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5.2.1. That time Ireland exploded in rebellion against the Protestant English settlers. 3.000 people were killed. Parliament quarreled over who should lead an army to defeat the rebels, Many MPs were afraid to give an army to Charles; they thought that Charles would use the army in order to dissolve Parliament by force and to rule alone again. Most of the House of Lords and a few from the House of Commons supported Charles. The Royalists were known as Cavaliers, controlled most of the north-west. Parliament controlled the east and south-east, including London. Their short hair gave the Parliamentarian soldiers their popular name of Roundheads. The two armies clashed eventually. The first battle, fought in October 1642, was indecisive. The king rejected Parliament’s conditions for his return to power; his intransigence aggravated the divisions among the victors. The army, more independent in religion and radical in politics than the Presbyterians who dominated Parliament, seized the king. Found guilty, Charles I was executed on January 30, 1649.
5.2.2. Several MPs had commanded the Parliamentarian army during the Civil War. One of them was a gentleman farmer named Oliver Cromwell. He had created a new "model" army. Instead of country people or gentry Cromwell invited into his army educated men wanted to fight for their beliefs. Cromwell and his advisers created the Republic called t he Commonwealth. From 1649 till 1660 Britain was the republic.
5.2.3. The tragic thing was that Cromwell and his associates created a government which was far more severe than Charles had been. They got rid of the monarchy, and now they got rid of the House of Lords. The need for a permanent, settled government remained, and the power resided in Cromwell and the army. In December 1653 Cromwell accepted the Instrument of Government, a written constitution, which created a protectorate consisting of himself as Lord Protector and a one-house Parliament.
5.2.4. The Scots were shocked by the King’s execution. They invited his son, whom they recognized as King Charles II, to join them and fight against the Parliamentarian army. But they were defeated; the young Charles himself had to escape to France. So land was brought under English republican rule. Cromwell also took an army to Ireland "to punish them for killing Protestants in 1641. Soon Cromwell became unpopular because of his politics, severe rules and forbids of celebrating Christmas and Easter, or to play games on Sunday. Cromwell died on September 3, 1658, and the drift toward anarchy was halted by the commander of the army in Scotland. He marched into London with his troops and recalled the Long Parliament, which then restored Charles II to the throne in May 1660.
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The age of Elizabeth. | | | The events after 1660. |