Published by Printed for John White & John Murray, Fleet Street; and John Harding, St James's Street., London, 1811
Seller: Cosmo Books, Shropshire., United Kingdom
£ 17.70
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Add to basketDisbound. Condition: Very Good. 9 pages. Note; This is an original article separated from The Harleian Miscellany: A Collection of Scarce, Curious, & Entertaining Pamphlets and Tracts, as well in Manuscript as in Print. Selected from the Library of Edward Harley, Second Earl of Oxford, and there is no separate title page. From the usual ravages of time and accident, upon the productions of pamphleteers, the Harleian Collection has, in numerous instances, become the only existing chronicle of many important particulars. Size: 22 x 28.5 cms. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Harleian Miscellany; Printed Before 1900; Inventory No: 371472. Cosmo Books : 27 years selling on ABE; 27 years of taking care of customers on ABE; A seller you can rely on.
Published by Printed T. Wright, Essex Street, Strand; and Sold by G. Kearsley, No 46, near Serjeant's Inn, Fleet Street, London., London, 1776
Seller: Cosmo Books, Shropshire., United Kingdom
£ 29.20
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Add to basketDisbound. Condition: Very Good. Fourth Edition. 55 pages, printed in double columns. Some foxing, and close cropped at the foot of a few pages with slight loss of text. Note; this is an original article separated from the volume, not a reprint or copy. Posted folded. Size: 5. Quantity Available: 1. Category: State Trials; State Trials::Large Folio; Printed before 1800; Weekly Mailing 2. Inventory No: 359214. This item may require more postage than the rates shown for delivery outside the UK. If extra postage is required we will contact you before processing your order and you will be given the details and option to decline the extra cost. Cosmo Books : 27 years selling on ABE; 27 years of taking care of customers on ABE; A seller you can rely on.
Published by London: by John Bill, Thomas New, 1680
Seller: D&D Galleries - ABAA, Somerville, NJ, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. 1 vol, 4to, 12pp, with the license leaf, disbound. Wing T3252.
Published by London: for Thomas Basset, and R, 1681
Seller: D&D Galleries - ABAA, Somerville, NJ, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. 1 vol, 4to, (ii)8pp, with the license leaf, disbound. Wing J560.
Published by London: for Thomas Fox, 1681
Seller: D&D Galleries - ABAA, Somerville, NJ, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. 1 vol, 4to, 18pp, with the license leaf, paper slightly browned, disbound. Wing E3717.
Published by London: by John Bill, Thomas New, 1680
Seller: D&D Galleries - ABAA, Somerville, NJ, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. 1 vol, 4to, 11(i)pp, with the final license leaf, disbound. Wing D2475.
Published by Langley Curtis, London, 1681
Seller: Main Street Fine Books & Mss, ABAA, Galena, IL, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. Small 8vo. Self-cover. Pp. 417-424. Near fine. Faintly age toned, as usual, else bright and attractive. Single issue (June 20, 1681) from the third volume of this Catholic-bashing weekly whose purpose was to fan the flames of anti-Catholicism supposedly begun by Titus Oates and which gripped England from 1678 to 1681. Oates wanted all Brits and Scots to believe that the Catholic Church in England was trying to assassinate King Charles II. On page 423 a contemporary hand neatly pens "Remarkable" alongside one anecdote about "a famous Virgin, called Juliana." This particular issue was published as the hysteria was waning, and soon afterward Oates was tried for perjury and found guilty. A handsome example.
Publication Date: 2024
Language: English
Seller: S N Books World, Delhi, India
LeatherBound. Condition: New. Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. Bound in genuine leather with Satin ribbon page markers and Spine with raised gilt bands. A perfect gift for your loved ones. Reprinted from 1680 edition. NO changes have been made to the original text. This is NOT a retyped or an ocr'd reprint. Illustrations, Index, if any, are included in black and white. Each page is checked manually before printing. As this print on demand book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages, but we always try to make the book as complete as possible. Fold-outs, if any, are not part of the book. If the original book was published in multiple volumes then this reprint is of only one volume, not the whole set and contains approximately 12 pages. IF YOU WISH TO ORDER PARTICULAR VOLUME OR ALL THE VOLUMES YOU CAN CONTACT US. Resized as per current standards. Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Language: English.
