Divine right of kings -- Early works to 1800
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- [The royal charter granted unto kings, by God himself ]
- A Reply to the answerer of the letter sent to the author of a paper called The doctrine of passive obedience and jure divino disproved ..
- A case of conscience resolved. : Wherein it is cleared, that the King may without impeachment to his oath, touching the clergy at coronation, consent to the abrogation of episcopacy. And the objections against it in two learned treatises, printed at Oxford, fully answered.
- A case of conscience resolved. : Wherein it is cleared, that the King may without impeachment to his oath, touching the clergy at coronation, consent to the abrogation of episcopacy. And the objections against it in two learned treatises, printed at Oxford, fully answered.
- A declaration and iustification, of the Earle of Lindsey, : now prisoner in Warwicke-Castle, wherein hee makes apparent the iustice of His Maiestyes cause in taking armes for the preservation of his royall person and prerogative. As it was sent in a letter to the right honourable Henry, Earle of Newmarke, now resident with His Maiesty at Oxford Ianuary 26, 1643. It being a true character of loyalty and myrrour of odedience [sic] for all His Maiestyes louing subiects
- A declaration from the Commissioners of the Generall Assemblie of the Kingdome of Scotland, : concerning the Kings Majesties royall person, and his due rights and priviledges. With their sense and resolution touching the lawfulnesse of Soveraignty, and the proceedings of a disloyall and perfidious party, who formerly pretended to fight for the King. This declaration from the Commissioners of the Generall Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland, was ordained to be forthwith printed and published, and to be read in all churches and chappels throughout the said Kingdome. Signed, A. Ker
- A discourse of obedience unto Kings & magistrates, upon the anniversary of His Majesties birth and restauration : By Isaac du Bourdieu, D. D. One of the ministers of the French church in the Savoy, the 29th of May, 1684. Done from the French by J. W. Containing the substance of what is believed by the Protestant reformed churches, touching subjection unto higher powers; together with a list of the names of the sentence and condemnation of several ministers, unto death, and other penalties; also an account of some churches demolished and shut up, the whole number whereof is computed to be about 800, within these 20 years last part, whereby may be conjectured, the state and growth of the Protestant religion in these our days
- A dozen of principall points : fit for every honest Englishman's wearing
- A holy commonwealth, or Political aphorisms, : opening the true principles of government: for the healing of the mistakes, and resolving the doubts, that most endanger and trouble England at this time: (if yet there may be hope.) And directing the desires of sober Christians that long to see the kingdoms of this world, become the kingdoms of the Lord, and of his Christ.
- A letter containing An humble and serious advice to some in Scotland : in reference to their late troubles and calamities. By a person of that nation
- A looking-glasse for rebells. Or the true grounds of soveraignty, : proving the Kings authority to be from God only: and the subjects obedience from Gods speciall command
- A remonstrance of the most gratious King Iames I. King of Great Britaine, France, and Ireland, defender of the faith, &c. : For the right of Kings, and the independencie of their crownes. Against an oration of the most illustrious Card. of Perron, pronounced in the chamber of the third estate. Ian. 15. 1615. Translated out of his Maiesties French copie, by R.B. pastor to the church at Ashele in the countie of Norfolke
- A review of the observations upon some of His Majesties late answers and expresses.
- A review of the observations upon some of His Majesties late answers and expresses.
