Thomas Maurice
Active Years
Min year: 1775, Max year: 1800, Max count: 6
As Author
- 1775: The school-boy, a poem
- 1776: Hagley
- 1776: Netherby: a poem. By Mr Maurice, of University College, Oxford
- 1777: A monody, sacred to the memory of Elizabeth, Dutchess of Northumberland. Addressed to His Grace the Duke of Northumberland
- 1778: The oxonian. A poem. In imitation of The splendid shilling. By the author of The School-Boy
- 1779: Poems and miscellaneous pieces
- 1782: Ierne rediviva
- 1784: Westminster-Abbey: an elegiac poem. By the Revd. Thomas Maurice, A. B. Of University-College, Oxford
- 1784: Ode
- 1789: Panthea, or the captive bride
- 1789: Panthea, or the captive bride
- 1790: Proposals for publishing, by subscription, a history of the revolutions of the empire of Indostan, ... By the Rev. Thomas Maurice,
- 1790: A letter, addressed to the Honourable Court of Directors of the East-India Company, containing proposals for printing a history of the revolutions of the empire of Indostan, from the Earliest Ages to the Present: with a sketch of the plan on which the work will be conducted; a concise Account of the Authors who will principally be consulted; and a short Retrospect of its General History
- 1793: Indian antiquities
- 1793: Indian antiquities
- 1793: Indian antiquities
- 1794: Indian antiquities
- 1795: An elegiac and historical poem
- 1795: An elegiac poem, sacred to the memory and virtues of the Honourable Sir William Jones
- 1795: The history of Hindostan; its arts, and its sciences
- 1795: Proposals for publishing, by subscription, in quarto, and on the elegant types of W. Bulmer & Co. at the Shakspeare [sic] Press, The history of Hindostan, ... By the author of Indian antiquities
- 1796: Indian antiquities: or, dissertations, relative to the ancient geographical divisions, the pure system of primeval theology, the grand code of civil laws, the original form of government, the widely-extended commerce, and the various and profound literature of Hindostan: compared, throughout, with the religion, laws, government, commerce, and literature, of Persia, Egypt, and Greece. The whole intended as introductory to, and illustrative of, the hostory of Hindostan, upon a comprehensive scale. Vol. VI. - Part I. Containing dissertations on the origin of druids, and the ancient commerce of Hindostan.
- 1796: This day is published in quarto, price 1l. 11s. 6d. printed on the elegant types of W. Bulmer & Co. at the Shakspeare Press, The history of Hindostan, ... by the author of Indian antiquities. Printed for the author, and sold by R. Faulder; and at T. Becket's,
- 1796: To John Coakley Lettsom, M.D. on the improvements at his villa of Grove-Hill
- 1797: Sanscreet fragments
- 1797: Sanscreet fragments
- 1798: The history of Hindostan
- 1798: The crisis
- 1798: Sanscreet fragments
- 1799: The history of Hindostan
- 1799: The history of Hindostan; its arts, and its sciences
- 1799: Grove-Hill
- 1800: Poems, epistolary, lyric, and elegiacal. In three parts. By the Rev. Thomas Maurice, A.M. assistant librarian of the British Museum
- 1800: Indian antiquities
- 1800: A dissertation on the oriental trinities: extracted from the fourth and fifth volumes of Indian antiquities. By the author
- 1800: Indian antiquities
- 1800: Indian antiquities
- 1800: Indian antiquities
Mon Dec 04 04:37:23 CST 2023