Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n great_a time_n year_n 7,732 5 4.6212 4 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
A41836 A brief narrative and deduction of the several remarkable cases of Sir William Courten, and Sir Paul Pyndar, Knights, and William Courten late of London Esquire, deceased their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, together with their surviving partners and adventurers with them to the East-Indies, China and Japan, and divers other parts of Asia, Europe, Africa and America : faithfully represented to both houses of Parliament. Graves, Edward. 1679 (1679) Wing G1605; ESTC R39444 18,876 18

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Spoils and depradations Maurice Thompson of London Merchant and others upon a private Account set forth several Ships for Trading Voyages to the East Indies upon the same Foundations laid by Sir William Courten The said Thompson having first gotten the Books and Papers of Instructions for that Trade from the Lady Katharine Courten and made Returns of Ten for one upon those Trading Voyages as the said Thompson himself Confessed before Credible Witnesses yet living Afterwards the Usurper Cromwell having setled the East-India Company by a New and Large Charter of Priviledges conformable to Sir William Courtens Grant from the King Which Charter was renewed to the East-India Company since his Majesties Restauration Three of the Companies Ships called the Postillion the Frederick and the Francis and Iohn upon the like Trading Voyages being stopt in their passage in the East India by the Officers and Men of War belonging to the Dutch East-India Company and their Voyage spoiled Upon their Complaint to Cromwell he immediately required by his Embassador at the Hague satisfaction and reparation to be made for the said Loss and Damages sustained which the East-India Company of the Netherlands were enjoyned by the States General upon his Demand forthwith to satisfy and pay at the Price Currant upon a computation of Returns as if they had made their Voyages home from those Parts Farther Prosecutions since the 29th of May 1660. Upon the Kings most Happy Restauration the Complaynants made fresh Applications to his Majesty in Council for Satisfaction of the said Spoils and Damages of the Bona Esperanza and Henry Bona Adventura and after sixteen Months debate between the Dutch Embassadors in England and the Kings Commissioners appointed to Treat with them at White-Hall it was agreed in the Treaty of Peace concluded at Westminster the 14 th of Septemb. 1662. That the said spoils and Damages of the Bona Esperanza and Henry Bona Adventura should be reserved from the general Abolition and extinguishment of all Offences Injuries Losses and Damages whatsoever for satisfaction and reparation to be-composed in an amicable way In pursuance whereof two several Memorials were given in at the Hague to the States General by Sir George Downing Envoy Extraordinary from his Majesty yet nothing could be obtained but impertinent Offers of Commencing Suits at Law against Iacob Pergens and Peter Boudaen at that time Bayl for the said Pergens who had defrauded the Dutch East India Company of 85000 Gilders upon false pretences of Assignments from William Courten of his Interest and Share in the said Ships which he had formerly granted to Sir Paul Pyndar the said East-India Company having intimation thereof After all which fruitless applications and endeavours at a great expence Dr. Exton Judge of the High Court of Admiralty in England by the Kings Command upon the proofs made before him reported the Damages to amount to 151612 l. Then upon the Humble Petition of Francis late Earl of Shrewsbury Sir Iohn Ayton Knight Charles Whitacre and others of the Complaynants on the behalf of themselves and the rest His Majesty with the Advice of the Lords of his Privy Council was gratiously pleased to grant Letters of Reprizal for the said Summ of 151612 l. under the great Seal of England in due form of Law grounded upon several Acts of Parliament and Statutes of this Realm wherein every Subject of England hath an Interest unto Sir Edmund Turner Knight and George Carew Esq their Executors Administrators and Assigns for the Use and Benefit of your Complaynants to continue in full force and effect until the summ of 151612 l. should be recovered with damages or the matter composed between the East-India Company of the Netherlands and your Complaynants concerning whom his Majesty hath declared in his Grant That he was obliged in Justice and Honor to see them satisfyed and repayed And that no Treaty whatsoever between his Majesty and the said States should obstruct the Recovery or Payment thereof by force or a fair agreement the said 151612 l being the only Debt liquidated ratified and confirmed judicially to be satisfyed as is more at large recited in