Henry Knollys (c 1689 – 1747), of Grove Place, Nursling, Hampshire, was a British politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1722 to 1734.
He matriculated at Trinity College, Oxford on 17 October 1704, aged 15 and was admitted at Middle Temple in 1705.
[1] He was sent down from Oxford in 1707 for ‘being disobedient, and insulting, and very abusive to the society’ but was re-admitted the next year.
[2] At the 1722 British general election, Knollys was returned as Member of Parliament for St Ives on the Powlett interest.
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