Great Britain -- History -- Commonwealth and Protectorate, 1649-1660
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Great Britain -- History -- Commonwealth and Protectorate, 1649-1660
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- 1659 : the crisis of the commonwealth
- A Brief relation of the proceedings of the High Court of Justice against Sir Henry Slingsby and Doctor John Hewet, : who for treason against His Highness the Lord Protector, and the Commonwealth, in plotting and contriving a new and bloody war, by bringing in Charles Stuart into this nation, were both beheaded on Tower-Hill, on Tuesday the 8th of this instant June. : Also their last speech and confession at the said place of execution
- A Concurrent declaration of the inhabitants of the city and liberty of Westminister, : with the declaration of the people of England for a free Parliament
- A Concurrent declaration of the inhabitants of the city and liberty of Westminister, with the declaration of the people of England for a free Parliament
- A Discovery made by his Highnesse the Lord Protector, to the Lord Mayor, aldermen, and common-councell of the City of London, on Friday, March the 12. 1657 : Concerning the new attempts and designs of Charles Stewart and his party, both at home and abroad, to imbroile this nation againe in a new war, and to imbrew it in blood. To which purpose he had imployed the Lord of Ormond, who had three weeks bin in this city to promote the design by incouraging and ingaging all he could in and about the city. And that in order to this invasion he had quartered eight thousand men in Flanders neere the water side, and had hired two & twenty ships to transport them into England, together with the setling of the militia of London in the hands of pious and faithfull men, who may carry on the work with alacrity and discretion, and be iu [sic] a condition to suppresse tumults and insurrections
- A Faithfull searching home vvord, : intended for the view of the remaining members of the former old Parliament in the time of their late second sitting at Westminster. Shewing the reasonableness and justness of their first dissolution, as also the dangerous rock they formerly split upon, that so they might learn to beware for the future: But being a second time dissolved upon the like account, as so many fruitless trees twic dead plucked up by the roots. It is now presented to the officers of the army as another looking-glass wherein they may plainly see, how woefully they also have dissembled, dealt treacherously, deceitfully and wickedly both with God and man, in having so greatly apostatized from, rejected, trodden under foot, persecuted, Judas-like betrayed, and as it were crucified and kept down in the grave (as the soldiers formerly did Christ) that blessed cause and those good principles, they once so highly pretended to own ... Together with an other seasonable word by way of counsel and proposal to the aforesaid officers of the armies of England, Scotland, and Ireland. All which, is also to be seen, and read of all men loving righteousness, that thereby they may (with the army) better know how to chuse the good, refute the evil, and rightly steer their course, and bend their spirits in the future, for the exaltation of Christ, his cause, and interest, and against all the apostacy and treachery, though never so refined, that may further appear in this gloomy, dark, overturning day
- A Further narrative of the passages of these times in the Common-wealth of England : an act for renouncing and disanulling the pretended title of Charls Stuart, and for the taking away of the Court of Wards and Liveries, the judgment ... against James Naylor the Quaker : with the triall of Miles Sundercombe ..
- A Healing motion from abroad to the Parliament of the Common-wealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, &c
- A Letter from Barwick, the head quarters of the army, under the conduct of General Monck .. : shewing their condition and resolution, and the necessity of the present Parliaments restitution : to a merchant in London
- A Letter from no far countrey : being a judgement upon the present posture of affairs in England &c. : written to, and made publike at the request of a worthy person elected to serve in the approaching parliament, as worth the serious consideration of his fellow members
- A Letter from the noblemen, gentlemen, justices, and free-holders of the shire of Fife, to the Lord General Monck : with his Lordships answer thereunto
- A Letter from the officers at Whitehall to the officers under Generall Monck in Scotland : with the answer of Generall Monck and his officers thereunto : wherein with plainness and sinceritie, they endeavour to set before them the evil of their doings
- A List of the earls and lords that were present in the House of Peers on Friday, April the 27th, 1660
- A List of the earls and lords that were present in the House of Peers on Friday, April the 27th, 1660
- A Lively pourtraicture of the face of this common-wealth
- A Parliamenter's petition to the army, the present supreme authority of England
- A Plain word of truth to all the officers and souldiers of the army
- A Quakers sea-journal : being a true relation of a voyage to New-England
- A Representation concerning the late Parliament in the yeer 1654 : to prevent mistakes
- A Serious and faithfull representation of the judgements of ministers of the gospell within the province of London : Contained in a letter from them to the generall and his counsel of warre./
- A Serious and faithfull representation of the judgements of ministers of the gospell within the province of London : contained in a letter from them to the Generall and his councell of warre. : delivered to his Excellency by some of the subscribers, Jan. 18, 1648
- A Sober vindication of Lt. Gen. Ludlow and others : in answer to a printed letter sent from Sir Hardress Waller in Ireland, and other non-commissioned officers at Dublin to Lt. General Ludlow at Duncannon, commander in chief of all the Parliament forces in Ireland : wherein you have a faithful but summary history of the affairs in Ireland as they now stand ...
- A True and impartial relation of the death of M. John Gerhard who was beheaded on Tower-hill, July 10, MDCLIV
- A True and perfect narrative of the great and dangerous risings in the western parts, near the borders of Wales, and the commissions brought by M. Smith, agent to the K. of Scots : likewise, a new discovery of the designs and intentions of the enemy ... with the advancing of Col. Okey to the city of Bristol ... and a list of the prisoners : together with a letter from Col. Okey, Col. West, and the governour of Hereford to the council, and an account touching Col. Massey, and Major General Brown
- A True relation of the great fight on Friday morning last at Willington Bridge near Northwich, within ten miles of the city of Chester, between the forces of the Lord Lambert and Sir George Booth : with the manner of the engagement, the particulars of the fight, the number killed, and seventeen hundred taken prisoners ... : likewise the summons of the Earl of Derby and Sir George Booth to the trayned-bands upon the pain of death, and Sir George's letter to the Lord Lambert, with His Lordships answer thereunto
- A Vindication of the London apprentices petition : and the legality of their subscriptions asserted
- A Winding-sheet for rebels, or, Englands grand traytors displaid in their colours
- A Word to the jury in the behalf of John Lilburn
- A brief character of the Protector Oliver Cromwel : with an account of the slavery he left the nation under at his death, comprehended in a seasonable speech concerning the upper house
- A brief necessary vindication of the old and new secluded members, from the false malicious calvmnies : and of the fundamental rights, liberties, privileges, government, interest of the freemen, Parliaments, people of England, from the late avowed subversions 1. of John Rogers ... 2. of M. Nedham ...
- A brief of proceedings between Sr. Hierom Sankey and Dr. VVilliam Petty : with the state of the controversy between them tendered to all indifferent persons
- A brief relation of a victory, obtained by the forces under the command of Gen. Edward Doyley, commander in chief of his Highnesse's forces in the island of Jamaica : Against the forces of the king of Spain, commanded by Don Christopher Arnaldo Sasi, commander in chief of the Spanish forces there
- A briefe description by way of supposition holding forth to the Parliament and such as have but common reason, wherein a true Common-Wealth consisteth : as also the grand enemies of this Common-Wealth plainly discovered
- A briefe resolution, of that grand case of conscience (necessary for these times) concerning the allegiance due to a prince ejected by force out of his kingdome, and how farre the subjects may comply with a present vsurped power
- A collection of all the proclamations, declarations, articles, and ordinances, passed by His Highness the Lord Protector and his council : and by their special command published, begining Decemb. 16, 1653, and ending Septem. 2, 1654
- A commission for the due and effectual assessing and leavying of the fourth part of the yearly value of lands, & of the yearly increase or profit of stocks, and other personal estate in the prespective precincts in Ireland; : for, and towards the pay of the armie
- A concealment discovered for the publique advantage : being the effect of a petition directed to the Right Honourable the Councell of State for the Common-wealth of England, by Will. Bagwell and John Brockedon, discoverers and plaintiffes in the behalfe of the said Common-wealth, which was delivered to the Lord Generall Cromwell, to be presented &c. the 17th day of Aprill last, 1652
- A conference held between the old Lord Protector and the new Lord General, truly reported by Hugh Peters
- A constitutional history of the British empire : from the accession of Charles I. to the restoration ... including a particular examination of Mr. Hume's statements relative to the character of the English government
- A copy of the letter from His Excellency the Lord Generall Cromwell, sent to the members of Parliament : called to take upon them the trust of the government of this common-vvealth : which began on Munday the fourth of June, 1653, the day appointed by the letters of summons from his Excellency the Lord Gen. Cromwell for the meeting of these gentlemen : with severall transactions since that time
- A copy of the presentment and indictment found and exhibited by the Grand-Jury of Middlesex : in the Upper Bench at Westminster, on the last day of Killary term, 1659 : against Collonel Matthew Alured, Collonel John Okey, (the Captains of the Gards) and Edmond Cooper (one of the door keepers) for assaulting and keeping Sir Gilbert Gerrard Baronet, one of the knights of the shire for their county, by force and arms out of the Commons House of Parliament, on the 27 [th] day of December last, when 21 members more were in like sort secluded and kept out of the House by them, which will serve as a president for other counties, and secluders of other members
- A declaration by the Kings Majesty, to his subjects of the kingdoms of Scotland, England, and Ireland
- A declaration concerning the government of the three nations of England, Scotland, and Ireland
- A declaration from His Majestie the King of Scots : wherein is declared how the army shall be fully satisfied all their arrears with a large overplus, together with an assurance of indempnity to all that have been engaged and and active in any the late wars, that all armies shall be disbanded, and his goverament always regulated by a free and full parliament triennially called, and the people secured of their liberties and eased of their illegal burthens and taxes, also A letter to the Right Honourable the Lord Lambert from a lover of peace and truth being a most faithful advice how to chuse the safest way to the happy ending of all our distractions
- A declaration of His Highnes by the advice of his council : shewing the reasons of their proceedings for securing the peace of the Commonwealth upon occasion of the late insurrection and rebellion
- A declaration of His Highnes the Lord Protector and the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland for a day of solemn fasting and humiliation in the three nations
- A declaration of His Highnes the Lord Protector for a day of publick thanksgiving : with an order of His Highness Council in Scotland for the government thereof for a day of publick thanksgiving in Scotland
- A declaration of Vice-Admiral John Lavvson commander of the fleet in the narrow seas by authority of Parliament : with the commanders of the several ships now with him in the Downes, in order to the removal of the interruption that is put upon the Parliament, the 13th of October last
- A declaration of all the watermen in and about the city of London, between Gravesend and Stanes, or, A hue and cry after Col. Whitton and his decoys
- A declaration of the General Convention of Ireland : Whereas the high extremityes of Ireland necessarily requiring it, this General Convention is assembled to consider of and apply remedyes to redeem the nation from those extremityes ..
- A declaration of the General Convention of Ireland : expressing their detestation of the unjust proceedings against the late King, in a pretended high court of justice in England
- A declaration of the King of Scots concerning the Presbyterians : agreed upon by the Bishop of Kildare, Doctor Levan, and divers others, at a general councel held the 12th of this instant December, 1651, at Paris in France
- A declaration of the Parliament assembled at Westminster : Whereas by a clause in an act of this present Parliament, for enabling and authorizing certain persons to be justices of the peace, and sheriffs ..
