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Ship money was a tax, the levy of which by Charles I of England without the consent of Parliament was one of the causes of the English Civil War. The Plantagenet kings of England had exercised the right of requiring the maritime towns and counties to furnish ships in time of war; and the liability was sometimes commuted for a money payment.

Notwithstanding that several statutes of Edward I and Edward III had made it illegal for the crown to exact any taxes without the consent of Parliament, the prerogative of levying ship money in time of war had never fallen wholly into abeyance, and in 1619 James I aroused no popular opposition by levying £40,000 of ship money on London and £8550 on other seaport towns.

The fleet of Charles I during the first three years of his reign was, says Samuel Rawson Gardiner, "largely composed of vessels demanded from the port towns and maritime counties. The idea of universal ship money to be levied in every county in England seemed to him to be merely a further extension of the old principle." Accordingly, in February 1628, Charles issued writs requiring £173,000 to be returned to the exchequer by March 1 for the provision of a fleet to secure the country against French invasion and for the protection of commerce, and every county in England was assessed for payment.

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Act Declaring the Illegality of Ship-money. - An Act passed, just before the start of the Civil War, making Ship Money illegal. Widely interpreted as a victory for Parliament over the King.

Extracts from the Speech of Oliver St John in the Ship-money Case - A speech in John Hampden's defence from Gardiner Constitutional Documents of the Puritan Revolution. A classic denunciation of arbitrary taxation.

Sandwich Collects Ship Money - Ship Money is still collected in England, the Cinque Port of Sandwich in Kent.

Ship Money - An article in the open source encyclopedia, Wikipedia, discussing the history and constitutional implications of Ship Money.

Ship Money List - An article from the Swindon Advertiser of 1885 with a short essay on the importance of ship money, and an explanation on how it was assessed and the Ship Money lists of Wiltshire.

The John Hampden Society - A society devoted to the study of 17th-century Parliamentarian John Hampden, who famous for resisting the Ship Money tax.
Meta Description: [ A society devoted to the study of 17th century Parliamentarian John Hampden, who became famous through resisting the King's illegal Ship Money tax. ]

404 Two Proposals for Raising Money by Extraordinary Means, c. 1627 - An article exploring the constitutional strains brought about by the refusal of Parliament to vote subsidies in the 1620s leading to the infamous Ship Money, a tax designed by Charles I to circumvent Parliament.

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