Title: | The golden rule, or, Justice advanced. Wherein is shewed, that the representative kingdom, or Commons assembled in Parliament, have a lawfull power to arraign, and adjudge to death the King, for tyranny, treason, murder, and other high misdemeanors: and whatsoever is objected to the contrary from Scripture, law, reason, or inconveniences, is satisfactorily answered and refuted. Being, a cleer and full satisfaction to the whole nation, in justification of the legal proceeding of the High Court of Justice, against Charls Steward, late King of England. The first part. / By John Canne. |
Author: | Canne, John, -1667? |
Note: | London : printed for Peter Cole, at the sign of the Printing-Presse in Corn-hil, neer the Royal-Exchange, Anno 1649 |
Link: | HTML at EEBO TCP |
No stable link: | This is an uncurated book entry from our extended bookshelves, readable online now but without a stable link here. You should not bookmark this page, but you can request that we add this book to our curated collection, which has stable links. |
Subject: | Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649 -- Early works to 1800 |
Subject: | Divine right of kings -- Early works to 1800 |
Subject: | Great Britain -- History -- Civil War, 1642-1649 -- Early works to 1800 |
Subject: | Great Britain -- Constitutional law -- Early works to 1800 |
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