17 results filtered with: Civil rights - Great Britain
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Unanimity the best defence of religious and civil liberty. A sermon, preached in the parish church of St. Andrew, Holborn, on Sunday, April 29th, 1798. By Henry George Watkins, ...
Watkins, Henry George.Date: 1798- Books
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An address to the Dissenters, on the state of their political and civil liberty, as subjects of Great Britain. By Samuel Catlow, of Mansfield.
Catlow, Samuel.Date: 1788- Books
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A short view of the rise and progress of freedom in modern Europe, as connected with the causes which led to the French revolution. ... By Thomas Hearn, ...
Hearn, Thomas.Date: 1793- Books
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Address and declaration, of the friends of Universal peace and liberty, held at the Thatched House Tavern, St. James's Street. August 20th. 1791. By Thomas Paine, Author of the works intitled Common Sense, and the Rights of Man. Together with some verses, by the same author, Which were printed in a Pensylvanian Newspaper.
Paine, Thomas, 1737-1809.Date: 1791?]- Books
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Unanimity the best defence of religious and civil liberty. A sermon, preached in the parish church of St. Andrew, Holborn, on Sunday, April 29th, 1798. By Henry George Watkins, A. M. Joint Curate of the Said Parish, Lecturer of St. Bartholomew the Great, and Evening Preacher at St. Dunstan's in the West.
Watkins, Henry George.Date: 1798- Books
Disability Awareness in Action : civil rights law and disabled people / written by Richard Light.
Light, RichardDate: 2000- Books
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The meridian sun of liberty; or, the whole rights of man displayed and most Accurately Defined, In a lecture read at the Philosophical Society in Newcastle, on the 8th of November, 1775, for printing of which the Society did the Author the honor to expel him. To which is now first prefixed, by way of Preface, a most important dialogue between the Citizen Reader, and the Author. By T. Spence.
Spence, Thomas, 1750-1814.Date: 1796- Books
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The groans of the oppressed; or, reasons for reviving, extending and perpetuating the late law for preventing frivolous and vexatious arrests, &c. For limitting the Jurisdiction of the Marshal's-Court, and for Establishing a General Court of Conscience, all over the Kingdom, as in the City of London; with some Remarks on the ungenerous Motives that are suggested to have induced certain Great Men to Wink at the Expiration of that Salutary and Necessary Law. In a letter to a very young Member of the present Parliament.
Date: [1748]- Books
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A vindication of the constitution of the English monarchy, and the just rights of the people. Or, faction, and corruption, enemies to religion, liberty, and property. Being a Brief and Impartial Account of the Times; Shewing the Origine of Faction; the Corrupt and Male-Administration in the Government; and the present ill Circumstance of Affairs in Germany and Italy: And also, the only Means by which these Evils may or can be Removed; the Exorbitant Power of the French King Reduced; and the Peace of the Kingdom Preserved and Stablished. Humbly offered to the Consideration of the Honourable House of Commons. By a lover of his countrey; and Her Majesty's faithful subject.
Lover of his countrey.Date: Printed in the Year, 1703- Books
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Considerations on Lord Grenville's and Mr. Pitt's bills, concerning treasonable and seditious practices, and unlawful assemblies. By a lover of order.
Godwin, William, 1756-1836.Date: [1795]- Books
The technology of political control / Carol Ackroyd, Karen Margolis, Jonathan Rosenhead, Tim Shallice.
Ackroyd, CarolDate: 1980- Books
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Political lectures. Volume the first - part the first: containing the lecture on spies and informers, and the first lecture on prosecutions for political opinion. To which is prefixed a narrative of facts relative to the recent attempts to wrest from the people the palladium of their natural and constitutional rights, liberty of speech. By John Thelwall.
Thelwall, John, 1764-1834.Date: [1795]- Books
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The natural and constitutional right of Britons to annual Parliaments, Universal Suffrage, and the freedom of popular association: being a vindication of the motives and political conduct of John Thelwall, and of the London Corresponding Society, in general. Intended to have been delivered at the Bar of the Old Bailey, in confutation of the late Charges of High Treason.
Thelwall, John, 1764-1834.Date: 1795- Books
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Memorial for the creditors of Sir Archibald Cockburn elder of Langton.
Date: 1762]- Books
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The speech of John Thelwall, at the second meeting of the London Corresponding Society, and other friends of reform, held at Copenhagen-House, On Thursday, November 12, 1795. Taken in short-hand by W. Ramsey. To which is added, the reply to the calumnies against the former meeting, and the petitions to the three branches of the Legislature.
Thelwall, John, 1764-1834.Date: 1795- Books
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A declaration of the rights of Englishmen. Declaration of those Rights of the Commonalty of Great Britain, without which they cannot be Free.
Date: 1795?]- Books
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England's warning-piece; shewing the supreme and indispensable authority of the laws of God; and the impiety, and fatal consequences of screening, and abetting murder. A sermon occasioned by the untimely death of Mr. William Allen the younger, who was most inhumanly murdered near his father's house, by an arbitrary military power, on Tuesday, the tenth of May, 1768. Preached at the request of his friends, in the Parish Church of Newington-Butts, and published in compliance with the demand of the public. By John Free, D.D.
Free, John, 1712?-Date: 1773