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  1. This study centres around three leading military statesmen who served under Oliver Comwell but were also his kin and shared the experiences of the civil wars, John Disbrowe (1608–80), Henry Ireton (1611–51), and Charles Fleetwood (1618–92). It seeks to develop our picture of their positions from the context of their kin link to Cromwell and how their private worlds shaped their public ...

  2. One of her daughters was Bridget Bendish. She features in an image in the National Portrait Gallery where she is shown in the foreground when her family were imagined to be pleading with Oliver Cromwell to spare the life of Charles I. The original was by William Fisk and James Scott creating the engraving in 1839. References

  3. When Bridget Ireton was born about 1650, in Attenborough, Nottinghamshire, England, United Kingdom, her father, Henry Ireton, was 40 and her mother, Bridget Cromwell, was 27. She married Thomas Bendish on 27 August 1669, in Islington St Mary, Middlesex, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 1 daughter.

  4. Bridget Bendish (born Ireton) was born on month day 1650, in birth place, to Henry Ireton and Bridget Margaret [Ireton] Fleetwood (born Cromwell). Bridget had 7 siblings: Elizabeth Polhill (born Ireton), Jane Barnard (born Ireton) and 5 other siblings. Bridget married William Bridges. William was born in 1650, in birth place.

  5. 30 de may. de 2021 · Genealogy for Bridget Bendysh (Ireton) (1650 - 1729) family tree on Geni, ... Bridget Bendish (born Ireton) in WikiTree view all 16 ...

  6. Sometime in 1694, Archbishop Tillotson presented Bridget Bendish to Queen Mary II. Bendish was granted a pension, presumably for circulating pro-Williamite propaganda prior to the Prince’s invasion in 1688, thereby supporting the Revolution. 1 Bendish seems to have had contacts in the Netherlands among the large Whig and Dissenting refugee communities there.