Great Britain -- History, Naval -- Stuarts, 1603-1714
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Great Britain -- History, Naval -- Stuarts, 1603-1714
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- A Bloudy fight between [t]he two potent fleets of England and Holland, on Thursday and Friday the second and third of June, in St. Georges Channel : with the number of ships that were burnt, sunk, and taken in the engagement: And a perfect account of the proceedings of both the fleets
- A Brief account of a great engagement which hapned [sic] between the English squadron, under the command of Vice-Admiral Herbert, and the whole French fleet, near the coast of Ireland, on the first of May, 1689
- A Catalogue of all the kings ships, as also of all other ships, and pinnaces, together with their squadrons, captaines, burthen, seamen, and landmen, set forth in His Maiesties seruice, the 27 of Iune, 1627
- A Full and exact relation of the fight betwixt the Henry, an East-India merchant-man, and the Marine, a French man of war of 40 guns, on the coast of Ireland on the 12th of July 1695
- A Full and true relation as well of the blovving up of the Ann frigat as also of the examination, tryal, and condemnation of John Adams, the gunner thereunto belonging : as the occasion of that accident by his default. For which he was on the 24th. of this instant December, sentenced by a councel of war to be hang'd
- A Full and true relation of the remarkable fight betwixt Capt. Hamilton and Capt. Brown, commanders of the two Scotch frigats, and three French men of war : that brought over the Irish men to joyn Dundee in the Western sea, as it was delivered to some of the privy counsellors in Scotland, by those that were eye witnesses during the whole action
- A Great victory obtained by the English against the Hollanders, on Friday the 6th of May : the whole manner of the engagement, the persuing of the Dutch fleet towards Holland, and blocking up of their admirals, Van Trump, de Witte and Ruyter, in the Texel, by General Dean, General Monk, and Vice-Admiral Penn : with the taking of 60 small ships and 6 merchant-men very richly laden, that were coming from France, about by Scotland
- A Just vindication of the principal officers of His Majesties ordnance : from the false and scandalous aspersions laid upon them in a printed libel entituled An exact relation of the several engagements and actions of His Majesties fleet, under the command of His Highness Prince Rupert, in the summers expedition, 1673
- A Letter from Liverpool : giving an account of the arrival of the Bonaventure frigat from Major General Kirk : and of what has been done for the relief of Londonderry, and for the encouragement of the men of Inniskillin : as also the recovery of the two ships that were taken by the French men of war
- A Letter from Liverpool : giving an account of the arrival of the Bonaventure frigat from Major General Kirk : and of what has been done for the relief of Londonderry, and for the encouragement of the men of Inniskillin : as also the recovery of the two ships that were taken by the French men of war ..
- A List of Their Majesties royal fleet and the squadron of Dutch joyned with it : as drawn up in a line of battel
- A List of the English and Dutch men of war that are appointed to guard the coasts this winter, under the command of Sir Ralph Delaval
- A Particular account of a terrible and bloody engagement between the English and French fleet, in the Bay of Bantry on the Irish coast : with an exact list of the damage sustained, and those slain and wounded on both sides
- A Relation of a late barbarous assault of the French upon the English near the Downs, March the 12th, 1688/9 : attested by captain, officers, and several of the passengers
- A Relation of the passages in the battel at sea, between the fleet of England, and the United Neitherlands [sic] : collected according to the charge & order of the Lords States General, dated June 24/14 [sic] 1666
- A Short vindication of marine regiments : in answer to a pamphlet entituled A letter to a member of Parliament concerning the four marine regiments
