(1746/47),
long thought to be of Charles Edward Stuart At the time of the
French Revolution, he lost his French Royal benefices and sacrificed many other resources to assist
Pope Pius VI. This, in addition to the seizure of his
Frascati property by the French, caused him to descend into poverty, which resulted in the sale of the
Stuart Sapphire. The British Minister in
Venice arranged for Henry to receive an
annuity of £4,000 from
George III of Great Britain. Although the British government represented this as an act of charity, Henry and the
Jacobites considered it to be a first instalment on the money which was legally owed to him. (For many years the British government had promised to return the English
dowry of his grandmother,
Mary of Modena, but never did so.) The Vatican had recognised James Francis Edward Stuart as James III and VIII as the King of Great Britain and Ireland. After his death in 1766, the Vatican did not recognise his son (Henry's brother) Charles, who had converted to
Anglicanism in 1750. The Vatican had not, however, overtly recognised the Hanoverian monarchs. However, in November 1792 the Vatican first referred to George III as the King of Great Britain and Ireland instead of the
Elector of Hanover. This resulted in a protest by Henry, who suggested the insult would result in him not visiting Rome again. Despite their general
anti-clericalism and hostility to the Bourbon monarchy, the
French Directory suggested to the
United Irishmen in 1798 to elevate Henry as
King of the Irish (Henry IX). This was in the course of General
Jean Joseph Amable Humbert landing a force in
County Mayo for the
Irish Rebellion of 1798, and trying to rally the Catholic population: a significant number of Irish priests supported the Rising, even though Humbert's army had been veterans of the anti-clerical campaign in Italy. The French hoped Henry could lead a French client state in Ireland; however,
Wolfe Tone, the Protestant republican leader, vetoed the scheme. Henry returned to Frascati in 1803. In September of that year he became the
Dean of the College of Cardinals and hence
Cardinal Bishop of Ostia and Velletri, though he still lived in the episcopal palace at Frascati. He died there on 13 July 1807, aged 82, after 60 years as a cardinal. ==Personal life==