Terracotta portrait bust of Oliver Cromwell by
Louis-François Roubiliac
London, England, around AD
1759
Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658), who had studied
law, was a Member of Parliament at the outbreak of the English
Civil War in 1642. He joined the cavalry under Essex, and soon
established a formidable military reputation. As one of the judges
at Charles I's trial, Cromwell signed the King's
death warrant in 1649. Under the new Commonwealth, Cromwell was
installed as Lord Protector in 1653, and campaigned vigorously for
religious liberty for Protestants and Nonconformists. After the
Restoration of Charles II to the English throne in 1660,
Cromwell's body was exhumed from Westminster Abbey and hung
on the gallows at Tyburn; his head was set on a pole on top of
Westminster Hall.
Despite
the memories of the Civil War and the Commonwealth, busts of
Cromwell were extremely popular in the eighteenth century, and were
carved by all the leading sculptors. Roubiliac produced a number of
portraits of Cromwell. This example has lost most of its original
surface coating, but traces of a dark brown layer remain on the
face and hair.
A. Dawson, Portrait sculpture, a catalogu (London, The British Museum Press, 1999)