Sir Miles Sandys (c. 1601 – 1636) was an English politician and author, MP for Cirencester in 1625.
He was educated at Hart Hall, Oxford, matriculating in 1616 aged 15, not taking a degree.
[1] They had one daughter and three sons:[3] Sandys was elected MP for Cirencester in the Useless Parliament of 1625.
The Parliament was dissolved by King Charles I after sitting for less than three months; Sandys left no mark on the parliamentary records.
[1] He was the author of the treatise Prudence, published in two editions in 1634, which accounts for prudence as comprising memory, understanding and providence.