Oliver CromwellGoupil & Company, 1899 - 216 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 30
Página 34
... Englishmen , without toleration either for the sects favoured by Cromwell , or for the Church of Andrewes and Laud which found one of its warmest and most conscientious supporters in Charles . Every man in the three kingdoms , including ...
... Englishmen , without toleration either for the sects favoured by Cromwell , or for the Church of Andrewes and Laud which found one of its warmest and most conscientious supporters in Charles . Every man in the three kingdoms , including ...
Página 27
... Englishmen who , as yet , championed a system of religious liberty , and he now succeeded in keeping a door open for it by proposing the addition of a few words , declaring that religion was to be reformed in England according to the ...
... Englishmen who , as yet , championed a system of religious liberty , and he now succeeded in keeping a door open for it by proposing the addition of a few words , declaring that religion was to be reformed in England according to the ...
Página 28
... Englishmen above the age of eighteen . of eighteen . Few indeed Few indeed amongst the members of Parliament willingly placed their necks under the yoke . It was the price paid for Scottish armed assistance , simply because that ...
... Englishmen above the age of eighteen . of eighteen . Few indeed Few indeed amongst the members of Parliament willingly placed their necks under the yoke . It was the price paid for Scottish armed assistance , simply because that ...
Página 34
... Englishmen , without toleration either for the sects favoured by Cromwell , or for the Church of Andrewes and Laud which found one of its warmest and most conscientious supporters in Charles . Every man in the three kingdoms , including ...
... Englishmen , without toleration either for the sects favoured by Cromwell , or for the Church of Andrewes and Laud which found one of its warmest and most conscientious supporters in Charles . Every man in the three kingdoms , including ...
Página 61
... Englishmen that order could be main- tained without a king , and with the great mass of Englishmen this view was still prevalent . We can hardly go wrong if we suppose that Cromwell shared the hope that Charles , by more generous ...
... Englishmen that order could be main- tained without a king , and with the great mass of Englishmen this view was still prevalent . We can hardly go wrong if we suppose that Cromwell shared the hope that Charles , by more generous ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
accept action amongst attempt authority Blake brought Buckinghamshire cause cavalry Charles Charles's Chequers Court Church clergy collection command Commonwealth constitutional Cromwell's daughter of Oliver declared defence doubt Duke Duke of Hamilton Earl elected Elizabeth enemy England English Englishmen episcopacy established facing Fairfax favour force France Frankland-Russell-Astley garrison Hamilton hands hath Henry Marten Hinchingbrooke hope House of Commons Instrument Ireland Ireton King King's kingdom Lambert least Lilburne London Long Parliament Lord Major-Generals Manchester ment military militia Model Army National Portrait Gallery negotiation never officers Oliver Cromwell Oliver's ordinance Painting by Robert Parlia Parliament Parliamentary party peace person political Presbyterian proposal Protector Puritan question refused regiments religion religious liberty resistance Robert Walker Royalist Samuel Cooper scheme Scotland Scots Scottish Scottish army settlement Sidney Sussex College soldiers Spain spirit taken tion took troops Vane victory vote Westminster whilst Windsor Castle wrote