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16454628AGbei Merian, aus: Theatr. Europ. Bd. 2 (?); 1680 (ca.); Ereignisse von 1645. Kupferstich, teilweise noch in Textseite integriert, Darst. 13,5 x 19,5 (incl. Text und ornamentalem Rahmen) (H); Bll. 17,7 x 20,5, montiert Auf Wunsch Digitalaufnahme in jpg-Format erhältlich- photo in jpg-format available. Je nach Versandart können die Portokosten bis zu 2 ? weniger als angegeben betragen.+
1687109573London: William Whitwood 1687. The Fourth Edition Revised. Leather bound. Fair. 14 253 11 p. 30 cm. Full leather. Boards worn and edges taped. Ink inscriptions and stamps on front endpapers and title page. Worm holes in bottom corners up to p. 40. Bottom corner out of a rear endpaper. Small hole in p. B2 of Dedication. <br/><br/>William Laud was Archbishop of Canterbury during the reign of Charles I 1625-1649. Shortly after Charles's succession Laud presented him with a list of England's ministers divided into "O" for orthodox and "P" for Puritan. This began a feud that led to the persecution of many Puritans and the beheading of Laud himself once the Puritans came to power. Laud was also at odds with Catholics as may be seen from this conference or discussion with "Fisher the Jesuit." Fisher was often imprisoned but lived into old age and died a natural death of cancer in about 1642. His name was brought up at Laud's trial one of the accusations against Laud being that he had protected Fisher and secured his release from prison. "A.C." mentioned on the title page probably stands for "A Catholic." William Whitwood hardcover
1651500042048London: R Lowndes 1651. New Edition. . Hardcover. Fair. tear & hole in title page affecting word " Late" 339pp 32mo close cropped to numbers on the pages. Rare not even certain that the BL has an early edition <br/> <br/> R Lowndes hardcover
16398544London: Richard Bager Printer to the Prince HIS HIGHNES 1639. First Edition. Full calf. Good. Contemporary calf with blind tooling raised bands replaced red leather title label 9 3/4 inches tall. Binding quite worn and scuffed yet with intact joints; recent title label raised at one edge. Lacking the front pastedown & blanks begins at title page title page with thin loss at bottom margin. 24 388 pp. Leaf 75-66 bound out of order; almost every leaf with some words neatly underlined in brown ink; many margins with worming; a few leaves with edge tears; last leaf 387-88 lacking bottom third removing 10 lines on the recto none on the verso. ESTC S113162. "In part a reply to: A. C. True relations of sundry conferences had betweene certaine Protestant doctours and a Jesuite called M. Fisher.Variant found in large-paper and some small-paper copies: title has 'Lawd'"."On 23 April 1622 James sent for Laud asking him to use his influence with the Countess of Buckingham who was attracted towards the church of Rome by the arguments of Percy a Jesuit who went by the name of Fisher. By the king's orders there had been two conferences held in her presence between Fisher and Dr. Francis White and on 24 May 1622 a third conference was held in which Laud took the place of White. The subject then discussed was the infallibility of the church."Laud's arguments on this occasion together with their subsequent enlargement in his account of the controversy published in 1639 mark his ecclesiastical position in the line between Hooker and Chillingworth. On the one hand he acknowledged the church of Rome to be a true church on the ground that it 'received the Scriptures as a rule of faith though but as a partial and imperfect rule and both the sacraments as instrumental causes and seals of grace' Works ii. 144. He strove against the position 'that all points defined by the church are fundamental' ib. ii. 31 attempting as far as possible to limit the extent of 'soul-saving faith' ib. ii. 402. The foundations of faith were 'the Scriptures and the creeds' ib. ii. 428. When doubts arose 'about the meaning of the articles or superstructures upon them�which are doctrines about the faith not the faith itself unless when they be immediate consequences - then both in and of these a lawful and free general council determining according to Scripture is the best judge on earth' ib. Laud in short wished to narrow