An Answer to Such Motives as Were Offer'd by Certain Military-men to Prince Henry, Inciting Him to Affect Arms More Than Peace |
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An Answer to Such Motives as Were Offer'd by Certain Military-Men to Prince ... Robert Cotton, Sir Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2016 |
An Answer to Such Motives as Were Offer'd by Certain Military-Men to Prince ... Robert Cotton Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2017 |
An Answer to Such Motives as Were Offer'd by Certain Military-Men to Prince ... Robert Cotton Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2017 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
advantage affection againſt anno Arms Army beſides beſt Biſhop Britain called cauſe charge Church clauſ Clergy commanded Commons Confederate Crown Danger deſire Duke Earl Edward Edward the third eight enemies England Ex Rot expence faith fame Fathers fifth firſt five force former forraign Fortune forty four fourth France French King give Government granted ground hands hath Henry himſelf Honour hundred intereſt Italy John Kingdom Land late leſs liberty Lords Marks Matth means Merchants moſt muſt never Nobility once Paris Parl Parliament party peace pence perſon pound Princes publick reaſon received Regis Reign Richard rule ſame ſecond ſecurity ſervice ſhillings ſhould ſince ſome Spain Subjects Subſidies ſuch tenth themſelves theſe third thoſe thouſand took Treaſure twenty twice wars
Populaire passages
Pagina 129 - Peers, fhewing himfelf in all his Aftions after, capable to Command not the Realm only, but the whole World. Thus do the wrongs of our Enemies more than our own difcretions, make us fometimes both wife and fortunate.
Pagina 22 - ... good Fame -, and holding it the chiefeft Honour to be thought the Wonder of their times : which if they attain to, it is but the condition of Monfters, that are generally much admired, but more abhorred.
Pagina 53 - ... and Poundage once for a Year; and after for Term of Life. Of the Clergy, four Tenths by one Grant, and three by feveral, every of them not lefs than 25084 /. Of Subfidies, he had one of the Province of Canterbury, another of both; the ftipendiary Minifters thereto tax'd according to the Rates of their Wages. In Anno 22, they granted a Moiety of all their Goods and Lands, payable by equal Portion in five Years, every Part arifing to 95000 /, And not long after he had added 150000 /. to the yearly...
Pagina 49 - Third, and Eighth entire, of which there were two for three Years Grant. Befides thefe former, out of the Wools he had 37107 /. rais'd by a Moiety of a Tenth and Fifteenth. And again of all Goods 6 s
Pagina 49 - Goods 6 s» 8 d. in the Pound. Of the Merchant, of Subfidies, rated as in former Times, he had them by Grant once but for a Year; the like doubled for two, and trebled for three and a half. This Subfidy amounted to 33J-.
Pagina 50 - Poundage improv'd to 6 s. § d. he took in his eighteenth Year after the Rates of his Father's Time ; he had it firft thrice by feveral Grants and Years, then as often for two Years, and again by a new Grant for five Years, and in the end for Term of Life* Of the Clergy he had, befides one half of Difmes, four entire Tenths.
Pagina 56 - Army, mag•nx fuiffet depyejfioni patenter expofitus & progreffus nou fine fuo dedecore perpetuo impeditus, if De la Poole had not as well fupply'd him with the Credit of his Security, as with the beft Ability of his own...
Pagina 53 - Tonnage he had, and Poundage once for a Year; and after for Term of Life. Of the Clergy, four Tenths by one Grant, and three by feveral, every of them not lefs than 25084 /. Of Subfidies, he had one of the Province of Canterbury, another of both; the ftipendiary Minifters thereto tax'd according to the Rates of their Wages. In Anno 22, they granted a Moiety of all their Goods and Lands, payable by equal Portion in five Years, every Part arifing to 95000 /, And not long after he had added 150000 /....
