Titles by Amey, Elizabeth in APA format
There are 19 titles associated with this person.
de La Noüe
, D.M.
(1743).
A declaration of monsieur de la noue, to the diet of the empire, at francfort, in the name of the french king. with proper observations upon that masterpiece of french policy. translated from the dutch.
London:
Unknown
, .
(1745).
An address to that honest part of the nation, call'd the lower sort of people; on the subject of popery and the pretender.
London:
Charles Corbett.
Unknown
, .
(1745).
An address to that honest part of the nation, call'd the lower sort of people; on the subject of popery and the pretender. the second edition.
London:
Charles Corbett.
Mead
, R.
(1747).
A discourse of the small-pox and measles. by richard mead, fellow of the london and edinburgh colleges of physicians, and of the royal-society, and physician to the king. to this is subjoined the commentary of rhazes, a most celebrated arabian physician, on the same diseases. translated from the latin, by a physician.
London:
Anne Dodd II. Elizabeth Nutt [Royal Exchange] Elizabeth Cooke [Cook] Elizabeth Amey.
Unknown
, .
(1747).
A letter to the heads of the university of oxford, on a late very remarkable affair.
London:
Unknown
, .
(1747).
A parallel between the roman and british constitution; comprehending polibius's curious discourse of the roman senate; with a copious preface, wherein his principles are applied to our government. the whole calculated to restore the true spirit of liberty, and to explode dependancy and corruption. addressed to the young members of the present parliament.
London:
Unknown
, .
(1747).
A parallel between the roman and british constitution; comprehending polibius's curious discourse of the roman senate; with a copious preface, wherein his principles are applied to our government. the whole calculated to restore the true spirit of liberty, and to explode dependancy and corruption. addressed to the young members of the present parliament.
London:
Unknown
, .
(1747).
An address to the electors of great britain. in which the constitution of england is considered and asserted; particularly, the original design, nature, privileges and, power of the house of commons, as opposed to ministerial influence and corruption. the independancy of parliaments earnestly recommended, as the only means to make the nation happy. by an independant elector.
London:
Elizabeth Amey.
Unknown
, .
(1747).
An address to the gentlemen, clergy, and freeholders of all the counties in great britain, and to the mayors, jurats, bailiffs, aldermen, common councilmen, and burgesses of all the cities, towns-corporate, and boroughs throughout the said kingdom of great britain. the following necessary and friendly advice is humbly offered, by a cordial admirer of truth and liberty, and a zealous friend to this constitution.
London:
Elizabeth Amey.
Parliament of Great Britain
, H.o.C., &
Parliament of Great Britain
, H.o.L.
(1747).
New and correct lists of both houses of parliament: summoned to meet the 10th of november 1747. containing, 1. a list of the lords spiritual and temporal, with the posts they hold under the government; the titles of their eldest sons, and their residence in town. 2. an alphabetical list of the lords, with their country seats. 3. lists of the knights of the garter, thistle, and bath; with a table of fees paid at their creation. 4. a list of the counties, boroughs, &c. in the order they are call'd over in the house; with the names of the members return'd for each, the places they possess, and their country seats. 5. an alphabetical list of the members of the house of commons, the place each is chosen for, and their residence in town. and an alphabetical list of the counties, cities, and boroughs, with the pages where their representatives are to be found; and several other useful particulars and distinctions throughout the whole: also, a list of members in the last parliament not in this. carefully done by the compilers of the former lists and revis'd by several members of parliament.
London:
Parliament of Great Britain
, H.o.C., &
Parliament of Great Britain
, H.o.L.
(1747).