- A declaration of the Parliament of the Common-wealth of England, relating to the affairs and proceedings between this Common-wealth and the States Generall of the United Provinces of the Low-Countreys, and the present differences occasioned on the States part : And the answer of the parliament to the three papers from the ambassadors extraordinary of the States Generall, upon occasion of the late fight between the fleets. With a narrative of the late engagement between the English and Holland fleet. As also a collection of the proceedings in the treaty between the Lord Pauw, ambassador extraordinary from the States Generall of the United Provinces, and the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England
- A declaration of the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England
- A declaration of the Right Honourable, James, Earle of Darby, Lord Stanly, Strange of Knocking, and of the Isle of Man. Concerning his resolution to keep the Isle of Man for His Majesties service, against all force whatsoever : Together with His Lordships letter, in answer to Commissary Generall Ireton
- A declaration of the army of England upon their march into Scotland : as also a letter of His Excellency the Lord Generall Cromwell to the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland : together with a vindication of the aforesaid declaration from the uncharitable constructions, odious imputations, and scandalous aspersions of the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland, in their reply thereto : and an answer of the under-officers and souldiers of the army, to a paper directed to them from the people of Scotland
- A declaration of the army of England vpon their march into Scotland
- A declaration of the commander in chief in Scotland : and the officers under his command, in vindication of the liberties of the people and priviledges of Parliament
- A declaration of the faithfull souldiers of the army, to all the honest people of the nation : shewing their resolution to stand by the good old cause, and maintain the liberties and privileges of the subject : formerly printed in canting language, and now re-printed with explanations in the margent, for the better information of all such as desire to look to the bottom of their deceits
- A declaration of the officers of the army, inviting the members of the long Parliament, who continued sitting till the 20th of April, 1653, to return to exercise and discharge of their trust, Fryday 6 April, 1659 : ordered by the Lord Fleetvvood, and the general council of the officers of the army, that this declaration be forthwith printed and published, Thomas Sandford Secretary
- A faithfull and conscientious account for subscribing the engagement : discussed in four sections : I. Motives for just expediency of giving such account, 2. The account truely stated and explained, 3. Reasons justifying the faithfulness of it, 4. Objections against it, satisfactorily answered
- A fevv plain vvords to the officers of the army by way of councel : from one who was conversant with them for the space of about 14 years
- A few plain words to be considered by those of the army or others that would have a Parliament that is chosen by the voyces of the people to govern the three nations : wherein is shewed unto them according to the Scriptures of the truth, that a Parliament so chosen are not like to govern for God and the good of His people : also something to the other part of the army and the new committee, who turned out or ownes the turning out of the late Parliament
- A further testimony to truth; or, Some earnest groans for a righteous settlement, in this hour of distraction, : agreeable to the late essay, so suitably offered by some friends and brethren, to this purpose: by some baptized congregations, and other cordial lovers and assertors of the publick good old cause, in the counties of Leicester, Nottingham, Rutland, Lincoln, Stafford, Darby, and Shropshire. To all that bear good will to Zion, and love the Lord Jesus, that have either power, opportunity, or hearts to appear for him, and his righteous cause, in this day
- A great fight neer the city of Dublin in Ireland, : between the Princes forces commanded by the Marquesse of Ormond, and the Parliaments forces under the conduct of Col. Jones; with the particulars thereof, and the names of those regiments who yeelded upon quarter, to march away without arms, with their hands in their pockets. Also terrible newes from the north of England, and another great army raising in Scotland
- A healing question propounded and resolved upon occasion of the late publique and seasonable call to humiliation : in order to love and union amongst the honest party, and with a desire to apply balsome to the wound, before it become incurable
- A healing question propounded and resolved upon occasion of the late publique and seasonable call to humiliation, in order to love and union amongst the honest party, : and with a desire to apply balsome to the wound, before it become incurable
- A healing question propounded and resolved upon occasion of the late publique and seasonable call to humiliation, in order to love and union amongst the honest party, and with a desire to apply balsome to the wound, before it become incurable
- A history of England : principally in the seventeenth century, Volume 3
- A history of three of the judges of King Charles I. : Major-General Whalley, Major-General Goffe, and Colonel Dixwell: who, at the Restoration, 1660, fled to America ; and were secreted and concealed, in Massachusetts and Connecticut, for near thirty years. : With an account of Mr. Theophilus Whale, of Narragansett, supposed to have been also one of the judges.
- A hue & crie after the good old cause
- A large relation of the fight at Leith neere Edenburgh : Wherein Major Generall Montgomery, Colonell Straughan, with many more of quality of the Scottish party were slaine and wounded. The particulars on both sides fully related, with a list of the prisoners taken, and number kild. Also a perfect account of every dayes transactions and engagements between the armies, since our armies first entring Scotland. Published by authority
- A legall vindication of the liberties of England against illegall taxes and pretended acts of Parliament lately enforced on the people, or, Reasons assigned by William Prynne ... why he can neither in conscience, law, nor prudence submit to the new illegall tax or contribution of ninety thousand pounds the month : lately imposed on the kingdom by a pretended act of some commons in (or rather out of) Parliament
- A letter and declaration of the gentry of the county of Norfolk and the county of the city of Norwich, to his excellency the Lord General Monk
- A letter from His Excellencie the Lord General Monck and the officers under his command, to the Parliament : in the name of themselves and the souldiers under them, dated 11 of Feb. 1659 : with the Parliaments answer thereunto
- A letter from Maj. General Massey to an honourable person in London
- A letter from Major General Sir Hardress VValler, and the Council of Officers at Dublin, to Lieutenant General Ludlow
- A letter from Sir Anthony Ashly [sic] Cooper, Thomas Scot, John Berners and John Weaver, Esqs : delivered to the Lord Fleetwood : owning their late actions in endeavouring to secure the Tower of London, and expostulating his Lordships defection from his engagement unto the Parliament
- A letter from William Basill Esq; : Attorney-General of Ireland, to the Honorable, William Lenthall Esq; speaker of the Parliament of England, concerning a great victory obtained by the Parliaments forces against the rebels in Meleek Island, on the five and twentieth of October, 1650. Together with an order of Parliament for a publique thanksgiving within the City of London and liberties thereof, on the next Lords-Day, being the first of Decemb. 1650. Die Martis, 26 Novembr. 1650. Ordered by the Parliament, that this letter and order be forthwith printed and published. Hen: Scobell, Cleric. Parliamenti
- A letter from divers of the gentry of the county of Lincolne : to his Excellency the Lord General Monck.
- A letter from the Earl of Glencairne : to the governour of Badgenoth Castle, and his answer thereunto : together with a letter from the governour, to the gentlemen of Badgenoth
- A letter from the King of Scots, to the Pope of Rome; : and his desires and propositions, touching the Parliament, to be sent to all Christian princes, common-wealths, and states. : Together with a relation concerning his landing at Calice in France. : And a declaration of his further proceedings, and last transactions. / Appointed to be read in all churches and chappels throughout England and Wales
- A letter from the Lord General Monck and the officers here : to the several and respective regiments and other forces in England, Scotland, and Ireland
- A letter from the offices of the army at the head-quarters ing the south : to the Lord Generall Cromwell, and the army in the north : vpon their expedition into Scotland
- A letter of November 12 from General Monck : directed (& delivered) to the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Common Council of the city of London, inciting them and all true English-men, to give their assistance, for redemption of the almost lost liberties of England
- A letter of advice to his excellencie the Lord General Monck
- A letter sent from Portsmouth, : from a very worthy person there, to a friend of his in London
- A letter sent to the Right Honourable William Lenthal Esq., speaker of the Parliament of the commonwealth of England : concerning the securing of Windsor Castle for the Parliament and a declaration of the officers and souldiers of the Regiment of Foot belonging to the Tower of London, December 24, 1659 : read in Parliament, December the 28, 1659
- A letter to Dr. E. Hyde : in answer to one of his occasioned by the late insurrection at Salisbury
- A letter to General Monk, expressing the sense of many thousands of the well affected people of England. Old Parliamenters, and old Puritanes : To the magnanimous and truly excellent Generall Monk.
- A letter to the Right Honourable William Lenthall, Esq., Speaker of the Parliament of England : giving a true relation of a late great victory obtained by the Parliaments forces against the Scots neere Dundee, the taking the old Generall Lesley, Lord Chancellour Louden, Lord Crauford Linsey, Lord Ogleby, and 300 more, whereof divers of quality : as also A true relation (with the particulars) of a great victory by our forces neer Worcester against the King of Scots army, 5000 of the enemy kild and taken, and the taking of the royall fort in Worcester
- A message from the King of Scots : and the full and perfect relation of his safe arrivall at Paris in France, the manner of his Royall entertainment, and his speech to the King and Councel, concerning the Parliament of England, and the Lord General Cromwel and his army : also, the manner of his escape, and how himself, and the Lord Wilmot, quitted their horses, and on their second dayes march from Worcester betook themselves into a tree, the third day into a wood, and immediately after for London, where he staid three weeks, and from thence, took shipping in a Dutch Barque, as a servant to the Lord Wilmont : whereunto is annexed, Captain Hind's progress ... : Published by authority
- A message from the king of Scotland; to the Parliament convened at Edenborough : And Lieutenant Gen: Lesley's preparation to receive him, upon his landing at Frith; and to conduct him to Edenborough, with a convoy of 3000 horse. : Also, a list of the earls, lords, and knights, that are expelled the kingdom of Scotland, and not to come within the verge of the court. : Together, with the raising of every fourth man in Scotland; the number of the horse and foot, and their advance nearer to the borders of England: with Col. Hackers regiment, and some other of the Parl. of Englands forces, marching into Northumberland
- A narrative of the proceedings of the commissioners appointed by O. Cromwell, for ejecting scandalous and ignorant ministers, in the case of Walter Bushnell, clerk, Vicar of Box in the county of Wilts : wherein is shewed that both commissioners, ministers, clerk, witnesses have acted as unjustly even as was possible for men to do by such a power, and all under the pretence of godliness and reformation
- A narrative wherein is faithfully set forth the sufferings of John Canne, Wentworth Day, John Clarke, John Belcher, John Richard, Robert Boggis, Petter Kidd, Richard Bryenton, and George Strange, called, as their news book saith, Fift Monarchy Men : that is, how eight of them were taken in Coleman Street, moneth second, called Aprill, day first, 1658, as they were in the solemn worship of God, and by the Lord Mayor sent prisoners to the counter in the Poultrey : also of the arraignment of Wentworth Day and John Clarke at the sessions in the Old Baily, and how the rest after three weeks imprisonment and more were discharged in their court
- A new book of loyal English martyrs and confessors : who have endured the pains and terrours of death, arraignment, banishment and imprisonment for the maintenance of the just and legal government of these kingdoms both in church and state
- A new declaration and remonstrance of the inhabitants of South-Wales : With the last transactions between the Scots and their King, and other remarkable intelligence of the proceedings of the Kirke Parliament and Army of Scotland. Also, the Lord Deputy of Irelands summons sent to General Preston Governor of Waterford, and General Prestons answer thereunto. Together with a message from the Prince of Orange to the magistrates of Amsterdam,
- A new parliament, or representative for the perpetual peace and quiet of this nation, and of other parts : (which be or shall be incorporated with the same) in the enjoyment of their just rights and liberties, as in the most peaceable times of old they have been : now proposed to be chosen and held certainly in all future times ... : with other things in order to the prevention of unlawful exacting from the people of this nation, every year hereafter, millions of money formerly so exacted
- A petitionary epistle directed to the Lord Protector, and people of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, to continue in unity
- A remonstrance and protestation of the vvell-affected people of the cities of London, Westminster, and other the cities, counties and places within the commonwealth of England, against : and against all pretended powers and authorities that they have, or shall set up, to rule or govern this commonwealth, that is not established by Parliament
- A serious and faithfull representation of the judgements of ministers of the gospell within the province of London : Contained in a letter from them to the generall and his councell of warre.
