81 |
New-Babels confusion. Or, Severall votes of the Commons assembled in Parliament; against certain papers, entituled, The agreement of the people for a firm and present peace upon grounds of common right
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England and Wales
|
1649 |
Engelska |
82 |
Mr. Pryns letter and proposals to our gracious lord and soveraign King Charles: and His Majesties gracious resolves to all his loving subjects, of what degree or quality soever. - Published for general satisfaction
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William Prynne
|
1660 |
Engelska |
83 |
King Richard the Third revived. - Containing a memorable petition and declaration contrived by himself and his instruments, whiles Protector, in the name of the three estates of England, to importune and perswade him to accept of the kingship, and crown of England, by their joynt election, (as if he were unwilling to undertake, or accept, though he most ambitiously aspired after them, by the bloudy murthers of K. Henry 6. Edward 5. and sundry others) before his coronation; presented afterwards to, and confirmed by the three estates and himself, in his first Parliament, to give him a colourable title both by inheritance, and their election to the crown. Transcribed out of the Parliament roll of 1.R.3. (printed in Speeds History of Great Britain: where his other additionall policies to engage the City of London, lawyers, divines and people, to elect, and make him their king, are at large recorded.)
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William Prynne
|
1657 |
Engelska |
84 |
Mr. Prinns charge against the King. - Shewing that the Kings design, purpose, and resolution, his endeavours, practice, and conversation, have alwayes been engaged, byassed, and tended to settle, establish, confirm, popery, tyranny, and slavery, in, among, over his dominions, subjects, people, and in order to that design, end, and purpose, he writ to the Pope of Rome ... engaging himself to the said Pope, to endeavour to settle the popish religion only in his dominions; and since his coming to the crown, hath extented extraordinary favonrs sic upon, and protecti- on sic of notorious papists, priests & Jesuits, against all prosecution of lawes enacted against them; notwith- standing all his protestations to the contrary, hath raised up a most horrid, unnatural, and bloudy warre, arming his Roman Catholique subjects to massacre, plunder, torture, imprison, ruine, his loyall, faithfull pious Protestant subjects to burn, sack, and spoile their cities, towns and villages, collected from the bookes written
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William Prynne
|
Printed in the year 1648 |
Engelska |
85 |
Articles of impeachment of high-treason, - exhibited by the Commons of England, in a free Parliament, against Lieutenant-General Oliver Crumwel Esquire, Commissary-General Henry Ireton Esquire, Sir Hardresse Waller Knight and colonel, Colonel Pride, Colonel Hewson, Colonel Ewers, Cornet Joyce, Hugh Peters clerk, William Lenthal Esquire, Speaker, Sir Henry Mildmay Knight, Sir Peter Wentworth Knight of the Bath, Henry Martin, Cornelius Holland, and Thomas Scot, Esquires, Members of the House of Commons
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William Prynne
|
1648 |
Engelska |
86 |
The substance of a speech made in the House of Commons
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William Prynne
|
1649 |
Engelska |
87 |
The Levellers levelled to the very ground. - Wherein this dangerous seditious opinion and design of some of them; that it is necessary, decent, and expedient, now to reduce the House of Peeres, and bring down the Lords into the Commons House, to sit and vote together with them, as one House. And the false absurd, grounds whereon they build this paradox, are briefly examined, refuted, and laid in the dust
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William Prynne
|
1648 |
Engelska |
88 |
A breife sic memento to the present unparliamentary junto - touching their present intentions and proceedings to depose and execute, Charles Steward, their lawfull King
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William Prynne
|
1649 |
Engelska |
89 |
Ardua Regni: or, XII. arduous doubts of great concernment to the Kingdome, - requiring a full and speedy resolution : propounded to M. Speaker, and the House of Commons, touching some of their late proceedings against their own suspended, ejected members, and the impeached Lords
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William Prynne
|
Printed in the yeere 1648 |
Engelska |
90 |
The petition of right of the free-holders and free-men of the kingdom of England. - humbly presented to the Lords and Commons (their representatives and substitutes) from whom they expect a speedy and satisfactory answer, as their undoubted liberty and birth-right
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William Prynne
|
Printed in the year, 1648 |
Engelska |
91 |
A summary collection of the principal fundamental rights, liberties, proprieties of all English freemen; - both in their persons, estates, and elections; and of the memorable votes, resolutions, and acts of Parliament, for their vindication and corroboration, in the late Parliaments of 3 & 17 of King Charles; collected out of their Journals, and printed Ordinances. Most necessary to be known, considered, re-established (in this present juncture of publick affairs) with all possible old and new securities; against past, present, and future publick violations, under-minings, by force or fraud, for the much-desired healing of the manifold large mortal wounds in these chief vital parts, and repairing the various destructive subversive breaches in these prime foundations of our English state-fabrick; without which no effectual present or future healing, union, peace, or settlement can possibly be expected, or established in our distracted nations