Published by London: Printed for R. Baldwin, 1681
£ 56
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Add to basket20 pp. fol., disbound, pages partly detached, foxing and staining especially outer leaves.
Published by Printed T. Wright, Essex Street, Strand; and Sold by G. Kearsley, No 46, near Serjeant's Inn, Fleet Street, London., London, 1776
Seller: Cosmo Books, Shropshire., United Kingdom
£ 52.20
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Add to basketDisbound. Condition: Very Good. Fourth Edition. 67 pages, printed in double columns. Some foxing. Note; this is an original article separated from a larger volume, not a reprint or copy. THERE IS MORE THAN ONE PICTURE OF THIS ITEM TO SHOW YOU MORE DETAILS. Size: Folio (8.5 x 13.5 inches). Quantity Available: 3. Category: State Trials; State Trials::Large Folio; Printed before 1800; New Arrivals; Weekly Mailing 2. Inventory No: 359213. This item may require more postage than the rates shown for delivery outside the UK. If extra postage is required we will contact you before processing your order and you will be given the details and option to decline the extra cost. Cosmo Books : 27 years selling on ABE; 27 years of taking care of customers on ABE; A seller you can rely on.
Published by London: for the Author, 1685
Seller: D&D Galleries - ABAA, Somerville, NJ, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. 1 vol, 4to, 34pp, with the final postscript leaf. Bound in recent 1/2 tan calf, vertical gilt labeled spine. Wing S4269a.
Published by Will of 22 April Probate granted by the Prerogative Court of Canterbury 7 May 1690. Abstract dating from the eighteenth century. watermark includes "GR", 1689
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
£ 150
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Add to basket13pp., large (41.5 x 33 cm) 4to. In good condition, lightly aged, on good Britannia paper. In worn wraps, with printed slip describing the item from a bookseller's catalogue (Henry Grey, 1901, 45s), and docketed at back. Neatly and closely written out in a clerk's hand. At end: 'The Abstract of this Will and Codicil is taken from the Probate thereof Granted by the Prerogative Court of Canterbury to Anne Lady Belasyse Relict of the said John Lord Belasyse and One of the Executors the 7th. of May 1690'. Belasyse's second wife was the daughter of the Marquess of Winchester.
Published by London: by John Bill, Thomas New, 1680
Seller: D&D Galleries - ABAA, Somerville, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Condition: Very Good. FIRST EDITION. 1 vol., 16pp., folio, woodcut vignette on title, with the licence leaf opposite title. Bound in recent marbled card wraps. "He (Guildford) appears to have foreseen that the consequence of the violent and arbitrary measures, which he was unable to prevent, would, if continued, work the downfall of the Stuart family. His private life was temperate and regular, untainted with the vices of the times." --Sir T. N. Talfourd: Retrosp. Rev., ii. 249. Wing G2215 & E3714.
Published by Printed for Thomas Fox, at the Sign of the Angel in Westminster-hall, 1681, London, 1681
Seller: Black's Fine Books & Manuscripts, Toronto, ON, Canada
First Edition
£ 228.93
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Add to basketHardcover. First Edition. pp. 18. Slim folio measuring 12" x 7.75". Rebound in modern 1/4 leather over paper boards. Appointment (license) leaf has been reproduced on old paper in perfect letterpress facsimile. Period numbered notations ("318-325") to upper-right margins of rectos, else, near fine. Corresponds to ESTC Citation No. R14804. See also, Wing E3717. A politically charged document from the height of the "Popish Plot" hysteria, which captures the interrogation of Edward Fitzharris, a Catholic courtier accused of treason for allegedly authoring a seditious pamphlet inciting rebellion against the Crown. The "Popish Plot", a fabricated conspiracy concocted by Titus Oates, fueled widespread anti-Catholic sentiment in England and Scotland, leading to numerous prosecutions. Fitzharris' case became a flashpoint in the struggle between Parliament and the Crown during the Exclusion Crisis, with the Commons seeking to use his prosecution to justify their anti-Catholic measures, while the King and the courts asserted royal prerogative, ultimately leading to Fitzharris' execution in 1681. Published by order of the Commons, the present offering was likely intended as propaganda to reinforce public fears of Catholic subversion and to bolster parliamentary authority. A significant artifact of 17th-century political intrigue and power struggles.