- Advice to the commons within all His Majesties realms and dominions
- An answer by letter to a worthy gentleman who desired of a divine some reasons by which it might appeare how inconsistent presbyteriall government is with monarchy. : In which the platforme of that government is briefly delineated, with the tenents and suitable practices thereof. And withall it is demonstrated, that it is inconsistent with any government whatsoever; is full of faction, sedition and treason; an enemy to all peace, domesticall, neighbourly, brotherly, &c. against soveraigne authority, authority of all iudges, and iudicatories, entrenching upon all so farre, as there can be no liberty of person, trade, commerce or propriety, but at their pleasure who bear sway therein
- An humble desired union betweene prerogative and priviledge. : Shewing, that if one draw too hard one way, and the other another, the whole common-wealth must be in danger to be pull'd in sunder
- Anti-Parรฆus, or, A treatise in the defence of the royall right of kings : against Parรฆus and the rest of the anti-monarchians, whether Presbyterians or Jesuits. Wherein is maintained the unlawfulnesse of opposing and taking up arms against the Prince, either by any private subject, inferiour magistrate, the states of the Kingdom, or the Pope of Rome. Confirm'd from the dictate of nature, the law of nations, the civill and canon law, the sacred scriptures, ancient fathers, and Protestant divines. Delivered formerly in a determination in the divinity schooles in Cambridge, April the 9th. 1619. And afterwards enlarged for the presse by learned Dr. Owen. Now translated and published to confirme men in their loyalty to their king, by R.M. Master in Arts
- Anti-Parรฆus: siue Determinatio de iure regio habita Cantabrigiรฆ in scholis theologicis, 19. April. 1619. contra Davidem Parรฆum : cรฆterosq[ue] reformatรฆ & Romanรฆ religionis antimonarchas, ร Davide Ovven monensi, theologiรฆ professore, honoratiss. comiti de Holdernes ร sacris. Discussione propositionum eiusdem Parรฆi รจ re nuper natรก paulรฒ auctior
- Certain considerations vpon the duties both of prince and people.
- Christus Dei, the Lords annoynted. Or, A theologicall discourse, : wherein is proved, that the regall or monarchicall power of our soveraigne lord King Charles is not of humane, but of divine right, and that God is the sole efficient cause thereof, and not the people. Also that every monarch is above the whole common-wealth, and is not onely major singulis, but major vniversis. Written in answer to a late printed pamphlet intituled, Observations upon some of His Majesties late answers and expresses
- Claudii Salmasii ad Johannem Miltonum responsio : opus posthumum
- De monarchia absoluta dissertatio politica, sive, Brevis discussio istius quรฆstionis, an monarchia absoluta sit optima imperii forma. : Cui adjicitur appendix de Monarchiรข mixtรข
- Declaration du serenissime roy Iaques I roy de la Grand' Bretaigne France et Irlande, defenseur de la foy : pour le droit des rois & independance de leurs couronnes, contre la harangue de l'illustrissime Cardinal du Perron prononcรฉe en la chambre du tiers Estat le XV de Ianuier 1615
- Dr. Sherlock vindicated, or, Cogent reasons, why that worthy person hath complied with the necessity of the times : and why he at first refused it
- Dr. Sherlock vindicated, or, Cogent reasons, why that worthy person hath complied with the necessity of the times, : and why he at first refused it
- Episcopacy as established by law in England not prejudicial to regal power
- God and the King: or, The divine constitution of the supreme magistrate; especially in the kingdome of England: against all popular pretenders whomsoever.
- God and the king
- Great Britans [sic] vote: or, God save King Charles. : A treatise seasonably published this 27th. day of March, the happy inauguration of his sacred (though now despised and imprisoned) Maiesty. Wherein is proved by many plaine texts of Scripture, that the resisting, imprisoning, or deposing our King, under what specious pretences soever couched, is not onely unlawfull but damnable
- Herod and Pilate reconciled: or The concord of papist and puritan (against Scripture, fathers, councels, and other orthodoxall writers) for the coercion, deposition, and killing of kings. Discouered by David Owen Batchelour of Diuinitie, and chaplaine to the right Honourable Lord Vicount Hadington
- Herod and Pilate reconciled: or The concord of papists, anabaptists, and sectaries, against Scripture, Fathers, councils, and other orthodoxical writers, for the coercion, deposition, and killing of kings. Discovered by the reverend Father in God, Dr. Owen, late bishop of St. Asaph. Dedicated to the loyal subjects of Great Britain
- Investigatio jurium antiquorum, et rationalium regni, sive Monarchiae Angliae, in magnis suis conciliis, seu Parliamentis : et regiminis, cum iisdem in suis principiis, optimi. or, A vindication of the government of the kingdom of England under our kings and monarchs, appointed by God, from the opinion and claim of those, that without any warrant or ground of law or right reason, that laws of God and man, nature and nations, the records, annals and histories of the kingdom, would have it to be originally derived from the people, or the king to be co-ordinate with his houses of peers and Commons in Parliament.
- Iohn by the permission of God Bishop of Norwich: to all and singular archdeacons, officials, parsons, vicars, curates, church-wardens, side-men, and all other ecclesiasticall officers ..
