Questions resolved, and propositions tending to accommodation and agreement betweene the king being the royall head, and both Houses of Parliament being the representative body of the Kingdome of England.

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Title
Questions resolved, and propositions tending to accommodation and agreement betweene the king being the royall head, and both Houses of Parliament being the representative body of the Kingdome of England.
Publication
[London :: s.n.,
1642]
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Subject terms
Charles -- I, -- King of England, 1600-1649.
England and Wales. -- Parliament -- Jurisdiction.
Prerogative, Royal -- England -- Early works to 1800.
Divine right of kings -- Early works to 1800.
Great Britain -- Politics and government -- 1625-1649 -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"Questions resolved, and propositions tending to accommodation and agreement betweene the king being the royall head, and both Houses of Parliament being the representative body of the Kingdome of England." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A91601.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 4, 2024.

Pages

3. All Court flatterers and Royalists, who daily in their affections and discourses maintaine absolute and Prerogative power in the King, to grant by his Letters Patents, what and how he will, above the Lawes and Statutes, and would have Proclamations to be Lawes, that so they might have Monopolies and projects to serve their turne.

These weake men of Learning for the most part, in the deepe points

Page 15

of Law and policy, must be taught to wait on the King their Master, with all diligent service and attendance, and leave off their discourses of King∣ly Authority and of Parliamentall Priviledges and force of Lawes, and content themselves henceforth with the King their Masters reward of their service, without peeling or preying on the people with their Mo∣nopolies and Projects.

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