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William Prynne
|
1656 |
Engelska |
92 |
A plea for the Lords: or, A short, yet full and necessary vindication of the judiciary and legislative power of the House of Peeres, - and the hereditary just right of the lords and barons of this realme, to sit, vote and judge in the high Court of Parliament. Against the late seditious anti-Parliamentary printed petitions, libells and pamphlets of Anabaptists, Levellers, agitators, Lilburne, Overton, and their dangerous confederates, who endeavour the utter subversion both of parliaments, King and peers, to set up an arbitrary polarchy and anarchy of their own new-modelling
|
William Prynne
|
1648 |
Engelska |
93 |
The Machavilian Cromwellist and hypocritical perfidious new statist - discovering the most detestable falshood, dissimulation and Machavilian practices of L. G. Cromvvel and his confederates, whereby they have a long time abused and cheated both the houses, city and country; and the wicked and treasonable things they have done, and unwarrantable means they have used, to carry on their own ambitious designs
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William Prynne
|
Printed in the year 1648 |
Engelska |
94 |
Beheaded Dr. John Hewytts ghost pleading, yea crying for exemplarie justice against the arbitrarie, un-exampled injustice of his late judges and executioners in the new High-Commission, or Court of Justice, sitting in Westminster-Hall. - Conteining his legal plea, demurrer, and exceptions to their illegal jurisdiction, proceedings, and bloody sentence against him; drawn up by counsel, and left behinde him ready ingrossed; the substance whereof he pleaded before them by word of mouth, and would have tendred them in writing in due form of law, had he not discerned their peremptory resolution to reject and over-rule, before they heard them read
|
William Prynne
|
printed in the year of our Lord, 1659 |
Engelska |
95 |
Mr. Pryn's last and finall declaration to the Commons of England, concerning the King, Parliament, and Army. - And his remonstrance and proposals to the kingdome, shewing, that it is high treason, to compasse or imagine the deposition or death of our Soveraign Lord King Charles. With the oath of allegiance to His Majesty, taken by the Parliament men, before their admission into the House as members
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William Prynne
|
1649 |
Engelska |
96 |
Minors no senators. Or A briefe discourse, proving, that infants under the age of 21. yeares, are uncapable, in point of law, of being members of Parliament, - and that the elections of any such are meere nullities; yea, injurious, prejuditiall, dishonourable to the whole Parliament and Kingdome, in sundry respects
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William Prynne
|
anno 1646 |
Engelska |
97 |
Diotrephes catechised: or Sixteen important questions touching the ecclesiastical jurisdiction and censures (contradistinct to civill) now eagerly pretended to and challenged by a divine right, by some over-rigid Presbyterians, and Independents - Propounded to both these dissenting parties, for the further discovery of truth; the preservation of the civill magistrates interest, and speedier comprising of our present unhappy controversies touching church government: on which many now so over-dote, as to place the whole kingdome of Christ and substance of religion therein, to repute all our former reformation, a meere nothing; the Church of Christ undone, and the exercise of their ministry, not onely fruitlesse but unlawfull, so as they cannot with good conscience continue, but threaten to relinquish it, in case they cannot obtain their demands, of such an exorbitant power, by Divine justitution, which Christ and his Apostles never claimed, exercised, nor themselves, nor predecessors, ever formerly enioyed, petitioned for, or pretended to in any age, but this
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William Prynne
|
Printed anno Dom. 1646 |
Engelska |
98 |
Scotlands ancient obligation to England and publike acknowledgment thereof, - for their brotherly assistance to, and deliverance of them, with the expence of their blood, and hazzard of the state and tranquility of their realm, from the bondage of the French, in the time of their greatest extremity. Anno Dom. 1560
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William Prynne
|
1646 |
Engelska |
99 |
Twelve queries of publick concernment - humbly submitted to the serious consideration of the Great Councell of the Kingdome
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William Prynne
|
MDCXLVII. 1647 |
Engelska |
100 |
A seasonable, legal, and historicall vindication, and chronological collection of the good, old, fundamentall liberties, franchises, rights, laws of all English freemen - their best inheritance, birthright, security, against all arbtrary tyranny, and Ægyptian burdens) and of their strenuous defence in all former ages; of late years most dangerously undermined, and almost totally subverted, under the specious disguise of their defence and future establishment, upon a sure basis, by thier pretended, greatest propuguers. Wherein is, irrefragably evinced by Parliamentary records, ... that we have such fundamental liberties, .... That to attempt or effect the subversion ... by fraud or force, is High Treason. The principal of them summed up in X. Propositions
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William Prynne
|
1655 |
Engelska |