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On January the 30th 1649, the English killed their king. | 0:00:37 | 0:00:42 | |
It had happened before, of course, | 0:00:42 | 0:00:45 | |
all those Edwards and Richards violently done in by their subjects, | 0:00:45 | 0:00:50 | |
but this WAS different. | 0:00:50 | 0:00:52 | |
Now the British monarchy itself had been exterminated. | 0:00:52 | 0:00:56 | |
Now there was just the people and its Parliament, | 0:00:56 | 0:01:00 | |
the keepers of the liberties of England. | 0:01:00 | 0:01:04 | |
But what was the point of freedom when you were frightened? | 0:01:04 | 0:01:09 | |
What the people really wanted to know was - who would keep them safe? | 0:01:09 | 0:01:13 | |
Who would stop the soldiers from burning and pillaging, | 0:01:16 | 0:01:21 | |
allow people to sleep quietly in their beds? | 0:01:21 | 0:01:25 | |
Who would protect them from the wars of religion and politics which seemed to go on and on and on? | 0:01:25 | 0:01:32 | |
Would it be Parliament? | 0:01:32 | 0:01:34 | |
Or would it be a great general, like Oliver Cromwell? | 0:01:34 | 0:01:39 | |
It doesn't matter, said the hard-headed philosopher Thomas Hobbes, | 0:01:40 | 0:01:46 | |
a royalist who'd come back to Cromwell's England. | 0:01:46 | 0:01:50 | |
"What the country needs is a strong ruler who embodies all of the people. | 0:01:50 | 0:01:55 | |
"Whatever or whoever can save the country from anarchy, | 0:01:58 | 0:02:02 | |
"whatever can save you from yourselves. | 0:02:02 | 0:02:06 | |
"Never mind about what's right or wrong - put yourself in the hands of the power that protects, | 0:02:06 | 0:02:13 | |
"the all-powerful leviathan. | 0:02:13 | 0:02:16 | |
"If that's Oliver Cromwell, then so be it. It's the reasonable thing to do." | 0:02:21 | 0:02:28 | |
But the Scots, English and Irish were not about to be reasonable - | 0:02:28 | 0:02:33 | |
because they were too busy being righteous. | 0:02:33 | 0:02:36 | |
Over the next 50 years, righteousness would kill a lot of the British. | 0:02:36 | 0:02:41 | |
At the end, reason would appear, but not before a lot of tears had been shed, | 0:02:41 | 0:02:47 | |
tears of rapture and tears of grief. | 0:02:47 | 0:02:50 | |
Not everyone was lying awake at night, biting their nails about the plight of kingless Britain. | 0:03:28 | 0:03:35 | |
For many, this was the dawn of a new age. | 0:03:35 | 0:03:39 | |
It's true no-one had foreseen this during the civil wars, | 0:03:39 | 0:03:45 | |
but, in giving them victory, the Almighty had shown them that Albion must be turned into Jerusalem. | 0:03:45 | 0:03:51 | |
He had lain the Stuart kings in the dust. | 0:03:51 | 0:03:55 | |
The only king to follow now was King Jesus, | 0:03:55 | 0:03:58 | |
and the only true government that of his saints. | 0:03:58 | 0:04:02 | |
Let them sing aloud upon their beds! | 0:04:09 | 0:04:12 | |
Let the high praise of God be in their mouths and a two-edged sword in their hands! | 0:04:12 | 0:04:18 | |
The Kingdom of God was at hand, | 0:04:24 | 0:04:26 | |
the most blessed revolution of all, | 0:04:26 | 0:04:29 | |
and no-one was more convinced of this than Albion's holy warrior, Oliver Cromwell. | 0:04:29 | 0:04:37 | |
"Religion is not at first the thing contended for, | 0:04:39 | 0:04:43 | |
"but God brought it to that issue at last and at last it proved that which was most dear to us." | 0:04:43 | 0:04:50 | |
Cromwell called himself a seeker, | 0:04:53 | 0:04:56 | |
and what he sought all his life was God's destiny for himself and for his country. | 0:04:56 | 0:05:04 | |
At first, he'd been innocent of the Lord's design. | 0:05:04 | 0:05:07 | |
For years, he'd just led the life of an obscure East Anglian country gentleman. | 0:05:07 | 0:05:13 | |
Just as Cromwell was beginning to make his way in the world, | 0:05:13 | 0:05:18 | |
some sort of crisis happened to his modest fortune. | 0:05:18 | 0:05:22 | |
But what the world might have seen as misfortune was, through the cunning of the Almighty, | 0:05:22 | 0:05:28 | |
his saving grace. | 0:05:28 | 0:05:31 | |
He underwent some kind of religious conversion. | 0:05:31 | 0:05:34 | |
The vanities were stripped away so he might be opened to the light. | 0:05:34 | 0:05:39 | |
"Oh, I lived in and loved darkness and hated the light! | 0:05:42 | 0:05:46 | |
"This is true. I hated godliness, yet God had mercy on me. | 0:05:46 | 0:05:52 | |
"Oh, the riches of his mercy!" | 0:05:52 | 0:05:55 | |
The sense that God had some special service for him made a new man of Cromwell. | 0:05:59 | 0:06:06 | |
He knew where he was going and what had to be done. | 0:06:06 | 0:06:10 | |
What had to be done was to tear the sword out of the hands of the untrustworthy, Papist-loving king. | 0:06:10 | 0:06:17 | |
He went to war as a complete novice, with no military experience whatsoever, | 0:06:18 | 0:06:25 | |
but his sense of divine appointment was his armour. | 0:06:25 | 0:06:29 | |
It made him supremely confident, cool under fire, | 0:06:29 | 0:06:33 | |
but never reckless. | 0:06:33 | 0:06:35 | |
An aura of invincibility began to cling to him. | 0:06:36 | 0:06:41 | |
He became the driving force of the godly revolution. | 0:06:41 | 0:06:46 | |
When the vanquished king defied God's judgment, | 0:06:46 | 0:06:51 | |
his blood was needed to expiate the crime. | 0:06:51 | 0:06:55 | |
But it was obvious that doing away with the monarch was no guarantee of doing away with the monarchy. | 0:06:55 | 0:07:02 | |
For if Charles couldn't be among his subjects in person, his proxy could. | 0:07:02 | 0:07:08 | |
The Greek word "eikon" means both an image and a copy, | 0:07:11 | 0:07:16 | |
and the Eikon Basilike, the spitting image of the king, appeared within a week of his execution. | 0:07:16 | 0:07:23 | |
It was an instant bestseller, going through 35 editions in a year, | 0:07:23 | 0:07:28 | |
and it made Charles an imperishable martyr, | 0:07:28 | 0:07:31 | |
a latter-day Christ, sacrificed for the sins of his people. | 0:07:31 | 0:07:37 | |
Like Christ, Charles too would be resurrected wearing his heavenly crown, | 0:07:37 | 0:07:44 | |
and made flesh in the person of his son Charles II, | 0:07:44 | 0:07:48 | |
awaiting the call from exile in France. | 0:07:48 | 0:07:51 | |
The poet John Milton, an ardent champion of the Parliamentary Commonwealth, | 0:07:51 | 0:07:59 | |
was hired to attack the cult of the king-martyr as "so much wicked idolatry", | 0:07:59 | 0:08:06 | |
