Eman. Matthews
Active Years
Min year: 1714, Max year: 1734, Max count: 97
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
- 1714: A funeral-sermon preach'd at Hackney, July 11. 1714. on occasion of the much lamented death of the Reverend Mr. Matthew Henry, late minister of the gospel there. By W. Tong
- 1715: The family instructor
- 1715: A sermon preach'd at Black Friars
- 1715: The king's safety the Church's triumph
- 1715: Plain-dealing
- 1715: Plain-Dealing
- 1715: The horrid ingratitude of all Protestants that are not sincerely thankful for King George
- 1715: Plain-dealing
- 1716: A sermon preach'd at the evening-lecture in Salters-Hall, July the 15th, 1716
- 1716: The validity of the dissenting ministry
- 1716: A funeral-Sermon for the Reverend Mr. Tho. Risley, A.M. and sometime fellow of Pembroke-Colledge in Oxford. With some short memoirs of his life. By Charles Owen
- 1716: National blessings proper motives to national piety
- 1716: A vindication of plain-dealing
- 1716: The rational dissenter
- 1717: A sermon preach'd before the Societies for Reformation of Manners, at Salters-Hall, July 1st. 1717. By Daniel Mayo, M. A. Published at their Request
- 1717: Memoirs of the Church of Scotland
- 1717: A sermon preach'd before the Societies for Reformation of Manners, at Salters-Hall, July 1st. 1717
- 1718: A sermon preach'd the XXVIIIth of May, 1718, being King George's birth-day, to a Society of Protestant Dissenters, who support the Lord's-Day morning-lecture in Little St. Helens. By S. Wright. Published at the request of the said society
- 1718: The nature and advantage of trusting in God. A sermon preach'd at the funeral of the late Reverend Mr. Thomas Simmons, March 17. 1717/18. By M. Clark
- 1719: A vindication of Mr. Trosse from the charge of uncharitableness
- 1719: A sober reply to Mr. Peirce's angry and scornful letter
- 1719: A sober reply to Mr. Peirce's angry and scornful letter
- 1719: Equal liberty of conscience asserted
- 1720: The necessity of contending for revealed religion
- 1720: The proceedings on the King's Commission of the peace, and oyer and terminer, and gaol-delivery of Newgate, held for the city of London, and county of Middlesex, Justice-Hall in the Old B[ayly,] on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday being the 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th of this instant December, 1720. In the seventh year of His Majesty's reign
- 1720: A preface to four sermons upon revealed religion
- 1720: God's good will to Great-Britain
- 1720: A letter to the Protestant dissenters
- 1720: A sermon preach'd to the Societies for Reformation of Manners
- 1720: A letter to the Protestant dissenters
- 1720: Past deliverances and present calamities improved
- 1720: Of the children of religious parents: their privileges, and duty
- 1721: A sermon preach'd to the Societies for Reformation of Manners
- 1721: Some customs consider'd
- 1721: A sermon preach'd before the Right Honourable the Lord-Mayor, the aldermen, and the citizens of London, in the Cathedral Church of St. Paul; on November the 5th, 1720
- 1721: The proceedings on the King's Commission of the Peace, and Oyer and Terminer, and Goal-delivery of Newgate, held for the city o[f] London, and county of Middlesex, at Justice-Hall in the Old Bayly on Friday, Saturday and Monday, being the 13th, 14th, and 16th of this instant January, 1720. In the seventh year of His Majesty's reign
- 1721: A sermon preach'd before the Right Honourable the Lord-Mayor, the Aldermen, and the Citizens of London, in the cathedral Church of St. Paul; on November the 5th, 1720. The Day of our Deliverance from the Gunpowder Treason; and also of the Safe and Happy Arrival of his late Majesty, King William, (of Glorious Memory) to Deliver these Nations from Popery and Slavery. By Francis Haslewood. M. A. Rector of Chinkford, in Essex; Prebend of Wherwell, in Hampshire; and Chaplain to His Grace Philip Duke of Wharton
- 1721: God's goodness to a people
- 1721: A sermon preach'd before the Right Honourable Sir John Fryer, bart. Lord-Mayor of the city of London, the Court of Aldermen and the liveries of the several companies, in the Cathedral Church of St. Paul, Jan. 30. 1720
- 1721: A letter to a minister, giving advice how to act under temptations
- 1722: A sermon preach'd to the Societies for Reformation of Manners
- 1722: The uncharitableness of modern charity
- 1722: A letter to the Reverend Mr. Thomas Reynolds
- 1722: The only way for England to be sav'd from the plague
- 1723: The wonders of redeeming love
- 1723: A sermon preach'd to the Societies for Reformation of Manners
- 1724: The lordship of Christ considered
- 1724: Stedfastness in religion recommended
- 1724: The lordship of Christ considered
- 1724: An essay on plays and masquerades
- 1724: The change of times and seasons, considered and improv'd
- 1725: The Christian's conduct after the sacrament of the Lord's Supper directed
- 1725: The prospect of the future judgment fit to restrain vicious affections and to engage betimes in an holy course. A funeral sermon for John Fryer, Esq; ... who departed this life at Wherwell in Hampshire on the 16th of August, 1724. By Jacob Ball
- 1725: An alarm to Protestant princes and people
- 1726: A sermon preach'd at Chester, on occasion of opening the new Meeting-house there, October 9, 1700
- 1726: The practical influences of the speculative doctrines of Christianity demonstrated
- 1727: Sober-mindedness press'd upon young people
- 1730: A sermon occasion'd by the death of the late Reverend Mr. Thomas Cotton
- 1732: The certain and unchangeable difference betwixt moral good and evil
- 1732: A short view of the whole Scripture history
- 1732: The certain and unchangeable difference betwixt moral good and evil
- 1734: A sermon preached to the Societies for reformation of manners, at Salters-Hall; on Monday, July the 8th, 1734
- 1734: A sermon on marriage
- 1734: The art of reading and writing English
As Printer
Tue Jun 06 00:45:51 CDT 2023