|
More about George Henry Rooke:
| | Books by George Henry Rooke: Books in the extended shelves: Rooke, George Henry, 1702-1754: Athenian letters, or, The epistolary correspondence of an agent of the King of Persia, residing at Athens during the Peloponnesian War : containing the history of the times, in dispatches to the ministers of state at the Persian court ; besides letters on various subjects between him and his friends. (John Archer ..., 1792), also by Samuel Salter, Thomas Birch, Catherine Talbot, John Lawry, Henry Coventry, William Heberden, Henry Heaton, Daniel Wray, John Green, Charles Yorke, and Philip Yorke Hardwicke (page images at HathiTrust) Rooke, George Henry, 1702-1754: Athenian letters: or, The epistolary correspondence of an agent of the king of Persia, residing at Athens during the Peloponnesian war. A new edition; to which is prefixed a geographical index. In two volumes. Illustrated with engravings, and a map of ancient Greece ... (T. Cadell and W. Davies, 1810), also by Samuel Salter, Thomas Birch, Catherine Talbot, John Lawry, Henry Coventry, William Heberden, Henry Heaton, Daniel Wray, John Green, Charles Yorke, and Philip Yorke Hardwicke (page images at HathiTrust) Rooke, George Henry, 1702-1754: Athenian letters, or, The epistolary correspondence of an agent of the king of Persia, residing at Athens during the Peloponnesian War. (printed and fold by James Decker ;, 1800), also by Samuel Salter, Thomas Birch, Catherine Talbot, John Lawry, Henry Coventry, William Heberden, Henry Heaton, Daniel Wray, John Green, Charles Yorke, and Philip Yorke Hardwicke (page images at HathiTrust) Rooke, George Henry, 1702-1754: Lettres athéniennes, ou Correspondance d'un agent du roi de Perse, à Athènes, pendant la guerre du Péloponèse (Dentu, 1803), also by Alexandre-Louis de Villeterque, Samuel Salter, Thomas Birch, Catherine Tablot, John Lawry, Henry Coventry, William Heberden, Henry Heaton, Daniel Wray, John Green, Charles Yorke, and Philip Yorke Hardwicke (page images at HathiTrust)
Find more by George Henry Rooke at your library, or elsewhere.
|