the Letters Patents bearing Date at Westminster the 19 th day of May in the Seventeenth Year of the Reign of King Charles the Second and Inrolled in the High Court of Chancery Actions at Law depending in Holland and Zealand against Iacob Pergens and the Executors of Peter Boudaen and David Goubard at the Suits of the Executors Administrators and Assigns of Sir William Courten Sir Paul Pyndar and William Courten Esq An Action upon the Accompts concerning the Linnen Trade against the Sons and Daughters of Peter Boudaen for 122000 l. An Attachment in the Bank for 12000 Gilders of David Goubards An Action against Jacob Pergens and the Heirs of Sir Jacob Gats for 3000 l. lent by Sir William Courten upon Bond. An Action against the said Jacob Pergens for 5500 l. sterling upon his Covenant for Moneys received in Trust for William Courten Esq Three several Actions against the Heyres and Executors of Peter Boudaen for 4000 l. Legacies given to Sir William Courten James Boeve and William Courten Esq by Sir Peter Courten and John Money These Actions came not under any Consideration whatsoever upon Publick Treaties neither can they fall under the construction of Offences Injuries Damages and Losses arising by Spoils and Depredations upon the Sea for which another proper Remedy is Granted Nevertheless The War having continued between the King and the States General for the space of two years and a half A Treaty was concluded at Breda on the 21 of Iuly 1667. Old Style mentioning that all Offences Injuries Damages and Losses should be extinguished without any notice taken in the said Articles of any compensation to be made to the Complaynants that lay under all the Circumstances aforesaid Iustice denyed in Holland and Zealand IN the Third place your Complaynants do most humbly represent the Injustice done them by the States of Holland and Zealand as followeth viz. Sir William Courten of London Merchant Sir Peter Courten of Middleburgh in Zealand Merchant and Iohn Moncy of London Merchant entred into Partnership in Trade with a Joynt Stock in the year 1606 the moiety of the said Stock belonging to Sir William Courten and to each of the other a fourth part with which they Traded to Italy Spain Portugal the Coast of Barbary and other parts of the World But chiefly carried on a great Stock in the Linnen Trade both from Holland and Flanders during their Lives Besides they yearly employed four or five Ships fitted out of Zealand for Greenland with Biscayners for their Harponeers in the Whale Fishing This Copartnership continued thirty years wherein they made Returns of Two Hundred Thousand pounds Sterling per Annum at least But the Accompts were not liquidated in Fourteen years before the Death of Sir William Courten who took up of your Complaynants divers great Sums of Money upon Exchange and Obligations
on the accompt of their Copartnership That Sir Peter Courten at the time of his Death stood indebted to the General Stock 129426 l. 00 s. 10 d. as by the Ballance of the Books of Accompts kept in London appears which rests in the hands of Peter Boudaen and his Sons Executors of Sir Peter Courten That the Executors of Sir Peter Courten and Iohn Moncy living in Middleburgh aforesaid refused upon the Death of Sir William Courten to come to any Accompt for the said 129426 l. 0 s. 10 d. in their hands whereupon a Suite was commenced against them by Mr Iames Boeve in Middleburgh the said Boeve having been formerly a Servant and Book-keeper to Iohn Moncy who had a Procuration for that purpose and advanced very far in the prosecution thereof until the Boudaens caused the said Boeve to be Arrested upon a great feigned Action and kept him several years in Prison on purpose to obstruct him in carrying on the Action of Accompt Commenced against them and depending in the ordinary Courts of Judicature in Holland and Zealand And to avoid the said Action do now insist That by the general Words of the Articles of the Treaty at Breda viz. all Offences Injuries Losses and Damages the Executors of Sir Peter Courten Iohn Moncy Peter Boudaen and Iacob Pergens are discharged and released of all Actions relating to Accompts Obligations particular Contracts or Covenants whatsoever with English men upon which any Suite was depending before the said Treaty at Breda And that the States of Holland having made that Construction upon the said Articles and consequently interdicted their Courts of Judicature from doing Justice to your Complaynants they hold themselves discharged accordingly Which is a President of that dangerous Consequence against all Civil Society and Commerce that no English man can be safe in his Property and Estate that Trade with the Hollanders if such forced interpretations shall take effect Which are left to the great Wisdom and apprehension of this Parliament to report their Opinion with an effectual recommendation thereof