A Marxist Analysis of Historical Falsification and the
Crisis of Bourgeois Historiography
Part I: The English Revolution and the Crisis of
Historical Consciousness
1. The Political Stakes of Historical Interpretation
The seventeenth-century English Revolution holds a special
place in human history. It marked the first successful overthrow of a feudal
monarchy by a rising bourgeoisie and the first time a king was executed by his
own people. It also represented the first continuous effort to establish a
political system based not on divine right but on the secular needs of
property, trade, and the growing global market. Essentially, it was the
foundational moment of the modern world.
In today's era—defined by the accelerating crisis of global
capitalism, the breakdown of democratic institutions, and the resurgence of
authoritarian governance—the English Revolution has been systematically
misrepresented. The bourgeoisie, faced with the effects of its own historical
decline, avoids acknowledging its revolutionary roots. It aims to hide the
truth that its rise to power was not the result of slow reforms or
constitutional changes, but was achieved through violent upheavals, mass
mobilisation, and the overthrow of the old order.
The debate over Cromwell's role in history is mainly a
political contest regarding the interpretation of revolution. The bourgeoisie,
facing a legitimacy crisis not seen since the early 20th century, struggles to
accept its revolutionary origins. It tends to dismiss, downplay, or
psychologize the English Revolution to preserve the illusion that social change
happens through parliamentary politics, constitutional stability, and gradual
reforms. In reality, the bourgeoisie seized power via insurrection, civil war,
and severe suppression of radical left movements—actions that are unacceptable
to a ruling class now cautious of the working class's revolutionary capacity.
Hence, the distortion of the English Revolution is shaped by current political
interests.
2. The Bourgeoisie Renounces Its Own Revolution
The bourgeoisie's ideological shift away from its
revolutionary roots is a notable aspect of modern historical consciousness. In
the 1800s, liberal historians like Macaulay praised the English Revolution as a
victory for liberty over tyranny, Parliament over monarchy, and reason over
superstition. At that time, the bourgeoisie, still convinced of its historical purpose,
upheld the revolutionary aspects of its history.
However, as capitalism advanced into its imperialist stage—characterised
by worldwide competition, colonial control, and the rise of the working class
as a distinct political entity—the bourgeoisie began to distance itself from
the revolutionary violence that had initially elevated it. By the mid-20th
century, amid the rise of fascism, Stalinism, and the Cold War, the bourgeoisie
had completely dissociated from revolutionary ideals. Its historians shifted
focus, highlighting continuity, moderation, and constitutional principles.
In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, this stance
shifted toward outright denial. Revisionist scholars—such as John Morrill and
Mark Kishlansky—contend that the English Revolution was not truly a revolution.
Instead, they describe it as a “war of religion,” a “crisis of authority,” or
simply a “series of misunderstandings." They minimise class conflict,
dismiss mass mobilisation, regard the Levellers as a statistical anomaly, and
depict Cromwell as a devout soldier caught in uncontrollable circumstances.
This historiographical counter-revolution reflects the political interests of a
ruling class that fears the resurgence of revolutionary movements. To deny the
English Revolution is to deny the possibility of revolution today.
3. The Liberal-Biographical Tradition: Fraser and the
Humanisation of Power
Antonia Fraser’s *Cromwell:
Our Chief of Men* illustrates the liberal-biographical method. Fraser depicts
Cromwell as a man driven by a strong conscience, a conflicted Puritan whose
moral integrity is central to his greatness. The revolution acts as a backdrop
that reveals his personality. This method plays three key ideological roles: it
personalises structural change by framing class conflict through character; it
moralises colonial violence by viewing Cromwell’s Irish atrocities as tragic
yet somewhat understandable; and it limits the revolution’s focus to the
development of English constitutional identity.
Fraser’s biography is not just inadequate; it is also
politically reactionary. It portrays Cromwell — the military leader of a
bourgeois revolution — as a tragic hero whose actions are only understandable
through personal faith and psychological nuances. The masses vanish; class
conflict is overlooked; the revolution turns into a moral story rather than a
social upheaval. This exemplifies the ideological role of bourgeois biography:
to humanise authority, sentimentalise violence, and conceal the structural forces
driving history.
