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A06786 Consuetudo, vel lex mercatoria, or The ancient law-merchant Diuided into three parts: according to the essentiall parts of trafficke. Necessarie for all statesmen, iudges, magistrates, temporall and ciuile lawyers, mint-men, merchants, marriners, and all others negotiating in all places of the world. By Gerard Malynes merchant. Malynes, Gerard, fl. 1586-1641. 1622 (1622) STC 17222; ESTC S114044 480,269 516

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the Sea is adioyning and in proprietie to bee esteemed accordingly taking their names of the Countries and Kingdomes adiacent or of their scituation as Mare Britannicum Mare Germanicum Mare Hibernicum and for scituation Mare Mediterraneum obserued by Cosmographers Historiographers and Mathematicians this is performed with the helpe of the Compasse counting of courses soundings colour of the grauell or sands and other wayes to designe Finitum ab ' i●finito By the Ciuile Law so farre as is expedient for the certaine reach and bounds of Seas properly apppertaining to any Prince or people wherein the Doctors of the Ciuile Law haue recorded excellent obseruations By the Law of Nation and Customes Baldus saith Vidimus de iure gentium in Mare esse Regna distincta sicut in terra Auda Ad legem 1. de ter diuisione In §. nullius in tratt de i●sula Bartolas doth in his opinion allow for princes and people at the sea-side Centum mitliaria which is one hundreth leagues of sea from their coast if they extend their protection so farre called by them Districtus maris territorium which is most plaine in those seas where the Isles of Garnesey and Iarnesey are so sensible and visible to the realme of England Visible Markes of Dominion or where there are such rockes or eminent marks as the Washes at the West seas thereof to which purpose Paulus a renowmed Ciuilian saieth That it is not needfull for him who would possesse himselfe of any land to go about and tread ouer the same but it is sufficient to enter in vpon any part thereof with a mind to possesse all the rest thereof euen to the due marches to be made apparant by the instruments of Geometricians And the like may be designed vpon the seas notwithstanding the soliditie of the one and the continuall flowing too and fro of the other This distinction of dominion hauing continued so many hundreth yeares needeth not to be corroborated with other proofe and arguments yet let vs note obiter That if the same were not distinguished as aforesaid Cases of ciuile Law or Admiraltie one borne vpon the seas should haue no countrie or nation to appeale vnto and a man dying intestate vpon the seas should minister occasion of question to know who should administer his goods and making of a Will how the same should be proued and executed by law without approbation of some Court or Iurisdiction whereas we find many Admiralls of the seas and their seuerall iurisdictions vpon the seas as deputies to their Princes or States who are alwaies absolute Commanders in their precincts according to the treaties and contracts made betweene Princes which are in the nature of lawes and inseperable of the said Princes right on the land concerning the possession of their Kingdomes or Common-weales as the fundamentall cause of their dominion wherein discontinuance of any part of their right cannot be pleaded against them The Kings of England neuerthelesse haue beene prouident and carefull herein for Historiographers haue recorded That King Edgar one of the Saxon Kings long before the Conquest made a suruay yearely of the foure great seas Mathew of Westm. and stiled himselfe lord thereof euen vntill Norway Ranulph Cestriensis and his progresse was most towards the North. It is also affirmed Anno 973. That the said King Edgar caused an inscription to be made vpon his Tombe for a monument calling himselfe Dominus quatuor Marea and as Papinian the Iurisconsult saieth In finalibus questionibus vete ra monumenta sequenda sunt Mare Britanicum But this for the dominion of the Kings of England ouer their seas Mare Hibernicum is not needfull For afterwards William Duke of Normandie after he had subdu●d the realme of England by conquest Mare Germanicum caused himselfe not onely to be proclaimed King Mare Deucalidon but also that all the goods of the subiects were his and so caused the land to be diuided and yet was contented to change the title of a Monarchie by conquest into a Monarchie Royall and was also Lord of the said foure seas Io Bodinus de Resp. by the former assumpsit which had then continued 200 yeares and his progresse by sea was most Westward For when Princes or Kings do stile themselues by proclamation then the continuance thereof without opposition of other princes is holden and obserued as inuiolable and permanent Now King Henrie the second succeeding William