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A memorial for the perusal of the grand preservative of peace and allegiance both in His Majesty's absence from, and presence with us; In a supplement to conscience, very friendly, very healing: being a Sound, casuistical, and most compassionate admonition, I. In the religion of oaths in general. II. The solemn contract of loyalty by state-oaths. III. The true state and power of eight, that is, all the suggested evasions in point of conscience. With two material appendices; [I]. A new, brief, and compleat solution of the scruples, about the revolution: and an accurate satisfaction and rejection of te pretender. [II.] The oaths themselves: and the legal inconveniencies from not taking them. By the impartial hand of a country divine, who has lately taken the oaths.
Country divine.Date: 1716- Archives and manuscripts
Loyalty Oath
Date: 1949-1950Reference: PSY/TOL/1/4Part of: Leytham, G. W. (b.1913): Papers Relating to E. C. Tolman (1886-1959)- Books
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The lawfulness of oaths, and the sin of perrjury [sic] and profane swearing. A sermon preached in the cathedral of Salisbury, at the assises held for the county of Wilts, July the 22d, 1710. By Francis Fox, ...
Fox, Francis, 1675-1738.Date: 1710- Books
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The declaration of loyalty of the ministers of the established Church of Scotland, Who had not the Freedom to take the Oath of Abjuration: With the whole Proceedings thereon. Dated at Edinburgh, November 15. 1712.
Date: 1712]- Books
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A letter from a clergyman in London, who hath taken the oaths to his present Majesty, directed to a clergyman in the country, who hath refused them.
Clergyman in London.Date: MDCCXVI. [1716]- Books
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A letter from a clergyman in Cork, to Philadelphicus.
Clergyman in Cork.Date: Printed in the Year 1750- Books
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A letter from a clergy-man of the Church of Ireland, to a member of Parliament, concerning charity-schools.
Clergyman of the Church of Ireland.Date: 1717- Books
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Oaths appointed to be taken instead of the oaths of allegiance and supremacy: and declaration.
Date: 1764?]- Books
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Oaths appointed to be taken instead of the oaths of allegiance and supremacy: and declaration.
Great Britain. Sovereign (1727-1760 : George II)Date: not after 1755]- Books
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Considerations upon the present test-law of Pennsylvania: addressed to the legislature and freemen of the state.
Rush, Benjamin, 1745-1813.Date: MDCCLXXXV. [1785]- Books
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King George's title asserted: Or, a letter to a Fellow of a College in Cambridge; shewing, The Lawfulness of the Oaths Requir'd by the present Government, upon Principles equally receiv'd by all Parties.
Venn, Richard, 1691-1740.Date: 1716- Books
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Copies of all the lists which have been returned to the clerk of the Privy Council, or his deputy, of such papists as have taken and subscribed the oath prescribed by the statute of the thirteenth and fourteenth of His present Majesty, intitled "An Act to enable His Majesty's subjects of whatever persuasion to testify their allegiance to him"; ...
Date: 1786?]- Books
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The case of the abjuration oath endeavoured to be cleared, To the Satisfaction of those who are Required to take it.
Date: 1702- Pictures
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Charles Bradlaugh being arrested by the police in 1881 for refusing to take the oath as a Member of Parliament, and subsequently rejoicing at the passage of his Oaths Bill in 1888. Colour lithograph by Tom Merry, 1888.
Merry, Tom, 1852-1902.Date: 24 March 1888Reference: 564996i- Books
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A speech in the Lower House of Convocation, On Monday 23 January 1775. By the Reverend James Ibbetson, D.D. Archdeacon of St. Alban's. Published by request.
Ibbetson, James, 1717-1781.Date: M.DCC.LXXV. [1775]- Archives and manuscripts
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Photocopy of the Church of England sacrament certificate and record of oath of loyalty to King George II (1758) of James Inglis, surgeon to the fifth regiment
Date: 1758Reference: RAMC/1057Part of: Royal Army Medical Corps Muniments Collection- Books
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Considerations upon the present test-law of Pennsylvania: addressed to the legislature and freemen of the state.
Rush, Benjamin, 1745-1813.Date: MDCCLXXXIV. [1784]- Books
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The declaration of the estates of the Kingdom of Scotland, containing the claim of right; and the offer of the crown to their Majesties King William and Queen Mary.
England and Wales. Parliament.Date: MDCCLXXIX. [1779]- Books
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I A. B. do truly and sincerely acknowledge, profess, testifie and declare in my conscience before God and the world, that Our Sovereign Lady Queen Anne is lawful and rightful Queen of this realm, and of all other Her Majesties dominions and countries thereunto belonging. And I do solemnly and sincerely declare, that i do believe in my conscience that the person pretended to be Prince of Wales, during the life of the Late King James, and since his decease pretending to be, and taking upon himself the stile and title of King of England, by the name of James the Third, hath not any right or title whatsoever to the Crown of this realm, ...
England and Wales. Sovereign (1702-1707 : Anne)Date: 1702- Books
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The oath taken by the censors, who are the examiners of the college, before the president and the college : upon the day of their admission into their office.
Royal College of Physicians of LondonDate: [1700?]- Books
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Loyalty asserted: or, The new test oath vindicated, and proved by the principles of the canon and civil laws, and the authority of the most eminent writers. With an enquiry into the pope's deposing power, and the groundless claims of the stuarts. In a letter to a Protestant gentleman.
O'Leary, Arthur, 1729-1802.Date: 1776?]- Books
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The Second section of the Articles of war.
Date: 1775?]- Books
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Miscellaneous tracts: by the Rev. Arthur O'Leary. Containing, I. A defence of the divinity of Christ, and the Immortality of the Soul: in answer to the author of a work, lately published in Cork, entitled, "thoughts on Nature and Religion." Revised and corrected. Loyalty asserted: or, a Vindication of the Oath of Allegiance; with an impartial enquiry into the Pope's temporal power, and the present claims of the Stuarts to the English throne: proving that both are equally groundless. III. An Address to the common People of Ireland, on occasion of an apprehended invasion by the French and Spaniards, in July, 1779, when the united fleets of Bourbon appeared in the Channel. IV. Remarks on a letter written by Mr. Wesley, and a Defence of the Protestant Associations. V. Rejoinder to Mr. Wesley's Reply to the above Remarks. VI. Essay on toleration: tending to prove that a man's speculative opinions ought not to deprive him of the rights of civil society. In which are introduced, the Rev. John Wesley's letter, and the defence of the protestant associations.
O'Leary, Arthur, 1729-1802.Date: M.DCC.LXXXI. [1781]- Books
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King George's title asserted: or, a letter to a fellow of a college in Cambridge; shewing The Lawfulness of the oaths required by the present Government, upon Principles equally received by all Parties. Written in the Year 1715. The Second Edition, Corrected. By Richard Venn, A. M. Rector of the United Parishes of St. Anthony and St. John the Baptist in London.
Venn, Richard, 1691-1740.Date: MDCCXXXIV. [1734]- Books
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Loyalty asserted. or, The new test oath, vindicated, and proved by the principles of the canon and civil laws, and the authority of the most eminent writers. With an enquiry into the Pope's deposition power, and the groundless claims of the stuarts. In a letter to a Protestant gentleman. By the Rev Arthur O'Leary.
O'Leary, Arthur, 1729-1802.Date: M.DCC.LXXVI. [1776]