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To the most honourable the House of Peeres, and the honourable House of Commons assembled in Parliament. : The humble petition of the baronets, justices, and gentlemen of the county of Devon at their generall sessions.
Published 1642“…Humble petition of the baronets, justices, and gentlemen of the county of Devon at their generall sessions…”
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To the most honourable the House of Peeres, and the honourable House of Commons assembled in Parliament. : The humble petition of the baronets, justices, and gentlemen of the county of Devon at their generall sessions.
Published 1642“…Humble petition of the baronets, justices, and gentlemen of the county of Devon at their generall sessions…”
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To the high and honourable court of Parliament. : The humble petition of sundry of the nobles, knights, gentry, ministers, freeholders, and divers thousands of the inhabitants of the county palatine of Chester, whose names are subscribed to the several schedules hereunto annexed. In answer to a petition delivered on to the Lords Spirituall and Temporall, by Sir Thomas Aston, Baronet, from the county palatine of Chester, concerning episcopacie.
Published 1641CONNECT
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The rates of merchandise, : that is to say, the subsidy of tonnage, subsidy of poundage, and the subsidy of woollen clothes or old-drapery, as they are rated and agreed on by the Commons House of Parliament. Set down ... to be paid according to the tenor of the act of tonnage and poundage ... and subscribed with the hand of Sir Harebotle Grimston Baronet, Speaker of the House of Commons. Saturday July 28. 1660....
Published 1660CONNECT
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An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament: : for the inabling of Sr. William Brereton baronet, one of the members of the House of Commons, speedily to put in execution the ordinances for the sequestraion of the estates of Papists and delinquents ... and all other ordinances of Parliament, within the county of Chester ... and to take subsscriptions for the better supply and maintenance of the forces under his command ... also allowing unto the said Sir William Brereton the personall estates of all Papists and delinquents, in and about London ... as are not yet sequestred, or discovered for the service aforesaid.
Published 1644CONNECT
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An exact abridgment of the records in the Tower of London : from the reign of King Edward the Second, unto King Richard the Third, of all the Parliaments holden in each Kings reign, and the several acts in every Parliament: together with the names and titles of all the dukes, marquesses, earls, viscounts, and barons, summoned to every of the said Parliaments. Collected by Sir Robert Cotton knight and baronet. Revised, rectified in sundry mistakes, and supplied with a preface, marginal notes, several omissions, and exact tables, both of the special matters, great officers, speakers, nobles, and other persons therein contained....
Published 1679CONNECT
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The rates of merchandise : that is to say, the subsidy of tonnage, subsidy of poundage, and the subsidy of woollen clothes or old-drapery, as they are rated and agreed on by the Commons House of Parliament. Set down and exprest in this book, to be paid according to the tenor of the act of tonnage and poundage, from the 24th day of June inclusively, in the twelfth year of His Majesties reign, during His Majesties life, and subscribed with the hand of Sir Harebotle Grimston Baronet, Speaker of the House of Commons. Saturday July 28. 1660....
Published 1660CONNECT
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A most exact catalogue of the Lords spirituall and temporall, as peers of the realme, in the higher House of Parliament, according to their dignities, offices, and degrees: some other called thither for their assistance, & officers of their attendances : And also the names of the knights for the counties, citizens, burgesses for the boroughs, and barons for the ports for the House of Commons, for this Parliament. Whereunto is added a catalogue of the nobility of Ireland: the knights baronets and knights of the bath of England made by King Iames, and King Charles.
Published 1628CONNECT
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To the Kings most excellent Maiesty, : the humble petition of divers recusants and others, in the county of Lancaster, that they may be ceceived [sic] into his Maiesties protection, and have their armes redelivered to them, for the defence of his Majesties person, and their families. Together with his Majesties commission to Sir William Gerard Baronet, Sir Cecill Trafford knight, and other his Majesties subjects recusants in the same county, charging and commanding them to provide with all possile speed sufficient armes for the defence of his Maiesties person, or them against all force raised by any colour of any order or ordinance whatsoever without his Maiesties consent....
Published 1642CONNECT
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An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament: : for the inabling of Sir William Brereton Baronet, one of the members of the House of Commons, speedily to put in execution the ordinances for the sequestration of the estates of papists and delinquents, the fifth, and twentieth part, weekly assessement; and all other ordinances of Parliament, within the county of Chester, and county and city of Chester: and to take subscriptions for the better supply and maintenance of the forces under his command, for security of the said places, and preventing the accesse of the Irish forces into those parts....
Published 1644CONNECT
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A declaration of the Commons assembled in Parliament, : upon two letters sent by Sir John Brooks, (sometimes a Member of the Commons House this parliament, ... being a projector, a monopolist, and a fomentor of the present bloudy and unnaturall war; for bearing of arms actually against the Parliament) to William Killegrew at Oxford (intercepted neer Coventrey) giving his advice how the King should proceed in the Treaty upon the propositions for peace, presented unto him by the Parliament. With the names of the lords, baronets, knights, esquires, gentlemen, ministers and freeholders, indicted the last sessions at Grantham, of high-treason, by Sir Peregrine Bartue and the said Sir John Brooks, before themselves, and other their fellow-cavaliers, rebels and traitors, commissioners, appointed, (as they say), for that purpose. ......
Published 1643CONNECT
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