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{{Use British English|date=August 2017}}
'''Sir Robert Tichborne''' (ca. 1610–1682),<ref>His name was spelt '''Robert Titchbourn''' in the [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=13968#s13 Proclamation for apprehending the late King's Judges] (4 June 1660) and as '''Robert Titchborne''' in [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=14215#s8 House of Lords Journal Volume 11] ([[7 February]] 1662)</ref> was an English soldier who fought in the [[English Civil War]] and a [[regicide]] of [[Charles I of England|Charles I]].<ref>David Plant, [http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/biog/tichborne.htm Robert Tichborne, Regicide, c.1610-82], the British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website</ref>
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2024}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| honorific_prefix =
| name = Sir Robert Tichborne
| image = File:Robert Tichborne.jpg
| caption = Engraving from late 18th to early 19th century
| alt =
| office = [[Sheriff of the City of London]]
| term_start = 1651
| term_end = 1651
| alongside = [[Richard Chiverton]]
| predecessor =
| successor =
| office2 = [[Lord Mayor of London]]
| term_start2 = October 1656
| term_end2 = October 1657
| predecessor2 = [[John Dethick]]
| successor2 = Richard Chiverton
| birth_date = c. 1604
| birth_place =
| death_date = 1682
| death_place = [[Tower of London]]
| known_for = [[List of regicides of Charles I|Regicide of Charles I]]
}}

'''Sir Robert Tichborne''' ({{circa|1604|1682}}) was an English merchant, politician, author and military officer who served as [[Lord Mayor of London]] in 1656. He was a [[regicide]] of [[Charles I of England|Charles I]].<ref>David Plant, [http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/biog/tichborne.htm Robert Tichborne, Regicide, c.1610–82], the British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website</ref><ref>His name was spelt '''Robert Titchbourn''' in the [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=13968#s13 Proclamation for apprehending the late King's Judges] (4 June 1660) and as '''Robert Titchborne''' in [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=14215#s8 House of Lords Journal Volume 11] (7 February 1662)</ref>

Before the [[English Civil War]], he was a linen-draper by trade. In 1643 he was a captain in the London trained bands. He was [[Lieutenant of the Tower of London]] in 1647. Tichborne was an extreme republican and independent who [[Trial of Charles I|signed Charles I's death-warrant]]. He was appointed as a commissioner to settle government of Scotland in 1651, following the [[Tender of Union]]. He sat for London in the Little parliament and in Cromwell's House of Lords. He was [[Knights, baronets and peers of the Protectorate|knighted in 1655]], and made [[lord mayor of London]] in 1656.

Tichborne was one of the conservators of liberty set up by the [[New Model Army]] in 1659. He was sentenced to death after the [[Stuart Restoration]], and imprisoned for life in the [[Tower of London]]. Tichborne was also the author of two religious works.<ref>[[Sidney Lee|Lee, Sidney]] (1903), [[Dictionary of National Biography]] [https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofnati00leesuoft Index and Epitome], [https://archive.org/stream/dictionaryofnati00leesuoft#page/1300/mode/1up p. 1300] (also main entry lvi 377)</ref> Burke's Peerage, page 1436. Berry, Genealogies of Hants, Page 28. Berry, Genealogies of Kent, page 361. Visitation of London, Vol. 2, page 289.

==Early life and origins==
Robert Tichborne (1599–1682) was related to the Tichbornes of Tichborne, near Winchester, Hants. The precise relation is not clear but both lines were descended from Sir John Tichborne (died 1498) Knight and Sheriff of Hampshire in 1488 and 1496, and (married c. 1465) Margaret Martin, daughter and heiress of Richard Martin of Edenbridge. The line for [[Chidiock Tichborne]] is also descended from this couple.

The Harleian MS 5800 in the British Library has a handwritten pedigree for the Tichbornes, written 1658 for Robert Tichborne just after he had been Lord Mayor of London (1656–57) and for his elevation to the Lords by Cromwell. Robert's coat of arms uses the Tichborne coat (vair a chief or) but with a crescent for difference, denoting a second son.

