Great Britain -- Economic conditions -- 17th century
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The concept Great Britain -- Economic conditions -- 17th century represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Sydney Jones Library, University of Liverpool.
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Great Britain -- Economic conditions -- 17th century
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The concept Great Britain -- Economic conditions -- 17th century represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Sydney Jones Library, University of Liverpool.
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- A Present remedy for the poor, or, The most probable means to provide well for the poor of the nation : to free us in time from paying the poors rates, and deliver us now from the publick nusance of beggars, humbly submitted to the wisdom of the next sessions of Parliament
- A Way to raise what money shall be necessary, with less expence, and more equality than can be done by continuing any one, all, or any select number of those ways, or such as those which are now in use : humbly offered to the consideration of both houses
- A discourse about trade : wherein the reduction of interest in money to 4 l. per centum, is recommended : methods for the employment and maintenance of the poor are proposed : several weighty points relating to companies of merchants, the act of navigation, naturalization of strangers, our woollen manufactures, the ballance of trade, and the nature of plantations, and their consequences in relation to the kingdom are seriously discussed : and some arguments for erecting a court of merchants for determining controversies, relating to maritime affairs, and for a law for transferrance of bills of debts, are humbly offered
- A good-work for bad times, or, A way to make England rich and happy : shewing how the charge of the war if it should continue may be born without any tax or pressure to the subject, and all the poor and idle persons in this nation may be employed or set to work, by which the nation will gain more than double the charge of the war as is herein plainly set forth, and the poor of all sorts that are not able to get their living by their work may be better maintain'd than now they are, without begging, and the children be brought up to work and taught to read, write and cast accompts, and be virtuously educated so as they may be serviceable to the nation : and also money will be made plenty and trade brisk, and some, amongst a great many, of the vast advantages that will accrue to the nation by it are here set forth : most humbly dedicated to the consideration of His Majesty and the Parliament
- A letter to a countrey-gentleman, setting forth the cause of the decay and ruin of trade : to which is annexed a list of the names of some gentlemen who were members of the last Parliament, and now are (or lately were) in publick employments
- An abstract of the grievances of trade which oppress our poor : humbly offered to the Parliament
- An account of several new inventions and improvements now necessary for England, : in a discourse by way of letter to the Earl of Marlborough, relating to building of our English shipping, planting of oaken timber in the forrests, apportioning of publick taxes, the conservacy of all our royal rivers, in particular that of the Thames, the surveys of the Thames, &c. : Herewith is also published at large The proceedings relating to mill'd-lead-sheathing, and the excellency and cheapness of mill'd-Lead in preference to cast sheet-lead for all other purposes whatsoever. : Also A treatise of naval philosophy,
- An appeal to all true English-men (if there be any such left), or, A cry for bread
- Consumer behaviour and material culture in Britain, 1660-1760
- Consumer behaviour and material culture in Britain, 1660-1760
- Consumer behaviour and material culture in Britain, 1660-1760
- Custom and commercialisation in English rural society : revisiting Tawney and Postan
- England's great happiness, or, A dialogue between Content and Complaint : wherein is demonstrated that a great part of our complaints are causeless, and we have more wealth now, than ever we had at any time before the restauration of His Sacred Majestie
- England's improvement by sea and land : to out-do the Dutch without fighting, to pay debts without moneys, to set at work all the poor of England with the growth of our own lands, to prevent unnecessary suits in law : with the benefit of a voluntary register : directions where vast quantities of timber are to be had for the building of ships, with the advantage of making the great rivers of England navigable : rules to prevent fires in London, and other great cities, with directions how the several companies of handicraftsmen in London may always have cheap bread and drink
- England's improvements : in two parts : in the former is discoursed how the kingdom of England may be improved ... : in the latter is discoursed how the navigation of England may be increased and the soveraignty of the British seas more secured to the crown of England ...
- English rural society, 1500-1800: essays in honour of Joan Thirsk
- Essays about the poor, manufactures, trade, plantations, & immorality : and of the excellency and divinity of inward light, demonstrated from the attributes of God and the nature of mans soul, as well as from the testimony of the Holy Scriptures
- Essays on trade and navigation : in five parts
- Et à dracone, or, Some reflections upon a discourse called Omnia à belo comesta : containing some animadversions from the north, upon the letter out of the west : correcting some mistakes, and aiming at a more full and certain discovery of the causes of the present great want of money in the trading stock of the nation
- From British peasants to colonial American farmers
- From British peasants to colonial American farmers
- His Majesties gracious patent to the goldsmiths for payment and satisfaction of their debt : published by His Majesties command, for the information of their several creditors
- Humphrey Chetham, 1580-1653 : fortune, politics and mercantile culture in seventeenth-century England
- John Locke and agrarian capitalism
- Overseas trade and traders: essays on some commercial, financial and political challenges facing British Atlantic merchants, 1600-1775
- Political and economic writings of Daniel Defoe
- Reasons for the abatement of interest to four in the hundred : and the objections against it fairly stated and briefly and fully answered
- SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND POLICY DURING THE PURITAN REVOLUTION
- Slavery, Atlantic trade and the British economy, 1660-1800
- Slavery, Atlantic trade and the British economy, 1660-1800
- Some thoughts of the bank
- The case of the assignees of the goldsmiths, for their interest granted to be paid out of the hereditary revenue of excise
- The humble proposal of Gilbert Malkin and P. B. for making England flourishing and happy
- The industrial revolution : the state, knowledge and global trade
- The joyful news of opening the exchequer to the gold-smiths of Lombard-street, and their creditors : as it was celebrated in a letter to the same friend in the countrey, to whom the bankers case was formerly sent
- The new instructions to the officers : &c. for managing His Majesty's revenue of hearth-money
- The political economy of British historical experience, 1688-1914
- The political economy of public finance in Britain, 1767-1873
- The political economy of public finance in Britain, 1767-1873
- The settlement of the land-bank, established anno dom. 1695 : with an abstract thereof annex'd
- To the supream authority the Parliament of the Common-VVealth of England : A remonstrance humbly presented by Thomas Wilkes, on behalfe of all the old distressed officers, souldiers, and other creditors upon the publique faith, within this nation, for satisfaction of all their just debts due before 1647. Shewing the severall lamentable conditions of many of them for want of the same, with a visible way for their satisfaction and reliefe
- Usury at six per cent. examined, and found unjustly charged by Sir Tho. Culpepper and J.C. with many crimes and oppressions, whereof 'tis altogether innocent : wherein is shewed the necessity of retrenching our luxury, and vain consumption of forraign commodities, imported by English money : also the reducing the wages of servants, labourers,
- War and economy: in the age of William III and Marlborough
- Wednesday the eighteenth of August 1652, : resolved by the Parliament that the Parliament doth declare and order that any cattle, sheep, horses, corn, or grain of any kinde shall or may be exported ... from England into Ireland (without paying custom or excise in England)
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.liverpool.ac.uk/resource/AOMn8kV3RBU/" typeof="CategoryCode http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Concept"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.liverpool.ac.uk/resource/AOMn8kV3RBU/">Great Britain -- Economic conditions -- 17th century</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.liverpool.ac.uk/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.liverpool.ac.uk/">Sydney Jones Library, University of Liverpool</a></span></span></span></span></div>