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The chivalric ethos and the development of military professionalism
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Absolutismus und Heer
zur Entwicklung des Militärwesens im Spätfeudalismus -
A proclamation, ordaining officers of the army to repair to their charges
William and Mary, by the grace of God, King and Queen of Great-Britain, France, and Ireland, defenders of the faith, to our lovits, [blank] macers of Our Privy Council, messengers at arms -
Some thoughts on the land-tax, general excises, and the least burthensome way of raising taxes
occasion'd by the London Journal on that subject -
May it please your Lordship, having formerly discourst amongst the crowd of arguments which have been vented since the knowledg of the peace; ...
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A letter from a gentleman at London to his friend at Edinburgh
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The counterpoise
being thoughts on a militia and a standing army -
A treatise concerning the militia
in four sections -
Eight speeches made in Parliament, on several important occasions
recommended to the electors of Great-Britain as a seasonable preparative for the ensuing elections -
Standing armies standing evils
and prov'd to be foreign to the nature, spirit, and genius of the old English Constitution, and absolutely contrary to the principles of the famous revolution, and the liberties of mankind -
Pendennis and all other standing forts dismantled: or, Eight military aphorismes
demonstrating the uselesness, unprofitableness, hurtfulness, and prodigall expensivenes of all standing English forts and garrisons, to the people of England: their inability to protect them from invasions, depredations of enemies or pyrates by sea or land: the great mischiefs, pressures, inconveniences they draw upon the inhabitants, country, and adjacent places in times of open wars, when pretended most usefull: and the grand oversight, mistake, injury in continuing them for the present or furure [sic] reall defence of the peoples lives, liberties, estates, the only ends pretended for them -
The necessity of a plot: or, reasons for a standing army. By a friend to K. G
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An address to the Cocoa-Tree from a Whig
And a consultation on the subject of a standing-army, held at the King's-Arms Tavern, on the twenty-eighth day of February, 1763 -
Letters on the impolicy of a standing army in time of peace and on the unconstitutional and illegal measure of barracks
with a postcript [sic] illustrative of the real constitutional mode of defence for this island -
An appeal to the people
Consent not with a multitude to do evil -
A discourse of standing armies
shewing the folly, uselesness, and danger of standing armies in Great Britain. By Cato -
Considerations on militias and standing armies
With some observations on the plan of defence suggested by the Earl of Shelburne, and some Thoughts on the Propriety of Military Exercises on Sunday, and on the Necessity of a Scotch Militia. By a Member of Parliament -
Four speeches against continuing the Army, &c., as they were spoken on several occasions in the House of Commons
as also a speech for relieving the unhappy sufferers in the Charitable Corporation, as it was spoken in the House of Commons, May 8, 1732 -
A letter from a gentleman at St. Germains, to his friend in London
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Some queries for the better understanding of a list of King James's Irish and popish forces in France
ready (when called for) -
The Argument against a standing army rectified
and the reflections and remarks upon it in several pamphlets consider'd -
Some reflections on a pamphlet lately publish'd, entituled, An argument shewing that a standing army is inconsistent with a free government
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An argument shewing that a standing army is inconsistent with a free government
and absolutely destructive to the constitution of the English monarchy -
An Argument proving that a small number of regulated forces established during the pleasure of Parliament, cannot damage our present happy establishment
and that it is highly necessary in our present circumstances to have the matter fully determined -
A confutation of a late pamphlet intituled, A letter ballancing the necessity of keeping a land-force in times of peace, with the dangers that may follow on it