The descent is not clear for the first two generations – and does not fully match with other contemporary Tichborne genealogies. Working backwards and using additional sources as well, this gives Robert Tichborne's ancestry as:

# son of Robert Tichborne (1567–) and Johanna Banckes, daughter of Thomas Banckes.(''Visitation of London'', 1633–4, ii. 289). This Robert's brother was Richard Tichborne of Crippenden, Cowden, Kent – a wealthy Iron Foundry owner.
# who was second son of John Tichborne (after 1549–1620) of Cowden and Dorothy Chaloner (born 1542), daughter of Thomas Chaloner of Lyndfield and Alice Shirley, daughter of Sir Richard Shirley of Wiston. This John's brother Morris, married Jane Chaloner, sister of Dorothy.
# who was son of John Tichborne (d.&nbsp;1556) and Alice Wolffe of Ashington, possibly daughter of Edward Wolffe of manor of Ashinton, W Sussex)
# who was second son of Maurice/Morris Tichborne (died before 1508) and Margaret Courthope (died 1533), daughter of William Courthope of Heath.


This Morris Tichborne was either a younger son of John Tichborne and Margaret Martin – or grandson, with two generations in quick succession, through Thomas Tichborne (born between 1470–1477). This remains a genealogical uncertainty.
Before the war he was a linen-draper by trade. In 1643 he was a captain in the London trained bands. He was lieutenant of the Tower of London in 1647. He was an extreme republican and independent who [[trial of Charles I|signed Charles I's death-warrant]]. He was appointed as a commissioner to settle government of Scotland in 1651. He sat for London in the Little parliament and in Cromwell's House of Lords. He was knighted in 1655, and made [[lord mayor of London]] in 1656. He was one of the conservators of liberty set up by the army, 1659. He was sentenced to death at the [[restoration (England)|restoration]] of the monarchy, and imprisoned for life. He was author of two religious works.<ref>[[Sidney Lee|Lee, Sidney]] (1903), [[Dictionary of National Biography]] [http://www.archive.org/details/dictionaryofnati00leesuoft Index and Epitome], [http://www.archive.org/stream/dictionaryofnati00leesuoft#page/1300/mode/1up p. 1300] (also main entry lvi 377)</ref>


Early in life Robert Tichborne (1599–1682) was a linen-draper in London "by the little Conduit in Cheapside".<ref name=unknown-quote>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} gives the quotation, but does not cite his source</ref> Burke's Peerage, page 1436. Berry, Genealogies of Hants, page 28. Berry, Genealogies of Kent, page 361. Visitation of London, Vol. 2, page 289.
==Early life==
Robert Tichborne was grandson of John Tichborne of Cowden, Kent, and son of Robert Tichborne
of the ward of Farringdon Within, London, by Joan, daughter of Thomas Bankes (''Visitation of London'', 1633-4, ii. 289). Early in life he was a linen-draper in London "by the little Conduit in Cheapside".<ref name=unknown-quote>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} gives the quotation, but does not cite his source</ref>


==Civil war==
==Civil war==
On the outbreak of the English Civil War Tichborne took up arms for Parliament, and was in 1643 a captain in the [[Yellow Regiment]] of the London [[trained band]]s.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: Dillon, ''List of the Officers of the London Trained Bands'', 1890, p. 8.</ref> In February of that year he was one of a deputation from the city who presented a petition to the House of Commons against the [[Treaty of Oxford|proposed treaty]] with the king.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: ''Report on the Duke of Portland's'' MSS. i. 95.</ref> According to a contemporary critic, he did not distinguish himself as a soldier, and was indeed "fitter for a warm bed than to command a regiment";<ref name=unknown-quote/> but he was a colonel in 1647, and was appointed by [[Lord Fairfax|Fairfax]] in August of that year lieutenant of the Tower.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: Rushworth, vii. 761; ''Clarke Papers'', i. 396.</ref> Tichborne political views were advanced, as his speeches in the [[Army Council (1647)|council of the army]] in 1647 prove; and in religion his printed works show that he was an extreme independent.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: Rushworth, i. 396, 404, ii. 256, 258, 262.</ref>
On the outbreak of the English Civil War Tichborne took up arms for Parliament, and was in 1643 a captain in the [[Yellow Regiment]] of the London [[trained band]]s.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: Dillon, ''List of the Officers of the London Trained Bands'', 1890, p. 8.</ref> In February of that year he was one of a deputation from the city who presented a petition to the House of Commons against the [[Treaty of Oxford|proposed treaty]] with the king.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: ''Report on the Duke of Portland's'' MSS. i. 95.</ref> According to a contemporary critic, he did not distinguish himself as a soldier, and was indeed "fitter for a warm bed than to command a regiment";<ref name=unknown-quote/> but he was a colonel in 1647, and was appointed by [[Lord Fairfax|Fairfax]] in August of that year lieutenant of the Tower.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: Rushworth, vii. 761; ''Clarke Papers'', i. 396.</ref> Tichborne's political views were advanced, as his speeches in the [[Army Council (1647)|council of the army]] in 1647 prove; and in religion his printed works show that he was an extreme independent.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: Rushworth, i. 396, 404, ii. 256, 258, 262.</ref>


