#historytale
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randomplaces-stuff · 2 years ago
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so i just remembered an au i did called historytale
and someone kind of got mad because I put it like that xd
which I published on amino but I don't remember my username or my password xd
and here is a small explanation of the au
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when the monsters were locked underground, they were erased from the history of humanity, this caused all trace of them to be lost, remaining only as a legend or myth
after a long time a human would fall underground and could be the salvation or the extinction of the monsters
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with this au the history of the monsters will be discovered so I will add more things than what we found in undertale
I will also make a separate post explaining well how the "mechanics" work
just let me organize my ideas
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katcoatl · 4 years ago
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History!Tale Chair and Fris :D
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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17th October 1660, Nine signers of the death warrant of Charles I, who was executed in 1649, are executed. After the restoration of the monarchy in this year, and with Charles II on the throne, those who had been involved in the trial and execution of his father, including those who had already died; were hung, drawn and quartered, their bodies thrown into a pit, and their heads placed on spikes. The remains of Oliver Cromwell who had proclaimed himself Lord Protector under the English Commonwealth (1649 to 1660), and who had been dead for two years in 1660, were also dug up, hung drawn and quartered, and his head placed on a spike where it was displayed at Westminster in London. Cromwell’s head was still on display when the English poet Robert Herrrick passed away fourteen years later, Herrick was buried on the 15th October 1674. It is very possible that Herrrick saw the head, due to the fact that he lived in Westminster at the time, exactly the same area where the head was displayed. Perhaps it was the sight of the head that influenced the carpe diem poem he is best known for. To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time. ``Gather ye rosebuds while ye may, Old Time is still a-flying; And this same flower that smiles today, Tomorrow will be dying’. Follow @ofgrave.concern for more dark tales from history #englishcivilwar #englishcivilwarsociety #cromwell #olivercromwell #hungdrawnandquartered #17thcentury #17thcenturyhistory #englishhistory #charlesi #britishhistory #westminister #londonhistory #17thcenturystyle #historicalstories #historytales #historicaltales #darkhistory #houseofstuart #carpediem #robertherrick #gatheryerosebudswhileyemay #gatheryerosebuds #charlesii #diedonthisday #restorationperiod #history #headonaspike #macabre #gothictales #macabrehistory https://www.instagram.com/p/CVGLQdoFhho/?utm_medium=tumblr
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marylinegames · 7 years ago
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Long story short: This is what I was able to save from the pages of HistoryTale. I like to play with ink and paper and it was really windy that day. I lost part of my drawings and pages that I was finished with or about to begin with. But I could save this page and the beta, that I am ready to post. (At least I didn’t loose the idea of the page.) I’m still writing the main story so I can make more progress. I hope that soon I am able to post some more about it.
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dayami-victoria0w0 · 7 years ago
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Holo, esta es la Toriel de mi universo de Undertale (Historytale), por ahora tengo eso pero seguiré creando mas personajes para este universo alterno nwn
Holo, this is the Toriel of my Undertale universe (Historytale), for now I have that but I will continue creating more characters for this alternate universe nwn
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jetsetexplore-blog · 8 years ago
