Dunton, John, 1659-1733
Dunton, John, 1659-1732
Dunton, John, Libraire
Dunton, John
John Dunton British bookseller
VIAF ID: 109516711 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/109516711
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Dunton ‡b John ‡f 1659-1732
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Dunton, John
- 100 1 _ ‡a Dunton, John ‡d 1659-1733
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Dunton, John, ‡d 1659-1732
- 100 1 _ ‡a Dunton, John, ‡d 1659-1733
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- 100 0 _ ‡a John Dunton ‡c British bookseller
- 100 0 _ ‡a John Dunton ‡c British bookseller
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (13)
5xx's: Related Names (9)
- 510 2 _ ‡a Athenian Society (London, England)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Carpenter, Andrew ‡d 1943-
- 500 1 _ ‡a Carpenter, Andrew ‡d 1943-...
- 500 1 _ ‡a Defoe, Daniel ‡d 1661-1731
- 551 _ _ ‡a London ‡4 ortw ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfActivity
- 500 0 _ ‡a N. H
- 500 0 _ ‡a Philaret, ‡d active 1697-1698
- 500 0 _ ‡a Philaret ‡d active 1697-1698
- 500 1 _ ‡a Uí Ogáin, Ríonach
Works
Title | Sources |
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An appeal to his Majesty's most gracious promise : of never forgetting those that have distinguished themselves in his service; the humble petition of John Dunton, gent | |
Athenæ redivivæ: or, the new Athenian oracle : under three general heads, viz. the divine, philosophick, and secret oracle. | |
Athenian oracle, being an entire collection of all the valuable questions and answers in the old Athenian mercuries, intermix'd with many cases in divinity, history, philosophy,... By a member of the Athenian society [J. Dunton] | |
The athenian spy : discovering the secret letters which were sent to the Athenian society by several ingenious ladies, relating to the management of their affections. Being a Compleat System of love cases, in which all the Difficult Questions and Nice Points, of that most mysterious Art, are fully Resolved. To which is added, The Way of a man with a maid: Or, The whole Art of Amour; with all its Intrigues and Amusements, till its Consummation in Enjoyment | |
Bloody Assizes | |
The case is alter'd : or, Dunton's re-marriage to the same wife. Being the first instance of that nature that has been in England. To which is added, the tender letters that pass'd between this new bride and bridegroom; the history of their courtship, &c. As also The Articles Agreed on for The Ruling a Wife, &c. With A Poem on the Re-Marriage. Sent (in Letters) to those Two Ladies who Publish'd Dialogues Concerning the Management of Husbands. Dedicated to Madam June Nicholas of St. Albans | |
A cat may look on a queen: or, A satyr on Her present Majesty. | |
The Christian's gazette, or, News chiefly respecting the invisible world | |
The conventicle : or, a narrative of the dissenters new plot against the present constitution in church and state. With the names of the Plotters, and their places of Meeting. Humbly address'd to Her Most Excellent Majesty, by one of the conspirators, and ready to be depos'd upon Oath before her Principal Secretary of State. To which is added, The reasons for disebling all Dissenters for ever voting more for Parliament-Men, and for wholly Repealing the Act of Toleration. With a few queries to those English Schismaticks, whose further Growth is now prevented by Act of Parliament. With a Vindication of the said act, against all Dissenters and Low-Churchmen whatsoever | |
The Devil's martyrs: or, plain dealing, in answer to the Jacobite speeches of ... William Paul ... and John Hall. ... To which is added, The high-church martyrology: ... Written by Mr. John Dunton, ... | |
The Dublin scuffle | |
Dunton's ghost | |
Dunton's recantation : or, his reasons for deserting his whiggish principles and turning jacobite, at this time when a new rebellion is so much talk'd of | |
An essay on death-bed-charity : Exemplify'd in the Life of Mr. Thomas Guy, Late Bookseller in Lombard-Street, Madam Jane Nicholas, Of St. Albans. And Mr. Francis Bancroft, Late of London Draper: Proving that great Misers giving large Donatives to the Poor in their last Wills is no Charity, To which is added the last Will of Mr. Francis Bancroft. Now publish'd as a necessary Appendix to the Hazards of a Death-Bed-Repentance, of which the Tenth Edition was lately Published | |
