A 17th Century Knight  
The Life and Times of Simonds D'Ewes
Author(s): Ben Norman
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399042277
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781399042277 Price: INR 1129.99
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Sir Simonds D’Ewes, a seventeenth-century gentleman bred in Dorset, but ultimately shaped by a deep and lasting love for Suffolk, was not destined for greatness. Nor did he have greatness thrust upon him in his short lifetime.

Yet this was hardly the point. Son to a respectable family, D’Ewes rose through local, legal and political ranks to become a first-hand witness to a succession of monumental events in England. As MP for Sudbury from 1640, he was one of those who saw with agonising immediacy – from the benches of Westminster – the rapid decline of the political situation in the mid-1600s. Simonds held his breath along with the rest when Charles I forcibly entered the Commons in 1642, and he was there to survey the stunning rise of Oliver Cromwell through the 1640s. When civil war arrived, D’Ewes observed the battle lines being drawn before his very eyes.

A 17th Century Knight has two aims. Firstly, it seeks to chart the life of Simonds D’Ewes himself: the husband, father, friend, antiquary, devout Protestant – even widower. His was an affecting story of personal loss, professional and recreational gain, and complex familial relationships that is deserving of study.

Secondly, it endeavours to weave a fresh narrative of the tempestuous first half of the 1600s, including the English Civil War, using D’Ewes’s experiences and wealth of written material as a focal point.

As this book shows, there is still much to be uncovered about a period in history that we think we all know.
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Sir Simonds D’Ewes, a seventeenth-century gentleman bred in Dorset, but ultimately shaped by a deep and lasting love for Suffolk, was not destined for greatness. Nor did he have greatness thrust upon him in his short lifetime.

Yet this was hardly the point. Son to a respectable family, D’Ewes rose through local, legal and political ranks to become a first-hand witness to a succession of monumental events in England. As MP for Sudbury from 1640, he was one of those who saw with agonising immediacy – from the benches of Westminster – the rapid decline of the political situation in the mid-1600s. Simonds held his breath along with the rest when Charles I forcibly entered the Commons in 1642, and he was there to survey the stunning rise of Oliver Cromwell through the 1640s. When civil war arrived, D’Ewes observed the battle lines being drawn before his very eyes.

A 17th Century Knight has two aims. Firstly, it seeks to chart the life of Simonds D’Ewes himself: the husband, father, friend, antiquary, devout Protestant – even widower. His was an affecting story of personal loss, professional and recreational gain, and complex familial relationships that is deserving of study.

Secondly, it endeavours to weave a fresh narrative of the tempestuous first half of the 1600s, including the English Civil War, using D’Ewes’s experiences and wealth of written material as a focal point.

As this book shows, there is still much to be uncovered about a period in history that we think we all know.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Dedication
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Author’s Note
  • Image Credits
  • Acknowledgements
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • PART ONE: PEACE
    • Chapter 1 In the beginning
    • Chapter 2 Out of Dorset
    • Chapter 3 Stowlangtoft
    • Chapter 4 A universal education
    • Chapter 5 The road to the Temple
    • Chapter 6 Jemima Waldegrave
    • Chapter 7 City living
    • Chapter 8 Anne Clopton
    • Chapter 9 Wolves
  • PART TWO: UNEASE
    • Chapter 10 New lives and old
    • Chapter 11 The Lavenham brass
    • Chapter 12 Laud
    • Chapter 13 Ship money, the Elector Palatine and the New World
    • Chapter 14 Conflict at home, conflict afar
    • Chapter 15 The Long Parliament meets
    • Chapter 16 Strafford
    • Chapter 17 The storm gathers
  • PART THREE: WAR
    • Chapter 18 Brother against brother
    • Chapter 19 Edgehill
    • Chapter 20 An unhappy Christmas
    • Chapter 21 Richard’s farewell
    • Chapter 22 ‘These miserable calamities and civil wars of England’
    • Chapter 23 Marston Moor
    • Chapter 24 The wrath of religion
    • Chapter 25 Naseby
    • Chapter 26 1646
    • Chapter 27 The king’s escape
    • Chapter 28 Colchester falls
    • Chapter 29 Purged
    • Chapter 30 ‘A happy hour’
  • Epilogue In the end
  • Appendix 1 D’Ewes family tree
  • Appendix 2 Barnardiston family tree
  • Appendix 3 The children of Simonds D’Ewes
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Plates
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