Despite a few setbacks at the outset Parliament, claiming God to be a forsworn roundhead, eventually stuck it to the King and his Cavaliers at the Battle of Naseby in 1646. They were prepared to let Charles remain King if he was a good boy, but he wasn’t. In fact he was very naughty and gave them the slip, raised another army to squash them with but was beaten and had his head chopped off as a reprimand. His son, Charles, went to France but would return later.
Charles II with a big hairdo - by lisby1
Parliament now found themselves in possession of a novelty. They had a country unfettered by a Monarch. They began to dream great dreams of a Republican world and everybody being saintly and good and God viewing England as the finest resort on Earth. It would appear that they got a little too over-excited though for the common man. For, in what was possibly the worst political manifesto ever, they came up with the splendid notion of banning Christmas.