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Oliver Cromwell |
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Biography 1
English soldier and statesman who helped make England a republic
and then ruled as lord protector from 1653 to 1658.
Oliver Cromwell was born on 25 April 1599 in
Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire into a family of minor gentry and
studied at Cambridge University. He became MP for Huntingdon in
the parliament of 1628 - 1629. In the 1630s Cromwell experienced
a religious crisis and became convinced that he would be guided
to carry out God's purpose. He began to make his name as a
radical Puritan when, in 1640, he was elected to represent
Cambridge, first in the Short Parliament and then in the Long
Parliament.
Civil war broke out between King Charles I and parliament in
1642. Although Cromwell lacked military experience, he created
and led a superb force of cavalry, the 'Ironsides', and rose
from the rank of captain to that of lieutenant-general in three
years. He convinced parliament to establish a professional army
- the New Model Army - which won the decisive victory over the
king's forces at Naseby (1645). The king's alliance with the
Scots and his subsequent defeat in the Second Civil War
convinced Cromwell that the king must be brought to justice. He
was a prime mover in the trial and execution of Charles I in
1649 and subsequently sought to win conservative support for the
new republic by suppressing radial elements in the army.
Cromwell became army commander and lord lieutenant of Ireland,
where he crushed resistance with the massacres of the garrisons
at Drogheda and Wexford (1649).
Cromwell then defeated the supporters of the king's son Charles
II at Dunbar (1650) and Worcester (1651), effectively ending the
civil war. In 1653, frustrated with lack of progress, he
dissolved the rump of the Long Parliament and, after the failure
of his Puritan convention (popularly known as Barebones
Parliament) made himself lord protector. In 1657 he refused the
offer of the crown. At home Lord Protector Cromwell reorganised
the national church, established Puritanism, readmitted Jews
into Britain and presided over a certain degree of religious
tolerance. Abroad, he ended the war with Portugal (1653) and
Holland (1654) and allied with France against Spain, defeating
the Spanish at the Battle of the Dunes (1658). Cromwell died on
3 September 1658 in London. After the Restoration his body was
dug up and hanged.
Cromwell's son Richard was named as his successor and was lord
protector of England from September 1658 to May 1659. He could
not reconcile various political, military and religious factions
and soon lost the support of the army on which his power
depended. He was forced to abdicate and after the restoration of
the monarchy in 1660 he fled to Paris. He returned to England in
1680 and lived quietly under an assumed name until his death in
1712.
Biography 2 -
Answers
Oliver Cromwell
The English statesman and general Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)
won decisive battles in the English civil war. He then
established himself and his army as the ruling force in England
and later took the title Lord Protector of Great Britain and
Ireland.
Oliver Cromwell was born on April 25, 1599, at Huntingdon. His
father, Richard Cromwell, was a younger son of one of the
richest men in the district, Sir Henry Cromwell of Hinchinbrook,
known as the "Golden Knight." Cromwell's mother was the daughter
of Sir William Steward, who managed the tithe revenues of Ely
Cathedral. Little is known of Cromwell's childhood, except that
his circumstances were modest and he was sent to the local
school. His schoolmaster, Dr. Beard, was a devout Calvinist;
most of Cromwell's intense religious convictions were derived
from Beard, whom he venerated throughout his life.
In 1616 Cromwell entered Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. He
left the following year on the death of his father. For the next
few years he lived in London, where in 1620 he married
Elizabeth, the daughter of Sir James Bourchier, a wealthy
leather merchant. Cromwell then returned to his small estate in
Huntingdon, where he farmed his land and played a modest part in
local affairs, acquiring a reputation as a champion of the poor
and dispossessed. During these years Cromwell experienced
periods of deep melancholy, suffused with religious doubt, but
after much spiritual torment he became convinced that he was the
instrument of God.
Political Situation in 1640
When Cromwell entered Parliament for Cambridge in 1640, England
had been ruled personally by Charles I for 11 years. The King
had pursued an authoritarian policy in religion and finance
which had distressed many country gentlemen, including Cromwell.
Furthermore, Charles had plunged into war with Scotland, which
had risen in revolt when Archbishop William Laud had persuaded
him to impose the English Prayer Book on the Scottish Church.
The Scots rapidly defeated the King; destitute of money and at
the mercy of the Scots, Charles I was forced to call Parliament.
