Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Oliver Cromwell. Oliver Cromwell ( Huntingdon, 25 de abril de 1599 – Palácio de Whitehall, 3 de setembro de 1658 ), foi um militar e líder político inglês e, mais tarde, Lorde Protetor. Nascido no seio da nobreza rural, os primeiros quarenta anos da sua vida são pouco conhecidos.

  2. 13 de abr. de 2024 · This distinguished lady of the British Isle, was the mother of Henrietta Cromwell, who was first married to Roger Whetstone, Esq. an officer in the parliamentary army, and afterwards to Col. John Jones, in 1623; the maternal grandparent of Hon. William Jones, who married Hannah, youngest daughter of Governor Eaton of New Haven ; and was also the great grandparent of Sir William Jones of India ...

  3. Jane Cromwell (born 1606) married in 1636 John Disbrowe, who became a senior commander in the parliamentarian army, a close colleague of Oliver’s, a member of the Protectoral Council of State throughout the Protectorate and one of the Major Generals of 1655-6. The couple had at least six sons – and possibly other sons and daughters who died ...

  4. Description. Mezzotint of Elizabeth Cromwell, mother of Oliver Cromwell. Half length with plain bonnet, pearl necklace, gown, and fur edged coat. Within a rectangular border, with English inscription below including publisher's address, 'London Published by S. Woodburn, 1810.'. Proof with open letters, for a later state see RCIN 602273.

  5. Brief Life History of Oliver Cromwell. When Oliver Cromwell Bradley was born on 4 March 1877, in Union Township, Champaign, Ohio, United States, his father, John Henry Bradley, was 24 and his mother, Emma March, was 17. He married Lucy Bell Siegenthaler on 10 June 1899, in Champaign, Ohio, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 sons.

  6. Oliver Cromwell's House: Visit the former Lord Protector's family home. Experience what domestic life would have been like in the 17th century in a variety of re-created period rooms as well as an exhibition detailing the Civil War.

  7. He made a living by farming and collecting rents, first in his native Huntingdon, then from 1631 in St Ives and from 1636 in Ely. Cromwell’s inheritances from his father, who died in 1617, and later from a maternal uncle were not great, his income was modest and he had to support an expanding family – widowed mother, wife and eight children ...