Nathaniel Barnardiston
Sir Nathaniel Barnardiston (1588 – 25 July 1653) of Kedington, alias Ketton, Suffolk was an English (East Anglian) landowner, magistrate and senior representative of a long-established knightly family, one of the wealthiest in Suffolk, who sat in the House of Commons for Sudbury twice and for the Shire three times between 1625 and 1648. Of Parliamentarian sympathies, he was considered an exceptional example (for one of his class, or of any class) of Christian piety in personal character and in the management of his household and of the parishes under his patronage, as much as in his rectitude and even-handedness in his public service, and in his loyalty to his nation despite his opposition to the policies of King Charles I. John Burke remarked that he was "esteemed the greatest ornament of
Barnardiston (surname)Barnardiston baronetsBlois familyElizabeth Brooke (writer)High Sheriff of SuffolkList of MPs elected to the English parliament in 1625List of MPs elected to the English parliament in 1626List of MPs elected to the English parliament in 1628List of MPs elected to the English parliament in April 1640List of MPs elected to the English parliament in November 1640List of MPs in the English parliament in 1645 and afterList of MPs not excluded from the English parliament in 1648Philip Parker (of Erwarton)Robert Brooke (MP for Dunwich)Robert NauntonSamuel FaircloughSir Charles Blois, 1st BaronetSir Robert Crane, 1st BaronetSir Samuel Barnardiston, 1st BaronetSir Thomas Barnardiston, 1st BaronetSir William Spring, 1st BaronetStephen SoameSudbury (UK Parliament constituency)Suffolk (UK Parliament constituency)William PooleyWilliam Spring of Pakenham
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Nathaniel Barnardiston
Sir Nathaniel Barnardiston (1588 – 25 July 1653) of Kedington, alias Ketton, Suffolk was an English (East Anglian) landowner, magistrate and senior representative of a long-established knightly family, one of the wealthiest in Suffolk, who sat in the House of Commons for Sudbury twice and for the Shire three times between 1625 and 1648. Of Parliamentarian sympathies, he was considered an exceptional example (for one of his class, or of any class) of Christian piety in personal character and in the management of his household and of the parishes under his patronage, as much as in his rectitude and even-handedness in his public service, and in his loyalty to his nation despite his opposition to the policies of King Charles I. John Burke remarked that he was "esteemed the greatest ornament of
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Sir Nathaniel Barnardiston (15 ...... figure in Civil War Suffolk".
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Not represented in the Rump Parliament
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Parliament suspended until 1640
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Member of Parliament for Suffolk
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Sir Nathaniel Barnardiston (15 ...... eemed the greatest ornament of
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Nathaniel Barnardiston
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