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On 5th day in Delhi with me, @travelwithneel move a little further back in time in 13th century and take a stop at this tall minaret, the Qutub Minar, a UNESCO world heritage site. Qutub Minar was built as a victory tower by Qutub ud-din Aibak of Mamluk dynasty. The tower sits on the grounds of erstwhile Qila Rai Pithora or Lal Kot. While Aibak is attributed with the construction of the tower, what we see today has been work of sultans who had come after. Iltutmish and Firoz Shah Tughlaq had over time added the top floors to it. Very close to the Qutub lies incomplete Alai Minar which was to be made to a height double of the one standing tall. Unfortunately, that never came to pass and Khilji lost Delhi to Tughlaq. #Travel #delhi #qutub #qutubminar #history #india #dilli #travelstagram #instatravel #travelgram #instaindia #indiagram #travelIndia #indiatravel #travelphotography #travelphoto #incredibleindia #indianhistory #historytales #dilliwale #sodelhi #coloursofindia #indiahistory #natgeoindia #historychannel #natgeoyourshot #lonelyplanetindia #lppathfinders #heritage #unescoworldheritage (at Qutub Minar)
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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2nd September 1666, around 2am in Pudding Lane in London at the bakery of the house of Thomas Farriner, a fire erupts. London was seeing the last cases from the worst outbreak of the plague that century with 100,000 of its citizens, a quarter of London’s population dead in 18 months. As the city slept, little did they know of what new disaster lay in wait slowly growing around them, and what destruction the ‘Great Fire of London’ would cause. Lasting until September 6th, the fire ultimately destroyed 80% of the medieval city of London, alongside 13,200 houses, 87 churches, and the medieval cathedral of St. Pauls. The fire’s spread and destruction is recorded in the diary of Samuel Pepys, a firsthand account of everyday life during the 17th century. Pepys himself was the first person to inform the king of the fire, according to his diary entry for this day. Historians disagree but one of the aftermaths of the fire was the rebuilding of London, where the plague never returned, is it possible that the fire storm wiped out the fleas and the rats that carried them, as well as the crowded medieval streets that had become their breeding ground since the first outbreak in 1348? Other epidemics in London would take its place, but yersinia pestis never again was able to gain a foothold in the city. Thank you for watching, if you would like more tales of the strange, dark and macabre alongside original artwork inspired by gothic history, please follow @ofgrave.concern #thursdaytales #macabrehistory #darkhistory #macabre #17thcentury #17thcenturyhistory #stuarthistory #houseofstuart #charlesii #historicalstories #historicalstory #englishhistory #britishhistory #thisdayinhistory #onthisdayinhistory #historyofbritain #restorationperiod #londonhistory #historytales #talesfromhistory #interestinghistory #greatfireoflondon #greatfireoflondon1666 #thegreatfireoflondon #greatplagueoflondon #historyoflondon #puddinglane #historicalevents #historyvideo #historyvideos https://www.instagram.com/p/CTU0aIlnHvH/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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24th June 1374, in Aachen Germany without any apparent cause, residents begin to experience hallucinations, and uncontrollable movements of the body, leading to unceasing ‘dancing’, being joined by others who are also unable to stop, the plague like dancing spreads until incidents are recorded in Cologne, Flanders, Franconia, Hainaut, Metz, Strasbourg, Tongeren, Utrecht, and out of Germany to Italy and Luxembourg. The outbreak was only claimed to cease when the majority died from exhaustion, or through the breaking of ribs made them unable to move any longer. While the strange outbreak would be worth mentioning if it was the only account, the outbreak of ‘dancing mania’, or ‘dancing plagues’, (as coined by Paracelsus); are recorded in one form or another for a thousand years from the 7th Century to the 17th. One instance in 1237 records an outbreak affecting only children, who danced across Germany; this outbreak also saw the legend of the Pied Piper of Hamelin arise at the same time. One of the best recorded instances is that of July 1518 in Strasbourg, where a preceding outbreak had taken place a hundred years before. One on July day Strasbourg resident Frau Troffea (or Trauffea), left her house and began dancing in the street outside, in which she was soon followed by others; who danced until exhaustion forced them to collapse, with the dancing resuming as soon as their energy was revived. As the numbers grew to over four hundred, the city authorities decided to encourage the dancing in the hope that the phenomenon would burn itself out, hiring musicians to accompany the dancing, and opening to guildhalls. The