London bookseller and publisher (1623-1686)
| Born | 1623 |
| Died | 1686? |
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London bookseller and publisher (1623-1686)
| Born | 1623 |
| Died | 1686? |
Subjects
Early works to 1800, Instruction and study, Dance, Handbooks, manuals, Music, Country-dances (Music), Violin music, Violin, Counterpoint, Dance music, Viola da gamba, Handbooks, manuals, etc, Viols, Bible, Cittern, Country dancing, Dance Instruction and Technical Manuals, English Folk dancing, English Hymns, Handbooks, vade-mecums, History, Music -- Handbooks, manuals, etc. -- Early works to 1800, Music for Dance, Notation for Dance, ParaphrasesID Numbers
- OLID: OL1244136A
- ISNI: 0000000081386478
- Library of Congress Names: n50019902
- MusicBrainz: c299e778-611b-4702-9602-00474220ceac
- SBN/ICCU (National Library Service of Italy): SBLV101726
- VIAF: 59270608
- Wikidata: Q1282455
- Inventaire.io: wd:Q1282455
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![Cover of: Vade mecum, or, The necessary pocket companion: containing, 1. Sir Samuel Moreland's Perpetual almanack ... [etc.]. Cover of: Vade mecum, or, The necessary pocket companion: containing, 1. Sir Samuel Moreland's Perpetual almanack ... [etc.].](http://covers.openlibrary.org/b/id/8568515-M.jpg)
![Cover of: England's black tribunal: Set forth in the triall of K. Charles I., at the pretended Court of Justice at Westminster Hall, Jan. 20. Together with His Majesties speech, immediately before he was murdred [sic] on a scaffold erected at Whitehall-gate, Tuesday, Jan. 30, 1648. Also the several dying speeches of the nobility and gentry, as were inhumanely put to death for their loyalty to their sovereign lord the King from 1642 to 1658. Earl of Strafford. Arch-bishop of Canterbury. Duke Hamilton ... [et al.] ... Cover of: England's black tribunal: Set forth in the triall of K. Charles I., at the pretended Court of Justice at Westminster Hall, Jan. 20. Together with His Majesties speech, immediately before he was murdred [sic] on a scaffold erected at Whitehall-gate, Tuesday, Jan. 30, 1648. Also the several dying speeches of the nobility and gentry, as were inhumanely put to death for their loyalty to their sovereign lord the King from 1642 to 1658. Earl of Strafford. Arch-bishop of Canterbury. Duke Hamilton ... [et al.] ...](http://covers.openlibrary.org/b/id/11867055-M.jpg)