Knowledge (XXG)

Andrew Corbet

Source πŸ“

369: 397: 37: 29: 518:, the President of the Council in the Marches. The county gentry had already petitioned the king on unsanctioned taxation, pointing out "how dangerous this course might prove to stir up an insurrection." However, the commissioners met no overt resistance, although payment was at first hesitant. Nothampton promised to use some of the funds to pay off government debts for past military expenditure in the region – so-called "coat and conduct" money. Shropshire paid the Exchequer Β£2,997 – 82 percent of its quota, compared with the national average of 72%. However, the experience had polarised attitudes, Corbet's included. 56: 620: 357: 455:
was a gentry dominated county and the number of families wishing to present themselves as gentlefolk was increasing rapidly. Those registered as "of Shrewsbury" had risen from 4 in 1569 to 10 in 1584 and 44 in 1623. The government was invariably insolvent and there was a widespread fear that it was manipulating the honours system to generate funds. Corbet was also sent to a conference with the Lords on a bill to limit legal actions.
601: 45: 543:, a loyal but critical supporter of the government, warned that there was a risk of Parliament being dissolved. Corbet replied: "shall we waive our resolutions for fear of dissolution? Let us go on and God will crown us with happy success." On 11 June Corbet was one of a large group of MPs who resolved to add to a 550:
Corbet's part in parliamentary debate was still modest, but his rapid alienation from the government was an important indicator of polarisation. On 24 April he joined Newport in citing a local official as a recusant. On 7 June he was appointed to the committee responsible for drafting the preamble to
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for Shropshire from 1618 until his death. He was commissioner for the subsidy, administering central government taxation, in 1621–22, and again after he succeeded his father in 1624–25 and 1628. With his succession came a series of important posts. In 1624 he was appointed to the Council in Wales and
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of her jointure properties in Buckinghamshire would be to his descendants. In practice, Sir Andrew was never to enjoy the rents of these lands, as Judith outlived him by three years. Sir Vincent still had considerable debts but he had taken steps to control them. His will explained that he had placed
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coronation. He was buried by his friends in his garden and his tomb required restoration by the early 17th century. (It is unclear when the reburial occurred. Augusta Corbet says it was when Andrew was a young man. Barbara Coulton dates it to about 1614, when Corbet was lord lieutenant of the county,
470:, gave an account of the venture that clearly impressed Corbet. He commented that "the king of Spain never intended to match with our Prince". He was concerned that Spain was about to launch a surprise attack on England and was shocked by the Spanish ambassador's demand that Buckingham be executed. 454:
of gentry and noble families. The fees for registering the pedigrees of gentry families were fairly modest: a Gentleman 25 shillings, an Esquire 35s. a Knight or Baronet 55s. were typical. However, the registration of newly recognised armorial bearings was much more costly – about Β£20. Shropshire
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Corbet was not returned to parliament again until 1628. He spent much of the interim period involved with the aftermath of the refusal to finance the king's war plans. The war against Spain was poorly-managed and Buckingham's inept handling of relations with France led to a war against two great
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Vincent came to an agreement with Wallop on Elizabeth's marriage settlement. The problem of Judith's future claims was neutralised by arranging the marriage of Andrew to Judith's eldest daughter, Elizabeth Boothby. The marriage settlement is dated 6 January 1607. Andrew and his wife settled at
275:, Besford, and Hatton-on-Hyne-Heath Co. Salop; and of lands, tenements, etc. in Moreton-Corbet, Preston-Brockhurst, Booley, Edgebaldon, Shawbury, Wythyford Parva, Besford, and Hatton-on-Hyne-Heath, Co. Salop, and three Court leets in Moreton-Corbet, Shawbury, and Besford, the 591:
was held at Shrewsbury on 19 September and its report gave a competent summary of Corbet property holdings, pointing out that Sir Andrew's mother-in-law, Dame Judith, still had large holdings in Buckinghamshire that were worth nothing to his heir.
