History Daily - The Fall of King James II
Episode Date: December 23, 2025December 23, 1688. King James II of England abandons the throne and flees abroad after a coup forces him from power. This episode originally aired in 2021. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-f...ree listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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a little bit tiller than tonsolissol.
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a little bit better than
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Usuntletoppa
It's January 30th,
1649.
Crowds fill the streets of central London.
A group of teenage boys
elbow their way through the packed bodies
searching for a better view.
leading them is a 15-year-old named Samuel Pepys. Samuel will later write one of the most famous
diaries in history, chronicling his life and times in astonishing detail. But today, he's just a schoolboy
who has sneaked away to witness and execution. The boys find a break in the crowd and huddled
together to see. On a street outside the Palace of Whitehall, a platform has been erected.
It's draped in black cloth and ringed with soldiers more than young Samuel can count.
vendors worked the crowds, selling hot pies that steam in the cold January air.
Many here have seen criminals and traders die before.
It's always been a popular day out for Londoners, but today will be an execution like none other.
Charles I, King of England, Scotland, and Ireland, has been found guilty of trying to seize unlimited and tyrannical power to rule according to his will
and to overthrow the rights and liberties of the people.
his death sentence comes after seven years of civil war.
At the heart of the conflict was the question of how the country was governed,
whether ultimate political power lay with the king,
elected by God or with Parliament elected by the people.
The king's forces fought those of Parliament, and the king lost.
Negotiations with the defeated Charles failed,
so Parliament decided that the only way to get ahead was for the king to lose his.
Just before 2 p.m., Charles I steps onto the scaffold.
Among the crowd, Samuel Pepys strains to see the king, who's dressed in all black.
The king tries to make a speech, but his voice does not carry beyond the parliamentary soldiers that surround the platform.
Samuel cannot hear the king's last words.
Then Charles kneels.
There's a flash of metal as the executioner raises his accent to the air.
The crowd, as one, draws its breath.
The executioner holds up the king's head for the crowd to see
before tossing it into the ranks of soldiers.
There's a scrum as men rush to soak their handkerchiefs in the blood
and ripped chunks of hair from the head.
The execution of Charles I will see England become a republic for the first time.
But the new regime will not last long,
and the question of who truly rules the country will fester for decades
before it's finally settled when another English king loses his crown
on December 23, 1688.
A quick word before we get to the rest of the episode.
The first show of my live tour will be in Dallas, Texas, on March 6th at the Granada Theater.
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and they aren't the days you might think.
Sure, everyone knows July 4, 1776, but there are many other days that are maybe even more influential.
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From Noisor and Ayrship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is December 23, 1688, the fall of King James II.
It's May 23, 1660, 28 years.
before King James II is forced from power.
A fleet of English warships lies at anchor off the coast of Holland.
From the beach, a rowing boat cuts through the waves heading for the flagship.
On board is 26-year-old James Stewart, the son of Charles I, the beheaded and former king.
James himself is not king yet.
He is an exile from England, having fled the country with his brothers and sisters
after the defeat of his father in the civil war.
But his exile is about to come to an end.
The ships offshore have come to carry James and his family home.
Eleven years after the execution of his father, Charles I, the English Republic, has collapsed.
During that time, James and his siblings have lived in exile,
scrabbling around Europe, relying on the charity of foreign monarchs to survive.
Now they have been invited back to rule England once more.
James' older brother, named Charles after their father, is to be crowned the new king.
James the second son is next in line to the throne behind Charles.
He will be named Lord Admiral in charge of the English Navy.
As they arrive at the flagship, a troop of nobles and dignitaries welcomes James and his new brother, the new king.
A day of feasting follows as the shores of Holland echo to the gunfire salute the English fleet fires off for its new monarch.
That afternoon, a brisk wind will carry the fleet away from Holland and take James and his family back to England.
A week later, the new king, Charles II, will enter London in triumph.
All the church bells will ring, and wine will flow through the fountains of the old city.
But just as the execution of Charles I did not settle England's division,
the return of his heirs will also not heal the wounds of the past.
Six years later, on Tuesday, September 4th, 1666,
a fire which began in a London bakery, has grown out of control,
and the whole city is in danger.
It's evening in Westminster, and a young Swedish nobleman unwisely ventures out into the streets.
The fire is further east, where the sky glows red, but even here he can taste the tang of
smoke in the air and sees embers carried by the wind. With a single bodyguard beside him,
the nobleman hurries through the streets on his way to see his mistress. But the fire is not
the only danger in London tonight. When a group of men overhear the Swedish nobleman talking to
his bodyguard, a cry goes up.
And soon a mob forms. The nobleman is forced to flee for his life. The members of the mob want to protect the city from foreign spies they are sure must have started the fire. As they string up a rope on a street corner, they are convinced the Swedish nobleman is one of these spies.
Soon enough, the nobleman is caught and brought back to the street corner where the rope awaits him. The mob surges and writhes around the nobleman, and before the swede knows what's happening, the noose bites into his neck.
He rise on the end of the rope, is just about to lose consciousness
when there's a sudden shout and a clatter of hoofs down the street.
The mob scatters as the incoming riders draw swords.
With a swift swing of a blade, the rope is cut,
and the Swedish nobleman collapses to the ground.
He claws the noose away gasping for air,
then finally looks up at his savior.
Red-eyed and covered in ash and soot,
James, the king's brother, has been out on the streets for hours
arranging teams of firemen, trying to stop the flames of London from spreading,
and now rescuing foreign citizens from a mob.
That night, the Easterly gale which had spread the fire all over the city
will at last die down, and so too will the flames.
But the tales of James' heroism will grow.
As one witness will write,
he has won the hearts of the people with his continual and indefatigable pains
day and night in helping to quench the fire.
