{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}} {{Use British English|date=March 2018}} thumb|right|Felley Priory today '''Gilbert Millington'''<ref>His name was spelt ''Gilbert Millington'' in the [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=13968#s13 Proclamation for apprehending the late King's Judges] (4 June 1660), but as '''Gilbert Myllington''' in [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=14215#s12 House of Lords Journal Volume 11] 7 February 1662</ref> (c. 1598–1666) was a barrister and one of the Regicides of King Charles I of England.

==Life== Millington was probably born at Felley Priory in about 1598. He was the eldest son of Anthony and Prudence Millington and was educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge becoming a member of Lincoln's Inn in 1614 and a barrister there by 1621. He had married in 1618 and inherited his father's estates in 1620. The estate was over 800 acres and enabled Millington to support causes in Nottingham and later in Parliament. He took on various public jobs in Nottingham looking after the sewers and then as Deputy Lieutenant for Nottinghamshire firstly in 1638.<ref name=odnb>Richard L. Greaves, ‘Millington, Gilbert (c.1598–1666)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/18761, accessed 30 July 2013]</ref>

He became the Master of Chancery in 1639 and he was elected as an M.P. for Nottingham, in the Long Parliament of 1640. He was made deputy-lieutenant for Nottinghamshire again in 1642. He was agent of communication between the Governor of Nottingham Castle, Colonel John Hutchinson (1615–1664), and the county committee, who were in dispute over the control of local troops. In 1649 he was one of the few barristers and he was energetic at the trial of Charles I and amongst those who signed the king's death-warrant. After the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 he was condemned to death, but his sentence was later commuted on appeal to life imprisonment.<ref>Lee, Sidney (1903), Dictionary of National Biography [https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofnati00leesuoft Index and Epitome], [https://archive.org/stream/dictionaryofnati00leesuoft#page/878/mode/1up p. 878] (also main entry xxxvii 440)</ref> He spent his final days at Mont Orgueil Castle on Jersey where he died on 19 September 1666.<ref name=odnb/>

==References== {{Reflist}} ;Attribution {{DNBIE|title=Millington, Gilbert | page=878}} {{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Millington, Gilbert}} Category:1590s births Category:1666 deaths Category:English barristers Category:Regicides of Charles I of England Category:Prisoners who died in Jersey detention Category:English prisoners sentenced to death Category:17th-century English lawyers Category:English MPs 1640–1648 Category:English politicians convicted of crimes

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