An essay, proving, we shall know our friends in heaven, 1698: | |
Halkett & Laing, Dict. of anonymous and pseudonymous English literature (2nd ed.), 1971: | |
The hazard of a death-bed-repentance : argued from the remorse of conscience of W- late D- of D- when dying; the Earl of Marlburg, the Lord Rochester, Sir Duncomb Colchester, and John Hampden, ... With many original papers wrote by them, .. | |
The hazard of a death-bed-repentance : furthur argued, from the late remorse of W- late D- of D- with serious reflections on his adulterous life. Being a second answer to Dr. K-'s sermon preach'd at the D-'s funeral. In which is fully resolv'd that Nice Question, How far a Death-Bed-Repentance, (such as was that of the D- of D-) is possible to be sincere? To which is added, conjugal perjury, or an Essay upon Whoredom; Address'd to the Husbands of Quality that keep Misses. With the Secret History of the Author's Failings, or D- at Confession | |
The hereditary-Bastard: or, the royal-intreague of the warming-pan : fully detected, in a sermon upon these words, And a bastard shall dwell in Ashdod, Zech. 9. 6. Being a full answer to the Pretender's late declaration, wherein he affirms he has an indefeasible hereditar right to His Majesty's crown. This sermon was deliver'd (I can't say preach'd) in publick by a lay-man, and is now publish'd as his first essay to reform the pulpit, which (as appears by his Majesty's Directions to our Archbishops and Bishops) has been greatly profan'd by the bitter Invectives and scurrilous Language of some of the Clergy | |
The history of living men : or, characters of the royal family, the ministers of state, and the principal natives of the three kingdoms. Being an essay on a thousand persons that are now living. With a poem upon each life. Dedicated to His Royal Highness, Prince George of Denmark | |
The impeachment, or Great Britain's charge against the present M-y : Sir Roger Bold, the L- C-ly, and Dr. S-ll. With The Names of those Credible Persons, that are able to prove (before Her Majesty, or either of Her Two Houses of Parliament) the whole Impeachment, consisting of Sixty Articles. Dedicated to the most Illustrious and ever victorious Prince John Duke of Marlborough. By the unknown author of Neck or nothing, who being buried alive (i. e. forc'd to abscond) for daring to call a Spade a Spade, does here appear (as a Ghost) to do Justice to himself and Witnesses. | |
John Dunton's Letters from New-England. | |
The judgment of whole kingdoms and nations, concerning the rights, power, and prerogative of kings, and the rights, priviledges, and properties of the people ... | |
The ladies dictionary (1694) | |
The life and errors of John Dunton | |
The life, travels, and adventures of Christopher Wagstaff 1762 | |
The living elegy: or, Dunton's letter (being a word of comfort) to his few creditors: with the character of a summer-friend. To which is added, the lives, religion, and honesty of the Moderator, Wandering Spy, Rehearsal, London C-d (alias post) Interloping Whipster, and the other attachers of my person and goods | |
The manifesto of K. John the Second; and of those noblemen, gentlemen and others, now arming in defence of his indefeasible and hereditary right to the imperial crown ... With a satyr upon royalty, writ by King John the Second, ... The whole printed by the special order of His Majesty King John; .. | |
The medal : or, A Loyal Essay upon King George's Picture, As 'twas presented to Mr. John Dunton, (author of The Golden Age) By His Majesty's Order. Most Humbly Inscrib'd to his Excellency The Baron de Bothmer | |
The merciful assizes : or, a panegyric On the Late Lord Jeffreys Hanging so many in the West. With The Lives, Characters, and Dying Speeches of the many Hundreds that were Converted by his Lordship's Sentence. As also Some secret memoirs relating to the West, never Publish'd till now. In a letter to Madam H- who had a brother Drawn, Hang'd and Quarter'd at Taunion | |
Merry ramble to the wild Irish | |
The mob-war: or a detection of the present state of the Brittish nation: but more especially with respect to that wou'd be King ... that threatens us with a speedy invasion. In sixteen letters. .. | |
Mordecai's memorial : or, There's Nothing done for Him. Being A Satyr upon Some-Body, but I name No-Body: (or, in Plainer English, A Just and Generous Representation of Unrewarded Services, by which the Protestant Succession has been sav'd out of Danger.) Written By an Unknown and Disinterested Clergy-Man, And most humbly Inscrib'd to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, Guardian of these Realms | |
