Publications of Richard Bovet

Author

  • Bovet, Richard. Pandæmonium, or The Devil's cloyster. Being a further blow to modern Sadduceism, proving the existence of witches and spirits. In a discourse deduced from the fall of the angels, the propagation of Satans kingdom before the flood: the idolatry of the ages after, greatly advancing diabolical confederacies. With an account of the lives and transactions of several notorious witches. Also a collection of several authentick relations of strange apparitions of dæmons and spectres, and fascinations of witches, never before printed. By Richard Bovet Gent. London: printed for J. Walthoe, at the Black Lion in Chancery Lane, over against Lincolns Inn, 1684. ESTC No. R15851. Grub Street ID 63753.
  • Bovet, Richard. Pandæmonium, or The Devil's cloyster. Being a further blow to modern Sadduceism, proving the existence of witches and spirits. In a discourse deduced from the fall of the angels, the propagation of Satans kingdom before the flood: the idolatry of the ages after, greatly advancing diabolical confederacies. With an account of the lives and transactions of several notorious witches, some whereof have been popes. Also a collection of several authentick relations of strange apparitions of dæmons and spectres, and fascinations of witches, never before printed. By Richard Bovet Gent. London: printed for Tho. Malthus, at the Sun in the Poultry, 1684. ESTC No. R229775. Grub Street ID 102187.
  • Bovet, Richard. A congratulatory poem, to the Honourable Admiral Russel, on his glorious victory over the French fleet. Long did the languishing Brittania grown Beneath French power on the English Throne! ... London: printed and sold by T. Moore, 1693. ESTC No. R20170. Grub Street ID 79053.
  • Bovet, Richard. A poem humbly presented to His Most Excellent Majesty King VVilliam the Third, upon his most miraculuous and happy preservation from that barbarous Jacobitish conspiracy to assassinate His Royal Person, February anno 1695. By R.B. London: printed by J[ames]. Dover, for Richard Baldwin near the Oxford-Arms in Warwick-lane, 1696. ESTC No. R26546. Grub Street ID 109846.