Episode 2.104: The Rump Resurrected - podcast episode cover

Episode 2.104: The Rump Resurrected

Apr 23, 202232 min
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Episode description

1659

Having run out of ideas, England once again turns to the men of the Rump parliament, who Oliver Cromwell had banished from Westminster six years earlier.

Transcript

This is Stuart England The Civil Wars episode two point one hundred and four. The Rump Resurrected the story of Richard Cromwell's Parliament, or the Third Protectorate Parliament as it's often called, is an awkward one to shape into a coherent narrative. At least I'm finding that to be the case. The problem lies in the multiple overlapping factions battling each other. So I thought I'd set up some simplified, perhaps oversimplified categories at the outset. This episode is going to center

around three groups. First, the old Civilian faction, which by this point you can also think of as supporters of Richard Cromwell as Lord Protector. Second, the Old Army faction, nominally led by Charles Fleetwood, but he was in an increasingly precarious position, holding less and less influence with the officers who made up the army. And finally, the Republicans or Rumpers, men like Arthur Hesselrigg, who dreamed of restoring the Rump, the last true expression of

untrammeled parliamentary sovereignty. The determining factor in this three way battle was the loyalty of the army officers. Richard Cromwell and his chief spokesman in Parliament, John Thurlow, had an uneasy relationship with army leaders like Fleetwood. Although the army and civilian factions had been divided on the future of the Protectorate for more than a year, the whole system faced an existential crisis. Some kind of reconciliation

had to be achieved if the Protectorate was to survive. The only question was whether that would mean a largely civilian government with a reduced role for Army grandees, or a kind of figure head protectorate with Fleetwood and the Army acting as the real power behind Richard Cromwell. This factional battle was complicated by the work

of the Republicans, who ate away at Fleetwood's influence in the army. The junior officers of the army, who had never really warmed to Fleetwood, were targeted by a barrage of pamphlets and back room visits warning that the army grandees were poor custodians of the Good Old Cause. The loose definition of the good

Old Cause worked to Republican advantage. Here. Army grandees could be variously accused of abandoning their godly mission, exposing soldiers to lawsuits for their actions over the past few years, or betraying past sacrifices by restoring the monarchy and placing a crown on Richard Cromwell's head. The dynamic created a kind of dilemma for Fleetwood.

If he made a deal with the low protector to ensure army leaders like himself retained power in England, he risked alienating the junior officers in the army that gave him political influence. Really, it was the same tension that had always marked all of A Cromwell's career, how to reconcile pragmatic power politics with the principled red wreck that inspired the troops. As events would demonstrate, Fleetwood had none of the political skill that his late brother in law had displayed.

Though, to be fair, in the spring of sixteen fifty nine, the English political world was a treacherous place that would have challenged even the most talented of statesmen. We'll start the action on the twenty eighth of March sixteen fifty nine. The same day the House of Commons finally voted to recognize the Other House as an official partner in Parliament. While on the surface that appeared to be some welcome progress towards well anything at Westminster, the glacial piece of action

in Parliament was already being overtaken by action elsewhere. That same day, Edmund Ludlow visited Wallingford House, Charles Fleetwood's headquarters, just day ten minute walk from Westminster. Since the opening of the Parliament, if not before, Fleetwood had been hosting regular meetings at Wallingford House, where he and his allies worked out strategy and conferred with delegates from other combinations or factions. Edmund Ludlow's visit was

a turning point. We know Ludlow as the Republican rumper who was a major player in Irish politics between the death of Henry Ireton and the arrival of Henry Cromwell in Dublin. Since then, Ludlow, like other rumpers like Arthur Hussig, had been marginalized ejected from Ireland for distributing anti Protectorate propaganda. He was

imprisoned upon arrival in England. After repeated fruitless attempts to get Ludlow to recognize the legitimacy of the Protectorate, Oliver Cromwell eventually gave up and sentenced the troublesome Republican to a kind of house arrest. With his relations in Essex. There Ludlow stewed until the opportunity provided by the new Parliament in sixteen fifty nine.

