- A
Counterblaste to
Tobacco is a
treatise written by King
James VI and I in 1604. In it he
expresses his
distaste for
tobacco and tobacco-smoking. It is...
-
Meditations The True Law of Free Monarchies, 1598
Basilikon Doron, 1599 A
Counterblaste to Tobacco, 1604, a
strong denunciation of
tobacco An
Apologie for the...
-
religious tone.
Virginia tobacco became po****r.
James I
published his A
Counterblaste to
Tobacco in 1604, but the book had no
discernible effect; by 1612...
-
James VI and I, King of
Scotland and England,
produced the
treatise A
Counterblaste to
Tobacco in 1604, and also
introduced excise duty on the product....
-
English king
James I was one of the
first outspoken skeptics and
wrote A
Counterblaste to Tobacco, an
unforgiving literary ****ault on what he
believed was...
- ignored. When
James VI and I, a
staunch anti-smoker and the
author of A
Counterblaste to Tobacco,
tried to curb the new
trend by
enforcing a
whopping 4000%...
- In 1604 King
James VI and I
published an anti-smoking treatise, A
Counterblaste to Tobacco, that had the
effect of
raising taxes on tobacco. Russia...
- and controversy.
Stuart King
James I
wrote a
famous polemic titled A
Counterblaste to
Tobacco in 1604, in
which the king
denounced tobacco use as "[a]...
-
unacceptable social life
feared by the
Forbidden City (and thus was akin to A
Counterblaste to
Tobacco written a
century earlier by
James I of England).
Madak had...
-
smoking had been
issued (January 11, 1964)
Campbell ran an editorial, "A
Counterblaste to Tobacco" that took its
title from the anti-smoking book of the same...