the Conqueror Graftons Chronicle within one hundreth yeares did ioine Ireland to the crowne of England and did reduce Normandie and other places in France to the crowne taking as it were a new possession of the said seas and Henrie the first euerie yeare or within three yeares at the furthest crossed ouer into Normandie hauing taken Robert Duke of Normandie prisoner In the time of King Edward the third Chro. Malmesbu●e there was a disputation held with France concerning the fishing of the seas about Brittaine in which it was proued to belong to England Ioh. Hayward and thereupon Fraunce disclaimed therein By ancient records and Treaties c. as appeareth by the said King Edward the third his Proclamation yet extant Which arguments and contracts are as a law effectuall And here I must remember the singular care which the right reuerend father in God doctor Abbot now Archbishop of Canturburie A rare booke remoining with the Archbishop of Canturburie and Metropolitane of England hath had in procuring at his great charges for the good of our posteritie an excellent great Volume or Manuscript which was heretofore taken at Calice in France when the Spaniards tooke the same Anno 1596 and caried to Bruxels in the Low-countries whereof I haue had the perusall and made an Abstract of the Chapters of the same viz. The Treatie of Peace betweene Edward the third king of England and Iohn king of France for themselues and their eldest sonnes namely Edward the Blacke Prince of Wales and Charles Duke of Normandie Regent the French King his father being prisoner to the said King Edward which Treatie was made the eight of May 1360 in Britanie neere Chartres and confirmed at Calice whereupon sixteene Hostages were giuen to the King of England by the French King who was to come thither in person and to pay three millions of crownes for his ransome of two crownes to bee reckoned for an English noble called in King Henrie the eight his time Angell noble being some 750000 〈◊〉 sterling The ransome o' King Iohn of France The ship whereof vpon the one side did signifie the dominion of the seas whereunto old Chaucer the Poet did allude in Henrie the fifth his time This money was to be paied to weet six hundreth thousand crownes at Calice within 4 months after King Iohns arriuall there more foure hundreth thousand crownes within the yeare and so much yearely vntill the full paiment made
a summe of money of the owners of a ship in consideration that he fraighteth the said ship for a voyage promising to repay the said money at the returne of the said voyage if the said Factor haue fraighted this ship for another mans account this Merchant is to haue the benefit of this money during the time and if the Factor conceale the same he is to repaire the damage thereof which is to be considered both for the interest and aduenture of the seas for the said owners beare the same and it is supposed that the Merchant would haue assured so much the lesse or by imploying that money towards the lading of the ship he should disburse to much money lesse to make the said voyage and it may be thought that in regard of that money the fraight is made the greater whereof the said owners of the ship haue had a consideration by disbursing the same Assurance If a Factor be required to make assurance for a Merchant vpon a ship or goods laden for a certaine voyage and haue moneys in his hands to pay for the Premio or the price of assurance and this Factor doth neglect the same and giueth no notice of it to the Merchant who might haue made assurance in another place and the said ship or goods do perish at the seas this Factor is to answere the damage vnlesse he can giue some sufficient reason for the non-performance of the said order or Commission Composition made without order If a Factor hauing made assurance vpon goods laden which afterwards are taken by the enemie maketh any composition with the assurers for the same without order or Commission for it he is to answere the whole assurance to the Merchant A Merchant caused a ship to be fraighted and laden with commodities for Constantinople by a Factor of London himselfe dwelling at Antuerpe and being a subiect to the king of Spaine in the late warres caused 2000 ll to be assured at London vpon the said goods the ship and goods was taken by the Gallies of Sicilia and brought to Palermo where it was proued that the goods did appertaine to the King of Spaine his subiects but that there was 2000 ll assured at London by English Merchants their enemies in those daies pretending thereupon to take the said goods for forfeited or so much of them as should amount to the summe so assured Hereupon the Assurers hauing intimation from the Factor of it desired to make some composition to auoid that danger whereby the goods also might bee sooner cleered and the possession obtained for the owner and