- A True account of a fight between Captain John Leech, commander of the ship Ann of London, of 14 guns and 19 men from Jamaica, and a French privateer of 24 guns and some petteraroes : as it came in a letter to his owners from Plymouth, dated the second of this instant January 1689
- A True account of an engagement between an English and French man of war : and of the taking the said Frenchman of 36 guns by Captain Brockenhame
- A True account of an engagement between an English and French man of war : and of the taking the said Frenchman of 36 guns by Captain Brockenhame
- A True and most exact relation of the taking of the goodly ship called the Saint Esprit, belonging vnto the French king : which was built in Holland, and furnished with 54 peeces of great ordnance, was surprised on the 28 day of September, by Sir Sackeuill Treuer, Knight, and since brought by him vnto Harwich in Essex ; likewise the proceedings of the Duke of Buckingham his Grace, in the Isle of Ree ... with many other particulars
- A True narrative of the engagement between His Majesties fleet and that of Holland, begun June the first, 1666, at two a clock, afternoon, and continuing till the fourth, at ten a clock at night
- A True relation of the engagement of His Majesties fleet under the command of His Royal Highness with the Dutch fleet, May 28, 1672
- A True relation of the engagement of His Majesties fleet under the command of His Royal Highness with the Dutch fleet, May 28, 1672
- A copie of the Kings commission, granted to Sir Nicolas Crispe, making him admirall of the sea-pirats : brought (with other papers) to the Parliament ... and presented to the Committee for the Navie
- A copy of Admiral Russel's letter to the Earl of Nottingham
- A declaration of the proceedings of the Prince of VVales : and His coming to the Isle of Jersey with his resolution and intentions thereupon, and a message to be sent to the London marchants, containing severall demands and proposals, in relation to the Navie. Also, the votes of the Parliament of England, concerning Lieut. Col. John Lilburn; and their adjudging the paper, entituled, The second part of England's new chaines, treasonable and destructive. Together with a proclamation of the states of Holland, touching the Prince and the Parliament; and the taking of 21. English ships richly laden, their custome amounting to above 20000. pounds. And a list of the Parliaments Navy which are to be employed in this present expedition
- A full and true account of a terrible and bloody engagement at sea, between a squadron of the French fleet and the naval forces under the command of our English admiral : together with a particular account of the sinking of three of the French men of war, taking of two, and disabling most of therest [sic], with the great courage and bravery of our English sea-men
- A iournall, and relation of the action which by His Maiesties commandement, Edward Lord Cecil, baron of Putney, and Vicount of Wimbledon, admirall, and lieutenant generall of His Maiesties forces, did vndertake vpon the coast of Spaine, 1625
- A letter to a member of Parliament concerning the four regiments commonly called Mariners
- A list of Their Majesties royal fleet and the squadron of Dutch joined with it : as drawn up in a line of battel
- A list of Their Majesties royal fleet for this summers expedition, 1691 : With the several rates, number of men, and guns : as also, the admirals and comanders names. : To which is added, an account of the Dutch squadron, that joyn the fleet of England
- A message from His Highness the Prince of Wales to His Majesty, and the Commissioners in the Isle of Wight : with his declaration concerning the Earl of Warwick, and the Parliaments fleet : also, a letter from Lieut. Gen. Cromwell to the committee at Derby House
- A message from His Highness the Prince of Wales to His Majesty, and the Commissioners in the Isle of Wight : with his declaration concerning the Earl of Warwick, and the Parliaments fleet : also, a letter from Lieut. Gen. Cromwell to the committee at Derby House ..
