Breval, John Durant, 1680?-1738
Breval, John, 1680?-1738
Breval, John, ca. 1680-1738
Breval, John Durant, ca. 1680-1738
John Durant Breval
VIAF ID: 54319660 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/54319660
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Breval ‡b John Durant ‡f 1680?-1738
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Breval, John Durant ‡d 1680-1738
- 100 1 _ ‡a Breval, John Durant ‡d 1680?-1738
- 100 1 _ ‡a Breval, John Durant, ‡d 1680?-1738
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Breval, John, ‡d 1680?-1738
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- 100 0 _ ‡a John Durant Breval
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (45)
5xx's: Related Names (9)
- 500 0 _ ‡a Author of The art of dress
- 500 1 _ ‡a Chute, Francis ‡d d. 1745)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Gay, Joseph
- 500 1 _ ‡a Haendel, Georg Friedrich ‡d 1685-1759)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Joly, Jaspar Robert ‡d 1819-1892
- 500 0 _ ‡a Ovide ‡d 0043 av. J.-C.-0017)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Pope, Alexander ‡d 1688-1744)
- 500 0 _ ‡a Welsted ‡d 1688-1747; Mr) (Leonard)
- 500 1 _ ‡a William III, King of England ‡d 1650-1702
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Acis and Galatea. | |
Apple-pye | |
The art of dress : A poem. | |
Calpe, or Gibraltar. A poem | |
The church-Scuffle: or, news from St. Andrew's. A ballad : To the tune of A begging we will go, etc. Written by Mr. Joseph Gay. | |
Comedy's. | |
A compleat key to The non-juror : Explaining the characters in that play, with observations thereon. By Mr. Joseph Gay. | |
The confederates: : a farce. | |
Court poems | |
An epistle to the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Esq : one of His Majesty's principal Secretaries of State. By Mr. Breval. | |
Gibraltar : a poem. Most Humbly Inscrib'd and Address'd to The Right Honourable the Earl of Portmore. | |
The harlot's progress : Founded upon Mr. Hogarth's six paintings. | |
Henry and Minerva : A poem. By J. B. Esq. | |
History of the House of Nassau | |
The hoop-petticoat : an heroi-comical poem in two books. | |
De l'action des eaux thermales de Bourbonne sur les cals défectueux et sur les désordres consécutifs aux fractures | |
The Lure of Venus (1733 edition) | |
The lure of Venus, or a Harlot's progress, an heroi-comical poem, in six cantos | |
Miscellanies, upon several subjects : occasionally written. By Mr. Joseph Gay. | |
Morality in vice | |
Musical farces. | |
Ovid in Masquerade : Being, a burlesque upon the xiiith book of his Metamorphoses, containing the celebrated speeches of Ajax and Ulysses. Designed for the Entertainment of those who had rather Laugh and be Merry, than be Merry and Wise. By Mr. Joseph Gay. | |
Pensées et maximes recueillies dans les littératures anciennes et modernes | |
Plays. | |
Pope's miscellany : The Second Part. Containing, I. The Hyde-Park Ramble. II. The Parson's-Daughter. III. The Court-Ballad. IV. Court Epigrams. To which is added, The Westminster Ballad: Or, The Earl of Oxford's Tryal. By Mr. Joseph Gay. | |
Pope's miscellany. : Viz. I. The Basset-Table. II. The Drawing-Room. III. The Toilet. IV. The Looking-Glass. V. The Worms. VI. The First Psalm. Translated for the use of a Young Lady. Publish'd faithfully, as they were found in a Pocket-Book taken up in Westminster-Hall, the last Day of the Lord Winton's Tryal. | |
The rape of Helen, 1737: | |
The rape of Helen: a mock-opera : As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Covent-Garden. By John Breval, Esq. | |
Remarks on several parts of Europe: : relating chiefly to the history, antiquities and geography, of those countries through which the author has travel'd; as France, the Low Countries, Lorrain, Alsatia, Germany, Savoy, Tyrol, Switzerland, Italy and Spain ... | |
Remarks on several parts of Europe : relating chiefly to their antiquities and history. Collected upon the spot in several tours since the year 1723; and illustrated by Upwards of Forty copper plates, from Original Drawings Among which are The Ruins of several Temples, Theatres, Amphitheatres, Triumphal Arches, and other Unpublish'd Monuments of the Greek and Roman Times, in Sicily, and the South of France. ... . By John Breval, Esq; Author of the former Remarks. | |
Strolers | |
The strolers : A farce, as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane, by His Majesty's Company of comedians. The second impression. To which is added, a new prologue and epilogue, spoken by Miss Robinson jun. at the Head of her Lilliputian Company. | |
Three hours after marriage : with The confederates and the two Keys |