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  1. Cromwell, Cambridge and the past. The story’s components passed down in the retelling can be summarised as follows. In August 1642 Cromwell raced from Westminster to Cambridgeshire (sometimes accounts add companions) after warnings from his faction amongst Cambridge townsmen of the University’s attempts to send convoys of plate to the King.

  2. Oliver Cromwell was born in Huntingdon on 25 April 1599 to a well-connected family. The Cromwells were distantly related to Thomas Cromwell, Henry VIII’s Chief Minister, through his nephew, Richard Williams. Richard later took the last name Cromwell, and his descendants continued to use it. Richard acquired lands in Huntingdonshire and his ...

  3. 14 de mai. de 2020 · Henry condemned him to death without trial. In 1540, Henry VIII gave his primary advisor, Thomas Cromwell, the axe. Well, technically the executioner gave him the axe, but the point still holds. Citing a dubious "contemporary" source, Arthur Galton describes an "ungodly" affair in which the executioner hacked at Cromwell's neck for ...

  4. 9 de nov. de 2009 · He was descended on his father’s side from Thomas Cromwell, a minister of King Henry VIII. Like most children born in the country at the time, Cromwell was baptized in the Church of England.

  5. 7 de nov. de 2022 · Henry and Cromwell sent men to strip the monasteries of their treasures, and established a new part of the government called the Court of Augmentations.

  6. Cromwell was educated as a civil lawyer but did not enrol at Doctors’ Commons, nor is there any evidence that he practised. Instead, he settled at Upwood, where his father granted him a 500-year lease of a house, the tithes and a few acres of meadow in 1583; the unusual duration of the lease may have been designed to evade liability for wardship.

  7. 23 de nov. de 2020 · Henry Cromwell. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. English: Henry Cromwell (20 January 1628 – 23 March 1674), the fourth son of Oliver Cromwell and Elizabeth Bourchier, was an English politician and an important figure in the Parliamentarian regime in Ireland.