Everything about Marmaduke Langdale totally explained
Marmaduke Langdale (
1598 at
Pighall –
August 5,
1661 at
Holme-on-Spalding-Moor ) was married to Ann Howard, a granddaughter of
Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk. He held the post of
High Sheriff of Yorkshire before the
English Civil War. Always a gaunt, austere and uncompromising character, he was one of those who had refused to pay ship money to the crown, but after gaining extensive military experience in Europe during the 1630s, he joined the
Royalist cause at the outbreak of the war.
He commanded a brigade of horse in the army of the
Marquess of Newcastle. After the Royalist defeat at the
Battle of Marston Moor, he took command of the surviving cavalry from Newcastle's army. Known as the "Northern Horse", these die-hards were largely impoverished sons of gentry, and they became known for touchiness and lack of discipline.
In February
1645, Langdale led a raid into Yorkshire, defeating Major-General
John Lambert at
battle of Wentbridge and relieving
Pontefract Castle. The lack of discipline which led to excesive rape a pillage, damaged the Royalist cause in Yorkshire. The respite the raid gained for Pontefract was only temporary because without infantry support, Langdale was forced to retire and when he did so Pontefract was again besieged.
In May, Langdale and Northern Horse formed the left wing of the main Royal army at the
Battle of Naseby. They faced
Oliver Cromwell's more numerous and better disciplined troopers, and were outflanked and driven from the field by weight of numbers.
After Naseby
King Charles tried to march towards Scotland to join forces with
Montrose. Langdale's men were part of the scratch army which attempted to lift the
siege of Chester. In the confused
Battle of Rowton Heath, they were defeated by Parliamentarian cavalry under Major-General
Sydnam Poyntz.
Although the King turned back, Langdale and his men attempted to continue to Scotland under the command of courtier
Lord Digby. During October Digby's forces fought a number of engagements, finally being defeated on
Carlisle Sands by Sir
John Brown on
October 24. Digby and Langsdale escaped to the relative safety of the
Isle of Man which was held for the Royalists by the
Earl of Derby. From Man they made their way to France.
In
1648, Langdale was among those who joined the Royalist side in the
Second English Civil War and who supported the Scottish
Engager invasion of England. Langdale organised the Royalist cause in
Cumberland and seized
Berwick. He was engaged by Major-General
John Lambert who's cavalry came into contact with his forces near
Carlisle. Instead of fighting a pitched battle Lambert slowly fell back towards
Bowes and
Barnard Castle, fighting small rearguard actions to annoy Langdale and gain time. Langdale didn't follow him into the mountains, but occupied himself in gathering recruits and supplies of material and food for the Scots. Lambert, reinforced from the Midlands, reappeared early in June and drove Langdale back to Carlisle with his work half finished. Langdale's English Royalists joined the Scottish army and placed themselves under its commander, the
Duke of Hamilton. They accompanied him on his march through Lancashire. On
17 August 1648, Langdale's force was guarding the road into Preston while the main body of the army crossed the
River Ribble, when Cromwell launched an unexpected attack, initiating the three-day running
Battle of Preston (1648). Langdale's Royalists fought for some hours without support and was eventually overwhelmed.
Langdale managed to escape from Preston but was captured a few days later in
Nottingham and imprisoned in
Nottingham Castle. In October 1648 he managed to escaped and make his way to the European Continent. This was lucky escape for him, as the Parliamentarians wasn't inclined towards mercy and executed a number of prominent Royalists including the Duke of Hamilton and Langdale's name was included on Parliament's list of Royalists excluded from pardon for their roles in the wars.
At
Charles II's court-in-exile, Langdale advocated an alliance with the Spanish as the best means of regaining the throne. Like Digby, he became a convert to
Roman Catholicism. At the
Restoration he was created Baron Langdale.
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