- A relation of the engagement of His Majesty's fleet with the enemies, on the 11th of August, 1673 : as it has been represented by letters from the several squadrons
- A relation of the sea fight between the united fleets of the English and Dutch, against the French : as it was sent to the States General, by Admiral Evertsen, and published by their authority at the Hague in the monthly accounts of July last
- A seventeenth-century mariner
- A true and impartial account of a great and bloody fight between part of the English fleet, commanded by Sir Clovesly Shovel and the French at sea : with an account of the men killed and wounded : together with the great bravery and courage of Captain Hoskins, from on board Their Majesties ship the Crown, this ninth of December, 1690, riding Plimouth-Sound
- A true narrative of the late success which it hath pleased God to give to some part of the fleet of this common-wealth, upon the Spanish coast, against the King of Spains West-India fleet, in its return to Cadiz : being the substance of several letters writ and sent by the generals of the fleet upon this occasion
- A true relation of a most worthy and notable fight, performed the nineteenth day of Iune now last past, by two small shippes of the citie of London, the Vineyard of a hundred and twentie tunnes, and the Vnicorne of a hundred and fourtie tunnes, against sixe great gallies of Tunes, hauing in them a thousand and eight hundred men, of the Ile of Way-yorcke in the straights : our shippes hauing in all, mariners, merchants, and passengers fifty sixe men
- A true relation of the victory and happy success of a squadron of His Majesties fleet in the Mediterranean, against the pyrates of Algiers
- Admiral Russel's letter to the Earl of Nottingham : containing an exact and particular relation of the late happy victory and success against the French fleet
- An Account of Sir George Rook's arrival in the chanel with the fleet under his command
- An Account of Their Majesties fleet, and also of the Turkey fleet of merchant-men (homeward-bound) : in a letter from aborad the Royal Soveraign, to a friend in London
- An Account of a late engagement at sea near Rye on the coast of Sussex : with the particulars of taking a French man of war, and bringing her into the said port : of the number of the enemy killed, among whom was the Lord Strabane, &c. : in a letter from Rye, August the 8th, 1691
- An Account of the bombarding of St. Malo, by the fleet under the command of the Lord Berkeley, admiral of the blue
- An Account of the taking of the island of Martinego, in the West-Indies, from the French by the English forces and fleet, commanded by Sir Francis Wheeler : also of the taking of two French ships, one of 22 guns, the other of 20 guns, belonging to Martinego and Guardialoope : in a letter to a merchant in London
- An Account of what English men of war have been taken, or otherwise lost, during the present war : with some observations upon a late printed paper concerning that matter
- An Account of what men of war and privateers have been taken from the French since the beginning of the war : (declared the 7th of May 1689,) to the first of October 1695
- An Exact and faithful account of the late bloody fight between Captain Hastings, commander of the Saphire, Captain Showel, commander of the James galley, and Jonas Raile, captain of the Half-Moon of Algier : a ship of 32 guns, and 246 men, with the particulars of the engagement, sent from on board the James galley, lying in Tangier Road : September the 22d. 1681
- An Exact list of all Their Majesties forces in Flanders, England, Scotland, and Ireland for the year 1692 : and the charges of each regiment
- An Exact relation of the most remarkable transactions that happened lately in Ireland : with an account of a great sea-fight between the English and French fleets
- An Express from Ross giving an account of a French privateer that landed 80 men, which stripped the inhabitants and plundered the town of Feather, May 5th. Dublin, May 9th, 1707
- An Express from Scotland. Thursday April the 1st, 1708. The following letter from a good hand in Scotland, being more particular as to the French Fleet, than what we have yet had any account of, it is thought fit to insert it
- An Express from Sir Stafford Fairborne with the welcome news of the surrender of Ostend the 25th of June N.S. 1706. Whitehall July 3, published by authority
- An Express from the Duke of Marleborough with an account of the taking of Huy
- An accompt of both the fleets : their number and stations, with a perfect narrative of occurrences that have passed between them hitherto : in a letter from aboard the Edgar
- An account of Sir George Rooke's arrival in the chanel, with the fleet under his command
- An account of Sir George Rooke's arrival near the mouth of the channel with His Majesty's fleet under his command, and a great fleet of merchant-ships from Cadiz
- An account of a remarkable sea-fight between an English ketch and a French privateer : from aboard the Breda frigate at the spit-head, April 19, 1690
- An account of the late bloody sea-fight between part of Their Majesties fleet commanded by Sir Clovesly Shovel, and that of the French fleet commanded by the sieurs Turville and Ampheville : with the sinking of three of the French men of war, one of which was a vice admiral
- An account of the late bloody sea-fight between part of Their Majesties fleet commanded by Sir Clovesly Shovel, and that of the French fleet commanded by the sieurs Turville and Ampheville : with the sinking of three of the French men of war, one of which was a vice admiral
