Letzte Suchanfragen
Ergebnisse für *
Es wurden 20 Ergebnisse gefunden.
Zeige Ergebnisse 1 bis 20 von 20.
Sortieren
-
An answer to a late pamphlet, intituled, Reasons offer'd against the intended project, commonly called, The national land-bank, &c
-
Mr. J. Briscoe, a director in the National Land-Bank, his defence of Dr. Hugh Chamberlen's Bank or Office of Land-Credit
in a letter to the doctor -
The humble offer of the National Land-Bank
-
Mr. Briscoe's reply to a pamphlet, intituled, The freeholders answer to Mr. John Briscoe's proposals for a national bank
-
Mr. Briscoe's reply to a pamphlet, intituled, The freeholders answer to Mr. John Briscoe's proposals for a national bank
-
An answer to a late pamphlet, intituled, Reasons offer'd against the intended project, commonly called, The national land-bank, &c
-
A discourse of money
Being an essay on that subject, historically and politically handled. With reflections on the present evil state of the coin of this kingdom; and proposals of a method for the remedy. In a letter to a nobleman, &c -
Mr. Briscoe's reply to a pamphlet, intituled, The freeholders answer to Mr. John Briscoe's proposals for a national bank
-
Mr. J. Briscoe, a director in the national land-bank, his defence of Dr. Hugh Chamberlen's bank or office of land-credit
In a letter to the doctor -
An almanack for the year 1695/6
with severall tables shewing rates of purchasing annuities for 6, 10, or 20 years, &c. And in how many years the Bank of England may have all the money and purchase all the land in the kingdom. With an artificial scheme (never before known) for the subjects to be enriched by taxes ... with several resolutions concerning forging of titles whereby it plainly appears, that one man may cheat another of his estate, without doing him any wrong: very necessary for all free-holders and lawyers -
Mr. J. Briscoe, a director in the national land-bank, his defence of Dr. Hugh Chamberlen's bank or office of land credit. In a letter to the doctor
-
A discourse on the late funds of the Million-act, Lottery-act, and Bank of England
Shewing, that they are injurious to the nobility and gentry, and ruinous to the trade of the nation. Together with proposals for the supplying their Majesties with money on easy terms, exempting the nobility, gentry, &c. from taxes, enlarging their yearly estates, and enriching all the subjects in the kingdom, by a national land-bank. Humbly offered and submitted to the consideration of the Lords spiritual and temporal, and Commons in Parliament assembled, by John Briscoe -
A discourse of money
being an essay on that subject, historically and politically handled, with reflections on the present evil state of the coin of this kingdom, and proposals of a method for the remedy, in a letter to a nobleman, &c -
An answer to a late pamphlet intituled Reasons offer'd against the intended project, commonly called the National Land-Bank, &c
-
Mr. J. Briscoe, a director in the National Land-Bank, his defence of Dr. Hugh Chamberlen's bank or office of land-credit
in a letter to the doctor -
To the honourable the knights, citizens, and burgesses in Parliament assembled
may it please your honours, the last sessions of Parliament while I attended -
To the Lords spiritual and temporal and Commons in Parliament assembled
may it please your honours, the last sessions of Parliament I presented you -
A discourse on the late funds of the Million-Act, Lottery-Act, and Bank of England
shewing that they are injurious to the nobility and gentry, and ruinous to the trade of the nation -
Mr. John Asgill his plagiarism detected
and his several assertions, of which he pretends to be the author, proved to be taken out of Mr. Briscoe's Discourse on the late funds -
Reasons humbly offered for the establishment of the national land-bank