy, including minting coins for governance. In 1803, as senior cardinal-bishop, he became Dean of the and Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia and , though he continued residing and administering from until his death.

Role in Papal Conclaves

Henry Benedict Stuart, as Cardinal York, actively participated in the papal conclaves of 1758, 1769, 1774–1775, and 1799–1800, marking him as the last member of a European royal family to engage directly in the election of a pope. In the conclave of May 6 to July 6, 1758, following the death of , Stuart joined 44 other cardinals in electing Carlo Rezzonico as ; at age 33, he was among the junior electors but fulfilled his voting duties in the proceedings. The 1769 conclave, from February 15 to May 19 after Clement XIII's death, saw Stuart, then 43, participate alongside 45 cardinals amid factional tensions between imperial and Bourbon interests, resulting in the election of Lorenzo Ganganelli as Pope Clement XIV. From October 5, 1774, to February 15, 1775, after Clement XIV's passing, Stuart voted in a prolonged session of 43 cardinals that deadlocked over candidates like Giovanni Angelo Braschi, ultimately electing Braschi as Pope Pius VI on the 133rd ballot. The conclave of November 30, 1799, to March 14, 1800—held in Venice's San Giorgio Monastery due to French Revolutionary forces occupying —featured Stuart among 35 participating cardinals, who navigated external pressures from Napoleon Bonaparte to elect Barnaba Chiaramonti as after over 100 days of scrutiny between Alessandro Mattei and Luigi Antonelli. Stuart had fled the amid the 1798 French advance but returned for the election.

Life in the Papal States

Establishment at Frascati

In 1761, following his appointment as Cardinal-Bishop of Frascati on 13 July, Henry Benedict Stuart relocated to the diocese and established his principal residence at La Rocca, the episcopal palace in the town. This move marked the beginning of his long-term settlement in Frascati, approximately 20 kilometers southeast of Rome, where he assumed administrative duties over the suburbicarian see of Tusculum and integrated into local ecclesiastical life. La Rocca, originally constructed in the 16th century as a fortified villa, served as the traditional seat for the bishops, providing Stuart with a suitable base amid the Papal States' supportive environment for the exiled Jacobite claimant. Stuart promptly undertook enhancements to adapt the palace to his needs, reflecting his commitment to maintaining a dignified Jacobite court in exile. In 1769, he repurposed an ancient as a courtyard and consecrated a private chapel altar on 4 September, enhancing the site's liturgical functionality. By 1776, he oversaw further renovations, including the addition of a dedicated chapel, bedroom suite, and stables, alongside a redesigned facade to modernize the structure's appearance. These improvements, documented in contemporary records, underscored his role as both spiritual overseer and princely figure, with the palace hosting a modest that preserved Stuart pretensions despite limited resources from French pensions. thus became his favored retreat from Roman duties, where he cultivated a and engaged in diocesan for decades.

Patronage of Arts, Music, and Scholarship

Henry Benedict Stuart emerged as a prominent patron of sacred music in Rome, commissioning works for the chapels associated with his residences and ecclesiastical roles. From the early 1740s, he supported composers including Giovanni Battista Costanzi, who provided music for Stuart-related liturgies, and later Sebastiano Bolis, whose extensive surviving oeuvre—over 200 sacred pieces—was composed specifically for the cardinal's chapels in Rome and Frascati between approximately 1770 and 1800. Other musicians under his patronage included Giuseppe Ottavio Pitoni and Tommaso Bai, whose motets and masses were performed in his services, reflecting a preference for polyphonic and Neapolitan styles adapted to Roman liturgical needs. While his early interests extended to secular music inherited from his family's courtly traditions, Stuart's patronage shifted toward ecclesiastical compositions after his ordination, funding performances and manuscript preservation that preserved lesser-known repertoires amid declining Roman musical patronage elsewhere. In the , Stuart commissioned portraits to affirm his Jacobite identity and cardinal status, engaging artists such as Antonio David and Louis Gabriel Blanchet in during the 1740s and 1750s. These works, often depicting him in armor or ecclesiastical garb with Stuart symbols, circulated among supporters to sustain pretender legitimacy. He amassed a notable collection of paintings at his residence, including works and contemporary pieces, which enhanced the princely ambiance of his papal household; this collection, valued for its quality, was largely looted by French forces during the 1798 occupation of . Stuart's support for scholarship centered on ecclesiastical and historical preservation, including funding the revitalization of the Jesuit in starting in 1769, where he contributed resources and intellectual guidance to foster theological education amid post-suppression Jesuit recovery. He curated a substantial of historical texts, theological treatises, and Stuart family documents, serving as an archival hub that safeguarded Jacobite records and church scholarship; portions of this collection endured French depredations and inform modern studies of eighteenth-century exile courts. His patronage of letters extended to correspondence networks with scholars, preserving narratives of the Stuart cause without direct authorship of polemical works.

