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A35255 The wars in England, Scotland and Ireland, or, An impartial account of all the battels, sieges, and other remarkable transactions, revolutions and accidents, which have happened from the beginning of the reign of King Charles I, in 1625, to His Majesties happy restauration, 1660 illustrated with pictures of some considerable matters curiously ingraven on copper plates. R. B., 1632?-1725? 1681 (1681) Wing C7357; ESTC R8819 122,635 215

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to allow him the benefit of a free and general Pardon granted by King James in Parliament in the 21st Year of his Reign and likewise that of the Coronation Presently after the Commons drew up another Declaration of Grievances against the Duke whom they resolved utterly to overthrow though contrary to the Inclination of the King who being thereat incensed dissolved the Parliament the very next day June 15. 1626. and committed the Earl of Bristol to the Tower Publishing a Proclamation for burning all Copies of the said Declaration After which the King Published a Declaration shewing the Grounds and Reasons of his Dissolving this and the former Parliament Then several ways were Resolved on for advancing the Kings Revenue and special care was taken by the Councel for the levying of Customs and Imposts upon all Merchandizes Imported and Exported as being intended to have been settled by the Two last Parliaments but prevented by their sudden Dissolution The Forfeitures of Papists likewise which had been misimployed were now taken into a more strict Account Privy Seals also were issued out and Benevolence proposed and at length a Commission for a General Loan was resolved upon as the most convenient Method since the present state of Affairs admitted not of the way of a Parliament and private Instructions were given to the Commissioners how to manage the business which upon their Faith and Allegiance they were commanded to keep Secret and not to disclose to any About this time some Souldiers returned from Cadiz and were Quattered in the Countreys and Money was raised for them which made this Loan the more unwelcome and Sir Randolph Crew for not appearing vigorous in promoting the Loan was displaced from being L. Chief Justice and Sir Nich. Hyde advanced in his place the Bishop of Lincoln was likewise informed against in the Star Chamber by Sir John Lamb and Dr. Sybthorp for speaking against the Loan and seeming to favour the Puritans and Nonconformists Not long before which Bishop Laud hearing that the Bishop of Lincoln endeavoured to ingratiate himself with the D. of Buckingham Dreamed That the Bishop came to him with Iron Chains but returned free from them that he leaped upon a Horse departed and he could not overtake him which was afterwards interpreted concerning the Bishop of Lincolns taking Arms for the Parliament in Wales and his being at liberty when Bishop Laud was imprisoned in the Tower There were several Occasions at this time which required considerable Supplies of Money for besides that of the Palatinate there was great probability of a War with France upon this Occasion the French King Lewis the 13. had borrowed of his Brother in Law the King of England a Man of War called the Vauntguard and six other Merchants Ships in pursuance of a Design against Italy but with this express Condition that they should not be imployed against the Protestants at Rochel there having been an Agreement lately made between them and their King by the Mediation of the English Ambassadors But Mounsieur Soulize who was for the Protestants taking the Advantage of the French Armies going into Italy suddenly broke that Agreement for getting some small Ships together he Surprized the Isle of Rhe and some Ships in the Harbour at which the French King being offended turns his whole Design from Italy to Rochel and with the Seven English Ships under Admiral Pennington Twenty Dutch Ships and the French Navy he furiously falls upon Soulize forceth him from his Fastness and chaseth him to the Isle of Oleron The King of England was much concerned at this Action of the French King as a breach of his Royal Word and demanded Satisfaction which the French King deferring to give the King Seized a Rich French Ship and the French King Arrested the Goods of the English Merchants in France to the value of Three Hundred Thousand Pounds but at length all was Reconciled and Restored on both sides Thus all seemed quiet at present till the Insolent deportment of the Queens Priests and Confessor made another Rupture who Imposed upon her to go bare-foot to Spin to wait upon her Servants at their Dinners nay to walk on Foot on a Rainy Morning from Somerset-House to