The neck-adventure : Or the case and sufferings of Mr. John Dunton, author of those early discoveries, intitled, the court-spy, neck or nothing, Queen Robin, and, the impeachment. Which not only defeated the Jacobite-Plot in Southwark to restore the pretender, but were the sole occasion why the Irish Parliament inspected the pretender's listing of men in Dublin, and of wholly suppressing that traiterous project. The whole discoveries humbly submitted to the consideration of His Most Excellent Majesty. | |
Neck or nothing. Part 1 | |
The new practice of piety; writ in imitation of Dr. Browne's Religio medici: or The Christian virtuoso : Discovering the Righ way to heaven between all extreams. To which is added, a satyr on the House of Lords, for their throwing out the bill against occasional conformity. | |
The new Quevedo : Or, a vision of Charon's passengers: from the creation of the world, down to this present year 1702 | |
The night-walker, or, Evening rambles in search after lewd women . The London-spy . The amorous bugbears | |
Ox---- and Bull---- : or, a funeral sermon for the two beasts that are to be slaughter'd upon Tower-Hill, next session of Parliament, Upon these Words, With the Serious Advice that was given to Ox-And Bull-, to prepare for the Axe; at a time when Beasts could Speak, and pretended to Reason and Loyalty. Also, An Elegy upon their Untimely End, to be sung the same Day they are Quarter'd. The whole dedicated to that State-Butcher, Jack Catch, Esq; By Mr. John Dunton, (author of Neck or Nothing, and the Sermon, intituled, The Hereditary-Bastard) and is his second Attempt to Reform the Pulpit | |
Petticoat-government. In a letter to the court ladies : By the author of The Post-Angel. | |
Phenix. | |
The phenix : or, a revival of scarce and valuable pieces from the remotest antiquity down to the present times. Being A Collection of Manuscripts and Printed Tracts, no where to be found but in the Closets of the Curious | |
The post-boy robb'd of his mail : or, The pacquet broke open. | |
The pulpit-Fool. A satyr | |
Religio bibliopolæ | |
Seeing's believing: or, K---ng G----rge prov'd a us----per : and his whole reign one continu'd act of cr-ty and op-n, and other notorious fail-ngs. Written by a subject to the lawful king. And Inscrib'd to A Noble Earl, Who lately fought in Defence of the Right Title to the British Crown | |
The shortest way with the King: or, plain English spoke to His Majesty. Being the third part of Neck or nothing; containing, The Secret History of King George's Reign, from the Death of the late Queen, to the Report made in the House of Commons, by the Committee of Secrecy. Introduc'd with the Secret Reign of the Monarchs of Great-Britain, for the last Sixty Years. The whole Discoveries humbly submitted to the Consideration of the Right Honourable James Stanhope, Esq; one of His Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State. By Mr. John Dunton, Author of the First and Second Part of Neck or Nothing | |
The state-weathercocks : or, a new secret history of the most distinguished favourites, both of the late and present reign. ... Writ by that Person of honour, that sent to Mr. John Dunton all those Jacobite secrets that composed Neck or nothing, ... To these new discoveries is added, the twentieth edition of Neck or nothing, ... Also Mordecai kneeling at the King's gate: .. | |
Traité du pouvoir des rois de la Grande Bretagne, où l'on fait voir quel a été de tout tems le gouvernement monarchique, et où justifie par les autorités des anciens et des modernes les principes qui ont causé la révolution en 1689 | |
A true journall of the Sally Fleet | |
The visions of the soul before it comes into the body ..., 1692: | |
Vox populi, vox Dei, being true maxims of government | |
A voyage round the world, or, A pocket-library : divided into several volumes ... : the whole work intermixt with essays, historical, moral, and divine, and all other kinds of learning | |
Whigg loyalty, or an humble address to Her Majesty. By Mr. John Dunton, Author of the Court-Spy. In which he offers to appear and prove all His Discoveries, and several others of great Moment, to the Queen and Kingdom, if Her Majesty will be pleased to grant Her Royal Protection to Himself and Witnesses. |