Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
BX1492 .G85 | The struggle for Catholic emancipation (1750-1829) / | 1 |
BX1492 .H3 | The Catholics in Caroline England. | 1 |
BX1492 .H58 1982 | Resistance and compromise : the political thought of the Elizabethan Catholics / | 1 |
BX1492 .H8 | The hue and cry after Father Peters, by the deserted Roman Catholicks. | 1 |
BX1492 .H92 1580 | A consolatorie epistle to the afflicted Catholikes | 1 |
BX1492 (INTERNET) |
An epistle of the persecution of Catholickes in Englande The confession of John Browne, a Iesvite, in the gate-house twice examined by a committee from the honourable House of Commons wherein is discovered the late plots of the Pope and papacy against these kingdomes, England, Scotland, and Ireland : and the manner how he poceeds in his intents to intrude himselfe into the temporall monarchy hereof : with the copy of the Popes Breve, & the fansinesse of his Nuntio with the English ladies : and the event that may preoceed by stopping such proceedings. The late apology in behalf of the papists reprinted and answered in behalf of the royallists A relation of the triall made before the King of France, vpon the yeare 1600 betvveene the Bishop of Eureux, and the L. Plessis Mornay About certayne pointes of corrupting and falsifying authors, wherof the said Plessis was openly conuicted. / Another letter of Mr. A.C. to his dis-Iesuited kinseman, concerning the appeale, state, Iesuites Also a third letter of his, apologeticall for himselfe against the calumnies contained against him in a certaine Iesuiticall libell, intituled, A manifestation of folly and bad spirit, etc. Virtumnus romanus, or, A discovrse penned by a Romish priest wherein he endevours to prove that it is lawfull for a papist in England to goe to the Protestant church, to receive the communion, and to take the oathes, both of allegiance and supremacie : to which are adjoyned animadversions in the in the [sic] margin by way of antidote against those places where the rankest poyson is couched / An epistle to the truly religious and loyal gentry of the Church of England A letter from a gentleman in the city to a gentleman in the country, about the odiousness of persecution wherein the rise and end of the penal laws for religion in this kingdom, are consider'd : occasioned by the late rigorous proceedings against sober dissenters, by certain angry justices in the country. A letter to the D. of P in answer to the argueing part of his first letter to Mr. G[ooden] A dialogue between two friends occasioned by the late revolution of affairs, and the oath of allegiance A Coppy of the prisoners jvdgment condemned tody [sic] from Nvgate on Mundaie the 13 of Decemb. 1641 vvith the examination of the Bishop of Calcedon and the rest of the Iesuits condemned to die and the names of the other prisoners condemned and the matter for which they suffer vvhereunto is added the names of those who deny the oath of supremacy : shewed first to the officers of the prison and after to one of the Iury that so the truth might be printed. A treatise tending to mitigation tovvardes Catholike-subiectes in England VVherin is declared, that it is not impossible for subiects of different religion, (especially Catholikes and Protestantes) to liue togeather in dutifull obedience and subiection, vnder the gouernment of his Maiesty of Great Britany. Against the seditions wrytings of Thomas Morton minister, & some others to the contrary. Whose two false and slaunderous groundes, pretended to be dravvne ... / Reflexions upon the oathes of supremacy and allegiance A defence of the right of kings Wherein the power of the papacie ouer princes, is refuted; and the Oath of Allegeance iustified. / A declaration of the fauourable dealing of her Maiesties commissioners appointed for the examination of certain traitours and of tortures vniustly reported to be done vpon them for matters of religion. 1583. A discussion of the ansvvere of M. VVilliam Barlovv, D. of Diuinity, to the booke intituled: The iudgment of a Catholike Englishman liuing in banishment for his religion &c Concerning the apology of the new Oath of allegiance. / A quiet and sober reckoning vvith M. Thomas Morton somewhat set in choler by his aduersary P.R. concerning certaine imputations of wilfull falsities obiected to the said T.M. in a treatise of P.R. intituled Of mitigation, some part wherof he hath lately attempted to answere in a large preamble to a more ample reioynder promised by him. But heere in the meane space the said imputations are iustified, and confirmed, & with much increase of new vntruthes on his part returned vpon him againe: so as finally the reconing being made, the verdict of the Angell, interpreted by Daniel, is verified of him. There is also adioyned a peece of a reckoning with Syr Edward Cooke, now L. Chief Iustice of the Co[m]mon Pleas, about a nihil dicit, & some other points vttered by him in two late preambles, to his sixt and seauenth partes of Reports. A temperate vvard-vvord, to the turbulent and seditious VVach-word of Sir Francis Hastinges knight vvho indeuoreth to slaunder the vvhole Catholique cause, & all professors therof, both at home and abrode. Reduced into eight seueral encounters, vvith a particuler speeche directed to the Lordes of her Maiesties most honorable Councel. To vvhome the arbitriment of the vvhole is remitted. / A bvll from Rome, consisting of 15 pardons for delinquents in these kingdomes vvith a declaration of the Popes election in the chaire at Rome where the cardinalls, with their stript-up armes, doe use to feele, before his consecration, whether he bee a man or woman : whereunto is occasionally related by them the orginall cause of womens vailes and of their wicked tongues. The good old cause rightly stated, and the false un-cased |
20 |
BX1492 .J47 1677 | [A collection of several treatises concerning the reasons and occasions of the penal laws. Viz. I. The execution of justice in England, not for religion, but for treason: 17 Dec. 1583. II. Important considerations, by the secular priests: printed A.D. 1601. III. The Jesuits reasons unreasonable: 1662] | 1 |
BX1492 .L35 2019 | All hail to the Archpriest : confessional conflict, toleration, and the politics of publicity in post-reformation England / | 1 |
BX1492 .L43 |
The best fence against popery, or, A vindication of the power of the king in ecclesiastical affairs being an answer to the papists objections against the oath of supremacy : to which is added Queen Elizabeth's admonition declaring the sense of the said oath, and King James's vindication of the oath of allegiance / The best fence against popery, or, A vindication of the power of the king in ecclesiastical affairs being an answer to the papists objections against the oath of supremacy : to which is added, Queen Elizabeth's admonition, declaring the sense of the said oath, and King James's vindication of the oath of allegiance / |
4 |
BX1492 .L47 | A Letter to Mr. S., a Romish priest concerning the impossibility of the public establishment of popery here in England. | 2 |
BX1492 .L48 1961 | Catholics in England, 1559-1829 : a social history / | 1 |
BX1492 .L48 1961a | Catholics in England, 1559-1829 : a social history / | 1 |
BX1492 .L66 1673 | The late apology in behalf of the papists reprinted and answered in behalf of the royallists | 2 |
BX1492 .M23 2016 | The Catholic Church and the campaign for emancipation in Ireland and England / | 1 |
BX1492 .M244 1996 | The loyal opposition : Tudor traditionalist polemics, 1535-1558 / | 1 |
BX1492 .M3 | The Catholic question in English politics, 1820 to 1830 / | 1 |
BX1492 .M33 2018 | Divided loyalties? : pushing the boundaries of gender and lay roles in the Catholic Church, 1534-1829 / | 1 |
BX1492 .M34 2005 | Religious ideology and cultural fantasy : Catholic and anti-Catholic discourses in early modern England / | 1 |
BX1492 .M35 1994 | The Catholic priesthood and the English Reformation / | 1 |
BX1492 .M37 2004 | Lest we be damned : practical innovation and lived experience among Catholics in Protestant England, 1559-1642 / | 1 |