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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
The Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell was a practical experiment in government, but it was an experiment guided by more than practicality alone. For its first three years, it rested heavily on a single ecclesiastical party, the Congregational Independents. This was the party of the preachers John Owen, Philip Nye, Thomas Goodwin, and their fellows and followers. They did not rule alone, but for three years they managed to dominate the governing coalition. They supplied the implicit ideological basis and the explicit personal support for the establishment of the Protectorate, the reign of the major generals, and the refusal of the Protector to accept a crown. Briefly but with lasting effects, England experienced the political consequences of a Congregational Independent regime.
1. An extensive debate was opened by Hexter, J. H., “The Problem of the Presbyterian Independents,” American Historical Review 44 (10, 1938): 29–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Major literature in the debate to 1969 was reviewed by Foster, Stephen, “The Presbyterian Independents Exorcized,” Past and Present 44 (09 1969): 52–75;CrossRefGoogle Scholar Foster's own argument, however, was refuted by a number of reputable historians in “Debate: Presbyterians, Independents and Puritans,” Past and Present 47 (05, 1970): 116–136.Google ScholarUnderdown, David, Pride's Purge (Oxford, 1971)Google Scholar and Worden, Blair, The Rump Parliament (Cambridge, Eng., 1974)Google Scholar are recent significant contributions.
2. This formulation excludes both Roman Catholics and people who insisted on episcopacy.
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4. A few Sectaries claimed that civil rule was valid only if it was the rule of saints. They could affect the government negatively through harrassment, but there was never any real possibility of their taking positive control.
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53. Firth and Rait, 2:1048–1056, esp. articles 10, 11; cf 2:813–822, articles 35–38.
54. Articles 1, 3, 6, 8.
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