St. Jameses and from thence as far as Tybourn Gallows to offer up her Prayers for the Souls of some Jesuits whom they stiled Martyrs who were formerly Executed there her Confessor himself Riding by her in a Coach These and several other Arrogancies being justly charged upon the Queens French Domestick Servants they were paid off discharged and sent home Upon which the French Arrested the Ships of the English Wine Merchants at Blay Castle which was so ill Resented by his Majesty of Great Britain that he resolved upon a Breach with France But about the same time the English Fleet under the L. Willoughby which were sent to the Aid of the Rochellers were so scattered by a Storm that they could scarce get into safe Harbour The Assessment of the Loan was generally opposed whereupon the People of the lower Rank were ordered to appear in the Military Yard near St. Martins in the Fields before the Lieutenant of the Tower to be Listed for Souldiers it being thought fit that those who refused to assist with their Purses in Common Defence should be forced to serve in their Persons others of better Quality were bound to appear at the Council Table several of whom were committed Prisoners to the Fleet Marshalsea Gatehouse and other Prisons and among them Sir John Eliot who Petitioned his Majesty and repeated many Presidents That all manner of Aids and Taxes informer Kings Reigns were never levied but by the general Consent of the Nobility and Commons Assembled in Parliament However he was committed Prisoner to the Gatehouse and upon the same Account Sir Peter Hayman was commanded to Serve his Majesty in the Palatinate which after he had settled his Estate he did acordingly Doctor Sybthorp and Dr. Maynwaring two Eminent Preachers at Court about this time preached up the Necessity and Duty of the Loan one of them Asserting That the Prince hath Power to Direct his Councel and make Laws and that Subjects if they cannot Exhibit Active Obedience in Case the thing commanded should be against the Law of God or Nature or more Impossible yet nevertheless they ought to yield Passive Obedience and in all other Cases they were bound to Active Obedience The other Affirmed That the Kings Royal Command in Imposing of Loans and Taxes though without common consent in Parliament did Oblige the Subjects Conscience upon Pain of Eternal Damnation Which Positions being entertained by the Court with Applause the Sermon of Dr. Sybthorp call'd Apostolick Obedience was Licensed and Approved of by Dr. Laud B. of London and an express Command was sent from the King to Archbishop Abbot to License it which he refused whereupon having been under some disfavour before this Increased it and he was suspended from his Archiepiscopal See and a Commission was
acquainted them with a Declaration which he had procured of the King That he did discharge the Service Book Book of Canons and high Commission and likewise did annul and rescind all Acts for establishing them and did discharge the urging the Practice of the Five Articles of Perth and that all Persons whomsoever shall be liable to the Censure of Parliament General Assembly or any other Judicatories according to the Nature of the Offence That the Ancient Confelsion of Faith and Band annexed shall be subscribed and received as in K. James time That a General Assembly be holden at Glafcow Nov. 21. 1638 and a Parliament at Edenbourgh May 15. 1639 All former Offences to be pardoned and a General Fast appointed This Declaration being published the Marquess and Council subscribed the Covenanters Confession of Faith c. yet still some matter remained for a Protestation which was read by one Johnson wherein the People were exhorted to consider with whom they had to deal and exceptions were made against Bishops and their Voting in the Assembly After this they Elect Commissioners for the Assembly whom they moved to cite the Archbishops and Bishops to appear there as Guilty Persons which being refused they themselves present a Bill of Complaint against them to the Presbytery at Edenbourgh who accordingly warned them to appear at the next General Assembly At their Meeting the Bishops sent in a Protestation against their Assembly which the Covenanters would not vouchsafe to read but presumed to forbid Six Lords of the Privy Council to fit in their Assembly though nominated by the King His Majesty having notice of their proceedings as to the Bishops and other matters ordered their Assembly to be dissolved which was done accordingly Nov. 21. 