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A52617 The history of the affairs of Europe in this present age, but more particularly of the republick of Venice written in Italian by Battista Nani ... ; Englished by Sir Robert Honywood, Knight.; Historia della republica Veneta. English Nani, Battista, 1616-1678.; Honywood, Robert, Sir, 1601-1686. 1673 (1673) Wing N151; ESTC R5493 641,123 610

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Grounds and Principles of the Art of Physick with the Insufficiency of the vulgar way of preparing Medicines and the Excellency of such as are made by Chymical Operation By Edward Bolnest Med. Lond. in octavo price bound 1 s. 11. Aurora Chymica or a rational way of preparing Animals Vegetables and Minerals for a Physical Vse by which preparations they are made most efficacious safe and pleasant Medicines for the preservation of the life of man By Edward Bolnest Med. Reg. O●d in octavo price bound 1 s. 6 d. LAW 12. An Abridgment of divers Cases and Resolutions of the Common Law Alphabetically digested under several Titles By Henry Rolls Serjeant at Law published by the Lord Chief Baron Hales and approved by all the Judges in folio price bound 40 s. 13. The Reports of Sir George Croke Knight in three Volumes in English Allowed of by all the Judges The second Edition carefully corrected by the Original in folio price bound 45 s. The first part of the Institutes of the Laws of England or a Commentary upon Littleton Written by the Lord Chief Justice Coke the eighth Edition in Folio price bound 18 s. 15. The second part of the Institutes of the Laws of England containing the Exposition of Magna Charta and many ancient and other Statutes Written by the Lord Chief Justice Coke The third Edition with an Alphabetical Table added in Folio price bound 14 s. 16. The third part of the Institutes of the Laws of England concerning High Treason and other Pleas of the Crown and Criminal Causes The fourth Edition Written by the Lord Chief Justice Coke in folio price bound 6 s. 17. The fourth part of the Institutes of the Laws of England concerning the Jurosdiction of Courts Written by the Lord Chief Justice Coke The fourth Edition with an Alphabetical Table not heretofore printed in Folio price bound 9 s. 18. Brief Animadversions on Amendments of and Additional Explanatory Records to the fourth Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England concerning the Jurisdictions of Courts By Will. Prynne Esq in folio price bound 12 s. 19. Action upon the Case for Slander or a Methodical Collection of thousands of Cases in the Law of what words are Actionable and what not By William Sheppard Esq in folio price bound 6 s. 20. Thesaurus Brevium or a Collection of approved Forms of all sorts of Original and Judicial Writs in the Kings-Bench With their special directions By J.C. in folio price bound 6 s. 21. Brevia Judicialia or an Exact Collection of approved Forms of all sorts of Judicial Writs in the Common-Bench together with their Returns By Rich. Brownlow in folio price bound 12 s. 22. The History of Gavel-kind with the Etymology thereof containing a Vindication of the Laws of England together with a short History of William the Conqueror By Silas Taylor in quarto price bound 3 s. 23. The Compleat Solicitor performing his Duty and teaching his Client to run through and manage his own Business as well in his Majesties Superior Courts at Westminster as in the Mayors Court Court of Hustings and other Inferiour Courts in the City of London and elsewhere The fourth Edition in octavo price bound 3 s. 6 d. 24. An Exact Abridgment in English of the Cases reported by Sir Francis Moor Knight with the Resolution of the Points of the Law therein by the Judges By W. Hughes in octavo price bound 2 s. 6 d. 25. An Exact Abridgment of all the Statutes in Force and Use made in the 16 17 and 18. of King Charles the First and the 12 13 14 15 and 16. of King Charles the Second By William Hughes Esq in octavo price bound 2 s. 6 d. 26. The Touchstone of Wills Testaments and Administrations being a Compendium of Cases and Resolutions touching the same carefully collected out of the Ecclesiastical Civil and Canon Laws as also out of the Customs Common Laws and Statutes of this Kingdom By G. Meriton in twelves price bound 1 s. 6 d. 27. A Guide for Constables Church-wardens Overseers of the Poor Surveyors of High-ways Treasurers of the County Stock Masters of the House of Correction Bayliffs of Mannors Toll-takers in Fairs c. shewing the extent and power of the several Offices the third Edi●●on enlarged collected by George Meriton in twelves price bound 1 s. 6 d. HISTORY 28. The Voyages and Travels of the Duke of Holsteins Ambassadors