No member of a learned society it is presumed will be inclined to deny, that the support and improvement of its public repositories of learning, is one of the first and most natural objects of its attention. The University of Oxford owes the most important obligations to the munificence of Sir Thomas Bodley, of Archbishop Laud, of Mr. Selden's executors, and of other eminent persons, who established, or by subsequent benefactions have enriched the inestimable collection of the Bodleian Library. ... [electronic resource].
1790
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No member of a learned society it is presumed will be inclined to deny, that the support and improvement of its public repositories of learning, is one of the first and most natural objects of its attention. The University of Oxford owes the most important obligations to the munificence of Sir Thomas Bodley, of Archbishop Laud, of Mr. Selden's executors, and of other eminent persons, who established, or by subsequent benefactions have enriched the inestimable collection of the Bodleian Library. ... [electronic resource].
Publication Details
[Oxford? : s.n., 1790?]
Place of Publication or Printing
Great Britain -- England -- Oxford.
Language
English
Description
4p. ; 2⁰.
Note
Anonymous. By William Scott.
Title from opening lines of text.
Reproduction of original from Bodleian Library (Oxford).
Title from opening lines of text.
Reproduction of original from Bodleian Library (Oxford).
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Indexed In
English Short Title Catalog, T221144.
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Cengage Gale, 2009. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.
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