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  1. Cromwell realised people would be more willing to support Henry’s decisions if they were involved in making them. Parliament could represent everyone: the nobility and the Church in the House of Lords, and the towns and countryside in the House of Commons. They were loyal to Henry, and so usually supported any Acts put forward in the King’s ...

  2. Henry Cromwell (20 January 1628 – 23 March 1674) was the fourth son of Oliver Cromwell and Elizabeth Bourchier, and an important figure in the Parliamentarian regime in Ireland. Pages in category "Henry Cromwell"

  3. 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.

  4. When Henry Cromwell arrived in Ireland the baptist sectaries were in control of the administration. By 1659 he had displaced not merely these but also the independents, and had instead forged a politique alliance with the ‘old protestants’, as the protestant planters who had settled in Ireland before 1641 came to be known after the restoration.

  5. Henry Cromwell was the fourth son of Oliver Cromwell and his wife, Elizabeth Bourchier, born in Huntingdon on 20 January 1628. He was baptised at Huntingdon on 29th. [1] Educated at Felsted School and Emmanuel College, Cambridge he served under his father during the latter part of the Civil War.

  6. 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.

  7. CROMWELL, alias WILLIAMS, Henry (c.1537-1604), of Hinchingbrooke and Ramsey Abbey, Hunts. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603 , ed. P.W. Hasler, 1981 Available from Boydell and Brewer