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  1. Bulstrode Whitelocke, 1634. Sir Bulstrode Whitelocke (6 August 1605 – 28 July 1675) was an English lawyer, writer, parliamentarian and Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England.

  2. 15 de abr. de 2024 · Bulstrode Whitelocke was an English republican lawyer, an influential figure in Oliver Cromwell’s Commonwealth regime. Whitelocke was the son of Sir James Whitelocke, a King’s Bench judge, and became a barrister in 1626 and served in the Parliament of the same year. He was elected to the Long.

  3. Being ‘so young a Parliament man’ he found the experience daunting, and had to screw up his ‘courage’ to do ‘as all the rest did’ in ‘the great and ruffling Parliament’. However, a certain amount of confusion seems to have crept into Whitelocke’s memory of the 1626 Parliament.

  4. 29 de jun. de 2022 · The memoirs of the parliamentarian lawyer and MP Bulstrode Whitelocke are invaluable as a primary source for historians wishing to understand the political history of the 1640s and 1650s.

  5. Whitelocke Bulstrode (1650–1724) was an English official, religious controversialist and mystical writer. Life. He was the second son of Sir Richard Bulstrode and his wife Jocosa, daughter of Edward Dyneley of Charlton, Worcestershire. On 27 November 1661 he was specially admitted a student of the Inner Temple. [1]

  6. Bulstrode Whitelocke (1605-75) Memorials of the English affairs, or an historical account of what passed from the beginning of the reign of King Charles the First to King Charles the Second his happy restauration ... / by Mr Whitelock.

  7. 12 de out. de 2019 · Summary. In early August 1690, the Puritan Roger Morrice noted in his Entring Book an account of a controversy at Ealing in 1647 over keeping Christmas. Morrice's account expanded that of his source, the Memorials of the English Affairs, written by the common lawyer Bulstrode Whitelocke.