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The legall fundamentall liberties of the people of England revived, asserted, and vindicated. Or, an epistle written the eighth day of June 1649, by Lieut. Colonel John Lilburn (arbitrary and aristocratical prisoner in the Tower of London) to Mr. William Lenthall Speaker to the remainder of those few knights, citizens, and burgesses that Col. Thomas Pride at his late purge thought convenient to leave sitting at Westminster ... who ... pretendedly stile themselves ... the Parliament of England, intrusted and authorised by the consent of all the people thereof, whose representatives by election ... they are; although they are never able to produce one bit of a law, or any piece of a commission to prove, that all the people of England, ... authorised Thomas Pride, ... to chuse them a Parliament, as indeed he hath de facto done by this pretended mock-Parliament: and therefore it cannot properly be called the nations or peoples Parliament, but Col. Pride's and his associates, whose really it is; who, although they have beheaded the King for a tyrant, yet walk in his oppressingest steps, if not worse and higher.

 
dc.contributor Text Creation Partnership,
dc.contributor.author Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657.
dc.contributor.author Lenthall, William, 1591-1662.
dc.coverage.placeName London
dc.date.accessioned 2018-05-25
dc.date.accessioned 2019-11-09T23:33:41Z
dc.date.available 2019-11-09T23:33:41Z
dc.date.created 1649
dc.date.issued 2008-09
dc.identifier ota:A88212
dc.identifier.citation http://purl.ox.ac.uk/ota/A88212
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12024/A88212
dc.description.abstract Annotation on Thomason copy: "June 18". Reproduction of the original in the British Library.
dc.format.extent Approx. 305 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 43 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images.
dc.format.medium Digital bitstream
dc.format.mimetype text/xml
dc.language English
dc.language.iso eng
dc.publisher University of Oxford
dc.relation.isformatof https://data.historicaltexts.jisc.ac.uk/view?pubId=eebo-99864015e
dc.relation.ispartof EEBO-TCP (Phase 1)
dc.rights 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. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal. The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission.
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
dc.rights.label PUB
dc.subject.lcsh Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657 -- Imprisonment -- Early works to 1800.
dc.subject.lcsh England and Wales. -- Parliament. -- House of Commons.
dc.subject.lcsh Civil rights -- England -- Sources.
dc.subject.lcsh Great Britain -- Politics and government -- 1642-1649 -- Early works to 1800.
dc.subject.lcsh Great Britain -- History -- Commonwealth and Protectorate, 1649-1660 -- Early works to 1800.
dc.title The legall fundamentall liberties of the people of England revived, asserted, and vindicated. Or, an epistle written the eighth day of June 1649, by Lieut. Colonel John Lilburn (arbitrary and aristocratical prisoner in the Tower of London) to Mr. William Lenthall Speaker to the remainder of those few knights, citizens, and burgesses that Col. Thomas Pride at his late purge thought convenient to leave sitting at Westminster ... who ... pretendedly stile themselves ... the Parliament of England, intrusted and authorised by the consent of all the people thereof, whose representatives by election ... they are; although they are never able to produce one bit of a law, or any piece of a commission to prove, that all the people of England, ... authorised Thomas Pride, ... to chuse them a Parliament, as indeed he hath de facto done by this pretended mock-Parliament: and therefore it cannot properly be called the nations or peoples Parliament, but Col. Pride's and his associates, whose really it is; who, although they have beheaded the King for a tyrant, yet walk in his oppressingest steps, if not worse and higher.
dc.type Text
has.files yes
branding Oxford Text Archive
files.size 4738590
files.count 4
identifier.stc Wing L2131
identifier.stc Thomason E560_14
identifier.stc ESTC P1297
identifier.stc ESTC R204531
otaterms.date.range 1600-1699

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