Call Number (LC) Title Results
DA395 .G8518 1841 Historia de la revolución de Inglaterra : precedida de la historia de la nacion inglesa hasta el reinado de Carlos I y continuada por M. Hume hasta la reforma electoral de 1832 / 1
DA395 .H2 Memorials and letters relating to the history of Britain in the reign of Charles the First / 1
DA395 .H49 Observations on the historie of The reign of King Charles published by H.L. Esq., for illustration of the story, and rectifying some mistakes and errors in the course thereof. 1
DA395 .H53 1682 The history of Whiggism, or, The Whiggish-plots, principles, and practices (mining and countermining the Tory-plots and principles) in the reign of King Charles the First, during the conduct of affaires, under the influence of the three great minions and favourites : Buckingham, Laud, and Strafford, and the sad forre-runners and prologues to that fatal-year (to England and Ireland) 41 : wherein (as in a mirrour) is shown the face of the late (we do not say the present) times. 1
DA395 .H65 2006 Why was Charles I executed? / 1
DA395 .H85 The Humble gratulation and petition of divers His Majesties faithfull subjects of the true Protestant religion within the county palatine of Lancaster with His Majesties answer thereunto. 1
DA395 (INTERNET) The Lord Marques of Argyle's speech to a grand committee of both Houses of Parliament the 25th of this instant June, 1646 together with some papers of the commissioners for the kingdom of Scotland, wherein they do give their consent to the sending of the propositions of peace to His Majesty, and desire their armies to be supplyed, and the accounts between the kingdoms to be perfected, to the end all armies may be disbanded, &c. : also His Majesties letter to the Marques of Ormond discharging all further treaty with the Irish rebels : and a letter from General Major Monro concerning the state of affairs in Ireland.
A great discovery of a damnable plot at Rvgland castle in Monmoth-shire in Wales related to the high court of Parliament /
An astrologicall judgement upon His Maiesties present martch begun from Oxford May 7. 1645. /
Observations upon some of His Majesties late answers and expresses
Observations on the historie of The reign of King Charles
The sovereigns prerogative and the subjects priviledge discussed betwixt courtiers and patriots in Parliament, the third and fourth yeares of the reign of King Charles : together with the grand mysteries of state then in agitation.
Ephemeris parliamentaria, or, A faithfull register of the transactions in Parliament in the third and fourth years of the reign of our late Sovereign Lord, King Charles containing the severall speeches, cases and arguments of law transacted between His Majesty and both Houses : together with the grand mysteries of the kingdome then in agitation.
Caledons complaint against infamous libells, &c
Englands remembrancer, or, A thankfull acknowledgement of Parliamentary mercies our English-nation wherein is contained a breife enumeration of all, or the most of Gods free favours and choise blessings multiplied on us since this Parliament first began /
The articles and charge of the armie against fourscore of the Parliament men, who have acted contrary to the trust reposed in them by the people, and would have His Majesties late concessions to be a ground of peace with the names and number of those who were seized on by Col. Pride on Wednesday last at Westminster and committed to safe custody : likewise, the further demands of His Excellency and the Generall Councel of Officers, and their desires touching Major Generall Brown, sheriff of the city of London.
Oratio quâ auspicatissimum serenissimi principis Caroli, reditum ex Hispanijs celebrauit Georgius Herbert Academiæ Cantabrigiensis orator
New propositions propounded by the Earle of Pembrook, the Earle of Northumberland, the Earle of Essex, and the Earle of Holland ; to the lord major, aldermen, and common councell of the city in Guild Hall, on Saturday being the 11 day of June, 1642 ; in the behalfe of all the Commons in England ; whereunto is annexed many remarkeable passages with the numbers of horse that they have underwrit ; together with the substance of a letter sent from Holland ; wherein is declared that there are many hundreds of carbines, 3000 great saddles, 300 barrels of powder, 8 pieces of ordnance which is conceived to be bought with part of the money borrowed upon the jewels of the crowne, and to be transported to England ; also a declaration from both Houses of Parliament concerning the ordering of the militia, directed to the deputy lievtenants of the respective counties throughout all England and Dominion of Wales.
A plea for defensive armes, or, A copy of a letter
The copies of two speeches in Parliament The one by Iohn Glanvill Esquire. The other by Sir Henry Martin Knight. At a generall committee of both houses, the 22. of May. 1628.
