Items
-
A letter to the King on Catholic emancipation : being an answer to certain statements in a late publication, entitled a "Letter from the King to his Catholic subjects."
A letter to the King on Catholic emancipation : being an answer to certain statements in a late publication, entitled a "Letter from the King to his Catholic subjects." -
Selections from Pope, Dryden, and various other British Catholic poets, who preceded the nineteenth century: with biographical and literary notices of those and other British Catholic poets of their class, comprising a brief history of British Catholic poetry from an early period
-
The Holy Family hymns
-
Jesus and Mary: or, Catholic Hymns
-
Catholic history of Liverpool
-
The true story of the Catholic hierarchy deposed by Queen Elizabeth: with fuller memoirs of its last two survivors
-
The register of Adam de Orleton, Bishop of Hereford (A.D. 1317–1327)
Transcribed and edited with an introduction by A.T. Bannister. -
Converts to Rome : a biographical list of the more notable converts to the Catholic Church in the United Kingdom during the last sixty years
-
Tracts published under the superintendence of the Catholic Institute of Great Britain. Tracts 1-38. vol. 1
CONTENTS. A Short Account of the Origin and Progress of the Catholic Institute of Great Britain, with an Appendix of Documents. Apostolic Letter from His Holiness Pope Gregory XVI to the Right Honourable the Earl of Shrewsbury, President of the Catholic Institute. TRACTS. 1. Declaration of the Catholic Bishops, the Vicars Apostolic, and their Coadjutors in Great Britain. 2. Bishop Baines' Sermon on Faith, Hope, and Charity. 3. The Widow Wolfrey versus the Vicar of Carisbrooke ; or Prayer for the Dead 4. Bishop Milner's Letters on the Rule of Faith, or the Method of finding out the True Religion, No. I. 5. Ditto No. II. 6. Ditto No. III. 7. Bishop Milner's Catholic Scriptural Catechism. 8. Bishop Challoner's Touchstone of the New Religion, and the True Principles of a Catholic annexed. 9. The True Principles separately. 10. Sixty Reasons in favour of the Old Religion; or the Cogitations of a Convert to the Catholic Faith. 11. A Short Account of the Conversion of the Hon. and Rev. G. Spencer to the Catholic Faith, written by himself. 12. An Inquiry into the Doctrine of Good Works, Merit, &c. 13. A Refutation of the Charge of Religious Persecution, urged against the Catholic Religion ; being an Abridgment of his Fourth Letter to a Prebendary, by the Right Rev. John Milner, D.D., F.S.A. 14. A Short Treatise on Fasting. 15. The High Church Claims, No. I. — by the Right Rev. Nicholas Wiseman, occasioned by the Controversy respecting Dr. Hampden's appointment to the Theological Chair at Oxford, in 1836. 16. Ditto ditto, No. II. — occasioned by a Sermon by the Rev. John Reble, M. A., entitled "Primitive Christianity recognized in Holy Scripture." 17. The High Church claims, No. III. — occasioned by the publication of the "Tracts for the Times." 18. Ditto ditto, No. IV. — occasioned by the "Tracts for the Times," and the publication of a new Edition of the Works of the Rev. Richard Hooker, with additions, arranged by the Rev. John Keble. 19. Ditto ditto, No. V. — occasioned by the publication of the " Tracts for the Times." 20. Ditto ditto, No. VI. — occasioned by the publication of the "Remains of the late Rev. H. Froude, M.A." 21. Tracts from the Fathers of the English Church, No. I. — Two Letters of Alcuin on the Confession of Sins 22. Reasons for Subscribing to the Exclusive Teaching and Authority of the Catholic Church, by John Athanasius Cooke, Esq. Barrister-at-Law 23. Mumford's Catholic Scripturist, No. I. — Scripture and Tradition 24. A Search into Matters of Religion, by Francis Walsingham, Deacon of the Protestant's Church before his Change to the Catholic 25. Mumford's Catholic Scripturist, No. II. — Perpetuity of the Church — its Universality and Infallibility 26. Nuns and Monastic Institutes 27. Mumford's Catholic Scripturist, No. III. — Roman Church the infallible Church — the Supremacy of St. Peter — the Pope not Antichrist. 