4. The Marxist Tradition: Hill, Manning, and the
Restoration of Class
The Marxist tradition, chiefly represented by Christopher
Hill and Brian Manning, opposes this falsification. Hill’s work is the most
significant Marxist contribution to understanding the English Revolution. He
reestablished the importance of the masses in history, highlighted the class
dynamics in the conflict, and uncovered the ideological role of Puritanism.
Hill’s Cromwell is not a heroic figure but the political
representative of the gentry faction within the emerging bourgeoisie. The
Levellers are not just a fringe group but the revolutionary left of the
movement. The New Model Army functions as a political entity rather than merely
a military force.
Hill’s Marxism was influenced by the national scope of the
Communist Party Historians’ Group. His view of revolution is centred on
England, not the global context; his concept of bourgeoisie is confined to the
nation, not the international scene; and his analysis stops short of framing
the English Revolution within the broader emergence of capitalism worldwide.
In contrast, Manning’s work is more radical and considers
wider international effects. He emphasises the importance of the lower classes,
such as artisans, small producers, and soldiers, who played a key role in the
revolutionary movement. Manning portrays the Levellers as a mass movement
rather than a fringe group. He contends that the revolution was incomplete
because the bourgeoisie feared that the lower classes’ democratic ambitions
could threaten their interests.
Together, Hill and Manning exemplify the peak of Marxist
historiography on the English Revolution. However, their work needs to be
expanded, enhanced, and connected more broadly internationally.
5. The Internationalist Breakthrough: Pashukanis,
Slaughter, and the World-Systemic Perspective
The most sophisticated Marxist analysis of the English
Revolution does not originate from British Marxist historians but from the
internationalist perspective crafted by the Trotskyist movement. Evgeny
Pashukanis offers the key theoretical insight: the bourgeois revolution
generates the legal subject, embodying the juridical expression of the
commodity form. Cliff Slaughter, working within the International Committee of
the Fourth International, provides the only fully coherent Marxist
interpretation of the revolution. He situates the revolution within the global
rise of capitalism rather than solely within England's national development.
For Slaughter, Cromwell’s Irish campaign exemplifies
primitive accumulation rather than a mere military conflict. In the end, the
bourgeois revolution is viewed as a fundamental historical break that goes
beyond just a constitutional change. This internationalist view shows the
English Revolution as part of a worldwide process, including the shift from
feudalism to capitalism, the rise of the global market, and the development of
the modern state.
6. The Contemporary Relevance of the English Revolution
The political lessons from the
English Revolution remain relevant today, directly addressing the current
crisis of capitalism. The bourgeoisie rejects its revolutionary roots because
it is now afraid of revolution. Liberal historians tend to sentimentalise
Cromwell, as they avoid confronting the violence that accompanies capitalist
growth. Revisionists omit the masses to prevent the resurgence of mass
politics. Marxists emphasise the revolutionary nature of the seventeenth
century because the working class needs to understand how ruling classes ascend
and decline within historical processes. The English Revolution demonstrates
that no ruling class relinquishes power voluntarily, that the masses make
revolutions, and that the bourgeoisie, once victorious, turns ruthlessly
against those who carried it to power.
Part II: The World-Systemic Origins of the English
Revolution
1. The English Revolution as a Product of Global
Transformation
Viewing the English Revolution as a global event requires
rejecting the narrow, nationalist viewpoint common in both liberal and
revisionist histories. It was not merely an isolated act of English
exceptionalism or a simple domestic struggle over constitutional issues.
Instead, it reflected a deep transformation in the world economy: the rise of
capitalist social relations, the growth of the global market, and the breakdown
of feudal systems across Europe.
The English Revolution must be viewed in the context of
wider historical shifts from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century. These
include the growth of Atlantic trade, the increase of colonial silver wealth,
the expansion of international commerce, the rise of financial capitalism in
the Dutch Republic, the decline of feudal rent practices, and demographic and
agricultural changes in early modern Europe.
England actively contributed to these forces, serving as a
key testing ground. The enclosure movement, expansion of merchant capital,
emergence of a commercially driven gentry, and deeper integration into global
trade networks fostered social conditions conducive to revolutionary upheaval.
Thus, the English Revolution was not merely a national anomaly but an essential
stage in the worldwide shift from feudalism to capitalism.
