Twelve of the regicides in the ensuing…
October 1660 CE
Twelve of the regicides in the ensuing trials are condemned to death, the full penalty for Fifth Monarchy Men.
Thomas Harrison, the seventeenth of fifty-nine commissioners (judges) to sign the death warrant in 1649, is the first person found guilty of the regicide, and, because he is considered by the new government still to represent a real threat to the reestablished order, the first regicide to be hanged, drawn and quartered,.
At Charing Cross or Tyburn, London in October 1660, ten are publicly hanged, drawn and quartered: Thomas Harrison, John Jones, Adrian Scroope, John Carew, Thomas Scot, and Gregory Clement, who had signed the king's death warrant; the preacher Hugh Peters; Francis Hacker and Daniel Axtel, who commanded the guards at the king's trial and execution; and John Cooke, the solicitor who directed the prosecution.
Others are given life imprisonment or simply excluded from office for life.