==Regicide==
==Regicide==
On 15 January 1649 Tichborne presented to the House of Commons a petition from London in favour of the execution of the king and the establishment of a republic.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: Ludlow, ''Memoirs'', i. 212; ''The humble petition of the Commons of the City of London ... together with Col. Tichborne's Speech'', 1648, [[4to]].</ref> Tichborne was appointed one of the king's judges, signed the death-warrant, and attended every meeting of the court excepting two.{{sfn|Firth|1903|p=377}}
On 15 January 1649 Tichborne presented to the House of Commons a petition from London in favour of the execution of the king and the establishment of a republic.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: Ludlow, ''Memoirs'', i. 212; ''The humble petition of the Commons of the City of London ... together with Col. Tichborne's Speech'', 1648, [[4to]].</ref> Tichborne was appointed one of the king's judges, signed the death-warrant, and attended every meeting of the court excepting two.{{sfn|Firth|1898|p=377}}


==Commonwealth==
==Commonwealth==
On 23 October 1651 parliament selected Tichborne as one of the eight commissioners to settle the government of Scotland and prepare the way for its union with England.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: ''Commons' Journals'', vii. 30.</ref> On 14 May 1652 he received the thanks of the English Parliament for his services in Scotland.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: ''Commons' Journals''. vii. 132.</ref> In 1650 he was one of the [[Sheriff of London|sheriffs of London]].{{sfn|Firth|1903|p=377}}
On 23 October 1651 parliament selected Tichborne as one of the eight commissioners to settle the government of Scotland and prepare the way for its union with England.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: ''Commons' Journals'', vii. 30.</ref> On 14 May 1652 he received the thanks of the English Parliament for his services in Scotland.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: ''Commons' Journals''. vii. 132.</ref> In 1650 he was one of the [[Sheriff of London|sheriffs of London]].{{sfn|Firth|1898|p=377}}


==Protectorate==
==Protectorate==
Tichborne was one of the representatives of London in the [[Little Parliament]], and was a member of the two [[Council of State (England)|councils of state]] elected by it.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: ''Commons' Journals''.</ref>
Tichborne was one of the representatives of London in the [[Little Parliament]], and was a member of the two [[Council of State (England)|councils of state]] elected by it.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: ''Commons' Journals''.</ref>


In 1651 Tichborne was a [[Sheriff of the City of London]]. He is recorded as 'Alderman Tichburne' in attendance at the [[Whitehall Conference]] in 1655, representing the interests of merchants in discussing the [[Resettlement of the Jews in England|readmission of Jews into England]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://eebo.chadwyck.com/search/full_rec?SOURCE=pgimages.cfg&ACTION=ByID&ID=V95268&PAGENO=7|title=Early English Books Online - EEBO|website=eebo.chadwyck.com|access-date=31 January 2020}}</ref> The merchants were broadly opposed to readmission.
In 1651 Tichborne was a [[Sheriff of the City of London]] and in 1656 was elected [[Lord Mayor of London]].<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: ''London's Triumph, or the solemn reception of Robert Tichborne, Lord Mayor'', Oct. 29, 1656, 4to.</ref> The Lord Protector [[Oliver Cromwell]] knighted him on 15 December 1655 and summoned him to [[Cromwell's Other House|his House of Lords]] in December 1657. On 17 April 1658 Tichborne, who was colonel of the Yellow Regiment and a member of the [[London Militia Committee]], presented an address from the London trained bands to the Lord Protector (''Mercurius Politicus'', 15–22 April 1658).{{sfn|Firth|1903|p=377}}


In 1656, he was elected [[Lord Mayor of London]].<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: ''London's Triumph, or the solemn reception of Robert Tichborne, Lord Mayor'', 29 October 1656, 4to.</ref> The Lord Protector [[Oliver Cromwell]] knighted him on 15 December 1655 and summoned him to [[Cromwell's Other House|his House of Lords]] in December 1657. On 17 April 1658 Tichborne, who was colonel of the Yellow Regiment and a member of the [[London Militia Committee]], presented an address from the London trained bands to the Lord Protector (''[[Mercurius Politicus (1650)|Mercurius Politicus]]'', 15–22 April 1658).{{sfn|Firth|1898|p=377}}
An unflattering character of Tichborne was given in "A Second Narrative of the late Parliament", 1658.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=378}} Cites: ''Harl. Miscell''. iii. 484.</ref>

