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A Motion humbly presented to the consideration of the honourable, the committee of the high court of Parliament (3)
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Boscobel, or, The history of His Sacred Majesties most miraculous preservation after the battle of Worcester, 3 Sept. 1651 (3)
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English wars and republic (3)
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The true cavalier examined by his principles and found not guilty of schism or sedition (2)
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Murder will out, or, The King's letter justifying the Marquess of Antrim (2)
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A brief chronicle of all the chief actions so fatally falling out in these three kingdoms, viz. England, Scotland & Ireland (2)
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Arguments and reasons to prove the inconvenience & unlawfulness of taking the new engagement (2)
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The Iury of inquisition de jure divino (2)
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The Kings Maiesties letter intercepted by the commissioners attending his Majesty (2)
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A copy of a letter written by Mr. Stephen Marshall (2)
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A letter sent from Lieutenant Generall Cromwel to the Marquis of Argyle and Generall Lesley, and his protestation concerning the Scottish forces, under the command of Gen. Monro (2)
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To the honourable the knights, citizens and burgesses in Parliament assembled. The humble petition of Oliver Flemming, knight (2)
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The Ivry of inqvisition de jvre divino (2)
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A form of prayer, with thanksgiving to Almighty God for having put an end to the great rebellion by the restitution of the King and royal family (2)
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Things now-a-doing: or, The chvrches travaile of the child of reformation now-a-bearing (2)
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A true and just relation of Maj. Gen. Sir Thomas Morgan's progress in France and Flanders with the six thousand English, in the years 1657 and 1658, at the taking of Dunkirk and other important places (2)
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The Christian moderator: or, Persecution for religion condemned (2)
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The civil warres of Great Britain and Ireland (2)
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A vision (2)
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Severall letters and passages between His Excellency, the Lord Generall Cromwell, and William Dundas, governour of Edinburgh Castle, and the ministers therein, since His Excellencies entrance into Edinburgh (2)
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No power but of God, and yet a power in every creature, or, A word in season, to all men not void of grace, or deprived of reason (1)
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Four centuries of witch beliefs (1)
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The complete works of Gerrard Winstanley (1)
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The civil wars experienced (1)
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The English Atlantic in an age of revolution, 1640-1661 (1)
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Behemoth, or, The Long Parliament (1)
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The Christian moderator, or, Persecution for religion condemned, by the light of nature, law of God, evidence of our own principles (1)
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Tracts of Mr. Thomas Hobbs of Malmsbury (1)
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An answer to certain observations of W. Bridges, concerning the present warre against His Majestie (1)
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The Levellers designe discovered, or, The anatomie of the late unhappie mutinie (1)
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The Good old cause explained, revived, & asserted and the Long-Parliament vindicated (1)
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An answer to those qvestions propounded by the Parliament to the assembly of divines, touching jus divinum in matter of church-government (1)
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The loyal citizen revived (1)
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A phanatique league and covenant (1)
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The history of Oliver Cromwel (1)
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An answer sent to the ecclesiasticall assembly at London (1)
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Sacra nemesis, the Levites scourge, or, Mercurius Britan. disciplin'd, civicvs disciplin'd (1)
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The Young-mens and the apprentices outcry, or, An inquisition after the lost fundamentall lawes and liberties of England (1)
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The prisoners plea, humbly offered in a remonstrance (1)
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The mysterie of iniqvity yet working in the kingdomes of England, Scotland, and Ireland, for the destruction of religion truly Protestant (1)
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Continuirende Rebellion: das ist, Gründlicher Bericht und kurtze Aussführung so wol der anjetzo newen in Franckreich erweckten Rebellion deren Ursachen und nochwährenden Missverstände zwischen etlich Parlamenten und dem Cardinal Mazarini (1)
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Walwyns jvst defence (1)
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Murder will out, or, The king's letter justifying the Marquess of Antrim (1)
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A memento, directed to all those that truly reverence the memory of King Charles the martyr (1)
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The famous tragedie of the life and death of Mris. Rump (1)
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Die Martis, 4 April, 1648 (1)
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The history of the Commons Warre of England (1)
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The history of the rebellions in England, Scotland, and Ireland (1)
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Treason discovered, or, The black book opened (1)
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A Remonstrance or declaration touching the re-establishing and sitting of the Parliament at Westminster (1)
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Bradshaw's ghost (1)
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The history of the civil wars of England (1)
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Sampsons foxes agreed to fire a kingdom, or, The Jesuit and the Puritan met in a round to put a kingdom out of square (1)
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Votivæ Angliæ, Englands complaint to their king:, or, The humble desires of all the zealous and true-hearted Protestants in this kingdome, for a speedy and happy reformation of abuses in church government (1)
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A manifestation from Lieutenant Col. John Lilburn, Mr. William Walwyn, Mr. Thomas Prince, and Mr. Richard Overton (1)
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Evangelium armatum, A specimen, or short collection of several doctrines and positions destructive to our government, both civil and ecclesiastical (1)
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A faithful memorial of that remarkable meeting of many officers of the Army in England, at Windsor Castle, in the year 1648 (1)
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Evangelium armatum, or, The Scripture abus'd (1)
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Sagrir, or, Doomes-day drawing nigh, with thunder and lightening to lawyers (1)
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A fvll reply to Certaine briefe observations and anti-queries on Master Prynnes twelve questions about church-government (1)
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A plea for defensive armes, or, A copy of a letter written by Mr. Stephen Marshall to a friend of his in the city, for the necessary vindication of himself and his ministerie, against that altogether groundlesse, most unjust and ungodly aspersion cast upon him by certain malignants in the city, and lately printed at Oxford, in their Mendacium aulicum, otherwise called, Mercurius Aulicus, and sent abroad into other nations to his perpetual infamie (1)
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To the high court of Parliament of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland (1)