- An act declaring the grounds and causes of making prize the ships and goods that shall be taken from time to time by the Parliaments ships at sea, and for the encouragement of officers, mariners and seamen
- An essay concerning the laws of nations, and the rights of soveraigns : with an account of what was said at the Council-board by the civilians upon the question, whether Their Majesties subjects taken at sea acting by the late king's commission, might not be looked on as pirates? : with reflections upon the arguments of Sir T.P. and Dr. Ol
- An exact and true account on the taking five French ships laden with ammunition : by the Dutch, design'd for Ireland: together with the particulars of the blowing up of Dunkirk by the magazine taking fire
- An exact and true relation of the great and mighty engagement between the English and Duch [sic] fleets, upon the coast of Holland : and the advancing of 24 of the chief Lords and noblemen of the United Provinces, to the several courts of admiralty. The setting up of the standard of the Netherlands: the resolution of their Lord Admiral De Witte, and his joyning with the French Fleet. The chaining up of the Dutch Harbors, the planting of the ordnance against the English; and all officers and souldiers to die without mercy, that shall dissert their colours. With the bearing up of the Lord General Monk, and 100 gallant men of war against them; their resolution to fight it out to the last man. The engaging of them near the Texel, the number sunk and taken; and the full particulars of the loss on both sides, with a list of the names of the captains, lieutenants, ensignes, masters, and others officers taken prisoners. Advertised by letters from the Navy, Sept. 3. 1653. and published by special order
- An exact journal of the engagement between the English fleet and the French : from May the 18th to the 25th, 1692
- An exact journal of the engagement between the English fleet and the French : from May the 18th to the 25th, 1692
- An impartial account of some remarkable passages in the life of Arthur Earl of Torrington : together with some modest remarks on his tryal and acquitment
- An ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament : enabling all persons approved of by Parliament, to set forth sips [sic] in war-like manner, for the guarding of the seas, and defence of His Majesties dominions
- By the Councell Board at White-Hall, the 24. of May. 1625 : this to bee proclaimed by sound of drumme aboard the kings ships, and the rest of the nauie, as likewise, in all such other places, as the commissioners for the nauy shall think fit
- By the King : a proclamation directing how prisoners shall be ordered which are taken at sea, by men of warre
- By the King : a proclamation for a thanksgiving for the late victory by His Majesties naval forces
- By the King : a proclamation for all Captaines, masters, and officers of ships, and mariners, which are to serue in the Kings fleete, to make their present repaire to Portesmouth
- By the King : a proclamation for the better furnishing of the nauy, and increase of shipping
- By the King : a proclamation for the better furnishing of the nauy, and increase of shipping
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation : declaring Their Majesties pleasure for continuing the seamen belonging to their first, second and third rate ships in their service during this winter, and for payment of their wages before the fleet shall set sail for the next summers expedition
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation : whereas we have received information, that divers seamen and mariners who have been hired and impressed in our service and do belong to our ships of war, do absent themselves from our said ships
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation : whereas we have received information, that divers seamen and mariners who have been hired and impressed in our service and do belong to our ships of war, do absent themselves from our said ships ..
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation concerning colours to be worn on board ships
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation for prohibiting seamen from deserting Their Majesties service
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation for prohibiting seamen from deserting Their Majesties service
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation requiring all seamen and mariners to render themselves to Their Majesties service
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation requiring all seamen and mariners to render themselves to Their Majesties service
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation requiring all seamen and mariners to render themselves to Their Majesties service
- By the King and Queen, a proclamation to explain a clause in a late proclamation (for encouraging seamen and mariners to enter themselves on Their Majesties service) dated the one and twentieth day of December, 1691
- By the King, a proclamation : for enlarging the time for bounty-money to such seamen and landmen as shall voluntarily come into our sea-service by the tenth of February next, and for regulating of protections
- By the King, a proclamation : whereas the safeguard and protection we owe to such of our own subjects, and to all others in league and amity with us, as pass and repass the seas belonging to these our kingdoms
- By the King, a proclamation : whereas the safeguard and protection we owe to such of our own subjects, and to all others in league and amity with us, as pass and repass the seas belonging to these our kingdoms ..