An unflattering character of Tichborne was given in "A Second Narrative of the late Parliament", 1658.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=378}} Cites: ''Harl. Miscell''. iii. 484.</ref>


==Second Commonwealth==
==Second Commonwealth==
After the fall of the house of Cromwell, Tichborne, who was never a member of the [[Long Parliament]], became a person of less importance; but in October 1659, when the army under [[John Lambert (General)|John Lambert]] expelled the parliament, he was appointed one of the [[English Committee of Safety#1659|committee of safety]] which the army set up, and he was also one of the twenty-one "conservators of liberty" named by them in December following.{{sfn|Firth|1903|p=377}} [[Edmund Ludlow]] wrathfully observes that he "had lately moved to set up [[Richard Cromwell]] again".<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: Ludlow ''Memoirs'', ii. 131, 149, 173, ed. 1894.</ref> The restoration of the Long Parliament at the end of the month put an end to his political career. On 20 April 1660 a warrant was issued for the arrest of Tichborne and Alderman John Ireton, who were regarded as the two pillars of the [[Good Old Cause]] in the [[City of London]]. They were released four days later on bail.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: ''Cal. State Papers'', Dom. 1659-60, p. 574.</ref>
After the fall of the house of Cromwell, Tichborne, who was never a member of the [[Long Parliament]], became a person of less importance; but in October 1659, when the army under [[John Lambert (General)|John Lambert]] expelled the parliament, he was appointed one of the [[English Committee of Safety#1659|committee of safety]] which the army set up, and he was also one of the twenty-one "conservators of liberty" named by them in December following.{{sfn|Firth|1898|p=377}} [[Edmund Ludlow]] wrathfully observes that he "had lately moved to set up [[Richard Cromwell]] again".<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: Ludlow ''Memoirs'', ii. 131, 149, 173, ed. 1894.</ref> The restoration of the Long Parliament at the end of the month put an end to his political career. On 20 April 1660 a warrant was issued for the arrest of Tichborne and Alderman John Ireton, who were regarded as the two pillars of the [[Good Old Cause]] in the [[City of London]]. They were released four days later on bail.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: ''Cal. State Papers'', Dom. 1659–60, p. 574.</ref>


==Restoration==
==Restoration==
At the Restoration Tichborne surrendered in obedience to the king's proclamation (16 June), though he showed considerable vacillation, withdrawing himself from the custody of the sergeant-at-arms, and then giving himself up once more,<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: Ludlow, ii. 294; and Kennet, ''Register'', p. 181.</ref> and Royalist pamphlets exulted over his imprisonment.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=377}} Cites: (''The two City Jugglers, Tichborn and Ireton: a dialogue'', 1660, 4to; ''The pretended saint and the profane libertine well met in prison: or a dialogue between Robert Tichborne and [[Henry Marten]]'', 1660.</ref>
At the Restoration Tichborne surrendered in obedience to the king's proclamation (16 June), though he showed considerable vacillation, withdrawing himself from the custody of the sergeant-at-arms, and then giving himself up once more,<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: Ludlow, ii. 294; and Kennet, ''Register'', p. 181.</ref> and Royalist pamphlets exulted over his imprisonment.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=377}} Cites: (''The two City Jugglers, Tichborn and Ireton: a dialogue'', 1660, 4to; ''The pretended saint and the profane libertine well met in prison: or a dialogue between Robert Tichborne and [[Henry Marten (regicide)|Henry Marten]]'', 1660.</ref>