505:. Despite his Puritan sympathies, Corbet, unlike Newport, had never shown any predilection for denouncing Catholic recusants. The parliament was dissolved later in the month, having refused to grant Charles the financial independence he demanded. 116:
The Corbets had reached the height of their power and influence under the first Sir Andrew, who died in 1578. He and his wife had six sons, apparently assuring the succession and the continuing power of the dynasty. However, their eldest son,
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the Marches, which still held decisive power in much of Wales and the border counties of England: the Council had been the main theatre of action of his famous grandfather, the first Sir Andrew Corbet. In the same year, Corbet was appointed
378: 562:. Corbet was never to sit as an MP again, as he died in 1637. His loss of trust in the monarchy was probably duly noted. He was amply qualified by wealth and experience for higher office in his county and beyond, but it was his nephew 538:
but Charles then tried to silence further debate in the Commons, ordering an end to attacks on his ministers. On 5 June members deliberately defied the king, naming Buckingham as the cause of the country's problems. The veteran MP
416:. Shropshire's gentry always returned their own kind to parliament, and always by agreement arrived at before the formal election. There was apparently an informal agreement not to return the same members twice consecutively. 437:
throughout the reign. There were two sessions: the first from 19 February 1624 to 24 May 1624, the other from 2 November 1624 to 16 February 1625. The king died on 27 March 1625 and the parliament was immediately dissolved.
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Corbet's contribution to the parliament was not great. He was appointed to two committees, one of them on a bill to regulate heralds' fees. This was a live issue in Shropshire, as the county had received its last
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could mount claims to them, and in some cases had already taken possession. Most pressing of all, Richard's widow, Judith Austin, a forceful woman, three-times-married and very wealthy, held large estates as her
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Buckingham, favourite and probably lover of James I, continued to exercise great influence in the following reign, until his assassination in 1628. Corbet was at first impressed by Buckingham but quickly became
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Sir Vincent died in 1623 and was buried at Moreton Corbet on 9 March. Sir Andrew was his recognised heir and was able to take over a fairly consolidated group of estates, with little fear of legal challenge. An
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because it appeared initially that king and his parliament had at last found a degree of common ground in hostility to Spain. However, it soon fell to the mutual suspicion and hostility that had characterised
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Corbet died at the age of about 56 on 6 May 1637 and was buried at Moreton Corbet on 7 May 1637. He died intestate but his wife obtained administration of his goods, valued at Β£2,200. His eldest son and heir
482:, summoned a new parliament almost immediately, asking that the same members be returned to it. This accounts for the re-election of Corbet and Newport, in contravention of Shropshire's conventions. The 514:
powers simultaneously. Charles imposed the Forced Loanβ€”a tax levied without parliamentary consent. Corbet was one of the commissioners charged with its collection in Shropshire, under the direction of
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Although his contributions were limited, Corbet was enthralled to be at the centre of politics. He wrote to his steward detailing an important debate on war with Spain that took place in February.
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voted for five subsidies towards the cost of the war. Corbet voted against the fifth and said: "as the case standeth with us, four subsidies is enough". Parliament then moved on to introduce the
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of Shropshire, which at that time meant deputising locally for the President of the Council in the Marches. A major landowner still in Oxfordshire, as well as a trained lawyer, Corbet was made
215:, to the west of Moreton Corbet. Vincent was knighted in July 1607 at Greenwich and went on to complete the new house at Moreton Corbet, although he had little public presence and was never a 135:
Andrew Corbet's prospects, as the heir of a sixth son, would not have seemed especially bright and he was given as full an education as possible to secure his future. He was educated first at
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Andrew Thrush and John P. Ferris (editors): History of Parliament Online: Members 1604–1629 – CORBET, Sir Andrew (1580–1637), of Moreton Corbet and Acton Reynell, Salop – Author: Simon Healy
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that "the excessive power in the Duke of Buckingham and the abuse of it has been the cause of those evils that have fallen upon us, and is like to be the greatest cause of future dangers."
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Both Sir Vincent and Sir Andrew were broadly sympathetic to Puritanism, essentially a continuation of the Protestant creed the Corbets had long upheld during a period of increasing
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was a spendthrift who left debts of about Β£6000 but no children. Vincent Corbet, the youngest and last surviving son inherited a difficult situation, which he strove to stabilise.
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Andrew's father, Vincent Corbet, had inherited vast estates when his brother Richard died in 1606: 12,600 acres in Shropshire, concentrated mainly between the county town and
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the subsidy bill. No speech by Corbet is recorded for the 1629 session of the parliament. However, he was one of those sent to the king with a petition for a national fast.
