Selected quad for the lemma: city_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
city_n build_v call_v king_n 5,860 4 3.5615 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A34614 Remarks of the government of severall parts of Germanie, Denmark, Sweedland, Hamburg, Lubeck, and Hansiactique townes, but more particularly of the United Provinces with some few directions how to travell in the States dominions : together with a list of the most considerable cittyes in Europe, with the number of houses in each citty / written by Will. Carr ... Carr, William, 17th cent. 1688 (1688) Wing C636; ESTC R5052 66,960 226

There are 12 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

les then the Vniversal Empire and that how formidable soever he were yet they not onely maintained their pretensions but with uninterrupted prosperitie and succesfulnesse advanced their trade and spread their conquests in all the foure parts of the world Rome it self though most famous and victorious yet could not as is believed in so short a time do what by this Commonwealth hath bin effected In India and Affrica they soon forced the Spaniard and Portugeses to yeeld to them most of their trade and posessions And tho England put in for a share yet they were a long while vigourously opposed by the Dutch and to this hour have enough to do to keep what they have gotten so that in lesse then an hundred years this Commonwealth by their industrie and art in trading are becom so excessive rich and potent that they began to insult and would needs be Arbitraters to their neighbouring Princes and States and encroach upon their Territories and Dominions This drew upon them that fatal war before mentioned by which they were sorely weakned and brought so low that except God by a more then ordinarie Providence had protected and appeared for them they had certainly bin ruinated and never able to recover themselves again however their pride hereby was much abated And as Luxurie and lasciviousnes are the sad effects of prosperitie as wel as Pride so such vices in a bodie Politick and Common-wealth as do corrupt the radical humors by abating the vigour of the Vital parts doe insensiblie tend to the consumption and decay of the whole That this Commonwealth hath much recovered its strength may clearly appeare if we consider what great things they have effected since the little time they have enjoyed peace They have in lesse then 7 yeares built about 40 gallant ships of war They have laid out vast sums of treasure in refortifying Narden Mastricht Breda the Grave and many other places They have payd vast sums of money to their Allies for their auxiliarie troopes as also 200000 pound sterling to the King of England to Enjoy their peace with him And besides all this their Encrease in Riches and power may be guest at by the many stately houses built within these 5 years in Amsterdam Rotterdam and other places to all which we may ad to what excessive hight the Actions of the East and West-Indie Companie are risen and the obligations from the Sates are so esteemed as to securitie that they Can get as much money as they please at 2 Per cent not to speak of the Exceeding encrease of their subjects occasioned by the French Kings tyrannie against the distressed Protestants in France Alsace and other parts of his Conquests neither wil we speak of other signes of the encrease of this Commonwealth as not Judging it convenient to commit them to paper but wil now proceed to shew the Method of Living and travelling in the Dominions and places of the States which if you do wel consider you May see how happie and easie the Government of England is above that of other Nations The Brill in Holland is the Usual place where the Packet and Kings pleasure boats bring on such as come for to see the United Provinces here be sure to furnish your self wel with money From hence you take a boat to Maseland Sluce or Rotterdam which if you goe in Companie with others wil only cost you 5 stivers but if you take one for your self wil cost 25. stivers for Maseland Sluce and a Ducaton to Rotterdam The Fifth part of which goes to the States for a tax they call Passagie Gelt and the other 4 parts are for the boat Men or Shippers who also out of their gaines must Pay a tax to the States so that by computation you pay a fift pennie to the States for your travelling either in boats by water or in waggons by land As you passe by Maseland Sluce you 'l see a verie faire fishing village to which belong near two hundred Herring Buisses but if you goe by the way of Rotterdam you sail by two old Townes Called Flardin and Schiedam yet let me advise you before you depart from the Bril to take a serious view of it as beeing the citie which in Queen Elisabeths time was one of the Cautionarie Townes pawned to England The Brill had a voyce among the States but by reason Rotterdam hath got away their Trade by which having lost its former lustre is now become afishing town onely Rotterdam is the second Citie for trade in Holland and by some is caled little London as having vast traffick with England in so much that many of the citisens speak good English There are in this citie two considerable Churches of English and Scotch and how great a trade they drive with the King of Englands subjects is evident for in the yeare 1674 at the opening of the waters after a great frost there departed out of Rotterdam 300 Sail of Englesh Scotch and Irish Ships at once with an Easterly wind And if a reason should be demanded how it coms to passe that so many English Ships should frequently com to that haven It is easilie answered because they can ordinarily Load and unload and make returns to England from Rotterdam before a Ship can get clear from Amsterdam and the Texel And therfore your English Merchants find it Cheaper and more commodious for trade that after their goods are arrived at Rotterdam to send their goods in boats Landward in to Amsterdam This citie is famous as beeing the place where Great Erasmus was born whose Statue of Brasse stands erected in the Market place And although the buldings here are not so superb as those of Amsterdam Leyden or Harlem yet the places worth the seeing are first the Great Church where Several Admirals Lay Stately Entombed here you see their Admiralitie East Indie and Stathouses together with that caled het Gemeen Lands Huis From Rotterdam you may for 5 strivers have a boat to bring you to Delph but before you com thither you passe thro a faire village called Overschie where the French and English youths are trayned up in litterautre as to the Latin and Dutch tongue Booke keeping c from thence in the same boat you com to Delph which is famous for making of Porceline to that degree that it much resembles the China but onely it is not transparent In Delph is the great Magasin of Arms for the whole Province of Holland Their churches are verie large in one of which are Tombs of the Princes of Orange Admiral Tromp and General Morgans Ladie and in the Cloyster over against the Church you have an Inscription in a Pillar of Brasse shewing after what manner William the 1 that famous Prince of Orange was Shot to death by a miscreant Jesuist with his deserved punishment Delph hath the 3 d voyce in the States of Holland and sends its Deputies unto the Colledge of the States General and to all other colledges
methodes they have in building preserveing their Shipps when built but I shall refer you to that Exellent peece written by the Heer Witsen on that subject And shall now in the next place say some thing of their famous Company called the East-India Company of the Netherlands This Company is said to be a Commonwealth within a Commonwealth it is true if you consider the Soveraigne Power Priviledges they have granted them by the States General likewise consider their riches Vast Number of subjects the many Territories Colonies they possess in the East-Indies they are said to have 30000 men in constant pay above 200 Capital Shipps besides Sloopes Catches Yachts This Company hath by their Politick contrivances sedulons Industry possessed themselves of many Colonies formerly belonging unto the Spaniards Portugeeses diverse Indian Princes as good Christians have been at great Charge in Planting the Gospel of Christ in many parts there Printing in the Indian Language Bibles Prayer Bookes Catechismes for the Instruction of the Indians maitaineing Ministers Schoolemasters to inform those that are converted to the Christian faith And now because I have said that this Company is so considerable as it were a Commonwealth apart I will demonstrate it to be so first by their power Riches strength in the Indies secondly what figure they make in Europe this verie briefly for if I should speake of every particular as to their posessions in the Indies it would swell into many Volumes But I will only begin with them at the Cape of de Bonne Esperance where they have built a Royall Fort in which they maintaine a Garrison of souldiers to defend their Shipps which come there to take in fresh Water from thence let us take a view of them in the Iland of Java where they have built a faire City called Battavia fortified it with Bastions after the Mode of Amsterdam This City is the place of Residence of their grand Minister of State called the General of the Indies he hath allowed him 6 Privie Councellers in Ordinary 2 extraordinary These governe the concernes of the Company throughout the Indies They make peace war send ther Ambassadors to all parts thereof as occasion requireth This General hath his Guards of Horse Foot all sorts of Officers servants as if he were a soveraigne Prince the whole Expence whereof is defraied out of the Companys stock This General hath much of the Direction of Bantam and other