Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
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BR757 .H34 | The country clergy in Elizabethan & Stuart times, 1558-1660. | 1 |
BR757 .H37 |
For the magistrates & other officers in Huntingtonshire who have been concern'd in the spoiling the goods of the innocent who meet together in obedience to the requirings of the good spirit of the Lord to worship him in his own way The Harmonious consent of the ministers of the province within the county palatine of Lancaster, with their reverend brethren the ministers of the province of London in their late testimonie to the trueth of Jesus Christ, and to our Solemn league and covenant : as also against the errours, heresies, and blasphemies of these times, and the toleration of them. The Harmonious consent of the ministers of the province within the county palatine of Lancaster, with their reverend bretheren, the ministers of the province of London in their late testimony to the truth of Jesus Christ, and to the Solemn league and convenant : as also against the errours, heresies, and blasphemies of these times, and the toleration of them. |
6 |
BR757 .H4 1666 | A speech delivered to the king in the name of the forreign [sic] churches of the realm, for the royal protection which his majesty hath been pleased to assure ... / | 1 |
BR757 .H54 | Antichrist in seventeenth-century England : the Riddell memorial lectures, forty-first series, delivered at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne on 3, 4 and 5 November 1969 / | 1 |
BR757 (INTERNET) |
The returne of the renowned caualiero Pasquill of England, from the other side the seas, and his meeting with Marforius at London vpon the Royall Exchange VVhere they encounter with a little houshold talke of Martin and Martinisme, discouering the scabbe that is bredde in England : and conferring together about the speedie dispersing of the golden legende of the liues of the saints. A friendly admonition to Martine Marprelate, and his mates A vvhip for an ape, or, Martin displaied A caution to constables and other inferiour officers, concerned in the execution of the Conventicle-Act with some observations thereupon, humbly offered, by way of advice, to such well-meaning and moderate justices of the peace, as would not willingly ruine their peaceable neighbours, but act (in relation to that act) rather by constraint, than by choice / An epistle written from Lucifer, Prince of Darkness vnto his well-beloved children the persecuting popish prelats / A letter writ by Mijn Heer Fagel, pensioner of Holland, to Mr. James Stewart, advocate giving an account of the Prince and Princess of Orange's thoughts concerning the repeal of the Test, and penal laws. The Humble petition of the county of Cornwall to the Kings Most Excellent Majestie subscribed by above seven thousand hands : with His Majesties answer thereunto : whereunto is added the oaths of allegiance and supremacie. Mar-Martine I know not why a trueth in rime set out maie not as wel mar Martine and his mates, as shamelesse lies in prose-books cast about marpriests, & prelates, and subvert whole states. For where truth builds, and lying overthroes, one truth in rime, is worth ten lies in prose. An answer to a Catholike English-man (so by himselfe entitvled) who, without a name, passed his censure vpon the apology made by the Right High and Mightie Prince Iames by the grace of God King of Great Brittaine, France, and Ireland &c. for the oath of allegiance : which censvre is heere examined and refvted / Sam. Ld. Bp. of Oxon, his celebrated reasons for abrogating the test and notions of idolatry, answered by Samuel, Arch-Deacon of Canterbury. An almond for a parrat, or, Cutbert Curry-knaues almes Fit for the knaue Martin, and the rest of those impudent beggers, that can not be content to stay their stomakes with a benefice, but they will needes breake their fastes with our bishops. Risum sum plenus. Therefore beware (gentle reader) you catch not the hicket with laughing. A vvonderfull, strange and miraculous astrologicall prognostication for this yeere 1591 Discouering such wonders to happen this yeere, an neuer chaunced since Noes floud. Wherein if there be found one lye, the author will loose his credit for euer. Newly corrected. / Fourteen papers Marre Mar-Martin, or, Marre-Martins medling, in a manner misliked Martins vaine prose, Marre-Martin doth mislike, reason (forsooth) for Martin seekes debate ... Martin, Marre-Martin, Barrow ioynd with Browne shew zeale : yet striue to pull religion downe. Pierces supererogation, or, A new prayse of the old asse A preparatiue to certaine larger discourses, intituled Nashes s. fame. / Oh read ouer D. Iohn Bridges, for it is worthy worke, or, An epitome of the fyrste booke, of that right worshipfull volume, written against the puritanes, in the defence of the noble cleargie, by as worshipfull a prieste, Iohn Bridges ... Wherein the arguments of the puritans are wisely prevented ... / Plaine Perceuall the peace-maker of England Sweetly indeuoring with his blunt persuasions to botch vp a reconciliation between Mar-ton