ID 2529
Last Name Unknown
First Name
Title
Gender Unknown
Date of Birth
Date of Death
Place of Birth
Place of Death
VIAF URI
Wikipedia Entry
Jackson Entry
Image URL
Notes
Timeline

Titles

Displaying 526–550 of 1388

Role Title Date
Author A criticism on Mahomet and Irene. In a letter to the author. 1749
Author A letter to Mr G-------k, Relative to His treble Capacity of Manager, Actor, and Author; With some Remarks on Lethe. 1749
Author A letter to the town, concerning the man and the bottle. 1749
Author A Protestant catechism: Shewing the principal errors of the Church of Rome. Published by Order of the Incorporated Society in Dublin, for promoting English Protestant schools in Ireland. The fourth edition. 1749
Author An authentick account of the conduct of the young Chevalier, from his first arrival in Paris, after his defeat at Culloden, to the conclusion of the peace at Aix-la-Chapelle. Wherein the motives of his late behaviour are fully laid open and explained; with the various messages that passed between him and the French King; and many other curious and interesting particulars. Never before made public. In a letter from a gentleman residing at Paris, to his friend in London. 1749
Author At the General Assembly of the governor and Company of the English colony of Rhode-Island, and Providence Plantations, in New-England, in America, held at Providence, within and for the colony aforesaid, on the first Tuesday of January, being the third day of said month, i the twenty-second year of the reign of His Most Sacred Majesty George the Second, by the grace of God, king of Great-Britain, &c. 1749
Author At the General Assembly of the governor and Company of the English colony of Rhode-Island, and Providence Plantations, in New-England, in America; begun and held by adjournment at Newport, the third Monday of August, in the twenty-third year of the reign of His Most Sacred Majesty George the Second, by the grace of God, of Great-Britain, France, and Ireland, king, defender of the faith, &c. And in the year of our Lord, one thousand seven hundred and forty nine. 1749
Author Jane Shore to the Duke of Gloster, an epistle. 1749
Author The Small English atlas being a new and accurate sett of maps of all the counties in England and Wales. 1749
Author A home truth: being memoirs of the love and state-intrigues of the Court of H---; from the marriage of the Princess of Z------, to the tragical death of Count K-----k: written originally in High-German, by the celebrated Countess of K----k. The Second Edition. 1750
Author A serious and affectionate address to the cities of London and Westminster; occasioned by the late earthquake. The second edition. 1750
Author An account of explosions in the atmosphere, or airquakes. Their distinction from true earthquakes. With some observations on the late shocks, near this city, &c. to shew that they were most probably of the former kind. 1750
Author Friendly Advice to a child unborn. A little piece of poetry, with very long notes. By a person of learning, as you may see by the motto. 1750
Author Lucina sine concubitu. A letter humbly address'd to the Royal Society; in which is proved by most incontestible evidence, drawn from reason and practice, that a woman may conceive and be brought to bed without any commerce with man. 1750
Author Memoirs of the life of Mrs. A--a W--t. Shewing, I. The unkind Usage she receiv'd from an only Brother. II. The Cause of her coming to London. III. The Manner in which she was seduc'd from the Inn, to a House of ill Fame. IV. How she was there male-treated, debauch'd, and confin'd for the Space of two Years. V. Her Behaviour and Treatment there till the Time of her Deliverance, and how dispos'd of since. 1750
Author The conduct and scandalous behaviour of the porters in Exchange Alley. To which is added, the heads of a remarkable trial at a Travest Sessions at Guildhall, London, on the twentieth day of September, one thousand seven hundred and forty-nine. By a Society of twenty impartial inquirers. 1750
Author The story on which the new tragedy, call'd, The Roman father, is founded. With some account of the author, and his writings. 1750
Author The story on which the new tragedy, call'd, The Roman father, is founded. With some account of the author, and his writings. The Second Edition. 1750
Author A letter to a Member of Parliament, concerning the laws which disable Papists from purchasing in this kingdom. 1751
Author A letter to a Member of Parliament, concerning the laws which disable Papists from purchasing in this kingdom. 1751
Author Mother Midnight's miscellany. Containing, more than all the wit, and all the humour, and all the learning, and all the judgement, that has ever been, or ever will be. Likewise the Discovery of an unknown World; with some Account of the Religion, Customs, Manners, and Ceremonies of the Glums and Gawrys, Men and Women that Fly: With the Marriage-Ceremony of a Lying Man to a Flying Woman, and many other extraordinary Events, which ought never to be forgotten. First discover'd by Selim, in a Vision, on the Hills of Bagdat, on the sixth Day of the fourth Moon, Anno Mundi, 5791. Dedicated to the King of the Fidlers, and to his Queen, and to the Great Mogul's Jester, and to the greatest Conjurer in all Lapland, and to Bajazet the famous Race-Horse, and to the Gnost of Black and All Black, &c. &c. &c. By Mary Midnight, Midwise to all the Inhabitants of this Cosmos, and to the Choice Spirits in the Elysian Shades. Publish'd (which she always observes) in Conformity to several Acts of Parliament, and by Permission of their Most Christian and Most Catholick Majesties, the Great Mogul, and the States General. 1751
Author The life of the most Reverend Dr Cranmer, Some Time Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, Primate of all England, and Metropolitan; One of His Majesty's Most Honourable Privy-Council in the Reign of Henry Viii. Chairman of the Committee for Compiling the English Liturgy, and Martyr in the Reign of Queen Mary. The Whole including various remarkable Events in the History of the Reformation. 1751
Author The rural maid, a poem. 1751
Author The true and genuine account of the confession (whilst under sentence of death) of Thomas Jones, and James Welch, for the barbarous rape and murder of Sarah Green, ... Together with a genuine account of the remarkable robberies committed by Matthias Keys, and Henry Bryan. ... 1751
Author The œconomy of human life. Translated from an Indian Manuscript, written by an ancient Bramin. To which is prefixed, An account of the Manner in which the said manuscript was discover'd. In a letter from an English Gentleman, now residing in China, to the Earl of ****. 1751

Cite this Page

"Unknown" The Women's Print History Project, 2019, Person ID 2529, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/person/2529. Accessed 2025-09-13.

Suggestions and Comments for Unknown
Follow Up