Reference code
DWL/RB/1
Level of description
subfonds
Title
Richard Baxter Treatises
Date
1638-1691
Extent and Medium
Extent:12 folio, ff 2-13b (ff 2v, 3v, 4v, 5v, 6v, 7v, 8v, 9v, 10v, 11v are blank)
Creator
Scope and content
Richard Baxter (1615-91) was described by A G Matthews in Calamy Revised as “the outstanding figure among ejected ministers”. Although he was one of those ministers appointed chaplains to the King in 1660, and despite his attendance at and contribution to the negotiations held at the Savoy to decide on the shape and details of the restored Church of England, he was harassed and imprisoned in the reigns of both Charles II and James II. The biographical dictionary, accompanying the Entring Book of Roger Morrice (Woodbridge 2007), states that Baxter “retired from the Church of England on the passing of the Act of Uniformity”. The word retire may give a misleading impression of genteel withdrawal from public life, rather than the principled and self-denying choice which he and perhaps some 2000 nonconformist divines felt compelled to make. Yet, in spite of harsh treatment after 1662, Baxter consistently favoured the cause of ecclesiastical comprehension and did not actually leave the Church of England, although he was inhibited in the continuance of his ministry. In fact he sought to and did attend the parish church whenever he could, though that attendance also brought him some criticism.
Neil Keeble has described Richard Baxter as “throughout his life a voluminous correspondent” and the volume of his correspondence is matched by that of his many other writings which demonstrate a consistent engagement with current affairs, with movements in theology and with the vicissitudes of everyday life. Dr Williams’s Library contains the great majority of the extant manuscripts which relate to Baxter, among which are numerous letters, the subject of Keeble and Nuttall’s two volumed Calendar of the Correspondence of Richard Baxter(1991). Certainly Baxter could not refrain from writing. This puritan minister who did not attend university lived as much through his writings as through any other medium. The annotated list of Baxter’s works, compiled by A G Matthews in 1932, contains 135 works written and published in his lifetime and 6 more published posthumously, including his autobiography the Reliquiae Baxterianae (1696). A further 37 contributions to other works were also listed by Matthews, to which Geoffrey Nuttall added another 17, in his own copy of Matthews’ list (now held at Dr Williams’s Library). That is, Baxter wrote or contributed to something like 195 published works.
The manuscripts, contained in the Baxter Treatises at DWL, offer drafts and copies of some of his better known works, including much that makes its way into the later published Reliquiae Baxterianae. As a whole the treatises offer revealing insights into the creation of his published works, as well as his responses to the work of other major figures of the period. They are not easy to consult, however, for they have been arranged haphazardly. They also contain some scoring out and some marginal notes and, at times, a good deal of shorthand.
In addition then to the six volumes of Baxter letters in the DWL holdings (containing some 621 separate items), are several so called volumes of Baxter ‘Treatises’, the first seven of which are the most weighty and most significant. These seven volumes contain about 274 separate items. Furthermore there are fourteen slighter volumes containing some 86 items which take the total of items in the Baxter Treatises to 362. Many of the items are subdivided and some are bulky, making a substantial amount of material overall. This catalogue of these treatises aims to provide readers with an outline of each treatise so that they might readily see the possible benefits from consulting them. These ‘volumes’ of treatises have been in effect loose gatherings of manuscripts jumbled together at some time in the past and subsequently maintained in modern and more appropriate boxes, designed to hold such archives, in contrast to their previous homes. The recent disbinding of the volumes allows greater scope for their examination and has improved their long-term preservation prospects.
The volumes consist of treatises, tracts, disputations, sermons, exercises, drafts, letters and miscellaneous papers. Although as a collection, the Baxter holdings at DWL are widely recognised to be of considerable importance, the treatises themselves have been largely ignored or overlooked by scholars, unaware of their existence or daunted by their diversity, complexity and perhaps by their physical condition.
The treatises were not all written by Baxter, although most relate to him in some way, but again not all. For instance, RB/1/65 contains the remarks of Sir Francis Nethersole (1587-1659) concerning two articles in The Solemn League and Covenant of 1643. Nethersole saw the articles as resembling a creed, although he had no deep conscientious problem with the covenant itself, for he believed that parliament had raised its forces for the houses’ “just defence” against the army of the king.
Nevertheless the treatises are correctly known as the Baxter Treatises because they were found to be in his possession at his death, probably by his executor, Matthew Sylvester (1636/7-1708), also an ejected minister, to whom Baxter in his will left £20 and the care of all his manuscripts, none of which were to be published without the approval of certain named nonconformist ministers, among whom were Roger Morrice (1628/9–1702) and Daniel Williams (c 1643-1716). Unfortunately Sylvester proved unable to impose order upon Baxter’s ‘great quantity of loose Papers’ - hence the confused state of the Reliquiae Baxterianae which reflects the similar disorder of the treatises.
The treatises reveal not only Baxter’s contacts with the highly placed like Archbishop Ussher of Armagh, Gilbert Sheldon, Bishop of London and later Archbishop of Canterbury, Sir Edward Hyde, Lord Chancellor, later Lord Clarendon, Lord Orrery, Lord Conway ( Baxter’s step-mother was Conway’s aunt and he addressed Baxter’ father as ‘cousin’) but also his dealings with humble apprentices, troubled wives, Baptists and Quakers. Moreover they touch on the bizarre, eccentric and the mundane. The treatises show a concern for both the saving of souls and the saving of bodies.
The wide ranging nature of Baxter’s concerns are evident in other of his writings here. Some time after 1662, Baxter wrote a political, ecclesiastical and historical tract on the true state of the divisions in England RB/1/13 in order to inform better any foreigners who might “marvel at the madness and misery of distracted and divided England”. Yet, he wondered, “Is any great part of this world in any better case?”
Inevitably the treatises touch on Baxter’s brushes with the law. One document from June 1669, is directed to the Keeper of His Majesty’s Gaol, known as the New Prison, in Clerkenwell. It states that Baxter had preached “in an unlawful assembly, conventicle or meeting” and as a result he was to be detained and imprisoned in the New Prison. Also in 1669 RB/1/53 is the warrant for Baxter’s arrest, issued to the constables of Acton where Baxter was then living. The constables were informed that they must straightway apprehend Baxter and bring him before the justices at the Red Lion in Brentford on the following Friday.
In 1683 Baxter wrote in defence of nonconformist ministers to an unnamed Scottish lord (RB/1/22) who did not understand, in Baxter’s words, “our case”. “My Lord, you tell me that you were among some great men, when one said, He went to here Mr Baxter and that he preacht & prayed so well that his judgment was, He ought to beaten with many stripes”.
However in October 1686 we have, but not in Baxter’s own handwriting, his petition to the king, then James II (RB/1/33). In this Baxter asked the monarch to allow his discharge from the bond and penalties imposed upon him unjustly, in his view, two years previously. By then he had been in prison for over a year and he was not to be released for another 6 months or so.
Almost at the end of his life, Baxter’s concern for common folk surfaced in “The Husbandman’s advice to rich racking landlords”, which was “written in Compassion especially of their soules and of the land” (RB/1/93). He exhorted “the Lords, Knights and Gentlemen of England … not to come to Dives’ place of torment [a reference to the biblical story of the rich man and Lazarus – Luke 16:19-31]: and to believe Christ who assureth them that by what they faithfully give to the poore, they give incomparably more to themselves, as giving it to him that will reward them”. This manuscript, consisting of 7 chapters, was written by Baxter in October 1691, a few weeks before his death.