proprietarie thereof which was the Merchant of Antuerp wherein expedition was required The Factor in regard of the said expedition did not stay to receiue an answere from the Merchant what hee should doe but maketh a composition with the assurors for 60 pound for the hundreth pound to be payed instantly The goods were afterwards all recouered whereof so much as had beene assured was formerly relinquished to the assurors for the Merchant would not condescend to make any composition with the assurors So that the Factor did beare the aduenture to lose 2000 ll for some 1200 ll which hee had receiued if the goods had not beene recouered and therefore the said Factor tooke to himselfe the benefit of this composition by the aduice of the experienced Merchants If a Factor by errour of account doe wrong vnto a Merchant Accounts hee is to amend and to make good the same not onely for the principall but also with the interest for the time So on the contrarie if a Factor for his owne wrong haue forgotten to charge the Merchants account with some parcells payed out for him or made ouer by exchange the Merchant is to answere for it with interest for the time In these precedent obseruations are comprised all other cases of differences which may happen betweene Factors and Merchants CAHP. XVII Of the beginning of Sea Lawes HAuing in the former Chapters methodically intreated as also in this hitherto of the matters therein intended neuerthelesse according to the Contents of them the matter being of seuerall natures runneth promiscuously but in the end will performe the worke For as the roundnesse of the Globe of the world is compounded of the Waters and the Earth So this worke of the Law-merchant cannot be compleat without the Sea Lawes so called Lawes because they are written and knowne for without Nauigation Commerce is of small moment so that the Land affaires shall be intermixed with Sea-faring matters accordingly Some doe attribute the first making of Sea Lawes to the Pheniciaus and Carthaginians because Plinie doth ascribe the Art of Sayling vnto them But by the most ancient Records the Beginning must be from the inhabitants of the Island of Rhodes Rhodian Law scituated within the Mediterranean Sea who were most famous for shipping and sayling as Strabo hath written and surpassing all Nations in knowledge of equitie in Maritime causes and the Mediterranean Sea was for aboue one thousand yeares onely ruled by their Law called the Rhodian Law although augmented with some additions of the Romanes At last as some haue recorded when all sorts of Lawes by the euersion and lacerating of the Romane Empire were in a manner buried the Rulers of Rome in the yeare 1075 made new Sea Lawes and Statutes and so did euery chiefe Seafaring Towne vpon the said Mediterranean Coast adding thereunto other ordinances So did they of Marseilles in the yeare 1162 Genoa in the yeare 1186 they of Peloponessus called Morea in the yeare 1200 the Venetians in the yeare 1262 Constantine 1270 Iames King of Arragon the said yeare Peter King of Arragon 1340 and they of Barselona 1434 Which Lawes are collected and extant vntill this day But on the great Ocean Seas The Law of Oleron the first Lawes were made by the inhabitants of the Island of Oleron scituate on the Sea-coast of France neere Saint Martin de Rea against the Riuer of Charante which was called Le Roll d' Oleron by which the controuersies on that Coast were determined and the said Lawes were afterwards dispersed and brought in vse in England and the Low Countries whereupon diuers Statutes both in England and Scotland haue been enacted for Sea-faring businesse and in like manner diuers ordinances in the Low Countries especially since their fishing trade began Edward the third King of England caused with the aduice of diuers men of knowledge and experience in Maritime causes diuers Articles to be set downe Admiraltie Court in France and these were enrolled and obeyed for the gouernement of the Admirall Court and the French King Iohn made his Contracts with King Edward accordingly concerning the fishing trade as by the Records extant in the Tower of London where I haue seene them may appeare Francis the French King and Henrie the third of France haue made some Statute Lawes concerning the Courts of Admiraltie but the substance of all
