Call Number (LC) Title Results
DA405 .G45 2007 The English Revolution and the wars in the three kingdoms, 1638-1652 / 1
DA405 .G45 2014 The English Revolution and the wars in the three kingdoms, 1638-1652 1
DA405 .G46 1992 The new model army in England, Ireland, and Scotland, 1645-1653 / 1
DA405 .G87 2007 Brave community : the Digger movement in the English Revolution / 3
DA405 .H3 The Royalists during the Puritan Revolution.
The royalists during the Puritan Revolution
2
DA405 .H49 1984 The experience of defeat : Milton and some contemporaries / 2
DA405 .H49 1985 The experience of defeat : Milton and some contemporaries / 1
DA405 .H5 The English revolution, 1640 : three essays / 1
DA405 .H5 1940a The English revolution, 1640 : three essays / 1
DA405 .H5 1955 The English Revolution, 1640 : an essay / 1
DA405 .H6 1939 The levellers and the English revolution / 1
DA405 .H62 The history of the civil wars of England from the year 1640-1660 / 2
DA405 .H63 1679 The history of the civil wars of England from the year 1640 to 1660 2
DA405 .H63 1682 Behemoth the history of the causes of the civil-wars of England and the councels and artifices by which they were carried on from the year 1640 to the year 1660 / 2
DA405 .H83 2004 Gangraena and the struggle for the English revolution / 1
DA405 .I57 1972 The interregnum : the quest for settlement, 1646-1660 / 1
DA405 (INTERNET) Som sober inspections made into those ingredients that went to the composition of a late cordial, call'd A cordial for the Cavaliers for the satisfaction of som, who mis-apprehended the author.
Boscobel, or, The history of His Sacred Majesties most miraculous preservation after the battle of Worcester, 3 Sept. 1651
The speech of Sergeant Glanvill in the vpper Hovse of Parliament for peace and vnitie also shewing that the way to preserve peacc [sic] is to bee well provided for warre.
A narrative of some passages in or relating to the Long Parliament
Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow Esq; Lieutenant General of the Horse, Commander in Chief of the forces in Ireland, one of the Council of State, and a Member of the Parliament which began on November 3, 1640 In two volumes.
Sagrir, or, Doomes-day drawing nigh, with thunder and lightening to lawyers in an alarum for the new laws, and the peoples liberties from the Norman and Babylonian yokes : making discoverie of the present ungodly laws and lawyers of the fourth monarchy, and of the approach of the fifth, with those godly laws, officers and ordinances that belong to the legislative power of the Lord Iesus : shewing the glorious work incumbent to civil-discipline, (once more) set before the Parliament, Lord Generall, army and people of England, in their distinct capasities, upon the account of Christ and his monarchy /
A coppy of a letter written by John Lilburne, close prisoner in the wards of the fleet, which he sent to Iames Ingram and Henry Hopkins, wardens of the said fleet Wherin is fully discovered their great cruelty exercised upon his body.
Tracts of Mr. Thomas Hobbs of Malmsbury containing I. Behemoth, the history of the causes of the civil wars of England, from 1640 to 1660, printed from the author's own copy never printed (but with a thousand faults) before, II. An answer to Arch-bishop Bramhall's book called the catching of the Leviathan, never before printed, III. An historical narration of heresie and the punishment thereof, corrected by the true copy, IV. Philosophical problems dedicated to the King in 1662, but never printed before.
A true discourse of the two infamous upstart prophets, Richard Farnham weaver of White-Chappell, and Iohn Bull weaver of Saint Butolphs Algate, now prisoners, the one in Newgate, and the other in Bridewell with their examinations and opinions taken from their owne mouthes April 16. anno 1636. As also of Margaret Tennis now prisoner in Old Bridewell, with the hereticall opinions held by her, at the same time examined. /
Eye-salve for English-men, and an alarvm to the Londoners wherein is contained the summary of Romes late designes against England, and the present plots and enterprizes in hand against London, so many as hath yet come to the knowledge of the author : together with the opening of an effectual door, to the happiness of this nation : whereunto is annexed a postscript containing reasons and motives to his Highness and the present power in being, to grant us s[u]ch a committee which hath been long promised, and much longer desired and sought for /
A short view of the late troubles in England briefly setting forth, their rise, growth, and tragical conclusion, as also, some parallel thereof with the barons-wars in the time of King Henry III : but chiefly with that in France, called the Holy League, in the reign of Henry III and Henry IV, late kings of the realm : to which is added a perfect narrative of the Treaty at U[n]bridge in an.
A true and perfect narrative of what was acted, spoken by Mr. Prynne, other formerly and freshly secluded members, the army-officers, and some now sitting in the lobby, house, elsewhere, the 7th. and 9th. of May last ...
A memento treating of the rise, progress, and remedies of seditions with some historical reflections upon the series of our late troubles /
The danger of tolerating levellers in a civil state, or, An historicall narration of the dangerous pernicious practices and opinions wherewith Samuel Gorton and his levelling accomplices so much disturbed and molested the severall plantations in New-England parallel to the positions and proceedings of the present levellers in Old-England : wherein their severall errors dangerous and very destructive to the peace both of church and state ... together with the course that was there taken for suppressing them are fully set forth, with a satisfactory answer to their complaints made to the Parliament /
The mysterie of iniqvity yet working in the kingdomes of England, Scotland, and Ireland, for the destruction of religion truly Protestant discovered, as by other grounds apparant and probable, so especially by the late cessation in Ireland, no way so likely to be ballanced, as by a firme union of England and Scotland, in the late solemne covenant, and a religious pursuance of it.
Sacra nemesis, the Levites scourge, or, Mercurius Britan disciplin'd, [Mercurius] civicvs [disciplin'd] also deverse remarkable disputes and resolvs in the Assembly of Divines related, episcopacy asserted, truth righted, innocency vindicated against detraction.
Conscientious, serious theological and legal quæres, propounded to the twice-dissipated, self-created anti-Parliamentary Westminster juncto, and its members...
Sad and serious politicall considerations touching the invasive war against our Presbyterian Protestant brethren in Scotland, their late great overthrow, and the probable dangerous consequences thereof to both nations and the Prorestant [sic] religion which may serve as a satisfactory apology for such ministers and people, who out of conscience did not observe the publike thanksgiving against their covenant, for the great slaughter of those their brethren in covenant.
18
DA405 .J3 Social problems and policy during the Puritan revolution, 1640-1669 / 1
DA405 .K46 2008 Diggers, levellers, and agrarian capitalism : radical political thought in seventeenth century England / 1
DA405 .L36 2016 Worship, civil war and community, 1638-1660 / 1