Princes and Peoples: France and British Isles, 1620-1714 : an Anthology of Primary SourcesMargaret Lucille Kekewich This anthology focuses on Britain and France in a period critical to their development as great powers. Its emphasis is on the regions and nations of which these two states were composed, rather than on the monolithic states. The documents illustrate many facets of their history, from the personal to the constitutional and, in particular, reflect the development of absolutism in France and of limited monarchy in England and other parts of the British Isles. Additionally, the documents indicate the social, religious and political trends that influenced the direction of change. Some of the documents have been drawn from unpublished 17th- and early 18th-century sources, and a number are translated from French for the first time. |
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Page 45
... rule , if you admit them once to inhabit , and those that have interest in the land may be voted out of their land ... rule , show me why you will not , by the same right of nature , make use of anything that any man hath . Show me what ...
... rule , if you admit them once to inhabit , and those that have interest in the land may be voted out of their land ... rule , show me why you will not , by the same right of nature , make use of anything that any man hath . Show me what ...
Page 155
... rule in England and Wales , has traditionally been hailed as marking the turning point when the rule of an absolute monarch became an impossibility . Yet some recent writers have suggested that the government of Charles II and James II ...
... rule in England and Wales , has traditionally been hailed as marking the turning point when the rule of an absolute monarch became an impossibility . Yet some recent writers have suggested that the government of Charles II and James II ...
Page 223
... rule for discerning between the figurative meaning and the literal meaning of the Scripture . Jesus Christ , he tells us , declares that if we do not eat the flesh of the Son of Man , we will not be saved . It seems that this ...
... rule for discerning between the figurative meaning and the literal meaning of the Scripture . Jesus Christ , he tells us , declares that if we do not eat the flesh of the Son of Man , we will not be saved . It seems that this ...
Contents
17 | 13 |
19 | 14 |
Howells Familiar Letters from Edinburgh and from Dublin 1639 | 21 |
Copyright | |
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aforesaid army authority Boulonnais Catholic cause century Charles Christian church civil command concerning confess consent Council court Cromwell crown declare documents dominions doth duke Edict Edict of Nantes enemies England English enjoy Épernon established Estates Estates of Parliament extract faith favour France Frondes give hath Henry Sacheverell honour husband Ireland James John John Lilburne John Locke justice King King's kingdom labour land letter liberty live London Lord Louis XIII Louis XIV Madame de Maintenon Majesty Majesty's marriage Mary Mazarin ministers monarchy Monsieur never noble oath offence officers Paris parish parlement Parliament Parliament of Scotland peace person Pierre Bayle political poor present prince Protestant province punished rebellion reign religion Richelieu royal Scot Scotland Secondly ship money Source sovereign subjects taxes thereof things Thomas Thomas Rainsborough town Translated from French Union unto wherein wife William woman women word