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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

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and cloaks in the night but if in the Jesuits Schools there be any rich Burgemasters sons who have parts they are sure to be snapt up and adopted into the societie Formerly before the matter was otherwise adjusted in the diet of Ratisbonne there have been designs of voteing Protestant Magistrats into the government again but so soon as the Jesuits come to discover who of the Magistrats were for that they immediately preferred their sons or daughters and made them chanons abbots or chanonesses and so diverted them by interest It 's pity to see a city so famous for traffike in former times now brought to so great a decay that were it not for the trade of Rhenish wine it would be utterly forsaken and left wholy to the Church men The continuall alarms the Magistrats have had by forreign designs upon their liberty and the jealousies fomented among themselfs as it is thought by the Agents and favourers of France and especially the Bishop of Strasbourg have for severall yeares kept them in continuall disquiet and necessitated them to raise great taxes which hath not a litle contributed to the impoverishing of the people especially the boars round about who tho the Countrey they live in be one of the most pleasant and fertile plains of Germany yet are so wretchedly poor that canvas cloaths wooden shoes and straw to sleep on in the same room with their beasts is the greatest worldly happiness that most of them can attain unto The Elector of Cologne is a venerable old man Bishop of four great bishopricks viz Cologne Liege Munster and Heldershime He divides his time betwixt his devotion and experimental studies being punctuall in saying of mass every morning and constant in his Elaboratory in the afternoon for he is much addicted to chymistry and leaves the administration of Government to his Cozen the Bishop of Strasbourg To speak of all the miracles of the three Kings of Cologne and the vast number of saints who were removed out of England and interred there would be but tedious and perhaps incredible to the reader aswell as wide of my designe I shall therefore proceed From Cologne I took water on the Rhine and advanced to the citie of Bon and so forward to Coblints the residence of the Elector of Trier over against this city on the other side of the Rhine stands that impregnable fort called Herminshine built on a high rocky hill as high again as Windforcastle and on the north side of it the River Mosel falls into the Rhine over which there is a Stately stone bridge This Prince governs his subjects as the other Spirituall Electors doe that is both by temporall and spirituall authority which in that Country is pretty absolute The chiefe trade of this Countrey is in wine corn wood and Iron The next Countrey I came to was that of the Elector of Mayence who is likewise both a secular and Ecclesiasticall Prince and governs his subjects accordingly He is reckoned to be wholely for the Interests of the French King who notwithstanding of that pretends a title to the citadel of Mayence As I was upon my Journey to Mayence by land I made a turn down the Rhin to visit the famous litle city of Backrack and some towns belonging to the Landgrave of Hessen but especially Backrack because Travellers say it much resembles Jerusalem in its scituation and manner of buildings The Burgemaster of this city told mee that the whole Country about Backrack does not yield above 200 fouders of wine a year And yet the Merchants of Dort by an art of multiplication which they have used some years furnish England with severall thousande of fouders Here I shall take the liberty to relate a strange story which I found recorded in this Countrey tho I know it to be mentioned in History There was a certain cruel and inhumane Bisshop of Mayence who in a year of great scarcity and famine when a great number of Poor people came to his gates begging for bread caused the Poor wretches men women and children to be put into a barn under pretext of relieving their necessities but so soon as they were got in caused the barn doors to be shut fire set to it and so burnt them all alive And whil'st the poor wretches cried and shreeked out for horrour and pain the Barbarous miscreant said to those that were about him harke how the Rats and mice doe crie But the just Judgement of God suffered not the fact to pass unpunished for not long after the cruel Bishop was so haunted with Rats and mice that all the guards he kept about him could not secure him from them neither at table nor in bed At length he resolved to flee for safetie into a tower that stood in the middle of the Rhine but the Rats pursued him got into his chamber and devoured him alive so that the Justice of the Almighty made him a prey to vermine who had inhumanely reckoned his fellow Christians to be such The tower which I saw to this day is called the Rats-tower and the story is upon record in the city of Mayence On my Journey from thence