Oliver Cromwell is a hardass.
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chrismahon2005 — 19 years ago(April 14, 2006 04:08 PM)
Im of irish background myself,and also a military history fan,so ive always kinda of had a lot of respect for the guy,even though i know full well what he did was pretty heavy.
But that was what it was like those days,and he did i believe offer terms to the towns before he took them,by the laws of war in those days,once that offer is turned down,then the citys can be sacked by the troops involved,and take any plunder they can find.
But of course they probaly went way over the top,many accounts tell of them slaughtering nuns,priests etc in the town square,while none of the officers at first tried to stop them.
But even alexander,napoleon,wellington had there bad moments and there troops many times ran amok,so i guess it happens in all periods of warfare,even to the so called greats. -
bsrain — 19 years ago(June 25, 2006 01:24 PM)
Well, George Washington was a hardass too. Don't believe me? Just check this out:
http://members.aol.com/ChipCooper/george.html
By the way, what do you British think of the whole Cromwell/Charles I incident these days? In school, do they teach you that Cromwell was the bad guy and Chuck I was just an enlightened ruler who got a bum deal from some uppity Protestants? Or is it vice versa, like Cromwell was a man before his time who was laying the groundwork for a more democratic England? I would think that after the reinstatement of the monarchy, they would've had a little revisionist history written casting Cromwell in a bad light, being that they dug him up, cut his head off, and put it on a pike for years and years. Talk about overkill.
/curious Yank -
Koncorde — 19 years ago(July 01, 2006 04:04 PM)
Education is rather neutral from what I remember (I was a teacher for a short while but it wasn't my subject). Though to be honest it's not actually particularly focused upon by our education system, merely glossed over along with the rest of our couple of thousand year history+europe+world. Usually though anyone who gets their head chopped off does so because they're a "bad man", whereas the only 'school' fact I remember about Cromwell was that his brain reputedly weighed several pounds (the average being 1.4lb or something).
Revisionists can't do much more to Cromwell to be honest. He was the first leader to say "warts 'n all" and led a number of very well documented campaigns. At no point did he 'dress up' how he was, and fought vigorously against those who would bring him down - which is why the massacres and similar are patently out of character.
The "British" view overall is that he was a hero to one and all, the first 'low' ruler (i.e. a man of the people). It's unlikely that even with Charles II coming back to the throne that he could have put any weight into having history amended (given he was little more than a puppet for the Lords etc) and with such a wealth of information.
The Irish view (originally founded and based upon 'Royalist' propoganda, since reinforced through the occupation and continued troubles) is to the contrary obviously. -
Koncorde — 19 years ago(August 26, 2006 02:16 PM)
I was using "Occupation" as the Royalist/Irish term. It's the one several people I know use when referring to the northern counties in order to justify their support for 'civil disobedience' and the IRA's resistance.
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sculston — 19 years ago(August 04, 2006 10:42 PM)
If you are still curious, then a recent book by Geoffery Robertson might be of interest, check out "The Tyranicide Brief"
I'm a Brit who was brought up on the old 'Cromwell bad, Charles1/Restoration good' idea. This book changed my thinking; enjoy. -
General_Cromwell — 19 years ago(October 22, 2006 10:43 AM)
Another good book is 'Cromwell; Our Honorable Enemy' written no less by an Irishman (whose name escapes me) who puts a good case across that Cromwell wasn't the monster he is depicted as.
"What did i think of her? Four letter word beginning with C. You know, cold!" -
the-cullens — 19 years ago(February 03, 2007 08:16 AM)
The book you're thinking of is by Tom Reilly, who was a history lecturer at Dublin University at the time he wrote it. He researched it by going back to the primary sources,i.e. the accounts left by the eye witnesses of the time, as any decent historian is supposed to do, and discovered (surprise, surprise) that the so-called 'massacre' at Drogheda was nothing of the sort; no women, children or non-combatants were killed, and only those men 'found in arms against us'. The rules of war at the time (and for a couple of hundred years afterwards) dictated that Cromwell was perfectly within his rights to execute these men, as they had rejected (with accompanying insults) his call on them to surrender, forcing him to take the town by storm - which was considerably bloodier for all concerned, attackers and defenders alike. (Wellington did exactly the same thing to a town which refused to surrender during the Peninsular War - Badajoz I think - but you don't hear much criticism of him, even from the Spanish!)
This conclusion - that by the standards of the time it was neither a massacre nor an atrocity - was extremely unpopular with Reilly's fellow countrymen It turns out that the atrocity stories (slaughtering priests, raping nuns etc) only started to appear in the 19th century with the growth of the Irish Independence movement, and appear to have been totally fabricated.
Next thing you know, Reilly's left Dublin Uni. for a post at an American University did he jump or was he pushed?
Who says history doesn't mean anything these days.
And before someone has a go at me for being English, I'm half-Irish and half Welsh! -
tenkisoratoti — 19 years ago(April 03, 2007 05:07 AM)
Cromwell and his English Army conquered both Ireland and Scotland.
A great tactician and strategist
George Washington doesn't have anything on Cromwell, he was a shockingly poor tactician, look at the number of times his US Army got pwned by the British? Granted, British soldiers were superior, more of a reason. -
ArchStanton1862 — 18 years ago(May 18, 2007 01:22 AM)
Washington had a lot more on his plate than Cromwell too. He was in charge a the entire army and had to deal with Congress (Even worse than Parliament since at least they had several centuries of practice running things) as well as the many people in the army who disagreed with him. Not that I'm saying he was a better general than Cromwell but he certainly wasn't terrible at it. It's incredibly impressive that he managed to keep the army together to begin with nonetheless get them to fight. And yeah, the inexperienced soldiers did ruin a lot of his battles. They could have stood up a whole lot better at New York if they'd had NMA guys there instead.
Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain.
-Friedrich Schiller (1759-1805) -
NForest — 18 years ago(June 21, 2007 05:23 AM)
And let us all remember that when the catholic Spanish Armada was destroyed by the storms around the British Isles, a lot of the wrecks were washed up on catholic Irish beaches and were robbed and the survivors murdered.
Not many peoples in this life always cover themselves in glory.
Cromwell did what Kings of England had always doneput everyone to the sword who was thought to be against them.
"I was playing the RIGHT notesjust not necessarily in the right order"