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・ John Hanson Thomas Jerome
・ John Hanson Twombly
・ John Happenny
・ John Haran
・ John Harbach House
・ John Harbaugh
・ John Hammond (cricketer)
・ John Hammond (died 1589)
・ John Hammond (Irish politician)
・ John Hammond (physiologist)
・ John Hammond (producer)
・ John Hammond (racehorse trainer)
・ John Hammond (weather forecaster)
・ John Hammond (Wisconsin politician)
・ John Hammond, Jr. (disambiguation)
John Hampden
・ John Hampden (1653–1696)
・ John Hampden (1696–1754)
・ John Hampden (disambiguation)
・ John Hampden Burnham
・ John Hampden Grammar School
・ John Hampden Gurney
・ John Hampden Pleasants
・ John Hampden-Trevor, 3rd Viscount Hampden
・ John Hampshire
・ John Hampshire (cricketer, born 1913)
・ John Hampshire (cricketer, born 1941)
・ John Hampson
・ John Hampson (novelist)
・ John Hampson (writer)


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John Hampden : ウィキペディア英語版
John Hampden

John Hampden (ca. 1595 – 1643) was an English politician who was one of the leading parliamentarians involved in challenging the authority of Charles I of England in the run-up to the English Civil War. He became a national figure when he stood trial in 1637 for his refusal to be taxed for ship money, and was one of the Five Members whose attempted unconstitutional arrest by King Charles I in the House of Commons of England in 1642 sparked the Civil War.
Dying of wounds received on Chalgrove Field during the war, Hampden became a celebrated English patriot. The wars established the constitutional precedent that the monarch cannot govern without Parliament's consent, a concept legally established as part of the Glorious Revolution in 1688 and the subsequent Bill of Rights 1689. A statue of Hampden was selected by the Victorians as a symbol to take its place at the entrance to the Central Lobby in the Palace of Westminster as the noblest type of the parliamentary opposition, sword at his side, ready to defend the rights of Parliament. As one of the Five Members of the House of Commons, Hampden is commemorated at the State Opening of Parliament by the British monarch each year when the doors of the Commons Chamber are slammed in the face of the monarch's messenger, symbolising the rights of Parliament and its independence from the monarch.
==Origins==
He was the eldest son of William Hampden, of Hampden House, Great Hampden in Buckinghamshire (b. 1570), the son of Griffith Hampden and Anne Cavea and descendant of a very ancient family of that county, said to have been established there before the Norman conquest, and of Elizabeth, second daughter of Sir Henry Cromwell, and aunt of Oliver Cromwell.

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