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GRP16408843Taylor & Francis Group. Used - Good. Former library copy. Pages intact with minimal writing/highlighting. The binding may be loose and creased. Dust jackets/supplements are not included. Includes library markings. Stock photo provided. Product includes identifying sticker. Better World Books: Buy Books. Do Good. Taylor & Francis Group unknown
New-May2-2017--2984CQ Press 2016-06-14. Paperback. New. 0x0x0. New US Edition Textbook Ships with Emailed Tracking from USA CQ Press paperback
2012SONG0754645541Routledge 2012-03-28. 1. hardcover. Used: Good. 8.90x1.40x9.50. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Routledge hardcover
2025__1509979670Hart Pub Ltd 2025. Hardcover. New. 2nd edition. 480 pages. 9.61x6.65x1.00 inches. Hart Pub Ltd hardcover
2022x-3030799557Springer 2022. Hardcover. New. 232 pages. 9.25x6.10x0.56 inches. Springer hardcover
15995156like new. unknown
45108012-75Taylor & Francis Group. Used - Very Good. Former library copy. Pages intact with possible writing/highlighting. Binding strong with minor wear. Dust jackets/supplements may not be included. Includes library markings. Stock photo provided. Product includes identifying sticker. Better World Books: Buy Books. Do Good. Taylor & Francis Group unknown
1989180217Alembic Press 1989. paperback. Used-Like New. Alembic Press Oxford 1989 . Fine. Limited and numbered edition of 100 copies this being #93. Quarter cloth and marbled boards 57 pp. Tipped in sample plates of the press's work. Alembic Press unknown
15995156-nnew. unknown
2017x-1474425224Edinburgh Univ Pr 2017. Hardcover. New. 224 pages. 9.50x6.50x1.00 inches. Edinburgh Univ Pr hardcover
62102042Cambridge University Press CUP pp. 286 Index. Hardback. New. Cambridge University Press CUP hardcover
13976785like new. unknown
DADAX0567660087T&T Clark 2015-07-16. hardcover. New. 6.14x0.69x9.21. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. T&T Clark hardcover
DADAX1783483245Rowman & Littlefield Publishers 2015-05-05. hardcover. New. 6.37x0.91x9.14. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers hardcover
63525121Transaction Publishers pp. 346 . Hardback. New. Transaction Publishers hardcover
190231324Fall River MA: J. H. Franklin and Company. Very Good with no dust jacket; Boards rubbed spine cracked. 1902. Hardcover. Dark green cloth binding with gilt town logo stamped on front boards and gilt lettering on spine. Index. Decorative endpapers. Many photos and illustrations. A history of one of the oldest towns in Massachusetts and America stated by the first page of the text to have occurred through a transaction in 1659 between "Wamsitti and his squaw Tattapanum" and 26 original purchasers. Articles on various eras and aspects of this Bristol County town include Palo Alto Pierce Gilbert M. Nichols Rev. Leonard Woolsey Bacon Mrs. Paul M. Burns Col. Silas P. Richmond Benjamin Buffinton and John M. Deane. Printed on glossy stock. ; Large 8vo 9" - 10" tall; 287 pages . J. H. Franklin and Company hardcover
1849BOOKS073764IBoston: William Chadwick Printer 1849. good wraps softcover faint staining on covers. .EXECUTIVE AND LEGISLATIVE POWERS OF THE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT: WITH REMARKS INTENDED TO PROVE THAT THERE IS NO LAW IN THIS STATE CLOTHED WITH THE AUTHORITY OF THE CONSTITUTION AGAINST THE SALE OF SPIRITOUS LIQUORS: AND THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF SUPPRESSING THE SALE BY PENAL LAWS WITHOUT TRANSCENDING THE POWERS AND INVADING THE SACRED RIGHTS OF PROPERTY WHICH ARE ESTABLISHED AND GUARANTEED BY THE CONSTITUTION OF MASSACHUSETTS." 40pp. William Chadwick, Printer unknown
93620hardcover. 368pp. 8vo 3/4 leather; rubbed endpapers and flyleaves foxed text is clean. London: George Eyre and Andrew Strahan 1830.<br/> <br/> unknown
