Calendar of State Papers: Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles I, 1625-1649 ... Preserved in Her Majesty's Public Record Office ...H.M. Stationery Office, 1888 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 52
Página xxvi
... Plymouth having " now been accomplished , and being " advised to march yet further westward into Cornwall " to clear that country and to settle the same in peace , “ I have thought fit to send up Sir Philip Stapleton , and " with him Mr ...
... Plymouth having " now been accomplished , and being " advised to march yet further westward into Cornwall " to clear that country and to settle the same in peace , “ I have thought fit to send up Sir Philip Stapleton , and " with him Mr ...
Página xxvii
... Plymouth or hereabouts to enable us to march . Then we shall sell our lives at as dear a rate as may be , [ for I have ] never seen soldiers more willing to undertake anything nor to undergo wants with more patience . Here is a flying ...
... Plymouth or hereabouts to enable us to march . Then we shall sell our lives at as dear a rate as may be , [ for I have ] never seen soldiers more willing to undertake anything nor to undergo wants with more patience . Here is a flying ...
Página xxviii
... Plymouth by sea . His last letter from Lostwithiel is of the 27th August , and describes the extremity they were then in : - ment . • · " But had I known that Waller , who was to attend the King's army , had wanted either power or will ...
... Plymouth by sea . His last letter from Lostwithiel is of the 27th August , and describes the extremity they were then in : - ment . • · " But had I known that Waller , who was to attend the King's army , had wanted either power or will ...
Página 48
... Plymouth be taken into consideration to - morrow . 5. That the business about the Irish Committee at Grocers ' Hall be taken into consideration to - morrow at 5 p.m. 6. That it be demanded of the merchants now attending without what ...
... Plymouth be taken into consideration to - morrow . 5. That the business about the Irish Committee at Grocers ' Hall be taken into consideration to - morrow at 5 p.m. 6. That it be demanded of the merchants now attending without what ...
Página 137
... Plymouth . [ Interregnum 7 E. Day Book of Orders , p . 57. ] April 27. The Committee of both kingdoms to the Lord Admiral . By the Derby House . enclosed extracts of letters from the Governors of Lyme and Poole you will see the distress ...
... Plymouth . [ Interregnum 7 E. Day Book of Orders , p . 57. ] April 27. The Committee of both kingdoms to the Lord Admiral . By the Derby House . enclosed extracts of letters from the Governors of Lyme and Poole you will see the distress ...
Palavras e frases frequentes
Abingdon ammunition appointed arms August Aylesbury Barclay Capt Captain Castle Colonel command Commissioners Committee concerning Copy Crew Derby House desire Earl of Denbigh Earl of Manchester Earl of Manchester's Earl of Northumberland enclosed endeavours enemy enemy's forces garrison give Gloucester Henry horse and foot House of Commons informed inst Interregnum 16 Ireland John Meldrum July June junr King King's kingdoms this day Lancashire letter be written London Lord Admiral Lord Fairfax Lord General Essex Lord General's Lord Hopton Lord Wharton Lords Say Lordships Lyme Regis Maitland Majesty Majesty's Major-General Browne Messrs Middleton Militia mittee officers ordinance Oxford p.m. Ibid Parliament Pierrepont Plymouth present Prince Rupert Proceedings ready received reported Scottish army Sept ships Sir Arthur Haselrigg Sir Gilbert Gerard Sir H Sir Thos Sir Wm soldiers Solicitor speedily speedy taken thereof thither to-morrow town troops Vane victuals Waller Wallop Warristone Warwick write
Passagens conhecidas
Página 17 - TODD, DD, Senior Fellow of Trinity College, and Regius Professor of Hebrew in the University, Dublin. 1867. The work in its present form, in the editor's opinion, is a comparatively modern version of an undoubtedly ancient original. That it was compiled from contemporary materials has been proved by curious incidental evidence.
Página 13 - Grosseteste was bishop. 26. DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF MANUSCRIPTS RELATING TO THE HISTORY OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. Vol. I. (in Two Parts) ; Anterior to the Norman Invasion.
Página 6 - Supplement to Vol. I. and Vol. II. Mr. Bergenroth was engaged in compiling a Calendar of the Papers relating to England preserved in the archives of Simancas in Spain, and the corresponding portion removed from Simancas to Paris.
Página 3 - Price 15s. each Volume or Part.] As far back as the year 1800, a Committee of the House of Commons recommended that Indexes and Calendars should be made to the Public Records, and thirty-six years afterwards another Committee of the House of Commons reiterated that recommendation in more forcible words ; but it was not until the incorporation of the State Paper Office with the Public Record Office that the...
Página 9 - I., shortly after which period the present narrative was drawn up by an inmate of the establishment. The author had access to the title-deeds of the house ; and incorporates into his history various charters of the Saxon kings, of great importance as illustrating not only the history of the locality but that of the kingdom. The work is printed for the first time. 3. LIVES OF EDWARD THE CONFESSOR. I. — La Estoire de Seint Aedward le Rei. II. — Vita Beati Edvardi Regis et Confessoris.
Página 17 - OF HENRY II. AND RICHARD I., 1169-1192, known under the name of BENEDICT OF PETERBOROUGH. Vols. I. and II. Edited by WILLIAM STUBBS, MA, Regius Professor of Modern History, Oxford, and Lambeth Librarian. 1867.
Página 15 - Normandie. 1863-1867. This work consists of two parts, the History and the Cartulary of the Monastery of St. Peter, Gloucester. The history furnishes an account of the monastery from its foundation, in the year 681, to the early part of the reign of Richard II., together with a calendar of donations and benefactions. It treats principally of the affairs of the monastery, but occasionally matters of general history are introduced.
Página 17 - Britonum," in the second, a history of the Anglo-Saxon and Norman kings, down to the death of Henry III., and in the third a history of the reign of Edward I. The principal object of the work was apparently to show the justice of Edward's Scottish wars. The language is singularly corrupt, and a curious specimen of the French of Yorkshire.
Página 11 - LONDONIENSIS ; Liber Albus, Liber Custumarum, et Liber Horn, in archivis Gildhallae asservati. Vol. I. Liber Albus. Vol. II. (in Two Parts), Liber Custumarum. Vol. III., Translation of the Anglo-Norman Passages in Liber Albus, Glossaries, Appendices, and Index. Edited by HENRY THOMAS RILEY, Esq., MA, Barrister-at-Law.
Página 19 - Edited by WILLIAM STUBBS, MA, Regius Professor of Modern History, and Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford. 1868-1871. This work has long been justly celebrated, but not thoroughly understood until Mr. Stubbs