As someone growing up in the US where we think along the lines of the American Revolution, Cromwell Co. come across as very confusing.
They go so far as to execute the king (that isn't something that seemed likely had by some strange reason the American's captured the king (some good fan fiction there)) and yet as far as I can tell really don't seem to have much of a plan / do much to establish much at all after that, and sort of roll over at the end.
It always seems very muddy with all sorts of religious motivations (that admittedly I find hard to understand) from the outside.
Then again the tradition of 'Parliament' (speaking in a larger historical sense) seems to swing wildly as far as its loyalty to the king, or lack of it, power, or lack of power, and so forth.
Because the main issue was constitutional, not whether the king was alive or dead. The issue with Charles I, his father, and James II was (ultimately) that they did stuff that really pissed everyone off (and were often very disinterested leaders)...which was to a large extent based on a difference of opinion about what being king actually meant (even in today's authoritarian regimes, there is a concept of ruling with the consent of the people...China is a good example of this).
The religious motivation is fairly simple if you consider the period slightly before: Spain was predominant, England had gone to war with Spain, England was relatively weak, and Catholics had just tried to blow up Parliament...yes, England had lots of Catholics near government (which ended up being part of the problem) but it was a Protestant nation (the Thirty Years War happened in Europe too, this kind of religious conflict was not unknown). The extreme position that Cromwell took was also probably not a reflection of public opinion either btw (he was unquestionably not the leader of some democratic cause, and he just stepped into a power vacuum with leadership that was lacking elsewhere...the majority of his notable actions would be called religious genocide today).
To see the religious issue more clearly btw: if England had indeed had a Catholic ruler, it would have been like the Spanish Netherlands...that is the fear that existed at the time.
> To see the religious issue more clearly btw: if England had indeed had a Catholic ruler, it would have been like the Spanish Netherlands...that is the fear that existed at the time.
I think you're overestimating the average US citizen's knowledge of this and how it relates historically and politically to the area. I say this as someone who just had to look up what the Spanish Netherlands was, because at first I thought you were just talking about a hypothetical, not an actual region that existed.
This is possibly the most confusing and nonsensical period in English history. When you start throwing in the Scottish connections and the protestant vs catholic swirls, it is very difficult to keep track of anything.
Cromwell was one of the leaders of a Revolution. By the time of the American one you had the example of this one as well as the French Revolution, anything becomes easier to get right after a few iterations.
An alternative viewpoint to it being about religion is this [1].
Yeah I didn't mean to judge them by the standard of later revolutions as much as indicate as to why I find it confusing / where I'm coming from.
But I still find it confusing even if they didn't have a sort of age of enlightenment like spin in the sense that ... they really didn't seem to have a good plan and it just sort of ends abruptly.
I highly recommend Mike Duncans 'revolutions' podcast for a thorough and entertaining history of Cromwell and the entire English revolution - as well as the American revolution, French (my current season) and about 6 others.
If anyone besides me just sort of thinks of this as “a long long time ago”, to put a timeframe I have a better grasp of on these events: Newton was 6 years old when Charles I was beheaded.
They go so far as to execute the king (that isn't something that seemed likely had by some strange reason the American's captured the king (some good fan fiction there)) and yet as far as I can tell really don't seem to have much of a plan / do much to establish much at all after that, and sort of roll over at the end.
It always seems very muddy with all sorts of religious motivations (that admittedly I find hard to understand) from the outside.
Then again the tradition of 'Parliament' (speaking in a larger historical sense) seems to swing wildly as far as its loyalty to the king, or lack of it, power, or lack of power, and so forth.
The religious motivation is fairly simple if you consider the period slightly before: Spain was predominant, England had gone to war with Spain, England was relatively weak, and Catholics had just tried to blow up Parliament...yes, England had lots of Catholics near government (which ended up being part of the problem) but it was a Protestant nation (the Thirty Years War happened in Europe too, this kind of religious conflict was not unknown). The extreme position that Cromwell took was also probably not a reflection of public opinion either btw (he was unquestionably not the leader of some democratic cause, and he just stepped into a power vacuum with leadership that was lacking elsewhere...the majority of his notable actions would be called religious genocide today).
To see the religious issue more clearly btw: if England had indeed had a Catholic ruler, it would have been like the Spanish Netherlands...that is the fear that existed at the time.
I think you're overestimating the average US citizen's knowledge of this and how it relates historically and politically to the area. I say this as someone who just had to look up what the Spanish Netherlands was, because at first I thought you were just talking about a hypothetical, not an actual region that existed.
An alternative viewpoint to it being about religion is this [1].
[1] https://www.marxists.org/archive/hill-christopher/english-re...
But I still find it confusing even if they didn't have a sort of age of enlightenment like spin in the sense that ... they really didn't seem to have a good plan and it just sort of ends abruptly.