Part IV: 1660
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When the Convention Parliament voted on 1 May 1660 to recall Charles Stuart to the throne, nearly nine years after he fled into exile following defeat at the Battle of Worcester, the news was widely celebrated. Drawn up by Charles along with several of his advisors, the Declaration of Breda laid the groundwork for the monarchy's restoration in England. During the 1650s, John Milton composed some of the most strident defences of the execution of Charles I and of republican forms of government. The diary of Samuel Pepys is one of the most important records of English society in the years following the Restoration, and Pepys himself was closely involved in the events surrounding Charles's return. Awarded with the posts of Poet Laureate in 1668 and Historiographer Royal in 1671, John Dryden was one of the foremost defenders of the restored Stuart monarchy.

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