- By the King, a proclamation for encouraging mariners, seamen and landmen to enter themselves on board His Majesties ships of war
- By the King, a proclamation for encouraging mariners, seamen and landmen to enter themselves on board His Majesties ships of war
- By the King, a proclamation for recalling and prohibiting sea-men from the service of foreign princes and states : and that no prizes taken from the Dutch by vertue of Portugal commissions be brought into His Majesties ports
- By the King, a proclamation for recalling and prohibiting sea-men from the service of foreign princes and states : and that no prizes taken from the Dutch by vertue of Portugal commissions be brought into His Majesties ports
- By the King, a proclamation for recalling and prohibiting sea-men from the services of forreign princes and states
- By the King, a proclamation for recalling and prohibiting seamen from serving of forein princes and states
- By the King, a proclamation for recalling and prohibiting seamen from the service of forreign princes and states
- By the King, a proclamation for taking off the late restraint laid upon the ships of merchants and others from going to sea
- By the King, a proclamation for taking off the late restraint laid upon the ships of merchants and others from going to sea
- By the King, a proclamation of general pardon to all seamen, mariners and others imployed at sea
- By the King, a proclamation prohibiting the importation of cordage and cable-yarn from foreign parts
- By the King, a proclamation touching manners, sea-men, and souldiers, which are to serve in His Majesties navy
- By the King, a proclamation touching passes and sea-briefs
- By the King, a proclamation touching passes and sea-briefs
- Cromwell's navy : the fleet and the English Revolution, 1648-1660
- De vierdaagse zeeslag 11-14 Juni 1666
- Declaration of the Comte de Tourville Commandant His Most Christian M[ajes]ties fleet
- England in the Mediterranean : a study of the rise and influence of British power within the Straits, 1603-1713
- England's palladion, or, Britain's naval-glory : expressed in a panegyrick, beginning with a loyal salutation of the Royal Navie : with three additional poems I. A congratulation on the late victory, &c. II. The burning island, &c. III. A præmonition to the states of Holland
- England's sea empire, 1550-1642
- Exceeding welcome news from Ireland : being a copie of a letter sent from Dundalke to Mr. Dudley Norton, Esquire, inhabitant at Nanptwich and now resident in London : wherein is declared in what condition the Kingdome of Ireland is at this present : with true information what victories have been obtained against the rebels in several parts of that kingdome by the Earle of Ormond ... : with others
- Exceeding welcome news from Ireland : being a copie of a letter sent from Dundalke to Mr. Dudley Norton, Esquire, inhabitant at Nanptwich and now resident in London : wherein is declared in what condition the Kingdome of Ireland is at this present : with true information what victories have been obtained against the rebels in several parts of that kingdome by the Earle of Ormond ... : with others ..
- Good news from the English fleet : being an account of a great bloody engagement which hapned yesterday betwixt Their Majesties fleet commanded by the Earl of Torrington and the French fleet, near the Beachy, upon the coast of Suffolk : with a particular relation of the blowing-up of six of the biggest of the French men of war
- Good news from the English fleet : being an account of a great bloody engagement which hapned yesterday betwixt Their Majesties fleet commanded by the Earl of Torrington and the French fleet, near the Beachy, upon the coast of Suffolk : with a particular relation of the blowing-up of six of the biggest of the French men of war ..
