More about Donald Lupton:
| | Books by Donald Lupton: Books in the extended shelves: Lupton, Donald, -1676: Emblems of rarities: or Choyce observations out of worthy histories of many remarkable passages, and renowned actions of divers princes and severall nations With exquisite variety, and speciall collections of the natures of most sorts of creatures: delightfull and profitable to the minde. Collected by D.L. (London : Printed by N. Okes, 1636) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: Englands command on the seas, or, The English seas guarded.: Wherein is proved that as the Venetians, Portugals, Spaniards, French, Danes, Polands, Turks, the Duke of Tuscany, and the popes of Rome have dominion on their seas; so the Common-wealth of England hath on our seas. : Wherein the Dutch unjust procuration and prosecution of war against England is also described. (London : Printed for Jos. Blaik-lock in Ivie-lane ..., 1653) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: Flanders, or, An exact and compendious description of that fair, great, and fat countrey of Flanders wherein the inhabitants, bounds, length, breadth, division, riches, rivers, forrests, cities, towns, and villages, castles, principalities, sea-ports, courts of justice, abbeys, with the chief estates are observed : as also a distinct relation of some battels fought and towns won unto the now victorious proceedings of the English and French armies therein, with the taking Mardike, Dunkerk, Winnoxbergh, Vuern, and Dixmude, to the present besieging of Graveling. (London : Printed by Thomas Ratcliffe ..., 1658) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: The freedom of preaching or Spiritual gifts defended: proving that all men endowed with gifts and abilities may teach and preach the Word of God. By D. Lupton, servant of Jesus Christ in the work of the Gospel. (London : printed by R.W. for R. Harford, at the Bible and States Arms in Little-Brittain, 1652) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: The glory of their times. Or The liues of ye primitiue fathers Co[n]tayning their chiefest actions, workes, sentences, and deaths. (London : Printed by I: Okes, and are to be sold in Pauls Church-yard at the white Lyon [by S. Browne], 1640), also by George Glover (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: The history of the moderne Protestant divines, containing their parents, countries, education, studies, lives ... with a true register of all their severall treatises and writings that are extant. (N. and J. Okes, 1637), also by Jacob Verheiden and Henry Holland (page images at HathiTrust) Lupton, Donald, -1676: London and the countrey carbonadoed and quartred into seuerall characters. By D. Lupton (London : Printed by Nicholas Okes, 1632) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: A most exact and accurate map of the whole world: or The orb terrestrial described in four plain maps (viz.) Asia, Europe, Africa, America. Containing all the known and most remarkable capes, ports, bayes, and isles, rocks, rivers, towns, and cities; together with their scituation, commodities, history, customes, government; and a new and exact geography, especially their longitudes and latitudes, in alphabetical order, and fitted to all capacities. A work, as well useful as delightful, for all schollars, merchants, mariners, and all such as desire to know forreign parts, and is very helpful for the ready finding out any place mentioned in large maps. By D.L. M.A. (London : printed for John Garrett, at his shops as you go up the stairs of the Royal Exchange in Cornhil: where is printed, coloured and sold, a map of the world in four sheets with English descriptions: and where you may have also choice of all sorts of maps, and pictures for houses, studies, or closets, 1676) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: Obiectorum reductio: or, Daily imployment for the soule In occasional meditations upon severall subjects. By Donald Lupton. (London : Printed by Iohn Norton, for Iohn Rothvveli [sic], at the signe of the Sunne, in Pauls Church-yard, 1634) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: Objectorum reductio, or, Daily imployment for the soule (London, : Printed for John Rothwell., [ca. 1640]) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: Praestantium aliquot theologorum. English (London : Printed by N. and Iohn Okes [are to be sold by Andrew Crooke at ye Bare in Paules church yard], 1637), also by Jacob Verheiden and Henry Holland (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: The quacking mountebanck or The Jesuite turn'd Quaker.: In a witty and full discovery of their production and rise, their language, doctrine, discipline, policy, presumption, ignorance, prophanes, dissimulation, envy, uncharitablenes, with their behaviours, gestures, aimes and ends. All punctually handled and proved, to give our country men timely notice to avoid their snares and subtile delusions, ... / By one who was an eye and ear witnesse of their words and gestures in their new hired great Tavern Chappell, or the Great Mouth within Aldersgate. (London : Printed for E.B. at the Angell in Pauls-Church-Yard, 1655) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: The two main questions resolved how 1 the ministers 2 the impropriators shall be maintained satisfied if tythes be put down. Often petitioned for, by several counties, and propounded and debated at a meeting not far from London, by divers eminent personages of this Common-wealth, and sundry freeholders, and others, attending on them. By D. Lupton, servant of Jesus Christ in the work of the Gospel. (London : Printed by R.W. for R. Harford, at the Bible and States-Arms in Little-Brittain, M DC LII. [1652]) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: The tythe-takers cart overthrown: or, The downfall of tythes. Proved that they are not to be payd now, either to the appropriate or impropriate parsons or persons. Pen'd for the general satisfaction and easement of all the people of England. By D. Lupton, servant of Christ Jesus in the work of the Gospel. (London : Printed by J.M. for R. Harford, at the Bible and States arms in Little Brirain [sic], 1652) (HTML at EEBO TCP) Lupton, Donald, -1676: A warre-like treatise of the pike, or, Some experimentall resolves, for lessening the number, and disabling the use of the pike in warre with the praise of the musquet and halfe-pike, as also the testimony of Brancatio, concerning the disability of the pike / penn'd for the generall good of our nation, by a well wisher to the compleat musquetier. (London : Printed by Richard Hodgkinsonne ..., 1642) (HTML at EEBO TCP)
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