I came to the litle village of Hockom not far distant famous for our Hockomore wine of which though the place does not produce above 150 fouders a year yet the Ingenions Hollanders of Dort make some thousand fouders of it goe of in England and the Indies From Hockom I proceeded to Francfort a pleasant city upon the river of Maine called formerl●y Teutoburgum and Helenopolis and since Francfort becaus here the Franconians who came out of the Province of Franconia foarded over when they went upon their expedition into Gallia which they conquered and named it France and I thought it might very well deserve the name of petty-Petty-London because of its Priviledges and the humour of the citizens It is a Hansiatick and Imperiall town and Common-wealth the Magistrats being Lutherans which is the publick established Religion though the Cathedrall church belongs to the Roman Catholicks who also have severall monasteries there The citie is populous and frequented by all sorts of Merchants from most parts of Europe part of Asia also becaus of the two great faires that are yearely kept there Many Jews live in this city and the richest Merchants are Calvinists who are not suffered to have a Church in the town but half an houres journey out of it at a place called Bucknam where I have told seventy four Coaches at a time all belonging to Merchants of the city It was in ancient times much enriched by Charle le maigne and hath been since by the constitution of the Golden bull amongst other honours Priviledges its appointed to be the place of the Emperours Election where many of the ornaments belonging to that August ceremonie are to be seen It is strongly fortified having a stately stone bridge over the Maine that joynes it to Saxe-housen the quarter of the great master of the
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
of the Commonwealth They have also a Chamber in the East-Indie Companie as shal be more largely spoken to when we shal com to treat of the State of the said Companie From Delph you may by boat be brought to the Hague for 2 Stivers and an halfe Which is accounted the fairest Village in the world both for Pompous buildings and the largenes thereof Here the Princes of Orange hold their Residence as also the States General and the Councel of State Here you have the Courts of Justice Chancerie and other Courts of Law. Here you see that Great Hall in which many Hundreds of coulers are hung up in Trophie taken from the Emperor Spaniard and other Potentates with whom they have waged war. There Councel Chambers are admired by all that see them Many faire Libraries they have belonging to particular men The Princes Pallace is a most superb building And there are many costlie Gardins adjoyning to the Hague together with that to the Princes house in the Woad in which house are in a large Hall the most rare and costly Pictures of Europe there also are those magnificent and unparalled Gardins of the Heer Bentham of Amesland and others I might here speak of the splendor of the Prince of Orange his Court of his noble virtues and valour of the most virtuous and Beautiful Princesse his royal consort but I dare not least I should infinitely fal short of what ought to be and which others have alreadie don before me and therfore leaving the Hague I shal onely tel you that from thence you may for 7 Stivers have a boat to bring you to Leyden Leyden is a faire and great citie and the Universitie is verie famous beeing frequented by 1000 of Students from all parts as Hungarie Poland Germanie yea from the Ottomans Empire it self who pretend to be grecians besides the English Scots and Irish who this years were numbred to be above 80. The most remarkable things here to be seen I shal summarilie set down As the place called the Bergh formerly a Castle belonging to the Prince of Liege in Flanders The Stathowse the Vniversitie Schooles specially that of the Anatomie which excels all the Anatomie Schooles in the world a Book of the rarities whereof you may have for 6 Stivers their Physick Garden and the Professors Closet are al ravishing in rare Curiosities But as to their Colledges they are but two and verie small not to be compared with the smallest Hals in Oxford neither have they any endowments their maintenance being onely from the charitable collections of the Ministers of Holland neyther are any Students to remain longer there then til they attain the degree of Batchelers of Art One of the Curators beeing demaunded by me why so rich a Commonwealth as Holland is did not build and endow Colledges after the manner of Oxford and Cambridge answered they had not so many able and publick spirited men as are in England and to deal plainly with you said he had we such Colledges our Burgemasters and Magistrates would fil them with their own and their friends sons who by leading a lazie and idle life would never becom capable to serve the Common-wealth and therefore he judged it much better to put them to Pension in Burgers howses leaveing them to the care of the Professors who are verie diligent in keeping the Students at their