George Lisle (Royalist)

Sir
George Lisle
Sir George Lisle, late 1630s; 1713 engraving based on now lost portrait [1]
Master of the Household
In office
1645–1648
Military Governor of Faringdon
In office
December 1645 – June 1646
Personal details
BornLondon
Died(1648-08-28)28 August 1648
Colchester
Cause of deathExecuted by firing squad
Resting placeSt Giles Church Colchester[2]
RelationsFrancis Lisle (1617-1644)
Parent(s)Lawrence (ca 1585-after 1660); Dorothy (before 1600-1650?)
Military service
AllegianceRoyalist
RankColonel
Battles/warsEighty Years War
Siege of Breda (1637)
Thirty Years War
Battle of Vlotho
Wars of the Three Kingdoms
Edgehill; Chalgrove; First Newbury; Cheriton; Cropredy Bridge; Lostwithiel; Second Newbury; Storming of Leicester; Naseby; Siege of Faringdon; Colchester

Sir George Lisle (baptised 10 July 1615 – 28 August 1648) was a professional soldier from London who briefly served in the later stages of the Eighty and Thirty Years War, then fought for the Royalists during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. Captured at Colchester in August 1648, he was condemned to death by a Parliamentarian court martial and executed by firing squad along with his colleague Charles Lucas.

Son of a successful publisher with connections to the powerful Villiers family, Lisle began his military career in Europe before returning to England. Quickly proving a brave and competent leader, he was promoted to command of a brigade in the Royalist field army until it was destroyed at Naseby in June 1645. He surrendered at Oxford in June 1646 and made terms with Parliament.

When the Second English Civil War began in 1648, he joined the Royalist uprising in Kent before retreating to Colchester. After capitulating in August, he and Lucas were executed and later enshrined as Royalist martyrs.