The mood of Parliament was highly critical, and there was a
closely knit body of Puritan country gentlemen and lawyers who
were determined that the power of the King and the Anglican
Church should be limited by Parliament. Several of Cromwell's
relatives, particularly the influential John Hampden and Oliver
St. John, belonged to this group, which was led by John Pym.
Cromwell threw in his lot with these men. A middle-aged man
without parliamentary experience, he spoke rarely, but when he
did it was usually in support of extreme measures. Cromwell soon
established his reputation as a firm upholder of the
parliamentary cause; he was dedicated to the reform of the
Church and of the court and was highly critical of the King.
Civil War
By 1642 the King and Parliament had become so antagonistic that
armed conflict was inevitable. At the outbreak of war in August
1642, Cromwell headed a regiment whose prime duty was to defend
East Anglia. He rapidly demonstrated not only his skill as a
military leader by rapid raids into royalist territory combined
with skillful retreat, but also his capacity to mold an
effective army from his force of raw recruits.
Under the leadership of the Earl of Manchester, Cromwell's
commander, regiments from other counties were brought together
in a formidable body, known as the Eastern Association. In 1643
Cromwell's cavalry worsted the royalists in a number of sharp
engagements - Grantham (May 13), Gainsborough (July 18), and
Wincaby (October 13). These successes helped to create
parliamentary supremacy in East Anglia and the Midlands.
Cromwell's reputation as Parliament's most forceful general was
made the next year, however, at the battle of Marston Moor (July
2, 1644), when his Ironsides routed the cavalry of Prince Rupert,
the most successful royalist general. To Cromwell, whose
religious convictions strengthened with every victory that he
won, Marston Moor was God's work, and he wrote, "God made them
stubble to our swords."
The victories in eastern England, however, were not matched by
success elsewhere. After 2 years of war the King was still in
the field, and there was a growing rift between Parliament and
the army. Many disliked the price paid for alliance with the
Scots (acceptance of the Presbyterian form of church government),
and most longed for peace. Cromwell, however, yearned for
victory. He bitterly attacked the Earl of Manchester, and after
complex political maneuvering he emerged as the effective leader
of the parliamentary armies. He proved his exceptional
capacities as a general on June 14, 1645, when he smashed the
royalists' army at Naseby in Northamptonshire. Within 12 months
the royalist armies had capitulated.
In 5 years Cromwell had risen from obscurity to renown. A large
man with a long, red face studded with warts, he nevertheless
possessed considerable presence. His mood was usually somber,
thoughtful, and deeply religious. His soldiers sang psalms as
they went into battle, and every regiment had its preacher.
The next 3 years taxed Cromwell's skill and faith. His army
became riddled with Levellers, whose radical doctrines called
for a far more democratic social structure than Cromwell and his
fellow generals would tolerate. Parliament and the Scots
inclined not only to peace with the King but also to a rigid
form of Presbyterianism, which Cromwell disliked. He claimed to
believe in toleration, but excepted always Catholics and
atheists.
In 1648 the royalists rose again, sided by the Scots, but in a
lightning campaign Cromwell smashed both. The republicans were
then determined to bring Charles I to trial, and Cromwell did
nothing to stop them. At last agreeing that the King was "a man
of blood" and should be executed, he signed Charles I's death
warrant.
Further Campaigns
The execution of the King settled nothing. Legally, the House of
Commons, purged to such an extent that it was called the Rump,
ruled. But the army, Scotland, and Ireland were soon in
rebellion. The Scottish Presbyterians proclaimed Charles II
(Charles I's son) their lawful monarch, and the Irish Catholics
did likewise. In England the radicals were a rampant minority,
the royalists a stunned majority, but neither had any respect
for the Rump.
Cromwell suppressed the Levellers by force and then set about
subduing first Ireland and then Scotland. In the former Cromwell
fought a tough, bloody campaign in which the butchery of
thousands of soldiers at Drogheda (Sept. 11, 1649) and hundreds
of civilians at Wexford (Oct. 11) caused his name to be
execrated in Ireland for centuries.
On June 26, 1650, Cromwell finally became commander in chief of
the parliamentary armies. He moved against the Scots and got
into grievous difficulties. At Dunbar in August 1650 he was
pressed between the hills and the sea and was surrounded by an
army of 20,000 men. But the folly of the Scottish commander,
Leslie, enabled Cromwell to snatch a victory, he thought by
divine help, on September 3. The next year Charles II and his
Scottish army made a spirited dash into England, but Cromwell
smashed them at Worcester on Sept. 3, 1651. At long last the war
was over and Cromwell realized that God's humble instrument had
been given, for better or worse, supreme power.