Published by London: (Different publishers as below). 1679-1681., 1681
Seller: Offa's Dyke Books, LUDLOW, SALOP, United Kingdom
£ 600
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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. Blood, Thomas, A Just Narrative of the Hellish New Counter-Plots of the Papists, To cast the Odium of their Horrid Treasons upon the Presbyterians . iv+16pp, London: Printed for Dorman Newman, 1679. With Bourk, Hubert. The Information of Hubert Bourk Gent. Touching the Popish Plot in Ireland Carried on by the Conspiracies of the Earl of Tyrone . viii+27[1]pp., London: Printed for Randolph Taylor 1680. With Samson, Tho. A Narrative of the Late Popish Plot in Ireland, For the Subjugating thereof to the French King. viii+32pp., London: Printed for Sam Lee and Dan. Major, 1680. With (Duplicate) Samson, Tho. A Narrative of the Late Popish Plot in Ireland. viii+32pp., London: Printed for Sam. Lee, and Dan. Major, 1680. With Macnamara, John. The Information of John Macnamara, Gent. Touching the Popish Plot in Ireland: Carried on by the Conspiracies of the Earl of Tyrone . viii+23[1]pp., London: Printed for Randolph Taylor, 1680. With Lewis, William. The Information of William Lewis, Gent. Delivered at the BAR of The House of Commons . iv+31[1]pp., London, Printed for Randal Taylor, 1680. With Fitz-Gerrald, John. The Narrative of Mr. John Fitz-Gerrald, Late of the Order of St. Francis, in the Kingdom of Ireland. vi+30pp., London: Printed for Richard Janeway, 1681. With [Mowbray, Lawrence] The Portraicture of Roger L'Estrange Drawn to the Life: As it was taken in the Queens Chappel. [1]-22pp., London: Printed in the Year, 1681. Sm. folio, 8 Works in 1 volume with the contents neatly written in ink to the verso of the title of the first work, imprimatur leaf present in all but the last work, owner inscribed in ink 'John Rogers Vicar of Shifnall (sic) 1773', one title page dusty, a wormhole not affecting the text & a dampstain to the corner & margins of one work, otherwise internally overall in very good condition, bound in half calf, gilt, marbled boards, spine with raised bands & leather label gilt lettered 'Tracts Relating to Popish Plots', hinges split & top inch of spine missing, otherwise sound & very good.
Published by London: Printed for H.Hills, T. Parkhurst, J. Starkey, D. Newman, T. Cockerill, and T. Simmons., 1679
Seller: Colin Page Books, Storrington, United Kingdom
£ 120
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Add to basketFirst edition. Folio (30.5 x 19.5cm). pp. [4],8,24. First blank leaf present. Disbound. Vg. [Wing T3099; Baildon 1315-7; Darling 2225].
Published by London: Printed for Richard Janeway in Queens-head Alley in Paternoster-Row, 1681
Seller: Colin Page Books, Storrington, United Kingdom
£ 140
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Add to basketFirst edition. Folio (31 x 19.5cm). pp. [2],3-12. Disbound in three folded sheets. VG. [Wing C1558; Arber I, 421].
