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Oxford Parliament (1644)

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17th-century English parliament

Parliaments of England
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  Witenagemot 7th – 11th centuries
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Henry III
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  4th 1248
  Unnumbered 1251
  5th 1252
  6th 1253
  7th 1254
  8th 1255
  9th 1258
  10th "Oxford/Mad" 1258
  11th "Simon de Montfort" 1265
Edward I
  "Model" 1295
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  "Westminster" 1327
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  "Good" 1376
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  "Convention" 1399
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  1st "Blessed" 1604
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Charles I
  1st "Useless" 1625
  2nd 1626
  3rd 1628
  4th "Short" Apr 1640
  5th "Long (1) Nov 1640
  Oxford/Mongrel 1644
Revolution and Commonwealth
  1st "Long (2) 1645
  2nd "Rump (1)" 1648
  3rd "Barebone's/Little/Nominated Assembly/Saints" 1653
Protectorate
  1st 1654
  2nd 1656
  3rd 1659
  4th "Rump (2)" 1659
Commonwealth
  1st "Rump (3)" 1659
  2nd "Long (3)" 1660
Charles II
  1st "Convention (1)" 1660
  2nd "Cavalier" 1661
  3rd "Habeas Corpus/First Exclusion" 1679
  4th "Exclusion Bill/Second Exclusion" 1680
  5th "Oxford/Third Exclusion" 1681
James II
  "Loyal" 1685
William III and Mary II
  1st "Convention (2)" 1689
  2nd 1690
  3rd 1695
  4th 1698
  5th Feb 1701
  6th Dec 1701
Anne
  1st 1702
  2nd 1705

List of parliaments of England List of acts of the Parliament of England

Christ Church hall, depicted in 1845, where the Parliament met

The Oxford Parliament, also known as the Mongrel Parliament, was the Parliament assembled by Charles I of England for the first time on 22 January 1644 and adjourned for the last time on 10 March 1645, with the purpose of being an instrument of the Royalist war campaign.

Charles was advised by Edward Hyde and others not to dissolve the Long Parliament as this would violate the statute of 1641 which said that Parliament could not be dissolved without its own consent. So all members of the Long Parliament were summoned by King Charles to assemble for a session of Parliament to be held at Christ Church Hall, Oxford. Eighty-two peers, which was most of the House of Lords, and 175 commoners, which was about one-third of the House of Commons, heeded the summons and came. Sir Sampson Eure was elected as Speaker of the House of Commons.

The Parliament met a number of times during the First English Civil War and was seen by Charles as a way of raising revenue. However, some of the members defected back to Westminster because they did not like his alliance with Irish Catholics, and others argued strongly for a negotiated peace with the Long Parliament in Westminster Hall.

The first session lasted from 22 January 1644 until 16 April 1644. The second session was from 8 October 1644 until 10 March 1645.

Not much is known of its proceedings because all its records were burnt just before Oxford fell to Parliamentary forces in 1646.

See also

Further reading

References

  1. 'Alumni Oxonienses, 1500-1714: Eade-Eyton', Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714: Abannan-Kyte (1891), pp. 440-479. Date accessed: 29 April 2011
  2. Jens Engberg (1966). "Royalist Finances During the English Civil War 1642-1646". The Scandinavian Economic History Review. 14 (2): 73–96. doi:10.1080/03585522.1966.10407649. Before the surrender of Oxford the papers of the Privy Council and the Oxford Parliament were burnt, both groups of archives of importance for the history of the Royalist finances.
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