Robert Foulis
Active Years
Min year: 1740, Max year: 1776, Max count: 213
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Author
- 1740: A catalogue of books newly imported from abroad
- 1745: A catalogue of books imported from abroad, part I. Consisting of antient Greek authors; ... commissions to Robert Foulis
- 1760: Books printed by Robert and Andrew Foulis
- 1765: A catalogue of the valuable library of the Reverend Mr. Alexander Campbell, late minister of the gospel at Inverera; which begins to be sold by auction at R. and A. Foulis's auction-room ... on Monday the 4th of March, 1765,
- 1771: A catalogue of books of various ages, languages, and sciences
- 1776: A catalogue of pictures, composed and painted chiefly by the most admired masters of the Roman, Florentine, Parman, Bolognese, Venetian, Flemish, and French schools
As Publisher
As Printer
- 1743: The judgment of Hercules, a poem
- 1743: The judgment of Hercules, a poem
- 1743: A treatise concerning the truth of the Christian religion. By Gilbert Burnet D. D. Sometime Professor of Divinity in the University of Glasgow, afterwards Bishop of Sarum. To which is added, A discourse on miracles, by John Locke Esq;
- 1744: An abridgment of Mr. Locke's essay concerning human understanding
- 1745: The orphan: or, The unhappy marriage
- 1745: Hardyknute
- 1746: Letters to the Duke of Burgundy
- 1746: The distrest mother. A tragedy. By Ambrose Philips
- 1746: Cato
- 1746: Letters to the Duke of Burgundy
- 1746: The cherrie and the slae
- 1746: The mourning bride. A tragedy. By William Congreve
- 1746: The guardian. ...
- 1747: L'Allegro, and il penseroso
- 1747: Paradise regain'd
- 1747: The gentle shepherd
- 1747: Samson Agonistes
- 1747: The lucubrations of Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq
- 1747: A miscellany of poems
- 1747: Comus
- 1747: Paradise regain'd
- 1748: Cato
- 1748: Poems on several occasions
- 1748: The tragedy of Jane Shore
- 1748: Two old historical Scots poems, giving an account of the battles of Harlaw, and the Reid-Squair
- 1748: Hardyknute, a fragment of an antient Scots poem
- 1748: An essay on the composition and manner of writing of the antients
- 1748: Polemo-Middinia
- 1748: The [f]air penitent. [A] tragedy
- 1748: The philosophical principles of natural and revealed religion. Unfolded in a geometrical order by the Chevalier Ramsay Author of the Travels of Cyrus
- 1748: Poems in the Scottish dialect by several celebrated poets, viz. Christ's kirk on the green, by K. James I of Scotland. Habbie Simson's, and Sanny Brigg's Elegys. The Blythsome Wedding. The merry Testament of Mr. Andro Kennedie. Johnie Armstrang. A Satyreon Covetousness. A Panygyrick on Sr Penny. Robin and Makyne. a Pastoral. An Interlude of the Droichs. An Epistle
- 1749: Poems on several occasions
- 1749: The nature, reasonableness, and advantages of prayer
- 1750: Love of fame, the universal passion. In seven characteristical satires
- 1750: Phaedra and hippolitus
- 1750: The trade and navigation of Great-Britain considered
- 1750: Dialogues concerning eloquence
- 1750: The Indian emperor: or, The conquest of Mexico
- 1750: Tamerlane, a tragedy. Written by Nicolas Rowe, Esq
- 1750: The banquet of xenophon
- 1750: The thistle and the rose. Vertue and vyce
- 1750: The tablature of Cebes the Theban
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: The speech of a Fife laird newly come from the grave
- 1751: The tragedy of Cleopatra
- 1751: A letter of consolation to the Countess of Essex
- 1751: Fables composed for the use of the Duke of Burgundy
- 1751: Letters of the celebrated Abelard and Heloise
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: The way of the world
- 1751: The querist
- 1751: The cherry and the slae
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: Political arithmetic
- 1751: The old batchelor
- 1751: The mourning bride
- 1751: Pastorals, with discourse on Pastoral
- 1751: The double dealer
- 1751: L'allegro, and il penseroso
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: Poems on several occasions. By Matthew Prior, Esq
- 1751: A new discourse of trade
- 1751: Love for love
- 1751: Poems and translations
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: The orphan
- 1751: The conscious lovers. A comedy. Written by Sir Richard Steele
- 1751: Rosamond
- 1752: Dione
- 1752: The works of Edmund Waller
- 1752: A discourse concerning natural and revealed religion; evidencing the truth, and certainty of both; by Considerations (for the most part) not yet touched by any. Recommended (pursuant to the design of Mr. Boyle's Lecture) To the consideration of Atheists, Deists, and Sceptics; and useful to confirm and nourish the Faith and Piety of others. By Stephen Nye. First printed in the year M.DC.XCVI
- 1752: The gentle shepherd
- 1752: Paradise regain'd
- 1752: Poems on several occasions
- 1752: The lutrin
- 1752: The tragedy of Marcus Brutus
- 1752: An abridgment of Mr. Locke's Essay concerning human understanding
- 1752: Some passages of the life and death of John Earl of Rochester
- 1753: Oroonoko, a tragedy
- 1753: A short introduction to moral philosophy, in three books
- 1753: Cato
- 1753: The beggar's opera
- 1753: The beggar's opera
- 1753: The funeral: or, Grief A-la-mode
- 1754: Dialogues of the dead
- 1754: The history of Charles XII. King of Sweden
- 1754: An essay on man
- 1754: Instructions of a father to his son
- 1755: A judgment on the works of the principal and best painters of the two last ages
- 1755: The twin-rivals: a comedy. By Mr. George Farquhar
- 1755: Young Waters, an ancient Scottish poem
- 1755: Edom of Gordon; an ancient Scottish poem. Never before printed
- 1755: The beaux stratagem: a comedy. By Mr. George Farquhar
- 1755: Gill Morice, an ancient Scottish poem
- 1755: Remarks on several parts of Italy, &c. in the years 1701, 1702, 1703
- 1755: The recruiting officer: a comedy. By Mr. George Farquhar
- 1755: Young Waters, an ancient Scottish poem
- 1755: Gill Morice
- 1755: The mourning bride. A tragedy. By William Congreve
- 1756: The dublin Society's weekly observations for the advancement of agriculture and manufactures.