to the King Further Prosecutions concerning the Bona Esperanza c. That new Differences arising betwen the King of England and the States General in the Year 1671. another War was Proclaimed against them in London and about the same time the French King also denounced War against the said States your Complaynants then made farther applications to the King and Council at Whitehall for relief in the Premisses which were referred to a Select Committee of the Lords who fully represented the said Spoils Debts and Damages to his Majesty with their Opinion That the States not performing their Covenants and Agreements with the King the Obligations of all past Treaties were Cancelled and of no force and that it was Just and Seasonable for his Majesty to insist upon satisfaction and reparation for the Complaynants as freely as if no such Treaties had ever been made as by their Report under their Hands Dated the 29 of June 1672 appeares And which will be a continual claim from one Generation to another until an actual Satisfaction and Reparation be made to the persons interessed and injured That in pursuance thereof several Letters from the King and Orders from the Council Board with special Instructions from the Principal Secretaries of State were sent to the Lords Ambassadors and Plenipotentiaries from his Majesty during the Treaties both at Utrecht and Cologne to insist upon Satisfaction and Reparations for your Complaynants His Majesty having declared under His Sign Manual that His Care in this Singular Case should be exemplarily manifested in protecting his Subjects in their Just Rights as well as to assist them in Recovery thereof The said States General and their Subjects then lying under a necessity of doing Justice the last War having continued for the space of two years in Conjunction with France The Queen Regent of Spain interposed on the behalf of the States General with offers to the King for a separate Peace excluding France promising to secure the payment of eight Hundred Thousand Pattacones to his Majesty which was proposed by the Spanish Ambassador the Marquess del Frenzo who had a special Procuration from the States General to treat upon Articles ready framed and sent to him from the Hague who found Friends in Parliament to promote that Treaty by Addresses to the King although at the same time the Plenipotentiaries at Cologne were Treating upon better Conditions for your Complaynants Yet a sudden Peace was concluded at White Hall and the Articles Signed and Sealed the 9 of February 1674. New Stile by H. Finch C S. Latimer Ormond Arlington and H. Coventry Commissioners from the King of Great Britain and Al Marquess del Frenso Commissioner for the States General wherein the Seventh Article was worded as follows Quod Tractatus Bredae conclusus Anno Domini 1667 sicut etiam omnes alij praecedentes tractatus per illum tractatum confirmari renoventur maneant in plena vi ac vigori in quantum praesenti tractatus nullatenus contradicunt The Breda Treaty which the Hollanders style their Glorious Peace being attended with those Horrid Circumstances after the expence of five Millions and half of pounds Sterling in those three dreadful years of Plague Fire and War The very nomination of Breda sounds doleful in all English mens ears that suffered under the Conduct of those persons who drived on their own private Ends and Advantages before the Honor and Interest of the King and Kingdom and still the Politick States-men would eternize the Glory of their Nation by recording the Infamy of others In their own Words That the Treaty of Breda made in the year 1667 as all other former Treaties Confirmed by the said Treaty be renewed and remain in their full force and vigour so far forth as they contradict nothing in this present Treaty The Complaynants being surprised at the last Treaty finding no other provision made but the Pattacones concerning their reparation notwithstanding the report aforesaid so lately made to his Majesty by a Committee of the Lords of his Council viz. that all Obligations of past Treaties being Cancelled it was most Iust and Honorable for his Majesty to insist upon satisfaction of the Debt and Damages ascertained under the great Seal of England as aforesaid And there being a rumor spread abroad in the Hague and Amsterdam That the Lord Latimer Lord High Treasurer of England and another Minister of State had perswaded the King to Assign three parts of those Pattacones to the Prince of Orange for an Old Debt due to Prince Henery Fredrick his Grandfather from King Charles the First and the remain for other Services after all the Blood and Treasure spent upon account of the Subjects of England which ought to be strictly inquired after Iure naturae aequam est neminem cum alterius detrimento injuria fieri locupletiorem Then the Complaynants for preservation of their Right caused a Protest to be made