Gifford, John, 1758-1818
Gifford, John, Esq.
VIAF ID: 5329161211921840070005 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/5329161211921840070005
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Gifford, John ‡c Esq
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (2)
Works
Title | Sources |
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The complete English lawyer, 1810: | |
Gifford's English lawyer, or, Every man his own lawyer : containing a summary of the Constitution of England, its laws and statutes ... also, the criminal law of England, comprising every species of public offences, with their punishments ... also, a supplement ... the whole carefully digested and the statutes and term reports brought down to the 8th George IV | |
The history of England : from the earliest times to the peace of 1783 | |
A letter to the Earl of Lauderdale, containing strictures on his lordship's letters, to the peers of Scotland. With a Preface, and an Original Letter from the Right Hon, Edmund Burke, to the Author, Explaining the Much-Perverted Expression of "the Swinish Multitude." By John Gifford, Esq | |
A narrative of the transactions personally relating to the unfortunate Lewis the Sixteenth : King of France and Navarre; from the Period of his Evasion from Paris, on the Twentieth of June, 1791, to His Death, the twentieth of June, 1791, to his death on the twenty-first of January, 1793 | |
A plain address to the common sense of the people of England : Containing an interesting abstract of Pain's life and writings | |
The reign of Louis the Sixteenth; and complete history of the French Revolution : With notes, critical and explanatory; by John Gifford, Esq, and other able historians | |
A Residence in France, during the years 1792, 1793, 1794, and 1795 : described in a series of letters from an English lady: with general and incidental remarks on the French character and manners. Prepared for the press by John Gifford, Esq. author of The history of France, Letter to Lord Lauderdale, Letter to the Hon. T. Erskine, &c | |
A second letter to the Hon. Thomas Erskine : Containing farther strictures on his "view of the causes and consequences of the war:" Some Reflections on the Subject of the Present Negotiation; and Observations on the late Voluntary Loan. With a Word to the Critics, subjoined | |
A short address, to the members of the loyal associations, on the present state of public affairs : Containing A Brief Exposition Of The Designs Of The French Upon This Country, And Of Their Proposed Division Of Great Britain And Ireland Into Three Distinct And Independent Republics; with a list of the directories and ministers of the same, as prepared by the directory at Paris |