:
Events of 1643 • 19 January,
Battle of Braddock Down • 23 January,
Battle of Leeds • 28 January, the Long Parliament sends commissioners to negotiate the
Treaty of Oxford (unsuccessful) • 19 March,
Battle of Hopton Heath • 30 March,
Battle of Seacroft Moor • 3 April,
Battle of Camp Hill — a Royalist victory • 8–21 April,
Siege of Lichfield — a Royalist capture • 25 April,
Battle of Sourton Down — Parliamentarian victory • 16 May,
Battle of Stratton — Royalist victory • 21 May,
Thomas Fairfax launches an attack on the Royalist garrison at Wakefield to take prisoners in exchange for the men lost at Seacroft Moor • 29–31 May,
Siege of Worcester — Parliamentarians failed to capture • 16 June, the
Long Parliament passes the
Licensing Order • 18 June,
Battle of Chalgrove Field —
John Hampden was mortally wounded during the Battle and died on Saturday evening of 24 June 1643. • 30 June,
Battle of Adwalton Moor • 1 July, first meeting of the
Westminster Assembly • 2 July Second
Sieges of Bradford • 4 July,
Battle of Burton Bridge • 5 July,
Battle of Lansdowne (or Lansdown) fought near
Bath. • 13 July,
Battle of Roundway Down fought near
Devizes • 20 July,
Battle of Gainsborough • 26 July,
Storming of Bristol • 17 August, the
Church of Scotland ratifies the
Solemn League and Covenant • 2 September, Beginning of
Siege of Hull (1643) • 18 September,
Battle of Aldbourne Chase • 20 September,
First Battle of Newbury • 25 September, the
Long Parliament and the
Westminster Assembly ratify the
Solemn League and Covenant. Under the terms of the deal with Scotland, the
Committee of Safety is superseded by the
Committee of Both Kingdoms • 11 October,
Battle of Winceby Events of 1644 The Scots marched South and joined Parliament's army threatening York. • 26 January,
Battle of Nantwich • 3 February,
Siege of Newcastle, formal request to surrender to the Scots. • 29 March,
Battle of Cheriton • 28 May, Storming of Bolton and the
Bolton Massacre • 29 June,
Battle of Cropredy Bridge • 2 July,
Battle of Marston Moor • 13 September, Second
Battle of Aberdeen • 19 October,
Siege of Newcastle ends with the storming of the city by Scottish soldiers • 24 October, the
Long Parliament passes the
Ordinance of no quarter to the Irish • 27 October,
Second Battle of Newbury • 23 November, first publication of
Areopagitica by
John Milton • 4 November, the Long Parliament sends the
Propositions of Uxbridge to the king at Oxford
Events of 1645 • 6 January, the
Committee of Both Kingdoms orders the creation of the
New Model Army • 28 January, the
Long Parliament appoints commissioners to meet with the king's commissioners at
Uxbridge • 22 February, negotiations over the
Treaty of Uxbridge end unsuccessfully • February–July,
Great Siege of Scarborough Castle • 23 April, the
Long Parliament passes the
Self-denying Ordinance • 9 May,
Battle of Auldearn • 30 May, Siege and sacking of Leicester • 14 June,
Battle of Naseby • 2 July,
Battle of Alford • 10 July,
Battle of Langport • 15 August,
Battle of Kilsyth • 13 September,
Battle of Philiphaugh • 24 September,
Battle of Rowton Heath • Surrender of
Leicester • October fear of Royalist attack in south
Lincolnshire • Charles went to Welbeck,
Nottinghamshire • 17 December
Siege of Hereford ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison.
Events of 1646 • 18 January,
Siege of Dartmouth ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison. • 3 February,
Siege of Chester ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison after a 136-day siege. • 16 February,
Battle of Torrington victory for the New Model Army • 10 March,
Ralph Hopton surrenders the Royalist army at
Tresillian bridge in
Cornwall. • 21 March,
Battle of Stow-on-the-Wold the last
pitched battle of the First Civil War is a victory for the New Model Army • 13 April,
Siege of Exeter ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison. • 5 May, Charles surrendered to a Scottish army at
Southwell, Nottinghamshire • 6 May, Newark fell to the Parliamentarians • 24 June,
Siege of Oxford ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison. • 22 July,
Siege of Worcester ended with the surrender of Royalist garrison. • 27 July, after a 65-day siege,
Wallingford Castle, the last English royalist stronghold, surrenders to Sir
Thomas Fairfax. • 19 August, Royalist garrison of
Raglan Castle surrendered (Wales) • 9 October, the
Long Parliament passes the
Ordinance for the abolishing of Archbishops and Bishops in England and Wales and for settling their lands and possessions upon Trustees for the use of the Commonwealth Events of 1647 • 13 March,
Harlech Castle the last Royalist stronghold in Wales surrendered to the Parliamentary forces. • 29 May,
General Council of the Army drew-up the
Solemn Engagement • 3 June, Cornet
George Joyce (a junior officer in Fairfax's horse) with a troop of New Model Army cavalry seizes the King from his Parliamentary guards at Holdenby House and place him in protective custody of the New Model Army • 4–5 June, at a rendezvoused on
Kentford Heath near Newmarket the officers and men of the New Model Army gave their assent to the
Solemn Engagement • 8 June, General Fairfax sent the
Solemn Engagement to Parliament along with a letter explaining that the King was now in the custody of the Army negotiations would be conducted through New Model Army representatives • 1 August,
General Council of the Army offers the
Heads of Proposals • 31 August, Montrose escaped from the Highlands • October, "An
Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace upon grounds of common right", presented to the
Army Council • 28 October, Beginning of the
Putney Debates. Ended 11 November. • 26 December, a faction of
Scottish Covenanters sign
The Engagement with
Charles I ==The Second English Civil War==