Oliver CromwellGoupil & Company, 1899 - 216 páginas |
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... favour or disfavour never left him , and he was able , in the days of his greatness , to aver unhesitatingly that the results of Naseby and Worcester were an evidence that God himself approved of the victorious cause . In 1616 Cromwell ...
... favour or disfavour never left him , and he was able , in the days of his greatness , to aver unhesitatingly that the results of Naseby and Worcester were an evidence that God himself approved of the victorious cause . In 1616 Cromwell ...
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... favour or disfavour never left him , and he was able , in the days of his greatness , to aver unhesitatingly that the results of Naseby and Worcester were an evidence that God himself approved of the victorious cause . In 1616 Cromwell ...
... favour or disfavour never left him , and he was able , in the days of his greatness , to aver unhesitatingly that the results of Naseby and Worcester were an evidence that God himself approved of the victorious cause . In 1616 Cromwell ...
Página 11
... favoured . Yet though the clergy had ceased to cry out for the supersession of episcopacy by the Presby- terian discipline , the bulk of the clergy and of the religious laity were Puritan to the core . So much had been effected by the ...
... favoured . Yet though the clergy had ceased to cry out for the supersession of episcopacy by the Presby- terian discipline , the bulk of the clergy and of the religious laity were Puritan to the core . So much had been effected by the ...
Página 13
... favour . Important as Charles's own character - with its love of shifts and evasions - was in deciding the issue between them , it must not be forgotten that the crisis arose from a circumstance KING AND PARLIAMENT . 13.
... favour . Important as Charles's own character - with its love of shifts and evasions - was in deciding the issue between them , it must not be forgotten that the crisis arose from a circumstance KING AND PARLIAMENT . 13.
Página 19
... favour of the royalist gentry , whose very nickname of " cavaliers " was a presage of victory , and who were not only themselves familiar with horsemanship from their youth up , but had at their disposal the grooms and the huntsmen who ...
... favour of the royalist gentry , whose very nickname of " cavaliers " was a presage of victory , and who were not only themselves familiar with horsemanship from their youth up , but had at their disposal the grooms and the huntsmen who ...
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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