- Juan Caramuel Lobkovvitz. Religioso de la orden de Cister Abbad de Melrosa, &c. : Convencido en su libro intitulado, Philippus prudens Caroli V. Imper. filius, Lusitania, &c. Legitimus rex demonstratus. Impresso en el anรต de 1639. Y' en su respuesta al manifiesto del reyno de Portugal, impressa en esta รฃno 1642. Dedicado a Don Anton. d' Almada embaxador extraordinario del serenissimo principe Don Juan Rey de Portugal, al serenissimo Principe Carlos Rey de la Gran Bretรฃna. Por el Dotor Antonio de Sousa de Macedo, del supremo senado de Justicia de su Magestad de Portugal; y su Residente por la Embaxada ordinaria junto a la persona de su Magestad de la Gran Bretรฃna
- K. James's opinion of a King, of a tyrant, and of the English laws, rights, and priviledges : in two speeches, the first to the Parliament, 1603, the second, 1609
- King's right by divine law conditional, being a few observes from Scripture, of publick governors and right of Kings; in answer to the pretences of some for their darling's right, from the xxvii chapter of numbers, xvii of Deuteronomy 15th verse, and 1 Samuel viii Chap. with some remarks on Sir George Mackenzie's Jus Regium, and a few acts of Parliament before the revolution: ...
- Lex, rex: : The law and the prince. A dispute for the just prerogative of king and people. Containing the reasons and causes of the most necessary defensive wars of the Kingdom of Scotland, and of their expedition for the ayd and help of their dear brethren of England. In which their innocency is asserted, and a full answer is given to a seditious pamphlet, intituled, Sacro-sancta regum majestas, or The sacred and royall prerogative of Christian kings; under the name of J. A. But penned by Jo: Maxwell the excommunicate P. Prelat. With a scripturall confutation of the ruinous grounds of W. Barclay, H. Grotius, H. Arnisลus, Ant. de Domi. P. Bishop of Spalata, and of other late anti-magistratical royalists; as, the author of Ossorianum, D. Fern, E. Symmons, the doctors of Aberdeen, &c. In XLIV. Questions. Published by authority
- Lingua testium: : wherein monarchy is proved, 1. To be jure divino. 2. To be successive in the Church (except in time of a nationall desertion) from Adam untill Christ. 3. That monarchy is the absolute true government under the Gospel. 4. That immediately after extraordinary gifts in the Church ceased, God raised up a monarch for to defend the Church. 5. That Christian monarchs are one of the witnesses spoken of Rev. 11. 6. That England is the place from whence God fetched the first witnesse of this kind. 7. England was the place whither the witnesses, (viz. godly magistracy and ministry) never drove by Antichrist. Where is proved, first, that there hath been a visible magistracy, (though in sackcloth,) these 1260. yeares in England. ... Amongst these things are proved that the time of the calling of the Jews, the fall of Antichrist, and the ruine of the Beast of the earth is at hand. Wherein you have the hard places of Mat. 24, and Rev. 17. explained with severall other hard texts: ...
- Master Geree's Case of conscience sifted : Wherein is enquired, vvhether the King (considering his oath at coronation to protect the clergy and their priviledges) can with a safe conscience consent to the abrogation of episcopacy. By Edward Boughen. D.D
- Mr. Gerees Case of conscience sifted. : Wherein is enquired, vvhether the King (considering his oath at coronation to protect the clergy and their priviledges) can with a safe conscience consent to the abrogation of episcopacy.
