Oliver CromwellLongmans, Green, 1909 - 319 páginas This volume is an extensive biography of Oliver Cromwell, but according to its preface, the author suggests that it is a history. Gardiner makes a point to distinguish a history with a biographical viewpoint from that of a strict biography. |
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Página 15
... tanism , so that he bent his energies , not to securing for his friends free scope for the exercise of what persuasion was in them , but for the repression of those whom he looked upon as the enemies of the Church KING AND PARLIAMENT . 15.
... tanism , so that he bent his energies , not to securing for his friends free scope for the exercise of what persuasion was in them , but for the repression of those whom he looked upon as the enemies of the Church KING AND PARLIAMENT . 15.
Página 16
Samuel Rawson Gardiner. whom he looked upon as the enemies of the Church and the Crown . With the assistance of Laud he did everything in his power to crush Puritanism , with the result of making Puritanism stronger than it had been ...
Samuel Rawson Gardiner. whom he looked upon as the enemies of the Church and the Crown . With the assistance of Laud he did everything in his power to crush Puritanism , with the result of making Puritanism stronger than it had been ...
Página 29
... enemy's horse . So unquestioned was the inferiority of infantry , that unless the horsemen who gathered round Charles's standard when it was dis- played on the Castle Hill at Nottingham could be overpowered , the resistance of the ...
... enemy's horse . So unquestioned was the inferiority of infantry , that unless the horsemen who gathered round Charles's standard when it was dis- played on the Castle Hill at Nottingham could be overpowered , the resistance of the ...
Página 30
... enemies than His . It was no reason- —so they learnt from their captain - that they should remit any single precaution recommended by the most worldly of military experts . Cromwell almost certainly never told his soldiers - in so many ...
... enemies than His . It was no reason- —so they learnt from their captain - that they should remit any single precaution recommended by the most worldly of military experts . Cromwell almost certainly never told his soldiers - in so many ...
Página 33
... enemies that Cromwell and those who sympathised with him had to deal . Of all forms of war civil strife is the most hideous , and it is no wonder that the hands of many who had entered upon it with the expectation that a few months or ...
... enemies that Cromwell and those who sympathised with him had to deal . Of all forms of war civil strife is the most hideous , and it is no wonder that the hands of many who had entered upon it with the expectation that a few months or ...
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Términos y frases comunes
accept action Agitators amongst appointed Army Council asked attempt authority brought cause cavalry Charles Charles's Church clergy command Commons Commonwealth constitutional Crom Cromwell Cromwell's Crown danger declared defence demand difficulty doubt Dunkirk Dutch ecclesiastical elected enemy England English Englishmen episcopacy established Fairfax favour fleet followed force France hands Harrison hath Hazlerigg hope horse House imposed Instrument Ireland Ireton King King's kingdom Lambert land least Lilburne Long Parliament Lord Manchester ment military militia mind Model Army monarchy nation negotiation never Newcastle Propositions officers Oliver Oliver Cromwell Oliver's ordinance Parlia Parliamentary Parliamentary supremacy party peace person political Presbyterian proposal Protector Protectorate Parliament Protestant Puritan question refused regiments religion religious liberty resistance Royalist scheme Scotland Scots Scottish Scottish army Self-Denying Ordinance sent settlement soldiers Spain Spanish spirit tectorate tion toleration took troops Vane victory vote Westminster whilst words wrote