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John Lambert (general)

John Lambert, also spelt 'Lambart' (7 September 1619 – 1 March 1684) was an English Parliamentarian general and politician. Widely regarded as one of the most talented soldiers of the period, he fought throughout the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, and was largely responsible for victory in the 1650 to 1651 Scottish campaign.

John Lambert
General John Lambert
Committee of Safety
In office
May 1659 – October 1659
Member of Parliament
for Pontefract
In office
January 1659 – April 1659
Rule of the Major Generals, Northern Region
In office
October 1655 – January 1657
Nominated to Barebone's Parliament
In office
July 1653 – December 1653
Lord President, Council of State
In office
April 1653 – May 1653
Personal details
Born7 September 1619 (baptised)
Calton Hall, near Kirkby Malham, Yorkshire, England
Died1 March 1684(1684-03-01) (aged 64)
Drake's Island, Plymouth, England
Resting placeSt Andrew's Church, Plymouth
Political partyParliamentarian
SpouseFrances Lister (1622–1676)
ChildrenThomas, John and Mary
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
OccupationSoldier and politician
Military service
Allegiance England
Commonwealth
RankMajor General
Battles/warsWars of the Three Kingdoms
Tadcaster; Selby; Nantwich; Marston Moor; Siege of Pontefract; Siege of Dartmouth; Siege of Oxford; Preston; Dunbar; Inverkeithing; Worcester;
Booth's Uprising

Although involved in the discussions between the New Model Army and Parliament during 1647, his first formal involvement in civilian politics was in 1653 when he became a member of the English Council of State. In December 1653, he helped prepare the 'Instrument of Government', which provided the constitutional framework for the Protectorate. He later fell out with Oliver Cromwell, largely because he opposed converting his role as Lord Protector into a kingship.

He lost his offices in 1657 after refusing to swear an oath of loyalty to Cromwell, and after Cromwell's death in September 1658, he re-entered politics as Member of Parliament for Pontefract in early 1659. When Richard Cromwell resigned in May, he became a member of the Committee of Safety and successfully suppressed the Royalist Booth's Uprising. He was then sent to deal with George Monck but his army disintegrated and he was imprisoned in the Tower of London on 3 March 1660. [1]

Lambert escaped a month later on 9 April[1] and made one final attempt to resist The Restoration before being recaptured on 24 April. [1] Despite his prominent role in the Protectorate, he had not participated in the Trial of Charles I and had many close connections with senior Royalists. Although sentenced to death, this was commuted to life imprisonment; he spent the remaining 24 years of his life under house arrest, first on Guernsey, then on Drake's Island near Plymouth, where he died on 1 March 1684.

Personal details

John Lambert was born at Calton Hall, near Kirkby Malham in Yorkshire, son of Josias Lambert (1554-1632) and his third wife, Anne Pigott (ca 1605-1643). He had two half-sisters from his father's previous marriages, Cassandra and Jane.

A well-established member of the minor Yorkshire gentry, by the late 1620s Josias was in serious financial difficulties and died almost bankrupt. As a minor, John Lambert became the ward of Sir William Lister, a long-standing family friend, who appears to have paid for his education at Trinity College, Cambridge.[2]

In 1639 he married Frances Lister (1622–1676), Sir William's younger daughter; they had three children who survived into adulthood, Thomas (1639-1694), John (1639-1701) and Mary (1642-1675).

Career

First English Civil War

 
Thomas Fairfax; Lambert's mentor in the 1640s and commander of the New Model Army, he resigned in protest at the execution of Charles in January 1649

Pre-Civil War Yorkshire was characterised by close links among the local gentry, which often pre-empted political or religious differences. Although Lambert and the Listers followed Lord Fairfax in supporting Parliament, they were related by marriage and blood to Royalists like Sir Henry Slingsby and John Belasyse. Even during the 1650s, Lambert remained on good terms with Belasyse, despite the latter being a Catholic and leader of the secret Royalist association known as the Sealed Knot.[3]

When the First English Civil War began in August 1642, Lambert joined the Parliamentarian army of the Northern Association, commanded by the elder Fairfax. He fought at Tadcaster in December 1642, where his brother-in-law William Lister was killed and quickly established a reputation as a confident and aggressive soldier.[4] He played a prominent role in the defence of Hull and participated in Parliamentarian victories at Nantwich and Selby in early 1644. At Marston Moor, fought just outside York on 2 July, he and Thomas Fairfax led the Parliamentarian right, which was routed by Lord Goring. Accompanied only by a few troops, the two men fought their way across the battlefield to join Oliver Cromwell on the left and help secure victory.[5]