- 1756: Esop
- 1756: The elements of Euclid
- 1756: The Flax-husbandman and flax-dresser instructed
- 1756: The Dublin Society's weekly observations for the advancement of agriculture and manufactures
- 1757: The art of land-measuring explained
- 1758: The voice of rejoicing in the tabernacles of the righteous. A sermon preached at York to a congregation of protestant dissenters, on the 27th of November, 1757, just upon receiving the account of the King of Prussia's victory, on the fifth of that month. By Newcome Cappe, late of the University of Glasgow. Publish'd at the request of the audience
- 1758: Poems on several occasions
- 1759: A discourse on ancient and modern learning. By the late Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Esq; First published from an original manuscript of Mr. Addison's, prepared and corrected by himself
- 1759: Spartan lessons
- 1759: Poems on several occasions
- 1759: Religious discourses, on various useful and important subjects
- 1761: The corruption of this age
- 1761: A practical discourse concerning death
- 1762: A discourse of the pastoral care
- 1762: The elements of Euclid
- 1762: Utopia: or the happy republic; a philosophical romance, in two books. Book I. Containing preliminary discourses on the happiest state of a common-wealth. Book II. Containing a description of the island of Utopia, The towns, magistrates, mechanic trades, and manner of life of the Utopians, Their traffic, travelling, slaves, marriages, military discipline, religions. Written in latin by Sir Thomas More, Lord High Chancellor of England. translated into English by Gilbert Burnet D. D. Sometime Professor of Divinity in the University of Glasgow, afterwards Bishop of Sarum
- 1763: Travels from St. Petersburg in Russia, to diverse parts of Asia
- 1763: An easy introduction to Latin grammar by James Barr, A.M. Rector of the Grammar-School of Glasgow.
- 1763: Pastorals
- 1763: On the end of tragedy
- 1764: The history of the feuds and conflicts among the clans in the northern parts of Scotland and in the western isles
- 1765: A relation of the death of the primitive persecutors
- 1765: Paradise regain'd
- 1765: Comus
- 1766: A plan of education: by the Chevalier Ramsay
- 1767: The iliad
- 1768: The tea-Table miscellany
- 1768: The gentle shepherd
- 1768: An account of Corsica
- 1769: An essay on the nature and conduct of the passions and affections
- 1770: Paradise lost
- 1770: Memorables of the Montgomeries, a narrative in rhyme, composed before the present century. Printed from the only copy known to remain, which has been Preserved Above Sixty Years by the Care of Hugh Montgomerie Senior at Eaglesham, Long One of the Factors of the Family of Eglintoun
- 1770: A compend of physics
- 1770: The poetical works
- 1770: Poems on several occasions
- 1771: The history of the renowned Don Quixote de la Mancha
- 1771: A course of lectures on the private law of Scotland
- 1771: Poems on several occasions
- 1771: The iliad
- 1772: An inquiry into the original of our ideas of beauty and virtue
- 1772: Heads of a course of lectures on civil history
- 1773: Poems by the Right Honourable the late Lord Lyttleton
- 1773: The meditations of St. Augustine
- 1773: The poetical works of Alexander Pope, Esq
- 1773: Ode to independence
- 1774: Poems by James Thomson. Viz. Britannia, To the memory of Lord Talbot, The castle of indolence, and lesser poems: with Alfred, a masque, by Mr. Thomson and Mr. Mallet
- 1774: Hudibras
- 1774: Poems of Dr. Jonathan Swift
- 1775: The poetical works
- 1775: Poems on several occasions
- 1776: The seasons. By James Thomson
- 1776: Paradise lost, a poem in twelve books. The author John Milton
- 1776: Poems by James Thomson
As Bookseller
- 1743: The judgment of Hercules, a poem
- 1743: The judgment of Hercules, a poem
- 1744: An abridgment of Mr. Locke's essay concerning human understanding
- 1745: The orphan: or, The unhappy marriage
- 1745: Hardyknute
- 1746: Letters to the Duke of Burgundy
- 1746: Letters to the Duke of Burgundy
- 1746: The cherrie and the slae
- 1746: The distrest mother. A tragedy. By Ambrose Philips
- 1746: The mourning bride. A tragedy. By William Congreve
- 1746: Cato
- 1746: The guardian. ...