One obvious fact which emerges from a study of the Baxter Treatises is that Baxter himself, perhaps like many of his contemporaries among English and perhaps other ministers, was to modern eyes extraordinarily well read. That is the Treatises throw up his acquaintance not only with the celebrated writings of Augustine, Origen and Lactantius, with the reformers Calvin, Bucer and Beza, and with contemporary philosophers like Hobbes and Spinoza, all of which might be expected, but also with the Dutchmen, Hugo de Groot (Grotius) and J J Scaliger, the French Reformed theologians, Raymond Gaches, David Blondel and Daniel Chamier, the Germans Schwenckfeld, Polanus and Johnannes Clauberg, the disciple of Boehme, Quirinius Kuhlmann, the Italian, Girolamo Zanchi (Zanchius), the medical scholar, Jan Jesensky of Prague, and the Polish Reformed thinker, Jan Makowski (Maccovius), among many others, revealing a network of intellectual contacts which transcended national boundaries and prejudices. This erudition enabled him to provide the thoughtful responses to immediate issues, which marked his writings and rendered his work so difficult to dismiss.
Header Notes
Throughout Argent's Calendar to the Treatises he includes, in sequence, 'header notes' to the volumes. These notes are descriptive of the often uneven gatherings and of their authorship and composition. As this catalogue is descriptive of the treatises after their disbinding we decided to move these notes to the Scope and Content section of the catalogue:
- Volume IV Black: Treatises vol. iv, containing numbers 75-131 of the first series of papers.
- Volume VI Containing the first part of a third series, described in the old list as ‘A bundle of imperfect Papers’.
- For Volume VIII (items 285-292) see Volume XXII
- Volume IX Black: All (except art 5) written by the same hand as the signature on the corner of the first leaf (folio 1), ‘Tho. Hall of Kingsnorton Worcestorshire’; for the most part on alternate pages and some parts of the volume are left blank. It is evidently from the numerous corrections and additions throughout not a copy but the author’s orginal MS, notwithstanding what might appear to the contrary by the title page: ‘Pestis eram vivens, moriens tua mors ero Papa’. This MS, though evidently intended for posthumous publication, does not appear to have been known to the author’s biographers.
- Volume X Black: In rough calf, without title, heading, or date; irregularly paged, and foliated by the author; the latter half is blank and blank pages are left here and there. Richard Baxter’s Adversaria Theologica, volume I. Thomas: Three volumes (vols 10-12) partly used in collecting notes and extracts from various writing, with considerable portions in shorthand.
- Volume XI Black: A thicker and shorter volume, bound in smooth calf, without title. Irregularly paged and fliated by the author, but now foliated throughout in pencil. The tops of f 7, f 11, f 12, f 14, f 17, f 18 have been cut off, evidently by Baxter himself to adapt the first part of the book to his existing purpose. Richard Baxter’s Adversaria Theologica. Volume II. Thomas: Three volumes (vols 10-12) partly used in collecting notes and extracts from various writing, with considerable portions in shorthand.
- Volume XII Black: A neat volume in old brown calf, containing 172 leaves, partly paged, and mostly blank. Thomas: Volumes 10-12 are partly used in collecting notes and extracts from various writing, with considerable portions in shorthand.
- Volume XIII Black: In old brown sheep skin. Written by two different hands; to p. 256, and paged to 261 by the first hand; from p. 257 to the hand by another, and throughout corrected by the author. There are 6 vacant leaves at the beginning, and 54 at the end.
- Volume XIV Black: In rough calf, with clasps: stamped RB on both covers. The lining, and fly leaves at both hands, are portion of the printed Apocrypha in octavo; on those at the beginning.
- Volume XV Black: A collection of small MSS and fragments, heretofore unarranged and unbound; now put together and intitled – Miscellanea Baxteriana minora.
- Volume XVI Black: Three original manuscripts together with Baxter’s editorial matter, prefixed and subjoined. They constituted ‘No. 68’ in the series of Baxter’s Treatises: and some portions were bound up in the third volume of them: but the remaining portion being since found among loose leaves just as they came from Baxter’s printer, the whole is now collected and bound together. The whole of these MSS is printed in Baxter’s very rare publication entitled The Judgment of the late Lord Chief Justice Sir Matthew Hale, of the nature of true religion… (London, 1684), quarto; and their history may be seen in the preface; where Baxter says: ‘And lest any accuse me of forgery, I hope to preserve the Manuscripts, and doubt not that Lady Hale or Mr Stevens hath a copy of them’. He says that only the two verses Compositum jus fasque etc. were by Sir Matthew’s own hand; but the transcript appear to have been corrected by him. Two leaves follow, which seem to be parts of the original wrapper, with marks of sealing wax; containing: A shorthand note by Baxter or Morrice, with the date 21 Sept. 1682 (f 44v). Baxter’s endorsement ‘Judge Hale’s papers’ (f 45v). These MSS are thus mentioned by Baxter in the Rel. speaking of Hale and of his writings: ‘Two or three small tractates, written for me, I have published, expressing the simple and excellent nature of true religion, and the corruption and great evils that follow men’s additaments, called wrongfully by the name of religion, and contended far above it and against it; and showing how most parties are guilty of this sin.’ (Rel. iii. 181) The Latin Compositum jus fasque is the beginning of a quotation from the Satires of Persius. See also Treatises ix, 299. For Edward Stephens (d 1706), the son-in-law of Sir Matthew Hale, see ODNB and Corr 994, 1041, 1127 and 1179. See also Treatises iii, 68 and xvi, 341.
- Volume XVIII Black: Baxter’s manuscripts quarto unbound and found among loose papers, partly consisting of sheets sown together, and partly loose; and now completed by the incorporation of 27 leaves, formerly bound in the first volume of ‘Treatises’ as no. 18. f 2r: ‘A Treatise against the Dominicane doctrine of Divine Predetermination, feigned by them to be necessary to all actions naturall & free, even those that God forbiddeth, as they are determined to their forbidden objects, in all their modes & circumstances; & this by the naturall necessity of the dependance of the second Cause on the first, moving it by Physicall efficient immediate identifike predetermining Premotion In two Parts I An old Disputation written twenty yeares agoe & now published as a necessary Antidote against the Poyson of Mr Hobbes & some late Contenders writings that furiously call the Church to Armes against Truth & Peace for their dangerous undigested notions. II Animadversions on a booke called The Court of the Gentiles: Part 4: Predetermination. By Richard Baxter, A resolved defender of necessary Truth, Love & Peace to his power’
- Volume XIX Black: A small volume, consisting of severall sheets folded in octavo; very closely written, and irregularly paged by Baxter. They were formerly bound among the Treatises, partly as ‘number 76’ and partly as ‘number 83’ in volume 4.
- Volume XX Black: A small volume, consisting of four sheets folded in ocatovo and very closely written by Baxter; formerly bound as number 75 among the Treatises, vol. iv.
- Volume XXI Black: Several mss formerly bound up (in part) with the folio papers, and (in part) found loose; now placed together, and forming a small volume. They are neatly and uniformely written by the same hand as Lord Lauderdale’s Letters to Baxter; and one here numbered as marked in the series of Treatises.
- Volume XXII Black: Several quires of very large paper, intermingled with sheets or leaves of different series, now collected out of the unbound fragments. Reliquiae Baxterianae: or fragments of the Autobiography of Richard Baxter, as originally written by him, and including passages omitted in Sylvester’s publication under that title.