177934736London: Printed by R. Haswell 1779. First Edition. Newspaper. Fair. Newspaper. 18" x 12". Folded. 4 pages. Removed from a larger gathering with edge wear to the spine. Pages separated. Light toning to the single issue. Fair condition. <br /> <br /> Contents include an article titled "Philip Stephen Esq. Extract of a Letter from Captain Henry Senior Officer of his Majesty's ships in Georgia to Sir George Collier Savannah May 23 1779". The article details the British army movements against Charleston. "Charleston has offered to capitulate if they might remain neuter neutral which was refused: Our army is in possession of several flats and canoes on Ashley River." Other articles include population numbers of American States; a reprinted article "From Rivington's Royal Gazette printed at New York" also covering American Revolution news; several advertisements; a poem titled "Stanzas in the Grand Fleet on their last sailing from Portsmouth; and more. Printed by R. Haswell unknown
19051305Oxford: Printed at the University Press 1905. First edition. Leather_bound. Near Fine. 1 7/8 x 2 3/16 inches. 688 pages with black endpapers and illustrated frontispiece of "The Light of the World" by William Holman Hunt with inscription "By permission of Arthur Ackerman". Also bound with Hymns Ancient and Modern for Use in the Services of the Church c. 1905. London: Printed for the Proprietors of William Clowes & Sons Ltd. Illustrated frontispiece. 861 pages. All pages edges gilt. One leaf of BCP and one leaf of hymnal slightly extended and cropped during binding. Black endpapers. Pages clean and free from marking soiling or staining. Very clean. No marks or ownership inscriptions. Gilt lightly worn in places but still bright. Bound in full flexible green morocco with gilt "Common Prayer Hymns A & M" to front cover and gilt titles and "Oxford" to spine. Very light shelf wear to edges. The first printing of this miniature edition. Griffiths 1905/5. A near fine Edwardian first miniature printing of the Book of Common Prayer which replaced the "Finger Prayer Book." Printed at the University Press unknown
31082United Kingdom: n/a n.d. Scrapbook. Fair. Quarto. Approx. 11.25" x 9." Monogram Scrapbook. Maroon cloth hardcover with black stamped decorative borders and title in green blue and gilt on the front cover. Front hinge broken and front cover is loose but still attached. Cloth is split along the joints spine and corners. Light to moderate foxing to the sheets and tissue guards. 25 thick card leaves with numerous colored monograms. A few hand colored pages. No names or places identified in this collection. n/a unknown
191688025New York: The H.K. Fly Company Publishers 1916. First Edition. First Printing. Octavo 19.5cm; mauve cloth with titles stamped in gilt on spine and front cover; 89-3502pp. Though the title page credits it to C.D. Williams the frontispiece and four black & white plates of illustrations are signed by John Sloan. Gentle sunning and some light dust-soil to spine neat early owner's ink name and tiny label at upper front pastedown with a small faint splash mark to upper corners; Very Good with the spine titling somewhat brighter than usual.<br /> <br /> "In The Golden Blight 1916 an early example of modern science fiction a physicist whose sympathies are with the proletariat in their opposition to World War I invents a machine which from any distance can reduce gold to ash. Despite the villainous attempts of the capitalists and their kept government to prevent him he eventually attacks even the gold in the United States Treasury Building in his effort to bring a stop to the war. When the financiers of the world gather in the Treasury's vaults to observe as one of them has predicted the reconstruction of the ash back into its original form the metal kills the financiers wrecks the Treasury Building and leaves for wiser posterity a Caesar's Column of gold bodies and masonry. Freed of their servitude to gold which as the physicist explains represents capitalism the people of the world immediately declare peace and vote in the Cöoperative Commonwealth" Rideout pp.59-60. REGINALD 04906. The H.K. Fly Company Publishers unknown
