J. Clark
Active Years
Min year: 1671, Max year: 1748, Max count: 46
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
- 1671: The common accidence examined and explained, by short questions & answers according to the very words of the book
- 1673: The batchellors happiness. Or John's kind reply to the west-country maids delight
- 1673: The doctors medicines and counsel which he gave to a maiden, or, a cloak for a gross widdow
- 1673: The Debtford wedding. Or, the mad marriage between Peg and Moll
- 1673: VVades reformation: to all good-fellows in this nation
- 1673: The maidens fairing, or, a pattern pickt out against young men
- 1681: The invaluable price of an immortal soul
- 1681: Morbus satanicus. The devil's disease
- 1683: A true narrative of the discovery, lately made, of a new plot against His Majesty, and Royal Highness, and the three kindgomes in generall
- 1683: A true narrative of the discovery, of a most horrid plot against His Majesty, and Royal Highness, and the three kingdomes in generall
- 1683: The beggars chorus in the Jovial crevv
- 1684: Wades reformation, to all good fellows in this nation
- 1707: Dr. Wells's Letter to a dissenting parishioner considered
- 1708: An essay towards a confirming catechism
- 1709: An essay towards a confirming catechism
- 1709: A Full and true account of a horrid, barbarous and bloody murder committed by one Thomas Hide, servant to Mr. Robert Allen a maulster near Finchly, on the body of his own wife and child, on Thursday the 29th of this instant September, between Finchly and Highgate, by stabbing her in the belly with his knife, and knocking the child's brains out, who are now to be seen at the Two Brewers in High-gate
- 1710: A letter to Mr. Thomas Bennet
- 1712: The temper of Jesus towards His enemies
- 1712: To be every where spoken against, at first the case of the Christians themselves, and now of the Protestant dissenters
- 1712: The case of infant-baptism made plain
- 1714: The mischievous consequences of publick strife, and envy
- 1719: The psalms of David imitated in the language of the New Testament
- 1719: The second part of a reply to the vindication of the subscribing ministers: containing a defence of the several things published in The authentick account, &c. viz. Advices for peace; The Declaration of Faith; And, The Reasons for not subscribing the Article and Answers which the other Ministers subscribed. Published by Agreement of a Committee of the Non-Subscribing Ministers
- 1719: The psalms of David, imitated in the language of the New Testament
- 1720: A collection of the promises of scripture
- 1722: A collection of tunes
- 1722: The magistrate and the Christian
- 1722: The christian doctrine of the Trinity: or Father, Son, and spirit, three persons and one God, Asserted and Prov'd, With their Divine Rights and Honors Vindicated By plain Evidence of Scripture, without the Aid or Incumbrance of Human Schemes. Written chiefly for the Use of private Christians. By I. Watts
- 1724: A new method of curing the venereal disease much safer and easier than any hitherto used
- 1724: The triumph of wit
- 1725: Dissertations relating to the Christian doctrine of the Trinity
- 1725: Sermons upon various subjects
- 1726: A dissertation on the happy influences of society merely civil
- 1726: A short explanation of the Assembly's shorter catechism
- 1726: A defense against the temptation to self-murther
- 1726: Dissertations relating to the Christian doctrine of the Trinity
- 1726: A treatise on the religious observation of the Lord's Day
- 1726: Two letters to a friend
- 1726: A brief defence of the Christian religion
- 1727: A new and full method of settling the canonical authority of the New Testament
- 1727: An essay concerning the original of society, government, religion and laws, especially those of the penal kind. By a person of quality
- 1727: A treatise of that being born again without which no man can be saved
- 1727: Death abolished by Jesus Christ
- 1727: The religious improvement of publick events
- 1727: Two sermons preached at the Old Jewry
- 1728: Religion
- 1728: Christianity the perfection of all religion, natural and revealed. Wherein some of the principal prophecies relating to the Messiah in the Old Testament, are shewn to belong to him in the literal sense: In Opposition to the Attempts of the Literal Scheme, &c. By Thomas Jeffery
- 1728: The knowledge of the heavens and the earth made easy: or, the first principles of astronomy and geography explain'd by the use of globes and maps
- 1729: Discourses of the love of God
- 1734: Buchanan's history of Scotland
- 1748: A letter to His Grace the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury
- 1748: A collection of political and humorous letters
As Printer
As Bookseller
Sun Dec 10 05:13:43 CST 2023