to persuade the fearful and the gullible they didn't need a Charles I, nor any Stuart monarch. | 0:08:06 | 0:08:12 | |
"Look," he wanted to say, "Just stop worrying about the dead king. You're the sovereign now. | 0:08:12 | 0:08:19 | |
"Come to think of it, you've always been the sovereign. Kings have been yours to hire or fire." | 0:08:19 | 0:08:25 | |
But when Cromwell and Milton told the people that it was time for them to govern themselves, | 0:08:25 | 0:08:33 | |
they didn't, of course, mean to be taken literally. | 0:08:33 | 0:08:37 | |
What? Every jumped-up weaver or ploughman with some sixpenny-book learning | 0:08:37 | 0:08:43 | |
announcing he'd just appointed himself magistrate, granting himself the vote? | 0:08:43 | 0:08:49 | |
Heaven forbid! That way lay chaos! | 0:08:49 | 0:08:52 | |
No, the people should put the government of the state | 0:08:52 | 0:08:56 | |
into the hands of the kind of men God saw fittest to exercise it - | 0:08:56 | 0:09:01 | |
incorruptible men of substance and piety. | 0:09:01 | 0:09:05 | |
"Oh, I see," said freeborn John Lilburne, the Leveller, | 0:09:05 | 0:09:10 | |
an ex-army officer who wanted to level the distance between the mighty and humble, the rich and poor, | 0:09:10 | 0:09:16 | |
"You mean the same kind of people who got us into this mess?" | 0:09:16 | 0:09:21 | |
We've all known a John Lilburne, haven't we? Some of us have even been John Lilburne - | 0:09:27 | 0:09:34 | |
first to the barricades, first to be arrested, won't shut up, | 0:09:34 | 0:09:39 | |
but, love or hate him, you know he won't go away. | 0:09:39 | 0:09:43 | |
To Squire Cromwell, he was a pain in the neck, a dangerous loudmouth, capable of wrecking army discipline. | 0:09:45 | 0:09:52 | |
Lilburne, for his part, detested the new regime. | 0:09:54 | 0:09:59 | |
"All you intended when you set us a-fighting | 0:10:01 | 0:10:05 | |
"was merely to unhorse and dismount our old riders and tyrants so that you might ride in their stead." | 0:10:05 | 0:10:11 | |
The soldiers read freeborn John and believed they should have the vote. | 0:10:11 | 0:10:16 | |
Give them an inch and they'd take a mile. | 0:10:16 | 0:10:21 | |
Pretty soon, the men would start believing their officers were the tyrants Lilburne said they were. | 0:10:21 | 0:10:28 | |
They had to be stopped. An army was not - repeat, NOT - a commune. | 0:10:28 | 0:10:34 | |
I tell you, you have no other way to deal with these men, but to break them or they will break you, | 0:10:37 | 0:10:45 | |
yea, and bring and all the guilt of the blood and treasures shed and spent in this kingdom | 0:10:45 | 0:10:52 | |
upon your heads and shoulders, | 0:10:52 | 0:10:54 | |
and frustrate and make void all that work | 0:10:54 | 0:10:58 | |
that, with so many years' industry, toil and pains, you have done! | 0:10:58 | 0:11:03 | |
I tell you again - you are necessitated to break them. | 0:11:03 | 0:11:07 | |
Off to the Tower went the Leveller leaders, | 0:11:07 | 0:11:11 | |
like so many traitors. | 0:11:11 | 0:11:14 | |
But then something astounding happened... | 0:11:14 | 0:11:18 | |
A petitioning campaign to demand the release of the Levellers was mobilised by Leveller women. | 0:11:18 | 0:11:25 | |
Now, for the Puritans, the cardinal virtues of women were silence and meekness, | 0:11:25 | 0:11:31 | |
but these women were shameless, obstinate, loud-mouthed | 0:11:31 | 0:11:36 | |
and, it has to be admitted, brave. | 0:11:36 | 0:11:39 | |
Leveller women had always been involved in the movement's political campaigns. | 0:11:39 | 0:11:45 | |
Elizabeth Lilburne was politicised through her efforts to spring her husband from various prisons. | 0:11:45 | 0:11:52 | |
Mary Overton had been brutally punished for printing and distributing her husband's tracts, | 0:11:52 | 0:11:59 | |
tied to the end of a cart and dragged through London's streets with her six-month-old baby, | 0:11:59 | 0:12:05 | |
pelted like a common whore. | 0:12:05 | 0:12:08 | |
But the most impassioned and articulate of the sisters was Katherine Chidley. | 0:12:08 | 0:12:14 | |
She started as a charismatic preacher | 0:12:14 | 0:12:17 | |
and turned to politics in an attempt to make the Commonwealth understand the particular sufferings of her sex. | 0:12:17 | 0:12:23 | |
"Considering that we have an equal share and interest with men in the Commonwealth, | 0:12:23 | 0:12:30 | |
"and it cannot be laid waste, | 0:12:30 | 0:12:33 | |
"and considering that poverty, misery and famine like a mighty torrent is breaking in upon us, | 0:12:33 | 0:12:42 | |
"and we are not able to see our children cry out for bread | 0:12:42 | 0:12:46 | |
"and not have wherewithal to feed them, we had rather die than see that day." | 0:12:46 | 0:12:52 | |
This was not what Oliver Cromwell had expected from Jerusalem. | 0:12:55 | 0:13:00 | |
It got worse. | 0:13:00 | 0:13:03 | |
In May 1649, some hundreds of soldiers mutinied | 0:13:08 | 0:13:11 | |
and tried to combine forces in Oxfordshire. | 0:13:11 | 0:13:16 | |
Cromwell rode hell for leather, 50 miles in a day, and caught them in the middle of the night at Burford. | 0:13:16 | 0:13:23 | |
One of the prisoners, Anthony Sedley, locked in the church, expecting the worst, | 0:13:27 | 0:13:33 | |
carved his name into the font. | 0:13:33 | 0:13:36 | |
The next morning, three of his comrades in arms were led out into the churchyard and shot. | 0:13:36 | 0:13:44 | |
Then Oliver went off to get an honorary degree in law from Oxford. | 0:13:45 | 0:13:51 | |
He made sure the mutinous soldiers were shipped off to a place | 0:13:54 | 0:13:59 | |
where they could vent their frustration on someone else. | 0:13:59 | 0:14:04 | |
"Angry, are we?" was his line. | 0:14:04 | 0:14:07 | |
"Want to know who's to blame for prolonging the civil wars?" | 0:14:07 | 0:14:11 | |
"Say hello to the Antichrist across the Irish Sea." | 0:14:11 | 0:14:16 | |
The target of Cromwell's march through blood was an army of royalists holding out in Ireland | 0:14:16 | 0:14:23 | |
in the name of King Charles's son. | 0:14:23 | 0:14:26 | |
In fact, it was as much Protestant as Catholic, | 0:14:26 | 0:14:31 | |
but in his conviction they were the legions of the devil, Cromwell was not about to make nice distinctions. | 0:14:31 | 0:14:38 | |
At Drogheda, on the main road between Dublin and Ulster, | 0:14:38 | 0:14:43 | |
he made it only too clear what he had in mind. | 0:14:43 | 0:14:48 | |
There is no point sidestepping this horror. | 0:14:48 | 0:14:52 | |