In January 1645, Thomas Fairfax was appointed commander of the New Model Army and Lambert promoted Commissary General of the Northern Association, effectively acting as his deputy.[6] During the siege of Pontefract Castle, one of the few Royalist positions left in the north, he was wounded and defeated on 1 March by a relief force led by Marmaduke Langdale.[7] Shortly after this, Fairfax was finally replaced as commander in the north by the Presbyterian mercenary Sydnam Poyntz.[8] Lambert transferred to the New Model, although shortage of troops meant he remained in the north until just after Naseby in June 1645, when he served in Fairfax's western campaign. He supervised the capture of Dartmouth in January 1646 and was present at the sieges of Truro in March, Exeter in April and finally Oxford in June, which ended the First Civil War. In a sign of his growing stature within the New Model, Lambert acted as a commissioner for each surrender, in conjunction with Henry Ireton.[9]

Second English Civil War

Victory exposed long-standing divisions between mostly Presbyterian moderates led by Denzil Holles who dominated Parliament, and radicals within the New Model, focused around Cromwell. Originating in differences over the political settlement with Charles I, it was exacerbated by financial issues and by March 1647, the New Model was owed more than £3 million in unpaid wages. Parliament ordered it to Ireland, stating only those who agreed would be paid; when their representatives demanded full payment for all in advance, it was disbanded, but the army refused to comply.[10]

 
 
Exeter
 
Hull
 
London
 
Inverkeithing
 
Newcastle
 
York
 
Preston
 
Nantwich
 
Carlisle
 
Dartmouth
 
Pontefract
 
Oxford
 
Dunbar
 
Scarborough
 
Truro
 
Worcester
 
Berwick
 
Uttoxeter
class=notpageimage|
Lambert key locations, 1642 to 1651

Concerned by the influence of radicals such as the Levellers within the New Model, the Army Council was established to ensure a united front against Holles and his supporters. Working with Ireton, Lambert helped draw up the army's terms for a peace settlement with the king, although the extent of his involvement has been challenged by some historians.[11] After these were rejected by Charles, the Holles faction demanded he be invited to London for further talks. Fearing Charles was going to be restored without significant concessions, the Army Council took control of the city on 7 August and in October expelled their leading opponents from Parliament, the so-called Eleven Members.[12]

When the Northern Association army mutinied in early July 1647, Lambert was reinstated as commander and quickly succeeded in restoring discipline.[13] This was essential because a similar political struggle was taking place in Scotland between the Kirk Party and the Engagers, who gained control of government in April 1648. Backed by an alliance of English/Welsh Royalists and former Parliamentarian moderates, they agreed to restore Charles to the English throne and initiated the Second English Civil War in April 1648.[14]

Most of the New Model was with Fairfax, who was suppressing revolts in Essex and Kent, and Cromwell in South Wales, leaving Lambert facing a precarious situation in the north. The garrisons of Pontefract and Scarborough changed sides, while Royalists led by Sir Marmaduke Langdale captured Berwick and Carlisle. Although he could not prevent the Engagers under Hamilton crossing the border in July, Lambert fought a series of skilful delaying actions until Cromwell was able to join him. The Royalist/Engager army was destroyed after three days of fighting at Preston in August, while Lambert captured Hamilton at Uttoxeter on 25 August.[15]

Although the war was largely over, the Kirk Party asked for support and Lambert entered Edinburgh in September, before returning to Yorkshire. He supported the 'Remonstrance of the Army' issued in November, listing their grievances against Charles and Parliament, and named as one of the judges for the trial of Charles I. However, until March 1649 he was absent at the siege of Pontefract and thus avoided involvement in his execution in January, although he did not oppose it.[5]

The Commonwealth

When Cromwell was appointed to the command of the war in Scotland (July 1650), Lambert went with him as major-general and second in command. He was wounded at Musselburgh, but returned to the front in time to take a conspicuous share in the victory of Dunbar. He himself repulsed a surprise attack by the Covenanters at the Battle of Hamilton on 1 December 1650. In July 1651 he was sent into Fife to get in the rear and flank of the Scottish army near Falkirk, and force them to decisive action by cutting off their supplies. This mission, in the course of which Lambert won an important victory at Inverkeithing, was so successful that Charles II, as Lambert had foreseen, made for England. Lambert's part in the general plan of the resulting Worcester campaign was carried out brilliantly (including his capture of Upton-Upon-Severn), and in the crowning victory of Worcester he commanded the right wing of the English army, and had his horse shot under him. Parliament granted him lands in Scotland worth £1000 per annum.[16]

In October 1651 Lambert was made a commissioner under the Tender of Union to settle the affairs of Scotland, and on the death of Ireton he was appointed lord deputy of Ireland (January 1652). He made extensive preparations; parliament, however, reconstituted the Irish administration and Lambert refused to accept office on the new terms. He then began to oppose the Rump Parliament. In the Council of Officers he headed the party desiring representative government, as opposed to Harrison who favoured an oligarchy of "God-fearing" men, but both hated the Rump of the Long Parliament, and joined in urging Cromwell to dissolve it by force.[16]

At the same time Lambert was consulted by the parliamentary leaders as to the possibility of dismissing Cromwell from his command, and on 15 March 1653 Cromwell refused to see him, speaking of him contemptuously as "bottomless Lambert". On 20 April 1653, however, Lambert accompanied Cromwell when he dismissed the Council of State, on the same day as the forcible expulsion of the parliament.[16]