==Trial==
==Trial==
Tichborne was tried at the sessions house in the Old Bailey on 10 Oct. 1660, and pleaded not guilty, but admitted the fact for which he was indicted, only asserting his ignorance and repentance. "It was my unhappiness to be called to so sad a work when I had so few years over my head; a person neither bred up in the laws, nor in parliaments where laws are made. ... Had I known that then which I do now, I would have chosen a red hot oven to have gone into as soon as that meeting".<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=378}} gives the quotation, but does not cite his source</ref> He was found guilty of high treason, the considerable property he had acquired during the civil war and the confiscation of the crown lands that he had purchased were sequestrated,<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=378}} Cites: (''Commons' Journals''. viii. 73; ''Cal. State Papers'', Dom. 1660–1,78, 344, 558.</ref> and he was sentenced to death.{{sfn|Firth|1903|p=378}}
Tichborne was tried at the sessions house in the Old Bailey on 10 October 1660, and pleaded not guilty, but admitted the fact for which he was indicted, only asserting his ignorance and repentance. "It was my unhappiness to be called to so sad a work when I had so few years over my head; a person neither bred up in the laws, nor in parliaments where laws are made. ... Had I known that then which I do now, I would have chosen a red hot oven to have gone into as soon as that meeting".<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=378}} gives the quotation, but does not cite his source</ref> He was found guilty of high treason, the considerable property he had acquired during the civil war and the confiscation of the crown lands that he had purchased were sequestrated,<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=378}} Cites: (''Commons' Journals''. viii. 73; ''Cal. State Papers'', Dom. 1660–1,78, 344, 558.</ref> and he was sentenced to death.{{sfn|Firth|1898|p=378}}


The sentence of death was not carried out immediately because under terms of the [[Indemnity and Oblivion Act|act of Indemnity]] Tichborne was one of the nineteen regicides who, having surrendered themselves, were, if condemned, not to be executed save by a special act of parliament. It was also alleged in his favour that he had saved the lives of various royalists during the late government.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=378}} Cites: ''Hist''. MSS. ''Comm''. 5th Rep. p. 169; cf. Thurloe, iii. 381.</ref> A bill for the trial of Tichborne and his companions passed the House of Commons in January 1662, but was dropped in the Lords after Tichborne had been brought to the bar of the upper house and heard in his defence<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=378}} Cites: ''Lords' Journals'', xi. 372, 380.</ref>
The sentence of death was not carried out immediately because under terms of the [[Indemnity and Oblivion Act|act of Indemnity]] Tichborne was one of the nineteen regicides who, having surrendered themselves, were, if condemned, not to be executed save by a special act of parliament. It was also alleged in his favour that he had saved the lives of various royalists during the late government.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=378}} Cites: ''Hist''. MSS. ''Comm''. 5th Rep. p. 169; cf. Thurloe, iii. 381.</ref> A bill for the trial of Tichborne and his companions passed the House of Commons in January 1662, but was dropped in the Lords after Tichborne had been brought to the bar of the upper house and heard in his defence.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=378}} Cites: ''Lords' Journals'', xi. 372, 380.</ref>


==Life imprisonment==
==Life imprisonment==
In July 1662 Tichborne was removed, to [[Holy Island]], where he fell very ill, and was on his wife's petition transferred to [[Dover Castle]]. His wife and children were allowed to live with him during his imprisonment at Dover.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=378}} Cites: ''Papers of the Duke of Leeds'', p. 4; ''Cal. State Papers'', Dom. 1663-4, pp. 289, 505, 510, 592.</ref> He remained a prisoner for the rest of his life, and died in the Tower of London in July 1682.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1903|p=378}} Cites: Luttrell, ''Diary'', i. 204.</ref>
In July 1662 Tichborne was removed to [[Lindisfarne|Holy Island]], where he fell very ill, and was on his wife's petition transferred to [[Dover Castle]]. His wife and children were allowed to live with him during his imprisonment at Dover.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=378}} Cites: ''Papers of the Duke of Leeds'', p. 4; ''Cal. State Papers'', Dom. 1663-4, pp. 289, 505, 510, 592.</ref> He remained a prisoner for the rest of his life, and died in the Tower of London in July 1682.<ref>{{harvnb|Firth|1898|p=378}} Cites: Luttrell, ''Diary'', i. 204.</ref>


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
Tichborne was the author of two religious works:{{sfn|Firth|1903|p=378}}
Tichborne was the author of two religious works:{{sfn|Firth|1898|p=378}}
*''A Cluster of Canaan's Grapes: being several experimented truths'', 1649, 4to.
*''A Cluster of Canaan's Grapes: being several experimented truths'', 1649, 4to.
*''The Rest of Faith'', 1649, 4to.; this is dedicated to Cromwell.
*''The Rest of Faith'', 1649, 4to.; this is dedicated to Cromwell.
Line 46: Line 88:


