édition, corrigée et enrichie de cartes et des portraits des Rois de la Grande Bretagne. A
La Haye: chez
Pierre Grosse,
1719.
3 vol. 12mo. No copy of this edition was located for collation.
Quérard VI, page 502.
Backer V, col. 1940, no. 16.
Pierre Joseph d’Orléans, 1641-1698, French Jesuit writer and preacher. This
Histoire was first published in Paris in 1689, and frequently reprinted.
[371]
50
Dalrymple’s memoirs of Gr. Brit. & Ireland.
4
to.
1681-1692.
1815 Catalogue, page 18. no. 68, Dalrymple’s Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, 1681-1692, 4to.
DALRYMPLE,
Sir John.
Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland. From the Dissolution of the last Parliament of Charles II. until the Sea-battle off
La Hogue. By Sir John Dalrymple, Bart . . . The
Second Edition.
London: Printed for
W. Strahan and
T. Cadell; and
A. Kincaid and
J. Bell, and
J. Balfour,
Edinburgh,
1771.
DA435 .D148
4to. 264 leaves.
Lowndes II, page 583.
Grose 2628.
Sir John Dalrymple, 1726-1810. Scottish historical writer and chemist. The first edition of these
Memoirs was published in Edinburgh in 1771; a second and third volume, not in the Jefferson collection, were issued in 1773 and 1788.
[372]
51
D’Auvergne’s hist. of the campaign in Flanders of 1695.
4
to.
1815 Catalogue, page 18. no. 69, as above, with the reading
history.
D’AUVERGNE,
Edward.
The History of the Campagne in Flanders, for the Year, 1695. With an Account of the Siege of Namur. By Edward D’Auvergne, M.A., Rector of St. Brelade in the Isle of Jersey, and Chaplain to His Majesty’s Regiment of Scots Guards.
London: Printed for
Mat. Wotton and
John Newton,
1696.
First Edition. 4to. 102 leaves; advertisements of both publishers at the end, and below the imprint, where the
Histories for the years, 1692, 1693, 1694. Written by the same Author are announced as being for sale; at the end of
To the Reader is the Advertisement:
The Engraving of the Plan of the Siege of Namur, has retarded the Publishing of this Book for some time.
Not in Lowndes.
Grose 3302.
STC D295.
Edward d’Auvergne, 1660-1737, English military historian, was a native of the Island of Jersey. He served as chaplain to the Scots Guards throughout
the war in Flanders under William III and became its historian.
[373]
52
Wynne’s life of Jenkins.
2. v.
fol:-1685.
1815 Catalogue, page 20, unnumbered, as above.
WYNNE,
William.
The Life of Sir Leoline Jenkins, Judge of the High-Court of Admiralty, and Prerogative Court of Canterbury, &c. Ambassador
and Plenipotentiary for the General Peace at Cologn and Nimeguen, and Secretary of State to K. Charles II. And a Compleat
Series of Letters, from the Beginning to the End of those Two Important Treaties . . . Never before Published. In
Two Volumes. By William