By the Commons assembled in Parliament in the whole management of the late warr, unto which the Parliament was necessitated on the kingdoms behalf for recovering and securing their religion, lawes, and native liberties invaded by the enemies thereof ... but the same common enemy by secret contrivances severall ways, obstructed the Parliaments progress therein, seducing the affections of the people, instigating them to a generall insurrection, and under pretence of petitioning for peace, subtily promoting a new and bloody warr ...

Title
By the Commons assembled in Parliament in the whole management of the late warr, unto which the Parliament was necessitated on the kingdoms behalf for recovering and securing their religion, lawes, and native liberties invaded by the enemies thereof ... but the same common enemy by secret contrivances severall ways, obstructed the Parliaments progress therein, seducing the affections of the people, instigating them to a generall insurrection, and under pretence of petitioning for peace, subtily promoting a new and bloody warr ...
Author
England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.
Publication
London :: Printed by Richard Cotes,
1648.
Rights/Permissions

This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Searching, reading, printing, or downloading EEBO-TCP texts is reserved for the authorized users of these project partner institutions. Permission must be granted for subsequent distribution, in print or electronically, of this text, in whole or in part. Please contact project staff at eebotcp-info@umich.edu for further information or permissions.

Subject terms
Great Britain -- History -- Civil War, 1642-1649.
Great Britain -- Politics and government -- 1642-1649.
Link to this Item
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A38232.0001.001
Cite this Item
"By the Commons assembled in Parliament in the whole management of the late warr, unto which the Parliament was necessitated on the kingdoms behalf for recovering and securing their religion, lawes, and native liberties invaded by the enemies thereof ... but the same common enemy by secret contrivances severall ways, obstructed the Parliaments progress therein, seducing the affections of the people, instigating them to a generall insurrection, and under pretence of petitioning for peace, subtily promoting a new and bloody warr ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A38232.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 5, 2024.

Actions

View entire text

Contents

Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.