- AGM – The Works of Richard Baxter. An Annotated List(1932) compiled by A G Matthews (listed without annotations in Corr vol I, xxi-xxiv)
- Black – W H Black’s ms catalogue of the Baxter Treatises, prepared 1856-63
- Corr – N H Keeble and G F Nuttall (eds) Calendar of the Correspondence of Richard Baxter (Oxford 1991) 2 vols
- CR – A G Matthews Calamy Revised (Oxford 1934)
- DAB- Dictionary of American Biography
- DWB – Dictionary of Welsh Biography
- DWL – Dr Williams’s Library, London
- Entring Book Glossary – The Entring Book of Roger Morrice 1677-1691 Volume VI ed M Goldie (Woodbridge 2007) M Goldie ‘Glossary’
- JEH – Journal of Ecclesiastical History
- McElligott – The Entring Book of Roger Morrice 1677-1691 Volume VI ed M Goldie (Woodbridge 2007) J McElligott ‘Biographical Dictionary’
- ODNB – Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- ODCC – Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
- Rel – R Baxter Reliquiæ Baxterianæ: or, Mr. Richard Baxter’s narrative of the most memorable passages of his life and times (ed M Sylvester) one volume in three parts (1696)
- Thomas – R Thomas The Baxter Treatises - a catalogue of the Richard Baxter papers (other than the letters) in Dr Williams’s Library - Dr Williams’s Library Occasional Paper no 8 (1959)
- VCH – Victoria County History
System of arrangement
The Treatises range chronologically across Baxter’s life from the 1630s (with his admission to deacon’s status and his licence to preach in the Church of England in 1638) to his death in 1691, although not all the treatises are dated. Where the treatises are undated, some approximate dates were estimated by Roger Thomas, Dr Williams’s librarian 1946-67, in his catalogue largely basing his estimates upon references in the Reliquiae Baxterianae. This catalogue offers, based on internal evidence, and on the relation of individual treatises to outside events and to contemporary publications, to offer an approximate date for some treatises. However these estimates should be treated as such and should not be regarded as authoritative.
The 19th century arrangement of the manuscripts in the volumes was haphazard and accorded to no clear principles of subject matter or chronology. For instance RB/1/1 (formerly the first item in volume 1 i.e. Treatises i.1), is a brief of the charges against Baxter from his trial in 1685, whereas RB/1/322 is a letter from Baxter, dated 16 and 17 March 1654/5, and RB/1/323 (formerly volume 7 item 268) is dated 25 October, 1672, being a letter from Baxter to a person at court, requesting the King’s licence for preaching. Treatises RB/1/161 is a certificate from the Westminster Assembly of Divines in March 1648 approving Baxter’s appointment to the parish church in Kidderminster, in Worcestershire.
The treatises are, therefore, a decidedly mixed assortment but they offer the scholar a feast of informed, perceptive insights into the second half of the seventeenth century, mostly from a tolerant, if opinionated, observer. Perhaps the nonconformists in general might have been best advised in the Restoration period to obey the law and avoid controversy which some did, but Baxter was unable to limit himself to such guarded behaviour. Therefore the treatises, if properly catalogued and listed, with clear descriptive outlines of what lies within the manuscripts, constitute a rich source into the life and times of one awkward and energetic individual in particular (informing and filling out passages in the Reliquiae), but also into late seventeenth English life in general.
Physical characteristics and technical requirements
The Volumes
The Baxter Treatises are written on paper of different sizes, all of which were flattened and bound (though the term bound gives a misleading impression of collections of manuscripts grouped together and, in many cases forced together, in untidy, ill fitting sets, with larger manuscripts folded so as to conform to the size of the volume) and they were written by different hands. In addition the reasons why the treatises are numbered and ordered, as they are, are difficult to fathom.
Although the treatises are arranged in seven main volumes of material, twenty-one volumes of varying size and descriptions exist at DWL. The additional volumes are far smaller and include volume 8, the original of which is now housed in the British Library as part of the Egerton manuscript 2570. A photostat of this, supplied in the 1950s, now forms part of DWL’s collection and is volume 22 (RB/1/398) of the Baxter Treatises. Volume 9 is the life of Thomas Hall (1610-65), the minister of King’s Norton, Worcestershire from 1640, and related papers. Volumes 10-12 are commonplace books, mainly in shorthand and consisting of extracts from books and a variety of notes. Volume 17 is the diary of the Puritan cleric Richard Rogers (1551-1618) which was supposedly transcribed, edited and published by the American scholar, M M Knappen, in his Two Elizabethan Puritan Diaries (1933), as Thomas confidently announced. However Knappen admitted that his transcription was partial and in truth it requires some effort to see its resemblance to the original. A comparison of Knappen’s book with the manuscript shows that he started his published “copy” some half way down the first page and failed to indicate in his publication that he had left considerable gaps. It is, therefore, at best misleading. As Thomas stated, this diary should not really be included among the Baxter holdings for it is listed in a catalogue of the manuscripts of Roger Morrice and properly belongs with his material. Thomas had a further reason for writing his catalogue, which was to afford a key to the microfilm which had been made from the volumes of manuscript and this has proved to be its chief benefit to the dedicated reader. That microfilm is still in use. The item numbers had been inserted by Black for all the seven volumes which he consulted and Thomas continued that numbering throughout the subsequent volumes. Those same item numbers were inserted above all items in the microfilm, together with volume numbers and foliation.
Finding aids
Black and Thomas
The treatises have been catalogued twice with different degrees of success - by W H Black between 1856-63 and Roger Thomas in 1959, the latter published as an occasional paper (number 8) of the library: the catalogue presented here is considered of a piece with Argent's Calendar. Both of these previous catalogues have their merits. Black’s is itself now an aged and valuable manuscript, in one bound volume that shows signs of wear. At places its pages are torn, its spine is missing and its cover is loose. Nevertheless it is full and detailed and usually accurate, though it is hand written and Black’s hand, like Baxter’s, is not always easy and clear, with crossings out, late inclusions, over-written notes, notes in the margin, and after thoughts. He also has his own consistently singular spellings, such as the oft-repeated ‘draught’ (sic) rather than the more conventional draft. Like Baxter, who rarely bothered, when he was in full flow, to cross his 't's, Black at times found such crosses unnecessary or tiresome, thus rendering his handwriting a challenge. Yet Black the cataloguer did a good job of transcribing the difficult treatises, including the not infrequent Latin, and tracing those names mentioned and their works, and his work remains of enduring value.
A century after Black, Thomas’s catalogue did not replace his predecessor’s. Rather he intended to “introduce some sort of order into a very miscellaneous set of papers” and, unlike Black’s, as a printed listing, his catalogue was available for readers. Modestly Thomas saw his work as an aid to scholars and he maintained that “many more links could have been established with more prolonged research”. This catalogue is based on Dr. Alan Argent's Calendar to the Baxter Treatises (2014) and reproduces his work throughout. Argent's introductory and extensive critical notes vastly expanded and improved on Thomas' 1959 catalogue. While Argent retains the former coding scheme for the Treatises the disbinding of the volumes for conservation work encouraged the development of a fresh numbering scheme for this catalogue. The Supplementary Notes to the Baxter Treatises provides a cross-reference list to the former numbering schemes, a Publication List and a Persons Index.
Roger Thomas found three major disadvantages with Black’s catalogue. Firstly he found that Black’s entries were “so full that the essentials are often lost in a multiplicity of detail and in its entirety it is too long for convenient reproduction”. Secondly he criticised Black for adhering to “the order of the papers as they lie in the bound volumes, an order which is little short of chaotic”. Thirdly Black’s catalogue has no index, nor, wrote Thomas, “any sort of key to the chaos” – the chaos being the arrangement of the treatises. To consider these disadvantages, in reverse order, we may concur that an index would be an asset in such a work. We may also feel that some re-arrangement of the material would be desirable. Indeed Thomas’s re-arrangement in his catalogue was to date the treatises, as far as possible, by fitting them into the chronology of Baxter’s life, as set out in Reliquiae Baxterianae. However his re-arrangement does not entirely succeed. Lastly readers may not share Thomas’s view that the length of Black’s entries and comments is a great difficulty. As a librarian, Thomas aimed at conciseness and a paucity of surplus detail, whereas the average reader may desire more information in order to make an informed judgement of the manuscript’s usefulness to his/her researches. More information may be an asset.
