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A University of Cambridge history professor who has explored
the “religious psychology” of Oliver Cromwell will visit The
University of Alabama campus to give a talk on the 17th-century
English ruler.
Dr. John Morrill, professor of British and Irish history at
the English university, will present “Rewriting Cromwell: A
Case of Deafening Silences” on Wednesday, March 20, at 7:30
p.m. in UA’s Ferguson Theater. The talk is part of UA’s
Bankhead Lecture Series, The Art of Biography. Admission is
free, and the public is invited.
Morrill’s current research centers on the political,
religious, social and cultural histories of England, Ireland and
Scotland from the late 15th to the mid-18th centuries. He is
examining the changing relationship between governments within
Britain, Ireland and their adjacent islands and is undertaking a
series of detailed case studies of the “religious
psychology” of several people who lived through the civil wars
-- most notably Oliver Cromwell.
Cromwell governed England as Lord Protector from 1653-1658. A
military leader, Cromwell is remembered as a leader of the
English Revolution, as the first commoner to rule England and
for his Calvinistic religious beliefs.
Morrill has written and edited 19 books. He was the general
editor of the “Royal Historical Society Bibliography on
CD-ROM: the History of Britain, Ireland and the British
Overseas,” (a contents-indexed listing of 249,000 books,
articles and essays in collective volumes), and he is consultant
editor for the 6,300 17th-century lives in the “New Dictionary
of National Biography.”
In 1982, the Bankhead family established the Bankhead
Endowment Fund to further the interests of historical research
and scholarly activity within the history
department in UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences. In recent years, the family expanded
the original commission to bring visiting lecturers to campus
and to further promote the teaching and study of history.
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