Radnorshire was one of the smallest and most barren counties in seventeenth-century Wales.
Radnorshire’s parliamentary representation during the early Stuart period had been all but monopolised by the Price family of Mynachdy and Pilleth (adjacent villages lying a few miles south-west of Knighton), and that trend would continue into the 1640s.
Price sided with the king at the outbreak of civil war and was disabled from sitting as an MP early in October 1642. Dubbed by the parliamentarians ‘the great prince of Radnorshire’, he was killed in action when the New Model stormed Bristol in September 1645.
Radnorshire, like other Welsh counties, was assigned a second parliamentary seat under the Instrument of Government of 1653, and in the elections to the first protectoral Parliament in the summer of 1654 it returned the newcomer George Gwynne of Llanelwedd (near the county’s western border with Breconshire) and Henry Williams of Lower Caebalfa, about ten miles south of New Radnor. There is no evidence of a contest. The scion of a Carmarthenshire family, Gwynne had acquired a substantial estate in Radnorshire by marriage in the late 1640s and had become a militia commissioner and magistrate for his adoptive county.
Radnorshire was reduced to its traditional one Member in the elections to Richard Cromwell’s* Parliament of 1659, when the freeholders assembled at Presteigne on 4 January to return Henry Williams. The returning parties on the election indenture were ten named freeholders – headed by George Gwynne – and ‘divers other persons qualified and capable to elect Members’, and these same ten gentleman, and the county sheriff, were the only signatories.
Number of voters: c.1,000 in 1621
