Roman Catholic Royalist Officers in the North Midlands, 1642-1646
Abstract
Throughout the first civil war in England (1642-1646) Henry Hastings, Lord Loughborough led the royalist forces in the North Midland counties (Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire, Rutland and Staffordshire). His enemies labelled him as a ‘fellow-traveller’ of the Roman Catholic faction and asserted that his army was filled with papists. This article examines this claim by examining the structure of the officer corps in the army and assessing the numbers, distribution and service record of Roman Catholics within it. This analysis is set against the national picture of Roman Catholic militant royalism and against Hastings’s own religious background, questioning both his and King Charles I’s motivation for employing Roman Catholic officers in the royalist armed forces.Downloads
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