group
known as the Gunpowder Plot, a group of Catholics, failed in the attempt to blowup the king in Parliament.
By the end of the century, another king had been killed partly because he seemed too catholic (King Charles I, James I’s son) and yet another had been forced into exile for the
same reason King Charles II, Charles I’s son. (Guy Fawkes led the Gunpowder Plot,
think about Remember, remember the fifth of November) After the execution of King Charles I (he was convicted after a formal trial for crimes against his people) and during the exile of his son Charles II (who later became King) Britain became a republic fora while and was called The Commonwealth. The leader of the parliamentary army,
Oliver Cromwell, became Lord Protector of this republic with a military government which, after he had brutally
crushed resistance in Ireland, effectively encompassed all of Britain and Ireland. By the time Cromwell died, he,
his system of government, and the puritan ethics that went with it (theatres and other forms of amusement had been banned) had become so unpopular that the executed king’s son, Charles II, was asked to comeback and become King.
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