Publication Date: 1679
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
London: Printed for A. Brewster, 1679 (illustrator). London: Printed for A. Brewster, 1679. Perceptive Satirical Commentary on the Popish Plot of 1678 [Popish Plot]. [Smith, Francis (fl. 1657-1689)]. Some Observations Upon the Late Tryals of Sir George Wakeman, Corker and Marshall, &c. By Tom Tickle-Foot the Taborer, Late Clerk to Justice Clodpate. London: Printed for A. Brewster, 1679. 8, 7-9, [1] pp. Pagination irregular, text complete. Folio (11-1/2" x 7-3/4"). Stab-stitched pamphlet in later plain wrappers. Light creasing and edgewear to wrappers, chip to foot of front wrapper, moderate toning and occasional light foxing to interior, lower corner of leaf B1 (pp. 5-6) lacking without loss to text, small ink "11" to head of title page. $250. * Only edition. Supposedly written by a clerk to "Justice Clodpate," this satirical and sensational account of the Popish Plot of 1678 is also a remarkably perceptive and interesting contemporary analysis. One of the cruelest hoaxes in British history and the catalyst for a wave of anti-Catholic violence, the Popish Plot was the invention of Titus Oates, an Anglican clergyman, and his friend, Dr. Israel Tonge, a cleric and passionate anti-Catholic. They pretended to have discovered a Jesuit plot to assassinate the King, massacre Protestants and set James, Duke of York, the King's Catholic brother, on the throne. After the hoax was discovered in 1685 Oates was convicted of perjury, severely flogged and imprisoned. Under William III he was released and pensioned. English Short-Title Catalogue R12969.
Publication Date: 1679
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
A Victim of the Popish Plot [Trial]. [Popish Plot]. Richard Langhorne, Defendant [c.1624-1679]. The Tryall of Richard Langhorn Esq; Counsellor at Law: For Conspiring the Death of the King, Subversion of the Government, And Protestant Religion. Who Upon Full Evidence was Found Guilty of High Treason, And Received Sentence Accordingly, At the Sessions in the Old-Bayley, Holden for London and Middlesex, On Saturday, Being the 14th. of June 1679. Published by Authority. London: Printed for H. Hills et al., 1679. [ii], 41, 44-68, [2] pp. Collates complete, quire M paginated 41, 44, 45, 44. Folio (12-1/2" x 7"). Stab-stitched pamphlet bound into recent quarter morocco over marbled boards. Light fading to morocco, light rubbing to bottom edge. Moderate toning to interior, light foxing and soiling in a few places, illegible early marks to front endleaf and head of title page, later small stamped "5" to front endleaf. A handsome copy. $250. * Only edition. One of the cruelest hoaxes in British history and one that led to a wave of anti-Catholic violence, the Popish Plot was the invention of Titus Oates, an Anglican clergyman, and his friend, Dr. Israel Tonge, a cleric and passionate anti-Catholic. They pretended to have discovered a Jesuit plot to assassinate the King, massacre Protestants and set James, Duke of York, the King's Catholic brother, on the throne. Langhorne was a Roman Catholic and had provided legal and financial advice to Jesuits in London. He was convicted of treason and executed, and beatified as a Catholic martyr in 1929 by Pius XI. English Short-Title Catalogue R1705.
Published by Printed for Robert Pawlet, London, 1678
Seller: Second Life Books, Inc., Lanesborough, MA, U.S.A.
First Edition
First Edition. 4to, pp. 84. One inch cut to the foredge (not affecting any letterpress). Bound in later plain wraps, a very good copy. Wing T2268. From Wikipedia: "Ireland was the eldest son of William Ireland of Crofton Hall, Yorkshire, by Barbara, a daughter of Ralph Eure of Washingborough, Lincolnshire, by his first wife. Ireland was educated at the English College, St. Omer; admitted to the Society of Jesus at Watten, 1655; professed, 1673; and was for several years confessor to the Poor Clares at Gravelines. In 1677, Ireland was sent on the English Mission and appointed procurator of the province. On the night of 28 September 1678, he was arrested by constables led by Titus Oates, and taken before the privy council. Among those who shared his fate was John Grove, a layman and the nominal occupier of that part of Wild House, London, occupied by the Jesuits and the Spanish ambassador; also Thomas Jenison and John Fenwick. Together with Thomas Pickering, Ireland and Grove were said to have planned on 19 August, in the rooms of the Jesuit William Harcourt, to assassinate the king Charles II at Newmarket. Oates and William Bedloe swore that Grove was to have £1500 for the job and Pickering 30,000 Masses. The sworn testimony of Gates and Bedloe impressed the jury, and Chief Justice William Scroggs summed up against Ireland. After confinement in Newgate Prison, Ireland was sentenced to death on 17 December. Ireland wrote a journal in Newgate, which accounted for every day of his absence from London between 3 August and 14 September, but a Sarah Pain swore that she saw him in Fetter Lane on 20 August. After two reprieves Ireland and Grove were executed together at Tyburn, Grove saying: "We are innocent, we lose our lives wrongfully, we pray God to forgive them that are the causes of it." A deposition against Ireland's alibi was subsequently published by Robert Jenison, and further charges were brought against Ireland in John Smith's Narrative containing a further Discovery of the Popish Plot of 1679.
