Roderick Mackenzie
Active Years
Min year: 1703, Max year: 1799, Max count: 2
As Author
- 1703: To his Grace, her Majesty's High Commissioner, and the Right Honourable, the Estates of Parliament. A representation for Mr. Roderick Mackenzie
- 1708: Reports and extracts out of the register books of the African and Indian Company of Scotland, relating to Mr. Paterson's claim on the said company. ... The report of Mr. Roderick Mackenzie, late secretary to the Indian and African Company
- 1720: A letter to Sir J- c- Baroret, a member of the Honourable House of Commons
- 1720: A familiar letter to a gentleman at Bath
- 1721: Now or never: or, a familiar discourse concerning the two schemes for restoring the national credit
- 1725: [Some] necessary observations on an act of the last sessions of Parliament, intituled, An act for the relief of insolvent debtors
- 1725: Some necessary observations on an act of the last sessions of Parliament
- 1744: Reading no preaching: or a letter to a young clergyman, from a friend in London
- 1752: Reading no preaching: or, a letter to a young clergyman, from a friend in London
- 1753: Some remarks on a tract publish'd by the Rev. George Benson, D.D
- 1754: Remarks on a tract publish'd by the Rev. George Benson, D.D. intituled, The doctrine of predestination reviewed: or, The nature of the counsels and decrees of God; and the rise and occasion of the scripture language concerning them
- 1756: Reading no preaching: or, A letter to a young clergyman, from a friend in London
- 1757: Reading no preaching: or, A letter to a young clergyman, from a friend in London
- 1761: Reading no preaching; or A letter to a young clergyman, from a friend in London
- 1771: Unto the Right Honourable the Lords of Council and Session, the petition of Roderick Mackenzie of Scotsburn, Esquire
- 1781: Reading no preaching
- 1781: Reading is not preaching
- 1787: Strictures on Lt. Col. Tarleton's History "of the campaigns of 1780 and 1781, in the southern provinces of North America". Wherein military characters and corps are vindicated from injurious aspersions, and several important transactions placed in their proper point of view. In a series of letters to a friend, by Roderick Mackenzie, late lieutenant in the 71st regiment. To which is added, a detail of the siege of ninety six, and the re-capture of the island of new-providence.
- 1788: The extreme cruelty and danger of introducing natural plans of supposed happiness, in room of the scheme of Jesus
- 1793: A sketch of the war with Tippoo Sultaun
- 1797: Reading no preaching; or, A letter to a young clergyman, from a friend in London
- 1799: A sketch of the war with Tippoo Sultaun
Mon Dec 04 08:16:00 CST 2023