Many remarkeable passages from both Houses of Parliament from the 12 of May till this present concerning the great affaires of the whole kingdome : with many more passages of great consequence concerning Sir Edward Deering and divers other Kentish-men : and concerning a charge to be drawne up against them for their speedy tryall : with the examination of Mistresse Sanders, living at Ratcliffe, sister to Oneale, before the House of Commons the 12 of May, 1642 : also another examination by the honorable House of Commons concerning Sir Nicholas Cole and the inhabitants of Newcastle, May 13, 1642 : together with an order of both Houses of Parliament concerning the continuance of the terme at Westminster : likewise His Majesties letter to the gentry of Yorkshire, May 16, 1642. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A37835 of text R2516 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E1644). Textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. The text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with MorphAdorner. The annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). Textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish. This text has not been fully proofread Approx. 8 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 5 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. EarlyPrint Project Evanston,IL, Notre Dame, IN, St. Louis, MO 2017 A37835 Wing E1644 ESTC R2516 12630115 ocm 12630115 64722 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. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A37835) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 64722) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 252:E148, no 6) Many remarkeable passages from both Houses of Parliament from the 12 of May till this present concerning the great affaires of the whole kingdome : with many more passages of great consequence concerning Sir Edward Deering and divers other Kentish-men : and concerning a charge to be drawne up against them for their speedy tryall : with the examination of Mistresse Sanders, living at Ratcliffe, sister to Oneale, before the House of Commons the 12 of May, 1642 : also another examination by the honorable House of Commons concerning Sir Nicholas Cole and the inhabitants of Newcastle, May 13, 1642 : together with an order of both Houses of Parliament concerning the continuance of the terme at Westminster : likewise His Majesties letter to the gentry of Yorkshire, May 16, 1642. England and Wales. Sovereign (1625-1649 : Charles I) 8 p. Printed for T. Ryder, London : 1642. A news summary, to which are added the text of the order of "both Houses of Parliament," actually of the House of Lords and the text of the King's letter. Reproduction of original in Thomason Collection, British Library. eng Dering, Edward, -- Sir, 1598-1644. England and Wales. -- Parliament. -- House of Lords. England and Wales. -- Parliament. Great Britain -- History -- Charles I, 1625-1649 -- Sources. A37835 R2516 (Wing E1644). civilwar no Many remarkeable passages from both Houses of Parliament, from the 12. of May till this present, concerning the great affaires of the whole England and Wales. Parliament 1642 1271 11 0 0 0 0 0 87 D The rate of 87 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the D category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words. 2006-01 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2006-01 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2006-02 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2006-02 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2006-04 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion Many Remarkeable PASSAGES from both Houses of PARLIAMENT . From the 12. of May till this present , Concerning the great affaires of the whole Kingdome . With many more Passages of great Consequence concerning Sir Edward Deering and divers other Kentish-men , and concerning a Charge to be drawne up against them for their speedy Tryall . WITH The Examination of Mistresse Sanders , living at Ratcliffe , Sister to Oneale , before the House of Commons , the 12. of May , 1642. Also another Examination by the Honourable House of Commons , Concerning Sir Nicholas Cole , and the Inhabitants of Newcastle . May 13. 1642. Together with an Order of both Houses of Parliament , Concerning the continuance of the Terme at Westminster . John Browne Cleric Parliament . Likewise his Majesties Letter to the Gentry of Yorkeshire , May , 16. 1642. London , Printed for T. Ryder .. 