American History Tellers - History Daily: England Becomes a Republic
Episode Date: May 19, 2025May 19, 1649. After the English Civil War, an Act of Parliament makes England a Republic.You can listen ad-free in the Wondery or Amazon Music app. Or for all that and more, go to IntoHistory....comHistory Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's the morning of June 14, 1645, in a valley in Northamptonshire, England.
Sitting on horseback on the crest of a ridge, 46-year-old Oliver Cromwell stares down the
slope at a battle unfolding below.
Thousands of cavalry are formed up around him,
their horses snorting and pawing at the ground with impatience.
Cromwell grips his sword tight.
He's waiting for the right moment to give the command
and send his men down the hill to join the battle.
It's three years into a brutal civil war.
The conflict between King Charles I and the English Parliament
has torn the country apart. Charles I and the English Parliament has torn the
country apart. Charles believes that as King he is appointed by God and should wield absolute
power over his subjects. But the parliamentarians believe that the English people should have
some say over how they are governed. The course of the war has ebbed back and forth, but today
the main armies of each side are meeting in battle. And for the commander of the parliamentary cavalry, Oliver Cromwell,
it's an opportunity to strike a decisive blow against the royalists.
From his position on the ridge, Cromwell sees that the royalist infantry has overextended itself.
It's pushing the parliamentary infantry back, but that has left its flank exposed.
These conditions are perfect for a cavalry charge.
Cromwell shouts out his orders, and all is one his well-drilled cavalry surges forward.
The earth churns beneath thousands of pounded hooks. Galloping downhill with him,
Cromwell raises his sword above his head and lets out a guttural battle cry.
For Royalist infantry is pinned down in their fight with the parliamentary foot soldiers,
they can't turn and form lines to defend themselves,
before Cromwell's horsemen smash into them in a devastating collision of horses, men, mud and metal.
The Battle of Naseby will prove pivotal in the English Civil War.
The overwhelming victory for Oliver Cromwell and the Parliamentary Army will end all royalist
hopes of winning the conflict on the battlefield.
And less than a year later, King Charles will surrender.
His defeat will pave the way for his execution, the end of the monarchy as an institution,
and the founding of the Republic of England on May 19, 1649. Blackjack Pro, where strategy meets top-tier gameplay. Drop in on the exciting Sugar Rush and Crazy Time slot games, or play the dazzling MGM Grand
Emerald Nights, a slot experience that captures the magic of MGM.
With so many games, it's time to make your move.
Download the app and visit BedMGM Ontario today to experience the next level of gaming.
Visit BedMGM.com for terms and conditions.
19 plus to wager, Ontario
only. Please, gamble responsibly. If you have questions or concerns about your gambling
or someone close to you, please contact Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor
free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. the best doctors. Listen to Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. From Noizr and Airship, I'm Lindsey Graham, and this is History Daily. History is made every day.
On this podcast, Every Day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped
our world.
Today is May 19, 1649.
England becomes a republic.
It's May 19, 1649 in Oxford, England, four years after the decisive parliamentary victory
at the Battle of Naseby.
Dressed in ceremonial robes, 49-year-old Oliver Cromwell rises from his pew and steps forward
to meet the Chancellor of Oxford University.
In the high-ceiling chambers of Maudlin College Chapel, Cromwell is presented with an honorary
Doctor of Civil Law degree. Cromwell knows that many in the room today resent him in this honor.
During the Civil War, Oxford was the royalist headquarters and the university was a strong
supporter of King Charles I. Now, however, they are rolling out the red carpet for Cromwell, the man who helped defeat
the king.
As the university chancellor hands over the degree with a fixed smile, Cromwell's mind
wanders to a second piece of paper, currently being read out in the House of Commons in
London.
Worded by Cromwell himself, it's an act of parliament that will upend centuries of English
law. Cromwell doesn't miss the opportunity act of parliament that will upend centuries of English law.
