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Dance Culloden's Fancy 1476

Reel · 16 bars · 2 couples · Longwise - 4   (Progression: 21) · Usual number of repetitions: 8

Devised by
Unknown (1754)
Intensity
84 84 = 75% (1 turn), 52% (whole dance)
Formations
Steps
  • Pas-de-Basque, Skip-Change
Published in
Recommended Music
Extra Info
Culloden's Fancy
'StateBlock' object has no attribute 'is_code_block'
The Right Honourable Duncan Forbes, M.P., 5th Laird of Culloden,
Lord President of the Court of Session,
was one of those great men who are little understood in their own time
and little known in later times.
He was a statesman, an advocate, a genealogist, a peacemaker, a poet
and, above all else, a Highlander dedicated to the best interests of his country and its people.

Forbes was born in Inverness-shire, at Bunchrew on the Beauly Firth, on 10 November, 1684.
His early education was at Inverness where his family maintained a town house, The Horns.
He continued his studies at Edinburgh and Leiden in the Netherlands.
In 1709 Forbes became Sheriff of Mid-Lothian and was a member of Parliament for Inverness in 1722.
In 1725 he became Lord Advocate and in 1737 Lord President.
It has been suggested that his meteoric rise to positions of power
was brought about by the Campbells of Argyll
combined with his own personal loyalty to the Hanoverians.
This is probably quite true, for both John, 2nd Duke of Argyll (1678–1743)
and his brother Archibald, Lord Islay and, later, 3rd Duke (1682–1761),
were the puppeteers of the Scottish members of Parliament.
The House of Hanover he recognised as the legitimate rulers of Great Britain.
It was also said that Forbes was the unofficial servant of John Hay, 2nd Marquess of Tweeddale,
the Secretary of State for Scotland.

Forbes must have known that there was agonising trouble ahead for Scotland
for, after the Rising of 1715, he proposed that the government raise Highland regiments,
their colonels to be leaders whose loyalty to the Crown was above reproach,
or at least relatively stable,
and whose officers would be chosen form the highest ranks of the clan hierarchy
throughout the Highlands.
Thus was brought into existence the famed Highland regiments,
the earliest being the Black Watch, the Royal Highland Regiment, the 42nd regiment of the line.

When the first rumours of another Jacobite rising became a nightmare in the flesh,
Forbes did everything in his power to thwart it.
Through his efforts and persuasive ability,
the town of Inverness remained loyal to the Whig government
and many of the chiefs of the most powerful Highland clans
did not order their people into battle for Prince Charles Edward.
As the only representative of the government in the north
after Sir John Cope's defeat at Prestonpans on 19th August, 1745,
Forbes redoubled his peacemaking activities.
He recognised the handwriting on the wall
and he saw only too clearly,
after the bitter experiences and savage reprisals
that followed the massacre  at Glencoe, 13 February, 1692, and the Rising of 1715,
what would be the terrible fate of the Highlanders who took up the burning cross for the Jacobites.
It is, indeed, a paradox that the battle of Culloden,
when the hungry, weary and ill-equipped volunteers for Prince Charles Edward
clashed with the trained and seasoned professionals
under Prince William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland,
should have taken place very nearly on the doorstep of old Culloden House,
the ancestral seat of Duncan Forbes, on 16 April, 1746.

In spite of all his good offices, the punishment meted out to the defeated Jacobites
was as horrible as Forbes had imagined.
Again he pleaded, this time for the rebel Highlanders after Culloden,
and for his pains he was dubbed “that old maid” by Cumberland
and fell into Hanoverian disfavour.
Forbes died on 10 December, 1747, less than six months after the Disarming Act,
which forbade on pain of death or transportation
the wearing of the kilt or of tartan in any form as well as the playing of the bagpipes,
wsa made into law.

