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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_PymJohn Pym - Wikipedia

    Pym helped draft the Grand Remonstrance, presented to Charles on 1 December 1641; unrest culminated in 23 to 29 December with widespread riots in Westminster, led by the London apprentices. Suggestions Pym and other Parliamentary leaders helped organise these have not been proved, but as a result, bishops stopped attending the Lords.

    • Cancer
    • Anne Hooker or Hooke (1604–1620)
    • Lawyer, politician and businessman
    • 7, including Charles
  2. 3 de abr. de 2024 · John Pym (born 1583/84, Brymore, Somerset, Eng.—died Dec. 8, 1643, London) was a prominent member of the English Parliament (1621–43) and an architect of Parliament’s victory over King Charles I in the first phase (1642–46) of the English Civil Wars.

  3. 17 de ene. de 2022 · John Pym, 1584-1643. Leader of the political opposition to King Charles in the Long Parliament and architect of Parliament’s victory in the First Civil War. John Pym was born at Brymore House, Cannington in Somerset, where his family had been established since the thirteenth century.

  4. First proposed by John Pym, the effective leader of opposition to the King in Parliament and taken up by George Digby, John Hampden and others, the Grand Remonstrance summarised all of Parliament's opposition to Charles's foreign, financial, legal and religious policies, setting forth 204 separate points of objection and calling for the ...

  5. www.cromwellmuseum.org › cromwell › civil-warKey Figures | Cromwell

    Died: 1643. Key Significance. Pym was arguably the political leader of the Parliamentarian cause during the early months of the English Civil War. He had led political opposition to King Charles in the House of Commons, pushing for reform and for a greater balance between the power of the crown and Parliament.

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  6. The Long Parliament. G. Glover, after Edward Bower: John Pym. John Pym, detail of an engraving by G. Glover, 1644, after a portrait by Edward Bower. With his circumstances more desperate than ever, Charles I summoned Parliament to meet in November 1640. The king faced a body profoundly mistrustful of his intentions.

  7. Samuel Fullerton. Article. Metrics. Rights & Permissions. Abstract. This article explores the royalist libels that afflicted the parliamentarian leader John Pym during the early 1640s to argue that the period marked an important turning point in English libellous politics.