- Bevil Grenville
Sir Bevil Grenville (1596–
July 5 ,1643 ), Royalist soldier in theEnglish Civil War , was born nearWithiel , west ofBodmin ,Cornwall and was a grandson of SirRichard Grenville , Elizabethansailor , explorer, andsoldier . He was educated atExeter College, Oxford .As
Member of Parliament , first for Cornwall, then for Launceston, Grenville supported Sir John Eliot and the opposition, and his intimacy with Eliot was lifelong. In 1639, however, he appears as a royalist going to the Scottish War in the train of Charles I. The reasons for this change of front are unknown, but Grenville's honour was above suspicion and he must have entirely convinced himself that he was doing right. At any rate he was a very valuable recruit to the royalist cause, being the most generally loved man in Cornwall.At the outbreak of the Civil War, he and others of the gentry not only proclaimed the king's Commission of Array at Launceston assizes, but also persuaded the grand jury of the county to declare their opponents guilty of riot and unlawful assembly, whereupon the posse comitatus was called out to expel them. Under the command of Sir Ralph Hopton, Sir Bevil took a distinguished part in the
Battle of Braddock Down and, at Stratton (May 16 ,1643 ), where the parliamentary Earl of Stamford was completely routed by the Cornishmen, he led one of the storming parties which capturedChudleigh 's lines. [Clarendon, vii., 89] He then led his men on a victorious march throughDevon intoSomerset .A month later, the endeavour of Hopton to unite with Maurice and Hertford from Oxford brought on the
Battle of Lansdowne , near Bath. Here Grenville was killed at the head of the Cornish infantry as it reached the top of the hill. His death was a blow from which the king's cause in the West never recovered, for he alone knew how to handle the Cornishmen. Hopton they revered and respected but Grenville they loved as peculiarly their own commander and, after his death, there is little more heard of the reckless valour which had won Stratton and Lansdown.Memorials
Church. ["West Britons", by Mark Stoyle (Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Southampton) University of Exeter Press, 2002]
to him was erected on the field of Lansdown to commemorate the his heroism and that of his Cornish pikemen at the Battle of Lansdown.
ee also
*
Sir Richard Grenville, 1st Baronet
*The Gear Rout
*William Scawen
*Battle of Lostwithiel References
*Lloyd, "Memoirs of Excellent Personages" (1668)
*SR Gardiner, "History of the English Civil War" (vol. 1. passim).
*1911
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