Omitted Chapters of the History of England From the Death of Charles I to the Battle of Dunbar 1
Omitted Chapters of the History of England From the Death of Charles I to the Battle of Dunbar 1
Andrew Bisset
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iv. ^ g^^te Trials, vol. iv. p. 1449. 1649.] LILBURNffS ACQUITTAL. 25.1 almost forgot that an English Court of Justice was a field where even they might sustain a defeat that would be equal to the loss of a battle. Lieutenant-Colonel John Lilbume, soon after his ac- quittal on the charge of high treason, having been elected a common-council-man of London, a petition was presented to the House on the 26th of December, 1649, jfrom several aldermen and the sheriffs of London against him; on which ...the Parliament resolved, " That Lieut.-Col. Lilbume was, by the late Act * For disabling the election of divers persons to any oflSoe or place of trust within the city of London,' disabled to be chosen a common-council-man ; and his election was void." * ^ Pari Hist. voL iiL p. 1844. CHAPTER V. We must now direct our attention to the state of affairs in Scotland, where the Presbyterian oligarchy was pre- paring to give effect to the indignation and hatred enter- tained by them against that party which now ruled England, and which they designated by the contemptuous appellation of the '' English Sectaries.'' The state of parties had undergone a great change since the times when the predecessor of the " Council of State *' had been the " Committee of both Bangdoms/' in which together with several members of the present Council of State had sat as the representatives of Scotland, the Earl of Loudon, the Lord Maitland, the Lord Wariston, Sir Charles Erskine, Mr.
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