haue beene contented since Our comming to the Crowne to tollerate an indifferent and promiscuous kind of libertie to all Our friends whatsoeuer to fish vpon Our Streames and vpon any of Our Coasts of Great Brittaine Ireland and other adiac●●t Islands so farre forth as the permission or vse thereof might not redound to the impeachment of Our Prerogatiue Royall nor to the hurt and damage of Our louing Subiects whose preseruation and flourishing estate We hold Our selues principally bound to aduance before all worldly respects so finding that Our coniuence therein hath not onely giuen occasion of ouer great encroachments vpon Our Regalities or rather questioning of Our right but hath been a meanes of much daily wrongs to Our own people that exercise the trade of fishing as either by the multitude of strangers which doe preoccupie those places or by the iniuries which they receiue most commonly at their hands Our Subiects are constrained to abandon their fishing or at the least become so discouraged in the same as they hold it better for them to betake themselues to some other course of liuing Whereby not onely diuers of Our Coasts Townes are much decayed but the number of Marriners daily diminished which is a matter of great consequence to Our estate considering how much the strength thereof consisteth in the power of Shipping and the vse of Nauigation Wee haue thought it now both iust and necessarie in respect that Wee are now by Gods fauour lineally and lawfully possessed as well of the Island of Great Brittaine as of Ireland and the rest of the Isles adiacent to bethinke Our selues of good and lawfull meanes to preuent those inconueniences and many others depending vpon the same In the consideration whereof as Wee are desirous that the world may take notice that Wee haue no intention to deny Our neighbours and allies those fruits and benefits of peace and friendship which may be iustly expected at Our hands in honour and reason or are affoorded by other Princes mutually in the point of Commerce and Exchange of those things which may not prooue preiudiciall to them So because some such conuenient order may be taken in this matter as may sufficiently prouide for all these important considerations which doe depend thereupon Wee haue resolued first to giue notice to all the world That Our expresse pleasure is that from the beginning of the moneth of August next comming no person of what Nation or qualitie soeuer being not Our naturall borne Subiect be permitted to fish vpon any of Our Coasts and Seas of Great Brittaine Ireland and the rest of the Isles adiacent where most vsually heretofore any fishing hath beene vntill they haue orderly demanded and obtained licences from Vs or such Our Commissioners as Wee haue authorised in that behalfe viz. at London for Our Realmes of England and Ireland and at Edenborough for Our Realme of Scotland Which licences Our intention is shall be yearely demanded for so many Vessells and Ships and the Tunnage thereof as shall intend to fish for that whole yeare or any part thereof vpon any of Our Coasts and Seas as aforesaid vpon paine of such chastisement as shall be fit to be inflicted vpon such wilfull offenders Giuen at our Palace of Westminster the sixth of May in the seuenth yeare of Our Raigne of Great Brittaine France and Ireland Anno Dom. 1609. By this Proclamation is his Maiesties Right and Dominion of the Seas expressed in two words by Lineall and Lawfull possession of an hereditarie Kingdome or Kingdomes whereunto those Seas are ioyned and appertaining It is not a Dominion obtained by an electiue Kingdome as Poland Hungarie and others neither is it had by any first discouerie wherein the Pope must be a mediatour as Alexander the sixth was between the King of Castile and Portugal vpon the discouery of the East and West-Indies by drawing a line vpon the Globe from the Island of the Canaries to make the diuision betweene them Neither is it like to the Whale fishing in Greeneland where some vpon their discouerie tooke neither possession much lesse had any occupation which maketh the stronger right Neither is it by gift or purchase as some Italian Princes in the Mediterranean Seas which doe neuerthelesse inioy both freedome and benefit thereby but it is vndoubted and indisputable as aforesaid To conclude this Argument The best mark of distinct dominions vpon the Seas the distinct dominion of a bordering Prince vpon the Seas is best seene by the Tribute or Taxe which hee taketh vpon fishing ships whereof we haue many presidents In Russia many leagues from the Maine Fishermen doe pay great taxes to the Emperour of Russia and in most places none but his subiects are permitted to fish and the Hollanders doe giue him the tenth fish The King of Denmarke taketh great tribute both at Wardhouse and the Sound The Kings of Sweathen haue done the like which is now continued by the King of Denmarke for Norway The Duke of Medina Sidonia taketh for Tunyne King Edward the third of England tooke six pence for euery Tun in his time which by inhauncing of the money is now 18 pence All the bordering Princes of Italy doe take tribute of the fish taken within the Mediterranean Seas for their seuerall Territories In Lappia Fishermen doe pay monyes in the Sound for passage to fetch it ouer and aboue the tenth fish The Earle of Orkney taketh the tenth fish for the Isles of Orcades vnder his iurisdiction