- A short view of some remarkable transactions, leading to the happy settlement of these nations under the government of our lawfull and gracious soveraign, Charl[e]s the II, whom God preserve
- A solemn warning to all members of this kirk from the Commission of the Generall Assemblie : with an act for censuring such as act or comply with the sectarian armie now infesting this kingdom
- A summary of occurrences, relating to the miraculous preservation of our late sovereign lord King Charles II. after the defeat of his army at Worcester in the year 1651
- A treasonable plot discovered : with the names of those that are taken, and sent prisoners to the tower and the names of the chief suspected persons that had a hand in it
- A true and perfect narrative of what was done, spoken by and between Mr. Prynne, the old and newly forcibly late secluded members, the army officers, and those now sitting, both in the Commons lobby, House, and elsewhere on Saturday and Monday last (the 7 and 9 of this instant May) : with the true reasons, ends inducing Mr. Prynne ... thus earnestly to press for entry, to go and keep in the House as he did, and what proposals he intended there to make for publike peace, settlement, and preservation of the Parliaments privileges
- A true narrative of the particular profits and gaines made by me William Lenthall : from 1648 during the time I was speaker
- A true relation of the progress of the Parl[i]aments forces in Scotland : together with the king's wholly abandoning Scotland, and in despair, with what forces were left them, marching into England, with part of our forces in his van, and my Lord General following in his reer
- A voyce from the heavenly word of God : as a representation to every member of Parliament of the Commonwealth of England, in the behalf of Mr. John Lilburne close prisoner in Newgate : with the sighs and lamentations of many of the free born people of England for justice and equity, whose names are hereunto subscribed, on the behalf of themselves and others
- A warning-peece for England : being a discovery of a Jesuiticall design to dismember Wales from England, to the ruine of both : together with undeniable reasons and arguments, proving the indispensable necessity of appeals from Wales to the courts at Westminister ... : humbly tendred to the consideration of His Highness the Lord Protector and his council
- A word to the Royalists or Caveliers &c
- A word to the army, or, A friendly representation and humble request to the Honourable the L. Charles Fleetwood, commander in chief, and the Lord Lambert and the rest of the officers and souldiers of the army in England
- Against throne and altar : Machiavelli and political theory under the English Republic
- Alderman Fowke's speech at the delivery of a petition from the Lord Mayor, aldermen and commons in Common Councill assembled to the Parliament of England concerning their militia : and the Parliaments answer thereunto
- Aleyn mayor : At a Common Councel holden in the Guildhall London on Wednesday the 14th of December, 1659
- Aleyn mayor : At a Common Councel holden in the Guildhall London, on Tuesday the 20th of December, 1659
- All gentlemen merchants, and other persons may please to take notice that upon Tuesday night the eighteenth day of January 1652. the letters were sent from the old post-house ..
- An Account of the affairs in Ireland in reference to the late change in England : with a declaration of several officers of the army in Ireland, on behalf of themselves and those under their commands, holding forth their stedfast resolution to adhere to the Parliament in defence of its priviledges, and the just rights and liberties of the people of these nations as men and Christians
- An Act for the exportation of several commodities of the breed, growth and manufacture of this Commonvvealth : At the Parliament begun at Westminster the 17th day of September, an. Dom. 1656
- An Answer of some if not all the citizens of London & freemen of England ..
- An Answer to the declaration of the imaginary Parliament of the unknowne Common-wealth of England concerning the affaires past betwixt them of England and the high and mighty lords the States Generall of the United Provinces : wherein their frivolous reasons are cleerly refuted, and their injust proceedings in the treaty of the aforesaid affaires, as in all their actions, manifestly discovered
- An Assessment upon the precinct of [blank]
- An Express from the knights and gentlemen now engaged with Sir George Booth; : to the city and citizens of London, and all other free-men of England
- An Historical account of the rise and progress of addressing
- An account of the taking John Penruddock, Esq, Mr. Hugh Grove, and others, : at Southmolton in the County of Devon, March 15. 1654. by Col. Unton Crokes troop of horse. : And the true state of the pretended articles of Mr. Penruddock, &c
- An act for constituting a committee for the army and treasurers at war
- An act for continuing John Bradshaw serjeant at law, chancellor of the dutchy and county palatine of Lancaster ..
- An act for continuing and establishing the subsidie of tunnage and poundage, and for reviving an act for the better packing of butter, and redress of abuses therein : at the Parliament begun at Westminster, the 17th day of September, An. Dom. 1656
- An act for ministers and payment of tythes
- An act for quiet enjoying of sequestred parsonages and vicaridges by the present incumbent : at the Parliament begun at Westminster the 17th day of September, Anno Domini 1656
- An act for raising of fifteen thousand pounds sterling in Scotland : at the Parliament begun at Westminster the 17 day of September, Anno Dom. 1656
- An act for repeal of several of the clauses in the statues of IEÌŠliz. & 3IÌŠacobi, : touching the oathes of allegiance, obediance and supremacy
- An act for stating and determining the accompts of such officers and soldiers as are to have been imployed in the service of this commonwealth in Ireland
- An act for taking and receiving the accompts of the Commonwealth : with instructions concerning the same
- An act for the adjournment of this present Parliament from the six and twentieth of June 1657 unto the twentieth of January next ensuing : at the Parliament begun at Westminster, the 17th day of September, An. Dom. 1656
- An act for the admitting of the six counties of North-Wales to a general composition for their delinquency
- An act for the better suppressing of theft upon the borders of England and Scotland, and for discovery of highway men and other felons : At the Parliament begun at Westminster, the 17th day of September, An. Dom. 1656
- An act for the exportation of several commodities of the breed, growth, and manufacture of this Commonwealth
- An act for the tryal of Sir Iohn Stowel knight of Bath, David Ienkins Esq., Walter Slingsby Esq., Brown Bushel, William Davenant, ... and Colonel Gerrard
- An act giving licence for transporting fish in forreign bottoms : at the Parliament begun at Westminster the 17th day of September, An. Dom. 1656
- An act of the Commons of England in Parliament assembled : for the speedy raising and levying of monies by way of new impost or excise
- An act prohibiting correspondence with Charls Stuart or his party
- An act touching the moneys and coyns of England
- An additional act for more speedy effecting of the sale of the manors of rectories and gleab lands late belonging to archbishops, bishops, deans, deans and chapters, and other offices and titles which late were of or belonging to any cathedral of collegiate church or chappel within England or Wales : and for the encouragement of lenders upon the security thereof, and of other lands and hereditaments of the said deans, deans and chapters, &c
- An address for submissive, peaceable, and loving living together under the present government : to the people of the commonwealth of England, however by some called royalists, Presbyterians, independents, or fifth-monarchy-men
- An admonitio[n] to my Lord Protector and his Councill, of their present danger : the means to secure him and his posterity in their present greatness, with the generall applause and lasting tranquility of the nation
- An agreement prepared for the people of England, and the places therewith incorporated, for a secure and present peace, upon grounds of common right freedom and safety : also, a declaration of the General Councel of Officers, concerning the same : with a petition of His Excellency and the said General Councel, presented therewith, Saturday, January 20, 1648, to the Honorable the Commons of England in P[a]rliament assembled : here tendred to the people's considerations, and in due time for their subscriptions
- An answer to Grifith Williams Lord Bishop of Ossorie : his book, intituled, The great antichrist revealed, never yet discovered, and proved to be neither pope, nor Turk, nor any single person, nor any one monarch or tyrant in any polity
- An answer to the severall petitions of late exhibited to the High Court of Parliament and to His Excellency the Lord General Cromwell : by the poor husband-men, farmers and tenants in severall counties of England for the taking away of tithes paid to priests and impropriators
- An apologetick for the sequestred clergie of the Church of England : Disclaiming and detesting the late unnatural, presumptuous, unparallel'd and antichristian proceedings, against the honor and life of the best of Kings, our most dear and dread sovereign Lord and King, St Charls the martyr.
- An eccho to the book called A voyce from heaven, by Arise Evans : shewing how in the years 1633, 34, and 35, he forewarned the late King, courtiers and commons of the great ruine of all the three nations, and that the king should be put to death, according to his visions and prophesies : also, his exhortation now to the Parliament and all people for setting up the Kings son in his stead, according to that old unparallel'd prophesie of M. Truswell, recorder of Lincoln here opened, which likewise declareth the things past, present and to come, chiefly the revolution, and dissolution of this state, with the exaltation of the King, in the present year of grace, 1653
- An humble addresse to the right honourable Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament : in vindication of kingly power and government against the damnable positions of Jesuits and phanatiques desiring they would be pleased to call in the king without dishonourable conditions according to his just right
- An ordinance for indempnitie to the English Protestants of the province of Munster in Ireland
- An ordinance for the continuance and maintenance of the alms-houses & alms-men called Poor Knights, and other charitable and pious uses, whereof the late dean and canons of Windsor were feoffees in trust
- Animadversions on a petition delivered to the honourable House of Parliament by several of the godly party in the county of Salop : in vindication of the present government of the commonwealth, the prudent conduct of the army, and the liberties of the people
- Animadversions upon a book entituled Inquisition for the blood of our late soveraign &c., and upon the offence taken at it : wherein in order to peace the ground, reason, and end of our wars are discovered, the old cause stated and determined, the late insurrection animadverted, and a way of peace propounded
- Another great and bloody plot against His Highness the Lord Protector, and the Lords of His Honourable Council : with the particulars thereof, and the manner how a great and dreadfull blow should have been given on Christmass Day : likewise a list of the names of some of the chief conspirators, their oath of secresie touching fire-locks and blunderbusses, and the several examinations and confessions
- Another great victory obtained by the Lord Lambert against Sir George Booth, on Sunday morning last : with the manner of his taking the city of Chester and throwing open the gates, the taking of the five hundred prisoners and divers eminent commanders, viz, Maj. Gen. Egerton, the Lord Kilmurrey, Col. Brooks and Sir Wil. Neal : as also another desperate fight at Leverpool, the taking of the town, the beating and pursuing of the enemy toward Wales, and the escape of Sir George Booth with 200 horse to Cherk Castle
- Antitheta, or, Political reasonings
- Arbitrary government display'd in the tyrannick usurpation of the Rump Parliament and Oliver Cromwell : being a clear account of their arbitrary, cruel and illegal proceedings, under the notion of liberty and property, and a compendious history of those times
- Arbitrary government displayed to the life, in the tyrannic usurpation of a junto of men called the Rump Parliament, and more especially in that of the tyrant and usurper, Oliver Cromwell : in which you have a clear view of the arbitrary, illegal, and unjust proceedings, of those persons under the notion of liberty, and a compendious history of those times, faithfully collected : with the characters and lives of several of those usurpers, and a brief account of the several persons that suffered death, and imprisonment under them for their loyalty to their king and cuontry [sic] ... : illustrated with several brass cutts, representing the chief persons and passages therein
- Astrological predictions for the year of our Lord, 1659 : Wherein is demonstrated the lawfulness of astrology: and judging the power of this nation to stand firm, fixt and unshaken, and from good grounds in art. Also his judgement of the suns ingress into Aries, and of the three eclipses. Here is inserted some horary [sic] questions to declare the lawfulness of the art
- At the Committee of Adventurers for Lands in Ireland, the 9th day of March 1653
- At the counsell at White-Hall : ordered by His Highness with the consent of his counsel, that the commissioners for the excise ..
- Authority and conflict: England 1603-1658
- Be merry and wise, or, A seasonable word to the nation : shewing the cause, the growth, the state, and the cure of our present distempers
- Beheaded Dr. John Hewytts ghost pleading, yea crying for exemplarie justice against the arbitrary, un-exampled injustice of his late judges and executioners in the new High-Commission, or Court of Justice, sitting in Westminster-Hall : conteining his legal plea, demurrer, and exceptions to their illegal iurisdiction, proceedings, and bloody sentence against him ; drawn up by counsel, and left behinde him ready ingrossed ..
