Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
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DA460 .H4 1702 | Her ma[jes]ties answer to ye L[or]ds Address | 1 |
DA460 .H48 1660 | A poem to His Maiestie on his landing | 1 |
DA460 .H54 | A debate on the justice and piety of the present constitution under K. William in two parts, the first relating to the state, the second to the church : between Eucheres, a conformist, and Dyscheres, a recusant / | 2 |
DA460 .H57 1694 | His Majesties letter to the States General of the United Provinces, upon the death of the Queen | 1 |
DA460 .H66 2000 | A land of liberty? : England, 1689-1727 / | 1 |
DA460 .H67 1977b | Parliament, policy, and politics in the reign of William III / | 2 |
DA460 .H87 | The reply of Richard Hutchinson, Esquire, to Sir Eliab Harvey's answer | 1 |
DA460 .I46 | An impartial account of the surrender of Charleroy with the several articles, etc. | 2 |
DA460 .I5 | In Westminster-Hall, on the 22d. of January will be sold by inch of candle, these following goods, in several parcels. | 1 |
DA460 .I5 1693 | Inquiries to Sr Joseph Herne &c Oct: 19. 1693 | 1 |
DA460 (INTERNET) |
A sermon preached before the King and Queen at White-Hall on the 19th day of October, 1690, being the day of thanksgiving for His Majesties preservation and success in Ireland A true and impartial account of a great and bloody fight between part of the English fleet, commanded by Sir Clovesly Shovel and the French at sea with an account of the men killed and wounded : together with the great bravery and courage of Captain Hoskins, from on board Their Majesties ship the Crown, this ninth of December, 1690, riding Plimouth-Sound. The argument of the Letter concerning toleration, briefly consider'd and answer'd A free discourse wherein the doctrines which make for tyranny are display'd the title of our rightful and lawful King William vindicated, and the unreasonableness and mischievous tendency of the odious distinction of a king de facto, and de jure, discover'd / A true copy of a letter from the Right Honourable the Earl of Mulgrave, to Doctor Tillotson, Dean of Canterbury An Account of Mr. Blunts late book entituled, King William and Queen Mary conquerors now under the censure of the Parliament. An Account of last Sundays engagement between His Majesty's and the Prince of Orange's forces, in the road between Reading and Maidenhead, amongst which, its said, a blue-garter fell with a true account of some occurrences at Portsmouth. A letter to the Right Honourable Sir John Holt, Kt. Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench; occasioned by the noise of a plot Roger L'Estrange's queries considered and some queries put, for the consideration of those persons whose judgments are in danger of being again poysoned by the snare of smooth words, calculated to the humour of a biggot for helping the indigent case of King James, and vindicating the non-abdicators. An essay concerning the laws of nations, and the rights of soveraigns with an account of what was said at the council-board by the civilians upon the question, whether Their Majesties subjects taken at sea acting by the late king's commission, might not be looked on as pirates? : with reflections upon the arguments of Sir T.P. and Dr. Ol / England's alarum, being an account of God's most considerable dispensations of mercy and judgement toward these kingdoms for fourteen years last past and also of the several sorts of sins and sinners therein ... with an earnest call to speedy humiliation, supplication, and reformation. The second part of The vision, a pindarick ode occasioned by Their Majesties happy coronation / Whether the preserving the Protestant religion was the motive unto, or the end, that was designed in the late revolution in a letter to a country gentleman as an answer to his first query. A pastoral letter writ by the Right Reverend Father in God, Gilbert, Lord Bishop of Sarum, to the clergy of his diocess, concerning the oaths of allegiance and supremacy to K. William and Q. Mary A sermon preached at the coronation of William III and Mary II, King and Queen of England, ---- France, and Ireland, defenders of the faith in the Abby-Church of Westminster, April 11, 1689 / Lord Chancellor's petition to His Highness the Prince of Orange on his entrance into London. A Letter from Oxford concerning Mr. Samuel Johnson's late book The Englishman's choice, and true interest in a vigorous prosecution of the war against France, and serving K. William and Q. Mary, and acknowledging their right. A sermon preached before the queen the 22d of May, 1692 upon occasion of the late victory obtained by Their Majesties fleet over the French / A brief account of some of the late incroachments and depredations of the Dutch upon the English and of a few of those many advantages which by fraud and violence they have made of the British nations since the revolution, and of the means enabling them thereunto. R. Fergusson's apology for his transactions these last ten years, both in England and forreign parts An essay concerning Parliaments at a certainty, or, The kalends of May An epistle to Charles Montague Esq., on His Majesty's voyage to Holland A Full and perfect account of the seizing seven of K. James's officers Viz. Captain Vaughan, Frogmorton, Whinuell, Burges, Sidmore, Brookes and Yearburrough who were bound for France with treasonable letters, and now are in custody in Bell Savage Yard by Ludgate till their examination. By the King and Queen, a proclamation William R A dialogue betwixt Whig and Tory, aliàs Williamite and Jacobite wherein the principles and practices of each party are fairly and impartially stated that ... all those who prefer English liberty, and Protestant religion to French slavery and popery may be inform'd how to choose fit and proper instruments for our preservation in these times of danger. A defence of the absolution given to Sr. William Perkins, at the place of execution, April the 3d with a further vindication thereof, occasioned by a paper, entituled A declararion of the sense of the arch-bishops and bishops, &c. The tryals of Joseph Dawson, Edward Forseith, William May, [brace] William Bishop, James Lewis, and John Sparkes for several piracies and robberies by them committed in the company of Every the grand pirate, near the coasts of the East-Indies, and several other places on the seas : giving an account of their villainous robberies and barbarities : at the Admiralty sessions, begun at the Old-Baily on the 29th of October, 1696, and ended on the 6th of November. Whether the Parliament be not in law dissolved by the death of the Princess of Orange? and how the subjects ought, and are to behave themselves in relation to those papers emitted since by the stile and title of Acts : with a brief account of the government of England : in a letter to a country gentleman, as an answer to his second question. |
29 |
DA460 .J3 | This being Your Majesty's birth-day ... | 1 |
DA460 .J3 1692 | His Majesties most gratious declaration to all his loving subjects commanding their assistance against the Prince of Orange, and his adherents. | 1 |
DA460 .J35 | May it please your Majesty to accept my thanks for your gracious act in restoring the Charter | 1 |
DA460 .J35 1689 | His Majesties letter to the Lords Spiritual and Temporal Commissioners of Shires and Burroughs assembled, or to be assembled at Edenborough | 2 |
DA460 .J35 1692 |
His Majesties most gracious declaration to all his loving subjects commanding their assistance against the Prince of Orange, and his adherents. His Majesties most gracious declaration to his good people of his ancient kingdom of Scotland commanding their assistance against the Prince and Princess of Orange, and their adherents. |
2 |
DA460 .J35 1693 | His Majesties most gracious declaration to all his loving subjects | 2 |
DA460 .J35 1697 | Jacobus Secundus, Dei gratiâ, magnæ Britanniæ, Franciæ & Hiberniæ Rex, defensor fidei, omnibus regibus principibus, rebuspublicis &c. postqàm diuturno tamque funesto toti Christianæ reipublicæ bello Europa conflagravit .. | 1 |
DA460 .J66 1988 | War and economy in the age of William III and Marlborough / | 1 |
DA460 .J82 | A defence of Their Majesties King William and Queen Mary, against an infamous and Jesuitical libel entituled, A true portraicture of William Henry, Prince of Nassau ... | 1 |