With all the Cromwell out of the way and the Protectorate government in disarray, Ludlow won a seat in his native Wiltshire and joined Arthur Hessereagan, Thomas Scott, among others, as rumpers returning to Westminster. Ludlow's invitation to Wallingford House was a result of growing anxiety within Fleetwood circle. Richard Cromwell was proving more

difficult to intimidate or out maneuver than Fleetwood had anticipated. Though the General gave most of the credit to John Thurlow and the other civilian advisors who surrounded the Lord Protector. This Cromwell was no Oliver. The problem was the longer the

battle dragged on, the weaker Fleetwood became. The junior officers who provided the Army grandees with their power, were growing more and more disillusioned with the Protectorate as a whole, not just the civilian faction that currently held sway with Cromwell. Fleetwood needed a way to shore up his support in the army. Ludlow provided the answer. After all, it was Ludlow and his Republican friends who

were eroding fleetwood influence in the army. Their attacks on the Protectorates state, as fundamentally incompatible with the nebulous good old Cause, were making Fleetwood's work impossible. As he was himself tied to the Protectorate regime from its beginnings, the taint of betrayal fell on him just as much as Richard Cromwell and his civilian advisers. Fleetwood decided to begin coordinating with the Republicans. Their common immediate goal

up ending the status quo was enough to justify a partnership. The details of what came next could be saved for tomorrow. Armed with a vague sense of security on his army flank, Fleetwood moved quickly to put pressure on the Lord Protector. Just days after opening talks with the Republicans, Fleetwood and John desbro placed new demands before Richard Cromwell in order to ensure the army's interests were protected

in the current chaotic political environment. The Lord Protector had to call a meeting of the General council of officers. Such army councils had been crucial in sixteen forty seven and sixteen forty eight producing the framework of what would become the Commonwealth. Oliver Cromwell had also used a council of army officers to run the country after the forced dissolution of the Rump, until a more formal system could be

developed. Of course, behind this appeal to precedent lurked Fleetwood's true purpose. An army council would provide him with an independent source of power outside of Parliament or the Lord Protector's inner circle of advisors. How exactly Fleetwood intended to use that power is not entirely clear. The most likely interpretation is that he hoped

to intimidate the Lord Protector for months. Fleetwood's goal had been to drive the civilian faction from power and replace advisors like John Thurlow with himself and like minded allies. In other words, this was an old fashioned court power play that wouldn't have been out of place in James's day. Think of the Earl of Southampton trying to leverage his way into power at the expense of the Howards in

the sixteen tens. Or in the sixteen twenties, the Earl of Pembrokes attempt to use his influence in Parliament to supplant the Duke of Buckingham at court. The message Fleetwood delivered west straightforward, appease or frustrated soldiers by giving them a voice in government, or risk losing the one thing that had always held the regime up, the army. But there was a problem. The example provided

by the Earl of Pembroke is instructive. As you may recall, Pembroke and his allies in the House of Commons helped engineer the impeachment of the Duke of Buckingham in sixteen twenty six. But while Pembroke likely saw this as a bit of power politics, a threat that would force the King to meet his political demands, the influential Earl didn't exercise complete control over the House of Commons. Buckingham's impeachment was driven by real grievances. They were more like a wave that

Pembroke was riding on, rather than an instrument he could manipulate. The impeachment proceedings developed a momentum of their own, leaving Pembroke's plans for a limited cabinet shuffle in Ruins. Fleetwood was playing a similar game now in the spring of sixteen fifty nine. In effect, he was warning Cromwell that his administration was losing the support of the army and that the only men capable of keeping the officers in line were grandees like himself or John Desbroo. But that was only

half true. Once the Council of Officers was summoned and gave an official sanction by the Lord Protector, there was no guarantee that Fleetwood would be able to control its actions. In fact, Fleetwood was introducing an unpredictable new element into an already unstable situation. Cromwell, seeing he had little choice if he wanted to maintain the support of the army, acquiesced. On the second of April,

the General Council of Officers convened. Perhaps unsurprisingly considering the ongoing political crisis, the London area was packed with army men. Some five hundred attended the first meeting of the Council. Almost immediately it became clear that Fleetwood and Desboro had miscalculated. When the Council created a committee to draw up a petition outlining

the Army's grievances. Neither of the two grandees were invited to join. There were the usual complaints about back pay they was out, but the political demands were provocative. The officers accused the current regime of repeatedly insulting the good Old Cause, the very principles they had led for. As usual in such petitions, the Lord Protector himself wasn't blamed. The fault lay with the ever present evil councilors who surrounded him. The officers pledged to assist Cromwell in plucking the

wicket out of their places. On the surface, this appeared to serve Fleetwood's purposes. Here was a call to remove his civilian faction rivals from the corridors of power, exactly what he had assembled the Council of Officers to do. But the whole idea had been to replace those men with Army grandees like himself. Considering how quickly Fleetwood and his allies had been marginalized within the council, how credible could he be as a broker reconciling the army to the government.

