William Bowyer
Active Years
Min year: 1715, Max year: 1785, Max count: 6
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Author
- 1727: A view of a book, entitled, Reliquiæ Baxterianæ. In a letter to a friend.
- 1731: The traditions of the clergy not destructive of religion
- 1746: A dissertation
- 1752: Two letters from Dr. Bentley in the shades below, to Ld. O. in a land of thick darkness.
- 1764: Copy of a letter not sent, but read to Mr. John Rivington
- 1772: Remarks occasioned by a late dissertation on the Greek and Roman money
- 1772: Conjectures on the New Testament
- 1776: An appendix to the first edition of The origin of printing; containing the additional remarks which have been inserted in the second edition.
- 1777: I William Bowyer, printer, citizen, and stationer, of London
- 1782: An apology for some of Mr. Hooke's Observations concerning the Roman senate
- 1782: Critical conjectures and observations on the New Testament, collected from various authors, as well in regard to words as pointing: with the reasons on which both are founded. By W. Bowyer
- 1782: An apology for some of Mr. Hooke's Observations concerning the Roman senate
- 1785: Miscellaneous tracts
As Publisher
As Printer
- 1715: The whole book of Psalms: collected into English metre
- 1719: New principles of linear perspective
- 1727: A view of a book, entitled, Reliquiæ Baxterianæ. In a letter to a friend.
- 1732: A true and exact particular and inventory of all and singular the lands, tenements and hereditaments, goods, chattels, debts and personal estate whatsoever, of William Burroughs, Esq; late one of the Committee of the Charitable Corporation, which he was seized or possessed of, or intitled unto in his own right, and which any other person or persons was or were seized or possessed of or in Trust for him, or to or for his use or benefit, upon the first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and thirty, or at any time after, &c
- 1732: A true and exact particular and inventory of all and singular the lands, tenements and hereditaments, goods, chattels, debts and personal estate whatsoever, of Denis Bond Of Grange in the County of Dorset, Esq; Which he was (according to the best of his knowledge or remembrance or belief) seized or possessed of, or intituled unto in his own right, and which any other person or persons was or were seized or possessed of in trust for him, or to or for his use or benefit upon the first day of January Anno Dom. One Thousand Seven Hundred and Thirty, &c
- 1733: A true and exact particular and inventory of all and singular the lands, tenements and hereditaments, goods, chattels, debts and personal estate whatsoever, of William Burroughs, Esq; late one of the Committee of the Charitable Corporation, which he was seized or possessed of, or intitled unto in his own right, and which any other person or persons was or were seized or possessed of or in Trust for him, or to or for his use or benefit, upon the first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and thirty, or at any time after, &c
- 1733: A true and exact particular and inventory of all and singular the lands, tenements and hereditaments, goods, chattels, debts and personal estate whatsoever, of Denis Bond Of Grange in the County of Dorset, Esq; Which he was (according to the best of his knowledge or remembrance or belief) seized or possessed of, or intituled unto in his own right, and which any other person or persons was or were seized or possessed of in trust for him, or to or for his use or benefit, upon the first day of January, Anno Dom. One Thousand Seven Hundred and Thirty, &c
- 1736: Copy of the Honourable George Thomas, and George Lucas, Esquires, protests
- 1736: Eboracum
- 1739: The necessity of revelation: or an enquiry into the extent of human powers with respect to matters of religion; especially those two fundamental articles, the being of God, and the immortality of the soul. By Archibald Campbell, D. D. Regius Professor of Divinity and Ecclesiastical History in the University of St. Andrews.
- 1740: The anatomy of the human body
- 1741: The anatomy of the human body
- 1743: Original letters and papers of state, addressed to Oliver Cromwell
- 1744: Notitia monastica
- 1753: A journal from Grand Cairo to Mount Sinai
- 1755: A catalogue of books in quires, to be sold at the Queen's-Head Tavern, in Pater-Noster-Row, on Thursday the 6th day of February, 1755. Dinner will be on the table precisely at two o clock. Three months credit for ten pounds: six months for twenty pounds; two six months for one hundred pounds; and three six months for one hundred and fifty pounds. The numbers of several books shall be put up in lots, or together, as the company choose. No books to be made perfect, unless the imperfections are demanded in fourteen days after delivery.
- 1758: A dissertation on the presence of the patricians in the tributa comitia.
- 1759: A collection of state papers relating to affairs in the reign of Queen Elizabeth
- 1777: A list of various editions of the Bible, and parts thereof, in English; from the year 1526 to 1776. From a manuscript No 1140 in the Archiepiscopal Library at Lambeth, much enlarged and improved.
- 1780: An enquiry into the rationale of Christianity.
Mon Dec 11 00:10:08 CST 2023