Penn, William, 1644-1718
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The concept Penn, William, 1644-1718 represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in University of Missouri-Kansas City Libraries.
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Penn, William, 1644-1718
Resource Information
The concept Penn, William, 1644-1718 represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in University of Missouri-Kansas City Libraries.
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- Penn, William, 1644-1718
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- 1644-1718
44 Items that share the Concept Penn, William, 1644-1718
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- William Penn, horticulturist
- A Dialogue between Father P----rs and William P---n
- A just and plain vindication of Sir William Keith, Bart. late governour of Pennsilvania, : from the untruths and aspertions contained in a paper, printed at London, and now reprinting at Philadelphia, under the title of The case of the heir at law and executrix of the late proprietor of Pennsilvania, &c
- A just rebuke to the Quakers insolent behaviour, in their two books, i.e. A just censure, &c. the other, A sober reply, &c. : both presented to some members of Parliament. : Also a dialogue between a civilian and a Quaker
- A letter to Mr Penn : with his answer
- A letter to Mr Penn with his answer
- A letter to Mr. Penn with his answer
- A letter to Mr. Penn with his answer
- A letter to Mr. Penn, with his answer
- A letter to Mr. Penn, with his answer
- A letter, containing some reflections, on a discourse called Good advice to the Church of England, &c. and upon three letters from a gentlemen in the country to his friend in London about the repeal of the penal laws and tests
- A vindication of Quakerism no Christianity &c. : against the very vain attempts of William Pen in his pretended ansvver : with some remarkable passages out of the Quakers church registry wherein their near approach to popery and their bold blasphemy is abundantly manifest
- A vindication of W.P. from the erronious [sic] and false testimony of Thomas Budd: : being in answer to a sheet of his, entituled, A testimony for truth, against error.
- A vindication of William Penn, proprietary of Pennsilvania : from the aspersions spread abroad on purpose to defame him
- An abstract by way of index of some very unsound and some other very antichristian passages collected out of G. Whitehead's and W. Penns books, plainly contradicting their late creeds : one signed by W. Penn at Dublin in Ireland on which the B. of Cork hath made some seasonable remarks, another signed by G.W., called A few positions of the sincere belief and Christian
- An advertisement : [of a] meeting (about some controversies in religious matters of faith) to be held by George Keith and his Friends, at their meeting-place in Turners-Hall in Philpot-Lane, London, eleventh day of the month called June, 1696
- An answer by an Anabaptist to the three considerations proposed to Mr. William Penn, by a pretended Baptists, concerning a magna charta for liberty of conscience
- An answer to a small treatise call'd Just measurs : in an epistle of peace and love : by way of address, to such as esteem themselves elders amongst the people call'd Quakers ..
- An answer to several material passages in a book published some time since by W.P. entituled, A brief examination and state of liberty spiritual, both with respect to persons in their private capacity, and in their church-society and communion, &c.
- An answer to the seditious and scandalous pamphlet entituled The tryal of W. Penn and W. Mead at the sessions held at the Old Baily, London, the 1, 3, 4, 5 of Sept., 1670 : contained in four sections
- An answer to the seditious and scandalous pamphlet entituled The tryal of W. Penn and W. Mead, at the sessions held at the Old Baily, London, the 1, 3, 4, 5, of Sept., 1670. : contained in four sections. Sect. I. The design of the libellous pamphlet discovered. II. The scandals against the then Lord Mayor, Sir Thomas Bludworth, and Sir John Hovel, recorder, answered. III. The justice and honour of that court vindicated, by a true and impartial relation of that whole tryal. IV. The fining [sic] of that jury that gave two contrary verdicts justified, to prevent a failer of justice in London.
- An apology for Congregational divines : against the charge of ... : under which head are published amicable letters between the author and a conformist
- Controversy ended, or, The sentence given by George Fox himself against himself and party in the persons of his adversaries : ratified and aggravated by W. Penn (their ablest advocate) even in his huffing book of the vindication of G.F. &c. : being a defence of that little book intituled, The spirit of the Quakers tryed ..
