Name ESTC
Online Source http://estc.bl.uk/
Description

The 'English Short Title Catalogue' (ESTC) is a comprehensive, international union catalogue listing early books, serials, newspapers and selected ephemera printed before 1801. It contains catalogue entries for items issued in Britain, Ireland, overseas territories under British colonial rule, and the United States. The database contains over 480,000 entries, and represents the holdings of some 2,000 libraries world-wide.

Citation

 English Short Title Catalogue. British Library, www.estc.bl.uk/.

Titles 8235
Firms 78
View Source Firms

Titles

Displaying 3701–3725 of 8235

ID Title Author Firms (City) Date Edition
6664 Miscellanies, in prose and verse. By Miss Edwards. Edwards , Miss
1776
2352 Miscellanies, in prose and verse. By Mrs. Catharine [sic] Jemmat, daughter of the late Admiral Yeo, of Plymouth, and author of her own Memoirs Jemmat , Catherine
s.n. [sine nomine]
1771
2351 Miscellanies, in prose and verse. By Mrs. Catherine Jemmat. Daughter of the late Admiral Yeo, of Plymouth, and Author of her own Memoirs. Jemmat , Catherine
1766
15671 Miscellany Poems on Several Subjects Thomas , Elizabeth
Thomas Combes (London)
1722
23666 Miscellany poems on several subjects. Thomas , Elizabeth
Thomas Combes (London)
1722
23978 Miscellany poems, on several occasions. Written by a lady. Finch , Anne
John Barber (London)
1713
24373 Miscellany poems, on several occasions. Written by a lady. Finch , Anne
John Barber (London)
1713
22185 Miscellany poems, on several occasions. Written by the Right Honble Anne, Countess of Winchilsea. Finch , Anne
John Barber (London)
1713
23977 Miscellany poems, on several occasions. Written by the Right Honble Anne, Countess of Winchilsea. Finch , Anne
John Barber (London)
1713
22375 Miscellany poems, with a tragedy. By a lady, author of the poem on the spleen. Finch , Anne
John Barber (London)
1713
23774 Miscellany poems. By Mrs. Jane Adams in Crawfordsdyke. Adam , Jean
1734
23981 Misery is vertues whetstone. Reliquiæ Gethinianæ. Or some remains of the most ingenious and excellent lady, Grace Lady Gethin. Lately deceased. Being a collection of choice discourses, pleasant, apothegmes, and witty sentences. Written by her for the most part, by way of essay, and at spare hours. Published by her nearest relations to preserve her memory, and digested for method's sake under proper heads. The third edition. With a coppy of verses written by Mr. Congreve. Unto which is added a funeral sermon. With the inscription on her Monument. Gethin , Grace
John Graves (London)
1703 The Third Edition. With a coppy of verses written by Mr. Congreve. Unto which is added a funeral sermon. With the inscription on her Monument
22512 Misery is virtues whet-stone. Reliquiæ Gethinianæ, or, Some remains of the most ingenious and excellent lady, Grace Lady Gethin, lately deceased. Being a collection of choice discourses, pleasant apothegmes, and witty sentences. Written by her for the most part, by way of essay, and at spare hours. Published by her nearest relations to preserve her memory, and digested for method's sake under proper heads. The 2d edition. Unto which is added A funeral sermon. With the inscription on her monument. Gethin , Grace
1700 The 2d edition. Unto which is added A funeral sermon. With the inscription on her monument.
6353 Miss Mary Blandy's own account of the affair between her and Mr. Cranstoun, from the commencement of their acquaintance, in the year 1746, to the death of her father, in August, 1751. With all the circumstances leading to that unhappy event. To which is added, an appendix, containing copies of some original letters now in possession of the editor. Together with an exact relation of her behaviour, while under sentence; and a copy of the declaration signed by herself, in the presence of two clergymen, two days before her execution. Published at her dying request. Blandy , Mary
Andrew Millar (London)
Robert Main (London)
Oliver Nelson (Dublin)
John Exshaw I [Cork Hill] (Dublin)
1752
6141 Miss Mary Blandy's own account of the affair between her and Mr. Cranstoun, from the commencement of their acquaintance, in the year, 1746. To the death of her father, in August 1751. With all the Circumstances leading to that unhappy Event. To which is added, an appendix. Containing copies of some original letters now in Possession of the Editor. Together with an exact Relation of her Behaviour, whilst under Sentence; and a Copy of the Declaration signed by herself, in the Presence of two Clergymen, two Days before her Execution. Published at her dying Request. Blandy , Mary
