Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3330969> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 31 of
31
with 100 triples per page.
- Q3330969 subject Q6279981.
- Q3330969 subject Q8098389.
- Q3330969 subject Q8106995.
- Q3330969 subject Q8410857.
- Q3330969 subject Q8587804.
- Q3330969 subject Q8674282.
- Q3330969 abstract "The Bishopsgate mutiny occurred in April 1649 when soldiers of Colonel Edward Whalley's regiment of the New Model Army refused to obey orders and leave London. At the end of the mutiny one soldier, a supporter of the Levellers, Robert Lockyer, was executed by firing squad.In January 1649 Charles I of England was tried and executed for treason against the people. In February the Grandees (senior officers) banned petitions to Parliament by soldiers. In March eight Leveller troopers went to the Commander-in-Chief of the New Model Army, Lord Thomas Fairfax, and demand the restoration of the right to petition. Five of them were cashiered out of the army. 300 infantrymen of Colonel John Hewson's regiment, who declared that they would not serve in Ireland until the Leveller programme had been realised, were cashiered without arrears of pay, which was the threat that had been used to quell the Corkbush Field mutiny.When Soldiers of the regiment of Colonel Edward Whalley stationed in Bishopsgate London made similar demands they were ordered out of London. They refused to go fearing that once outside the City of London they too would be given the choice of obey or be cashiered without arrears of pay. The mutineers surrendered after a personal appeal by Fairfax and Oliver Cromwell. Fifteen soldiers were arrested and court martialed, of whom six were sentenced to death. Five were pardoned but Robert Lockier, a former Agitator within the regiment, was executed by firing squad in front of St Paul's Cathedral on April 27, 1649.Like the funeral of Colonel Thomas Rainsborough the previous year, Lockier's funeral was a massive Leveller-led demonstration in London, with thousands of mourners wearing the Levellers' ribbons of sea-green and bunches of rosemary for remembrance in their hats.".
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q1367657.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q1432954.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q216169.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q2379085.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q2387219.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q3048719.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q3330968.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q3907844.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q44279.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q511866.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q550612.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q6279981.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q7346970.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q7793392.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q779444.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q80330.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8098389.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8106995.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q81506.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8410857.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8587804.
- Q3330969 wikiPageWikiLink Q8674282.
- Q3330969 comment "The Bishopsgate mutiny occurred in April 1649 when soldiers of Colonel Edward Whalley's regiment of the New Model Army refused to obey orders and leave London. At the end of the mutiny one soldier, a supporter of the Levellers, Robert Lockyer, was executed by firing squad.In January 1649 Charles I of England was tried and executed for treason against the people. In February the Grandees (senior officers) banned petitions to Parliament by soldiers.".
- Q3330969 label "Bishopsgate mutiny".