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Front Page Titles (by Subject) LIST OF SOURCES - An Account of Denmark, With Francogallia and Some Considerations for the Promoting of Agriculture and Employing the Poor
LIST OF SOURCES - Robert Molesworth, An Account of Denmark, With Francogallia and Some Considerations for the Promoting of Agriculture and Employing the Poor [2011]Edition used:An Account of Denmark, With Francogallia and Some Considerations for the Promoting of Agriculture and Employing the Poor, Edited and with an Introduction by Justin Champion (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2011).
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- The Thomas Hollis Library
- Introduction
- Robert Molesworth and Gothic Liberty
- The Life
- The Ideas
- The History and Reception of the Texts
- Editorial Apparatus
- Bibliographical Descriptions Editions, Translations, and Extracts, 1694–1789
- English Editions
- European Editions 1
- Textual Policy
- Italics
- Spelling and Footnotes
- List of Sources
- Further Reading
- Acknowledgments
- An Account of Denmark
- The Preface
- Chapter I: Of the Territories Belonging to the King of Denmark, and Their Situation
- Chapter II: Of Denmark In Particular, and the Island of Zealand
- Chapter III: Of the Sound
- Chapter IV: Of the Other Islands, and Jutland
- Chapter V: Of the Rest of the King of Denmark’s Countries
- Chapter VI: Of Their Form of Government
- Chapter VII: The Manner How the Kingdom of Denmark Became Hereditary and Absolute
- Chapter VIII: The Condition, Customs, and Temper of the People
- Chapter IX: Of the Revenue
- Chapter X: Of the Army, Fleet, and Fortresses
- Chapter XI: Of the Court
- Chapter XII: The Disposition and Inclinations of the King of Denmark Towards His Neighbours
- Chapter XIII: The Manner of Dispossessing, and Restoring the Duke of Holstein Gottorp
- Chapter XIV: The Interests of Denmark In Relation to Other Princes
- Chapter XV: Of the Laws, Courts of Justice, Etc.
- Chapter XVI: The State of Religion, of the Clergy, and Learning, Etc.
- The Conclusion
- Francogallia, Or an Account of the Ancient Free State of France
- The Preface to the Reader 1
- The Translator’s Preface 3
- A Short Extract of the Life of Francis Hotoman, Taken Out of Monsieur Bayle’ S Historical Dictionary and Other Authors.
- Explication of the Roman Names Mention’d By Hotoman
- The Author’s Preface
- Chapter I: The State of Gaul, Before It Was Reduced Into a Province By the Romans
- Chapter II: Probable Conjectures Concerning the Ancient Language of the Gauls
- Chapter III: The State of Gaul, After It Was Reduced Into the Form of a Province By the Romans
- Chapter IV: Of the Original of the Franks; Who Having Possessed Themselves of Gallia, Changed Its Name Into That of Francia, Or Francogallia
- Chapter V: Of the Name of the Franks, and Their Sundry Excursions; and What Time They First Began to Establish a Kingdom In Gallia
- Chapter VI: Whether the Kingdom of Francogallia Was Hereditary Or Elective; and the Manner of Making Its Kings
- Chapter VII: What Rule Was Observ’d Concerning the Inheritance of the Deceased King, When He Left More Children Than One
- Chapter VIII: Of the Salick Law, and What Right Women Had In the King ’s Their Father’s Inheritance
- Chapter IX: Of the Right of Wearing a Large Head of Hair Peculiar to the Royal Family
- Chapter X: The Form and Constitution of the Francogallican Government
- Chapter XI: Of the Sacred Authority of the Publick Council; and What Affairs Were Wont to Be Transacted Therein
- Chapter XII: Of the Kingly Officers, Commonly Call’d Mayors of the Palace
- Chapter XIII: Whether Pipin Was Created King By the Pope Or By the Authority of the Francogallican Council
- Chapter XIV: Of the Constable, and Peers of France
- Chapter XV: Of the Continued Authority and Power of the Sacred Council, During the Reign of the Carolingian Family
- Chapter XVI: Of the Capetian Race, and the Manner of Its Obtaining the Kingdom of Francogallia
- Chapter XVII: Of the Uninterrupted Authority of the Publick Council During the Capetian Race
- Chapter XVIII: Of the Remarkable Authority of the Council Against Lewis the Eleventh
- Chapter XIX: Of the Authority of the Assembly of the States Concerning the Most Important Affairs of Religion 97
- Chapter XX: Whether Women Are Not As Much Debarred (by the Francogallican Law) From the Administration, As From the Inheritance of the Kingdom
- Chapter XXI: Of the Juridical Parliaments In France
- Some Considerations For the Promoting of Agriculture and Employing the Poor
- To the Gentlemen of the Honourable House of Commons of Ireland
- Some Considerations For the Promoting of Agriculture, Etc.
- Appendix 1
- Selected Sources Cited In Francogallia
- Loeb Classical Library
- Appendix 2
- Ordonnance Pour Les Rangs Du Royaume De Danemarck
LIST OF SOURCES
Where possible, all sources used by Molesworth in the Account of Denmark have been identified in appropriate footnotes. In Molesworth’s edition of Hotman’s Francogallia, he meticulously reproduced, generally in the main body of the text, references from the original editions that he had consulted (the 1576 Latin and French versions rather than the 1574 edition). The present edition has preserved this aspect of the translation. As Giesey and Salmon establish in their parallel Latin and English edition, Hotman identified his citations by italics (although not all such passages were direct quotations, sometimes being condensed or partially adjusted). The modern Cambridge University Press edition supplies precise pagination in accessible editions for these original sources. Readers who wish to explore the erudition at play in the work should consult the 1972 apparatus.
This Liberty Fund edition includes footnotes to identify sources where either Hotman or Molesworth failed to give a bibliographical reference. In general, references to classical sources will give author, title, book, and chapter or paragraph in standard style. A full and precise reference can be gathered from consulting Giesey and Salmon’s edition. A selected account of sources available to Hotman and Molesworth has been included in Appendix 1 for cross-reference to available sixteenth- and seventeenth-century printed editions. Because the most commonly used editions for reference purposes are the volumes from the Loeb Classical Library, citation to these volumes will simply be “Loeb” and the appropriate page number, or the volume and page number of a specific author’s work. Thus Suetonius, Caesar 25 (Loeb 1:32) is Loeb’s Suetonius, vol. 1, p. 32. Full references to cited classical sources are listed in the section “Loeb Classical Library” in Appendix 1.
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