Call Number (LC) Title Results
DA320 .R49 1999 Renaissance culture and the everyday / 1
DA320 .R49 1999eb Renaissance culture and the everyday / 1
DA320 .S3 1969 England in Tudor times; an account of its social life and industries, 1
DA320 .S35 The yeoman in Tudor and Stuart England. 1
DA320 .S53 1999 Shakespeare's England : life in Elizabethan & Jacobean times / 1
DA320 .S555 1999 Pleasures & pastimes in Tudor England / 1
DA320 .S56 1995 Daily life in Elizabethan England / 1
DA320.S78 1583 The second part of the anatomie of abuses, : containing the display of corruptions, with a perfect description of such imperfections, blemishes, and abuses, as now reigning in euerie degree, require reformation for feare of Gods vengeance to be powred vpon the people and countrie, without speedie repentance and conuersion vnto God: made dialogwise / 1
DA320 .S78 1995 Place and displacement in the Renaissance / 1
DA320 .S87 1584 The anatomie of abuses : containing a discouerie, or briefe summarie of such notable vices and corruptions, as nowe raigne in many Christian countreyes of the worlde, but (especially) in the countrey of Ailgna : together, with most fearefull examples of Gods iudgementes, executed vpon the wicked for the same, as well in Ailgna of late, as in other places, elsewhere : very godly, to be read of all true Christians, euery where, but most chiefly, to be regarded in England / 1
DA320 .S874 Family and fortune: studies in aristocratic finance in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. 1
DA320 .S876 1973 The anatomie of abuses. 1
DA320 .S876 2002 Philip Stubbes, The anatomie of abuses / 1
DA320 .W37 2016 The livery collar in late medieval England and Wales : politics, identity and affinity / 1
DA320 .W37 2016eb The livery collar in late medieval England and Wales : politics, identity and affinity / 1
DA320 .W5 1965 Life in Tudor England. 1
DA320 .W7 Life and letters in Tudor and Stuart England, 1
DA320 .Z4 Foundations of Tudor policy. 1
DA325 .A6 Spectacle, pageantry, and early Tudor policy. 1
DA325 .A6 1997 Spectacle, pageantry, and early Tudor policy / 1