Impact of the French Revolution

Loss of French Financial Support

The financial support Henry Benedict Stuart received from consisted primarily of lucrative ecclesiastical benefices, including commendatory abbacies granted by the Bourbon monarchy in acknowledgment of his status as a Stuart claimant and cardinal. These positions, held in absentia, yielded a portion of his overall annual income, which by the late reached approximately 40,000 British pounds from holdings across , , and other regions. The disrupted this arrangement through radical reforms targeting the . Following the National Assembly's confiscation of church lands in November 1789 and the enactment of the on 12 July 1790, which subordinated the French church to civil authority and suppressed non-resident benefices, Stuart's French holdings were effectively nationalized and revoked. By 1791, as revolutionary policies extended to émigré clergy and foreign prelates who refused the required , he lost these revenues entirely, contributing to his descent into financial distress. This severance of French support isolated Stuart from one of his primary income streams at a time when continental upheavals threatened papal territories, further straining his resources as he prioritized aid to Pope Pius VI amid the revolutionary invasions.

Receipt of British Government Aid

Following the cessation of French pensions amid the Revolution and the sequestration of his remaining assets during Napoleon's 1799 occupation of Italy, Henry Benedict Stuart faced acute financial hardship, fleeing to Venice with limited resources. In response, British diplomats, including ambassador Lord Minto in Vienna, coordinated with King George III to provide relief, culminating in 1800 with the grant of an annual pension of £4,000. This support, channeled through the British minister in Venice, was framed officially as an act of royal charity toward the aged claimant, though it effectively addressed longstanding Stuart demands for repayment of Mary of Modena's unpaid dowry from her marriage to James II—a claim the government had long deferred. Henry accepted the pension gratefully, which stabilized his circumstances and enabled his return to Frascati, where it supplemented ecclesiastical income until his death in 1807. In reciprocation, he bequeathed a collection of Stuart family jewels and gems—valued as heirlooms of the British crown—to , signaling closure to Jacobite pretensions while underscoring the aid's pragmatic resolution of historical obligations. The arrangement reflected Britain's strategic interest in neutralizing potential Stuart agitation abroad, particularly as continental upheavals diminished Jacobite viability, without formal parliamentary endorsement or public acknowledgment of legitimacy.

Personal Life and Character

Daily Habits and Personality Traits

Henry Benedict Stuart exhibited a personality marked by deep piety and earnest devotion, traits evident from his early childhood and reinforced throughout his ecclesiastical career. Described as mild-mannered and amiable, he possessed a genial disposition tempered by prudence and tact, though contemporaries noted a deficiency in forceful character and a reluctance to be contradicted. More introverted and cautious than his brother Charles Edward, Stuart's elevated tastes reflected a cultured appreciation for art and scholarship, albeit without exceptional depth in learning. In his daily routines, Stuart favored a settled life at the Villa Muti in after 1761, where he maintained his primary residence amid the . He frequently traveled by coach between his villas in the region, a habit that made him a familiar and favored figure among local inhabitants. As Cardinal-Bishop of , his days involved zealous administrative duties, including clerical reforms and oversight of foundations, aligning with his pious temperament. These patterns underscored a life of disciplined ecclesiastical routine rather than ostentatious activity, consistent with his earnest and retiring nature.

Relationships, Rumors, and Adherence to Celibacy

Upon as a on September 21, 1747, and subsequent elevation to the cardinalate on July 3, 1748, Henry Benedict Stuart formally committed to the ecclesiastical vow of , which prohibited sexual relations and . Throughout his 59-year tenure as a cardinal, no verifiable evidence emerged of romantic or sexual relationships, illegitimate children, or breaches of this vow, aligning with contemporary descriptions of him as an abstemious and pious figure who maintained a disciplined clerical life. Historians note his avoidance of proposed marriages in youth, prioritizing religious duties over dynastic obligations, which contributed to the extinction of the male Stuart line upon his death. Speculation about Stuart's sexuality arose shortly after his , primarily from British expatriate gossip networks in . Horace Walpole, in correspondence with diplomat Sir , alluded to rumors of homosexual inclinations, suggesting Stuart's interest in young men, though these claims lacked substantiation and reflected Walpole's penchant for scandalous anecdotes rather than empirical observation. Similar whispers circulated among Roman observers, including Italian diplomat Giuseppe Gorani, who noted perceived or close male companionships, but these were anecdotal and unaccompanied by direct testimony or proof. Such rumors, while persistent in Jacobite exile circles, appear driven by political animus toward the Stuart pretenders and cultural biases against celibate , with no archival records—such as papal investigations or personal confessions—indicating violations of . Later assessments emphasize Stuart's adherence to celibacy as likely genuine, portraying him as a "beatific" and "inoffensive" ecclesiastic whose personal restraint contrasted with his brother Charles Edward's notorious indiscretions. Absent concrete evidence, the rumors remain historiographical curiosities, often amplified by modern interpretations but unsupported by primary sources beyond hearsay from figures like Walpole, whose reliability on intimate matters was compromised by distance and sensationalism.