Published by F. Smith, et. al, London, 1679
Seller: Second Life Books, Inc., Lanesborough, MA, U.S.A.
First Edition
First Edition. 4to, pp. iv, 51. Bound with two copies of the license leaf and title-page. in later plain wraps. A very good copy. Wing J-561; McAlpin Coll.,; III, 806.; ESTC,; R11080. Jenison offers further evidence against Ireland and the other "plotters." He was a Catholic "witness" to the so called plot and said that the coinfessions of conspirator William Ireland on his death bed provoked him to become a Protestant.
Published by Without place or date late seventeenth or early eighteenth century
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
£ 320
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Add to basket2pp., foolscap 8vo. On watermarked laid paper, and plainly intended as an index to a volume of bound tracts. Aged and worn, with chipped edges, and a small part of the bottom outer corner of the leaf torn away, resulting in the loss of two numbers from the pagination. The document is headed 'The Contents of the 2. Volume', and is closely written in a clerk's hand. Both pages divided into two columns. The first third of the list, consisting of around 40 items, is headed 'Narratives', beginning with 'By Thomas Dangerfield' and ending with 'Remarks on some passages in ye life of Mr Blood relating to ye D. of B.' The second third of the document is headed 'Tryalls' and begins 'of Sir George Wakeman | Marshall | Rumby | Corker | [the last three names] Benedicin Monks', and ends with 'Tryial Conviction & condemnation of Andrew Bromigh & Wm Atkins | Priests at Stafford And Charles Kerne at Hereford Assizes'. The document also contains brief notes of 'Narratives in ye 1st. volume' and 'Tryalls in ye 1st. Volume', as well as a list of names in the second volume. The identity of the compiler is unknown. The book collector James Bindley (1737-1818) was a notable collector of material on the subject, and the list may relate to material sold after his death. The London bookseller Percy Dobell was a notable seller of such material, and the item may well have been handled by him.
Publication Date: 1684
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
The Beginning of the End For Titus Oates [Trial]. [Popish Plot]. Oates, Titus [1649-1705], Defendant. The Account of the Manner of Executing a Writ of Inquiry of Damages: Between His Royal Highness James Duke of York, &c. And Titus Otes, Which was Executed at the Bar of the Court of Kings Bench at Westminster, On Wednesday the 19th. Of June, 1684. In the Presence of the High Sheriff of Middlesex. London: Printed for Benj. Tooke, 1684. [iv], 31, [1] pp. Folio (11-1/2" x 7-1/2"). Stab-stitched pamphlet rebound in recent quarter cloth over marbled boards. Negligible rubbing and light soiling to boards. Moderate toning to interior, occasional light foxing, light soiling in a few places. $450. * Only edition. Oates, an Anglican clergyman, and his friend, cleric and anti-Catholic Dr. Israel Tonge, were the inventors of the Popish Plot, one of the cruelest hoaxes in British history and the inspiration for a wave of anti-Catholic violence. They pretended to have discovered a Jesuit plot to assassinate the King, massacre Protestants, and set James, Duke of York, the King's Catholic brother, on the throne. From 1678-1681, at least 15 innocent men were executed as traitors on Oates's testimony. In 1681, however, the tide began to turn against Oates. Undeterred by the change in public opinion, he pronounced the Duke of York a traitor and was sued for libel in 1684. The present work documents the trial, at which Oates refused to plead, and the subsequent ?100,000 fine awarded as damages. He was imprisoned after defaulting. When James acceded to the throne in 1685, Oates was convicted of perjury, imprisoned for life, stripped of his vestments and publicly whipped. He was later pardoned by William and Mary and granted a pension of ?260 per year. English Short-Title Catalogue R34141.
