History of England from the Accession of James I. to the Outbreak of the Civil War, 1603-1642, Volumen8Longmans, Green, 1909 |
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Página vii
... believed to be in danger 120 121 122 • 123 • 124 127 • 127 129 1635 Position of the English Catholics 130 Laud holds aloof from Panzani 1634 Panzani's arrival 133 1635 Panzani's conversations with Windebank 133 Deus , Natura , Gratia ...
... believed to be in danger 120 121 122 • 123 • 124 127 • 127 129 1635 Position of the English Catholics 130 Laud holds aloof from Panzani 1634 Panzani's arrival 133 1635 Panzani's conversations with Windebank 133 Deus , Natura , Gratia ...
Página 20
... believed that this minority to some ex- tent sympathised with the Irish nobility and gentry in their complaints against the Government , and after the dissolution 1027. of the Assembly , which met at Dublin in 1627 , de- finite charges ...
... believed that this minority to some ex- tent sympathised with the Irish nobility and gentry in their complaints against the Government , and after the dissolution 1027. of the Assembly , which met at Dublin in 1627 , de- finite charges ...
Página 30
... believed himself capable of doing Wentworth's more for Ireland than Irishmen themselves could government . do . Unhappily , his very intellectual superiority led him to think very much of doing the thing that was right and profitable ...
... believed himself capable of doing Wentworth's more for Ireland than Irishmen themselves could government . do . Unhappily , his very intellectual superiority led him to think very much of doing the thing that was right and profitable ...
Página 44
... believed that the neglect of formalities would stand in the way of the conversion of the Catholic population . When he arrived in Ireland he found that one of the Dublin churches had served his predecessor for a stable , that a second ...
... believed that the neglect of formalities would stand in the way of the conversion of the Catholic population . When he arrived in Ireland he found that one of the Dublin churches had served his predecessor for a stable , that a second ...
Página 46
... believed that by a skilful mixture of firmness and blandishment he might play the two parties off against one another , until he had gained from them the semblance of a national sanction to the decrees which emanated from his own will ...
... believed that by a skilful mixture of firmness and blandishment he might play the two parties off against one another , until he had gained from them the semblance of a national sanction to the decrees which emanated from his own will ...
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Términos y frases comunes
amongst April Archbishop army authority believed bishops Catholic charge Charles Charles's Church Church of England claim clergy Coke Cottington Council Court Crown danger declared defence Dutch Earl ecclesiastical Elector Palatine England English English Council Falkland favour fleet France French hand High Commission honour House ibid Ireland Irish Jesuits judges July June justice Juxon King King's kingdom knew Lady land Laud to Wentworth Laud's levy Majesty March ment ministers Mountnorris nation never Northumberland offence opinion Palatinate Panzani Panzani's letter Parliament peace persons petition Pope Prayer Privy Privy Council Protestant Protestantism Prynne Puritan Queen R. O. Transcripts ready refused religion Rome Rushworth S. P. Dom S. P. Ireland Seneterre sentence Sept ship-money soap Spain Star Chamber Strafford Letters subjects thought tion tonnage and poundage Vane Walter Montague whilst Windebank words writ wrote