There was little evidence that the frustrated officers would entrust Fleetwood to restore the good old cause. Four days after convening, the officers presented their petition to the Lord Protector. Two days after that it was read out in Parliament. There was an eerie sense of deja vous about the whole thing. Once again, the army was making demands of a parliament. But what authority did the officers have. The Lord Protector had authorized the gathering of the Officers Council, but

that body had no formal position within the Protectorate Constitution. On the other hand, the Protectorate Constitution was itself uncertain. Technically, the Humble Petition and Advice had superseded the Instrument of Government as the law of the land, but neither document had ever been wholeheartedly confirmed by a Parliament. The closest such measure came earlier in the current session, when the Humble Petition and Advice was given a

deliberately qualified seal of approval. Faced with the looming threat of the army, the Parliament acted as its predecessor had back in sixteen forty eight. It ignored the officers. A formal response to the petition was put off for ten days while Westminster focused on more pressing matters, and in case that response was too subtle for the officers to interpret. Those pressing matters were almost uniformly decided against the interests of the army. Part of this had to do with the makeup

of the Parliament as we saw earlier. As many as half of the members at Westminster were first time MP's. There was little in the way of factional organization or coherence. There were voices calling for strict republicanism, a return to a rump style, absolute parliamentary sovereignty. Some agreed with the army officers that their priority had to be salvaging the good old cause. Others focused on shoring up the current regime as the only path towards stability. But thieves were relatively

isolated minorities. Many had come to Westminster with much less narrowly focused goals. Memories of the rule of the major generals still lingered, fueling a sense that military government was both expensive and intrusive. As a result, In the days after the officers presented their petition, discussion turned to the most tangible aspect of

military rule, the taxes that paid for the army. In a span of ten days, Parliament held up the release of funds from the Excise Office to investigate collections, refused to raise the value of the assessment, and opened an investigation into the seizure of property from tax refusers. During the rule of the Major Generals, far from passing an amnesty for army officers, which the military

had long lobbied for, there was talk of impeachments. The crisis reached its climax when Parliament turned its attention to William Butler, who had been Major General of Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire and Huntingdonshire, the countryside north of London. We've met Butler briefly. He was the major general who violently suppressed a mass Quaker meeting,

which was typical of his tenure as major General. Bahler was notorious for being aggressive in the persecution of religious radicals like Quakers, and of Catholics too, which is impressive when you think about it. Among major generals, a group defined by its puritan anti Catholic fervor, Butler stood out for his aggression and violence. Bahler was perhaps the most authoritarian of the major generals and was

frequently criticized for his high handed treatment of local elites. He was even criticized by the Council of state when he arrested the Earl of Northampton on the charge of failing to pay the decimation tax. Northampton, who was a leading figure in the Sealed Knot, was hardly a friend of the regime, but the central government worried about the legality of Butler's actions and reprimanded the Major General.

It was perhaps no surprise then that Butler drew the attention of those in Parliament who wanted to make sure the major generals never returned as instruments of administration. He was accused of numerous illegal seizures of property during his tenure as Major General, and Parliament voted to strip him of his current office as Magistrate. This was the final straw for the army officers, who feared the precedent Parliament was

setting. If Boler could be removed from his civil office, and perhaps even drummed out of the army via impeach, then the whole Army's future was in doubt. How much of this was a product of the rivalry between the civilian and army factions at the Protectorate wasn't entirely clear, though unsurprisingly, many army

officers read these developments as a direct assault in all likelihood. However, Cromwellians like John Thurlow were exercising about as much control over Parliament as Fleetwood was over the Officers Council. Circumstantial evidence for the lack of control the government was exercising over Parliament came in the form of a series of panicked meetings at Whitehall.

While all this was going on, Richard Cromwell consulted with John Thurlow, Roger Boyle and bus Rode Whitelock, trying to find a way to de escalate the crisis before it reached a point of no return. One option was to arrest Fleetwood circle at Wallingford House, but it was unclear if that would achieve anything other than inflame the officers. As much as Thurlough, Boil and the others saw Fleetwood as the enemy, he was hardly the mastermind behind the current crisis.

