Church and state -- England -- Early works to 1800See also what's at your library, or elsewhere.
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Filed under: Church and state -- England -- Early works to 1800
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Filed under: Church and state -- England -- History -- SourcesFiled under: Anti-clericalism -- England -- HistoryFiled under: Church of England -- Establishment and disestablishmentFiled under: Oath of allegiance, 1606- Pseudo-Martyr: Wherein Out of Certaine Propositions and Gradations, This Conclusion Is Evicted, That Those Which Are of the Romane Religion In This Kingdome, May and Ought to Take the Oath of Allegeance (London: Printed by W. Stansby for W. Burre, 1610), by John Donne
Filed under: Royal supremacy (Church of England)- The Limits of the Royal Supremacy in the Church of England (second edition; London: Rivington's, 1884), by Lancelot Andrewes, ed. by Frederick Meyrick, contrib. by King of England James I
Filed under: Church and state -- Great Britain -- Early works to 1800- A Collection of Eighteen Papers, Relating to the Affairs of Church and State, During the Reign of King James the Second (London: Reprinted for J. Starkey and R. Chiswell, 1689), by Gilbert Burnet (multiple formats at archive.org)
- A Dissuasive from Jacobitism: Shewing in General What the Nation is to Expect from a Popish King, and in Particular, From the Pretender (London: Printed for J. Baker, 1713), by John Shute Barrington (multiple formats at archive.org)
- A Continuation of the Account of the Ministers, Lecturers, Masters and Fellows of Colleges, and Schoolmasters, Who Were Ejected and Silenced After the Restoration in 1660, By or Before the Act for Uniformity (2 volumes; London: Printed for R. Ford et al., 1727), by Edmund Calamy
Filed under: Church and state -- Early works to 1800- The Defence of Peace: Lately Translated Out of Laten in to Englysshe, With the Kynges Moste Gracyous Privilege (London: Printed by R. Wyer for W. Marshall, 1535), by Marsilius of Padua, trans. by William Marshall (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- A Treatise of Civil Power in Ecclesiastical Causes: Shewing That it is Not Lawfull for Any Power on Earth to Compell in Matters of Religion (1659), by John Milton (HTML with commentary at Dartmouth)
- The Prince, by Niccolo Machiavelli; Utopia, by Sir Thomas More; Ninety-Five Theses, Address to the German Nobility, Concerning Christian Liberty, by Martin Luther; With Introductions and Notes (Harvard Classics v36; New York: P. F. Collier and Son, c1910), ed. by Charles William Eliot and William Allan Neilson, trans. by Ninian Hill Thomson, Ralph Robinson, R. S. Grignon, and C. A. Buchheim, contrib. by Niccolò Machiavelli, Thomas More, Martin Luther, and William Roper (page images at HathiTrust)
Filed under: Church and state -- Church of England -- Early works to 1800Filed under: Church and state -- France -- Early works to 1800 |