T. Warner
Active Years
Min year: 1713, Max year: 1741, Max count: 120
Establishments over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
Locations over time
(number of mentions in parentheses)
As Publisher
- 1713: A short history of the Parliament
- 1713: A short history of the Parliament.
- 1713: A short history of the Parliament
- 1713: A short history of the Parliament
- 1713: A short history of the Parliament
- 1713: A short history of the Parliament
- 1713: The campaign
- 1713: The present state of fairy-land. In several letters from Esquire Hush, an eminent citizen of Fickle-Borough, to the King of Slave-Onia
- 1713: A short history of the Parliament
- 1714: The new project examin'd or The design of the faction to deprive the family of Hanover, of the power to name lords justices, anatomiz'd
- 1714: The impeachment, or Great Britain's charge against the present M-y
- 1717: The conduct of Robert Walpole, Esq
- 1717: An answer to A letter to the Bishop of Bangor
- 1717: The layman's letter to the Reverend Mr. Sell
- 1717: The miseries of the poor are a national sin, shame, and charge
- 1717: A letter from Mr. Forster to his acquaintance in London
- 1717: An answer to A letter to the Bishop of Bangor
- 1717: A vindication of the honour and prerogative of Christ's church
- 1717: The case of the war in Italy stated
- 1718: A voyage to and from the island of Borneo, in the East-Indies
- 1718: A faithful register of the late rebellion
- 1718: Observations on the conspiracies of the non-jurors
- 1718: Faustus, Fortunatus, and Amyntas
- 1718: A letter from the Jesuits to Father de la Pillonniere. In answer to the letter sent to them by that father, and published by Dr. Snape, in his vindication, &c
- 1718: Vindication of the press
- 1718: The history of Carolina
- 1718: A preservative against the artifices of the Bishop of Bangor's Jesuit, and of all other Popish agents, Harboured and Lucking in and about this City. In a refutation of these two Fundamental points, the primacy of St. Peter, as Head of the Church; and the succession of the Bishops and Popes of Rome from him in the same Commission and Authority. Designed for the Service of the Publick
- 1718: The rebel convinc'd
- 1718: The regulator
- 1719: The conduct of the dissenters considered. In a letter to the Bishop of Bangor.
- 1719: Octavius Prince of Syra
- 1719: A poem on the death of the King of Sweden, who was kill'd before Fredrickshall, December 11. 1718. By Timothy Harris, gent
- 1719: The merchants counting-house
- 1719: Great-Britain's welcome to His Sacred Majesty King George
- 1719: Pope Julius the Second. A comical and facetious dialogue between Julius II, evil genius, and St. Peter. Written originally in Latin by the great Erasmus; and now translated into English, by Philanglus Miso Papas. Lector Risum Cohibe
- 1720: The merchants counting-house: or, Wastbook instances, with direction for their standing and entrance
- 1720: The perfidious brother
- 1720: The compleat art of painting
- 1720: A necessary caution to the sufferers by the charitable corporation; and to all who wish them relief under their deplorable circumstances.