as the Fishermen doe to the Lords of the Manors in the West parts of England for Pilchards Hake and Conger The States of the vnited Low Countries doe take an Imposition vpon fish taken within the Seas and Streames of other Princes as also neere their Coast and their subiects trafficking with the Russians as Haunce Noblett Haunce Van stracle Robert Englegraue and others do continually pay the tenth fish vnto the Emperour of Russia All which is requisite for Merchants to know to preuent troubles or losses for the pretence of ignorance doth not excuse as our Merchants of Kingstone vpon Hull haue found to their exceeding losse heretofore CHAP. XXXVI Of Customes Subsidies and Impositions payed vpon Commodities WHereas Customes Subsidies Impositions Toles Customes vpon comm●dities due by the Law of Nations Accizes Imposts and other duties by the exemplarie actions of Princes and Common-weales are due by the Law of Nations as a matter inherent to their Prerogatiues because they are absolute Commanders in their Harbours Hauens and Ports where commodities are exported and imported euery Merchant is bound to take notice thereof and to obserue the same according to the ordinances and proceedings vsed therein in all countries respectiuely to auoid the danger of the losse and forfeiture of his commodities and to make a true calculation how to buy and sell to profit obseruing how much vpon the hundreth pounds in value of his commodities rated by the orders of diuers countries the same amounteth vnto and to adde the
as for the erecting of Schooles and Vniuersities maintenance of the poore and of widowes and orphanes repairation of Churches and high-wayes and ditches for the plantation of Collonyes of people in other Countries and building of Townes and Castles for their maintenance as also to erect Pawne-houses to supply the necessitie of the mechanicall poore suppressing intollerable vsurie whereof we shall intreate in the second Part of this Booke concerning monyes The Etimologie of the word Lotarie is deriued from the word Lot And albeit all Lotaries are things casuall in respect of man to whom the Lot falleth yet in regard of the prouidence of God they are certaine in effect by the said Diuine disposing of the Lot Insomuch that howsoeuer the words Fortune Chaunce Fate Destinie and Casualtie are borrowed from the Heathens it cannot bee denied but that respecting the effects and operations of God towards man they are proper distinctions of Gods Diuine Prouidence And hence ariseth the Prouerbe Nemo sua sorte contentus viuit * ⁎ * CHAP. XLII Of Associations Monopolies Engrossings and Forestallings ASsociations are twofold the one is done by publike authoritie of Princes or States vpon Graunts made by Letters Patents which are properly called Societies as the Companie of Merchant Aduenturers Societie of the Merchants Aduenturers which are of 400 yeares standing or thereabouts reckoning from the yeare 1248 when the said Merchants obtained priuiledges of Iohn Duke of Brabant and were called the Brotherhood of Saint Thomas Becket of Canturburie which were confirmed by King Edward the third Henry the fourth Henrie the fifth Edward the fourth Henrie the sixth Richard the third and King Henrie the seuenth who gaue them the name of Merchants Aduenturers after him also confirmed by King Henrie the eight Edward the sixth Queene Marie Queene Elizabeth and lastly by our Soueraigne Lord King Iames not without many enemies and oppositions and most especially of late taxing them to be Monopolizers and vnprofitable to the common-wealth being that all our Clothes were not dressed and dyed in England Whereupon their Patent was for a time suspended but afterwardes confirmed again vnto them by his Maiesties ample Proclamation As this Societie is of ancient estimation so is their gouernement verie commendable and preserueth the amitie and entercourse betweene the Realme and other neighbour Princes and States venting the best commodities of the Kingdome yet so that euerie man selleth freely at his pleasure without any combination or limitation to the great honour and seruice of the State wherein they may daily see and obserue more and more as is heeretofore declared Societies of East-Indies Virginia c. The East-India Merchants are also a Societie but their aduenturers runne all into maine Stockes and is gouerned and carried all ioyntly vpon benefit or losse This Company beganne in the yeare 1599. So the Merchants of Turkie are a Societie Also the Virginia and Barmuda Merchants and diuers others are Societies incorporated by his Maiesties Letters Patents as aforesaid The other Association is done by and betweene Merchants of their owne authoritie Partnership by Contract ioyning themselues together for to deale and trade either for yeares or voyages and this is properly called Partnership where one man doth aduenture