The french convert being a true relation of the happy conversion of a noble French lady, from the errors and superstitions of popery, to the reformed religion, by means of a Protestant gardener her servant. Wherein is shewed Her Great and Unparallell'd Sufferings on the Account of her said Conversion; as also Her Wonderful Deliverance from two assassines hired by a Popish Priest to murder her: And of her Miraculous Preservation in a Wood for two Years; and how she was at last Providentially found by her Husband, who (together with her Parents) was brought over by her Means to the Embracing of the True Religion as were divers others also. To which is added, a brief account of the present severe persecutions of the French Protestants
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Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
London
printed for Edw. Midwinter, at the Looking-Glass on London-Bridge
1725, [1725?]
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Edition: | The seventh edition |
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Online Access: | |
Collection: | Eighteenth Century Collections Online / ECCO - Collection details see MPG.ReNa |
Item Description: | English Short Title Catalog, T59230. - Fictitious. - Prefixed by a "copy of a letter sent from a French Protestant minster in France, to his friend in London, with the following relation," signed A. D'Auborn. - Reproduction of original from British Library. - Sometimes attributed to Daniel Defoe or to John Macgowan |
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Physical Description: | Online-Ressource ([8],112p) ill 12° |