the scope of dogmatism and to bring opinions not necessary to salvation to the bar of public discussion by duly authorised exponents instead of to that of an authority claiming infallibility on the bibliography of the controversy see the editor's preface to the 'Relation of the Conference' Works vol. ii."Though Laud's arguments failed permanently to impress the Countess of Buckingham they gave him great influence over her son. On 15 June as he states in his diary he 'became Confessor to my Lord of Buckingham' and was afterwards consulted by him on his religious difficulties." - DNB.The 24 p. introduction is addressed to Charles I. King James I. had died in 1625 between the time of the Conference 1622 and this publication 1639.William Laud 1573-1645 royal chaplain to James I. archbishop and religious advisor to Charles I.; he wielded immense power in the Church of England. Archbishop Laud was of a High-Church and anti-Puritan persuasion and used his power to suppress Puritanism to the best of his ability. He was loyal to the Crown and was accused of arbitrary and tyrannical acts against those whose religious views he condemned. He was fiercely resisted by the Church of Scotland. Many of the Church of England admired him for his resistance to Calvinism and Independency and for his defense of the doctrines of the Church of England. After the overthrow and execution of Charles I. Laud himself was tried and executed by the House of Commons."This venerable prelate a victim to sectarian violence and blood-thirsty ambition evinced in his last moments the animating power of that religion which he had preached and professed. No murmurs or lamentations escaped him: in prayers and supplications he bowed himself before heaven; though he was long prepared for that blow which was neither sudden or unexpected. Thus died as he had lived in the true spirit of genuine piety this zealous servant of the most high God a martyr to the cause of truth being persecuted even unto the death by the blood-thirsty and remorseless Calvinists of that gloomy period." - J. W. Hatherell in the Memoir prefacing the reprint of Laud's Sermons 1829 p. xiii. Richard Bager, Printer to the Prince HIS HIGHNES unknown
168642636London: Printed by Ralph Holt for Thomas Bassett Thomas Dring and John Leigh 1686. Fourth edition Revised: With a Table annexed. Hardcover. g- to vg. Large quarto 11 3/4 x 8". 14pp The Epistle Dedicatory 253 1pp Text 12pp Table of Contents. Blind-stamped contemporary calf rebacked but retaining the original covers with gold lettering and blind-stamped tooling to spine. Raised bands. Modern endpapers. Title page in red and black lettering. <br /> <br /> Originally published in 1639 under the title "A Relation of the Conference between William Laud and Mr Fisher by command of King James" this work is a first-hand account of the third conference between Father Perry Fisher a Jesuit and bishop William Laud on May 24 1622 before the lord marquess Buckingham and the countess his mother. <br /> <br /> The conference was a direct result of the Laud-"Fisher" Father Percy controversies on the Infallibility of the Church. Laud was induced by his desire to escape from the trammels of Calvinistic dogmatism to take up a wider and nobler position. In what he himself believed he was as arbitrary as any Calvinist; but the only way out of Calvinistic influence was by adopting a position of greater width. He argued that not all points defined by the Church are fundamental; limited as far as possible the domain and extent of soul-saving faith; and urged that the foundations of the faith are the Scriptures and the Creeds. In case of any doubt about the meaning of the Articles or superstructures upon them - "which are doctrines about the faith not the faith itself unless when they be immediate consequences" - then both in and of these a lawful and free General Council determining according to Scripture is the best judge on earth.<br /> <br /> Covers partly darkened and rubbed along edges. Closed tear to lower front joint. Previous owner's name in ink on inside of front free endpaper. Minor water-staining along upper margin of the last two leaves of the Epistle Dedicatory not affecting lettering. Minor and sporadic offsetting / foxing throughout. Binding in overall good- interior in good to very good condition. Printed by Ralph Holt for Thomas Bassett, Thomas Dring, and John Leigh hardcover