This was Cromwell's war crime. | 0:14:52 | 0:14:54 | |
This great atrocity has contaminated Anglo-Irish history ever since. | 0:14:54 | 0:15:00 | |
But we need to get right just what this atrocity was. | 0:15:00 | 0:15:04 | |
It wasn't indiscriminate butchery of women and children. | 0:15:04 | 0:15:08 | |
No eyewitnesses ever claimed to have seen any such thing. | 0:15:08 | 0:15:13 | |
What Cromwell DID order, unhesitatingly and without any mercy, | 0:15:13 | 0:15:18 | |
was, in any case, an act of unspeakable murder. | 0:15:18 | 0:15:22 | |
At least 3,000 royalist soldiers were butchered at Drogheda. | 0:15:30 | 0:15:35 | |
The vast majority after they had surrendered and disarmed. | 0:15:36 | 0:15:41 | |
At St Peter's Church, Cromwell's soldiers burnt the pews beneath the steeple, | 0:15:50 | 0:15:56 | |
to smoke out the defenders, who were incinerated in the flames. | 0:15:56 | 0:16:01 | |
The general saw no need to hang his head about the massacre. | 0:16:01 | 0:16:06 | |
"We have come to break the power of a company of lawless rebels... | 0:16:06 | 0:16:12 | |
"..Enemies to human society, whose principles are to destroy... all men not complying with them. | 0:16:12 | 0:16:19 | |
"We come by the assistance of God to hold forth and maintain the lustre and glory of English liberty | 0:16:19 | 0:16:27 | |
"in a nation where we have an undoubted right to it." | 0:16:27 | 0:16:31 | |
This is absolutely authentic Oliver Cromwell, and today it makes for unbearable reading. | 0:16:32 | 0:16:39 | |
No, it's not the confession of a genocidal lunatic, | 0:16:39 | 0:16:43 | |
but it IS the confession of a narrow-minded, pigheaded, Protestant bigot and English imperialist, | 0:16:43 | 0:16:51 | |
and that, surely, is bad enough. | 0:16:51 | 0:16:53 | |
Cromwell treated Ireland like the primitive colony he thought it was, | 0:16:56 | 0:17:02 | |
moving the Irish off their farms and using the land to pay his soldiers. | 0:17:02 | 0:17:07 | |
Before he could finish pacification, if that's what he thought it was, | 0:17:07 | 0:17:12 | |
another piece of unquiet Britain rose up to mock him. | 0:17:12 | 0:17:17 | |
For the Scots had invited the 20-year-old Charles II to come and be their king, | 0:17:17 | 0:17:24 | |
and went to war on his behalf. | 0:17:24 | 0:17:27 | |
Cromwell lured them into England in the summer of 1651, | 0:17:30 | 0:17:34 | |
where the Scottish army found itself caught between two bigger forces. | 0:17:34 | 0:17:40 | |
At the Battle Of Worcester, on the 3rd September, | 0:17:42 | 0:17:47 | |
it went down to a ruinous and irreversible defeat. | 0:17:47 | 0:17:51 | |
Charles went on the run, | 0:17:54 | 0:17:57 | |
hidden by royalist sympathisers | 0:17:57 | 0:17:59 | |
until he could get smuggled out of the country. | 0:17:59 | 0:18:03 | |
So when Oliver Cromwell returned to London in the Autumn of 1651, | 0:18:09 | 0:18:14 | |
it was as an English Caesar - | 0:18:14 | 0:18:17 | |
the like of whom had not been seen since the days of Edward I. | 0:18:17 | 0:18:22 | |
If Cromwell was God's Englishman, | 0:18:23 | 0:18:25 | |
it was because he felt that England was God's true promised land, | 0:18:25 | 0:18:31 | |
and it was best for Britain to become as English as possible. | 0:18:31 | 0:18:37 | |
The Stuart dream of a united Britain had been what had started the civil wars. | 0:18:37 | 0:18:43 | |
Now Cromwell had ended them by making that dream a reality, | 0:18:43 | 0:18:47 | |
not as a united kingdom, but as a united republic of Great Britain. | 0:18:47 | 0:18:53 | |
But what kind of republic was it supposed to be? | 0:18:56 | 0:19:00 | |
Cromwell knew the country was exhausted from almost 15 years of war. | 0:19:00 | 0:19:06 | |
It was time, as he said, to heal and settle. | 0:19:06 | 0:19:10 | |
This didn't mean business as usual. | 0:19:12 | 0:19:15 | |
Surely God didn't mean for so much blood to have been spilled | 0:19:15 | 0:19:20 | |
only so that ungodly lawyers and money brokers could get richer? | 0:19:20 | 0:19:25 | |
That was the way things were under the government of the Parliament - | 0:19:25 | 0:19:30 | |
the keeper of the liberties of England, as it styled itself. | 0:19:30 | 0:19:35 | |
It sat as it had when its members had been purged by the army to allow the trial of the king to proceed, | 0:19:36 | 0:19:43 | |
ridiculed by enemies as the "Rump". | 0:19:43 | 0:19:46 | |
To Cromwell, the Rump was a monstrosity - | 0:19:47 | 0:19:50 | |
a bastion of selfishness and greed, more like Sodom than Jerusalem. | 0:19:50 | 0:19:56 | |
Worst of all, it showed no signs at all of wanting ever to close down. | 0:19:56 | 0:20:02 | |
When it came up with a bill designed to keep itself going indefinitely, | 0:20:02 | 0:20:08 | |
this was the last straw. | 0:20:08 | 0:20:10 | |
On April 20th, 1653, | 0:20:15 | 0:20:18 | |
Cromwell marched down to Westminster with a troupe of musketeers. | 0:20:18 | 0:20:24 | |
Moses was descending from the mountain, | 0:20:30 | 0:20:34 | |
and he was not a happy prophet. | 0:20:34 | 0:20:37 | |
At first, it seemed as though the Member for Cambridge would behave. | 0:20:41 | 0:20:46 | |
Cromwell sat in his usual seat, he doffed his hat, | 0:20:46 | 0:20:50 | |
he asked if he might address the house, | 0:20:50 | 0:20:53 | |
and he commended the Rump for its care of the public good. | 0:20:53 | 0:20:58 | |
But, as he warmed up, the niceties were tossed aside, | 0:20:58 | 0:21:02 | |
and he began to berate the astounded members for their indifference to justice and piety. | 0:21:02 | 0:21:09 | |
"I expect you think this is not parliamentary language," he said. | 0:21:09 | 0:21:13 | |
"Well, I confess, it is not, | 0:21:13 | 0:21:16 | |
"and neither are you to expect any such from me." | 0:21:16 | 0:21:21 | |
The hat went back on - always a bad sign. | 0:21:22 | 0:21:25 | |
And Cromwell started to march up and down, | 0:21:25 | 0:21:29 | |
shouting that the Lord had done with them and had chosen instruments more worthy of their calling. | 0:21:29 | 0:21:36 | |
Someone tried to stop him in full spate, | 0:21:36 | 0:21:39 | |
but, by this time, Cromwell was in exterminating-angel mode and brushed him aside. | 0:21:39 | 0:21:45 | |
"You are no parliament!" he bellowed. "I say, you are no parliament!" | 0:21:45 | 0:21:50 | |
Then he called in the musketeers. | 0:21:50 | 0:21:53 | |
The boots entered heavily, noisily. | 0:21:53 | 0:21:56 | |
Parliament was shut down. | 0:21:57 | 0:22:00 | |