Cromwell doesn't miss the opportunity to tell those in Oxford all about it. As he receives his doctorate, he explains to those in the chapel that from this day forth,
England will no longer be ruled by a king. For the first time in its history,
England will be a republic. This radical change seemed impossible only a few years earlier. After King Charles'
first defeat in the Civil War, there was a fierce debate about what to do next. Some
among the victorious parliamentarians wanted widespread reforms that would sweep away the
old social order entirely. Others, though, had less ambitious demands. They wanted to
make a deal with the defeated king, one that would see him keep the throne in exchange for limits on his power. And for a time it looked as if these moderates
would triumph. Negotiations with the king in the fall of 1648 seemed close to a deal,
but then the parliamentary army intervened. Generals like Oliver Cromwell feared that
any deal between parliament and the king would see the army disbanded and their power destroyed. So, in late 1648, they moved decisively to make sure that couldn't
happen.
Soon, two regiments of soldiers surrounded the House of Commons and forty-five ministers
of Parliament who were seen as supporters of the King were arrested and over one hundred
others were expelled. Another eighty MPs then left in protest and those who remained
were known as the Rump Parliament. It was this Parliament of army loyalists that pushed
for the trial and execution of King Charles and early the next year, 1649, the King was
beheaded in front of a crowd in central London. It was Cromwell himself who signed the papers
confirming the King's sentence and he now believes that it is God's will that England becomes a republic.
But no one knows exactly what this new republic will look like.
England has been ruled by a king or queen for over 600 years.
The structure of English society and its laws have all been built around a single figurehead at the top.
So the Rump Parliament appoints a Council of State that includes Cromwell to act as an executive, but there is still fear that England will
soon descend into chaos without a monarch to rule it. Some people embrace that. The
more radical elements in the army call themselves levelers, who see this as the moment for wealth
and power to be shared out equally among the English people. But Cromwell is determined
that won't happen. Although he allied himself with the hardliners when it came to the fate of the king,
he has no interest in creating an England where all are equal. He doesn't believe everyone should
have the right to vote, and he doesn't believe in religious toleration. He believes in order and
stability. So Cromwell violently suppresses the Levellers, arresting and executing their leaders.
Cromwell himself may have been a rebel in the past when he took up arms against the
king, but now he won't allow anyone to question his new regime's authority.
But the Levellers are far from the only threat to the English Republic.
As a result of the Civil War, England's economy is in ruins, and its government is
almost bankrupt.
It can barely afford to pay its army, and England's European rivals are watching closely,
eager to see how they can take advantage of the country's weakness.
Desperate to fill a hole in public finances, the Council of States starts selling off property
belonging to the dead king. Land and palaces are to be sold, the royal collection of paintings
and sculptures is to be inventoried and then auctioned. But that new source of income will soon be consumed by a new threat.
King Charles I may be dead, but his 18-year-old son is still alive, and soon his supporters
will raise their banners and reignite the Civil War, hoping to put an end to the English
Republic just months after it was born.
The world can seem pretty chaotic sometimes, and if you're a parent, that's the last thing you need, which is why I think you'll appreciate a podcast that offers clarity, perspective, and hopefully a
little serenity to your world. Each week on Janet Lansbury on Ruff-Old, I strive to help with your
most confounding issues and offer practical, holistic advice so you can be the parent you want to be.
Calm, connected, confident, even in the most challenging moments. My goal is to
help take the chaos out of parenting, to shed light on the root causes of our
kids' behavior so we can respond effectively without anger, threats, or even
bribes. By embracing our role as respectful leaders, establishing both trust and boundaries, we
can enjoy a loving relationship with our kids that encourages mutual cooperation and respect.
So check out Janet Lansbury on Ruffled, on Wondery, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
We can do this.
You know those creepy stories that give you goosebumps?
The ones that make you really question what's real?
Well, what if I told you that some of the strangest, darkest, and most mysterious stories
are not found in haunted houses or abandoned forests,
but instead in hospital rooms and doctor's offices?
Hi, I'm Mr. Ballin, the host of Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries.