a thousand pounds another fiue hundreth pounds another three hundreth pounds and another foure hundreth pounds more or lesse as they agree amongst themselues to make a stocke euerie man to haue his profit or to beare losses and aduenture according to their seuerall stockes in one or many voyages for one or more yeares besides the moneyes taken vp at vse to trade withall proportionably according to the rates of their stocks by parts and portions to be diuided into so many parts as they agree wherein the conditions be diuers which must be obserued truely and the accounts accordingly otherwise all will run into a Laborinth and confusion And by the common Law one partner cannot proceed against another and in Chauncerie the suits may be prolonged for the life of a man vnlesse the Law-Merchant be better vnderstood and the Auditors Office be enabled to end these businesses with breuitie and expedition There is another branch of this maner of partnership Partnership by imployment which commeth to passe when Factors beyond the seas dealing for diuers Merchants will sometimes make imployment of seuerall mens money in one kind of commoditie to be diuided amongst them Here one may become a partner vnawares and vnknowne as of late I know the like did happen in a great bargaine of Tabacco whereupon all the partners being seuen in number are fallen out and diuers of them are in law This course althoug vsed is verie dangerous especially when they vse many Factors One Merchant sendeth commodities to his Factor to be sold in Spaine and giueth order that by that meanes he shall prouide money for his part of the imployment of Tabacco to be made another Merchant he sendeth a Letter of credit of a friend of his that so much money shall be taken vp by exchange for Antuerpe or London as shall be needfull for his part another Merchant he causeth so much money to be made ouer to his Factor by exchange ●●om Antuerpe as will furnish for his part Two other Merchants dwelling in Spaine doe furnish their parts there themselues And amongst them all they admit in Spaine one Factor dwelling there to buy the Tabacco and he hath a part with them but findeth the meanes to disburse no money for his part because he buyeth the said parcell of Tabacco amounting to some twelue thousand ducats and conditioned to pay a good part of it at six or more moneths And the seuenth Merchant he prouideth not any money and neuerles wil haue his part because he gaue order to his Factor to take it vp by exchange for London vpon him promising that he would pay the same here Hereupon the bargaine and imployment of Tabacco is made the goods receiued and sent ouer to London where it is diuidedly deliuered to some of the said partners to be sold with one and others priuitie for the generall account of them all to be made vp amongst them to cleere the said account and euerie man to haue his part of the benefit and profit and likewise to beare such losses as may decrease their profit according to equitie and conscience Interim it happened that the Factor who bought the said Tabacco dyed insoluent who did not only leaue his own part vnpaid but a far greater summe which the other two partners were faine to pay being bound for it in all amounting to 1300 ll sterling● Now the question is How this losse shall be borne amongst them The first Merchant he saieth I did send commodities and by the prouenue thereof my part was payed by him that dyed and that dependeth vpon accounts to be cleered betweene him and the partie deceased the second Merchant he sayeth My part was paied in readie mony in Spaine taken vp
to giue twentie per 100 for the yeare and so from yeare to yeare and dying the principall is theirs One hundreth pounds for eight liues by equalitie decreasing the pennie 8 is 12 ll 10 ss for two liues 11 ll 2 ss for three liues 10 ll for foure liues 9 ll 1 ss 9 pence is 6 ll 5 ss for eight liues The Citie of Amsterdam was wont to giue good consideration and did obserue this order vpon a hundreth Guelders for eight liues gaue 16 13 4 Obseruations of money deliuered vpon liues Of nine liues 19 1 0 Vpon tenne liues they gaue 22 4 5 Vpon eleuen liues 26 13 4 Vpon twelue liues 33 6 8 Vpon seuen liues 14 6 4 Vpon six liues 13 6 8 Here you are to remember the obseruations of Assurors whether the persons be young or old sober in their diet and behauiour much trauelling abroad or staying at home subiect to sickenesse and the like considerations Rents vpon houses Moneys deliuered vpon annuities for rents seeme more reasonable than pensions vpon liues because you beare onely the aduenture of the decay of houses or destruction of them in time of warre and much more should bee giuen without pawne than with pawne or morgage It is commodious for a man hauing wast grounds and intending to build vpon them to take much money vpon rent after 6 ¼ pro cent which