Books tagged: cromwell

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Found: 5 results

Famous Men of the 16th & 17th Century    by Rob Shearer
Price: $9.99 USD. 71830 words. Published on October 7, 2009. .

28 biographies from Queen Elizabeth I (who came to the throne in 1560) through King Louis XIV who died in 1715. The 17th century was an age of religious wars and revolutions. It was also the century in which the English and French established colonies in North America. Key biographies are James I, Charles I, Cromwell, Champlain, Captain John Smith, William Bradford, and John Winthrop.
Republic    by Wallis Peel
Price: $7.99 USD. 92380 words. Published by Amolibros  on July 20, 2010. .

Exciting historical adventure set in the time of Oliver Cromwell. Sarah Turner is a young Bristol widow, and works as a courier for Parliament. She seems to lead a charmed life until on one visit she stumbles upon an horrific scene which changes her whole way of life. With Charles II in exile, and the Puritans increasing their dull sway, the future of England is in the balance.
Teal's Choice    by Royce Day
Price: $0.99 USD. 14960 words. Published on January 11, 2011. .

Now held to her dragon by chains of obligation rather than force, Teal finds herself at odds with him again as she serves as his agent in the land he rules. Part Three of The Dragon's Companion omnibus.
Canonsfield 1    by Michael Hanson
Price: $4.69 USD. 41840 words. Published on March 5, 2011. .

The murder of a young girl stretches the resources of a small English police force and reveals the tensions, which sometimes arise between uniform officers and the C.I.D. A cynical Detective Sergeant receives unexpected help from wounded war veterans and a highclass madam who runs an up scale brothel. This is the first in a series of Tectales. i
My Father's America - Volume Two - The Colonies    by Walter Lorenz
Price: $4.99 USD. 175370 words. Published on November 7, 2011. .

England was ready. Of all the nations in Europe, 17th-century England was most peculiarly suited to succeed in peopling the North American continent. This was a strange turn of events. England had been the very last of the Western powers to show any kind of interest in the world beyond Europe. Yet once they got started, the English were destined to succeed in the most spectacular way.