There are other sides to the character of Duncan Forbes
besides that of a misunderstood arbiter who tried so heroically
to prevent battle between two twenty-five year old royal boys.
Forbes enjoyed entertaining and he was an expansive host.
He was reputed to be a rather heavy drinker
and even as a young man he and his brother were called “the greatest boozers in the North”.
To have earned such a reputation he must have been capable of drinking vast quantities
for Scotland then boasted many of the gentry
who spent as much upon spirits as they did upon home, family and farms.
Perhaps with one eye on the national revenue
and the other upon his own table at Culloden House which was stained red from spilled claret,
he deplored heartily the fact
that Scots of all classes were giving up their traditional early morning tumbler of ale, brandy or whisky
in favour of the newly introduced cup of tea.
Even more infamous to Forbes was the government's curtailing of the import of claret
in the hope that the British would drink more domestic port.

Forbes courted and married the acoomplished and elegant Miss Mary Rose,
the daughter of Hugh Rose, 15th Laird of Kilravock Castle in Nairnshire.
Unhappily, his young wife died soon after the birth of their son
and Forbes remained a widower for the rest of his life.

Duncan Forbes also had time to turn his hand to poetry and song writing
and some sources claim for him the authorship of “Ah, Chloris” to the tune of “Gilderoy”,
“Lucky Nancy” and “Love is the Cause of My Mourning”,
but the honour is up to critical debate.

Stenhouse wrote a fitting epitaph for Forbes in his *Illustrations* when he said:
“It may safely be affirmed, that a worthier man, a better lawyer,
a more discerning and upright judge,
or a more clear-headed, steady and patriotic statesman
than Duncan Forbes of Culloden, never existed in any country or age.
A chaste and masterly marble statue,
reckoned to be the *chef d'œuvre* of the celebrated sculptor Roubillac,
has been erected in the Parliament-house at Edinburgh,
as a tribute of gratitude and resepect to the memory of this truly great and good man.”

A trifle hyperbolised, perhaps, but better too much than too little in this instance.

Table rows with a green background denote recordings starting with one of the recommended tunes and the usual number of repetitions for the dance (8). A yellow background means a recording with one of the recommended tunes but a non-standard number of repetitions. Recordings with a red background use a different tune and possibly a non-standard number of repetitions.

Recordings whose titles are in italics are not explicitly linked to this dance but have been identified by the database based on the type, bar count, and recommended tune(s) of the dance.

NameArtistAlbumMediaTrkTypeTimePaceClip
Culloden's Fancy Kenny Thomson and the Wardlaw Scottish Dance Band Book 5. Music for Twelve Traditional Dances CD+ 6 R16 82:23 35.8
Culloden's Fancy 2/4L · R16
'StateBlock' object has no attribute 'is_code_block'
1–
: 1c set, turn BH ; 1c+2c half R&L (2x,1x)
9–
: 2c+1c turn BH to own sides, 1c face up NHJ ; 1c dance up and cast off (2,1)
Culloden's Fancy 2/4L · R16
'StateBlock' object has no attribute 'is_code_block'
1-8
: 1s set, turn 2H, 1s+2s dance 1/2 R&L
9-16
: 2s+1s turn 2H to own sides, 1s dance up to top & cast to 2nd place

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Twice through in a 2 couple set. For …

Added on: 2020-04-08 (Murrough Landon)
Quality: Good

NameTypeDateOwnerLast changed
20230507 - International Online Class - Blaine Class 2023-05-07 Zsofia Jozsef May 7, 2023, 6:24 p.m.
The Sunday Class Dance on RadioGH - 2023-04-16 Unknown 2023-04-16 Amanda Peart April 16, 2023, 5:07 p.m.
RSCDS Book 5 Unknown Jane Rose March 6, 2018, 7:20 p.m.
RSCDS Beginners Framework 2B Unknown Rachel Pusey Aug. 11, 2019, 10:43 p.m.
2-Couple Dances A - C Unknown Meinhard Reiser Feb. 27, 2019, 4:49 p.m.

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IdSubjectDateSubmitterAssigned toPriorityDisposition
3092 video March 25, 2023, 8:57 p.m. Rod Downey Eric Ferguson Normal Fixed