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MERCURIUS POLITICUS Numb

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:100.00 - 120.00 EUR
MERCURIUS POLITICUS Numb

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
MERCURIUS POLITICUS Numb. 104. Mercurius Politicus. Numb. 104. Comprising the summe of all intelligence, with the affairs and designs now on foot in the three nations of England, Ireland, and Scotland. In defence of the Common-wealth, and for information of the people. From Thursday, May 27. to Thursday, June 3. 1652. (Colophon : Printed by Tho. Newcomb) (1652)(16)-pp (numbered 1625-1640), 4to, disbound, fore and lower edges uncut : very good-nice. Originally edited by Marchamont Nedham and John Hall, then by Nedham alone, and finally by John Canne ; throughout 1651 it was licensed by John Milton. Milton has been described as co-editor for some issues ; this is, however disputed. In its early months Politicus was the doyen of the Commonwealth's radicals, making remarkable proposals for political reform, including, in January 1651, political union with the Netherlands. From October 1651 until August 1652 Nedham included a new series of editorials (in this number the seventh rule is covered on the first three pages : "That Children should bee educated and instructed in the Principles of Freedom … ) which were later published, in subtly revised form, as The Excellencie of a Free State (1656), a key text in British republicanism, and one which may have endangered his rapprochement with the increasingly anti-republican protectorate government. None the less, through the ten years of Politicus (a period which made it the most enduring news periodical before the London Gazette) this radicalism declined, particularly when Nedham was called upon to support an entrenched protectorate. The bulk of four pages is devoted to Irish affairs, beginning " For news in Conaght I cannot say more, then that since the Rendition of Galway, all that Country and Mayo have both submitted to Contribution. The whole Force of the Enemy is marching into the County of Sligoe, on the borders of Ulster & Clanrickard with them, where they intend a conjunction with the Ulster-forces ; and if they can keep their men together, will attempt something on Ulster. I have a considerable body of Horse attending them ; and next week the Commissary-gen. and my self resolv to march directly after them .. ".ALSO WITH THIS LOT: [SHERIDAN ( Thomas ), FRS ]. or, old elements of creed and class conciliation in Ireland. Edited by Saxe Bannister. 1870. a very good to nice copy.Essentially a reprinting of Sheridan's `A Discourse on the Rise and Power of Parliaments, 1677', which the DNB characterises as "of especial interest, both on account of the light it throws on Irish political life, and because of the singularly bold and enlightened manner in which the author proposes to meet the difficulties of administration by a system of conciliation and toleration." A lenghty introduction on Sheridan and his book is included, as is a six-page bibliography of Bannister (one-time Attorney-General of New South Wales and one of the founders of the Aborigines' Protection Society). ADB speaks of his writings as "the writings of a scholar, steeped in British colonial history", and of his ability "to express himself clearly and interestingly." “Sheridan (1646–1712), government official and Jacobite pamphleteer. Early in 1678 he published, anonymously, A Discourse of the Rise and Power of Parliaments. It ‘said little about parliament’ (Hiller, 108), but argued that England needed to maximize its economic potential to counter the threat from France. He denounced religious persecution as economically damaging; laws were needed against religious dissidents, but they should be lightly and sensitively enforced. He argued that Ireland too needed to modernize economically, which would require both freedom of trade and the replacement of the Gaelic language by English.” – ODNB. “In this text Sheridan, like Locke, advocated religious toleration (publishing before Locke's celebrated Letter concerning toleration), but, unlike the whig writer, included Roman catholicism among the creeds to be tolerated. He further argued that intolerance in Ireland made that kingdom vulnerable to French subornation, thereby undermining the acknowledged legitimacy of the Stuart dynasty in that country.” – CDIB.(2)ENGLISH PRE 1701; NEWSPAPERS; PERIODICALS; HISTORY; ENGLAND; IRELAND; ; ; ; ; ;