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By the Queene. A proclamation notifying the dissolution of the Parliament that was proroged vnto the xiiii day of Nouember. 1586
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By the Queene. A true copie of the proclamation lately published by the Queenes Maiestie, vnder the great seale of England, for the declaring of the sentence, lately giuen against the Queene of Scottes, in fourme as followeth
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Orders to be published and put in execution by the viceadmirals of this realme, set downe by the lord admirall, with the assent of the lordes of her Maiesties priuie Counsell the 12. of March. 1585
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Elizabeth by the grace of God queene of England, Fraunce and Ireland ... to all and singuler our justices of peace, maiors, sheriffes, bayliffes ...
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By the Queene
Where in the Parliament holden at Westminster, the seconde day of April, in the xiii. yeere of ye reigne of our Soueraigne Lady the Queen, there was for the relief of diuers poore decaied townes, & of great multitudes of her poore subiects, who otherwise were likely to perish, or to become unprofitable and dangerous to the common weale, among other prouided -
A Declaration of the Queenes Maiesties most gratious dealing with William Marsden and Robert Anderton, seminarie priests
sithence the time of their iust condemnation, being conuicted according to the lawes, and of their obstinacie in refusing to acknowledge their duetie and allegeance to her Maiestie, 1586 -
The true copie of a letter from the Queenes Maiestie, to the Lord Maior of London, and his brethren
conteyning a most gracious acceptation of the great ioy which her subiectes tooke vpon the apprehension of diuers persons, detected of a most wicked conspiracie, read openly in a great assemblie of the commons in the guildhall of that citie, the 22.day of August. 1586. Before the reading whereof, maister Iames Dalton, one of the counsellours of that citie, in the absence of the recorder, made this speach hereafter folowing -
The copie of a letter to the Right Honourable the Earle of Leycester, Lieutenant generall of all her Maiesties forces in the vnited Prouinces of the lowe Countreys
written before, but deliuered at his returne from thence: vvith a report of certeine petitions and declarations made to the Queenes Maiestie at two seuerall times, from all the lordes and commons lately assembled in Parliament. And her Maiesties answeres thereunto by her selfe deliuered, though not expressed by the reporter with such grace and life, as the same were vttered by her Maiestie