Lambert now favoured the formation of a small executive council, to be followed by an elective parliament whose powers should be limited by a written instrument of government. As the ruling spirit in the Council of State, and the idol of the army, he was seen as a possible rival of Cromwell for the chief executive power, while the royalists for a short time had hopes of his support. He was invited, with Cromwell, Harrison and John Desborough, to sit in the nominated "Barebones Parliament" of 1653; and when the unpopularity of that assembly increased, Cromwell drew nearer to Lambert. In November 1653 Lambert presided over a meeting of officers, when the question of constitutional settlement was discussed, and a proposal made for the forcible expulsion of the nominated parliament. On 12 December 1653, the parliament resigned its powers into Cromwell's hands, and on 13 December Lambert obtained the consent of the officers to the Instrument of Government, in the framing of which he had taken a lead. He was one of the seven officers nominated to seats in the council created by the Instrument.[16]

In the foreign policy of the Protectorate Lambert called for alliance with Spain and war with France in 1653, and he firmly withstood Cromwell's design for an expedition to the West Indies.[16]

In the debates in parliament on the Instrument of Government in 1654 Lambert proposed that the office of Lord Protector should be made hereditary, but was defeated by a majority which included members of Cromwell's family. In the parliament of this year, and again in 1656, Lord Lambert, as he was now styled, sat as member for the West Riding. He was one of the major-generals appointed in August 1655 to command the militia in the ten districts into which it was proposed to divide England, and who were to be responsible for the maintenance of order and the administration of the law in their several districts.[16]

Lambert took a prominent part in the Committee of Council which drew up instructions to the administrative major-generals. He was the organiser of the system of police which these officers were to control. Samuel Gardiner conjectures that it was through divergence of opinion between the protector and Lambert in connection with these "instructions" that the estrangement between the two men began. At all events, although Lambert had himself at an earlier date requested Cromwell to take the royal dignity, when the proposal to declare Oliver king was started in parliament (February 1657) he at once opposed it.[16]

A hundred officers headed by Charles Fleetwood and Lambert waited on the protector, and begged him to put a stop to the proceedings. Lambert was not convinced by Cromwell's arguments, and their complete estrangement, personal as well as political, followed. On his refusal to take the oath of allegiance to the protector, Lambert was deprived of his commissions, receiving instead a pension of £2000 a year. He retired from public life to Wimbledon; but shortly before his own death Cromwell sought a reconciliation, and Lambert and his wife visited Cromwell at Whitehall.[17]

When Richard Cromwell was proclaimed protector (3 September 1658), his chief difficulty lay with the army, over which he exercised no effective control. Lambert, though holding no military commission, was the most popular of the old Cromwellian generals with the rank and file of the army, and it was very generally believed that he would install himself in Oliver Cromwell's seat of power. Richard Cromwell's adherents tried to conciliate him, and the royalist leaders made overtures to him, even proposing that Charles II should marry Lambert's daughter. Lambert at first gave a lukewarm support to Richard Cromwell, and took no part in the intrigues of the officers at Fleetwood's residence, Wallingford House. He was a member of the Third Protectorate Parliament which met in January 1659, and when it was dissolved in April under compulsion of Fleetwood and Desborough, he was restored to his commands. He headed the deputation to Lenthall in May 1659 inviting the return of the Rump Parliament, which led to the tame retirement of Richard Cromwell; and he was appointed a member of the Committee of Safety and of the Council of State.[18]

When the parliament, in an attempt to control the power of the army, withheld from Fleetwood the right of nominating officers, Lambert was named one of a council of seven charged with this duty. The parliament's evident distrust of the soldiers caused much discontent in the army; while the absence of authority encouraged the royalists to make overt attempts to restore Charles II, the most serious of which, under Sir George Booth and the earl of Derby, was crushed by Lambert near Chester on 19 August 1659. He promoted a petition from his army that Fleetwood might be made lord-general and himself major-general. The republican party in the House took offence. The Commons (12 October 1659) cashiered Lambert and other officers, and retained Fleetwood as chief of a military council under the authority of the speaker. On the next day Lambert caused the doors of the House to be shut and the members kept out. On 26 October a new Committee of Safety was appointed, of which he was a member. He was also appointed major-general of all the forces in England and Scotland, Fleetwood being general.[18]

Lambert was now sent with a large force to meet George Monck, who was in command of the English forces in Scotland, and either negotiate with him or force him to terms. Monck, however, marched southward. Lambert's army began to melt away[why?], and he was kept in suspense by Monck till his whole army deserted and he returned to London almost alone. Monck marched to London unopposed. The excluded Presbyterian members were recalled. Lambert was sent to the Tower (3 March 1660), from which he escaped a month later. He descended a silk rope and aided by six men was taken away by barge. He tried to rekindle the civil war in favour of the Commonwealth by issuing a proclamation calling on all supporters of the "Good Old Cause" to rally on the battlefield of Edgehill. But he was recaptured on 22 April at Daventry by Colonel Richard Ingoldsby,[19] a regicide who hoped to win a pardon by handing Lambert over to the new regime.[20] He was kept imprisoned in the Tower of London[18] and then transferred to Castle Cornet on the island Guernsey.