And each week on my podcast,
you can expect to hear stories about bizarre illnesses no one can explain, miraculous recoveries that shouldn't
have happened, and cases so baffling they stumped even the best doctors.
So if you crave totally true and thoroughly twisted horror stories and mysteries, Mr.
Bolland's Medical Mysteries should be your new go-to weekly show.
Listen to Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen early and ad-free right now
by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app
or on Spotify or Apple podcasts.
["Wonderful Music"]
It's the morning of September 4th, 1651, in Worcester in the west of England, more than two years after the country became a republic. Fog hangs over the city as 52-year-old
Oliver Cromwell walks through its deserted streets. He passes smashed and looted stores, burned out houses and alleyways clogged with corpses.
The city was stormed by parliamentary troops last night, and the violence has taken a heavy
toll.
But Cromwell is unmoved.
He believes it is all God's will.
After the execution of Charles I, England became a republic, but Charles had not just
been King of England, he had also claimed the crowns of Scotland and Ireland. So royalists in those countries
quickly declared that their true leader was Charles' son, Charles II. These royalists
hoped to raise armies in Scotland and Ireland and invade England to put the young prince
on the throne. To see off this threat to the English Republic,
Cromwell first led an army into Ireland, and during a brutal campaign there, he won a string of major
victories over royalist forces. Then he returned across the Irish Sea to lead an
army into Scotland. But after capturing the Scottish capital, Edinburgh, he
received word that Charles II himself had landed with an army further south
and was marching through England in the hope of seizing the crown.
Leaving Scotland, Cromwell headed south in pursuit and caught up with royalists here
at the city of Worcester.
Charles II had hoped the people of England would rise up to support him, but they didn't,
and when the final battle began, Cromwell's forces heavily outnumbered the royalists and
they made that advantage count. Now, 3,000 royalist troops are dead, 10,000 more have been captured,
and Charles II is fleeing into exile.
The victory is so overwhelming that when Cromwell returns to London,
he hopes the long years of civil war that have scarred the country are finally at an end.
But while one conflict seems to be ending, another is growing.
This time the battle is between the army and the rump parliament.
Many in the army think parliament is ineffective and corrupt.
Many in parliament fear that the army has become too powerful, and both sides suspect
the other is just waiting for the right opportunity to move against them.
The defeat of the royalists at the Battle of Worcester only deepens the mutual mistrust.
Charles II is now in
exile and parliamentarians fear that without an external enemy to fight, the army will turn on
them instead. But for their part, the army fears that parliament will use the victory as an excuse
to cut funding and slash their numbers. As head of the army and a member of parliament, Oliver
Cromwell could be the man to mediate between the two sides.
But there are growing tensions between him and other prominent members of the Council of State.
And as the months pass, Cromwell becomes increasingly frustrated with a wider
rump Parliament as well. Its members were elected more than a decade earlier,
before the execution of the King, before the Civil War had even started.
So while the upheaval of recent years has made holding elections impossible, Cromwell
now believes fresh blood is needed if the English Republic is to pass the reforms it
needs to survive.
The Rump Parliament, though, seems unwilling to give up power.
So after months of often tense negotiations, in early 1653, Parliament finally agrees to
call an election.
But it won't be an entirely free
one. For the sake of the future of the Republic, both the Army and Parliament want to exclude
royalists and other conservatives from standing in the election, but they can't agree on
exactly who should be ineligible. Parliament believes it alone should decide, but Cromwell
and the Army worry that if it's left to the MPs, they'll fix the result to ensure
they are re-elected.
So at a meeting in April 1653, Cromwell suggests a compromise, that a new ruling
council be drawn from both the army and parliament to drive through necessary reforms before calling
an election. The MPs at the meeting are shocked at the idea of handing over power to unelected
soldiers. Still, they placate Cromwell by assuring him that his
proposal will be considered fully and that Parliament will make no moves to call an election
until that has happened. The following morning, though, Cromwell gets word that the Rump Parliament
is moving ahead with the election without considering his proposal at all, and under
the parliamentarian's plans, they alone will vet who is eligible to stand. Cromwell and his allies
in the army fear that everything they fought odds comes the gripping guidebook, How
to Survive Against the Odds, Tales and Tips for Animal Attacks and Natural Disasters.
