HARDWICKE PAPERS. Vol. DCCXXXVII. Anonymous treatise concerning the minority of a King and the administration of government during a King's minority. Endorsement and note on f. 40 b in the hand of the 1st Lord Hardwicke. Paper; ff. 43. XVIIIth cent. 14 ¾ x 9 ¾ in. Political Tracts: Treatise on ...
HARDWICKE PAPERS. Vols. DCCLXXVII.-DCCLXXXV. Warrants to the Attorney- or Solicitor-General (as in 36,123 above) for patents for public officials, peers, baronets etc., and for pardons, naturalizations, and other miscellaneous purposes, with accompanying papers; 1720-1733, 1756-1766. Signed by the King or Lords Justices, and countersigned by Secretaries of State, Commissioners of the Treasury and Admiralty, etc. Nine volumes. Paper. Folio.
HARDWICKE PAPERS. Vols. DCCXCVII., DCCXCVIII. Peerage cases in the House of Lords, 1730-1769, being chiefly notes by the 1st Earl of Hardwicke or briefs of the Hon. Charles Yorke, with some other papers relating to the subject. Two volumes.; Paper. Folio.
HARDWICKE PAPERS. Vols. DII., DIII. Proceedings of the two Commissions appointed in Ireland, by the Convention and by the Lords Justices and Council, 1660-1661, including a collection of papers referred to by them in the proposals for the settlement of Irish affairs, the earliest being the constitution of the (Roman Catholic) Supreme Council in 1642. Another copy of the whole is in Dean Milles' collections (Add. MS. 4,781). Two volumes. Paper; ff. 156, 138. XVIIIth cent. Folio.
HARDWICKE PAPERS. Vols. DXXXV., DXXXVI. Diplomatic papers relating to Spain, 1721-1757, being copies of treaties, despatches, etc. Two volumes. Two sets of papers in Vol. l., relating to Gibraltar (ff. 72-130), were issued to the House of Commons in' Feb. and March, 173 0/1. The later copies from Sir Benjamin Keene's correspondence, 1733-1757, are transcripts made for the 2nd Earl of Hardwicke, but a few papers of the lot Earl are among them. Paper. Folio.
HARDWICKE PAPERS. Vol. DLXXXVIII. Abridgment, or systematic arrangement of cases, from the Year-books, to temp. Edw. IV. In French. Like the earliest printed abridgment (1495 ?, attributed to Nicholas Statham) it follows the wording of the Year-books closely, but the collection is more ample tha...