But James' popularity will not last.
In the years after the fire, he will convert from Protestantism and become a Catholic,
falling prey to the deep suspicion that strung up the Swede,
a fear that Catholics are part of some foreign conspiracy.
James will try to keep his new beliefs a secret,
but the word will get out, and the news will spark a constitutional crisis
and threaten another civil war.
It's July 13, 1683, in a room at the Tower of London,
five years before the fall of James II.
A servant to the Earl of Essex has come in to check on his master.
The Earl should have risen by now.
His trial is due to start.
The Earl of Essex was arrested three days ago and brought to the Tower of London,
the dreaded ancient fortress in the heart of the city where those accused of treason are held.
The Earl is alleged to have conspired against the life of King Charles II and his brother, James.
The assassination plot failed, but it is the latest and most dramatic episode in the hysteria
that has taken over the country since rumors began swirling about James' conversion to Catholicism.
James' older brother, King Charles II, has no legitimate heirs, meaning James will become king if Charles dies.
A Catholic on the throne of England is an intolerable prospect for many, especially in Parliament.
There, new laws have been proposed to limit the influence of Catholics in government,
and even prevent James from becoming king.
Such moves have bitterly divided Parliament and the country.
In 1673, King Charles tried to quell discontent
by arranging the marriage of James' daughter and heir, Mary,
to the Dutch Protestant Prince William of Orange.
In the years since that match, however,
the fear of a new Catholic dynasty in England has not faded.
Some, it seems, are now willing to turn to more extreme measures to prevent it.
When the Earl of Essex servants steps into his room in the Tower of London
to check on his master. The Earl is nowhere to be seen. Baffled, the servant searches the room.
The closet door is stuck. The servant pushes hard against it and forces it open, just enough to see
the body of his master, the Earl, slumped on the ground, a razor blade in his hand and his throat
cut. The death of the Earl of Essex will be deemed of suicide, and it will be seen by many
as a shameful act of confession to a horrific crime, a plot against the royal family.
these alleged misdeeds will spark a wave of patriotism,
strengthening the position of James as heir to the throne.
It's November 19, 1688, near Sonsbury in the south of England,
five years after the death of the Earl of Essex.
James II, now the King of England, Scotland, and Ireland,
holds a fine lace handkerchief to his bleeding nose.
Ever since he left London two days ago,
marching at the head of an army 40,000 strong,
he's been suffering from repeated nosebleeds.
His doctors urge him to rest, but James is in a fight for his crown.
Following the death of his brother, Charles II,
James became king and was crowned at Westminster in April 1685,
but soon after his opponent's fears about his Catholicism were realized.
James believes he has been made king by God himself.
He has packed his army with Catholics and tried to force the courts to rule that he can ignore acts of parliament.
Those who opposed him were promptly removed, including judges and archbishops.
And with each passing month, James seems more and more like his father, a king who could not
bear any restraint on his power.
Many in England were horrified, but most took comfort in the fact that James did not have
any sons.
His heirs were his daughters, Mary and Anne, and they were Protestant.
But in June, 1688, James' wife gave birth to a boy, a boy who immediately outranked
his sisters in the line of succession and was to be raised a Catholic.
Just weeks after the birth of James' son, a group of seven Protestant nobles,
among the most powerful and wealthy men in the land, sent word to William of Orange,
a Dutch prince married to King James' eldest daughter.
They formally invited him to invade England and take the throne.
So just a week and a half earlier, William of Orange landed in Devon on the south coast of
England with 15,000 soldiers.
King James I second marched west from London to meet him.
Now, at Salisbury, the king has an army twice the size of Williams.
But James is unwell, plagued by nosebleeds that confine him to a sickbed.
And with each passing day, his advantage dwindles.
Troops rally to the invading Dutch as more and more men from the king's army defects.
James begins to panic.
He fears that the enemy is about to attack him in his weakened state, so he orders a retreat to London.
It's a disastrous misstep.
Whatever authority James had is struck a fatal blow by his loss of nerve.
The pace of defections from his army increases.
Anti-Catholic riots break out in London.
And soon James will realize that all hope is lost.
His reign is collapsing around him.
If he is to avoid sharing the same fate of his beheaded father,
he will have to flee England and abandon the throne.
It's December 23rd, 1688, about a month and a half,
since James II, the King of England, Scotland, and Ireland fled the field of battle.
Now, at Rochester, 30 miles east of London, James is heading into exile.
The new rulers of the land make no attempt to stop him or kill him.
They do not want to make a martyr of James.
They just want him to leave.
And now he's skulking out of his kingdom and heading for France, a bitter and reduced man.
But James will not give up his claim to the throne.
With the help of the French, he will raise a night.
other army in Ireland and try and take back what he thinks is his. But defeat at the Battle of the
Boyne in 1690 will end his hope of ever reclaiming the throne. In London, Parliament will declare
that James has abandoned the crown, breaking the oaths he made when he became king. The seat of power,
left vacant, will be offered to James' daughter Mary and her husband, the Dutch prince William of Orange.
They will reign over the country together, Protestant monarchs for a Protestant nation,
but they will only do so with the consent of Parliament.
No British king or queen will ever try to rule alone as if ordained by God again,
and the question of where ultimate power in England lies has finally been answered.
Parliament is supreme and has been ever since James II fled the country in disgrace
on December 23, 1688.
Next on History Daily, December 24, 1923,
Coolidge sparks a new American holiday tradition by lighting,
the first national Christmas tree.
From Noisor and Airship,
this is History Daily,
hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham,
audio editing by Molly Bond,
sound designed by Derek Barrens,
music by Lindsay Graham.
This episode is written and researched by William Simpson.
Executive producers are Stephen Walters for Airship
and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
