Great Britain History Prophecies Songs And Music : A New prophecy of several strange and wonderful revolutions that shall happen to the kingdom of England in or about an hundred years hence : to a new playhouse tune.
Great Britain History Puritan Revolution 1642 1660 Correspondence : An exact and perfect relation of every particular of the fight at VVorcester and ordering the battle on both sides of the river of Severne / from an emminent officer of the army ; severall letters from Scotland signifying the taking of Sir Philip Musgrave with severall other lords and lairds, and 500 of their party kild and taken neer Dumfreeze in Scotland ; also a letter from Col. Alured of the manner of the taking of Generall Lesley, &c. at Ellitt near Dundee ... ; lastly, also a letter of the taking of Dundee by storme September 1, in which storme Major Gen. Lumsden and 600 more of the Scots were slaine, &c.; Emminent officer of the army.
Great Britain History Puritan Revolution 1642 1660 Pamphlets : The Wise-womans saving the city Abel, by delivering the head of Sheba, who was a traytor, to the Kingdome of Israel : which serveth as a patterne whereby the city of London may be saved by the wise endeavours of the citizens thereof ... even by delivering up to law and justice the traitors to the Common-wealth of England.
Great Britain History Puritan Revolution 1642 1660 Registers : The royal martyrs, or, A list of the lords, knights, officers, and gentlemen, that were slain (by the rebels) in the late wars, in defence of their king and country : as also of those executed by their high courts of (in)-justice, or law-martial.
Great Britain History Puritan Revolution 1649 1660 Sources : The rebells warning-piece; : being certaine rules and instructions left by Alderman Hoyle (a member of Parliament) being a burgesse for York-shire, who hanged himself Ianuary 30. within half an hour after that day twelve-moneth he and his sectarian brethren had murthered their King. This seasonable caveat being written by his owne hand, was found lying by him in the chamber where he hanged himselfe. Also the sudden madnesse of Sheriff Wilson, a perjur'd relapsed, and apostate alderman of the City of London, who was carried mad from Guild-hall, so soon as he had taken the new ingagement, and now desperatly seeketh to end his life. With a new epitaph on Alderman Hoyle, and a new ballad on the loathed life and sudden death of Sir Philip E. of Pembroke.; Hoyle, Thos.,
1650
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Great Britain History Puritian Revolution 1642 1600 Early Works To : The black and terrible vvarning piece: or, a scourge to Englands rebellion. : Truly representing, the horrible iniquity of the times; the dangerous proceedings of the ranters, and the holding of no Resurrection by the shakers, in Yorkshire and elsewhere. With the several judgements of the most high and eternal Lord God, upon all usurpers, who deny His law, and His truth; and the manner how 130 children were taken away by the devil, and never seen no more; and divers others taken, rent, torn, and cast up and down from room to room, by strange and dreadfull spirits, appearing in the shapes of, a black boar, a roaring lyon, an English statesman, and a Roman fryer. Extracted out of the elaborate works of Bishop Hall, and Sir Kenelm Digby; and published for general satisfaction, to all Christian princes, states, and common-wealths in Europe.; Hall, George,
Great Britain History Restoration 1660 1668 Early Works To 1800 : Sionis reductio, & exultatio. Or, Sions return out of captivity : with Sions reioycing for her return. A discourse, intended for the solemn festivity of the English nation, at Livorno in Italy, upon the happy news of King Charles the Second his return into England, which was there celebrated with munificent feasting, and magnificent shows, fire-works, and other signs of triumph, three days together, in the month of July anno Dom. 1660. Since occasionally preached in part, at St. Margarets in Westminster, the Sonday [sic] after the solemnization of the Kings birth-day, and entry into London; and now presented to publick view, as to correct the mis-apprehension, and mis-interpretation of some that were present; so to prevent the mis-information, and depravation of others that were absent. By Ro. le Grosse, cleric. An orthodox priest of the Church of England; and D. Oecumenical, then residing in Livorno, at his return from grand Cairo in Egypt.; Le Grosse, Robert.
Great Britain History Restoration 1660 1688 Biblical Teaching Early : An enquiry into the vision of the slaying and rising of the vvitnesses : and falling of the tenth part of the city: with a post-script concerning the controversie about the duty of allegiance, occasion'd by our late revolution.
1692
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Great Britain History Restoration 1660 1688 Confiscations And Contr : A hue and cry after the high court of injustice. Or, the arraignment and sentence of those blood-thirsty and unparallel'd traitors, who contrary to all law and justice, judged and condemned the late Kings Majesty, Charles the First, of glorious memory to death; : who by the divine hand of Gods justice, which alwayes pursues and overtakes blood-thirsty traitots [sic] to their ruine aad [sic] destruction, are now to be made publick examples of justice, for that horrid act which is now by both Houses of Parliament declared to be horrid murder. With a perfect list of all their names, whose estates are to be sequestered for the same, for the use of his Majesty.
1660
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Great Britain History Restoration 1660 1688 Drama : The subjects joy for the Kings restoration, cheerfully made known in a sacred masque : gratefully made publique for His Sacred Majesty / by the author of Inqvisitio Anglicana.; Sadler, Anthony,