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