By then, many Jacobite soldiers had dispersed in search of food, while others were asleep in ditches and outbuildings.
While many Jacobite soldiers were of poor appearance, some without even shoes, they proved capable of defeating British regulars under certain circumstances.
It is said that Jacobite soldiers were ordered to "give no quarter" at Culloden.
Nonetheless, in the morning the exhausted Jacobite soldiers were certainly not ordered to "give no quarter" at the Battle of Culloden itself.
The garrison fired at the horses of the oncoming Jacobite soldiers and were successful in downing many.
Twelve Jacobite soldiers were killed in the skirmish.
What if it were not the eighteenth-century Jacobite soldier she was concerned about, but only his name?
A fictional anthropologist discover two Jacobite soldiers, preserved alive in a cave since 1745, and introduces them to modern life.
The Jacobite soldiers also had the option of joining the Williamite army.
The Jacobite soldiers thirdly had the option of returning home which some 2,000 soldiers chose.