| Active | 1643 to 1644 |
| Country | England |
| Allegiance | Parliamentarian |
| Conflicts | First Civil War |
| Type | Horse |
| Colonel | Edward King |
| Area Raised | Lincolnshire |
| Flag Colour | |
| Flag Design | |
| Field Armies | Manchester 1643 |
| Meldrum 1644 | |
Parliamentarian regiment of horse of the Eastern Association serving in Lincolnshire
A list of the regiment’s officers is shown in Laurence Spring’s Regiments of the Eastern Association1)
Edward King was a captain in Lord Willoughby of Parham’s Regiment of Dragoons but was commissioned colonel in October 1643 and appointed governor of Boston and Holland. He fell out with Lord Willoughby, leading to exchanges of insults and nearly a fight between their respective regiments at the Battle of Newark. Cromwell approved of him initially as the activist and fittest man in Lincolnshire, but in 1644, due to his Presbyterianism, he was briefed against by the Independents as a persecutor of all the honest and zealous conscientious men, leading to his dismissal.