Call Number (LC) Title Results
DA681 .M37 The day of the Lord, or, A caution to the city of London after the many dreadful fires 2
DA681 .M4 1689 A messenger of truth from the Common Hall, assembled in London on Midsummer-day last on account of the pretended petition. With allowance. 1
DA681 .M47 1700 A true copy of the petition and reasons thereunto annexed, of the master-cutting-taylors and journey-men, freemen of London in answer to the petition of some freemen-working-taylors, of the said city. To the right honourable the Lord Mayor, Court of Aldermen, and Common Council of the honourable city of London, the humble petition of several inhabitants, master-cutting-taylors, and journey-men freemen, of the same city. 1
DA681 .M6 1960 Little Britain / 1
DA681 .M63 1695 A modest essay in vindication of the Right Honourable Sir Thomas Lane, Kt. Lord Mayor, and the Right Honourable the Court of Aldermen, and Common-Council of the City of London: relating to the controversy about elections of sheriffs, &c. 1
DA681 .M66 The speech of the Right Honourable Edward, Earl of Manchester, lord chamberlaine of His Majestie's houshold delivered at the Guild-hall London, on Thursday, being the first day of Dec. 1664, at a common hall there held, where were likewise present the earl of Bridgewater, lord bishop of London [and 15 others] members of the honourable Houses of Parliament. 1
DA681 .N35 1681 The names of the aldermen, deputies, and common-council-men of the city of London, December the 23th, 1681 1
DA681.N49 1680 A new plot newly discovered, by the help of the London belman; of wicked and hellish conspiracies against the peace of this kingdom. Laid open to publick view of ull persons, both in city and countrey. With a term kept in hell, by Don Belzebub, to try causes in that principality; which whilst they were sitting, a letter to that court was brought, shewing, that a certain night-walker, of inferiour dignity , called the London bell-man, had discovered most of the eminent plots, cheats, and vilanies of several of the officers and promoters of the Devils own kindred, and brought them in danger of their lives; and by the help of his lanthorn and candle, made known the secrets that are taught in hell, and laid them open to the broad eye of the world and made them infamous, odious, and ridiculous to all persons, in setting them forth in print and drawing their pictures to the life, to the open view of all ... wherein is added a new discovery of several cunning gypsies, & thirteen sorts of crafty rogues & canting beggars ... with their manner of travelling over all England without ever a penny of money. 1
DA681.N49 1695 A new summons, to warn all bawds and whores, to the gossiping of the temple-twins 1
DA681 .O43 2020eb A weaver-poet and the plague : labor, poverty, and the household in Shakespeare's London / 1
DA681.O86 1647 To the Right Honorable Sir Robert Titchborn Knight, Lord Mayor of the City of London, and the right worshipful the Aldermen his brethren, and the commonalty of the said city, assembled in common-councel : the humble petition of John Osmond a free-man and car-man of London, and Mary his wife. 1
DA681 .P37 London and the outbreak of the Puritan revolution : city government and national politics, 1625-43. 1
DA681 .P37 1678 A particular of the new-buildings within the bills of mortallity [sic], and without the city of London, from the year 1656 to 1677 according to the account now taken by the church-wardens of the several parishes and the old account of new houses from 1620 to 1656, and what they did amount to at one whole years value, as appears by the duplicates in the exchequer. 1
DA681 .P47 1642 The petition of the most substantiall inhabitants of the city of London and the liberties thereof. To the Lords and Commons for peace. Together with the answer to the same. And the reply of the petitioners. 1
DA681 .P53 1998 Restoration London : from poverty to pets, from medicine to magic, from slang to sex, from wallpaper to women's rights / 2
DA681 .P54 Great Britains glory, or, A brief description of the present state, splendor, and magnificence of the Royal Exchange with some remarkable passages relating to the present engagement : humbly presented to the several merchants of the City of London, who daily meet, traffique, and converse in the said place / 1
DA681.P56 1672 To the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor: to the Right Worshipful the Alderman: with the commonalty of the City of London, in their Common-Hall assembled : the humble, and last address of Sir Tho. Player senior, Chamberleyn of London. 1
DA681 .P666 1996 The great fire of London / 1
DA681 .P73 The Present case of the Common-Hall in their election of sheriffs from the 24th of June, 1695. 2
DA681 .P79 A just and solemn protestation and remonstrance of the lord mayor, aldermen, sheriffs, common-councell-men, and other citizens and freemen of London against two late ordinances of the Lords and Commons that now sit, for the choosing of common-councell-men and other officers within the city and liberties thereof ... which ordinances bear date the 18, and 20 of December, 1648. 2