The New Encyclopaedia


Book Description




The New Encyclopaedia; Or, Modern Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences. On a New and Improved Plan. In which All the Respective Sciences are Arranged Into Complete Systems, the Arts Digested Into Distinct Treatises, and Philosophical Subjects Introduced in Separate Dissertations. Also, the Detatched Parts of Knowledge Alphabetically Arranged, and Copiously Explained, According to the Best Authorities. Including All the Material Information that is Contained in Chamber's Cyclopaedia, the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and the French Encyclopedie. The Whole Containing a Copious Digest and Display of the Complete Theory and Practice of the Liberal and Mechanical Arts. And Comprising an Universal Repositry of Ancient and Modern Literaure, Freed from the Obscurities, Errors and Superfluities of Other Dictionaries. And Including All the New Improvements and Latest Discoveries Made in the Arts and Sciences, Particularly Acoustics Aerology Aerostation Agriculture Algebra Amphibiology Anatomy Annuities Architecture Arithmetic Astronomy Belles-lettres Book-keeping Botany Brewing Catoptrics Chemistry Chronology Commerce Comparative Anatomy Conchology Conics Cosmography Criticism Dialling Dioptrics Distillation Drawing Dyeing Electricity Engineering Engraving Entomology Ethics Farriery Fencing Financing Fluxions Fortification Fossils Gardening Gauging Geography Geometry Grammar Gunnery Handicrafts Heraldry History Husbandry Hydraulics Hydrography Hydrostatics Ichthyology Laws Logic Magnetism Mammalia Mathematics Mechanics Medicine Mensuration Merchandize Metallurgy Metaphysics Military Affairs Mineralogy Midwifery Music Mythology Navigation National Affairs Optics Oratory Ornithology Painting Perspective Pharmacy Philolosophy Physic Physiology Pneumatics Poetry Politics Projectiles Rhetoric Rites Sculpture Surgery Surveying Tactics Theology Trade Trigonometry Vermeology Zoology, &c. By the New and Improved Plan of Incorporating Complete Systems on the Sciences, and Distinct Treatises on the Respective Arts, this Work Comprises, Independent of the Alphabetical Arragements, a General Circle of Science; and Forms the Most Comprehensive Library of Universal Knowledge that was Ever Published in the English Language. In Three Volumes. By William Henry Hall, Esquire. Illustrated with Upwards of One Hundred and Fifty Large Superb Copper-plates, Accurately Descriptive of the Different Subjects to which They Refer


Book Description




The New Royal Encyclopaedia; Or, Complete Modern Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences. On a New and Improved Plan. In which All the Respective Sciences are Arranged Into Complete Systems, the Arts Digested Into Distinct Treatises, and Philosophical Subjects Introduced in Detatched Dissertations. Also, the Separate Parts of Knowledge Alphabetically Arranged, and Copiously Explained, According to the Best Authhorities. Containing a Copious Digest and Display of the Whole Theory and Practice of the Liberal and Mechanical Arts. Comprising a General Repository of Ancient and Modern Literature, from the Earliest Ages Down to the Present Time. Containing All the New Improvements and Latests Discoveries Made in the Arts and Sciences, Particularly Acoustics Aerology Aerostation Agriculture Algebra Amphibiology Anatomy Annuities Architecture Arithmetic Astronomy Belles-lettres Book-keeping Botany Brewing Catoptrics Chemistry Chronology Commerce Comparative Anatomy Conchology Conics Cosmography Criticism Dialling Dioptrics Distillation Drawing Dyeing Electricity Engineering Engraving Entomology Ethics Farriery Fencing Financing Fluxions Fortification Fossils Gardening Gauging Geography Geometry Grammar Gunnery Handicrafts Heraldry History Husbandry Hydraulics Hydrography Hydrostatics Ichthyology Laws Logic Magnetism Mammalia Mathematics Mechanics Medicine Mensuration Merchandize Metallurgy Metaphysics Military Affairs Mineralogy Midwifery Music Mythology Navigation National Affairs Optics Oratory Ornithology Painting Perspective Pharmacy Philolosophy Physic Physiology Pneumatics Poetry Politics Projectiles Rhetoric Rites Sculpture Surgery Surveying Tactics Theology Trade Trigonometry Vermeology Zoology, &c. Including All the Material Information that is Contained in Chamber's Cyclopaedia, the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and the French Encylopedie. By Introducing and Incorporating Complete Systems on the Sciences, and Distinct Treatises on the Respective Arts, this Work Comprises, Independent of the Alphabetical Arrangement, a General Circle of Science; and Forms the Most Comprehensive Library of Universal Knowledge that was Ever Published in the English Language. The Whole Entirely Freed from the Errors, Obscurities, and Superfluities of Other Dictionaries. In Three Volumes. By William Henry Hall, Esquire. Assisted by Gentlemen of Scientific Knowledge Whose Names and Addresses Appear in the Work. Illustrated with Upwards of One Hundred and Fifty Large Superb Copper-plates, Accurately Descriptive of the Different Subjects to which They Refer


