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A58710 The history of the affaires of Scotland from the restauration of King Charles the 2d. in the year 1660, and of the late great revolution in that kingdom : with a particular account of the extraordinary occurrences which hapned thereupon, and the transactions of the convention and Parliament to Midsomer, 1690 : with a full account of the settling of the church government there, together with the act at large for the establishing of it. T. S. 1690 (1690) Wing S164; ESTC R32344 93,166 272

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Ministers of Christ's Church within this Kingdom as they are or shall be Legally admitted to particular Churches Likewise in pursuance of the Premisses Their Majesties do hereby appoint the first meeting of the General Assembly of this Church as above Established to be at Edinburgh the third Thursday of October next to come in this instant year 1690. And because many conform Ministers either have deserted or were removed from Preaching in their Churches preceding the thirteenth day of April 1689. And others were Deprived for not giving Obedience to the Act of the Estates made the said 13 of April 1689. Intituled a Proclamation against the owning of the late K. J. and appointing publick Prayers for King William and Queen Mary Therefore Their Majesties with Advice and Consent foresaid do hereby Declare all the Churches either deserted or from which the Conform-Ministers were Removed or Deprived as is said to be vacant and that the Presbyterian Ministers exercising their Ministery within any of these Parishes or where the last Incumbent is dead by the Desire or Consent of the Paroch shall continue their Possession and have Right to the Benefices and Stipends according to their Entry in the year 1689 and in the time coming ay while the Church as now Establish take further Course therewith And to the Effect the Disorders that have hapned in this Church may be Redressed Their Majesties with Advice and Consent foresaid do hereby allow the General Meeting and Representatives of the foresaid Presbyterian Ministers and Elders in whose hands the Exercise of the Church Government is Established either by themselves or by such Ministers and Elders as shall be appointed and Authorised Visitors by them according to the Custom and Practice of Presbyterian Government throughout the whole Kingdom and several parts thereof to try and purge out all insufficient Negligent Scandalous and Erroneous Ministers by due course of Ecclesiastical Process and Censures And likewise for Redressing all other Church-Disorders And farther It is hereby provided that whatsoever Minister being Convened before the said General Meeting and Representatives of the Presbyterian Ministers and Elders or the Visitors to be Appointed by them shall either prove Contumacious in not appearing or be found Guilty and shall be therefore Censured whether by Suspension or Deposition they shall Ipso Facto be Suspended from or Deprived of their Stipends and Benefices And Ordains this Act to be Printed and Published Extracted out of the Records of Parliament by me Th. Burnet Cls. Reg. Thus after so much disorder so much Tyranny and Oppression in a Kingdom the ill successes of Rebellion and the Return of Law and Justice into their ancient Channel one would think should be sufficient to regain the Affections of Men wandring after Chimera's and unite them to a Prince who has laid such Foundations of their Tranquillity But Rebels and Robbers very seldom lissen to these charms let the charmer charm never so wisely Which is the reason that the remains of Rebellion cannot yet be extinguish'd and that their are several Trayterous Conspiracies and Correspondencies found out of such as make it their business to disturb the peace of the Government However in regard those Discoveries are not yet ripe for publick view and that we can say nothing more of the Highlanders but that they Rob and plunder where they can find any advantage it is time here to conclude this accompt of the Revolution in Scotland no less memorable then that in England FINIS Books lately Printed and Sold by Tho. Salusbury at the sign of the Temple near Temple-Bar in Fleet-street 1690. THE History of the late Great Revolution in England with the Causes and Means by which it was accomplish'd Together with the Settlement thereof under their most Serene Majesties King William and Queen Mary by the Lords and Commons assembled in the late Parliament With an exact List of the Members of both Houses then Sitting The Second Edition To which is added the Effigies of their Present Majesties curiously Engraven on a Copper Plate A new Art of Brewing Beer Ale and other sorts of Liquors so as to render them more healthful to the Body and agreeable to Nature and to keep them longer from souring with less trouble and charge then generally practised which will be a means to prevent those torturing Distempers of the Stone Gravel Gout and Dropsie With easie Experiments for making excellent Drinks with Apples Currans Goosberries Cherries Herbs seeds Hay c. and the way to preserve Eggs 5 or 6 Months from being musty or rotten With an Appendix how to make Fruit-trees constantly fruitful Miscellany Poems viz. I. Remarks on the Death of K. C. II. II. On the Success of K. J. II. III. Upon Faith IV. Upon Patience V. Ambitioh VI. To the University of Oxford VIII The Soul to a good a Conscience VII The Soul to a bad Conscience By J. Whitehall The Declaration and Manifesto of the Protestants of the Vallies of Piedmont called the Vaudois to all Christian Princes and States of the Reasons of their taking up Arms against the Duke of Savoy And why they have put themselves under the protection of WILLIAM King of Great Britain and of the Evangelick Cantons of Switzerland An exact Collection of many Wonderful prophesies relating to the Government of England c. Since the first year of the Reign of K. James I. to this present time 1690. All which have been truly fulfilled and accomplished Also many Prophesies yet foretelling what Government is to succeed to make this Kingdom happy With the certain time of the Downfal of Antichrist throughout the World Remarks upon the Dream of the late abdicated Q. of England and upon that of Madam the D. of La Valiere late Mistress to the French King c.