163943326London: Printed by Richard Badger 1639. First edition. Hardcover. fair to vg. Quarto 11 x 7 1/2". 24 388pp. Contemporary full calf with gold lettering to spine. Raised bands. Title vignette. Decorative headpieces and initials. <br /> <br /> Scarce first edition of this account of the third conference between Father Perry Fisher a Jesuit and bishop William Laud on May 24 1622 before the lord marquess Buckingham and the countess his mother. The conference was a direct result of the Laud-"Fisher" Father Percy controversies on the Infallibility of the Church. <br /> <br /> Laud was prompted by his desire to escape from the restrictions of Calvinistic dogmatism to take up a wider and nobler position. In what he himself believed he was as arbitrary as any Calvinist; but the only way out of Calvinistic influence was by adopting a position of greater width. <br /> <br /> He argued that not all points defined by the Church are fundamental; limited as far as possible the domain and extent of soul-saving faith; and urged that the foundations of the faith are the Scriptures and the Creeds. In case of any doubt about the meaning of the Articles or superstructures upon them - "which are doctrines about the faith not the faith itself unless when they be immediate consequences" - then both in and of these a lawful and free General Council determining according to Scripture is the best judge on earth.<br /> <br /> Binding darkened and rubbed along edges. Rebacked but retaining most of the original spine. Closed tears along joints. Previous owners' names at upper margin of front free endpaper. Pages somewhat rippled throughout. Slight age-toning along paper margin. Contemporary marginalia at lower margin of page 308 not affecting lettering. Binding in overall fair interior in good to very good condition. About the author: William Laud 1573-1645 was educated at the borough school of Reading and St John's College Oxford where he matriculated 17 October 1589 Fellow 1593 B.A. 1594 M.A. 1598 and D.D. in 1608. He was ordained deacon in 1601 and priest later on that same year. He rose rapidly in the Church becoming Dean of Gloucester in 1616 and Bishop of St David's in 1621. Under Charles I he became very powerful and was translated to the see of London in 1621 and to the Primacy in 1633. In 1641 he was impeached for high treason tried in 1644 and executed the following year. He bequeathed to the Bodleian Library all his Greek manuscripts not otherwise disposed of all his oriental manuscripts and all such Hebrew printed books as were not already in the library. His whole library numbering some 8000 volumes was delivered to the Bodleian Library by his executors in 1659. Printed by Richard Badger hardcover
1695075397London: Ri. Chiswell. folio 22 616 2. contemporary brown calf blind ruled rebacked with contrasting title label to spine raised bands and blind-embossed compartments gilt new corners and end papers ownership signature to front end-paper ca 1909 and recent binder's label to front end-paper two bookplates to front paste-down one contemporary heraldic boards rubbed. title page printed in red and black with frontispiece portrait. With original publisher adverts at end ie 2pp. Overall a good clean copy with generous margins ESTC R354 pictures available on request . Good. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 1695. Ri. Chiswell hardcover
16734805London: Pr. by J.C. for Tho. Bassett T. Dring and J. Leigh 1673. Small folio. 12 ff. 253 1 pp. 7 ff. <br><br>Laud's conference with Fisher first saw print when it appeared as an appendix to Dr. White's Replie to Jesuit Fisher's Answers to Certain Questions in 1624 signed by Richard Baily Laud's chaplain. The first complete separate edition first issue i.e. without the Table was printed in 1639; the edition offered here is the "third edition revised: with a table annexed." It bears a large elaborately historiated initial at the beginning of the dedication showing the result of a duel between two men: One lies slain while the other waves his hand in triumph. The main text is accomplished in roman type with a scattering of italic.