R. Tookey
Active Years
Min year: 1700, Max year: 1728, Max count: 26
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Printer
- 1700: The London vocabulary
- 1700: The two great questions consider'd
- 1700: An antidote against Arminianism: or, A succinct discourse, to enervate and confute all the five points thereof
- 1701: Gospel mysteries unveil'd
- 1701: A funeral sermon on the decease of the Reverend Mr. John Woodhouse, Late Minister of the Gospel in London. By Daniel Williams
- 1702: A sermon preached on the sad occasion of the death of the best of kings
- 1702: A sermon preached on the death and funeral of the late King, William the IIId. Of Glorious Memory. By R. Norris
- 1703: The present state of chyrurgery
- 1704: The new world discovered
- 1704: Suada Anglicana
- 1704: Pastoral care exemplified: or, a funeral discourse
- 1704: Spiritual wickedness in high places: or, The corruption and oppression in the spiritual courts laid open, in the case of Peter Slynehead, of the Parish of Prescot in the county of Lancaster and Diocess of Chester
- 1704: An elegy on the much lamented death of that faithful and laborious minister of the Gospel, Mr. Benjamin Keach, late pastor of a church of Christ, meeting on Horsly-down, Southwark
- 1705: Thalia
- 1705: A word of advice to the wanton and unclean
- 1705: The everlasting high-priest
- 1705: Four discourses against vice and immorality
- 1705: A sermon on the occasion of the justly lamented death of the truly reverend Mr. John Howe
- 1705: A check to an ungovern'd tongue
- 1706: Deborah's Triumph over the mighty
- 1706: A caveat against evil company. By S. Brown
- 1706: England's misery, both spiritually and temporally, for want of a Godly discipline
- 1706: A funeral sermon occasion'd by the death of the Reverend Mr. John Quick, late minister of the gospel in London. By Thomas Freke
- 1706: A sermon preach'd to the Societies for Reformation of Manners
- 1707: An essay against uncharitableness
- 1707: A vindication of the eternal law
- 1707: Brit. Ann. 1a
- 1707: Two discourses
- 1707: A treatise touching falling from grace
- 1707: The dangerous deceitfulness of sin
- 1708: The two great comprehensive dutys of Christianity
- 1708: The conqueror crown'd. A funeral sermon on occasion of the death of the late Reverend and learned divine, Mr. Edward Veel. Who departed this life June the 6th, 1708. ... Preach'd at St. John Wapping, June the 13th, 1708. By Thomas Simmons
- 1708: A sermon preach'd before the Societies for reformation of manners, at Salters-Hall, Octob. the 4th, 1708. By Thomas Simmons. Published at their request
- 1708: What's that to thee? And Mind your own business
- 1708: A funeral sermon preach'd in Bartholomew-Close, July the 25th, 1708. Occasion'd by the death of Mrs. Elizabeth Quick, (relict of the Reverend Mr. John Quick) who departed this life the 19th day of the same month. By Thomas Freke
- 1708: The doctrine of God's free election opened and applied
- 1708: Seasonable words
- 1709: The second covenant: or the covenant of grace briefly stated and explained
- 1709: Meditations on death, hell, and heaven
- 1709: Joshua's example propounded for our imitation, in a thanksgiving-sermon preach'd at Kingston upon Thames, February the 17th, 170 8/9
- 1709: A dissertation concerning the future conversion of the Jewish nation
- 1710: The wisdom and mercy of God in prolonging the Church's conflicts, and gradually subduing her enemies
- 1710: A full and true account of two wonderful prodigies that were seen at several times in the element
- 1711: A funeral sermon, on occasion of the death of Mrs. Katherine Penny
- 1711: The marine intelligencer. Or an account of sea affairs
- 1712: The sin and danger of national ingratitude
- 1712: Pray for the peace of Jerusalem
- 1712: A discourse concerning the immortality of the soul
- 1712: The preaching-Weathercock: a paradox, proving Mr. W- R-Dson (lately a dissenting minister, and now a presbiter of the Church of England) will cant, recant, and re-recant, till (to prove he is no Schismatick) he has set his religion and conscience to all the points of the compass: Fairly argued from - The Secret History of his Life, Conversation and Doctrines - Whilst (tho' a Presbyterian) he stickled hard to be chose Pastor to an Independent Congregation in Moorfields; - Or, a Letter to that Universal Turncoat, concerning his so often changing his Religion. The whole Compleating the Weathercock-Paradox in III Parts. Written by John Dunton, a true and constant Son of the Church of England, without Respect to Parties, and Author of those Two Answers to Dean Kennet, and Dr. Sacheverel, intituled - The Bull-Baiting, - and Hazard of a Death-Bed-Repentance
- 1712: Salvation and the necessary means of it considered and urg'd: in a discourse upon Titus 3.4. By James Warner, Minister of the Gospel at Tewksbury, Gloucester-Shire. With a preface recommendatory, by Mr. Robinson
- 1712: A letter about a motion in convocation, to the Reverend Dr. Thomas Brett, L.L.D. rector of Betteshanger in Kent
- 1714: Joseph reviv'd: or the heavenly favourite. Being some serious meditations of the divine-providence, and the behaviour of that prince
- 1715: A catalogue of the books, paintings, prints and drawings of that ingenious gentleman, Matthew Fletcher, Esq; late of Chatham, in the county of Kent, deceased. ... which will be sold by auction at Waghorn's Coffee-House, near the House of Lords, in the Old Pallace-Yard in Westminster, on Thursday the 28th of this instant April, beginning at eleven a clock in the forenoon; ... Catalogues may be had at Oliver's Coffee-House at Westminster-Hall Gate;
- 1715: A letter to the free-holders of Great-Britain
- 1716: Royal gratitude
- 1720: The grammar of heraldry
- 1720: A short system of trade
- 1723: The pilgrims progress from this world to That which is to Come
- 1726: The state of true religion in all ages
- 1728: Speculnm [sic] Latinum: or, Latin made easy to scholars, by an English grammar only
Mon Oct 02 01:08:56 CDT 2023