Call Number (LC) Title Results
BX5037 .G8 The remains of Edmund Grindal successively Bishop of London and Archbishop of York and Canterbury 1
BX5037 .H7 Early writings of John Hooper. 1
BX 5037 H7L Later writings of Bishop Hooper, together with his letters and other pieces. 1
BX5037 .H9 The works of Roger Hutchinson ... 1
BX5037 .L4 1977 The joyful Christian : 127 readings from C. S. Lewis. 1
BX5037 .M51 The epistle unto Kynge Henry the Eight. 1
BX5037 .P2 Correspondence of Matthew Parker. Comprising letters written by and to him, from A. D. 1535, to his death, A. D. 1575. 1
BX5037 .P9 Spiritual letters of Edward Bouverie Pusey, doctor of divinity, 1
BX 5037 P9 4 Spiritual letters of Edward Bouverie Pusey : doctor of divinity, canon of Christ church, regius professor of Hebrew in the University of Oxford / 1
BX5037 .R7 The catholic doctrine of the Church of England, an exposition of the Thirty-nine articles, 1
BX5037 .W2 1811 The works of the Right Reverend William Warburton, D.D., lord bishop of Gloucester : to which is prefixed a discourse by way of general preface, containing some account of the life, writings, and character of the author / 1
BX5037 .W5 The works of John Whitgift ... 1
BX5037 .W557 2015eb Hospitality and translation : exploration of how muslim pupils translate their faith in the context of an anglican primary school / 1
BX 5052 H6 6 v.4 The English church in the sixteenth century, from the accession of Henry VIII to the death of Mary; 1
BX 5052 H6 1904 v.4 The English church in the sixteenth century from the accession of Henry VIII to the death of Mary / 1
BX5052 .H6 v.1 The English church from its foundation to the Norman conquest (597-1066) 1
BX5052 .H6 v.2 The English church from the Norman conquest to the accession of Edward I (1066-1272) 1
BX5052 .H6 v.3 The English church in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, 1
BX5052 .H6 v.4 The English church in the sixteenth century, from the accession of Henry VIII to the death of Mary; 1
BX5052 .H6 v.5 The English church in the reigns of Elizabeth and James I. (1558-1625) 1