Oliver Cromwell

Standard Name: Cromwell, Oliver
Used Form: Lord Protector

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Norah Lofts
NL set the first part of her historical novel Scent of Cloves in the Ireland of 1649-1657: the years of commonwealth and Cromwell ian rule (marked by massacres in Ireland at the beginning of this period).
OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.
Textual Production George Eliot
A notebook surviving from GE 's schooldays contains (besides such items as poems copied from annuals) an essay on Affectation and Conceit, which sketches the character of a vain woman in a tone of...
Textual Production Rosemary Sutcliff
Sutcliff called it an outside job, written in response to a complaint by her mother (a strong admirer of Oliver Cromwell ) about all the fictional representations of handsome, charming Cavaliers and boorish, unmannerly...
Textual Production Margaret Fell
MF wrote her first two letters to Cromwell ; she followed them with a third and fourth in 1656 and 1657.
Kunze, Bonnelyn Young. Margaret Fell and the Rise of Quakerism. Macmillan, 1994.
xi
Textual Production Margaret Fell
MF seems to have published three tracts in 1656, anonymously or with her initials, calling for the conversion of the Jews to Christianity. She did so in response to Cromwell 's edict re-admitting the Jews...
Textual Production Antonia Fraser
AF published her second historical biography, which she called Cromwell : Our Chief of Men, from a poem in praise of Cromwell by Andrew Marvell .
This was reprinted as Cromwell, The Lord Protector in 1989.
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
276
Whitaker’s Books in Print. J. Whitaker and Sons, 1988–2003.
(1988)
British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo.
Textual Production John Buchan
His later biographies include Sir Walter Scott, 1932, and Oliver Cromwell, 1934. His later essay collections include A Book of Escapes and Hurried Journeys, 1922 (which relates among other things the story...
Textual Production Mary Cary
She later said that the resurrection in question was connected with the formation of Cromwell 's New Model Army in April 1645. This work is available via Early English Books Online, together with the...
Textual Production Mary Russell Mitford
From August 1823 MRM was planning a grand historical tragedy on the greatest subject in English story—Charles and Cromwell.
qtd. in
Mitford, Mary Russell. The Life of Mary Russell Mitford: Told by Herself in Letters To Her Friends. Editor L’Estrange, Alfred Guy Kingham, Harper and Brothers, 1870, 2 vols.
2: 16
She noted Cromwell 's domestic virtues and thought of him as a man acting...
Textual Production John Oliver Hobbes
She had first approached Macmillan to publish the book, but they wanted the title changed and the last chapter revised. Hobbes refused, and approached Unwin's , which (on the advice of its reader, Edward Garnett
Textual Production Lucy Hutchinson
The parody To Mr Waller upon his panegirique to the Lord Protector is almost certainly by LH ; the ascription rests on Clarendon 's annotation.
Hutchinson, Lucy. “Introduction, Chronology”. Order and Disorder, edited by David Norbrook, Blackwell, 2001, p. i - lviii.
x
Lucretius, and Lucretius. “Introduction”. Lucy Hutchinson’s Translation of Lucretius, "De rerum natura", edited by Hugh De Quehen, translated by. Lucy Hutchinson, University of Michigan Press, 1996, pp. 1-20.
6
The manuscript spells Mr with a following colon....
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Lucy Hutchinson
This satirical eulogy uses the method of line-by-line contradiction of Waller 's poem in the manner used by Lady Mary Wroth in Railing Rimes Returned upon the Author about thirty years before. It skewers Cromwell
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Maria De Fleury
Her poem is Miltonic in style, with frequent echoes of Paradise Lost, although written in couplets. Accepting a designation applied to her by ideological enemies, MDF opens by comparing herself to the biblical Deborah...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text J. S. Anna Liddiard
The first poem in the volume, The Wreath of Fame, comments on her own daring in aiming for this wreath. Her other topics are the rage of Napoleon (the Man of Slaughter)...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Edna Lyall
Quotations about sympathy on the title-page come from George Henry Lewes (in his life of Goethe) and from Arnold Toynbee . EL 's earliest heroine, then Espérance de Mabillon, makes a cameo appearance with her...

Timeline

1701: Almost half a century after Cromwell had...

Building item

1701

Almost half a century after Cromwell had re-admitted the Jews to England, London acquired its first synagogue building.
Burns, William E. “’By Him the Women will be delivered from that Bondage, which some has found intolerable’: M. Marsin, English Millenarian Feminist”. Eighteenth-Century Women: Studies in their Lives, Work, and Culture, edited by Linda V. Troost, Vol.
1
, 2001, pp. 19-38.
32

1832: The University of Durham was founded....

Building item

1832

The University of Durham was founded.
The World of Learning. 47th ed., Allen and Unwin, 1997.
1519
Curtis, Stanley James. History of Education in Great Britain. Seventh, University Tutorial Press, 1967.
432
Dyhouse, Carol. No Distinction of Sex? Women in British Universities, 1870-1939. UCL Press, 1995.
12

Texts

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