The House of Lords has remained more…
March 1649 CE
The House of Lords has remained more powerful than the House of Commons, but the Lower House has continued to grow in influence, reaching a zenith in relation to the House of Lords during the middle seventeenth century.
Conflicts between the King and the Parliament (for the most part, the House of Commons) had ultimately led to the English Civil War during the 1640s.
The Commonwealth of England had been declared in 1649 after the defeat and execution of King Charles I, but the nation is effectively under the overall control of Oliver Cromwell.
The House of Lords is reduced to a largely powerless body, with Cromwell and his supporters in the Commons dominating the Government.
The House of Lords is on March 19, 1649, abolished by an Act of Parliament, which declares that "The Commons of England [find] by too long experience that the House of Lords is useless and dangerous to the people of England."
The House of Lords will not assemble again until the Convention Parliament meets in 1660 and the monarchy is restored, at which point it will return to its former position as the more powerful chamber of Parliament—a position it will occupy until the nineteenth century.