9 results filtered with: Prerogative, Royal
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A seventh letter to the people of England, occasioned by a late resignation.
Date: [1761?]- Books
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A letter to a friend: occasion'd by the contest between the Bishop of Exeter, and Mr. Hoadley.
M. S.Date: 1709- Books
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The regal supremacy in ecclesiastical affairs asserted in a discourse Occasioned by the Case of the Regale and Pontificat.
Date: 1701- Books
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A letter to a friend: Occasion'd by the contest Between the Bishop of Exeter, and Mr. Hoadly.
M. S.Date: 1709- Books
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A Seventh letter to the people of England. A defence of the prerogative royal, as it was exerted in His Majesty's proclamation for the prohibiting the exportation of corn. In which it is proved that this authority ever has been, is, and must be essential to the constitution, and inseperable from the rights and liberties of the subject.
Date: MDCCLXVII. [1767]- Books
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A Seventh letter to the people of England. On annual Parliaments, public addresses, a general militia, and the danger of foreign mercenaries.
Date: Printed in the year 1756- Books
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The prerogative of primogeniture: shewing, that the right of succession to an hereditary crown, depends not upon grace, religion, etc., but onely upon birth-right and primogeniture. And that the chief cause of all, or most, rebellions in Christendom, is a fanatical belief, that, temporal dominion is founded in grace / By David Jenner.
Jenner, David, -1691.Date: 1685- Books
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A seventh letter to the people of England. Upon political-writing, true-patriotism, Jacobitism, and evil and corrupt adm----ns.
Date: M.DCC.LVIII. [1758]- Books
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An expostulatory letter to the Rev. Mr. Patrick Cockburn, Formerly Curate of St. Dunstan's in the West, London, afterwards a Nonjuror; late Minister of St. Paul's Chapel in Aberdeen, and now Beneficed in the Diocese of Durham. fairly and friendly to convince him, that by his having revived the exploded doctrines of Sherlock and Higden, he has also unwarily exposed the late Revolution, and even the present government itself to a dangerous controversy.
Lindsay, John, 1686-1768.Date: 1740