Death, Succession, and Burial

Final Years and Demise

In the wake of the French occupation of in 1798, Henry Benedict Stuart relocated to , where he served as and resided in the episcopal palace, maintaining a modest household amid financial hardship following the loss of ecclesiastical revenues and properties. By 1800, King George III of granted him an annual of £4,000, providing essential support that alleviated his and enabled him to sustain his position without further reliance on depleted French or papal funds. Stuart's health, long compromised by frailty, deteriorated in his later years, confining him increasingly to and limiting his public engagements. He died on 13 July 1807 at the age of 82 in the episcopal palace at , following a brief illness of approximately two weeks. His passing marked the end of the direct male Stuart line, with his will designating of as heir to the Jacobite claims.

End of the Male Stuart Line

Henry Benedict Stuart died on 13 July 1807 at the Episcopal Palace in , , aged 82, from complications following a . His death extinguished the direct male line of the , as he produced no legitimate heirs, having taken as a cardinal and maintained throughout his adult life. In his will, signed "Henry R" to signify his Jacobite royal pretensions, Stuart bequeathed his personal estate, jewels, and the symbolic Jacobite claim to the British throne to of , a second cousin through descent from Henrietta Anne Stuart, daughter of Charles I. This transfer acknowledged the absence of closer male Stuart kin but did not revive the direct patrilineal descent, which terminated definitively with Stuart's passing; , of the , neither asserted nor renounced the claim during his reign. Subsequent Jacobite succession debates shifted to collateral female lines or further distant relatives, such as the Bavarian Wittelsbachs via Elizabeth Stuart (daughter of Charles I), but these lacked the unbroken male Stuart lineage tracing to James II. The extinction underscored the irreversible decline of the dynasty's direct male branch, reliant since James II's deposition in 1688 on papal and continental support without dynastic continuity.

Legacy and Historiography

Evaluation as Jacobite Claimant

Upon the death of his brother on 31 January 1788, Henry Benedict Stuart assumed the Jacobite claim to the thrones of , styling himself Henry IX of and I of among adherents who rejected the post-1688 constitutional settlements as illegitimate breaks from hereditary divine right. His pretensions persisted symbolically through rituals such as the issuance of commemorative medals in 1788—reissues of earlier Stuart designs—and the traditional "touching" for scrofula as a , maintaining a vestigial courtly pretense in despite the absence of territorial control or military capacity. However, these gestures commanded only marginal loyalty, such as sporadic toasts or celebrations by isolated sympathizers like students in 1748, reflecting the broader collapse of organized after the 1746 , which had already eroded popular and foreign backing. Henry's effectiveness as claimant was undermined by his longstanding ecclesiastical commitments, having entered the priesthood and received cardinalatial elevation in 1747, which precluded dynastic heirs through adherence to vows and diverted his energies toward Vatican diplomacy rather than political intrigue. Post-1746, he provided no financial or leadership patronage to Jacobite military ventures, with his sole notable contribution being the commissioning of a Latin history of the 1745 rising by Cordara, a propagandistic effort uncharacteristic of his later detachment. His reputation for caution—exemplified by declining to join Charles's Scottish expedition in 1745, a decision retrospectively deemed prudent amid its —further diminished prospects for revival, as it signaled to potential allies an aversion to risk absent robust continental support, which waned decisively after the disrupted traditional Bourbon aid. In later years, pragmatic necessities eroded even symbolic resolve; around 1800, Henry accepted an annual £4,000 pension from without formal of his , signing correspondence as "Henry R." until that juncture but prioritizing financial security amid Napoleonic depredations on his Italian properties. Historians assess his tenure as the terminal phase of Jacobite viability, a non-seditious figure whose divided loyalties between and altar rendered the cause inert, with no uprisings or diplomatic breakthroughs materializing under his nominal headship, culminating in the unasserted transfer of the claim upon his childless death in 1807. While theoretically grounded in Stuart , the claim's empirical nullity stemmed from Britain's entrenched Protestant establishment, effective Hanoverian consolidation, and Henry's own pivot, which foreclosed the aggressive seen in prior .

