The first part of an historical collection of the ancient Parliaments of England, from the yeer of our Lord 673, till the end of King John's reign, anno 1216. Wherein is cleerly demonstrated by histories and records beyond contradiction, that the ancient parliaments, and great councels of England, during all this tract of time, and many yeers after, were constituted, and consisted onely of our kings, princes, dukes, earls, nobles, barons, spiritual and temporal lords, and those we now usually stile the House of Peers; and that both the legislative and judicial power of our parliaments resided onliy [sic] in them; without any knights, citizens, burgesses of Parliament, or Commons House, not knowne, nor heard of, till of punier times then these. Published, to inform the ignorance, and check the insolent usurpations of those few commoners, who now call themselves not only the Commons House, but Parliament of England; and (as much as in them lies) have most unjustly excluded both our King and lords from being any Members, or branches of our late, or future Parliaments. / By William Prynne of Swainswick, Esquire.
dc.contributor | Text Creation Partnership, |
dc.contributor.author | Prynne, William, 1600-1669. |
dc.coverage.placeName | London |
dc.date.accessioned | 2020-07-01 |
dc.date.accessioned | 2020-09-22T12:31:25Z |
dc.date.available | 2020-09-22T12:31:25Z |
dc.date.created | 1649 |
dc.date.issued | 2011-04 |
dc.identifier | ota:A91183 |
dc.identifier.citation | http://purl.ox.ac.uk/ota/A91183 |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12024/A91183 |
dc.description.abstract | No more published. Annotation on Thomason copy: "Aug. 20". Reproduction of the original in the British Library. |
dc.format.extent | Approx. 85 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 17 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-99863266e |
dc.relation.ispartof | EEBO-TCP (Phase 2) |
dc.rights | To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal. This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information. |
dc.rights.uri | http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ |
dc.rights.label | PUB |
dc.subject.lcsh | Great Britain. -- Parliament -- History -- Early works to 1800. |
dc.subject.lcsh | England and Wales. -- Parliament. -- House of Lords -- Early works to 1800. |
dc.subject.lcsh | Great Britain -- History -- Commonwealth and Protectorate, 1649-1660 -- Early works to 1800. |
dc.title | The first part of an historical collection of the ancient Parliaments of England, from the yeer of our Lord 673, till the end of King John's reign, anno 1216. Wherein is cleerly demonstrated by histories and records beyond contradiction, that the ancient parliaments, and great councels of England, during all this tract of time, and many yeers after, were constituted, and consisted onely of our kings, princes, dukes, earls, nobles, barons, spiritual and temporal lords, and those we now usually stile the House of Peers; and that both the legislative and judicial power of our parliaments resided onliy [sic] in them; without any knights, citizens, burgesses of Parliament, or Commons House, not knowne, nor heard of, till of punier times then these. Published, to inform the ignorance, and check the insolent usurpations of those few commoners, who now call themselves not only the Commons House, but Parliament of England; and (as much as in them lies) have most unjustly excluded both our King and lords from being any Members, or branches of our late, or future Parliaments. / By William Prynne of Swainswick, Esquire. |
dc.type | Text |
has.files | yes |
branding | Oxford Text Archive |
files.size | 349615 |
files.count | 4 |
identifier.stc | Wing P3957 |
identifier.stc | Thomason E569_23 |
identifier.stc | ESTC R203232 |
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