Call Number (LC) Title Results
DA448 .W45 The Weekly pacquet of advice from Rome, or, the history of popery.
A pacquet of advice from Rome, or, The history of popery.
2
DA448 .W47 An answer to a late paper, intituled, A true copy of a paper written by Capt. Tho. Walcot in Newgate after his condemnation, and delivered to his son immediately before his execution, being also his last speech at the place of execution / 1
DA448 .W48 The ordeal of Mr. Pepys's clerk.
The ordeal of Mr. Pepys's clerk. -
2
DA448 .W49 1681 The honesty and true zeal of the Kings witnesses justified and vindicated against those unchristian-like equivocal protestations of Dr. Oliver Plunkett, asserting in his last speech his own innocency; being as great damnation to his soul, as any of his former trayterous and hellish practices against his King and countrey, as breathing them upon the point of death, without any time of repenting the enormity of them with true contrition. / 1
DA448 .W5 Charles II and the Cavalier House of Commons, 1663-1674.
A letter from an impartial hater of the papists to a friend
3
DA448 .W54 The speech of the Honourable Will[m] Williams, Esq., Speaker of the House of Commons, to the Honourable House of Commons, upon the electing of him Speaker in the Parliament at Oxford, Monday the 21st day of March, 1680 together with his speeches to His Most Excellent Majesty at the presenting of him Speaker to His Majesty by the Commons in Parliament upon Tuesday 22d day of the same month.
The information of Capt. Hen. Wilkinson of what hath passed betwixt him and some other persons who have attempted to prevail with him to swear high treason against the Earl of Shaftsbury.
The speech of the Honourable Will. Williams, Esq., Speaker of the House of Commons, to the Honourable House of Commons, upon the electing of him Speaker in the Parliament at Oxford, Monday the 21 of [sic] day of March, 1680 together with his speeches to His Most Excellent Majesty at the presenting of him Speaker to His Majesty by the Commons in Parliament upon Tuesday 22 day of the same month.
Dr. Wild's humble thanks for His Majesties gracious declaration for liberty of conscience, March 15, 1672
An impartial consideration of those speeches, which pass under the name of the five Jesuits lately executed viz. [brace] Mr. Whitebread, Mr. Harcourt, Mr. Gawen, Mr. Turner, and Mr. Fenwick : in which it is proved, that according to their principles, they not only might, but also ought, to die after that manner, with solemn protestation of their innocency.
9
DA448 .W54 1672 The Dutchmans acknowledgement of his errors. Or a Dutch balad translated into English. Setting forth the base and false reports that they are subject to believe. With a description of the shame that they cry on that state for bringing on them so many troubles. ; To the tune of, Packingtons Pound. 1
DA448 .W54 1679 M. Whitebread's contemplations during his confinement in Newgate 2
DA448 .W55 1665 An essay upon the late victory obtained by His Royal Highness the Duke of York, against the Dutch, upon June 3. 1665. 1
DA448 .W55 2014 The king's Irishmen : the Irish in the exiled court of Charles II, 1649-1660 / 1
DA448 .W56 Poor Robins character of a Dutch-man as also his predictions on the affairs of the United Provinces of Holland, together with a brief epitomy of the ingratitude of the Dutch, and the English at Amboyna, Polaroon and other islands in the East Indies. 2
DA448 .W57 1668 Vox & lacrimæ Anglorum, or, The true English-mens complaints to their representatives in Parliament humbly tendred to their serious consideration at there next sitting, February the 6th, 1668. 2
DA448.W58 1660 Whitehall swept and furnished by A. T. A lover of his countrey. 1
DA448 .W67 1660 A Word in due season to the ranting royallists, and rigid Presbyterians &c
A Word in due season to the ranting royallists, and rigid Presbyterians &c.
2
DA448 .Y37 A full discovery of the first Presbyterian sham-plot, or, A letter from one in London to a person of quality in the country 2
DA448 .Z66 2013 Protestantism, politics, and women in Britain, 1660-1714 / 1
DA448 .Z66 2013eb Protestantism, politics, and women in Britain, 1660-1714 1
DA448.7 .T87 1689 A new martyrology, or, The bloody assizes now exactly methodized in one volume : comprehending a compleat history of the lives, actions, trials, sufferings, dying speeches, letters, and prayers of all those eminent martyrs who fell in the west of England, and elsewhere, from the year 1678 to 1689 : with the pictures of several of the most eminent of them in copper plates : to this treatise is added, The life and death of George Lord Jeffryes. 2
DA448.9 A full and true account of the taking the late Duke of Monmouth by some of the Lord Lumley's regiment, near Ringwood, on Tuesday, July the 7th. 1685 London, July 9, 1685. 1
DA448.9 1685 A proclamation, for a thanksgiving throughout the kingdom of Scotland, for the late defeat of the Kings enemies 1