This is my personal genealogy hobby site. The data contained here has been gathered through 20 years of genealogy. Some of it is my research, much of it has been shared with me.

DISCLAIMER: This is my speculative data. I've verified very little of it. Use it for hints and pointers, but do your own research!

It costs me over $50 (US) a month to have this data on the web, so your support would be appreciated! If clicking on advertisments is not your thing, please consider a donation!

Rob Salzman
e-familytree.net
PO Box 25335
Beaverton, OR
97298-0335

sponsored links

This data changes often. If you've arrived from a search engine, it's could be that you don't see the information you were looking for. The current index for e-familytree.net can be found here. You can email me at genealogy at e-familytree.net for updates, removal requests, etc.

Family Sheet

HUSBAND
Name: Robert Clive Note Born: Married: Died: Father: Ambrose Clive Mother: Alice Townshend
WIFE
Name: Mary Abyn Born: Died: Father: Edward Abyn Sir Mother: Unknown
CHILDREN
Name: George Clive Born: Died: Wife: Mary Husbands
NOTES
1). 1 UPDA 2 PLAC Member in the Long Parliament 2 SOUR S32 LONG PARLIAMENT refers to a session of the English Parliament that lasted without a break from 1640 to 1653. It was not formally dismissed until 1660. The Long Parliament opened with a direct conflict with King Charles I. It met during the English CivilWar in the 1640 s, ordered the king s execution in 1649, and tried to rule in the uneasy years after the war. It was finally dismissed to make way for a new Parliament under King Charles II. In its early sessions, the Long Parliament made many lasting political reforms. It abolished courts controlled by the monarchy, including the Star Chamber and the Court of Requests. It declared that the king could neither collect money nor dismiss Parliament without its consent. It also brought about the execution of Charles s chief advisers, the Earl of Strafford and Archbishop William Laud. On religious questions, the Long Parliament was seriously divided. Presbyterians opposed Puritans, and neither side would budge. Civil war began when the king s supporters withdrew from Parliament, and the House of Commons soon became divided into Presbyterians, who were moderate supporters of the king, and Independents, who favored strong controls on the crown. The army, under Oliver Cromwell, supported the Independents. In 1648, an army detachment under Colonel Thomas Pride kept the Presbyterian majority from entering the House. Pride s Purge resulted in what was called the Rump Parliament, which had less than a fifth of the usual number of members. This remainder of the Long Parliament carried out the execution of Charles I, and it made England a commonwealth. Cromwell, the real power in the commonwealth, was unable to work with the Rump Parliament, and he suppressed it in 1653. However, he could not replace the Rump Parliament with an efficient legislature. In 1660, two years after Cromwell s death, political chaos in England forced the army under General George Monk to intervene. Monk persuaded a newly elected Parliament to invite Prince Charles Stuart to become King Charles II. Charles accepted, and the monarchy was restored.

						

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
e-familytree.net is a welldesigned.net website