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A declaration of Mr. David Jenkins now prisoner in the Tower of London, one of His Majesties judges in Wales, for trials, murthers, felonies and all other capitall crimes that they ought only to be by juries and not otherwise unlesse it be by Act of Parliament.
A preparative to the treaty: or, a short, sure, and conscientious expedient for agreement and peace; tendred to the two Houses of Parliament. With an appeale to the assembly of divines. Also, an admonition to the people, concerning the present ingagements. / By Da. J. P.N.
An apology for the army, touching the eight quære's upon the late declarations and letters from the army, touching sedition falsly charged upon them. Wherein those quæres are resolved, and thereby the present proceedings of the army are proved to be legall, just & honorable. By David Jenkins, prisoner in the Tower of London.
Iudicis in vvalli¶ principatu Lex terrµ [electronic resource] : in qua ex intimis penetralibus iuris Anglicani : doctissime explicat regimen ab omnibus feculis in Anglia usitatum : simulque demonstrat quam inique posterius hoc Parlamentum egerit cum Rege, unde & jure illud deserere fuerit coactus /
Reproduction of original in the Union Theological Seminary Library, New York.WingElectronic reproduction
A scourge for the directorie, and the revolting synod. Which hath sitten this 5. yeares, more for foure shillings a day, then for conscience sake. / By Judge Jenkins.
An apology for the army : touching the eight quaere's upon the late declarations and letters from the army, touching sedition falsly charged upon them : wherein those quaeres are resolved, and thereby the present proceedings of the army are proved to be legall, just & honourable /
Mode of access: Internet
Pacis consultum: a directory to the publick peace: briefly describing, the antiquity, extent, practice and jurisdiction of several countrey-corporation-courts; especially, the court leet. An exact and perfect method to keep a court of survey for the setting forth and bounding of the mannors, lands, and tenements; with the articles to be therein given in charge: a work most useful: of which subject, never was any thing printed before. An abstract of the penal statutes, useful for all men to know. Also some difficult questions in law, proposed unto, and resolved / by Judge Jenkings.
A discourse touching the inconveniencies of a long continued Parliament, and the ivdgement of the law of the land in that behalfe.
No. [10] in volume lettered: Civil War tracts. 1642-1649.Title vignette.Mode of access: Internet
All is not gould that glisters; with a vindication of His Majestie from the scandalous aspersions concerning former taxes and ship-money. / Written to informe the ignorant, to satisfie the unsatisfied, and to stop the mouthes of all such as carry two faces under one hood.
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