1638 and the Covenanters immediately according to their usual method Issued out a Protestation against it and likewise declared 6 former Meetings which were opposite to their ways to be void and of none Effect and soon after they abolished Episcopacy and then prepared for a War as being sensible that the King would maintain the Rights of the Bishops and would likewise strictly call them to Account for their late Transactions About this time a Letter was sent by the Scots to the King of France to implore his Assistance Signed by several of the Nobility The King of England prepares an Army for Scotland with which in the year 1639 he marcheth in Person into the North but while he stayed at York some of the Scots Nobility tampered with the Eaglish telling them that the ruin of the Scots would enable the King to be more severe toward his English Subjects by which Intelligence and Correspondence it was evident that the English had no mind to Fight though their Army was much stronger than the Scots whereupon by the Mediation of some Persons a Treaty of Peace was begun and soon finished wherein it was agreed That His Majesty should publish a Declaration whereby all should be confirmed which his Commissioners had promised in his Name That a General Assembly and a Parliament be held at Edenbourgh in a short time And lastly That upon disbanding their Forces dissolving their Councils and restoring the King to his Forts and Castles c. the King was to recall his Fleet and Forces and make restitution of their Goods since the Breach The Kings Declaration was no sooner published but the Covenanters set forth another Protestation for adhereing to there Assembly at Glasco and their Covenant whereupon the King who intended to be present at their General Assembly not finding the Scots punctual in performing Articles and perceiving they would treat of some matters distasteful to him goes into England after which the Assembly sate at Edenbourgh and abolished Episcopacy the Liturgy High Commission and Book of Canons and then made several demands of the King of a various nature His Majesty understanding how things went and that the Scots levyed Taxes and prepared Arms he commanded by his Commissioner the Earl of Traquair that their Parliament should be Adjourned for some time but the Covenanters declared against this Command and sent a Remonstrance to the King and afterward Hamilton and Traquair likewise came to London where there were such proceedings as did the more exasperate the jarring parties against each other In this year 1639 a Spanish Fleet of near Seventy Sail and Twenty five thousand Men designed to be landed at Dunkirk for the relief of Flanders were set upon by the Dutch in the Downs and Eleven of them taken and sent into Holland three perished upon the Coast of France one near Dover and five were sunk in the Fight What the real intent of this Fleet was is yet uncertain for it seemed unlikely that Twenty five thousand Men should be sent only for a Recruit and the Admirals refusing to shew his Commission when required thereto by the King makes it seem yet mon suspicious The Scots Commissioners having delivered their Message return home to Edenbourgh Nov. 19. 1639. the same night that a great part of the Castle Walls fell down and the Anniversary of the King Birth day A while after the King sent the Lord Estrich and others to tepair the Walls who were resisted by the Covenanters as not judging the Lord Estrich to be a fit Governour for the Castle which Office was designed him by the King The King being hereat extreamly offended resolved since fair means would not prevail to force the Scots to reason and to that end considers how to make provisions for Men and Money and calling a secret Cabinet Council consisting only of Archbishop Laud the Earl of Strafford and Duke Hamilton who drove on his own particular interest it was concluded That for the Kings supply a Parliament must be called in England and another in Ireland but because the Debates of Parliament would take up some time it was resolved that the Lords should subscribe to lend the King money The Earl of Strafford subscribed Twenty thousand pound the Duke of Richmond as much but Hamilton pretended poverty preserving his money for other uses the rest of the Lords Judges Officers and other Dependants and many of the Gentry yea even several Popish Recusants contributed according to their ability The Scots on the other side fore-seeing the storm prepared for their own Defence making Treaties in Denmark Sweden Holland and Poland and the Jesuits who are never idle did likewise endeavour to foment the differences to which end Con the Popes Nuncio Sir Toby Matthews Read and Maxwell two Scots endeavoured to perswade the discontented People That the King designed to iuslave them to his will and pleasure Which practices of theirs were discovered by Andreas Habernsfield a Nobleman of Bohemia who declared That many of the Nobility of England and chief Favourites at Court were consenting to these Transactions and particularly the Earl and Countess of Arundel Secretary Windebank and Endymion Porter Con also performed the part of a Firebrand as all his Successors