==References==
==References==
*{{Cite DNB |last=Firth |first=Charles Harding |wstitle=Tichborne, Robert |volume=56 |pages=377, 378}} Endnotes:
*{{citation|first=Charles Harding |last=Firth|year=1903|url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:Dictionary_of_National_Biography_volume_56.djvu/383|chapter=TICHBORNE, ROBERT |title=Dictionary of National Biography Index and Epitome|volume=56|pages=377, 378}} Along with the cited sources, these sources were used:
**{{citation|last=Noble|title=Lives of the Regicides|volume=ii |pages=272}}
**{{citation |last=Noble |first=Mark |authorlink=Mark Noble (biographer) |title=Lives of the Regicides |volume=ii |pages=272}}
**{{citation|last=Noble|title=House of Cromwell|volume=i |page=416}}
**{{citation |last=Noble |first=Mark |title=House of Cromwell |volume=i |page=416}}


==External links==
;Attribution
* [http://www.supralapsarian.com/Biographies/Robert_Tichborne_Bio.html''Robert Tichborne Biographical Information'']

'''Attribution'''
*{{DNBIE|title=Tichborne, Robert|page=1300}}
*{{DNBIE|title=Tichborne, Robert|page=1300}}
*{{DNB|wstitle=Tichborne, Robert|first=Charles Harding |last=Firth|volume=56|pages=377,378}}
*{{DNB |ref={{harvid|Wikisource|1898}}<!-- This fixes duplicate target errors --> |last=Firth |first=Charles Harding |wstitle=Tichborne, Robert |volume=56 |pages=377,378}}

{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Tichborne, Robert
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| DATE OF BIRTH =
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 1682
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tichborne, Robert}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tichborne, Robert}}
[[Category:1610s births]]
[[Category:1610s births]]
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[[Category:Regicides of Charles I]]
[[Category:Regicides of Charles I]]
[[Category:Sheriffs of the City of London]]
[[Category:Sheriffs of the City of London]]
[[Category:Lord Mayors of London]]
[[Category:17th-century lord mayors of London]]
[[Category:Lieutenants of the Tower of London]]
[[Category:English politicians convicted of crimes]]
[[Category:Members of Cromwell's Other House]]

Latest revision as of 23:22, 25 November 2024

Sir Robert Tichborne
Engraving from late 18th to early 19th century
Sheriff of the City of London
In office
1651–1651
Serving with Richard Chiverton
Lord Mayor of London
In office
October 1656 – October 1657
Preceded byJohn Dethick
Succeeded byRichard Chiverton
Personal details
Bornc. 1604
Died1682
Tower of London
Known forRegicide of Charles I

Sir Robert Tichborne (c. 1604 – c. 1682) was an English merchant, politician, author and military officer who served as Lord Mayor of London in 1656. He was a regicide of Charles I.[1][2]

Before the English Civil War, he was a linen-draper by trade. In 1643 he was a captain in the London trained bands. He was Lieutenant of the Tower of London in 1647. Tichborne was an extreme republican and independent who signed Charles I's death-warrant. He was appointed as a commissioner to settle government of Scotland in 1651, following the Tender of Union. He sat for London in the Little parliament and in Cromwell's House of Lords. He was knighted in 1655, and made lord mayor of London in 1656.

Tichborne was one of the conservators of liberty set up by the New Model Army in 1659. He was sentenced to death after the Stuart Restoration, and imprisoned for life in the Tower of London. Tichborne was also the author of two religious works.[3] Burke's Peerage, page 1436. Berry, Genealogies of Hants, Page 28. Berry, Genealogies of Kent, page 361. Visitation of London, Vol. 2, page 289.

Early life and origins

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Robert Tichborne (1599–1682) was related to the Tichbornes of Tichborne, near Winchester, Hants. The precise relation is not clear but both lines were descended from Sir John Tichborne (died 1498) Knight and Sheriff of Hampshire in 1488 and 1496, and (married c. 1465) Margaret Martin, daughter and heiress of Richard Martin of Edenbridge. The line for Chidiock Tichborne is also descended from this couple.

The Harleian MS 5800 in the British Library has a handwritten pedigree for the Tichbornes, written 1658 for Robert Tichborne just after he had been Lord Mayor of London (1656–57) and for his elevation to the Lords by Cromwell. Robert's coat of arms uses the Tichborne coat (vair a chief or) but with a crescent for difference, denoting a second son.