parts of the Iland of Java From whence let us take a view of them in their great possessions in the Moluceas Ilands those of Banda where they are become so formidable that they looke as if they aimed at the soveraingtye of the Southseas They have also a great Trade in China Japan from whence let us return to the Ilands of Sumatra on the coast of Bengale where they have several Lodges In Persia they have likewise great Commerce are so considerable that they wage war with that mighty Monarch if he wrongs them in their trade They also have several Colonies Lodges on the coast of Malabar Cormandel in the Country of the Great Magul King of Galcanda But principally let us behold them in the rich Iland of Zylon where they are Masters of the plaine Country so that the Emperor or King of that Iland is forced to live in the Mountains whilst this Company possess the City of Colomba other the most considerable Garrisons of that Iland It is said that the Company hath there in their pav 3600 Souldiers at least 300 Gunus planted in their Forts Garrisons In a word they are not only masters of the Cinamon but of all other Spices except Pepper that they would also have had it bin for their Intrest to Ingrosse but they wisely fore saw that the English would be a Block in their way therefore they contented themselves to be masters the Mace Cynamon Cloves and Nutmegs with which they not only serve Europe but many places in the Indies I will say no more of them in the Indies But let us see what figure they make in Europe And first to begin with them in Amsterdam where they have two large Stately Palaces one being in the ould part of the City and the other in the new In that of the ould part of the City they keep their Court and there sits the Resident Committie of the Company where alsoe they make the sales of the Company goods There for six yeares the grand Councel or assembly of the 17 doe meet and after six yeares are expired the grand Councel of the 17 doe assemble at Middelburg in Zealand for two yeares and then againe returne to Amsterdam The other lesser Chambers of Delph Rotterdam Horne and Enchusen never haveing the assembly of the 17 in their Chambers so that only Amsterdam and Zealand have the honour of that grand Councel I will therefore crave leave to describe unto you the Chamber of Amsterdam it being the most Considerable of the Chambers belonging to this famous Company In there house or Palace within the ould City are many large Offices or appartments as first on the Lower Floor is their Parlement Chamber where the 17 doe sit Next to this Chamber are several faire Chambers for the Committes to sit in They have also a Chamber of Audience where they do receive Princes or Ambassadors or other great men as have occasion to speak with them In one of these Chambers are the Armes of several Indian Princes they have Conquered On the same Floor is their Tresury Office where their Receivers sit and receive money and pay out the orders or assignments of the Company Neer ●o that Chamber sits their grand Minister the Heer Peter van Dam who is said to be a Second John de Wit for parts but he hath not one drop of John de Wits or Lovestine bloud against the good Prince of Orange This great minister is a man of Indefaigable Industry and labor night and day in the Companyes service He reads over twice the great Journal Bookes which come from the Indies and out of them makes minets to prepare matters of concerne necessary to be considered by the grand Councel of the 17 and by the Inferiour Committes of the Company and prepares Instructions and orders to be sent to their Chief Ministers in the Indies I could say many more things of his great worth and Virtues but shall forbeare least I should be Judged a flatterer Overagainst this great Ministers Office sitt in a Chamber many Clarkes or under Secretaryes who receive from this Minister their Ordrs of dispatches in the affaires of Company and next to this Chamber is a Register Office where are kept the Journal bookes of the Indies where you may see the names of al the men and women that have ever served the Company in the Indies with
the tyme of their death or departing the Companyes service Then next to that is a Councel Chamber where the Residing Chamber or Committe of the Company alwayes sitts Then assending up staires there sitt their Book-holders who keepe the accounts of all the Transactions of those that buy or sel actions of the Company and over against this office sitts the Heer Gerbrand Elias who is the second Advocate of the Company On this floore are several large Roomes in which are great stores of Packt Goods and also a Roome with all sorts of Drugs Tee and Wax Ambergreace and Musk and on the same floore is a Chamber where the Commissiners sitt who governe the Packhouses And next to them sitt their Clarks who keepe the Registers of the sales of the Company Goods And on the same Gallery or Floore is a Chamber where are kept the severall Bookes of Divinitie printed in the Indian Language that are sent to the several Colonies of the Company And at the end of this Gallery is a Magazine full of Medicaments and Instruments for Barber Chirurgions Chests to furnish the Companyes Shipps and Garrisons in the Indies Then assending up another paire of staires there are several large Magazins of Nutmegs Cloves Mace and Sinamond and in a long Gallery are many men at work sorting of Spices fitt for sale Then ascending up another paire of staires there are many Roomes full of Spices then desending into the Court-yard there is a Guard Chamber where every night the house keeper hath a Watch and on the other side of the Gate there is the Chymist who with his men prepares Medicaments for the Indies Adjoyning to this Court-yard is their Way-house and Packhouse for Pepper and Grosse Goods But before I leave this house in the ould part of the City I must say some thing of the maner or method used in the Transactions of the Jewes and others who make a Trade of buyng and selling the Actions of the Company the which is a great mystery of Iniquitie and where it inricheth one man it ruins an hundred The Jewes are the chiefe in that Trade and are said to negotiate 17 parts of 20 in the Company These Actions are bought and should 4 tymes a day at 8 in the morning in the Jewes street at a 11 on the Dam at twelve and at one a Clock upon the Exchange and at six in the evening on the Dam and in the Coledges or Clubs of the Jewes until 12 at midnight where many tymes the Crafty Jewes and others have Contrived to Coine bad newes to make the Actions fall and good newes to raise them the which craft of doing at Amsterdam is not taken notice of which is much to be wondered at in such a wise Goverment as Amsterdam is for it is a certaine trueth they many times spread scandalous reports touching the affaires of State which passe amongst the Ignorant for truth I shall now in the next place say some thing of their Pallace or Magazine in the new part of the City the which may more properly be called an Arsenal It is a building so superb that it lookes more like a Kings Pallace then a Magazin for Merchants I have measured the Ground on which this Arsenal stands which I find to be 2000 foot and square every way reckoning the Motes or Burgals about it I remember the Ingenious Sr. Joseph Williamsen measured the two Rope-allies by telling the stone figures in the wal found them to be 1800 foot long the like whereof is not to be seene in the world On the backside of this Rope-allie lyes a store of 500 Large Anchors besides small ones In this Arsenal they build the Ships belonging to this Chamber and here are al sorts of worke houses for the Artificers that serve the Company And in a Chamber next to the Joyners Office is a model of a Ship they now build their Ships by which cost 6000 Gilders When a man beholds the great stores of Tymber Cordage and the Provisions of war in their Magazin a man would think there were enough to furnish a whole Nation In this Arsenal the Ships unload their Goods layd up in several apartments in the grand Magazin and afterward is removed to the house in the ould part of the City as their is occasion for sale In the upper part of this large Pallace sit the saile Makers at worke but on the Lower part of this house is an appartment where the Bewinthebbers assemble upon occasion of Businesse This Arsenal is not to be seen by strangers without a Ticket from the Bewinthebbers Now al what I have spoaken of these two houses or Magazins doth only belong unto the Chamber of Amsterdam There are yet other Chambers of the Company who according to their Quota or stock in the Company have the like houses and Magazins as the Chambers of Zealand Delph Rotterdam Horne and Enkusen And now I have named the six Chambers of which the Company is composed I shall say some thing of their constitution which is from an Octroy or Act of the States General by which they have soveraign power over their servants in the Indies yea their Authoritie reacheth their servants in al Territoryes of the States General Donions It is Death for any of the States subjects to be Interlopers against this Company nor may any of what nation soever that lives in any of the Companyes Territories as Burgers or servants returne into Europe without leave from the Company only those called Freemen may depart without askeing leave to remove The Grand Councel of this Company is the Assembly of the Seventeen which are Elected out of the several Chambers before named that is eight from Amsterdam and four from Zealand Delph Rotterdam Horne and Enkusen send one a peece which makes sixteen and the five lesser Chambers by turns chose the seventeenth In the Chamber of Amsterdam there are 20 Bewinthebbers in ordinary who are for life and have 1000 Ducatones a yeare and spices at Christmas and their travelling charges when they goe upon the Companyes service The next Chamber is Zealand which hath twelve Bewinthebbers who have about 250 L. a yeare and travelling Charges and Spices at Christmas The next is Delph which hath seven Bewinthebbers who have only 120 L. a yeare and Travelling Charges and Spices at Christmas The other Chambers of Rotterdam Horne and Enkhusen have seven Bewinthebbers a peece and the like sallarie with travelling Charges and Spices at Christmas as the Chamber of Delph hath These Bewinthebbers are Elected or chosen out of those Adventerers called the high Participanten of the Company They generally chose such as are rich and men of parts and wisdome most of them being of the Magistratie of the Country No man is capable of being Elected a Bewinthebber who hath not a 1000 L. stock in the Company In a word this grand Councel of the Seventeen make lawes for the governing the Company both in India and Europe It is