- Obedience active and passive due to the supream povver, by the word of God, reason, and the consent of divers moderne and orthodox divines; : written not out of faction, but conscience, and with desire to informe the ignorant, and undeceive the seduced: by W.J. a welwiller to peace and truth
- Observations upon some of his Majesties late answers and expresses
- Ochlo-machia. Or The peoples war, : examined according to the principles of Scripture & reason, in two of the most plausible pretences of it. In answer to a letter sent by a person of quality, who desired satisfaction. By Jasper Mayne, D.D. one of the students of Ch. Ch. Oxon
- Orthodox state-queries, : presented to all those who retain any sparks of their ancient loyalty
- Puritano-Iesuitismus, : the Puritan turn'd Jesuite; or rather, out-vying him in those diabolicall and dangerous positions, of the deposition of kings; from the yeare 1536. untill this present time; extracted out of the most ancient and authentick authours. By that reverend divine, Doctour Ovven, Batchelour of Divinity. Shewing their concord in the matter, their discord in the manner of their sedition
- Questions resolved, and propositions tending to accommodation and agreement betweene the King being the royall head, and both Houses of Parliament being the representative body of the Kingdome of England
- Questions resolved, and propositions tending to accommodation and agreement betweene the king being the royall head, and both Houses of Parliament being the representative body of the Kingdome of England
- Reasons why this kingdom, as all others: : and the Parliaments and people of this kingdom, as all others, whether Christian or heathen. And especially such as hould predestination ought to adhere to their kings, whether good or bad
- Reflections upon two books, the one entituled, the case of allegiance to a King in possession : the other, an answer to Dr. Sherlock's Case of allegiance to sovereign powers, in defence of the case of allegiance to a King in possession, on those parts especially wherein the author endeavours to shew his opinion to be agreeable to the laws of this land. In a letter to a friend
- Remarks upon Dr. Sherlock's book, intituled, The case of the allegiance due to soveraign princes, stated and resolved, &c
- Royalty and loyalty or A short survey of the power of kings over their subjects: and the duty of subjects to their kings. : Abstracted out of ancient and later writers, for the better composeing of these present distempers: and humbly presented to ye consideration of his Ma.tie. and both Howses of Parliament, for the more speedy effecting of a pacification
- Rules for kings, and good counsell for subjects: : being a collection of certaine places of holy Scripture, directing the one to governe, and the other to obey. Most necessary for all men that are desirous to square their actions according to the rule of God's Law. Whereunto is added a prayer for the King. In these times of contradictions
- Sacro-sancta regum majestas, or, The sacred and royal prerogative of Christian kings. : Wherein sovereignty is by Holy Scriptures, reverend antiquity, and sound reason asserted, by discussing of five questions. And the Puritanical, Jesuitical, antimonarchical grounds are disproved, and the untruth and weakness of their new-devised-state-principles are discovered. Dei gratia mea lux
- Sacro-sancta regum majestas: or The sacred and royal prerogative of Christian kings : wherein sovereignty is by Holy Scriptures, reverend antiquity, and sound reason asserted, by discussing of five questions. And the Puritanical, Jesuitical, antimonarchical grounds are disproved, nnd [sic] the untruth and weakness of their new-devised-state-principles are discovered. Dei gratia mea lux
- Sacro-sancta regum majestas: or, The sacred and royall prerogative of Christian kings. : VVherein soveraigntie is by Holy Scriptures, reverend antiquitie, and sound reason asserted, by discussing of five questions. And, the Puritanicall, Jesuiticall, antimonarchicall grounds are disproved, and the untruth and weaknesse of their new-devised-state-principles are discovered. Dei gratia mea lux
- Sherlock against Sherlock. : The master of the temple's reasons for his late taking the oath to their Majesties, answered,
- Six serious quรฆries concerning the kings triall by the New High Court of Justice.
- The Earle of Lindsey his declaration and iustification : who is now prisoner in Warwicke Castle: wherein he declares the iustice of His Majesties cause in taking armes for the preservation of His royall person and prerogative. Being a patterne of loyalty, and mirrour of obedience, for all His Majesties loving subjects to be rightly guided by
- The King on his throne: or A discourse maintaining the dignity of a king, the duty of a subject, and the unlawfulnesse of rebellion. : Delivered in two sermons preached in the Cathedrall Church in York. By R.M. Master in Arts, Coll. S. Pet. Cant
- The Kings cause rationally, briefly, and plainly debated, as it stands defacto. : Against the irrationall, groundlesse misprisions of a still deceived sort of people
- The Kings right : briefely set downe in a sermon preached before the reuerend iudges at the assizes held in Reading for the county of Berks. Iune 28. 1619. By William Dickinson one of the fellowes of Merton Colledge in Oxford
- The Puritan turn'd Jesuite: : or rather, out-vying him in those diabolicall and dangerous positions, of the deposition of kings; from the year 1536. untill this present time; extracted out of the most ancient and authentick authors. Shewing their concord in the matter, their discord in the manner of their sedition. By that reverend divine, Doctor Ovven
- The State-proteus, or, The inconstant politician
- The apologie for the conformable ministers of England, for their subscription to the present church gouernement : wherein is handled two things, the first is, that the setting vp of the primitiue church gouernement, vnder a Christian king is not a matter of necessitie, and this is prooued by twentie substantiall reasons : the second is, that the gouernement of the church as now it standeth, differeth not from the primitiue gouernement, but onely in one materiall and necessarie circumstance
- The armies vindication, wherein these five things are proved: : first, that there is a supream and soveraign power alwayes residing in the people, over and above kings. Secondly, that all kings have been, and still are, subject to, and under law. Thirdly, that the people have power, not only to convent, but to censure, depose and punish their kings for their tyranny and misgovernment. Fourthly, that no nation is so strictly tied to any one form of civill government or law, but it is lawfull for the people to alter the same to another form or kind upon occasion. Fiftly, amongst all formes of civill government, aristocratical or popular is best and safest for the people. Besides, here is shewed, that to claim any crown by an hereditary or successive title, is upon a false and unjust ground. In reply to Mr. William Sedgwick.
