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1625
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld     
The English parliament attempts to clip the wings of the new king, Charles I, by placing an annual limit on his power to raise taxes       
1626
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld   
Charles I frustrates the English parliament's restrictions by raising taxes without summoning parliament for renewed approval     
1628
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld    
The English parliament's Petition of Right emphasizes the right of the citizen to be protected from royal tyranny      
1629
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld    
Charles I dismisses his parliament in Westminster, and fails to summon another in the following eleven years      
1634
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld     
Charles I demands ship money to increase his revenue, albeit in the absence of its conventional justification - a crisis of national defence       
1636
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld      
John Hampden refuses to pay ship money to Charles I, beginning a campaign that gradually wins wide support        
1637
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld      
Charles I and his archbishop of Canterbury, William Laud, attempt to impose the full Anglican hierarchy on presbyterian Scotland        
1638
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld      
A National Covenant, first signed in an Edinburgh churchyard, commits the Covenanters to oppose Charles I's reforms of the Church of Scotland        
1638
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld     
Riots erupt in Edinburgh, in response to the attempt by Charles I and Laud to impose a hierarchy of Anglican bishops       
1639
 
Narrative history in HistoryWorld    
The finances of the English king, Charles I, are in crisis, with his agents able to collect each year only a fraction of his demands