"Nero the Second" or "Nero II" is a traditional ballad that was popular amongst Jacobites in Great Britain and Ireland during the first half of the eighteenth century.[1] [2]

Composed around 1715, the year of a major Jacobite rising, it was considered a seditious libel by the authorities.[3] The Nero of the title, a reference to the tyrannical Roman Emperor Nero, is a thinly disguised version of George I the Hanoverian who had come to the throne in 1714. Jacobites supported a rival Stuart claimant the English-born James Francis Edward Stuart, styled James III by his followers, who was now living in exile.

References

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  1. ^ Fenlon p.186
  2. ^ Grosart p.6-8
  3. ^ Keymer p.113-114

Bibliography

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  • Fenlon, Jane. The Dukes of Ormonde, 1610–1745. Boydell & Brewer, 2000.
  • Grosart, Alexander Balloch . English Jacobite ballads, songs & satires, etc 1877.
  • Keymer, Thomas. Poetics of the Pillory: English Literature and Seditious Libel, 1660-1820. Oxford University Press, 2019.
  • Monod, Paul Kleber. Jacobitism and the English People, 1688–1788. Cambridge University Press, 1993