Okes, John, active 1627-1644
Okes, John, 160.?-1643
Okes, John fl. 1627-1644
Okes, John
VIAF ID: 58970390 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/58970390
Preferred Forms
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Okes, John ‡d fl. 1627-1644
- 100 1 _ ‡a Okes, John, ‡d 160.?-1643
- 100 1 _ ‡a Okes, John, ‡d active 1627-1644
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (31)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Emblema animæ, or, Morrall discourses reflecting upon humanitie, 1635: | |
Execration against Vulcan | |
The glory of their times, or, The liues of ye primitiue fathers : co[n]tayning their chiefest actions, workes, sentences, and deaths. | |
Helpe to discourse | |
The history of the moderne Protestant divines : containing their parents, countries, education, studies, lives, and the yeare of our Lord in which they dyed ; with a true register of all their several treatises, and writings that are extant | |
The knave in graine, new vampt : a witty comedy, acted at the Fortune many dayes together with great applause | |
life of Merlin, sirnamed Ambrosius. His prophesies, and predictions interpreted ; and their truth made good by our English Annalls. Being a chronographicall history of all the kings, and memorable passages of this kingdome, from Brute to the reigne of our royall soveraigne king Charles... | |
The lives of all the Roman emperors : being exactly collected from Iulius Caesar unto the now reigning Ferdinand the Second : with their births, governments, remarkable actions, & deaths. | |
The lost lady : a tragy comedy. | |
More merriment mixt with serious matters | |
The noble stranger : as it was acted at the private house in Salisbury Court by Her Maiesties servants | |
Nursery for gentry | |
A perfect diurnall of the passages in Parliament | |
Plays. | |
Pleasant and witty comedy called A new tricke to cheat the Divell | |
The rebellion : a tragedy, as it was acted nine dayes together and divers times since with good applause by His Majesties company of revells | |
The resolver, or, Curiosities of nature | |
A sermon preached at the assizes held at Reading, in the county of Berks, July 12th, 1681 | |
A sermon preached before the Honourable House of Commons, 1641: | |
The shepheards holy-day : a pastorall tragi-comaedie, acted before both Their Maiesties at White-Hall by the Queenes servants : with an elegie on the death of the most noble lady, the Lady Venetia Digby | |
Short vievv of the long life and raigne of Henry the Third, King of England | |
Survey of history | |
The totall discourse, of the rare adventures, and painefull peregrinations of long nineteene yeares travailes from Scotland, to the most famous kingdomes in Europe, Asia, and Affrica : Perfited by three deare bought voyages, in surveying of forty eight kingdomes ancient and modern, twenty one rei-publicks, ten absolute principalities, with two hundred islands, the particular names whereof, are described in each argument of the ten divisions or parts of this history ... | |
A true and experimentall discourse, upon the beginning, proceeding, and victorious event of this last siege of Breda : with the antiquity and annexing of it, to the house of Nassaw, and the many alterations it hath suffered by armes, and armies, within these threescore yeares : together with the prudent plots, projects, and policies of warre, the assailants and defendants matchlesse man-hood, in managing martiall affaires, the misery and manner of souldiers living, their pinching want, and fatall accidents, strange weapons and instruments used by both parties in severall conflicts : lastly, their concluded articles, with circumstances and ordering of the siege and victory, being pleasant to peruse, and profitable to observe | |
A true description of His Majesties royall ship : built this yeare 1637 at Wool-witch in Kent, to the great glory of our English nation and not paraleld in the whole Christian world. | |
Two bookes of epigrammes and epitaphs | |
A vaunting, daring, and a menacing letter, sent from Sultan Morat, the great Turke, from his court at Constantinople, by his Embassadour Gobam, to Vladislaus, King of Poland, [et]c. : which letter was sent to the Christian king, since the truce concluded betweene the Turke and the Persian in March last, as by many copies whereof may appeare as it was sent out of Poland : wherein he declares himselfe a mortall enemy to the said Christian king, threatning to invade his kingdomes and territories, with all manner of hostility : whereunto is annexed a briefe relation of the Turkish present strength, both of horse and foote, with al the victories the Turkes have prevailed against the Christians these last three hundred yeares : as also what glorious victories the Christians have wonne against the Turkes, till this present yeare, 1638 |