- Behemoth : the history of the Civil Wars of England, from the year 1640 to 1660
- Behemoth, or, An epitome of the civil wars of England, from 1640 to 1660
- Behemoth, or, The Long Parliament
- Bentivolio and Urania : in four bookes
- Bentivolio and Urania : in six books
- Bentivolio and Urania : in six books
- Bentivolio and Urania : the second part, in two books
- Bloody nevves from Enfield : being a true but sad relation of the bloody fight and dangerous engagement between eightscore countrey-men with pikes, halberds, forks and swords, and a party of foot souldiers with their arms on Monday last near the said Enfield Chase, with the particulars of this lamentable conflict, and the manner, cause, and grounds thereof : likewise the number killed and taken prisoners, on both sides, the guarding of diverse red-coats to Newgate, with the bloud running about their ears, the lodging them in the dungeon on Monday night last, and the removing them to the common-side on Tuesday morning
- Boscobel, or, The compleat history of His Sacred Majesties most miraculous preservation after the battle of Worcester 3 Sept. 1651 : introduc'd by an exact relation of that battle, and illustrated with a map of the city
- Brethren in iniquity: Or, A beardless pair : held forth in a diaglogue betwixt Titchburn and Ireton, prisoners in the Tower of London
- Britains triumphs, or, A brief history of the warres and other state-affairs of Great Britain : from the death of the king, to the third year of the government of the Lord Protector
- Britains triumphs; or, A brief history of the warres and other state-affairs of Great Britain. From the death of the late king, to the third year of the government of the Lord Protector
- Britania triumphalis, a brief history of the warres and other state-affairs of Great Britain, from the death of the late King to the dissolution of the last Parliament
- By the Council of State : the Council of State taking notice of the tumultuous and barbarous actings at the New-Exchange ..
- By the Council of State, a proclamation : whereas several officers reduced and disbanded, within the space of a year last past, do now remain in and about the cities of London and Westminster ..
- By the Council of State, a proclamation : whereas the Parliament assembled at Westminster the third of November, 1640, is now dissolved, and the care and preservation of the publick in this interval is, in a special manner, committed by authority of Parliament to the Council of State, which trust they are obliged and resolved in the strength of God, to perform with all faithfulness
- By the King, Charles by the grace of God, king of Great Brittain, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, to all and sundry his lieges and subjects, greeting : whereas the Lord hath been pleased in his gracious goodness and tender mercy to discover unto his Maiesty the great evill of the wayes wherein he hath been formerly led by wicked Cromwell ..
- By the Kings Most Excellent Majestie a declaration to all His Maiesties loving subiects in his Kngdoms [sic] of England, Scotland, and Ireland, &c
- By the Kings Most Excellent Majesty, a proclamation
- By the Lord Protector : A proclamation declaring His Highness pleasure and command for putting in execution the laws, statutes and ordinances made against Jesuits and priests, and for the speedy conviction of popish recusants
- By the Lord protector : A proclamation commanding all papists, and all other persons who have been of the late kings party, or his sons, to depart out of the cities of London and Westminster, and late lines of communication, within three days
- By the Mayor, to the Alderman of the Ward of [blank] : whereas according to the directions of a late ordinance made amongst other things, for reforming the great defects in streets and pavements, scavengers have been lately chosen within the several parishes of your ward and accordingly sworn to execute that office ..
- By the Mayor, to the Alderman of the Ward of [blank] : whereas by an ordinance entitled, an ordinance for the better amending and keeping in repaire the common high-wayes within this nation ..
- By the Mayor, to the Alderman of the Ward of [blank] : whereas divers good laws and ordinances have been made for the due observation of the Lord's Day : and divers penalties thereby imposed both upon the ..
- By the Protector : A proclamation commanding a speedy and due execution of the lavvs made against the abominable sins of drunkenness, profane swearing and cursing, adultery, fornication, and other acts of uncleannesse; for observing the assize of bread, ale, and fewel; and touching weights, and measures; for setting the poor on work, and providing for the impotent and aged poor, and punishing rogues and vagabonds, taking accounts of church-wardens and overseers of the poor; and against disturbing of publick preachers, and profanation of the Lords day
- By the Protector : A proclamation commanding all papists, and all other persons, who have been of the late king's party or his sons, to repair unto their places of abode, and not to remove above five miles from the same
- By the Protector : A proclamation signifying His Highness pleasure, that all men being in office of government, at the decease of his most dear father, Oliver late lord protector, shall so continue till His Highness further direction
- By the Protector, a proclamation for appointing of a certain day and place for the meeting of the commissioners named in an act of the late Parliament, entituled, an act for the security of His Highness the Lord Protector His Person, and continuance of the nation in peace and safety
- By the Protector, a proclamation giving encouragement to such as shall transplant themselves to Jamaica
- By the covncil : Whereas the late Parliament dissolving themselves, and resigning their powers and authorities, The government of the Common-wealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, by a Lord Protector
- By the protector : A declaration of His Highness for a day of publique fasting and humiliation
- By the protector : a proclamation of the peace made between this common-wealth and the kingdome of France
- By the protector, a declaration of His Highness the Lord Protector for a day of solemn fasting and humiliation
- Castigio temporum, or, A Short view and reprehension of the errours and enormities of the times, both in church and state : and what is the most probable means to cure the distempers in either
- Cavalier : a tale of chivalry, passion and great houses
- Certain considerations propos'd by the city to the souldiery in and about London : touching the peace and welfare of the nation
- Certain queries worthy mature consideration : to beget good affections in the peoples hearts by purging secret ill humors out of the body of the Commonwealth, and that it may be restored to perfect health
- Certain seasonable considerations and reasons humbly offered against reviving the act intituled, An Act for the Better Propagation and Preaching of the Gospel in Wales .. : presented to the supreme authoritie the Parliament of the Common-wealth of England : with wholesome proposalls, touching the future disposall of the powers given by the said act
- Changes of government in England from May 1659 to May 1660
- Charls Stuart and Oliver Cromvvel united, or, Glad tidings of peace to all Christendom, to the Jews and heathen, conversion, to the Church of Rome, certain downfall, the Irish not to be transplanted
- Colonel Huson's (or the cobler's) confession : in a fit of despair, taken in short-hand by the pen of a ready-writer
- Comfortable nevves from Breda, : in a letter to a person of honour
- Concerning the gouverment of the present Parlament of England, : those are in the behalfe of the supreame iudge to be delivered to the lord mayor and aldermen of the city of London, and are by them to be made knowne and manifested unto all other magistrats of the cities and provinces of the whole kingdome
- Considerations and proposals presented to his late Highnesse Oliver, Lord Protector of England : touching the not warring with Spain, or the more advantagious prosecuting thereof, after it was begun
- Considerations concerning the present engagement, whether it may lawfully be entered into, yea or no?
- Country and court: England, 1658-1714
- Cromwell and the interregnum : the essential readings
- Cromwell's House of Lords : politics, parliaments and constitutional revolution, 1642-1660
- Cromwell's head
- Cromwell's navy : the fleet and the English Revolution, 1648-1660
- Cromwell's navy: the fleet and the English revolution, 1648-1660
- Declaratio Parliamenti Angliæ de expeditione exercitûs eorum in Scotiam
- Declaration du Parlement d'Angleterre touchant la marche de son armée en Escosse
- Die Jovis, 8 Novembr. 1649 : resolved upon the question by the Parliament, that such person or persons who shall ... bring in safe custody ... any person that hath committed, or shall commit any burglary or robbery ..
- Die Martis, 60 Augusti, 1650. Resolved, &c., that the Parliament doth declare, that the several powers given by the several acts of Parliament to the respective commissioners for the militia's of the cities of London and Westminster, the militia's of Southwark and the hamlets of London, be and are in full force ..
- Die Martis, 9 Aprilis, 1650 : Resolved by the Parliament, that the arms of the late King be taken down in all ships of and belonging to the Commonwealth ..
- Die Veneris, 6 Decembr. 1650 : Resolved by the Parliament, that no captain shall absent himself from his charge, without leave from his field-officer ..
- Die Veneris, 6 ÌŠSeptembr, 1650 : ordered by the Parliament, that the lord commissioners of the Great-Seal of England do consider how the engagement may be tendred to all persons in any cities, towns or counties within England or Wales, who are willing to take the engagement ..
- Disaffection and everyday life in interregnum England
- Divers serious cautions : plainly shewing the unlawfulness of the oath of abjuration, and that (for several reasons) a branch of the old royal family may more necessarily tend to the happy settlement of these three distracted nations then any other new government whatsoever
- Elenchi motuum nuperorum in Anglia
- England in conflict, 1603-1660 : kingdom, community, commonwealth
- England's faithfull reprover and monitour
- England's standard, to which all the lovers of a just and speedy settlement, by a safe parliamentary authority, in city, country and army, are desired to repair, or, A remonstrance of the lovers of the commonwealth, inhabitants of Hampshire : delivered to the council of the officers of the army, November 21, 1659
- Englands apology for its late change, or, A sober persvvasive of all disaffected or dissenting persons to a seasonable engagement for the settlement of this common-vvealth : drawne from the workings of providence, the state of affaires, the danger of division
- Englands present case stated .. : partly occasioned by the late proclamation for the convening of a Parliament ... wherein the arbitrary unparallel'd proceedings of the army and their adherents, since 1641 to this time, their dissolving of all Parliament powers and governments to perpetuate themselves are discussed and discovered ... : as also a declaration to live and die with the generals by authority of Parliament and the city of London in defence of the Parliament, laws, city and nations ..
- Englands remembrances
- Eucharisticon pro recuperata valetudine Olivari : serenissimi nostri principis, & imperatoris occidentalium insularum semper Augusti, &. Cum nuper excussus effet Quadrigâ (mirum̀ feroicientibus equis) gravissimoque Casu contusus, ut paene de salute desperaretur
- Eye-salve for English-men, and an alarvm to the Londoners : wherein is contained the summary of Romes late designes against England, and the present plots and enterprizes in hand against London, so many as hath yet come to the knowledge of the author : together with the opening of an effectual door, to the happiness of this nation : whereunto is annexed a postscript containing reasons and motives to his Highness and the present power in being, to grant us s[u]ch a committee which hath been long promised, and much longer desired and sought for
- Financial and commercial policy under the Cromwellian protectorate
- General Monck's last letter to His Excellency the Lord Fleetwood : declaring his resolution to send Col. Wilkes, Lieut. Col. Clobery, Major Knight, by way of treaty, in order to a happy union between the two armies of England and Scotland : with two other letters from persons of honour, signifying great hopes of peace, and a prohibition of either armies proceeding any further in their march
- Glory to God Almighty who ruleth in the heavens, and in whose hands are all the kingdoms of the earth
- God's Englishman: Oliver Cromwell and the English Revolution
- God's fury, England's fire : a new history of the English Civil Wars
- God's instruments : political conduct in the England of Oliver Cromwell
- Going to the wars : the experience of the British civil wars, 1638-1651
- Going to the wars : the experience of the British civil wars, 1638-1651
- Good counsel and advice rejected by disobedient men : and the dayes of Oliver Cromwells visitation passed over, and also of Richard Cromwel his son ..
