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Humphrey Mackworth (born 1631) : ウィキペディア英語版
Humphrey Mackworth (born 1631)

Humphrey Mackworth was an English politician and soldier of Shropshire landed gentry origins. He was military governor of Shrewsbury, in succession to his father and namesake, for almost five years under the Protectorate, from 1655〔(Johnstone, p. 274. )〕 until late in 1659.〔 He represented Shrewsbury in the First, Second and Third Protectorate Parliaments.〔
==Origins and early life==
Mackworth was probably born in September 1631 as he was baptised on the 10th of the month in St Chad's Church, Shrewsbury,〔( Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, p. 77. )〕 his local parish church. His parents were:
:
*Humphrey Mackworth of Betton Strange. At the time Mackworth senior was an ambitious young lawyer, a member of Gray's Inn, who was just making a transition from collecting reports on cases in London to working for the town of Shrewsbury. This move brought success and the position of alderman in 1633. The Mackworths originated in Mackworth, near Derby,〔(Blakeway, p. 390. )〕 where the senior branch of the family, the Mackworth baronets, had their seat at Mackworth Castle until migrating to Normanton, Rutland in the 17th century. Humphrey's very junior branch of the family had been involved in Shrewsbury's commerce and politics for about a century and had held Betton Strange, a manor a few miles south of the town, since 1544.〔(Blakeway, p. 391. )〕
:
*Anne Waller, Mackworth's first wife, who had married him by May 1624. She was the daughter of Thomas Waller of Beaconsfield,〔 and distantly related to the poet Edmund Waller.
The younger Humphrey is sometimes stated to be the second child of the marriage.〔 He had an older brother Thomas Mackworth (1627–96), who played a considerable part alongside him in the politics of Shropshire. However, there was another brother, William, who had died in a few months before his own birth.〔 Later came three sisters, starting with Anne, born a year after Humphrey.〔( Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, p. 86. )〕 the family lived at Betton Strange, although Humphrey the elder also had official lodgings in town. The children were presumably brought up as Puritans. In autumn 1633, during a canonical visitation of St Chad's by Robert Wright, the Bishop of Lichfield, the incumbent Peter Studley included Humphrey Mackworth among the heads of twenty families who refused to bow at the name of Jesus or to kneel at the altar rail—a refusal which meant they were "wilful refusers to communicate for the gestures sake."〔Coulton, p. 85.〕 His mother, Anne, died when the young Humphrey was four years old and was buried at St Chad's on 26 May 1636.〔( Register of St Chad's, Shrewsbury, p. 109. )〕 The young Humphrey entered Shrewsbury School in 1638, the same year as his elder brother.〔(Blakeway, p. 392. )〕 In July of the same year his father married Mary Venables, by whom he was to have two more children.〔(Blakeway, p. 393. )〕
The elder Humphrey continued to agitate against Laudianism and was a supporter of Parliament from the outset of its conflict with the king.〔 At the outbreak of the English Civil War in the late summer of 1642, the royalists under Francis Ottley, a relative of the Mackworths, seized the initiative and occupied Shrewsbury〔Coulton, p. 91-2.〕 and began arresting or expelling the Puritan clergy.〔(Audley (1907), p. 249-50. )〕 Ottley invited Charles I to come to Shrewsbury and the royal army occupied the town from 20 September〔Sherwood, p. 4-5.〕 to 12 October.〔Sherwood, p. 13.〕 Moving south, the king paused at Bridgnorth to issue a proclamation ordering the arrest of "some persons of good quality," whom he intended to put on trial for high treason. Only three were named and Mackworth senior was one of them.〔(Phillips (ed.), 1895, ''Ottley Papers'', p. 252. )〕 The family's home and estates were sequestered by the royalists, and apparently under Ottley's control, as it was he who later received correspondence on the matter from Dorothy Gorton, young Humphrey's paternal grandmother, and also the widow of Ottley's uncle,〔 whose jointure properties had been confiscated.〔(Phillips (ed), 1895, ''Ottley Papers'', p.302-3. )〕 It is not clear exactly where and how family life continued over the succeeding two or three years, as the elder Humphrey was constantly mobile, participating in Parliamentarian county committees and their offshoots all over the West Midlands, and helping to organise the reconquest of Shropshire from an initial foothold at Wem.〔(Johnstone, p. 269. )〕 However, he was in London for a considerable time early in 1644, in connection with the trial of Archbishop William Laud〔Coulton, p. 97.〕 Humphrey's elder brother, Thomas, was admitted to Gray's Inn, their father's Inn of Court, on 6 February 1645,〔(Foster, ''Register of Admissions to Gray's Inn'', p. 239 )〕 so it is possible the family took refuge in the capital while the war was at its height in Shropshire. However, the published record of Thomas's admission to Gray's Inn calls him the "son and heir of Humphrey M., of the city of Coventry," which perhaps shows that city was regarded as the normal residence of the Mackworths. The supposition is strengthened by Parliament's reprimand to Mackworth senior later in the year for spending too much time in Coventry, where he was the steward,〔 the senior record keeper and archivist of the city.
With the capture of Shrewsbury by the Parliamentarians in February 1645, Mackworth senior was acclaimed governor by his colleagues of the Shropshire committee,〔Coulton, p. 105.〕 although he had to wait until June 1646 for confirmation by Parliament.〔(Johnstone, p. 270. )〕 At some stage, as a degree of security was established, the family probably joined him at Shrewsbury, although there were still royalist uprisings. The most serious threat came in 1651 with the appearance of Charles Stuart at the head of a large Scottish army, to whom Colonel Mackworth refused to surrender.〔Coulton, p. 15-6.〕 It is known that Thomas was a captain commanding a garrison troop at Shrewsbury in the days preceding the arrival of the Scots. It is likely that Humphrey too gained military experience around this time: certainly he was paid as a captain during the first year of his governorship.〔''Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, 1655, ''(24 July 1655, p. 257. )〕

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