Cromwell's Rule: 1653-1658
For 5 years after the execution of the King, Parliament tried to
formulate a new constitution. Its failure to do this so
exasperated Cromwell that on April 20, 1653, he went with a
handful of soldiers to the House of Commons, where he shouted at
the members, "The Lord be done with you," and ordered them out.
Until his death Cromwell tried to create a firm new
constitutional base for his power. His first attempt to
establish a constitution by means of a nominated Parliament in
1653 ended in disaster, so the Council of Army Officers
promulgated the Instrument of Government, by which Cromwell
became Protector in December 1653. He was assisted by a Council
of State on whose advice he acted, for Cromwell believed
sincerely in the delegation and sharing of power. For 8 months
Cromwell and his Council ruled most effectively, sweeping away
ancient feudal jurisdictions in Scotland and Ireland and uniting
those countries with England under one Parliament, which was
itself reformed. When the Parliament met in 1654, however, it
soon quarreled with Cromwell over the constitution. He once more
took power into his own hands and dissolved Parliament on June
22, 1655.
Cromwell's government became more authoritarian. Local
government was brought under major generals, soldiers whom he
could trust. This infuriated the radical left as well as the
traditionalists. Again attempting to give his authority a formal
parliamentary base and also needing additional revenue, Cromwell
reconvened Parliament. His successes abroad and his suppression
of revolts at home had greatly increased his popularity; thus
when Parliament met, he was pressed to accept the crown, but
after much soul-searching he refused. He took instead the title
Lord Protector under a new constitution - the Humble Petition
and Advice (May 25, 1657). This constitution also reestablished
the House of Lords and made Cromwell king in all but name. But
Cromwell was no Napoleon; there were definite limits to his
personal ambition. He did not train his son Richard to be his
successor, nor did he try to establish his family as a ruling
dynasty. And at the height of his power he retained his deep
religious conviction that he was merely an instrument of God's
purpose.
Cromwell pursued an effective foreign policy. His navy enjoyed
substantial success, and the foundation of British power in the
West Indies was laid by its capture of Jamaica (1655). He allied
himself with France against Spain, and his army carried the day
at the battles of the Dunes in 1658. These victories, combined
with his dexterous handling of Scotland and brutal suppression
of Ireland, made his personal ascendancy unassailable, in spite
of failures in his domestic policy. But shortly after his death
on Sept. 3, 1658, Cromwell's regime collapsed, and the
restoration of the monarchy followed in 1660.
Critical Assessment
Cromwell's greatness will always be questioned. As a general, he
was gifted yet lucky; as a statesman, he had some success but
was unable to bring his plans to complete fruition. Although his
religious conviction often appears to be a hypocritical cloak
for personal ambition, his positive qualities are unmistakable.
He believed in representative government (limited to men of
property, however). He encouraged reform, and much of it was
humane. He brought to the executive side of government a great
degree of professionalism, particularly in the army and navy.
Britain emerged from the Commonwealth stronger, more efficient,
and more secure. Perhaps the most remarkable qualities of
Cromwell were his sobriety and his self-control. Few men have
enjoyed such supreme power and abused it less.
Further Reading
Cromwell's letters and speeches are collected by Wilbur C.
Abbott in The Writings and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell (4 vols.,
1937-1947). The literature on Cromwell is enormous. The best and
most complete biography of him is Sir Charles Firth, Oliver
Cromwell and the Rule of the Puritans in England (1900; repr.
1961). An excellent brief biography is C. V. Wedgwood, Oliver
Cromwell (1939). Maurice Ashley, OliverCromwell and the Puritan
Revolution (1958), is also valuable. The problems of Cromwell's
character and policies are well explored in Richard E. Boyer, ed.,
Oliver Cromwell and the Puritan Revolt (1966). Equally valuable
is Maurice P. Ashley, ed., Cromwell (1969). Cromwell's career as
a general is best studied in C. V. Wedgwood, The King's War
(1958); Alfred H. Burne and Peter Young, The Great Civil War: A
Military History of the First Civil War, 1642-1646 (1959); and
Austin H. Woolrych, The Battles of the English Civil War (1961).
The best bibliographical guide is Wilbur C. Abbott, Bibliography
of Oliver Cromwell (1929).
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