Roger Thomas admitted that he had made “little effort to go behind Black’s individual entries”. Indeed, he continued truthfully, his own catalogue is but “a re-arrangement of Black’s entries, abbreviated as much as possible”. That, of course, might be all very well, if Black had made no mistakes. Alas, he did make some, not a huge number, but some errors did creep in and Thomas repeated them. Indeed Thomas usually quoted Black verbatim and a careful check seems to suggest that Thomas may have consulted the original manuscripts only sparingly, if at all, and compiled his 1959 catalogue from Black’s work alone.
As stated, Thomas maintained that the key to imposing order on the chaos of the Baxter Treatises lay in relating the various items contained in the volumes to what was printed in Baxter’s autobiography, the Reliquiae Baxterianae of 1696. Thomas noted that a “considerable number of the items were the original drafts or the original copy” of what was later printed in the Reliquiae. Other items, where dates can be discovered, were included by Thomas under that date, although, he wrote, “the dates assigned are in many cases only convenient pegs (such as a relation to some published work) and must not be otherwise relied upon”. In addition, he linked some undated items to dated items because “of similarity of subject matter”. The result was that Thomas arranged Baxter’s material into 6 sections as they appeared to relate to passages in the Reliqiuae Baxterianae. Yet each of these sections contains a number of additional items from the treatises, which, Thomas believed, were “Other Items” dating roughly from that same period of time. In addition, Thomas had a section of items dated after Baxter’s death.
A first time reader of Thomas may easily be put off by the strange presentation of his material which is almost completely impossible to use without some prior acquaintance with the Reliquiae, with Black’s catalogue, and/or with the original treatises. Thomas’s work is therefore an educated hit and miss, as he more or less admitted himself. If his catalogue depended on his ability to offer accurate or approximate dates, then the four pages of “undated items”, at the end of his catalogue, raise serious questions about his strategy.
One obvious advantage which a modern cataloguer has, over Black and Thomas, is access to the two volumes of Keeble and Nuttall’s Calendar of the Correspondence of Richard Baxter (Oxford 1991) which marked a great advance in Baxter studies. Their Calendar’s usefulness at every stage of the development of Argent's Calendar and this catalogue is clear.
Related
Related material:The original of volume 8 is now housed in the British Library as part of the Egerton manuscript 2570. A photostat of this, supplied in the 1950s, now forms part of DWL’s collection and is volume 22 of the Baxter Treatises.
Personal name
Baxter, Richard. Dr. ( 1615-1691)
Alleine, Joseph. ( 1634-1668)
Cotton, John. ( 1585-1652)
Dr. John Wallis (1616-1703), Richard Baxter (1615-1991)
Annesely, Samuel. ( 1620-1696) Dr
Fuller, Samuel. ( 1635-1700)
Ross, Thomas. ( c 1620-1675)
Germanus. Bishop of Auxerre, ( c 378-448)
Ussher, James. ( 1581-1656) Archbishop of Armagh
Calamy , Edmund. ( bap 1598/1600-66)
Charles I. King of Great Britain and Ireland ( 1600-1649)
Charles II. King of Great Britain and Ireland ( 1630–1685)
Gunning, Peter . ( d 1684) Bishop of Chichester (1669-75)
Tillotson, John . ( 1630-94) Archbishop of Canterbury
Hale , Matthew. ( 1609-1676)
Humfrey , John . ( bap 1621-1719)
James II . ( 1633-1701) ( King Of England)
Jurieu, Pierre. ( 1637-1713)
Lawson, George . ( Gd 1678) rector of More
L’Estrange, Sir Roger . ( 1616-1704)
Maitland, John . ( 1616-1682)
Morley , George . ( c.1598-1684 ) Bishop of Worcester
Morrice, Roger . ( 1628/9–1702)
Owen, John . ( 1616-83)
Penn, William . ( 1644-1718)
Sylvester, Matthew . ( 1636/7-1708 )
Alleine, Joseph. ( 1634-1668)
Cotton, John. ( 1585-1652)
Dr. John Wallis (1616-1703), Richard Baxter (1615-1991)
Annesely, Samuel. ( 1620-1696) Dr
Fuller, Samuel. ( 1635-1700)
Ross, Thomas. ( c 1620-1675)
Germanus. Bishop of Auxerre, ( c 378-448)
Ussher, James. ( 1581-1656) Archbishop of Armagh
Calamy , Edmund. ( bap 1598/1600-66)
Charles I. King of Great Britain and Ireland ( 1600-1649)
Charles II. King of Great Britain and Ireland ( 1630–1685)
Gunning, Peter . ( d 1684) Bishop of Chichester (1669-75)
Tillotson, John . ( 1630-94) Archbishop of Canterbury
Hale , Matthew. ( 1609-1676)
Humfrey , John . ( bap 1621-1719)
James II . ( 1633-1701) ( King Of England)
Jurieu, Pierre. ( 1637-1713)
Lawson, George . ( Gd 1678) rector of More
L’Estrange, Sir Roger . ( 1616-1704)
Maitland, John . ( 1616-1682)
Morley , George . ( c.1598-1684 ) Bishop of Worcester
Morrice, Roger . ( 1628/9–1702)
Owen, John . ( 1616-83)
Penn, William . ( 1644-1718)
Sylvester, Matthew . ( 1636/7-1708 )
- DWL/RB/i.1 - Brief of the charges against Baxter
- DWL/RB/i.2 - Seven Questions Concerning the Manhood of Christ
- DWL/RB/i.3 - What Visible Christianity is
- DWL/RB/i.4 - Sermon on Titus 3:2
- DWL/RB/i.5 - Brief for Baxter’s Defence at his Trial
- DWL/RB/i.6 - Baxter’s defence of his A Paraphrase on the New Testament
- DWL/RB/i.7 - An Address to Charles II from the Puritan/Nonconformist ...
- DWL/RB/i.8 - Baxter’s Defence Notes on Samuel Fuller’s Canonica ...
- DWL/RB/i.9 - A Treatise opposed to Baxter’s Aphorismes of Justification
- DWL/RB/i.10 - Baxter’s Treatise of Government – personal, domestic, ...
- DWL/RB/i.11 - Sixteen questions by John Cotton
- DWL/RB/i.12 - An unfinished treatise on the nature of God
- DWL/RB/i.13 - Baxter's true state of English divisions, written to inform ...
- DWL/RB/i.14 (1) - A short treatise on several questions relating to the ...
- DWL/RB/i.14 (2) - Baxter's tract on expressions used in Scripture
- DWL/RB/i.14 (3) - Baxter's questions for his friend, answered
- DWL/RB/i.15 - Church Baxter's abstract on church reform
- DWL/RB/i.16 - Baxter’s A Treatise of Episcopacy explained
- DWL/RB/i.17 - Copy of Baxter’s arrest warrant
- DWL/RB/i.18 - Animadversions on Theophilus Gale's 'The Court of the ...
- DWL/RB/i.19 - Baxter's answer to the Cheshire questions about preaching
- DWL/RB/i.20 - Baxter's defence of nonconformist ministers to a Scottish ...
- DWL/RB/ii.21 (1) - Baxter’s answer to the animadversions of John Wallis
- DWL/RB/ii.21 (2) - John Wallis’ Animadversions on Baxter’s 'Aphorismes of ...
