J. Tonson
Active Years
Min year: 1682, Max year: 1780, Max count: 21
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
- 1682: Prologue to His Royal Highness, upon his first appearance at the Duke's Theatre since his return from Scotland. Written by Mr. Dryden. Spoken by Mr. Smith
- 1688: Britannia rediviva
- 1691: Britannia rediviva
- 1709: The Indian emperor
- 1712: Anicius Manlius Severinus Boetius
- 1713: Rural sports
- 1714: The good man's refuge in distress
- 1715: The humble address of the House of Commons to the King
- 1715: Claremont
- 1715: The report of the committee appointed to inspect the poors [sic] rates and the scavengers rates within the cities of London and Westminster, and weekly bills of mortality.
- 1715: The political writings of Sir Richard Steele
- 1715: The lover
- 1717: Thomyris, Queen of Scythia. An opera
- 1718: The distrest mother
- 1719: Wit and mirth; or pills to purge melancholy
- 1719: Plays
- 1719: The works of Sir John Suckling
- 1719: An ode on His Majesty's return
- 1719: Wit and mirth; or pills to purge melancholy
- 1720: The poetical works
- 1725: The careless husband
- 1727: The christian hero
- 1727: Fables. By Mr. Gay
- 1727: Cyder
- 1727: The first part of Miscellany poems
- 1727: All for love
- 1727: Tables of ancient coins, weights and measures, explain'd and exemplify'd in several dissertations
- 1727: Poetical miscellanies, consisting of original poems and translations
- 1728: The elogium of Sir Isaac Newton
- 1728: The chronology of ancient kingdoms amended
- 1729: Ovid's epistles: with his amours. Translated into English verse, by the most eminent hands. Adorn'd with cutts
- 1729: A general ecclesiastical history
- 1729: The great art of artillery of Casimir Simienowicz
- 1730: Love of fame, the universal passion. In seven characteristical satires
- 1730: The odes
- 1730: The works of Edmund Waller
- 1731: An essay concerning the nature of aliments
- 1731: The careless husband
- 1731: Poems on several occasions
- 1732: The British enchanters
- 1732: A letter to the author of Reflexions historical and political
- 1732: Alciphron
- 1732: An essay concerning the nature of aliments
- 1732: The ladies library
- 1733: Fables. By the late Mr. Gay
- 1733: The judgement of Paris
- 1733: The theory of vision, or visual language, shewing the immediate presence and providence of a deity, vindicated and explained. By the author of Alciphron, or, the minute philosopher
- 1733: Friendship in fashion
- 1734: Gnothi seauton
- 1734: The analyst
- 1735: The mistake
- 1735: The rival ladies
- 1735: Troilus and Cressida
- 1735: Limberham
- 1735: Love triumphant
- 1735: Poems on several occasions
- 1735: The wild gallant
- 1735: An essay concerning the nature of aliments
- 1735: The state of innocence, and fall of man
- 1735: Mariamne
- 1736: Friendship in fashion
- 1736: The biter
- 1736: The mourning bride. A tragedy
- 1737: Fables. By the late Mr. Gay
- 1739: The free-holder, or, Political essays
- 1739: An account of the expedition of the British fleet to Sicily, in the years 1718, 1719 and 1720
- 1740: L'llegro
- 1743: Paradise regain'd
- 1744: Several orations
- 1744: Cyder
- 1744: The works of Edmund Waller
- 1745: Hercules
- 1745: Fables antient and modern
- 1745: Three sermons
- 1745: Remarks on several parts of Italy, &c. in the years 1701, 1702, 1703
- 1746: A new occasional oratorio
- 1746: The mischiefs of division with respect both to religion and civil government
- 1746: Miscellaneous works
- 1747: Miss in her teens
- 1747: Miss in her teens
- 1747: The fair penitent. A tragedy
- 1747: The suspicious husband
- 1747: The Suspicious husband
- 1747: Miss in her teens
- 1748: Joshua
- 1748: Pastorals, epistles, odes, and other original poems
- 1748: Ovid's art of love, in three books
- 1748: Miss in her teens
- 1748: Ovid's epistles: with his amours. Translated into English verse, by the most eminent hands
- 1749: A general table of the matters contained in the eight volumes of the Lives of Plutarch
- 1749: The spectator
- 1749: The distrest mother
- 1749: The suspicious husband
- 1749: Theological lectures at Westminster-Abbey
- 1749: Samson. An oratorio
- 1749: The life and exploits of the ingenious gentleman Don Quixote de la Mancha
- 1749: Plutarch's Lives
- 1749: The old and New Testament connected
- 1749: Theological lectures at Westminster-Abbey
- 1749: Paradise lost
- 1749: Solomon. An oratorio
- 1750: A dissertation on II Peter I. 19. In which is shewn, I. That the interpretation of this passage, in the Apostle, as it is propos'd by the author of The grounds and reasons of the Christian religion, is not, probably, the sense of the author, because it does not fall in naturally, with the Course of his Argument to make any Comparison between Miracles and Prophecy; nor is the State of the, suppos'd, Comparison natural. II. That it cannot, possibly, express the Mind of the Author, because it includes Assertions which are false in fact, and, absolutely, contradictory to the positive Declarations of Christ himself. III. That the most remarkable Interpretations, which are manifestly intended to remove these Difficulties, are liable to the same, or other Difficulties. IV. That there is a Construction of the Place, which is natural, easy, and obvious; consistent with the Argument of the Apostle, with the Truth of Things, and with the whole Tenor of the Gospel. Nullius addictus jurare in Verba Magistri, Quod verum atque decens curo, & rogo, & omnis in hoc sum. By Thomas Ashton, M. A. Fellow of Eton College
- 1750: Edward the Black Prince; or, The battle of poictiers
- 1750: The fair penitent. A tragedy
- 1750: The spectator. ...
