Murther upon murther : or a true and faithful relation, of six horrid and bloody cruelties, and barbarous and unheard of murthers, and tragical villanies, lately committed in several counties of England. 1. A farmer, his wife and child, barbarously murthered in Cambridg-shire, by a bloody serving man. ... 6. An honest wealthy yeoman in York-shire, was murthered by a vvoman thief, that came with six men of the same profession, to rob the said yeomans house.
Saved in:
Imprint: | London : printed by W.D. for J. Conyers at the Black-Raven in Duck-Lane, 1684. |
---|---|
Description: | 1 online resource (8 p.) |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11533047 |
Notes: | Reproduction of original in the Folger Shakespeare Library. Wing (CD-ROM, 1996) M3090 |
---|
Similar Items
-
Murther upon murther : being a full and true relation of a horrid and bloody murther committed upon the bodies of Mrs. Sarah Hodges ... Mrs. Elizabeth Smith and Hannah Williams at the Loyal Coffee-House near.
Published: (1691) -
A Strange and wonderful account of a most barbarous and bloody murther: committed by five notorious villains on Tuesday the 11th of this instant May ...
Published: (1984) -
A Strange and wonderful account of a most barbarous and bloody murther : committed by five notorious villains on Tuesday the 11th of this instant May ...
Published: (1680) -
Sundrye strange and inhumaine murthers, lately committed : the first of a father that hired a man to kill three of his children neere to Ashford in Kent, the second of Master Page of Plymouth, murthered by the consent of his owne wife : with the strange discouerie of sundrie other murthers, wherein is described the odiousnesse of murther, with the vengeance which God inflicteth on murtherers.
Published: (1591) -
A relation of the cruelties and barbarous murthers : and other misdemeanours, done and committed by some foot-souldiers, and others, without command, upon some of the inhabitants of Enfield, Edmonton, Southmyms, and Hadley, in the county of Middlesex, and their servants and cattle.
Published: (1659)