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  2. 1 day ago · Trial of Charles I – Power and the People. MPS were divided how to deal with the king. Colonel Thomas Pride threw out 300 MPS who supported parliamentary negotiations with the king – this was known as Pride’s Purge and the ups who remained were known as The Rump. it meant that when the king was bought to trial there was no one on his side ...

  3. 3 days ago · His scholarly reputation was enhanced by his study of Charles I, the best study of the King so far published. He has now turned his attention to Charles’s relationship with his peerage from his accession in 1625 to the eve of the outbreak of the English Civil War in 1642.

  4. 3 days ago · Explore the timline of Charles I of England. Charles I of England (r. 1625-1649) was a Stuart king who, like his father James I of England (r. 1603-1625), viewed himself as a monarch with absolute power and a divine right to rule.

    • Mark Cartwright
    • Publishing Director
  5. 3 days ago · Father. Infante Carlos María Isidro of Spain. Mother. Infanta Maria Francisca of Portugal. Infante Carlos of Spain ( Carlos Luis María Fernando; 31 January 1818 – 13 January 1861) was the Carlist claimant to the throne of Spain under the name Carlos VI after his father's renunciation in 1845. He used the title Conde de Montemolín (Count of ...

  6. 3 days ago · Charles, though with more good sense than his father, entertained equally high notions of the sacred character of a king, and was now driven to have recourse to the prerogatives often exercised by his predecessors on cases of emergency.

  7. 4 days ago · The War of the Spanish Succession was a European great power conflict fought between 1701 and 1714. The immediate cause was the death of the childless Charles II of Spain in November 1700, which led to a struggle for control of the Spanish Empire amongst supporters of the claimant Bourbon and Habsburg dynasties.

  8. 5 days ago · Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Charles I, 1636-7. Covers the period from June 1636 to April 1637. Calendar of State Papers, Domestic - Charles I. Originally published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1867.

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