exercises both at Publick lectures and in their private howses also where they cause them Punctually at their appointed houres to come to their examinations and lectures besides those they have in Publick Their churches are rare so are the walks round the citie and the fortifications verie pleasing to behold Here you have the River Rhine running through the citie and falling into it from Catwyckop Zee Leyden is verie famous in historie for the long Siege it held out against the Spaniard From hence for twelve stivers and an half you are brought to Harlem by water being twelve English miles Harlem is famous in that Costor one of their Burgers first invented the Art of Printing This Costor beeing suspected to be a Conjurer was fain to flee from Harlem to Cologne in Germany and there Perfected his Invention having in Harlem onely found out the way of printing on one side of the Paper The first book he ever printed is kept in the Stathouse for those that are curious to see it Here is one of the fairest and largest Churches of the 17 Provinces in the wals whereof there remain to this day sticking canon Bullets shot by the Spaniards during the Siege thereof In this Church are three Organs as also the model of the three Ships that sayled from Harlem to Damiater seasing the Castle in which the Earl of Holland was kept prisoner and brought him away to Holland In the Tower of this Church hang two silver be●s which they also brought from thence and now ring them everie night at nine a clock Harlem is renowned for making the finest linnen cloth Tyfinies Dammasks and silk Stufs also Ribands and Tapes They have Mils by which they can weave fortie and 50 Pieces at a time they make the finest white thread and Tapes for lace in the whole world there Bleacheries surpas al other whatsoever their waters whitening cloath better then any in the seventeen Provinces They have a most pleasant grove like a little Wood divided into Walks where on Sondays and holly dayes the Citisens of Amsterdam and other places come to take their pleasure Harlem is the second citie of Holland and sends in Deputies unto all the Colledges of the Gouvernment From hence you have a passage by boat to Amsterdam for six stivers but when you are come half way you must step out of one boat to goe into another where you see a Stately Pallace where the Lords called Dykgraves sit Everie one of these Lords hath his Apartment when he coms for the concerns of the Sea-dykes and bancks here are also 2 large Sluces having gates to let in or out water from the Harlemmer Meer Near this place about Ano 1672 a part of the Seabanck was broken by a strong Northwest wind drowning all the land betwixt Amsterdam and Harlem which cost an incredible vast sum to have it repaired They sunck in this breach 400 smal vessels fild with earth and stones for a foundation to rebuild the wel upon and by unspeakable industrie and charges at last repaired the Banck I come now to speak of Amsterdam which having bin the place of my abode for several years I shal give a more large and punctual account thereof then I doe of other places It is esteemed by Intelligent men the second citie in the world for trade and not inferiour to any in wealth Certainly Amsterdam is one of the beautifullest cities in the world their buildings are large their streets for the most part pleasantly planted with trees paved so neatly as is to be found no where els in any other Countrie save in some
Roade from whence they were constrained by the season of the yeare to retire home and such were the sudden great showers of raine that the Bisshop of Munster was forced in disorder to raise his siege at Groeningen and the French to quit Gorcom I could ad many more observations of the Providences of God to these people as the preserveing the Prince of Orange from the many treacherous designes contrived against him from his Cradel but Moses must be preserved to goe in and out before his people certainely never young Prince Indured so many fatigues as did his Highnes in his tender yeares of which I was an eye witnes and had his Highnes had the yeares and Experience and such a good disciplinde Armie as now he hath in the yeare 1671 when the French Entered the Country his Highnes had given them as good a welcome as he did at Bergen I will say no more of this subject only this that the peace at Nimwegen was also a very wonderful thing for that not above 8 dayes before the peace was signed most of the Plenipotentiaries did believe the war would have continued another yeare first because the King of Denmark and Duke of Brandenburg prospered Exceedingly against Sweedland and totally refused the propositions of France and secondly because the French King writ such Bitter letters against the States Generall yet 8 dayes after drest a letter unto the States in which he calles them his good friends and old Allyes offering them not only Mastricht but every foot of ground they could lay claime to in the world also giveing them new Termes and Conditions as to their priviledges in France by way of Trade Neither can I forget how