Last modified: 2025-02-15 by rob raeside
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image located by William Garrison, 15 January 2025
Source:
https://commons.wikimedia.org
See also:
'It's not Robert Devereux's fault that his marriage and sex life became a public spectacle on par with a British Interregnum-era episode of "The Jerry Springer Show."'
Full details at https://www.military.com/history/cuckold-flag-strange-history-of-worlds-weirdest-battle-ensign.html
I just don't know about the validity of this flag...
William Garrison,
15 January 2025
Strange as it may be, it is genuine. Although most Royalist
cavalry troop standards used devices connected with religion or politics, a
handful mocked the Earl of Essex, and by implication, his army.
Five such
standards were captured by the opposing Parliamentary side at the battle of
Naseby in 1645. At least three are associated with Sir Horatio Cary's regiment
(so perhaps they all were). The mottoes were variously 'Come out you cuckold'
(as shown in the illustration), 'Come cuckold', 'Cuckold wee come' and 'Cuckolds
we come' (twice). Cary's regiment was raised in the West Country of England in
1643 and was disbanded after Naseby, when the Royalist cause fell apart. Cary
himself had been a Parliamentarian until 1643, when he changed sides, so he may
have been working off a particular and personal grudge against the Earl of
Essex, his former commander.
The others I have been able to find are:
Caryl Molyneux, a Royalist troop commander in the regiment of his brother
Richard, used a standard with the motto 'Ad quid exaltatis cornu' (To what do
you exalt this horn?), with a device of a deer's head supported by five hands.
The head stands for Essex, the five hands are the 'Five Members', five pre-war
Members of Parliament who were the core of opposition to the King.
Colonel Richard Molyneux used a standard with two mottoes, 'Quid si refulsero'
(What if I shine back) and 'Vae cornibus meis' (Alas for my horns). Accompanying
the first motto was a sun. This is being obscured by a crescent moon to which
the second motto is attached. The sun was the King, the crescent moon was Essex.
A bit more subtle perhaps, but still a reference is Essex's marital
difficulties. Molyneux's regiment was raised in Lancashire, but had fought
against Essex at Edgehill in 1642.
According to Wikipedia
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuckold> 'In Western traditions, cuckolds have
sometimes been described as "wearing the horns of a cuckold" or just "wearing
the horns". This is an allusion to the mating habits of stags, who forfeit their
mates when they are defeated by another male.'
They are all referred to
in: Young, Alan R. (ed.). The English Emblem Tradition 3: Emblematic Flag
Devices of the English Civil Wars 1642-1660 (Toronto, University of Toronto
Press, 1995), as items 0041.0, 0042.0, 0059.0, 0060.0 and 0061.0 (Cary's
regiment), and 0008.0 and 0378.0 (Molyneux's).
The source for the
illustration seems to be Kightly, Charles & Barton, Anthony (illustrator),
'Standards of the English Civil Wars,' in: Military Modelling, Vol 8, no 4
(April 1978), 280-82
Ian Sumner, 16 January 2025