- Fiction found out. : To my esteemed friends, call'd Quakers, on occasion of two copies of verses printed, and subscribed W.P
- For G.P. or the author of a little book entituled, Just measures, in an epistle, &c. and to all approvers thereof; : with a postscript and a few words to the yearly meeting in London
- Gross error and hypocrisie detected in George Whitehead and some of his brethern : as doth appear from the disingenuous and hypocritical answer he and some others have given to some queries sent to the last Yearly Meeting of the people call'd Quakers, in the third month, 1695, by comparing the said answer with the printed books of the said George Whitehead, William Pemn, and John Whitehead, leading men in the said Meeting, wherein the great inconistency and contradiction of their present late answer to the express words and sentiments of their printed books is discovered : with a further account of their vile and pernicious errours
- Memoirs of the private and public life of William Penn
- More fruits of solitude relating to the conduct of human life
- Quakerism subverted : being a futher discovery and confutation of the gross errours of the Quakers published and maintained by William Penn and others of that sect : by which it is plain that the errours of the Quakers be most pernicious, subverting Christs true religion
- Some errors of the Quakers detected : viz. their denial of Christ, his sacrifice, ordinances, the Resurrection of the Body, and Christ's second coming : to which is added proof tha the light in all men is not Christ : with an answer to a Quaker's praise of William Penn
- Some fruits of solitude in reflections and maxims
- The Quaker condemned out of his own mouth, or, An answer to Will. Pen's book entitled Reason against railing, and truth against fiction : wherein he hathe confessed that if those things objected against the Quakers in two former dialogues be true, that then a Quaker is quite another thing than a Christian, that those matters heretofore objected were and are real truths and no fictions, is fully cleared and evinced in this third dialogue between a Christian and a Quaker
- The Quakers appeal answer'd, or, A full relation of the occasion, progress, and issue of a meeting held in Barbican the 28th of August last past : wherein the allegations of William Pen in two books lately published by him against Thomas Hicks, were answered and disproved, and Tho. Hicks, his quotations out of the Quakers own books attested by several as being appeal'd unto
- The anti-Quaker, or, A compendious answer to a tedious pamphlet entituled, A treatise of oaths : subscribed by a jury of 12 Quakers, whose names are prefixed to it, together with the fore-man of that jury ... William Penn : alledging several reasons why they ... refuse to swear, which are refuted, and the vanity of them demonstrated both by Scripture, reason, and authority of ancient and modern writers
- The constancy of the people called Quakers. : In their testimony against popery, sincerely asserted, in opposition to a perverss [sic] lybel, falsly stiled, A looking-Glass for the Quakers, (in two collumns) sallaciously mis-representing them:
- The eighth part of The Christian-Quaker distinguished from the apostate & innovator : wherein certain doctrines ... are examined, and in order to a decision of the controversie ... an adress [sic] is made to a book entituled, An Adress to Protestants, given forth by W.P. anno 1679 ...
- The foundation of God standeth sure, or, A defence of those fundamental and so generally believed doctrines : of the trinity of persons in the unity of the divine essence, of the satisfaction of Christ the second person of the real and glorious Trinity, the justification of the ungodly by the imputed righteousness of Christ : against the cavils of W.P. J. a Quaker in his pamphlet entituled The sandy foundation shaken &c. : wherein his and the Quakers hideous blasphemies, Socinian, and damnably-heretical opinions are discovered and refuted, W.P.'s ignorance, weakness, falshoods, absurd arguings, and folly is made manifest unto all ...
- The peoples [brace] ancient and just [brace] liberties asserted, in the tryal of William Penn, and William Mead, : at the sessions held at the Old-Baily in London, the first, third, fourth, and fifth of Sept. 70. against the most arbitrary procedure of that court
- The rebuker rebuked in a brief answer to Caleb Pusey his scurrilous pamphet [sic], entituled, A rebuke to Daniel Leeds, &c. : Wherein William Penn his Sandy foundation is fairly quoted, shewing that he calls Christ, the finite impotent creature. By Daniel Leeds
- The true copy of a paper given in to the yearly meeting of the people called Quakers : at their meeting-place in Grace-Church-street, Lonon, 15 day of the 3d. month 1695. By George Keith, which was read by him in the said meeting, by their allowance. With a brief narrative of the most material passages of discourse betwixt George White-head, Charles Marshal, and George Keith, the said day, and the day following, betwixt George White-head, William Penn, and Francis Canfield on the one side, and George Keith on the other; ... Together with a short list of some of the vile and gross errors of George Whitehead, John Whitehead, William Penn, their chief ministers, and now having the greatest sway among them (being of the same sort and nature with the gross errors charged on some in Pensilvania) most apparently opposite to the fundamental doctrines of the Christian religion ... And a proposition to VVilliam Penn, to prove his charge, that G.K. is an apostate
- Three considerations proposed to Mr. William Pen, concerning the validity and security of his new magna charta for liberty of conscience,
- Three dialogues between a Christian and a Quaker : wherein is faithfully represented, some of the chief and most concerning opinions of the Quakers : together with their method and manner of reasoning in the defence thereof : unto which is now annexed The Quakers appeal answered, being a full relation of a dispute betwixt William Pen and the author
- Whereas His Majesty, in consideration of the great merit and faithful services of Sir William Penn deceased ..
- William Penn and the Quakers either imposters or apostates, which they please : proved from their avowed principles and contrary practices
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.umkc.edu/resource/QuJ1qV8lvn0/" typeof="CategoryCode http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Concept"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.umkc.edu/resource/QuJ1qV8lvn0/">Penn, William, 1644-1718</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.umkc.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.umkc.edu/">University of Missouri-Kansas City Libraries</a></span></span></span></span></div>