- The birth, life, and death of the Jewish unction.
- The burthen of Issachar: or, The tyrannical power and practices of the Presbyteriall government in Scotland; : in their [brace] I. Parochiall session. II. Presbyterie. III. Provinciall synods. IV. Generall assembly. With the articles of Presbyterian faith inconsistent with monarchie. Whereby it is evident, that Presbyteriall fingers are heavier than Episcopall loynes; these correcting with a rod, those with a scorpion. And therefore it is not the kingdome and government of Jesus Christ, whose yoake is easie, his burthen light, and his scepter a scepter of righteousnesse
- The case of the allegiance due to soveraign powers, further consider'd, and defended : with a more particular respect to the doctrine of non-resistance and passive-obedience. Together with a seasonable perswasive to our new dissenters. By Will. Sherlock, D.D. master of the temple
- The common-wealth-man's principles examined; and proved dangerous to monarchy
- The divine right and original of the civill magistrate from God, : (as it is drawn by the Apostle S. Paul in those words, Rom. 13.1. There is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God) illustrated and vindicated in a treatise (chiefly) upon that text. Wherein the procedure of political dominion from God, by his ordination; ... is endevored truly and plainly to be laid open.
- The divine right of government: : [brace] 1. naturall, and 2. politique. More particularly of monarchie; the onely legitimate and natural spece of politique government. VVherein the phansyed state-principles supereminencing salutem populi above the Kings honour: and legitimating the erection of polarchies, the popular elections of kings and magistrates, and the authoritative and compulsive establishment of a national conformity in evangelical and Christian dutyes, rites, and ceremonies, are manifested to be groundlesse absurdities both in policy and divinity.
- The divine right of kings asserted in general: ours in particular; : both by the laws of God, and this land.
- The doctrine of the Scriptures, concerning the originall of dominion : Wherein Gods perpetuall propriety in the soveraignty of the whole earth, and the Kings great charter for the administration thereof, are justified by authoritative records in both the Testaments. And sundry of the chiefe arguments reduced into forme, ready for the present examination of those who (in this great cause) desire the truth. By Robert Weldon, rector of Stony-Stanton in the county of Lecester
- The doctrine of the Scriptures, concerning the originall of dominion. : Wherein Gods perpetuall propriety in the soveraignty of the whole earth, and the Kings great charter for the administration thereof, are justified by authoritative records in both the Testaments. And sundry of the chiefe arguments reduced into forme, ready for the present examination of those who (in this great cause) desire the truth.
- The golden law and emperial principle, or, The universal monarch : viz. the soveraignty of salus populi (not voluntas nor voluptas populi) over all powers and potentates whatsoever ... : besides many other usefuls, to rectify and so to satisfie the conscience scruples of all sorts about the high and disputable point of this time, as, who hath right to the government of our three countries ..
- The golden rule, or, Justice advanced. : Wherein is shewed, that the representative kingdom, or Commons assembled in Parliament, have a lawfull power to arraign, and adjudge to death the King, for tyranny, treason, murder, and other high misdemeanors: and whatsoever is objected to the contrary from Scripture, law, reason, or inconveniences, is satisfactorily answered and refuted. Being, a cleer and full satisfaction to the whole nation, in justification of the legal proceeding of the High Court of Justice, against Charls Steward, late King of England. The first part.
