The Greatness of Oliver CromwellHodder and Stoughton, 1957 - 382 Seiten |
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Seite 30
... religious , self - respecting people , with none of the flamboyance of the extrava- gant uncle at Hinchingbrooke.3 Something of the social and religious atmosphere of the Cromwell family has come down to us in letters written when ...
... religious , self - respecting people , with none of the flamboyance of the extrava- gant uncle at Hinchingbrooke.3 Something of the social and religious atmosphere of the Cromwell family has come down to us in letters written when ...
Seite 36
... religious organization of the country was thoroughly bad . He heard the call , that young men hear , to put the world right . Such glimpses of Cromwell as we have in these days are of a natural leader of men whose strong temper ...
... religious organization of the country was thoroughly bad . He heard the call , that young men hear , to put the world right . Such glimpses of Cromwell as we have in these days are of a natural leader of men whose strong temper ...
Seite 54
... religious question was then paramount . In two of his early letters we read also of the anxiety that he felt over his religion . In February 1641 , he wrote to a London merchant who had business in Scotland asking him to send him ' the ...
... religious question was then paramount . In two of his early letters we read also of the anxiety that he felt over his religion . In February 1641 , he wrote to a London merchant who had business in Scotland asking him to send him ' the ...
Inhalt
When Envy is Laid Asleep by Time | 11 |
Cromwells Place in Society | 25 |
Cromwells Religion | 39 |
Urheberrecht | |
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appointed Assembly attack battle bishops Cambridge campaign Catholic cavalry Christian Church Civil Colonel command commander-in-chief Committee Commonwealth conscience constitutional Council Covenant Crom Cromwell's dispatch Dunbar Dutch Earl of Essex Earl of Manchester Earl of Manchester's elected enemy England English fight force friends garrison Haselrigg Henry Ireton horse House of Commons House of Lords Independents infantry Instrument of Government Ireland Irish John Lambert John Pym John Thurloe King Charles King's kingdom land later leaders Leslie letter liberty Lieutenant-General Lilburne London Long Parliament Lord Protector Major-General March Marquis Marston Moor ment military militia Model Army monarchy Naseby negotiations Newcastle officers Oliver Cromwell once ordinance Oxford Parlia Parliamentarians peace petition political Presbyterian Prince Rupert Protestant Puritan Queen reform regiment religion religious republican Royalist Rump Scotland Scots Scottish army sent side siege soldiers surrendered thought Thurloe tion took town troops Vane victory Westminster wrote Yorkshire