William -- III -- King of England -- 1650-1702

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pensionnaire de Hollande, à Monsieur Jaques Stewart, advocat : pour l'informer des sentimens de leurs Altesses Royales, Monseigneur le Prince, & Madame la Princesse d'Orange : sur l'abolition du Test & des loix penales. Traduite de l'anglois. Caption title. Imprint from colophon. Dated at end: Nov. 4. 1687. Signatures: A⁴.
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Military correspondence regarding a battle that took place the day before. This is probably the Battle of the Boyne, fought between supporters of James II (Jacobites, Irish Catholics, French) and supporters of William III (Ulster Protestants, English, Dutch) in 1690.
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Panegyricvs Serenissimo Britanniae Franciae Scotiae Et Hiberniae Regi Vilhelmo Aravsiaco A D. III. Eidvs Aprileis Qvo Die Pariter Cvm Avgvsta Conivge Maria Stvartia Solenniter Regno Fvit Inavgvratvs Et Diademate Ornatvs Post Evropam Omnem Ab Imminenti Britanniam A Praesenti Tyrannide Svis Avspiciis Et Dvctv Sed Sine Caede Et Sangvine Vindicatam.
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[“Paradoxes of State, Relating to the Present Juncture of Affairs in England and the Rest of Europe; Chiefly Grounded on His Majesty's Princely, Pious, and Most Gracious Speech; Translated from English, 1702.”] 11 sections: I. That the particular interests of the Court and Country, of Prerogative and Privilege, of the King and People, may be and at this time are actually the same. II. That whatever names may have been formerly coined to distinguish parties here in England, there is at present neither Whig nor Tory, Williamite nor Jacobite, nor any real distinction but between those who are in a French, and those that are in an English interest. III. That the most inveterate enemies to civil liberty, are those who would now act the part of Commonwealthmen; and that the real promoters of a Popish Hierarchy and Spiritual Tyranny, are such as contend for the right of Presbyters against the Episcopal and Metropolitical Authority in the Church. IV. That the favor and indulgence of the present Government towards the Protestant Dissenters (so much envied by a certain party of anti-protestant churchmen) is so far from being disadvantageous to the established Church of England, that it is the surest and only way of regaining all the Dissenters to the National Communion. V. That the spirit of those, who, in the present circumstances of the Nation and Europe, would declare for Peace and against a War, is in reality a Spirit of Sedition, intestin [sic] War, private Revenge and Cruelty; and tends directly to such a War, as must end in the Conquest of these Nations, and in the establishment of a French government in England by the Administration of the pretended Prince of Wales, as it is already in Spain by that of the Duke of Anjou. VI. That France and Spain are as much united at present under two Kings, as ever they can be under one. VII. That whatever may be alleged about the Emperor’s immediate interest to restore his Family, and placing his Son the Arch-Duke on the throne of Spain, which belongs to him of Right; yet it is not true that the Emperor is Principal and we Seconds in this Cause, for England and Holland are and must be Principals in the War as well as He. VIII. That it is not only safer, but easier to fight for all Spain, than a Part; and for the entire Restoration of the House of Austria [Habsburgs], than for what may be called Satisfaction to the Emperor by some new and more fatal Partition Treaty. IX. That it is no Way advantageous, but rather must be fatal to England and Holland, and their united Interests, to attempt the Conquest of the Mines in the Spanish West Indies; and that the possession of Gold or Silver Mines must not only be peculiarly destructive of our English Constitution, but is also necessarily ruinous to the Industry, Manufacture, Trade, Agriculture, Manners, Strength, and Riches, of any People, and this in less Time than one Generation. X. That it is not injurious to the Interest of England, to have a Prince on the Throne who is not a Native of this Realm; and that there could not be greater Advantages expected from any Succession, than this in prospect of the Protestant Family of Hanover. XI. That in this ensuing War for our own Liberty and that of the World, whatever is given in Taxes, is not given to the King, nor any Thing given away from our Selves.
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[“Missive from London, May 24, 1701.”] 1) King William III responds to a Parliamentary resolution. He thanks the Parliament for their support and pledges to support freedom (religious?) in Germany. Parliament then voted unanimously to send 5,000 Irish troops to Holland. The English public, including merchants, supported going to war as “more useful than the current peace”. The largest fleet was in Spithead with 20 ships; it was ordered for them to set sail within 24 hours. 2) The House of Lords responded to the King in Kensington: they agreed to join the States General (Dutch Parliament) in an alliance. They further ask the King to join in an alliance with the (German) Kaiser as per the 1689 treaty.
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The famous English theologian D. Gilbert Burnet: A sermon preached in the chapel of St. James's, before His Highness the Prince of Orange, the 23d of December, 1688. Sermon/prayer of thanks (Psalms 118:23)
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[“The unrest imposed by scheming and false attacks from the newly crowned Lord William III, Prince of Orange, who conquered the Kingdom of Britain: all that has happened from the beginning [of the takeover] until now, briefly and accurately written by a trustworthy author. Cologne, Printed in 1689.”] On the causes of the current unrest in the Kingdom of Great Britain. On the ways in which the English Protestants exaggerated their grievances, and the Manifest issued by the Prince of Orange. Declaration: by Your Highness Lord William Henry, by the grace of God Prince of Orange, etc. Attachment to the declaration of Your Highness. To all officers and seamen currently in service of the English fleet. How the King of England has conducted himself in a manner contrary to this Manifest, and what has occurred due to the fortunate performance that has followed; signed by James the King. Copy of a letter from London on December 22, 1688. Letter from the King of England to the Dukes of Feversham, dated December 20, 1688 at Whitehall. Postscript, or sorrow and victory speeches between James II, King of Great Britain, and William, Prince of Orange.
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