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2. The third part of The soveraigne povver of parliaments and kingdomes. Wherein the Parliaments present necessary defensive warre against the Kings offensive malignant, popish forces; and subjects taking up defensive armes against their soveraignes, and their armies in some cases, is copiously manifested, to be just, lawfull, both in point of law and conscience; and neither treason nor rebellion in either; by inpregnable reasons and authorities of all kindes. Together with a satisfactory answer to all objections, from law, Scripture, fathers, reason, hitherto alledged by Dr. Ferne, or any other late opposite pamphleters, whose grosse mistakes in true stating of the present controversie, in sundry points of divinity, antiquity, history, with their absurd irrationall logicke and theologie, are here more fully discovered, refuted, than hitherto they have been by any: besides other particulars of great concernment
3. Thursday November 15. 1660. Resolved and declared by the Commons assembled in Parliament, that the priviledge of this House, in point of protection from arrests doth belong to the Members of the House, and their menial servants onely ...
4. To the honorable assembly of Commons, in house of Parliament the humble petition of His Maiesties much grieued and distressed subjects and seruants belonging to his Highnesse great Wardrobe, whose names are here vnder-written, with others their artificers and dependants, to the number of two thousand persons or there about..
5. To the honourable House of Commons : the humble petition and case of Henry Mortlock, Matthew Gilliflower, William Hensman, Thomas Fox, and John Fish, booksellers in Westminster Hall
6. To the honourable House of Commons assembled in Parliament. The case and humble petition of Benjamin Harris bookseller, lately come from New-England
7. To the honourable House of Commons assembled in Parliament, the humble petition of Peter Chamberlen, doctor in physick,.
8. To the Honourable House of Commons assembled in Parliament the humble petition of the weavers, cloathworkers, and worsted-combers, of the old and new drapery of this kingdom
9. To the Honourable House of Commons, commonly called, the Lower House of Parliament the humble petition of the masters or gouernours of the Mysterie Comminaltie of Barbers and Chirurgions of London
10. To the Honourable House of Commons now assembled in Parliament
11. To the honourable House of Commons. The humble petition of the poor journymen shooe-makers of the city of London, Westminster and Southwark, and their brethren of the countrey
12. To the honourable knights, cittizens and burgesses, in the House of Commons in Parliament The humble petition of sundry the knights, gentlemen, freeholders, and others of the inhabitants of the county of Suffolke, to the number of above 13000
13. To the honourable the Commons of England assembled in Parliament
14. To the honourable the Commons of England assembled in Parliament. The humble petition of Benjamin Harris .
15. To the honourable the Commons of England assembled in Parliament. The humble petition of Jacob Massey, John Verger, Isaac du Blé, John Michell, and Mathurin Lambert Pagen, French-men and merchant-jewellers of the city of Paris in the kingdom of France
16. To the Honourable the Commons of England in Parliament, A remedy against taxes: or, The resumption of crown-lands, and forfeitures
17. To the Honourable the Commons of England, in Parliament assembled. A proposal for preventing the farther decay of our harbours:
18. To the Honourable the Commons of England in Parliament assembled; is humbly represented to you a short view or abstract of several letters, which I happened to look o're, some time since; which letters were sent from the collectors of His Majesty's customs of this port of Bristol, directed to Daniel Ballard his clerk, then manager of that revenue in his absence
19. To the Honourable the House of Commons in Parliament assembled the humble representation of the earnest desires and distressed condition of the officers in the list lately managed by Sr John Norwich
20. To the honourable, the knights, citizens and burgesses of the Commons house in Parliament now assembled, Ianuary, 24, 1642 the humble petition of the lay-Catholiques recusants of England
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