Englands birth-right justified : against all arbitrary usurpation, whether regall or parliamentary, or under what vizor soever. With divers queries, observations and grievances of the people, declaring this Parliaments present proceedings to be directly contrary to those fundamentall principles, whereby their actions at first were justifyable against the King, in their present illegall dealings with those that have been their best friends, advancers and preservers: and in other things of high concernment to the freedom of all the free-born people of England; by a well-wisher to the just cause for which Lieutenant Col. John Lilburne is unjustly imprisoned in New-gate.
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Author / Creator: | Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657. |
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Imprint: | [[London : [publisher not identified], 1645. |
Description: | 1 online resource (2 unnumbered pages, 47 pages, 3 unnumbered pages). |
Language: | English |
Series: | Early English books online Early English books online. |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11833736 |
Notes: | A well-wisher = John Lilburne. First leaf bears "The preamble, to all the free-borne people of England" on verso. Machine converted from AACR2 source record. |
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Englands birth-right justified : against all arbitrary usurpation, whether regall or parliamentary, or under what vizor soever. With divers queries, observations and grievances of the people, declaring this Parliaments present proceedings to be directly contrary to those fundamentall principles, whereby their actions at first were justifyable against the King, in their present illegall dealings with those that have been their best friends, advancers and preservers: and in other things of high concernment to the freedom of all the free-born people of England ; by a well-wisher to the just cause for which Lieutenant Col. John Lilburne is unjustly imprisoned in New-gate.
by: Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657
Published: (1645) -
England's birth-right justified : against all arbitrary usurpation, whether regall or parliamentary, or under what vizor soever. With divers queries, observations and grievances of the people, declaring this Parliaments present proceedings to be directly contrary to those fundamentall principles, whereby their actions at first were justifyable against the King, in their present illegall dealings with those that have been their best friends, advancers and preservers: and in other things of high concernment to the freedom of all the free-born people of England ; by a well-wisher to the just cause for which Lieutenant Col. John Lilburne is unjustly in-prisoned in New-gate.
by: Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657
Published: (1645) -
Englands birth-right justified against all arbitrary usurpation, whether regall or parliamentary, or under what vizor soever. With divers queries, observations and grievances of the people, declaring this Parliaments present proceedings to be directly contrary to those fundamentall principles, whereby their actions at first were justifyable against the King, in their present illegall dealings with those that have been their best friends, advancers and preservers: and in other things of high concernment to the freedom of all the free-born people of England; by a well-wisher to the just cause for which Lieutenant Col. John Lilburne is unjustly imprisoned in New-gate.
by: Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657
Published: (1645) -
England's birth-right justified against all arbitrary usurpation, whether regall or parliamentary, or under what vizor soever. With divers queries, observations and grievances of the people, declaring this Parliaments present proceedings to be directly contrary to those fundamentall principles, whereby their actions at first were justifyable against the King, in their present illegall dealings with those that have been their best friends, advancers and preservers: and in other things of high concernment to the freedom of all the free-born people of England; by a well-wisher to the just cause for which Lieutenant Col. John Lilburne is unjustly in-prisoned in New-gate.
by: Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657
Published: (1645) -
England's birth-right justified : against all arbitrary usurpation, whether regall or parliamentary, or under what vizor soever : with divers queries, observations and grievances of the people, declaring this Parliaments present proceedings to be directly contrary to those fundamentall principles, whereby their actions at first were justifyable against the King, in their present illegall dealings with those that have been their best friends, advancers and preservers : and in other things of high concernment to the freedom of all the free-born people of England /
by: Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657
Published: (1645)