Publication Date: 1679
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
Victims of the Popish Plot of 1678 [Trials]. [Popish Plot]. [Green, Robert (d.1679)], Defendant. [Henry Berry, Henry (d.1679)], Defendant. [Hill, Lawrence (d.1679)], Defendant. The Tryals of Robert Green, Henry Berry, and Lawrence Hill, For the Murder of Sr. Edmond-bury Godfrey, Knt. One of His Majesties Justices of the Peace for the County of Middlesex; At the Kings-Bench Bar at Westminster, Before the Right Honourable Sir William Scroggs Knt. Lord Chief Justice of the Court, And the Rest of His Majesties Judges There; On Monday the 10th of February 1678/9. Where, Upon Full Evidence They Were Convicted, And Received Sentence Accordingly, On Tuesday the Next Day Following. London: Printed for Robert Pawlet, 1679. [iii], 92 pp. With an imprimatur leaf. Folio (11" x 7"). Recent period-style quarter calf over marbled boards, negligible light fading to spine. Moderate toning to text, minor stains and spark burns to a few leaves, light soiling to title page "4" in tiny hand to its upper margin. $450. **DESCRIPTION TRUNCATED DUE TO CHARACTER LIMITS. PLEASE CONTACT US FOR A COMPLETE VERSION.** * Only edition. One of the cruelest hoaxes in British history and the inspiration for a wave of anti-Catholic violence, the Popish Plot was the invention of Titus Oates, an Anglican clergyman, and his friend, Dr. Israel Tonge, a cleric and passionate anti-Catholic. They pretended to have discovered a Jesuit plot to assassinate the King, massacre Protestants, and set James, Duke of York, the King's Catholic brother, on the throne. The trial of Green, Berry and Hill was one of its most shameful episodes. In October 1678 Godfrey, a justice of the peace to whom Oates first described the plot, was found dead in a ditch, apparently the victim of murder. The Catholic community was blamed and Green, Berry and Hill were eventually hanged for his murder. Many questions about this case remain, however, including the exact circumstances of Godfrey's death. One theory holds that Godfrey was killed by Oates and his supporters to underpin their own invented plot, another that he was murdered for reasons unconnected with any Catholic plot. It is also possible that Godfrey committed suicide; when his body was found it was manipulated to fit the plot scenario. In any event, Godfrey was buried in an elaborate funeral as a martyr to the Protes.
Published by Henry Brome and Richard Tonson, London, 1680
Seller: Second Life Books, Inc., Lanesborough, MA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Folio, pp. 88. Bound in later calf backed boards, lower corner of title page restored with several letters of the imprint added in facsimile, a very good clean copy with wide margins. Wing L1259. L'Estrange (1616!1704) was one of the earliest English journalists and writers of political pamphlets. He was an active Royalist and had to flee the country during the parliamentary wars. After the Restoration, in 1663, he was appointed surveyor of printing presses and the licenser of the press. He maintained this position until he was discredited by the Popish Plot. In addition, he was an accomplished linguist, translating Josephus, Cicero, Seneca and other standard authors. from Wikipedia: "The Popish Plot was a fictitious conspiracy concocted by Titus Oates that between 1678 and 1681 gripped the Kingdoms of England and Scotland in anti-Catholic hysteria. Oates alleged that there existed an extensive Catholic conspiracy to assassinate Charles II, accusations that led to the executions of at least 22 men and precipitated the Exclusion Bill Crisis. Eventually Oates' intricate web of accusations fell apart, leading to his arrest and conviction for perjury." Second edition (actually the first edition of 1679 with a cancel titlepage).
Published by s.i., London, 1679
Seller: Capitol Hill Books, ABAA, Washington, DC, U.S.A.
