A07224
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Reasons monarchie. Set forth by Robert Mason of Lincolnes Inne Gent
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Mason, Robert, 1571-1635.
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1602
(1602)
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STC 17621; ESTC S101429
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39,949
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156
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View Text
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A69015
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An Englis[h] expositor[:] teaching the in[ter]pretation of the harde[st] words [vsed] in our language. With sundry [ex]plicat[ions, de]scriptions [, and d]iscourses. By I.B. ...
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J. B. (John Bullokar)
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1621
(1621)
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STC 4084; ESTC S115630
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109,867
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269
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View Text
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A30077
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An English expositor teaching the interpretation of the hardest words used in our language : with sundry explications, descriptions and discourses / by I.B., doctor of physick.
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J. B. (John Bullokar)
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1641
(1641)
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Wing B5429; ESTC R29141
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109,869
|
224
|
View Text
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A17230
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An English expositor teaching the interpretation of the hardest words vsed in our language. With sundry explications, descriptions, and discourses. By I.B. Doctor of Phisicke.
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J. B. (John Bullokar)
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1616
(1616)
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STC 4083; ESTC S107055
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109,871
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224
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View Text
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A03380
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The schoole of skil containing two bookes: the first, of the sphere, of heauen, of the starres, of their orbes, and of the earth, &c. The second, of the sphericall elements, of the celestiall circles, and of their vses, &c. Orderly set forth according to art, with apt figures and proportions in their proper places, by Tho. Hill.
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Hill, Thomas, b. ca. 1528.; Jaggard, William, 1569-1623.
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1599
(1599)
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STC 13502; ESTC S104125
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144,541
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253
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View Text
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A35985
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Of bodies and of mans soul to discover the immortality of reasonable souls : with two discourses, Of the powder of sympathy, and, Of the vegetation of plants / by Sir Kenelm Digby, Knight.
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Digby, Kenelm, Sir, 1603-1665.
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1669
(1669)
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Wing D1445; ESTC R20320
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537,916
|
646
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View Text
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A35987
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Two treatises in the one of which the nature of bodies, in the other, the nature of mans soule is looked into in way of discovery of the immortality of reasonable soules.
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Digby, Kenelm, Sir, 1603-1665.
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1644
(1644)
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Wing D1448; ESTC R9240
|
548,974
|
508
|
View Text
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A42257
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The royal commentaries of Peru, in two parts the first part, treating of the original of their Incas or kings, of their idolatry, of their laws and government both in peace and war, of the reigns and conquests of the Incas, with many other particulars relating to their empire and policies before such time as the Spaniards invaded their countries : the second part, describing the manner by which that new world was conquered by the Spaniards : also the civil wars between the Piçarrists and the Almagrians, occasioned by quarrels arising about the division of that land, of the rise and fall of rebels, and other particulars contained in that history : illustrated with sculptures / written originally in Spanish by the Inca Garcilasso de la Vega ; and rendered into English by Sir Paul Rycaut, Kt.; Comentarios reales de los Incas. English
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Vega, Garcilaso de la, 1539-1616.; Rycaut, Paul, Sir, 1628-1700.
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1688
(1688)
|
Wing G215; ESTC R2511
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1,405,751
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1,082
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View Text
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A09800
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The philosophie, commonlie called, the morals vvritten by the learned philosopher Plutarch of Chæronea. Translated out of Greeke into English, and conferred with the Latine translations and the French, by Philemon Holland of Coventrie, Doctor in Physicke. VVhereunto are annexed the summaries necessary to be read before every treatise; Moralia. English
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Plutarch.; Holland, Philemon, 1552-1637.
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1603
(1603)
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STC 20063; ESTC S115981
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2,366,913
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1,440
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View Text
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