- 1750: The thousand and one days
- 1750: A critical enquiry into the present state of surgery
- 1750: The works of celebrated authors
- 1750: Samson. An oratorio
- 1750: A critical enquiry into the present state of surgery
- 1750: The works of Mr. Francis Beaumont, and Mr. John Fletcher
- 1750: The careless husband
- 1750: The mourning bride
- 1750: A character of King Charles the Second
- 1751: The confederacy
- 1751: Alexander's feast
- 1751: The Grecian history
- 1751: Julius Cæsar
- 1751: The ladies library
- 1751: A treatise on the operations of surgery
- 1751: An essay concerning the effects of air on human bodies
- 1751: The drummer
- 1751: The grecian history
- 1751: Ovid's metamorphoses, in fifteen books
- 1751: The free-holder. Or Political essays. By the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Esq
- 1752: Alciphron
- 1752: All for love
- 1752: A miscellany
- 1752: The use of a liturgy, and the excellency of the liturgy of the Church of England considered
- 1752: Paradise regain'd
- 1752: Joshua
- 1752: Every man in his humour. A comedy
- 1752: Love of fame
- 1752: Romeo and Juliet
- 1752: The use of a liturgy
- 1753: The commentaries
- 1753: The spectator.
- 1753: The spanish fryar
- 1753: Miscellaneous works
- 1753: The country lasses
- 1753: Lucan's Pharsalia. Translated into English verse by Nicholas Rowe, Esq; In two volumes. ...
- 1753: Remarks on several parts of Italy, &c. in the years, 1701, 1702, 1703
- 1753: The evidences of the Christian religion
- 1753: The creation and fall of man
- 1753: The mourning bride. A tragedy. Written by Mr. Congreve
- 1753: Alexander's feast
- 1753: The committee: or, the Faithful Irishman
- 1753: Rule a wife, and have a wife
- 1754: The analyst
- 1754: The fair penitent. A tragedy
- 1754: Samson. An oratorio
- 1754: Joshua
- 1754: Dissertations on the prophecies
- 1754: L'allegro, ed il penseroso
- 1754: Cases in surgery
- 1754: The life and death of King John
- 1754: The satyrs of Decimus Junius Juvenalis
- 1754: A sermon preached before the Sons of the Clergy
- 1754: A collection of sermons
- 1754: The old batchelor
- 1754: Cases in surgery
- 1754: A critical enquiry into the present state of surgery
- 1755: The fairies
- 1755: Barbarossa
- 1755: Fables antient and modern
- 1755: Every man in his humour
- 1755: The fairies
- 1755: The fairies. An opera
- 1755: The christian hero
- 1755: Barbarossa
- 1756: The late dreadful earthquakes no proof of God's particular wrath against the Portuguese
- 1759: The prophetess
- 1760: Samson. An oratorio
- 1760: The jovial crew
- 1761: The royal merchant; or, the beggars bush. A comedy. As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Covent-Garden. Written by Beaumont and Fletcher
- 1761: The school-Boy
- 1761: Essays on education
- 1761: The dramatic works of Colley Cibber, Esq; in five volumes. Volume the fifth.
- 1761: The dramatic works of Sir Richard Steele, Knt
- 1761: Every man in his humour
- 1762: The farmer's return from London
- 1762: Cymbeline
- 1762: Poems attempted in the style of Milton
- 1762: The Indian Queen: a tragedy. Written by the Honourable Sir Robert Howard, and Mr. Dryden
- 1762: The farmer's return from London
- 1763: Romeo and Juliet
- 1763: Rule a wife, and have a wife
- 1763: A midsummer night's dream
- 1765: The miscellaneous works
- 1766: Paradise regain'd
- 1767: The miscellaneous works
- 1768: A sermon preached in the parish-church of Wandsworth, in the county of Surrey, on May 16, 1748. at the funeral of the Reverend Thomas Cawley, M. A. late Vicar of that Church. By Thomas Church, M. A. Vicar of Battersea, and Prebendary of St. Paul's
- 1780: The death of Abel
As Printer
- 1709: Late last night the following account was brought over by an express arrived here from Great Britain. Windsor-Castle, September 4. 1709. This morning arrived here Lieutenant-Colonel Graham, being dispatched express from the Duke of Marlborough to Her Majesty, and brought the following letter from His Grace to the Right Honourable Mr. Secretary Boyle. Published by authority
- 1709: Whitehall, August 25. 1709
- 1710: Letters of the second of September, which came in late last night from the Hague
- 1716: Marinda. Poems and translations upon several occasions
- 1724: Instructions for officers in the country, who take account of coffee, tea, cocoa nuts, and chocolate, and survey chocolate-makers
- 1724: Instructions to be observed by the officers employ'd in the duty on coffee, tea, and chocolate, in London
- 1725: An abridgement and abstract of the laws relating to the ordnance
- 1725: The supplement to Antiquity explained, and represented in sculptures, by the learned Father Montfaucon. Translated into English by David Humphreys, ... In five volumes.
- 1726: Bibliothec? Bridgesian? catalogus
- 1728: De mundi systemate
- 1735: Sermons upon several practical subjects
- 1735: Instructions for collectors of excise
Mon Oct 02 04:26:14 CDT 2023