24 results filtered with: Netherlands - Foreign relations - Great Britain
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An enquiry into the danger and consequences of a war with the Dutch.
Defoe, Daniel, 1661?-1731.Date: 1712- Books
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The present condition of Great-Britain, in a discourse upon things that have not been considered, though they are of the greatest consequence to her. With a true state of the case between us and the Dutch, that may not be unworthy of the Deliberations of that august Assembly by which we are represented in Parliament; and particularly in that great Article which fills them with so many Terrors as are insinuated in our present Accounts from Holland.
T. W.Date: [1746]- Books
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A letter to the Dutch merchants in England.
Marriott, James, Sir, 1730?-1803.Date: MDCCLIX. [1759]- Books
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Some remarks on the Barrier Treaty, between Her Majesty and the States-General. By the author of The conduct of the allies. To which are added, the said Barrier-Treaty, with the two separate articles; Part of the Counter-Project; The Sentiments of Prince Eugene and Count Sinzendorf, upon the said Treaty; And a Representation of the English Merchants at Bruges.
Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745.Date: [1712]- Books
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The case of the Dutch ships, considered. By James Marriott, LL.D. One of the Advocates of Doctors-Commons, and Fellow of Trinity-Hall Cambridge.
Marriott, James, Sir, 1730?-1803.Date: M.DCC.LIX. [1759]- Books
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Two additional letters (being the third and fourth) to His Excellency the Count de Welderen, on the present situation of affairs between Great Britain and the United Provinces. With an appendix. By John Andrews, LL. D.
Andrews, John, 1736-1809.Date: M.DCC.LXXXI. [1781]- Books
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The dutch better friends than the French, to the Monarchy, Church, and trade of England. In a letter from a citizen to a country gentleman.
Withers, John, 1669-1729.Date: 1713- Books
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The dutch better friends than the French, to the Monarchy, Church, and trade of England. In a letter from a citizen to a country gentleman.
Withers, John, 1669-1729.Date: 1713- Books
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Some remarks on the Barrier Treaty, between Her Majesty and the States-General. By the author of The conduct of the allies. To which are added, the said Barrier-Treaty, with the two separate articles; Part of the Counter-Project; The Sentiments of Prince Eugene and Count Sinzendorf, upon the said Treaty; And a Representation of the English Merchants at Bruges.
Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745.Date: [1712]- Books
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The case of the Dutch ships, considered. By James Marriott, LL.D. One of the Advocates of Doctors-Commons, and Fellow of Trinity-Hall Cambridge.
Marriott, James, Sir, 1730?-1803.Date: M.DCC.LIX. [1759]- Books
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Considerations on both sides; or, remarks on the conduct of Great Britain and Holland, at the present critical conjuncture. In a letter from a person of distinction at the Hague, to his friend at London.
Person of Distinction at the Hague.Date: [1747]- Books
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The case of the Dutch ships considered. By James Marriott, LL.D.
Marriott, James, Sir, 1730?-1803.Date: M,DCC,LXXVIII. [1778]- Books
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The case of the Dutch ships, considered.
Marriott, James, Sir, 1730?-1803.Date: M.DCC.LVIII. [1758]- Books
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The dutch better friends than the French, to the Monarchy, Church, and trade of England. In a letter from a citizen, to a country gentleman.
Withers, John, 1669-1729.Date: [1713]- Books
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Some remarks on the Barrier Treaty, between Her Majesty and the States-General. By the author of The conduct of the allies. To which are added, the said Barrier-Treaty, with the two separate articles; Part of the Counter-Project; The Sentiments of Prince Eugene and Count Sinzendorf, upon the said Treaty; And a Representation of the English Merchants at Bruges.
Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745.Date: 1712- Books
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Some remarks on the Barrier Treaty between Her Majesty and the States-General. By the author of The conduct of the allies. To which are added, the said Barrier-Treaty, with the two separate articles; Part of the Counter-Project; The Sentiments of Prince Eugene and Count Sinzendorf, upon the said Treaty; And a Representation of the English Merchants at Bruges.
Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745.Date: 1712- Books
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Memoire justificatif de la conduite de la Grande Bretagne, en arrêtant les navires étrangers et les munitions de guerre, destinées aux insurgens de L'Amérique.
Marriott, James, Sir, 1730?-1803.Date: MDCCLXXIX. [1779]- Books
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Belga-Britannus: or, the Hollander always in the English interest. With Remarks on the late ill Treatment the Dutch have met with from a certain Kingdom that is in Alliance with them. To which is added, the affair of Amboyna set in a true light, by one that liv'd upon the Spot, in Answer to a Pamphlet, call'd, Dutch Alliances, &c. In a letter from a Dutch merchant at Amsterdam, to his correspondent in London.
Golt, Abraham van.Date: [1712]- Books
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The dutch better friends than the French, to the Monarchy, Church, and trade of England. In a letter from a citizen to a country gentleman.
Withers, John, 1669-1729.Date: [1713]- Books
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A justification of the Dutch from several late scandalous reflections: In which is shewn the Absolute Necessity of Preserving a Strict and Inviolable Friendship betwixt Great-Britain and the States-General: With the Fatal Consequences that must attend a War with Holland.
Date: [1712]- Books
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An account of the obligations the states of Holland have to Great-Britain, and The Return they have made both in Europe and the Indies. With Reflections upon the Peace.
Ferguson, Robert, -1714.Date: Printed in the Year, 1711- Books
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The case of the Dutch ships, considered. By James Marriot, LL.D. And one of the Advocates of Doctors-Commons.
Marriott, James, Sir, 1730?-1803.Date: M.DCC.LIX. [1759]- Books
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Considerations on both sides; or, remarks on the conduct of Great Britain and Holland, at the present critical conjuncture. In a letter from a person of distinction at the Hague, to his friend at London.
Person of distinction at the Hague.Date: MDCCXLVII. [1747]- Books
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Dutch generosity, and English gratitude, exemplified in their treatment of each other in peace and war: with a particular account of the entertainment the Dutch gave the royal family in their Exile; and how far they contributed to the restoration: with several secret transactions.
Date: [1712]