- 1721: The second part of Penkethman's jests
- 1721: A letter from the Lord Mordington, to His Grace the Lord Arch-Bishop of York; occasion'd by a most impious and scandalous weelky paper, call'd the Independent Whig
- 1721: The Daily packet; or, The new London day post
- 1721: An appeal to common sense
- 1721: Aminadab's letter to the author of a paper called, The independent whig
- 1721: Hodegus confuted, in a plain demonstration, that the pillar of a cloud and fire, which led the Israelites thro' the wilderness; was not, as Mr. Toland vainly imagines, a fire of human preparation, but the most miraculous and awful presence of God, under the similitude of column of cloud and fire
- 1721: Pinkethman's jests
- 1722: A defence of Sir Fopling Flutter
- 1722: A discourse of standing armies
- 1722: A discourse of standing armies
- 1722: The Form of a petition submitted to the consideration and correction of those noblemen and gentlemen
- 1722: Presbyterian prejudice display'd
- 1722: The British journal
- 1722: The penitent lady: or Reflections on the mercy of God, in form of prayers
- 1722: The Hardship of the south-sea suffers consider'd, and some proper remedies for their relief propos'd
- 1722: A faithfull account of Robert Forrester
- 1722: Mr. Hutcheson's defence against the aspersions cast upon him in a virulent paper, entitled, The St. James's Journal, no 5. publish'd on the 31st of May, 1722
- 1722: A discourse of standing armies
- 1722: Tyburn's worthies, or, the robberies and enterprizes of John Hawkins, and George Simpson, lately executed for robbing the Bristol-mail
- 1722: The art of governing
- 1722: The art of governing
- 1722: The Secret history of the loose and incestuous loves of Pope Gregory VII
- 1722: The case of inoculating the small-pox consider'd
- 1723: His Grace the Duke of Wharton's speech
- 1723: His Grace the Duke of Wharton's speech
- 1723: Remarks on a play, call'd, The conscious lovers
- 1723: The censor censured; or, the conscious lovers examin'd
- 1723: His Grace the Duke of Wharton's speech
- 1723: Memoirs of Venutius and Cartismandua
- 1723: Political reflections for the year, 1722, &c
- 1724: A specimen of some free and impartial remarks on publick affairs and particular persons, especially relating to Scotland; occasion'd by Dr. Burnet's History of his own times. By John Cockburn, D.D
- 1724: An accurate description of Newgate
- 1724: New improvements in the art of midwifery
- 1724: The fortunate mistress
- 1724: An account of the state of the Roman-Catholick religion throughout the world
- 1724: The Church of England-man's private devotions
- 1724: A defence of Dr. Cockburn
- 1724: The church rambler; or, sermon taster
- 1725: The harangues or speeches of several famous mountebanks in town and country
- 1725: Articles of agreement made
- 1725: A view of London and Westminster
- 1725: A new miscellany: being a collection of pieces of poetry
- 1725: The creation of women
- 1725: The life of Jonathan Wild
- 1725: The life and surprizing adventures of Don Juliani de Trezz
- 1726: A letter to a nobleman, concerning the bill to prevent frivolous and vexatious arrests; with the substance of the said bill, and notes thereupon
- 1726: Cadenus and Vanessa
- 1726: A letter to the Reverend Mr. John Henley, M.A
- 1726: Eikones iatrikai. Or a visionary discourse with Hippocrates
- 1726: An essay
- 1726: A brief case of the distillers
- 1726: A letter from a male physician in the country
- 1726: The peaceable layman and military churchman delineated
- 1726: Mere nature delineated: or, A body without a soul
- 1726: The political history of the Devil
- 1726: A true and exact list of the Rt. Honble the Lords spiritual and temporal, and Commons of Great Britain. With a blank margin to insert any alterations that may happen. Also a Compleat List of the Lords of his Majesty's most Honourable Privy-Council, Great Officers of State, Civil and Military; the Knights of the Garter, Thistle, and Bath: With many other Curious and Useful Lists, &c
- 1726: A second enquiry into the reasons of the conduct of Great Britain, with relation to the present state of affairs in Europe
- 1726: A dissertation on the law of nature
- 1726: Some memoirs of the life of Abel, Toby's uncle. Composed, Collated, Comprized, Compiled, Digested, Methodized, Written, and Illustrated by Dr. Andrew Tripe. To which is added, the phyz of his nephew Toby, curiously engraved on copper: as also his life and character
- 1727: Conjugal lewdness
- 1727: A proposal most humbly offered to the consideration of the Honourable House of Commons, in relation to the publick taxes and debts, in order to the more speedy lessening the one, and the more certain, just and regular Payment of the other
- 1727: The metamorphosis of man
- 1727: The hermit
- 1727: Variety: a poem
- 1727: Reasons against a war
- 1727: An account of the life and writings of Sr. Isaac Newton. Translated from the eloge of M. Fontenelle, Secretary of the Academy of Sciences at Paris
- 1727: A vindication of the Quakers, from the aspersions of the author of William Gibson's case, lately published.
