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References
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[PDF] History of the English Revolution of 1640 - Loc1625-1629. Accession of Charles the First to the thr6ne-State and disposition of. England-Meeting of the first parliament-Spirit of liberty ...
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The English Revolution and the Wars in the Three Kingdoms, 1638 ...An Irish Catholic revolt in 1641 led to a decade of bloodshed. Civil war raged in England from 1642 to 1646 and broke out again in 1648, each time delivering ...
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England on Edge: Crisis and Revolution, 1640-1642England on Edge deals with the collapse of the government of Charles I, the disintegration of the Church of England, and the accompanying cultural panic that ...
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Literature and Revolution in England, 1640-1660Jun 25, 1997 · The years of the British Civil War and Interregnum constituted a turning point not only in the political, social, and religious history of ...<|separator|>
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England's 17th Century RevolutionGuizot, to two factors: first, that the English Revolution had a thoroughly religious character, and hence in mo way broke with all past traditions; and second, ...
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Charles I and the Petition of Right - UK ParliamentThe crisis of 1629-60 originated in Charles I's belief that by the royal prerogative he could govern without the advice and consent of Parliament.Missing: Ship case
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HIST 251 - Lecture 19 - Crown and Political Nation, 1604-1640In 1642, civil war broke out between the crown and the parliament. In 1649, King Charles I was put on trial by a High Court of Justice formed from parliament ...
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The Personal Rule of Charles I - UK ParliamentMany people were outraged by what they regarded as his non-parliamentary use of medieval laws to raise money. The most notorious was ship money. This turned ...Missing: case crisis
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HIST 251 - Constitutional Revolution and Civil War, 1640-1646He describes how Charles was forced to end his personal rule and call a parliament in 1640 in order to defend England against invading Scottish armies. The ...
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The breakdown of 1641-2 - UK ParliamentReligious tensions and the Grand Remonstrance. The tensions within Parliament over the English Church were increased by radical Protestants destroying ...
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The Grand Remonstrance, 1641 - BCW ProjectThe Grand Remonstrance was a long, wide-ranging document that listed all the grievances perpetrated by the King's government in Church and State since the ...
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Report to Archbishop Laud - The National ArchivesAll three men were Puritans. They believed that Laud's changes were making the Protestant Church of England too much like the Catholic Church of Rome. Laud had ...
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HIST 251 - Street Wars of Religion: Puritans and ArminiansHe traces how the rise of Arminianism resulted in the polarization and politicization of religion with Charles I's appointment of Arminian clerics (notably ...
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[PDF] Puritan Structure, Political and Theological Distinctions in aNov 21, 2022 · The Puritans who left for the Massachusetts Bay Colony in response to Laud's crackdown sought to give the world an example of what following ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Charles I, Civil War, Reformation - Protestantism - BritannicaSep 8, 2025 · He promoted Arminians to influential positions in the church and subtly encouraged the propagation of Arminian theology. His fortunes turned, ...
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The Book of Sports 1633 - The History of EnglandJan 31, 2022 · The document of 1618 reflected James' distrust and dislike of puritans, who in his view were potential separatists from the church of England, ...
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Religion and the struggle for freedom in the English RevolutionMar 25, 2010 · Russell, Conrad, The causes of the English Civil War (Oxford, 1990), ch. ... Historical Journal, XXXIII (1990), 693–704Google Scholar(also ...Missing: divisions | Show results with:divisions
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Charles I (r. 1625-1649) | The Royal FamilyCharles was reserved (he had a residual stammer), self-righteous and had a high concept of royal authority, believing in the divine right of kings. He was a ...Missing: primary | Show results with:primary
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361 Charles in Charge - The History of EnglandJan 1, 2023 · Royal debt stood at £2m which was about 3 times the annual income in peacetime, which stood at about £600,000. At the start of the personal rule ...
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The Economic Causes of the English Civil War: Freedom of Trade ...In stockThe English Civil War's economic causes include a demand for freedom of trade, a merchant-gentry alliance, and the merchant-gentry alliance against prerogative ...
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Civil War person: Charles I - The National ArchivesCharles I created a lot of bad feeling as a result. Ship money also provided the king with valuable revenue. This was a tax usually paid in counties that had ...