<br>Â Â Â Â The DNB notes that Laud and his enthusiastic patron Charles I saw this work as usefully conclusively proving "that Laud's principles differed widely from those of the Roman catholics" in spite of the fact that for example his demanded revisions of Scottish church interiors canons and prayer books were such as to win him the outraged contemptuous north-of-the-Tweed nickname "the pope of Canterbury." The DNB accurately felicitously characterizes Laud's system overall as an ultimately doomed attempt to obtain "unity of heart by the imposition of compulsory uniformity of action. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â Wing rev. ed. L594; ESTC R3539. On Laud see: Dictionary of National Biography XXXII 18594. Contemporary speckled calf with a little blind ruling and framing; spine and covers starting to flake bumped at corners. Front cover nearly off and back joint open; all edges marbled. Small hole affecting text on c4 well repaired; ink-smudges in outer margin of T1. Pp. 7 148 149 and 185 misnumbered as 10 178 179 and 186 but text is perfectly consecutive. Pr. by J.C. for Tho. Bassett, T. Dring, and J. Leigh unknown books
169520578London:: Ri. Chiswell 1695. First edition. Folio. 2 A2 a-c2 B-4I4 4K2. Contemporary calf blind ruled Cambridge style with floral ends on covers rebacked with title label to spine in gilt. Edges rubbed. Small contemporary previous owners signature at top corner of half-title and title. Title page in red and black print. Several other separate title pages throughout. B2 M4 Aa2 with very small hole to outside margins no affect. C4 tiny clean tear lower margin no affect. With original publisher adds at end. Overall a very nice clean copy with large margins. An excellent copy priced to go. Engraved frontispiece portrait of Laud. William Laud 1573-1645 archbishop of Canterbury; entered St. John's College Oxford 1589; fellow 1593; M.A. 1598; ordained 1601; B.D. 1604; D.D. 1608; president of St. John's College Oxford 1611; archdeacon of Huntingdon 1615; dean of Glouscester 1616; bishop of St. David's 1621-6; became predominant in the Church of England at Charles I acession 1625; supported the king in his struggle with the Commons; dean of the Chapel Royale 1626; bishop of Bath and Wells 1626-8; privy councillor 1627; bishop of London 1628-33; chancellor of the University of Oxford; 1629; archbishop of Canterbury 1633; adopted policy of compelling compulsory uniformity of action on the part of church men; interfered disasterously with the Scottish church; impeached of high treason by the Long parliament 1640; committed to the Tower 1641; tried 1644; condemned and beheaded 1645. In his ecclesiastical policy he failed to allow for the diversity of the elements which made up the national church. His sermons were first published in 1651 and his collected works appeared between 1695 and 1700. Wing L586. ESTC R354. Ri. Chiswell, unknown
1639012766London: Printed By Richard Badger Printer to the Prince His Highnes 1639. Book measures 27x18.cm. 24388pp. Bound in period or early full calf raised bands gilt band lines gilt lines/stamp to board. At some time not recently the spine has been relaid/repaired. Calf rubbed on edges corners with some loss hinge joints cracked boards holding. Generally a nice early binding. Internally name of a few previous owners. Pages in good clean condition. A nice attractive copy. F. First Edition. Calf. Near Very Good. Quarto. Printed By Richard Badger, Printer to the Prince His Highnes Paperback
1651JD1144R. Lowndes 1651. Hardcover. Good. 1651; London; leather covered boards with gold titles; moderate edge wear and rubbing; external hinges professionally repaired; sticker on front cover near crown; hand written note on ffep; binding is tight; Interior is clean and unmarked; 16mo - over 5 3/4" to 6 3/4" tall; 339 pages R. Lowndes hardcover