168935228London: Printed for Thomas Basset at the George in Fleet-Street and Thomas Fox at the Angel in Westminster-Hall 1689. First Edition. Full calf. Fair. Folio. 3 140 pages. MISSING THE ENGRAVED FRONTISPIECE Marbled calf leather binding with leather title label on the spine. Outer joints for both boards are cracked and the boards are loose but still attached. Text is outlined in red horizontal and vertical printed lines. Armorial bookplate of "Hans Sloane Stanley" located on the front paste down. Sir Jonathan Trelawny Bishop of Bristol William Lloyd Bishop of St. Asaph William Sancroft Bishop of Canterbury was three of the Bishops on trial for seditious libel under King James II. From wikipedia: <br /> <br /> Sir Jonathan Trelawny 3rd Baronet 24 March 1650 – 19 July 1721 was a British Bishop of Bristol Bishop of Exeter and Bishop of Winchester. Trelawny is best known for his role in the events leading up to the Glorious Revolution which are sometimes believed to be referenced in the Cornish anthem The Song of the Western Men. He was born at Trelawne in the parish of Pelynt Cornwall the eldest surviving son of Sir Jonathan Trelawny 2nd Baronet. He was educated at Westminster School and then went to Christ Church Oxford at the start of the Michaelmas term of 1668 where he distinguished himself as a scholar.<br /> A staunch royalist he was ordained in 1673 and became a beneficed clergyman. He was appointed rector of South Hill on 4 October and of St. Ives on 12 December 1677 becoming Bishop of Bristol in 1685. He was one of the Seven Bishops tried for seditious libel under James II. Trelawny and the other bishops petitioned against James II's Declaration of Indulgence in 1687 and 1688 granting religious tolerance to Catholics and as a result he was arrested and imprisoned in the Tower of London on charges of seditious libel. The bishops said that whilst they were loyal to King James II their consciences would not agree to allowing freedom of worship to Catholics even if it were to be within the privacy of their own homes as the Declaration proposed; thus they could not sign. Trelawny was held for three weeks before trial then tried and acquitted; this led to great celebrations with bells being rung in his home parish of Pelynt.1<br /> <br /> William Lloyd was born at Tilehurst in Berkshire in 1627 the son of Richard Lloyd then vicar1 who was the son of David Lloyd of Henblas Anglesey. By the age of eleven he had understanding in Greek and Latin and somewhat of Hebrew before attending Oriel and Jesus Colleges Oxford later becoming a Fellow of Jesus College.2 He graduated M.A. in 1646. In 1663 he was prebendary of Ripon in 1667 prebendary of Salisbury in 1668 archdeacon of Merioneth in 1672 dean of Bangor and prebendary of St Paul's London in 1680 bishop of St Asaph in 1689 lord-almoner in 1692 bishop of Lichfield and Coventry and in 1699 bishop of Worcester.3 As Bishop of Lichfield he rebuilt the diocesan residence at Eccleshall Castle which had been destroyed in the Civil War.4<br /> Lloyd was an indefatigable opponent of the Roman Catholic tendencies of James II of England and was one of the seven bishops who for refusing to have the Declaration of Indulgence read in his diocese was charged with publishing a seditious libel against the king.3 However he was acquitted in 1688 which was one of the events that lead to the fall of James II.citation needed<br /> He engaged Gilbert Burnet to write The History of the Reformation of the Church of England and provided him with much material. He was a good scholar and a keen student of biblical apocalyptic literature and himself "prophesied" to Anne Queen of Great Britain Robert Harley 1st Earl of Oxford and Mortimer William Whiston and John Evelyn the diarist. Lloyd was a staunch supporter of the Glorious Revolution.3<br /> He lived to the age of ninety-one and died at Hartlebury Castle on 30 August 1717. He was buried in the church of Fladbury near Evesham in Worcestershire of which his son was rector and where a monument is erected to his memory with a long inscription.5<br /> <br /> William Sancroft 30 January 1617 – 24 November 1693 was the 79th Archbishop of Canterbury2 and was one of the Seven Bishops imprisoned in 1688 for seditious libel against King James II over his opposition to the king's Declaration of Indulgence. Deprived of his office in 1690 for refusing to swear allegiance to William and Mary he later enabled and supported the consecration of new nonjuring bishops leading to the nonjuring schism. Printed for Thomas Basset, at the George in Fleet-Street, and Thomas Fox, at the Angel in Westminster-Hall unknown
1872003327Rutland: Tuttle & Co. Printers. 1872. hardcover. 751 pp Fine/- some light page soiling fold-out map present but. crease d rebound in leather. Tuttle & Co. Printers hardcover