Page:Plomer Dictionary of the Booksellers and Printers 1907.djvu/183

Rh Yarranton's Improvement improved, By a Second edition of The great Improvement of Lands by Clover &hellip; London, Printed by J. C. for Francis Rea, Bookseller in Worcester, 1663. [ 724, a. 21.]  REA (ROGER), bookseller (?) in London, (1) Golden Cross Cornhill; (2) Gilded Cross, Westminster Street [near Gresham College]. 1660-67. Advertised in the Kingdoms Intelligencer, September 9th, 1661, an edition of Sir R. Stapylton's translation of Juvenal's Mores Hominum, published in 1660.  REDMAN, see. REDMAYNE, or REDMAN (JOHN), printer in London; Lovell's Court Paternoster Row, 1659-88. One of the printers of the Perfect Diurnal of every dayes Proceedings in Parliament, which began on February 21st, 16, and the Publick Intelligencer in 1660. At the survey taken on July 29th, 1668, he was returned as having two presses, one apprentice, four compositors, and two pressmen. &#91;Plomer, Short History, p. 227.]  REDMAYNE (WILLIAM), bookseller (?) in London, 1648. Hazlitt, iii. 276, records an edition of John Allibond's Rustica Academiæ Oxoniensis &hellip; Londini, impensis G. Redmayne, 1648.  REINOR, see. REYBOLD, see. REYNOLDS (JOHN), bookseller (?) in London, 1642. Only known from the imprint to a pamphlet entitled Cornucopia; or Roome for a Ram Head. [Hazlitt, H. 520.]  REYNOLDS (ROWLAND), bookseller in London; Sun and Bible, Postern Street, neere More-gate, 1667-84. Hazlitt records an edition of Abraham Cowley's The Mistresse, or Several Copies of Love Verses, as published by him in 1667. [Hazlitt, i. 105.]  REYNOR, see.