remedy of providing music to dance to was also the treatment later proscribed (continued the comments) #thursdaytales #strangehistory #darkhistory #oddhistory #weirdhistory #medievalhistory #latemedieval #blackdeath #dancingplague #dancingplagueof1518 #germanhistory #europeanhistory #medieval #historystories #historicalstories #historytales #dancinginthestreet #14thcentury #16thcentury #dancingmania #stvitusdance #stjohnsdance #piedpiperofhamelin #athanasiuskircher #strangetales #masshysteria #ergot #gothichistory #strangestories https://www.instagram.com/p/CQgkri0H6GE/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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25th October 1829, opening of Eastern State Penitentiary in Pennsylvania, the first solitary confinement system prison in the United States. Designed in the neo gothic style by the English-born architect John Haviland, the building’s gothic religious aesthetics were intended to impose upon the inmates the feel of a church in which their total restriction from others would result in religious penance, piety and fear; with the light in their cells termed the "Eye of God". The architectural style was influenced by the same aesthetics used throughout England in the 1780’s, for asylums and prisons, again with the same quasi religious medievalism in mind. The solitary system at Eastern State lasted until 1913, and the prison closed in 1970, whereupon it sat slowly crumbling, with its memories and ghosts, until it was opened to the public in 1994. Prior to its opening, a prison reform group was formed by Dr. Benjamin Rush in 1787, Rush also is known as the "father of American psychiatry, for his work ‘Observations and Inquiries upon the Diseases of the Mind’, published in 1812. Rush also as recently highlighted, was the inventor of the ‘the tranquilizer chair’ for use in asylums. Another member of the prison reform group was Benjamin Franklin. In 1842 while touring the eastern US, Charles Dickens visited the prison, later commenting "The System is rigid, strict and hopeless solitary confinement, and I believe it, in its effects, to be cruel and wrong...." and further "He is a man buried alive; to be dug out in the slow round of years; and in the mean time dead to everything but torturing anxieties and horrible despair." The theme of prisons appears (Continued in the comments) #easternstatepenitentiary #solitaryconfinement #neogothic #neogothicarchitecture #eyeofgod #benjaminfranklin #charlesdickens #macabremonday #macabremondays #mentalasylum #asylum #benjaminrush #historyofmadness #historyofmentalhealth #mentalhealthweek #18thcentury #18thcenturyhistory #psychiatry #historyofpsychology #historyofpsychiatry #prisonhistory #19thcentury #19thcenturyhistory #madnessart #darkhistory #historicalstory #historytales #historicalplaces #morbidhistory #darktales https://www.instagram.com/p/CVdTUFQFIJp/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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12th October 1773, the first asylum in the American colonies opens in Virginia for 'Persons of Insane and Disordered Minds'. Treatment at the asylum consistent with the standards of the day are brutal, with the use of simulated drowning in ice baths , bleedings, induced vomiting and later electrocution to ‘shock’ insanity out of the patients. By 1790 the asylum built high fenced exercise areas named ‘mad yards’, and attitudes towards mental illness were somewhat lessened by the involvement of Dr. Benjamin Rush, known as the "father of American psychiatry, for his work ‘Observations and Inquiries upon the Diseases of the Mind’, published in 1812. As well as this work Rush also developed ‘the tranquilizer chair’, which was used at the asylum. Rush believed that ‘madness’, was caused by an inflammation of the brain, and as such patients were strapped into the chair and fitted with a head clamp which was supposed to control the flow of blood towards the brain, reduce motor activity, and henceforth reduce ‘madness’. Rush also strongly persisted in his belief on the benefits of bloodletting, a practice also performed at the asylum. Excessive bloodletting as advocated by Rush, was already by the 1790’s becoming questioned as a medical treatment, however Rush’s insistence on the practice, especially during the Yellow Fever epidemic of 1793, is thought to have hastened the death of Benjamin Franklin, as well as George Washington. In 1799, Rush won a $5,000 libel judgment against British radical journalist and reformer William Cobbett, who accused Rush of bleeding patients to death. (Continued in the comments) #mentalasylum #asylum #benjaminrush #historyofmadness #historyofmentalhealth #mentalhealthweek #18thcentury #18thcenturyhistory #psychiatry #historyofpsychology #historyofpsychiatry #elizabethfry #elizabethfrysociety #prisons #prisonhistory #newgateprison #19thcentury #19thcenturyhistory #madnessart #williamcobbett #electricshocktherapy #ect #thisweekinhistory #mentalillnessrecovery #darkhistory #historicalstory #historytales #historicalplaces #morbidhistory #darktales https://www.instagram.com/p/CVDjA9HFzXw/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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6th September 1776, first submarine attack in history during the American revolutionary war. American inventor, teacher, medical doctor and engineer, David Bushnell launches his submersible named ‘Turtle’, into the waters of New York City Harbour against the British ship HMS Eagle’. The attack fails, but Bushnell’s utilization of a screw propeller, and water for ballast are still used to this day. In 1787, Bushnell relocated to France where he met fellow American inventor Robert Fulton, In 1800 Napoleon had asked Fulton to build what would become the first working submarine named the ‘Nautilus’. It is possible that Bushnell assisted Fulton with his design. 12th September 1624, King James I of England and IV of Scotland, witnesses alongside 3,000 spectators lined along the banks of the Thames in London, the first launching of a submarine. Designed by Dutch inventor Cornelis Drebbel, for the Royal Navy, the pigskin-covered wooden frame, is powered by six oars, and carries sixteen passengers including the King himself. Able to stay submerged for three hours, at a depth of twelve to fifteen feet. The King is amazed by the contraption, but the invention is never implemented by the Navy beyond its first testing. In the style of historical what if’s, I would love to present an alternative history, where the battles of Naseby and Marston Moor during the English Civil War twenty years later would be joined by the names of naval battles fought between Parliamentary and Royalist submarines. Art shown is influenced by steampunk history, and is for sale on the website at: www.ofgraveconcern.com/ Follow @ofgrave.concern for more tales of strange history #submarine #submarines #strangehistory #amazinghistory #astounding #steampunkart #steampunkillustration #americanrevolution #historystory #americanrevolution #americanrevolutionarywar #navalbattles #warofindependence #robertfulton #jamesi #englishcivilwar #londonhistory #riverthameslondon #englishcivilwarsociety #interestingfact #royalnavyhistory #historicalillustration #fantastical #steampunkart #submersible #submersibles #historicaltales #historytales #steampunkstyle #steampunktendencies #whatif #charlesii https://www.instagram.com/p/CTpaaE5lLT_/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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4th September 1780, death of English magistrate and social reformer John Fielding, half-brother of novelist, and chief magistrate Henry Fielding, author of ‘The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling’, first published in 1749. At the age of 19 John Fielding was blinded in a navy accident. His lack of sight however earned him the feared title of the "Blind Beak of Bow Street" for his ability to recognise and prosecute thousands of criminals just by their voices. Both John and Henry Fielding as London magistrates founded the first professional police force, known as the Bow Street Runners. Previous to a recognized police authority, criminals in early 18th century London were captured and prosecuted by corrupt ‘thief takers’. One of the most famous being Jonathan Wild, who both instigated crime, and then received the reward for the criminals’ capture. All art shown is inspired by the history of crime and punishment in the 18th century and is for sale at: www.ofgraveconcern.com/crimeandpunishment Where a whole host of historically inspired art of pirates, thieves, murderers and rogues, also reside. Follow @ofgrave.concern for more history from 1348 - 1848. #18thcentury #18thcenturyhistory #historyofcrime #crimehistory #rogues #historicalstories #todayinhistory #onthisdayinhistory #historicalillustration #broadside #gothichistory #vintageaesthetic #darkromanticism #henryfielding #bowstreetrunners #bowstreet #historyoflondon #londonhistory #thieves #crimeandpunishment #crimeandpunishmentmuseum #highwaymen #smuggler #murderhistory #historytales #diedonthisday #rogues https://www.instagram.com/p/CTZ9hLDnUKl/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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Shallow