- Engagers
The Engagers were a faction of the Scottish
Covenanter s, who made "The Engagement"ref|engagement with King Charles I in December1647 while he was imprisoned inCarisbrooke Castle by the English Parliamenterians after his defeat in the First Civil War.The Covenanters, a national
Presbyterian movement, governed Scotland from 1639-51, during the civilWars of the Three Kingdoms . They supported the English Parliamentarians in theFirst English Civil War in return for theLong Parliament agreeing to theSolemn League and Covenant , supporting the church settlement in Scotland and promising reform in England "in accordance with the word of God and the example of the best reformed churches.". However, after the English Parliament's victory, they feared being sidelined - especially by the more radical Independent faction that had a strong following in theNew Model Army both in the rank and file and among theGrandee s likeOliver Cromwell .As a result, some of their General Assembly members signed a secret treaty with Charles I in
1647 , known as "The Engagement" which promised that Charles would support the establishment ofPresbyterianism , in England for a period of three years, in return for a military alliance with the Covenanters. Not all Covenanters agreed with The Engagement and a large faction known as the Kirk party, strongly influenced byArchibald Campbell, 1st Marquess of Argyll were opposed, because King Charles refused to take the Covenant personally and they feared he would not honour the agreement if he were restored to power. However the faction which supported The Engagement, known as "The Engagers", outmaneuvered the Kirk party and organised an expeditionary army. Neither of the more experienced Scottish Generals, Lord Leven or David Leslie, were willing to lead the army as they sided with Argyll, so the command was given to the less experienced Duke of Hamilton.The army was sent to England to try and enforce this deal, but were routed by Cromwell at the
battle of Preston in1648 and Charles I was executed in 1649. This defeat discredited the Engager party. The more radical Covenanters, in the Kirk party, insisted that any future deal with the King or other would have to include the public endorsement of their demands and not the secret promise of concessions in the future. Charles II agreed to their demands in theTreaty of Breda (1650) , but his defeat at the Battle of Worcester 1651 at the hands ofOliver Cromwell negated any agreements he had made with the Covenanters. Later he averred that 'Presbyterianism is no religion for a gentleman'.Notes
# [http://www.constitution.org/eng/conpur076.htm The Engagement between the King and the Scots] .
ee also
*
History of Scotland
*Scottish Civil Warhttp://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/glossary/engager.htm
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.