A History of the Tory Party, 1640-1714 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 54
Page 20
... turned to an age of lead . New and glorious buildings testified as to the classes for whose education the endowments , originally bequeathed for poor clerics , were henceforth mainly to be devoted : a few such legacies as Colonel ...
... turned to an age of lead . New and glorious buildings testified as to the classes for whose education the endowments , originally bequeathed for poor clerics , were henceforth mainly to be devoted : a few such legacies as Colonel ...
Page 29
... turned from the struggling Church of 1558 to the majestic and still dim outline of the first four centuries . As against the Puritans ' naked deductions from Scripture , Hooker and Andrewes built up a catholic and reasoned defence of ...
... turned from the struggling Church of 1558 to the majestic and still dim outline of the first four centuries . As against the Puritans ' naked deductions from Scripture , Hooker and Andrewes built up a catholic and reasoned defence of ...
Page 34
... turned to carry by legislative enactment their most solid and drastic measures . The first years of Edward VI clearly testify to an increasing deference for statute as against government by Council , and the outstanding constitutional ...
... turned to carry by legislative enactment their most solid and drastic measures . The first years of Edward VI clearly testify to an increasing deference for statute as against government by Council , and the outstanding constitutional ...
Page 38
... turned into one of revolution . The Puritan extremists thus managed , inside one year , to join together what the whole previous century had contrived to keep apart - that is , the political and the religious implications of Protestant ...
... turned into one of revolution . The Puritan extremists thus managed , inside one year , to join together what the whole previous century had contrived to keep apart - that is , the political and the religious implications of Protestant ...
Page 40
... turning their faces from the future inevitable concentration of national government , rested their notion of liberty , as did their successors in 1701 , upon a balance or a separation of powers . The political principles on which ...
... turning their faces from the future inevitable concentration of national government , rested their notion of liberty , as did their successors in 1701 , upon a balance or a separation of powers . The political principles on which ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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