The appeal of iniured innocence, unto the religious learned and ingenuous reader in a controversie betwixt the animadvertor, Dr. Peter Heylyn, and the author, Thomas Fuller.
- Title
- The appeal of iniured innocence, unto the religious learned and ingenuous reader in a controversie betwixt the animadvertor, Dr. Peter Heylyn, and the author, Thomas Fuller.
- Author
- Fuller, Thomas, 1608-1661.
- Publication
- London :: Printed by W. Godbid, and are to be sold by John Williams ...,
- 1659.
- Rights/Permissions
-
To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
- Subject terms
- Heylyn, Peter, 1600-1662. -- Examen historicum.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/a40651.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"The appeal of iniured innocence, unto the religious learned and ingenuous reader in a controversie betwixt the animadvertor, Dr. Peter Heylyn, and the author, Thomas Fuller." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/a40651.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 8, 2024.
Contents
- title page
-
To the Right Honorable GEORGE BERKELEY, L.
Berkeley, Moubray, Segrave andBruce, my most Bountiful and most Exemplary Patron. -
THE APPEAL OF INJUR'D INNOCENCE.
-
CHAP. I. That it is impossible for the
Pen of anyHistorians writing in (as our's) a divided Age, to please all Parties, and how easie it is to Cavil at any Author. - CHAP. II. Why the Author desired and hoped never to come under the Pen of the Animadvertor in a Controversal Difference.
-
CHAP. III. That after serious Debate the Author found himself Necessitated to make this
Appeal in his own just Vindication. -
CHAP. IV. The Author's
first General Answere taken from hisTitle-page andWord ENDEVOVRED. -
CHAP V. The Second Generall Answer. That many, especially MEMORY Mistakes and
Pen-slips, must be ex∣pected in a great Volume. - CHAP. VI. The Third General Answer. That in Intire Stories of impregnable Truth it is facile for one to Cavill with some Colour at Dismembred Passages therein.
-
CHAP. VII. The Fourth General Answer. That FAVOVR of COVRSE is indulged to the
first (asleast per∣fect ) Edition of Books. - CHAP. VIII. The Fifth General Answer. That it is no shame for any Man to confess (when convinced thereof) and amend an Error in his Iudgement.
-
CHAP. IX. The Sixth General Answer. That
Prelial Mistakes in Defiance of all Care will escape in the best Corrected Book. -
CHAP. X. The Seventh and last General Answer. That an
Author charging his Margin with hisAuthor is thereby Himselfdischarged. -
CHAP. XI. That many of the Animadvertors Notes are onely
Additional, notOp∣posite to what I have written; And that all things, omitted in an History, are not Defects. -
CHAP. XII. That the Author Designed unto himself no
Party-pleasing in Writing his Church-History. -
CHAP. XIII. What
Good theAnimadvertor might, but would not doe; and, whatGood, by Gods goodness he Herein hath done unto theAuthor. -
CHAP. XIV. That the
Author is unjustly charged by theAnimadvertor for beingagreeable to the Times; And how far forth suchAgreeableness is consistent withChristian Prudence. -
Dr.
Heilyn 's TITLE-PAGE. Examen Historicum: OR A DISCOVERY and EXAMINATION OF THE Mistakes, Falsities, and Defects in someModern History. Part. I. CONTAINING Necessary ANIMADVERSIONS ON The Church-History ofBRITAIN: AND The History ofCAMBRIDGE, Publish'd byThomas Fuller: For Vindication of the Truth, the Church, and the Injured Clergy. -
An ANSWER TO Dr.
Heylyn 's Necessary INTRODUCTION&c. -
Errata confessed by the Printer of Dr.
Heylyns Animadversions. - PART I.
-
CHAP. I. That it is impossible for the
-
part - 2
-
THE SECOND BOOK. Of the Conversion of the
Saxons, and that which followed thereupon till theNorman Conquest. -
THE THIRD BOOK From the time of the
Norman Conquest, to the first preach∣ing ofWickliffe. -
THE FOURTH BOOK. From the first preaching of
Wickliffe, to the beginning of the Reign of KingHenry the eighth. -
THE FIFTH BOOK. Relating to the time of King
Henry the Eight. - THE SIXTH BOOK. Containing the History of Abbeys.
-
THE SEVENTH BOOK. Containing the Reign of King
Edward the sixth. -
THE EIGHTH BOOK. The Reign of Queen
Mary. -
THE NINTH BOOK. Containing the Reign of Queen
Elizabeth. -
THE TENTH BOOK. Containing the Reign of King
James.
-
THE SECOND BOOK. Of the Conversion of the
- part - 3
-
To the Reverend, and his Worthy Friend, Dr.
Iohn Cosin, Dean of Peter-burgh. - To the Religious, Learned and Ingenuous Reader.
-
To my Loving Friend, Doctor
Peter Heylyn. -
To Dr.
Cornelius Burges. - AN INDEX OF THE MOST REMARKABLE PERSONS and Passages in this BOOK.
- ERRATA.
- to the reader