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Henry Marten ( 1602 – 9 September 1680 ) was an English lawyer and politician who sat in the House of Commons in two periods between 1640 and 1653.
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Henry and Marten
For himself he bought in 1655 the manor of Beckett near Shrivenham ( then in Berkshire, now Oxfordshire ), and other lands adjoining it, from his friend Henry Marten.
The castle and town changed hands several times during the English Civil War, and the regicide Henry Marten was later imprisoned and died in the castle.
After serving as High Sheriff of Wiltshire for 1645 he was elected in 1646 Member of Parliament ( MP ) for Wiltshire in place of his father, and became involved with the Independent faction within Parliament-especially with Henry Marten and other radical critics of the monarchy.
Marten was the elder son of the successful lawyer and diplomat Sir Henry Marten ; his other known siblings were a brother, George, and three sisters, Elizabeth, Jane and Mary.
He may have been the Henry Marten admitted to Gray's Inn in August 1618 and was certainly admitted to the Inner Temple in November 1619.
In 1662 there appeared Henry Marten's Familiar Letters to his Lady of Delight, containing letters Marten had written to his common-law wife, Mary Ward, which had been seized and published without permission.
Sir Henry Marten ( c. 1562 – 26 September 1641 ) was an English judge and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1625 and 1640.
Sir Henry was probably born in London, supposedly the son of Anthony Marten and his wife Anne Jacob, daughter of John Jacob of Bishops Stortford.
Henry and 1602
In May 1602, he was ordained in the Trinity College Chapel as a deacon in the Protestant, established, Church of Ireland ( and possibly priest on the same day ) by his uncle Henry Ussher, the Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland.
When Henry clamped down on a Spanish-backed plot amongst the senior French nobility in 1602, for example, he detained the ringleader Charles Gontaut, the Duke of Biron, in the Bastille, and had him executed in the courtyard.
His 38 plays include tragedies such as Hamlet ( 1603 ), Othello ( 1604 ), and King Lear ( 1605 ); comedies such as A Midsummer Night's Dream ( 1594 — 96 ) and Twelfth Night ( 1602 ); and history plays such as Henry IV, part 1 — 2.
On the occasion of the creation of Prince Henry as Prince of Wales in 1610, Cavendish was made a Knight of the Bath, subsequently travelled with Sir Henry Wotton, then ambassador to the Duke of Savoy, and on his return married his first wife, Elizabeth Basset ( before 1602 – 17 April 1643 ), daughter of William Basset of Blore, Staffordshire by his wife Judith Austen, and widow of Henry Howard, third son of the 1st Earl of Suffolk.
# Lady Jane, Part I, by Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Heywood, Wentworth Smith, and John Webster, November 1602.
During the years 1597 to 1602 he collaborated in many plays with Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, John Day, Richard Hathwaye and Wentworth Smith.
After the victory of Fontaine-Française ( 1595 ), Henry took Jeannin into his council and in 1602 named him intendant of finances.
In 1602, Henry IV of France rented factory space for his Flemish tapestry makers on the current location of the Gobelins Manufactory adjoining the Bièvre river.
He fought together with Henry IV in Savoy ( 1600 – 1601 ) and negotiated the treaty of peace in 1602 ; in 1603, he represented Henry at the court of James I of England ; and throughout the reign, he helped the king to put down insurrections of the nobles, whether Roman Catholic or Protestant.
Subsequently he came to know Henry Percy, 9th Earl of Northumberland, whom he supported in his quarrel with Sir Francis Vere in 1602.
According to this tree, Sir Henry, himself a son of a Henry Culmer, had married Mary Baldwyn in 1602, and was created a Baron by King Charles I in 1630, although this is not listed in Burke's Peerage.
John Bradshaw ( sometimes spelt Bradshawe ) the second son of Henry Bradshaw and Catherine Winnington was born in 1602 probably at Wybersley ( Wyberslegh ) Hall in the village of High Lane near Stockport or possibly at the nearby Peace Farm, Marple ( his father farmed at both ) and baptized on 10 December in Stockport Church.
In 1411 the lord of the manor was John Rogers, who also held the manor of Barwick, and by 1602 these had been inherited by Henry Lyte.
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