First Edition
Condition: Very Good. [London?]: N.P., 1679. First Edition. Small folio (29cm); original bifolium bound in 20th-century roan-backed decorative boards, gilt-lettered spine; 4pp. Boards a bit rubbed, especially at spine ends, textblock rather foxed, else a Very Good example of this scarce tract. Forms part of the flurry (avalanche?) of anti-Catholic literature coinciding with the fictitious conspiracy known as the Popish Plot that gripped England and Scotland from 1679 to 1681. Whipped up by the English priest Titas Oates, a former associate of the Jesuit house of St. Omer in France, the supposed Plot involved an extensive conspiracy amongst Catholics to assassinate King Charles II. Show trials and executions ensued, including that of former St. Omer associate John Fenwick who, together with four other Jesuit priests, was tried, hanged, and quartered in the summer of 1679. The present dialogue is set at the Gates of Heaven guarded by St. Peter where the five recently-hanged men have arrived, lamed by their recent quartering. When asked for a certificate or recommendation into Heaven, the men cite Pope Innocent the XI, "the Vicar of Christ, and thy Successor at Rome" to which St. Peter replies "I know of no Vicar nor any Successor that Christ or I have in any such place. What's his Name? is he a Fisherman?" ESTC R024408; WING N-964.
Publication Date: 1679
Seller: Zamboni & Huntington, Bangor, ME, U.S.A.
Disbound. Condition: Good. [London, 1679]. 11 3/8 x 7 1/2". 4pp. Disbound, light soiling and browning at edges, inked number in upper margin of p. 1. Small library stamp in lower margin of p. 4. A satirical account of the Popish Plot with a maritime twist.
Publication Date: 1679
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
Victims of the Popish Plot of 1678 [Trials]. [Popish Plot]. [Green, Robert (d.1679)], Defendant. [Henry Berry, Henry (d.1679)], Defendant. [Hill, Lawrence (d.1679)], Defendant. The Tryals of Robert Green, Henry Berry, and Lawrence Hill, For the Murder of Sr. Edmond-bury Godfrey, Knt. One of His Majesties Justices of the Peace for the County of Middlesex; At the Kings-Bench Bar at Westminster, Before the Right Honourable Sir William Scroggs Knt. Lord Chief Justice of the Court, And the Rest of His Majesties Judges There; On Monday the 10th of February 1678/9. Where, Upon Full Evidence They Were Convicted, And Received Sentence Accordingly, On Tuesday the Next Day Following. London: Printed for Robert Pawlet, 1679. [iii], 92 pp. With an imprimatur leaf. Folio (11" x 7"). Disbound stab-stitched pamphlet. Moderate toning, light foxing in places, light soiling to exterior, chips and minor tears to fore-edges of a few leaves, text not affected. $250. **DESCRIPTION TRUNCATED DUE TO CHARACTER LIMITS. PLEASE CONTACT US FOR A COMPLETE VERSION.** * Only edition. One of the cruelest hoaxes in British history and the inspiration for a wave of anti-Catholic violence, the Popish Plot was the invention of Titus Oates, an Anglican clergyman, and his friend, Dr. Israel Tonge, a cleric and passionate anti-Catholic. They pretended to have discovered a Jesuit plot to assassinate the King, massacre Protestants, and set James, Duke of York, the King's Catholic brother, on the throne. The trial of Green, Berry and Hill was one of its most shameful episodes. In October 1678 Godfrey, a justice of the peace to whom Oates first described the plot, was found dead in a ditch, apparently the victim of murder. The Catholic community was blamed and Green, Berry and Hill were eventually hanged for his murder. Many questions about this case remain, however, including the exact circumstances of Godfrey's death. One theory holds that Godfrey was killed by Oates and his supporters to underpin their own invented plot, another that he was murdered for reasons unconnected with any Catholic plot. It is also possible that Godfrey committed suicide; when his body was found it was manipulated to fit the plot scenario. In any event, Godfrey was buried in an elaborate funeral as a martyr to the Protestant cause. This event stoked the fires of anti-Cath.