E. Withers
Active Years
Min year: 1737, Max year: 1758, Max count: 20
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Author
As Publisher
- 1737: The triumph of sin and grace exemplified in the life of Mary Magdalen
- 1741: A letter to a Bishop concerning The divine legation of Moses
- 1742: An essay, or examination of the doctrine of Robert Barclay's Apology
- 1742: A compendious work. Being an exhortation to unity and concord
- 1748: Poems on several occasions
- 1748: A letter to the Right Reverend Father in God George
- 1748: A letter to the Right Reverend Father in God George, Lord Bishop of Exeter
- 1750: Luxury, pride, and vanity, the bane of the British nation
- 1750: An account of the earthquakes which happened at Leghorn in Italy
- 1750: Memoirs of the Bashaw Count Bonneval
- 1751: The scripture meaning of Aleim and Berith
- 1751: The True oeconomy of human life
- 1751: Memoirs of the life of a French nobleman
- 1751: An oration on the death of His Royal Highness Frederick, Prince of Wales
- 1751: A defence of Mr. Hutchinson's tenets in philosophy and divinity
- 1751: An oration on the death of His Royal Highness Frederick, Prince of Wales
- 1752: The evidence for Christianity contained in the Hebrew words aleim and berit, stated and defended, against the repeated rabbinical attempts to invalidate and destroy it
- 1752: The portrait of old age
- 1753: The blessing of Judah by Jacob, considered
- 1753: A full answer to the Essay on spirit
- 1753: An Earnest persuasive and exhortation to the Jews, occasioned by the late act of Parliament in their favour
- 1753: Remarks on the Reverend Mr. Tucker's letter on naturalizations
- 1754: A method for preventing the frequency of robberies and murders
- 1754: Spicilegium Shuckfordianum: or, A nosegay for the critics
- 1754: Public nusance [sic] considered under the several heads of bad pavements
- 1755: The tryal of William Turton, Esq
- 1755: A reply to Dr. Sharp's review and defence of his dissertations on the scripture meaning of Aleim and Berith. By Julius Bate, A.M
- 1755: An abstract from the works of John Hutchinson
- 1755: The divinity of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ
- 1755: Christ mystical
- 1755: An abstract from the works of John Hutchinson
- 1755: Bishop Hall's portraiture of a true Christian
- 1756: An enquiry into the occasional and standing similitudes of the Lord God, in the Old and New-Testament; or the forms made use of by Jehovah Aleim to represent themselves to true believers, before and since the Law by Moses. With a dissertation on the supposed confusion of tongues at Babel. By Julius Bate, A.M
- 1757: A dissertation on Jacob's prophecy
- 1757: The opinion of Lord Chief Justice Hale
- 1758: A letter from the author of a late discourse on the XVIIIth chapter of Genesis
Mon May 29 11:27:04 CDT 2023