The history of the two impostors Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck who, (in the reign of King Henry Vii) were pretenders to the crown of England;set up by Margaret Duchess of Burgundy; chiefly supported by the Kings of France and Scotland; much favour'd by Maximilian King of the Romans; by Philip his Son, the Duke of Burgundy; by the King of Portugal, &c. And acknowledged as Lawful Sovereigns in Flanders, Ireland and England. But were at last detected, defeated, and so deserted by their Adherents, that the One was made a Turn-Spit in the King's Kitchen, and the Other set in the Stocks and Pillory, both in London and Westminster, and then hang'd at Tyburn. With an appendix, shewing the intrigue of the Jesuits at Rome to impose another sham prince upon Great-Britain, in the year 1688

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: S. W
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: London printed for J. Watts at the Printing-Office in Wild-Court near Lincoln's-Inn-Fields: and sold by B. Dod at the Bible and Key in Ave-Mary-Lane near Stationers-Hall 1745, [1745]
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Eighteenth Century Collections Online / ECCO - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Description
Item Description:Dedication signed: S. W. - English Short Title Catalog, T36540. - Price from imprint: Price One Shilling. - Reproduction of original from British Library. - With a final advertisement leaf
Physical Description:Online-Ressource ([8],70,[2]p) 8°