Background
Jacob Astley was born in 1579. He came from an established Norfolk family, and was born at Melton Constable Hall.
Jacob Astley was born in 1579. He came from an established Norfolk family, and was born at Melton Constable Hall.
His first experiences of war were at the age of 18 when Jacob Astley joined the Islands Voyage expedition in 1597 under the Earl of Essex and Sir Walter Raleigh to the Azores. In 1598 he joined Maurice of Nassau and Henry of Orange in the Netherlands, where he served with distinction, and afterwards fought under Frederick V, Elector Palatine and Gustavus Adolphus in the Thirty Years" War. He was evidently thought highly of by the States-General, for when he was absent, serving under Christian IV of Denmark, his position in the Dutch army was kept open for him.
Returning to England with a well-deserved reputation, Jacob Astleywas in the employment of Charles I in various military capacities.
As "Sergeant-Major-General" of the infantry, Jacob Astley went north in 1639 to organize the defence against the expected Scottish invasion. Here his duties were as much diplomatic as military, as the discontent which ended in the Civil War was now coming to a head
In the ill-starred Bishops" Wars, Astley did good service to the cause of the king, and he was involved in the so-called "Army Plot". At the outbreak of the First English Civil War in 1642 he at once joined Charles, and was made Major-General of the Foot (infantry) the cavalry was under the command of his former student Prince Rupert.
Both sides" troops were poorly trained and both sides claimed the battle to be a victory, but the outcome was inconclusive and it would take a further three years of civil war before the Royalists lost to the Parliamentarians. Astley was a loyal supporter of the Crown throughout the First Civil War, while his own region of East Anglia was strongly Parliamentarian. His opposite number in the Parliamentarians was Philip Skippon, another Norfolkman.
At Gloucester Astley commanded a division, and at the First Battle of Newbury, Jacob Astley led the infantry of the royal army.
With Ralph Hopton, in 1644, Jacob Astley served at Arundel and Cheriton. At the second Battle of Newbury, he made a gallant and memorable defence of Shaw House.
Jacob Astley was made a baron by King Charles, and at the Battle of Naseby he once more commanded the main body of the infantry. He afterwards served in the west, and with 3,000 men fought stubbornly but vainly at the Battle of Stow-on-the-Wold (March 1646), the last pitched battle of the First Civil War.
He surrendered to the Parliamentarians with the words "Well, boys, you have done your work, now you may go and play if you don"t fall out among yourselves".
Jacob Astley's scrupulous sense of honour forbade him to take any part in the Second Civil War, as he had given his parole at Stow-on-the-Wold. But he had to undergo his share of the discomforts that were the lot of the vanquished royalists. He was imprisoned initially but able to retire to Maidstone.
Astley was loyal supporter of the Crown throughout the First Civil War, while his own region of East Anglia was strongly Parliamentarian. His opposite number in the Parliamentarians was Philip Skippon, another Norfolkman.
Quotations: "Well, boys, you have done your work, now you may go and play if you don't fall out among yourselves".
Jacob Astley was married to a Dutch woman, Agnes Impel, who bore him two sons and a daughter.