168622921<p><strong>1668 William LAUD Canterbury & John Percy Jesuit Protestant Calvinism Martyr</strong></p><p>William Laud was the source and origin of many controversial and contentious arguments between Protestants and Catholics in the 17th-century. He was accused of heresy and false-doctrine by both sects opposing Catholicism and called an opponent of Puritanism. While Laud was the confidant to the Duke of Buckingham the Duke hired Jesuit John Percy also known as John Fisher as a chaplain. A series of pamphlets and arguments by Laud soon followed. </p><p>This treatise '<em>A Relation of the Conference'</em> describes the heated debates and controversial nature of the attitudes between Calvinists and Jesuits. This work is a first-hand account of the conference between Perry and Laud in 1622 discussing the infallibility of the church doctrine of Calvinism and the foundations of Scriptures and Creeds.</p><p>Item number: #22921</p><p>Price: $599</p><p>LAUD William</p><p><strong><em>A relation of the conference between William Laud . and Mr. Fisher the Jesuit by the command of King James of ever blessed memory</em></strong></p><p>London: Printed by Ralph Holt for Thomas Bassett Thomas Dring and John Leigh 1686.</p><p><u>Details</u>: </p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->Collation: Complete with all pages</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->o <!--endif-->14 253 13</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->Language: English</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->Binding: Leather; tight and secure</p><p><!-- if !supportLists-->· <!--endif-->Size: ~12in X 7.75in 30cm x 19.5cm</p><p>Our Guarantee:</p><p>Very Fast. Very Safe. Free Shipping Worldwide.</p><p>Customer satisfaction is our priority! Notify us with 7 days of receiving and we will offer a full refund without reservation!</p><p>22921</p><p>Photos available upon request. </p> Ralph Holt for Thomas Bassett, Thomas Dring and John Leigh hardcover
1695AB7553London: Printed for Ri Chiswell 1695. First Edition. . Hardcover. Good. folio 616pp 2pp publishers list. A good copy for its age. Modern leather banded spine with probably original leather boards which have some digs and wear. Pos on ffep geoffrey maxwell davis and on title page Robert Tyrwhitt believed 1-time canon of St Paul's Cathedral repairs to frontispiece page and hole to last page publ list losses to fore edges of a few pages water marks to outside edges of approx 100pp not affecting text worse on preface and early pages. pos on front pastedown. some neat annotations on rear fep. heavy book may incur additonal postage charge. <br/> <br/> Printed for Ri Chiswell hardcover
1637368892London: Printed by Richard Badger 1637. First edition. 14 77 pp. Small 4to. Modern green cloth. Title page mounted and toned. Bound without A1 blank. First edition. 14 77 pp. Small 4to. Attack by Archbishop Laud 1573-1645 upon theological innovations of Puritan polemicist William Prynne who was convicted of seditious libel along with John Bastwick and Henry Burton named in this pamphlet. Prynne was fined and imprisoned and branded on the order of the Star Chamber. Under the Long Parliament Laud was in his turn imprisoned and was executed in 1645. STC 15307; ESTC S108350 Printed by Richard Badger unknown
1695108013London: Ri. Chiswell/Sam. Keble et al 1695/1700. First edition. Leather bound. 2 vols.: 22 616; 4 84 2 217 185 p. 33 cm. Frontisportrait of Laud in vol. 1. Full leather bindings with blank impressing. Worn corners and edges. Both hinges of vol. 1 and rear hinge in vol. 2 tape-repaired. Ink signatures inscriptions and stamps on front endpapers half-titles and titles. Vol. 2 cracked at 'To The Reader' page. Dampstained half title in vol. 1 and large tear at bottom of title page. Stain on title page in vol. 2. Chipped bottom corner vol. 1 p. 11 and large tear vol. 1 p. 53. Small ink mark on vol. 2's fore-edge. Otherwise only small stains tears and a few small ink marks throughout. <br/><br/>William Laud was Archbishop of Canterbury during the reign of Charles I 1625-1649. Shortly after Charles's succession Laud presented him with a list of England's ministers divided into "O" for orthodox and "P" for Puritan. This began a feud that led to the persecution of many Puritans and the beheading of Laud himself once the Puritans came to power. The English writer and librarian Henry Wharton made the acquaintance of a later Archbishop of Canterbury William Sancroft under whose patronage Wharton's literary work was done. Wharton became well known in his lifetime as an ecclesiastical historian. Ri. Chiswell/Sam. Keble et al hardcover