翻訳と辞書 ・ Sir Albert Bowen, 1st Baronet ・ Sir Albert Gladstone, 5th Baronet ・ Sir Albert Naylor-Leyland, 2nd Baronet ・ Sir Albert Spicer, 1st Baronet ・ Sir Aldingar ・ Sir Alexander Abercromby, 1st Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Allan, 1st Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Baird, 1st Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Ball (1809 ship) ・ Sir Alexander Bannerman, 11th Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Beville Gibbons Stanier, 2nd Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Boswell, 1st Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Brown, 1st Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Buchanan ・ Sir Alexander Campbell, 1st Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Carew, 2nd Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Cockburn, 12th Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Cornewall Duff-Gordon, 3rd Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Dick, 3rd Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Don, 5th Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Don, 6th Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Falconer, 1st Lord Falconer of Halkerton ・ Sir Alexander Fleming College ・ Sir Alexander Fraser of Dores ・ Sir Alexander Gibb & Partners ・ Sir Alexander Grant, 10th Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Grant, 8th Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Holburn, 3rd Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Home, 1st Baronet ・ Sir Alexander Hope
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Sir Alexander Carew, 2nd Baronet : ウィキペディア英語版 | Sir Alexander Carew, 2nd Baronet
Sir Alexander Carew, 2nd Baronet (30 August 1609 – 23 December 1644), of Antony in Cornwall, was an English Member of Parliament executed for attempting to betray the Parliamentary cause during the English Civil War. ==Life== Carew was the eldest son of Sir Richard Carew, 1st Baronet (c. 1580-1643). Both his father and his grandfather had been Knights of the Shire (Members of Parliament) for Cornwall, and Alexander was elected to the same office in the Long Parliament in 1640. On the outbreak of the Civil War, Carew declared for Parliament and, in Clarendon's words, ''"had, from the beginning of the Parliament concurred in all conclusions with the most violent, with as full a testimony of that zeal and fury, to which their confidence was applied, as any man"''. Although Cornwall and the rest of the south-west were generally under Royalist control in the opening stages of the war, the Mayor of the strategically vital port of Plymouth had seized it for Parliament, and Parliament entrusted its defence to a committee including Carew. Carew was made governor of St Nicholas's Island in Plymouth Sound, the keystone to the defence of the town. It was while held this post that his father died, on 14 March 1643, and he inherited the baronetcy. After the Royal victory at Stratton (16 May 1643) and the capture of Bristol, Sir Alexander secretly contacted the commander of the Royal forces then besieging Exeter, offering to surrender Plymouth in return for a pardon for himself. The Royalists were willing enough but ''"he was so sottishly and dangerously wary of his own security, (having neither courage enough to obey his conscience, nor wicked enough to be prosperous against it), that he would not proceed until he was sufficiently assured that his pardon had passed the Great Seal of England"'' (Clarendon, quoted in Burke's ''Extinct Baronetage''), and the delay left time for a disloyal servant to leak the plot to the Mayor and the rest of the Committee. He was arrested, and taken by ship to London. A House of Commons resolution disabled him from sitting (in effect, expelled him) on 4 September 1643, and he was committed to the Tower of London on 5 December. He was eventually tried for treason by court-martial, in the Guildhall on 19 November 1644. Convicted, he was sentenced to death, but his wife petitioned the Commons that he was "in a kind of distracted condition and unfit to die". A House of Commons committee visited him in prison and reported that there was nothing in the petition; however, they allowed him a respite of a month to settle his affairs. He was beheaded on Tower Hill on 23 December 1644.
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