- 1727: The history of the Devil, as well ancient as modern
- 1727: A treatise concerning the use and abuse of the marriage bed: shewing I. The nature of matrimony, its sacred original, and the true meaning of its institution. II. The gross abuse of matrimonial chastity, from the wrong notions which have possessed the world, degenerating even to whoredom. III. The diabolical practice of attempting to prevent child-bearing by physical preparations. IV. The fatal Consequences of clandestine or forced Marriages, thro' the Persuasion, Interest, or Influence of Parents and Relations, to wed the Person they have no Love for, but oftentimes an Aversion to. V. Of unequal Matches, as to the Disproportion of Age; and how such, many ways, occasion a Matrimonial Whoredom. VI. How married persons may be guilty of conjugal lewdness, and that a man may, in effect, make a whore of his own wife. Also, many other particulars of family concern
- 1727: The case of William Gibson impartially stated
- 1727: A Dissertation upon drunkenness
- 1727: Mr. Addison's fine ode to Dr. Thomas Burnet, on his sacred theory of the earth
- 1728: The history of the Devil, as well antient as modern
- 1728: A true and impartial account of all that has pass'd between the court of Rome and Cardinal de Noailles. In relation to the constitution since the promotion of Benedict XIII. Taken from authentick papers and original letters. Done from the French
- 1728: An impartial account of the late famous siege of Gibraltar
- 1728: A discourse of the danger of governing by one minister
- 1728: The nature
- 1728: Some observations on the chronology of Sir Isaac Newton
- 1728: Durgen
- 1728: An account of the life and writings of Sr. Isaac Newton
- 1728: A thesis, that motion is not essential to matter
- 1729: Observations on the occasional writer, the craftsman, and other papers, complaining of the present conduct in publick affairs
- 1729: Britannia. A poem
- 1730: The perjur'd free mason detected
- 1730: The Weekly news, and daily register
- 1730: A letter to a Member of Parliament concerning the proposals of the East-India Company
- 1730: A vindication of his excellency the Lord C----t
- 1730: Christianity not as old as the creation
- 1730: Colonel Split-Tail
- 1731: Some short reflections on the situation of Gibraltar, and its importance to the trade and maritime force of this kingdom; with a proposal for rendering the late works of the Spaniards, near that fortress, ineffectual
- 1731: Gorgoneicon
- 1731: The divine catastrophe of the kingly family of the House of Stuarts: or, a short history of the rise, reigne, and ruine thereof. Wherein The most Secret and Chamber Abominations of the two last Kings are discovered, Divine Justice in King Charles his Overthrow vindicated, and the Parliaments Proceedings against him clearly justified. By Sir Edward Peyton, Knight and Baronet, a diligent Observer of Those Times.
- 1731: Lord Pole translated; or The D----l turn'd chimney-sweeper: a ballad
- 1731: Advice to the poets. A poem
- 1732: Proposals for a regulation, or an entire suppression, of pawn-brokers
- 1732: The original plan, progress, and present state of the South-Sea-Company
- 1732: A letter to the merchants of Great Britain; or a proper reply to the London journal, of Dec. 12, 1730
- 1732: A discourse upon the nature and cause of sudden deaths
- 1732: A defence of the Dissertation or inquiry concerning the Gospel according to Matthew
- 1732: Historical and critical remarks on the History of Charles XII. King of Sweden, by Mr. de Voltaire, design'd as a supplement to that work. In a letter to the author, by Mr. de La Motraye. Translated from the French.
- 1732: A letter to the Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole
- 1732: The weekly register: or, Universal journal
- 1732: Historical and critical remarks on the History of Charles XII. King of Sweden, by Mr. de Voltaire, design'd as a supplement to that work. In a letter to the author, by Mr. de La Motraye. Translated from the French.
- 1732: Reasons shewing the necessity of reducing the army
- 1732: Transportation
- 1732: A Letter to a member of Parliament, concerning the reduction of interest
- 1733: A short letter to the letter-writer concerning the duties on wines and tobacco
As Printer
As Bookseller
Sun Mar 26 13:08:16 CDT 2023