to more money than at first one may imagine and this thought I confess made me wish it were otherwise I would not have the Reader to mistake mee here as if I espoused or pleaded for any particular party No I plead onely for the sentiments of humanity without which our nature degenerates into that of brutes and for the love that every honest man ought to have for his Countrey I am asmuch a friend to the Spanish Inquisition as to the persecuting of tender Conscienced protestants provided there be no more but Conscience in the case and I could heartily wish that Papists and Protestants could live as lovingly together in England as they doe in Holland Germany and other Countries for give mee leave to say it I love not that Religion which in stead of exulting destroys the Principles of morality and humane societie I have met with honest men of all persuasions even Turks and Jews who in their lives and manners have far exceeded many of our Enthusiastick professors at home and when ever this happened I could not forbeare to love the men without embraceing there Religion for which they themselves are to account to their great master and Judge In my progress towards Hanover I touched at Hildersheim a city whose Magistrates are Lutheran though Roman Catholicks have the Cathedrall Church and severall monasteries there The court of Hanover makes another kind of figure than that of Cassels it being the court of a greater Prince who is Bishop of Osnaburg duke of Brunswick Lunenburg Hanover c. Here I had the honour to kiss the hands of the Princess Royall Sophia youngest sister to the late Prince Rupert Her highness has the character of the Merry debonnaire Princess of Germany a lady of extraordinary virtue and accomplishments and mistriss of the Italian French High and low dutch and English languages which she speaks to perfection Her husband has the title of the Gentlemen of Germany a gracefull and comely Prince both a foot and on horseback civill to strongers beyond compare infinitely Kind and beneficent to people in distress and known in the world for a valiant and experienced Soldier I had the honour to see his troops which without controversic are as good men and commanded by as expert Officers as any are in Europe Amongst his Officers I found brave Steel-hand Gordon Collonel of an Excellent Regiment of horse Grimes Hamilton Talbot and others of our Kings subjects God hath blest the Prince with a numerous offspring having six sons all galant Princes of whom the two eldest signalized themselves so bravely at the raising of the siege of Vienna that as an undoubted proofe of their valour they brought three Turks home to this court prisoners His Eldest son is married to a most beautifull Princess sole heiress of the duke of Lunenbourg and Zell his elder brother as the lovely Princess his daughter is lately married to the Electorall Prince of Brandenbourg He is a gracious Prince to his people and keeps a very splendid court having in his stables for the use of himself and children no less than fifty two sets of coach horses he himself is Lutheran but as his subjects are Christians of different persuasions nay and some of them Jews too so both in his court and army he entertains Gentlemen of various opinions and Countries as Italian abbots and Gentlemen that serve him and many Calvinist French Officers neither is he so bigotted in his Religion but that he and his Children goe many times to Church with the Princess who is a Calvinist and joine with her in her devotion His Countrey is good having gold and silver mines in it and his subjects live well under him as doe those also of his brother the duke of Lunenbourg and their Cozen the duke of Wolfembottel which are the three Princes of the house of Lunenbourg of whom it may be said that they have alwayes stuck honestly to the right side and befriended the interests of the Empire so that no by respect neither honour nor profit could ever prevail with them as it has with others to make them abandon the publick concern From this Princes court I went to Zell the residence of the duke the elder brother of the familie This Prince is called the mighty Nimrod becaus of the great delight he takes in horses dogs and hunting He did mee the honour to let mee she his stables wherein he keeps 370 horses most of them English or of English breed His dogs which are also English are so many that with great care they are quartered in severall apartments according to their Kind and qualities there being a large office like a brewhouse employed for boyling of malt and Corn for them It is this valiant Prince who tooke Tieves from the French and made the Mareshall do Crequi prisoner he is extreamely obliging to strangers and hath severall brave Scottish Officers under his pay as Major General Erskin Graham Goloman Hamilton Melvin and others His Lieutenant General is one Chavot a Protestant of Alsatia an excellent and experienced commander who did mee the honour to treat mee three days at his house where with all his Scottish and English Officers whom he had invited wee liberally drank to the health of our present King having as he told us served under his Majestie when duke of York both in France and Flanders where he gained the reputation both for skill and conduct in the wars not onely from Mareshall Turin a competent Judge but also from all other General Persons who had the honour to know him that fame hath made better know'n in the world than the encomium which that generous Gentleman ingenuously gave and which heere I spare to relate I shall adde no more concerning this Prince his Officers or Countrey but that he with the other two Princes of the house of Lunenbourg Hanover and Wolfenbottel can upon occasion bring into the field 36000 Soldiers whom they keep in constant pay and such men as I never saw better in my life After some stay at the Court of the duke of Zell I went to Hambourg a famous Hansiatick town It is a republick and city of great trade occasioned partly by the English Company of Merchant adventures but much more by the dutch Protestants who in the time of the Duke of Alba forsook the low Countries and seltled here and the Protestants also who were turned out of Cologne and other places in Germany who nevertheless are not now allowed publick Churches within the citie but at a place called Altena a village belonging to the King of Denmark a quarter of an houres walk distant from Hambourg This Commonwealth is Lutheran and governed by four Burgemasters twenty four Radtsheres and a common Council of all the Burghers who have above 40 schellings per annum free hold The symbole or Motto under their Armes is da pacem domine in diebus nostris and in their Standart are these letters S. P. Q. H. The
his place This custome is Religiously observed by all his highnesses garrisons whilest he himself with his Children being five sons two Daughters and two Daughters in law goe constantly to the Calvinist Church adjoyning to the Court. Amongst other acts of publick pietie and charitie this Prince hath established and endowed some Religious houses or Nunneries for Protestant young ladies where they may live virtuously and spend their time in devotion as long as they please or otherwise marry if they think fit but then they lose the benefit of the Monastery There is one of these at Herford in Westphalia where I was and had the honour to wait upon the Lady Abbess the Princess Elisabeth eldest sister of the Elector Palatine and Prince Rupert who is since dead Notwithstanding the late wars with Sweden and that by the prevalency of France in that hasty treaty of peace concluded at Nimwegen his Electorall Highness was obliged to give back what he had Justly taken from that crown yet his subjects flourish in wealth and trade his highness having encouraged manufactures of all sorts by inviting Artizans into his dominions and estalished a Company of tradeing Merchants to the West-Indies which will much advance navigation amongst his subjects And in all humane probabilitie they are like to continue in a happy condition seing by the alliances his highness hath made with the Protestant Princes of the Empire and especially the house of Lunenbourg they are in no danger of being disturbed by their neighbours I told you before that the Prince of Brandenbourg was married to the Daughter of the duke of Hanover so that so long as that alliance holds the families of Brandenbourg and Lunenbourg will be in a condition to cast the ballance of the Empire they both together being able to bring into the field 80000 as good men as any are in Europe When I parted from Berlin I made a turn back to Lunenbourg in my way to Swedland where I found severall of my Countrey men Officers in the garison who shew'd mee what was most remarkeable