A calendar of key events in Cromwell's life 

1599

  • Born Huntingdon, 25th April

1616

  • Enters Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge

1628

  • MP for Huntingdon

1640

  • MP for Cambridge

1642

  • Raises troops for Parliament

1643

  • Colonel in the Eastern Association

1644

  • Lieutenant-General of the Eastern Association
    Army

  • Battle of Marston Moor, 2nd July

  • Battle of Newbury, 27th October

1645

  • Lieutenant-General of the New Model Army

  • Battle of Naseby, 14th June

1647

  • Supports Parliamentary army in clashes with Parliament

1648

  • Crushes royalist rising in South Wales

  • Battle of Preston, 18th August

1649

  • Supports trial and execution of the King, January

  • Commands army sent to crush Ireland, August

1650

  • Commands army sent to crush Scotland, July

1650

  • Battle of Dunbar, 3rd September

1651

  • Battle of Worcester, 3rd September

1653

  • Dissolves Parliament, 20th April

  • Becomes Lord Protector, 16th December

1654

  • Meets first Protectorate Parliament, September

1655

  • System of the Major- Generals established, October

1656

  • Meets second Protectorate Parliament, September

1657

  • Rejects Parliament's offer of the crown and remains Lord Protector, March - June

1658

  • Dies at Whitehall, 3rd September

1661

  • Exhumed and posthumously 'executed', 30th January

 

The final resting place of Cromwell's physical remains is a matter of dispute. However, it is likely that his body lies near Tyburn in London, now the Marble Arch area. The head believed to be Cromwell's became a rather undignified collector's piece until bequeathed to his old Cambridge College in 1960 and buried near Sidney Sussex chapel.  

 

Who was this Oliver Cromwell?

Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658) remains something of an enigma. His early life was conventional: he was born into a family of Huntingdonshire gentry and educated at Huntingdon, Cambridge, and Lincoln's Inn. He lived quietly on his small estate and took an active part in local political affairs, representing Huntingdon in the parliament of 1628 and Cambridge both in the Short Parliament -- which was summoned by Charles I to provide money for a campaign to reintroduce episcopacy in Scotland, but during which many members who sympathized with the Scots organized opposition to his policies, provoking the unhappy monarch into an abrupt dissolution of parliament which further alienated his opponents - -and in the Long Parliament, which won the constitutional reforms from Charles I which the Parliamentary party would be called upon to defend in the Civil Wars. His social, political, and religious attitudes at this time--he was a devout Puritan--were all typical of his class.

The Civil Wars, however, which broke out in 1642, when Cromwell was forty-three, made it clear that he possessed unexpected talents and abilities. Though totally lacking in previous military experience, he created and led a superb force of cavalry, the Ironsides, and rose from the rank of captain to that of lieutenant-general in three years, displaying, at the same time, a paradoxical mixture of religious sincerity and astute political opportunism. Before 1645 he was one of the parliamentarians who refused to compromise with the loyalists, and again, in 1647, he took the side of the NEW MODEL ARMY in the face of attempts to disband it. He was a prime mover in the trial and execution of the King in 1649, and after the Commonwealth (1649-53) was established, he became lord-general and commander in chief and lord lieutenant of Ireland, where he presided over the massacres of the garrisons of Drogheda and Wexford. [If you listen to the music of U2, you may recognize the name of Cromwell from some of their music!]

In 1653, after the expulsion of the Rump Parliament, he became lord protector (which is to say chief executive) of the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth proper, however, ended with the establishment of Cromwell's Protectorate (1653-58), which was characterized by profitable commercial treaties with several foreign powers and several successful wars. The Protectorate endured, however, only while Cromwell lived, and collapsed after his incompetent son Richard alienated both the Army and Parliament in his attempt to succeed him.

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