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See also: lord See also: protector of See also: England, eldest surviving son of Oliver See also: Cromwell and of See also: Elizabeth Bourchier, was
See also: born on the 4th of See also: October 1626
.
He served in the See also: parliamentary army, and in 1647 was admitted a member of Lincoln's See also: Inn
.
In 1649 he married Dorothy, daughter of See also: Richard Mayor, or Major, of Hursley in Hampshire
.
He represented Hampshire in the parliament of 1654, and Cambridge University in that of 1656, and in See also: November 1655 was appointed one of the council of See also: trade
.
But he was not brought forward by his See also: father or prepared in any way for his future greatness, and lived in the country occupied with See also: field
See also: sports, till after the institution of the second See also: protectorate in 1657 and the recognition of Oliver's right to name his successor
.
On the 18th of See also: July he succeeded his father as chancellor of the university of See also: Oxford, on the 31st of See also: December he was made a member of the council of See also: state, and about the same See also: time obtained a regiment and a seat in Cromwell's See also: House of Lords
.
He was received generally as his father's successor, and was nominated by him as such on his See also: death-See also: bed
.
He was proclaimed on the 3rd of See also: September 1658, and at first his accession was acclaimed with general favour both at home and abroad
.
Dissensions, however, soon broke out between the military faction and the civilians
.
Richard's See also: elevation, not being " general of the army as his father was," was distasteful to the See also: officers, who desired the See also: appointment of a See also: commander-in-chief from among themselves, a See also: request refused by Richard
.
The officers in the council, moreover, showed jealousy of the See also: civil members, and to See also: settle these difficulties and to provide See also: money a parliament was summoned on the 27th of See also: January 1659, which declared Richard protector, and incurred the hostility of the army by criticizing severely the arbitrary military See also: government of Oliver's last two years, and by impeaching one of the major-generals
.
A council of the army accordingly established itself in opposition to the parliament, and demanded on the 6th of See also: April a See also: justification and confirmation of former proceedings, to which the parliament replied by forbidding meetings of the army council without the permission of the protector, and insisting that all officers should take an See also: oath not to disturb the proceedings in parliament
.
The army now broke into open See also: rebellion and assembled at St See also: James's
.
Richard was completely in their power; he identified himself with their cause, and the same
See also: night dissolved the parliament
.
The Long
' See also: Frederic See also: Harrison, Cromwell, p
.
34
.
Parliament (which re-assembled on the 7th of May) and the heads of the army came to an agreement to effect his dismissal; and in the subsequent events Richard appears to have played a purely passive See also: part, refusing to make any attempt to keep his power or to forward a restoration of the See also: monarchy
.
On the 25th of May his submission was communicated to the House
.
He retired into private See also: life, heavily burdened with debts incurred during his tenure of office and narrowly escaping arrest even before he quitted See also: Whitehall
.
In the summer of 166o he See also: left England for See also: France, where he lived in seclusion under the name of See also: John
See also: Clarke, subsequently removing elsewhere, either (for the accounts differ) to
See also: Spain, to See also: Italy, or to See also: Geneva
.
He was long regarded by the government as a dangerous See also: person, and in 1671 a strict See also: search was made for him but without avail
.
He returned to England about 168o and lived at See also: Cheshunt, in the house of Sergeant See also: Pengelly, where he died on the 12th of July 1712, being buried in Hursley See also: church in Hampshire
.
Richard Cromwell was treated with general contempt by his contemporaries, and invidiously compared with his
See also: great father
.
According to Mrs See also: Hutchinson he was " gentle and virtuous but a peasant in his nature and became not greatness." He was nevertheless a See also: man of respectable abilities, of an irreproachable private character, and a See also: good See also: speaker
.
Domestic, LansdowneSee also: MSS. in See also: British Museum
.
(P
.
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