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COLLIER ( Jeremy ). An ecclesiastical history of Great Britain, chiefly of England … to the end of

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:60.00 - 80.00 EUR
COLLIER ( Jeremy ).  An ecclesiastical history of Great Britain, chiefly of England … to the end of

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 19 @ 18:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
COLLIER ( Jeremy ). An ecclesiastical history of Great Britain, chiefly of England … to the end of the reign of King Charles the Second. With a brief account of the affairs of religion in Ireland … [bound with:] COLLIER ( Jeremy ) An answer to some exceptions in Bishop Burnet's third part of the History of the Reformation, &c. against Mr. Collier's Ecclesiastical Hiostory. Together with a reply to some remarks in Bishop Nicholson's English Historical Liibrary, &c. upon the same subject. London : Printed for Richard Sare, Benjamin Tooke, Daniel Midwinter and George Strahan, 1715. London : Printed for Samuel Keble … and Benjamin Tookse …, 1708-04-15FIRST EDITIONS, with a fine impression of the engraved frontispiece by Sturt after Lens, pages xx, 736, (24) : xx, 904, 119, (1, blank), (20) : 12, with a 4-page subscriber list (not identical) in each volume, 2 works in 2 vols, folio, contemporary panelled calf : one label defective and the bindings though strong, are rubbed and worn, minor worming in the blank margin of the last few leaves of the first volume, well clear of text : a very good copy. Collier (1650–1726), anti-theatrical polemicist and bishop of the nonjuring Church of England. “The Ecclesiastical History derived its constitutional history from the work of Robert Brady, who had been master of Gonville and Caius when Collier was an undergraduate, and who had argued that the English constitution was not handed down from the Anglo-Saxon period or earlier, but instead rested on the conquest of William I. Collier sought to demonstrate, in contrast to the comparatively recent origins of the civil power, ‘the continued existence in England of the bearers of the divine commission, free both from papal and royal interference’ (Hopes, 171). The nonjurors were presented as the representatives of an unchanging ecclesiastical tradition handed down from the early church. The Ecclesiastical History brought accusations that Collier was a Roman Catholic sympathizer from Gilbert Burnet and others, but Collier never sought union with the Church of Rome, and continued to reject its doctrine and claim to supremacy.” – ODNB.(2)ENGLISH PRE 1801; HISTORY; THEOLOGY; ENGLAND; IRELAND; RELIGION; ; ; ; ; ;