in the city as the Saltworks which bring in considerable summes of money to the duke of Lunenbourg the Stathouse and Churches in one of which I saw a communion table of pure ducat gold From thence I went into the Province of of Holstein and at a small sea port called Termond of which I spake before I embarked for Sweden He that hath read in the histories of this last age the great exploits of Gustavus Adolphus and his Swedes perhaps may have a fancy that it must be an excellent Countrey which hath bredsuch warriours but if he approach it he will soon find himself undeceived Entering into Sweedland at a place called Landsort wee sailed forwards amongst high rocks having no other prospect from Land but mountains till wee came to Dollers which is about four Swedish that is twenty four English miles from Stockholm the capitall citie of the Kingdome upon my comeing a shore I confess I was a litle surprised to see the poverty of the people and the litle wooden houses they lived in not unlike Soldiers huts in a leaguer but much more when I discovered litle else in the Countrey but mountanous rocks and standing lakes of water The Reader will excuse mee I hope if I remarke not all that I may have taken notice of in this Countrey seing by what I have already written he may perceive that my designe is rather to observe the manner of the inhabitants living then to give a full description of every thing that may be seen in the Countrey they live in However I shall say somewhat of that too having premised once for all that the ordinary people are wretchedly poor yet not so much occasioned by the Publick taxes as the barrenness of their Countrey and the oppression of the nobles their Landlords and immediate superiours who till the present King put a stop to their violences tyrannically domineered over the lives and fortunes of the poor peasants From Dollers I took waggon to Stockholm changing horses three times by the way by reason of the badness of the rode on all hands environed with rocks that hardly open so much as here and there to leave a shred of plain ground At two miles distance upon that rode the citie of Stockholme looks great becaus of the Kings palace the houses of Noblemen and some Churches which are seated upon rocks and indeed the whole citie and suburbs stand upon rocks unless it be some few houses built upon ground gained from the rivers that run throw the town Stockholme has its name from a stock or logg of wood which three brothers threw into the water five miles above the city making a vow that where ever that stock should stop they would build a castle to dwell in The stock stopt at the Holme or rock where the palace of the King now stands and the brothers to be as good as their word there built their castle which invited others to doe the like so that in process of time the other rocks or holmes were covered with buildings which at length became the capital citie of the Kingdome It is now embellished with a great many Stately houses and much emproved from what it was 4●0 yeares agoe as indeed most cities are for the Stathouse then built is so contemtible and low that in Holland or England it would not be suffered to stand to disgrace the nation The Council Chamber where the Burgemaster and Raedt sit is two rooms cast into one not above nine foot high and the two rooms where the sheriffs and the Erve colledge which is a Judicature like to the Doctors Commons in England sit are not above eight foot and a halfe high The Kings Palace is a large square of stone building in some places very high but an old and irregular fabrick without a sufficient quantitie of ground about it for gardens and walks It was anciently surrounded with water but some yeares since part of it was filled up to make a way from the castlegate down into the old town In this Palace there are large rooms but the lodgings of the King Queen and Royall familie are three pair of stairs high the rooms in the first and second story 's being destin'd for the Senat Chamber and other courts of Judicature The Kings library is four pair of stairs high being a room about fourty six foot square with a closet adjoyning to it not half the dimensions When I considered the appartments and furniture of this Court I began to think that the French Author wrote truth who in his Remarks upon Swedland sayes that when Queen Christina resigned the Crown to Carolus Gustaphus the father of this present King she disposed of the best of the furniture of the Court and gave away a large share of the Crown lands to her favorites in so much that the King considering the poor condition she had left the Kingdome in and seeing the Court
contemptible that the libraries of many Grammar Schools and of privat men in England or Holland are far better stored with books then it is Upon viewing of it and that of the Kings Palace I called to mind the saying of a French man upon the like occasion That Swedland came behind France and England in the knowledge of men and things at least 800 yeares yet some Swedes have been so conceited of the antiquity of their Countrey as to bragg that Paradice was seated in Sweden that the Countrey was turned into such heaps of rocks for the rebellion of our first parents and that Adam and Eve had Cain and Abel in a Countrey three Swedish miles distant from Vpsall A French man standing by and hearing this Romantick story as I was told fitted him with the like telling him that when the world was made in six days at the end of the creation all the Rubbish that remained was throw'n together into a corner which made up Sweden and Norway And indeed the French seeme to have no great likeing to the Countrey what ever kindness they may have for the people for a French Ambassadour as an author of that Countrey relates being by order of Queen Christina treated in a Countrey house 4 Swedish miles from Stockholme and upon the rode goeing and comeing with all the varieties and pleasures that the Countrey could affoard on purpose to make him have a good opinion of the same made answere to the Queen who asked him upon his return what he thought of Sweden that were he master of the whole Countrey he would presently sell it buy a farme in France or England which under favour I think was a litle tart and sawcy Having stayed a considerable time in Swedland and most part at Stockholme I set out from thence to goe to Elsenbourg by land and went a litle out of my way to see a small city called Eubrone famous for a coat of Arms which it got in this manner A certain Masculine Queen of Denmark who had conquered a great part of Sweden comeing to this city asked the Magistrates what was the Arms of their city who having told her that they had none she plucked up her coats and squatting upon the Snow bid them take the marke she left there for their Arms It 's pity she did not give them a suitable motto to it also What that figure is called in blazonerie I know not but to this day the city uses it in their Armes and for marking their commodities This Queen came purposely into Sweden to pay a visit to a brave woman that opposed a King of Swedland who in a time of famine would have put to death all the men and women in his Countrey above sixty years of age The Countrey all the way I travelled in Swedland is much of the same qualitie of the land about Stockholme untill I came neare the Province of Schonen which is called the store house and Kitchin of Sweden where the Countrey is far better It was formerly very dangerous to travell in this Province of Schonen becaus of the Snaphances who were a kind of bloody robbers now utterly destroyed by the King so that it is safe enough travelling there Entering into Schonen I saw twenty nine of these rogues upon wheeles and elsewhere in the Countrey ten and twenty at severall places The King used great severitie in destroying of them some he caused to be broken upon the wheele others speeted in at the fundament and out at the shoulders many had the flesh pinched off of there breasts and so were fastened to stakes till they died and others again had their noses and both hands cut off and being seared with a hot Iron were let goe to acquaint their camerades how they had been served The King is very severe against Highway-men and duellers In above a hundred miles travelling wee found not a house where there was either French wine or brandie which made mee tell a Swede of our Company who was travelling to Denmark that I would undertake to shew any man 500 houses wherein a traveller might have wine and other good accommodation in the space of an hundred miles upon any rode from London There are severall small towns and fertile land in this Countrey of Schonen lying upon the Sound at the narrowest part whereof lies Elsenbourg burnt down by the Danes in the last war Here I crost over to Elsenore the passage being but a league broad The King of Denmark has a castle at Elsenore which commands the narrow passage of the Sound where all Ships that enter into or come out of the Baltick sea must pay toll Having visited this castle and stai'd about a fortnight with the English Consul and Sr. John Paul late resident at the Court of Swedland I went to the danish Court at Coppenhaguen Copenhaguen is the capitall city of Zeeland Jutland or Denmark and place of residence of the King It stands on a flat encompassed with a pleasant and delightfull Countrey much resembling England The streets of the city are kept very neat and cleane with lights in the night time for the convenience and safetie of those who are then abroad a custome not as yet introduced into Stockholme where it is dangerous to be abroad when it is dark The Kings men of war lye here very conveniently being orderly ranged betwixt Booms after the manner of Amsterdam and neare the Admiralty