Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
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DA400 -- H6 2010eb | Clarendon Edition of Works of Thomas Hobbes, Volume X : Behemoth or The Long Parliament. | 1 |
DA400 .H63 H63 2012 | Hobbes's Behemoth : Religion and Democracy. | 1 |
DA400.H63 K73 1990 | History and modernity in the thought of Thomas Hobbes / | 1 |
DA400 .H67 |
Horrible newes from Yorke, Hull, and Newcastle, concerning the Kings Maiesties intent to take up armes against the Parliament with His Maiesties threatenings to imprison the Lord Fairefax, Sir Phillip Stapleton, and the rest of the committee appointed by the Parliament to sit at Yorke, and the ioynt votes of both Houses concerning the same : also the Lord Stamfords report to the Pariiament [sic] concerning the da[n]ger of Hull, and His Majesties resolution to take up armes : together with the Parliaments speciall command throughout all England and Wales. Horrible newes from Yorke, Hull, and Newcastle, concerning the Kings Maiesties intent to take up armes against the Parliament with His Maiesties threatenings to imprison the Lord Fairefax, Sir Phillip Stapleton, and the rest of the committee appointed by the Parliament to sit at Yorke, and the ioynt votes of both Houses concerning the same : also the Lord Stamfords report to the Pariiament [sic] concerning the da[n]ger of Hull, and His Majesties resolution to take up armes : together with the Parliaments speciall command throughout all England and Wales. |
2 |
DA400 (INTERNET) |
A letter from the Commissioners of the Kingdom of Scotland residing here at London to William Lenthall Esq. Speaker of the House of Commons concerning the present proceedings in this kingdome, against religion, the King, and government : together with their declaration and protestation against the taking away His Majesties life. Twelve considerable serious questions touching chvrch government sadly propounded (out of a reall desire of vnitie and tranquillity in church and state) to all sober-minded Christians, cordially affecting a speedy setled reformation, and brotherly Christian vnion in all our churches and denominations, now miserably wasted with civill unnatuall warres, and deplorably lacerated with ecclesiasticall dissentions / England's worthies under whom all the civill and bloudy warres since anno 1642 to anno 1647 are related : wherein are described the severall battails, encounters, and assaults of cities, townes, and castles at severall times and places, so that the reader may behold the time, yeare, and event of every battle, skirmish, and assault wherein London-apprentices had not the least share : as also, severall victories by sea by the noble Admirall Robert, Earle of Warwick. His Majesties declaration to all his loving subjects, of the causes which moved him to dissolve the last Parliament. / The Manner of discovering the King at Southwell on Tuesday the 5. of April, 1646, who is now in the Parliaments quarters before Newarke Banbury taken in, with the ordnance, armes, and ammunition : and the treaty with Sir Charles Compton from Oxford : also the copie of Sir Thomas Fairfax's proclamation commanded to be read in all churches neere Oxford : and a copie of a summons sent to Ludlow, and the governours answer : and a copie of Colonel Birch his letter. An appendix to the late answer printed by His Majesties command, or, Some seasonable animadversions upon the late observator and his seaven anti-monarchicall assertions with a vindication of the King and some observations upon the two houses. One sheet, or, If you will a winding sheet for the good old cause in order to a decent funerall, in case of a second death / The coppy of two letters from Sr. Thomas Rowe Lord Embassador Extraordinary for His Majesty in Germany. One to the Earle of Holland. The other to Mr. Edward Waller, one of the Members of the House of Commons. Concerning the French Embassadors accusation against him in the House of Peeres. The Dvke of Lenox his honovrable and vvorthy speech in the high court of Parliament in Scotland Octob. 