- DWL/RB/ii.22 - The Healing Causist
- DWL/RB/ii.23 - Baxter’s defence to an unknown doubter of his Of the ...
- DWL/RB/ii.24 - Account of Joseph Alleine’s arrest
- DWL/RB/ii.25 - Baxter’s defence of his Catholick communion defended
- DWL/RB/ii.26 - Account of Joseph Read(e) to Baxter
- DWL/RB/ii.27 - A certificate of strange evidences of Providence at ...
- DWL/RB/ii.28 - Baxter's aquaintaince with Archbishop Usher
- DWL/RB/ii.29 - Additional papers relating to the Savoy Conference
- DWL/RB/ii.30 - Baxter’s petition to the King
- DWL/RB/ii.31 - Paper relating to Universal Redemption
- DWL/RB/ii.32 - Additions to the Paraphrase of the Revelations
- DWL/RB/ii.33 - Treatise relating to Baxter’s Aphorismes of justification
- DWL/RB/ii.34 - A case relating to marriage
- DWL/RB/ii.35 - Baxter’s abstract of his defence of his Paraphrase on the ...
- DWL/RB/ii.36 - The reason and tenor of Baxter’s accused writing in ...
- DWL/RB/ii.37 - Proofs that Baxter’s meaning and thoughts are falsely ...
- DWL/RB/ii.38 (1) - Baxter’s argument that future happiness is possible
- DWL/RB/ii.38 (2) - The true cause of divisions on the subject of religion
- DWL/RB/ii.39 (1) - Answer to certain queries – from Henry More
- DWL/RB/ii.39 (2) - Answer to certain queries – anonymous
- DWL/RB/ii.39 (3) - Answer to certain queries – anonymous
- DWL/RB/ii.39 (4) - Answer to certain queries – from George Lawson
- DWL/RB/ii.39 (5) - Answer to certain queries – from George Lawson
- DWL/RB/ii.39 (6) - Answer to certain queries – from George Lawson
- DWL/RB/ii. 39 (7) - Answer to certain queries – from Baxter
- DWL/RB/ii.40 - Sentences of Scripture for faith to build upon
- DWL/RB/ii.41 - Answer to William Penn
- DWL/RB/ii.42 - Communion betwixt adult & paedobaptist, discourst
- DWL/RB/ii.43 - Warrant for apprehending Baxter
- DWL/RB/ii.44 - Of man’s free will
- DWL/RB/ii.45 - Sermon on Hebrews 12:14
- DWL/RB/ii.46 - Judge Hale’s papers concerning witches
- DWL/RB/ii.47 - Means of uniting Protestant Ministers
- DWL/RB/ii.48 - Disputation concerning physical Predetermination
- DWL/RB/ii.49 - Report of the conference between Baxter and John Tombes on ...
- DWL/RB/ii.50 - A second appendix to Richard Baxter’s Dying Thoughts
- DWL/RB/ii.51 - Preface and abstract of The Nonconformists Plea for Peace
- DWL/RB/ii.52 - Continuation of Treatise ii.51
- DWL/RB/ii.53 - Theses on the nature, will and purpose of God
- DWL/RB/ii.54 - John Tombes’ sermon on Hebrews 12:24
- DWL/RB/ii.55 - Sir Francis Nethersole’s thoughts on the Solemn League ...
- DWL/RB/ii.56 - Baxter’s Animadversions on John Humfrey’s writings in a ...
- DWL/RB/ii.57 - R Dyer’s Animadversions on Baxter’s Directions
- DWL/RB/ii.58 - Reasons against conformity
- DWL/RB/ii.59 (1) - Preface to the petition to the King concerning alterations ...
- DWL/RB/ii.59 (2) - Petition to the King concerning alterations to the Liturgy
- DWL/RB/ii.59 (3) - Petition to the King concerning alterations to the Liturgy
- DWL/RB/ii.59 (4) - Petition to the King concerning alterations to the Liturgy
- DWL/RB/ii.59 (5) - Baxter’s letter to Lord Chancellor Hyde
- DWL/RB/ii.59 (6) - Baxter’s proposals sent by Sir Ralph Clare to Dr Henry ...
- DWL/RB/ii.59 (7) - Dr Hammond’s Answer
- DWL/RB/ii.59 (8) - Petition to the King from ministers formerly commissioned ...
- DWL/RB/ii.60 (1) - Concerning prelacy and against reordination
- DWL/RB/ii.60 (2) - Concerning prelacy and against reordination
- DWL/RB/iii.61 (a) - Baxter’s disputation on whether it is lawful to use set ...
- DWL/RB/iii.61 (b) - Proposals for Communion with the Parish Churches
- DWL/RB/iii.61 (c) - Treatise against Baxter’s Aphorismes of Justification
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (1) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (2) - Papers on church government and other topics - included in ...
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (3) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (4) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (5) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (6) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (7) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (8) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (9) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (10) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.62 (11) - Papers on church government and other topics
- DWL/RB/iii.63 (a) - Baxter’s 'The poor husbandman’s advocate to rich ...
- DWL/RB/iii.63 (b) - Fair copy of Treatises iii. 63 (a)
- DWL/RB/iii.64 - Baxter’s answer to Bishop Morley’s accusations
- DWL/RB/iii.65 - Baxter’s projected liturgy
- DWL/RB/iii.66 (a) - Baxter’s The Safe Religion (1657) Vindicated
- DWL/RB/iii.66 (b) - An answer to Baxter’sThe Safe Religion
- DWL/RB/iii.67 - Confutation of some opinions of Thomas Bromley
- DWL/RB/iii.68 - Judge Hale's papers
- DWL/RB/iii.69 - Offer of communion to those against infant baptism
- DWL/RB/iii.70 - Of God’s decrees with respect to sin
- DWL/RB/iii.71 - Baxter’s vindication of himself, with respect to his ...
- DWL/RB/iii.72 - Baxter’s defence of his Aphorismes of justification (1649)
- DWL/RB/iii.73 - Of the nature and immortality of the soul
- DWL/RB/iii.74 (1) - Baxter’s vindication of some of his principles
- DWL/RB/iii.74 (2) - Baxter’s vindication of some of his principles
- DWL/RB/iv.75 - Baxter’s assize sermon at Shrewsbury
- DWL/RB/iv.76 - Of the nature and immortality of human souls
- DWL/RB/iv.77 - Translated extracts from Pierre du Moulin’s writings
- DWL/RB/iv.78 - Propositions agreed on by the Associated Ministers of ...
- DWL/RB/iv.79 - Twelve questions and answers concerning a vow
- DWL/RB/iv.80 - Baxter's paper on baptism and communion
- DWL/RB/iv.81 - [John] Lambe’s arguments to justify separation from John ...
- DWL/RB/iv.82 - Baxter’s animadversions on George Lawson’s answers
- DWL/RB/iv.83 - Considerations touching on Thomas Willis’s tract
- DWL/RB/iv.84 - Two papers by Charles II
- DWL/RB/iv.85 - Baxter’s notes on William Penn’s The Spirit of truth ...
- DWL/RB/iv.86 - Translated extracts from David Blondel’s Primacie in the ...
- DWL/RB/iv.87 - Baxter’s treatise on Origenism
- DWL/RB/iv.88 - Anti-Arminianism to John Fell
- DWL/RB/iv.89 - Baxter’s letter to William Meade
- DWL/RB/iv.90 - Concerning the successive council and ecclesiastical peace
- DWL/RB/iv.91 - Baxter’s treatise against Bishop George Morley of ...