Contributions to Church and Culture

Henry Benedict Stuart's ecclesiastical career exemplified dedication to the Roman Catholic Church, spanning over six decades in the Papal States. Created a cardinal-deacon by Pope Benedict XIV on 3 July 1747, he advanced rapidly, becoming titular Archbishop of Corinth in November 1759 and Cardinal-Bishop of Frascati on 13 July 1761. In 1751, he was appointed Arch-Priest of St. Peter's Basilica, a position he held for 56 years, overseeing the liturgical and ceremonial functions of the Vatican's central shrine. By 1803, he had ascended to Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, participating in multiple papal conclaves, including the election of Pius VII in 1800, marking the last active involvement of a Stuart claimant in such proceedings. His longevity as a cardinal—over 60 years—remains the longest in Church history, reflecting sustained administrative influence amid political upheavals like the French Revolution, which stripped many of his revenues yet did not diminish his pious commitment. Stuart's contributions extended to fostering Catholic institutions and scholarship. He amassed a significant library at his Frascati residence, comprising theological texts and historical works that supported ecclesiastical study, though much was dispersed after his death. As a sincerely earnest cleric, he prioritized pastoral duties, including oversight of Roman parishes like Santa Maria in Campitelli, where he served early in his cardinalate. His role in the involved diplomatic engagements, such as advising on Church responses to secular encroachments, underscoring a legacy of stability in Vatican governance during the late Enlightenment. In cultural spheres, Stuart emerged as a prominent patron in eighteenth-century Rome, particularly in music and the arts, blending Jacobite pretensions with Baroque traditions. He sponsored compositions and performances, supporting leading musicians and contributing to the Stuart court's opera patronage, influenced by earlier experiences in Urbino and Fano. His Frascati establishment hosted salons that bridged sacred and secular realms, commissioning works that preserved late-Baroque styles amid emerging Classicism. This patronage not only sustained artistic networks but also perpetuated Stuart symbolism in Roman cultural life, leaving an archival and musical legacy documented in modern studies of princely courts.

Modern Assessments and Debates

In contemporary , Henry Benedict Stuart is frequently portrayed as a transitional figure whose Jacobite royal pretensions waned in favor of ecclesiastical prominence, rendering him more a Vatican insider than an active claimant after the 1745 rising. Scholars note his participation in four papal conclaves (1758, 1769, 1774–1775, and 1799–1800) and his 60-year cardinalate, culminating as Dean of the Sacred College, as evidence of his prioritization of Church duties over dynastic intrigue, especially post-1788 when he assumed the title Henry IX following his brother Charles Edward's death. This shift is attributed to his lifelong residence in the and clerical vows, which curtailed political adventurism, though he maintained symbolic assertions of sovereignty, such as styling himself Fidei Defensor and performing the Catholic rite of touching for the King's Evil. Debates persist regarding the "reality" of his kingship versus his cardinal identity, exemplified by analyses of regalia like the Prince of Wales badge, which symbolized continuity with Stuart claims but lacked pre-1689 English provenance, underscoring the performative nature of his exile court in and from 1766 to 1807. Recent studies emphasize the court's evolution into a "perpetual pretence," sustained by papal subsidies and Stuart loyalists, yet increasingly isolated from viable restoration plots amid Enlightenment and post-Waterloo realignments. His 1800 receipt of £25,000 from George III's government to preserve Stuart relics is interpreted by some as pragmatic acknowledgment of Hanoverian permanence, marking the Jacobite cause's terminal phase, though others view it as a dignified exit preserving dynastic artifacts without outright capitulation. Personal character assessments invoke unsubstantiated 18th-century rumors of , drawn from gossip by observers like Gorani (1793) and Lynch Thrale Piozzi (1794), citing close male attendants and alleged intimacies, yet lacking documentary proof such as correspondence. These speculations appear in modern popular histories, sometimes amplified during cultural observances like , but empirical evidence remains anecdotal and potentially biased by anti-Jacobite or anti-Catholic polemics of the era; Stuart's 1775 adjudication of a diocesan case, where he commuted a life sentence to 10 years, suggests adherence to clerical moral standards rather than personal . Scholarship marking his 1725 birth tricentenary in 2025 highlights enduring legacies in Vatican archives, music patronage, and patronage, positioning him as an overlooked "forgotten prince" overshadowed by his brother's romanticized exploits.

