Search Results
Showing 1 - 10 of 816 results
Search Results
A dialogue of cumfort against tribulation, made by the right vertuous, wise and learned man, Sir Thomas More, sometime L. Chanceller of England, which he wrote in the Tower of London, An. 1534. and entituled thus: = A dialogue of cumfort against tribulation, made by an Hungarian in Latin, and translated out of Latin into French, [and] out of French into English
| Location |
|---|
| Access Content Online |
An oration against the vnlavvfull insurrections of the protestantes of our time, vnder pretence to refourme religion. Made and pronounced in Latin, in the Schoole of Artes at Louaine, by Peter Frarin of Andwerp, M. of Arte, and Bacheler of both lawes. And now translated into English with the aduise of the author. VVith licence
| Location |
|---|
| Access Content Online |