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  1. Marston Moor. Naseby. Langport. Bristol 1645. Basing House. Oxford. Dunbar. Worcester. Charles Fleetwood, c. 1618 to 4 October 1692, was an English lawyer from Northamptonshire, who served with the Parliamentarian army during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.

  2. English Civil Wars. Charles Fleetwood (born c. 1618, Aldwinkle, Northamptonshire, Eng.—died Oct. 4, 1692, Stoke Newington, Middlesex) was an English Parliamentary general, son-in-law and supporter of Oliver Cromwell. He joined the Parliamentary army at the beginning of the Civil War between Parliament and King Charles I and fought in the ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Charles Fleetwood. Charles Fleetwood was born in Northampton in about 1618. Educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge and Gray's Inn, and on the outbreak of the Civil War Fleetwood joined the the bodyguard of the Earl of Essex. Fleetwood fought at Newbury (September, 1943) and commanded a cavalry regiment at Naseby (June, 1645).

  4. Summary: An interview of Charles Fleetwood conducted 1979 Mar. 28, by Sandra Curtis Levy, for the Archives of American Art. Fleetwood speaks of Peter Hurd's mural, commissioned in 1952, for the Prudential Building in Houston, Tex.

  5. Contributed by. Clavin, Terry. Fleetwood, Charles (d. 1692), soldier and lord deputy of Ireland, was third son of Sir Miles Fleetwood of Aldwincle, Northamptonshire, England, and his wife Anne, daughter of Nicholas Luke of Woodend, Bedfordshire. After being admitted to Gray's Inn (30 November 1638), he became a supporter of parliament and ...

  6. 14 de may. de 2024 · Charles Fleetwood, c. 1618 to 4 October 1692, was an English lawyer from Northamptonshire, who served with the Parliamentarian army during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.

  7. 23 de mar. de 2010 · Charles Fleetwood merely informed his brother-in-law on 7 September that, ‘what is don as to the succession is in your brother & the great quietnes that is, will be better related then I shall trouble you with my pen’. 60 Another privy councillor, Philip Jones, simply thanked God that ‘He hath afforded us this mercy (as to David) that he [Cromwell] hath this day a sonne upon his throne ...