Sir John Eliot was an English Puritan and Parliamentarian who, with his brilliant oratory, played a leading role in the early conflicts between King Charles I and Parliament. His death during his imprisonment for opposing the crown made him a martyr to the Parliamentary cause.
Background
John was the son of Richard Eliot and Bridget Carswell, he was born on April 11, 1592, in Cuddenbeak, a farm on his father's Port Eliot estate at St. Germans in Cornwall, United Kingdom. He was baptized on 20 April at St Germans Church, immediately next to Port Eliot. The Eliot family were an old Devon family that had settled in Cornwall.
Education
John Eliot was educated at Blundell's School, Tiverton, and matriculated at Exeter College, Oxford, on 4 December 1607, and, leaving the university after three years, he studied law at one of the Inns of Court.
Career
He also spent some months travellingin in 1607 in France, Spain and Italy, in company, for part of the time, with young George Villiers, afterwards 1st Duke of Buckingham.
Eliot was first elected to Parliament in 1614 and was knighted four years later. In 1622 his friend George Villiers, Earl (later Duke) of Buckingham, the royal favourite, appointed him vice admiral of Devon. In 1623 Eliot succeeded in arresting a well-known pirate, Captain John Nutt, who thereupon used his political connections to have Eliot imprisoned for bribery. Six months later Buckingham stepped in to obtain his release.
Elected to the Parliament of 1624, Eliot won a reputation as an orator for his addresses defending freedom of speech for members of the House of Commons. He lost confidence in Buckingham after witnessing the mistakes and extravagances of Buckingham’s foreign policy, and in the Parliament of 1626 he helped manage impeachment proceedings against the duke.
Charles I thereupon saved Buckingham by imprisoning Eliot (May 11–19, 1626) and dissolving Parliament. Eliot was suspended from his vice admiralty, and in June 1627 he was thrown into prison along with 74 other prominent gentry for refusing to contribute a forced loan to the crown.
Released in January 1628, he became the opposition leader in the Parliament that convened in March. There he made speeches against arbitrary taxation and in favour of preservation of English Protestantism from what he considered the Roman Catholic leanings of the archbishops. With Edward Coke and Peter Wentworth, he urged passage of the Petition of Right. In the Parliament of 1629, Eliot went further by drawing up three resolutions that vigorously condemned Charles’s religious policy and his customs levies. Although Charles ordered Parliament to adjourn, Eliot had the speaker of the House of Commons held down in his chair until the resolutions were passed. The king had Eliot and eight others arrested. Imprisoned in the Tower of London, Eliot wrote several books on politics and ethics, including An Apology for Socrates and The Monarchie of Man. But his close confinement undermined his health; contracting tuberculosis, he died in the Tower.
Achievements
Eliot, a parliamentarian, was initially a client of the royal favorite Buckingham. His commitment to parliamentary liberties was undoubted, but by preferring the role of the demagogue to that of constructive statesman he blocked the way to compromise. He was knitted in 1618.
Connections
In 1611, Eliot married Radigund (or Rhadagund), daughter of Richard Gedie of Trebursye in Cornwall, by whom he had five sons and four daughters.