It was a depressingly modern moment - a classic coup d'etat, in fact. | 0:22:06 | 0:22:11 | |
Cromwell had crossed the line from mere bullying to dictatorship. | 0:22:11 | 0:22:17 | |
In so doing, he undid at a stroke the entire point of the war | 0:22:17 | 0:22:22 | |
that HE had fought against the King's unparliamentary conduct. | 0:22:22 | 0:22:27 | |
Cromwell claimed he was striking a blow against ambition and avarice, | 0:22:27 | 0:22:33 | |
but what he wounded, and fatally, was the commonwealth, itself. | 0:22:33 | 0:22:38 | |
This is the point at which Cromwell could have seized power, | 0:22:47 | 0:22:52 | |
and everyone expected him to. | 0:22:52 | 0:22:54 | |
But he wasn't working for himself - he was working for God. | 0:22:55 | 0:23:00 | |
In Parliament's place, he would set up an assembly of men chosen for their piety. | 0:23:01 | 0:23:08 | |
It would be an assembly of saints. | 0:23:08 | 0:23:11 | |
His language was very different as he exhorted them to go about their business. | 0:23:11 | 0:23:18 | |
"Love all the sheep, love the lambs, | 0:23:21 | 0:23:24 | |
"love all, | 0:23:24 | 0:23:26 | |
"tender all." | 0:23:26 | 0:23:29 | |
But mystical rapture and politics don't go well together - at least, not in Britain - | 0:23:29 | 0:23:36 | |
and in a few months the unworkable assembly collapsed - its leaders begging Cromwell to end it. | 0:23:36 | 0:23:43 | |
He duly obliged. | 0:23:46 | 0:23:49 | |
Now there seemed no alternative but to take the crown - to become Oliver I. | 0:23:49 | 0:23:55 | |
But this was still a step too far for a man whom God had told to punish the haughtiness of kings. | 0:23:56 | 0:24:03 | |
Instead, he chose to become a lord protector. | 0:24:03 | 0:24:07 | |
That had a good ring to it. Authority but not tyranny. | 0:24:07 | 0:24:11 | |
He was king in all but name, but a constitutional sovereign, | 0:24:13 | 0:24:17 | |
ruling with a council and a newly elected parliament. | 0:24:17 | 0:24:22 | |
His great hope was for a settling, | 0:24:24 | 0:24:27 | |
but the Protector himself was unsure in his own mind about the direction he should take the country. | 0:24:27 | 0:24:34 | |
Should Britain be righteous or reasonable? | 0:24:34 | 0:24:38 | |
It was a civil war that he fought over and over again in his own head. | 0:24:38 | 0:24:44 | |
Squire Cromwell saw the virtues of a reasonable state of affairs. | 0:24:44 | 0:24:50 | |
Given a little breathing space, the old world of the counties was coming back to life. | 0:24:50 | 0:24:56 | |
Magistrates were sitting at courts, gentlemen riding to hounds, | 0:24:56 | 0:25:01 | |
war-damaged houses being repaired, children being married off, | 0:25:01 | 0:25:06 | |
friends and neighbours asked to dinner. | 0:25:06 | 0:25:09 | |
And when some gentlemen were elected to the Protectorate parliaments, | 0:25:10 | 0:25:16 | |
the old connections between Westminster and the counties - the secret of English government - | 0:25:16 | 0:25:23 | |
were at last being put back together. | 0:25:23 | 0:25:26 | |
The righteous Cromwell fretted. | 0:25:27 | 0:25:30 | |
This return to older methods was only too successful. It was not so much healing as backsliding - | 0:25:30 | 0:25:38 | |
royalism by the back door. | 0:25:38 | 0:25:40 | |
So, in 1655, Cromwell turned his mastiffs loose. | 0:25:42 | 0:25:47 | |
The major generals. | 0:25:49 | 0:25:51 | |
It was their job to take righteousness out into the shires - the Protestant Taliban on horseback. | 0:25:54 | 0:26:01 | |
Muffle the bell ringers, | 0:26:01 | 0:26:03 | |
snoop on the ale houses, | 0:26:03 | 0:26:05 | |
lock up fornicators, | 0:26:05 | 0:26:07 | |
cancel Christmas. | 0:26:07 | 0:26:09 | |
John Evelyn, royalist and gentleman of letters, | 0:26:14 | 0:26:18 | |
who endured the leviathan of the Cromwellian state, | 0:26:18 | 0:26:22 | |
was one of many who found themselves the victim of the general's bullying. | 0:26:22 | 0:26:28 | |
"My wife and I went to London to celebrate Christmas Day - Mr Gunning preaching in Exeter Chapel. | 0:26:29 | 0:26:36 | |
"As he was giving us the Holy sacrament, the chapel was surrounded by soldiers. | 0:26:36 | 0:26:42 | |
"All the assembly surprised and kept prisoner by them - | 0:26:44 | 0:26:48 | |
"some in the house, others removed." | 0:26:48 | 0:26:51 | |
It was a public relations disaster for the Protectorate. | 0:26:55 | 0:27:00 | |
Cromwell reasserted himself over the pious, and got rid of the major generals in a hurry. | 0:27:00 | 0:27:07 | |
There were some places, though, where the two instincts worked together and changed Britain as a result, | 0:27:09 | 0:27:16 | |
and this is one of them - the synagogue of Bevis Marks in London. | 0:27:16 | 0:27:21 | |
Historians claim it's difficult to find hard evidence of any good at all that came out of the Protectorate. | 0:27:22 | 0:27:30 | |
This is hard enough evidence for me. | 0:27:30 | 0:27:33 | |
It was on these unforgiving, backless oak benches | 0:27:33 | 0:27:37 | |
that the first Jews to be admitted since the expulsion 360-something years before parked their behinds. | 0:27:37 | 0:27:45 | |
It was under the Protectorate that Jews were allowed finally to worship openly and to live openly | 0:27:45 | 0:27:51 | |
in what became a piece of multi-cultural London. | 0:27:51 | 0:27:55 | |
Cromwell is to thank for that - | 0:27:55 | 0:27:58 | |
for opening a new chapter of Anglo-Jewish history - MY history. | 0:27:58 | 0:28:04 | |
His apocalyptic timetable told him | 0:28:17 | 0:28:20 | |
that the conversion of the Jews would herald the coming of the last days. | 0:28:20 | 0:28:25 | |
But he saw that with a network in the Dutch and Spanish trading world, | 0:28:25 | 0:28:30 | |
the Jews could be a priceless source of commercial and military intelligence. | 0:28:30 | 0:28:37 | |
Piety and pragmatism - those twin qualities so often at odds inside Cromwell's personality - | 0:28:37 | 0:28:44 | |
this time came together to make him, as far as the Jews were concerned, a true lord protector. | 0:28:44 | 0:28:50 | |
But not king. | 0:28:51 | 0:28:53 | |
In the end - and so unlike the king he had destroyed - Cromwell could not lose his sense of unworthiness. | 0:28:53 | 0:29:01 | |
It was what saved him and Britain from a true dictatorship. | 0:29:01 | 0:29:06 | |
Cromwell believed he worked for God - real dictators think they ARE God. | 0:29:07 | 0:29:13 | |
