A42709
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Something offered to the consideration of all those who have had a hand in putting the late made Act, (entituled, An Act to prevent and suppress seditious conventicles) in execution For the sake of such who have any tenderness towards the innocent; and also for the information of all others, who have had, shall or may have, a hand in putting in execution the said Act, I shall offer something to shew, whom and what exercises of religion are concerned in and by the said Act, and what not, according to the most true natural genuine litteral sense and meaning thereof, and no other wise.
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Gibson, Thomas, Quaker.
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1665
(1665)
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Wing G678; ESTC R218330
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7,386
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9
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View Text
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A40928
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Christian religious meetings allowed by liturgie are no seditious conventicles, nor punishable by the late act, or, What persons and meetings are owned and allowed by the liturgie of the Church of England and also, what makes a religious meeting to pass and suffer under the name of a seditious conventicle, and likewise, what is a conventicle and what is not a conventicle ... / written the beginning of the fourth moneth in the year 1664 by R.F.
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R. F. (Richard Farnworth), d. 1666.
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1664
(1664)
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Wing F476; ESTC R25391
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17,848
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36
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View Text
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A79999
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Englands compleat law-judge, and lawyer. Declared in these ensuing heads; 1. Whether that law and those judges and practizers owned time out of minde by the supreme authority of the nation, be not the laws, judges, and lawyers of this Common-wealth, &c. 2. Whether courts so constituted are not records of the nation. 3. Whether each court hath not power, as such, to enforce its owne decrees. 4. That the decrees and usages of such a court are as valid as of any court. 5. Whether it be not against reason, that when divers courts in the same nation act by divers lawes, one of the courts should have power to prohibit the other to proceed to bring the matters in difference before it self. 6. Concerning judges of appeale.
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Cock, Charles George.; Paget, Thomas, d. 1660.
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1655
(1655)
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Wing C4788; Thomason E860_3; ESTC R206642
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21,704
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41
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View Text
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A69830
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A vindication of the Parliament of England, in answer to a book written by William Molyneux of Dublin, Esq., intituled, The case of Irelands being bound by acts of Parliament in England, stated by John Cary ...
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Cary, John, d. 1720?
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1698
(1698)
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Wing C734; ESTC R22976
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59,166
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136
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View Text
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A54694
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Restauranda, or, The necessity of publick repairs, by setling of a certain and royal yearly revenue for the king or the way to a well-being for the king and his people, proposed by the establishing of a fitting reveue for him, and enacting some necessary and wholesome laws for the people.
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Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690.
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1662
(1662)
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Wing P2017; ESTC R7102
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61,608
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114
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View Text
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A61555
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Ecclesiastical cases relating to the duties and rights of the parochial clergy stated and resolved according to the principles of conscience and law / by the Right Reverend Father in God, Edward, Lord Bishop of Worcester.
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Stillingfleet, Edward, 1635-1699.
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1698
(1698)
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Wing S5593; ESTC R33861
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132,761
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428
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View Text
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A62918
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A defence of Mr. M. H's brief enquiry into the nature of schism and the vindication of it with reflections upon a pamphlet called The review, &c. : and a brief historical account of nonconformity from the Reformation to this present time.
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Tong, William, 1662-1727.
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1693
(1693)
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Wing T1874; ESTC R22341
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189,699
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204
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View Text
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A41429
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The Royal College of Physicians of London, founded and established by law as appears by letters patents, acts of Parliament, adjudged cases, &c. : and An historical account of the College's proceedings against empiricks and unlicensed practisers, in every princes reign from their first incorporation to the murther of the royal martyr, King Charles the First / by Charles Goodall ...
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Goodall, Charles, 1642-1712.
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1684
(1684)
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Wing G1091; ESTC R8914
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319,602
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530
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View Text
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