Restoration

On the Restoration Lambert was exempted from prosecution by an address of both Houses of the Convention Parliament to the king, but the Cavalier Parliament in 1662 charged him with high treason.[18] In April 1662 General Lambert was, with Sir Henry Vane, brought to England and tried in June 1662. On 25 July a warrant was issued to Lord Hatton, the governor of Guernsey, to take into his custody "the person of John Lambert, commonly called Colonel Lambert, and keep him a close prisoner as a condemned traitor until further orders". On 18 November following, directions were given from the king to Lord Hatton to "give such liberty and indulgence to Colonel John Lambert within the precincts of the island as will consist with the security of his person".

Later life

In 1662 Lambert was imprisoned in Guernsey.[18] In 1667 he was transferred to Drake's Island in Plymouth Sound, at the entrance to the Hamoaze, and he died there during the severe winter of 1683–84. The site of his grave is now lost but he was laid to rest at St Andrews Church in Plymouth on 28 March 1684[21]

Legacy

He was the author of the Instrument of Government, the first written constitution in the world codifying sovereign powers.[citation needed] The Instrument of Government was replaced in May 1657 by England's second, last, and extinct codified constitution, the Humble Petition and Advice.

It has been said that Lambert's nature had more in common with the royalist than with the puritan spirit. Vain and ambitious, he believed that Cromwell could not stand without him; and when Cromwell was dead, he imagined himself entitled to succeed him. As a soldier he was far more than a fighting general and possessed many of the qualities of a great general. He was an able writer and speaker, and an accomplished negotiator and took pleasure in quiet and domestic pursuits. He learnt his love of gardening from Lord Fairfax, who was also his master in the art of war. He painted flowers, besides cultivating them, and was accused by Mrs Hutchinson of "dressing his flowers in his garden and working at the needle with his wife and his maids".[18]

Notes

References

  1. ^ a b c "Lambert, John (1619—1694)", by F. Warre Cornish, Encyclopedia Britannica, Ninth Edition, Volume 14 (Henry G. Allen Company, 1890) p. 237
  2. ^ Farr 2003, pp. 12, 15.
  3. ^ Farr 2003, p. 163.
  4. ^ Farr 2003, p. 36.
  5. ^ a b Farr 2004.
  6. ^ Hill & Watkinson 2012, p. 17.
  7. ^ Barratt 1975, pp. 162–163.
  8. ^ Farr 2011.
  9. ^ Farr 2003, p. 39.
  10. ^ Rees 2016, pp. 173–174.
  11. ^ Adamson 1987, pp. 568–569.
  12. ^ Grayling 2017, p. 23.
  13. ^ Farr 2003, pp. 40–41.
  14. ^ Royle 2004, pp. 424–425.
  15. ^ Farr 2003, p. 43.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Chisholm 1911, p. 108.
  17. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 108–109.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Chisholm 1911, p. 109.
  19. ^ Greaves 1986, pp. 27–29.
  20. ^ "Sunday 22 April 1660". The Diary of Samuel Pepys.
  21. ^ Gaunt, pp 44,45

Sources

  • Adamson, JSA (1987). "The English Nobility and the Projected Settlement of 1647". The Historical Journal. 30 (3): 567–602. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00020896. JSTOR 2639160. S2CID 154769885.
  • Barratt, John (1975). "A Royalist Account of the Relief of Pontefract, 1st March 1645". Society for Army Historical Research. 53 (215): 159–169. JSTOR 44225367.
  • Farr, D. N. (2011). "Poyntz [Poynts], Sydenham [Sednham])". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/22695. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Farr, D. N. (2004). "Lambert , John (bap. 1619, d. 1684)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15939. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Farr, David (2003). John Lambert, Parliamentary Soldier and Cromwellian Major-General, 1619-1684. Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1843830047.
  • Firth, Charles Harding (1893). "Lambert, John (1619-1683)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 33. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 11–18.
  • Greaves, Richard L. (1986). Deliver us from evil: the radical underground in Britain, 1660–1663. Oxford University Press US. ISBN 0-19-503985-8.
  • Hill, PR; Watkinson, JM (2012). Cromwell Hath the Honour, But...: Major-General Lambert's Campaigns in the North 1648. Frontline Books. ISBN 978-1848326545.
  • Rees, John (2016). The Leveller Revolution. Verso. ISBN 978-1-78478-390-7.

Attribution

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lambert, John". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 108–109.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainAtkinson, Charles Francis (1911). "Great Rebellion". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 403–421.