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preacher and one of his tenants, whom he had protected but who was finally arrested by the authorities. Sir Andrew gave a Latin oration at the reburial of Edward Burton of
1209: 207:. Worse still, Judith had potential claims on more, as the improvident Richard had made up her jointure in questionable ways, acknowledging as much in his rambling will. 1045:
Andrew Thrush and John P. Ferris (editors): History of Parliament Online: Members 1604–1629 – NEWPORT, Richard (1587–1651), of High Ercall, Salop – Author: Simon Healy
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of Staunton...He was siezed in tail male of the Manors of Lawley, Harcott, Hopton and Hopley, Co. Salop, and in divers premises there and in Kenston, Espley, Loxford,
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three times: in 1624, 1625 and, after an interlude during the 1626 Parliament, again in 1628. On each occasion he was elected as second in order of precedence to
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He was the son of Sir Vincent Corbet (d.1623), of Moreton Corbet, by his wife Frances Humfreston, a daughter of William Humfreston of Humfreston in the parish of
1204: 368: 396: 486:, so-called because it refused to transact the business demanded by the king, sat only from June to August 1625. Parliament granted the king the taxes of 978: 802: 838:
P. W. Hasler (editor): History of Parliament Online: Members 1558–1603 – CORBET, Richard (c1545-1606), of Moreton Corbet, Salop – Author: N. M. Fuidge.
616:(d.1606), who in his later years married (as her third husband) Judith Austin. By Elizabeth he had at least seven sons and nine daughters as follows: 826:
P. W. Hasler (editor): History of Parliament Online: Members 1558–1603 – CORBET, Robert (1542–83), of Moreton Corbet, Salop – Author: A. M. MimardiΓ¨re
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at various times between 1624 and 1629. A Puritan sympathiser, he at first supported the government but became an increasingly vocal opponent of King
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Richard Corbet (d.1691), a distinguished royalist soldier in the Civil War, whose mural monument survives in St Bartholomew's Church, Moreton Corbet.
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and humanist education, which involved extensive use of drama. His was the second generation of Corbets to attend the school, and his great-uncle
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was still only 19 years of age, but his mother bought his wardship, thus saving the family estates from the depredations of a speculator. An
385: 1214: 198:, preventing their dispersal, substantial lands were not. This meant that Robert Corbet's surviving daughter, Elizabeth, and her husband, 299:
and Shrewsbury and of the advowson of Moreton-Corbet and the tithes in Wythyford Magna and Besford and of the Manors of Acton Reyner and
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on 21 June, a crucial body in a time of conflict with the Crown. In August he was sent to a conference with the Lords about pardons for
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Andrew Thrush and John P. Ferris (editors): History of Parliament Online: Constituencies 1604–1629 – Shropshire – Author: Simon Healy
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After the parliament was dissolved on 10 March 1629, the king resolved to rule without parliament and imposed the 11-year period of
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Corbet's involvement was again not large, although at least two of his responsibilities were important. He was made a member of the
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The inquisition also revealed that Sir Vincent had taken the precaution of getting Judith Austin to recognise in writing that the
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for the county in 1625, a position of great importance in managing the judicial system which he held for the rest of his life.
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P.W. Hasler (editor): History of Parliament Online: Members 1558–1603 – CORBET, Sir Andrew (1522–78) – Author: N. M. Fuidge.
698: 534:, specifically forbidding many of the abuses that had taken place in the preceding period. The petition was accepted by the 132:
The second Andrew Corbet was baptised at Moreton Corbet on 28 August 1580, and was presumably born earlier the same month.