into Muscovy Tartary and Persia begun in the year 1633. and finished in 1639. containing a Compleat History of those Countries whereunto are added the Travels of Mandelslo from Persia into the East-Indies begun in 1638. and finished in 1640. The whole illustrated with divers accurate Maps and Figures Written Originally by Adam Olearius Secretary to the Embassie Englished by J. Davis The second Edition in folio price bound 18 s. 29. The present State of the Ottoman Empire in three Books containing the Maxims of the Turkish Politie their Religion and Military Discipline illustrated with divers Figures Written by Paul Ricaut Esq late Secretary to the English Ambassador there now Consul of Smyrna The third Edition in Folio price bound 10 s. 30. The History of Barbadoes St. Christophers Mevis St. Vincents Antego Martinico Monserrat and the rest of the Caribby Islands in all twenty eight in two Books containing the Natural and Moral History of those Islands Illustrated with divers pieces of Sculpture representing the most considerable Rarities therein described in folio price bound 10 s. 31. The History of the Affairs of Europe in this present Age but more particularly of the Republick of Venice Written in Italian by Battista Naní Cavalier and Procurator of St. Mark Englished by Sir Robert Honywood Knight in Folio price bound 14 s. 32. Il Cardinalismo di Santa Chiesa or the History of the Cardinals of the Roman Church from the time of their first Creation to the Election of the late Pope Clement IX with a full account of his Conclave in three Parts Written in Italian by the Author of the Nipotismo di Roma and faithfully Englished in folio price bound 8 s. 33. The World Surveyed or the famous Voyages and Travels of Vincent le Blanc of Marseilles into the East and West-Indies Persia Pegu Fez Morocco Guinney and through all Africa and the principal Provinces of Europe in folio price bound 10 s. 34. The History of the Life and Death of William Land Lord Archbishop of Canterbury containing the Ecclesiastical History of the three Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland from his first rising viz. 1621. to his death 1644. by P. Heylin D.D. in folio price bound 10 s. 35. A brief Account of Mr. Valentine Greatrakes the famous Stroker and divers of the strange Cures by him lately performed Written by himself to the Honourable Robert Boyle in quarto price stitched 1 s. 36. A Relation of Three Embassies from his Majesty Charles the Second to the Great Duke of Muscovy the King of Sweden and the King of
at last at Francfort he was received there with infinite applause and the instances of the Bohemians being rejected who endeavoured to exclude him the oppositions of Saxony being overcome with recompences and the Palatine at last forced to consent he was the 28. of August adorned with the Imperial Dignity while at the same time the Bohemians resolve upon a new Election of a King Whether this Kingdom be Hereditary or Successive is a dispute which hath long wearied Armies and Pens with various Judgments some approving reason though over-mastered others applauding the direction of Fortune and the Conquerours As to that which concerned this business in question the resolution sprung both from the necessity of having a Director of that confused Government and from the want of a support by foreign Force In consideration of his nearness his Religion and his Power they offered the Crown to John George Duke of Saxony but he hoping for more certain advantages from the Austrians refuses it The fame of worth and courage begot a great esteem of Carlo Emanuel Duke of Savoy so that he was invited by the Bohemians and in regard of their Religion and Liberty would have preferred him before all others but it appearing environed with thorns that were too sharp neither Carlo nor any body else was yet found that was willing to accept it It was then adjudged to Frederick Prince Palatine a young man and in whom concurred his own high designs and the hopes to be assisted by others being Son-in-law to the King of England It seemed to some of the more wary of that Party that affairs were too far advanced the Austrians being put to a necessity of putting forth their utmost strength and the Catholicks into the obligation of uniting themselves with them Therefore some of the Electors were not wanting who disswaded the Palatine Bavaria counselled from it and the King of England himself endeavoured to divert him He at first shewing himself backward was at last seduced by hopes and ambition to despise their counsels He had his chief incouragement from the then present state of things for although Ferdinand were advanced to so remarkable dignity his ruine was thought near hand whilst