Ciuitatis amor The cities loue : An entertainment by water, at Chelsey, and White-hall. At the ioyfull receiuing of that illustrious hope of Great Britaine, the high and mighty Charles, to bee created Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornewall, Earle of Chester, &c. : Together with the ample order and solemnity of his Highnesse creation, as it was celebrated in his Maiesties palace of White-hall on Monday, the fourth of Nouember. 1616. : As also the ceremonies of that ancient and honourable Order of the Knights of the Bath; and all the triumphs showne in honour of his royall creation.
The letter torn in pieces, or, A full confutation of Ludlow's suggestions, that King Charles I. was an enemy to the state
A groane at the fvnerall of the incomparable and glorious monarch, Charles the First, King of Great Brittaine, France and Ireland, &c., on whose sacred person was acted that execrable, horrid and prodigious murther by a trayterous crew, and bloudy combination at Westminster, January 30, 1648
The life of Alfred, or, Alvred the first institutor of subordinate government in this kingdome, and refounder of the Vniversity of Oxford : Together with a parallell of our soveraigne lord, K. Charles untill this yeare, 1634 /
A vvorthy speech spoken by His Excellence the Earle of Essex in the head of his armie before his arrivall at Worcester on Saterday last, being the 24 of September, 1642 : vvherein is declared every particular order and duty which His Excellence expects to be performed both by his commanders and souldiers : with a royall protestation taken by His Excellence and by him prescribed to be taken throughout the armie.
The speeches of the Lord Digby in the High Court of Parliament, concerning grievances, and the trienniall Parliament
Certain letters written to severall persons
Declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament concerning His Majesties advancing with his army toward London : with direction that all the trained bands and volunteers be put into a readinesse : also how Sir Iohn Hinderson urged one David Alexander a Scotchman to kill Sir Iohn Hotham and blow up the Parliaments magazine : to who His Majesty gave money and he received it : together with the depositions of the said David Alexander and Sir Iohn Hinderson : whereunto is added severall votes of the Lords and Commons, corrected and amended by the House of Commons to prevent false copies.
A loud call to great mourning in a sermon preached on the 30th of January 1661, being the anniversary fast for the execrable murther of our Late Soveraign Lord King Charles the First, of Glorious Memory, before the Honourable Knights, citizens, & burgesses of the Commons House of Parliament, in the parish-church of Saint Margarets Westminster /
A new discovery of the prelates tyranny in their late prosecutions of Mr. William Pryn, an eminent Lawyer, Dr. Iohn Bastwick, a learned physitian and Mr. Henry Burton, a reverent divine wherein the separate and joynt proceedings against them in the high commission and Star Chamber their petitions, speeches, cariages at the hearing and execution of their last sentences.
The dvtie of Sir Francis Wortley deliniated in his piovs pitty and christian commiseration of the sorrowes and sufferings of the most vertuous yet unfortunate Lady Elisabeth Queene of Bohemia being a dedication to fame and trvth : prefer'd to both Houses of Parliament /
The reign of King Charles an history faithfully and impartially delivered and disposed into annals.
An earnest call to the people of England to beware of the temptations of the regicide. Ludlow, to contract the guilt of the murther of King Charles the First, by a conceit that the shedding of that royal bloud was no murther, but an act of justice.
His Maiesties speciall command under the great seale of England to the Lord Major of the honourable city of London dated Decemb. 9, 1641 : for the speedy sending of precepts into severall wards of the city : to suppresse the tumultuous and unlawfull assemblies and riotous disorders both in the city of London and VVestminster : vvith a relation of the riotous assemblies, mutinous vproares and disorders made and committed by a company of Brownists or Seperatists within the city of London and VVestminster : also in what manner they entred into St. Georges church where one of them made a sermon on Sunday Decemb. 12 : vvhereunto is added the riotous insurrection and rebellion of some prisoners in New-gate condemned to dye on Munday December 13, 1641.
XIIII orders voted by the high court of Parliament with His Majesties message to the House about the Jesuits that were condemned : and the Parliaments answer to the same : also a petition from the Queene to the Parliament for the release of Father Philips : and the heads of five other petitions for other greevances by divers subjects : whereunto is added a declaration of the offence taken by the Parliament against the Iustices of Middlesex for affronting of the citizens of London in the bringing in of their petition for which Iustice Long was committed to the Tower, Decemb. 13, 1641.