Bibliography

  • Fell, David William. "John Lambert". northlincsweb.net. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  • Lambert, Andy (31 March 2010). "Major General John Lambert". Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  • Plant, David (5 June 2007). . British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website. Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  • Simkin, John (September 1997 – June 2013). "John Lambert". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  • Gaunt, Peter (1998). Cromwelliana The Journal of The Cromwell Association (PDF). The Cromwell Association. pp. 44–45. ISBN 0-905729-09-9.

john, lambert, general, other, people, named, john, lambert, john, lambert, disambiguation, john, lambert, also, spelt, lambart, september, 1619, march, 1684, english, parliamentarian, general, politician, widely, regarded, most, talented, soldiers, period, fo. For other people named John Lambert see John Lambert disambiguation John Lambert also spelt Lambart 7 September 1619 1 March 1684 was an English Parliamentarian general and politician Widely regarded as one of the most talented soldiers of the period he fought throughout the Wars of the Three Kingdoms and was largely responsible for victory in the 1650 to 1651 Scottish campaign Major GeneralJohn LambertGeneral John LambertCommittee of SafetyIn office May 1659 October 1659Member of Parliamentfor PontefractIn office January 1659 April 1659Rule of the Major Generals Northern RegionIn office October 1655 January 1657Nominated to Barebone s ParliamentIn office July 1653 December 1653Lord President Council of StateIn office April 1653 May 1653Personal detailsBorn7 September 1619 baptised Calton Hall near Kirkby Malham Yorkshire EnglandDied1 March 1684 1684 03 01 aged 64 Drake s Island Plymouth EnglandResting placeSt Andrew s Church PlymouthPolitical partyParliamentarianSpouseFrances Lister 1622 1676 ChildrenThomas John and MaryAlma materTrinity College CambridgeOccupationSoldier and politicianMilitary serviceAllegiance England CommonwealthRankMajor GeneralBattles warsWars of the Three Kingdoms Tadcaster Selby Nantwich Marston Moor Siege of Pontefract Siege of Dartmouth Siege of Oxford Preston Dunbar Inverkeithing Worcester Booth s UprisingAlthough involved in the discussions between the New Model Army and Parliament during 1647 his first formal involvement in civilian politics was in 1653 when he became a member of the English Council of State In December 1653 he helped prepare the Instrument of Government which provided the constitutional framework for the Protectorate He later fell out with Oliver Cromwell largely because he opposed converting his role as Lord Protector into a kingship He lost his offices in 1657 after refusing to swear an oath of loyalty to Cromwell and after Cromwell s death in September 1658 he re entered politics as Member of Parliament for Pontefract in early 1659 When Richard Cromwell resigned in May he became a member of the Committee of Safety and successfully suppressed the Royalist Booth s Uprising He was then sent to deal with George Monck but his army disintegrated and he was imprisoned in the Tower of London on 3 March 1660 1 Lambert escaped a month later on 9 April 1 and made one final attempt to resist The Restoration before being recaptured on 24 April 1 Despite his prominent role in the Protectorate he had not participated in the Trial of Charles I and had many close connections with senior Royalists Although sentenced to death this was commuted to life imprisonment he spent the remaining 24 years of his life under house arrest first on Guernsey then on Drake s Island near Plymouth where he died on 1 March 1684 Contents 1 Personal details 2 Career 2 1 First English Civil War 2 2 Second English Civil War 2 3 The Commonwealth 2 4 Restoration 3 Later life 4 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 BibliographyPersonal details EditJohn Lambert was born at Calton Hall near Kirkby Malham in Yorkshire son of Josias Lambert 1554 1632 and his third wife Anne Pigott ca 1605 1643 He had two half sisters from his father s previous marriages Cassandra and Jane A well established member of the minor Yorkshire gentry by the late 1620s Josias was in serious financial difficulties and died almost bankrupt As a minor John Lambert became the ward of Sir William Lister a long standing family friend who appears to have paid for his education at Trinity College Cambridge 2 In 1639 he married Frances Lister 1622 1676 Sir William s younger daughter they had three children who survived into adulthood Thomas 1639 1694 John 1639 1701 and Mary 1642 1675 Career EditFirst English Civil War Edit Thomas Fairfax Lambert s mentor in the 1640s and commander of the New Model Army he resigned in protest at the execution of Charles in January 1649 Pre Civil War Yorkshire was characterised by close links among the local gentry which often pre empted political or religious differences Although Lambert and the Listers followed Lord Fairfax in supporting Parliament they were related by marriage and blood to Royalists like Sir Henry Slingsby and John Belasyse Even during the 1650s Lambert remained on good terms with Belasyse despite the latter being a Catholic and leader of the secret Royalist association known as the Sealed Knot 3 When the First English Civil War began in August 1642 Lambert joined the Parliamentarian army of the Northern Association commanded by the elder Fairfax He fought at Tadcaster in December 1642 where his brother in law William Lister was killed and quickly established a reputation as a confident and aggressive soldier 4 He played a prominent role in the defence of Hull and participated in Parliamentarian victories at Nantwich and Selby in early 1644 At Marston Moor fought just outside York on 2 July he and Thomas Fairfax led the Parliamentarian right which was routed by