By the King, a proclamation forbidding His Majesties subjects to give assistance to any the subjects of the King of Spain now in rebellion against him England and Wales. Sovereign (1660-1685 : Charles II) 1675 Approx. 2 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 1 1-bit group-IV TIFF page image. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2009-10 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A32594 Wing C3519 ESTC R33284 13119124 ocm 13119124 97809 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32594) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 97809) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1547:10) By the King, a proclamation forbidding His Majesties subjects to give assistance to any the subjects of the King of Spain now in rebellion against him England and Wales. Sovereign (1660-1685 : Charles II) Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. 1 broadside. Printed by the assigns of John Bill and Christopher Barker ..., London : 1675. "Given at our court at Whitehall the seventeenth day of June 1675, in the seven and twentieth year of our reign." Reproduction of original in the Harvard University Library. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. 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Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Charles -- II, -- King of Spain, 1661-1700. Proclamations -- Great Britain. Great Britain -- History -- Charles II, 1660-1685. 2008-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2008-10 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2008-11 John Pas Sampled and proofread 2008-11 John Pas Text and markup reviewed and edited 2009-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion By the King. A PROCLAMATION , Forbidding His Majesties Subjects to give Assistance to any the Subjects of the King of Spain now in Rebellion against him . CHARLES R. WHereas Complaint hath been made unto Vs by Don Pedro Ronquillos , Envoy Extraordinary from his Catholick Majesty the King of Spain , That several Merchants and others Our Subjects , have carried Provisions , and given Assistance and Succour to those of Messina in the Kingdom of Scicily , now in Rebellion against his said Catholick Majesty , contrary to the Treaty made in 1667 , between Vs and the said King ; We being desirous to give all just Satisfaction to Our good Brother the King of Spain , and to maintain inviolably the Articles contained in the said Treaty , do by this Our Royal Proclamation expresly Enjoyn and Command all Our Subjects of what Condition soever , That they forbear giving any manner of Assistance , Countenance or Succour to those of Messina , or any other of his Catholick Majesties Subjects in Rebellion against him , upon pain not onely of Our high Displeasure , but suffering such Punishment as by Law may be inflicted on such as wilfully violate our Treaties , and infringe the Peace betwixt the two Crowns . Given at Our Court at Whitehall the Seventeenth day of June 1675 , In the Seven and twentieth Year of Our Reign . God save the King. LONDON , Printed by the Assigns of John Bill and Christopher Barker , Printers to the Kings most Excellent Majesty . 1675.