The doome of cowardisze and treachery, or, A looking-glasse for cowardly or corrupt governours, and souldiers, who through pusillanimity or bribery, betray their trusts, to the publick prejudice Containing certaine domestick lawes, heretofore, lately made, and judgements given against such timorous and treacherous persons; fit to be known in these unhappy times of warre. /
A Discourse shewing in what state the three kingdomes are in at this present
Mr. Speakers speech on Thursday the thirteenth of May 1641 as it was delivered to the Kings Majesty before the Lords in Parliament at the presenting of these three bills, viz : an act for the shortning of Michaelmas term, for the pressing of marriners for the kings ships, for the remainder of the six entire subsidies.
Two letters of note the one master speakers letter ordered by the honorable House of Commons to the high sheriffe and gentry of Yorke-shire : the other from the lords of the counsell in Ireland to the high court of Parliament here in England, &c.
The cry of blood and of a broken covenant written out at first upon the sad relation of our late Soveraignes most treacherous and inhumane murther : most humbly dedicated and then proposed to have been published and presented to the Kings most excellent Majestie if so Providence had dispensed, and now, how late soever, all obstructions being removed, adventured upon His Majesties gracious acceptance and favor of all herein concerned to remain at least as a standing testamonie to posteritie, of the authors conceived sense of duety, in conscience to God and alleagiance to lawfull soveraignty /
The Kings most gracious messages for peace and a personal treaty published for his peoples satisfaction, that they may see and judge, whether the foundation of the Commons declaration, touching their votes of no farther addresse to the King, viz His Majesties aversenesse to peace, be just rationall and religious.
A sermon preached before the King, January 30, 1668/9, being the day of the execrable murther of King Charles I
A vindication of King Charles, or, A loyal subjects duty Manifested in vindicating his soveraigne from those aspersions cast upon him by certaine persons, in a scandalous libel, entituled, The Kings cabinet opened : and published (as they say) by authority of Parliament : whereunto is added, a true parallel betwixt the sufferings of our Saviour and our soveraign, in divers particulars, &c /
The privileges of Parliament which the members, army, and this kingdom have taken the protestation and covenant to maintain reprinted for consideration and confirmation on the 5th of January 1659, the day appointed to remember them.
A speech delivered in Parliament by Sir Benjamin Rudyard
The Lord Digby his last speech against the Earle of Strafford occasioned upon the reading the bill of attainder touching the point of treason.
His Majesties speech to both Houses of Parliament December the second 1641
A memento, directed to all those that truly reverence the memory of King Charles the martyr and as passionately wish the honour, safety, and happinesse of his royall successour, our most gratious sovereign Charles the II : the first part /
The protestation of the noblemen, barrons, gentlemen, borrowes, ministers, and commons subscribers of the confession of faith and covenant, lately renewed within the kingdome of Scotland, made at the Mercate Crosse of Edinburgh the 22. of September immediatly after the reading of the proclamation, dated September 9. 1638.
Sir Beniamin Rudyard his learned speech in Parliament on Wednesday being the twenty ninth day of December 1641 concerning the treatie with the Scottish commissioners about the Irish affairs : vvith the letts [sic] and impediments that have hindred the proceedings of the Parliament therein : as also the removeall of the papists from court and all popish officers from severall places of imployment within this kingdome.
A reply to the Answer (printed by His Majesties command at Oxford) to a printed booke intituled Observations upon some of His Maiesties late answers and expresses
By the King, a proclamation for the adjournement of part of Michaelmas terme
By the King, a proclamation for the avoyding of all intercourse betweene His Maiesties Royall Court and the cities of London and Westminster, and places adioyning
By the King a proclamation concerning the adiournement of the Parliament.
By the King a proclamation signifying His Maiesties pleasure, that all men being in office of government, at the decease of his most deare, and most royall father, King Iames, shall so continue, till His Maiesties further direction.
By the King a proclamation for restraint of disorders in souldiers, prested [sic] for His Maiesties seruice.
A vindication of the King· with some observations upon the two Houses /
The advice of that vvorthy commander Sir Ed. Harvvood, collonell
A second defence of King Charles I by way of reply to an infamous libel called Ludlow's letter to Dr. Hollingworth.
