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Barlow surrenders on Easter Sunday, 25 April and is hanged in Lancaster on 10 September; he will be canonized as a saint in 1970. Ward is caught on 15 July and executed in London on 26 July. 21 April – the House of Commons votes 204 to 59 in favor of the conviction for treason and the execution of the Earl of Strafford, and the House of Lords ...
[10] Pym's patron and political ally, the Earl of Bedford, 1587–1641. Even in an era when it was common, he was notable for his anti-Catholicism, and opposition to alleged Catholic practices in the Church of England. One reason for this was the close links in the 17th-century between religion and politics, with alterations in one viewed as ...
Cooper's election disputed and he never sat; Griffin disabled on 5 February 1644 Hindon: Robert Reynolds Miles Fleetwood: Fleetwood died 1641 - replacement Thomas Bennett died 1644 Heytesbury: Thomas Moore Edward Ashe: Westbury: William Wheler John Ashe: Calne: George Lowe Hugh Rogers: Lowe disabled 5 February 1644 Devizes: Edward Bayntun ...
On 1 June 1642 [1] the English Lords and Commons approved a list of proposals known as the Nineteen Propositions, sent to King Charles I of England, who was in York at the time. [2] In these demands, the Long Parliament sought a larger share of power in the governance of the kingdom.
10 August 1641 An Act for the better ordering and regulating of the Office of the Clerk of the Market, allowed and confirmed by this Statute; and for the Reformation of false Weights and Measures. (Repealed by Statute Law Revision Act 1863 ( 26 & 27 Vict. c. 125))
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The Grand Remonstrance was a list of grievances presented to King Charles I of England by the English Parliament on 1 December 1641, but passed by the House of Commons on 22 November 1641, during the Long Parliament. [1] It was one of the chief events which was to precipitate the English Civil War. [2]
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