The John Batchelor Show podcast

S8 Ep697: 3. The Personal Rule and the Legal Challenge of Ship Money Guest Author: Jonathan Healey Charles I’s early reign was marked by intense struggle with Parliament over taxes and religion, leading to the 1628 Petition of Right. Following the assassination of

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3. The Personal Rule and the Legal Challenge of Ship Money Guest Author: Jonathan Healey Charles I’s early reign was marked by intense struggle with Parliament over taxes and religion, leading to the 1628 Petition of Right. Following the assassination of his favorite, the Duke of Buckingham, Charles dismissed Parliament in 1629 to begin eleven years of "personal rule". To fund the state, he employed controversial methods like "ship money," extending a maritime defense tax to inland counties. This sparked a landmark legal battle where lawyers like Oliver St John argued against taxation without representation, a principle that would later resonate deeply with the American founders who eventually used these same arguments. (3)

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