London's liberties; or A learned argument of lavv & reason, upon Saturday, December 14. 1650. before the Lord Major, Court of Aldermen, and Common Councell at Guild Hall, London, between Mr Maynard Mr Hales & Mr Wilde of Councell for the Companies of London. And Major John Wildman and Mr John Price of Councell for the Freemen of London. Wherein the freedom of the citizens of London in their elections of their chief officers, is fully debated, the most ancient charters and records of the City examined, and the principles of just government cleared & vindicated. This discourse was exactly taken in short-hand by severall that were present at the argument, who have compared their notes, and published them for publique use.
Dublin Core
Title
London's liberties; or A learned argument of lavv & reason, upon Saturday, December 14. 1650. before the Lord Major, Court of Aldermen, and Common Councell at Guild Hall, London, between Mr Maynard Mr Hales & Mr Wilde of Councell for the Companies of London. And Major John Wildman and Mr John Price of Councell for the Freemen of London. Wherein the freedom of the citizens of London in their elections of their chief officers, is fully debated, the most ancient charters and records of the City examined, and the principles of just government cleared & vindicated. This discourse was exactly taken in short-hand by severall that were present at the argument, who have compared their notes, and published them for publique use.
Description
Handwritten imprint probably sent to Bagford; not in Bagford's hand
Creator
Source
Wing (CD-ROM, 1996) L2936A
Publisher
Giles Calvert
Identifier
544
Collection
Tags
Citation
“London's liberties; or A learned argument of lavv & reason, upon Saturday, December 14. 1650. before the Lord Major, Court of Aldermen, and Common Councell at Guild Hall, London, between Mr Maynard Mr Hales & Mr Wilde of Councell for the Companies of London. And Major John Wildman and Mr John Price of Councell for the Freemen of London. Wherein the freedom of the citizens of London in their elections of their chief officers, is fully debated, the most ancient charters and records of the City examined, and the principles of just government cleared & vindicated. This discourse was exactly taken in short-hand by severall that were present at the argument, who have compared their notes, and published them for publique use.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 25, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/3322.