- Hell or Connaught! : the Cromwellian colonisation of Ireland, 1652-1660
- Hell or Connaught!: the Cromwellian colonisation of Ireland, 1652-1660
- His Highness speech to the Parliament in the Painted Chamber at their dissolution, upon Monday the 22d. of Ianuary 1654 : Published to prevent mistakes, and false copies
- His Highnesse the Lord Protector-protected : in his accepting, or (if you will have it so) in his assuming the protectorship as is here cautioned, and all the clamors, cavils, exceptions, and objections against either as unlawful or king-like (as some please to call it) fully refuted and answered, or satisfied &c. : written in honour of His Highness, so of all our other present powers whether creators or createds, to quit them of the aspersions of usurpers or unlawful powers ... likewise the peoples rights and liberties are fully maintain'd ... lastly all exceptions against the ordinance about treason answered, and it's conceived that it were treason not to make such an ordinance
- His Majesties letter to His Excellency the Lord General Monck, to be communicated to the officers of the army : brought to His Excellency from His Majesties Court at the Hague, by Sir Thomas Clarges
- His late Highness's letter to the Parliament of England : Shewing his willingness to submit to this present government: attested under his owne hand, and read in the House on Wednesday the 25th of May 1659
- Ho Antichristos : the great antichrist revealed, before this time never discovered, and proved to be neither pope, nor Turk, nor any single person, nor the succession of any one monarch or tyrant in any policies, but a collected pack, or multitude of hypocritical, heretical, blasphemous, and most scandalous wicked men that have fulfilled all the prophesies of the Scriptures ... and especially have united ... together by a solemn league and covenant to slay the two witnesses of God, Moses and Aaron ... that is, the supreme magistrate of the Commonwealth, and the chief pastors and governours of the Church of Christ, and the Christian world is requested to judge whether the Assembly of Presbyterians consulting at Westminster, together with the independents, Anabaptists, and lay-preachers be not the false prophet ... and whether the prevalent faction of the long Parliament ... that killed the two witnesses of Jesus Christ, 1. Charles the First ... 2. William Laud ... be not the grosse and visible body of the same antichrist
- Hobbes, Bramhall and the Politics of Liberty and Necessity : A Quarrel of the Civil Wars and Interregnum
- Honest, vpright, faithful, and plain dealing with thee O army of the common-wealth (so called) without flattery, in true unfeigned love to thee : with something more particularly unto the officers of the army, and those that join with them in the outward government of this nation : wherein truth, uprightness, and equity is declared for, and deceit, wickedness, oppression, and tyranny is declared against
- Instructions printed & sent down to Salisbury to ye prisoners [illegible] are to be tried for their lives, for ye late insurrection there
- Instructions to be observed by the several justices of peace in the several counties within this Commonwealth, for the better prevention of robberies, burglaries, and other outrages
- Interest of the United Provinces in the restitution of the king of England : declared upon occasion of the present warr with the English rebells
- Inventing a republic: the political culture of the English Commonwealth, 1649-1653
- Ireland. A declaration for the destroying of vvolves : By the Commissioners of the Common-wealth of England, for the Affairs of Ireland
- Ireland. By the Commissioners of the Common-wealth of England, for the affairs of Ireland : The said Commissioners, taking into their consideration the want the forces in Ireland would be in the next vvinter for hay, fire and candle, if a timely provision were not made for them, did by their order of the 21. of April last, referr the same to a Committee of Officers, who have (in order to a timely supply) offered as followeth
- Joyfull nevves from the Marquesse of Ormond and the Princes army in Ireland : concerning their late fight with the Parliamen[t]s forces, and the landing of 3000 horse in Ireland, for Prince Charles, by the Duke of Lorraign; with a resolution to joyn with 7000. Scots under the Lord of Ards. 3000 Irish commanded by the E. of Clanrickard, 7000 of the Spanish faction, commanded by Gen. Oneal, and 13900 of Ormonds forces which escaped the last fight. All which are designed against the Lord Governour Cromwell, whose numbers will amount to above 30000 horse and foot. Also the Scots declaration concerning their declared King, and all those who have broken the covenant, despised the oath of God, corrupted the truth, and subverted the fundamentall government by King and Parliament
- Justice to the maimed soldier : nursing, medical care, and welfare for sick and wounded soldiers and their families during the English Civil Wars and interregnum, 1642-1660
- Killing is murder, and no murder, or, An exercitation concerning a scurrilous pamphlet of one William Allen, a Jesuitical impostor, intituled, Killing no murder : wherein His Highness honor is vindicated and Allens impostors discovered : and wherein the true grounds of government are stated, and his fallacious principles detected and rejected : as also his calumnious scoffs are perstringed and cramb'd down his own throat
- Killing is murder, and no murder, or, An exercitation concerning a scurrilous pamphlet of one William Allen, a Jesuitical impostor, intituled, Killing no murder : wherein His Highness honor is vindicated and Allens impostors discovered : and wherein the true grounds of government are stated, and his fallacious principles detected and rejected : as also his calumnious scoffs are perstringed and cramb'd down his own throat
- Killing no murder. : Proving 'tis lawful and meritorious in the sight of God and man, to destroy, by any means, tyrants of all degrees, their creatures and dependants; that should attempt the subversion of liberty in a free state, to introduce slavery, beggary, &c. demonstrated from holy writ, the laws of nature, and the most celebrated authors, antient and modern.
- La declaration du Parlement d'Angleterre : contenant les motifs & raisons de leurs dernieres procedures, et pour lesquelles ils ont estably le gouvernement present, en forme de respvbliqve, ou d'estat libre
- Letters of state
- Letters to the council of state, from the commissioners of the militia of several counties, &c : informing them of the several marches of Colonel Lamberts forces, and shewing their readiness to suppress them and a letter from the Lord Montagu, expressing the fleets obedience to the council and Parliament, also a letter from Col. Ingoldsby, who with his own hands took Col. Lambert prisoner : with some further information given by the messenger that came first with the news and was in person at the randezvous on Edge-hill, when Col. Okey and Major Creed appeared there
- Lieut. Colonel J. Lilburn tryed and cast, or, His case and craft discovered : wherein is showed the grounds and reasons of the Parliaments proceeding in passing the act of banishment against him, and wherefore since his coming over hee hath been committed to the Tower by the Parliament : here likewise, is laid open the partiall corrupt and illegal verdicts of his juries ... : being to satisfie all those in the nation that are truly godly ..
- Lieut. Colonel J. Lilburns, apologetisch verhael, nopende sijn onwettigh en onrechtvaerdigh bannissement, onlanghs tegen hem uytgesproken, toegeschreven aen alle inwoonders der vereenighde Nederlandsche Provintien : Lieft. [sic] Colonell I. Lilburne his apologeticall narration, in reference to his late illegall and unjust banishment, directed to the people of the United Provinces
- Linx Brittannicus, or Contemplations upon the present condition of the kingdome
- Literature and politics in Cromwellian England : John Milton, Andrew Marvell, Marchamont Nedham
- Londons glory represented by time, truth and fame : at the magnificent triumphs and entertainment of His most Sacred Majesty Charls the II. The Dukes of York and Glocester, the two Houses of Parliament, Privy Councill, Judges, &c. At Guildhall on Thursday, being the 5th. day of July 1660. and in the 12th. year of His Majestie [sic] most happy reign. Together with the order and management of the whole days business. Published according to order
- Love's name lives, or, A publication of divers petitions presented by Mistris Love to the Parliament, in behalf of her husband : with severall letters that interchangeably pass'd between them a little before his death : as also, one letter written to Master Love by Mr. Jaquel, one of the witnesses against him : together with seven severall letters and notes sent to him, from Dr. Drake, Mr. Jenkyn Mr. Case, and Mr. Robinson, his then fellow-sufferers : all published for publick good
- Miltons republican-letters : or a collection of such as were written by command of the late Commonwealth of England from the year 1648 to the year 1659
- Miraculum basilicon, or The royal miracle : truly exhibiting the wonderful preservation of His Sacred Majesty in, with his miraculous escape afer, the Battel of Worcester : with his deliverances at Edge-hill and in the Downs : faithfully collected and composed from the best and truest relations, but as to that of Worcester, principally from the incomparable Elenchus motuum &c. as it was immediately deliver'd from the King's own mouth to that learned author ...
- Monarchy asserted to be the best, most ancient and legal form of government : in a conference held at White-Hall with Oliver Cromwell and a committee of Parliament : made good by the arguments of Oliver St. John L. Chief Justice, Lord Chief Justice Glynne ..
- Monarchy asserted to be the best, most ancient and legall form of government : in a conference had at Whitehall, with Oliver late Lord Protector & a committee of Parliament made good by the arguments of Oliver St. Iohn ..., Lord Chief Justice Glynn, Lord Comm. Whitlock, Lord Comm. Lisle, Lord Comm. Fines, Lord Broghall, Mr. of the Roles, Sr. Charles Wolseley, Sr. Richard Onslow, Colonel Iones, members of that committee
- Monarchy asserted, to be the best, most ancient and legall form of government : in a conference had at Whitehall with Oliver late Lord Protector & a committee of Parliament: made good by the arguments of Oliver St. Iohn, Lord chief Justice. Lord chief Justice Glyn. Lord Comm. Whitlock. Lord Comm. Lisle. Lord Comm. Fines. Lord Broghall. Mr. of the Roles. Sr. Charles Wolseley. Sr. Richard Onslow. Colonel Iones. Members of that committee
- Monarchy, no creature of Gods making, &c : wherein is proved by Scripture and reason that monarchical government is against the mind of God and that the execution of the late King was one of the fattest sacrifices that ever queen justice had : being an hue and cry after lady liberty ... together with a preface to the supream authority of the three nations, the Parliament of England ...
- Monarchy, no creature of Gods making, &c : wherein is proved by Scripture and reason, that monarchicall government is against the minde of God, and that the execution of the late king was one of the fattest sacrifices that ever Queen Iustice had ...
- Mr. Love's case: : wherein is published, first, his several petitions to the Parliament. Secondly, a full narrative of the late dangerous design against the state, written with Mr. Loves own hand, and by him sent to the Parliament; wherein he setteth down his several meeting and secret actings with Major Alford, Maj. Adams, Col. Barton, Mr. Blackmore, Mr. Case, Mr. Cauton, Dr. Drake, Mr. Drake, Cap. Farr, Mr. Gibbons, Mr. Haviland, Major Huntington, Mr. Jenkins, Mr. Jaquel, Mr Jackson, Lieut. Col. Jackson, Cap. Massey, Mr. Nalton, Cap. Potter, Mr. Robinson, Mr. Sterks, Colonel Sowton, Colonel Vaughan, and others. Thirdly, Mr. Loves speech and prayer on the scaffold on Towerhil, August 22. 1651. Printed by an exact copy, taken in short-hand by John Hinde. Fourthly, animadversions on the said speech and prayer
- Mr. Praise God Barbones his petition : as it was presented to the Parliament, Thursday the 9th of February, 1660. in behalf of himself and many thousands. : With the Parliaments answer thereunto
- Mr. Praise-God Barbone his petition : as it was presented to the Parliament, Thursday the ninth of February, 1659, in behalf of himself and many thousands : vvith the Parliaments answer thereunto
- Mr. Pryn's good old cause stated and stunted 10 years ago, or, A most dangerous designe in mistating the good by mistaking the bad old cause : clearly extricated and offered to the Parliament, the General Council of Officer's, the good people's and army's immediate consideration
- Mr. Recorders speech to the Lord protector, upon Wednesday the eighth of Febr. 1653 : being the day of His Highnesse entertainment in London
- Newes from Brussels : in a letter from a neer attendant on His Maiesties person, to a person of honour here : which casually became thus publique
- Newes from sea, concerning Prince Rupert, Capt. Pluncket, Capt. Munckel, and others : with some transactions betwixt the King of Portingal, and them, together with the taking of certain ships : and a relation touching the strange newes of the Barbadoes : also, the discovery of a plot in the isle of Silly [sic], for destroying of the English ..
