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15 results filtered with: Coinage - Great Britain - Early works to 1800
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A letter to a Member of Parliament relating to the coin.
Date: [1718]- Books
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Act and intimation anent opening of the mint and re-coining the forreign money.
Scotland. Parliament.Date: Anno. Dom. 1707- Books
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Short remarks on the coins current in this kingdom.
Date: 1725?]- Books
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A stiptick for a bleeding nation. Or, a safe and speedy way to restore publick credit, and pay the national debts.
Date: 1721- Books
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Considerations on money, bullion, and foreign exchanges; being an enquiry into the present state of the British coinage; particularly with regard to the scarcity of silver money. With a view to point out the most probable means of making it more plentiful.
Beldam, W., -1787.Date: MDCCLXXII. [1771]- Books
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A short but thorough search into what may be the real cause of the present scarcity of our silver coin. And a method proposed, which, if taken, will effectually both produce a speedy supply, and prevent the like scarcity of it for the future. With The fatal Consequences that will unavoidably follow, either from the advancing our Silver Coin, or lowering the Price of our Gold. By a hearty well-wisher of the peace and prosperity of his country.
Clayton, David, active 1717-1719.Date: MDCCXVII. [1717]- Books
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Considerations on money, bullion, and foreign exchanges; being an enquiry into the present state of the British coinage; particularly with regard to the scarcity of silver money. With a view to point out the most probable means of making it more plentiful.
Beldam, W., -1787.Date: MDCCLXXII. [1772]- Books
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An Act to impower the lord high-treasurer, or commissioners of the treasury, to issue out of the monies arising by the coynage-duty, any sum not exceeding five hundred pounds, over and above the sum of three thousand pounds yearly, for the uses of the mint.
England and Wales.Date: 1705 [i.e. 1706]]- Books
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Thoughts on our silver coin, both as what may be the cause of its present scarcity, and what will produce a speedy supply. By a lover of his country.
Lover of his country.Date: 1718- Books
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Remarks on some conjectures, relative to an antient piece of money endeavouring to prove it a coin of Richard, the First King of England of that name. Shewing the improbability of the notion therein advanced; that the arguments produced in support of it are inconclusive, or irrelative to the point in question. In which will be particularly and largely consider'd the standard and purity of our most antient English coins, the state of the mints, and the beginning or sterling, from the public records. To which will be added, an epistorlary dissertion on some supposed saxon gold coins read before the society of antiquaries: By Geo. North, A.M. Fellow of the society of antiquaries, London.
North, George, 1710-1772.Date: MDCCLII. [1752]- Books
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An Act to continue duties for encouraging the coinage of money; and to charge the duties on senna as a medicinal drug; and for the appropriating several supplies granted to His Majesty.
Great Britain.Date: 1716]- Books
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A miscellany, containing several law tracts.
Wynne, Edward, 1734-1784.Date: Printed in the Year MDCCLXV. [1765]- Books
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Thoughts upon a new coinage of silver, more especially as it relates to an alteration in the division of the pound troy. By a Banker.
Magens, Magens Dorrien.Date: M,DCC,XCVIII. [1798]- Books
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George, Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornwall, and Earl of Chester, &c. Whereas an order was made by our royal uncle King Charles II. in the words following. Charles, R. Whereas, by the antient known laws and customs of the stannaries, no time ought to be exported by land or water out of our countries of Cornwall, or, Devon, without having the coinage stamp on the same; and until the late licentious times all tinn was from thence exported in great blocks only, ...
Cornwall (England : Duchy)Date: 1720]- Books
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The draper's remarks on the late importation of new-coin'd English half-pence, And the Consequences thereof to this Kingdom. With modest reasons for the liberty of a mint, &c. humbly offered to the consideration of those at the helm.
Draper.Date: printed in the year, 1732