The Gear Rout

Coordinates: 50°05′28″N 5°05′24″W / 50.091°N 5.090°W / 50.091; -5.090 The Gear Rout was a Cornish insurrection of 1648 following the end of the English Civil War. It involved some 500 Cornish rebels who fought on the Royalist side against the Parliamentarian forces of Sir Hardress Waller.

Cornish forces had fought on the Royalist side in the defence of the Duchy against the New Model Army in the Civil War and had perceived it as a war of national liberation against the English Parliament, which the Cornish ultimately lost.

After the English Civil War, taxes were increased to fund military installations but many in Cornwall rebelled against this and took to arms. Following the killing of 70 Cornish Royalists in Penzance on May 16, 1648, the people of Mullion sent 120 men, who marched to Goonhilly Downs and then to St Keverne and Mawgan, collecting 300 more foot soldiers and 40 horsemen.[1] There was a battle against Parliamentarian forces under the control of Sir Hardress Waller which ultimately led to the defeat of the Cornish forces near Gear Camp, a nearby earthwork of the Celtic Iron Age that overlooked the Helford River.

See also

References

  1. West Britons: Cornish identities and the early modern British state - Prof Mark Stoyle
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, July 18, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.