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  1. In 1644, Charles Louis returned to England at the invitation of Parliament. He took up residence in the Palace of Whitehall and took the Solemn League and Covenant, even though his brothers, Rupert and Maurice, were Royalist generals.

  2. Jun 22, 2023 · Parliament praised Charles Louis’s decision to return to The Hague, with the House of Lords recommending on 19 September 1642 (OS) that financial payments to the elector should continue as he ‘hath shewed his Respect to the Parliament, in going away, and not be employed against it’. 21 Eight days later, the Lords were presented with a ...

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  4. After living the first half of his life in exile during the German Thirty Years' War and the English Civil War, in 1649 Charles Louis reclaimed his father's title of Elector Palatine, along with most of his former territories.

  5. Electorate. Next year the hopes of the large fatherless family rose; for Gustavus Adolphus's Swedes, fighting their way south through Germany, reached the Palatinate and forced the Imperialists to surrender Heidelberg. Nominally the Palatinate was restored to the heir, Charles's uncle Philip acting as regent for him. But Oxenstierna, the

  6. Jun 22, 2023 · Between 1632 and 1648, Charles Louis’s affairs and interests were intermittently coordinated from a recently restored yet short-lived regency government in Heidelberg and Frankenthal, the Palatine court-in-exile at The Hague, and the court of Charles I.

  7. One of the key goals for the Charles I was to regain the Palatinate for Frederick V, and a er his death in , for Charles Louis. A consequence of the alliance with Spain was the resumption of the diplomatic negotiations between the King of England and the Emperor a er a nearly ten-year break.

  8. Specifically, they came from a place then called the Electorate of the Palatinate, which is now part of the German Federal State of Rhineland-Palatinate. Their region had witnessed nearly a century of warfare, from the Thirty Years’ War that began in 1618, to the Nine Years’ War in the 1690s, to the current conflict known as the War of ...

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