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  1. Charles Ier, né le 19 novembre 1600 à Dunfermline et mort le 30 janvier 1649 à Londres, est roi d' Angleterre, d' Écosse et d' Irlande de 1625 à son exécution en 1649 . Petit-fils de la reine Marie Stuart et fils du roi Jacques Stuart, il succède à ce dernier à sa mort, le 27 mars 1625. Dès le début de son règne, Charles Ier ...

  2. During the Restoration of 1660, when Charles II came to throne, the new king hunted down all those who had signed his father’s death warrant and executed them as regicides. The executioners managed to evade the wrath of the new monarch, however, as no one ever discovered who the two men were. See also: The Execution of Charles I

  3. The Royalist view. The engraving above was produced in 1725, 76 years after the execution of Charles I. In the bottom right hand corner is the Banqueting House and the execution taking place.

  4. 30. Jan. 2023 · Three days later, on 30 January, Charles I was executed outside of Banqueting House at Westminster, ‘put to death by the severing of his head from his body’ (see footnote 5). Treason was now definitively a crime against the state. The Sentence of Charles I, calling him a ‘tyrant, traitor, murderer and public enemy to the good people of ...

  5. Charles I - Civil War, England, Scotland: In September 1642 the earl of Essex, in command of the Parliamentarian forces, left London for the midlands, while Charles moved his headquarters to Shrewsbury to recruit and train an army on the Welsh marches. During a drawn battle fought at Edgehill near Warwick on October 23, the king addressed his troops in these words: “Your king is both your ...

  6. Charles attempted again to address the Court after the sentence had been read out. Bradshaw ordered the guards to remove the King. The law was on Bradshaw’s side: a man condemned to death was legally dead and therefore could not speak after the passing of the death sentence. Charles had also refused to recognise the Court throughout the proceedings: Bradshaw argued that the King could not ...

  7. A plate depicting the trial of Charles I in January 1649, from John Nalson 's "Record of the Trial of Charles I, 1688" in the British Museum. The High Court of Justice was the court established by the Rump Parliament to try Charles I, King of England, Scotland and Ireland. Even though this was an ad hoc tribunal that was specifically created ...