By the seventeenth century, Carmarthenshire had through the incorporation of outlying lordships become the largest of the Welsh counties. In 1646 the gentry described the ‘mere commodities’ of their county as ‘butter, cheese, hay, oats etc.’, but insisted that ‘the subsistence of our county consists in stock of cattle not in corn or other commodities’.
In nine out of 15 elections from 1572, the Vaughans of Golden Grove took the single seat. The election held on 26 March, the indenture for which is now missing, saw the return of Henry Vaughan of Derwydd, younger brother of John Vaughan†, who in 1628 had been created earl of Carbery [I].
Carbery’s speedy rehabilitation was the price Parliament evidently considered worth paying for peace in west Wales, and the writ was moved on 10 February 1646 for both the Carmarthenshire and Carmarthen by-elections.
Lloyd’s election was probably secured with the support of those Carmarthenshire gentry keen to reach a rapprochement with Parliament and to ensure that native gentry continued to oversee ‘civil government and affairs’.
Lloyd was secluded along with Annesley and Meyrick, his associates, at Colonel Thomas Pride’s* purge of the House in December 1648. Under the terms of the Instrument of Government, the county acquired another seat, and the election to the first protectorate Parliament was held in the summer of 1654. The original writ to the Carmarthenshire sheriff in 1654 would be brought into the House in March 1659 as a specimen when the summoning of Scottish Members was in debate.
When writs were issued for elections to Richard Cromwell’s* Parliament, the pre-1654 franchise and electoral arrangements had been restored. The county election for the single Member was held at Llandeilo on 6 January 1659.