those that could take him It is supposed there were about three thousand slain at Worcester and seven hundred taken Prisoners and not long after the E. of Derby who was one of them was Beheaded at Bolton in Lancashire His Majesty through many dangers and difficulties arrived at last safely at Paris in France And a while after Oliver Cromwell April 20. 1653. Dissolved the long Parliament which had sate Twelve years six months and seventeen days In this year and the next there were five bloody Engagements at Sea against the Dutch in most of which the English were Victorious Oliver Cromwell called another Junto this year which was termed the Little Parliament who sate some short time and then delivered back their Power to him from whom they had received it And December 16. 1653. Cromwell was Sworn Lord Protector of England Scotland and Ireland c. And so the Government was now again in a single Person and in April after the Protector concluded a Peace with the Dutch whose aid and assistance the King had strongly sollicited against him His Majesty after this sought a Reconciliation between France and Spain and hoping thereby to further his own Interest he left France and departed for Germany accompanied with his Cousin Prince Rupert about which time Cromwell had discovered a Plot in England against his Authority and Collonel Gerrard and Mr. Vowell suffered for the same at Tower-Hill Scotland began likewise to stir again the Earl of Glencarn Monro and Middleton having gotten some Forces together intended to have prosecuted the Kings Cause but they were routed by General Monk and Collonel Morgan According to the Treaty with France Cromwell sent over some Forces to aid the French in his Wars against Flanders and the English were to have Dunkirk in consideration thereof which upon taking of it was accordingly delivered In the same year 1656. Cromwell by a Parliament garbled to his mind was installed L. Protector in Westminster-Hall and a while after another Plot was discovered Sir Henry Slingsby Dr. Hewet Mr. Aston and Mr. Stacy suffered Death upon the same Account the two first being beheaded and the other Drawn Hanged and Quartered being charged to be concerned therein Upon Sept. 3. 1658. O. Cromwell departed this life in Whitehall and lay in State in Somer set-house till Nov. 23. following when he was buried with great Pomp in Westminster Abby After whom his Son Richard Succeeded but was soon thrust out of his Protectorship by Fleetwood and Lambert who with the rest of the Army called the Long Parliament again after which several Gentlemen in Cheshire under the conduct of Sir George Booth rose for defence of their Priviledges but were defeated by Lambert who soon after turned out this remnant of the Long Parliament again and erected a Government which they called the Committee of Safety All which Revolutions still advanced the Kings Cause Lambert now Marches North as far as New-Gastle to fight against General Monk but his men were unwilling to engage and in the mean time the remainder of the Long Parliament had again gotten together and dissolved the Committee of Safety and then invited General Monk to march with his Army to London which he did accordingly and was received with Joy and soon after he procured the Dissolution of that Long Parliament and he calling another upon April 25. 1660. who being sate unanimously Voted the restoration of his Majesty to his Kingdoms and accordingly upon May 29. following the King accompanied with the Dukes of York and Glocester and attended with several Lords and Gentlemen arrived at Dover where he was met by divers Noble Personages and among the rest General Monk who was dignified with the George and Garter In October following several of the Regicides of the late King were Tryed in the Old Baily and ten of them Executed at Charing-Cross that is Thomas Harrison John Carew Adrian Scroop John Jones Gregory Clement Thomas Scot John Cook Hugh Peters Francis Hacker and Daniel Axtell Mary Princess of Orange coming over to Visit the King her Brother fell sick of the Small Pox and dyed and in January after one Vennor a Wine-cooper and some others in whom he had infused Enthusiastick Principles put themselves in Arms and came into the City but being opposed they killed 22 of his Majesties Subjects and about as many of them were slain and the rest were taken and dispersed eleven of whom and Vennor their leader were executed in several places in the City In the beginning of the next year Prince Henry D. of Glocester dyed and upon April 23. following being St. George's day His Majesty K. Charles the 2. was Crowned at Westminster with great splendor and Solemnity having the day before made a Magnificent Passage from the Tower through the City of London where four curious Pageants were erected to Whitehall And here we shall conclude this abstract of so many various affairs wishing all happiness to his Majesty and the preservation of the Protestant Religion forever FINIS
