294 results filtered with: Great Britain - Foreign relations - France
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Utrum horum? The government; or, the country? By D. O'Bryen.
O'Bryen, D. (Denis), 1755-1832.Date: 1796- Books
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An address to the people of Great Britain. By R. Watson, Lord Bishop of Landaff.
Watson, Richard, 1737-1816.Date: [1798]- Books
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A view of the causes and consequences of the present war with France. By the Honourable Thomas Erskine.
Erskine, Thomas Erskine, Baron, 1750-1823.Date: M,DCC,XCVII. [1797]- Books
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Reasons humbly offered to prove that the letter printed at the end of the French memorial of justification is a French forgery, and falsely ascribed to His R---l H-----ss.
Date: [1756]- Books
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An address to the people of Great Britain. By R. Watson, Lord Bishop of Landaff.
Watson, Richard, 1737-1816.Date: 1798- Books
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The speech of the Right Hon. William Pitt, Chancellor of the Exchequer, first commissioner of the Treasury, on introducing the plan for consolidating and simplifying the duties of the customs, before a committee of the House of Commons, February 26, 1787.
Pitt, William, 1759-1806.Date: [1787]- Books
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A letter, commercial and political, addressed to the Rt. Honble. William Pitt: in which the real interests of Britain, in the present crisis, are considered, and some observations are offered on the general state of Europe. The second edition, corrected and enlarged. By Jasper Wilson, Esq.
Currie, James, 1756-1805.Date: MDCCXCIII. [1793]- Books
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The manifesto of the court of France; or, a parallel of the King's conduct, with that of the King of Great-Britain, Elector of Hanover. Relative to the affairs of the Empire, and particularly to the breach of the capitulation of Closter-Seven. Faithfully translated into English, that the Public, from this Sophistical and Scurrilous Piece, may judge of the Artisice and Fraud of the French Court, in throwing the Odium of their unjust and turbulent Proceedings upon Powers, whose Intentions were always Sincere, Just and Pacific.
Date: MDCCLVIII. [1758]- Books
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A short statement of facts, with some reflections; occasioned by a pamphlet, entitled "the plain thoughts of a plain man." By a real plain man.
Real Plain Man.Date: M,DCC,XCVII. [1797]- Books
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A memorial, containing a summary view of facts, with their authorities, in answer to the Observations sent by the English Ministry to the courts of Europe. Translated from the French.
Moreau, Jacob Nicolas, 1717-1804.Date: 1757- Books
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A State of the national debt, provided or unprovided for by Parliament, as it stood the 31st of December 1728, and the 31st of December 1729. Together with an account of the produce of the sinking fund in that year, and to the payment of what debts contracted before the 25th of December 1716, the said fund hath been applied. Also, an account shewing how the money given for the service of the year 1729 hath been disposed of, distinguished under the several heads, until the 29th day of January 1729, and the parts thereof remaining unsatisfied, with the deficiency thereupon. To which is added, a copy of the pension-bill passed by the Commons, and rejected by the Lords.
Date: 1730- Books
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Two papers by the calm observer, not printed in the collection of his letters extracted from the Morning Chronicle.
Vaughan, Benjamin, 1751-1835.Date: 1795- Books
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The apparent danger of an invasion, briefly represented in a letter to a minister of state. By a Kentish gentleman.
Date: 1701- Books
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A true and authentick narrative of the action between the Northumberland and three French men of war. Describ'd in all its Circumstances. With an Account of the Behaviour of Captain Watson, and certain Persons on that Occasion. Also a Relation of the Usage the English Prisoners met with in France, and a Description of that Country and People. By an Eye-Witness.
Eye-witness.Date: MDCCXLV. [1745]- Books
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A view of the causes and consequences of the present war with France. By the Hon. Thomas Erskine.
Erskine, Thomas Erskine, Baron, 1750-1823.Date: 1797- Books
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The conduct of Great Britain, vindicated against the calumnies of foreign enemies and domestic conspirators ; Since The Aera Of The Commencement Of The Present War With France. By Charles Tweedie, Junr.
Tweedie, Charles, active 1799-1803.Date: 1799- Books
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The speech of the Honourable Charles James Fox. In the House of Commons, on Monday, the 3d of February, 1800, on a motion for an address to the throne, approving of the refusal of ministers to treat with the French Republic.
Fox, Charles James, 1749-1806.Date: [1800]- Books
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Two letters on the conduct of our domestick parties, with regard to French politicks; including "observations on the conduct of the minority, in the session of M.DCC.XCIII," By the late Right Hon. Edmund Burke.
Burke, Edmund, 1729-1797.Date: 1797- Books
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A third letter to a British merchant: containing reflections on the foreign and domestic politics of this country, together with strictures on the conduct of opposition. The second edition. By John Bowles, Esq.
Bowles, John, 1751-1819.Date: M.DCC.XCVII. [1797]- Books
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The real grounds of the present war with France. To which is added, a postscript. By John Bowles, Esq.
Bowles, John, 1751-1819.Date: [1794]- Books
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An appeal to the head and heart of every man and woman in Great Britain, respecting the threatened French invasion, and the importance of immediately coming forward with voluntary contributions.
Date: [1798]- Books
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Ministerial artifice detected, or, a full answer to a pamphlet lately published, intitled, The interests of the Empress Queen, the Kings of France and Spain, &c. betrayed in the preliminary articles at Aix-la-Chapelle.
Date: MDCCXLIX. [1749]- Books
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Speech of the Right Honourable William Pitt, in the House of Commons, Thursday, January 31, 1799, on offering to the House the resolutions which he proposed as the basis of an union between Great Britain and Ireland.
Pitt, William, 1759-1806.Date: 1799- Pictures
A fearful woman (Britannia) is encouraged by three British politicians to resist the invading fleet of France. Coloured etching by J. Gillray after J. Sneyd, 1803.
Sneyd, John.Date: 14 March 1803Reference: 12191i- Books
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A letter to the Hon. Thomas Erskine; containing some strictures on his view of the causes and consequences of the present war with France. Second edition. By John Gifford, Esq. Author of a Letter to the Earl of Lauderdale, &c. &c.
Gifford, John, 1758-1818.Date: 1797