New and correct lists of both houses of parliament: summoned to meet the 10th of november 1747. containing, 1. a list of the lords spiritual and temporal, with the posts they hold under the government; the titles of their eldest sons, and their residence in town. 2. an alphabetical list of the lords, with their country seats. 3. lists of the knights of the garter, thistle, and bath; with a table of fees paid at their creation. 4. a list of the counties, boroughs, &c. in the order they are call'd over in the house; with the names of the members return'd for each, the places they possess, and their country seats. 5. an alphabetical list of the members of the house of commons, the place each is chosen for, and their residence in town. and an alphabetical list of the counties, cities, and boroughs, with the pages where their representatives are to be found; and several other useful particulars and distinctions throughout the whole: also, a list of members in the last parliament not in this. carefully done by the compilers of the former lists and revis'd by several members of parliament.
London:
Unknown
, .
(1748).
A proposal for relief and punishment of vagrants, particularly such as frequent the streets and publick places of resort, within this kingdom.
London:
Elizabeth Amey.
Unknown
, .
(1748).
Memoirs of the life and times, of sir thomas deveil, knight, one of his majesty's justices of the peace, for the counties of middlesex, essex, surry and hertfordshire, the city and liberty of westminster, the tower of london, and the liberties thereof, &c.
London:
Unknown
, .
(1748).
Memoirs of the life and times, of sir thomas deveil, knight, one of his majesty's justices of the peace, for the counties of middlesex, essex, surry and hertfordshire, the city and liberty of westminster, the tower of london, and the liberties thereof, &c.
London:
Unknown
, .
(1748).
Remarks on an appeal to the publick, by mr. cleland, against thirteen govenors of the general hospital at bath; with respect to their suspending and dismissing him from his office, as surgeon to the said hospital, upon the evidence of two notorious prostitutes. and on a letter to him, (from a reverend advocate for the thirteen governors) occasioned by his full vindication of the said appeal. to which is added extracts from the case of seduction, relating to a french abbee's committing rapes upon 133 virgins in order to shew the analogy of the partial proceedings against mr. cleland and the said abbee.
London:
John Wood. William Owen. Elizabeth Amey. William Frederick.
Unknown
, .
(1748).
The fool: being a collection of essays and epistles, moral, political, humourous, and entertaining. published in the daily gazetteer. with the author's preface, and a complete index.
London:
Unknown
, .
(1748).
The fool: being a collection of essays and epistles, moral, political, humourous, and entertaining. published in the daily gazetteer. with the author's preface, and a complete index.
London:
Henley
, J.
(1748).
The informer's winding-sheet: or, nine oaths for a shilling. being a parable, in five allegorical discourses: on i. st. paul's treatment and apology, on a charge of preaching against the government. ii. gallio's prohibiting the prosecution of st. paul, for words; and a sketch of words accused, in a manuscript paper, privately handed about the public, answered. iii. the liberty of one protestant dissenter's preaching in his own way, asserted; proving the words were for the government: and a reply to the censure of indecent or light expressions, pretense of religion, ridiculing religion, wicked purpose, sedition, treason, blasphemy, disorder, &c. iv. the justice's and counsellor's vade-mecum, a disquisition on false witness, by the laws of god, nature, nations, philosophy, the civil, canon, and common laws; and the validity or nullity of evidence of words decided. v. the right to free speaking and reasoning in all lights, on trustees of government, no sedition, but one weight in the people's choice on occasion between in english free protestant authority, and a supposed french popish dominion: and sedition defin'd. by sir mawdcope moreclarke, of hull, in coates's rents, garrn-street, opposite the sign of the seven affidavits.
London:
Lilburn Shaftsbury.
Loredano
, G.F.
(1748).
The life of adam. translated from gio francisco loridano. to which is subjoyn'd, an essay towards an analysis of the human mind. being, an enquiry into the original of our ideas of good and evil, and the nature, rise, and progress of the passions, habits, and affections of the human soul. by richard murray, a. m. & j. u. b.
London:
Thomas Osborne II. Elizabeth Nutt [Royal Exchange] Elizabeth Cooke [Cook] Mary Cooper. Charles Corbett. Anne Dodd II. George Woodfall [Charing Cross] John Jackson. Henry Chapelle [Chappelle] Elizabeth Amey.