Andrew Millar (London)
1752
6195 Miss Mary Blandy's own account of the affair between her and Mr. Cranstoun, from the commencement of their acquaintance; in the year 1746. To the death of her father, in August 1751. With all the circumstances leading to that unhappy event. To which is added, an appendix, containing copies of some original letters now in possession of the editor. Together with an exact relation of her behaviour, whilst under sentence; and a copy of the declaration signed by herself, in the presence of two clergymen, two days before her execution. Published at her dying request. Blandy , Mary
Andrew Millar (London)
1752
6365 Miss Mary Blandy's own account of the affair between her and Mr. Cranstoun, from the commencement of their acquaintance; in the year 1746. To the death of her father, in August 1751. With all the circumstances leading to that unhappy event. To which is added, an appendix, containing copies of some original letters now in possession of the editor. Together with an exact relation of her behaviour, whilst under sentence; and a copy of the declaration signed by herself, in the presence of two clergymen, two days before her execution. Published at her dying request. Blandy , Mary
Andrew Millar (London)
1752
6447 Miss Mary Blandy's own account of the affair between her and Mr. Cranstoun, from the commencement of their acquaintance; in the year 1746. To the death of her father, in August 1751. With all the circumstances leading to that unhappy event. To which is added, an appendix, containing copies of some original letters now in possession of the editor. Together with an exact relation of her behaviour, whilst under sentence; and a copy of the declaration signed by herself, in the presence of two clergymen, two days before her execution. Pubished at her dying request. Blandy , Mary
Andrew Millar (London)
1752
7611 Miss Melmoth; or, The new Clarissa. In three volumes. Briscoe , Sophia
Thomas Lowndes [77 Fleet Street] (London)
1771
22933 Miss Scrope's answer to Mr. Cresswell's narrative. Scrope , Elizabeth
Robert Baldwin I (London)
1749
7035 Mistake upon mistake, or, appearance is against them, a farce, in two acts, as it is acted at the Theatre Royal, Covent-Garden. Inchbald , Elizabeth
James Barker and Son (London)
1785
25771 Mocking is catching, or, a pastoral lamentation for the loss of a man and no man. In the simple stile. By the author of Namby Pamby. Carey , Henry
Nicholas Blandford (London)
1726
24827 Models of Letters, for the Use of Schools and Private Students. Being an Epitome of the Large Octavo Volume, Entitled, Elegant Epistles: and Containing Select Letters From the Best English Authors, With Many Translated From the French, Which Have Never Appeared in Any Miscellaneous Collection. Thomas Norton Longman III (London)
Bedwell Law and Son (London)
James Dodsley (London)
Joseph Johnson (London)
Charles Dilly (London)
George, George, and John Robinson (London)
Thomas Cadell [London] (London)
William Richardson [Cornhill] (Cornhill)
Robert Baldwin I (London)
William Goldsmith [Warwick] (London)
Francis and Charles Rivington (London)
Robert Faulder (London)
Samuel Hayes (London)
David Ogilvy and J. Speare (London)
Ann Vernor and Thomas Hood [Birchin Lane] (London)
William Lowndes [76 Fleet Street] (London)
C. Wynne (London)
William Bent [55 Paternoster] (London)
James Scatcherd (London)
George and Thomas Wilkie (London)
John Walker II [44 Paternoster Row, 1784-1814, 1818-1825] (London)
James Evans (London)
Catharine and George Kearsley (London)
H. Murray (London)
1794
22267 Moderation truly stated: or, a review of a late pamphlet, entitul'd, Moderation a vertue, or, the occasional conformist justify'd from the imputation of hypocricy. Wherein this justification is further consider'd, and as far as it is capable, justify'd. Astell , Mary
Richard Wilkin (London)
1704
15655 Moderation truly stated: or, a review of a late pamphlet, entitul'd, moderation a vertue. With a prefatory discourse to Dr. D'Avenant, concerning his late essays on peace and war. Astell , Mary
Richard Wilkin (London)
1704