Author
English · 1599-1658 · 11 quotes
English · 1599–1658
11 quotes in our collection
Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658) was an English soldier and statesman who became Lord Protector of the Commonwealth after the English Civil Wars. A leading figure in Parliamentarian victory, he rose from country gentleman to commander of the New Model Army and then to head of state after the execution of Charles I. His most important historical record lies in his letters, speeches, military actions, and the political settlement associated with the Commonwealth and Protectorate. Cromwell matters because he stands at the center of debates about revolution, religious liberty, military power, republican government, and authoritarian rule. To some, he was a providential reformer; to others, a regicide and dictator. His quotes often carry the urgency of a man who saw politics as moral struggle, where conscience, force, and national destiny could not be separated.
Collected Quotes
What in the name of God is this?
It is plain sense.
All tyrannies must go together.
We mislike no bishops save that they stand by a tyrannous church.
We attack not faiths or opinions, but despotism.
The sword of judgment.
Here are ten lines of the bitterest damnation that ever came from the mind of treason.
Blood is upon us again, blood spilled for a perfidious king.
All arguments are ended.
Time presses.