A Vindication of King Charles the Martyr ...
A Vindication of King Charles the Martyr, Proving That His Majesty Was the Author of Eikon Basilike. Against a Memorandum, Said to Be Written by the Earl of Anglesey; and Against the Exceptions of Dr. Walker, and Others
London: Joseph Hindmarsh, 1693.
Other editions:
London, H. Hindmarsh, 1697
Topics:
3. Sacrifice and politics (16th-18th Century) 6. Sacrifices of self: Martyrology after Reformation (16th-18th Century)
3. Sacrifice and politics (16th-18th Century) 6. Sacrifices of self: Martyrology after Reformation (16th-18th Century)
Authority file: http://viaf.org/viaf/35394939
Edited by: Francesco Quatrini
Related Documents:
Dr. Hollingworth's Defence of K. Charles the First's Holy and Divine Book, Called Eikon Basilikē; Against the Rude and Undutiful Assaults of the Late Dr. Walker of Essex. Proving by Living and Unquestionable Evidences, the Aforesaid Book to Be That Royal Martyr's, and Not Dr. Gauden's
London: Samuel Eddowes, 1692.
A Defence of the Vindication of K. Charles the Martyr; Justifying His Majesty's Title to Eikon Basilike. In Answer to a Late Pamphlet Intituled Amyntor
London: W. Bowyer, 1699.
Vindiciae Carolinae, or, A Defence of Eikon basilikē, the Portraicture of His Sacred Majesty in His Solitudes and Sufferings in Reply to a Book Intituled Eikonoklastes, Written by Mr. Milton, and Lately Re-Printed at Amsterdam
London: J.L.; Luke Meredith, 1692.
Eikōn ē pistē. Or, the Faifhfull Pourtraicture of a Loyall Subject, in Vindication of Eikon Basilike. Otherwise Intituled The Pourtraicture of His Sacred Majestie, in His Solitudes and Sufferings. In Answer to an Insolent Book, Intituled Eikōn alēthinē: Whereby Occasion Is Taken, to Handle All the Controverted Points Relating to These Times
n.p.: n.p., 1649.