Concept
Credit - Great Britain - Early works to 1800
Catalogue
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An essay upon public credit: being an enquiry how the public credit comes to depend upon the change of the ministry, or the dissolutions of Parliaments; and whether it does so or no? With an argument, Proving that the public credit may be upheld and maintained in this Nation, and perhaps brought to a greater Height than it ever yet arrived at; though all the Changes or Dissolutions already made, pretended to, and now discoursed of, should come to pass in the World: By Robert Harley, Esq. afterwards earl of oxford, and lord high treasurer of Great Britain; First printed, 1710. With short historical notes, explaining the difficult Passages.
Defoe, Daniel, 1661?-1731.Date: 1797- Books
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Dearness not scarcity, its cause and remedy. By a commercial man. Humbly Offered to the Consideration of His Majesty's Ministers.
Commercial man.Date: [1800]- Books
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Letters on Credit. The second edition. With a postscript, and a short account of the bank at Amsterdam. By John Hope, Esq.
Hope, John, 1739-1785.Date: M.DCC.LXXXIV. [1784]- Books
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A true state of publick credit: or, a short view of the condition of the nation, with respect to our present calamities. And Some Considerations how they may be redress'd, and the Landed and Trading Interest advanced. As also Some necessary Observations on the Conduct of the Bank, in this Critical Juncture. Dedicated to the Right Honourable, Sir John Fryer, Bart. Lord Mayor of the City of London; occasion'd by the City Petition to the Honourable House of Commons.
Date: [1721]- Books
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Letters written to the governor and directors of the Bank of England, in September, 1796, on the pecuniary distresses of the county, and the means of preventing them. With some additional observations on the same subject, and the means of speedily Re-Establishing the public and commercial credit of the country. By Sir John Sinclair, Bart. President of the Board of Agriculture.
Sinclair, John, Sir, 1754-1835.Date: 1797