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  1. Edmund Ludlow (c. 1617–1692) was an English parliamentarian, best known for his involvement in the execution of Charles I, and for his Memoirs, which were published posthumously in a rewritten form and which have become a major source for historians of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.

    • Commonwealthsmen
    • Henry Cromwell (as lord deputy)
  2. 22 de mar. de 2024 · Edmund Ludlow (born c. 1617, Maiden Bradley, Wiltshire, Eng.—died November 1692, Vevey, Switz.) was a radical republican who fought for Parliament against the Royalists in the English Civil Wars and later became one of the chief opponents of Oliver Cromwell’s Protectorate regime.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. 21 de may. de 2018 · views 2,955,181 updated May 21 2018. Ludlow, Edmund ( c. 1617–92). Ludlow was one of a group of austere republicans that included Vane and Haselrig. His father Sir Henry Ludlow, a Wiltshire landowner, represented the county in the Long Parliament and was a fierce opponent of the king's policies.

  4. Edmund Ludlow (c. 1617–1692) was an English parliamentarian, best known for his involvement in the execution of Charles I, and for his Memoirs, which were published posthumously in a rewritten form and which have become a major source for historians of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.

  5. Edmund Ludlow, the son of Sir Henry Ludlow, was born at Maiden Bradley in 1617. Educated at Trinity College, Oxford, he was admitted to the Inner Temple in 1638. Ludlow was elected to the House of Commons as representative of Wiltshire. A strong critic of Charles I and a close associate of Henry Marten, Ludlow caused controversy in Parliament ...

  6. Ludlow, Edmund (1616/17–1692), army officer and regicide, was the son of Sir Henry Ludlow (1592?–1643) of Maiden Bradley, Wiltshire, a radical MP in the Long parliament, and his wife, Elizabeth (d. 1660), daughter of Richard Phelips of Montacute, Somerset.

  7. 2 de dic. de 2021 · Alongside Sidney’s Discourses these included the Memoirs of his republican ally Edmund Ludlow, which had been translated by another Huguenot bookseller, Paul Marret. Footnote 18 Toland, who was responsible for the late seventeenth-century English editions of both Ludlow and Sidney knew Levier through Benjamin Furly, a friend of Sidney’s based in the Netherlands.