It was THOSE men who fancied themselves as little gods - Charles I or the republican oligarchs - | 0:29:13 | 0:29:20 | |
who most aroused Cromwell's contempt. | 0:29:20 | 0:29:23 | |
Simplicity was a word he used about himself, and it was the highest of moral compliments, | 0:29:23 | 0:29:29 | |
but to prolong the Protectorate, Cromwell needed to be more of a leviathan than he could stomach. | 0:29:29 | 0:29:36 | |
And that is both is exoneration and his failure. | 0:29:36 | 0:29:41 | |
It's one of the most extraordinary ironies of British history | 0:29:41 | 0:29:46 | |
that Cromwell's Protectorate, demonized by both royalists and republicans alike, | 0:29:46 | 0:29:52 | |
ultimately formed the blueprint for our constitutional monarchy. | 0:29:52 | 0:29:57 | |
A chief executive chose his government, but both were answerable to a regularly elected parliament. | 0:29:57 | 0:30:04 | |
But Cromwell himself would not live to see this happen. | 0:30:04 | 0:30:09 | |
On September 3rd 1658, the anniversary of the Battle of Worcester, Cromwell died, | 0:30:12 | 0:30:18 | |
while an immense, black tempest was raging over England, | 0:30:18 | 0:30:23 | |
ripping out trees and sending belfries crashing to the ground. | 0:30:23 | 0:30:29 | |
It was, the old wives said, the devil coming for his soul. | 0:30:35 | 0:30:40 | |
What Oliver Cromwell left behind was not a workable political system, but a vision. | 0:30:44 | 0:30:50 | |
He may have been an angry, ruthless, overbearing man, perhaps even a manic depressive, | 0:30:50 | 0:30:57 | |
but that vision was something of startling sweetness, a sighting of Jerusalem, | 0:30:57 | 0:31:03 | |
a place where everyone would be free to receive Christ in their own way, | 0:31:03 | 0:31:08 | |
provided they did not disturb the peace and conscience of anybody else. | 0:31:08 | 0:31:13 | |
After all his marches and slaughters and fits of table-pounding, red-faced fury, | 0:31:13 | 0:31:19 | |
what it turned out Oliver Cromwell wanted for everyone was a quiet life. | 0:31:19 | 0:31:25 | |
But Catholics were excluded from this vision because for Cromwell, and the country at large, | 0:31:26 | 0:31:33 | |
Catholicism meant tyranny. | 0:31:33 | 0:31:36 | |
The Protector left the country safe from despots, but not from anarchy. | 0:31:36 | 0:31:41 | |
After his death, it returned - power swinging between the soldiers and the politicians, sleepless nights, | 0:31:41 | 0:31:48 | |
the nagging questions from ten years before. | 0:31:48 | 0:31:52 | |
"Who will keep us safe?" "Who do we obey?" "Where do we find a sovereign to protect us?" | 0:31:52 | 0:31:59 | |
It took another hard-headed soldier to see the only way to restore order. | 0:31:59 | 0:32:03 | |
General George Monck had been a royalist in the Civil War, | 0:32:03 | 0:32:08 | |
and a Cromwellian when it seemed that only the Protector could keep the peace. | 0:32:08 | 0:32:14 | |
Now he realised that with the Lord Protector gone, there was only one person who could take his place. | 0:32:14 | 0:32:22 | |
That was a new king. | 0:32:22 | 0:32:24 | |
Ironically, Charles II came to the throne | 0:32:27 | 0:32:31 | |
not because England needed a successor to Charles I, | 0:32:31 | 0:32:35 | |
but because England needed a successor to Oliver Cromwell. | 0:32:35 | 0:32:40 | |
There was universal rejoicing, bonfires and feasting. | 0:32:47 | 0:32:52 | |
The chaos brought by Cromwell's death was ending. | 0:32:52 | 0:32:56 | |
This new Charles seemed just what everyone had hoped for, a model of sweet reason. | 0:32:56 | 0:33:03 | |
That was what Samuel Pepys thought. | 0:33:03 | 0:33:06 | |
Pepys was a pure product of Cromwell's England. | 0:33:06 | 0:33:10 | |
He was present when the new king boarded his flagship home. | 0:33:10 | 0:33:15 | |
On route, the tall, dark-haired man told the story of his escape after the Battle of Worcester. | 0:33:15 | 0:33:22 | |
Here was a king full of charisma. | 0:33:22 | 0:33:25 | |
He had magic. | 0:33:27 | 0:33:30 | |
But would his reason survive the emotions stirred by his return? | 0:33:36 | 0:33:41 | |
The diarist John Evelyn recorded, with unrepentant royalism burning in his breast... | 0:33:41 | 0:33:48 | |
"This day came in His Majesty to London after a sad and long exile. | 0:33:48 | 0:33:53 | |
"With a triumph of above 20,000 horse and foot, | 0:33:53 | 0:33:57 | |
"brandishing their swords and shouting with inexpressible joy, | 0:33:57 | 0:34:02 | |
"the ways strewn with flowers, the bells ringing. | 0:34:02 | 0:34:06 | |
"I stood in the Strand and beheld it and blessed God. | 0:34:06 | 0:34:10 | |
"And all this without one drop of blood, and by that very army which had rebelled against him." | 0:34:10 | 0:34:17 | |
The King was crowned at Westminster on 23rd April 1661. | 0:34:17 | 0:34:23 | |
His reign was backdated to the day after his father had been beheaded. | 0:34:23 | 0:34:28 | |
But even before the coronation, there were those with long memories who were looking for revenge. | 0:34:28 | 0:34:36 | |
On January 30th 1661, | 0:34:38 | 0:34:41 | |
exactly 12 years after Charles I's severed head dropped into the straw, | 0:34:41 | 0:34:46 | |
the remains of Cromwell and the regicides were taken from the tombs | 0:34:46 | 0:34:51 | |
and hanged from the common gallows at Tyburn before being buried in a deep pit. | 0:34:51 | 0:34:59 | |
Over the next months, eleven other king killers were hanged, drawn and quartered. | 0:34:59 | 0:35:05 | |
The old Cromwellians watched this in tactful, furtive silence. | 0:35:11 | 0:35:16 | |
They wondered just how reasonable this new regime might actually be. | 0:35:16 | 0:35:21 | |
Killing the kill-joys, Charles knew, would not damage his popularity. | 0:35:23 | 0:35:28 | |
Given a free vote, the people would, especially after the major generals, vote for pleasure over piety. | 0:35:28 | 0:35:36 | |
# Lavender's green, dilly dilly... # | 0:35:37 | 0:35:42 | |
And leading the dance, of course, was Charles himself, | 0:35:42 | 0:35:47 | |
constitutionally incapable of being so churlish | 0:35:47 | 0:35:51 | |
as to spurn any woman generous enough to invite him into her bed. They all did. | 0:35:51 | 0:35:57 | |
# ..I love you. # | 0:35:57 | 0:35:59 | |
This was the golden age of ogling. | 0:35:59 | 0:36:02 | |
If Puritan England had been governed by the ear, wide open to receive the Word of God, | 0:36:02 | 0:36:09 | |
the Restoration restored the sovereignty of the eye. | 0:36:09 | 0:36:13 | |
