<Ul> <Li> 1st Hull </Li> <Li> Portsmouth </Li> <Li> Powick Bridge </Li> <Li> Kings Norton </Li> <Li> Edgehill </Li> <Li> Aylesbury </Li> <Li> Brentford </Li> <Li> Chichester </Li> <Li> Turnham Green </Li> <Li> Braddock Down </Li> <Li> Leeds </Li> <Li> 1st Middlewich </Li> <Li> Hopton Heath </Li> <Li> Seacroft Moor </Li> <Li> Camp Hill </Li> <Li> Lichfield </Li> <Li> Reading </Li> <Li> Ripple Field </Li> <Li> Sourton Down </Li> <Li> Stratton </Li> <Li> Wakefield </Li> <Li> 1st Worcester </Li> <Li> Chalgrove Field </Li> <Li> Adwalton Moor </Li> <Li> Burton Bridge </Li> <Li> Lansdowne </Li> <Li> Roundway Down </Li> <Li> 1st Bristol </Li> <Li> Gainsborough </Li> <Li> Gloucester </Li> <Li> Aldbourne Chase </Li> <Li> 1st Newbury </Li> <Li> 2nd Hull </Li> <Li> Heptonstall </Li> <Li> Winceby </Li> <Li> Olney </Li> <Li> Basing House </Li> <Li> Alton </Li> <Li> 2nd Middlewich </Li> <Li> Nantwich </Li> <Li> Lathom </Li> <Li> Newark </Li> <Li> Boldon Hill </Li> <Li> Stourbridge Heath </Li> <Li> Cheriton </Li> <Li> Selby </Li> <Li> Lyme Regis </Li> <Li> York </Li> <Li> Lincoln </Li> <Li> Bolton </Li> <Li> Tipton Green </Li> <Li> Cropredy Bridge </Li> <Li> Marston Moor </Li> <Li> Ormskirk </Li> <Li> Lostwithiel </Li> <Li> Montgomery </Li> <Li> 2nd Newbury </Li> <Li> Taunton </Li> <Li> Scarborough </Li> <Li> Naseby </Li> <Li> Langport </Li> <Li> 2nd Bristol </Li> <Li> Chester </Li> <Li> Rowton Heath </Li> <Li> Torrington </Li> <Li> Stow - on - the - Wold </Li> <Li> Newark </Li> <Li> Oxford </Li> <Li> 2nd Worcester </Li> </Ul> <Li> Stow - on - the - Wold </Li> <P> The Battle of Langport was a Parliamentarian victory late in the First English Civil War which destroyed the last Royalist field army and gave Parliament control of the West of England, which had hitherto been a major source of manpower, raw materials and imports for the Royalists . The battle took place on 10 July 1645 near the small town of Langport, which lies south of Bristol . </P> <P> Taunton had been captured by the Parliamentarian army under the Earl of Essex in June 1644 . After Essex's army was forced to surrender at Lostwithiel in Cornwall in September, the Royalists maintained a siege of Taunton, although the town was briefly relieved by Sir William Waller in late November . </P>

Where did the battle of langport take place