house which is a large pile of building well furnished with stores and Magazines secured by a citadell that not onely commands the city but also the Haven and entrey into it The Court of Denmark is splendid and makes a far greater figure in the world then that of Sweden tho not many yeares agoe in the time of Carolus Gustaphus the father of the present King of Swedland it was almost reduced to its last when the walls of Copenhagen saved that Crown and Kingdome That siege was famous caried on with great vigour by the Swede and as bravely maintained by the Danes The monuments whereof are to be seen in the canon bullets gilt that still remain in the walls of some houses and in the steeple of the great Church of the town The Royall palace in Copenhaguen is but small and a very ancient building but his Majesties house Fredenburg is a stately fabrick of Modern Architecture and very richly furnished Denmark is at present a flourishing Kingdome and the King who hath now made it hereditary surpasses most of his predecessours in power and wealth He hath much enlarged his dominions aswell as Authority and by his personall and Royall virtues no less then the eminent qualities of a great many able ministers of State he hath gained the universall love of his subjects and the esteeme of all forreigne Princes and States The Court if much frequented every day but especially on Sundays where about eleven of the clock in the morning the Nobility forreigne Ministers and Officers of the Army
man and there it is so securely preserved that although the house should be burnt the Booke in al probabilitie would be safe Should I here give an account of the Vast summes of money that dayly are written of in this Bank I might probably be thought to speake at Random but this I may bouldly affirme that it farr Exceeds all the Bankes in Europe both for Riches and Business and their Credit is such that the Italians French Germans and English have great summes in the same neither was ever any man refused his money in the worst of times A second Tax is what ariseth from the just and laudable Establishment of a Register A Tax which I think most men will be willing to submit to Except such as designe to cheat and defraud their Naibours and live by such like sins and Confusion and for the most part die with the curse of the people This Register in Holland begitts such assurance and Safetie in dealling that in purchasing of houses or land a Childe tho overreached in the Value yet cannot be cheated as to the title The methodes of which Register I have by me for the use of our King and Parlement when they please to Command it The third and last Tax is that of sealed paper as it is practised in Holland The Method of which I likewise keep by me for his Maiestie and Parlements Commands There are many other things might be spoken as to the Government of Amsterdam but I may not tyre your patience However one considerable thing I would not passe by touching the Melitia There are in Amsterdam 60 Companyes of Foot the least of them haveing 200 men some 300 which in a modest account amounts at least to 15000 men in which number neither Jews nor Anabaptists who carry no Armes are reckned only they are obliged to Contribute to the maintenance of the 1400 Souldiers who are kept in Constant pay as a Guard for the Citty and towards the night watch or Ratelwatch who walke the streets the whole night to keepe good Orders and tell us every halfe houre what a Clock it is There are also upon every Church Tower Trumpetters who sound every halfe houre and if any fire breakes out in the Citty they give a Signall on which side of the Citty the fire is and ring the Firebell and they have Exellent wayes on a suddain in such sad accidents to Quench Fire but I may not inlarge any longer but hasten out of Holland And yet before I leave Amsterdam I must vindicate her from a malitious aspersion cast upon her by the Ignorant they accuse her to have very rudely and uncivilly affronted the Duke of York beeing there Anno 1681 All which is very false True the English Phanaticks of Amsterdam were so malitiously wicked as to spread severall lyes of his Sacred Person and stird up the Canalie as much as they could to affront his Highnes but as for the Magistrates they payd him verie great respects first sending me to the Hague to know what day his Highnes would please to honor their Citty with his presence that thereby they might be prepared to receive his Royall person with all the honor emaginable being resolved to Treat his Highnes in their Stathouse and that the Burgers should be in their Armes also giveing out orders for Coaches and the Admiraltys Yagts to attend his Highnes when ever he pleased to come but his Highnes by Collonel werden let me know that I should attend the Burgemasters and thank them for their kind presentation but his Highnes was resolved to see their Citty incognito and therefore desired the Burgemasters not to put themselves to any maner of Trouble Notwithstanding the Magistrates Commanded their Yatchts to lye ready the halfeway Harlem and Vice Admiral de Ruiter Dirick Tulp and others went out in their Coaches to meet his Highnes and conduct him into the Citty at which tyme our English Phanaticks Especially those called Monmouths twelve Apostels did all that they could to stir up the rude multitude to affront his Highnes crying out to them This is he that brought the last war upon you and with his Jesuits would cut all the Protestants Throats But the next day after his Highnes was com into the Citty Burgemaster Valkenier the great Solon of Amsterdam sent for me and could me that although the Burgemasters which are the Soveraignes of the City give no Visits to strange Princes unless they be Crouned heads yet said he I have a great Ambition to pay a Visit to the Duke of York upon severall respects first as being the brother of so great a King and as he is our Statholders Vnckell and Father in law and therefore said he you shall procure me Audience in the privatest maner imaginable for I designe to goe with you to him without so much as a footman attending me here upon I waitted upon the Earle of Peterborow and Collonel Werden and Collonel Porter to desire them to aquaint his Highnes with the Burgemasters designe whereupon his Highnes turnd to me and said Mr. Carr when the Burgemaster pleaseth whereupon I went immediately to the Burgemaster and attended him to his Highnes quarters the newes whereof comeing to the Cittizens they gathered together in great Multitudes to see whether this great man their Petty God did humble himself so far as to pay a Visit to his Highnes whereas the other Burgemasters only sent a Secretary and one of there Pensionaries to Visit the Duke of Monmouth and all Ambassandors have no other Complement but by Secretaries or Pensionaries After the Burgemaster had had a long houres Audience with the Duke in a Roome a part I attended the Burgemaster to his Daughter Pelicorns house the which was neare his Highnes Lodgings for the Tumult of the Burgers was so great that the Burgemaster did not care to pas by them and being come into his daughters Parler he began to speake to me after this maner Sir I never in all my life met with a Prince so generally Experienced in all things a Prince that hath far penetrated into the affaires of Europe and hath the right measures of the present State of our Country and discourses as if he sate in our Councell but above all I was mightly pleased to heare him declare himselfe so freely touching Liberty of Conscience commending the wisdome of our State in Opening their Gates to all tender Consciences and that is it said his Highnes that makes you so considerable and enticeth the Rich Merchants of other places to come live amongst you whereas the folly of the Spanish Inquisition hunts away the chiefest of their Traders the Jewes and others For my part said his Highnes I never was for oppressing tender Consciences in England for nothing more disturbs the peace and quiet thereof then forceing men by Pe●d Lawes to become all of one Religio● To conclude said the Burgemaster do but Remark this one thing and remember it if you out
live me viz that if ever this great Prince come to be King of England he will alter all the Measures of Europe and possible become the Arbiter thereof After which discourse the Burgemaster said let me now present you mijn Heer Consul with a Glasse of Rhenith wyne to his Highnes health and pray when you have an Opportunitie to speake with his Highnes assure him that he 〈◊〉 in Amsterdam a true and faithfull freind and moreover he said when I speake next with our Statholder the Prince of Orange and our Pensionarie Fagel I will doe his Highnes Justice and thus wee parted but the civil deportment of this Burgamaster was not all for other great ones of the Citty did their part also as Vice-Admiral de Ruiter with at least 30 Captains of the Admiralty Chamber of Amsterdam attended his Highnes to shew him the Men of warr and Magazins of the Admiralty likewise Sir Dirick Tulp and the Heer Peter van Dan● and others the Bewinthebbers of the East-India Company attended his Highnes to the East-Indie House where was spread a Banquet of Sweetmeats and rich Wines and they offered his Highnes a present but his highnes would not accept of any only two large Bookes in which were Painted all the Beasts Fishes and Foules and likewise all the Plants Flowers and Fruites of the East-Indies and because his Highnes had tasted the Mum in the East-Indie Magazine and liked it the Company caused twelve Caskes to be neatly hoopt and gave me them to be sent after his Highnes to Brussels And I know it was the resolution of the Bewinthebbers to have spared no cost if his Highnes would have accepted of a Treat in their house