Its ruling passion was scopophilia, | 0:36:15 | 0:36:18 | |
the addiction of gaze. | 0:36:18 | 0:36:20 | |
Whether eyeballing an outrageous wig, a plunging neckline, a louse caught in the lens of a microscope, | 0:36:20 | 0:36:28 | |
or the constellations of the stars. | 0:36:28 | 0:36:30 | |
# Lavender's blue, diddle diddle | 0:36:30 | 0:36:35 | |
# Lavender's green... # | 0:36:35 | 0:36:40 | |
Charles's boyish enthusiasm with the latest optical instruments | 0:36:40 | 0:36:45 | |
suggested he might be a new kind of Stuart. | 0:36:45 | 0:36:48 | |
One whose vision dwelt not in cloudy realms of absolutism, but which was precisely focused, | 0:36:48 | 0:36:55 | |
concerned to observe reality, political as well as physical. | 0:36:55 | 0:37:00 | |
He might even turn out to be a reasonable Stuart king. | 0:37:00 | 0:37:05 | |
This was the Stuart for whom the physical world was his alpha and omega, who was earthy in his realism. | 0:37:06 | 0:37:13 | |
All too earthy, some thought, as they looked down in disgust | 0:37:14 | 0:37:19 | |
at the theatre of indolence punctuated by debauchery that had become the court. | 0:37:19 | 0:37:26 | |
They were not SO worldly, as to be free of the fear that some day there would be a reckoning. | 0:37:26 | 0:37:33 | |
Some day soon, as it turned out. | 0:37:33 | 0:37:36 | |
In the summer of 1664, a comet appeared in the skies over England. | 0:37:40 | 0:37:45 | |
Its sallow tail could be seen with unprecedented clarity through the lens of the new telescopes, | 0:37:45 | 0:37:52 | |
owned among others by the King. | 0:37:52 | 0:37:55 | |
What most people saw was disaster in the offing. | 0:37:55 | 0:37:59 | |
They had all read their almanacs. | 0:37:59 | 0:38:02 | |
They knew the Apocalypse would be heralded by pestilence, fire and war. | 0:38:02 | 0:38:07 | |
A year later, thousands of bodies, killed by bubonic plague, were being tossed each week | 0:38:12 | 0:38:19 | |
into the great pit of Aldgate. | 0:38:19 | 0:38:21 | |
And there was nothing that science could do about it, except count the dead with a care demanded | 0:38:21 | 0:38:29 | |
by modern statistics. | 0:38:29 | 0:38:32 | |
# My part of death | 0:38:34 | 0:38:37 | |
# No-one so true | 0:38:37 | 0:38:42 | |
# Did share it | 0:38:43 | 0:38:48 | |
# Come away | 0:38:49 | 0:38:52 | |
# Come away | 0:38:52 | 0:38:55 | |
# Death... # | 0:38:55 | 0:38:58 | |
One-sixth of London's population perished. | 0:39:02 | 0:39:07 | |
The infection ebbed with the onset of autumn, but the trepidation hung around, | 0:39:07 | 0:39:13 | |
for the number of the beast was 666. | 0:39:13 | 0:39:18 | |
And sure enough, up from the smoky regions of hell, | 0:39:22 | 0:39:26 | |
in the first week of September 1666, | 0:39:26 | 0:39:29 | |
came the diabolical fire. | 0:39:29 | 0:39:32 | |
In the early hours of Sunday, September 2nd, | 0:39:37 | 0:39:41 | |
the Lord Mayor of London was woken from his sleep | 0:39:41 | 0:39:45 | |
to be told that a fire had started in a baker's shop in Pudding Lane. | 0:39:45 | 0:39:50 | |
His response was... | 0:39:50 | 0:39:52 | |
"Pish! A woman might piss it out." | 0:39:52 | 0:39:55 | |
As he snored on, the flames reached the warehouses flanking the Thames between the Tower and London Bridge, | 0:40:03 | 0:40:11 | |
brimful of tallow, pitch and brandy. | 0:40:11 | 0:40:14 | |
A monstrous fireball came roaring and sucking out of the narrow streets, | 0:40:15 | 0:40:21 | |
feeding on the overhanging bays and gables. | 0:40:21 | 0:40:25 | |
In another hour, 200-300 houses had been swallowed by the flames. | 0:40:27 | 0:40:32 | |
John Evelyn, who'd been saying for years that overcrowded London was a disaster waiting to happen, | 0:40:37 | 0:40:44 | |
took no joy in the fulfilment of his prophecy. | 0:40:44 | 0:40:49 | |
"Oh, the miserable and calamitous spectacle! | 0:40:50 | 0:40:55 | |
"God grant mine eyes that I never behold the like again, | 0:40:55 | 0:40:59 | |
"who now saw 10,000 houses all in one flame. | 0:40:59 | 0:41:04 | |
"The noise and crackle and thunder of the impetuous flames. | 0:41:04 | 0:41:09 | |
"The shriek of women and children. | 0:41:09 | 0:41:11 | |
"The hurry of people. The fall of towers, houses and churches, like a hideous storm. | 0:41:11 | 0:41:18 | |
"London was, but is no more." | 0:41:18 | 0:41:21 | |
THUNDER CRASHES | 0:41:33 | 0:41:35 | |
When the rain started, a week after the outbreak of the fire, allowing an early stocktaking, | 0:41:37 | 0:41:44 | |
the scale of the devastation horrified even the pessimists. | 0:41:44 | 0:41:49 | |
13,200 houses had been destroyed, along with some of the most famous buildings of the city. | 0:41:49 | 0:41:56 | |
St Paul's Cathedral was in ruins. | 0:41:58 | 0:42:01 | |
The new leviathan, it seemed, had no fire insurance. | 0:42:01 | 0:42:06 | |
Still, there were those who were determined that London would rise as a Phoenix from its ashes | 0:42:06 | 0:42:13 | |
and, like the reborn, rebuilt Rome, astonish the world. | 0:42:13 | 0:42:18 | |
This sort of thing had long been on the mind of Christopher Wren, | 0:42:18 | 0:42:23 | |
mathematician, architect and prodigy of the Royal Society. | 0:42:23 | 0:42:28 | |
So when Roman antiquities were found in the debris around St Paul's, | 0:42:28 | 0:42:33 | |
one of them a tablet bearing the Latin inscription, "Resurgam" - "I shall arise," | 0:42:33 | 0:42:40 | |
Wren took the message to heart. | 0:42:40 | 0:42:42 | |
London had once been a great Roman city | 0:42:42 | 0:42:46 | |
and now would outdo the ancients, | 0:42:46 | 0:42:49 | |
with great piazzas, broad avenues, calculated to afford geometrically satisfying vistas | 0:42:49 | 0:42:56 | |
and up to 50 new churches. | 0:42:56 | 0:42:59 | |
And at its heart would be a new St Paul's, | 0:42:59 | 0:43:03 | |
a cathedral the like of which had never been seen in northern Europe. | 0:43:03 | 0:43:08 | |
He even built a giant wooden model to show the King and clergy just what they would be getting. | 0:43:08 | 0:43:15 | |
How could they not be awestruck by the huge dome that used the same technology as a microscope | 0:43:17 | 0:43:24 | |
to flood the interior with light? | 0:43:24 | 0:43:26 | |
But there was a problem. | 0:43:54 | 0:43:56 | |
Wren had designed his cathedral as a Greek cross, | 0:43:56 | 0:44:00 | |
sacrificing the traditional design of a Protestant church in favour of perfect acoustics and light. | 0:44:00 | 0:44:08 | |
You can almost hear the mystified, angry complaints of the reverends, | 0:44:08 | 0:44:13 | |