The descent is not clear for the first two generations – and does not fully match with other contemporary Tichborne genealogies. Working backwards and using additional sources as well, this gives Robert Tichborne's ancestry as:

  1. son of Robert Tichborne (1567–) and Johanna Banckes, daughter of Thomas Banckes.(Visitation of London, 1633–4, ii. 289). This Robert's brother was Richard Tichborne of Crippenden, Cowden, Kent – a wealthy Iron Foundry owner.
  2. who was second son of John Tichborne (after 1549–1620) of Cowden and Dorothy Chaloner (born 1542), daughter of Thomas Chaloner of Lyndfield and Alice Shirley, daughter of Sir Richard Shirley of Wiston. This John's brother Morris, married Jane Chaloner, sister of Dorothy.
  3. who was son of John Tichborne (d. 1556) and Alice Wolffe of Ashington, possibly daughter of Edward Wolffe of manor of Ashinton, W Sussex)
  4. who was second son of Maurice/Morris Tichborne (died before 1508) and Margaret Courthope (died 1533), daughter of William Courthope of Heath.

This Morris Tichborne was either a younger son of John Tichborne and Margaret Martin – or grandson, with two generations in quick succession, through Thomas Tichborne (born between 1470–1477). This remains a genealogical uncertainty.

Early in life Robert Tichborne (1599–1682) was a linen-draper in London "by the little Conduit in Cheapside".[4] Burke's Peerage, page 1436. Berry, Genealogies of Hants, page 28. Berry, Genealogies of Kent, page 361. Visitation of London, Vol. 2, page 289.

Civil war

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On the outbreak of the English Civil War Tichborne took up arms for Parliament, and was in 1643 a captain in the Yellow Regiment of the London trained bands.[5] In February of that year he was one of a deputation from the city who presented a petition to the House of Commons against the proposed treaty with the king.[6] According to a contemporary critic, he did not distinguish himself as a soldier, and was indeed "fitter for a warm bed than to command a regiment";[4] but he was a colonel in 1647, and was appointed by Fairfax in August of that year lieutenant of the Tower.[7] Tichborne's political views were advanced, as his speeches in the council of the army in 1647 prove; and in religion his printed works show that he was an extreme independent.[8]

Regicide

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On 15 January 1649 Tichborne presented to the House of Commons a petition from London in favour of the execution of the king and the establishment of a republic.[9] Tichborne was appointed one of the king's judges, signed the death-warrant, and attended every meeting of the court excepting two.[10]

Commonwealth

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On 23 October 1651 parliament selected Tichborne as one of the eight commissioners to settle the government of Scotland and prepare the way for its union with England.[11] On 14 May 1652 he received the thanks of the English Parliament for his services in Scotland.[12] In 1650 he was one of the sheriffs of London.[10]

Protectorate

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Tichborne was one of the representatives of London in the Little Parliament, and was a member of the two councils of state elected by it.[13]

In 1651 Tichborne was a Sheriff of the City of London. He is recorded as 'Alderman Tichburne' in attendance at the Whitehall Conference in 1655, representing the interests of merchants in discussing the readmission of Jews into England.[14] The merchants were broadly opposed to readmission.

In 1656, he was elected Lord Mayor of London.[15] The Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell knighted him on 15 December 1655 and summoned him to his House of Lords in December 1657. On 17 April 1658 Tichborne, who was colonel of the Yellow Regiment and a member of the London Militia Committee, presented an address from the London trained bands to the Lord Protector (Mercurius Politicus, 15–22 April 1658).[10]

An unflattering character of Tichborne was given in "A Second Narrative of the late Parliament", 1658.[16]

Second Commonwealth

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After the fall of the house of Cromwell, Tichborne, who was never a member of the Long Parliament, became a person of less importance; but in October 1659, when the army under John Lambert expelled the parliament, he was appointed one of the committee of safety which the army set up, and he was also one of the twenty-one "conservators of liberty" named by them in December following.[10] Edmund Ludlow wrathfully observes that he "had lately moved to set up Richard Cromwell again".[17] The restoration of the Long Parliament at the end of the month put an end to his political career. On 20 April 1660 a warrant was issued for the arrest of Tichborne and Alderman John Ireton, who were regarded as the two pillars of the Good Old Cause in the City of London. They were released four days later on bail.[18]

Restoration

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At the Restoration Tichborne surrendered in obedience to the king's proclamation (16 June), though he showed considerable vacillation, withdrawing himself from the custody of the sergeant-at-arms, and then giving himself up once more,[19] and Royalist pamphlets exulted over his imprisonment.[20]

