Oliver Cromwell, Henry Ireton, Judge Thomas Pride, and Judge John Bradshaw were posthumously attainted for high treason. |
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Cromwell and Ireton maintained that only property in freehold land or chartered trading rights gave a man the right to vote. |
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The bodies of Oliver Cromwell, Henry Ireton and John Bradshaw were subjected to the indignity of posthumous decapitations. |
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Henry Vane the younger removed himself from Parliament in protest of this unlawful action by Ireton. |
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In January 1661, the corpses of Cromwell, Ireton and Bradshaw were exhumed and hanged in chains at Tyburn. |
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At the 1647 General Council Oliver Cromwell and Henry Ireton argued against equating the right to life with the right to property. |
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The campaigns under Cromwell's successors Henry Ireton and Edmund Ludlow mostly consisted of long sieges of fortified cities and guerrilla warfare in the countryside. |
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