Thomas Middleton and Early Modern Textual Culture is a comprehensive companion to The Collected Works of Thomas Middleton, providing detailed introductions to and full editorial apparatus for the works themselves as well as a wealth of ...
CD 1621 CD 1628 CD 1629 CJ LJ PP 1610 Parliamentary Proceedings Commons Debates in 1621 , ed . by Wallace Notestein ... 1987 ) Proceedings in Parliament 1626 , volumes 11 and 111 : House of Commons , ed . by William B. Bidwell and Maija ...
69 up at the very beginning of the 1621 Parliament , as a threat to the principle of free speech for Members . ... Christopher Thompson , The Debate on Free Speech in the House of Commons in February 1621 ( Orsett , 1985 ) ; David ...
traced to the 1614 ' addled ' parliament which was thought to have failed because of the machinations of Catholic ... The Debate on the Freedom of Speech in the House of Commons in February 1621 ( Orsett , Essex : The Orchard Press ...
... Christopher Barker.11 The purpose of the printing remains unclear, as there is no indication that it was to be sold, and both the title and content make clear that this was a prayer read at the start of Parliament every day.
First, because it was directed against the Commons's efforts to promote what they conceived of as true religion, ... Coke's decision in late 1621 to take a strong stand on the issue of free speech was therefore an index of his concern ...
In February 1621 some members of the newly assembled House of Commons pointed out that this proclamation struck at freedom of speech . Edward Alford raised the same issue once more in November , but Secretary Calvert reassured the House ...
... 1983) , Sodometries: Renaissance Texts, Modern Sexualities (Stanford, 1992) Gray, Douglas, 'Rough Music: Some Early Invectives and Flytings', in Claude Rawson, ed., English Satire and the Satiric Tradition (London, 1984), pp.
A Calendar of Material Relating to Ireland from the High Court of Admiralty Examinations, 1536-1641
Debates over speech fractured a succession of early Stuart parliaments, and served across the Stuart era as a litmus test ... The Debate on Freedom of Speech in the House of Commons in February 1621 (Orsett, Essex: Orchard Press, 1985).