and Mar-tother. / Martins months minde that is, a certaine report, and true description of the death, and funeralls, of olde Martin Marreprelate, the great makebate of England, and father of the factious. Contayning the cause of his death, the manner of his buriall, and the right copies both of his will, and of such epitaphs, as by sundrie his dearest friends, and other of his well willers, were framed for him. A demonstration of the trueth of that discipline which Christe hath prescribed in his worde for the gouernment of his Church, in all times and places, vntill the ende of the worlde wherein are gathered into a plaine forme of reasoning, the proofes thereof, out of the scriptures, the euidence of it by the light of reason rightly ruled, and the testimonies that haue beene giuen therevnto, by the course of the churche certaine hundredths of yeares after the Apostles time, and the generall consent of the Churches rightly reformed in these latter times : according as they are alleaged and maintained, in those seuerall bookes that haue bin written concerning the same. Pappe with an hatchet, alias, A figge for my God sonne, or, Cracke me this nut, or, A countrie cuffe that is, a sound boxe of the eare, for the idiot Martin to hold his peace, seeing the patch will take no warning / An ansuer vntho [sic] the complaint of R. Cant that he is an athean, Ievv, vilain, traitour, in Rabbi Dauid farars [sic] disputation at Amsteldam. A myrror for Martinists, and all other schismatiques, which in these dangerous daies doe breake the godlie vnitie, and disturbe the Christian peace of the Church An enquiry into the reasons for abrogating the test imposed on all members of Parliament Six papers Truths caracter of professors and their teachers which by looking through may bring to their remembrance the dayes of old, and how it was then with them, which may evidently shew unto them what hath befallen them since they degenerated from the measure of God, which some of them had in them, and it may also put them in mind of Gods justice and severity towards them ... / Rythmes against Martin Marre-Prelate A letter form [sic] a gentleman in the country to his friends in London upon the subject of the penal laws and tests Reasons for abrogating the test imposed upon all members of Parliament, anno 1678, Octob. 30 in these words, I A.B. do solemnly and sincerely, in the presence of God, profess, testifie, and declare, that I do believe that in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper there is not any transubstantiation of the elements of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ, at, or after the consecration thereof by any person whatsoever, and that the invocation or adoration of the Virgin Mary, or any other saint, and the sacrifice of the mass, as they are now used in the Church of Rome, are superstitious and idolatrous : first written for the author's own satisfaction, and now published for the benefit of all others whom it may concern. |
28 |
BR757 .J36 1660 | King James his apology for the oath of allegiance and supremacy; against the two breves of Pope Paulus Quintus, and the late letter of Cardinal Bellarmine to G. Blackwell the arch-priest. | 1 |
BR757 .J36 2011 | Alchemical belief : occultism in the religious culture of early modern England / | 1 |
BR757.J36 2011 | Alchemical belief : occultism in the religious culture of early modern england. | 1 |
BR757 .K38 1996 | Prayer, despair, and drama : Elizabethan introspection / | 1 |
BR757 .K57 2013 | Persuasion and Conversion : Essays on Religion, Politics, and the Public Sphere in Early Modern England. | 1 |
BR757 .L25 2015 | Scandal and religious identity in early Stuart England : a Northamptonshire maid's tragedy / | 1 |
BR757 .L27 2001 | The boxmaker's revenge : 'orthodoxy', 'heterodoxy', and the politics of the parish in early Stuart London / | 1 |
BR757 .L39 1988 | The reformation of cathedrals : cathedrals in English society, 1485-1603 / | 1 |
BR757 .L39 1988eb | The reformation of cathedrals : cathedrals in English society, 1485-1603 / | 1 |
BR757 .L43 | The Wallons consistory and excommunication | 2 |
BR757 .L66 | Religion, order, and law : a study in pre-Revolutionary England. | 1 |
BR757 .L68 | Makers of religious freedom in the seventeenth century : Henderson, Rutherford, Bunyan, Baxter. | 1 |
BR757 .L8 1688 | An answer to the Bishop of Oxford's Reasons for abrogating the test, impos'd on all members of Parliament anno 1678. Octob. 30. in these words, I A.B. do solemnly and sincerely, in the presence of God, profess: testifie, and declare, that I do believe that in the sacrament of the Lord's Supper there is not any transubstantiation of the elements of bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ, at, or after the consecration thereof by any person whatsoever; and that the invocation, or adoration of the Virgin Mary, or any other saint, and the sacrifice of the Mass, as they are now used in the Church of Rome, are superstitious and idolatrous. / | 1 |
BR757 .M16 | John Penry and the Marprelate controversy. | 1 |
BR757 .M2 1967 | The Marprelate tracts [1588-1589] | 1 |