
PREFACE.
OLIVER CROMWELL. - CHAPTER I. KING AND PARLIAMENT.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
Transcribers' Note
Born in Huntingdon in 1599 to a modest farming family, Oliver Cromwell grew up amid the conflicting worldviews of his Puritan father and the more flamboyant relatives who had once enjoyed wealth. His schooling at the local free school under Dr. Beard introduced him to a worldview that saw divine providence at work in every triumph and disaster, a belief that would shape his later judgments. After a brief stint at Cambridge, he left to support his widowed mother and five sisters, marrying the London merchant’s daughter Elizabeth in 1620.
Cromwell’s first step onto the national stage came in 1628 when he was elected MP for Huntingdon, a seat that placed him at the heart of growing tensions between King and Parliament. In the Commons he quickly earned a reputation for stern moral conviction and a willingness to speak plainly, traits honed by his early religious education. These experiences laid the groundwork for the principled, often uncompromising, leadership style that would later define his public life.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (447K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-02-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1829–1902
Best known for his sweeping histories of the English Civil War era, this Victorian scholar devoted his career to making the political and religious struggles of 17th-century England vivid and readable. His work helped shape how later generations understood the Stuarts, the Commonwealth, and Oliver Cromwell.
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