A true account of the whole proceedings betwixt His Grace James Duke of Ormond, and the Right Honor. Arthur, Earl of Anglesey, late Lord Privy-Seal, before the King and Council and the said Earls letter of the second of August to His Majesty on that occasion : with a letter of the now Lord Bishop of Winchester's to the said Earl, of the means to keep out popery, and the only effectual expedient to hinder the growth thereof, and to secure both the Church of England, and the Presbiterian party.

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Title
A true account of the whole proceedings betwixt His Grace James Duke of Ormond, and the Right Honor. Arthur, Earl of Anglesey, late Lord Privy-Seal, before the King and Council and the said Earls letter of the second of August to His Majesty on that occasion : with a letter of the now Lord Bishop of Winchester's to the said Earl, of the means to keep out popery, and the only effectual expedient to hinder the growth thereof, and to secure both the Church of England, and the Presbiterian party.
Author
Ormonde, James Butler, Duke of, 1610-1688.
Publication
London :: Printed for Thomas Fox,
1682.
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Subject terms
Great Britain -- History -- Charles II, 1660-1685.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A63346.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A true account of the whole proceedings betwixt His Grace James Duke of Ormond, and the Right Honor. Arthur, Earl of Anglesey, late Lord Privy-Seal, before the King and Council and the said Earls letter of the second of August to His Majesty on that occasion : with a letter of the now Lord Bishop of Winchester's to the said Earl, of the means to keep out popery, and the only effectual expedient to hinder the growth thereof, and to secure both the Church of England, and the Presbiterian party." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A63346.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 8, 2024.

Pages

Answer.

They are not only against the whole Scope of the Laws in Ireland and England, for Establishing the Protestant Religion and Suppression of Poperty, but against these particular Acts of Par∣liament (viz.) 2 Eliz. Cap 1. 2 in Ireland and 28. H. 8 Cap. 13 &c. And in England the Statutes of the 17 Caroli 1. Cap. 34. 35. 36. 37. in one of which it is provided, that all pardons granted to any of the Rebells of Ireland, without assent of Par∣liament shall be void, and yet by the Cessations they were Re∣prieved, and by both the Peaces fully pardoned.

And in the same Act, it is also enacted, that whosoever shall make any promise or agreement, to Introduce or bring unto the Realm of Ireland the Authority of the See of Rome in any Case whatsoever, or to defend or maintain the same, shall forfeit all his Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments, Goods and Chattells.

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