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This is a timeline of events leading up to, culminating in, and resulting from the English Civil Wars.

Events prior to the English Civil War[]

  • 1625 - Charles I of England accedes to the English throne, and shortly after marries a French, Bourbon, Roman Catholic princess, Henrietta Maria
  • 1626 - Parliament dismisses George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham from command of English forces in Europe; Charles I, furious, dismisses Parliament.
  • 1628 - Charles recalls Parliament; Parliament draws up Petition of Right which Charles reluctantly accepts. John Felton murders George Villiers in Portsmouth.
  • 1629 - Charles dismisses Parliament and does not call it again until 1640, thus commencing the Personal Rule
  • 1633 - William Laud appointed Archbishop of Canterbury.
  • 1637 - Charles attempts to impose Anglican services on the Presbyterian Church of Scotland, Jenny Geddes reacts starting a tumult which leads to the National Covenant.
  • 1639–1640 - Bishops' Wars start in Scotland.

1640[]

  • 13 April, first meeting of the Short Parliament
  • 5 May, Charles dissolves the Short Parliament
  • 26 October, Charles forced to sign the Treaty of Ripon.
  • 3 November, first meeting of the Long Parliament.
  • 11 December, the Root and Branch Petition submitted to the Long Parliament

1641[]

  • July, the Long Parliament passes "An Act for the Regulating the Privie Councell and for taking away the Court commonly called the Star Chamber"
  • August, the Root and Branch Bill rejected by the Long Parliament
  • October, outbreak of the Irish Rebellion of 1641
  • 1 December - The Grand Remonstrance is presented to the King
  • December - The Long Parliament passes the Bishops Exclusion Act

1642 until the outbreak of the war[]

  • 4 January, Charles unsuccessfully attempts to personally arrest the Five Members (John Pym, John Hampden, Denzil Holles, Sir Arthur Haselrig, and William Strode) on the floor of the House of Commons
  • January, on the orders of the Long Parliament, Sir John Hotham, 1st Baronet seizes the arsenal at Kingston upon Hull
  • 5 February, the bishops of the Church of England are excluded from the House of Lords by the Bishops Exclusion Act
  • 23 February - Henrietta Maria goes to the Netherlands with Princess Mary and the crown jewels
  • 5 March, the Long Parliament passes the Militia Ordinance
  • 15 March, the Long Parliament proclaims that "the People are bound by the Ordinance for the Militia, though it has not received the Royal Assent"
  • April, Sir John Hotham, 1st Baronet refuses the king entrance to Kingston upon Hull
  • 2 June - The Nineteen Propositions rejected.
  • 3 June, The great meeting on Heworth Moor outside York, summoned by Charles to garner support for his cause.
  • July, Charles I of England unsuccessfully besieged the city of Kingston upon Hull in an attempt to secure its arsenal.
  • July, Parliament appoints the Committee of Safety

The First English Civil War[]

Events of 1642[]

Events of 1643[]

Events of 1644[]

The Scots marched South and joined Parliament's army threatening York.

Events of 1645[]

Events of 1646[]

  • 18 January, Siege of Dartmouth ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison.
  • 3 February, Siege of Chester ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison after a 136-day siege.
  • 16 February, Battle of Torrington victory for the New Model Army
  • 10 March, Ralph Hopton surrenders the Royalist army at Tresillian bridge in Cornwall.
  • 21 March, Battle of Stow-on-the-Wold the last pitched battle of the First Civil War is a victory for the New Model Army
  • 13 April, Siege of Exeter ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison.
  • 5 May, Charles surrendered to a Scottish army at Southwell, Nottinghamshire
  • 6 May, Newark fell to the Parliamentarians
  • 24 June, Siege of Oxford ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison.
  • 22 July, Siege of Worcester ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison.
  • 27 July, after a 65-day siege Wallingford Castle, the last English royalist stronghold, surrenders to Sir Thomas Fairfax.
  • 19 August, Royalist garrison of Raglan Castle surrendered (Wales)
  • 9 October, the Long Parliament passes the Ordinance for the abolishing of Archbishops and Bishops in England and Wales and for settling their lands and possessions upon Trustees for the use of the Commonwealth

Events of 1647[]

  • 13 March, Harlech Castle the last Royalist stronghold in Wales surrendered to the Parliamentary forces.
  • 29 May, General Council of the Army drew-up the Solemn Engagement
  • 3 June, Cornet George Joyce (a junior officer in Fairfax's horse) with a troop of New Model Army cavalry seizes the King from his Parliamentary guards at Holdenby House and place him in protective custody of the New Model Army
  • 4–5 June, at a rendezvoused on Kentford Heath near Newmarket the officers and men of the New Model Army gave their assent to the Solemn Engagement
  • 8 June, General Fairfax sent the Solemn Engagement to Parliament along with a letter explaining that the King was now in the custody of the Army negotiations would be conducted through New Model Army representatives
  • 1 August, General Council of the Army offers the Heads of Proposals
  • 31 August, Montrose escaped from the Highlands
  • October, "An Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace upon grounds of common right", presented to the Army Council
  • 28 October, Beginning of the Putney Debates. Ended 11 November.
  • 26 December, a faction of Scottish Covenanters sign The Engagement with Charles I