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after less than five years as head of the family, leaving two daughters but no sons to succeed him. His heir, his brother,
194:, begun by Robert, still unfinished after a quarter century or more in construction. Although most of the estates were in 388:
was the architect of the parliamentary campaign against absolute rule, which Corbet supported in 1628–29. He died in the
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of Shrewsbury had played an important part in the agitation which led to its establishment, funded by property from the
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in the Middle Ages. They emerged in the 16th century as Shropshire's leading gentry family in a county without resident
995: 527: 71: 672:. Thornes was Sir Vincent Corbet's trustee and was accused of manipulating the baronet's estate in his own interests. 639:"of Moreton Corbet". He married Sarah Monson, a daughter of Sir Robert Monson, a Lincolnshire lawyer and landowner. 623:
Mural monument to Richard Corbet (d.1691), a younger son of Andrew Corbet; St Bartholomew's Church, Moreton Corbet
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Sir Andrew had already been appointed to posts considered appropriate to reliable members of the gentry. He was a
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for only a year, not his lifetime as he had demanded, and a subsidy of Β£140,000. This impeded the waging of the
199: 187: 259:, held in 1624, listed the Shropshire properties passed on by Sir Vincent to Sir Andrew. Sir Vincent had been 1084:"HARLEY, Sir Robert (1579–1656), of Brampton Bryan, Herefs.; Stanage Lodge, Herefs. and Aldermanbury, London" 1032: 588: 498: 356: 280: 276: 256: 101:(1522-1578) of Moreton Corbet. The Corbets traced their lineage and connection with Shropshire back to the 1024: 683: 676: 609: 381: 328:
in trust for 41 years so that the rents could be devoted to debt repayments. Sir Andrew was appointed his
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Corbet was returned to parliament again in 1628. The parliament assembled on 17 March. On 4 April the
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in Staunton, Harpcott, Moston, Sowbatche, Heath House, Hatton-on-Hyne-Heath and Greenfields and the
443: 216: 170:, from which he matriculated on 20 June 1602. He was then given a legal education for two years at 59:
Part of the Elizabethan building at Moreton Corbet Castle, completed by Vincent Corbet (died 1623)
567: 483: 425: 308: 212: 1020: 1008: 974: 798: 669: 632: 555: 531: 451: 401: 341: 304: 159: 136: 855: 429: 171: 148: 404:, about 1630. Corbet was out of favour during the period of absolute monarchy in the 1630s. 1016: 636: 608:
Andrew Corbet married Elizabeth Boothby, a daughter of William Boothby of Delphouse, near
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The temporary victory of Charles I, portrayed allegorically as the slaying of a dragon by
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John Burke "A General and heraldic dictionary of the peerage and baronetage Volume 1"
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Vincent Corbet (died 1623) of Moreton Corbet, father of Sir Andrew Corbet (1580–1637)
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dominance. A legend tells how Sir Vincent was unjustly cursed by Paul Holmyard, a
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eldest son and heir, an important royalist commander in Shropshire during the
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by his wife Judith Austin. Elizabeth was the step-daughter of his uncle
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at Open Library, Internet Archive. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
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at Open Library, Internet Archive. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
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at Open Library, Internet Archive. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
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at Open Library, Internet Archive. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
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at Open Library, Internet Archive. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
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The family of Corbet; its life and times, Volume 2, p.314-316
891:"Kathy Lynn Emerson (2008–13): A Who's Who of Tudor Women: A" 706:
Alice Corbet married William Onslowe, a Shrewsbury merchant.
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Anna Corbet married her cousin, Pelham Corbet, of Leigh and
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at The Acts and Monuments Online. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
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As seen on Corbet family monuments in Moreton Corbet Church
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The family of Corbet; its life and times, Volume 2, p. 311
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The family of Corbet; its life and times, Volume 2, p.341
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The family of Corbet; its life and times, Volume 2, p.308
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The family of Corbet; its life and times, Volume 2, p.305
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Betriche Corbet (or Beatrice) married Francis Thornes of
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and tithes in Oakhurst Co. Salop and died siezed thereof.
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Elizabeth Boothby (died 1658), wife of Sir Andrew Corbet
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John Foxe: Acts and Monuments (1583 edition), p. 1539
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Jane Corbet married a member of the Tibbatt's family.
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The visitation of Shropshire, taken in the year 1623
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although he became deputy lieutenant only in 1624.)