In fact, removing him might just strengthen the power of the junior officers and their radical agenda. The other option was to dissolve the Officers Council or their conflict with Parliament turned violent. This too had the potential to be inflammatory, but Cromwell hope that Fleetwood and his allies might exercise a calming influence on

the army. If the Lord Protector could guarantee the safety of the Army Grandees from any retribution against them in Parliament, they might agree to dismantle the Officers Council. By this point it was clear that Fleetwood and Desbroo had got themselves into a precarious position. They faced a hostile Parliament and an increasingly unruly officer corps. They might jump at the chance to climb down from their vulnerable position.

On the eighteenth of April, the Lord Protector announced that the Officers Council had come to an end. All officers were to return to their units, many of which were stationed fire from London. The announcement had little effect. Many officers who had no official Army business in London remained in the city. The Army's influence over the increasingly unstable political situation would not be neutralized so easily. That afternoon, the House of Commons locked itself in its chamber for an

emergency debate. By the evening, they produced some declarations of their own. All meetings of Army officers were banned unless given specific authorization by Parliament and the Lord Protector The Commons also called on all army officers to make a solemn pledge not to interrupt Parliament's work. Those who refused must immediately resign. The next

scheduled meeting of the Officers Council went ahead anyway. Two days later, on the twentieth of April, fleetwoods attempts to exert some kind of control over the body were fruitless. In fact, the General was more or less ignored dismissed from the movement he had helped encourage. That night, Fleetwood and Desborough met

with Richard Cromwell. The Lord Protector assured them that he would defend them from any attempt by Parliament to his act retribution on their persons or property, But it wasn't clear that Cromwell had any more influence over Parliament than the Grandees had over the Officers Council. Fleetwood and Desboro begged the Lord Protector to dissolve the session at Westminster before history repeated itself and Parliament went to war with the army.

In fact, in London, battle lines were already being drawn. The mayor sided with Parliament, whereas most of the city militia appeared ready to line up behind the Army. The next day, Cromwell assembled the leading members of the Civilian Party to advise him. Roger Boyle, Bulstrode, Whitelocke and John Thurlow were all in agreement. The situation had become untenable. Parliament and the Army were on a collision course. The only solution was to de escalate by

dissolving Parliament and enforcing the dispersal of the Army Council. As if to prove that assessment right, that day, Parliament stepped up its attacks on the Army. The House debated putting the entire Army under the direct control of Parliament and the Lord Protector, eliminating any pretense that officers controlled their own destiny. This is one of those moments when events moved far too quickly for individual players to

control them. Late on the twenty first of April, hours after Parliament debated its control over the Army and Cromwell had been advised to dissolve Parliament, Charles Fleetwood and his allies gathered at Wallingford House to assess their options. Clearly, the Lord Protector was unwilling or unable to fulfill his promise of protection. Rumors were also circulating that this was all a manufactured crisis to neuter the y and

paved the way for a Cromwellian monarchy. Torn between a Lord Protector they couldn't trust and a wave of army resentment they couldn't control, Fleetwood and his allies decided to gamble on the army. The important thing was to survive the next few days. They could worry about the nation's future. Later, late in the evening, Fleetwood sent it word from Wallingford House. The army was to gather at Saint James's Palace the following morning. England needed them one last time

to prevent the betrayal of the good old cause. Meanwhile, Lord Protector Cromwell called on his civilian faction allies to mobilize their forces too. As you know, despite the label, several of the civilian faction leaders were army men themselves. But when the sun came up it was clear that the army had rallied to Fleetwood, not the Lord Protector. The force Cromwell managed to scramble together at Whitehall consisted of a poultry, two troops of horse, and three companies

of infantry. A message soon arrived from John desbro at Saint James's Palace dissolved Parliament. He demanded of Cromwell and the army would protect him, a somewhat sarcastic reversal of the promise the Lord Detector had made two days before. Seeing no other option, Cromwell agreed to dissolve Parliament later that day. The men of the Commons refused the summons to hear the Lord Protector's formal address, but

their protest was effectively meaningless. Once again, men with guns trumped parliamentary procedure. The third Protectorate Parliament had come to a close, like the first two, dissolved amid acrimony and resentment. On paper, the Wallingford house men had won a victory. They were in the same position Oliver Cromwell had been in when he dissolved the Rump in the spring of sixteen fifty three or the nominated Assembly later that year. But appearances can be deceiving. Where in those cases

