John Taylor (Q385371): Difference between revisions

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(‎Added link to [enwikisource]: A Dictionary of the Booksellers and Printers who Were at Work in England, Scotland and Ireland from 1641 to 1667/Taylor (John))
(‎Changed [fr] description: * vers 1645 (estimation de génération), † 1713 London, éditeur à Londres, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1640780736271)
 
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description / endescription / en
* c. 1650 (generation estimate), + 1713 London, publisher in London
* c. 1645 (generation estimate), + 1713 London, publisher in London
description / dedescription / de
* ca. 1650 (Generationenschätzung), + 1713 London, Herausgeber in London
* ca. 1645 (Generationenschätzung), + 1713 London, Herausgeber in London
description / frdescription / fr
* vers 1650 (estimation de génération), + 1713 London, éditeur à Londres
* vers 1645 (estimation de génération), 1713 London, éditeur à Londres
Property / Career statement: Publisher / qualifier
 
Begin date: 1660
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Property / Career statement: Publisher / qualifier
 
End date: 1686
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Begin date: 1687
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Latest revision as of 17:13, 29 December 2021

* c. 1645 (generation estimate), + 1713 London, publisher in London
Language Label Description Also known as
English
John Taylor
* c. 1645 (generation estimate), + 1713 London, publisher in London

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    John was described by Dunton as an honest, industrious and obliging man with ‘moderate principles’. In 1703 he instituted an annual sermon at the Baptist church in Lincoln’s Inn Fields to commemorate his escape from death in the great storm of that year. Taylor had previously traded successfully under The Sign of the Globe at the west end of St.Paul’s Churchyard, and for a time he worked in partnership with his son William, who had served his apprenticeship with him. The last book of his to bear the Globe imprint was The Female Advocate, A Poem written by a Lady in Vindication of her Sex (1686). By a coincidence, the last of his books bearing the Ship imprint was The Husbandman’s Disputation (1706).
    1713
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