speedilie and as strangly the mighty French King did quit his Conquered Townes after the Valiant Prince of Orange took Naerden which was the first step to the Frenchs ruine in the States Dominions I come now according to promess in the beginning of this book to give the reader some Remarkes I made in other Countries where I have been during my sixteen years travels To give a full account of all that might be observed in so many Countries is not a taske for one man nor a subject for so small a book I shall onely therefore briefely take notice of some remarkable matters which may in some measure satisfie the curiositie of my Country men who have not been in the said places and convince if possible all of them that no Countrey that ever I was in afords so great conveniencies for the generalitie of people to live in as the Kingdome of England doth Though I have twice made the grand tour of Germany Hungary Italy and France and after my return back to England travelled a third time through Holland as for as Strasbourg and so back by Francfort to Denmark and Sweden yet the reader is not to expect I should follow a Geographicall method and order in speaking of the places I have been in that is to be lookt for in the map and not in travels but onely that I mention places as I found them on my rode according as busines or curiositie led mee to travel The first considerable place I then met with after I was out of the dominions of the States General was Cleave the capital citie of the Province so called a fair and lovely citie standing upon the Rhine and the rivers Wall and Le●k This Province much resembles England in rich soyl and pleasantness of its rivers The inhabitants of the Countrey would have mee beleeve that they were originally descended of those Saxons who made a descent in to England and conquered it and to convince the truth of this they shew'd mee a cloyster standing on a hill called Eltham from which they say our Eltham in Kent had its name I was made to observe also two places standing upon the Rhine neare Emmerick called Doadford and Gron●wich which according to them gave the names to Dedford and Greenwich in England but many such analogies and similitudes of names are to be found in other places of Germany but especially in uper Saxony and Denmark The greatest part of this Province of Cleave and part of the duchy's of Julieres and Berg and of the Provinces of Marke and Ravensbourg belongs to the Elector of Brandenbourg the rest belonging to the Duke of Newbourg now Elector Palatine and the Elector of Cologne The inhabitants are partly Roman Catholicks partly Lutherans and partly Calvinists who all live promiscuously and peaceably together both in city and Countrey The citie of Cleave is the out most limit of the territories of the Elector of Brandenbourg on this side of Germany from whence his Electorall Highness can travel two hundred dutch miles out right in his own Dominions and never sleep out of his own Countrey but one night in the territories of the Bishop of Osnabrug From Cleave I went to a small town called Rhinberg but a very strong fortification belonging to the Elector of Cologne which dies at two miles distance from the citie of Wesel that belongs to the Elector of Brandenbourg Through Disseldorpe scituated on the Rhine and the Residence of the duke of Newbourg I went next to Cologne a very large city called by the Romans Colonia Agrippina and the French Rome d'Allemagne Cologne is an Imperial citie and a Republick though for some things it does Homage to the Elector of that name and receives an oath from him It is much decayed within these hundred years having been much priest ridden a misfortune that hath undone many other great cities The Jesuits have had so great influence upon the Magistrats that they prevailed with them to banish all Protestants who removed to Hambourg and Amsterdam so that Cologne is become so dispeopled that the houses dayly fall to ruine for want of inhabitants and a great deal of corn and wine now grows within the walls upon ground where houses formerly stood I dare be bold to affirm that there is twice the number of inhabitants in the parish of St. Martins in the fields then there is in Cologne and yet it contains as many parish churches monasteries and chappels as there are days in the year The streets are very large and so are the houses also in many of which one may drive a Coach or waggon into the first room from the streets but the streets are so thin of people that one may pass some of them and not meet ten men or women unless it be Church men or Religious sisters The most considerable inhabitants of the citie are Protestant Merchants tho but few in number and they not allowed a Church neither but a place called Woullin a mile without the citie the rest of the inhabitants who are lay men are miserably poor There are no less than 3000 Students in Cologne taught by the Jesuits gratis who have the priviledge to beg in musicall notes in the day time and take to them selves the liberty of borrowing hats
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