When Charles orders a parliamentary adjournment in …
Years: 1629 - 1629
March
When Charles orders a parliamentary adjournment in March, members hold the Speaker, Sir John Finch, down in his chair so that the dissolving of Parliament can be delayed long enough for resolutions against Catholicism, Arminianism, and poundage and tonnage to be read out.
The lattermost resolution declares that anyone who paid tonnage or poundage not authorized by Parliament would "be reputed a betrayer of the liberties of England, and an enemy to the same", and, although the resolution is not formally passed, many members declare their approval.
Nevertheless, the provocation is too much for Charles, who dissolves parliament the same day.
Moreover, eight parliamentary leaders, including John Eliot, are imprisoned on the foot of the matter, thereby turning these men into martyrs, and giving popular cause to a protest that had hitherto been losing its bearings.
The parliamentary session of 1629 ends in a breach between the king and parliament which makes the task of a moderator hopeless.
Thomas Wentworth, who, following the assassination of Buckingham, had in December 1628 become Viscount Wentworth and president of the Council of the North, has to choose between either helping the House of Commons dominate the King or helping the King to dominate the House of Commons.
He chooses the latter course, throwing himself into the work of repression with characteristic energy and claiming that he is maintaining the old constitution and that his opponents (Parliament) are attempting to alter it.
From this time on, he acts as one of two principal members (the other being William Laud, named Bishop of London in 1628) in a team of key advisors to the king during an eleven-year period of total monarchical rule without parliament (known both as "the Personal Rule" and the "eleven-year tyranny").
Locations
People
Groups
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Protestantism
- Huguenots (the “Reformed”)
- France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
- England, (Stuart) Kingdom of
Topics
- Protestant Reformation
- Counter-Reformation (also Catholic Reformation or Catholic Revival)
- Anglo-French War of 1627-28
- Personal Rule