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Sad and serious politicall considerations touching the invasive war against our Presbyterian Protestant brethren in Scotland, their late great overthrow, and the probable dangerous consequences thereof to both nations and the Prorestant religion (1)
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The Humble petition of the well-affected Commons of England (1)
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The petition of divers of the inhabitants of the citie of London, delivered at their severall courts of ward-moot, to the right worshipfull the aldermen and common-councell of the severall wards of London, the 22 of Deecember , 1645 (1)
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The temple of lively stones, or, The promised glory of the last days, appearing in the perfect patern of the house in the top of the mountains, established upon the never-failing foundation of apostles and prophets, by Christ the chief corner stone (1)
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A Full answer to the Levellers petition, presented to the House of Commons, on Munday Septemb. 11, 1648 (1)
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A Warning-piece to the General Council of the Army (1)
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A letter, discovering the cause of Gods continuing wrath against the nation (1)
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The faerie leveller, or, King Charles his leveller descried and deciphered in Queene Elizabeths dayes (1)
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A moderate ansvver to Mr. Prins full reply to Certaine observations on his first twelve questions (1)
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A memento treating of the rise, progress, and remedies of seditions (1)
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The utter routing of the whole army of all the Independents and Sectaries, with the totall overthrow of their hierarchy ..., or, Independency not Gods ordinance (1)
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Satan in Samuels mantle, or, The cruelty of Germany acted in Jersey (1)
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The declaration and resolution of His Highnesse the Prince of Wales, upon the death of his royall father (1)
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A brief chronicle of the late intestine vvar in the three kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland, with the intervening affairs of treaties, and other occurences relating thereunto (1)
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Sir John Berkenhead revivd, or, A satyr against the late rebellion (1)
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Never faile, or, That sure way of thriving under all revolutions (1)
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A moderate answer to Mr. Prins full reply to certaine observations on his first twelve questions (1)
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A Looking-glass for King-opposers, or, Twenty admirable examples of Gods severe justice and displeasure (1)
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To the Kings most sacred Majesty (1)
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A brief chronicle of the late intestine vvar in the three kingdoms of England, Scotland & Ireland with the intervening affairs of treaties, and other occurences relating thereunto (1)
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The arraignment of rebellion, or, The irresistibility of sovereign powers (1)
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Several letters and passages between His Excellency the Lord General Cromwel and the governor of Edinburgh Castle and the ministers there (1)
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Complaints and queries vpon Englands misery (1)
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The rod of recompence, or, The hand of justice in the punishment of the enemies of church & state (1)
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Memoires of the lives, actions, sufferings & deaths of those noble, reverend, and excellent personages, that suffered by death, sequestration, decimation, or otherwise, for the Protestant religion, and the great principle thereof, allegiance to their soveraigne, in our late intestine wars, from the year 1637, to the year 1660. and from thence continued to 1666 (1)
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To the supream authority of the nation the Parliament of the common-wealth of England (1)
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A declaration of General Monck touching the King of Scots, and his proclamation (1)
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Of quencing the spirit (1)
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A letter from his Excellency the Lord General Monck, and the officers under his command, to the Parliament, in the name of themselves and the souldiers under them (1)
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The declaration of Sir Charles Coot, Knight and baronet (1)
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Intolerable oppression both in Presbyteriall government, and the common-wealth (1)
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One sheet, or, If you will a winding sheet for the good old cause (1)
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England still freshly lamenting the losse of her King, with several of her dearest children, vvhich have been beheaded, hanged, and shot, by O. Cromwel, and the Long-Parliament (1)
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The Arraignement of svperstition, or, A discovrse betweene a Protestant, a glasier, and a separatist concerning the pulling downe of church-windows (1)
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The severall ordinances and declarations of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament . (1)
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A chronicle of the late intestine war in the three kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland (1)
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The Selfe afflicter (1)
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Resolved by the Parliament that the markets be kept to morrow , being the five and twentieth day of December (1)
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A letter from a member of the army, to the committee of safety, and councell of officers of the army (1)
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Plaine truth without feare or flattery, or, A true discovery of the unlawfulnesse of the Presbyterian government (1)
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A briefe ansvver to a book called The declaration of the kingdomes of England and Scotland (1)
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Certain queries humbly proposed in order to a quiet Christian submission to His Highness the Lord Protector (1)
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Beheaded Dr. John Hewytts ghost pleading, yea crying for exemplarie justice against the arbitrary, un-exampled injustice of his late judges and executioners in the new High-Commission, or Court of Justice, sitting in Westminster-Hall (1)
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The original of plotts, or, Some seasonable reflections upon the late horrid fanatick conspiracy (1)
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A Modest vindication of Oliver Cromwell from the unjust accusations of Lieutenant-General Ludlow in his Memoirs (1)
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Memoirs of Lieutenant General Ludlow (1)
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A letter from the offices of the army at the head-quarters ing the south (1)
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A letter from the Commissioners of the Kingdom of Scotland residing here at London to William Lenthall Esq. Speaker of the House of Commons (1)
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Warrior generals (1)
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Reason and religion in the English revolution (1)
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The anatomy of revolution revisited (1)
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The many-headed hydra (1)
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Memorials of the English affairs, or, An historical account of what passed from the beginning of the reign of King Charles the First, to King Charles the Second his happy restauration (1)
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Warrior generals (1)
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The Complete Works of Gerrard Winstanley (1)
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The English Atlantic in an age of revolution, 1640-1661 (1)
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Gerrard Winstanley (1)
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The civil wars experienced (1)
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