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  1. Maurice Ashley. Oliver Cromwell - Protectorate, Puritanism, Revolution: Before Cromwell summoned his first Protectorate Parliament on September 3, 1654, he and his Council of State passed more than 80 ordinances embodying a constructive domestic policy. His aim was to reform the law, to set up a Puritan Church, to permit toleration outside it ...

  2. Hace 1 día · Oliver Cromwell’s head . In 1659 Richard Cromwell gave up power, and Charles II was restored as King of England – this was known as the restoration. Charles decreed that Cromwell be disinterred from Westminster Abbey, and that he be ‘executed’ – despite already being dead – for regicide.

  3. 5 de dic. de 2013 · Cromwell died in 1658 in London, probably from septicemia resulting from a kidney infection. Oliver Cromwell was buried in Westminster Abbey. Cromwell’s son, Richard, succeeded him as Lord Protector. Richard resigned in 1659 and in 1660 Charles II came out of exile, the monarchy was restored and Charles was crowned as king.

  4. Oliver Cromwell. Oliver Cromwell (ur. 25 kwietnia 1599 r. w Huntingdon, zm. 3 września 1658 r. w pałacu Whitehall w Londynie) – polityk angielski, główna postać angielskiej wojny domowej, lord protektor Anglii, Szkocji i Irlandii 1653–1658.

  5. Oliver Cromwell (født 25. april 1599, død 3. september 1658) var en engelsk militær og politisk leder, kjent for å ha henrettet den engelske kongen. I en periode forvandlet Cromwell England til et republikansk samvelde, og han fungerte som Lord Protector, «herrebeskytter», av England, Skottland og Irland.

  6. Richard Cromwell (born Oct. 4, 1626—died July 12, 1712, Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, Eng.) was the lord protector of England from September 1658 to May 1659. The eldest surviving son of Oliver Cromwell and Elizabeth Bourchier, Richard failed in his attempt to carry on his father’s role as leader of the Commonwealth.

  7. 3 de jul. de 2017 · Death of Oliver Cromwell 1658-1661. Cromwell descended into ill health, suffering from a variety of complaints including malaria and kidney stones: his death, which took place at Whitehall on 3 September 1658 (the anniversary, incidentally, of the Battle of Worcester) was probably the result of some kind of infection, possibly pneumonia.