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November 1640-1660 - UK ParliamentNovember 1640 The Long Parliament was convened and attacked measures and people associated with Personal Rule.
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The Long ParliamentThroughout 1640-1 the Long Parliament dismantled bit by bit the structure of Personal Rule. The King had to assent grudgingly to whittling away his own ...Missing: 1640-1642 | Show results with:1640-1642
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The English Civil Wars: Origins, Events and Legacy - English HeritageCharles believed in the 'Divine Right of Kings' – that monarchs were appointed by God, and that he could govern his kingdoms personally, taking advice from a ...Missing: primary | Show results with:primary
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British Civil Wars | National Army MuseumFrom 1629 to 1640, King Charles I ruled without Parliament, denying its involvement in passing laws and authorising taxes. To raise money, Charles resorted to a ...
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Charles I in search of friends: government in crisis and the rewards ...Aug 23, 2022 · By late 1640 the government of Charles I was in deep trouble. A treaty signed at Ripon on 26 October signalled the end of three years of war ...
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The Eleven Years War 1641-52 – A Brief Overview - The Irish StoryJan 10, 2014 · The 1641 rebellion was a Catholic uprising that broke out on October 23, 1641. While initially intended, by a small group of Ulster gentry ...
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[PDF] The Struggle of Irish Catholics Against Ultramontanism and English ...Nov 29, 2022 · The 1641 Irish rebellion was caused by land seizures by English Protestants, the conflict between Protestants and Catholics, and the English ...
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BBC - Wars and Conflicts - Plantation of Ulster - 1641 Rebellion - BBCModern research calculates the actual number of deaths to be 12,000 out of a total Protestant population in Ulster at the time of 40,000, a massacre by any ...
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The English Civil Wars: History and StoriesThe English Civil Wars were a series of conflicts between Charles I and Parliament from 1642-1651, caused by disagreements about religion and power, and the ...
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Battle of Edgehill - English Civil WarIt may be that the casualties of the battle were around 1,500 in dead, wounded and captured for Parliament and 1,000 for the King. Of the senior officers, the ...
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The Armies & the Losses - The Battlefields TrustAccounts of casualty and prisoner numbers vary, but it appears that around 50 parliamentary soldiers were killed in the battle, with perhaps more than this ...
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Self-Denying Ordinance | England [1645] - BritannicaIn April 1645, by the Self-Denying Ordinance, members of Parliament resigned all military and civil office and command acquired since November 1640.Missing: formation | Show results with:formation
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Battle of Naseby (1645) | Description & Significance - BritannicaSep 30, 2025 · Battle of Naseby, battle fought on June 14, 1645, between the Parliamentary New Model Army under Oliver Cromwell and Sir Thomas Fairfax and the royalists under ...
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Battle of Naseby - The Civil Wars - The Battlefields TrustDestruction of the royalist Oxford field army by Parliament's New Model Army marks the beginning of the end for the King's cause. The battle of Naseby was ...
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The Battle of Stow-on-the-Wold - Historic UKWith Astley's defeat, Charles realised that the end was in sight and surrendered soon afterwards to the Scottish army at Newark, in May 1646. Click here for a ...
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Charles I surrenders to the Scots at Newark – 1646 - BBCAfter starting the war well, Charles' Royallist forces face defeat. Fearing capture by the Parliamentary army, Charles surrenders to the Covenanters.
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The Engagement, 1647-8 - BCW ProjectHowever, his plans miscarried when the Scots handed him over to Parliament in January 1647 on the promise of a £400,000 indemnity.
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Battle of Preston in 1648 - World History EncyclopediaJan 25, 2022 · The Battle of Preston between 17 and 20 August 1648 occurred during the English Civil Wars (1642-1651) and saw Oliver Cromwell lead Parliament's New Model Army ...
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Cromwell in Ireland | olivercromwell.orgOn 10 September 1649, a week after arriving at the town's walls, Cromwell summonsed the Governor of Drogheda to surrender within 24 hours. His message was clear ...
