, Continued Heads; Or, Perfect Passages in Parliament, pp.20-27, 1649.

J. Baston, History, Prophecy, and Interpretation: Mary Cary and Fifth Monarchism, Prose Studies, vol.1, issue.3, p.7, 1998.

E. Poole and . Vision, Wherein is Manifested the Disease and Cure of the Kingdome, p.3, 1648.

I. Poole, , p.6

M. Cary, The Little Horns Doom and Downfall; or, A Scripture Prophecie of James and King Charles, and of This Present Parliament, Unfolded, London, 1651, A8 v ; see as well her Resurrection of the Witnesses (Mary Cary, The Resurrection of the Witnesses, and Englands Fall from (The Mystical Babylon) Rome Clearly Demonstrated to Be Accomplished, pp.65-67, 1648.

I. Crawford, Who so sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed") and Numbers 35, vol.33, p.42

H. Pope, , p.25

, See Pope, Behold, op. cit, p.3

I. Pope, , p.9

K. Gillespie, See similar arguments in John Maxwell, Sacro-sancta Regum Majestas: Or, The Sacred and Royall Prerogative of Christian Kings, London, 1644 and Dudley Digges, The Unlawfulnesse of Subjects Taking Up Arms against Their Soveraigne, Domesticity and Dissent in the Seventeenth Century: English Women Writers and the Public Sphere, p.1644, 2004.

H. Pope, , p.4

R. Zaller, Breaking the Vessels: The Desacralization of Monarchy in Early Modern England, The Sixteenth Century Journal, vol.29, issue.3, p.764, 1998.

. Pope and . Behold, , p.18

, In the Church of England separation a mensa et thoro was authorized -but not divorce a vinculo

, See Claire Gheeraert-Graffeuille, La Cuisine et le forum. L'émergence des femmes sur la scène publique pendant la Révolution anglaise (1640-1660), p.52, 2005.

A. Poole, . Vision, and O. Wiseman, Susan Wiseman concludes: "the examples all indicate that the operation of civil society may be contractual but, in the last instance, social relationships are divinely decreed and God's representatives (kings and fathers) possess certain elements of divine authority, pp.150-152

M. Brod, The Seeker Culture of the Thames Valley, Cromohs Virtual Seminars. Recent Historiographical Trends of the British Studies (17th-18th Centuries, p.5, 2006.

A. Poole, , p.3

A. Poole and . Vision, , p.5

I. Poole, , p.2

I. Poole, , p.2

I. Poole, , p.1

I. Poole, , p.4

K. , Gillespie interestingly calls her "a minister through print, p.40

A. Batson, , pp.9-10

. Cary, , pp.46-47

A. Batson, Elizabeth Cromwell is the wife of Oliver Cromwell, pp.9-10

, Lady Bridget Ireton is the wife of Henry Ireton, parliamentary army officer and regicide

, Lady Margaret Rolle is the wife of Hery Rolle, parliamentary radical who was appointed chief justice of King's Bench and to the Council of State

. Cary, , pp.31-32

. Anon, The Life and Death of King Charles the Martyr, Parallel'd With our Saviour in All His Sufferings, p.1649, 1649.

J. Baston, History, Prophecy, and Interpretation: Mary Cary and Fifth Monarchism, Prose Studies, vol.1, issue.3, pp.1-18, 1998.

M. Brod, Cromohs Virtual Seminars. Recent Historiographical Trends of the British Studies (17th-18th Centuries), M. Caricchio, G. Tarantino (éds.), vol.31, pp.1-10, 1999.

M. Cary, The Resurrection of the Witnesses, and Englands Fall from (The Mystical Babylon) Rome Clearly Demonstrated to Be Accomplished, p.1651, 1648.

P. Crawford, Charles Stuart, That Man of Blood, The Journal of British Studies, vol.16, issue.2, pp.41-61, 1977.

S. Davies, Unbridled Spirits. Women of the English Revolution: 1640-1660, 1998.

D. Digges, The Unlawfulnesse of Subjects Taking Up Arms Against Their Soveraigne, p.1644

C. Gheeraert-graffeuille, L. Cuisine, and . Le-forum, L'émergence des femmes sur la scène publique pendant la Révolution anglaise, pp.1640-1660, 2005.

K. Gillespie, Domesticity and Dissent in the Seventeenth Century: English Women Writers and the Public Sphere, 2004.

J. P. Kenyon, The Stuart Constitution 1603-1688: Documents and Commentary, 1986.

D. Loewenstein, Scriptural Exegesis, Female Prophecy, and Radical Politics in Mary Cary, Studies in English Literature, vol.46, issue.1, pp.133-53, 2006.

J. Maxwell, Sacro-sancta Regum Majestas: Or, The Sacred and Royall Prerogative of Christian Kings, p.1644

J. Milton, The Complete Prose Works, 8 vols, pp.1953-1982

M. Nevitt, Women and the Pamphlet Culture of Revolutionary England, 2006.

E. Poole and . Vision, An Alarum of War, Given to the Army and to their High Court of Justice, London, 1649 --. An[other] Alarum of Warre, London, 1649. POPE, Mary, A Treatise of Magistracy, Shewing the Magistrate Hath Beene, and for Ever Is to Be the Cheife Officer in the Church, vol.1647, p.1648, 1648.

M. Suzuki, Women's Political Writings 1610-1725, London, Pickering and Chatto, Subordinate Subjects: Gender, the Political Nation, and Literary Form in England, pp.1640-1660, 1994.

T. E. , The Lawes Resolutions of Womens Rights; or, The Lawes Provision for Women, p.1632

M. Turchetti, Tyrannie et tyrannicide de l'Antiquité à nos jours, 2001.

S. Wiseman, Conspiracy and Virtue: Women, Writing, and Politics in Seventeenth-Century England, 2006.

R. Zaller, Breaking the Vessels: The Desacralization of Monarchy in Early Modern England, Journal of the History of Ideas, vol.54, pp.757-78, 1993.