Lord Goring Accompanied only by a few troops the two men fought their way across the battlefield to join Oliver Cromwell on the left and help secure victory 5 In January 1645 Thomas Fairfax was appointed commander of the New Model Army and Lambert promoted Commissary General of the Northern Association effectively acting as his deputy 6 During the siege of Pontefract Castle one of the few Royalist positions left in the north he was wounded and defeated on 1 March by a relief force led by Marmaduke Langdale 7 Shortly after this Fairfax was finally replaced as commander in the north by the Presbyterian mercenary Sydnam Poyntz 8 Lambert transferred to the New Model although shortage of troops meant he remained in the north until just after Naseby in June 1645 when he served in Fairfax s western campaign He supervised the capture of Dartmouth in January 1646 and was present at the sieges of Truro in March Exeter in April and finally Oxford in June which ended the First Civil War In a sign of his growing stature within the New Model Lambert acted as a commissioner for each surrender in conjunction with Henry Ireton 9 Second English Civil War Edit Victory exposed long standing divisions between mostly Presbyterian moderates led by Denzil Holles who dominated Parliament and radicals within the New Model focused around Cromwell Originating in differences over the political settlement with Charles I it was exacerbated by financial issues and by March 1647 the New Model was owed more than 3 million in unpaid wages Parliament ordered it to Ireland stating only those who agreed would be paid when their representatives demanded full payment for all in advance it was disbanded but the army refused to comply 10 Exeter Hull London Inverkeithing Newcastle York Preston Nantwich Carlisle Dartmouth Pontefract Oxford Dunbar Scarborough Truro Worcester Berwick Uttoxeterclass notpageimage Lambert key locations 1642 to 1651 Concerned by the influence of radicals such as the Levellers within the New Model the Army Council was established to ensure a united front against Holles and his supporters Working with Ireton Lambert helped draw up the army s terms for a peace settlement with the king although the extent of his involvement has been challenged by some historians 11 After these were rejected by Charles the Holles faction demanded he be invited to London for further talks Fearing Charles was going to be restored without significant concessions the Army Council took control of the city on 7 August and in October expelled their leading opponents from Parliament the so called Eleven Members 12 When the Northern Association army mutinied in early July 1647 Lambert was reinstated as commander and quickly succeeded in restoring discipline 13 This was essential because a similar political struggle was taking place in Scotland between the Kirk Party and the Engagers who gained control of government in April 1648 Backed by an alliance of English Welsh Royalists and former Parliamentarian moderates they agreed to restore Charles to the English throne and initiated the Second English Civil War in April 1648 14 Most of the New Model was with Fairfax who was suppressing revolts in Essex and Kent and Cromwell in South Wales leaving Lambert facing a precarious situation in the north The garrisons of Pontefract and Scarborough changed sides while Royalists led by Sir Marmaduke Langdale captured Berwick and Carlisle Although he could not prevent the Engagers under Hamilton crossing the border in July Lambert fought a series of skilful delaying actions until Cromwell was able to join him The Royalist Engager army was destroyed after three days of fighting at Preston in August while Lambert captured Hamilton at Uttoxeter on 25 August 15 Although the war was largely over the Kirk Party asked for support and Lambert entered Edinburgh in September before returning to Yorkshire He supported the Remonstrance of the Army issued in November listing their grievances against Charles and Parliament and named as one of the judges for the trial of Charles I However until March 1649 he was absent at the siege of Pontefract and thus avoided involvement in his execution in January although he did not oppose it 5 The Commonwealth Edit When Cromwell was appointed to the command of the war in Scotland July 1650 Lambert went with him as major general and second in command He was wounded at Musselburgh but returned to the front in time to take a conspicuous share in the victory of Dunbar He himself repulsed a surprise attack by the Covenanters at the Battle of Hamilton on 1 December 1650 In July 1651 he was sent into Fife to get in the rear and flank of the Scottish army near Falkirk and force them to decisive action by cutting off their supplies This mission in the course of which Lambert won an important victory at Inverkeithing was so successful that Charles II as Lambert had foreseen made for England Lambert s part in the general plan of the resulting Worcester campaign was carried out brilliantly including his capture of Upton Upon Severn and in the crowning victory of Worcester he commanded the right wing of the English army and had his horse shot under him Parliament granted him lands in Scotland worth 1000 per annum 16 In October 1651 Lambert was made a commissioner under the Tender of Union to settle the affairs of Scotland and on the death of Ireton he was appointed lord deputy of Ireland January 1652 He made extensive preparations parliament however reconstituted the Irish administration and Lambert refused to accept office on the new terms He then began to oppose the Rump Parliament In the Council of Officers he headed the party desiring representative government as opposed to Harrison who favoured an oligarchy of God fearing men but both hated the Rump of the Long Parliament and joined in urging Cromwell to dissolve it by force 16 At the same time