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Cromwellian Conquest - Down Survey - Trinity College DublinIn March 1649, Westminster appointed Oliver Cromwell to lead an invasion of Ireland in order to crush all resistance to the new English Commonwealth.
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The Cromwell Museum - Key EventsLong Parliament. Charles I summons what would become known as the 'Long Parliament'. Summer 1641. Catholic Rebellion in Ireland. Catholic Rebellion in Ireland.
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Oliver Cromwell: Lord Protector | National Army MuseumLieutenant-General Oliver Cromwell was a Parliamentary commander during the British Civil Wars and later became Lord Protector.
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Pride's Purge, 'the Rump' and regicide - UK ParliamentThe parliamentary trinity of King, Lords and Commons had been broken and now the Rump declared full sovereignty over the country. Biographies. You can access ...
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Parliaments 1640-1660 | History of Parliament OnlineCharles forced to summon a new Parliament to meet in November, to become the notorious Long Parliament which was not finally dissolved until 1660.Missing: legislation | Show results with:legislation
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The Rump Parliament (The Purged Parliament) - BCW ProjectFollowing the trauma of Pride's Purge and the King's execution, the Rump Parliament adopted a conciliatory and cautious approach towards policy and legislation, ...
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HIST 251 - Lecture 21 - Regicide and Republic, 1647-1660On the 1st of January 1649, the Rump, the remaining 150 members of parliament, set up a high court of justice to try the King. The House of Lords refused to ...
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[PDF] King Charles I during his trial and executionThe execution of King Charles I was now set for. January 30, 1649. With this understanding of the basic historical events it is now easier to examine ...
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King Charles I, 1600 - 1649 | OpenLearn - The Open UniversityOnce the decision to place Charles on trial had been made, the result was a foregone conclusion. On 30th January 1649, Charles was executed on a scaffold in ...Missing: facts | Show results with:facts
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An Act for Abolishing the Kingly Office (1649)The Rump Parliament was responsible for the trial and execution of Charles I, the dissolution of the House of Lords, and the abolishment of the monarchy. ... 1649 ...
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The Abolition of the House of Lords - Historic UKFeb 18, 2022 · On 19th March 1649 the House of Lords was abolished by an Act of Parliament ... Cromwell dissolves the Rump Parliament.
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An act declaring and constituting the people of England to be a ...An act declaring and constituting the people of England to be a commonwealth and free-state. England and Wales. London :: Printed for Edward Husband, 1649.Missing: primary | Show results with:primary
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Tension between the Rump and the army 1649-53, and Cromwell's ...Levellers stressed the importance of a codification and simplification of the laws, to return to England the freedoms of the Saxon times, which had been ...Missing: Challenges | Show results with:Challenges
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Instrument of Government - BCW ProjectThe Instrument of Government was England's first written constitution. It was adopted by the Council of Officers on 15 December 1653 and Cromwell was installed ...
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The Protectorate ParliamentsThe 'Instrument of Government' (the new written constitution of 1653) placed great power in the executive formed by the 'Protector' (the role of national ...
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(DOC) CROMWELL'S PROTECTORATE - Academia.eduOn the next day, 16 December, Oliver Cromwell was proclaimed Lord Protector. In a public ceremony he took an oath to rule 'upon such a basis and foundation ...
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Anglo-Dutch War | First [1652–1654] - BritannicaAfter peace was concluded with the Dutch in 1654, Cromwell instructed Blake to make English naval power felt in the Mediterranean. Accordingly, the admiral ...
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Imperial Designs: Cromwell's Conquest of Jamaica - History TodayJun 6, 2017 · Imperial Designs: Cromwell's Conquest of Jamaica. Oliver Cromwell's invasion of Jamaica in 1655 in transformed Britain's early empire. Carla ...Missing: foreign | Show results with:foreign
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English Capture of Jamaica | Research Starters - EBSCOThe attack on and conquest of Jamaica were part of the Western Design, developed by England's lord protector Oliver Cromwell, to attack Spanish colonies in ...
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Rule of the Major-Generals - BCW ProjectThe first duty of the Major-Generals was to maintain security by suppressing unlawful assemblies, disarming Royalist "malignants" and apprehending thieves, ...