2. The Bourgeoisie Before the Bourgeoisie: The Gentry and
the Transformation of Property
A common myth in English historiography is the idea that the
bourgeoisie was weak, marginal, or lacked political influence in the
seventeenth century. This misconception supports the revisionist view that the
Civil War was driven not by class struggle but by conflicts among elites over
religion and constitutional power. In truth, the English bourgeoisie was
emerging within the gentry — a class increasingly connected to capitalist
agriculture, commercial rents, and trade investments. The gentry were not merely
feudal remnants but served as the transitional class through which capitalist
relations spread into the countryside.
The transformation of property relations—such as enclosure,
leasehold reform, and the monetisation of rents—led to the emergence of a class
whose interests conflicted with the absolutist state. The monarchy, reliant on
feudal privileges, monopolies, and arbitrary taxation, hindered the free growth
of capitalist accumulation. Consequently, the clash between Parliament and the
Crown was not merely a constitutional dispute but a conflict between
incompatible modes of production.
3. The New Model Army and the Political Form of the
Bourgeois Revolution
The New Model Army served as the crucial force behind the
revolution. More than just a military entity, it functioned as a political organisation
— the first modern army in history, characterised by discipline, centralisation,
and a unified ideology. Its members primarily came from the upper segments of
the petty bourgeoisie, including artisans, small producers, and radicalised
yeomen. The Army’s political discussions — such as the Putney Debates of 1647,
the petitions from the Agitators, and the Leveller manifestos — mark the
earliest sustained efforts to define a democratic political agenda rooted in
the interests of the lower classes. In essence, the New Model Army was the
revolutionary party of the seventeenth century.
The Army also embodied the revolution's internal
contradiction. While the bourgeoisie relied on the Army to overthrow the
monarchy, it simultaneously feared the soldiers' democratic hopes. The
suppression of the Levellers in 1649, including the execution of the Burford
mutineers, marked the point when the bourgeoisie turned against the very masses
that had helped it rise to power. This illustrates the core dialectic of the
bourgeois revolution: it mobilises the masses to dismantle feudalism, only to
repress them to secure capitalist stability.
4. Cromwell as the Instrument of Class Necessity
Oliver Cromwell’s importance in history lies less in his
personal traits, faith, or psychological intricacies—common themes in liberal
biographies—and more in his role as the political figure who embodied the
growing bourgeois class. He served as the means for the bourgeoisie to address
and overcome the contradictions arising from the revolution.
Cromwell’s measures—such as dissolving Parliament,
suppressing the Levellers, conquering Ireland, and establishing the
Protectorate—were motivated by the goal of stabilizing the new social order
rather than personal ambition. He executed the king not out of fanaticism, but
because the monarchy clashed with bourgeois interests. His crackdown on the
Levellers was a response to the bourgeoisie’s fear of the lower classes'
democratic aspirations, not tyranny. Meanwhile, his Irish conquest was driven
by the need to seize land for capital accumulation, not cruelty. Cromwell is a
key figure of the bourgeois revolution.
5. Ireland and the Colonial Foundations of Capitalism
No part of Cromwell’s legacy has been more distorted than
his actions in Ireland. While some liberal historians like Fraser see the
massacres at Drogheda and Wexford as tragic yet understandable parts of
seventeenth-century brutal warfare, revisionists tend to diminish or relativise
the violence, and nationalists often mythologise it. A Marxist perspective
clarifies these distortions, showing that Cromwell’s Irish campaign was not an
anomaly but a fundamental act of primitive accumulation.
The seizure of Irish land, the displacement of the Catholic
peasantry, and the redistribution of property to English soldiers and settlers
were crucial steps in forming a landless proletariat and a capitalist farming
class. Ireland served as a testing ground for English capitalism. Cromwell’s
campaign violence was driven not solely by religious fanaticism but by the
inherent violence of capitalist development. The bourgeois revolution,
especially in its colonial context, involved dismantling traditional property
systems, expropriating peasants, and establishing a new legal and economic
framework. The Irish case illustrates the global scope of the English
Revolution, highlighting its links to colonial expansion, the Atlantic economy,
and the creation of the world market.
