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Great Britain - History - Charles I, 1625-1649
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England's black tribunal; or, The royal martyr. Shewing, how they impeached the King of murder, treason, and other heinous crimes, not suffering him to answer for himself, but treated him worse than a malefactor. How the King took leave of his children, with his hearty prayer for the prosperity of the Church and Kingdom, and then submitted himself to the fatal block, where the executioner severed his head from his body.
Date: [1765?]- Books
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The history of the reign of King Charles I. Containing a more particular and impartial account of the rebellion and civil wars than has yet been published; collected from private memoirs and authentick papers, and compar'd with Clarendon, Rushworth, &c. Written in French by Monsieur De Larrey, counsellor of the Court and Embassies, and historiographer to the King of Prussia; and translated by a colonel in the English army. In two volumes.
Larrey, Isaac de, 1638-1719.Date: [1720?]- Books
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England's black tribunal. Containing, I. The compleat tryal of King Charles the first, by the pretended High Court of Justice in Westminster-Hall, begun January 20, 1648. Together with His Majesty's Speech on the Scaffold, erected at Whitehall-Gate, on Tuesday, Jan. 30, 1648. II. The loyal martyrology: Or, A perfect Relation of the Sufferings and Death of the Nobility, Gentry, and others, who were inhumanly sacrific'd for their Loyalty to their Sovereigns King Charles I. and II. Together with their several Dying Speeches. III. An historical register of the Lords, Knights, and Gentlemen, who were slain in defence of their King and country, during the Unnatural Rebellion, begun in 1641. IV. The loyal confessors: In a brief Account of the most eminent Sufferers, by Imprisonment, Banishment, or in Estate, for the Cause of His Sacred Majesty. The seventh edition, very much enlarged. To which is added, an historical preface, by a true churchman.
Date: MDCCXLIV. [1744]- Books
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England's black tribunal: containing, I. The compleat tryal of King Charles the First, by the pretended High Court of Justice in Westminster-Hall, Begun Jan. 20, 1648. Together with His Majesty's Speech on the Scaffold, Erected at White-Hall-Gate, on Tuesday, Jan. 30, 1648. II. The loyal martyrology: Or, A perfect Relation of the Sufferings and Death of the Nobility, Gentry, and others, who were inhumanly Sacrific'd for their Loyalty to their Sovereigns King Charles I. and II. Together with their several Dying Speeches. III. An historical register of the Lords, Knights, and Gentlemen, who were slain in defence of their King and country, during the Unnatural Rebellion, begun in 1641. IV. The loyal confessors: In a Brief Account of the most Eminent Sufferers, by Imprisonment, Banishment, or in Estate, for the Cause of His Sacred Majesty.
Date: MDCCXX. [1720]- Books
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No king-killers. A sermon preach'd in Swallow-Street, St. James's, on January 30, 1714/15. By James Anderson, M.A.
Anderson, James, approximately 1680-1739.Date: [1715]