brooks, and rivers wide. Towers, and battlements it sees Bosom'd high in tufted trees, Where perhaps some beauty lies, The cynosure of neighbouring eyes. Hard by, a cottage chimney smokes, From betwixt two aged oaks, L'Allegro John Milton 3rd September 1651, Oliver Cromwell’s new Model Army destroys the last royalist army at the Battle of Worcester, the last battle of the English Civil War. After the battle the son of Charles I, who later would be restored to the throne as Charles II, hides in an Oak tree to avoid capture. The tree becomes known as the Royal oak. The tree survived until the 17th and 18th centuries, where it became the site of souvenir hunters who hacked off branches and limbs until the tree died. A descendant of the tree still stands today. In April 1786 John Adams and Thomas Jefferson visited the site of the battle, where the English Civil War had ended resulting in a constitutional monarchy. Disappointed by the locals lack of knowledge of the site. John Adams then proceeded to lecture them upon its history and wider impact stating ‘do Englishmen so soon forget the ground where liberty was fought for?’. On the same day 3rd September 1783, the Treaty of Paris was signed ending the American Revolutionary War between Great Britain and the United States of America, which recognized its existence as a free, sovereign, and independent state. Ironically on the same day in 1658, English general, and Lord Protector of England Oliver Cromwell died of malaria and kidney stone disease aged 59. His son Richard succeeded him as Lord Protector of England, during the Rump parliament, until arrested by the army, (Continued in the comments). #oaktree #johnmilton #olivercromwell #englishcivilwar #englishcivilwarsociety #17thcentury #17thcenturyhistory #charlesi #houseofstuart #royaloak #johnadams #thomasjefferson #lordprotector #hungdrawnandquartered #newenglandprimer #englishhistory #englishhistorynerd #constitutionalmonarchy #talesfromhistory #historicalplace #stuarthistory #britishhistory #restorationperiod #historytales #interestingfact #interestinghistory #americanrevolution #americanrevolutionarywar #charlesii #historyfacts https://www.instagram.com/p/CTXYyN0nDNK/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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On this day (2nd September) in 1685, Alice Lisle mounted the scaffold and was beheaded, the last woman in England to be judicially sentenced in this manner. Lisle was accused and convicted of harbouring fugitives after the defeat of the Monmouth Rebellion at the Battle of Sedgemoor. Upon the death of Charles II the previous February, his catholic brother ascended to the throne as James II. James II’s reign was opposed by many protestants, especially in the West of the Country. Raising an army, James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, the illegitimate son of Charles II, claimed the throne and attempted to depose James. After the failed rebellion, the participants were tried in Winchester during what is known to history as the ‘Bloody Assizes’ . The trials were presided over by Baron George Jeffreys, known to history as the ‘hanging judge’, for his frequent sentencing of execution. It is estimated that during the assizes, Jeffreys gave the sentence of execution for treason to 700 of those involved, or in Lisle’s case those who had sheltered the fugitives. It is also believed that her sentencing could have resulted from her husband, Sir John Lisle’s involvement as one of the judges in the trial and subsequent execution of James’s father Charles I, at the end of the English Civil War. Therefore her sentence in this case possibly was retroactive vengeance. The Hanging Judge’s actions in this matter were hypocritical at best, now handing out the sentence for execution for those who opposed catholic rule; it had been Jeffrey’s who had freely dispensed the sentence of execution seven years before in 1678, during the ‘Popish Plot’ of the wonderfully named Titus Oates, (continued in the comments). #thehangingjudge #thursdaytales #execution #macabrehistory #darkhistory #macabre #17thcentury #17thcenturyhistory #stuarthistory #houseofstuart #charlesii #historicalstories #historicalstory #monmouthrebellion #jamesii #englishcivilwar #religiouswars #toweroflondon #toweroflondon🇬🇧 #englishhistory #britishhistory #diedonthisday #thisdayinhistory #onthisdayinhistory #historyofbritain #restorationperiod #londonhistory #historytales #talesfromhistory #interestinghistory https://www.instagram.com/p/CTU0AuBHl7f/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ofgraveconcern · 3 years ago
