Charles I
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 375 years ago |
Google books | books.google.com |
Authors | John Skelton |
Genres | Biography |
Date of birth | November 19,1600 |
Zodiac sign | Scorpio |
Born | Dunfermline Abbey And Palace |
Dunfermline | |
United Kingdom | |
Died | Palace Of Whitehall |
London | |
Date of died | January 30,1649 |
Children | Charles II of England |
James II of England | |
Charles II | |
James II | |
Spouse | Henrietta Maria of France |
Siblings | Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia |
Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales | |
Robert Stuart, Duke of Kintyre and Lorne | |
Elizabeth Stuart | |
Parents | James VI and I |
Anne of Denmark | |
Grandchildren | William III of England |
Mary II of England | |
King of England William III | |
Mary II | |
William III | |
Anne, Queen of Great Britain | |
Books | King Charles the First: an historical tragedy. Written in imitation of Shakespear, etc. [By William Havard.] |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2928968 |
Charles I Life story
Charles I was King of England, Scotland, and Ireland from 27 March 1625 until his execution in 1649. Charles was born into the House of Stuart as the second son of King James VI of Scotland, but after his father inherited the English throne in 1603, he moved to England, where he spent much of the rest of his life.
Women's remarkable Civil War roles revealed in Huntingdon display
... , who tried twice to free Charles I from Parliamentarian captivity...
Lost painting by female artist goes on display at Windsor Castle
... The painting was discovered in storage when investigators re-examined inventories of the property of King Charles I...
Scottish ceremony sees King Charles tread a thin line
... Now King Charles III returns to Edinburgh s High Kirk, where he stood guard over his mother s coffin after her death at Balmoral Castle in September, to be presented with the crown, the sceptre, and a in the presence of the Stone of Destiny...
Tate Britain has rehung its art collection: What can we learn?
... We learn in an early room called Court Versus Parliament 1640-1720 that the artists on show were thriving at a time of huge turbulence: civil war, the execution of Charles I and the birth of party politics...
King Charles' Coronation: How people watched a day not seen for 70 years
... Seventy years on, the crowning of King Charles III was a very different kind of spectacle...
Coronation processions: What to look out for and when
...By the Visual Journalism Team BBC NewsThousands of people are expected to line the streets hoping to catch a glimpse of King Charles III as he travels between Buckingham Palace and Westminster Abbey before and after his coronation on 6 May...
The most-streamed songs of 1952 to 2022 revealed
......
What message will King Charles's first trips send?
... While there, he ll visit the 950-year-old Dunfermline Abbey, where - with appropriate symmetry - Charles III will find himself at the birthplace of Charles I, the last monarch born in Scotland...
Women's remarkable Civil War roles revealed in Huntingdon display
By Katy PrickettBBC News, Cambridgeshire
The Women who " rose to the occasion and played a remarkable role in the Civil War" is the theme of an exhibition called The Weaker Vessel?
Historian Stuart Orme said the Biblical phrase was used to denigrate 17Th Century women, but their 1640s experiences were " complex and richer".
Women ran businesses, were spies, preachers, accused of witchcraft and faced violence and starvation.
The Exhibition is at, from 6 December.
It aims to challenge the impression in the " popular imagination" that women during the 1640s were " aristocratic ladies defending their husbands' estates, or women camp-followers accompanying armies".
Instead it focuses upon The Women who had to " run households and businesses by themselves while their husbands were away and cope with food shortages and rising taxes which rose 1,000% during the 1640s" said Mr Orme.
Both Royalist and Parliamentarian armies placed their soldiers with households in towns and villages.
Mr Orme said: " Huntingdon was briefly captured by The Royalists in 1645 and every house had 20 to 30 soldiers billeted on them.
" These were people who might just have enough to see them through The Winter and The Soldiers would take all their food before they moved off. "
The Exhibition draws upon The Work of, which looks at petitions from veterans and their families for welfare payments as a result of their injuries or bereavement.
Mr Orme said: " This includes complaints about The Way women were treated by The Soldiers billeted on them - Theft , violence and rape were not uncommon. "
The Museum tells Oliver Cromwell 's story from his Huntingdon childhood until his death as Lord Protector in 1658.
So The Exhibition features his younger daughters, Mary and Frances, who became the " Puritan princesses" after their father's elevation.
It also highlights, who ran a printing business, who was " unusual if not to say scandalous in the 17Th Century by being involved in public preaching" said Mr Orme.
She led a march of women on Parliament calling for their husbands to be freed, but Parliament told them to " concentrate on their washing up".
, who tried twice to free Charles I from Parliamentarian captivity.
At the same time, " women were accused of being at the root of what was Going Wrong in this period with a resurgence of witchcraft led by The Infamous deeply misogynistic Witchfinder General Matthew Hopkins - 90% of those accused were women" He Said .
The Weaker Vessel? Women of the Civil Wars will run until 7 April.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com