| Henry Dircks - 1865 - 162 pages
...cannot tell, he continued that course but awhile."—[Wood's Fas. Ox. 3rd edition, Vol. ii. p. 483.] EX. Considerations tending to the happy accomplishment...Wisdome of the High and Honourable Court of Parliament. 4to. [1647.] The head title reads thus :—" A brief Discourse concerning the Accomplishment of our... | |
| Alfred Stern - 1877 - 884 pages
...899 ')Boyle's Works I. 22 ff., V. 25« ff. *) Considerations Tending To the Hapi>y Accomplishment oi England's Reformation in Church and State. Humbly...Wisdome of the High and Honourable Court of Parliament. E. 389 B r. M. — 4 — (Ms. Note v. Thomason „May li)47"), Vorrede unterschrieben: „Samuel Hartlib",... | |
| Stern - 1877 - 1452 pages
...899 i)Boyle's Works I. 22 «f., V. 256 ff. *) Considerations Tending To the Happy Accomplishment ot England's Reformation in Church and State. Humbly presented to the Piety and Wisdome of the High and Ilonourahle Court of Parliament. E. 389 • B r. M. — j — (Ms. Kote v. Thomason „May 1647"),... | |
| Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby - 1903 - 1076 pages
...charitable. His publications, which are devoted chietly to educational and economic reforms, include: Considerations Tending to the Happy Accomplishment of England's Reformation in Church and lítate (submitted to Parliament in 1647); Macaría (1641), containing the outlines of an ideal State;... | |
| Huguenot Society of London - 1911 - 754 pages
...men, some reference to the proposed Office of Address. AN OFFICE OF ADDRESS In a tractate entitled Considerations tending to the Happy Accomplishment of England's Reformation in Church and State, addressed to the Parliament, Samuel Hartlib unfolds his idea of an ' Office of Address.' He urges that... | |
| Archibald Edward Dobbs - 1919 - 284 pages
...the cathedral property. Lastly in 1653 Parliament appointed a Committee for the Advancement of Learn1 Considerations tending to the Happy Accomplishment...presented to the Piety and Wisdome of the High and Honorable Court of Parliament. See Adamson, Pioneers of Modern Education, 1600-1700, 108. 1 They were... | |
| J. C. Davis - 1983 - 444 pages
...dispersal of the Nominated Assembly. It centred on the Office of Address scheme, announced in Hartlib's Considerations Tending to the Happy Accomplishment of England's Reformation in Church and State (1647), and the Webster, 'Macaria: Samuel Hartlib and the Great Reformation', Acta Comeniana, 26 (1970),... | |
| David R. Ransome, John Trevor Cliffe, Mark Greengrass - 1997 - 514 pages
...mans expences to his presente condition; & a resolution not to rayse his expences till 50 John Dury, Considerations tending to the Happy Accomplishment of England's Reformation in Church and State (1647), Wing Hg8i. 51 It is not clear to whom Culpeper refers. it hathc pleased God to blesse & increase... | |
| Melvin Jonah Lasky - 752 pages
...Ouly 1953), 4:232. 26. Samuel Hartlib, Considerations tending to the Happy Accomplishment of Englands Reformation in Church and State, Humbly presented...Wisdome of the High and Honourable Court of Parliament (1647), preface. 27. Some Proposalls towards the Advancement of Learning (MS., 1653), in Hartlib and... | |
| John William Adamson - 1905 - 320 pages
...support, Samuel Hartlib was in his own person just such an Office of Public Address as his project denned. It is not easy to decide what branch of public usefulness...fact, of Comenius's view as expressed in the Great Didactic1. " The magistrate," says Hartlib, "should see schools opened, provided with teachers, endowed... | |
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