J. Burges
Active Years
Min year: 1796, Max year: 1800, Max count: 24
As Printer
- 1796: The principles of hydrostatics
- 1796: The principles of mechanics
- 1796: A description of the university, town, and county of Cambridge
- 1796: Jonah
- 1797: A sermon preached before the governors of Addenbrooke's Hospital
- 1797: An illustration of the method of explaining the New Testament by the early opinions of Jews and Christians concerning Christ
- 1797: An appendix to observations on Hamlet; being an attempt to prove that Shakspeare designed that tragedy as an indirect censure on Mary Queen of Scots. Containing I Some Observations on Dramas, which professedly allude to the Occurrences and Characters of the times in which they were written, and an Answer to Objections brought against the Hypothesis. II. Some farther Arguments in support of it. And III. An Answer to the Objections brought against Dr. Warburton's Hypothesis respecting an Allusion to Mary Queen or Scots in the celebrated Passage in the Midsummer Night's Dream. By James Plumptre, M.A
- 1797: The heads of a course of lectures on experimental philosophy
- 1798: An essay tending to shew the state of the Jews since the death of Christ affords an argument for the truth of Christianity
- 1799: A description of the university, town, and county of Cambridge
- 1799: Iter Britanniarum; or that part of the itinerary of Antonius which relates to Britain, with a new comment, by the Rev. Thomas Reynolds, A. M. Rector of Bowden Parva, Northamptonshire
- 1799: A sermon preached in the parish church of Clare, in Suffolk, at the presentation of the colours to the military association of that place, on Wednesday, June 26, 1799. By C. Hayward, Vicar of Haverhill, Suffolk
- 1799: An essay on the conduct and character of St. Peter
- 1800: The elements of the conic sections
- 1800: The importance of the doctrine of the Holy Trinity asserted
- 1800: The alliance between the church and the state. A sermon preached before the University of Cambridge, November 2, 1800, being the day of commemoration of benefactors. By Richard Ramsden,
- 1800: An essay tending to shew that the Christian religion has in its effects been favourable to human happiness
Tue Nov 28 14:53:41 CST 2023