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The Cromwell Museum - Lord ProtectorWhether he knew this would happen is unknown, but contingency plans seem to have been made with a constitution 'The Instrument of Government' drafted behind ...Missing: details | Show results with:details
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religious liberty and the English Church under Oliver CromwellIn the early months of the Protectorate, Cromwell and his Council of State passed three crucial ordinances on religion that brought a degree of clarity to the ...
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3 Toleration and the ProtectorateThe religious policy of Oliver Cromwell becomes clearer when we see it as a search not for the toleration for which he is so often commended, but for union: ...
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Richard Cromwell, Lord Protector - Historic UKDec 2, 2020 · Political chaos followed the death of Oliver Cromwell in September 1658. His successor as Lord Protector was his son Richard.
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The end of the Protectorate - UK ParliamentPolitical chaos followed the death of Oliver Cromwell in September 1658. His successor as Lord Protector, his son Richard, was not able to manage the ...
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[PDF] PROTECTOR OF THE REFORMED - DRUMThis event situates the Cromwellian Protectorate under Oliver (1653-1658) into an evolving construct of power for the expansion and innovative use of the ...
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The failure of the 'Good Old Cause' | olivercromwell.orgBy New Year's day 1659 the Protectorate regime was to have a debt of £2.5 million and the army a legitimate demand for £890,000. This would have been sufficient ...
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A month in politics: the fall of Protector Richard Cromwell, 1659Jul 21, 2022 · Protector Oliver Cromwell had died on 3 September 1658, having recently declined an offer of the crown but also having, in traditional mode ...
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The 'Interruption' of Parliament and the quest for political settlement ...Oct 17, 2019 · ... Richard Cromwell, who lacked substantial military experience, had been short-lived. A Parliament (elected December 1658/January 1659) which ...<|separator|>
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The Restoration and the birth of the British ArmyAfter entering London with his troops, he secured the readmission to the Rump Parliament of those members who had been excluded during Pride's Purge in 1648.<|separator|>
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The last days of the Republic – The fall of Richard Cromwell – Part 2Cromwell dissolved the Rump in April 1653. Then when it returned to power in May 1659, from what we can see, its maximum active membership was about 110 MPs.
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Interregnum (1649-1660) - The Royal FamilyFrom 1649 to 1660, England was therefore a republic during a period known as the Interregnum ('between reigns'). A series of political experiments followed, as ...
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1660 | History of Parliament OnlineAs the elections commenced early in April, the exiled Charles II issued a declaration at Breda, setting out his programme for a restored constitutional monarchy ...
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Declaration of Breda | Peace Treaty, Charles II, RestorationSep 30, 2025 · It expressed his desire for a general amnesty, liberty of conscience, an equitable settlement of land disputes, and full payment of arrears to the army.
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Restoration Period, Charles II & Glorious Revolution - BritannicaSep 13, 2025 · With Hyde's help, Charles issued in April 1660 his Declaration of Breda, expressing his personal desire for a general amnesty, liberty of ...
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Towards the Restoration of the Monarchy, 1-8 May 1660May 1, 2020 · The Commons had decisively declared in his favour and they had implicitly done so on the basis of the Declaration of Breda.
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Charles II returns to England to claim his throne | May 25, 1660Feb 9, 2010 · May 25, 1660: Under invitation by leaders of the English Commonwealth, Charles II, the exiled king of England, sets sail for Dover, England, ...<|separator|>
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The Return of Charles II, 29 May 1660 - The History of ParliamentMay 29, 2020 · The huge procession, mostly formed of the army, the London trained bands and the City worthies, crossed London Bridge and then proceeded through ...
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Your ultimate guide to the Restoration period - HistoryExtraApr 17, 2023 · The Declaration of Breda, drafted by the exiled court in April 1660, made it clear that Charles wanted to offer stability, to respect the rule ...
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Charles II, 1660: An Act of Free and Generall Pardon Indempnity ...... Act of Free Pardon Indempnity and Oblivion shall be utterly void and of none effect. X. Exceptions of Murder not comprized in the First Clause.; Piracy ...The Causes and Ends of this... · VI. The like by reason of any...
