's
Jani Anglorum Facies Altera (1610) by Littleton under the pseudonym Redman Westcot A Latin poem
Tragi-Comœdia Oxoniensis, ridiculing the parliamentary visitation of Oxford, has been ascribed both Littleton, and to John Carrick, also of Christ Church. months before the issue of
Robert Ainsworth's
Dictionary which took its place. Littleton also worked on a Greek lexicon, but died before its completion. He published also: •
Pasor metricus sive Voces omnes Novi Testamenti primogeniæ … Hexametris Versibus comprehensæ. Accessit diatriba in VIII Tractatus distributa; in quâ agitur de flectendi, derivandi, & componendi ratione ... Margaritæ Christianæ, sive Novi Testamenti adagiales formulæ, colligente A. Schotto huc congestæ ut juventuti materiam ad Praxin subministrent, 3 pts. London, 1658. •
Elementa Religionis, sive quatuor Capita Catechetica, London, 1658. • ''Solomon's Gate: or, an Entrance into the Church, being a familiar explanation of the Grounds of Religion conteined in the four heads of Catechism'', London, 1662. •
Sixty-one Sermons preached mostly upon publick occasions, 3 pts., London, 1680, 1679. Littleton published sermons, and prefixed Latin
elegiacs to
Nathaniel Hodges's Λοιμολογία, 1672. He wrote the preface to
Cicero, edited by
Thomas Gale, 2 vols., 1681. The life of
Themistocles in vol. i. of the English translation of ''
Plutarch's Lives'' of 1683, was by Littleton. In the same year, under the name of Redman Westcot, he published an English translation, with notes, of
John Selden's
Jani Anglorum Facies Altera (1610). In gratitude for the benefactions to the church at Chelsea of his friend
Baldwin Hamey the younger, Littleton appended to his
Latin Dictionary verses in praise of Hamey. After Hamey's death, he edited his essay
On the Oath of Hippocrates (1693). ==Family==