Book Description




The New Royal Encyclopaedia ; Or, Complete Modern Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences. On a New and Improved Plan. In which All the Respective Sciences are Arranged Into Complete Systems, the Arts Digested Into Distinct Treatises, and Philosophical Subjects Introduced in Detatched Dissertations. Also, the Separate Parts of Knowledge Alphabetically Arranged, and Copiously Explained, According to the Best Authhorities. Containing a Copious Digest and Display of the Whole Theory and Practice of the Liberal and Mechanical Arts. Comprising a General Repository of Ancient and Modern Literature, from the Earliest Ages Down to the Present Time. Containing All the New Improvements and Latests Discoveries Made in the Arts and Sciences, Particularly Acoustics Aerology Aerostation Agriculture Algebra Amphibiology Anatomy Annuities Architecture Arithmetic Astronomy Belles-lettres Book-keeping Botany Brewing Catoptrics Chemistry Chronology Commerce Comparative Anatomy Conchology Conics Cosmography Criticism Dialling Dioptrics Distillation Drawing Dyeing Electricity Engineering Engraving Entomology Ethics Farriery Fencing Financing Fluxions Fortification Fossils Gardening Gauging Geography Geometry Grammar Gunnery Handicrafts Heraldry History Husbandry Hydraulics Hydrography Hydrostatics Ichthyology Laws Logic Magnetism Mammalia Mathematics Mechanics Medicine Mensuration Merchandize Metallurgy Metaphysics Military Affairs Mineralogy Midwifery Music Mythology Navigation National Affairs Optics Oratory Ornithology Painting Perspective Pharmacy Philolosophy Physic Physiology Pneumatics Poetry Politics Projectiles Rhetoric Rites Sculpture Surgery Surveying Tactics Theology Trade Trigonometry Vermeology Zoology, &c. Including All the Material Information that is Contained in Chamber's Cyclopaedia, the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and the French Encylopedie. By Introducing and Incorporating Complete Systems on the Sciences, and Distinct Treatises on the Respective Arts, this Work Comprises, Independent of the Alphabetical Arrangement, a General Circle of Science ; and Forms the Most Comprehensive Library of Universal Knowledge that was Ever Published in the English Language. The Whole Entirely Freed from the Errors, Obscurities, and Superfluities of Other Dictionaries. In Three Volumes. By William Henry Hall, Esquire. Assisted by Gentlemen of Scientific Knowledge Whose Names and Addresses Appear in the Work. Illustrated with Upwards of One Hundred and Fifty Large Superb Copper-plates, Accurately Descriptive of the Different Subjects to which They Refer


Book Description




The New Encyclopaedia


Book Description







The new encyclopaedia; or, Modern universal dictionary of arts and sciences. On a new and improved plan. In which all the ... sciences are arranged into complete systems, the arts digested into distinct treatises, and philosophical subjects introduced in separate dissertations ... Including all the material information that is contained in Chambers's Cyclopaedia, the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and the French Encyclopedie ... By William Henry Hall


Book Description










The Literature of British Domestic Architecture, 1715-1842


Book Description

While few historians would dispute the importance of the printed book in the development of domestic design in 18th- and 19th-century Britain, this is the first major study to trace the evolution of architectural ideas during the period by examining the literary output of architects. It is a work of extraordinary scholarship, based on an extensive search of dozens of major library collections, that will serve as a standard resource for researchers and librarians, book dealers and collectors. Most of the book is devoted to descriptions of hundreds of books and periodicals containing original designs for domestic structures. The earliest title described is Colen Campbell's Vitruvius Britannicus (1715), an important Palladian manifesto and the first book to illustrate a series of the author's own executed designs for dwellings, intended to redirect and reform British architectural taste, and the latest title is Supplement (1842) to John Claudius Loudon's Encyclopedia. Related materials on agriculture, landscape design, drawing, and perspective also are covered. Each entry includes a bibliographic description of all known editions and a commentary that describes and analyzes the text and plates, focusing in particular on the author's ideas and approaches to design issues. Appendixes to the principal entries provide a checklist of additional handbooks and manuals by important authors such as Crunden, Halfpenny, Langley, Nicholson, Pain, Richardson, Salmon, and Swan, and books showing domestic interiors. There is also a valuable short-title chronological list, and a list of printers, publishers, and booksellers. In a lengthy introductory essay, Archer discusses architecture and the book trade, the format and content of the books, and aspects of architectural theory and design-including ideas of "character" and "retirement," dwelling types such as villas, cottages, and row houses, model housing for laborers, and town and village planning. John Archer is Associate Professor in the Humanities Program at the University of Minnesota.