- News from the fens, or, An Answer to a pamphlet entituled, Navigation prejudiced by the fen-drainers : (published lately in defense of the petition of Lin, delivered to the Committee for petitions) : wherein is set forth the vanity and falsehood of that discourse, and it is proved that navigation is meliorated by the fen-drainers
- No King but Jesus, or, The Walls of tyrannie razed and the foundations of unjust monarchy discovered to the view of all that desire to see it : wherein is undeniably proved that no king is the Lords anointed but Jesus ...
- No fool, to the old fool
- November 15. 1654 : A perfect list of the several high sheriffs appointed by His Highness the Lord Protector and His Councill, for the severall counties in England and Wales for the year ensuing, viz
- O antichristos. The great Antichrist revealed, before this time never so fully discovered : a treatise in three books : wherein is opened all the prophesies in the Scriptures concerning the great Antichrist, compared with the expositions of ancient fathers and modern authors, both Protestant and Papists of all sorts : and from thence (besides other points of moment) these particulars following treated of ... : in each book it is enquired, whether it doth not appear by matters of fact, that the prevalent party of the long Parliament and their adherents have acted what was foretold should be done by the great Antichrist, killing the two witnesses, and thereby did become the visible body of the great Antichrist : and whether the assembly of divines, together with the Independents, Anabaptists and lay preachers, be not the false prophet, and mystical soul of the same Antichrist : the author determineth not, but requesteth all Christians first to reade, and then judge, with consideration had of his protestation in the next page
- Ohel or Beth-shemesh : A tabernacle for the sun, or, Irenicum evangelicum : an idea of church-discipline in the theorick and practick parts, which come forth first into the world as bridegroom and bride ... by whom you will have the totum essentiale of a true Gospel-church state according to Christs rules and order left us when he ascended ... : published for the benefit of all gathered churches, more especially in England, Ireland and Scotland
- Oliver Cromwell : new perspectives
- Oliver Cromwell's letters to foreign princes and states, for strengthning [sic] and preserving the Protestant religion and interest : with an appendix
- Oliver Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the dominions and territories thereto belonging : to all persons, ministers, lecturers, vicars, and curates ... : whereas the minister and inhabitants of the parish of South-Okenden in our county of Essex ..
- Oliver Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the dominions thereto belonging : to all, to whom these presents shall com, or in any wise appertain, greeting : whereas Philip Up de Beake ..
- Oratio anniversaria in diem inaugurationis serenissimi nostri principis Olivari, D.G. Ang. Scot. & Hybern. prepotentissimi protectoris : habita in Aulâ Medii Templi Decembris decim. sept. M. D. C. LV
- Oratio secunda anniversaria in honorem serenissimi pientissimi ac potentissimi nostri principis Olivari, prout nuper habita est Westmonast. in ædibus ancrumianis : unà cum ode quæ per dom. Hengistonum cum suis ibidem, decantabatur ambæque juvenum spectatissimo Edoardo Laurentio, de vetustissima Laurentiorum familia dedicatæ : quibus accessit in authoris patrem nuperrimè spultum epitaphium, per amicum
- Ordered by the Commons assembled in Parliament : that such of the persons to whom the sum of seventy six thousand pounds, or any part thereof is due for fraight ..
- Original letters and papers of state, addressed to Oliver Cromwell; : concerning the affairs of Great Britain. From the year MDCXLIX to MDCLVIII. Found among the political collections of Mr. John Milton. Now first published from the originals.
- Orthodox state-queries,
- Paean triumphalis in secundum inaugurationem serenissimi nostri principis Olivari : ubi celebriores terra marique victoriae brevissimè perstringuntur : dedecatus Cardinali Mazarino
- Parliaments and politics during the Cromwellian Protectorate
- Parliaments and politics during the Cromwellian Protectorate
- Peace to the nation
- Perceptions of a monarchy without a king : reactions to Oliver Cromwell's power
- Phyllon therapeytikon : an healing leaf most humbly tendred to the nobility and gentry of England, as an essay to cure the bleeding wounds of themselves and the nation
- Pian piano, or, Intercourse between H. Ferne, Dr. in divinity and J. Harrington, Esq : upon occasion of the doctors censure of the Common-wealth of Oceana
- Poetry and the Cromwellian Protectorate : culture, politics, and institutions
- Poetry and the Cromwellian Protectorate : culture, politics, and institutions
- Pride's Purge: politics in the Puritan revolution
- Prince Charles his message to the Levellers in the west and his promise and royal grant concerning their just liberties and freedoms : with their letter to the citizens of London touching the same : also, His Highnesse putting forth to sea with thirty sayl of French, Dutch, and Danes, 200 genltemen of note, 2000 officers and souldiers, 5000 arms and a declaration of their design: likewise, a great fight neer Plymouth between the Par. forces and 1500 Levellers upon their attempt to seize upon the town ..
- Proposals humbly presented to His Highness Oliver, Lord Protector of England, &c. and to the High Court of Parliament now assembled : for the calling to a true and just accompt all committee-men, sequestrators, treasures, excize and custom-commissioners, collectors of monthly assessments and all other persons that have been entrusted with the publick revenue or have in their custody any thing of value appertaining to the Commonwealth ...
- Proposals to the adventurers for lands in Ireland : together with the explanations thereupon
- Rebellion or revolution?: England 1640-1660
- Recollection in the Republics : memories of the British Civil Wars in England, 1649-1659
- Resolutions of Parliament touching delinquents and their compositions : Die Mercurii, 14 Martii, 1648. Resolved by the Commons assembled in Parliament
- Resolved by the Parliament that all primers formerly used in the time of kingship in this nation be suppressed, and shall from henceforth be no further used in any school, either publique or private, within this commonwealth
- Resolved by the Parliament that whatsoever person or persons have, or shall have in their custody any of the printed papers (entituled, His Majesties declaration to all his loving subjects of the kingdom of England and dominion of VVales) be injoyned forthwith to bring the same in to the Councel of State ..
- Revolution and restoration: England in the 1650s
- Rump; or, An exact collection of the choycest poems and songs relating to the late times
- Sate of the case of the Commonvvealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the dominions thereto belonging : in reference to the late established government by a Lord Protector and a Parlament : manifesting therein, not only a consistencie with, and necessary consequence upon the foregoing alterations, but also a full conformity to the declared principles and engagements of the Parlament and army : it being the judgement of divers persons, who, throughout these late troubles, have approved themselves faithfull to the cause and interest of God and their country : presented to the publick, for the satisfaction of others
- Saturday, August 27. 1659 : Ordered by the Parliament, that the proceedings of the commissioners for the militia in the respective counties, cities and places of this commonwealth, for the raising of money ..
- Scotlands holy vvar : a discourse truly, and plainly remonstrating, how the Scots out of a corrupt pretended zeal to the covenant have made the same scandalous, and odious to all good men, and how by religious pretexts of saving the peace of Great Brittain they have irreligiously involved us all in a most pernitious warre
- Secret reasons of state in reference to the affairs of these nations, at the interruption of this present Parliament: anno 1653. discovered : also, the power of parliaments, touching imprisonment debated : with other matters worthy of observation, in Jo. Streater's case, this being a narrative of his two years troubles at the beginning of the late monarchie, erected by General Cromwel
- Sedition scourg'd, or A view of that rascally & venemous paper, entituled, A charge of high-treason exhibited against Oliver Cromwel, Esq; for several treasons by him committed
- Several informations and examinations taken concerning Lieutenant Colonell John Lilburn : shewing his apostacy to the party of Charles Stewart, and what his intentions are in coming over into England out of Flanders
- Several letters from the Lord Generall Monck, commander in chief of the forces in Scotland .. : to Mr. Speaker, to the Lord Fleetwood, to the Lord Lambert
- Several petitions answered, that were put up by the priests of Westmorland, against James Naylor and Geo. Fox .. : with the answer to an order given forth by the justices at Appleby sessions ..
- Several reasons why some officers of the army : with many other good people, did heretofore admit of and subject to Oliver Cromwel as the supreme magistrate of the common-wealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the dominions and territories thereunto belonging : as also, why they did admit of and subject to Richard, the eldest son of the said Oliver, as successor to his father in the government of the aforesaid common-wealth, &c. : likewise, why they have rejected the said government, and earnestly desire the Long Parliament to sit to exercise and discharge their trust in governing the said common-wealth without a single person, king-ship, or House of Lords
- Severall letters from Scotland relating to the proceedings of the army there : read in Parliament the sixth day of September, one thousand six hundred and fifty
- Sir Arthur Hasilrig's meditations, or, The Devil looking over Durham
- Sir Tho. Soame vindicated by a vote of Parliament of March 12, 1659, for the discharging of two former votes of June 1, 1649 : with a recital of the said votes so discharged : for the information of the people concerning the pretended crimes occasioning the same
- Soldiers, writers and statesmen of the English Revolution
- Some farther intelligence of the affairs of England : the death of the renowned Oliver Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland : with an exact relation how Somerset-House was prepared for his effigies : the proclaiming ... the Lord Richard ... Protector of England ... : a Parliament called Jan. 7, 1659 ... : a list of the English fleet designed for the Sound ... : petition of the General Council of the officers of the armyes of England ... : a proclamation about dissolving the Parliament ... April 22, 1659 : a declaration of the officers of the army ..
- Some grounds and reasons from the law of God, and this nation : to manifest the unlawfulnesse of the practice of those magistrates, and others, who commit men to prison, or fine them for not putting off the hat, or not standing bare before them, to convince them of their errour therein : and also to remove prejudices and stumbling-blocks out of the way of the honest-hearted, and to satisfie all that are moderate therein
- Swedish diplomats at Cromwell's court, 1655-1656: the missions of Peter Julius Coyet and Christer Bonde
- Ten quæres upon the ten new commandements of the general council of the officers of the armies, Decemb. 22, 1659 ..
- The Antient land-mark, skreen, or bank betwixt the prince or supreame magistrate and the people of England : by the right of inheritance which the nobility & baronage of England have to sit in the House of Peers in Parliament
- The Armies proposalls to the Parliament of the common-wealth of England, Scotland and Ireland
- The Army in Cromwellian England, 1649-1660
- The Army mastered, or, Great Brittain's joy : briefly presented to those true patriots of their countrey, now assembled in Parliament, by thousands of persons well affected to the lawfull authority of these nations
- The British Republic, 1649-1660
- The British wars, 1637-1651
- The Case and proceedings of at least sixty gentlemen participants and purchasers for valuable consideration, of lands in the levell of Hatfield Chace, the counties of York, Lincolne and Nottingham : and more then two hundred of their tenants who have been dispoiled of their estates by the inhumane and barbarous ryots of the inhabitants of the mannor of Epworth ...
- The Case in law and equity of Tristram Wodward, Esq : for the mannors of Tuddington, Harlington, and Tyngrith, and other lands in the county of Bedford
- The Common-wealths undoubted right and title to the stelyard [sic] in London truly stated in and by the ensuing particulars : conceived to be worth 2000 l. per annum at the least, besides improvements which will amount to a farre higher valuation
- The Copy of a letter to a countrey collonel, or, A serious dissuasive from joyning with those officers now in rebellion against the Parliament
- The Cromwellian Protectorate
- The Cromwellian Protectorate
- The Declaration of Colonel Rich's regiment, with the engagement they have entered into : also Major Braman's letter to Lieutenant Colonel Lagoe upon their going into Portsmouth : to which is added another letter sent from Major Braman to a friend of his in London
- The Draught of an act for county registers, wills and administrations : and for preventing inconvenience, delay, charge and irregularity in chancery and common law (as well in common pleas as criminal and captital causes : and for settling county judicatures, gardians of orphans, courts of appeal, county treasures and work-houses, : with tables of fees, and short forms of declarations
- The Earle of Bristoll his speech in the House of Lords the XX day of July 1660 upon the bill of indempnity
- The English Civil Wars : local aspects
- The English civil wars, 1640-1660
- The English conquest of Jamaica : Oliver Cromwell's bid for empire
- The English conquest of Jamaica : Oliver Cromwell's bid for empire
- The Free-mens petition to the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Commonalty of the city of London in common-council assembled : the humble representation of many thousands of the free-born people of England, inhabiting in London, and free-men of the same city
- The Grand memorandum, or, A True and perfect catalogue of the secluded members of the House of Commons, sitting 16. March, 1659, being the day of their dissolution : also a perfect catalogue of the Rumpers, some of them sitting with the secluded members the same day : together with the names of such as were the kings judges, and condemned him to death under their hands and seals ..
