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Notes

 
[1]

Clarke's Miscellaneous Works appeared in 1836 (13 vols.). A memoir by his son, J. B. B. Clarke (3 vols. 1833) contains a bibliography of the writings.

[2]

Clarke's oriental collection was sold 15 June 1836 by Sotheby. It realized £1,804 5s., and was largely purchased by Henry G. Bohn and for the British Museum by the booksellers Payne and Foss.

[3]

Edward Harwood, A view of the various editions of the Greek and Roman Classics, with remarks. London 1775. Editions also in 1778, 1782, 1790. Harwood's work was translated into German and Italian, and listed some 2000 titles.

[4]

The Miscellany also includes an account of English translations of all the Greek and Roman classics; a list of Arabic and Persian grammars; remarks on the origin of language; a history of printing; an account of the perfection of printing in Italy; a list of 15th century towns where printing was carried on; an essay on bibliography and bibliographical systems wherein Clarke expands the system of Peignat's Dictionnaire de Bibliologie (Paris 1802); and accounts of the Olympiads, the Roman Calendar, the Mohammedan Era and the Khalifs.