Hardress Waller
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hardress_Waller an entity of type: Thing
Sir Hardress Waller (c. 1604 – 1666), was an English Protestant who settled in Ireland and fought for Parliament in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. A leading member of the radical element within the New Model Army, he signed the death warrant for the Execution of Charles I in 1649; after the Stuart Restoration in 1660, he was condemned to death as a regicide, a sentence commuted to life imprisonment.
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Hardress Waller
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Hardress Waller
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Hardress Waller
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1666-07-30
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738470
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1108630336
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1625
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Anglo-Spanish War (1625–1630)
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Irish Confederate Wars
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Wars of the Three Kingdoms
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Naseby; Langport; Bristol; Basing House; Siege of Exeter
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Cádiz expedition (1625)
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Siege of Carlow; Limerick
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1604
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Mont Orgueil, where Waller died in 1666
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Walter ; James ; Bridget ; Anne ; Mary; Elizabeth
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1666-07-30
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Sir
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English
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Radical politician and soldier
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Protectorate
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Parliament of IrelandIrish
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Elizabeth Dowdall
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1653
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1659
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April 1635
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January 1649
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1651
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1654
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July 1634
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March 1639
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Sir Hardress Waller (c. 1604 – 1666), was an English Protestant who settled in Ireland and fought for Parliament in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. A leading member of the radical element within the New Model Army, he signed the death warrant for the Execution of Charles I in 1649; after the Stuart Restoration in 1660, he was condemned to death as a regicide, a sentence commuted to life imprisonment. A prominent member of Protestant society in Munster during the 1630s, Waller fought against the Catholic Confederacy following the 1641 Irish Rebellion. When the First English Civil War began in August 1642, Charles I wanted to use his Irish troops to help win the war in England, and in September 1643 agreed a truce or "Cessation" with the Confederacy. Waller opposed this and defected to the Parliamentarians; in April 1645, he was appointed a Colonel in the New Model Army and fought throughout the final campaigns of 1645 and 1646. An admirer of Oliver Cromwell, Waller became a political and religious radical; he took part in the 1647 Putney Debates, supported Pride's Purge in December 1648 and was a judge at the Trial of Charles I in January 1649. During the Protectorate, he held considerable political power in Ireland and was arrested in February 1660 after staging a coup in an attempt to prevent the Restoration of Charles II. At his trial for regicide in October 1660, Waller pleaded guilty and was sentenced to death, later commuted to life imprisonment. He died in 1666 at Mont Orgueil on the island of Jersey.
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Clare, Limerick and Kerry
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16900