The Second English Civil War[]

Events of 1648[]

Events of 1649[]

  • 15 January, "An Agreement of the People of England, and the places therewith incorporated, for a secure and present peace, upon grounds of common right, freedom and safety" presented to the Rump Parliament
  • 20 January, The trial of Charles I of England by the High Court of Justice begins
  • 27 January, The death warrant of Charles I of England is signed
  • 30 January, Charles I of England executed by beheading - the Rump Parliament passes Act prohibiting the proclaiming any person to be King of England or Ireland, or the Dominions thereof
  • 5 February, The eldest son of Charles I, Charles, Prince of Wales, was proclaimed "king of Great Britain, France and Ireland" by the Scottish Parliament at the Mercat Cross, Edinburgh.[1]
  • 7 February, The Rump Parliament votes to abolish the English monarchy
  • 9 February, publication of Eikon Basilike, allegedly by Charles I of England
  • 14 February, the Rump Parliament creates the English Council of State
  • February, Charles II proclaimed king of Great Britain, France and Ireland by Hugh, Viscount Montgomery and other Irish Royalists at Newtownards in Ulster.[2][3]
  • 9 March, Engager Duke of Hamilton, Royalist Earl of Holland, and Royalist Lord Capel were beheaded at Westminster
  • 17 March, an Act abolishing the kingship is formally passed by the Rump Parliament.
  • 24 March, The capitulation of Pontefract Castle which, even after the death of Charles I, remained loyal to Charles II
  • 1 May, "AN AGREEMENT OF THE Free People of England. Tendered as a Peace-Offering to this distressed Nation" extended version from the Leveller leaders, "Lieutenant Colonel John Lilburne, Master William Walwyn, Master Thomas Prince (Leveller), and Master Richard Overton, Prisoners in the Tower of London, May the 1. 1649."
  • October, first publication of Eikonoklastes by John Milton, a rebuttal of Eikon Basilike

Third English Civil War[]

Events of 1650[]

Events of 1651[]

Events after the English Civil War[]

deathcount: royalists: 50,000. parliamentarians: 34,000

  • 1650-1660, English Interregnum
    • 1649-1653, The first period of the Commonwealth of England
    • 20 April 1653, The Rump Parliament disbanded by Oliver Cromwell
    • 1653-1658, The Protectorate under Oliver Cromwell
    • 25 March 1655, Battle of the Severn was fought in the Province of Maryland and was won by a Puritan force fighting under a Commonwealth flag who defeated a Royalist force fighting for Lord Baltimore
    • 13 April 1657, Oliver Cromwell declines the crown of England
    • 3 September 1658, Death of Oliver Cromwell
    • 1658-1659, The Protectorate under Richard Cromwell
    • 7 May 1659, Rump Parliament restored by Richard Cromwell
    • 25 May 1659, Richard Cromwell delivered a formal letter resigning the position of Lord Protector
    • 13 October 1659, Rump Parliament disbanded again
    • 1659-1660, The second period of the Commonwealth of England
  • 1660, English Restoration and the return of King Charles II of England
    • 30 January 1660, Charles II proclaimed King of England
    • March 1660, Convention Parliament elected
    • 4 April 1660, Charles II issued the Declaration of Breda, which made known the conditions of his acceptance of the crown of England
    • 25 April 1660, Convention Parliament assembled for the first time
    • 29 May 1660, Charles II arrives in London and the English monarchy is restored
    • July 1660, Richard Cromwell left England for the Kingdom of France where he went by a variety of pseudonyms, including “John Clarke”
    • 29 December 1660, Convention Parliament disbanded by Charles II
    • 23 April 1661, coronation of Charles II at Westminster Abbey
    • 1660-1662, The trials and executions of the regicides of Charles I
    • 30 January 1661, On the 12th anniversary of the beheading of Charles I, the exhumed remains of Oliver Cromwell were posthumously executed (Cromwell's severed head was displayed on a pole outside Westminster Hall until 1685)

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. Brown 2013, Scottish proclamation.
  2. Reid & Killen 1853, p. 102 footnote 20: The ceremonial at the proclamation of Charles II. at Newtownards may be seen in the Montg. MSS., p. 206.
  3. "King Charles the 2d being proclaimed our King of Great Britain, France, and Ireland" (Montgomery & Hill 1869, pp. 68, 178).

References[]

  • Brown, K.M., ed (2007–2013). "The Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707". St Andrews. 
  • Reid, James Seaton; Killen, William Dool (1853). A History of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland: Comprising the Civil History of the Province of Ulster from the Accession of James the First .... 2 (2 ed.). Whittaker. p. 102. 
  • Montgomery, William; Hill, George (1869). "The Montgomery manuscripts: (1603-1706) Comp. from family papers by William Montgomery, of Rosemount; and edited with notes". Belfast: Archer. pp. 68, 176. 

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Timeline of the English Civil War and the edit history here.
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