Lambert was consulted by the parliamentary leaders as to the possibility of dismissing Cromwell from his command and on 15 March 1653 Cromwell refused to see him speaking of him contemptuously as bottomless Lambert On 20 April 1653 however Lambert accompanied Cromwell when he dismissed the Council of State on the same day as the forcible expulsion of the parliament 16 Lambert now favoured the formation of a small executive council to be followed by an elective parliament whose powers should be limited by a written instrument of government As the ruling spirit in the Council of State and the idol of the army he was seen as a possible rival of Cromwell for the chief executive power while the royalists for a short time had hopes of his support He was invited with Cromwell Harrison and John Desborough to sit in the nominated Barebones Parliament of 1653 and when the unpopularity of that assembly increased Cromwell drew nearer to Lambert In November 1653 Lambert presided over a meeting of officers when the question of constitutional settlement was discussed and a proposal made for the forcible expulsion of the nominated parliament On 12 December 1653 the parliament resigned its powers into Cromwell s hands and on 13 December Lambert obtained the consent of the officers to the Instrument of Government in the framing of which he had taken a lead He was one of the seven officers nominated to seats in the council created by the Instrument 16 In the foreign policy of the Protectorate Lambert called for alliance with Spain and war with France in 1653 and he firmly withstood Cromwell s design for an expedition to the West Indies 16 In the debates in parliament on the Instrument of Government in 1654 Lambert proposed that the office of Lord Protector should be made hereditary but was defeated by a majority which included members of Cromwell s family In the parliament of this year and again in 1656 Lord Lambert as he was now styled sat as member for the West Riding He was one of the major generals appointed in August 1655 to command the militia in the ten districts into which it was proposed to divide England and who were to be responsible for the maintenance of order and the administration of the law in their several districts 16 Lambert took a prominent part in the Committee of Council which drew up instructions to the administrative major generals He was the organiser of the system of police which these officers were to control Samuel Gardiner conjectures that it was through divergence of opinion between the protector and Lambert in connection with these instructions that the estrangement between the two men began At all events although Lambert had himself at an earlier date requested Cromwell to take the royal dignity when the proposal to declare Oliver king was started in parliament February 1657 he at once opposed it 16 A hundred officers headed by Charles Fleetwood and Lambert waited on the protector and begged him to put a stop to the proceedings Lambert was not convinced by Cromwell s arguments and their complete estrangement personal as well as political followed On his refusal to take the oath of allegiance to the protector Lambert was deprived of his commissions receiving instead a pension of 2000 a year He retired from public life to Wimbledon but shortly before his own death Cromwell sought a reconciliation and Lambert and his wife visited Cromwell at Whitehall 17 When Richard Cromwell was proclaimed protector 3 September 1658 his chief difficulty lay with the army over which he exercised no effective control Lambert though holding no military commission was the most popular of the old Cromwellian generals with the rank and file of the army and it was very generally believed that he would install himself in Oliver Cromwell s seat of power Richard Cromwell s adherents tried to conciliate him and the royalist leaders made overtures to him even proposing that Charles II should marry Lambert s daughter Lambert at first gave a lukewarm support to Richard Cromwell and took no part in the intrigues of the officers at Fleetwood s residence Wallingford House He was a member of the Third Protectorate Parliament which met in January 1659 and when it was dissolved in April under compulsion of Fleetwood and Desborough he was restored to his commands He headed the deputation to Lenthall in May 1659 inviting the return of the Rump Parliament which led to the tame retirement of Richard Cromwell and he was appointed a member of the Committee of Safety and of the Council of State 18 When the parliament in an attempt to control the power of the army withheld from Fleetwood the right of nominating officers Lambert was named one of a council of seven charged with this duty The parliament s evident distrust of the soldiers caused much discontent in the army while the absence of authority encouraged the royalists to make overt attempts to restore Charles II the most serious of which under Sir George Booth and the earl of Derby was crushed by Lambert near Chester on 19 August 1659 He promoted a petition from his army that Fleetwood might be made lord general and himself major general The republican party in the House took offence The Commons 12 October 1659 cashiered Lambert and other officers and retained Fleetwood as chief of a military council under the authority of the speaker On the next day Lambert caused the doors of the House to be shut and the members kept out On 26 October a new Committee of Safety was appointed of which he was a member He was also appointed major general of all the forces in England and Scotland Fleetwood being general 18 Lambert was now sent with a large force to meet George Monck who was in command of the English forces in Scotland and either negotiate with him or force him to terms Monck however marched southward Lambert s army began to melt away why and he was kept in suspense by Monck till