6. The Restoration as the Consolidation of Bourgeois
Power
The Restoration of 1660 is often seen as a failed
revolution, with the monarchy returning and Cromwell’s legacy discarded.
However, this view is mostly incorrect. The Restoration was more about
strengthening existing gains than undoing them. The bourgeoisie had already
secured key objectives: ending absolutism, asserting parliamentary dominance,
protecting property rights, and establishing a legal system suitable for
capitalism. The monarchy that came back in 1660 was not the same as Charles
I's; it was a constitutional monarchy that served bourgeois interests.
Charles I's execution fundamentally changed the political
scene. After 1649, no monarch felt truly secure on the throne. The Glorious
Revolution of 1688—viewed by the bourgeoisie as their preferred revolution—was
only feasible because the upheavals of the 1640s shattered the basis of
absolutism. The Restoration served as the bourgeoisie’s strategy to secure the
revolution's gains while limiting its radical democratic prospects.
7. The English Revolution and the Birth of the Modern
State
The modern state—characterised by centralisation,
bureaucracy, secularism, and a focus on capital interests—originated from the
English Revolution. During this period, feudal privileges were abolished,
taxation was streamlined, a standing army was established, and a legal system
rooted in property rights was developed.
The Protectorate, often regarded as a failed experiment, was
in fact the initial effort to establish a modern bourgeois state. Its
constitutional documents—the Instrument of Government and the Humble Petition
and Advice—are among the earliest attempts to formalise the political structure
of capitalist society. Consequently, the English Revolution was not just a
political event but also a fundamental transformation of the state's structure.
Part III: The Levellers, the Democratic Surge, and the
Bourgeoisie’s Fear of the Masses
1. The Levellers and the Revolutionary Left Wing of the
English Revolution
No part of the English Revolution has been more deliberately
misrepresented by bourgeois history than the role of the Levellers. Liberal
scholars see them as merely a group of troublemakers; revisionists consider
them an insignificant statistical blip; and Cromwell's biographers depict them
as a bother he was compelled to contain. This misrepresentation is purposeful.
The Levellers embody the democratic promise of the revolution—the idea that
overthrowing absolutism could lead not only to property rule but also to political
empowerment for the lower classes.
The Levellers were not just a fringe group but the earliest organised
democratic movement in modern history. Their platform—outlined in The Agreement
of the People, petitions from London radicals, and speeches by Army
Agitators—called for: universal male suffrage, biennial Parliaments, legal
equality, religious toleration, and the subjugation of political authority to
popular consent. These demands were not mere idealistic dreams but reflected
the real interests of artisans, small producers, and radicalised soldiers. The
Levellers embodied the working-class foundation of the revolution—the social
strata whose mobilisation enabled the overthrow of absolutism.
The bourgeoisie could not accept this wave of democracy. The
Levellers’ agenda threatened the core of capitalist property rights. Allowing
everyone to vote would have strengthened the lower classes; legal equality
would have challenged the privileges of property owners; and popular
sovereignty could have destabilised the nascent bourgeois state. Therefore, the
Levellers were seen as internal enemies of the bourgeois revolution—a force
that needed to be suppressed after the monarchy was overthrown.
2. The Putney Debates: The Revolution Thinks Aloud
The Putney Debates of 1647 are among the most remarkable
events in history. For the first time, ordinary soldiers—artisans, small
farmers, and radical democrats—challenged the political leadership of a
revolutionary army and sought a voice in shaping the nation's future. These
debates vividly illustrate the class tensions of the revolution. On one side
were the Levellers and the Army Agitators, advocating for political equality
and popular sovereignty, while on the other were Cromwell and Henry Ireton,
representing the interests of the propertied classes.
Ireton’s arguments exemplify classic bourgeois ideology. He
argued that political power should be linked to property, claiming those
without property lack a “permanent interest” in the nation, and warning that
universal suffrage could destroy social order. These points—repeated by
capitalists’ defenders over centuries—highlight the core contradiction of the
bourgeois revolution: proclaiming universal rights while limiting political
power to the propertied. The Putney Debates marked a turning point, when the
revolution became self-aware—when the common people voiced their democratic
hopes and the bourgeoisie expressed its fears.