462:, who had rashly travelled to Spain incognito with 242:because of his Protestant beliefs – according to 408:Corbet was returned as Member of Parliament for 261: 32:Sir Andrew Corbet (1580–1637) of Moreton Corbet 952: 950: 360:Charles I in the early years of his reign, by 991: 989: 987: 424:The parliament called in 1624, the fourth of 8: 1069:Augusta Elizabeth Brickdale Corbet (1914): 1056:Augusta Elizabeth Brickdale Corbet (1914): 956:Augusta Elizabeth Brickdale Corbet (1914): 928:Augusta Elizabeth Brickdale Corbet (1914): 915:Augusta Elizabeth Brickdale Corbet (1914): 446:only the year before. The heralds recorded 1092: 693:Margaret Corbet, married Thomas Harley of 19:For other people named Andrew Corbet, see 971:Regime and Religion: Shrewsbury 1400–1700 795:Regime and Religion: Shrewsbury 1400–1700 682:Frances Corbet, married Edmund Taylor of 219:. Andrew was knighted on 25 August 1617. 849: 847: 845: 516:William Compton, 1st Earl of Northampton 724: 460:George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham 324:a tract of Shropshire lands centred on 1210:Alumni of the Queen's College, Oxford 757: 435:relations between king and parliament 7: 1205:People educated at Shrewsbury School 755: 753: 751: 749: 747: 745: 743: 741: 739: 737: 1027:of arms; marshals and deputies to 862:. Institute of Historical Research 303:and divers premises there, and in 48:Arms of Corbet of Moreton Corbet: 14: 346:Commissioner of Oyer and Terminer 1086:. historyofparliamentonline.org. 715:Elizabeth Corbet died in infancy 703:Mary Corbet married John Pearce. 97:Sir Vincent was the son of Sir 1177:Parliament suspended until 1640 648:William Corbet, died in infancy 629:Sir Vincent Corbet, 1st Baronet 162:. However, his college was not 139:, then famous for its blend of 1047:. Retrieved 18 September 2013. 1015:A-J only by Robert Tresswell, 998:. Retrieved 18 September 2013. 764:. Retrieved 18 September 2013. 645:Walter Corbet, died in infancy 392:during the period of Thorough. 153:Dissolution of the Monasteries 21:Andrew Corbet (disambiguation) 1: 466:in pursuit of the so-called 240:St Chad's Church, Shrewsbury 860:Alumni Oxonienses 1500–1714 854:Joseph Foster, ed. (1891). 828:. Retrieved September 2013. 635:. In 1642 he was created a 522:The parliament of 1628–1629 428:'s reign, was known as the 420:The parliament of 1624–1625 113:, but were never ennobled. 78:'s policies and ministers. 1246: 572:High Sheriff of Shropshire 18: 1159:Member of Parliament for 1157: 1145: 1131: 1116:Member of Parliament for 1114: 1102: 1095: 969:Coulton, Barbara (2010): 793:Coulton, Barbara (2010): 690:captain in the Civil War. 1215:Members of Lincoln's Inn 82:Background and education 1033:Clarenceux king of arms 981:, p. 47 and footnote 15 773:also known as Francesca 589:inquisition post mortem 257:inquisition post mortem 1025:Rouge Croix Pursuivant 1007:George Grazebrook and 880:Coulton (2010), p. 55. 