2'"i S. No 28., July 12. '66. *| 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



23 



them against the Oath of Allegiance, with the Reasons 

 of Penal Laws. 1677(?)." 



" Answer to Three Treatises published under the Title 

 of ' The Jesuits' Loyalty.' 4to. Lend., 1678." 



" An Account of" the Growth of Popery, and Arbitrary 

 Government in England ; more particularly from the 

 long Prorogation of Parliament of Nov. 1675, ending 

 the 15th Feb. 1676, till the last Meeting of Parliament, 

 the 16th of July, 1677. Fol. Lond., 1678. Reprinted 

 in 'State Tracts' in 1689." 



" Popery, or the Principles and Positions approved by 

 the Church of Rome (when really believed and practised), 

 are verj' dangerous to all, and to Protestant Kings and 

 Supreme Powers more especially pernicious and incon- 

 sistent with that Loyalty which (by the Law of Nature 

 and Scripture) is indispensably due to Supreme Powers. 

 By Thomas Barlow, Bishop of Lincoln. 4to. Lond., 

 1679." 



" Brutum Fulmen, or the Bull of Pius V. against Q. 

 Elizabeth, with Observations and Animadversions. By 

 the Same. 4to. Lond., 1681." 



" The King- Killing Doctrine of the Jesuits, translated 

 from the French. By Peter Bellon. 4to. Lond., 1679." 



" The Jesuits' Catechism according to St. Ignatius 

 Loyola for the Instructing and Strengthening of all those 

 which are weake in that Faith. Wherein the Impiety of 

 their Principles, Pernitiousness of their Doctrines, and 

 Iniquitv of their Practises are declared. 4to. Lond., 

 1679." ' 



" The Jesuits Unmasked ; or Politick Observations 

 upon the Ambitious Pretensions and Subtle Intreagues of 

 that Cunning Society. Presented to all High Powers 

 as a Seasonable Discourse at this Time. 4to. Lond., 

 1679." 



" Christian Loj'alty ; or a Dyscourse, wherein is asserted 

 that just Royal Authority and Eminency, which in this 

 Church and Realm of England, is yielded to the King. 

 Especially concerning Supremacy in Causes Ecclesiastical. 

 Together with the Disclaiming all Foreign Jurisdiction ; 

 and the Unlawfulness of Subjects Taking Armes against 

 the King. By William Falkner. 8vo. Lond., 1679." 



" An Exact Discovery of the Mystery of Iniquity as it 

 is now in practice among the Jesuits and other their 

 Emissaries. With a particular Account of their Anti- 

 christian and Devillish Policy. 4to. 1679.'* 



" The Case put concerning the Succession of the D. of 

 York. With some Observations upon the Political Cate- 

 chism, the Appeal, &c., and Three or Four other Libels. 

 2nd edit, enlarged. [By Sir Roger L'Estrange.] Lond., 

 1679." 



" Seasonable Advice to all true Protestants in England 

 in this present Posture of Affairs. Discerdlng the pre- 

 sent Designs of the Papists, with other remafttable Things, 

 tending to the Peace of the Church, and the Security of 

 the Protestant Religion. By a Sincere Lover of his King 

 and Country. 4to. Lond., 1679." 



" A Seasonable Memorial in some Historical Notes 

 upon the Liberties of the Press and Pulpit, with the 

 Effects of Popular Petitions, Tumults, Associations, Im- 

 postures, and disaffected Common Councils. To all good 

 Subjects and true Protestants. 4to. Lond., 1680." [By 

 Sir Roger L'Estrange, partly in favour of the succession of 

 the Duke of York.] 



" Three Great Questions concerning the Succession, 

 and the Danger of Popery. Fully examined in a Letter 

 to a Member of the present Parliament. 4to. 1680." 



" The True Protestant Subject, or the Nature and 

 Rights of Sovereignty discussed and stated. Addressed 

 to the Good People. of England. 4to. Lond., 1680." 