- The Grand spie discovered : being a punctual narrative of all the transactions of the nation both civil and military, more especially in Cheshire, Lancashire, Yorkshire, and Derbyshire, as also in the counties of Kent, Sussex, and Surrey
- The Humble advice, and tender declaration, or remonstrance of several thousands of men fearing God, in the county of Durham, Northumberland, and the adjacent parts of Westmerland and Cumberland, with the north part of Yorkshire; : to the Lord General Monk and those vvith him
- The Humble petition of many inhabitants in and about the city of London : presented to the Parliament by Mr. Sam. Moyer and others, May 12, 1659 : together with the answer of the Parliament thereunto
- The Humble representation and remonstrance of divers free-men of England well-affected to Parliaments, to the Right Honourable the Councel of Officers of the Army
- The Lord Craven's case, briefly stated
- The Lord Cravens case briefly stated out of the report : with observations, upon the several parts of the same
- The Lord Lambert's letter to the Right Honorable the speaker of the Parliament, concerning the victory which it hath pleased God to give the forces of this commonwealth once the rebels under Sir George Booth in Cheshire : read in Parliament Monday Aug. 22 : to which is added a list of the officers which are prisoners, with the number of soldiers and colours taken : according to the relation made by Captain Brown who was present in the fight
- The Names of the persons to be a nevv Council of State appointed by the Parliament sitting at Westminster, on Thursday February 23, 1659
- The Parliament having received intelligence of the taking of the castle of Sterling in Scotland ..
- The Parliaments plea, or, XX. reasons for the union of the Parliament & army presented to publick consideration : wherein the whole matter betwixt Parliament and army is argued and this new interruption condemned
- The Resolutions of the private souldiery of Col. Scroops regiment of horse (now quartering at and neer unto Salisbury) concerning their present expedition for the service of Ireland : wherein they declare their integrity and faithfulness to the solemn engagement of the army made at New-Market and Triploe Heaths, June 5, 1647, and to that end have chosen agitators for their respective troups, agreeing and resolving not to disband or divide, or suffer themselves to be disbanded, till the freedoms of England be first settled and the rights of the souldiery obtained, according to the many declarations and remonstrances of the Parliament and army : directed and presented to the consideration of all the souldiery of the nation, both of field and garrison
- The Restoration : a political and religious history of England and Wales 1658-1667
- The Restoration: a political and religious history of England and Wales, 1658-1667
- The Restoration: a political and religious history of England and Wales, 1658-1667
- The Rump despairing, or, The Rumps proverbs and lamentations : published to promote the repentance of such as have been, and to deterre all others from ever proving, rebels to their prince and country
- The Rump dockt
- The Scotch occurrences impartially relating, the present state and condition of both armies; : with their several actions, designs, and motions; and the desperate ousets and victorious atchievments obtained at Ruthin Castle. Likevvise, the orders of General Monk to all the English forces, to march up against the highlanders in one intire body; and the speech of Gen. Middleton to his souldiers, declaring, that if their enemies vvere one hundred thousand strong, there were enow to be killed, enow to be taken prisoners, and enow to run away. Together with a relation of the great and memorable engagement, the event and success thereof, and the particulars of the loss on both sides
- The Solemn League and Covenant of the Three Kingdoms and the Cromwellian Union, 1643-1663
- The Unbiased statesman : laying the government in an equal balance, being a seasonable word for the commonwealth in a seasonable time
- The Vindication and declaration of the Scots nation, &c
- The afflicted prisoner's appeale : unto His Excellence, the Lord General Cromwell
- The agrement [sic] of the general council of officers of the Armies of England, Scotland, and Ireland, : together with the rest of the officers and forces in and about London; to which the rest of the officers and forces of this Commonwealth by land and sea, are desired to give their concurrence
- The answer of the Emperour of Germany to the letter sent from the King of Scots by the Lord Wilmot for supply of men and monies against England : with the resolution of the Christian princes, dukes, marquesses, earles, lords, noblemen and agents at the great meeting at Regensburgh, and the King of Denmark's proceedings in reference thereunto : also the putting forth of the Dutch fleet to sea, the advance and motion of the English, and 35 sayl brought into Yarmouth, Alesborough, and Harwich : likewise, the great and terrible earth-quake in Natolia, the casting up of great mountains, the covering and over-whelming of towns, and the burying of ten thousand men, women, and children in heaps of earth
- The apologie of Thomas Bushell, of Enston in the county of Oxford, Esquire : By way of vindication from the supposed treason, or misprision of treason laid to his charge, or suggested against him by malicious persons aiming at his life and fortune; together with the reasons of his absence, and right of his demands ..
- The case of Colonel John Lambert, prisoner in the Tower of London
- The case of Sir Gervas Scrope Knight, &c. before the honourable Commissioners for Articles
- The case of the Common-wealth of England stated, or, The equity, utility, and necessity of a submission to the present government : cleared out of monuments both sacred and civill, against all the scruples and pretences of the opposite parties, viz. royallists, Scots, Presbyterians, Levellers : wherein is discovered severally the vanity of their designes, together with the improbability of their successe and inconveniences which must follow (should either of them take effect) to the extreme prejudice of the nation : two parts : with a discourse of the excellencie of a free-state above a kingly-government
- The case of the old secured, secluded, and now excluded members, briefly and truly stated : for their own vindication, and their electors and the Kingdomes satisfaction
- The causes of a publick fast, and humiliation, : to be kept with all convenient diligence: by all the members of this Kirk and Kingdom of Scosland [sic].
- The civil wars in Britain and Ireland, 1638-1651
- The common-wealths great ship commonly called the Soveraigne of the Seas, built in the yeare, 1637 : with a true and exact dimension of her bulk and burden, and those decorements which beautifie and adorne her, with the carving work, figures, and mottoes upon them : shee is besides her tunnage 1637 tuns in burden, shee beareth five lanthorns, the biggest of which will hold ten persons to stand upright, without shouldring or pressing one another, with the names of all the ropes, masts, sailes, and cordage that belong unto a ship : as also the names of all our commanders at sea, the number of men and gunnes which every ship carrieth both in their admirall, vice admirall, and reare-admirall : with all the fights wee have had with the Hollander, since the engagement of Lieutenant-Admirall Trompe neere Dover, against the English fleet under the command of Generall Blake, at the same time that three of their embassadours were here treating of peace : with a perfect rehearsall of an act for encrease of shipping, and encouragement of the navigation of this nation, which so much displeaseth the Hollander
- The commonwealth of England having used all means of tendernesse and affection towards the people of this nation, by receiving them (after a chargeable and bloody war) into union with England ..
- The constitutional experiments of the Commonwealth : a study of the years 1649-1660
- The continuation of this session of Parliament, justified, and the action of the army touching that affair defended : and the objections to both answered according to the best rules of law, reason, and just-preserving policie
- The court of Oliver Cromwell
- The declaration of Sir Chalrs [sic] Coot Knight & Baronet, Lord President of the province of Connaught, and the rest of the council of officers of the army in Ireland present at Dublin
- The declaration of the County of Nottingham, and of the County of the town of Nottingham, presented by way of address to his Excellency the Lord General Monck, the 28th. of February 1659 : vvith a letter to His Excellency, and another to the Speaker of Parliament
- The diary of Bulstrode Whitelock, 1605-1675
- The exercitation answered, : in the assertions following made good against it. 1 That the usurpation pretended by the exercitator is really no usurpation, by any thing that he hath said to prove it such. 2 That former oaths in controversie oblige not against obedience to present powers. 3 That obedience is due to powers in possession, though unlawfully enter'd
- The experience of revolution in Stuart Britain and Ireland
- The experience of revolution in Stuart Britain and Ireland
- The fanatique powder-plot, or The design of the Rumpers and their adherents, to destroy both Parliament and people : VVith a caution against forged intelligence
- The form and order of the coronation of Charles the II, King of Scotland : together vvith the sermon then preached by Mr. Robert Dowglas &c, and the oath then taken with several speeches made : as it was acted at Scoone, the first day of January, 1651 [i.e. 1652]
- The form and order of the coronation of Charles the II, King of Scotland : together with the sermon then preached
- The form and order of the coronation of Charles the II. King of Scotland, together with the sermon then preached, the oath then taken, and the several speeches made : as it was acted and done at Scocne, the first day of January, 1651
- The form and order of the coronation of Charls II, King of Scotland, England, France and Ireland, as it was acted and done at Scoon the first day of Ianuary, 1651
- The forme and order of the coronation of Charles the Second, King of Scotland, England, France, and Ireland : as it was acted and done at Scoone, the first day of January, 1651
- The good old cause briefly demonstrated : with advertisements to authority concerning it, to the end, all persons may see the cause of their bondage, and way of deliverance
- The good old cause of England revived and asserted : with proposals humbly tendered to the consideration of the Parliament, in order to a setlement, security, and peace in this nation
- The grand concernments of England ensured : viz. liberty of conscience, extirpation of popery, defence of property, easing of taxes, advance of trade, soveraign powers of parliaments, reformation of religion, laws and liberties, indempnity, settlement, by a constant succession of free Parliaments, the only possible expedient to preserve us from ruine or slavery : the objections, answered, but more largely, that of a senate : with a sad expostulation, and some smart rebukes to the army
- The great antichrist revealed, never yet discovered, and proved to be neither pope, nor Turk, nor any single person, nor any one monarch or tyrant in any polity : but a collected pack, or multitude of hypocritical, heretical, blasphemous, and most scandalous wicked men that have fulfilled all the prophesies of the Scriptures ... and especially have united ... together by a solemn league and covenant to slay the two witnesses of God viz. [brace] the supreame magistrate of the Commonwealth, and the chief pastors and governors of the Church of Christ, and the Christian world is requested to judge whether [brace] the Assembly of Presbyterians, together with the independents, Anabaptists, and lay- preachers be not the false prophet ... and whether the prevalent faction of the long Parliament ... that killed the two witnesses of Jesus Christ , 1. Charles the First ... 2. William Laud ... be not the visible body of the same antichrist
- The history of Oliver Cromwel : being an impartial account of all the battles, sieges and other military achievements wherein he was ingaged in England, Scotland, and Ireland : and likewise of his civil administrations while he had the supream government of these three kingdoms till his death : relating only matters of fact wihout reflection or observation
- The history of Oliver Cromwel, lord protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland : Being an account of all the battles, sieges, and other military achievements, wherein he was ingaged, in these three nations. And likewise of his civil administrations, while he had the supream government till his death. : Relating only matters of fact, without passion or partiality.