Cromwell had been in a strong position to shape what came next. Fleetwood and desbro had only a precarious grip on the situation. Their goal wasn't really to overthrow the Protectorate regime, but to replace the Civilian Faction as the dominant players surrounding the Lord Protector. However, the junior officers who had fueled their coup

had very different objectives. They wanted to defend and restore the good old cause, and the past few weeks had cast serious doubt and whether the Lord protect or the Protectorate system as a whole was willing or able to do that. Almost immediately, two political movements started traveling along separate, even divergent tracks.

Fleetwood and his allies quickly consolidated their power at Whitehall. The Civilian Faction men who had been Cromwell's closest advisors over the past few weeks were purged from office. Meanwhile, several men who had been forced into unwilling retirement were restored, most notably John Lambert. You may recall Oliver Cromwell had removed Lambert from both political office and the army when he refused to endorse the Humble Petition and Advice.

This process of consolidation was completed with the appointment of Charles Fleetwood as Commander in Chief, where previously Richard Cromwell had refused to divide that office from that of Lord Protector. He was now powerless to resist. To all appearances, the Protectorate State looked poised to undergo yet another bout of constitutional change, though in a sense it was more a winding back of the clock to sixteen fifty

five. All the decisions that had made since then seemed destined to be reversed. The major general system and Lambert's original instrument of government were both back on the table. In effect, the army men had successfully reversed the defeats they had suffered in the second Protectorate Parliament. But these machinations at Whitehall only told

half the story. While Fleetwood and the Grandees consolidated their power around the Lord Protector, the junior officers who had made those victories possible drew up their own plans. The victories on the twenty second of April, the dissolution of Parliament and the purges of Cromwell's allies from Whitehall truly belonged to the officers as a

whole, not the new Commander in Chief Charles Fleetwood. The Army Grandees were presenting themselves as friends of the good old Cause because they had no other choice. While the deals were worked out at Whitehall, the majority of the army men looked on suspiciously from Saint James's Palace. There they worked out their own definition of the Good Old Cause that Fleetwood and the others would be judged by. In this they were heavily influenced by the Republicans and old Rumpers of the

recently dissolved Parliament. As you recall, it had been this radical Republican influence that the Army grandees had tried to forestall or co opt in the opening days of the Parliament. Those attempts had quite obviously failed. In a series of meetings at the end of April and the beginning of May, junior officers conferred with a host of old rumpers, most prominent among them Arthur Husselerigg, Edmund Ludlow and Henry Vane. The key demand that emerged from these meetings was the

rebirth of the Rump. Ever since Alvar Cromwell had forcibly and illegally shut down the Rump Parliament, the principles they had all fought for in the Civil War had been repeatedly betrayed. Not everyone agreed on what the Good Old Cause was, but they had a pretty clear sense of what it wasn't the conservative drift of protectorate politics, the persecution of certain independent sects, and the elevation of the Cromwells into a kind of royalty. Each of these were betrayals of their

comrades, who had died in the sixteen forties. It had all started with a shuddering of the rump. Constitutionally speaking, the argument was pretty straightforward. Cromwell and his goons had never had the legal authority to dissolve the Rump. Therefore, it had never been dissolved. The Long Parliament, which had been created in the fall of sixteen forty, was still alive, the only legitimate political institution in England. By the first week of May, the fault lines

in the new political order were apparent. On the one hand were the Army grandees, who dominated the last remnants of the protector at state apparatus, personified in Lord Protector Richard Cromwell, produced to a mere figurehead. On the other side were the Rump Republicans, some of whom had waited six years to reverse

