John Knight the Younger

John Knight the Younger

Sir John Knight (died February 1718) was an English merchant and politician, MP for Bristol from 1689 to 1695. His uncle was also an MP for Bristol.

Knight was appointed a sheriff for Bristol in September 1681, and in this office he persecuted Dissenters, arousing great controversy in the city. He was presented to King Charles II in March at Newmarket and knighted.cite video| people = Paul D. Halliday | title = [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15727 Knight, Sir John (d. 1718)] | publisher = The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography | year = 2008] In April 1686 Knight alerted the mayor and the sheriffs of a Catholic meeting, resulting in the arrest of a priest. When the news reached the Catholic King James II's court of Knight's behaviour, he was arrested by late May and had to explain himself before the Privy Council. A writ of habeas corpus failed to release him but a Bristol jury acquitted him in November.

Having stood unsuccessfully at a by-election in December 1685, Knight was elected to the Convention Parliament in 1689 for Bristol. Knight disagreed with the Whig doctrine that King James's flight from England had left the throne vacant. He therefore opposed making William and Mary monarchs.

In 1693 he opposed the Naturalisation Bill which aimed to grant English citizenship to foreign Protestants resident in England. In a speech against the Bill, Knight said: "Let us first kick the bill out of the House; and then let us kick the foreigners out of the kingdom". [Thomas Babington Macaulay, "The History of England from the Accession of James the Second. Popular Edition in Two Volumes. Volume II" (London: Longmans, 1889), p. 477.] Knight's speech was printed as a pamphlet and tens of thousands of copies circulated. But when the House of Commons saw the pamphlet they voted it as a "false, scandalous, and seditious" and to be burnt by the hangman. Knight disclaimed all knowledge of the pamphlet. [Macaulay, p. 477.]

Knight was called a "violent tory" by Narcissus Luttrell and a "coarse-minded and spiteful Jacobite, who, if he had been an honest man, would have been a nonjuror" by Thomas Babington Macaulay. [Macaulay, p. 477.]

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