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  1. Lincolnshire campaign. After the victory over the army of Parliament under Lord Fairfax and Sir Thomas Fairfax at the Battle of Adwalton Moor on 30 June 1643, the Earl of Newcastle advanced with the main northern Royalist army into Lincolnshire.

    • Siege of Hull

      The first siege of Hull marked a major escalation in the...

  2. The position of siege forts around Hull in 1643. Meanwhile, the siege of Hull had commenced. The Eastern Association forces under Manchester promptly moved up into Lincolnshire, the foot besieging Lynn (which surrendered on 16 September 1643) while the horse rode into the northern part of the county to give a hand to the Fairfaxes.

  3. The unsuccessful second siege of Hull by the Royalist Earl of Newcastle in 1643 was a victory for Parliament at the high point of the Royalist campaign in the First English Civil War. It led to the abandonment of the Earl of Newcastle's campaign in Lincolnshire and the re-establishment of Parliament's presence in Yorkshire.

    • 2 September-12 October 1643
    • Parliamentarian victory
  4. siege of Hull, where his antagonists, the Fairfaxes, had retreated after their defeat at Adwalton Moor. Although the garrison were sustained from across the River Humber, the Royalists failed to act with sufficient decision to secure

  5. THE sieges of 1642 and 1643 are the most important events in the history of Hull, and not without influence on the general history of the Civil War. The first siege was among the earliest military operations of the struggle. When the second siege was undertaken by the marquis of Newcastle in September, 1643,

  6. The unsuccessful second siege of Hull by the Royalist Earl of Newcastle in 1643 was a victory for Parliament at the high point of the Royalist campaign in the First English Civil War. It led to the abandonment of the Earl of Newcastle's campaign in Lincolnshire and the re-establishment of Parliament