being got free from many trains which in his return from Francfort were laid in the way he no sooner arrives at Vienna but he sees all Hungary risen in Arms. The Bohemians having applied themselves to the Ottoman Port to get a consent that Bethlem Gabor Prince of Transilvania might raise Souldiers in those parts where many Hereticks of the Country moved him to it had no great difficulty to obtain it the Turks being always greedy to see the Christians weaken themselves by themselves and having now made a Peace with the Persian were so much the more vigilant if amidst these discords a way might not be opened to advantages of their own This nevertheless as it ordinarily happens that the most wicked counsels are the least successful instead of bringing a prejudice to Ferdinand served greatly to advance his Cause for the Protestants themselves and the Catholicks which took Arms in his favour upon a specious pretext alledged that it was fit they should all joyn for common defence against the Infidels to maintain that Frontier which defended Germany and Europe from ruine Nevertheless the motion of Gabor was at first with great force for with little opposition he makes himself Master of Cassovia with upper Hungary Afterwards of Altemberg and of Presburg or Possonia where he found the Crown worshipped by that people as a testimony from Heaven of lawful Empire The Confederate Bohemians to joyn with him enter into Austria and failed but a little that they had not possessed the Bridges of Vienna if D'Ampiere and Marradas with a stout defence had not maintained them They then advanced towards Hungary when Buquoy with 5000 men only meeting Gabor who not far from Possonia marched with 15000 knowing the Hungarians more fierce to charge than stout to maintain a fight gave them battel and defeats them But the Victory was not of that importance as in the disproportion of their Forces to hinder la Tour from joyning with Gabor and entring into Austria threaten Vienna with a Siege but the season being advanced into November and Victuals in the open Country through the licentiousness of the Souldiers being quickly consumed they were constrained to retire and the rather because the Archduke Carlo Brother to Ferdinand driven in the Revolt of Silesia from his Church of Vratislavia and having fled for refuge to Sigismond King of Poland had obtained of him a Levy of 10000 men though without the consent of the States of the Kingdom and they under Homonay a Hungarian Baron being entred into the upper Hungary had defeated Stefano Ragotzi Gabors General The Confederates for this cause resolved not only to leave Austria but a Diet in Hungary in which was treated the conferring of that Crown upon Gabor was dissolved for fear and Gabor himself retaining his Conquests yields to a Truce which though it ended not w●●h the Peace nevertheless for ten months it took away that troub●…som distraction giving opportunity to Homanay to pass into S●l●…a and Moravia to Buquoy to go into the upper Austria and to D'A●…piere to follow la Tour into Bohemia And now the applications and thoughts of the Princes were turned towards this Kingdom and it might be said that it resembled a great Lake in which many were fishing with various designs Ferdinand looked at it as his Patrimony Frederick reckoned it as a gift bestowed upon him Saxony and Bavaria gaped after spoils and there wanted not those who waiting upon accidents hoped when others were wearied out to reap for themselves the recompence of the War The House of Austria at that time was truly the die of the Fortune of Europe some desired to raise her up others laboured to bring her down the most were to keep her in a moderate condition All parties therefore made use of the same pretexts of Piety and of State albeit that Princes of several belief joyned themselves together and Religion made War to it self The eyes of the whole Empire were now turned towards the King of England because being so nearly allied to the Palatine and in all affairs endeavouring to thwart the advantages of the Austrians it seemed that it would be difficult for him not to ingage in Arms. But in that Prince decorum and want of power were commonly opposites He being Scotch by birth and come to the Crown by inheritance was the first that governed the two Nations by natural Antipathy and ancient emulation Enemies and designing to reclaim the fierceness of those people with ease and idleness had set up his rest in Peace and avoided as much as possible the calling of Parliaments without which having not the power to impose Contributions nor levy Money he contented himself rather to struggle with many straights and difficulties than see them meet with a jealousie of them or