Parliament in 1629, and represented Cambridge in 1640,
where to oppose the king he, by commission in 1642
from Essex, raised a troop of horse, famous afterwards
as his “Ironsides”; with these he distinguished
himself, first at Marston Moor in 1644, and next year
at Naseby; crushed the Scots at Preston in 1648, who
had invaded the country in favour of the king, now
in the hands of the Parliament, and took Berwick;
sat at trial of the king and signed his death-warrant,
1649; sent that same year to subdue rebellion in Ireland,
he sternly yet humanely stamped it out; recalled from
Ireland, he set out for Scotland, which had risen
up in favour of Charles II., and totally defeated
the Scots at Dunbar, Sept. 3, 1650, after which Charles
invaded England and the Royalists were finally beaten
at Worcester, Sept. 3, 1651, upon which his attention
was drawn to affairs of government; taking up his
residence at Hampton Court, his first step was to dissolve
the Rump, which he did by military authority in 1653;
a new Parliament was summoned, which also he was obliged
to dismiss, after being declared Lord-Protector; from
this time he ruled mainly alone, and wherever his
power was exercised, beyond seas even, it was respected;
at last his cares and anxieties proved too much for
him and wore him out, he fell ill and died, Sept.
3, 1658, the anniversary of his two great victories
at Dunbar and Worcester; they buried him in Westminster,
but his body was dug up at the Restoration, hanged
at Tyburn, and buried under the gallows; such treatment
his body was subjected to after he was gone, and for
long after he was no less ignobly treated by several
succeeding generations as a hypocrite, a fanatic,
or a tyrant; but now, thanks to Carlyle, he is come
to be regarded as one of the best and wisest rulers
that ever sat on the English throne (1599-1658).
See “Cromwell’s Letters and Speeches,”
edited by Carlyle.
CROMWELL, RICHARD, son of the Protector; appointed
to succeed him; was unequal to the task, and compelled
to abdicate, April 26, 1659; retired into private
life; went after the Restoration for a time abroad;
returned under a feigned name, and lived and died at
Cheshunt (1626-1712).
CROMWELL, THOMAS, minister of Henry VIII., and malleus
monachorum, the “mauler of the monks,”
born at Putney; the son of a blacksmith; led a life
of adventure for eight or nine years on the Continent;
settled in England about the beginning of Henry’s
reign; came under notice of Wolsey, whose confidant
he became, and subordinate agent in suppressing the
smaller monasteries; on his master’s fall rose
into favour with Henry by suggesting he should discard
the supremacy of the Pope, and assume the supremacy
of the Church himself; attained, in consequence, the
highest rank and authority in the State, for the proposal
was adopted, with the result that the Crown remains
the head of ecclesiastical authority in England to
this day; the authority he thus acquired he employed
in so high-handed a fashion that he lost the favour
of both king and people, till on a sudden he was arrested
on charges of treason, was condemned to death, and
beheaded on Tower Hill (1485-1540).