- The judgment of Sir Orlando Bridgman, : declared in his charge to the jury at the arraignment of the twenty nine regicides (the murtherers of King Charles the First, of most glorious memory) began at Hicks-Hall on Tuesday the ninth of October 1660, and continued at the Sessions-House in the Old-Baily, until Friday the ninteenth of the same month
- The loyall convert, (according to the Oxford copy.) : A convert will be loyall: or, some short annotations on this book;
- The loyall convert.ยท
- The necessity of Christian subjection : demonstrated, and proved by the doctrine of Christ, and the apostles, the practice of primitive Christians, the rules of religion, cases of conscience, and consent of latter Orthodox divines, that the power of the King is not of humane, but of divine right, and that God onely is the efficient cause thereof. Whereunto is added, an appendix of all the chief objections that malice it selfe could lay upon His Majestie, with a full answer to every particular objection
- The necessity of Christian subjection. : Demonstrated, and proved by the doctrine of Christ, and the Apostles; the practice of primitive Christians, the rules of religion, cases of conscience, and consent of latter orthodox divines, that the power of the King is not of humane, but of divine right; and that God onely is the efficient cause thereof. Whereunto is added, an appendix of all the chief objections that malice it selfe could lay upon His Majestie, with a full answer to every particular objection. Also a tract intituled, Christus Dei, wherein is proved that our Soveraign Lord the King is not onely major singulis, but major universis
- The necessity of Christian svbiection. : Demonstrated and proved by the doctrine of Christ and the apostles : the practice of primitive Christians, the rules of religion, cases of conscience, and consent of latter orthodox divines.
- The obligation resulting from the Oath of Supremacy : to assist and defend the pre-eminence or prerogative of the dispensative power belonging to the King, his heirs and successors. In the asserting of that power various historical passages occurring in the usurpation after the year 1641. are occasionally mentioned; and an account is given at large of the progress of the power of dispensing as to acts of Parliament about religion since the reformation; and of divers judgments of Parliaments declaring their approbation of the exercise of such power, and particularly in what concerns the punishment of disability, or incapacity
- The perswasion of certaine grave Divines, (most of them of the assembly) to such as suffer for the King, that they persevere in their sufferings
- The prerogative of the monarchs of Great Brittain : asserted according to the antient laws of England. Also, A confutation of that false maxim, that royal authority is originally and radically in the people. By Bartholomew Lane, Esq;
- The pvblique confider
- The pvbliqve confider
- The resolving of conscience, upon this question : whether upon such a supposition or case, as is now usually made, (The King will not discharge his trust but is bent or seduced to subvert religion, laws, and liberties.), subjects may take arms and resist? and whether that case be now? : resolved, I. That no conscience upon such a supposition or case can finde a safe and cleare ground for such resistance II. That no man in conscience can be truly perswaded, that the resistance now made is such, as they themselves pretend to, that plead for it in such a case, III. That no man in conscience can be truly perswaded that such a case is now, that is, that the King will not discharge his trust but is bent to subvert, &c., whence it followeth, that the resistance now made against the higher power is unwarrantable and according to the Apostle damnable, Rom. 13, also that the shedding of bloud in the pursuit of this resistance is murder
- The right, and prerogatiue of kings : against Cardinall Bellarmine and other Iesuites. Written in French by Iohn Bede, aduocate in the court of Parliament of Paris, and published by authority. Translated by Robert Sherwood
- The royal apology: or, an answer to the rebels plea: : wherein, the most noted anti-monarchical tenents, first, published by Doleman the Jesuite, to promote a bill of exclusion against King James. Secondly, practised by Bradshaw and the regicides in the actual murder of King Charles the 1st. Thirdly, republished by Sidney and the associators to depose and murder his present Majesty, are distinctly consider'd. With a parallel between Doleman, Bradshaw, Sidney and other of the true-Protestant party
- The royal charter granted unto kings, by God Himself : and collected out of his Holy Word, in both Testaments. By T.B. Dr. in Divinity
- The royal charter granted unto kings, by God himself : and collected out of his holy Word, in both Testaments. By T.B. Dr. in Divinitie. Whereunto is added by the same author, a short treatise, wherein Episcopacy is proved to be jure divino