"And where exactly is the choir supposed to go? And how do we process up a nave which isn't there?" | 0:44:13 | 0:44:20 | |
Most of all, they said, "Call us old-fashioned, but this looks to us like a Catholic basilica. | 0:44:20 | 0:44:27 | |
"We'll be, if you pardon the phrase, damned, if we're going to let St Paul's turn into St Peter's." | 0:44:27 | 0:44:34 | |
When the King joined critics, telling him to go back to the drawing board, | 0:44:34 | 0:44:39 | |
Wren's normally very dry eyes are said to have filled with tears. | 0:44:39 | 0:44:44 | |
He would have his chance to build his domed cathedral, | 0:44:44 | 0:44:48 | |
but only when it was joined to a long nave, something like a traditional church. | 0:44:48 | 0:44:54 | |
The irony was that, for all his Roman enthusiasm, Wren believed he was building a truly Protestant church, | 0:44:54 | 0:45:03 | |
but his timing was terrible. | 0:45:03 | 0:45:06 | |
Ever since the days of the Reformation, Britain had been victim to anti-Catholic fear. | 0:45:06 | 0:45:13 | |
And once again, in Charles's reign, it erupted. | 0:45:13 | 0:45:17 | |
Not all of it was misplaced - Charles was suspected of having secret Catholics in his government, | 0:45:20 | 0:45:26 | |
and so he did. | 0:45:26 | 0:45:29 | |
He was also suspected of making secret treaties with the militantly Catholic Louis XIV of France, | 0:45:29 | 0:45:35 | |
and so he had. | 0:45:35 | 0:45:37 | |
But there was worse... | 0:45:37 | 0:45:40 | |
much worse. | 0:45:40 | 0:45:42 | |
The King's own brother, James, Duke of York, had actually converted to the Roman Church, | 0:45:42 | 0:45:48 | |
and he made no secret of it. | 0:45:48 | 0:45:50 | |
With no children born to the King, the first Catholic ruler since Bloody Mary was an imminent prospect. | 0:45:50 | 0:45:58 | |
They were shivering in the Shires. | 0:45:58 | 0:46:01 | |
A century before, England's Queen Elizabeth had been threatened | 0:46:01 | 0:46:06 | |
with Catholic assassination plots. | 0:46:06 | 0:46:08 | |
The Jesuit lurking in the shadows was a permanent fixture in the popular nightmare. | 0:46:08 | 0:46:15 | |
So when an ex-Jesuit called Titus Oates concocted a pack of lies about a plot to murder the King, | 0:46:15 | 0:46:22 | |
invite a French invasion and create a Catholic state under James, | 0:46:22 | 0:46:27 | |
he tripped the Guy Fawkes alert. | 0:46:27 | 0:46:29 | |
And when the magistrate investigating the charges was found mysteriously murdered on Primrose Hill, | 0:46:29 | 0:46:37 | |
it seemed obvious that Oates knew what he was talking about. | 0:46:37 | 0:46:42 | |
It sent the jittery country right over the edge. | 0:46:42 | 0:46:46 | |
Anti-Catholic violence swept the country - | 0:46:58 | 0:47:03 | |
riots, burnings, lynch mobs, kangaroo courts. | 0:47:03 | 0:47:07 | |
For some politicians, the country's ugly mood was a golden opportunity to press their favourite cause - | 0:47:10 | 0:47:18 | |
James, Duke of York, should never be allowed to sit on the throne. He HAD to be excluded. | 0:47:18 | 0:47:25 | |
Anything to stop the cycle of religious wars from breaking out again. | 0:47:25 | 0:47:31 | |
It was an extraordinary crisis in the history of the British monarchy, | 0:47:31 | 0:47:36 | |
for at stake were not only the lives of hundreds of those victimised by all the lies and hysteria, | 0:47:36 | 0:47:42 | |
but the fate of the polity itself, | 0:47:42 | 0:47:44 | |
because to concede exclusion was to accept that Parliament had the right | 0:47:44 | 0:47:49 | |
to judge who was fit or unfit to occupy the throne. | 0:47:49 | 0:47:54 | |
And THAT was a concession Charles II was absolutely not about to make. | 0:47:54 | 0:47:59 | |
But Charles met the most serious crisis of his reign with his most powerful weapon - reason. | 0:48:00 | 0:48:07 | |
He offered a compromise. | 0:48:07 | 0:48:10 | |
His brother would be allowed to succeed IF he agreed to be a private Catholic | 0:48:10 | 0:48:16 | |
and not to lay a finger on the Church of England. | 0:48:16 | 0:48:19 | |
Riding the wave of paranoia, the newly elected Parliament, summoned to Oxford, turned him down. | 0:48:19 | 0:48:26 | |
They assumed that memory was on their side, | 0:48:26 | 0:48:30 | |
that this Charles would remember the fate of his stubborn father, | 0:48:30 | 0:48:34 | |
who had triggered a war when he, too, had been suspected of being soft on Catholicism. | 0:48:34 | 0:48:40 | |
But historical memory is a double-edged sword. | 0:48:40 | 0:48:44 | |
FANFARE | 0:48:44 | 0:48:47 | |
When the Commons filed into the Great Hall of Christchurch | 0:48:47 | 0:48:51 | |
to hear what they THOUGHT would be the royal capitulation, | 0:48:51 | 0:48:55 | |
they found themselves instead confronted by a leviathan in ermine. | 0:48:55 | 0:49:00 | |
"This is the King's will," he said, in effect. | 0:49:02 | 0:49:06 | |
"Take it or leave it." | 0:49:06 | 0:49:09 | |
It was a breathtaking gamble. | 0:49:11 | 0:49:14 | |
Backed up by the House of Lords, | 0:49:14 | 0:49:16 | |
Charles had left the Exclusionists in the Commons no alternative but to go to war. | 0:49:16 | 0:49:23 | |
And he was betting that the memory of the last round would be a deterrent. | 0:49:25 | 0:49:31 | |
He was right - | 0:49:31 | 0:49:33 | |
the granite and marble tombs of the dead from Edgehill, Marston Moor and Worcester were still being carved. | 0:49:33 | 0:49:40 | |
That war had begun as a parliamentary protest and ended in Puritan crusade. | 0:49:40 | 0:49:46 | |
Who wanted that back? Not the Exclusionists. | 0:49:46 | 0:49:50 | |
THEY blinked first. | 0:49:50 | 0:49:52 | |
James did get the keys to the kingdom when his brother died, in 1685, | 0:49:53 | 0:49:59 | |
and he inherited a new parliament with a massively royalist majority, | 0:49:59 | 0:50:05 | |
along with widespread public sympathy. | 0:50:05 | 0:50:08 | |
Within three years, though, he had squandered it all. | 0:50:08 | 0:50:13 | |
James never had any intention of hiding his faith. | 0:50:17 | 0:50:21 | |
His Catholicism wasn't just a private comfort to be celebrated away from the public gaze. | 0:50:21 | 0:50:28 | |
No, James was going to be a visible Catholic king, | 0:50:28 | 0:50:33 | |
but he was playing a dangerous game. | 0:50:33 | 0:50:35 | |
When James tried to reverse anti-Catholic laws, | 0:50:37 | 0:50:42 | |
the pillars of the Establishment - the country gentry in the Church of England - were horrified. | 0:50:42 | 0:50:49 | |
