Lord Protector
The
Lord Protector was an English governmental title used by the
de-facto head of state during the brief period of the
republic or "
Commonwealth" in
Great Britain and
Ireland.
Oliver Cromwell and afterwards his son
Richard Cromwell were the Lords Protector of
England,
Scotland and
Ireland during the period
1649 to
1659.
The title of Lord Protector was not an invention of Cromwell's, however. It had previously been used by princes or other nobles exercising a regency while the heir apparent was still a minor. The most notable example of this is Richard, Duke of Gloucester (later Richard III) who was Lord Protector to the 'Princes in the Tower'.