A treatise of traditions. Part I ... Where it is proved, that we have evidence sufficient from tradition; I. That the Scriptures are the Word of God. II. That the Church of England owns the true canon of the books of the Old Testament. III. That the copies of the Scriptures have not been corrupted. IV. That the Romanists have no such evidences for their traditions. V. That the testimony of the present Church of Rome can be no sure evidence of Apostolical tradition. VI. What traditions may be securely be relyed upon, and what not.
Daniel Whitby (1637/38 - 1726)
Category
Books
Date
1688
Materials
Place of origin
England
Collection
Calke Abbey, Derbyshire
NT 3071262.1
Summary
Bibliographic description
[4], v-lxviij, 135, [1] p. . 4to.. Bound with part 2, 1689. Previous shelfmark: K.b.8. Provenance: Nineteenth-century small Baronet's badge bookplate, with Harpur & Crewe crests, with inscription: Calke Abbey Library [associated with Sir George Crewe, 8th Baronet (1795-1844)]. Binding: Seventeenth-century full leather binding; quarter blind fillet; blind fillet border; spine gilt ruled and spine label gilt lettered.
Provenance
Transferred to the National Trust by the Treasury in lieu of CTT in 1985 with an endowment provided by the NHMF.
Makers and roles
Daniel Whitby (1637/38 - 1726)