Notes of the Treaty Carried on at Ripon Between King Charles I. and the Covenanters of Scotland, A.D. 1640Camden Society, 1869 - 92 páginas |
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Notes of the Treaty Carried on at Ripon Between King Charles I. and the ... Sir John Borough Visualização completa - 1869 |
Notes of the Treaty Carried on at Ripon Between King Charles I. and the ... Sir John Borough Visualização completa - 1869 |
Notes of the Treaty Carried on at Ripon Between King Charles I. and the ... Sir John Borough Visualização completa - 1869 |
Termos e frases comuns
afternoone agreed answeare Army Articles Assistants beginning Berwick Bristoll CAMD Camden Society Cessation of Armes commanded Commission Committee competencie concearning copies Council counties Covenanters Creswell Creswell Crowcombe debate Declaration deliuered demands Deputy-Lieutenants desire Earl Marshal Earl of Northumberland England English Lords Essex gentlemen giue giuen hath haue Holland John Conyers June King King's Kingdome Lanerick letter levy Lord Conway Lord Lieutenant Lord Lowdon Lord Sauill Lord Trequair Lord Wharton Lords Commissioners Lords retire Lords retourne Lordships maintenance Majesty Majesty's Mandeuile Margin Moues Nalson Newcastle Northumberland to Lord October Papists Parliament payde payment Peers petition present printed in Rushworth priuate propose proposition propound receaue refused retyre RIPPON SAMUEL RAWSON GARDINER Scotch Commissioners Scotland Scots Scottish Commissioners Secretary Vane Secretary Windebank securitie sent Sheriff shew ship-money Sir John Borough soldiers themselues Treaty Treaty of Ripon unto vnto vpon WILLIAM TITE Windebank to Lord writing Yorke
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página i - Puritan, to signify the defenders of matters doctrinal in the English church. Formerly the word was only taken to denote such as dissented from the hierarchy in discipline and church government, which now was extended to brand such as were anti-Arminians in their judgments.
Página xix - The occasion never came till it was too late. To Northumberland, all the efforts made by his more warlike colleagues were hopeless from the first. " To your lordship," he went on to say, " I must confess that our wants and disorders are so great that I cannot devise how we should go on with our designs for this year. Most of the ways that we relied on for supplies of money have hitherto failed us, and for aught I know we are likely to become the most despised nation of Europe. To the regiments that...
Página xxiv - Neither do I believe," he wrote to Windebank on August 3, " the Scots will come into England ; this that they do is only to brag ; but, however, I will look to myself as well as a man may that has no money in his purse. I would send for more of the foot from Selby, but I fear unpaid soldiers more than I do the Scots, and the Devil to boot. God keep you from all three.
Página iv - That it might appear that the court was not at all apprehensive of what the parliament would or could do; and that it was convened by his majesty's grace and inclination, not by any motive of necessity ; it proceeded in all respects in the same unpopular ways it had done : ship-money was levied with the same severity; and the same rigour used in ecclesiastical courts, without the least compliance with the humour of any man ; which was great steadiness ; and, if it were then well pursued, it degenerated...
Página xxiii - Essex are every day increased by new attempts, insomuch as they have now, within these few days, taken upon them to reform churches ; and even in the time of divine service to pull down the rails about the Communion Tables, and in Icklinton [Ickleton, near Royston], in Cambridgeshire, to force the minister to run over a river, and the minister at Panfield, near Braintree, to forsake his charge and family to save his life.