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Cromwell, parliament, Ireland and a Commonwealth in crisis: 1652 revisited

  • Autores: John Morrill
  • Localización: Parliamentary history, ISSN-e 1750-0206, Vol. 30, Nº. 2 (June), 2011, págs. 193-214
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • This article investigates an episode in 1652 which is usually ignored and has never been explained. On 19 May 1652 the Rump Parliament, without forewarning, voted not to renew the office of lord lieutenant and thereby stripped the lord general, Oliver Cromwell of one of his highest and most significant offices. The article seeks to penetrate the wall of silence in the press and in the parliamentary records to see what lay behind this decision, which split the Commons down the middle. It seeks to relate the decision to two very different visions of the settlement to be imposed on Ireland following the rebellion of 1641 and the �Cromwellian conquest� and it suggests that it is likely that the subsequent act of the Rump, which sought the execution of tens of thousands of Irish royalists, the exiling of many tens of thousands more and the herding of almost all of the rest of the catholic population into four counties in the west of England � known to history as the �Cromwellian settlement�� was precisely a settlement Cromwell did not want.


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