A plaine path-vvay to plantations that is, a discourse in generall, concerning the plantation of our English people in other countries. Wherein is declared, that the attempts or actions, in themselues are very good and laudable, necessary also for our country of England. Doubts thereabout are answered: and some meanes are shewed, by which the same may, in better sort then hitherto, be prosecuted and effected. Written for the perswading and stirring vp of the people of this land, chiefly the poorer and common sort to affect and effect these attempts better then yet they doe. With certaine motiues for a present plantation in New-found land aboue the rest. Made in the manner of a conference, and diuided into three parts, for the more plainnesse, ease, and delight to the reader. By Richard Eburne of Hengstridge in the countie of Somerset.

[20], 80, [2], 89-120, [2] p. Printer's name from STC. Parts 2 and 3 have separate title pages; pagination and register are continuous. The last leaf is blank. Running title reads: The path-way to plantations . Reproduction of the original in the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery.

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Eburne, Richard.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: [London] :: Printed by G[eorge] P[urslowe] for Iohn Marriot, 1624
Subjects:
Online Access:http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A21108.0001.001
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spelling ftumich:oai:quod.lib.umich.edu:A21108.0001.001 2023-05-15T17:22:24+02:00 A plaine path-vvay to plantations that is, a discourse in generall, concerning the plantation of our English people in other countries. Wherein is declared, that the attempts or actions, in themselues are very good and laudable, necessary also for our country of England. Doubts thereabout are answered: and some meanes are shewed, by which the same may, in better sort then hitherto, be prosecuted and effected. Written for the perswading and stirring vp of the people of this land, chiefly the poorer and common sort to affect and effect these attempts better then yet they doe. With certaine motiues for a present plantation in New-found land aboue the rest. Made in the manner of a conference, and diuided into three parts, for the more plainnesse, ease, and delight to the reader. By Richard Eburne of Hengstridge in the countie of Somerset. Eburne, Richard. 1624. http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A21108.0001.001 eng eng [London] :: Printed by G[eorge] P[urslowe] for Iohn Marriot, Ann Arbor, MI Oxford (UK) :: Text Creation Partnership (DLPS) A21108.0001.001 (stc) STC 7471 (stc) ESTC S105454 (eebo citation) 99841182 (proquest) 99841182 (vid) 5744 http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A21108.0001.001 http://quod.lib.umich.edu/t/text/accesspolicy.html To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information. CC0 PDM Colonization -- Early works to 1800 Newfoundland -- Early works to 1800 text 1624 ftumich 2022-03-31T18:32:39Z [20], 80, [2], 89-120, [2] p. Printer's name from STC. Parts 2 and 3 have separate title pages; pagination and register are continuous. The last leaf is blank. Running title reads: The path-way to plantations . Reproduction of the original in the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery. Text Newfoundland University of Michigan: Digital Collections Huntington ENVELOPE(-127.078,-127.078,54.707,54.707)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Michigan: Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftumich
language English
topic Colonization -- Early works to 1800
Newfoundland -- Early works to 1800
spellingShingle Colonization -- Early works to 1800
Newfoundland -- Early works to 1800
Eburne, Richard.
A plaine path-vvay to plantations that is, a discourse in generall, concerning the plantation of our English people in other countries. Wherein is declared, that the attempts or actions, in themselues are very good and laudable, necessary also for our country of England. Doubts thereabout are answered: and some meanes are shewed, by which the same may, in better sort then hitherto, be prosecuted and effected. Written for the perswading and stirring vp of the people of this land, chiefly the poorer and common sort to affect and effect these attempts better then yet they doe. With certaine motiues for a present plantation in New-found land aboue the rest. Made in the manner of a conference, and diuided into three parts, for the more plainnesse, ease, and delight to the reader. By Richard Eburne of Hengstridge in the countie of Somerset.
topic_facet Colonization -- Early works to 1800
Newfoundland -- Early works to 1800
description [20], 80, [2], 89-120, [2] p. Printer's name from STC. Parts 2 and 3 have separate title pages; pagination and register are continuous. The last leaf is blank. Running title reads: The path-way to plantations . Reproduction of the original in the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery.
format Text
author Eburne, Richard.
author_facet Eburne, Richard.
author_sort Eburne, Richard.