3. The Suppression of the Levellers: The Bourgeoisie
Turns Against the Masses
The repression of the Levellers in 1649 was not a mere
anomaly but a natural result of the bourgeois revolution. After the monarchy
was abolished and traditional structures were dismantled, the bourgeoisie no
longer relied on the radicalised masses. The Levellers' calls for popular
sovereignty, legal equality, and democratic responsibility challenged the
stability of the emerging social order, conflicting with the interests of the
property-owning classes.
Cromwell’s suppression of the Levellers— arresting their
leaders, destroying their presses, and executing the Burford mutineers—was not
a personal act of betrayal but a class-driven necessity. The bourgeoisie needed
to crush the lower classes' democratic hopes to strengthen its power. The
execution of the Burford mutineers— soldiers who fought for the revolution and
now demanded their deserved rights— highlights a key moment in bourgeois
history. It shows that while the bourgeois revolution was progressive in ending
feudalism, it was also fundamentally reactionary in oppressing the masses. The
Levellers were the first victims of the bourgeois counter-revolution.
4. The Diggers and the Limits of Agrarian Radicalism
If the Levellers were the democratic faction of the
revolution, the Diggers embodied its agrarian-communist spirit. Under Gerrard
Winstanley's leadership, the Diggers tried to farm shared land at St. George’s
Hill, asserting that the earth belonged to everyone as a 'common treasury.'
Their goals—eliminating private land ownership, promoting communal farming, and
establishing an equal society—were remarkably progressive for their era.
The Diggers weren't proto-socialists in today's terms, but
their movement reveals the revolution's hidden potential. The abolition of
feudal property relations opened the door to a more radical change—one that
could have challenged not just the monarchy but also the emerging capitalist
system. The bourgeoisie could not accept this threat. The Diggers were
suppressed as ruthlessly as the Levellers, with their communes destroyed,
leaders arrested, and their movement suppressed. Their fate highlights the
limits of the bourgeois revolution: it could dismantle feudalism but not
establish a society of equality. It could mobilise masses but not empower them,
proclaim universal rights but fail to realise them.
5. The New Model Army as a Revolutionary Organism
The New Model Army was the most sophisticated political
institution of the seventeenth century. It stood out as the first modern army —
disciplined, centralised, and ideologically united — and also marked the
inaugural mass political organisation in world history. Its soldiers engaged in
political debates, elected leaders, and expressed a democratic agenda.
The Army served as the revolutionary force of the
seventeenth century, overthrowing the monarchy, defeating royalist armies, and
enforcing Parliament's will. However, it also reflected the revolution’s
internal conflict, pitting bourgeois leaders against radicalised common people.
Thus, it functioned both as a tool of bourgeois dominance and as a means for
democratic hopes. The suppression of the Levellers marked the point at which
the Army shifted from a revolutionary entity to an instrument of the bourgeois
state.
6. The Bourgeois Revolution and the Dialectic of
Liberation and Suppression
The English Revolution exposes the core dialectic of the
bourgeois revolution: it starts by freeing society from feudalism and mobilising
the masses to overthrow the old order. However, once the bourgeoisie secures
its interests, it suppresses those same masses. This pattern is not unique to
England but is seen in every bourgeois revolution: the suppression of the
sans-culottes during the French Revolution, the betrayal of radical democrats
in the American Revolution, the crushing of the Paris Commune by the French
bourgeoisie, and the repression of Chartism in the nineteenth century. The
bourgeoisie acts as a revolutionary class only against feudalism; once it
establishes its power, it becomes a reactionary force. The English Revolution
is the earliest and clearest example of this recurring pattern.
7. The Levellers and the Contemporary Working Class
The political lessons from the Levellers extend beyond the
seventeenth century and directly relate to today's working-class struggles. The
Levellers were the first to try to develop a democratic agenda independent of
the ruling class. Their suppression shows the limitations of bourgeois
democracy and highlights the need for a separate political movement for the
working class.
The Levellers’ focus on popular sovereignty, legal equality,
and democratic accountability is still pertinent today. Their struggle
highlights a core contradiction in capitalist society: the clash between the
democratic hopes of the people and the economic goals of the ruling elite. The
working class should learn from the Levellers—not by copying their policies,
but by understanding how ruling classes historically ascend, strengthen, and
silence the masses.
