Title: | Pendennis and all other standing forts dismantled: or, Eight military aphorismes, demonstrating the uselesness, unprofitableness, hurtfulness, and prodigall expensivenes of all standing English forts and garrisons, to the people of England: their inability to protect them from invasions, depredations of enemies or pyrates by sea or land: the great mischiefs, pressures, inconveniences they draw upon the inhabitants, country, and adjacent places in times of open wars, when pretended most usefull: and the grand oversight, mistake, injury in continuing them for the present or furure [sic] reall defence of the peoples lives, liberties, estates, the only ends pretended for them. / Penned by William Prynne of Swainswick, Esquire, during his close imprisonment in Pendennis Castle. And now published for the common benefit, ease, information of the whole nation. |
Author: | Prynne, William, 1600-1669 |
Note: | London, : Printed for the author, and are to be sold by Edward Thomas in Green-Arbour, 1657 [i.e. 1656] |
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: | England and Wales -- Army -- Early works to 1800 |
Subject: | Standing army -- Early works to 1800 |
Subject: | Military bases -- Great Britain -- Early works to 1800 |
Other copies: | Look for editions of this book at your library, or elsewhere. |
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