When the bishops complained, the King declared, "I shall find a way to do my business without you." | 0:50:49 | 0:50:56 | |
The protesting bishops were locked up in the Tower. | 0:50:56 | 0:51:02 | |
James's timing was disastrous, | 0:51:06 | 0:51:09 | |
for he was doing all this when Louis XIV, the militantly Catholic King of France, | 0:51:09 | 0:51:15 | |
was threatening Europe. | 0:51:15 | 0:51:19 | |
By January 1688, James had managed to alienate all his natural allies, | 0:51:19 | 0:51:24 | |
and to turn himself into an even more dangerous version of his father, Charles I. | 0:51:24 | 0:51:30 | |
He was even filling the officer ranks of the Army with Irish Catholics. | 0:51:30 | 0:51:36 | |
The only consolation was that, at 52, he had no son. | 0:51:38 | 0:51:43 | |
The next in line to the throne was his daughter Mary, | 0:51:43 | 0:51:48 | |
a staunch Protestant who'd married the Dutch Prince William of Orange, | 0:51:48 | 0:51:52 | |
hero of the resistance to Louis XIV. | 0:51:52 | 0:51:55 | |
On June 10th 1688, all this changed. | 0:51:56 | 0:52:00 | |
James's wife, Mary of Modena, gave birth to a boy, | 0:52:00 | 0:52:04 | |
who was duly baptised with Roman rites. | 0:52:04 | 0:52:09 | |
Now not only was the king Catholic, | 0:52:09 | 0:52:12 | |
so was his dynasty. | 0:52:12 | 0:52:14 | |
What could be done? Well, something quite extraordinary. | 0:52:14 | 0:52:19 | |
A group of seven leading statesmen sent a message to Holland with an explosive request. | 0:52:20 | 0:52:27 | |
"Prince William," they asked, "would you mind invading Britain and saving us from a Catholic king?" | 0:52:27 | 0:52:34 | |
William wanted to save his country from Catholic despots all right, | 0:52:35 | 0:52:41 | |
but the country HE had in mind, first, foremost and always, was the Dutch republic. | 0:52:41 | 0:52:47 | |
English politics were a sideshow, for William, to the main event - | 0:52:47 | 0:52:52 | |
the great European war against Louis XIV. | 0:52:52 | 0:52:55 | |
What choice did he have? There would be British troops in that war. | 0:52:57 | 0:53:02 | |
To make sure that they'd be fighting for him, not against him, | 0:53:02 | 0:53:07 | |
exactly 100 years after the Spanish Armada failed to do the same thing, | 0:53:07 | 0:53:11 | |
William set out to conquer Britain. | 0:53:11 | 0:53:14 | |
He was nothing if not thorough. | 0:53:18 | 0:53:22 | |
60,000 copies of William's manifesto blanketed England | 0:53:22 | 0:53:26 | |
in an effort to present the planned invasion | 0:53:26 | 0:53:29 | |
as a response to a spontaneous uprising against the Catholic tyrant. | 0:53:29 | 0:53:34 | |
It was so persuasive that he succeeded in making James seem the foreigner in his own land | 0:53:34 | 0:53:41 | |
and the Dutchman the TRUE Brit. | 0:53:41 | 0:53:43 | |
The fate of the Armada was a sobering thought, | 0:53:46 | 0:53:50 | |
so his Dutch invasion force made the Spanish one seem puny. | 0:53:50 | 0:53:54 | |
This time there were 600 vessels and up to 20,000 troops. | 0:53:54 | 0:53:59 | |
He landed at Torbay on November 5th - Guy Fawkes Day. | 0:54:14 | 0:54:18 | |
Obviously, God was a Protestant. | 0:54:18 | 0:54:21 | |
When he realised that this Protestant invasion was really going to oust him, | 0:54:21 | 0:54:27 | |
James' courage failed him. | 0:54:27 | 0:54:30 | |
His resolution in melt-down, his nights haunted by the ghost of his beheaded daddy, | 0:54:30 | 0:54:37 | |
he fled the kingdom. | 0:54:37 | 0:54:39 | |
William claimed that he'd come just to restore English liberties, | 0:54:45 | 0:54:50 | |
but now he had Dutch soldiers in the streets. | 0:54:50 | 0:54:54 | |
And if he'd decided to be king after all, who was going to say otherwise? | 0:54:54 | 0:55:00 | |
In February 1689, William of Orange and Mary Stuart were proclaimed King and Queen of England. | 0:55:06 | 0:55:13 | |
But during the ceremony, something profoundly novel happened. | 0:55:15 | 0:55:20 | |
A declaration of rights was read out, | 0:55:20 | 0:55:23 | |
listing the conditions under which the new monarchs would be allowed to sit on the throne. | 0:55:23 | 0:55:30 | |
Parliament had changed the job description of the ruler. | 0:55:30 | 0:55:34 | |
It turned out the country did not need leviathan. | 0:55:34 | 0:55:38 | |
It wanted a chairman of the board. | 0:55:38 | 0:55:40 | |
Dutch William fitted that role to a T. | 0:55:40 | 0:55:45 | |
William III would fight HIS wars by asking, not demanding, | 0:55:45 | 0:55:50 | |
funds from the elected representatives of the people. | 0:55:50 | 0:55:54 | |
And ruling together with Parliament, | 0:55:54 | 0:55:57 | |
his government looked remarkably like a reasonable version of Oliver Cromwell's Protectorate. | 0:55:57 | 0:56:04 | |
History has called this a Glorious Revolution. | 0:56:05 | 0:56:09 | |
It was probably neither. | 0:56:09 | 0:56:12 | |
But afterwards, the British monarchy would never be the same again. | 0:56:12 | 0:56:17 | |
But the old monarchy had one last, desperate, play to make. | 0:56:23 | 0:56:29 | |
In March 1689, James landed in Ireland | 0:56:29 | 0:56:33 | |
with 20,000 French troops. | 0:56:33 | 0:56:36 | |
The Catholic Irish flocked to their king. | 0:56:36 | 0:56:40 | |
Like the English, they had become pawns in someone else's chess game. | 0:56:40 | 0:56:46 | |
Outside Drogheda, two armies - two worlds - faced each other across the River Boyne. | 0:56:51 | 0:56:57 | |
One belonged to the old world of faith and fervour. | 0:56:57 | 0:57:01 | |
The other - Dutch and German professionals - were part of a modern war machine. | 0:57:01 | 0:57:07 | |
No prizes for guessing who won. | 0:57:17 | 0:57:20 | |
Nobody. | 0:57:21 | 0:57:23 | |
It is the patriotic duty of Irish men and Irish women | 0:57:34 | 0:57:38 | |
to engage in that legitimate armed struggle. | 0:57:38 | 0:57:42 | |
WE WILL NEVER SURRENDER! | 0:57:42 | 0:57:45 | |
NEVER! | 0:57:45 | 0:57:46 | |
NEVER! | 0:57:46 | 0:57:48 | |
NEVER! | 0:57:48 | 0:57:50 | |
-Never... -CHEERING | 0:57:50 | 0:57:52 | |
I would appeal to Unionists to engage fully in the search for a lasting peace. | 0:57:52 | 0:57:59 | |
I, too, am an Ulster man, | 0:57:59 | 0:58:01 | |
and we don't need British ministers to rule us... | 0:58:01 | 0:58:05 | |
# ..By Christ and Saint Patrick | 0:58:05 | 0:58:08 | |
# The nation's our own | 0:58:08 | 0:58:13 | |
# Lilli burlero | 0:58:13 | 0:58:17 | |
# Bullen a la. # | 0:58:17 | 0:58:24 |