Ergebnisse für *
Es wurden 1329 Ergebnisse gefunden.
Zeige Ergebnisse 1 bis 25 von 1329.
Sortieren
-
Juvenile monitor, or, The new children's friend
-
The hermit of the forest, and the wandering infants
A rural fragment. ; Embellished with cuts -
A Select collection of the newest and most favorite country dances, waltzes, reels & cotillions
as performed at court and all grand assemblies -
The three woe-trumpets, of which the first and second are already past, and the third is now begun
under which the seven vials of the wrath of God are to be poured out upon the world ; being the substance of two discourses, from Rev. XI. 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 ; delivered in Parliament, on the 3d and 24th of February, 1793 -
The case of His Majesties sugar plantations
-
Discourses on the several estates of man, on earth,-in heaven-and hell
Deduced from reason and revelation: as they were delivered in the Abbey Church, Bath -
The tryals and condemnation of several persons for murders, felonies and burglaries
which began on the 16th of this instant July 1679. and ended on Fryday the 18th. at the Sessions-house in the Old-Bayly, with the number of those that are condemn'd, burn'd in the hand, transported and to be whipt. As also, of the tryals of Sir George Wakeman, Mr. James Corker, William Rumley and William Marshal: all which were charged with high-treason -
The avthoritie of the Chvrch in making canons and constitutions concerning things indifferent
and the obedience thereto required: with particular application to the present estate of the Church of England. Deliuered in a sermon preached in the Greene yard at Norwich the third Sunday after Trinitie. 1605. By Fran. Mason, Bacheler of Diuinitie, and sometime fellow of Merton College in Oxford. And now in sundrie points by him enlarged -
Two letters
one from the States-general to His Most Christian Majesty, the other from His Most Christian Majesty to the States-general, relating to the present conjuncture of affairs -
The late Lord Beilhaven's memorable speeches in the last Parliament of Scotland, holden at Edinburgh, in November 1706
on the subject-matter of the then projected union of both kingdoms ... with an occasional preface, by the editor -
Property re-asserted
in answer to the arguments and exceptions in a late paper, intituled, Property vindicated -
A free and impartial enquiry into the extraordinary and advantagious bargain, (lately under the consideration of Parliament) for remitting money for the pay of the forces abroad for the year 1743
being a faithful specimen of the oeconomy and management of the present administration in domestic affairs -
Five hundred points of good husbandry
as well for the champion or open countrey, as also for the woodland or several, mixed in every moneth with houswifery, over and besides the Booke of houswifery ... -
The Lord Chancellor's speech upon the Lord treasurer's taking his oath in the Exchequer
the fifth of December, 1672 -
[Four treatises on trade]
-
At the court at Whitehal, the third day of May 1672
present the King's most excellent majesty -
The oaths of allegiance & supremacy
-
A Familiar discourse between George, a true-hearted English gentleman, and Hans, a Dutch merchant, concerning the present affairs of England
-
Cottoni posthuma
divers choice pieces of that renowned antiquary Sir Robert Cotton, Knight and Baronet, preserved from the injury of time and exposed to publick light for the benefit of posterity -
A brief advertisement to the merchant and clothier about the present state of the woollen manufactures of this nation
to which is added an abstract of a late impression of England's interest by trade -
The emblem of ingratitude
a true relation of the unjust, cruel, and barbarous proceedings against the English at Amboyna in the East-Indies by the Netherlandish governour & council there -
By the King. A proclamation for the more speedy bringing in of seamen and mariners
-
The interest of England in the present war with Holland
-
The Dutch remonstrance concerning the proceedings and practices of John de Witt, pensionary, and Ruwaert van Putten, his brother, with others of that faction
-
A justification of the present war against the United Netherlands
wherein the declaration of His Majesty is vindicated and the war proved to be just, honourable, and necessary, the dominion of the sea explained, and His Majesties rights thereunto asserted, the obligations of the Dutch to England and their continual ingratitude