A History of the Tory Party, 1640-1714 |
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Page 18
... leaders , the strength and weakness of the whole party system , hinged and depended on this cardinal fact . A county's politics were governed not nearly so directly by provincial separatism , or economic formation , as by the views of ...
... leaders , the strength and weakness of the whole party system , hinged and depended on this cardinal fact . A county's politics were governed not nearly so directly by provincial separatism , or economic formation , as by the views of ...
Page 26
... leaders of English Presbyterianism were by no means obscure men : the fiery Cartwright was Lady Margaret Professor , while Hooker's opponent Travers was sometime tutor to a son of Burleigh , preached to acclaiming congrega- 1 Zurich ...
... leaders of English Presbyterianism were by no means obscure men : the fiery Cartwright was Lady Margaret Professor , while Hooker's opponent Travers was sometime tutor to a son of Burleigh , preached to acclaiming congrega- 1 Zurich ...
Page 31
... leaders clung to the Crown as their buckler , evolved a political theory of passive obedience to rulers , and exalted the King's constitutional powers against the two - handed engine of a Puritan Parliament and an all- embracing Common ...
... leaders clung to the Crown as their buckler , evolved a political theory of passive obedience to rulers , and exalted the King's constitutional powers against the two - handed engine of a Puritan Parliament and an all- embracing Common ...
Page 40
... leaders still distrusted the divine right of bishops , and nearly all repudiated the divine absolutism of the King . What exactly their Church should be was not yet decided , and on some particulars of royal power they were equally ...
... leaders still distrusted the divine right of bishops , and nearly all repudiated the divine absolutism of the King . What exactly their Church should be was not yet decided , and on some particulars of royal power they were equally ...
Page 42
... leaders . Such forces of atavism , sentiment , or social impulse weighed , inevitably , far more heavily in the early and undefined days of party , and one cannot appreciate later Tory history till some effort , however cursory , is ...
... leaders . Such forces of atavism , sentiment , or social impulse weighed , inevitably , far more heavily in the early and undefined days of party , and one cannot appreciate later Tory history till some effort , however cursory , is ...
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Anglesey April army B. M. Add Ballard MSS Barillon bill bishops Bodl Bolingbroke Bromley Buckingham Burnet Cabinet Carmarthen Catholic Cavalier Chancellor Charles Church of England Clarendon Clarges Commons constitutional Corr Council Court Coventry Coxe Crown Danby Danby's Dartmouth December declared Dissenters Duke Dutch election English Finch Foley Foxcroft France friends Godolphin Grey Halifax Hanoverian Harcourt Harley Harley's Hatton Corr Henry Coventry House Hyde ibid impeachment Jacobite James July June King King's Klopp leaders letter London Lord Lord-Lieutenant loyal March Marlborough ment ministers Ministry moderate monarchy Montague Musgrave never Newcastle Non-jurors Nottingham November Ormonde papers Oxford Parliament party passim peace political Portland Presbyterian Prince Privy prorogation Protestant Puritan Queen refused reign Reresby Restoration Revolution Rochester royal Royalist Secretary Sept session Seymour Shrewsbury Somers Sunderland Swift tion Tory Treasurer treaty Triennial Bills vote Wharton Whig William wrote