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0:00.0 | BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts. |
0:05.0 | Thanks for downloading this episode of In Our Time. |
0:07.4 | There's a reading list to go with it on our website, |
0:09.6 | and you can get news about our programs if you follow us on Twitter |
0:13.0 | at BBC In Our Time. |
0:14.9 | I hope you enjoyed the programs. |
0:17.3 | Hello, in 1649, England's Parliament executed Charles I, |
0:22.0 | as it couldn't rule with the monarch, |
0:23.6 | and spent the next decade learning it couldn't rule without one. |
0:27.2 | That decade's known as the Interregnum. |
0:29.8 | When Charles II was restored, he aimed to help England reset |
0:33.8 | and forget the 1650s. |
0:35.7 | But in Scotland, and notoriously in Ireland, |
0:38.2 | the legacy of conquest was indelible. |
0:40.7 | With me to discuss the Interregnum, our Laura Stewart, |
0:43.4 | Professor in Early Modern History at the University of York, |
0:46.5 | Micholo Schokru, Professor of Modern History at Trinity College Dublin, |
0:50.6 | and Glad Jackson, senior tutor at Trinity Hall University of Cambridge. |
0:55.5 | Glad Jackson, what planet any did Parliament have |
0:59.2 | or who would rule after the execution of Charles I? |
1:03.0 | I think that's a very good question. |
1:04.2 | I think it's a good question that a lot of contemporaries would have been asking. |
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