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Evans-TCP
The Presbyterian and independent visible churches in New-England and else-where, brought to the test, and examined according to the doctrine of the Holy Scriptures, in their doctrine, ministry, worship, constitution, government, sacraments and Sabbath Day, and found to be no true church of Christ. More particularly directed to these in New-England, and more generally to those in old-England, Scotland, Ireland, &c. : With a call and warning from the Lord to the people of Boston and New-England, to repent, &c. : And two letters to the preachers in Boston; and an answer to the gross abuses, lyes and slanders of Increas [sic] Mather and Samuel Norton, &c. / By George Keith.
Date of publication:
1689
Description:
Caption title: A friendly epistle to these people called Presbyterians & independants.
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Evans-TCP
A serious appeal to all the more sober, impartial & judicious people in New-England to whose hands this may come, whether Cotton Mather in his late address, &c. hath not extreamly failed in proving the people call'd Quakers guilty of manifold heresies, blasphemies and strong delusions, and whether he hath not much rather proved himself extreamly ignorant and greatly possessed with a spirit of perversion, error, prejudice and envious zeal against them in general, and G.K. in particular, in his most uncharitable and rash judgment against him. : Together with a vindication of our Christian faith in those things sincerely believed by us, especially respecting the fundamental doctrines and principles of Christian religion. / By George Keith.
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
In answer to Mather's Little flocks guarded against grievous wolves.
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Evans-TCP
The Christian faith of the people of God, called in scorn, Quakers in Rhode-Island (who are in unity with all faithfull brethren of the same profession in all parts of the world) vindicated from the calumnies of Christian Lodowick, that formerly was of that profession, but is lately fallen there-from. And also from the base forgeries, and wicked slanders of Cotton Mather, called a Minister, at Boston ... : To which is added, some testimonies of our antient Friends to the true Christ of God; collected out of their printed books, for the further convincing of our opposers, that it is (and hath been) our constant and firm belief to expect salvation by the man Christ Jesus that was outwardly crucified without the gates of Jerusalem.
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Attributed to George Keith by Evans. Signed on p. 8 by Edward Thurston and twelve others, including Keith.
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Signed on p. 36: Geo. Keith, Thomas Budd, John Hart, Richard Helliard, Thomas Hooton, Henry Furnis. Imprint supplied by Evans. Two states of the title page noted. One is transcribed here; the other has "With an account of ...
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Caption title. Two states noted. In the first, the title is in five lines, with a comma after "judges", and the word "and" spelled out. In the second, the title is in six lines, with no comma after "judges", "&" for "and", ...
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Caption title. By George Keith. Imprint supplied by Evans. "Books lately printed, and to be sold by William Bradford in Philadelphia. 1692."--p. [16].
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Caption title. Signed on p. 8: George Keith. Imprint from colophon.
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Caption title. Signed on p. 12: George Keith. Imprint supplied by Evans.
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1693
Description:
"The first protest against slavery printed in America."--Evans. Caption title. "Given forth by our Monethly Meeting in Philadelphia, the 13th day of the 8th moneth, 1693. and recommended to all our friends and brethren ...
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1694
Description:
Ascribed to the press of William Bradford by Evans. Errata note, p. [10]. "A chronological account of the several ages of the world from Adam to Christ. ..."--32 p. at end, with separate title page (Wing K154).
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Evans-TCP
A refutation of three opposers of truth, by plain evidence of the Holy Scripture, viz. I. Of Pardon Tillinghast, who pleadeth for water-baptism, its being a Gospel-precept, and opposeth Christ within, as a false Christ. To which is added, something concerning the supper, &c. II. Of B. Keech, in his book called, A tutor for children, where he disputeth against the sufficiency of the light within, in order to salvation; and calleth Christ in the heart, a false Christ in the secret chamber. III. Of Cotton Mather, who in his appendix to his book, called, Memorable providences, relating to witchcraft, &c. doth so weakly defend his father Increase Mather from being justly chargeable with abusing the honest people called Quakers, that he doth the more lay open his father's nakedness; and beside the abuses and injuries that his father had cast upon that people, C. Mather, the son, addeth new abuses of his own. : And a few words of a letter to John Cotton, called a minister, at Plymouth in New England. / By George Keith. ; [Two lines from Zephaniah]
Date of publication:
1690
Description:
(Evans-TCP ; no. N00417) Transcribed from: (Readex Archive of Americana ; Early American Imprints, series I ; image set 516) Images scanned from Readex microprint and microform: (Early American imprints. First series ; no. 516)
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Evans-TCP
The pretended antidote proved poyson: or, The true principles of the Christian & Protestant religion defended, and the four counterfit [sic] defenders thereof detected and discovered; the names of which are James Allen, Joshua Moodey, Samuell Willard and Cotton Mather, who call themselves ministers of the Gospel in Boston, in their pretended answer to my book, called, The Presbyterian & independent visible churches in New-England, and else-where, brought to the test, &c. : And G.K. cleared not to be guilty of any calumnies against these called teachers of New-England, &c. / By George Keith. ; With an appendix by John Delavall, by way of animadversion on some passages in a discourse of Cotton Mathers before the General Court of Massachusetts, the 28th of the third moneth [sic], 1690.
Date of publication:
1690
Description:
"Errata"--p. 224.
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1690
Description:
Attributed to George Keith by Evans.
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Caption title. Signed on p. 8: George Keith, Thomas Budd. Imprint supplied by Evans.
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Caption title. Imprint suggested by Evans and Hildeburn.