- Great news from sea, or, The True narrative of the great and bloody fight between several of His Majesties ship [sic] and four Tnrks [sic] men of war : and of the victory obtained by the English : as also the account of the names, qualities and carriage of guns of those Turks that were sunk and slain ... and each particular as it was communicated from on board the Greenwich t[o] a gentleman here in London
- Great news from the Isle of Wight : giving a full and ttue [sic] relation of the English and French fleets there, and of the intended engagement of the English with the French, yesterday being the twenty fourth instant
- His Maiesties letter to the generals of the navy at sea : together with His Majesties most gratious declaration
- Justice perverted, and innocence & loyalty oppressed, or, A detection of the corruptions of some persons in places of great trust in the government : which would have been laid open the last session of Parliament, according to the intentions of both Houses, had it not been prevented
- Kings of the sea : Charles II, James II and the Royal Navy
- List of his Maiesties ships, with others of the merchants that are now set forth under the command of the right honourable Algernon Percy, Earle of Northumberland, Lord Poynings, Fitz-paine, Brian and Latimer, Knight of the most noble Order of the Garter, one of his Majesties most honourable privie councell, generall and admirall of his Majesties fleet for this expedition : with the names of the captaines and lievtenants that are employed in this action, with the names of his Majesties, and merchants ships gone to sally against the Turkish pirats, 1637
- Man of war : Sir Robert Holmes and the Restoration Navy
- Mediterranean passes : [in the Public Record Office, London]
- Memoirs relating to the Lord Torrington
- Observations on a pamphlet touching the present condition of the navy and victualling : with some particular remarks on the author and on what he writes touching Q's and R's
- On the death of that noble knight, Sr John Harman, who died the 11th of October, 1673
- Proposals for raising a very considerable summ of money on ships and other vessels : whereby the sea as well as the land may be made to contribute to the defence of both
- Queen Anne's navy in the West Indies
- Robert Blake : general-at-sea
- Ships, money, and politics : seafaring and naval enterprise in the reign of Charles I
- The Dolphins danger and deliuerance : being a ship of 220. tunne hauing in her but 36. men and 2. boyes, who were on the 12. of Ianuary 1616. set vpon by 6. men of warre of the Turkes hauing at the least 1500. men in them : who fought with them 5. houres and a halfe, yet to the glory of God and the honor of our English nation, both shippe and goods safely brought vp the Riuer of Thames and deliuered
- The English navy in the revolution of 1688
- The Full and true account of the barbarous and cruel usage of Mr. George Willington, midshipman on board the Faulkland man of war : which having taken a prize call'd the Lascine, richly la[d]en from the West-Indies with several persons of quality and passengers on board : the leiutenant, George Titsdon, Mr. Willington, and several others were put on board the said prize, who for some secret grudge toward the said Mr. Willington beat and bruis'd him so barbarously
- The Full and true account of the barbarous and cruel usage of Mr. George Willington, midshipman on board the Faulkland man of war : which having taken a prize call'd the Lascine, richly la[d]en from the West-Indies with several persons of quality and passengers on board : the leiutenant, George Titsdon, Mr. Willington, and several others were put on board the said prize, who for some secret grudge toward the said Mr. Willington beat and bruis'd him so barbarously ..
- The Glory of the British seas : being a list of the Royal Navy
- The Glory of the British seas : being a list of the Royal Navy ..
- The Late plot on the fleet detected : with the Jacobites memorial to the French king, and an account of those gentlemen who invited the French fleet to invade our English coasts, &c
- The Late plot on the fleet, detected : with the Jacobites memorial to the French king, and an account of those gentlemen who invited the French fleet to invade our English coasts &c
- The Mediterranean passes in the Public Records Office, London
- The Navy as an instrument of policy, 1558-1727
- The Resolution and remonstrance of the navie to the supream power of England, the Commons assembled in Parliament : and to His Excellency the Lord Generall Fairfax, with the honourable counsell of the army, declaring their reall affections and ardent desires for the publique good of the kingdom, against all forraigne invasions, which they resolve to performe with their lives and fortunns : and a list of the chief commanders engaged herein
- The Resolution and remonstrance of the navie to the supream power of England, the Commons assembled in Parliament : and to His Excellency the Lord Generall Fairfax, with the honourable counsell of the army, declaring their reall affections and ardent desires for the publique good of the kingdom, against all forraigne invasions, which they resolve to performe with their lives and fortunns : and a list of the chief commanders engaged herein
- The Seaman's opinion of a standing army in England : in opposition to a fleet at sea, as the best security of this kingdom
