ID 4005
Last Name Dodd II
First Name Anne
Title
Gender Female
Date of Birth
Date of Death 1757
Place of Birth
Place of Death London
Related Firms Anne Dodd II
Anne Dodd I
VIAF URI http://viaf.org/viaf/11160664937303360561/#Dodd,_Anne,_active_1739-1757
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Titles

Displaying 126–150 of 223

Role Title Date
Bookseller On the late decease of the Honourable John Spencer, Esq; an elegiac essay. Humbly inscribed to His Grace the Duke of M----------. 1746
Publisher One thousand, seven hundred, and forty-five. A satiric-epistle; after the manner of Mr. Pope. 1746
Publisher Past and present, or, times compared: a satire. By the author of One thousand seven hundred and forty-five. 1746
Bookseller Physic in danger: being the complaint of the Company of Undertakers, against the Doctors T-, C-, and D-. Addressed to the College of Physicians: Containing remarks upon the pamphlets lately published by those three gentlemen. 1746
Publisher The case of the revolution truly stated; or, full proof that the Pretender (if allow'd to be King James's son) has no more right to the crown of England, than King Saul's son had to the throne of Judah. 1746
Bookseller The frauds of popery, and the abettors of the present rebellion, set in a true light. A sermon preach'd at the church in Doncaster, on Sunday the 29th of December, 1745. By William Holmes, Master of the Grammar-School in Pontefract, and Curate of Ferry-Fryston. Published at the Request of the Corporation. 1746
Bookseller The frauds of popery, and the folly of the abettors of the present rebellion, set in a true light. A sermon preach'd at the church in Doncaster, on Sunday the 29th of December, 1745. By William Holmes, Master of the Grammar-School in Pontefract, and Curate of Ferry-Fryston. The second edition, corrected. 1746
Publisher The present condition of Great-Britain, in a discourse upon things that have not been considered, though they are of the greatest consequence to her. With a true state of the case between us and the Dutch, that may not be unworthy of the Deliberations of that august Assembly by which we are represented in Parliament; and particularly in that great Article which fills them with so many Terrors as are insinuated in our present Accounts from Holland. 1746
Bookseller 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. 1747
Bookseller A letter to the heads of the University of Oxford, on a late very remarkable affair. 1747
Publisher Ovid’s Art of love paraphrased, and adapted to the present time. With notes. And a most correct edition of the original. Book I. 1747
Bookseller The female rebels: being some remarkable incidents of the lives, characters, and families of the titular Duke and Dutchess of Perth, the Lord and Lady Ogilvie, and of Miss Florence M'donald. Containing several particulars of these remarkable persons not hitherto published. 1747
Publisher Adollizing: or, A lively picture of adoll-worship. A poem in five canto's. 1748
Publisher An enquiry into the behaviour of our great churchmen since the reformation in the enacting and executing of penal laws against papists and Protestant diffenters. 1748
Printer 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. 1748
Bookseller 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. 1748
Publisher Seasonable observations on the naturalization bill, now depending in Parliament; and also a clear confutation of the city of London's remonstrance to the House against it, shewing the advantages that will accrue to Great-Britain by a naturalization. 1748
Bookseller 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. 1748
Printer 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. 1748
Bookseller 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. 1748
Publisher 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. 1748
Bookseller The true-Born Englishman. A satire. Corrected and enlarg'd by the author. 1748
Printer A criticism on Mahomet and Irene. In a letter to the author. 1749
Bookseller A criticism on Mahomet and Irene. In a letter to the author. 1749
Bookseller A letter to Mr G-------k, Relative to His treble Capacity of Manager, Actor, and Author; With some Remarks on Lethe. 1749

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"Dodd II, Anne" The Women's Print History Project, 2019, Person ID 4005, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/person/4005. Accessed 2025-04-01.

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