THE HISTORY OF THE AFFAIRES OF SCOTLAND FROM The Restauration of King Charles the 2d in the year 1660. And of the late great Revolution in that Kingdom WITH A particular account of the Extraordinary Occurrences which hapned thereupon and the Transactions of the CONVENTION and PARLIAMENT to Midsomer 1690. With a full Account of the Settling of the Church Government there Together with the Act at Large for the Establishing of it Licensed and Entred according to Order LONDON Printed for Tho. Salusbury at the sign of the Temple near Temple-Bar in Fleet-street 1690. TO THE Right Honourable JANE Countess of SUTHERLAND Madam IT was the Custom in former Ages when Offerings were made to various Deities that the Adorer made choice of that same Numen to which he thought his Oblation would be most Grateful The same reason encourages this Address to your Ladiship in hopes the Subject of it will be acceptable to a Personage so eminently fam'd for being so highly concerned in the late Miraculous Revolution and your assisting the Deliverance of these Oppressed Nations To you therefore Madam this Compendium appeals as an accomplished judge of Truth where ' ere you find it or in what ever dress 'T is true Madam the Present is but inconsiderable as is the Quality of the Presenter But Persons in your Station look down as well as upward Which if your Ladiship shall vouchsafe to do with an Eye of favour upon this unworthy Offering it is the chief Happiness aspir'd to by Madam Your Ladyships most faithful and most Humble Servant T. S. TO THE READER PRovidence over-rules all Things but never any Act of Providence so strange and so surprizing as the great Revolution that so lately happened in the two Kingdoms of England and Scotland A Revolution not to be parallel'd in History but seasonable to the British Monarchy the Glory whereof was almost brought to Ruine and Destruction Nor was it to be admired that the desire of such a Change should reach so far as Scotland where the causes were the same and the cries of Oppressions were no less loud then in England For it is too evident that all the Laws Priviledges and Rights of the Kingdom of Scotland had under the late Raigns been not onely encroached upon but subverted and Overthrown In regard that by the gradual enlargements of the Prerogative beyond what was allow'd by the Laws of the Constitution and the Statutes of the Realm the Legal and Regular Monarchy of the Nation was swell'd into an Arbitrary and Despotic Power So that all the Franchises and Rights which by Original Contracts and Subsequent Laws were reserved unto the People were either overthrown or precariously enjoy'd No wonder then it was that as well the Scots and the English sought for speedy Redress and to be freed as well from Spiritual Bondage as Temporal Slavery Which at length they obtained by the auspicious Conduct and Generous Advance of his Present Majesty to their Relief A Story certainly that cannot be otherwise then most grateful to Posterity as being accompanied with such Variety of circumstances such unparallel'd Success and the General Advantage of all Europe It was no easie Thing to reduce into Order a Chaos of Government so dismally mangled and confus'd which being so great a Work and brought to so much Perfection in so short a Time as it shews the Extraordinary Zeal and Prudence of the Artificers so did it no less magnifie the Influences that govern'd and directed all their Actions Insomuch that it may be said of the Most Illustrious King WILLIAM what Suetonius says of the Famous and Best of the Roman Emperours Vespasian Rebellione Trium Principum et caede incertum et quari vagum Imperium suscepit firmavitque Gens Nassovia Popery and Idolatry now droop and the Protestant Religion enjoys a general Freedom under a truly Protestant Defender Vnder whose Auspicious Government soon might these two Nations be happy had we not so many Disturbers of Israel amongst us though it was not well known what they repined and grumbled at till this late detection of complicated Conspiracy for the Restoration of Popery and Tyranny In short there has already an accompt been given of our deliverance in England This is a Prospect of the same Deliverance in Scotland the one no less conducible to be known then the Other especially to those who are desirous to observe the Coherences and Concatenations of Providence I will not say it is a structure embellished with the flourishes of Eloquence as being only designed for plainness and exactness wherein I may he bold to say that diligence has been observed as to compile it in the best manner and method that the Truth of Collection could any way claim as due to it And being laid upon so solid a foundation however it fares of it self it may serve to give Light to politer Pens when they shall be at leisure to be more accurate Though there is no question to be made but that many will be as willing to see the naked Rasters of a History as to view the covered Frame though Japanned over never so curiously The History of the Affairs and late Revolution in Scotland from the Year 1660. to this present Year 1690. WHEN Charles II. was restored in the Year 1660. to his ancient Dominions from which he had been for some time kept out by the Civil Wars the Joy was no less cordial and universal in Scotland then in England And it may be said the extraordinary favour of Heaven did so second the Constancy of the Scottish Nation 's Love to a Prince so long wish'd for that their great Persuasions of his singular Endowments without regard to the wary Cautions of scrupulous Prudence were the only measures of their Concessions They established his Prerogative to be absolute and uncontroulable in the choice of all Officers of State Counsellors and Judges and in and over all matters of Peace War Leagues Conventions and Parliaments with a distinct Exclusion of all Exceptions They added to his Revenue above double of what he formerly possessed They declared his ordering and disposal of Trade with Foreign Nations and the laying Restraints and Impositions upon Foreign Imported Commodities to belong to his Majesty and his Successors as an undoubted Prerogative of the Crown And that it might appear that they placed the Security of all their Interests more in the confidence of His Majesties Goodness than on the firmest provision of their best Laws tho' the Parliament in 1641. was held by King Charles I. then present in person and many Acts were there pass'd and subscribed by him for the setling their Religion and Liberties with all the Authority of Judgment that long and well-weigh'd Experience could furnish yet because their Luster seemed to be somewhat eclipsed by the harsh remembrance of some previous Contentions wherein it was their misfortune to have His Majesty differing from them at one blow they annull'd that Parliament and without any other reason