|
|
THE LAND IS OURS
|
Historical Archives |
|
| The English Civil War we see in our schools is from the point of view of the seventeenth century gentry. Ordinary people, who had given up home and livelihood to fight, had strong ideas about what they were fighting for which are missing from 'official' accounts.
But with a bit of research we begin to uncover evidence of a groundswell of public opinion at the end of hostilities, and great dissatisfaction with the outcome. This period from 1647-1649 coincided with Cromwell's dictatorship and the brutal suppression of the Leveller cause. The Civil War had begun when Parliament tried to take control of taxation and the militia from Charles I. The King had been taxing heavily to finance his wars on the continent. Allegiance of the English aristocracy was divided between the old feudal noblemen, who supported the King, and the new merchant class, represented by parliament, who had begun to acquire wealth and property through trade. Many commentators see the parliament's eventual victory as the beginning of what we now call Capitalism. The rest of the population were pawns in this struggle. Education was almost non-existent for them and communications were slow and unreliable, even between neighbouring towns. The presses were strictly controlled by print guilds who followed the lead of their feudal 'betters'. There were however some, notably John Lilburne, William Walwyn, Richard Overton and Thomas Prince, who were disgusted that the future foundation of our nation would be based on a bun-fight between two equally selfish alliances. They questioned the morality of all the killing and bloodshed without anything substantial to offer to the English people at the end of it. Parliamentary soldiers formed the bedrock of the Leveller party. The majority had given up home and livelihood to fight the King and Lt. Col. Lilburne was the best-known of the four leaders. He had risen up the ranks through his courage and shrewdness in battle to command his own regiment. He was intimate with and initially much respected by Cromwell, they even slept in the same bed on occasions. But Cromwell turned on his friend when he started putting detail on his desire for constitutional reform. John Lilburne put it to him like this, "We were ruled by a King, Lords and Commons; now by a General, Court Martial and Commons, and we pray you what is the difference?" Parliament offered Cromwell the crown and he declined. Towards the end of his life he deeply regretted the outcome. As 'Lord Protector' he was called to the House of Commons but spoke ruefully of how he "...did not ask or wish to be here..." The Civil War failed to rejuvenate the nation and within a few years of 'interregnum' the king was re-installed.
|
Documents in this Archive(You can download a a rich text format (*.rtf) version of this archive for printing, level.zip, contained in a zip file.)
|
See Tony Gosling's site http://www.bilderberg.org for texts of more Leveller & Digger documents, including:
England's New Chains Discovered 1648
The Second Part of England's New Chains Discovered 1649
England's Standard Advanced. 1649
The True Levellers' Standard Advanced 1649
A New Yeers Gift to the Parliament and Armie. 1650
A Declaration from the poor oppressed people of England. 1649
A letter to the Lord Fairfax 1649
The Law of Freedom in a Platform 1652
A Declaration by the Diggers of Wellingborough. 1650
@nticopyright
These pages maintained by TLIO's Webslaves...
Contact us at
www@tlio.demon.co.uk
with any problems or suggestions concerning this website.