Part IV: The Legal Form, the Modern State, and the
International Logic of the Bourgeois Revolution
1. The Bourgeois Revolution and the Emergence of the
Legal Subject
The English Revolution not only dismantled feudal political
institutions but also fundamentally changed the nature of law itself. This
shift cannot be fully grasped through liberal constitutionalism, which views
law as a neutral structure for politics. Instead, it is best understood via the
Marxist theory of the legal form, as elaborated by Evgeny Pashukanis.
Pashukanis showed that the legal subject—abstract, equal,
and formally free—represents the juridical expression of the commodity form.
The rise of capitalist production relations necessitates a legal system where
individuals interact as holders of rights, obligations, and property.
Consequently, the law of the bourgeois state is not merely an ideological
superstructure imposed from above, but a fundamental expression of capitalism's
social relations.
The English Revolution marked the first time this legal form
appeared in its early stages. The abolition of feudal privileges, the
restructuring of taxation, the codification of property rights, and the
development of contract law all reflected new social relations forming beneath
political conflicts. Although often seen as technical or administrative, the
legal reforms during the revolutionary era actually laid the juridical
groundwork for capitalist society.
2. The Instrument of Government and the First Bourgeois
Constitution
The Instrument of Government (1653), which served as the
constitution for Cromwell’s Protectorate, is one of the most overlooked
documents in world history. Liberal historians view it as a failed experiment,
revisionists see it as an authoritarian imposition, and constitutional scholars
often ignore it completely.
A Marxist perspective highlights its significance: the
Instrument of Government was the world's first written bourgeois constitution.
Its main features—such as a centralised executive, a standing army, regular
Parliaments, and a legal system based on property—mark the earliest effort to
formalise the political structure of capitalist society. The Instrument was not
an idealistic plan but a practical measure for a class that seized power through
revolution and sought to stabilise its dominance. The Protectorate represented
the first modern state: a centralised, bureaucratic, secular system designed to
serve capital's interests. It laid the foundation for the bourgeois state,
which later appeared in the Dutch Republic, the United States, and
revolutionary France.
3. The Humble Petition and Advice: The Bourgeoisie Seeks
Stability
The Humble Petition and Advice (1657), which proposed
offering Cromwell the crown, exposes the internal contradictions of the
bourgeois revolution. While the bourgeoisie had toppled the monarchy, they now
aimed to reinstate a modified form of it to secure the stability of the new
social order.
This seeming paradox is not a contradiction of principle but
reflects class necessity. The bourgeoisie needs a state strong enough to
safeguard property, enforce contracts, and control the masses, yet weak enough
to prevent the return of absolutism. Cromwell's proposed constitutional
monarchy aimed to establish a political system that could balance these
conflicting requirements.
Cromwell’s rejection of the crown—often idealised as a sign
of republican virtue—actually acknowledged that the monarchy, even in a
transformed state, conflicted with the revolutionary roots of the new
government. The bourgeoisie would eventually reconcile this in 1688 with
William of Orange’s rise to the throne under Parliamentary conditions. However,
during the 1650s, the revolutionary wounds were still raw, and the
contradictions too pronounced, making such a compromise impossible at that
time.
4. The International Dimension: England, the Dutch
Republic, and the World Market
The English Revolution should be viewed in conjunction with
the Dutch Republic, which was the leading capitalist society of the seventeenth
century. The Dutch pioneered financial capitalism, maritime trade, and global
markets. Their political system — republican, commercial, and oligarchic —
embodied the most advanced form of bourgeois governance in Europe.
England’s conflict with the Dutch during the First
Anglo-Dutch War (1652–1654) was more than a fight for naval dominance; it was a
clash between two models of capitalist development. The Navigation Acts, the
growth of the English navy, and the proactive pursuit of colonial trade
reflected England’s efforts to access the global market, which the Dutch then
controlled. The English Revolution was not just a domestic upheaval but also
part of the broader global contest for capitalist supremacy. England's emergence
as a world power—culminating in the 18th-century British Empire—was rooted in
the revolutionary changes of the 1640s and 1650s.