- The history of independency : the fourth and last part : continued from the death of His late Majesty, King Charls the First of happy memory, till the deaths of the chief of that juncto
- The history of the civil wars of England : from the year 1640-1660
- The history of the life and death of His Most Serene Highness, Oliver, late Lord Protector : wherein, from his cradle to his tomb, are impartially transmitted to posterity, the most weighty transactions forreign or domestique that have happened in his time, either in matters of law, proceedings in Parliaments, or other affairs in church or state
- The history of the life and death of His most Serene Highness, Oliver, late Lord Protector : Wherein, from his cradle to his tomb, are impartially transmitted to posterity, the most weighty transactions, forreign or domestique, that have happened in his time, either in matters of law, proceedings in Parliaments, or other affairs in church or state.
- The humble addresse of John Musgrave to the supreme authority, the Parliament of the common wealth of England
- The humble and healing advice of Colonel Robert Overton, Governour of Hull, to Charles Lord Fleetwood, and General Monck, and all other inferiour officers of both armies in England and Scotland
- The humble appeal and remonstrance of Thomas Ivie ..
- The humble petition and advice presented unto His Highnes the Lord Protector : by the knights, citizens and burgesses assembled at the Parliament begun and held at Westminster the 17th day of September, 1656 and there continued until the 26th day of June following and then adjourned unto the 20th day of January 1657 : as also their humble additionall and explanatory petition and advice presented unto His Highness in the same Parliament : together with His Highness consent unto the said petitions when they were respectively presented
- The humble petition of Richard Cromwell, Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland, to the councel of officers at Walingford House
- The just devil of Woodstock, or, A true narrative of the several apparitions, the frights, and punishments inflicted upon the rumpish commissioners : sent thither to survey the mannors and houses belonging to His Majestie
- The lambe still pursuing the wolfe : as may appear by the four within named letters truly duplicated and printed
- The last speech of Col. Eusebius Andrews, : sometimes a lawyer of Lincolns-Inne, at the time of his execution on the scaffold at Tower-hill, Thursday the 22 of August, 1650: with several questions propounded to him by Doctor Swadling, and his answer thereunto. Licensed, entred, and published according to order
- The last speech of Col. Eusebius Andrews, sometimes a lawyer of Lincolns-Inne, at the time of his execution on the scaffold at Tower-hill, Thursday the 22 of August, 1650 : with several questions propounded to him by Doctor Swadling, and his answer thereunto
- The lavvfulnes of obeying the present government and acting under it
- The life of Oliver Cromwel, Lord Protector of the Common-wealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland : being an account of all the battles, sieges, and other military atchievements, wherein he was engaged, in these three nations : and likewise, of his civil administrations while he had the supream government, till his death
- The long Parliament revived: or An act for the continuation and the not dissolving of the long Parliament but by an act of Parliament : With undenyable reasons deduced from the sd Act to prove that the Parliament is not yet dissolved. Also Mr Wm Prin his 5 arguments fully answered whereby he endeavors to prove it to be dissolved by the King's death. / By a true lover and great sufferer for his King and Country
- The martial horse, or, Power of a court-martial : being the general charge of Robert Kinderslie, gent. against Stevens, and others, 1651
- The oath of allegiance and the national covenant proved to be non-obliging: or, three several papers on that subject; : viz. 1. Two positions, with several reasons of them, and consequences flowing from thence. 2. An answer to the said positions. 3. A reply to the said answer, wherein the truth of the positions is vindicated, and the oath of allegiance, and the national covenant are made non-obliging.
- The oppressed mans second outcry for justice, : to every member of Parliament against the unparallel'd corruptions, and most cruel oppression, tyranny, and incomparable injustice exercised by the Commissioners for Compounding sitting at Haberdashers Hall London, upon Cornet Christopher Cheesman, late agent for sequestrations in the county of Berks the author hereof ..
- The perfect politician, or, A full view of the life and actions (military and civil) of O. Cromwel : containing also a history of the late civil war, so far as he was concerned therein : whereunto is added his character and a compleat catalogue of all the honours conferr'd by him on several persons
- The perfect politician, or, A full view of the life and actions (military and civil) of O. Cromwell : containing also a history of the late civil war, so far as he was concerned therein : whereunto is added his character and a compleat catalogue of all the honours conferr'd by him on several persons
- The political activities of the Baptists and Fifth Monarchy Men in England during the Interregnum
- The rates of the excise and new-impost : set and imposed by Parliament on the severall commodities imported, hereafter mentioned, to be paid and collected from the 21st. day of December 1649
- The readie and easie vvay to establish a free commonwealth : and the excellence therof compar'd with the inconveniences and dangers of readmitting kingship in this nation
- The reward of oppression, tyranny, and injustice committed by the late kings and queens of England and others : by the unlawful entry and unlawful deteiner of the dutchie lands of Lancaster : declared in the case of Samuel Beck, an infant, and directed to his Highness Oliver, Lord Protector of England &c. and to the Right Honorable his Privy Counsel
- The royal oake, or, An historicall description of the royal progresse, wonderful travels, miraculous escapes, and strange accidents of His Sacred Majesty Charles the II, third monarch of Great Britain : wherein is observable and worth publique view ...
- The rule of manhood : tyranny, gender, and Classical Republicanism in England, 1603-1660
- The several tryals of Sir Henry Slingsby, Kt., John Hewet, D.D., and John Mordant, Esq., for high treason, in Westminster-Hall : together with the Lord President's speech before the sentence of death was pronounced against the afore named Sir H. Slingsby and Dr. Hewet, being the 2 of June, 1658, at which time the said Mr. Mordant was by the court acquitted : as also the manner of their execution on Tower-Hill the 8 of June following, with the substance of their speeches on the scaffold
- The speech and deportment of John Hewit, D.D., late of St. Gregories London : at the place of execution on Tower Hill, June 8, 1658
- The speech of His Highnesse the Lord Protector to the Parliament in the painted chamber at Westminster, on Munday last, being the fourth of this instant September, 1654 : Examined by the original copy ; published by order and authority
- The speech of the Right Honourable the Lord Fiennes, Commissioner of the Great Seal; : made before His Highness and both Houses of Parliament, on Wednesday the 20th of January, 1657. Being the first day of their sitting. Published by His Highness special command
- The speeches of Col. Penruddock, Col. Jones, Mr. John Dean, and Mr. Lucas : before the time of their execution, at the appointed places, on Thursday and Fryday last, at Salisbury and Excester, being the 3d and 4th of this instant May, 1655 : with a declaration of their ingagement, caus, and principles, touching religion, law, and liberty, and a narrative of the whole business, with the prayer before death
- The storming and totall routing of tythes : wherein is shewed the unlawfullnesse of claiming them by the now pretended tribe of Levy, and both takers and payers therein denying Christ to be come in the flesh
- The testimony of some Christians, in and about Lewes in the county of Sussex, : held forth to the nations, and seriously proposing unto them, the neerest and surest way of settlement, after so long and sore shakings; and the best means of reconciling the civil differences amongst ourselves, in this Commonwealth, is as follows
- The troubles of Israel, or, The English achan pursued, and his foot-steps partly discovered : by one that hopes to be kept from admiring any mans person for advantage sake; yet freely desires to give honour to whom honour and fear to whom fear is due
- The true speeches of Collonel John Penruddock, and Hugh Grove : delivered on the scaffold at Exeter Castle, May the 17th, 1655
- The tryall of traytors, : or, The rump in the pound. Wherein is presented the lively shapes, and bloody actings of the chief of those grand traytors who subscribed to the horrid murder of that blessed martyr Charles the First, of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, King, &c
- The tyrannicide brief : the story of the man who sent Charles I to the scaffold
- The wars in England, Scotland and Ireland, or, An impartial account of all the battels, sieges, and other remarkable transactions, revolutions and accidents, which have happened from the beginning of the reign of King Charles I in 1625, to His Majesties happy restauration, 1660 : illustrated with pictures of some considerable matters curiously ingraven on copper plates
- The wars in England, Scotland and Ireland; : or, An impartial account of all the battels, sieges, and other remarkable transactions, revolutions and accidents, which have happened from the beginning of the reign of King Charles I in 1625, to His Majesties happy restauration, 1660 ; illustrated with pictures of some considerable matters curiously ingraven on copper plates
- The whole triall of Mr. Christopher Love, before a pretended high court of justice in Westminster Hall : containing the charge of high treason against him ... with the relation of his suffering and his speech and prayer at his death on Tower-hill
- The world's mistake in Oliver Cromwell; or, A short political discourse, : shewing that Cromwell's mal-administration, (during his four years and nine moneths pretended protectorship,) layed the foundation of our present condition, in the decay of trade
- To His Highness Richard Lord Protector of the Common-wealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the dominions and territories thereunto belonging : the humble representation and petition of the General Council of the Officers of the Armies of England, Scotland, and Ireland
- To His Highness the Lord Protector and the Parliament of England, &c
- To his highness Protector of the Common-wealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the dominions thereunto belonging : The humble address of Sir John Scot, of Scottistarvet
- To the Parlament, the humble proposal of Sr. Balthazar Gerbier Kt., Peter Larcy, and George Gelders : concerning the representing, in oil, pictures of all the memorable atchievments since the Parlaments first sitting
- To the Parliament of the commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, assembled at Westminster : the humble petition of Humphrey Bagaley
- To the Right Honourable the Lords assembled in Parliament : the humble petition of Archibald Stewart and John Traylemam [sic], obligees for Randall Lord Marquess of Antrim, and Sir Thomas Soames, Thomas Carelton, John Lawrence, Henry Thompson, Edward Basse, and about sixty other persons, creditors of the said Lord Marquess, citizens of London
- To the right honorable, the high court of Parliament, sitting at Westminister : the illegal and immodest petition of Praise-God Barbone, Anabaptist and leather-seller of London
- To the right honourable our worthy and grave senators the lord mayor, and aldermen, to be suddenly communicated and consulted with the commonalty of the city of London, in Common Councell assembled : The further humble petition and remonstrance of the free-men and prentices of the city of London
- To the right honourable, our right vvorthy and grave senatours, the lord mayor, aldermen, and commonalty of the city of London in Common Council assembled, : the most humble petition and address of divers young men, on the behalf of themselves and the apprentices in and about this honourable city,
- To the supream authoritie (under God) of the common-wealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland : the commons in Parliament assembled
- To the supream authority, the Parliament of the Commonvvealth of England &c : the humble petition of divers well-affected inhabitants of the county of Wilts
- To the supreme authority for the common-wealth of England : the humble petition of John Lilburn Esquire, prisoner in Newgate
- To the supreme authority of this nation assembled in Parliament : the humble petition of the creditors in the Common-wealth of England
- To the supreme authority, the Parliament of the Commonvvealth of England, &c : The humble petition of divers well-affected inhabitants of the county of Wilts.
- Treason's master-piece, or, A conference held at Whitehall between Oliver, the late usurper, and a committee of the then pretended Parliament : who desired him to take upon him the title of King of England ... : wherein many of the leading-men of those times did, by unanswerable arguments, assert and prove monarchy to be the only legal ancient, and necessary form of government in these kingdoms
- Twelve queries humbly proposed to the consideration of the Parliament & army, : for the better security of, and advantage to the present government; and publique satisfaction of the good people of the nation.
- Two letters : the one, sent by the lord mayor, aldermen, and common council of London, to His Excellency, the Lord Gen. Monck, by their sword-bearer, which letter was sent in answer to a letter formerly publish'd, and sent to the common council by His Excellency, delivered to them by Col. Markham, and Col. Atkins : the other, His Excellencies answer thereunto
- Two letters from Sir Charles Coote, Lord President of the Province of Connaght in Ireland to the Honourable VVilliam Lenthall, speaker of the Parliament : relating the rendition of the towne and castle of Carickfergus, to Sir Charles Coote, together with the totall defeate of the Scottish and Irish forces in the north of Ireland, under the command of the Lord Ards, Lord Claneboys and Monro