title A plaine path-vvay to plantations that is, a discourse in generall, concerning the plantation of our English people in other countries. Wherein is declared, that the attempts or actions, in themselues are very good and laudable, necessary also for our country of England. Doubts thereabout are answered: and some meanes are shewed, by which the same may, in better sort then hitherto, be prosecuted and effected. Written for the perswading and stirring vp of the people of this land, chiefly the poorer and common sort to affect and effect these attempts better then yet they doe. With certaine motiues for a present plantation in New-found land aboue the rest. Made in the manner of a conference, and diuided into three parts, for the more plainnesse, ease, and delight to the reader. By Richard Eburne of Hengstridge in the countie of Somerset.
title_short A plaine path-vvay to plantations that is, a discourse in generall, concerning the plantation of our English people in other countries. Wherein is declared, that the attempts or actions, in themselues are very good and laudable, necessary also for our country of England. Doubts thereabout are answered: and some meanes are shewed, by which the same may, in better sort then hitherto, be prosecuted and effected. Written for the perswading and stirring vp of the people of this land, chiefly the poorer and common sort to affect and effect these attempts better then yet they doe. With certaine motiues for a present plantation in New-found land aboue the rest. Made in the manner of a conference, and diuided into three parts, for the more plainnesse, ease, and delight to the reader. By Richard Eburne of Hengstridge in the countie of Somerset.
title_full A plaine path-vvay to plantations that is, a discourse in generall, concerning the plantation of our English people in other countries. Wherein is declared, that the attempts or actions, in themselues are very good and laudable, necessary also for our country of England. Doubts thereabout are answered: and some meanes are shewed, by which the same may, in better sort then hitherto, be prosecuted and effected. Written for the perswading and stirring vp of the people of this land, chiefly the poorer and common sort to affect and effect these attempts better then yet they doe. With certaine motiues for a present plantation in New-found land aboue the rest. Made in the manner of a conference, and diuided into three parts, for the more plainnesse, ease, and delight to the reader. By Richard Eburne of Hengstridge in the countie of Somerset.
title_fullStr A plaine path-vvay to plantations that is, a discourse in generall, concerning the plantation of our English people in other countries. Wherein is declared, that the attempts or actions, in themselues are very good and laudable, necessary also for our country of England. Doubts thereabout are answered: and some meanes are shewed, by which the same may, in better sort then hitherto, be prosecuted and effected. Written for the perswading and stirring vp of the people of this land, chiefly the poorer and common sort to affect and effect these attempts better then yet they doe. With certaine motiues for a present plantation in New-found land aboue the rest. Made in the manner of a conference, and diuided into three parts, for the more plainnesse, ease, and delight to the reader. By Richard Eburne of Hengstridge in the countie of Somerset.
title_full_unstemmed A plaine path-vvay to plantations that is, a discourse in generall, concerning the plantation of our English people in other countries. Wherein is declared, that the attempts or actions, in themselues are very good and laudable, necessary also for our country of England. Doubts thereabout are answered: and some meanes are shewed, by which the same may, in better sort then hitherto, be prosecuted and effected. Written for the perswading and stirring vp of the people of this land, chiefly the poorer and common sort to affect and effect these attempts better then yet they doe. With certaine motiues for a present plantation in New-found land aboue the rest. Made in the manner of a conference, and diuided into three parts, for the more plainnesse, ease, and delight to the reader. By Richard Eburne of Hengstridge in the countie of Somerset.
title_sort plaine path-vvay to plantations that is, a discourse in generall, concerning the plantation of our english people in other countries. wherein is declared, that the attempts or actions, in themselues are very good and laudable, necessary also for our country of england. doubts thereabout are answered: and some meanes are shewed, by which the same may, in better sort then hitherto, be prosecuted and effected. written for the perswading and stirring vp of the people of this land, chiefly the poorer and common sort to affect and effect these attempts better then yet they doe. with certaine motiues for a present plantation in new-found land aboue the rest. made in the manner of a conference, and diuided into three parts, for the more plainnesse, ease, and delight to the reader. by richard eburne of hengstridge in the countie of somerset.
publisher [London] :: Printed by G[eorge] P[urslowe] for Iohn Marriot,
publishDate 1624
url http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A21108.0001.001
long_lat ENVELOPE(-127.078,-127.078,54.707,54.707)
geographic Huntington
geographic_facet Huntington
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation (DLPS) A21108.0001.001
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(eebo citation) 99841182
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A21108.0001.001
op_rights http://quod.lib.umich.edu/t/text/accesspolicy.html
To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
op_rightsnorm CC0
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