Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. By his wife, Bridget Cromwell, Ireton left one son, Henry Ireton (circa 1652–1711), and four daughters, one of whom, Bridget Bendish (she married Thomas Bendish in 1670) is said to have compromised herself in the Rye House Plot of 1683, as did Henry. Ireton's widow Bridget afterward married General Charles Fleetwood.

  2. 12 de sept. de 2012 · Putney needs to be set in the context of previous army proceedings and the continuing desire of the soldiers to maintain unity. Woolrych warned us to ‘be very cautious about treating the Putney debates, wonderful as they are, as the typical voice of the army’. Evans argues that ‘the Debates were essentially concerned with the search for ...

  3. Ireton, the son of one of Cromwell’s generals, was also a grandchild of the Lord Protector himself. Though his father, a regicide, had died in 1651, the family estates were nevertheless confiscated after the Restoration and vested in the Duke of York. Nothing is known of Ireton’s career until 19 Jan. 1684 when he was accused of complicity ...

  4. Henry Ireton (mayo de 1650 - noviembre de 1651) Carlos Fleetwood (noviembre de 1651 - abril de 1653) [ editar datos en Wikidata] La conquista de Irlanda se llevó a cabo entre 1649 y 1653 por las fuerzas del parlamento inglés, dirigido por Oliver Cromwell y su New Model Army durante las guerras de los Tres Reinos. 1 .

  5. Henry Ireton was born in a house to the west of Attenborough church. During the time of the English Civil Wars (1642 - 1649) he became a famous Parliamentary general who went on to marry a daughter of Oliver Cromwell.

  6. 29 de nov. de 2021 · Henry Ireton. copy attributed to Robert Walker, after Samuel Cooper, and Sir Anthony van Dyck. oil on canvas, circa 1650. 49 in. x 39 1/2 in. (1245 mm x 1003 mm) Purchased, 1945. Primary Collection. NPG 3301. On display in Room 6 on Floor 3 at the National Portrait Gallery.

  7. Since Oliver Cromwell and Henry Ireton were dead, their bodies were exhumed, and hung in chains as a grisly reminder of the dangers facing all revolutionaries on the losing side. They made an appropriate pair, not just because Ireton had married Cromwell's daughter, Bridget, but because, as David Farr argues, no two men did more to further the English Revolution.