his whole army deserted and he returned to London almost alone Monck marched to London unopposed The excluded Presbyterian members were recalled Lambert was sent to the Tower 3 March 1660 from which he escaped a month later He descended a silk rope and aided by six men was taken away by barge He tried to rekindle the civil war in favour of the Commonwealth by issuing a proclamation calling on all supporters of the Good Old Cause to rally on the battlefield of Edgehill But he was recaptured on 22 April at Daventry by Colonel Richard Ingoldsby 19 a regicide who hoped to win a pardon by handing Lambert over to the new regime 20 He was kept imprisoned in the Tower of London 18 and then transferred to Castle Cornet on the island Guernsey Restoration Edit On the Restoration Lambert was exempted from prosecution by an address of both Houses of the Convention Parliament to the king but the Cavalier Parliament in 1662 charged him with high treason 18 In April 1662 General Lambert was with Sir Henry Vane brought to England and tried in June 1662 On 25 July a warrant was issued to Lord Hatton the governor of Guernsey to take into his custody the person of John Lambert commonly called Colonel Lambert and keep him a close prisoner as a condemned traitor until further orders On 18 November following directions were given from the king to Lord Hatton to give such liberty and indulgence to Colonel John Lambert within the precincts of the island as will consist with the security of his person Later life EditIn 1662 Lambert was imprisoned in Guernsey 18 In 1667 he was transferred to Drake s Island in Plymouth Sound at the entrance to the Hamoaze and he died there during the severe winter of 1683 84 The site of his grave is now lost but he was laid to rest at St Andrews Church in Plymouth on 28 March 1684 21 Legacy EditHe was the author of the Instrument of Government the first written constitution in the world codifying sovereign powers citation needed The Instrument of Government was replaced in May 1657 by England s second last and extinct codified constitution the Humble Petition and Advice It has been said that Lambert s nature had more in common with the royalist than with the puritan spirit Vain and ambitious he believed that Cromwell could not stand without him and when Cromwell was dead he imagined himself entitled to succeed him As a soldier he was far more than a fighting general and possessed many of the qualities of a great general He was an able writer and speaker and an accomplished negotiator and took pleasure in quiet and domestic pursuits He learnt his love of gardening from Lord Fairfax who was also his master in the art of war He painted flowers besides cultivating them and was accused by Mrs Hutchinson of dressing his flowers in his garden and working at the needle with his wife and his maids 18 Notes EditReferences Edit a b c Lambert John 1619 1694 by F Warre Cornish Encyclopedia Britannica Ninth Edition Volume 14 Henry G Allen Company 1890 p 237 Farr 2003 pp 12 15 Farr 2003 p 163 Farr 2003 p 36 a b Farr 2004 Hill amp Watkinson 2012 p 17 Barratt 1975 pp 162 163 Farr 2011 Farr 2003 p 39 Rees 2016 pp 173 174 Adamson 1987 pp 568 569 Grayling 2017 p 23 sfn error no target CITEREFGrayling2017 help Farr 2003 pp 40 41 Royle 2004 pp 424 425 sfn error no target CITEREFRoyle2004 help Farr 2003 p 43 a b c d e f g Chisholm 1911 p 108 Chisholm 1911 pp 108 109 a b c d e f Chisholm 1911 p 109 Greaves 1986 pp 27 29 Sunday 22 April 1660 The Diary of Samuel Pepys Gaunt pp 44 45Sources EditAdamson JSA 1987 The English Nobility and the Projected Settlement of 1647 The Historical Journal 30 3 567 602 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00020896 JSTOR 2639160 S2CID 154769885 Barratt John 1975 A Royalist Account of the Relief of Pontefract 1st March 1645 Society for Army Historical Research 53 215 159 169 JSTOR 44225367 Farr D N 2011 Poyntz Poynts Sydenham Sednham Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 22695 Subscription or UK public library membership required Farr D N 2004 Lambert John bap 1619 d 1684 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 15939 Subscription or UK public library membership required Farr David 2003 John Lambert Parliamentary Soldier and Cromwellian Major General 1619 1684 Boydell Press ISBN 978 1843830047 Firth Charles Harding 1893 Lambert John 1619 1683 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 33 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 11 18 Greaves Richard L 1986 Deliver us from evil the radical underground in Britain 1660 1663 Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 503985 8 Hill PR Watkinson JM 2012 Cromwell Hath the Honour But Major General Lambert s Campaigns in the North 1648 Frontline Books ISBN 978 1848326545 Rees John 2016 The Leveller Revolution Verso ISBN 978 1 78478 390 7 Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lambert John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 108 109 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Atkinson Charles Francis 1911 Great Rebellion In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 403 421 Bibliography EditFell David William John Lambert northlincsweb net Retrieved 17 May 2020 Lambert Andy 31 March 2010 Major General John Lambert Retrieved 17 May 2020 Plant David 5 June 2007 John Lambert c 1619 1684 British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website Archived from the original on 17 July 2012 Retrieved 19 July 2013 Simkin John September 1997 June 2013 John Lambert Spartacus Educational Retrieved 19 July 2013 Gaunt Peter 1998 Cromwelliana The Journal of The Cromwell Association PDF The Cromwell Association pp 44 45 ISBN 0 905729 09 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Lambert general amp oldid 1121254888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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