A Defiance Against All Arbitrary Usurpations Or Encroachments, either of the House of Lords, or any other, upon the Soveraignty of the Supreme House of Commons, (the High Court of Judicature of the Land) or upon the Rights, Properties and Freedoms of the people in generall. Whereunto is annexed, A Relation of the unjust and barbarous proceedings of the House of Lords, against that worthy Commoner, Mr. Overton, who standeth by them committed to the most contemptuous Goal of Newgate, for refusing to Answer to Interrogatories, and Appeal- ing from that Court to the Honourable House of Commons (as by the great Charter of Eng- land he was bound) for the triall of his Cause. Howsoever the House of Lords do suggest in their Commitment of him, that it was for his contemptuous words and gesture, refusing to answer unto their Speaker. Which being every mans case, is published by his friends for the publick benefit of all the Free-born people of England, as it was enclosed in a Letter to one of his Friends. ... (1 line)

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A Defiance Against All Arbitrary Usurpations ...
Richard Overton
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Last edited by MARC Bot
December 22, 2022 | History

A Defiance Against All Arbitrary Usurpations Or Encroachments, either of the House of Lords, or any other, upon the Soveraignty of the Supreme House of Commons, (the High Court of Judicature of the Land) or upon the Rights, Properties and Freedoms of the people in generall. Whereunto is annexed, A Relation of the unjust and barbarous proceedings of the House of Lords, against that worthy Commoner, Mr. Overton, who standeth by them committed to the most contemptuous Goal of Newgate, for refusing to Answer to Interrogatories, and Appeal- ing from that Court to the Honourable House of Commons (as by the great Charter of Eng- land he was bound) for the triall of his Cause. Howsoever the House of Lords do suggest in their Commitment of him, that it was for his contemptuous words and gesture, refusing to answer unto their Speaker. Which being every mans case, is published by his friends for the publick benefit of all the Free-born people of England, as it was enclosed in a Letter to one of his Friends. ... (1 line)

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Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
26

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Book Details


Edition Notes

H&L, new ed, and Pease, Leveller Movement, 148, ascribe to J: Lilburn.

DNB, 42:386-387; author anonymous

Published in
[Place of publication not identified]

The Physical Object

Pagination
[1], 26 p.
Number of pages
26

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL44819275M
OCLC/WorldCat
613976564

Source records

marc_columbia MARC record

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