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Hu-Hun

 
  1. Hulton family, former owner. (84)
  2. Humanas recreo mentes, v[o]lucres[que] feras[que], omnia floriferi laetantur tempore veris [graphic] / Crispin de Pas, inuentor et excud. ; Magdalena vande Pas, sculp. (1)
  3. Humble, George, d. 1640, bookseller. (1)
  4. Humble, George, d. 1640, publisher. (3)
  5. Humble, William, Sir, ca. 1650-1705. (2)
  6. Hume, Alexander, schoolmaster. (1)
  7. Humfrey, John, 1621-1719. (230)
  8. Humour out of breath. A comedie diuers times latelie acted, by the Children of the Kings Reuells. Written by Iohn Day. (1)
  9. Humphrey Dyson copy; inscriptions: on front fly-leaf of volume: "Liber Will. Wylde ex donacione Wi[lliam] Jumper"; and on slip pasted inside front cover: "Edward Palmer"; Marquess of Ripon copy; bought by Folger in June 1925 from Pickering (1)
  10. Humphrey Holt's account of persistent and grievous attacks made upon him (2)
  11. Humphrey, G., fl. ca. 1820, publisher. (1)
  12. Humphrey, Hannah, fl. 1774-1817, publisher. (7)
  13. Humphry Duke of Gloucester, uncle to the king and protector, Henry VI, from an original picture in the collection of Hon. Horace Walpole ... [graphic] / Harding del. ; W. N. Gardiner sct. (1)
  14. Humphry, Ozias, 1742-1810, artist. (5)
  15. Humphry, Ozias, 1742-1810, ill. (2)
  16. Humphrys, William, 1794-1865, printmaker. (2)
  17. Hundre'd merry tales. A hundred merry tales : the earliest English jest-book / How first reproduced in photo-lithography from the unique copy of 1526 in the Royal Library at Göttingen ; with an introduction, notes, and glossarial index by W. Carew Hazlitt. (1)
  18. Hungers preuention: or, The whole arte of fovvling by vvater and land. Containing all the secrets belonging to that arte, and brought into a true forme or method, by which the most ignorant may know how to take any kind of fowle, either by land or water. (43)
  19. Hungers prevention: or, The whole art of fovvling by water and land. Containing all the secrets belonging to that art, and brought into a true forme or method, by which the most ignorant may know how to take any kind of fowle, either by land or water. Also, exceeding necessary and profitable for all such as travell by sea, and come into uninhabited places: especially, all those that have anything to doe with new plantations. By Gervase Markham. (2)
  20. Hunnis, William, -1597, correspondent. (2)