Name Publisher
Description The firm that takes on the financial responsibility for the editing, printing, and distribution of the work. Usually indicated by the phrase “printed for” in the imprint. In the event that a work has been self-published, this will be indicated in the Self-Published field.

Firms

Displaying 22951–22975 of 23973

Firm Title
Henry Lintot Friendship in death: in twenty letters from the dead to the living. To which are added, letters moral and entertaining, in prose and verse. In three parts. By Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe.
George Ewing The man's bewitch'd; or, the devil to do about her. A comedy, as it is acted at the New-theatre in the Hay-market; by her Majesty's servants. Written by Susanna Cent-livre.
Bernard Lintott The masquerade. A poem. Humbly inscribed to His Grace the Duke d'Aumont.
James Roberts [Warwick Lane] The masqueraders; or fatal curiosity: being the secret history of a late amour. Part II.
George Ewing The masqueraders. Or fatal curiosity: being the secret history of a late amour.
Thomas Astley The merry masqueraders: or, the humorous cuckold. A comedy.
John Isted The merry masqueraders: or, the humorous cuckold. A comedy.
Elizabeth Nutt [Royal Exchange] The merry masqueraders: or, the humorous cuckold. A comedy.
Anne Dodd I The merry masqueraders: or, the humorous cuckold. A comedy.
John Jolliffe The merry masqueraders: or, the humorous cuckold. A comedy.
Abigail (Ann) Baldwin [Warwick Lane] The moderator: or, Considerations propos'd, in order to end the unseasonable debate concerning the legality of the late happy revolution. By a country minister of the Church of England, zealously devoted to her doctrine and discipline, as by law establish'd. The Second Edition Corrected and Augmented.
Thomas Worrall [Judge Coke's Head, Fleet Street] Friendship in death: in twenty letters from the dead to the living. To which are added, Letters moral and entertaining, in prose and verse. In three parts. By the same author.
Thomas Worrall [At Judge's Head, Fleet Street] Friendship in death: in twenty letters from the dead to the living. To which are added, letters moral and entertaining. In prose and verse. In three parts. By Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe. The fifth edition.
E. Penn An account of the life and death of Mrs. Elizabeth Bury, who died, May the 11th 1720. Aged 76. Chiefly collected out of her own diary. Together with her funeral sermon, preach'd at Bristol, ... By the Reverend Mr. William Tong, and her elegy, by the Reverend Mr. J. Watts. The Fourth Edition, Corrected.
Sarah Malthus The moderator: published for promoting of peace; for reconciling differences between parties; to shew wherein every one misses it, and for uniting the hearts of the people to Her Majesty and government, &c.
Sarah Malthus The moderator: published for promoting of peace; for reconciling differences between parties; to shew wherein every one misses it, and for uniting the hearts of the people to Her Majesty and government, &c.
John Penn An account of the life and death of Mrs. Elizabeth Bury, who died, May the 11th 1720. Aged 76. Chiefly collected out of her own diary. Together with her funeral sermon, preach'd at Bristol, May 22. 1720. By the Reverend Mr. William Tong, and her Elegy, by the Reverend Mr. J. Watts. The Third Edition, Corrected.
Joseph Penn An account of the life and death of Mrs. Elizabeth Bury, who died, May the 11th, 1720. Aged 76. Chiefly collected out of her own diary. Together with her funeral sermon, preach'd at Bristol, May 22. 1720. By the Reverend Mr. William Tong, and her elegy by the Reverend Mr J. Watts.
s.n. [sine nomine] An address to young people, or Warning to them from one among them, yet may be called warning from the dead, given by Mercy Wheeler of Plainfield, a person confined to a bed of languishing for more than five years together.
s.n. [sine nomine] An account of the particular soliloquis and covenant engagements, past betwixt Mrs. Jannet Hamilton the defunct Lady of Alexander Gordon of Earlstoun. Upon the severel dyets, and at several places under writen & were found in her cabinet among her paper after her death at Earlstoun, February 26th. 1696. Being all writen and subscrived with her own hand.
s.n. [sine nomine] An account of the particular soliloquies and covenant engagements past betwixt Mrs. Janet Hamilton, the defunct Lady of Alexander Gordon of Earlstoun; upon the several dyets, and at the several places underwritten; which were found in her cabinet among her papers, after her death at Earlstoun, Feb. 26. 1696 being all written and subscrived with her own hand.
Abigail (Ann) Baldwin [Warwick Lane] An answer to A letter from a clergy-man in the country to a dignify'd clergy-man in London, &c. Concerning the bill brought in the last session of Parliament for preventing the translation of bishops.
John Morphew La conduite de milord Duc d'Ormonde, pendant la campagne de l'année, 1712.
John Morphew An apology for the clergy of the Church of England, in a letter to the Lord Bishop of Bangor. Wherein some unjust insinuations against them, in his lordship's answer to the representation of the committee of the lower house of convocation are detected and confuted; and the necessity of learning, in order to a right understanding and exposition of the scriptures, demonstrated; contrary to what his lordship asserts, particularly in the 20th section of his first chapter; and to many other dangerous positions in the course of that book. By a clergyman of the Church of England.
Rebecca Bonwicke An English dictionary, explaining the difficult terms that are used in divinity, husbandry, physick, philosophy, law, navigation, mathematicks, and other arts and sciences. Containing many thousand of hard words (and proper names of places) more than are in any other English dictionary or expositor: together with the etymological derivation of them from their proper fountains, whether, Hebrew, Greek, Latin, French, or any other language. In a method more comprehensive than any that is extant. By E. Coles, schoolmaster, and teacher of the tongue to foreigners.