Aliver Cromwell's coup. Nominally, the army leaders held the power. Fleetwood was Commander in chief and his allies controlled the Lord Protector as their personal puppet, but that power was illusory with the prestige of the Protectorate in Tatter's real power lay with the army. If push came to shove, who would the soldier's side. With the generals, they were growing increasingly suspicious of or the rump politicians, who promised fulfillment of the good old cause. Neither side was entirely

confident. A compromise solution was therefore attractive. Over four days, from the second of May to the fifth, Henry Vane hosted a prolonged conference at his London residence. He was joined by his fellow rumpers Hesselrigg and Ludlow. Representing the Army Grandees was a delegation led by John Lambert, the sharpest political mind among the generals and a man who could sympathize with the long exile from power the rumpers had suffered through. It quickly became apparent, however, that the

rumpers held all the cards. It was their demands that set the agenda for the conference, namely the restoration of the rump, which would embody the absolute sovereignty of Parliament. In other words, the complete dismantling of the protectorate state that the army men currently controlled. Initially Lambert at his best, who preserved

the system he had helped create. Perhaps Richard Cromwell could be retained as a figurehead, a face saving gesture to retain some continuity with post rump governance, or maybe the creation of a Senate to share rule with the House of Commons, a body populated by senior officers to ensure army leadership had a voice in the new order. But neither Hasselrig nor Vaine had waited this long just to

compromise on the principle of parliamentary sovereignty. They even rejected Lambert's proposal that army officers enjoy an amnesty against retribution for their role in the protectorate state. The most they were willing to offer was their work that the army men would get a sympathetic hearing in the revitalized Parliament. In the end, Lambert, Fleetwood, desbro and the others took that relatively scant offer. They had no confidence

that the army would follow them in resisting the return of the rump. In a sense, they were now looking to the rumpers to protect them from their own subordinates. On the fifth of May, the deal was struck, and the following morning, forty two members of the old Rump Parliament retook their seats, just over six years after they had been removed by Oliver Cromwell's soldiers. More would come in the following days, bringing the total up to seventy eight,

less than one seventh the total population of the full long Parliament. In a neat bit of continuity. The first issue the reformed Rump took up was the same one they had been debating when Cromwell shut them down. New elections. The Parliament set the date for the seventh of May sixteen sixty one year in the future, but that still left the same problem that Oliver Cromwell had never managed to solve, how to hold elections that honored the principle of representative

politics but didn't toss out the existing regime. John Lambert, ever, the institutional tinker, proposed a solution to the problem, a Senate of godly statesman who would ensure Parliament as a whole remained true to the principles of the sixteen forties. This drew the interest of Henry Vane, who saw godly Senate as a kind of constitutional guarantee of religious freedom, but for idelogs like Arthur Hasseligg, this was an intolerable limit on the power of the House of Commons.

The issue lay unresolved through the time being. A more immediate concern was the day to day governance of the nation. Technically, Richard Cromwell was still the Lord Protector, though the developments of the past few days had effectively stripped him of all power. But if the Lord Protector didn't exercise executive power, then

who did. A new Council of State was formed, composed of twenty one members of Parliament, including Hasselrig, Vane and Ludlow, and ten non members, mostly army officers, chief among them John Lambert, John desbro and James Barry, who had been Major General in charge of Wales and the Western Borderlands. Thomas Fairfax was invited to join the Council as well, a gesture and

tended to legitimize the new government in the eyes of the public. But fair had always been a cautious politician and he wasn't about to break his long held policy of remaining aloof from politics for the sake of an infant regime of dubious legitimacy. But with or without the respected General, the new administration was determined

to move forward. That meant disposing of the embarrassing Richard Cromwell. In an effort to save his regime, Cromwell had spent the past few weeks reaching out two possible allies outside of London. After all, the city no longer enjoyed a monopoly on power in the British Isles. George Monk led an army in Scotland that operated virtually independently from London or Westminster. Richard's brother Henry led his own national government in Dublin, and Edward Montagu, who had always been a

diehard Cromwell loyalist, commanded England's navy. All three men were potential allies with the military power to contest the recent coup, but Richard's please went unanswered. Monk claimed that he was powerless to act. If he ordered his army to restore Cromwell to power, he would face a mutiny. Whether that was true or not, it is difficult to say. Monk had always been a difficult figure to pin down politically. In way, he was perhaps more like Oliver