by all which you see that the Magistrates and chiefe men in Amsterdam were not guilty of Rudenes to his Highnes but it was the Canalie And now haveing said so much good of the States Government and of Amsterdam in particular it will not be amisse to take notice of some Bad customes and practises now in vogue in Holland and leave it to the reader to Judge what they may portend There are tollerated in the Citty of Amsterdam amongst other abuses at least 50 Musick houses where lewd Persons of both sexs meet and practise their villanies There is also a place called the Longseller a Tollerated Exchange or publick meeting house for whores and Rogues to Rendevous in and make their filthy Bargains This Exchange is open from six a clock afterdinner untill nine at night Every whore must pay three stivers at the dore for her entrance or admission I confess the Ministers preach and exclaim from the pulpit against this horrible abuse but who they be that Protect them I know not yet I have heard some plead for the tolleration of these wicked meetings upon pretext that when the East-India fleets come home the Seamen are so mad for women that if they had not such houses to bait in they would force the verie Cittyzens wives and Daughters but it is well known that as money does countenance so Discipline might suppress that abuse The ould severe and frugall way of Liveing is now allmost quite out of Date in Holland there is very littell to be seene of that sober modestie in Apparell Diet and habitations as formerly In stead of Convenient Dwellings the Hollandtrs now build Stately palaces have their delightfull Gardens and houses of pleasure keep Coaches waggons and sleas have very rich furniture for their horses with Trappings-adorned with silver Bells I have seen the Vanitie of a Vintners sonne who had the bosses of the bit and Trapping of his horse of pure silver his footman and Coachman having silver fringd Gloves yea so much is the humour of the women altered and of their Children also that no Apparel can now serve them but the best and richest that France and other Countryes affoards and their sonns are so much adicted to play that many families in Amsterdam are ruined by it not that England is lesse Extravagant then the Duch who as I said before got such great Estates by their frugalitie whilest they were not addicted to such prodigalitie and wantonesse as the English are whose excesse I can not excuse neverthelesse the grave and sober people of Holland are very sensible of the great alteration that now is in their Country and as they say Paracelsus used to cure his patients of their disease with a full belly so a good Burgemaster desirous to convince his Amsterdammers of their dissolute kind of lif● invited the Thirty six Magistrates and their wives to a feast who being come and the Ladyes big with Expectation of some rare and Extraordinary Entertainment sat down at table where the first course was Buttermilk boild with Appells Stockfish Buttered Turnips and Carrots lettice Salade and red Herrings only smale beare without any Wyne At this the Ladies startled and began to whisper to their husbands that they Expected no such Entertainement but upon removing of the Dishes and plates they found underneath printed verses Importing that after that manner of liveing they began to thrive had inlarged their Citty The second course consisted of Bocke de kooks quarters of Lamb rosted Rabits and a sort of pudding they cal a Brother here they had Dorts and English beare with French wyne yet all this did not please the dainty Dames but upon removing away the plates another Dish of poetrie appeared which acquainted them that after that modest and sober way of Liveing they might keep what they had gott and lay up some thing for their Children Then comes in the third course made up of all the rarities of the season as Patridges Pheseants and all sorts of foule and English pasties with plenty of Rinish and other sorts of wyne to moisten them this put the ladyes in a frolick and Jolly humour but under their plates was found the use and Application in verses telling them that to feed after that manner was Voluptuous and Luxurious and would Impaire their health and wast their Estates make them neglect their Trade and so in Tyme reduce their Stately and new built flourishing Citty to their ould fishing towne againe After this was brought in a Banquet of all sorts of sweet meats piled up in piramides and delicate fruite with plenty of delitious wynes and to conclude all a set of Musick and maskers who danced with the young Ladyes but at parting like the hand writing to Belteshazzar upon the wall every one had a printed paper of moralities put into their hand shewing them the causes of the ruine of the Roman Commonwealth according to that of the Poët Nullum crimen abest facinusque libidinis ex quo Paupertas Roman a perit with an Excellent aduice to them that if they did not quit the Buffoneries and apish modes of the French and returne to the Simplicitie plaineness and modestie of their Ancestors and founders their Common-wealth could not long last but all the thanks the good
people here grone under heavy taxes and impositions The State becaus of continuall Alarms they have from the King of Denmark or other neighbours and the intestine broiles that frequently happen here as well as at Cologne where the Burgemasters are often in danger of their lives from the mutinous mobile being forced to maintain six or seaven thousand men in pay besides two or three men of war to guard their havens from pirats I shall not name all the wayes of imposing taxes which this Commonwealth uses becaus in most they imitate the methods of the States Generall as to that which have bin mentioned before I shall onely take notice of some peculiar customes they have wherein they differ from Holland When a Barber shoe maker or any other Artizan dies leaving a widow and Children another of the same trade is not admitted to set up for himself as a master unless he compound with the widow for a piece of money or else marry her or a daughter of hers with her consent If any man cause another to be arrested for debt or upon any other suit the plaintif must goe along with the Officer who arrests the party and stay by him untill the prisoner be examined by the sheriff so that if the sheriff be not to be spoken with that night the plaintiff must tarry with the prisoner all night untill the sheriff examine the matter and see cause of discharging or committing the party but this a plaintiff may doe by a procuration Notariall If a prisoner be committed for debt the plaintiff must maintain him in prison according to his qualitie and if the party lye in prison during the space of six yeares at the expiration of that time the prisoner is discharged and if during the time of his imprisonment the plaintif doe not punctually pay the prisoners allowance at the months end the prisoner is set at liberty and nevertheless the plaintiff must pay the Gailer the last months allowance This state is severe in the execution of Justice against thieves murders and cheats There is no pardon to be expected for murder and a Burgemaster himself if guilty cannot escape The punishment for Murder is here as in Sweden breaking malefactors on the wheele pinching their breasts and Arms with hot Pincers speeting them in at the fundament and out at the shoulder they have also cruel wayes of torturing to make prisoners confess And are very carefull not to be cheated in their publick revenue their accisemen and collectors being punished as in Holland They take a very good course not to be cheated in their accise for all the mils of the Countrey are in the hands the State so that no baker nor brewer can grind his own corn but must have it ground at the States mills where they pay the accise There is a Generall tax upon all houses and that is the Eight penny which nevertheless does not excuse them from chimney money The States here as at Genoa in Italy are the publick vintners of whom all people must buy their wine which they buy from the Merchants or otherwise import it in their own ships In their ceremonies of burying and Christening they are ridiculously prodigall as for instance If one invite a Burgemaster he must give him a ducat in gold if a Ra●dtsheer that is an Alderman a Rixdollar to every Preacher Doctor of Physick Advocat or Secretary halfe a Rixdollar and to every Schoolmaster the third part of a Rixdoller The women are the inviters to Burialls weddings and Christenings who weare an Antick Kind of a dress having mitered caps as high again as the Miter of a Bishop The Churches here are rich in revenues and ornaments as Images and Stately Organs wherein they much delight They are great lovers of Musick in so much that I have told ●5 masters of severall sorts of Musick in one Church besides those who were in the Organ-gallery Their Organs are extraordinarely large I measured the great pipes in the Organs of St. Catharins and St. James's Churches and found them to be 3 foot and 3 quarters in circumference and 32 foot long in each of which Organs there are two Pipes 5 foot and 8 inches round The wealth and trade of this citie encreases dayly They send one year with another 70 Ships to Greenland and have wonderfully engrossed that trade from England and Holland and it is beleeved that small and great there are belonging to this Commonwealth five thousand sayl of Ships After Amsterdam Genoa and Venice their bank is reckoned the chiefe in credit but in trade they are accounted the third in Europe and come next to London and Amsterdam Hambourg is now become the Magazine of Germany and of the baltick and northern seas They give great priviledges to the Jewes and to all strangers whatsoever Especially the