John Wyat
Active Years
Min year: 1693, Max year: 1726, Max count: 16
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
- 1693: The history of the life of Katharine de Medicis Queen Mother and regent of France. Or, The exact pattern of the present French king's policy
- 1699: An ordinary day well spent
- 1699: A vindication of infant baptism
- 1701: The necessity of coming to church, and the due performance of holy worship there
- 1701: A vindication of the Christian Church in the baptizing of infants, drawn from the Holy Scriptures. By Theophilus Dorrington, Rector of Wittresham in Kent
- 1701: Moral thoughts upon the mysteries of Jesus Christ
- 1701: Of confirmation. A sermon preach'd before the Right Reverend father in God, the Right Honourable Nathanael Lord Crewe, Lord Bishop of Durham, at the parish church of St. Nicholas, in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, June 23. 1700. By Nathanael Ellison, Vicar of Nerecastle
- 1702: The ruine and safety of a nation, consider'd and apply'd
- 1702: Principles upon which the taking the oath of abjuration may be grounded
- 1703: The plain man's gift of prayer
- 1704: The life of Pope Sixtus the Vth
- 1704: Persuasions to a publick spirit
- 1707: The charge of the Bp. of Gloucester, deliver'd to the clergy of his diocese, in his late triennial visitation, held by commission
- 1707: Thomas Beaven's Vindication of his second thoughts relating to the Quakers
- 1707: Agrippa almost perswaded to be a Christian: or, the self-condemn'd Quaker
- 1707: An oration sacred to the imperial Majesty of Anne
- 1708: A practical exposition of the catechism of the Church of England
- 1709: The moralists
- 1710: A sermon preach'd to the societies for reformation of manners, at St. Mary-le-Bow
- 1710: The charge of the Bishop of Gloucester, deliver'd to the clergy of his diocese, in his triennial visitation held by commission, anno domini 1710
- 1710: Dr. Edwards's vindication consider'd
- 1712: A sermon of the honour of the Christian priesthood
- 1713: Of undissembled and persevering religion
- 1713: The worship of God in the beauty of holiness
- 1713: The dangers of a relapse
- 1713: The truth of the Christian revelation, prov'd from the nature and greatness of its miracles
- 1714: The case of baptism consider'd
- 1714: The extent of Christ's commission to baptize
- 1714: A prefatory epistle concerning some remarks to be published on Homer's Iliad: occasioned by the proposals of Mr. Pope towards a new English version of that poem. To the Reverend Dr. Swift, Dean of St. Patrick's. By Richard Fiddes, B. D. Chaplain to the Right Honourable the Earl of Oxford
- 1715: The country-man's antidote for confuting popery: or, A seasonable warning against an ensnaring, and very much of late prevailing tenet, viz. 'Tis better to be a Roman Catholick than a Presbyterian
- 1715: Popular discontents self-condemn'd
- 1715: The great wickedness of perjury, and of the present rebellion
- 1715: No security for Protestants under a popish prince
- 1715: The religion of an oath
- 1716: The wisdom of a government in distributing punishment or mercy to state-criminals
- 1716: A national establishment
- 1717: A short discourse
- 1717: A collection of harangues pronounc'd upon several occasions by the most eminent members of the French Academy
- 1718: A short discourse, shewing the occasion of our present great want of silver
- 1718: A letter to the reverend the Prolocutor
- 1718: A second vindication of the Lord Bishop of Bangor. Wherein Mr. Law's Notions of benediction, absolution and church-communion, are proved to be destructive of the whole Christian religion, and contrary to Common Sense. And a paraphrase is given upon all the chief passages of Scripture relating to these points. With a postscript, containing, First, some remarks on Mr. Law's Manner of answering objections. And, Secondly, A plain Argument against the Notion of an Uninterrupted Succession of Regular Episcopal Ordainers. In a second letter to a member of the University of Cambridge. By Thomas Pyle, M. A. Lecturer of Lyn-Regis in Norfolk
- 1719: A sermon preach'd before the Honourable the House of Commons at St. Margaret's Westminster, on Friday, January the 30th, 1718/19. Being the Anniversary of the Martyrdom of King Charles the First. By John Waugh D. D. Rector of St. Peters Cornhill, and Chaplain in Ordinary to His Majesty
- 1720: The nature and extent of the office of the civil magistrate
- 1720: A brief exposition of the church-catechism
- 1720: Historia sacra: or, The holy history
- 1721: Two letters to the reverend Dr. Bentley
- 1721: God's mercy and forgiveness to the disobedient and rebellious upon their serious repentance
- 1722: The natural method of teaching
- 1722: An essay upon church authority
- 1723: A sermon preached to the Societies for reformation of manners
- 1723: A sermon preached on the third day of November, 1723. At St. Martin's in the Fields
- 1723: A sermon preached to the Societies for Reformation of Manners
- 1725: A paraphrase with some notes, on the Acts of the Apostles
- 1725: A paraphrase with short and useful notes on the books of the Old Testament
- 1726: The charge of the Right Reverend
- 1726: The value of church and college leases consider'd: and the advantage of the lessees made very apparent
As Bookseller
Mon Dec 04 07:18:38 CST 2023