Cromwell than any of his contemporaries. Whatever his reasons, Monk felt it prudent to hang back and see what course events took at Westminster. Henry Cromwell's protests of helplessness are a bit more believable. This was his brother, after all. Even setting aside any personal loyalty, Henry may have felt, if Richard Cromwell was deposed it was unlikely the regime that replaced him would have much trust in that other Cromwell in Ireland. But the younger Cromwell was forced to admit

that he was powerless. His conflicts with the army in Ireland had never really been resolved. He had wrestled them to a draw in Dublin to the point that he could exercise independent action in government, but the Irish Army was more likely to fight for the new regime than ride to the Lord Protector's rescue. Henry Cromwell announced that if his brother decided to surrender his authority to the new regime, he would accept it. Two In fact, when Richard was deposed

soon after, Henry resigned his position in Irish government. His replacement turned out to be his old rival, Edmund Ludlow. Finally, Edward Montagu was perhaps the one man willing and able to fight for the Cromwellian at it. Unfortunately, he couldn't be reached in time. In events will be covering. Soon Montagu was commanding the Protectorate navy off the coast of Denmark. The Northern theater had once again turned explosive. On the twenty fifth of May, Richard Cromwell

accepted reality and agreed to give up his power as Lord Protector. In exchange, the new regime agreed to forgive his personal debts and pay him attention. However, it didn't take long for Cromwell to doubt the good will of his usurpers, and he fled into French exile. The Protectorate was officially over. Although it had achieved impressive results on the international stage, the Protectorate state had

never truly established itself at home. Although in theory parliament had always been a central feature of the system, all attempts to incorporate one into Protectorate governance had failed. In a sense. Aliver Cromwell had never worked out a permanent solution to the constitutional problem you found when he shut down the rump. It was now time to see if the current regime could fare any better. Could they figure out a way to legally dissolve the rump and call a new session that

was both freely elected and upheld the Prince suppose they had fought for. The signs were not good. Throughout the summer of sixteen fifty nine. The new Rump was marred by the same factionalism that had undermined every other parliament before it.

This time the source of the controversy was John Lambert's constitutional program. His Godly Senate was the only way to restrain the conservative or even royalist tendencies of a freely elected House of Commons, but Hasselrigg refused to countenance any weakening of the supremacy of the Commons. The die hard Rumper was caught in an ideological

dilemma. His principles dictated that the only legitimate power was a parliament that represented the people, but in practice those principles would be abandoned if the people were allowed a free choice to select their representatives. Paralyzed by this conundrum, Hasselrigg could provide no suggestions for how to move forward, only opposition to Lambert's program.

The result was a kind of deja vous for anyone who lived through the dying days of the First Rump. In the spring of sixteen fifty three, despite the deadline for elections, the Rump was making no progress towards its dissolution or crafting a workable constitution. A minority of MPs, led by Henry Vane, argued for Lambert's model, but Arthur Hasselik commanded a majority who opposed it on principle. The problem was that majority was unable to propose any alternative.

Pretty soon Parliament moved on from the fruitless debate on the future of England and bickered over more mundane issues. Mundane but not unimportant, and alarmingly for the army, they always seemed to be getting the short end of the stick. The Rump moved at a glacial pace when it came to releasing funds for army pay. Westminster also hollowed out the Commander in Chief title Fleetwood had secured from Richard Cromwell. The office was ruled temporary, said to expire when the current

session of Parliament ended. This was necessary to prevent Fleetwood from wielding political power in between the Rump's dissolution and the formation of a new Parliament. But the army men were less than reassured, especially when the Rump took over much of

the authority that ought to belong to a commander in chief. New officer appointments were made by a Parliamentary committee, not Fleetwood, and all existing officers were ordered to turn in their old commissions and received new ones issued by Parliament. The ostensible goal was to eliminate Cromwellian loyalists from within the officer corps, but no one missed that it was Parliament, not the Commander in Chief, those

testing the loyalty of the officers. The most heated debate involved the general amnesty that army officers had been pushing for since the major general system fell apart. If the army wasn't to enjoy power, at the very least, they needed guarantees against prosecution or lawsuits. But after seven weeks of argument, the Rump produced an amnesty bill that was both weak and vague. When John Lambert complained, Hasselrig replied, you are only at the mercy of the Parliament. Who

are your good friends? Hardly reassuring words. It didn't help that next on Parliament's docket was a comprehensive Militia Bill, which many army leaders saw as a ploy to make the army redundant or at the very least entirely subservient to Westminster. In August, just when the new regime seemed to be at its breaking point, rumors of a Royalist uprising began swirling around England. Unfortunately, these

states best s Bymaster John Thurlow had been purged with the other Cromwellians. In the absence of his impressive network, the new regime had no solid information on the danger they faced. Next time, we'll follow them as they faced their first external challenge before their many internal challenges had been overcome.

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