-
1
A Very true and credible relation of the severall passages at Manchester the 15th of Iuly last, 1642 : wherein is specified an invitation of the Lord Strange unto a banquet whose life was afterwards much endangered by Sir Thomas Stanley Baronet, John Holcroft Esquire, Thomas Birch Gentleman : as will be attested upon oath with the declaration of the better sort of the townesmen of Manchester.
Published 1642CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
2
A very true and credible relation of the severall passages at Manchester the 15.th of Iuly last, 1642. : VVherein is specified an invitation of the Lord Strange unto a banquet, whose life was afterwards much endangered by Sir Thomas Stanley baronet, John Holcroft Esquire, Thomas Birch gentleman....
Published 1642CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
3
A declaration of the Commons assembled in Parliament : upon two letters sent by Sir John Brooks ... to Sir William Killegrew at Oxford ... 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 Granham 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 ... : also the ordinance of both Houses made the 17 of Decemb. 1642, that the pretended commissioners and any whom it may concern may know what to expect, that shall presume to molest the persons or estates of any for their service to the Parliament and Kingdom : with some abstracts of credible letter from Exceter who give a further relation concerning the late expedition under the command of Sergeant Major James Chudleigh against the Cornish.
Published 1643CONNECT
Electronic eBook -
4
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
Electronic eBook