John Lambert, Parliamentary Soldier and Cromwellian Major-general, 1619-1684

Front Cover
Boydell Press, 2003 - Biography & Autobiography - 268 pages
A biography of one of the most prominent soldiers in the New Model Army, who made Cromwell Lord Protector but stopped him becoming king.

John Lambert's life and career have long deserved this revealing study. The man who made Cromwell Lord Protector in 1653 also stopped him becoming king in 1657; and Lambert was the originator of the Instrument of Government, on which Cromwell's Protectorate was based. Committed to his deeply held, radical beliefs, Lambert first rose to prominence as a dashing cavalry commander in the civil wars of 1642 - 51, and he was a prominent upholder of the power ofthe New Model Army, particularly in his creation of the Major Generals, who ruled England in 1655. Lambert's refusal to countenance Cromwell as king saw his temporary fall from power, but he emerged after the Protector's death asa possible successor. His radical ideas seemed to threaten even 'his own side', and led to his imprisonment in the Tower in 1660, but he escaped and staged a last desperate republican stand against the return of Charles II. Although Lambert was subsequently convicted of treason, Charles did not have him executed - sure recognition that his character, private actions and beliefs were those of a man who was much more than a military revolutionary.
DAVID FARR is head of history at Norwich School.

 

Contents

The shaping of allegiance
8
Military success 164250
31
Lambert and the politics of
45
The conquest of Scotland
77
The functioning of Lamberts immediate network
94
165253
111
Kin cash Catholics and Cavaliers
154
Lamberts religious identity and the Restoration
168
166084
215
Conclusion
227
Index
259
Copyright

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