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Battle of Newburn

 
British History: battle of Newburn

Newburn, battle of, 1640. Though the battle of Newburn was little more than a skirmish, it helped to bring Charles I to the scaffold. The first Bishops' War in 1639 ended in negotiation, but the following year a large Scottish army, led by Alexander Leslie, crossed the border and was confronted by Lord Conway's troops, trying to hold the line of the Tyne. At the ford at Newburn, west of Newcastle, on 28 August 1640, the Scots crossed with little difficulty, occupied Newcastle, and dictated such financial terms to the king that the calling of another Parliament was inevitable. The Long Parliament, the following year, executed Strafford and declared itself irremovable, save with its own consent.

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Wikipedia: Battle of Newburn
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Battle of Newburn
Part of Bishops Wars
Date 28 August 1640
Location Newburn, Northumberland, England
Result Scottish victory
Belligerents
Scotland-Covenanters  England
Commanders
Alexander Leslie Lord Conway
Strength
24000+ 15000+
Casualties and losses
12 killed 60 killed

The Battle of Newburn was fought on 28 August 1640 during the Second Bishops' War between a Scottish Covenanter army led by General Alexander Leslie and English royalist forces commanded by Edward, Lord Conway. Conway, heavily outnumbered, was defeated, and the Scots went on to occupy the port of Newcastle, obtaining a stranglehold on London's coal supply. Charles I had no choice but to agree to a truce, under which the Scottish army in northern England would be paid daily expenses, pending a final treaty of peace. To raise the necessary funds Charles had to call the Long Parliament, thus setting in motion a process that would lead to the outbreak of the English Civil War two years later.

Purge of the bishops

In attempting to force the Scots to accept a new Prayer Book in 1637, Charles sparked a crisis that led to the compilation and subscription of the National Covenant in early 1638, a document which rejected all innovations in worship that had not been subject to the approval of both the Scottish Parliament and the General Assembly of the church. In November of the same year a General Assembly in Glasgow not only rejected the Prayer Book, but also expelled the bishops from the church, as suspect agents of the crown. Charles' refusal to accept this led to the outbreak of the First Bishops' War in 1639.

This war saw much posturing but little real action. In the end the two sides, reluctant to push the issue, concluded hostilities in the Pacification of Berwick, an agreement without an agreement, that was at best a breathing space. The Scots agreed that the Glasgow Assembly had been 'illegal'; Charles agreed that a new Assembly, together with a Parliament, should meet in Edinburgh in the summer of 1640. As none of the issues that had led to the signing of the National Covenant had been settled, it was obvious to all that the Edinburgh Assembly would simply confirm the decisions taken at Glasgow. This was to lead directly to the outbreak of the Second Bishops' War. To raise the necessary funds Charles summoned a new Parliament to Westminster, the first to meet for eleven years, hoping to use English patriotism as a counter to the rebel Scots. But the Short Parliament was more interested in raising various grievances long suppressed and was quickly dismissed, leaving the king worse off than before.


References

  • Donaldson, G., Scotland from James V to James VII, 1965.
  • Fissel, M. C., The Bishops' War: Charles I's Campaigns against Scotland, 1638-1640, 1994.
  • Hewison, J. K., The Covenanters, 1913.
  • Matthew, D, Scotland Under Charles I, 1955.
  • Russel, C, The Fall of the British Monarchies, 1637-1642, 1991.
  • Stevenson, D., The Scottish Revolution, 1637-44, 1973.
  • Turner, Sir James, Memoirs of his own Life and Times, 1632-1670, 1829.
  • Terry, C. S., The Life and Campaigns of Alexander Leslie, 1899.
  • Wedgewood, C. V., The King's Peace, 1637-1641, 1955.
  • Matthews, R., England versus Scotland, 2003. ISBN 850529492

See also

Coordinates: 54°58′53″N 1°44′35″W / 54.98139°N 1.74306°W / 54.98139; -1.74306


 
 

 

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