H. Lownes
Active Years
Min year: 1604, Max year: 1630, Max count: 24
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Printer
- 1604: The sicke mans salue
- 1604: A sermon preached before the Kings maiestie
- 1605: Of the imitation of Christ
- 1605: When you see me, you know me. Or the famous chronicle historie of King Henry the eight, with the birth and vertuous life of Edward Prince of Wales
- 1606: A supplication of the Family of Loue (said to be presented into the Kings royall hands, knowen to be dispersed among his loyall subiectes) for grace and fauour
- 1606: The nine English worthies: or, Famous and worthy princes of England
- 1607: The sicke mans salue
- 1607: Of affectation
- 1607: A discourse of life and death VVritten in French by Phil. Mornay. Done in English by the Countesse of Pembroke
- 1607: A comfortable treatise, for the reliefe of such as are afflicted in conscience
- 1608: Pharisaisme and Christianitie
- 1611: Caries farewell to physicke
- 1611: Musica sacra
- 1611: A helpe vnto deuotion
- 1611: The mother and the child
- 1612: Cato translated grammatically
- 1612: Theophilus, or Loue diuine
- 1612: The golden cabinet of true treasure: containing the summe of morall philosophie. Translated out of French & enlarged, by W. Ievvel, Mr of Arts, of Exeter Colledge in Oxford
- 1612: Theophilus, or Loue diuine
- 1613: Sententię pueriles, translated grammatically
- 1614: The mysterie of the Lords Supper
- 1614: A helpe vnto deuotion
- 1614: The English concord
- 1614: Contemplations vpon the principal passages of the holy story. The second volume; in foure books. By I. Hall, Dr. of Diuinity
- 1614: A siluer watch-bell
- 1615: The posing of the parts. Or, A most plaine and easie way of examining the accidence and grammar, by questions and answeres, arising directly out of the words of the rules
- 1615: The triumph of a Christian
- 1616: The godly merchant, or The great gaine
- 1616: A helpe vnto deuotion
- 1617: Pueriles confabulatiunculę: or Childrens dialogues
- 1618: The posing of the parts. Or a most plaine and easie way of examining the accidence and grammar, by questions and answeres, arising directly out of the words of the rules
- 1618: A counterbane against earthly carefulnes
- 1619: Certaine sermons preached before the Kings Maiestie, and else where
- 1619: [The sicke mannes salve.]
- 1620: The spirituall armour
- 1621: The Roman-Catharist: or the Papist is a Puritane
- 1621: A letter vnto them of the Romish Church, by Peter du Moulin, minister in the reformed Church at Paris. Together with a true iubile or generall pardon of indulgence by the same author
- 1622: The gales of grace; or, the spirituall vvinde
- 1622: The plaine mans path-way to heauen
- 1622: Cato translated grammatically
- 1622: The Countesse of Pembrokes Arcadia
- 1623: A sermon of predestination
- 1623: Spirituall food, and physick
- 1623: A sermon preached at Shelford, in Nottinghamshire
- 1624: A sermon preached in Oxford-shire; by Nicholas Cantrel, Master in Arts. Published at the request of Sir Richard Blunt
- 1624: A true relation of the vniust, cruell, and barbarous proceedings against the English at Amboyna in the East-Indies, by the Neatherlandish gouernour and councel there
- 1624: The foot out of the snare
- 1624: The foot out of the snare
- 1625: A discouerie and plaine declaration of sundry subtill practices of the Holy Inquisition of Spaine
- 1625: The French tutour: by way of grammar exactly and fully teaching all the most necessary rules, for the attaining of the French tongue
- 1625: A full, ample and punctuall discouery of the barbarous, bloudy, and inhumane practises of the Spanish Inquisition, against Protestants
- 1625: The righteous mans euils, and the Lords deliuerances
- 1625: Articles to be enquired of by the church-wardens and sworne-men
- 1626: Sermons upon the ten first verses of the third chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter
- 1626: The birth of man-kinde; otherwise named The womans booke. Set forth in English by Thomas Raynald physitian, and by him corrected and augmented. The contents are in the table following, but chiefly in the prologue
- 1626: The anatomy of Armininanisme: or, The opening of the controuersies of these times (formerly handled in the Low-Countries) concerning the doctrine of prouidence, of predestination, of the death of Christ, of nature and grace, &c. By Peter Du Moulin, Minister of the Church at Paris
- 1626: Comfort to the afflicted. Deliuered in a sermon preached at Pauls-Crosse the xxi. day of May, M. DC. XXVI. Being the last Sunday in Easter terme. By Antony Fawkener, Mast. of Arts, of Iesus Colledge in Oxford
- 1626: Vox belli, or, An alarum to vvarre
- 1627: Foure sermons
- 1627: The onely remedy
- 1628: The practise of repentance
- 1628: A man in Christ, or: A new creature
- 1628: A new inuention of shooting fire-shafts in long-bowes
- 1628: Delights for ladies
- 1628: Soliloquium animę
- 1629: The workes of the famous diuine, Master Iohn Randall
- 1629: Saint Pauls triumph, or, Cygnea illa & dulcissima cantio
- 1629: The plaine-mans path-way to heauen
- 1629: The practice of repentance
- 1629: A man in Christ, or A new creature
- 1629: A treatise of love. Written by Iohn Rogers, ministers of Gods word in Dedham in Essex
- 1630: The pleasant history of Iohn VVinchcomb
- 1630: An exposition on the vvhole fifth chapter of S. Iohns Gospell
- 1630: Delights for ladies, to adorne their persons, tables, closets, and distillatories
- 1630: A briefe concordance to the Bible of the last translation
- 1630: The burthen of a loaden conscience: or, The misery of sinne
- 1630: Corpus Christi: by Edmund Gurnay, Bach. Theol. P. de Harpley Norfolc
Thu Jun 01 10:41:07 CDT 2023