28, 1641 concerning the Kings Majesties returne into England : and a certaine affront which was given to himselfe and the Marquisse Hamilton when they first came to take their places in the Parliament House. Most curious Mercurius Brittanicus, alias Sathanicus, answer'd, cuff'd, cudgell'd, and clapper-claude ... To the right honorable the knights, citizens, and burgesses of the House of Commons assembled in Parliament the humble petition of Edmond Felton, Gent. The Kings letter intercepted coming from Oxford with a ioyful and true relation of th[e?] great victory obtained by Sir Thomas Fairfax, Sir William Brereton, and Sir VVilliam Fairfax, against the Irish at the raising of the siege at Nantwich on Friday last January 26, 1643. Salmasius his dissection and confutation of the diabolical rebel Milton in his impious doctrines of falshood, maxims of policies, and destructive principles of hypocrisie, insolences, invectives, injustice, cruelties and calumnies, against His Gracious Soveraign King Charles I : made legible for the satisfaction of all loyal and obedient subjects, but by reason of the rigid inquisition after persons and presses by the late merciless tyrant Oliver Cromwel, durst not be sold publickly in this kingdom, under pain of imprisonment and other intollerable dammages. A modest plea both for the caveat, and the author of it with some notes upon Mr. James Howell, and his sober inspections / Animadversions on a petition delivered to the honourable House of Parliament by several of the godly party in the county of Salop in vindication of the present government of the commonwealth, the prudent conduct of the army, and the liberties of the people / His Maiesties passing through the Scots armie as also, his entertainment by Generall Lesly : together with the manner of the Scots marching out of New-Castle / A chronicle of the late intestine war in the three kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland with the intervening affairs of treaties and other occurrences relating thereunto : as also the several usurpations, forreign wars, differences and interests depending upon it, to the happy restitution of our sacred soveraign, K. Charles II : in four parts, viz. the commons war, democracie, protectorate, restitution / Evangelium armatum A specimen, or short collection of several doctrines and positions destructive to our government, both civil and ecclesiastical / Master Hollis his speech in Parliament the 21, of March 1642 wherein is contained his declaration concerning the Kings Atturney Generall for his abuse given to the House of Commons in the accusation of high treason against the sixe members of the House : as also his advice concerning the last commands issued from the said House. |
19 |
DA400 .J36 |
Salmasius his dissection and confutation of the diabolical rebel Milton in his impious doctrines of falshood, maxims of policies, and destructive principles of hypocrisie, insolences, invectives, injustice, cruelties and calumnies, against His Gracious Soveraign King Charles I : made legible for the satisfaction of all loyal and obedient subjects, but by reason of the rigid inquisition after persons and presses by the late merciless tyrant Oliver Cromwel, durst not be sold publickly in this kingdom, under pain of imprisonment and other intollerable dammages. Salmasius his dissection and confutation of the diabolical rebel Milton in his impious doctrines of falshood, maxims of policies, and destructive principles of hypocrisie, insolences, invectives, injustice, cruelties and calumnies, against His Gracious Soveraign King Charles I : made legible for the satisfaction of all loyal and obedient subjects, but by reason of the rigid inquisition after persons and presses by the late merciless tyrant Oliver Cromwel, durst not be sold publickly in this kingdom, under pain of imprisonment and other intollerable dammages. |
2 |
DA400 .J4 1966 | Background to the English Civil War | 1 |
DA400 .K46 | A petition and protestation of the county of Kent | 2 |
DA400 .K5 | The Kings Maiesties resolvtion concerning Robert Earl of Warwicke, Lord Admirall of His Majesties navie royall, wherein is declared the Kings full resolution and intention concerning his navie, now lying upon the downs. : With the Earl of Warwicks declaration to both Houses of Parliament, and the oath taken by all his captains, lieutenants, and other inferiour officers, under his command, belonging to the fleet. : Also the proceedings of the Earl of Warwicke and Sir Iohn Pennington, lying neer to the said Earl with a great number of cavaleers near the downs : ... whereunto is annexed, exceeding joyfull newes from Ireland, being the copy of a letter read in the House of Commons on Saturday last, Iuly the 8. | 1 |
