Bonnie Prince Charlie Was Defeated at Culloden. Now Scottish Archaeologists Have Made a Major Find There
Archaeologists in Scotland have made a major discovery at the battlefield of Culloden, the site where Bonnie Prince Charlie met defeat.
Culloden is a famous battle in Scottish history, and it's also prominently featured in the popular television series, Outlander.
"Archaeologists from the University of Glasgow and the National Trust for Scotland have recovered more than 100 projectiles, including lead musket balls and cannon shot, from Culloden Battlefield," an October 30 statement from the university reveals.
Why it matters:
- "The battle, fought on 16 April 1746, saw the decisive defeat of the Jacobite army led by Bonnie Prince Charlie by government forces commanded by the Duke of Cumberland's government army," the statement reads.
- "The new findings, from an area of the battlefield that had not previously yielded any archaeological discoveries, is fresh evidence from the last battle fought on British soil," it notes.
The University Says That Jacobite Artillery Shed Light on a 'Dramatic Episode' on the Battlefield
(Photo by National Galleries Of Scotland/Getty Images)
According to the university, the "most striking result from the investigation, which took place between 13-18 October, was the recovery of over 100 projectiles, which included lead musket balls and cannon shot, the latter of which included what is believed to be a three-pound cannon ball fired by the Jacobite artillery."
This collection of artifacts "not only proves that archaeology from the battle has survived in this area but, the project leaders believe, it has provided evidence for one of the most dramatic episodes in a battle that from beginning to end probably lasted less than an hour," the release says.
(Photo by Thibaut Durand / Hans Lucas via AFP) (Photo by THIBAUT DURAND/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images)
"We’ve only had time to make a rapid assessment of our results, but musket balls fired by Jacobite and government troops, including pistol balls fired by government dragoons, likely relate to one of the last actions in the battle," Professor Tony Pollard Said in the University's release.
"This fight took place between the initial battle lines, at a location where boggy ground slowed the Highland charge, and this in combination with heavy fire from Cumberland’s line helped to seal the fate of the Jacobite cause."
An Expert Explained That a Battalion Fighting With the Jacobites 'Made a Brave Stand'
According to Pollard, as the Jacobites retreated, "a battalion of Irish troops in French service, fighting with the Jacobites, made a brave stand against hundreds of mounted men from Cobham’s Dragoons and possibly Kingston’s Horse, advancing from the right of Cumberland’s line."
He added: :"The job of these horsemen was to cut down the disordered Jacobites, and we have recovered some of the shot fired from their heavy pistols. The Irish troops, numbering about 150 men, under their commander Lieutenant-Colonel Walter Stapleton, blocked this advance and according to an account by Adjutant General John O’Sullivan, one of Bonnie Prince Charlie’s senior officers, fired volleys into the approaching cavalry."
However, according to Pollard, "The red-coated Irish Picquets then found cover behind the walls of Culloden Parks but their surrender, after suffering heavy casualties, with Stapleton among the dead, was the only alternative to total annihilation. Being regular troops in French service, they were treated as prisoners of war rather than rebels, but none-the-less they suffered the privations of confinement on a prison hulk in the Thames before being repatriated to France in early 1747."
“This valiant action helped thousands of Jacobites get away from the field, but it gets only brief mentions in most of the history books. A more detailed analysis of the artefacts and their distribution pattern will be required before we can make a definitive statement but at present there are no obvious alternative interpretations.”

