Keyword: Royalists
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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.
Restitution to the royal author, or, A Vindication of King Charls the Martyr's most excellent book intitutled 'Eikåon basilikåe' from the false, scandalous, and malicious reflections lately published against it
London: Samuel Keble, 1691.
The Court Career Death Shaddow'd to Life. Or Shadowes of Life and Death. A Pasquil Dialogue Seriously Perused and Highly Approved by the Clearest Judgments
[London]: n.p., 1659.
The English Devil: Or, Cromwel and His Monstrous Witch Discover'd at White-Hall: With the Strange and Damnable Speech of This Hellish Monster, by Way of Revelation, Touching King and Kingdom; and a Narrative of the Infernal Plots, Inhumane Actings, and Barbarous Conspiracies of This Grand Impostor, and Most Audacious Rebel, That Durst Aspire From a Brew-House to the Throne, Washing His Accursed Hands in the Blood of His Royal Soveraign; and Trampling Over the Heads of the Most Loyal Subjects, Making a Foot-ball of a Crown, and Endeavouring Utterly to Extirpate the Royal Progeny, Root and Kinde, Stem and Stock
London: Robert Wood; George Horton, 1660.
The Famous Tragedie of King Charles I. Basely Butchered by Those Who Are, Omne nefas proni patare pudoris inanes crudeles, violenti, importunique tyranni mendaces, falsi, perversi, perfidiosi, faedifragi, falsis verbis infunda loquentes. In Which Is Included, The Several Combinations and Machinations That Brought That Incomparable Prince to the Block, the Overtures Hapning at the Famous Seige of Colchester, the Tragicall Fals of Sir Charls Lucas and Sir George Lisle, the Just Reward of the Leveller Rainsborough, Hamilton and Bailies Trecheries, in Delivering the Late Scottish Army Into the Hands of Cromwell, and the Designe the Rebels Have, to Destroy the Royal Posterity
n.p.: n.p., 1649.
Basiliká. The Works of King Charles the Martyr: With a Collection of Declarations, Treatises, and Other Papers Concerning the Differences Betwixt His Said Majesty and His Two Houses of Parliament
London: James Flesher; Richard Royston, 1662.
Reliquiae sacrae Carolinae. Or the Works of That Great Monarch and Glorious Martyr King Charles the I. Collected Together, and Digested in Order According to Their Several Subjects, Civil and Sacred
Hague [London]: Samuel Brown [William Dugard; Francis Eglesfield], 1650.
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.
The Death of King Charles I Proved a Down-Right Murder, With the Aggravations of It. In a Sermon at St. Botolph Aldgate, London, January 30, 1692/3. To Which Are Added, Some Just Reflections Upon Some Late Papers, Concerning That King's Book
London: R. Norton; Walter Kettilby, 1693.
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.