" A Seasonable Address to both Houses of Parliament 

 concerning the Succession, the Fears of Popery, and Ar- 

 bitrary Government. 4to. 1681." 



" A Conference about the next Succession to the Crown 

 of England. By R. Doleman. Reprinted, 1681." 



" The Case of Protestants in England under a Popish 

 Prince, if any shall happen to wear the Imperial Crown. 

 4to. 1681." 



" Loyalty asserted, in Vindication of the Oath of Al- 

 legiance. 8vo. 1681." 



"A Dialogue between the Pope and a Phanatic con- 

 cerning Affairs in England. By a Hearty Lover of his 

 Prince and Country. 4to. Lond., 1681." 



" Ursa Major et Minor, shewing that there is no such 

 Fear as is factiouslv pretended of Poperv and Arbitrary 

 Power. Lond., 168'l." 



" No Protestant Plot, or the present pretended Con- 

 spiracy of Protestants against the King and Government 

 discovered to be a Conspiracy of the Papists against the 

 King and his Protestant Subjects. (By Antony Ashley 

 Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury.) 4to. Lond., 1681." 



"A Letter to a Friend containing certain Observations 

 upon some Passages which have been published in a late 

 Libel, intituled, The Third Part of No Protestant Plot ; 

 and which do relate to the Kingdom of Ireland. 4to. 

 Lond., 1682." 



" Last Efforts of Afflicted Innocence ; being an Account 

 of the Persecution of the Protestants of France, and a 

 Vindication of the Reformed Religion from the Aspersions 

 of Disloyalty and Rebellion charged on it by the Papists, 

 translated from the French by W. Vaughan. 1682." 



" The Loyaltj' of Popish Principles examined in answer 

 to a late Book entitled ' Stafford's Memoirs.' By Robert 

 Hancock. 4to. Lond., 1682." 



" The Judgment of an Anonymous Writer concerning 

 these following particulars : 1. A Law for Disabling a 

 Papist to Inherit the Crown, &c. &c. The second edition, 

 4to. Lond. 1684." 



This was first published In 1674 under a dif- 

 ferent title : see Biographia Britannica. Suppl., 

 p. 95., n. D. Dr. Geo. Hickes was the writer. 



" The Royal Apology, or Answer to the Rebel's Plea, 

 wherein the anti-monarchical Tenents, first published by 

 Doleman the Jesuit, to promote a Bill of Exclusion against 

 King James. Secondh', practised by Bradshaw and the 

 Regicides in the actual Murder of King Charles the 1st. 

 Thirdly, republished by Sidney and the Associators to 

 Depose and Murder his Present Majesty, are distinctly 

 considered. With a Parallel between Doleman, Hrad- 

 shaw, Sidney, and other of the True Protestant Party. 

 4to. Lond., 1684." 



Watt ascribes this work to Sir R. L'Estrange as 

 well as to Assheton. 



" The Apostate Protestant. A Letter to a Friend, oc- 

 casioned by the late reprinting of a Jesuit's Book about 

 Succession to the Crown of England, pretended to have 

 been written by R. Doleman. Bj' Edw. Pelling. 4to. 

 Lond., 1685." 



The first edition was published In 1682. As- 

 cribed by Watt to Sir R. L'Estrange also. 



" Remarks upon the reflections of the Author of Popery 

 misrepresented, &c., on his Answerer ; particularly as to 

 the deposing Doctrine, &c. &c. By Mr. Abednego Seller. 

 4to. 1686." 



" Popery anatomized ; or the Papists cleared from the 

 false Imputations of Idolatry and Rebellion. 4to. 1686." 



"An Answer of a Minister of the Church of England to 

 a Seasonable and Important Question proposed to him by 

 a loyal and religious Member of the present House of 

 Commons, viz.. What Respect ought the true Sons of the 

 Church of England in point of Conscience and Christian 