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A small country road in rural Lincolnshire bears the pastoral and scenic name of Tom Otter lane. Conjuring the farming scenes and agrian nostalgia found in the 18th century poems of John Clare, or William Wordsworth. The truth however to the naming of the stretch of country lane is far more gruesome and involves a murder, and execution and a family of birds. On the 22nd November 1804, in Eakring in Nottinghamshire twenty-eight-year-old Tom Otter married Martha Rawlinson, their first child being born a month later. Looking for work Tom crossed the border shortly after into Lincolnshire, leaving his wife and child. It is not known whether he intended to return or not, however his actions play out the fact that he may not have intended to. After a short period he seduced Mary Kirkham, while passing himself off as a widower using his mother's maiden last name of Temporal. Mary became pregnant, and the local authorities forced his marriage to the local girl, who was eight months pregnant. The marriage took place on the 5th November 1805, a little over the first year anniversary of his marriage to Martha. After their marriage they were seen in The Sun Inn at Saxilby, where on the road from Saxiby and Drinsey Nook, Mary’s body was discovered the next morning in a ditch; her skull was so badly battered that it had nearly been detached by the severity of the blows, by a club that was also found a short distance from the body. Carried back to the Sun inn for a inquest into her death, (Inns and coaching houses being common sites during the 18th century, for inquests and local courts); it was clear that Mary had been brutally murdered and a suspect was quickly identified, (Continued in the comments) #gibbet #19thcentury #19thcenturyhistory #regencygothic #victoriangothic #murdermystery #historicalstories #historystory #historicalcrime #historycrime #crimeandpunishment #ballards #lincolnshire #macabrehistory #darkhistory #gothictales #murderhistory #murders #crimescene #grusome #gruesome #macabre #macabreart #macabreartist #historicaltales #historytales #thursdaytales #murdermostfoul #murdertrial #folkhistory https://www.instagram.com/p/CRWpXzDle_m/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ofgraveconcern · 4 years ago
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25th May 1659, fall from power of English statesman Richard Cromwell, second Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland and son of the first Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell. Becoming Lord Protector upon his fathers death on the 3rd September 1658, Richard Cromwell attempted to forge a path between the varying protestant factions, and royalist elements of what was called the Rump Parliament. Refusing a demand by the army to dissolve the parliament, he was on this day arrested by the army and removed from power, whereupon he was given the nicknames "Tumbledown Dick" and "Queen Dick". 25th May 1660, a year to the day after the fall of Richard Cromwell and the Commonwealth, Charles II lands in Dover, four days later on the 29th May 1660, on his 30th birthday, he enters London to claim the English throne which is backdated to 1649, the year of his fathers execution. Nine signers of the death warrant of his father are hanged, drawn and quartered, their bodies thrown into pits. The remains of Oliver Cromwell, who had been dead for two years, are also dug up, hung, drawn and quartered, and his head placed on a spike where it was displayed at Westminster in London. 26th May 1703, death of English navy administrator and Member of Parliament Samuel Pepys. Pepys historical fame is established by his diary, an important firsthand account of everyday life during the 17th century restoration period in the years after the death of Oliver Cromwell. Giving an account of events, such as the coronation of King Charles II, and the restoration of the Monarchy, the Great Plague of London in 1665, (continued in the comments). #englishcivilwar #englishcivilwarsociety #cromwell #olivercromwell #hungdrawnandquartered #17thcentury #17thcenturyhistory #englishhistory #charlesii #britishhistory #westminister #londonhistory #richardcromwell #samuelpepys #greatplague #greatplagueoflondon #bubonicplague #plaguedoctor #plagueart #greatfireoflondon #greatfireoflondon1666 #gothictales #17thcenturystyle #historicalstories #macabre #macabreartist #macabreillustration #historytales #historicaltales #darkhistory https://www.instagram.com/p/CPbEoIFn_AI/?utm_medium=tumblr
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