A general tresury, a perpetual repertory, or a common councel-place of
accounts for all countries in Christendome. The first part of ordinary
accounts, in which is contained and found all vsuall, daily, and most
necessary reckonings ready done, and the assise of bread, with a iust and
easie proofe of their doings, by addition onely of two numbers together,
and infinite examples of numeration, addition, substraction, [sic]
multiplication, diuision, reduction, and of the rules of three, &c. To
which is added the art of arithmetike according to the generall parts,
rules, operations, and demonstrations thereof. Also a discouery of the sayd
treasury, by the contents, explication, and application of the same vnto
the sayd art, and questions to it belonging, with the practise thereby to
adde and subtract all vsuall fractions vnlike, without reduction, into
likenesse, to multiply without multiplication, to diuide without diuision,
not passing 18 in operation. ... By William Colson Londoner.
Dublin Core
Title
A general tresury, a perpetual repertory, or a common councel-place of
accounts for all countries in Christendome. The first part of ordinary
accounts, in which is contained and found all vsuall, daily, and most
necessary reckonings ready done, and the assise of bread, with a iust and
easie proofe of their doings, by addition onely of two numbers together,
and infinite examples of numeration, addition, substraction, [sic]
multiplication, diuision, reduction, and of the rules of three, &c. To
which is added the art of arithmetike according to the generall parts,
rules, operations, and demonstrations thereof. Also a discouery of the sayd
treasury, by the contents, explication, and application of the same vnto
the sayd art, and questions to it belonging, with the practise thereby to
adde and subtract all vsuall fractions vnlike, without reduction, into
likenesse, to multiply without multiplication, to diuide without diuision,
not passing 18 in operation. ... By William Colson Londoner.
accounts for all countries in Christendome. The first part of ordinary
accounts, in which is contained and found all vsuall, daily, and most
necessary reckonings ready done, and the assise of bread, with a iust and
easie proofe of their doings, by addition onely of two numbers together,
and infinite examples of numeration, addition, substraction, [sic]
multiplication, diuision, reduction, and of the rules of three, &c. To
which is added the art of arithmetike according to the generall parts,
rules, operations, and demonstrations thereof. Also a discouery of the sayd
treasury, by the contents, explication, and application of the same vnto
the sayd art, and questions to it belonging, with the practise thereby to
adde and subtract all vsuall fractions vnlike, without reduction, into
likenesse, to multiply without multiplication, to diuide without diuision,
not passing 18 in operation. ... By William Colson Londoner.
Creator
William Colson
Source
STC (2nd ed.) 5584
Publisher
Nicholas Okes
Identifier
235
Collection
Citation
William Colson, “A general tresury, a perpetual repertory, or a common councel-place of
accounts for all countries in Christendome. The first part of ordinary
accounts, in which is contained and found all vsuall, daily, and most
necessary reckonings ready done, and the assise of bread, with a iust and
easie proofe of their doings, by addition onely of two numbers together,
and infinite examples of numeration, addition, substraction, [sic]
multiplication, diuision, reduction, and of the rules of three, &c. To
which is added the art of arithmetike according to the generall parts,
rules, operations, and demonstrations thereof. Also a discouery of the sayd
treasury, by the contents, explication, and application of the same vnto
the sayd art, and questions to it belonging, with the practise thereby to
adde and subtract all vsuall fractions vnlike, without reduction, into
likenesse, to multiply without multiplication, to diuide without diuision,
not passing 18 in operation. ... By William Colson Londoner.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 25, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/3014.
accounts for all countries in Christendome. The first part of ordinary
accounts, in which is contained and found all vsuall, daily, and most
necessary reckonings ready done, and the assise of bread, with a iust and
easie proofe of their doings, by addition onely of two numbers together,
and infinite examples of numeration, addition, substraction, [sic]
multiplication, diuision, reduction, and of the rules of three, &c. To
which is added the art of arithmetike according to the generall parts,
rules, operations, and demonstrations thereof. Also a discouery of the sayd
treasury, by the contents, explication, and application of the same vnto
the sayd art, and questions to it belonging, with the practise thereby to
adde and subtract all vsuall fractions vnlike, without reduction, into
likenesse, to multiply without multiplication, to diuide without diuision,
not passing 18 in operation. ... By William Colson Londoner.,” John Bagford's Albums of Fragments, accessed November 25, 2024, https://digitalbookhistory.com/johnbagford/items/show/3014.