- DWL/RB/iv.92 - Third part of Baxter’s Reformed Pastor
- DWL/RB/iv.93 - Baxter’s draft of a petition to King James II
- DWL/RB/iv.94 - A letter to Baxter concerning a proposed marriage
- DWL/RB/iv.95 - Baxter’s the true case of my life
- DWL/RB/iv.96 - Baxter on the nature and immortality of human souls
- DWL/RB/iv.97 - Addenda
- DWL/RB/iv.98 - Scholastic disputation
- DWL/RB/iv.99 - A copy of Thomas Bampfield’s paper concerning Seventh Day ...
- DWL/RB/iv.100 - Baxter’s conclusion to a treatise on the soul
- DWL/RB/iv.101 - Theological propositions in Latin
- DWL/RB/iv.102 - Paper on the Book of Common Prayer for the Savoy Conference
- DWL/RB/iv.103 - Baxter’s paper on God’s providence
- DWL/RB/iv.104 - Five propositions for moderate conformity
- DWL/RB/iv.104x - Letter from John Raynolds to Baxter
- DWL/RB/iv.105 - Baxter’s answer to William Belchier’s paper on kneeling ...
- DWL/RB/iv.106 - Declaration concerning copyright of Baxter’s Church ...
- DWL/RB/iv.107 - Baxter’s proposals for an indulgence to Nonconformist ...
- DWL/RB/iv.108 - Contents of David Blondel’s Of the primacie in the Church
- DWL/RB/iv.109 - Baxter’s account of his ailments
- DWL/RB/iv.110 (1) - Baxter’s case with Lord Conway
- DWL/RB/iv.110 (2) - Lord Conway’s letter to Baxter’s father
- DWL/RB/iv.110 (3) - Original bond from Edward Huxley
- DWL/RB/iv.110 (4) - Baxter’s legal difficulties about lease on Oxenden estate
- DWL/RB/iv.110 (5) - Lawrence Griffith’s note for Baxter's house
- DWL/RB/iv.111 - Case of conscience about becoming the minister of St ...
- DWL/RB/iv.112 - Covenant of grace and Mosaic law
- DWL/RB/iv.113 - A thesis
- DWL/RB/iv.114 - The unity and concord of God-fearing people
- DWL/RB/iv.115 - Baxter’s opinion on a husband and wife who differ on ...
- DWL/RB/iv.116 - Anonymous Latin thesis
- DWL/RB/iv.117 - An elegy on the death of Richard Baxter
- DWL/RB/iv.118 - A Pindaric ode to Baxter’s memory
- DWL/RB/iv.119 - Gilbert Sheldon’s seal in respect of Baxter
- DWL/RB/iv.120 - Baxter’s admission to deacon’s status
- DWL/RB/iv.121 - James Littleton to Baxter: licence to preach
- DWL/RB/iv.122 (B) - Certificate of the Westminster Assembly approving Baxter ...
- DWL/RB/iv.122 (A) - The Assembly’s approbation of Baxter for Kidderminster
- DWL/RB/iv.123 - Case of conscience regarding a woman who caught gonorrhea ...
- DWL/RB/iv.124 - Baxter’s reasons for declining re-ordination
- DWL/RB/iv.125 - Henry Pollexfen’s judgement on Baxter’s occasional ...
- DWL/RB/iv.126 - Proposal concerning money levied on Dissenters
- DWL/RB/iv.127 - Money expended in prosecuting Baxter’s discharge from ...
- DWL/RB/iv.128 (1) - Bond whereby George Dance left Kidderminster
- DWL/RB/iv.128 (2) - George Dance’s discharge and receipt
- DWL/RB/iv.129 - Baxter’s reply to the Bishops’ response to ‘The ...
- DWL/RB/iv.130 - Edmund Saunders’ opinion of Baxter’s case
- DWL/RB/iv.131 - Baxter on Government and the Constitution
- DWL/RB/v.132 - Magistrates of Ghent’s speech
- DWL/RB/v.133 - Margaret Baxter’s instructions to the trustees of her ...
- DWL/RB/v.134 - Baxter's queries on conformity
- DWL/RB/v.135 - Baxter’s answer to a query on laws binding the conscience
- DWL/RB/v.136 - Baxter’s queries on Church Government
- DWL/RB/v.137 - Latin acrostic on William Bates
- DWL/RB/v.138 - A survey of the Oxford Oath
- DWL/RB/v.139 - Legal opinion of T[homas] B[ampfield] on bail
- DWL/RB/v.140 - On private baptism
- DWL/RB/v.141 - Whether Scripture alone is a sufficient law for the Church ?
- DWL/RB/v.142 - Baxter’s reasons for alterations to Common Prayer
- DWL/RB/v.143 - Baxter’s reflection on writing The Saint’s Everlasting ...
- DWL/RB/v.144 - Baxter’s answer to a writer on free will
- DWL/RB/v.145 - Kneeling at the Lord’s Supper is unlawful
- DWL/RB/v.146 - Baxter’s duty of propagating true religion against ...
- DWL/RB/v.147 - An answer to a letter of Jarvis Disney
- DWL/RB/v.148 - Notes in Latin on Whiteway’s paper
- DWL/RB/v.149 - Benefices disposed of by the Lords Commissioners
- DWL/RB/v.150 - Archbishop Hutton’s pedigree
- DWL/RB/v.151 - Thomas Pyke’s petition to the Westminster Assembly of ...
- DWL/RB/v.152 (1) - Baxter on the Book of Revelation (1)
- DWL/RB/v.152 (2) - Baxter on the Book of Revelation (2)
- DWL/RB/v.152 (3) - Baxter on the Book of Revelation (3)
- DWL/RB/v.153 - James Mirle’s petition to the Westminster Assembly
- DWL/RB/v.154 - Parliamentary offices in Devon
- DWL/RB/v.155 - Robert Trail’s profession of faith
- DWL/RB/v.156 - Mr Stubbs’ testimonial given to Roger Morrice
- DWL/RB/v.157 - The elements of conic sections
- DWL/RB/v.27 - A Puritan minister’s account of his spiritual state
- DWL/RB/v.158 - Baxter on excommunication
- DWL/RB/v.159 - Baxter on vows of celibacy
- DWL/RB/v.160 - Rules for understanding the Decalogue
- DWL/RB/v.161 - Reformation of the Church as desired by the Reconcilers
- DWL/RB/v.162 - Baxter on sufficient and effectuall grace
- DWL/RB/v.163 (1) - Plan of comprehension (1)
- DWL/RB/v.163 (2) - Plan of comprehension (2)
- DWL/RB/v.163 (3) - Plan of Comprehension (3)
- DWL/RB/v.164 - Baxter’s conclusions for the reform of parish assemblies
- DWL/RB/v.165 - Baxter on Churches and Church Government
- DWL/RB/v.166 - Baxter’s professed reasons for his preaching in his chapel
- DWL/RB/v.167 - Proposed alterations in the King’s Declaration of 1660
- DWL/RB/v.168 - Arguments and passages in the Koran
- DWL/RB/v.169 - Baxter on one nature or two in Christ
- DWL/RB/v.170 - Suspected plot in Worcestershire
- DWL/RB/v.171 - Baxter’s case: he was not liable for restraining ...
- DWL/RB/v.172 - Government is from God
- DWL/RB/v.173 - Five questions about the worship of Dissenters
- DWL/RB/v.174 - Thomas Manton on Sir John Baber and Lord Keeper Bridg(e)man
- DWL/RB/ - On the rule of faith
- DWL/RB/v.176 - Baxter on preparation for death
- DWL/RB/v.177 - Baxter on sufficient and effectual grace
- DWL/RB/v.178 - Original bill for uniting the King’s subjects
- DWL/RB/v.179 - An Act for exempting Dissenters from certain laws
- DWL/RB/v.180 - An Act for securing the Protestant succession
- DWL/RB/v.181 - Richard Wallop’s opinion on Baxter’s case
- DWL/RB/v.182 - Petition of E Byrche to Sir Orlando Bridg(e)man
- DWL/RB/v.183 - Copy of information against those found in a religious ...
