The Memoirs and Memorials of Sir Hugh Cholmley of Whitby, 1600-1657
Edited by Jack Binns
Sir Hugh Cholmley played many roles in an extraordinary life, transforming himself from a spendthrift play-boy into a successful estate manager, local militia officer, and member of parliament for Scarborough. He became identified with a parliamentary group of rebellious Yorkshire gentry who conspired to kill Charles I's chief minister, the earl of Strafford, but after holding Scarborough's harbour and castle for Parliament he suddenly and controversially defected to the Royalist cause; after the king's defeat he endured years in exile before returning to a ruined estate in Yorkshire. Dr Binns' book is the first to bring together Sir Hugh's surviving writings, which bear witness to some of the most momentous events in English history: of principal importance are his autobiography and his three Civil War essays on the tragic fate of the Hothams, the bloody battle on Marston Moor, and the great siege of Scarborough Castle.
JACK BINNS is former history master at Scarborough Sixth Form College, and Scarborough in the Civil War period has been the focus of much of his research as a local historian.
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DETAILS
1 b/w illustrations 9 line illustrations 228 pages Size: 23.4 x 15.6 cm 13 digit ISBN: 9780902122833
Binding: Hardback First published: 31/Aug/2000 Last printed: 07/Sep/2000 Price: 95.00 USD / 50.00 GBP
Imprint: Yorkshire Archaeological Society Series: Yorkshire Archaeological Soc Record Series
Subject: Modern History
BIC class: HRAX
STATUS: Available
Details updated on 01/12/2008
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Reviews
Adds significantly to the small number of personal records that have come down to us of what it was like to live through the Civil Wars. TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT [John Morrill] Should prove useful to all historians of seventeenth-century England. HISTORY A finely-crafted volume. The text is superby edited and supported by full scholarly apparatus. Essential reading for students of the Civil War in northern England, and provides valuable insights into the mindset of a fascinating, if hardly typical, seventeenth-century country gentleman. ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW Those with an interest in the Civil War will find much of interest. YORKSHIRE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
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