A continuation of a former relation concerning the entertainment giuen to Prince His Highnesse by the King of Spaine in his court at Madrid
A sermon preached before the Aldermen of the city of London, at St. Lawrence-church, Jan 30. 1680/1 being the day of the martyrdome of K. Charles I. /
A true relation and iournall, of the manner of the arrivall, and magnificent entertainment, giuen to the high and mighty Prince Charles, Prince of Great Britaine, by the King of Spaine in his court at Madrid
A protestation of the gentlemen prisoners in the Tower of London dated October 1647 made by them upon the occasion of an order of the House of Commons for their sudden removall thence to severall other persons where by treason of the sequestring them of all their estates (contrary to the known and fundamentall laws of England, contained in Magna Charta and the petition of right, &c. so often sword to be maintained and inviolably observed by this present Parliament) and denying unto them according to the known law of the land, allowance for their maintenance) they must in reason be necessitated to sterve and perish : unto which is prefixed their letter, which the 14 of October 1647 was delivered to the speaker of the House of Commons.
Matters of great note and consequence 1 divers questions upon His Majesties last answer concerning the militia resolved upon by both Houses of Parliament to be of dangerous consequence : 2 a true relation of the strange and unitmely deathes which hath successively befalen all the nobility and others which have beene the possessors of Shirborne Castle in Dorset-shire since that it was unlawfully usurped and taken from the church by King Stephen in Anno Dom. 1100 : which castle is now in the possession of George Lord Digby : and how the case stands with him I leave to the courteous reader to censure : whereunto is added certaine articles of high treason against the said Lord Digby.
Admirable and notable things of note viz, 1. the royall letter sent from the French King to his brother the King of England : 2. a true coppy of the Lord George Digbies last letter to the Queenes Majesty : 3. the Queenes Majesties gracious answer to the same : 4. a horrible treason discovered from Holland which was plotted by a company of Iesuites and papists against the Lady Elizabeth at the Hague the seventh of March last, 1641.
Trve nevves from Yorke consisting of severall matters of note, and high concernment since the 13 of Iune : concerning these severall heads, viz. : concerning 1. Sir Iohn Meldrun, 2. L. Marq. Hamilton, 3. Earl of Newcastle, 4. Earle of Warwick, 5. Lord Willoughbit, 6. Duke of Richmond, 7. L. Marq. Hertford, 8. Earle of Bristoll, 9. Lord Paget : whereunto is added newes from Ireland, viz. : concerning 1. E. of Antrime, 2. E. of Castlehaven, 3. Lord Conway, 4. Lord Digby : with a catalogue of the names of the lords that subscribed to levie hose to assist His Majestie in defence of of [sic] his royall person, the two Houses of Parliament, and the Protestant religion.
The humble petition of Mr. Prynne, late exile, and close prisoner in the isle of Iersey presented to the Honorable, the knights, citizens and burgesses, of the Commons House of Parliament.
A vindication of the honour of King Charles I against the prodigious calumnies of the regicide, Ludlow, publisht in what he calls A letter from Major-General Ludlow to Sir E.S.
Newes from Scotland, His Maiesties manifest touching the Palatine cause and act of Parliament concerning the same : read, voiced, and past in the Parliament of Scotland, the 6 day of September, 1641.
Englands looking-glasse presented in a sermon preached before the Honorable House of Commons at their late solemne fast, December 22, 1641 /
The intentions of the army of the kingdome of Scotland, declared to their brethren of England, by the commissioners of the late parliament, and by the generall, noblemen, barons, and others, officers of the army
The Earle of Essex his speech in the Partilrie garden to the souldiers on Tuesday last with His Majesties propositions to the citizens of London likevvise terrible and blovdy news from Yorke concerning the great affront which was given to the said city by the cavileers and how the citizens gave them a repulse and shut up the gates : whereunto is annexed, Londons resolution for the defence of the King and Parliament.
A defence of the Parliament of 1640. and the people of England against King Charles I. and his adherents containing a short account of some of the many illegal, arbitrary, Popish and tyrannical actions of King Charles I. unjustly called the pious martyr; together with the following tracts, &c. 1. The Pope's letter to King Charles ... 14. To give a clear demonstration of this holy martyr's religion and piety, see his declaration for the lawfulness of sports and pastimes on the Lord's Day, printed at large in this book.
An elegy upon the most incomparable K. Charles the I persecuted by two implacable factions, imprisoned by the one, and murthered by the other, January 30th 1648.