- 1747: The gentle shepherd
- 1747: Paradise regain'd
- 1747: Paradise regain'd
- 1747: Samson Agonistes
- 1747: Comus
- 1747: The lucubrations of Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq
- 1747: L'Allegro, and il penseroso
- 1748: The philosophical principles of natural and revealed religion. Unfolded in a geometrical order by the Chevalier Ramsay Author of the Travels of Cyrus
- 1748: Polemo-Middinia
- 1748: The [f]air penitent. [A] tragedy
- 1748: The tragedy of Jane Shore
- 1748: Hardyknute, a fragment of an antient Scots poem
- 1748: Cato
- 1748: Two old historical Scots poems, giving an account of the battles of Harlaw, and the Reid-Squair
- 1748: Poems in the Scottish dialect by several celebrated poets, viz. Christ's kirk on the green, by K. James I of Scotland. Habbie Simson's, and Sanny Brigg's Elegys. The Blythsome Wedding. The merry Testament of Mr. Andro Kennedie. Johnie Armstrang. A Satyreon Covetousness. A Panygyrick on Sr Penny. Robin and Makyne. a Pastoral. An Interlude of the Droichs. An Epistle
- 1748: An essay on the composition and manner of writing of the antients
- 1748: Poems on several occasions
- 1749: The nature, reasonableness, and advantages of prayer
- 1750: The Indian emperor: or, The conquest of Mexico
- 1750: The tablature of Cebes the Theban
- 1750: Phaedra and hippolitus
- 1750: Dialogues concerning eloquence
- 1750: The trade and navigation of Great-Britain considered
- 1750: Love of fame, the universal passion. In seven characteristical satires
- 1750: The banquet of xenophon
- 1750: Tamerlane, a tragedy. Written by Nicolas Rowe, Esq
- 1750: The thistle and the rose. Vertue and vyce
- 1751: The old batchelor
- 1751: Rosamond
- 1751: The conscious lovers. A comedy. Written by Sir Richard Steele
- 1751: Fables composed for the use of the Duke of Burgundy
- 1751: L'allegro, and il penseroso
- 1751: The way of the world
- 1751: Love for love
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: The tragedy of Cleopatra
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: The speech of a Fife laird newly come from the grave
- 1751: Letters of the celebrated Abelard and Heloise
- 1751: A letter of consolation to the Countess of Essex
- 1751: The cherry and the slae
- 1751: Pastorals, with discourse on Pastoral
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: The querist
- 1751: A new discourse of trade
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: The orphan
- 1751: The double dealer
- 1751: Poems on several occasions. By Matthew Prior, Esq
- 1751: Political arithmetic
- 1751: Poems on several occasions
- 1751: The mourning bride
- 1752: A discourse concerning natural and revealed religion; evidencing the truth, and certainty of both; by Considerations (for the most part) not yet touched by any. Recommended (pursuant to the design of Mr. Boyle's Lecture) To the consideration of Atheists, Deists, and Sceptics; and useful to confirm and nourish the Faith and Piety of others. By Stephen Nye. First printed in the year M.DC.XCVI
- 1752: Paradise regain'd
- 1752: The gentle shepherd
- 1752: Some passages of the life and death of John Earl of Rochester
- 1752: An abridgment of Mr. Locke's Essay concerning human understanding
- 1753: The funeral: or, Grief A-la-mode
- 1753: The beggar's opera
- 1753: A short introduction to moral philosophy, in three books
- 1753: Oroonoko, a tragedy
- 1753: The beggar's opera
- 1753: Cato
- 1754: Instructions of a father to his son
- 1754: The history of Charles XII. King of Sweden
- 1754: Dialogues of the dead
- 1755: A judgment on the works of the principal and best painters of the two last ages
- 1755: The recruiting officer: a comedy. By Mr. George Farquhar
- 1755: Gill Morice
- 1755: Remarks on several parts of Italy, &c. in the years 1701, 1702, 1703
- 1755: The twin-rivals: a comedy. By Mr. George Farquhar
- 1755: Young Waters, an ancient Scottish poem
- 1755: Young Waters, an ancient Scottish poem
- 1755: The mourning bride. A tragedy. By William Congreve
- 1755: The beaux stratagem: a comedy. By Mr. George Farquhar
- 1755: Edom of Gordon; an ancient Scottish poem. Never before printed
- 1755: Gill Morice, an ancient Scottish poem
- 1756: The Dublin Society's weekly observations for the advancement of agriculture and manufactures
- 1756: The dublin Society's weekly observations for the advancement of agriculture and manufactures.
- 1756: Esop
- 1756: The Flax-husbandman and flax-dresser instructed
- 1758: Poems on several occasions
- 1765: Comus
- 1765: Paradise regain'd
Sat Dec 09 18:04:18 CST 2023