Bewick, John, 1760-1795
Bewick, J. (John), 1760-1795
Bewick, John
Bewick, John (English woodcutter, illustrator, and engraver, 1760-1795)
John Bewick English wood-engraver
Bewick, I., 1760-1795
VIAF ID: 29801572 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/29801572
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Bewick ‡b John ‡f 1760-1795
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Bewick, John ‡d 1760-1795
- 100 1 _ ‡a Bewick, John ‡d 1760-1795
- 100 1 _ ‡a Bewick, John ‡g English woodcutter, illustrator, and engraver, 1760-1795
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Bewick, John, ‡d 1760-1795
- 100 1 _ ‡a Bewick, John, ‡d 1760-1795
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- 100 0 _ ‡a John Bewick ‡c English wood-engraver
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (11)
Works
Title | Sources |
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An answer to a Quakers seventeen heads of queries, containing in them seventy-seven questions : Wherein sundry scriptures out of the prophets and apostles are cleared: the maintenance of ministers by tithes is by scripture fullly [sic] vindicated: several cases of conscience are resolved: several points of Christian religion are confirmed; parochial churches, and the practises of some things in these our English churches are throughly justified: the Grand Antichrist with the heretical antichrists are decyphered and parallelled | |
An antidote against lay-preaching, or, The preachers plea : in a discourse answering such objections which were given to a conscientious friend : who for his satisfaction requested a resolution : in which discourse is proved that preaching of the Word is a peculiar calling to be undertaken by none without a speciall call : and that more is required in such who undertake it than abilities : in which likewise other incidentall questions and cases concerning the profession of preachers are discussed | |
The Bewick collector; | |
Bewick's woodcuts: | |
The blossoms of morality, 1821: | |
The chase : A poem | |
Confiding England vnder conflicts, triumphing in the middest of her terrors, or, Assured comforts that her present miseries will end in unspeakable lasting mercies to the whole nation : first preached in Bengeo and Hitchin in Hartfordshire and now published for the common comfort of the nation | |
The dance of death | |
Danza della morte. | |
Emblems of mortality; representing, in upwards of fifty cuts, death seizing all ranks and degrees of people; imitated from a painting in the cemetery of the Dominican church at Basil, in Switzerland: with an apostrophe to each, tr. from the Latin and French ... to which is prefixed a copious preface, containing an historical account of the above, and other paintings on this subject ... | |
Fables | |
FABLES/BY THE LATE/M.R GAY./IN ONE VOLUME COMPLETE [estampe] | |
Fabliaux or tales of the XIIth and XIIIth centuries | |
Fabliaux ou contes. | |
A history of the cries of London, ancient and modern. | |
[Illustrations for Robinson Crusoe] | |
Imagines mortis | |
John Bewick : engraver on wood, 1760-1795 : an appreciation of his life together with an annotated catalogue of his illustrations and designs | |
The looking-glass for the mind, or, intellectual mirror : being An elegant collection of the most delightful little stories and interesting tales, chiefly translated from that much admired work L'ami des enfants | |
The new Robinson Crusoe : an instructive and entertaining history, for the use of children of both sexes | |
Poems by Goldsmith and Parnell. | |
Proverbs exemplified, and illustrated by pictures from real life. Teaching morality and a knowledge of the World; with prints. Desisgned as a succession-book to Æsop's Fables. | |
Robinson der Jüngere. | |
Select fables, in three parts : Part I. Fables extracted from Dodsley's. Part II. Fables with reflections, in prose and verse. Part III. Fables in verse. To which are prefixed, The life of Æsop; and an essay upon fable. | |
Select fables; with cuts, designed and engraved by Thomas and John Bewick, and others, previous to the year 1784; together with a memoir; and a descriptive catalogue of the works of Messrs. Bewick. | |
Tales for youth; in thirty poems: to which are annexed, historical remarks and moral applications in prose. | |
The true ministers living of the Gospel : distinguished from the false ministers living upon tithes and forced maintenance. With a word of reproof (preceding the distinction) to the ministers of the nation, whose kingdom is already shaken and divided against itself. And the iniquity and antichristianism of that ministry which is upheld by forced maintenance, briefly discovered according to the scriptures of the Old and New Testament. In a brief reply to a book stiled, An answer to a Quakers seventeen heads of quaeries, by John Bewick, who calls himself a minister of the Gospel, and rector of the parish church of Stanhop in Weredale in the county of Durham |