, 1631. Charles Louis was baptised in March 1618 in the presence of the
Prince of Sedan and
Albertus Morton, who was the representative of the
Prince of Wales. On the death of his exiled father in 1632, Charles Louis inherited his father's possessions in the
Electorate of the Palatinate. His older brother
Henry Frederick had died in the Netherlands in 1629. , 1637 Charles Louis and his younger brother
Rupert spent much of the 1630s at the court of his maternal uncle,
Charles I of England, hoping to enlist British support for his cause. Despite support from his mother's officials
Curtius and
Nethersole, the young Elector Palatine had limited success. He led an army of voluntaries from Britain (led by
William Lord Craven) and the Palatinate (in alliance with Swedish forces under the command of the Scot
Lieutenant General James King) at the
Battle of Vlotho Bridge on 17 October 1638. Lord Craven, Prince Rupert and Colonel William Vavasour were captured after a rash charge by Prince Rupert (who tried to blame King). It is clear from the correspondence in the Swedish archives that King had managed to extract Charles Louis and his forces from the field and had them under his protection in Minden throughout October and November, a matter that caused much consternation to Field Marshal Banier who sowed rumours about King preferring the Elector's to Swedish service. This was something King forcefully rejected, although he did seek instruction as to how to deal with Charles Louis and his army. Thereafter after Charles Louis retired first to The Hague, and then to Britain. In November 1641, Charles Louis sat in the Scottish Parliament and secured the right to 10,000 Scottish Covenanter soldiers who were to follow him to Germany. Unfortunately the Irish Rebellion broke out and these forces were diverted to Ireland to protect the Protestant community there. Charles Louis afterwards became gradually estranged from the King, who feared that Charles Louis might become a focus for opposition forces in England. Indeed, in the English crisis leading up to the outbreak of the
English Civil War, Charles Louis had considerable sympathy for the parliamentary leaders, especially the
Earl of Essex, feeling them more likely to come to the aid of the Palatinate on the continent. The Prince Palatine supported the execution of
Strafford. Although Charles Louis was involved in the early stages of the Civil War with his uncle, he was mistrusted for his parliamentary sympathies, and soon returned to his mother in
The Hague. There he distanced himself from the royalist (
Cavalier) cause in the Civil War, fearing that Charles would sell him out for Spanish support. In 1644, Charles Louis returned to England at the invitation of Parliament. He took up residence in the
Palace of Whitehall and took the
Solemn League and Covenant, even though his brothers,
Rupert and
Maurice, were Royalist generals. Contemporaries (including King Charles) and some in subsequent generations believed that Charles Louis's motive in visiting
Roundhead London was that he hoped that Parliament would enthrone him in place of his uncle. Charles Louis's endorsement of the Parliamentary party was a cause of enmity between uncle and nephew, and when a captive Charles I met his nephew once again in 1647, the elder Charles accused the Prince of angling for the English throne. Charles Louis was still in England in October 1648 when the
Peace of Westphalia restored the Lower Palatinate to him (the Upper Palatinate, to his great disappointment, remained under the
Elector of Bavaria). He remained in England long enough to see the
execution of his uncle in January 1649, which appears to have come as a shock. The two had not reconciled prior to the King's death – Charles refused to see his nephew before his execution. == Electorate ==