翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Samuel Sherwood
・ Samuel Sherwood (Canadian politician)
・ Samuel Sherwood (high constable)
・ Samuel Sherwood (New York)
・ Samuel Shimon
・ Samuel Shippey
・ Samuel Shobal Ryckman
・ Samuel Shone
・ Samuel Shore (banker)
・ Samuel Shore (disambiguation)
・ Samuel Shrewsbury, Sr. House
・ Samuel Shrimski
・ Samuel Shuckford
・ Samuel Shullam
・ Samuel Shumack
Samuel Shute
・ Samuel Sidibé
・ Samuel Sidney
・ Samuel Sidyno
・ Samuel Siegel
・ Samuel Siegfried Karl von Basch
・ Samuel Silas Curry
・ Samuel Silke
・ Samuel Silkin, Baron Silkin of Dulwich
・ Samuel Silva
・ Samuel Silverman
・ Samuel Sim
・ Samuel Simeon Fels
・ Samuel Simmons
・ Samuel Simms


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Samuel Shute : ウィキペディア英語版
Samuel Shute

Samuel Shute (January 12, 1662 – April 15, 1742) was an English military officer and royal governor of the provinces of Massachusetts and New Hampshire. After serving in the Nine Years' War and the War of the Spanish Succession, he was appointed by King George I as governor of Massachusetts and New Hampshire in 1716. His tenure was marked by virulent disagreements with the Massachusetts assembly on a variety of issues, and by poorly conducted diplomacy with respect to the Native American Wabanaki Confederacy of northern New England that led to Dummer's War (1722–1725).
Although Shute was partly responsible for the breakdown in negotiations with the Wabanakis, he returned to England in early 1723 to procure resolutions to his ongoing disagreements with the Massachusetts assembly, leaving conduct of the war to Lieutenant Governor William Dummer. His protests resulted in the issuance in 1725 of the Explanatory Charter, essentially confirming his position in the disputes with the assembly. He did not return to New England, being replaced as governor in 1728 by William Burnet, and refused to be considered for reappointment after Burnet's sudden death in 1729.
Thomas Hutchinson (Massachusetts royal governor in the early 1770s), in his history of Massachusetts, described Shute's tenure as governor as the most contentious since the Antinomian Controversy of the 1630s.〔Hart, p. 2:133〕
==Early life==
Samuel Shute was born in London, England on January 12, 1662.〔Garraty et al., p. 909〕〔Derby et al., p. 374〕 He was the eldest of six children of Benjamin Shute, a London merchant. His mother, identified in sources as Elizabeth, Patience, or Mary, was the daughter of Joseph Caryl, a dissenting Presbyterian clergyman. His brother John, afterward Lord Barrington, became an influential member of parliament, political leader of religious Dissenters, and confidant of King George I.〔〔''Memorial of Lord Viscount Barrington'', p. 67〕 Shute was educated by Rev. Charles Morton, who afterward emigrated to New England. Shute then attended the University of Leyden in Holland and subsequently entered the English army, serving under William III.〔
In the War of the Spanish Succession Shute served in the campaigns of the Duke of Marlborough in the 3rd Dragoon Guards.〔〔Lediard, p. 269〕 He was a captain of that cavalry regiment when he was wounded at the 1704 Battle of Blenheim; by the end of the war he had a full promotion to lieutenant-colonel and a brevet promotion to colonel.〔 Upon the accession of King George I in 1714, Colonel Elizeus Burges was commissioned as governor of Massachusetts and New Hampshire.〔Barry, p. 104〕 Massachusetts agents Jeremiah Dummer and Jonathan Belcher, representing opponents of a land bank proposal that Burges had promised to support, bribed him £1,000 to resign before he left England. Dummer and Belcher were then instrumental in promoting Shute as an alternative to Burges, believing among other things that he was likely to be well received in New England because he was from a prominent Dissenting family.〔Batinski, p. 25〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Samuel Shute」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.