Hamlet Puleston or Puliston (1632–1662) was an English academic, known as a political writer.
[1] Puleston at first declined to subscribe to the ordinances of the parliamentary visitors;[1] he took part, in fact, in the stubborn armed resistance in Lincoln College, around George Hitchcocke.
[1] Puleston later settled in London, where he died at the beginning of 1662, in poverty according to Wood.
[1] Puleston published in 1660 Monarchiæ Britannicæ singularis Protectio; or a brief historical Essay tending to prove God's especial providence over the British Monarchy.
It was reissued as the Epitome Monarchiæ Britannicæ … wherein many remarkable observations on the civil wars of England, and General Monk's Politique Transactions in reducing the Nation to a firm Union, for the resettlement of his Majesty, are clearly discovered, 1663.