Edmund Chillenden Explained

Edmund Chillenden (fl. 1631–1678) was an English soldier, known as an agitator and theological writer. At different times he was a Leveller and a Fifth Monarchist.[1]

Life

With 60 others, he was arrested at a religious meeting in London in January 1641 at the house of Richard Sturges.[2] He was a prisoner of war in 1642 in Oxford Castle, and wrote a pamphlet on the terrible conditions of his confinement, against William Smith.[3] [4]

He was an officer in the parliamentary New Model Army, in 1646 a Lieutenant and intelligence officer in Whalley's Regiment.[5] He was on the army's General Council in 1647, and a supporter of the Levellers.[6] Jason Peacey writes of

Works

He published :

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Michael R. Watts, The dissenters: from the Reformation to the French Revolution (1986), p. 137.
  2. Keith Lindley, The English Civil War and revolution: a sourcebook (1998), p. 90.
  3. The inhumanity of the Kings prison-keeper at Oxford (1643).
  4. Charles Carlton, Going to the Wars: The Experience of the British Civil Wars, 1638-1651 (1994), p. 249.
  5. [Austin Woolrych]
  6. Woolrych, Britain in Revolution, p. 381.
  7. [:s:Chillenden, Edmund (DNB00)]