Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 17 de ene. de 2022 · Henry Ireton, 1611-1651. Cromwell’s right-hand man in his dealings with the Levellers and the leading architect of the King’s trial and execution. Cool, taciturn and intellectual in contrast to Cromwell’s passion and emotion. Henry Ireton was born at Attenborough, near Nottingham, the eldest of five sons of a minor country gentleman.

  2. Henry Ireton was seen as Oliver Cromwell’s ‘second self’. 1 The two men, bound by religion and kin, were regarded as a unit. Leveller and royalist portrayals of a Machiavellian Ireton manipulating Cromwell are overplayed, but Ireton was, after God, among the most important influences on Cromwell. 2 Ireton and Cromwell had been close since first meeting in 1643, as fellow Puritan officers ...

  3. Hace 3 días · Henry Ireton, Parliamentary official and son in law of Oliver Cromwell, was buried in Henry VII's chapel in Westminster Abbey in 1652. However after the Restoration of Charles II to the throne the House of Commons voted on 4th December 1660 that Ireton's remains, with those of Cromwell and Judge Bradshaw, should be exhumed and the bodies hung ...

  4. 12 de sept. de 2012 · Henry Ireton was baptised on 3 November 1611 in Attenborough, Nottinghamshire. The Iretons had moved from the area of Kirk Ireton, Little Ireton or Ireton wood in Derbyshire into Nottinghamshire at some point after 1600. In 1544 a German Ireton of Little Ireton made his will after being appointed to go in the retinue of the Earl of Shrewsbury ...

  5. A devout puritan, Henry Ireton was an immediate parliamentarian activist rising to the rank of Commissary-General of the New Model Army. Ireton shared Oliver Cr...

  6. Contents. David Farr. Book: Henry Ireton and the English Revolution. Online publication: 12 September 2012. Your Kindle email address. Please provide your Kindle email. @free.kindle.com@kindle.com (service fees apply) Available formatsPDFPlease select a format to save.

  7. 8 de jun. de 2018 · Ireton, Henry (1611–51). Ireton was plunged into the Civil War, since he was appointed by Parliament to command the horse at Nottingham two months before Charles I raised his standard in the same town. He fought at Edgehill and in the first battle of Newbury, where he was wounded and temporarily captured, and rapidly became one of Cromwell's ...