The History of England, from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Abdication of James the Second, 1688, Band 4Porter & Coates, 1876 |
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Seite 122
... popular government in opposition to such unlim- ited authority in the sovereign . It was necessary to fix a choice : either to abandon entirely the privileges of the peo- ple or to secure them by firmer and more precise barriers than ...
... popular government in opposition to such unlim- ited authority in the sovereign . It was necessary to fix a choice : either to abandon entirely the privileges of the peo- ple or to secure them by firmer and more precise barriers than ...
Seite 244
... popular councils , finding that he owed his advancement to the desertion of their cause , represented him as the great apostate of the common wealth , whom it behooved them to sacrifice as a victim to public justice . Strafford ...
... popular councils , finding that he owed his advancement to the desertion of their cause , represented him as the great apostate of the common wealth , whom it behooved them to sacrifice as a victim to public justice . Strafford ...
Seite 303
... popular leaders , and by offices to attach them to the crown , had failed of success , either for want of skill in con- ducting it or by reason of the slender preferments which it was then in the king's power to confer . The ambitious ...
... popular leaders , and by offices to attach them to the crown , had failed of success , either for want of skill in con- ducting it or by reason of the slender preferments which it was then in the king's power to confer . The ambitious ...
Inhalt
CHAPTER XLVII | 15 |
CHAPTER XLVIII | 38 |
CHAPTER XLIX | 60 |
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ancient appeared arms army assembly attended authority bill bill of attainder bishops Buckingham Catholics Charles Church civil Clarendon clergy command conduct council court Covenanters Cromwell crown dangerous declared Dugdale Duke Earl ecclesiastical employed endeavored enemies engaged England English enterprise entertained entirely Essex execution expedient extremely Fairfax favor forces former Franklyn honor House of Commons House of Peers Ireland Irish isle of Rhé James king king's kingdom levied liberty London Lord measures ment military ministers monarch Nalson nation necessity obliged officers Palatinate Parlia Parliament Parliamentary History party peace Peers person petition Petition of Right popular possessed prerogative present pretended prevailed prince Prince Rupert prisoner Puritans reason refused regard reign religion rendered royal royalists Rushworth Scotland Scots Scottish seemed seized sent Sir Edward Walker sovereign Spain spirit Strafford supply thought tion tonnage and poundage treaty troops violent voted Whitlocke whole zeal