Skip to content
Membership
Donate
Store
CLOSED TODAY
Tickets
Home
Collections
Search
Men and manners in Britain, or, A bone to gnaw for the Trollopes, Fidlers, etc. being notes from a journal, on sea and on land in 1833-4
Rare Books
Men and manners in Britain, or, A bone to gnaw for the Trollopes, Fidlers, etc. being notes from a journal, on sea and on land in 1833-4
Image not available
Type
Rare Books
(Opens in new tab)
Publication date
1835.
Call number
269199
Creator
Thorburn, Grant (1773-1863)
(Opens in new tab)
Dimensions
16 cm
Find out more
View in the Library catalog
(Opens in new tab)
You might also be interested in
Image not available
Of the dominion, or, Ownership of the sea two books. : In the first is shew'd, that the sea, by the lavv of nature, or nations. [sic] is not common to all men, but capable of private dominion or proprietie, as well as the land. In the second is proved, that the dominion of the British sea, or that which incompasseth the isle of Great Britain, is, and ever hath been, a part or appendant of the empire of that island
Rare Books
489056
Image not available
Mare clausum; : The right and dominion of the sea in tvvo books. In the first, the sea is proved by the law of nature and nations, not to be common to all men, but to be susceptible of private dominion and propriety as well as the land. In the second, it is asserted that the most serene King of Great Britain is the lord and proprietor of the circumfluent and surrounding sea, as an inseparable and perpetual appendix of the British empire. Written at first in Latin by that late famous and learned antiquary John Selden, Esquire. Formerly translated into English, and now perfected and restored by J.H. gent
Rare Books
325726
Image not available
Of the dominion, or, ownership of the sea : two books. In the first is shew'd, that the sea, by the lavv of nature, or nations. [sic] is not common to all men, but capable of private dominion or proprietie, as well as the land. In the second is proved, that the dominion of the British sea, or that which incompasseth the isle of Great Britain, is, and ever hath been, a part or appendant of the empire of that island. Writen at first in Latin, and entituled, Mare clausum seu, De dominio maris, by John Selden, Esquire. Translated into English; and set forth with som additional evidences and discourses, by Marchamont Nedham. Published by special command
Rare Books
132742
Image not available
Political arithmetick, or A discourse concerning, the extent and value of lands, : people, buildings; husbandry, manufacture, commerce, fishery, artizans, seamen, soldiers; publick revenues, interest, taxes, superlucration, registries, banks; valuation of men, increasing of seamen, of militia's, harbours, situation, shipping, power at sea, &c. As the same relates to every country in general, but more particularly to the territories of His Majesty of Great Britain, and his neighbours of Holland, Zealand, and France
Rare Books
287036
Visit
What’s On
Collections & Research
Learn
Join & Give
About
Dismiss
Open search