Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658) was born in Huntingdon
?,
England on
April 25, 1599
?. His influence as a military commander and politician during the
English Civil War dramatically altered the political landscape of the
British Isles. As leader of the
Puritan cause, and commander of the [New Model Army]
?, he defeated
Charles I's forces, and brought to an end the absolute power of the monarchy. He ruled for several years as [Lord Protector]
? of the republican
Commonwealth of England. Within two years of his death on
September 3, 1658
?, the monarchy was restored. In
1661 his body was exhumed and was subjected to the ritual of a
posthumous execution.
Cromwell's suppression of a rebellion in Ireland in 1649 [1] still has strong resonance among the Irish. In particular, his massacre of all men carrying arms in Drogheda after its capture, including the killing of all prisoners as well as Catholic priests and many civilians, is one of the historical memories that has driven Irish-English and Catholic-Protestant strife throughout the centuries.