A brief account of some of the late and present sufferings of the people called Quakers for meeting together to worship God in spirit and truth, being prosecuted by the statute of the 22th Car. 2. Cap. I., entituled, An act to prevent & supress seditious conventicles, by the prosecution of which act many families have had their estates wholly wasted and ruined, contrary to the law of God, the antient laws of the kingdom, and to nature itself : together with a particular account of such of the above said people who have dyed prisoners, from the year 1660 to 1880, I. for meeting together to worship God, &c., II. for refusing for conscience sake to swear in any case, III. for not going to the parish church, and not paying to the repair of the same, and not paying offering money, small tythes, &c. : humbly presented to the King, Lords & Commons in Parliament assembled.

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Title
A brief account of some of the late and present sufferings of the people called Quakers for meeting together to worship God in spirit and truth, being prosecuted by the statute of the 22th Car. 2. Cap. I., entituled, An act to prevent & supress seditious conventicles, by the prosecution of which act many families have had their estates wholly wasted and ruined, contrary to the law of God, the antient laws of the kingdom, and to nature itself : together with a particular account of such of the above said people who have dyed prisoners, from the year 1660 to 1880, I. for meeting together to worship God, &c., II. for refusing for conscience sake to swear in any case, III. for not going to the parish church, and not paying to the repair of the same, and not paying offering money, small tythes, &c. : humbly presented to the King, Lords & Commons in Parliament assembled.
Author
Whitehead, George, 1636?-1723.
Publication
London :: Printed by Andrew Sowle, and are sold at his shop ...,
1680.
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Subject terms
Society of Friends -- England -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A65840.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A brief account of some of the late and present sufferings of the people called Quakers for meeting together to worship God in spirit and truth, being prosecuted by the statute of the 22th Car. 2. Cap. I., entituled, An act to prevent & supress seditious conventicles, by the prosecution of which act many families have had their estates wholly wasted and ruined, contrary to the law of God, the antient laws of the kingdom, and to nature itself : together with a particular account of such of the above said people who have dyed prisoners, from the year 1660 to 1880, I. for meeting together to worship God, &c., II. for refusing for conscience sake to swear in any case, III. for not going to the parish church, and not paying to the repair of the same, and not paying offering money, small tythes, &c. : humbly presented to the King, Lords & Commons in Parliament assembled." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A65840.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 23, 2025.

Pages

BREWTEN.

Taken from John Martin of Brewten on the 9th day of the 12th moneth, 1679. by Warrant from Maurice Berkly, called Lord Fitz Harding, and Francis Paulett of Wells, for a Meeting at Thomas Whitheads in Brewten, a Horse worth about 3 l. for a fine of 2 l. 5 s. laid on the said John Martin's Wife; the Horse was taken by Edward Chicke and Henry Albin, Wardens, and Thomas Patter, Constabe, and sold, which since is rid about by Jane Berkly the said Justices Daughter.

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