684:Wigmore, Herefordshire 624: 610:Cheadle, Staffordshire 605: 474:The parliament of 1625 405: 393: 374: 365: 317: 60: 52: 41: 33: 1230:English MPs 1628–1629 1220:English MPs 1624–1625 1097:Parliament of England 695:Brampton Bryan Castle 622: 603: 399: 380: 371: 359: 246:, on the very day of 192:Moreton Corbet Castle 158:Corbet then attended 105:, and were important 58: 47: 39: 31: 1110:Sir Francis Kynaston 856:"Colericke-Coverley" 499:privileges committee 488:Tonnage and Poundage 362:Gerrit van Honthorst 352:Parliamentary career 337:justice of the Peace 1170:Sir Richard Newport 1153:Sir Richard Leveson 1139:Sir Richard Leveson 1127:Sir Richard Newport 697:and had issue, Sir 596:Marriage and family 444:heraldic visitation 271:of Moreton-Corbet, 217:knight of the shire 1149:Sir Rowland Cotton 1135:Sir Rowland Cotton 1011:(editors), 1889: 625: 606: 484:Useless Parliament 406: 394: 375: 366: 213:Acton Reynald Hall 61: 53: 42: 34: 16:English politician 1183: 1182: 1165:1628–1629 1132:Succeeded by 1122:1624–1625 1106:Sir Robert Vernon 1021:Augustine Vincent 1009:John Paul Rylands 979:978 1 906663 47 6 973:, Logaston Press 897:on 2 October 2014 803:978 1 906663 47 6 797:, Logaston Press 670:English Civil War 556:absolute monarchy 532:Petition of Right 492:Anglo-Spanish War 452:armorial bearings 402:Peter Paul Rubens 342:Deputy Lieutenant 160:Oxford University 137:Shrewsbury School 94:, in Shropshire. 64:Sir Andrew Corbet 50:Or, a raven sable 1237: 1225:English MPs 1625 1146:Preceded by 1103:Preceded by 1093: 1088: 1087: 1080: 1074: 1067: 1061: 1054: 1048: 1042: 1036: 1005: 999: 993: 982: 967: 961: 954: 945: 939: 933: 926: 920: 913: 907: 906: 904: 902: 893:. Archived from 887: 881: 878: 872: 871: 869: 867: 851: 840: 835: 829: 823: 817: 812: 806: 791: 785: 780: 774: 771: 765: 759: 732: 729: 528:House of Commons 430:Happy Parliament 200:Sir Henry Wallop 72:House of Commons 1245: 1244: 1240: 1239: 1238: 1236: 1235: 1234: 1185: 1184: 1166: 1164: 1155: 1151: 1141: 1137: 1123: 1121: 1112: 1108: 1091: 1082: 1081: 1077: 1068: 1064: 1055: 1051: 1043: 1039: 1017:Somerset Herald 1006: 1002: 994: 985: 968: 964: 955: 948: 940: 936: 927: 923: 914: 910: 900: 898: 889: 888: 884: 879: 875: 865: 863: 853: 852: 843: 836: 832: 824: 820: 813: 809: 792: 788: 781: 777: 772: 768: 760: 735: 730: 726: 722: 688:parliamentarian 677:Albright-Hussie 598: 580: 524: 511: 509:The Forced Loan 476: 448:pedigree charts 422: 414:Richard Newport 390:Tower of London 354: 180: 145:Reginald Corbet 103:Norman Conquest 84: 66:(1580–1637) of 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 1243: 1241: 1233: 1232: 1227: 1222: 1217: 1212: 1207: 1202: 1197: 1187: 1186: 1181: 1180: 1173: 1156: 1147: 1143: 1142: 1133: 1130: 1113: 1104: 1100: 1099: 1090: 1089: 1075: 1062: 1049: 1037: 1029:William Camden 1000: 983: 962: 946: 934: 921: 908: 882: 873: 841: 830: 818: 807: 786: 775: 766: 733: 723: 721: 718: 717: 716: 713: 710: 707: 704: 701: 691: 680: 673: 662:Shelvock Manor 658: 655: 652: 649: 646: 643: 640: 614:Richard Corbet 597: 594: 579: 576: 541:William Strode 536:House of Lords 523: 520: 510: 507: 478:The new king, 475: 472: 464:Prince Charles 421: 418: 373:disillusioned. 353: 350: 184:Market Drayton 179: 176: 127:Richard Corbet 123:bubonic plague 83: 80: 68:Moreton Corbet 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1242: 1231: 1228: 1226: 1223: 1221: 1218: 1216: 1213: 1211: 1208: 1206: 1203: 1201: 1198: 1196: 1193: 1192: 1190: 1179: 1178: 1174: 1172: 1171: 1163: 1162: 1154: 1150: 1144: 1140: 1136: 1129: 1128: 1120: 1119: 1111: 1107: 1101: 1098: 1094: 1085: 1079: 1076: 1072: 1066: 1063: 1059: 1053: 1050: 1046: 1041: 1038: 1034: 1030: 1026: 1022: 1018: 1014: 1010: 1004: 1001: 997: 992: 990: 988: 