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  1. 14 de mai. de 2024 · Charles Fleetwood, c. 1618 to 4 October 1692, was an English lawyer from Northamptonshire, who served with the Parliamentarian army during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. A close associate of Oliver Cromwell , to whom he was related by marriage, Fleetwood held a number of senior political and administrative posts under the ...

  2. 14 de mai. de 2024 · Although he perhaps underestimates the degree of reticence about the conquest in radical and sectarian thought, and rashly proclams that ‘the vast majority of opinion in England enthusiastically supported the enterprise’ (p. 64), he nevertheless emphasises the very different visions displayed by different factions and different individuals, whether in terms of Charles Fleetwood and Henry ...

  3. Há 6 dias · Harrison became a major in Charles Fleetwood's regiment of horse, which was noted as one of the most radical in religion in the Parliamentarian army. Major Harrison was denounced as an Anabaptist by Manchester's Presbyterian officers, but praised as God-fearing and zealous by Oliver Cromwell.

  4. Há 3 dias · An act constituting Charles Fleetwood esquire lieutenant-general and commander in cheise of the forces raised, and to be raised, by authority of parliament, within England and Scotland. To general Montagu.

  5. Há 2 dias · The Question being put, that this House doth agree with the Lords, that this Clause, as to Wm. Lenthall Esquire, Wm. Burton, Oliver St. John, John Ireton, Alderman, Colonel Wm. Sydenham, Colonel John Disbrow, John Blackwell of Mortclack, Christopher Pack, Alderman, Richard Keeble, Charles Fleetwood, John Pyne, Richard Deane, Major Richard Creed ...

  6. Há 3 dias · By 1739 the plot marked D on fig. 1 was in the tenure of Charles Fleetwood, who was then in control of the theatre. This was then known as the Sparrow's Nest (probably because a John Sparrow had occupied it in the 1670's), and was used for a wardrobe.

  7. 18 de mai. de 2024 · In 1652, he took a leave of absence and travelled with Oliver Cromwell's army in Ireland as physician-general, responsible to Cromwell's son-in-law, Charles Fleetwood. His opposition to conventional universities, being committed to 'new science' as inspired by Francis Bacon and imparted by his afore-mentioned acquaintances, perhaps ...