December 3. they presented their Petition against their Prosecutors And now the Papists began to fear a Cloud for Justice Howard was to deliver up a Catalogue of all Recusants within the Liberties of Westminster to prevent which he was stabbed by one Mr. John James in Westminster hall for which he was imprisoned in the Gate-house in order to a more severe punishment But Sir Francis Windebank Secretary of State fearing to be called to Account by the Parliament for reprieving Jesuits and Priests which he knew would be produced against him if not worse matters fled privately into France December 7th the Commons Voted Ship-money with the Opinion of the Judges thereupon to be Illegal and a Charge of High Treason was ordered to be drawn up against eight of them and they resolved to begin with the Lord Keeper Finch December 11th Alderman Pennington and some hundreds of Citizens presented a Petition subscribed by 15000 Hands against Church Discipline and Ceremonies and a while after the House of Commons Voted That the Clergy in a Synod or Convocation have no power to make Canons or Laws without Parliaments and that the Canons are against the Fundamental Laws of this Realm the Kings Prerogative the Property of the Subject the Right of Parliaments and tend to Faction and Sedition In pursuance hereof a Charge was ordered to be drawn up against Arch-bishop Laud as the principal framer of those Canons and other Delinquencies which Impeachment was seconded with another from the Scotch Commissioners upon which he was committed to the Black Rod and 10 weeks after Voted Guilty of High Treason and sent to the Tower The Scots likewise prefer a charge against the Earl of Strafford then in Custody requiring Justice against them both as the great Incendiaries and Disturbers of Church and State and Sir George Ratcliff the Earls Bosom Friend had Articles also drawn against him to this purpose That he had conspired with the Earl to bring Ireland under an Arbitrary Government and to subvert the Fundamental Laws and to bring an Army from Ireland to subdue the Subjects of England That he perswaded the Earl to use Regal Power and to deprive the Subjects of their Liberties and Properties That he countenanced Papists and built Monasteries to alienate the Affections of the Irish from England That he withdrew the Subjects of Scotland from their King And lastly That to preserve himself and the Earl of Strafford he laboured to subvert the Liberties and Priviledges of Parliament in Ireland The Lord Keeper Finch was the next Person designed to be censured and notwithstanding a Speech made in his own Vindication he was Voted a Traytor upon several Accounts and among the rest for soliciting perswading and threatning the Judges to deliver their Opinions for raising Ship-money and for several ill Offices done in moving the King to Dissolve the last Parliament and causing the publishing the Kings Declaration thereupon Next day he was accused before the Lords but he foresaw the Storm and went over into Holland The Parliament having now removed their Enemies and increasing in Reputation were designing a Bill for a Triennial Parliament for promoting which Petitions came from divers places one whereof was subscribed with 800 Hands directly against Episcopacy which the King took notice of and calling both Houses together tells them Of their slowness and the charge of Two Armies in the Kingdom and that he would have them avoid two Rocks the one about the Hierachy of Bishops which he was willing to Reform but not to alter The other concerning frequent Parliaments which he liked well but not to give his Power to Sheriffs and Constables About this time one Goodman a Popish Priest condemned at the Sessions in London was reprieved by the King upon which both Houses petitioned to know who were the Instruments of it and receiving an unsatisfactory Answer they Remonstrated against the Toleration of Papists and the Popes Nuncio Rosetti and this Goodman whom they desired might be left to the Justice of the Law To this the King answers That the increase of Popery and Papists in his Dominions is extreamly against his mind and that he would use all possible means for the restraining of it As for the Popes Nuncio Rosetti he had no Commission but only to preserve Correspondence between the