5. Primitive Accumulation and the Colonial Foundations of
Capitalism
Marx’s idea of primitive accumulation — involving the
violent seizure of peasant land, the destruction of communal ownership, and the
formation of a landless working class — is crucial to understanding the English
Revolution. It accelerated long-standing processes such as enclosure, the shift
to monetised rents, the commodification of labour, and the growth of colonial
exploitation.
Cromwell’s Irish campaign marked a pivotal point in this
history. The seizure of Irish land, the removal of Catholic peasants, and the
redistribution of land to English soldiers and settlers were driven more by
economic motives than military needs. The violence enacted during the 1650s
colonial efforts established the groundwork for Ireland's transition to
capitalism and strengthened English influence across the Atlantic.
The English Revolution was both a domestic and colonial
event, with internal changes closely linked to external expansion. The
bourgeoisie that arose from the revolution became not only a national class but
also a global player, focused on the world market and reliant on colonial
exploitation.
6. The Restoration and the Completion of the Bourgeois
Revolution
The 1660 Restoration is often perceived as a failure of the
revolution, marked by the monarchy's return and the rejection of Cromwell’s
legacy. Yet, this perspective is fundamentally mistaken. The Restoration was
not a defeat but a culmination. The bourgeoisie had achieved its primary
objectives: dismantling absolutism, establishing parliamentary dominance,
securing property rights, and developing a legal framework suited to
capitalism. The restored monarchy in 1660 was not Charles I's original monarchy
but a constitutional one aligned with bourgeois interests. The execution of
Charles I permanently altered the political landscape, as no monarch post-1649
could feel secure on the throne. The 1688 Glorious Revolution, favored by the
bourgeoisie as a revolutionary act, only occurred because the revolutionary
upheavals of the 1640s had weakened absolutist foundations. Consequently, the
Restoration signified the bourgeois consolidation of the revolution's
achievements.
7. The English Revolution and the Birth of the Modern
World
The English Revolution marked the first successful bourgeois
revolution in history. It abolished feudalism, affirmed the authority of
Parliament, developed the legal and political structures of capitalist society,
and set the stage for England’s emergence as a global power.
Its importance cannot be overstated. The modern
era—characterized by capitalist economies, constitutional governments, and a
global market—originated from the revolutionary upheavals of the seventeenth
century. When liberal and revisionist historians distort the history of the
English Revolution, they do more than make an academic mistake; they engage in
a political act. This distortion aims to hide the revolutionary roots of the
modern world and to dismiss the potential for revolutionary change today.
Part V: The Crisis of Bourgeois Historiography and the
Contemporary Relevance of the English Revolution
1. The Bourgeoisie’s Flight From Its Own Origins
The misrepresentation of the English Revolution is not just
a scholarly mistake but reflects a deeper crisis in bourgeois historical
awareness. A dominant class that believes in its revolutionary purpose embraces
its origins, while a declining ruling class rejects them.
In the nineteenth century, the bourgeoisie maintained a
sense of historical legitimacy. It celebrated Cromwell as a heroic figure who
destroyed tyranny, saw Parliament as the symbol of liberty, and regarded the
revolution as the basis of modern civilization. Macaulay’s *History of England*
exemplifies this confidence: a triumphant narrative portraying the bourgeoisie
as the rightful successors of progress.
However, as capitalism moved into its imperialist
stage—characterized by international competition, colonial control, and the
rise of the working class as a distinct political entity—the bourgeoisie
started distancing itself from its revolutionary roots. The brutality of its
beginnings was now considered shameful; the democratic hopes of the masses
posed a threat; and the memory of revolution was seen as a danger.
By the late twentieth century, views had shifted to outright
denial. Revisionist scholars—Morrill, Kishlansky, and their followers—claim the
English Revolution was not a true revolution. They characterize it as a “war of
religion,” a “crisis of authority,” or a “series of misunderstandings."
According to them, class conflict disappears, mass mobilization fails to
materialize, the Levellers are just a statistical anomaly, and Cromwell is
depicted as a devout soldier caught in circumstances beyond his control. This
historiographical counter-revolution reflects the political needs of a ruling
class afraid of revolutionary resurgence. To deny the English Revolution is to
deny the possibility of revolution today.
2. The Postmodern Assault on Historical Truth
The crisis in bourgeois historiography worsens with the rise
of postmodernism, which rejects the idea of objective historical truth.