Titles, Honors, and Heraldry

Royal and Pretender Styles

Henry Benedict Stuart was styled from birth on 6 March 1725 as His Henry, , in accordance with Jacobite usage mirroring the traditional English title for the sovereign's second son. This title was granted by his father, , the Jacobite claimant as James III and VIII, to affirm the family's continued assertion of in exile. Upon the death of his brother, , on 31 January 1788, Henry succeeded as the final active Jacobite to the thrones of , , and , adopting the style Henry IX of and Henry I of among supporters. These titles invoked the pre-Union numbering for while treating and jointly under the post-1707 for . Jacobite adherents, including continental European sympathizers and some Catholic clergy, addressed him accordingly in correspondence and inscriptions, though the style held no legal recognition beyond the pretender's court in . To underscore the legitimacy of his claim rooted in hereditary divine right rather than parliamentary consent, Henry commissioned medals struck shortly after 1788 bearing the inscription "Henricus IX, Rex Magnae Britanniae; non voluntate hominum, sed Dei gratia" (Henry IX, King of ; not by the will of men, but ). This phrasing echoed Stuart precedents, such as those used by his father and grandfather, emphasizing monarchical authority derived from providence over electoral or legislative processes. The full pretender style, as reflected in such artifacts and private diplomatic exchanges, approximated "Henry IX, , King of , and , ," adapting the historic formula while omitting explicit reference to the in deference to his Catholic orders.

Ecclesiastical Dignities

Henry Benedict Stuart pursued an ecclesiastical career from youth, receiving papal permission at age seven from to hold benefices despite his minority. On 3 July 1747, elevated him to the cardinalate as a cardinal-, assigning him the of Santa Maria in Campitelli on 31 July. He was ordained on 25 August 1748 and priest on 1 September 1748 by the pontiff himself. Advancing rapidly, Stuart was appointed Archpriest of on 8 November 1751, overseeing the Vatican basilica for the ensuing 56 years until his death. He transitioned to the order of cardinal-priests, holding titles including Santi XII Apostoli from 18 December 1752 and from 12 February 1759; additionally, on 2 October 1758, he became titular archbishop of Corinthus and was consecrated on 19 November 1758. On 13 July 1761, he opted for the suburbicarian see of as cardinal-, establishing his primary residence there. Further dignities included appointment as of the Holy Roman Church on 13 March 1758 and Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church on 24 January 1763, the latter position retained for 44 years. In September 1803, as the senior cardinal-bishop, he assumed the role of Dean of the , receiving the associated diocese of Ostia e Velletri while continuing to reside in .

Arms and Symbolism

Henry Benedict Stuart employed the royal arms of Great Britain as quartered by the House of Stuart—first and fourth grand quarters for England (gules, three lions passant guardant in pale or armed and langued azure) and Ireland (azure, a harp or stringed argent), second grand quarter for Scotland (or, a lion rampant gules armed and langued azure within a double tressure flory-counterflory gules)—differenced at the fess point with a crescent argent to denote his position as second son during the lifetimes of his father James Francis Edward Stuart and brother Charles Edward Stuart. The shield was typically ensigned with a cardinal's galero, a wide-brimmed red hat from which hung fifteen scarlet tassels arranged in five rows on either side, emblematic of his elevation to the cardinalate in 1747 and subsequent ecclesiastical offices. This differencing adhered to heraldic conventions, distinguishing branches while affirming Stuart royal lineage and rejecting Hanoverian augmentations to the arms post-1714, such as the inescutcheon for Brunswick-Lüneburg. The integration of the atop the royal shield underscored Stuart's fusion of temporal pretensions to the British crowns with his sacred in the Catholic , a duality reinforced in artifacts like embroidered vestments and armorial medals produced during his lifetime. Following Charles Edward Stuart's death on 31 January 1788, Henry succeeded as Jacobite claimant styling himself Henry IX, at which point depictions and usages shifted to the undifferenced royal arms, symbolizing his assertion of undivided sovereignty over the differenced version of his ducal precedence. The unadorned Stuart arms in this phase carried Jacobite symbolism of legitimacy and restoration, evoking the pre-Union and pre-Hanoverian constitutional order without concessions to parliamentary settlements like the Act of Settlement of 1701. No unique personal charges beyond or appurtenances appear in verified armorial bearings, emphasizing continuity with ancestral over innovation.

References

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