Queen and the Pope which was allowed her by the Articles of Marriage however he had prevailed with her to remove him and is contented to remit the particular Case of Goodman to both Houses The Scots had been now quartered in England five months during which a Cessation had been concluded at Rippon but the full Pacification was reserved for London where Commissioners sate on both Parties to hear the Demands of the Scots and to make answer thereunto After which the Scots presented the great Account of their Charges which was Five hundred fourteen thousand one hundred twenty eight pounds nine Shillings besides the loss of their Nation which was Four hundred and forty thousand pounds This Reckoning startled the English Commissioners till the Scots told them They did not give in that Account as expecting a Total Reparation of their Charges and Losses but were content to bear a part of it hoping for the rest from the Justice and Kindness of England There was some opposition made to the Demands however Moneys were raised for the present from the City of London for the Supply of both the Northern Armies as the Parliament had done once before At this time a Match was propounded between the young Prince of Orange and the Lady Mary Eldest Daughter to the King which his Majesty liked well of and communicated it to the Parliament with whom it found an unanimous and general Reception in regard of the Alliance to be thereupon concluded with the States General and likewise that he was of the same Protestant Religion with England so that the Marriage was soon concluded Presently after four Members of the Commons delivered a Message to the Lords of a Popish Design of Levying an Army of Fifteen thousand in Lancashire and Eight thousand in Ireland and that the main promoters thereof were the Earls of Strafford and Worcester In February Sir Robert Berkly one of the Judges about Ship-money was accused of High Treason and committed Prisoner to the Black Rod. In this Month the King passed that Act for a Triennial Parliament and to let them know what value he put upon this great favour his Majesty told the Two Houses That hitherto they had gone on in those things which concerned themselves and now he expected they should proceed upon what concerned him The King then likewise signed the Bill of Subsidies which gave them such universal content that Sir Edward Littleton Lord Keeper was ordered To return the Humble Thanks of Both Houses to his Majesty at Whitehall Upon which there were Bonefires and Bells ringing in and about London in the same manner as formerly upon granting the Petition of Right March 1 1640
That if he had the least Thoughts of disagreeing with the happiness of this Kingdom he would not advise with such Councellors as they were And so the upper Schools were assigned to the Lords and the Convocation House to the Commons In this Parliament besides the Prince D. of York L. Keeper Littleton Treasurer Cottington D. of Richmond and Marquess of Hartford there were 19 Earls and as many Lords and 117 Knights and Gentlemen and afterwards 5 Lords and 23 Gentlemen more came to them The first thing they fell upon was to consider of means for effecting a Peace to which end a Letter was written to the E. of Essex and subsigned by all their hands who returned no answer but sent it to the Parliament at Westminster Jan. 16. 1643. The Scots Army entred England by the way of Newcastle being 18000 Foot and 2000 Horse under Gen. Levens For assisting the Parliament in pursuance of the Solemn League and Covenant and declaring the Justness of their Cause which they profess to be Reformation of Religion Honour of the King and Peace of the Kingdoms and that the main end of their coming is to rescue the King from his pernicious Counsellors The Parliament caresse the Scots Army and impower them to assess for themselves the Twentieth part of all Malignants Estates as they called them in the North besides what other Counties were assessed for them But the E. of Newcastle is marching to give them rougher entertainment and the L. Fairfax sent his Son Sir Thomas against him Sir John M●ldrum with 700 men besieged Newarks and is blockt up by Prince Rupert whereupon they parleyed and upon Articles were suffered to march away leaving their Match Bullet Powder Cannon and all other Fire-Arms behind them In the mean time Matters are preparing for Scotland by James Marquss of Montro's who had formerly sided with the Covenanters but now the King understanding he had really forsaken them gives him a Commission to be General Governor of Scotland and orders him Forces to go into the heart of that Kingdom for a diversion to the Scots In the year 1644. the Twentieth of his Majesties Reign Sir Will. Waller defeats the