According to postmodernism, history isn't about studying actual events but
about interpreting texts; it's not about analyzing social forces but
deconstructing narratives; and it's not about reconstructing the past but
revealing linguistic structures.
This epistemological nihilism benefits the interests of the
ruling class. Without objective truth, there is no definitive history of class
struggle. If all narratives hold equal validity, then the revolutionary view of
the English Revolution is just one among many "discourses." If the
past cannot be known, then the future remains unchangeable.
Postmodernism reflects a bourgeoisie struggling with its own
legitimacy, embodying a ruling class that no longer believes in progress,
distrusts its institutions, and no longer views itself as guiding historical
development. In response to this intellectual decline, Marxism emphasizes that
history results from concrete social forces, that revolutions are objective
occurrences, and that past events can be understood scientifically through
class analysis.
3. The English Revolution and the Crisis of the Modern
State
The modern state—characterized by centralization,
bureaucracy, secularism, and a focus on capital—originated during the English
Revolution. This period saw the abolition of feudal rights, reforms in
taxation, the establishment of a standing army, and the development of a legal
system rooted in property rights.
However, the modern state is facing a crisis. The
institutions established by the bourgeois revolution—such as Parliaments,
constitutions, legal systems, and representative bodies—are becoming less
capable of handling the tensions of global capitalism. The growing wealth gap,
diminishing democratic rights, increasing militarization, and the emergence of
authoritarian rule expose the limitations of the political structures developed
in the seventeenth century.
The crisis faced by the modern state is essentially the
crisis of the bourgeois revolution. The political structures established by the
bourgeoisie can no longer hold back the social forces unleashed by global
capitalism. The contradictions that fueled the English Revolution—such as those
between traditional and modern property, the masses and the ruling class, and
societal needs versus elite interests—are reemerging worldwide today.
4. The Lessons of the English Revolution for the
Contemporary Working Class
The English Revolution offers crucial lessons for today's
working class, illustrating that no ruling class will willingly surrender
power. The monarchy didn't fall due to persuasive arguments or constitutional
constraints; it was overthrown by a revolutionary movement that mobilised the
masses and dismantled the old regime's institutions. Additionally, it emphasises
the vital role of the masses in shaping history. Groups like the Levellers, the
Army Agitators, and the radicalised soldiers of the New Model Army were active
participants rather than passive observers.
Their demands for democracy, equality, and popular
sovereignty fueled the revolution. Third, it underscores the limitations of
bourgeois democracy. The bourgeoisie rallied the masses to overthrow feudalism
but later suppressed them to safeguard their own interests. The suppression of
the Levellers, the dismantling of the Diggers, and the strengthening of the
Protectorate reveal the fundamental contradiction of the bourgeois revolution:
it claims to defend universal rights while restricting political power to
property owners. Fourth, it emphasizes the importance of an independent
political movement for the working class. The Levellers were defeated not
because their program was unrealistic, but because they lacked an independent
organizational base capable of challenging the bourgeoisie. Their defeat
illustrates the need for a revolutionary party that can unite the masses and
lead the struggle for power.
5. Conclusion: The English Revolution and the Future of
Humanity
The English Revolution marked the first major bourgeois
revolution in history. It dismantled feudal structures, established the modern
state, and laid the groundwork for capitalist society. Its importance is
immense. The modern world — characterized by a capitalist economy,
constitutional governments, and a global marketplace — originated from the
upheavals of the seventeenth century. However, the bourgeois revolution is now
reaching its limits. The political systems it created face crisis; the social relations
it fostered are no longer sustainable; and the contradictions it introduced
pose a threat to humanity's future.
The working class has yet to finish the historical journey
started in the seventeenth century. The initial phase was the dismantling of
feudalism; the subsequent phase is the overthrow of capitalism. The English
Revolution shows both what bourgeois transformation can achieve and its
boundaries. It proves that masses are the agents of history, that revolutions
are essential, and that the future does not lie with the ruling class but with
those fighting to change society.
The task of the present is to carry forward the
revolutionary legacy of the past — not by returning to the Levellers’ programme
or the institutions of the Protectorate, but by building a global working-class
movement capable of resolving capitalism’s contradictions and creating a new
world based on equality, democracy, and human liberation.