DA400 .K56 1644 |
The Kings letter intercepted coming from Oxford with a ioyful and true relation of th[e?] great victory obtained by Sir Thomas Fairfax, Sir William Brereton, and Sir VVilliam Fairfax, against the Irish at the raising of the siege at Nantwich on Friday last January 26, 1643 .. The Kings letter intercepted coming from Oxford with a ioyful and true relation of th[e?] great victory obtained by Sir Thomas Fairfax, Sir William Brereton, and Sir VVilliam Fairfax, against the Irish at the raising of the siege at Nantwich on Friday last January 26, 1643. |
2 |
DA400 .L3 1660 | The last vvill and testament of that monstrous, bloudy, tyrannical, cruel, and abominable Parliament dissembled at Westminster, May 15, 1648. Being desperately sick in every part of its ungodly members, as well committees, sequestrators, sollicitors, promoters, clerks, door keepers, and all other her untrue and unlawful adherents in manner and form is in here specified. | 1 |
DA400 .L4 | A letter sent from the agitators of the army, under the command of His Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax, to the souldyers, and others, vvel-affected in North-VVales. | 1 |
DA400 .L47 | A modest plea both for the caveat, and the author of it with some notes upon Mr. James Howell, and his sober inspections / | 2 |
DA400 .L47 1662 | A modest plea both for the caveat, and the author of it with some notes upon Mr. James Howell, and his sober inspections / | 2 |
DA400 .L48 1642 | A letter directed to Master Bridgeman, the fourth of January, and a letter inclosed in it, to one Master Anderton, were this day read and ordered to be entred. To the worshipfull, and my much honoured friend, Orlando Bridgeman Esquier, and a burgesse of the Parliament, at his chamber, at the Inner-Temple, these present. | 1 |
DA400 .L54 | The grand plea of Lieut. Col. John Lilburne, prerogative prisoner in the Tower of London, against the present tyrannicall House of Lords, which he delivered before an open committee of the House of Commons, the twentieth day of October, 1647, where Mr. Iohn Maynard the lawyer had the chaire unto which is annexed his proposition of the 2 Oct. 1647, to argue his case in point of law, with any 40 lawyers the Lords shall choose. | 2 |
DA400 .L56 | Never faile, or, That sure way of thriving under all revolutions in an eminent instance from 1639 to 1661. | 2 |
DA400 .L66 1648 |
Look to it London threatned to be fired by wilde-fire-zeal, schismatical-faction, & militant mammon : discovered July 15, 1648 in a discourse with one Croply and Hide, by one John Dias, one of Captain Whaleys regiment, extant in a printed schedule, here verbatim inserted and commented. Look to it London threatned to be fired by wilde-fire-zeal, schismatical-faction, & militant mammon : dicovered July 15, 1648 in a discourse with one Croply and Hide, by one John Dias, one of Captain Whaleys regiment, extant in a printed schedule, here verbatim inserted and commented. |
2 |
DA400 .L82 | Memoirs of Lieutenant General Ludlow. with a collection of original papers serving to confirm and illustrate many important passages of this and the preceding volumes : to which is added, a table to the whole work. | 2 |
DA400 .M36 1646 |
The Manner of discovering the King at Southwell on Tuesday the 5. of April, 1646, who is now in the Parliaments quarters before Newarke Banbury taken in, with the ordnance, armes, and ammunition : and the treaty with Sir Charles Compton from Oxford : also the copie of Sir Thomas Fairfax's proclamation commanded to be read in all churches neere Oxford : and a copie of a summons sent to Ludlow, and the governours answer : and a copie of Colonel Birch his letter. The Manner of discovering the King at Southwell on Tuesday the 5. of April, 1646, who is now in the Parliaments quarters before Newarke Banbury taken in, with the ordnance, armes, and ammunition : and the treaty with Sir Charles Compton from Oxford : also the copie of Sir Thomas Fairfax's proclamation commanded to be read in all churches neere Oxford : and a copie of a summons sent to Ludlow, and the governours answer : and a copie of Colonel Birch his letter. |
2 |