Tooke, John Horne, 1736-1812
Tooke, John Horne
Horne Tooke, John, 1736-1812
Horne Tooke, John
Tooke, John H. 1736-1812
John Horne Tooke
VIAF ID: 290080297 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/290080297
Preferred Forms
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Horne Tooke, John, ‡d 1736-1812
- 100 0 _ ‡a John Horne Tooke
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Tooke, John H. ‡d 1736-1812
- 100 1 _ ‡a Tooke, John H. ‡d 1736-1812
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Tooke, John Horne
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Tooke, John Horne, ‡d 1736-1812
- 100 1 _ ‡a Tooke, John Horne, ‡d 1736-1812
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (29)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Address and declaration of the friends of universal peace and liberty held ... August 20th, 1791 | |
British linguistics in the eighteenth century | |
The decline and fall, death, dissection, and funeral procession of His Most Contemptible Lowness the London Corresponding Society, who took his departure from this world on the 18th day of December 1795 the pen of His Grace citizen Duke of Bedford ... | |
Diversions of Purley | |
Facts: | |
Facts: addressed to the landholders, stockholders, merchants, farmers, manufacturers, tradesmen, proprietors of every description and generally to all the subjects of Great Britain and Ireland ... | |
Further proceedings on the trial of John Horne, Esq., upon an information filed ex officio by His Majesty's Attorney General, for a libel, in the Court of King's Bench on Wednesday the 19th and Monday the 24th of November | |
Genuine copies of all the letters which passed between the Right Honourable the Lord Chancellor and the sheriffs of London and Middlesex, and between the sheriffs and the Secretary of State relative to the execution of Doyle and Valine. | |
The genuine trial between the Rt. Hon. Geo. Onslow, Esq; and the Rev. Mr. John Horne, : tried at Guildford the 1st of August, 1770, before the Right Honourable Lord Mansfield. For printing two libels against, and speaking defamatory words of, George Onslow, Esq; one of the Representatives for the County of Surry. Together With The Libels, and all the Letters that passed relative to this Affair. Taken down in short hand | |
John Horne, plaintiff in error and Our Sovereign Lord the King, defendant : upon a judgement, in the Court of King's-Bench, on an information for several libels : the case of the plaintiff in error. | |
A letter on parliamentary reform containing the sketch of a plan. By John Horne Tooke, Esq. | |
A letter to a friend on the reported marriage of His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales | |
A letter to John Dunning, Esq. | |
A letter to Lord Ashburton, from Mr. Horne : occasioned by last Tuesday's debate in the House of Commons, on Mr. Pitt's motion | |
A letter to Sir Fletcher Norton, : Knt. Speaker of the House of Commons, on the petition of Thomas de Grey, Esq; and others, as inserted in the Public Advertiser, on Friday the eleventh instant, for which the printer was ordered to attend the House, on Monday, Feb. 14 | |
Letter to the editor of the Times | |
Manifeste d'Angleterre, a tous les peuples de l'Europe, cocernant la constitution françoise | |
Many days in Morocco | |
Memoirs | |
Memoirs of John Horne Tooke : interspersed with original documents | |
Miscellaneous Documents. 1778-04-08 | |
An oration delivered by the Rev. Mr. Horne, at a numerous meeting of the freeholders of Middlesex, assembled at Mile-End Assembly-room, March 30, 1770. : To consider of an address, remonstrance, and petition, to His Majesty. Containing a minute and circumstantial detail of all the grievances and unconstitutional steps which have been taken, from the seizure of Mr. Wilkes's papers to the present time. With many spirited remarks, and several pieces of secret intelligence of a very interesting nature, not known to the public before | |
The petition of an Englishman. | |
The prison diary (16 May-22 November 1794) of John Horne Tooke | |
Proceedings in an action for debt, between the Right Honourable Charles James Fox, plaintiff, and John Horne Tooke, Esq. defendant. Published by the defendant | |
The proceedings in cases of high treason : under a special commission of Oyer and Terminer, which was first opened at Hick's Hall, Oct. 2, 1794, and afterwards continued at the Sessions House, in the Old Bailey | |
Reply to Palmetto | |
A sermon | |
A sermon. By the Rev. John Horne, minister of New-Brentford | |
The speeches of J.H. Tooke, Esq on the hustings in Covent-Garden. On being proposed a candidate for the city of Westminster. | |
The speeches of John Horne Tooke, during the Westminster election, 1796: with his two addresses to the electors of Westminster. Also, the speech of the Right Hon. C. J. Fox, on the last day but one of the election. | |
State trials for high treason : embellished with portraits ... | |
The trial of John Horne Tooke, : for high treason, at the Sessions house in the Old Bailey, on Monday the Seventeenth, Tuesday the Eighteenth, Wednesday the Nineteenth, Thursday the Twentieth, Friday the Twenty-First, and Saturday the Twenty-Second of November, 1794. ... . Taken in short-hand, by Joseph Gurney | |
Trials for high treason containing the whole of the proceedings at the Old-Bailey, from October 28, to December 5, 1794. Comprising the trials complete of Thomas Hardy, John Horne Tooke, and John Thelwall. ... | |
Two pair of portraits, presented to all the unbiassed electors of Great-Britain : and especially to the electors of Westminster | |
The whole proceedings in the cause on the action brought by the Rt. Hon. Geo. Onslow, : Esq. against the Rev. Mr. Horne, on Friday, April 6, at Kingston, for a defamatory libel, before the Right Honourable Sir William Blackstone, Knt. One of the Justices of His Majesty's Court of King's Bench. Taken in short-hand (by Permission of the Judge). by Joseph Gurney |