R. Griffiths
Active Years
Min year: 1748, Max year: 1762, Max count: 34
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
- 1748: The after-thought
- 1748: Musidorus
- 1748: An honest Briton's pathetick address to his countrymen
- 1748: Marriage
- 1748: The town. A satire. By W. Kenrick
- 1748: Musidorus
- 1749: An essay on tragedy, with a critical examen of Mahomet and Irene
- 1750: The art and the pleasures of hare-hunting. In six letters to a person of quality. By John Smallman Gardiner, Gent
- 1750: The actor
- 1750: A supplement to the Bishop of London's Letter to the clergy and people of London and Westminster
- 1750: A compleat history of the piratical states of Barbary
- 1751: Philosophical letters upon physiognomies
- 1751: Observations on the Romans
- 1751: The question truly stated and calmly considered, whether or no, there be any just reasons for a new translation of the Bible, or a review of our liturgy, articles and canons? Dedicated to the Clergy of the Churches of England and Ireland. With remarks on a pamphlet, entitled, Free and impartial considerations upon the candid disquisitions, &c. in a Letter to the Author. By a gentleman
- 1751: The force of education
- 1751: Memoirs of a coxcomb
- 1752: The pillars of priestcraft and orthodoxy shaken
- 1753: A new form of common-prayer, with the offices thereto belonging
- 1753: Christianity and deism stated. By a layman
- 1753: Taste: an epistle to a young critic
- 1753: The Other side of the question
- 1753: A Profound meditation upon turnpikes
- 1753: A funeral oration on the late Rev. James Foster
- 1753: The lives of the poets of Great Britain and Ireland
- 1754: A letter from a clergyman
- 1754: The book of conversation and behaviour
- 1754: Some account of the North-America Indians; [sic]
- 1754: The scripture-Account of a future state considered
- 1754: The crisis
- 1754: A brief account of the kings and queens, whose statues (now repaired and decorated in a most splendid manner) are placed in the Royal-Exchange of London, With The Reasons why some of their Statues are not set up, that such Persons, as have not Leisure or Opportunity to read the general Histories at large, may be acquainted with the Succession and principal Events that happened in the Reigns of these illustrious Personages, in a continued Series from Edward I. to our present Sovereign, so clearly connected as that a Person of an indifferent Memory may relate the Whole after Perusal. By John Halliday, M.A. Teacher of the Languages and Mathematicks, in Ayliffe-Street, Goodman's-Fields
- 1755: The important question concerning invasions
- 1755: The ligature preferable to agaric, in securing the blood-vessels after amputations
- 1755: The actor
- 1755: An appeal to the nobility and gentry, in regard to the gold and silver lace
- 1756: Love and duty
- 1756: An address to the ladies on the indecency of appearing at immodest plays.
- 1756: Letters from an old man to a young prince, with the answers
- 1757: An enquiry into the causes of our ill success in the present war.
- 1757: An essay on the expediency of a national militia. With proposals for raising and supporting a military force sufficient for our security at home: To be furnished by the several Counties, after the manner of Militia, and continually employed in the Service of the Publick, without any additional Expence to the Subject
- 1758: The case of authors by profession or trade
- 1758: An historical and critical account of the life and writings of Charles I
- 1758: The moral miscellany
- 1758: The protestant system
- 1758: A new scheme for making inland navigations
- 1758: A discourse on the conduct of the government of Great-Britain, in respect to neutral nations, during the present war
- 1758: Two letters, adapted to the present critcal conjuncture
- 1759: Virtue
- 1759: A discourse occasioned by the glorious victory gained over the French, by Prince Ferdinand of Brunswic, August 1, 1759. By the Rev. Mr. Radcliffe, of Boston in Lincolnshire. The second edition. To which is prefixed, a dedication to L*** G***** S********. By the editor
- 1760: Job
- 1760: The tears of music. A poem, to the memory of Mr. Handel
- 1760: The partisan: or, the art of making war in detachment
- 1760: Miscellanies in prose and verse
- 1761: An authentic narrative of the proceedings under a commission of bankruptcy against John Perrott
- 1761: Sentiments relating to the late negotiation
- 1761: A hymn to hope
- 1761: Considerations on the expediency of a Spanish war
- 1761: An impartial account of the rise both of Arianism and Athanasianism. To which is added, a short irenicum
- 1762: The case of authors by profession or trade
As Bookseller
- 1748: Baron Mountenay's celebrated dedication of the select orations of Demosthenes, to the late Sir Robert Walpole, Bart. of ministerial memory. Done into plain English, and illustrated with notes and comments, and dedicated to Trinity - College, Dublin. By Ęschines the Third
- 1750: A faithful account of Mr. Archibald Bower's motives
- 1751: A faithful account of Mr. Archibald Bower's motives
- 1754: The crisis
- 1754: A brief account of the kings and queens, whose statues (now repaired and decorated in a most splendid manner) are placed in the Royal-Exchange of London, With The Reasons why some of their Statues are not set up, that such Persons, as have not Leisure or Opportunity to read the general Histories at large, may be acquainted with the Succession and principal Events that happened in the Reigns of these illustrious Personages, in a continued Series from Edward I. to our present Sovereign, so clearly connected as that a Person of an indifferent Memory may relate the Whole after Perusal. By John Halliday, M.A. Teacher of the Languages and Mathematicks, in Ayliffe-Street, Goodman's-Fields
- 1754: Some account of the North-America Indians; [sic]
- 1757: The ceremoniale at the installation of the Knights of the Garter
- 1758: The case of authors by profession or trade
- 1760: The partisan: or, the art of making war in detachment
- 1761: An impartial account of the rise both of Arianism and Athanasianism. To which is added, a short irenicum
- 1762: The case of authors by profession or trade
Wed Nov 29 05:55:34 CST 2023