Sir James Harington, 3rd Baronet

Sir James Harrington or Harington, 3rd Baronet of Ridlington (30 December 1607 – 1680)[1][2] was an English Member of Parliament for Rutland (1646–53) and Middlesex (1654–55).

As a major-general in the Parliamentarian army during the English Civil War, Harrington fought at the Battle of Cropredy Bridge.[3]

Although he did not sign the death warrant, Harrington was one of the Commissioners (Judges) at the trial of Charles I. During the Interregnum, he continued to serve the Parliamentary cause, he served on the first Council of State and later was for a time President of the Council. After the Restoration he was exempted from the Indemnity and Oblivion Act which pardoned most for taking up arms against the King in the Civil War, and died in exile on the European mainland.[2][4] His baronetcy, which he had inherited on his father's death in 1653, was declared forfeited for life in 1661.[5]

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Footnotes

  1. Families covered: Harington (Harrington) of Exton, Harington of Ridlington
  2. 1 2 John Tapin References writes that in most existing contemporary records the spelling of the name was with a double 'r', and that the single 'r' is used in some instances, and that this is the way the family spells their name today.
  3. Battle of Cropredy Bridge
  4. David Hume The history of England From the invasion of Julius Caesar to the revolution in 1688:Volume VI: The Commonwealth (1778): Endnote [a]
  5. Leigh Rayment's Peerage Page: Baronetage, Harnage to Hermon-Hodge
Baronetage of England
Preceded by
Edward Harington
Baronet
(of Ridlington)
1653-1661
Succeeded by
Edmund Harington


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