John Wilkes had started the newspaper The …
Years: 1768 - 1768
April
John Wilkes had started the newspaper The North Briton in June 1762.
After one article was published on April 23, 1763, severely attacking George III, the king and his ministers had tried to prosecute Wilkes for seditious libel.
However, Lord Chief Justice Lord Mansfield had ruled at his trial that as an MP, Wilkes was protected by parliamentary privilege so he was released without conviction.
Wilkes then proceeded to publish more material that was deemed offensive and libelous to The Crown.
It was only after the House of Lords declared one of his poems to be obscene and blasphemous, that moves were made to expel Wilkes from the House of Commons, but he fled to Paris before any expulsion or trial.
In absentia, he had been found guilty of obscene libel and seditious libel and was declared an outlaw on January 19, 1764.
Wilkes had hoped for a change in power to remove the charges, but this had not come to pass.
As his French creditors began to pressure him in 1768, he had little choice but to return to England.
Wilkes had returned intending to stand as an MP on an anti-government ticket; the government had not issued warrants for his immediate arrest as it had not wanted to inflame popular support.
Wilkes had stood in London but came bottom of the poll of seven candidates, possibly due to his late entry into the race for the position, but he had been quickly elected MP for Middlesex where most of his support is located.
In April he surrenders himself to the King's Bench after waiving his parliamentary privilege to immunity.
He is sentenced by Judge Joseph Yates to a year's imprisonment and fined £500; reduced to ten months for his time already spent in prison.
The Lords' sentence of outlawry is overturned.
Wilkes is taken to King's Bench Prison in Southwark, south London.
After one article was published on April 23, 1763, severely attacking George III, the king and his ministers had tried to prosecute Wilkes for seditious libel.
However, Lord Chief Justice Lord Mansfield had ruled at his trial that as an MP, Wilkes was protected by parliamentary privilege so he was released without conviction.
Wilkes then proceeded to publish more material that was deemed offensive and libelous to The Crown.
It was only after the House of Lords declared one of his poems to be obscene and blasphemous, that moves were made to expel Wilkes from the House of Commons, but he fled to Paris before any expulsion or trial.
In absentia, he had been found guilty of obscene libel and seditious libel and was declared an outlaw on January 19, 1764.
Wilkes had hoped for a change in power to remove the charges, but this had not come to pass.
As his French creditors began to pressure him in 1768, he had little choice but to return to England.
Wilkes had returned intending to stand as an MP on an anti-government ticket; the government had not issued warrants for his immediate arrest as it had not wanted to inflame popular support.
Wilkes had stood in London but came bottom of the poll of seven candidates, possibly due to his late entry into the race for the position, but he had been quickly elected MP for Middlesex where most of his support is located.
In April he surrenders himself to the King's Bench after waiving his parliamentary privilege to immunity.
He is sentenced by Judge Joseph Yates to a year's imprisonment and fined £500; reduced to ten months for his time already spent in prison.
The Lords' sentence of outlawry is overturned.
Wilkes is taken to King's Bench Prison in Southwark, south London.