English Company of Merchant Adventures whom they allow a large building where they have a Church and where the deputy governour Secretary Minister and the other Officers of the Company live to whom they yearly make present of Wine Beere Sheep Salmond and Sturgeon in their seasons And so much of Hambourg From Hambourg I went to Lubeck which is also a Commonwealth and Imperiall town It is a large well built city containing ten parish Churches the Cathedrall dedicated to St. Peter being in length 500 foot with two high spires all covered with brass as the rest of the Churches of that city are In former times this city was the place where the deputies of all the Hansiatick towns assembled and was once so powerfull as to make war against Denmark and Sweden and to conquer severall places and Islands belonging to those two Crowns nay and to lend Ships to England and other Potentates without any prejudice to their own trade wherein they vied in all parts with their neighbours but it is now exceedingly run into decay not onely in territories but in wealth and trade also And the reason of that was chiefely the inconsiderate zeal of their Lutheran Ministerꝰ who perswaded the Magistrates to banish all Roman Catholicks Calvinists Jews and all that dissented from them in matter of Religion even the English Company too who all went and setled in Hambourg to the great advantage of that city and almost ruine of Lubeck which hath not now above 200 Ships belonging to it nor more territories to the State than the city it self and a small part called Termond about eight miles distant from it The rest of there territories are now in the possession of the Danes and Swedes by whom the burghers are so continually allarmed that they are quite tired out with keeping guard and paying of Taxes The city is indeed well fortified but the government not being able to maintain above 1500 Soldiers in pay 400 Eurghers in two Companies are obliged to watch every day They have a large well built Stathouse and an Exchange covered on the top whereof the globes of the world are painted This Exchange is about
assemble and make a glorious appeareance There one may see many Knights of the order of the Elephant of Malto but I never saw any order of the like nature as that of Sweden that King rarely appearing in his George and garter but on days of publick audience I have observed at one time above 150 coaches attending at the Court of Denmark which are ten times more than ever I saw together at that of Sweden The King is affable and of easy accels to strangers seen often abroad by his subjects in his gardens and stables which are very large and well furnished with all sorts of Horses He is a great lover of English horses and dogs and delights much in Hunting as his eldest son the Prince with his brothers doe in cockfighting in so much that the English Merchants can not make a more acceptable present to those Princes then of English game-cocks The standing forces of Denmark are well disciplined men and commanded by good Officers both natives and strangers both French and Scots as Major General Duncan and Major General Veldun both Scottishmen whom I saw at Copenhaguen The Soldiers aswell as courtiers are quartered upon the citizens a custome which is likewise practised in Sweden and tho somewhat uneasy yet not repined at by the people who by the care and good government of the King find trade much advanced For his Majestie by encouraging strangers of all religions to live in his dominions and allowing the French and dutch Calvinists to have publick Churches hath brought many tradeing families to Coppenhaguen and by the measure he hath taken for settling trade in prohibiting the importation of forreigne manufactures and reforming and new modelling the East and West India Companies hath much encreased commerce and thereby the wealth of his subjects so that notwithstanding the new taxes imposed upon all coaches waggons Ploughs and all reall and personall estates which amount to considerable summs of money the people live very well and contented There are commonly about eight thousand men in garison in Coppenhaguen and his Majesties Regiment of foot guards who are all cloathed in red with cloaks to keep them warm in the winter time is a very handsome body of men and with the horse guards who are bravely mounted and have their granadeers and Hoboyes make a very fine shew His Majestie hath caused severall new fortifications to be built upon the Elb and other rivers and hath now in his possession that strong Castle called Hilgueland at present commanded by a Scottishman The Queen of Denmark is a most virtuous Princess sister to the present Landgrave of Hessel-Cassel and in persuasion a Calvinist having a chappell allowed her within the Court though the publick religion of the King and Kingdome be Lutheran The Clergie here are learned many of them having studied at Oxford and Cambridge where they learnt the English Language and amongst the Bishops there is one Doctor King the son of a Scottishman But seing it is my designe rather to observe the condition of the people then to be punctuall in describing all the rarities that are remarkeable in the Countries I have been in I shall conclude what I have to say of Denmark by acquainting the Reader that the people of that Countrey live far better then the Swedes and aswell as most of their adjoyning neighbours and that there are severall places both there and in Norway which have the names of English towns as Arundale Totness London c. When I fist began to write this treatise I had some thoughts of making observations upon the severall governments of other States and Dominions where I had travelled some years before I was in the Countries I have been speaking of as of the rest of Germany Hungary Switzerland Italy and France but that was a subject so large and the usefulness of it to my present designe so inconsiderable that by doeing so I found I could neither satisfie the curious by adding any thing materiall to those many who have already obliged the publick by the remarks of their travells in those places or make my discontented Countrey men more averse then they are already from removing into those Countries where I think few of them will chuse to transport themselves for the sake of liberty and Propertie tho England were even worse than they themselves fancy it can be All that remains to be done then is to conclude this treatise with an obvious and popular remark that those Countries where cities are greatest and most frequented by voluntary inhabitants are alwayes the best to live in and by comparing the city of London with all other cities of Europe and demonstrating by the surveys I have made which I think will hardly be contradicted or confuted that of all the capitall cities of Europe it is the biggest and most populous so prove consequentially that England for the generality of people is the best Countrey in the world especially for its natives to live in Now this being an observation for what I know not hitherto made good by induction and instance as I intend to doe it I hope it will please the Reader as much as if I gave him a particular account of other Countreys and governments and leave it to his own reflexion to State the comparison Though London within the walls cannot vie for bigness with many cities of Europe yet take the city and suburbs together according as it hath been surveyed by Mr. Morgan in breadth from St. Georges Church in Southwarke to Shore ditch and in length from Limehouse to petty France in Westminster and it is in a vast proportion larger in compass of ground and number of houses then any city whatsoever in Europe This I shall demonstrate first by compareing it with some cities of Holland and then with the most considerable cities of the other Countries of Europe which I shall set down in an alphabeticall order with the number of the houses they severally contain When London and suburbs was surveyed some years agoe by Mr. Morgan there were reckoned to be in it 84000 houses besides hospitalls Almeshouses and other buildings that payed no chimney money to the King Now if those were added and the vast number of new houses that have been built since that survey upon modest computation London may be reckoned to countain 100000 houses I know the French doe vapour and would perswade the world that Paris is much bigger then London And the Hollanders will scarce believe that London hath more Houses then the 18 Cittyes in Holland that have voyces in the States for say they Amsterdam Stands upon a 1000 Morgens land and London Stands but upon 1800 To both which I answer that it is very true that Paris takes up a great spot of ground but then you must consider that in Paris there are severall hundreds of Monasteries Churches Coledges and Cloysters some of them haveing large Gardens and that in Paris there are 7500 Palaces and Ports for Coaches
