The Scottish establishment has made it clear…
February 1650 CE
The Scottish establishment has made it clear to Charles II that if he is ever to exercise real power he will be obliged to subscribe to a radical Presbyterian agenda.
Among other things he would be required to take the Covenants of 1638 and 1643, a move his father had always resisted.
In exile at the Hague, Charles is anxious to take the quickest way back to the throne.
He had initially favored calling on the assistance of the Catholic Irish authorities at Kilkenny, until this option had been removed by Oliver Cromwell in the summer of 1649.
In falling back on the Covenanters, Charles hopes to put them in a more accommodating frame of mind.
One way of doing this is to take the advice of the ultra-royalist Marquess of Montrose, who had led a military campaign against the Covenanters in 1644 and 1645, enjoying some notable successes.
Charles on February 22, 1649, had appointed Montrose as Lieutenant-Governor of Scotland and Captain General of all of his forces there.
Although he is about to receive a deputation from the government in Edinburgh he is prepared to listen to Montrose's more militant advice, especially as there are already some stirrings against the Covenanters in northern Scotland.