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  1. The John Hampden Society is seeking new trustees, with a particular interest in digital and/or editorial skills. If you are interested, please email thechairman@johnhampden.org The John Hampden Society exists to bring together people with an interest in John Hampden, and to encourage wider knowledge of this great 17th century Parliamentarian, his life and times.

  2. John Hampden, né en 1594 à Londres (Royaume-Uni) et mort à Thaines (comté d’Oxford) le 24 juin 1643, est un homme politique anglais. Biographie [ modifier | modifier le code ] Sa famille, de vieille souche saxonne, possédait de grands biens dans le comté de Buckingham .

  3. John Hampden was a local landowner and Member of Parliament, from an ancient South Buckinghamshire family with a long tradition of public service. Find out how he opposed King Charles I, fought in the Civil Wars, and died for his cause. See 17th century armour and weaponry on loan from The John Hampden Society and Battlefields Trust.

  4. John Hampden (ca. 1594 – 24 June 1643) of Hampden House in the parish of Great Hampden in Buckinghamshire, England, was one of the leading Parliamentarians involved in challenging the authority of King Charles I and became a national figure when he stood trial in 1637 for his refusal to be taxed for ship money. He was one of the Five Members whose attempted unconstitutional arrest by King ...

  5. John Hampden occupied a major place in that shared history. His life spanned the years of the reigns of James I and Charles I, what John Palfrey, a historian in America in the nineteenth century, chose to call the Stuart Dynasty.1 Born in 1594, Hampden was just nine when James came to the

  6. John Hampden's funeral in 1643. Devonshire Collection, Chatsworth. Reproduced by permission of Chatsworth Settlement Trustees. The Great Hall at Hampden House. Charles I tries to arrest the Five Members in the House of Commons. Pyrton Manor, home of John Hampden's first wife. The Earl of Buckinghamshire at the 350th anniversary ceremony in Thame.

  7. John Hampden half in der Schlacht von 1642 mit, Aylesbury zu verteidigen und wurde bei Chalgrovefield, einige Meilen von Oxford, in einem Reitertreffen am 18. Juni 1643 verwundet und starb sechs Tage später in Thame, Oxfordshire. Die Stadt Hamden in Connecticut, USA, wurde nach ihm benannt, ebenso wie das Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia, USA.