The History of the Church of England in the Colonies and Foreign Dependencies of the British Empire, Bind 2F. & J. Rivington, 1848 |
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Side xii
... Opechancanough - Acts respecting the Church , 1644-5 - Laws against Popish Recusants and Non - con- formists - Sympathy of some Virginians with the Puritans checked -Remarkable Petition of Castell to Parliament , 1641 - Sander- son's ...
... Opechancanough - Acts respecting the Church , 1644-5 - Laws against Popish Recusants and Non - con- formists - Sympathy of some Virginians with the Puritans checked -Remarkable Petition of Castell to Parliament , 1641 - Sander- son's ...
Side 83
... Opechancanough - Acts respecting the Church , 1644-5 - Laws against Popish Recusants and Noncon- formists - Sympathy of some Virginians with the Puritans checked -Remarkable Petition of Castell to Parliament , 1641 - Sanderson's name ...
... Opechancanough - Acts respecting the Church , 1644-5 - Laws against Popish Recusants and Noncon- formists - Sympathy of some Virginians with the Puritans checked -Remarkable Petition of Castell to Parliament , 1641 - Sanderson's name ...
Side 137
... Opechancanough , who , twenty years before , had struck so heavy a blow against the English by the massacre which his followers then perpetrated , still lived to avenge the fresh insults which the white man heaped upon him . Up to the ...
... Opechancanough , who , twenty years before , had struck so heavy a blow against the English by the massacre which his followers then perpetrated , still lived to avenge the fresh insults which the white man heaped upon him . Up to the ...
Side 138
... Opechancanough himself prisoner , and brought him back in triumph to James Town . Death of Opechan- canough . The Indian prince was so bowed down by the weight of many , -it is said , well nigh a hundred , - years , that he was carried ...
... Opechancanough himself prisoner , and brought him back in triumph to James Town . Death of Opechan- canough . The Indian prince was so bowed down by the weight of many , -it is said , well nigh a hundred , - years , that he was carried ...
Side 139
... Opechancanough in- dignantly said to him , that , ' had it been his good fortune to have taken Sir William Berkeley prisoner , he would not have meanly exposed him thus a show unto his people " . ? Soon after the death of Opechancanough ...
... Opechancanough in- dignantly said to him , that , ' had it been his good fortune to have taken Sir William Berkeley prisoner , he would not have meanly exposed him thus a show unto his people " . ? Soon after the death of Opechancanough ...
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adverted afterwards Aleppo already Antinomian appointed Archbishop authority Barbados Berkeley Bermudas Bishop Bishop of London blessing Chalmers CHAP Charles the Second Charter Christ Christian Church of England Clarendon Clergy Colony Company Council Court Cromwell declared Divines duties Eliot emigrants enacted English evil faith favour Gospel Governor Grand Assembly granted hath Hening History History of Barbados Holy honour Ibid India Indian inhabitants instance Island King King's Kingdom of England labours land Laud laws letter liberty Long Parliament Lord Lord Baltimore Maryland Massachusetts matters ment ministers native Neal notice oath oath of supremacy offence Opechancanough ordinances Parish Parliament party passed period persons plantation Pocock possession Prayer Presbyterian present proceedings province Puritans reign religion religious respect Sermon settlement soon spirit tion truth unto Virginia West Indies whilst words XVII zeal СНАР