This might just be the most important book you'll ever read.
Go inside life or death situations where everyday people survived nature's most extreme scenarios.
And learn how you can too.
In these tales, you'll hear about the grit, willpower, and know-how needed to endure shipwrecks,
alligator attacks, earthquakes, and more.
You'll learn from experts, including top doctors, about what happens to your body and
mind in life-threatening situations.
Plus, important tips on what to do,
and equally important, what not to do when faced with a situation that is truly against the odds.
Go to SurvivalGuidebook.com to pre-order How to Survive Against the Odds Today
and get the perfect gift in time for graduation and Father's Day.
In the early hours of December 4th, 2024,
CEO Brian Thompson stepped out onto the streets
of Midtown Manhattan.
This assailant starts firing at him.
And the suspect.
He has been identified as Luigi Nicholas Mangione.
Became one of the most divisive figures
in modern criminal history.
It was meant to sow terror.
He's awoking the people to a true issue.
Listen to law and crimes
Luigi exclusively on one degree plus enjoying one degree plus
one degree at Spotify or Apple podcasts.
It's April 10th 1653 in the House of Commons in London, a year and a half after the Battle
of Worcester.
An enraged Oliver Cromwell sits at the side of the chamber, darkly scowling.
The members of parliament around him are moments away from calling a vote on a new election,
an election in which they, the sitting ministers of parliament, will decide the rules, including
who can and can't stand. But before it can be put to a vote, Cromwell rises to his feet.
His voice is slow and measured at first, but the anger seething inside of him is impossible
to miss. He tells his fellow MPs that they are not the ones who have fought for the right
to decide how the country is run. His voice begins to rise as he marches up and down the chamber, his soldiers boots thumping on the floor. He tells the shocked
politicians that the people of England will not put up with their self-interest any longer,
and when any MPs try to protest, he shouts them down, calling them drunkards and whoremasters.
Then with a roar of command, Cromwell summons a group of soldiers into the chamber. He instructs
them to throw out every last member of parliament, including the Speaker of the House. Parliament
is dissolved and the army is in charge now.
Following this military coup, Oliver Cromwell declares himself Lord Protector of England.
Some of his supporters want to offer him the crown and make him King Oliver I, but Cromwell
refuses. He is determined that England will remain a republic. Still, he rules England much as
a king would. He will believe his reign is divinely ordained and on his deathbed in 1658,
he will entrust his power to his eldest son.
But this will be the beginning of the end of the English Republic. The younger Richard
Cromwell will lack his father's iron will and his
support among the army. After less than a year, his reign as Lord Protector will collapse.
In 1659, the rump Parliament will be recalled, but that won't fill the power vacuum in England.
Soon the country will turn to the model of government it knows best. In 1660, the exiled
King Charles II will be invited to return to London and reclaim his throne.
England will be ruled by a monarch once again.
The English Republic was a radical experiment that failed, but the idea of a country without a king
will spread across the world, inspiring other, more successful revolutions in the years to come.
So, although the monarchy will persist in England, no king
or queen will ever hold absolute power in the nation again. The relationship between
rulers and the ruled will forever be changed by England's brief existence as a republic,
one that began on May 19, 1649.
Next on History Daily, May 20, 1875, diplomats from 17 countries meet in Paris to agree on
an international system of units, the metric system.
From Neuser and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me,
Lindsey Graham. Audio editing by Mohamed Shazeen, supervising sound designer Matthew Filler.
Music by Thrum. This episode is written and researched by Owen Paul Nichols. Edited by
William Simpson, managing producer Emily Burke. Executive producers are William Simpson for
Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser. 30th, purchase four new Michelin Passenger or Light Truck tires and receive up to $70 by prepaid MasterCard.
Conditions apply.
Details at michelin.ca.
Find a Michelin TreadExperts dealer near you at treadexperts.ca slash locations.