28. Remarks on the Erroneous Opinions entertained respecting the Catholic Religion, by Henry Howard, Esq. 29. Tracts from the Fathers of the English Church, No. II. — Alcuin on the Holy Eucharist and the Ceremonies of Baptism 30. Pastoral Charge of the Archbishop of Tours, for the Lent of 1840 31. Mumford's Catholic Scripturist, No. IV. — Of the Sacraments of the Church and accompanying Ceremonies — Baptism — Confirmation 32. Ditto ditto, No. V. — Of the Holy Eucharist and Communion under one kind 33. Ditto ditto, No. VI. — Of the Mass 34. Ditto ditto. No. VII. — Of Saying Mass and other Public Prayers in the Latin Tongue 35. Dialogues on Methodism, by the Rev. J. A. Mason, No. I. 36. Mumford's Catholic Scripturist, No. VIII. — Penance — Extreme Unction — Holy Order — Matrimony — Single Life of Priests 37. Dialogues on Methodism, by the Rev. J. A. Mason, No. II. 38. An Account of the Conversion of an American Family, by the Right Rev. Dr. Hughes, Bishop of Basileopolis and Coadjutor of New York -
Foley, Records, Volume 1 (1877)
-
Foley, Henry – Records of the English Province of the Society of Jesus: historic facts illustrative of the labours and sufferings of its members in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
-
Sommervogel, Carlos – Bibliothèque de la Compagnie de Jésus
-
Christian feminism: a charter of rights and duties
-
Catholic emancipation tracts, 1826–1829 (31 items)
[1]. Declaration of the Catholic bishops, the vicars apostolic and their coadjutors in Great Britain [2]. An address from the British Roman Catholics to their Protestant fellow countrymen [3]. A letter to the Duke of Wellington on the Catholic claims by J. Doyle [4]. A reply to the charge of Dr. Elrington ... / by Dr. Doyle [5]. Dr. Doyle's letter to Lord Farnham on the second reformation in Ireland [6]. People of England! [7]. Monkish superstition, modern improvements [8]. Triumph of justice and liberty over tyranny and oppression through the influence of the Catholic clergy. [9]. Civil and religious liberty [10]. Happy homes and altars free [11]. Modern method of converting idolaters by bible saints [12]. Address of the Catholics of Ireland to the people of England [13]. A slight view of an ascendancy inquisition [14]. Great Britain and Ireland [15]. A few samples of national disadvantages produced by the Reformation [16]. A slight peep into the church vestry system in Ireland [17]. Specimens of the conversions at Cavan by bible saints [18]. To the people of England [19]. Speech of Mr. Eneas M'Donnell at the British Catholic Association meeting. [20]. Error refuted and truth stated [21]. Conduct of the Irish law church clergy [22]. Ireland, plain facts submitted to the sober sense of Englishmen [23]. Defence of Catholic doctrines by Patrick Spence [24]. Education in Ireland [25]. Address of Catholics of Ireland to the Protestant dissenters of England [26]. Simultaneous meetings in Ireland in the cause of civil and religious liberty [27]. The new Reformation [28]. Protestant Episcopal Church establishment of England and Ireland [29]. The forty-shilling freeholder [30]. National eudcation [sic] [31]. Appeal of the Catholics of Ireland to the people of England. -
Butler, Charles – Historical memoirs of the English, Irish, and Scottish Catholics since the Reformation
-
A speech delivered by the Revd. John Dennis, A.B. at a meeting held at Teignmouth, on Thursday, May 24th 1827, for the purpose of petitioning both houses of Parliament, to grant no further concessions to the Roman Catholics
-
Speech of the Right Honourable Lord Somers, in the House of Lords, on the Catholic question, delivered on Friday, January 30, 1812; with some supplemental observations relative to the same subject
-
The Latin hymns of the Anglo-Saxon church: with an interlinear Anglo-Saxon gloss derived chiefly from a manuscript of the eleventh century preserved in the library of the dean and chapter of Durham
-
Gillow, Joseph – A literary and biographical history, or bibliographical dictionary, of the English Catholics from the breach with Rome, in 1534, to the present time