which have likewise great Gardens whereas London is very thick built and in the Citty the Houses have scarce a Yard big enough to sett a Pump or House of conveniency in but the weekely bills of Mortality will decide this Question and plainely give it to London and so doth Mons la Cour and Sir. William Pette in his last Essayes dedicated lately to our King makeing it appeare that London is bigger then Paris Rhoan and Rochell altogether and as for Amsterdam I doe appeale to all knowing men that have seen it that although it be true that it Stands upon 1000 Morgens Land yet there is not above 400 Morgens built and this I prove thus that the large Gardens on the Heeregraft Kysersgraft and Princegraft and the Burgavalls of Amsterdam take up more then a third part of the Citty then reckon the Bastions and the space of Ground betweene the Wall and the Houses and all the Ground unbuilt from the Vtricks-Port to the Wesoper-Port Muyer-Port and so to the Seasido and you will find it to be near 300 Morgens land There are 2 Parishes in the Suburbs of London viz Stepuey and St. Martins in the fields the later being so big that the last Parlement divided it into 4 Parishes either of them have more Houses then Rotterdam or Harlem and there are severall other great Parishes as St. Margrets-Westminster St. Giles in the fields Toolyes and St. Mary Overs the which if they stood apart in the Country would make great Cittyes wee reckon in London and the Suburbs thereof to be at least 130 Parishes which containe 100000 Houses now if you reckon 8 persons to everie house then there are neare 800000 soules in London but there are some that say there is a million of soules in it I shall now set downe the Cittyes Alphabetically and their number of Houses as they were given to me not only from the Surveyours and Citty Carpenters but from the Bookes of the Herthmoney and bookes of the Verpoundings where such Taxes are payd and first I shall begin with the 18 Cittyes that have Voyces in the States of Holland Cittyes Houses DOrt 5500 Harlem 7250 Delph 2300 Leyden 13800 Amsterdam 25460 Rotterdam 8400 Tergoe 3540 Gorcom 2460 Schiedam 1550 Brill 1250 Schonehoven 2200 Alckmaar 1540 Horn. 3400 Enckhuysen 5200 Edam 2000 Monekendam 1500 Medenblick 850 Purmerent 709 Cittyes in Germany and in the 17 Provinces ANtwerp 18550 Aix la Chapell 2250 Arford 8440 Berlin 5200 Bonn. 410 Bresack 1200 Breme 9200 Breda 3420 Bolduke 6240 Bergen op Zome 2120 Brussels 19200 Cologne 12000 Cleave 640 Coblins 420 Castells 1520 Dresden 6420 Disseldorpe 620 Dunkirk 2440 Emden 2400 Francford 10200 Groningen 8400 Guant 18200 Harford 1420 Hanover 1850 Heidelberg 7520 Hamburg 12500 Lubeck 6500 Louain 8420 Lypsick 3240 Lunenburg 3100 Lewardin 5860 Mayance 2420 Malin 8000 Middelburg 6200 Madelburg 1120 Mastricht 5600 Munster 1240 Nurenberg 18240 Osenburg 2200 Osburg 8420 Oldenburg 620 Praag 18640 Passaw 560 Ratisbone 6540 Strasburg 8560 Spire 540 Stockholme 6480 Salsburg 12460 Vtrick 8240 Viana 4520 Vean 340 Wormes 1200 Westburg 2420 Cittyes in France AVinion 12400 Amiens 5200 Bullion 1400 Bomont 800 Burdeaux 8420 Calis 1324 Cane 2147 Chalon 1850 Diepe 1920 Lyons 16840 Montruill 820 Monpiller 5240 Marsellis 9100 Nantes 4420 Nemes 3120 Orlians 10200 Orange 354 Paris 72400 Rochell 4200 Roan 11200 Tolonze 13200 Valance 458 Cittyes in Italy BOlonie 12400 Florance 8520 Janua 17200 Luca. 1650 Legorne 3560 Milan 18500 Napells 17840 Pesa 2290 Padua 8550 Rome 31200 Sena 1820 Venetia 24870 Veterba 620 Valentia 1520 Cittyes in Savoy CHambray 852 Salé 320 Turin 8540 Nece 500 St. John de Latteran 420 Remes 340 Moloy 270 Cittyes in Switserland BErne 4270 Ball. 5120 Geneve 4540 Losana 2100 Solure 500 Zurick 6200 Morge 210 Vina 320 St. Morrice 300 Cittyes in Denmark COpenhagen 8220 Elsenore   Cittyes in Sweedland NOrthoanen 600 Stockholme 7500 Vpsall 8200 FINIS
fifty yards in the length and but fifteen in breadth over it there is a Roome where the skins of five Lions which the Burghers killed at the city gates in the year 1252 are kept stuft The great market place is very large where a monumentall stone is to be seen on which one of their Burgemasters was beheaded for running away without fighting in a sea engagement The people here spend much time in their Churches at devotion which consists chiefely in singing The women are beautifull but disfigured with a kind of Antick dress they wearing cloaks like men It is cheap living in this town for one may hire a palace for a matter of 20 〈◊〉 a year and have provisions at very reasonable rates besides the air and water is very good the city being supplied with fountains of Excellent fresh water which Hambourg wants and good ground for cellerage there being cellars here fourty or fifty foot deep I had the curiosity to goe from Lubeck to see the Ancient city of Magdeburg but found it so ruined and decayed by the Swedish war that I had no encouragement to stay there I therefore hastened to Berlin the chiefe residence of the Elector of Brandenbourg at whose Court I mett with a very Ingenuous French Merchant who tould me that he and divers other Merchants were designed to have lived in England but were discouraged by a letter sent from London by a French man that was removeing from thence to Amsterdam for these following reason which I coppied out of his Letter First because the Reformed Religion is persecuted in England as it is in France the which I tould him was a great untruth for it is apparent that they have been all along graciously admitted and received into his Majesties Dominions without interruption allowed the free exercise of their owne forme of worship according to the Doctrine discipline of the Churches of France nor can they who converse with the French Ministers either in France or Holland be Ignorant that the chiefest part if not all those Ministers are willing to complye with the Church of England and it is Evident that most of the Dutch and French Protestants so called in Holland make use of Organs in their Churches A second thing was that both the bank of London and the Bankers Gouldsmiths were all broak the which I tould this Frenchman was not true altogether for there are many able Bankers whome I named as Alderman Fowles Alderman Hornbey Alderman Duncomb Alderman Founs Mr. Thomas Cook Mr. Rob Vyner Mr. Childe Mr. Endes Mr. Evans and others well known to the world by their solid dealling neyther was the Bank as he called the Chamber of London broak only it had been under the management of a bad Person whose designe was to bring it into disgrace besides there is the East-India Company an unquestionable securitie for those as have money to dispose of together with another undeniable securitie which is Land. Thirdly he saith that in England there is no Register and therefore many frauds in purchases morgages which begett teadious suites and renders both dangerous to trust Fourtly that if a man would purchase land he cannot being an Alien untill Naturalized Fiftly that in England there are so many plots and Confusions in Government that the Kingdome is hardly quiet twenty yeares together Sixtly that false wittnesses were so common in England and the crime of perjury so slightly punished that no man could be safe in life or Estate if he chanced to be in trouble Lastly he said that the English are so restless and quarrelesome that they not only foment and cherish Animosities amongst one another but are Every foot contriving and plotting against their lawfull soveraign and the Government By such surmises and insinuations as these the French and Germans are scared from trusting themselves and fortunes in England and therefore settle in Amsterdam Hamburg and other Cittyes where there are Banks and Registers This I say is one cause why there are now to be seene at Amsterdam such vast numbers of French and Germans who have much inriched that Citty and raised the rents of the houses 20 parcent and the silkeweavers grow also verie rich keeping so many Almes Children to doe their work and having all their labour without any charge only for the teaching them their trades which hath lessened the revenues of the French crown and will in tyme greately increase the number of the States subjects and advance ther publick Incomes To say the truth the inconstancy and wantonnesse of the English nation especially of late tymes when no other cause could be given for it but to much ease and plenty is not only wondered at but reflected upon by foreigners yet I am morally certaine that could the people of England be once againe united in love and affection as they are bound to be in duty and Interest and would they be as willing to contribute to their own hapines as heaven hath been kind and liberal in bestowing the meanes of it with a good and gratious Prince solicitous for preserveing the same to them could wee be so blest as wee have great reason to Expect wee may under the Auspicious reigne of him whose royall Virtues are dreaded by none either at home or a broad but such as are the disturbers of publick and lawfull Authoritie Having made this digression I return to Berlin It is a city lately enlarged with fair streets and palaces The Magistrates of the place are Lutherans which is the publick established Religion in all the Electors dominions though he himself and his Children be Calvinists He is lookt upon to be so true to that persuasion that he is reckoned the Protector of the Calvinists and indeed he sollicited the Emperour very hard for a toleration of the Protestants in Hungary His chaplains as most of the Lutheran ministers also endeavour to imitate the English in their way of preaching and his highness is so much taken with English divinity that he entertains divines for translating English books into the German tongue as the whole duty of man and severall others He has a large and Srately palace at Berlin and therein a copious library enriched with many manuscripts medalls and rarities of Antiquity He may compare with most Princes for handsome guards being all of them proper well bodied men and most part Officers who ride in his guards of horse As he is know'n in the world to be a valiant and warlick Prince so he maintains in pay an Army of 36000 men besides five or six thousand horsmen who in time of war are modelled into troopes with which body during the late war with Sweden his highness in Person beat the Swedes out of his Countrey Hee keeps his forces in strickt Discipline obliging all the Officers if Protestants on Sundays and holy days to march their severall Companies in order to Church but if a superiour Officer be of a contrary persuasion then the next in commission supplies