Englands hallelu-jah, or, Great Brittaines gratefull retribution, for Gods gratious benediction In our many and most famous deliuerances, since the halcyon-dayes of euer-blessed Queene Elizabeth, to these present times. Together, with diuers of Dauids Psalmes, according to the French metre and measures. /
The diseases of the times, or, The distempers of the common-wealth succinctly describing each particular disease wherin the kingdome is troubled : contracted into these heads viz. 1. the immedicable tumour of faction : 2. the strange diffusuion of Brownianisme : 3. the stupendeous inundation of heresie : 4. the desperate swelling of obstinacy : 5. the dangerous disease of feminine divinity : 6. the aspiring ambition of presumption : 7. the audacious height of disobedience : 8. the painted deceitfulnesse of hypecrisie.
The history of the Kings Majesties affairs in Scotland under the conduct of the most Honourable James Marques of Montrose, Earl of Kincardin, &c. and generall governour of that kingdome : in the years, 1644. 1645. & 1646.
Basiliká the works of King Charles the martyr : with a collection of declarations, treaties, and other papers concerning the differences betwixt His said Majesty and his two houses of Parliament : with the history of his life : as also of his tryal and martyrdome.
72
DA395 .K56 1641 The King His Maiesties most gracious speech made to the lord maior the recorder, and the rest of the aldermen of this honourable, and renowned city of London, upon Thursday, November the 25, 1641 : and his message to the Lords, concerning the trayned bands, with theirs, and the House of Commons petition to His Majesty, and his royall answer by the Earle of Warwicke, and the Earle of Bristow : with the examination of divers of the Irish, lately apprehended as suspitious persons : and orders from the High Court of Parliament, concerning the suppressing of papists : as also, another order for the recalling of the trayned bands, to their daily attendance, as formerly, Nov. 27, 1641. 1
DA395 .L38 1640 Late newes from the north: being, A relation of the skirmish betwixt the English and Scots, neere the river of Tine. As also the manner of the Scots entrance into Newcastle. 1
DA395 .L46 Mr Speaker his speech to His Majestie, in the high court of Parliament, the fifth of November. 1640. 1
DA395 .L47 The observator observed, or, Animadversions upon observations on the history of King Charles wherein that history is vindicated, partly illustrated, and severall other things tending to the rectification of some publique mistakes, are inserted : to which is added, at the latter end, the observators rejoinder.
The reign of King Charles an history disposed into annalls.
2
DA395 .L68 The reign of King Charles. : an history diposed into annalls. 1
DA395 .M25 Politics, religion and the English Civil War / 1
DA395 .M3 The age of Charles I. 1
DA395 .M67 1628 A Most exact catalogue of the Lords spirituall and temporall, as Peers of the realme, in the higher House of Parliament, according to their dignities, offices, and degrees, some other called thither for their assistance, & officers of their attendances and also the names of the knights for the counties, citizens, burgesses for the boroughs, and barons for the ports for the House of Commons, for this Parliament : whereunto is added the names of the knights of the Bath, and baronets, made by King Iames, and King Charles. 1
DA395 .N49 1643 A nevv plea for the Parliament and the reserved man resolved : from the serious considerations of the state of the controversie, between the King and the Parliament : together with severall answers to some common objections about this subject : with advice to those who are yet unsetled in their thoughts hereabout / 1
DA395 .O27 1628 The Oath of euery free-man of the citie of London 1
DA395 .P3 Patent declaring Catherine Lady Ogle daughter of Cuthburt[?] Lord Ogle and her h[...] to be Baronesse & Barone Ogle. Brought up from Wolbek 1
DA395 .P5 A Plot lately discovered for the taking of the Tower, by negromancie for the deliverance of the Archbishop, discovered by a mathematician in Southwarke, who after some serious debate with himself revealed the conspiracie to many eminent men : for which thirty Papists most inhumanely beset his house, and pursued him as far as Lambred upon Trent, where they most barbarously murdered him : some are taken, and lie in hold, to the mercy of justice. 2
DA395 .P53 The Plain dealer an essay wherein are some remarks upon Mr. Thomas Long, but more particularly upon Dr. Hollingworth's book where the character of King Charles the first is inserted from the declaration of Mr. Alexander Henderson, which book he calls A further defence of the Kings holy book &c. 2