S. Popping
Active Years
Min year: 1710, Max year: 1723, Max count: 36
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
- 1710: An answer to the Surry-Gentleman's letter concerning Mr. Lloyd's sermon preach'd at Covent-Garden the fifth of November, 1710
- 1710: A letter to Mr. B-- a North-Wiltshire clergyman
- 1710: The glorious warriour: or, a ballad in praise of General Stanhope
- 1710: The tryals of Peter Messenger
- 1711: The Scotch medal decipher'd, and the new hereditary-right men display'd
- 1711: A thanksgiving sermon, preach'd November 5. 1711
- 1711: A second letter to Sir J- B-
- 1711: The scotch medal decipher'd
- 1711: A caveat to the treaters
- 1711: The whigs appeal to the Tories. In a letter to Sir T--- H-----. With a postscript concerning the proceedings in P---------t
- 1711: An abridgment of the secret history of Crete
- 1711: The truth at last; or, the whole affair of the Scotch medal; set in a true light in a letter from Mr. John Sporeswood Keeper of the Advocates Library at Edinburgh to Mr. James Mackensie student at Oxford, transmitted from thence by the last post
- 1711: The oxford almanack of 1712
- 1711: The considerable advantages of a South-Sea trade to our English nation
- 1711: Worcestershire-Queries about peace
- 1711: A dialogue between Dr. Henry Sach-Ell, and Mr. William B-Set
- 1711: A true account of the voyage of the Nottingham-Galley of London, John Dean commander, from the River Thames to New-England, Near which Place she was cast away on Boon-Island, December 11, 1710. by the Captain's Obstinacy, who endeavour'd to betray her to the French, or run her ashore; with an Account of the Falsehoods in the Captain's Narrative. And a faithful Relation of the Extremities the Company was reduc'd to for Twenty-Four Days on that desolate Rock, where they were forc'd to eat one of their Companions who died, but were at last wonderfully deliver'd. The whole attested upon oath, by Christopher Langman, Mate; Nicholas Mellen, Boatswain; and George White, Sailor in the said Ship
- 1712: The sense of the court and Parliaments of England, as to the dissenters, ever since the Restoration
- 1712: A merry new year's gift
- 1712: Vox populi: being the sense of the nation
- 1712: Some remarkable passages relating to Archbishop Laud
- 1712: The previous question to the several questions about valid and invalid baptism
- 1712: The interest of Europe
- 1712: The sense of the Court of Hannover, ... in a letter, relating to the Protestant succession, ... To which are added two extracts from Dyer the news-writer's letter, concerning the reception of the pretender's-medal. Made publick to discover the sense of the party he belongs to.
- 1713: A sermon without doors
- 1713: A short account of the Spanish Juros. In a letter to a citizen of London
- 1714: A poem on the arrival of His Majesty King George
- 1714: Eugene's annals
- 1715: The speech which their Excellencies, Messieurs van Duyvenvoord and van Borsselen ambassadors extraordinary from their High Mightinesses, the States General; made to His Majesty on the 12th instant, when they had their publick audience
- 1715: An index to the report of the Secret committee
- 1716: Remarks upon the E. of Derwentwater's speech
- 1716: A Cry for justice, against all the impeach'd and attainted rebels and traytors
- 1716: A speech made in the House of Commons, by Richard Hampden Esq; on Tuesday the 24th of April, 1716. at the second reading of the Bill for enlarging the time for continuance of Parliaments, &c
- 1716: An humble appeal to the impartial judgement of all parties in Great Britain
- 1716: Panegyrical essays upon the prayer Lord, pity the people
- 1716: A letter to the Right Honourable the Earl of Oxford
- 1716: A true (tho' a short) account of the ancient Britons
- 1716: The speech, of the Right Reverend the L---d B------ of R------
- 1716: A true character of Mr. Pope, and his writings
- 1717: Some considerations upon His Majesty's message
- 1717: The mug vindicated
- 1717: Eiko?n Basilike?
- 1717: An account of the Swedish and Jacobite plot
- 1717: The prevalency of prayer
- 1717: Truth brought to light by time: fully proving who was the real mother of the Pretender. Demonstrated by uncorrupted evidence in every fact. To which is added, a letter to the Earl of Oxford
- 1718: Dr. Sherlock's Vindication of the Test Act examin'd
- 1719: The plebeian
- 1719: The plebeian
- 1719: The plebeian
- 1719: The plebeian
- 1720: The Athenian spy: or, A packet for the virtuosi of Great-Britain
- 1720: The barbadoes packet
- 1722: A guide to the electors of Great-Britain
- 1722: A list of all the names (who were skreen'd) mention'd in the report of the Committee of Secrecy. With the sums wherewith they are charged, in relation to South-Sea stock, ... As also the sum total of the late sub-governour's, deputy-governour's, and every director's estate; ... To which is added, an abstract of the supplement to the reports of the Committee of Secrecy.
- 1723: Upon this moment depends eternity
As Printer
As Bookseller
- 1710: A refutation of the doctrine of passive obedience and non-resistance
- 1710: A condoling letter to the Tattler
- 1710: An address to the Church of England clergy, concerning resistance
- 1711: The grand-Point, lately carried by the Common-Council, has lost the main-point
- 1715: King George for ever: or, Dunton's speech to the Protestant associators of Great-Britain: but more especially to those of the Tower-Hamlets, with whom he has enter'd into a voluntary and strict Association, to Defend his Majesty's just Title to the British Crown, against the Pretender and all his Adherents. With a Copy of that Loyal Association which Mr. Dunton subscrib'd, and is the Subject of this Speech. To which is added, The neck-adventure; or, the case and sufferings of Mr. John Dunton, for daring to Detect the Treason and Villany of Oxford and Bolingbroke, whilst they were Reigning Favourites, in his Four Essays, intituled, The Court-Spy, Neck or Nothing, Queen Robin, and The Impeachment. The whole Discoveries (and Speech) most humbly Submitted to the Consideration of King George, our alone Rightful and Ever-Glorious Sovereign; and Inscrib'd to the Right Honourable the Lord Viscount Townshend, One of his Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State
- 1716: The rebell's doom
- 1717: The second part of the Rebuke to the High-Church priests, for turning the 30th of January into a madding-day: being the history of the match betwixt King Charles I, and Henrietta Maria of France.
- 1719: An appeal to common sense: or, a sober vindication of Dr. Woodward's State of physick
- 1719: A guide to gentlemen and farmers, for brewing the finest malt-liquors
Thu Jun 01 09:49:16 CDT 2023