Roundhead
Roundhead is a historical term used to describe supporters of the Parliament of England during the English Civil War and the broader Wars of the Three Kingdoms. The name is traditionally associated with their hairstyle—a close-cropped, rounded appearance of the head—though it also signified the Parliamentarian political and religious alignment against King Charles I and his royalist opponents, the Cavaliers.
Most Roundheads were Puritans or others favoring parliamentary governance, and they included gentry, merchants, town militias,
Following years of conflict, Charles I was executed in 1649, and England was declared a Commonwealth. Oliver