The Writings and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, Band 3This third volume on Oliver Cromwell covers the years 1653 to 1655, and traces Cromwell's emergence as the ruler of his country, and as an international statesman. In December 1653, after the collapse of Barebone's parliament, a short-lived experiment in radical Puritan rule, Cromwell became Lord Protector under a new constitution designed by the army, the Instrument of the Government. The volume traces the failure of Cromwell's attempt to win assent for that constitution from the parliament of 1654, and describes the royalist plotting which led to the rising under Colonel Pe nruddock in March 1655. The insurrection prompted Cromwell to entrust the government of the regions to his Major-Generals, in whose rule the military character of the Protectorate was at its most obvious. Abroad, a series of hard-won treaties, with France and with Protestant powers, paved the way for the war with Spain which began in the autumn of 1655. The volume ends at a point when Cromwell perhaps enjoyed greatest power, but the least support. |
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Seite 355
Wh . He never did the like to any public minister ; but this , and all other honor
done to me , was but to testify their respects to your highness , the which indeed
was very great , both there and where I past in Germany . Pro . I am obliged to
them ...
Wh . He never did the like to any public minister ; but this , and all other honor
done to me , was but to testify their respects to your highness , the which indeed
was very great , both there and where I past in Germany . Pro . I am obliged to
them ...
Seite 380
... and agents remains unperformed on the part of your Majesty , the money
payable in respect thereof being yet unsatisfied , whereby the persons who
managed the service are very great sufferers in their estates and credit . We have
therefore ...
... and agents remains unperformed on the part of your Majesty , the money
payable in respect thereof being yet unsatisfied , whereby the persons who
managed the service are very great sufferers in their estates and credit . We have
therefore ...
Seite 656
And I may add a fourth : that the people will now the more willingly pay their taxes
, in respect they see how unsuccessful the royal party are in their designs . . . .
Very many of the persons who have engaged in this business , both in the north ...
And I may add a fourth : that the people will now the more willingly pay their taxes
, in respect they see how unsuccessful the royal party are in their designs . . . .
Very many of the persons who have engaged in this business , both in the north ...
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Inhalt
The END OF THE COMMONWEALTH | 3 |
The Barebones Parliament | 48 |
The Fall OF THE BAREBONES PARLIAMENT | 93 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Verweise auf dieses Buch
Gentle Flame: The Life and Verse of Dudley, Fourth Lord North (1602-1677) Dale B. J. Randall,Dudley North Baron North Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1983 |
Between Nations: Shakespeare, Spenser, Marvell, and the Question of Britain David Baker Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1997 |