- The account given by Sir John Ashby, Vice-Admiral, and Reere-Admiral Rooke to the Lords Commissioners of the engagement at sea between the English, Dutch, and French fleets, June the 30th, 1690 : with a journal of the fleet since their departure from St. Hellens to their return to the Buoy-in-the-Nore, and other material passages relating to the said engagement
- The common-wealths great ship commonly called the Soveraigne of the Seas, built in the yeare, 1637 : with a true and exact dimension of her bulk and burden, and those decorements which beautifie and adorne her, with the carving work, figures, and mottoes upon them : shee is besides her tunnage 1637 tuns in burden, shee beareth five lanthorns, the biggest of which will hold ten persons to stand upright, without shouldring or pressing one another, with the names of all the ropes, masts, sailes, and cordage that belong unto a ship : as also the names of all our commanders at sea, the number of men and gunnes which every ship carrieth both in their admirall, vice admirall, and reare-admirall : with all the fights wee have had with the Hollander, since the engagement of Lieutenant-Admirall Trompe neere Dover, against the English fleet under the command of Generall Blake, at the same time that three of their embassadours were here treating of peace : with a perfect rehearsall of an act for encrease of shipping, and encouragement of the navigation of this nation, which so much displeaseth the Hollander
- The common-wealths great ship commonly called the Soveraigne of the Seas, built in the yeare, 1637 : with a true and exact dimension of her bulk and burden, and those decorements which beautifie and adorne her, with the carving work, figures, and mottoes upon them : shee is besides her tunnage 1637 tuns in burden, shee beareth five lanthorns, the biggest of which will hold ten persons to stand upright, without shouldring or pressing one another, with the names of all the ropes, masts, sailes, and cordage that belong unto a ship : as also the names of all our commanders at sea, the number of men and gunnes which every ship carrieth both in their admirall, vice admirall, and reare-admirall : with all the fights wee have had with the Hollander, since the engagement of Lieutenant-Admirall Trompe neere Dover, against the English fleet under the command of Generall Blake, at the same time that three of their embassadours were here treating of peace : with a perfect rehearsall of an act for encrease of shipping, and encouragement of the navigation of this nation, which so much displeaseth the Hollander
- The defeat of James Stuart's Armada, 1692
- The history and life of Admiral Blake; general and admiral of the fleets and naval forces of Ngland : Containing account of his glorious atchievements by sea land, more especially by sea, where he obtained by surprising victories. [W]ritten by a gentleman bred in his family. Devoted himself wholly to the public service, was resolute in his undertakings, and most faithful in the performance of them. With him valour seldom mist its reward, or cowardice its punishment. Earl of Clarendon's character of him
- The last Elizabethan: Sir John Coke, 1563-1644
- The naval side of King William's war, 16th/26th November 1688-14th June 1690
- The navy in the English Civil War
- The navy in the War of William III, 1689-1697
- The second part of the nevv ballad of the late and terrible fight on St. James's Day one thousand 666 : to the tune of the first part written and printed at London
- The speech of the right honourable Edward, Earl of Manchester, Lord Chamberlain of His Majesties houshold : delivered at the Guild-Hall, London, on Thursday, being the first day of December, 1664. at a common hall there held : where were also present ... members of the honourable Houses of Parliament
- To the two most honourable Houses, the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled, an humble representation of the sad and distressed case of many thousands of their most gratious Majesties loyal seamen, or their widows, aged parents, or other friends or relations : and an humble supplication in behalf of all the said distressed and all other the seamen of England and Scotland
- War at sea under Queen Anne, 1702-1708
- Whereas the Kings Most Excellent Majestie hath lately published a declaration, intituled, His Majesties Declaration for encouragement of seamen and mariners imployed in the present service ...
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/r33jWEucEuo/" typeof="CategoryCode http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Concept"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/r33jWEucEuo/">Great Britain -- History, Naval -- Stuarts, 1603-1714</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/">University of Missouri Libraries</a></span></span></span></span></div>
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Data Citation of the Concept Great Britain -- History, Naval -- Stuarts, 1603-1714
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/r33jWEucEuo/" typeof="CategoryCode http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Concept"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/r33jWEucEuo/">Great Britain -- History, Naval -- Stuarts, 1603-1714</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/">University of Missouri Libraries</a></span></span></span></span></div>