Trial

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Tichborne was tried at the sessions house in the Old Bailey on 10 October 1660, and pleaded not guilty, but admitted the fact for which he was indicted, only asserting his ignorance and repentance. "It was my unhappiness to be called to so sad a work when I had so few years over my head; a person neither bred up in the laws, nor in parliaments where laws are made. ... Had I known that then which I do now, I would have chosen a red hot oven to have gone into as soon as that meeting".[21] He was found guilty of high treason, the considerable property he had acquired during the civil war and the confiscation of the crown lands that he had purchased were sequestrated,[22] and he was sentenced to death.[23]

The sentence of death was not carried out immediately because under terms of the act of Indemnity Tichborne was one of the nineteen regicides who, having surrendered themselves, were, if condemned, not to be executed save by a special act of parliament. It was also alleged in his favour that he had saved the lives of various royalists during the late government.[24] A bill for the trial of Tichborne and his companions passed the House of Commons in January 1662, but was dropped in the Lords after Tichborne had been brought to the bar of the upper house and heard in his defence.[25]

Life imprisonment

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In July 1662 Tichborne was removed to Holy Island, where he fell very ill, and was on his wife's petition transferred to Dover Castle. His wife and children were allowed to live with him during his imprisonment at Dover.[26] He remained a prisoner for the rest of his life, and died in the Tower of London in July 1682.[27]

Bibliography

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Tichborne was the author of two religious works:[23]

  • A Cluster of Canaan's Grapes: being several experimented truths, 1649, 4to.
  • The Rest of Faith, 1649, 4to.; this is dedicated to Cromwell.

Notes

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  1. ^ David Plant, Robert Tichborne, Regicide, c.1610–82, the British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website
  2. ^ His name was spelt Robert Titchbourn in the Proclamation for apprehending the late King's Judges (4 June 1660) and as Robert Titchborne in House of Lords Journal Volume 11 (7 February 1662)
  3. ^ Lee, Sidney (1903), Dictionary of National Biography Index and Epitome, p. 1300 (also main entry lvi 377)
  4. ^ a b Firth 1898, p. 377 gives the quotation, but does not cite his source
  5. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Dillon, List of the Officers of the London Trained Bands, 1890, p. 8.
  6. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Report on the Duke of Portland's MSS. i. 95.
  7. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Rushworth, vii. 761; Clarke Papers, i. 396.
  8. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Rushworth, i. 396, 404, ii. 256, 258, 262.
  9. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Ludlow, Memoirs, i. 212; The humble petition of the Commons of the City of London ... together with Col. Tichborne's Speech, 1648, 4to.
  10. ^ a b c d Firth 1898, p. 377.
  11. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Commons' Journals, vii. 30.
  12. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Commons' Journals. vii. 132.
  13. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Commons' Journals.
  14. ^ "Early English Books Online - EEBO". eebo.chadwyck.com. Retrieved 31 January 2020.
  15. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: London's Triumph, or the solemn reception of Robert Tichborne, Lord Mayor, 29 October 1656, 4to.
  16. ^ Firth 1898, p. 378 Cites: Harl. Miscell. iii. 484.
  17. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Ludlow Memoirs, ii. 131, 149, 173, ed. 1894.
  18. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1659–60, p. 574.
  19. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: Ludlow, ii. 294; and Kennet, Register, p. 181.
  20. ^ Firth 1898, p. 377 Cites: (The two City Jugglers, Tichborn and Ireton: a dialogue, 1660, 4to; The pretended saint and the profane libertine well met in prison: or a dialogue between Robert Tichborne and Henry Marten, 1660.
  21. ^ Firth 1898, p. 378 gives the quotation, but does not cite his source
  22. ^ Firth 1898, p. 378 Cites: (Commons' Journals. viii. 73; Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1660–1,78, 344, 558.
  23. ^ a b Firth 1898, p. 378.
  24. ^ Firth 1898, p. 378 Cites: Hist. MSS. Comm. 5th Rep. p. 169; cf. Thurloe, iii. 381.
  25. ^ Firth 1898, p. 378 Cites: Lords' Journals, xi. 372, 380.
  26. ^ Firth 1898, p. 378 Cites: Papers of the Duke of Leeds, p. 4; Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1663-4, pp. 289, 505, 510, 592.
  27. ^ Firth 1898, p. 378 Cites: Luttrell, Diary, i. 204.

References

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Attribution