id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt A67871 Bagshaw, Edward, d. 1662. A just vindication of the questioned part of the reading of Edward Bagshaw, Esq; an apprentice of the common law. Had in the Middle Temple Hall the 24th day of February, being Munday, anno Dom. 1639. upon the statute of 25 E.3. called, Statutum pro clero, from all scandalous aspersions whatsoever. With a true narrative of the cause of silencing the reader by the then Archbishop of Canterbury: with the arguments at large of those points in his reading, for which he was questioned at the Council-Board. 1660.0 .xml application/xml 16399 5161 91 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Had in the Middle Temple Hall the 24th day of February, being Munday, anno Dom. 1639. Had in the Middle Temple Hall the 24th day of February, being Munday, anno Dom. 1639. called, Statutum pro clero, from all scandalous aspersions whatsoever. called, Statutum pro clero, from all scandalous aspersions whatsoever. With a true narrative of the cause of silencing the reader by the then Archbishop of Canterbury: with the arguments at large of those points in his reading, for which he was questioned at the Council-Board. With a true narrative of the cause of silencing the reader by the then Archbishop of Canterbury: with the arguments at large of those points in his reading, for which he was questioned at the Council-Board. ./cache/A67871.xml ./txt/A67871.txt