Extracts, in a late 17th century hand, from the answers of William Laud (1573-1645), then bishop of St Davids, in a controversy with John [Fisher] Percy (1569-1641), a Jesuit, in 1622. The answers were originally printed pseudonymously but were later issued in Archbishop Laud's name.
A letter dated 26 August 1665, signed by King Charles II (1630-1685) and sent, per the Earl of Carlingford [d. 1677], from Salisbury, whither the English Court had removed owing to the plague, to 'Mon Cousin, L'Euesque de Munster', i.e. Christopher Bernard von Ghalen, prince-bishop of Munster, Westphalia, ally of England in the Anglo-Dutch war.
The King's Oracles by Thomas Coulle, alias J. Craven Thomas (d. 1927), being the manuscript, prepared for publication, with illustrations, of poems described by the author as a collection of unrecorded tales and writings for the most part attributed to King Arthur and his court, together with transcripts from 'the ruined seats of ancient British learning ... and Songs of the long silenced Bards'.
Coulle, Thomas, d. 1927 King's Oracles by, manuscript, NLW MS 6648E
One of four volumes containing transcripts made between 1859 and 1862 at Panteg, Monmouthshire by Herbert Armitage James (1844-1931) of skeleton sermons and short essays written between 1824 and 1840 by John Elias o Fôn (1774-1841), Calvinistic Methodist preacher.
One of three volumes of poems by Richard Davies ('Mynyddog'; 1833-77), some of them in his autograph but most of them in the hand of David Emlyn Evans.
Autograph sermons [? of Walter Williams, vicar of Llywel, Brecknockshire] preached, 1729-1733, at Llanddeti and Llansantffraid, Brecknockshire, and delivered elsewhere by a subsequent owner of the volume later in the 18th century.
Financial accounts of Cefnfaes schoolroom, Bethesda, 1902-1907, entitled Ysgoldy Newydd y Cefnfaes. Cyfrif or casgliad wnaed gan Gyngor yr Eglwysi Rhyddion tuagat yr uchod, yn cynnwys y Derbyniadau ar Taliadau. Trosglwyddwyd y gweddill ... i Gyn-lywodraethwyr Ysgol y Cefnfaes, tuagat leihau eu dyled drom.