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The Restoration Settlement, 1660-65 - BCW ProjectD uring the remainder of 1660, the Convention Parliament implemented the initial Restoration settlement. It was broadly intended to restore the constitution ...
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1660 – The year the world changed, war ended and the King returnedOn 29th December the Convention Parliament went its way, having done its main work. New elections would come soon. Before then, though, there was a shocking ...
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Full article: Veteran Politics in Restoration England, 1660–1670Aug 16, 2013 · This article calls attention to the political and social significance of the military during the first decade of Charles II's reign.<|separator|>
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HIST 251 - An Unsettled Settlement: The Restoration Era, 1660-1688In this lecture Professor Wrightson discusses the Restoration settlement of 1660 and the reigns of Charles II and James II.
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The Whig interpretation of historyThe term Whig is actually a name originally used pejoratively to refer to the British Whigs, who supported the power of Parliament, by their Tory opponents.
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ENGLISH HISTORIANS REPEATING THEMSELVES - jstorENGLISH HISTORIANS REPEATING THEMSELVES: THE REFINING. OF THE WHIG INTERPRETATION OF THE ENGLISH REVOLUTION. AND CIVIL WAR. William W. MacDonald. One of the ...
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347 The English Revolution - The History of EnglandJul 3, 2022 · Gardiner wrote his History of the Great Civil War, 1642–9, in three volumes between 1886 and 1891. It's a long time ago – but the voices of ...
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[PDF] Macaulay's history of England from the accession of James IIHistory. ' In September 1839 Macaulay, who had re-entered Parliament as a supporter of Lord Melbourne's Government, entered the Cabinet as Secretary at War ...
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[PDF] 6 x 10.5 Three line title.p65 - Assets - Cambridge University PressThough criticized in details,. Macaulay's history, Whig history, became, in Trevor-Roper's words, ... Rawson Gardiner, who was not uncritical of Macaulay ...
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England under the Stuarts - Reviews in HistoryNov 30, 2003 · Their Whiggish outlook, which Trevelyan inherited, pervades the book: it comes through in his sympathy for Parliaments rather than monarchs, and ...
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The Whig Interpretation of History - University College Oxford (Univ)He puts forward the view that “Whig Historians,” are guilty of writing histories that lean in favour of progress and revolutions.
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Two Cheers for the Whig Interpretation of History – AHASep 1, 2012 · The Whig Interpretation of History became required reading for most history graduate students for the next quarter century, and not a few undergraduates as ...
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Christopher Hill: The English Revolution 1640 (1940)Jul 6, 2020 · Now, it is true that the English Revolution of 1640, like the French Revolution of 1789, was a struggle for political, economic and religious ...
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The English Revolution, 1640 - Libcom.orgMar 8, 2017 · Christopher Hill's Marxist analysis of the English civil war and revolution in the 17th century, published in 1940.Missing: interpretation | Show results with:interpretation
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The English Civil War Interpreted by Marx and Engels - jstorTHE ENGLISH CIVIL WAR INTERPRETED. BY MARX AND ENGELS. CHRISTOPHER HILL historiography of the English civil war is in itself a f ing study for a Marxist. For ...
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Norah Carlin: Marxism and the English Civil War (Autumn 1980)Mar 29, 2016 · The embattled position of Marxism has hindered the development of Marxist understanding of the English bourgeois revolution for long enough. The ...
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Christopher Hill, Pioneer of History From Below - JacobinMay 5, 2025 · By contrast, Hill's long early essay, “The English Revolution 1640,” retells this story from a Marxist perspective. Writing during the ...Missing: interpretation | Show results with:interpretation<|separator|>
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Christopher Hill and the Recovery of History - Against the CurrentIn his early essay, The English Revolution 1640, Hill presented the Revolution as a “bourgeois revolution” in a more or less orthodox sense: a struggle between ...
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[PDF] Revisionism and its legacies: the work of Conrad Russell'The unity of the revisionists in the 1970s was always built around a series of negative propositions.' Conrad Russell's comment highlights the.
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[PDF] Introduction: John Morrill and the experience of revolutionIt reveals how this was a war of religion not just for the radical Puritans, but also for those with a higher view of the Church of England and its future. Page ...