- The royal prerogatve [sic]; or, Subjection to kings and the necessity of passive obedience in the subject. : Proved and pressed as an excellent duty to be performed by all good Christians; or any that would be accounted so; contrary to the schismatical and rebellious tenets of some in these times. Being also a divine and excellent preservative against famine, sword, and pestilence in a sermon
- The royall plea; or, a defence of the Kings supremacie : Wherein it is evidenced and maintained by argument, that to punish a King capitally, is absolutely against the word of God, and the established lawes of the land; and that to doe so great a wickednesse, will cast a great dishonour upon our nation, and the profession of Christianitie. By R.B. bach. of divinity
- The subject of supremacie. The right of Caesar. Resolution of conscience. : Wherein are three questions handled: viz. 1. Whether the King without the Parliament may take up armes, and in the time of it fight with friends or foes, as having the law of armes in his owne power, and no law else? 2. Whether the Parliament without the King may take up armes to defend themselves, and kingdome, against delinquents, invaders, and forces raised in, or out of the kingdome? 3. Whether the people by command of either to assist the one, and resist the other be rebells? And may serve as a replication to the reply of Dr. Ferne, concerning free subjects; a faithfull councell, a royall King, and loyall people; placed by this author as slaves, a faction, a tyrant, rebells, in his ignorance of jurisdiction, legall, and naturall preservation
- The subjects liberty: set forth in the royall and politique power of England. : The first intent that makes a king is the peoples consent, Fortesc. cap. 13. and is as the effluxe of blood from the heart to the head, and lives before it. The laws as sinewes unite all the members, and the head can no more change them, then the head of the naturall body can alter the ligaments of all the members. The regall power is not righteous that is meerely imperiall. Whereunto is annexed, six reasons, to prove that it is no treason, nor rebellion to obey the ordinances of Parliament, against the personall commands of the King, be they never so royall or regall. With six reasons obligatory, why the powers in Parliament are to be obeyed, both by persons departed, and all the people distracted. The first is, Iudicium regnt
- The supremacy debated, or, The authority of Parliaments, formerly owned by Romish clergy to be the supreamest power
- The tenure of kings and magistrates: : proving, that it is lawfull, and hath been held so through all ages, for any, who have the power, to call to account a tyrant, or wicked King, and after due conviction, to depose, and put him to death; if the ordinary magistrate have neglected, or deny'd to doe it. And that they, who of late so much blame deposing, are the men that did it themselves.
- The tenure of kings and magistrates: : proving, that it is lawfull, and hath been held so through all ages, for any, who have the power, to call to account a tyrant, or wicked king, and after due conviction, to depose, and put him to death; if the ordinary magistrate have neglected, or deny'd to doe it. And that they, who of late, so much blame deposing, are the men that did it themselves.
- The true lawe of free monarchies, or, The reciprock and mutuall dutie betwixt a free king, and his naturall subiects
- The true portraiture of the kings of England; drawn from their titles, successions, raigns and ends. Or, A short and exact historical description of every king, with the right they have had to the crown, and the manner of their wearing of it; especially from William the Conqueror. : Wherein is demonstrated that there hath been no direct succession in the line to create an hereditary right, for six or seven hundred yeers; faithfully collected out of our best histories, and humbly presented to the Parliament of England.
- The truth of the times vindicated: : whereby the lawfulnesse of Parliamentary procedings in taking up of arms, is justified, Doctor Fernes reply answered, and the case in question more fully resolved.
- The visible vengeance: or, a true relation of the suddaine, miserable end, of one VVhite, late Mayor of Exceter: : who, the first of this instant December, wickedly reviling our Soveraigne Lord King Charles, was in the very moment, punished by the Divine Justice, with a violent and strange death
- The white crow : Or, An enquiry into some more new doctrines broach'd by the Bp. of Salisbury, in a pair of sermons utter'd in that cathedral, on the V. and VII. of November, 1710. And his lordship's last restauration sermon
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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/_IXVlXrhRvU/" 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/_IXVlXrhRvU/">Divine right of kings -- Early works to 1800</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>
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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/_IXVlXrhRvU/" 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/_IXVlXrhRvU/">Divine right of kings -- Early works to 1800</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>