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Cromwell's Diplomatic Blunder: The Relationship Between the Western Design of 1654–55 and the French Alliance of 1657*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2014

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Extract

The principal historians of the Cromwellian period, from S. R. Gardiner to Christopher Hill, have asserted that Oliver Cromwell was a master of statesmanship whose foreign policy was guided by clear, though perhaps archaic, objectives; that his diplomacy was always aggressive, and largely successful; and that with him England entered into her rightful place in the community of nations. These axioms have been repeated in every textbook. The phenomenon is not unknown in recent history where, until A.J.P. Taylor suggested differently, few English writers dared to question the culpability of Adolf Hitler in bringing on the 1939-1945 war. Though Mr. Taylor's views excited critical comment, they have not been without supporters, and are being addressed by historians of the Twentieth century. This essay re-examines the diplomacy of the Cromwellian period, specifically in the years 1654 through 1657. It suggests that a revision of long-established views is in order.

Milestones of English foreign affairs during the Protectorate exhibit an apparent uniformity of policy. From the Treaty of Westminster of April 1654 to the Battle of the Dunes, June 14, 1658, the trend was towards a firm association with France, with the ultimate objective to destroy Spanish power in Europe and the Western Hemisphere. Such a generalization must be treated with caution, however, for it can be demonstrated that the course of English policy between the conclusion of the First Dutch War and the death of Oliver Cromwell was guided less by a desire for an alliance with France than by a series of miscalculations, the cumulative effect of which left the Protector little choice but to join with France, and thereby to assist in the establishment of the hegemony of Louis XIV.

Type
Research Article
Information
Albion , Volume 5 , Issue 4 , Winter 1973 , pp. 279 - 298
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference on British Studies 1973

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Footnotes

*

Revised version of a paper read at the New England Conference on British Studies, Worcester, Massachusettes, April 1971.

References

1 During the decade 1650-60, the United Provinces and the Commonwealth could each set forth around 150 warships; France, some fifty; and Spain, about thirty. The Dutch possessed none of the “first-rate” (70-100 guns); the twenty galleys of the French Navy had no utility on the high seas; and only half of the Spanish vessels were in full commission. Society for Nautical Research, Occasional Publications No. 5, Lists of Men-Of-War, 1650-1700 (London, 1935–1939), Parts I, II, and IVGoogle Scholar; Perkins, James Breck, France Under Mazarin, With a Review of the Administration of Richelieu, 2 vols, (third ed., New York, 1887), II: 354–65Google Scholar; Lynch, John, Spain Under the Habsburgs, 2 vols. (Oxford, 19641969)Google Scholar, Volume II, Spain and the Americas, 1598-1700, p. 113; Smith, Rhea Marsh, Spain, A Modern History (Ann Arbor, 1965), p. 212.Google Scholar

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3 Guizot, F.P.G., History of Oliver Cromwell and the English Commonwealth…, 2 vols. (London, 1854), II; 439, 441445Google Scholar; Abbott, Wilbur Cortez, The Writings and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, 4 vols. (Cambridge, Mass., 19371947), III: 78–79, 84–85, 106107Google Scholar (hereafter cited as Abbott, W. & S.); Birch, Thomas, ed., A Collection of the State Papers of John Thurloe… 7 vols. (London, 1742), II: 8Google Scholar (hereafter cited as Thurloe).

4 See reports in the Thomason and the Burney Collections of newssheets in the British Museum, London. On the balance of prizes, see SirRichmond, Admiral Herbert, The Navy as an Instrument of Policy, 1558-1727 (Cambridge, 1953), p. 94.Google Scholar

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20 Powell, John Rowland, The Letters of Robert Blake Together With Supplementary Documents, The Navy Records Society, Vol. 76 (London, 1937), p. 270.Google Scholar

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37 See my article cited in note 15 above.

38 I am presently completing a book manuscript on the Western Design. The best currently available account is by Taylor, S.A.G., The Western Design (2nd ed., London, 1969).Google ScholarPubMed

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