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Evans-TCP
The plea of the innocent against the false judgment of the guilty being a vindication of George Keith and his friends, who are joyned with him in this present testimony, from the false judgment, calumnies, false informations and defamations of Samuel Jenings, John Simcock, Thomas LLoyd, and others joyned with them, being in number twenty eight. : Directed by way of epistle to faithful friends of truth in Pennsilvania, East and West-Jarsey, and else-where as occasion requireth. : [Nine lines of Scripture texts]
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Signed on p. 24: George Keith, Thomas Budd. Imprint supplied by Evans.
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
Caption title. Variously attributed to George Keith and Thomas Budd. Imprint supplied by Evans. Errors in paging: p. 6, 7, first count and 4, 5 second count misnumbered 9, 6 and 12, 13. "Books to be sold by William Bradford ...
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
In reply to: Helmont, Francis Mercurius van. Two hundred queries ... Caption title. Imprint suggested by Evans and Hildeburn.
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1692
Description:
"Collected and arranged under this false title by George Keith, for an evil purpose, to pass of as George Fox's."--Smith, Joseph. A descriptive catalogue of Friends' books, v. 2, p. 26.
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1693
Description:
Attributed to George Keith in: Smith, Joseph. A descriptive catalogue of Friends' books, v. 1, p. 27. Apparently a joint effort of Keith and Thomas Budd, including also Bradford's account of the trial. Cf. Eames, Wilberforce. ...
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Evans-TCP
Date of publication:
1693
Description:
Signed on p. 22: George Keith. Errors in pagination: p. 5, 8, 15 misnumbered 7, 6, 13.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1676
Description:
Place of publication suggested by NUC pre-1956 imprints. A reply to: Quakerism canvassed : Robin Barclay baffled in the defending of his theses against young students at Aberdene. Reproduction of original in the Bodleian Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1696
Description:
The second book of the history of the Quakers has separate paging. "Our antient testimony renewed ... London, 1695" has special t.p. on p. 31 at end. Imperfect: pages stained. Reproduction of original in the Union Theological ...
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1694
Description:
Caption title. Signed (p. 16): George Keith. Imprint from colophon. Reproduction of original in Bodleian Library.
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EEBO-TCP
The Presbyterian and independent visible churches in New-England and else-where brought to the test, and examined according to the doctrin of Holy Scriptures ... : more particulary directed to those in New-England, and more generally to those in old England, Scotland, Ireland, &c. : with a call and warning from the Lord to the people of Boston and New-England, to repent, &c. : and two letters to the preachers in Boston, and an answer to the gross abuses, lies and slanders of Increase Mather and Nath. Morton, &c. / by George Keith.
Date of publication:
1691
Description:
Reproduction of original in Union Theological Seminary Library, New York.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1674
Description:
Caption title on p. 1 reads: Some clear testimonies unto the truth, (as it is owned by the people called in derision Quakers collected out of the works and books of William Tindall martyr. Running title reads: A looking-glass ...
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1670
Description:
Reproduction of original in Union Theological Seminary Library, New York. Errata: p. 9 [i.e. 22]
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EEBO-TCP
Quakerism no popery, or, A particular answere to that part of Iohn Menzeis, professor of divinity in Aberdeen, (as he is called) his book, intituled Roma mendax Wherein the people called Quakers are concerned, whom he doth accuse as holding many popish doctrins, and as if Quakerism, (so he nick-names our religion,) were but popery-disguised. In which treatise his alleadged grounds for this his assertion, are impartialy and fairly examined and confuted: and also his accusation of popery against us, justly retorted upon himself, and his bretheren. By George Keith.
Date of publication:
1675
Description:
Imprint place from Wing. A reply to Menzeis, John. Roma mendax. Reproduction of the original in the Harvard University Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1693
Author(s):
Keith, George, 1639?-1716.
;
Boss, Peter, defendant.
;
Budd, Thomas, 1648-1699, defendant.
and
Bradford, William, 1663-1752, defendant.
Description:
Imprint from NUC pre-1956. "This seems to be the joint production of George Keith and Thomas Budd, including Bradford's own account of the trial." Cf. Eames, W. The first year of printing in New York. New York, 1928, no. ...
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1693
Description:
Advertisement: p. 22. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1675
Description:
Reproduction of original in the British Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1696
Description:
Errata: p. 62. Half title: G. Keith's narrative of the proceedings at Turners-Hall, the eleventh of the month called June, 1696. The appendix contains quotations from the works of George Whitehead, William Penn and Thomas ...
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EEBO-TCP
A Farther account of the great divisions among the Quakers in Pensilvania, &c. as appears by another of their books lately come over from thence, intituled, Some reasons and causes of the late separation, that hath come to pass at Philadelphia, betwixt us, called by some of the seperate meeting, and others that meet apart from us : more particularly opened, to vindicate and clear us and our testimony in that repsect, viz. : that the seperation lieth at their door, and they, and not we, are justly chargeable with it : with an apology for the present publication of these things.
Date of publication:
1693
Description:
Philadelphia edition, 1692, signed: Thomas Budd, George Keith, Henry Furnis [and others] Reproduction of original in Cambridge University Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1697
Description:
Reproduction of original in Huntington Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1687
Description:
Postscript signed: Stephen Crisp. Reproduction of the original in the British Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1668
Description:
Reproduction of original in the Harvard University Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1665
Description:
Preface signed: Alex. Jaffray. T.p. cropped, imprint lacking. Imprint information supplied from Wing. Errata: p. [1] at end. "Writ about the beginning of the 11 month in the year 1664": p. 75. Reproduction of original in ...
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1693
Description:
Signed: George Keith. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1665
Description:
Reproduction of original in the British Library.
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EEBO-TCP
Date of publication:
1694
Description:
"A loving epistle to all the moderate, judicious and impartial amoung the people called Quakers in London and elsewhere": p. 1-8. Statement at end signed: J.R. [i.e. John Raunce] Reproduction of original in Bodleian Library.
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