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James de la Cloche (1644–1669; unattested dates) is an alleged would-be-illegitimate son of Charles II of England who would have first joined a Jesuit seminary and then gave up his habit to marry a Neapolitan woman. His existence has not been proven, and the parentage with Charles II is unlikely if 1644 is his correct birth date, since the king was only 14 years old then.James de la Cloche is mainly known through studies of British historian Lord Acton.

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  • James de la Cloche (1644–1669; unattested dates) is an alleged would-be-illegitimate son of Charles II of England who would have first joined a Jesuit seminary and then gave up his habit to marry a Neapolitan woman. His existence has not been proven, and the parentage with Charles II is unlikely if 1644 is his correct birth date, since the king was only 14 years old then.James de la Cloche is mainly known through studies of British historian Lord Acton. Arthur Barnes in 1908, and Marcel Pagnol in 1973, developed an identification of the famous Man in the Iron Mask with James de La Cloche.In his historical essay Le Secret du Masque de fer (The secret of the Iron Mask) released in 1973, Marcel Pagnol summarizes and comments various theories of historians. Besides Lord Acton and Mgr Barnes, M. Pagnol also refers to the historian John Lingard, Andrew Lang, Edith Carey, and also the French historian Laloy. (en)
  • James de La Cloche (1644? - 1669?) est un prétendu fils bâtard de Charles II d'Angleterre qui, après être entré dans un séminaire jésuite, aurait renoncé à l'état ecclésiastique et épousé une Napolitaine. Il est surtout connu à travers les études de l'historien britannique Lord Acton, et son existence n'est pas certaine. Mgr Barnes, en 1908, et Marcel Pagnol, en 1965, ont défendu une identité entre l'Homme au masque de fer et James de La Cloche. (fr)
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  • James de La Cloche (1644? - 1669?) est un prétendu fils bâtard de Charles II d'Angleterre qui, après être entré dans un séminaire jésuite, aurait renoncé à l'état ecclésiastique et épousé une Napolitaine. Il est surtout connu à travers les études de l'historien britannique Lord Acton, et son existence n'est pas certaine. Mgr Barnes, en 1908, et Marcel Pagnol, en 1965, ont défendu une identité entre l'Homme au masque de fer et James de La Cloche. (fr)
  • James de la Cloche (1644–1669; unattested dates) is an alleged would-be-illegitimate son of Charles II of England who would have first joined a Jesuit seminary and then gave up his habit to marry a Neapolitan woman. His existence has not been proven, and the parentage with Charles II is unlikely if 1644 is his correct birth date, since the king was only 14 years old then.James de la Cloche is mainly known through studies of British historian Lord Acton. (en)
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  • James de la Cloche (en)
  • James de La Cloche (fr)
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