984: 980: 976: 972: 966: 963: 959: 953: 951: 947: 943: 938: 935: 931: 925: 922: 918: 912: 909: 896: 892: 886: 883: 877: 874: 861: 857: 850: 848: 846: 842: 839: 834: 831: 827: 822: 819: 816: 811: 808: 804: 800: 796: 790: 787: 784: 779: 776: 770: 767: 763: 758: 756: 754: 752: 750: 748: 746: 744: 742: 740: 738: 734: 728: 725: 719: 714: 712:Judith Corbet 711: 708: 705: 702: 700: 699:Robert Harley 696: 692: 689: 685: 681: 678: 674: 671: 667: 663: 659: 657:Arthur Corbet 656: 653: 650: 647: 644: 642:Andrew Corbet 641: 638: 634: 630: 627: 626: 621: 617: 615: 611: 602: 595: 593: 590: 586: 577: 575: 573: 569: 565: 561: 557: 552: 548: 546: 542: 537: 533: 529: 521: 519: 517: 508: 506: 504: 500: 495: 493: 489: 485: 481: 473: 471: 469: 468:Spanish Match 465: 461: 456: 453: 449: 445: 439: 436: 431: 427: 419: 417: 415: 411: 403: 398: 391: 387: 383: 379: 370: 363: 358: 351: 349: 347: 343: 338: 333: 331: 327: 326:Acton Reynald 322: 316: 314: 310: 306: 302: 298: 294: 290: 286: 282: 278: 274: 270: 266: 260: 258: 252: 249: 248:Elizabeth I's 245: 241: 237: 233: 229: 225: 220: 218: 214: 208: 206: 201: 197: 196:fee tail male 193: 189: 185: 177: 175: 173: 172:Lincoln's Inn 169: 165: 161: 156: 154: 150: 146: 142: 138: 133: 130: 128: 124: 120: 119:Robert Corbet 114: 112: 108: 107:marcher lords 104: 100: 99:Andrew Corbet 95: 93: 89: 81: 79: 77: 73: 69: 65: 57: 51: 46: 38: 30: 26: 22: 1175: 1168: 1158: 1125: 1115: 1078: 1065: 1052: 1040: 1003: 970: 965: 937: 924: 911: 901:18 September 899:. 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Retrieved 859: 833: 821: 810: 794: 789: 778: 769: 727: 664:, a staunch 651:Henry Corbet 607: 581: 553: 549: 545:Remonstrance 525: 512: 496: 477: 457: 440: 423: 407: 334: 318: 262: 253: 232:Longner Hall 221: 209: 190:building at 181: 157: 134: 131: 115: 96: 85: 63: 62: 49: 25: 1200:1637 deaths 1195:1580 births 224:High Church 188:Elizabethan 111:aristocracy 1189:Categories 1161:Shropshire 1118:Shropshire 720:References 410:Shropshire 382:John Eliot 313:Berrington 121:, died of 92:Bridgnorth 88:Albrighton 633:Civil War 574:in 1635. 558:known as 503:recusants 480:Charles I 384:, MP for 321:reversion 301:Grynshill 265:siezed of 244:John Foxe 178:Landowner 164:St John's 141:Calvinist 76:Charles I 666:royalist 566:who was 560:Thorough 386:Cornwall 330:executor 297:Whixhill 289:advowson 281:Staunton 273:Shawbury 205:jointure 149:recorder 805:, p. 40 668:in the 637:baronet 585:Vincent 568:pricked 426:James I 277:Rectory 236:Emstrey 234:, near 228:Puritan 168:Queen's 90:, near 1167:With: 1124:With: 1019:, and 977:  801:  570:to be 564:Robert 309:Astley 293:Peplow 285:tithes 283:, the 269:manors 578:Death 305:Clyve 147:, as 975:ISBN 903:2013 868:2013 799:ISBN 686:, a 450:and 267:the 279:of 263:... 1191:: 1031:, 1023:, 986:^ 949:^ 858:. 844:^ 736:^ 494:. 332:. 307:, 295:, 174:. 155:. 905:. 870:. 679:. 364:. 23:.

Index

Andrew Corbet (disambiguation)




Moreton Corbet
House of Commons
Charles I
Albrighton
Bridgnorth
Andrew Corbet
Norman Conquest
marcher lords
aristocracy
Robert Corbet
bubonic plague
Richard Corbet
Shrewsbury School
Calvinist
Reginald Corbet
recorder
Dissolution of the Monasteries
Oxford University
St John's
Queen's
Lincoln's Inn
Market Drayton
Elizabethan
Moreton Corbet Castle
fee tail male

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