1642. Many Remarkable Passages from both Houses of Parliament , from the 12. of May , till this present , concerning the great affayres of the whole Kingdome . UPon the 9. day of this present moneth of May , there was a Committee of the House of Commons sate concerning the differences betweene Sir Nicholas Cole ( Major ) and the Townesmen of Newcastle ; where witnesses were examined in that cause , and an Order issued to be sent to Newcastle forthwith to Mason Castle for the bringing up of more witnesses . Vpon this present day there was also then given up at the Court gate a Command from His Majesty by Sir Nicholas Hand for the speedy repaire of all his Majesties Servants in Ordnary to YORKE , upon paine of his Maiesties displeasure , the House of Commons falling into consultation of the malignant party of the Kingdome , and among o●hers , of Sir Edward Deering , and the residue that were instructers in the late scandalous Petitions delivered from Kent and having prepared a charge against them , at a desi●ed conference it was then moved for their speedy triall . Vpon the 12. day of this instant Moneth , one Mrs. Sanders of Ratcliffe , Sister to Oneale , was brought to the house of Commons upon report made that they furnished Oneale with con●eniencies for his escape , who being examined thereupon before a Committee appoynted , and denying thereof , was committed to Custody , till convenient time for her examination . Divers Committees of this house of Commons , were appoynted to meet on Wednesday last in the afternoone , for Sr. Cornelious Vermud●●s Bill , for the Fines of Recusants and other delinquents . But the Body of the house met and sate in a Committee , for the nomination of the time and place , for the Sinod to meet , which occasioned much conferring , The Lords assembled in this present Parliament , received a Complaint against one Captaine Jackso● , who had formerly had Command in the I le of Providence , before the rising of the Spaniard , by a Souldier for aff●onts under him that Voyage , and concerning some pretended oppressions and traines laid to take away h●s life ( by the said Captain ) after some debate thereof it was referred to a Committee for Examination . Upon the 13. day of this present moneth , 1642. The House of Commons taking into consideration His Majesties date Message , and the danger the Committees of each House underwent residing at Yorke , then after some debate they Voted , that whosoever hee were that should attach or imprison either the said Members , or any other of each House , imployed on their service , should be accounted as an enemy to the State and Common-Wealth , &c. Which being acquainted the Lords at a Conference , it were assented too , and a joynt Order issued for the printing of the said Votes . And likewise Order issued to the Sheriffe of Yorkeshire , for the sending up of those Delinquents in their County ▪ formerly sent for , but not yet appeared . Die Martis , 17 Maii , 1642. WHereas the Lords in Parliament , have this day beene Informed , That the King is Resolved to adjourn the next Terme from Westminster to Yorke ; Upon which , The Lords sent a Committee to the Lord Keeper of the great Seale of England , to know of him , whether hee had received my command touching the same , who acquainted the said Committee , That hee had received command from His Majesty , to issue Proclamations and Writs , to that purpose . Whereupon , This House taking the said matter into consideration , hath Voted : That the Kings removall of the Terme to Yorke , from Westminster , during sitting of this Parliament , is Illegall . And hath further ordered , That the said Lord Keeper shall not issue out any Writs , or Seale any Proclamation , for adjourning the said next Terme from Westminster to Yorke , as aforesaid . Joh. Browne , Cleric . Parl. His Majestes Letter to the Gentry of Yorkshire , May , the sixteenth , 1642. To our right trusty and well beloved the Gentry of York , and others of this our County of York , whom it doth or may concern . WE have with great contentment considered your mercifull and affectionate Answer to our Proposition concerning the unsufferable affront which we received at Hull , We have not bin deceived in that confidence we had in your affection , wherefore we desire you to assure the rest of your Countrymen , who through negligence were omitted to be sum●oned : that We shall never abuse your love by any power wherewith God shall enable us to the least violation of the least of your Liberties , or the diminution of those Immunities which we have granted you this Parliament , though they be beyond the Acts of most ( if not all ) Our Predecessours ; being resolved with a constant and firme Resolution to have the Law of this Land duely observed , and shall endeavor onely so 10 preserve Our just Royall Rights , as may enable us to protect our Kingdome and people , according to the ancient H●●ors of the Kings or England , and according to the trust which by the Law of God and this Land is put into the Crowne , being sufficiently warned by the late affront at Hull , not to transferre the same o●● of our power concerning which Affront we will take some time to Advisse , which way we may usefully imploy your Affections , in the mean time we shall take it well from all such as shall personally attend us , so followed and provided , as they shall thinke fit for the better safety of our person , because We know not what suddain violence , or affront may be offered unto us , having lately received such an actuall testimony of rebellious intentions as Sir-John Hotham have expressed at Hull : Being thus secured by your affections and assistance we promise you our Protection against any contrary power whatsoever , And that you shall not be molested for your humble and modest Petition , as of late have been threatned . Given at Our Court at Yorke , May the 16. 1642. FINIS .