L. Hoptons Forces and takes Winchester and Oliver Cromwell was made Governor of Ely Beudly is surprized by Coll. Fox for the Parliament and the Garrisons of Selby and Heintough are taken by the L. Fairfax and his Son Prince Rupert raiseth the siege at Latham House The King at this time in the presence of the Peers at Oxford received the Sacrament at Christs Church at the hands of Bishop Vsher where he used these solemn Protestations My Lords I espy here many resolved Protestants who declare to the world the Resolution I do now make I have to the utmost of my power prepared my Soul to become a worthy Receiver and may I so receive comfort by the Blessed Sacrament as I do intend the establishment of the True Reformed Protestant Religion as it stood in its beauty in the happy days of Q. Elizabeth without any connivance at Popery I bless God that in the midst of these Publick Distractions I have still Liberty to communicate and may this Sacrament be my damnation if my heart do not joyn with my lips in this Protestation The Parliament at Westminster Voted it Treason for any Member or Member of either House to desert them and to go to the King and they never to be received again The King marcheth out of Oxford and i● followed by Essex and Waller he defeats Waller at Cropredy-Bridge and Essex is blockt up by the Kings Forces in Cornwall and July 4th the King sends several Letters to the Parliament about a Treaty of Peace Sept. 12. the Parliament at Oxford Assemble again but falling into Factions and Divisions the King in March following Dissolves them The Earl of Newcastle was besieged in York about two months to whose relief Prince Rupert advanceth Northward with a great Power of Horse and Foot upon whose approach to the City the Beseigers drew off and those within sally out upon their Rear the E. of Newcastle being thus relieved joyns with P. Rupert resolving to follow the Parliamentarians and give them battle which accordingly they did upon a Plain called Marston-Moor where about 9000 men were slain for the Royalists having near routed the Parliaments Army pursued the Chace so far that the Victory was snatcht out of their hands and the Parliament obtained an entire Victory after 3 hours Fight resolutely maintained on both sides After which York was delivered up to the Parliament and they soon became Masters of all the North and Levens the Scotch General takes Newcastle After this Battel which was the greatest both for the fierceness of it and for the number of Souldiers on both sides P. Rupert goes into Lancashire but the E. of Neweastle lately made Marquess with his two Sons and his brother Sir Charles Cavendish General King the Lord Falconbridge the Lord Widdrington the Earl of Cranworth the Bishop of London-derry Sir Edward Widdrington Coll. Carnaby Col. Basset Col. Mouson Sir William Vavasor Sir Francis Mackworth with about eighty other persons upon some discontent refused to engage any further in the Kings Cause and went over to Hamburgh New Levies are now made by the Parliament and 〈◊〉 Attempts were made by the Parliamentarians upon Dennington Castle but in vain The Queen go●ng from Oxford to Exeter was there delivered of a daughter June 16 1644. who was called Henrietta Maria and afterward went from thence to Penden●is Castle in Cornwall where she embarqued for France and did not return again to England till His present Majesties Happy Restoration in 1660. Banbury Castle is relieved by Sir William Compton having been besieged about 11 weeks by the Par●iamens Forces Coll. Myn is defeated by Massy near Glocester and himself slain and about 170 Officers and Souldiers taken Prisoners Prince Rupert sending 500 Horse and Foot to fortifie Beachly in order to his going to Ashferry they are routed by Massey who soon after takes Monmouth Town Newberry seemed to be a Place destined for Martial exploits for October 27. another great Battel was fought there between the Kings party and the Parliaments under Essex Waller and Manchester wherein the Royalists were worsted and between 4 and 5000 men slain on both sides Novemb. 19. Monmouth is retaken by the Kings Forces December 23. Sir Alexander Carew was beheaded for endeavouring to deliver up the Island of Plymouth to the Kings Forces Two Principal Irish Rebels the L. Macguire and Mac-mahon had been sent from Ireland and imprisoned in the Tower from whence they made their escape but being retaken and Tryed were found guilty of High Treason and were both Drawn Hang'd and Quartered at Tyburn though Macguire pleaded his Priviledge to the Lords as a Peer of Ireland Archbishop Laud having been accused by th● Parliament in 1640. as the framer of the Canons 〈◊〉 Convocation and other Delinquencies and th● Scots joyning him and the