Plundering Time
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (November 2023) |
Plundering Time | |||||||
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Part of English Civil War and Protestant Revolution of Maryland | |||||||
William Claiborne, one of the infamous leaders, along with privateer Richard Ingle of the lawless period in the Province of Maryland known as the "Plundering Time" | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Maryland Catholics Maryland proprietary colonial militia |
Maryland Puritans outlaws | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Governor Lord Baltimore Leonard Calvert | Richard Ingle | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
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The Plundering Time (1644–1646), also known as "Claiborne and Ingle's Rebellion", was a period of civil unrest and lawlessness in the English colony of the Province of Maryland.
Causes of rebellion
[edit]The causes of the rebellion included William Claiborne's disputed claim with the Calverts over Kent Island, Maryland, the bitter relations between the Catholic minority elite and the Protestant majority, and the political partisanship of the English Civil War.
The dark period marked a combination of the fall of the British King and religious intolerance, which led directly to the event.
Plundering Time
[edit]In 1638, the first provincial Maryland governor Leonard Calvert seized a trading post on Kent Island established by Captain William Claiborne.
In 1644, William Claiborne led an uprising of Protestants and retook Kent Island. Meanwhile, privateer Captain Richard Ingle, the co-commander of Claiborne, seized control of St. Mary's City, the capital of the Maryland colony. Catholic Governor Calvert escaped to the Virginia Colony.
The Protestant pirates began plundering the property of anyone who did not swear allegiance to the English Parliament, mainly Catholics.
End of rebellion
[edit]In 1647, the Rebellion was finally put down by Maryland Governor Lord Baltimore, who successfully led Maryland colonial forces against the Parliamentary privateers and regained control of the colony effectively ending the rebellion initiated by Claiborne and Ingle.
Succumbing to illness, Lord Baltimore died the following summer in 1648.[citation needed]
Aftermath
[edit]The Maryland colonial assembly issued the Maryland Toleration Act of 1649 to mollify the two factions. A Parliamentary victory in England renewed old tensions leading to the Battle of the Severn, now present-day Annapolis in 1655.
References
[edit]- Timothy B. Riordan, The Plundering Time: Maryland in the English Civil War, 1642-1650. Maryland Historical Society, 2005.
- Paul F. Liston, The plundering Time: The Hardships of Southern Maryland Catholics in Colonial Times. Abbeyfeale Press, 1993.