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The History of the Rebellion - Edward Hyde, Earl of ClarendonHere is the only affordable selection of Clarendon's classic History of the Rebellion currently in print, and the first popular edition since 1953.
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The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England ... - WythepediaJul 24, 2025 · The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England strongly supports a monarchy founded on law, with both church and constitution as a ...
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Thomas Hobbes: Moral and Political PhilosophyHis main concern is the problem of social and political order: how human beings can live together in peace and avoid the danger and fear of civil conflict. He ...
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Leviathan: Thomas Hobbes and Leviathan Background - SparkNotesFor Hobbes, civil war was the ultimate terror, the definition of fear itself. He thus wanted to reform philosophy in order to reform the nation and thereby ...
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Popular Royalism and Cheap Print in Interregnum EnglandMay 26, 2022 · This chapter locates the tensions of popular royalism not so much within individual texts as across a set of related stories whose worker-heroes ...
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Instrument of Government | Oliver Cromwell, Parliament | BritannicaSep 30, 2025 · The Instrument of Government established the English Protectorate, vesting power in a lord protector and council, and creating a single-chamber ...
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The instrument of government assessed - Cromwell AssociationThe constitution restored separate and powerful legislative and executive arms of government, while building in a series of checks and balances to prevent one ...
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The Paper Constitutions of the English Interregnum 1647-1660Jan 31, 2020 · This paper discusses the various attempts at a constitutional settlement during those ensuing eleven years -- 1649-1660. During the last year of ...Missing: experiments legacy
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English Civil War and Interregnum | Encyclopedia.comThese high-handed fiscal practices, combined with increasing resort to arbitrary arrest and imprisonment and other absolutist practices, provoked resentment ...Missing: propaganda | Show results with:propaganda
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What was the social and economic impact of the English Civil War ...Compulsory attendance at the parish church was no longer demanded, and faced with the huge financial demands of conducting the war, parliament seems to have ...<|separator|>
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The Impact of the English Civil War on the Economy of London ...The Civil War mainly disrupted trade, with sharp contractions in 1643-44 and 1648-50. Internal trade was disrupted in 1643-44, and naval issues in 1648-50. ...
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How did the English Civil War affect England's economy? | TutorChaseThe English Civil War caused financial instability, high costs, trade decline, infrastructure damage, and agricultural decline, leading to economic decline.
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[PDF] Political Institutions and Economic Development in England, 1600 ...107). 4 See Robert Ashton, The English Civil War: Conservatism and Revolution, 1603-1649 (London,. 1978) ...
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John Locke | Philosophy, Social Contract, Two Treatises ... - BritannicaRaised in Pensford, near Bristol, Locke was 10 years old at the start of the English Civil Wars between the monarchy of Charles I and parliamentary forces under ...
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The Appropriation of Locke - The Heritage FoundationSep 16, 2021 · Locke's Two Treatises of Government became a catalyst for the American Revolution and for other revolutions dedicated to human equality, freedom ...
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The English Civil War and the Glorious Revolution - AP Euro Study ...Key differences: English version is a statute protecting Parliament's role and ... and set precedents that made the Glorious Revolution's constitutional ...
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Stephen Davies, "The Levellers and the Emergence of (Some ...Nov 1, 2019 · In this month's Liberty Matters online discussion we discuss the Leveller pamphlets and the emergent political ideas found there.
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The English Revolution and the History of Majority RuleDec 13, 2021 · The basic point to be made here is that political practices led the way. Majoritarian practices proliferated in the Commons before the English ...<|separator|>
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Remembering the Diggers - JacobinAug 22, 2019 · The Diggers of the English Revolution were egalitarian radicals well before their time. No account of socialist history is complete without them.
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How did the English Revolution influence political thought? | QuizletThe English Revolution influenced political thought by the works of Thomas Hobbes and John Locke providing an answer to the English Revolutions.
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English Revolution: Political and Social Transformations of the 17th ...Social Impact: The war caused significant loss of life and destruction, profoundly affecting English society. Glorious Revolution. The Glorious Revolution of ...