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The Protestant almanack for the year 1698 : since [brace] the creation of the world 5704, the incarnation of Jesus Christ 1698, England received the Christian faith 1508, Martin Luther wrote against the pope 182, our first deliverance from popery by K. Edward VI 150, our second deliverance from popery by Queen Elizabeth 139, the horrid design of the gun-powder plot 93, the burning of the city of London 32, our second deliverance from popery by K. Will. & Q. Mary 10 : being the bissextile or leap-year ... calculated according to art, for the meridian of Babylon ...and may without sensible errour, indifferently serve the whole papacy / by Philoprotest.
Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698Date: 1698- Books
- Online
The Protestant almanack for the year 1699 : since [brace] the creation of the world 5705, the incarnation of Jesus Christ 1699, England received the Christian faith 1509, Martin Luther wrote against the pope 183, our first deliverance from popery by K. Edward VI 151, our second deliverance from popery by Queen Elizabeth 140, the horrid design of the gun-powder plot 94, the burning of the city of London 33, our second deliverance from popery by K. Will. & Q. Mary 11 : being the bissextile or leap-year ... calculated according to art, for the meridian of Babylon ...and may without sensible errour, indifferently serve the whole papacy / by Philoprotest.
Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698Date: 1699- Books
- Online
1680, A yea and nay almanack for the people call'd by the men of the world Quakers : containing many needfull and necessary observations from the first day of the first month, till the last day of the twelfth month, being the bissextile or leaping year : calculated properly for the meridian of the Bull and Mouth within Aldersgate, and may indifferently serve for any other meeting-house what or wheresoever.
Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698Date: 1680- Books
Poor Robin, 1667. : An almanack after a new fashion. Wherein the reader may see (if he be not blind) many remarkable things worthy of observation. Being the third after bissextil [sic] or leap-year. Containing a two-fold kalender viz the Julian or English; and the round-head or fanaticks: with their several saints daies, and observations upon every month. In a more exact method then heretofore. / Written by Poor Robin knight of the burnt island, a well-willer to the mathematicks. Calculated for the meridian of Saffron-Walden, where the May-pole is elevated (with a plumm cake on the top of it) 5 yards 3/4 above the market-cross.
Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698.Date: [1667]- Books
- Online
The Protestant almanack for the year 1694 : the creation of the world 5700, the incarnation of Jesus Christ 1694, England received the Christian faith 1504, Martin Luther wrote against the Pope 178, our first deliverance from popery by K. Edward VI 146, our second deliverance from popery by Q. Elizabeth 135, the horrid design of the Gun-Powder Plot 89, the burning of the city of London 28, our third deliverance from popery by K. Will. & Q. Mary 6 : being the second after bissextile or leap-year, wherein bloody aspects ... of the papacy ... are described, in the change of the moon, some probable conjectures concerning the weather, the eclipses, the moon place in the zodiac, and an account of some principal martyrs ... for the meridian of Babylon, wherein the Pope is elevated an hundred and fifty degrees above ... and may without sensible errour, indifferently serve the whole papacy / by Philoprotest a well-willer to the Mathematicks.
Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698Date: 1694