- DWL/RB/v.184 - Dispute between Richard Bell and John Whitehalgh
- DWL/RB/v.185 - Articles of agreement between Baxter and his step-mother
- DWL/RB/v.186 - Address to the King from the ministers of Nottingham etc.
- DWL/RB/v.187 - Address of London Dissenting Ministers following rebellion ...
- DWL/RB/1/233 - A second letter of the Gentleman
- DWL/RB/v.188 - Baxter’s answer to William Penn
- DWL/RB/v.189 - The arrangement with the bookseller about Baxter’s ...
- DWL/RB/vi.190 - Baxter’s answer to a bill against him by Sir Robert ...
- DWL/RB/vi.191 - An address to the King from the Savoy Conference
- DWL/RB/1/238 - A fragment of Baxter’s controversy with William Penn
- DWL/RB/1/239 - Baxter’s draft of a petition to the King
- DWL/RB/1/240 - Theses on the nature of God
- DWL/RB/1/241 - The case of the Nonconformists: the second part
- DWL/RB/1/242 - Defects and disorders of the Liturgy
- DWL/RB/1/243 - A treatise relating to Baxter’s Aphorismes
- DWL/RB/1/244 - John Warren’s later animadversions
- DWL/RB/1/245 - Baxter’s reply to John Warren’s later animadversions
- DWL/RB/1/246 - A new system of the Apocalypse by a French minister
- DWL/RB/1/247 - A postscript concerning the Independents’ Confession at ...
- DWL/RB/1/248 - Baxter’s defence of charity against George Morley
- DWL/RB/1/249 - Baxter’s answer to the call for a Senate
- DWL/RB/1/250 - A confutation of atheism, bestiality and infidelity
- DWL/RB/1/251 - A political catechism, occasioned by a letter to Baxter
- DWL/RB/1/252 - A political primer, by Baxter
- DWL/RB/1/253 - Baxter’s addition to the 5th section of his Sacrilegious ...
- DWL/RB/1/254 - Baxter’s expository defence of his Paraphrase on the New ...
- DWL/RB/1/255 - Six fundamentals of Christianity
- DWL/RB/1/256 - Baxter’s answer to Stephen Lobb
- DWL/RB/1/257 - Passages concerning a supposed diabolical possession
- DWL/RB/1/258 - Of Church Communion
- DWL/RB/1/259 - Baxter’s refutation of John Ballard’s report on Sir ...
- DWL/RB/1/260 - Copy of Treatises vi, 213
- DWL/RB/1/261 - Baxter’s epistle against the Quakers
- DWL/RB/1/262 - Comprehension of Protestants in the Church of England
- DWL/RB/1/263 - 58 propositions on the Apocalypse
- DWL/RB/1/264 - Peter Jurieu’s 35 Characters of Antichrist
- DWL/RB/1/265 - Baxter’s petition to the King
- DWL/RB/1/266 - Baxter’s remarks on the Bill for Comprehension
- DWL/RB/1/267 - Increase Mather’s comments on Baxter’s Glorious Kingdom ...
- DWL/RB/1/268 - Baxter’s remarks on a Dialogue by Isaac Chauncy
- DWL/RB/1/269 - Baxter’s paper on Excommunication
- DWL/RB/1/270 - Queries on ecclesiastical administration during the ruined ...
- DWL/RB/1/271 - Additions to Baxter’s Autobiography for the years 1675 ...
- DWL/RB/1/272 - Animadversions on Thomas Beverley’s Commendations
- DWL/RB/1/273 - A second admonition to George Kendall
- DWL/RB/1/274 - Animadversions on George Sikes’ Exposition of Ecclesiastes
- DWL/RB/1/275 - Baxter’s animadversions on John Corbet’s enquiry into ...
- DWL/RB/1/276 - Part of a treatise on true repentance
- DWL/RB/1/277 - A breviate of pacifying theology by Baxter
- DWL/RB/vii.230 - Theological Questions
- DWL/RB/1/279 - On kneeling at the Sacrament
- DWL/RB/vii.232 - Baxter’s antidote against liars (ie Roger L’Estrange)
- DWL/RB/vii.233 - Baxter’s treatise against Popery and Election
- DWL/RB/vii.234 - Baxter’s treatise on infant Church membership
- DWL/RB/vii.235 - Animadversions on Thomas Gilbert’s paper on guilt and ...
- DWL/RB/vii.236 - Thomas Gilbert’s paper on guilt and pardon of sin
- DWL/RB/vii.237 - Notes from Thomas Beverley and others
- DWL/RB/vii.238/1 - Re-ordination of Presbyters
- DWL/RB/vii.238/2 - Re-examining Presbyters
- DWL/RB/vii.238/3 - Toleration of Nonconformists
- DWL/RB/vii.238/4 - A proposal for the settlement of the Church
- DWL/RB/vii.239 - Concerning a comprehensive Church settlement
- DWL/RB/vii.240 - Towards comprehension
- DWL/RB/vii.241 - Towards comprehension
- DWL/RB/vii.242 - Two cases of conscience
- DWL/RB/vii.243 - God deduced from nature
- DWL/RB/vii.244 - Proposals for concord
- DWL/RB/vii.46 - Thesis
- DWL/RB/vii.245 - An act for healing in matters of religion
- DWL/RB/vii.246 - Anonymous letter to Baxter
- DWL/RB/vii.247 - Baxter's sermon on Psalm 50
- DWL/RB/vii.248 - Concerning Original Sin by Gilbert Clerke
- DWL/RB/vii.249 - Baxter's answer to an invective
- DWL/RB/vii.250 - Baxter’s subscription following the Declaration of Breda
- DWL/RB/vii.251 - Cases of conscience
- DWL/RB/vii.252 - A Worcester Association paper
- DWL/RB/vii.253 - Part of the brief of Baxter’s defence
- DWL/RB/vii.254 - Instructions for Baxter’s counsel
- DWL/RB/vii.255 - Notes against Popery
- DWL/RB/vii.256 - A general prayer
- DWL/RB/vii.257 - Desired alterations to the Liturgy
- DWL/RB/vii.258 - John Berry’s case of simony
- DWL/RB/vii.259 - Thomas Gilbert’s thesis against John Owen’s De Justitia ...
- DWL/RB/vii.260 - Baxter on allegiance to the King
- DWL/RB/vii. 261 - Baxter’s answer to a paper by John Faldo
- DWL/RB/vii.62 - Sermons
- DWL/RB/vii.262 - Baxter's proposal for an Act of Concord
- DWL/RB/vii.263 - Baxter’s study of the book of Revelation
- DWL/R/vii.264 - Abstract concerning the King's declaration
- DWL/RB/1/318 - Baxter's defence of the Associated Ministers
- DWL/RB/vii.265 - A call for further reformation
- DWL/RB/vii.266 - A case of conscience
- DWL/RB/vii. 69 - Petition to the King
- DWL/RB/vii.267 - Letter from Baxter answering 6 theological questions
- DWL/RB/vii.268 - Baxter’s request for the King’s licence for preaching
- DWL/RB/vii.269 - Baxter’s animadversions on Kuhlmann
- DWL/RB/vii.270 - Samuel Whittell’s letter to Baxter (1)
- DWL/RB/vii.271 - Samuel Whittell's letter to Baxter (2)
- DWL/RB/vii.272 - Baxter's letter to Samuel Whittell (1)
- DWL/RB/vii.273 - Baxter's letter to Samuel Whittell (2)
- DWL/RB/vii.274 - Baxter's comments on a controversy with George Lawson
- DWL/RB/vii.275 - Baxter’s paper on ejection of Ministers after the Act of ...
