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Colonel Sir Richard Ingoldsby (1617–1685) was an officer in the New Model Army and a Regicide who as a Commisoner (Judge) at the trial of King Charles I signed his death warrant. Events Change of emperor of the Ottoman Empire from Ahmed I (1603-1617) to Mustafa I (1617-1623). ...
Events February 6 - James Stuart, Duke of York becomes King James II of England and Ireland and King James VII of Scotland. ...
This article deals with the English Civil War army. ...
The broad definition of Regicide is the deliberate killing of a king. ...
Charles I ( 19 November 1600– 30 January 1649) was King of England, Scotland and Ireland from 27 March 1625, until his death. ...
Richard Ingoldsby was the second son of Sir Richard Ingoldsby K.B. of Lenborough in Buckinghamshire and Elizabeth (nee Cromwell). Her father was Sir Oliver Cromwell of Hinchinbroke, Hunts, the grandfather of Oliver Cromwell the Lord Protector. This meant that Ingoldsby was the cousin of the Lord Protector. Military Badge of the Order of the Bath The Most Honourable Order of the Bath is a British order of chivalry founded by George I on 18 May 1725. ...
Lenborough is a hamlet in the parish of Buckingham, in Buckinghamshire, England. ...
Buckinghamshire (abbreviated Bucks) is a county in south central England. ...
The Lord Protector was the head of state during the brief period of the republic or Commonwealth in Great Britain and Ireland. ...
During the English Civil war he joined John Hampden's regiment as a Captain and followed Oliver Cromewell into the New Model Army were he served as Colonel. He took part in the western campaign and the was involved in the capture of Brisol and Bridgewater. His regiment garrisond Oxford when it surrendered in 1646. In 1649 his regiment was one of the regiments which supported the Bishopsgate mutiny and for a time he was held prisoner by his own men. Some Levellers, notably Col. William Eyres, were imprisoned in Oxford after the Banbury mutiny, and contrived to inspire a second mutiny in the garrison, it was quickly suppressed by Ingoldsby and others; two of the ring-leaders were shot in Broken Hayes. In May 1551 Ingoldsby's regiment left Oxford and joined the army which fought at the Battle of Worcester the last battle of the English Civil War. John Hampden as depicted in the 1851 Illustrated London Reading Book John Hampden (circa 1595—1643) was an English politician, the eldest son of William Hampden, of Hampden House, Great Hampden in Buckinghamshire, a descendant of a very ancient family of that county, said to have been established there before...
This article deals with the English Civil War army. ...
The Bishopsgate mutiny occurred in April 1649 on when soldiers in the regiment of Colonel Edward Whalleys regiment of the New Model Army refused to obey orders and leave London. ...
The Banbury mutiny was a mutiny by soldiers in the New Model Army. ...
The Battle of Worcester was the final battle of the Second English Civil War. ...
Ingoldsby sat in the House of Lords during the Protectorate commonly known as Cromwell's Other House from 1657-1659. When Oliver Cromwell died he supportd Richard Cromwell as Lord Protctor. But after the Rump Parliament removed Richard he threw in his lot with General George Monck and the move towards the restoration of the English monarchy. This article is about the British House of Lords. ...
The Protectorate in English history refers specifically to the English government of 1653 to 1659 under the direct control of Oliver Cromwell, who assumed the title of Lord Protector of the newly declared Commonwealth of England (later the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland) after the English Civil War. ...
The original Rump Parliament was the remnant of the Long Parliament, following Prides Purge (1648). ...
George Monck, 1st Duke of Albemarle by Sir Peter Lely, painted 1665–1666. ...
After the restoration he was pardoned for his regicidefor two reasons. He had captured John Lambert on Sunday 22 April 1660, when Lambert had escaped from the Tower where General George Monck had imprissoned him, and had tried to raise the supporters of the Good Old Cause in a last ditch attempt to stop the English Restoration in 1660. Ingoldsby also pleaded that he had been forced to sign the death warrent by his cousin Oliver Cromwell that "he refused but Cromwell and the others held him by violence; and Cromwell,with a loud laugh, taking his hand in his, and putting the pen between his fingers, with his own hand wrote Richard Ingoldsby"[1] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Ingoldsby#endnote_regicide). He was Member of Parliament for the constituency of Aylesbury from 1660 until 1681. John Lambert (1619 - 1684) served as an English Parliamentary general in the English Civil War. ...
April 22 is the 112th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (113th in leap years). ...
Events January 1 - colonel George Monck with his regiment crosses from Scotland to England at the village of Coldstream and begins advance towards London in support of English Restoration February 2 – George Monck and his regiment arrive in London February 23 - Charles XI becomes king of Sweden. ...
George Monck, 1st Duke of Albemarle by Sir Peter Lely, painted 1665–1666. ...
The Good Old Cause was the name given by the soldiers of the New Model Army for the reasons they fought for Parliament against King Charles I and the Royalists during the English Civil War and the support they gave to the republic, particularly the English Commonwealth, of the Interregnum...
The English Restoration or simply Restoration was an episode in the history of Great Britain beginning in 1660 when the monarchy was restored under King Charles II after the English Civil War. ...
This page is about Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire, England. ...
Notes
- ^ Quote from Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon, The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England from David L.Smith; Oliver Cromwell 1640-1658. See online The Cromwell Association Quotes about Oliver Cromwell (http://www.olivercromwell.org/quotes2.htm)
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