Skip to content
Membership
Donate
Store
CLOSED TODAY
Tickets
Home
Collections
Search
A letter to Mr. Grant, : concerning barretry, forgery, and thf [sic] danger and malignity of partial judges and jury-men. Publish'd to prevent false reports, and partial and corrupt verdicts. Instead of an assise-sermon
Rare Books
A letter to Mr. Grant, : concerning barretry, forgery, and thf [sic] danger and malignity of partial judges and jury-men. Publish'd to prevent false reports, and partial and corrupt verdicts. Instead of an assise-sermon
Image not available
Type
Rare Books
(Opens in new tab)
Publication date
[1706?]
Call number
306643
Creator
Hickeringill, Edmund (1631-1708)
(Opens in new tab)
Dimensions
(4to)
Find out more
View in the Library catalog
(Opens in new tab)
You might also be interested in
Image not available
Scandalum magnatum: or the great trial at Chelmnesford assizes, : held March 6, for the county of Essex, betwixt Henry Bishop of London, plantiff, and Edm. Hickeringill rector of the rectory of All-Saints in Colchester, defendant, faithfully related. Together with the nature of the writ call'd supplicavit, seldom granted against any in these days, more seldom granted against any but common-rogues, and common-barreters, and common-villains; yet granted against Mr. Hickeringill: who was thereupon bound to the good-behaviour, at the court of King's-Bench Westminster, Octab. Pur. xxxiv. R.R. As also the articles sworn against him, by six proctors of Doctors-Commons; the reverend proctors names are like-wise (according to the record in the Crown-Office) particulariz'd. With large observations and reflections upon the whole. Published to prevent false reports
Rare Books
134545
Image not available
Lieut. Colonel J. Lilburn tryed and cast: or, his case and craft discovered. : Wherein is shewed the grounds and reasons of the Parliaments proceeding, in passing the act of banishment against him, and wherefore since his coming over hee hath been committed to the Tower by the Parliament. Here likewise is laid open the partiall, corrupt, and illegall verdicts of his juries, both the former and later. Being to satisfie all those in the nation that are truly godly, and wel-affected to the peace of the Common-wealth: and to stop the mouths of others; proving, what is done in order to his present imprisonment, is according to the rules of justice and equity contained in the morall law of God, and nature, or sound naturall reason. Published by authority
Rare Books
232848
Visit
What’s On
Collections & Research
Learn
Join & Give
About
Dismiss
Open search