- DWL/RB/vii.276 - Baxter on issues arising out of the ejection of Ministers ...
- DWL/RB/vii.277 - Church polity
- DWL/RB/vii.278 - Baxter’s answer to Lady Anne Lindsey
- DWL/RB/vii.279 - Baxter's letter to Lady Anne Lindsey
- DWL/RB/vii.280 - Baxter’s answer to a nobleman on the return of the ...
- DWL/RB/vii.281 - Baxter on qualifying for baptism or church membership
- DWL/RB/vii. 282 - Baxter's defence against false accusations
- DWL/RB/vii.283 - Bishop George Morley's answers
- DWL/RB/vii.284 - Baxter’s propositions on Church government and discipline
- DWL/RB/IX.293 - A brief account of the life and death of Thomas Hall
- DWL/RB/1/340 - Will and testament of Thomas Hall
- DWL/RB/1/341 - Rules for the use of the Library
- DWL/RB/1/342 - Books given to library at King's-Norton
- DWL/RB/1/343 - List of school books given to Kings-Norton library
- DWL/RB/1/344 - A catalogue of books for Kings-Norton library
- DWL/RB/1/345 - Parochial writings
- DWL/RB/X.300 - Alphabetical index
- DWL/RB/X.301 - Extracts from and references to English and foreign authors ...
- DWL/RB/1/348 - Miscellaneous theological and biblical observations
- DWL/RB/1/349 - An alphabetical index
- DWL/RB/1/350 - Observations on practical divinity
- DWL/RB/xi.305 - Remarks on Article 20 of the Church of England
- DWL/RB/1/352 - Part of an index
- DWL/RB/1/353 - Miscellaneous notes
- DWL/RB/1/354 - Financial accounts in shorthand
- DWL/RB/1/355 - Lemmata Philosophica
- DWL/RB/1/356 - Extracts from Sir Matthew Hale’s Origin of Mankind
- DWL/RB/1/357 - Extracts from Boyle's Excellent Theology
- DWL/RB/1/358 - On Saints
- DWL/RB/1/359 - Tillotson on Deut. 13:1
- DWL/RB/1/360 - Some biblical notes
- DWL/RB/1/361 - Sufficient grace
- DWL/RB/1/362 - The lawfulness of being a soldier
- DWL/RB/1/363 - Concerning Ignatius and against heretics
- DWL/RB/1/364 - True Notion of the Lord’s Supper
- DWL/RB/1/365 - Baxter’s discourse on Christ’s death and resurrection
- DWL/RB/1/366 - Notes in shorthand
- DWL/RB/1/367 - John Warren’s animadversions on Baxter’s Aphorismes of ...
- DWL/RB/1/368 - Copy of John Warren's letter to Baxter
- DWL/RB/1/369 - Baxter’s answer to Warren
- DWL/RB/1/370 - Baxter’s answer to Warren’s animadversions
- DWL/RB/1/371 - Baxter’s introductory observations in answer to John ...
- DWL/RB/1/372 - Baxter’s later additions to DWL/RB/1/370
- DWL/RB/1/373 - Baxter's postscript
- DWL/RB/1/374 - Minor memoranda
- DWL/RB/1/375 - Baxter’s answers to five questions
- DWL/RB/1/376 - Of the Arian heresy
- DWL/RB/1/377 - Assent should be required only to a few statements etc.
- DWL/RB/1/378 - Five proposals for comprehension
- DWL/RB/1/379 - Answers to the Cheshire questions
- DWL/RB/1/380 - Baxter’s Aphorisms of ecclesiastical government
- DWL/RB/1/381 - Anonymous treatise on difficulties with the Holy Spirit
- DWL/RB/1/382 - Religious Stories
- DWL/RB/1/383 - Fragment of a sermon
- DWL/RB/1/384 - Conclusion of Baxter’s thoughts on Revelation
- DWL/RB/1/385 - Portions of Baxter’s animadversions and questions
- DWL/RB/1/386 - Further portions of Baxter’s animadversions and questions
- DWL/RB/1/387 - Judge Matthew Hale’s papers: Judgement of true religion
- DWL/RB/1/388 - Judge Matthew Hale’s papers: Preface DWL/RB/1/387
- DWL/RB/1/389 - Judge Matthew Hale’s papers: the ends and uses of religion
- DWL/RB/1/390 - Judge Matthew Hale’s papers: concerning religion
- DWL/RB/1/391 - Judge Matthew Hale’s papers: of the Christian religion
- DWL/RB/1/392 - Judge Matthew Hale’s papers: testimonies from the works ...
- DWL/RB/1/393 - Religious diary of a Puritan Minister of Cambridge
- DWL/RB/1/394 - Against the Dominican doctrine of predetermination
- DWL/RB/1/395 - Baxter’s animadversions on The Court of the Gentiles by ...
- DWL/RB/1/396 - Of the nature & immortality of human soules
- DWL/RB/1/397 - A postscript
- DWL/RB/1/398 - Baxter’s Assize sermon at Shrewsbury
- DWL/RB/1/399 - Pierre du Moulin’s translation of de Novitate Papismi
- DWL/RB/1/400 - Contents of David Blondel’s Of the Primacie in the Church
- DWL/RB/1/401 - Passages from David Blondel’s Of the primacie in the ...
- DWL/RB/1/402 - Passages from David Blondel’s Of the primacie in the ...
- DWL/RB/1/403 - Passages from David Blondel’s Of the primacie in the ...
- DWL/RB/1/404 - Passages from David Blondel’s Of the primacie in the ...
- DWL/RB/1/405 - Sections from Reliquiae Baxterianae
- DWL/RB/1/406 - Sections from Reliquiae Baxterianae
- DWL/RB/1/407 - Sections from Reliquiae Baxterianae
- DWL/RB/1/408 - Sections from Reliquiae Baxterianae
- DWL/RB/1/409 - Sections from Reliquiae Baxterianae
- DWL/RB/1/410 - Baxter's letter to the Earl of Orrery
- DWL/RB/1/411 - Baxter's proposals for uniting the Protestant Ministers of ...
- DWL/RB/1/412 - Baxter’s answer to Bishop Morley’s Strictures
- DWL/RB/1/413 - On taking arms against the King
- DWL/RB/1/414 - Paper relating to the Savoy Conference of 1661
- DWL/RB/1/415 - Damaged manuscript
- DWL/RB/1/416 - Paper relating to the Savoy Conference of 1661
- DWL/RB/1/417 - An appendix vindicating the soul’s immortality
- DWL/RB/1/418 - Latter part of a letter from William Allen
- DWL/RB/1/419 - Portion of a letter to Henry Dodwell
- DWL/RB/1/420 - Middle portion of letter to Henry Dodwell
- DWL/RB/1/421 - Copy of ‘Bishop Morley’s great mistakes’ by Baxter
- DWL/RB/1/422 - Baxter’s Letter to a Critic
- DWL/RB/1/423 - Correspondence from John Humfrey
- DWL/RB/1/424 - Part of a letter signed EP [Edward Pearse]
- DWL/RB/1/425 - Reply to a letter
- DWL/RB/1/426 - Notes
- DWL/RB/1/427 - Discussion on results of Nonconformity
- DWL/RB/1/428 - Against a pamphlet on judgement in capital cases
- DWL/RB/1/429 - Various notes