many Cities giue continually to increase their wealth and inhabitants And because the valuation of their money doth often alter and is inhaunced whereby all things become dearer Rents payed in specie the parties are aduised to haue their rents paied in specie in Crownes Dollers Ducats to bee paied as formerly they were currant the dangers in times of warres causeth rents to decrease for the ancient rent is alwayes first to bee paied although all others bee losers * ⁎ * CHAP. XIX Of the Denomination and Diuision of Moneys of diuers Countreys THE Denomination Diuision and Subdiuision of the moneys of all Countreys is most necessarie for Merchants and all others to be knowne because without it they sayle in the course of Trafficke without Compasse abandoned at all vncertainties and dangers to haue true equalitie and equitie obserued in their buyings and sellings and that more especially if the course of exchanges be neglected as shall be declared hereafter Some of these moneys are imaginarie and some are substantiall or reall in specie and yet not concurring in price or value England IN England concerning Siluer coynes there is the Crowne of fiue shillings and the halfe Crowne of two shillings sixe pence the shilling the sixe pence the foure pence or groat the three pence two pence three halfe pence the pennie and halfe pennie of sterling Siluer and the farthing of Copper The ordinarie Golden coynes are the vnite peeces of 22 shillings the halfe of eleuen shillings and the crownes or quarters of fiue shillings sixe pence and the ⅛ part two shillings nine pence and the fiue peeces coyned at foure shillings making twentie two shillings with the Rose and the Thistle The Laureat King Iames of twentie two carrats fine of twentie shillings and the halfe peece Scotland In Scotland is the Crosse Dagger peece of eleuen shillings and the halfe of it and their Rider of ten shillings six pence and for their Siluer coyne the Marke peece valued at 13 pence ½ in England and the halfe of the same as also six small peeces of aboue two pence for the said Marke Ireland In Ireland where no Mint hath beene since King Edward the fourth of England the fifteene shilling sterling make twentie shillings Irish and the Siluer Harpe of nine pence sterling is there currant for twelue pence and the moitie thereof accordingly and the abouesaid Gold coynes are currant as in England or in sterling reduced into their Irish moneys one third part more so that the twentie shillings peece of Laureat King Iames is there foure Nobles and all other diuisions of it accordingly So the English shilling is sixteene pence Irish and the parts of it accordingly All other old Irish coyne is out of vse and little quantitie to be found of it In Germanie they make all their moneys by the account of Batsen euerie Batts foure Creutzers coyning peeces of three sixe Germanie and twelue Creutzers So the Ducat of Hungarie maketh 27 Batses the Gold guelder eighteene Batses the Polish guelder or doller fifteene Batses Teastons fiue Batses The said Gold guelder was value Anno 1520 to bee currant in Holland for twentie eight stiuers whereby their corne is bought and sold which is erronious and imaginarie because there is no such peece in specie So was the doller and the Siluer guelder called Gros or Vnciales weighing an ounce The ancient Romans called an ounce a guelder and the eight ounces made one mark and 12 ounces or guelders were reckoned for one pound and there were coyned peeces called Nummi Dragmi alias Grosleyn is the eight part of a doller Angelicies was the ⅙ of a doller making three Batses or twelue Creutzers called Schriekenborgers The said Angelici were Tribute penies which being allayd and made worse did obtaine the name of Bats as it were seeking of a benefit which since haue bin more imbased and therefore deserue that name of Batses they are called in Thuringia Gulielmi and in Bohemia Bohemici in regard of the said tribute whereof they haue also 12 peeces diuidedly for 12 pence which pennie is all Germanie ouer two Hellers by way of account The doller was first made vpon sixtie and fiue Creutzers which in those coynes so imbased are answered by 72 Creutzers And in oth●● cities of Germanie they reckon as followeth vpon diuers coynes 〈◊〉 made and some imaginarie At Augusta they haue small moneys Grosses of three Batses Augusta Lion peeces whereof two make a Creutzer the Blackepennie foure to one Creutzer Snubourgh Blaphart or Bohomicos of three and 3 ½ Creutzers the Ryckes doller is thirtie Albes of eight pence euerie Albe or seuentie and two Creutzers for the said doller At Frankford they diuide their Florens of sixtie Creutzers Frankford by twentie shillings and euerie shilling in twelue Hellers according to the pound At Norenbourgh in like manner and the Creutzer is foure pence Norenborough euerie pennie two Hellers and fiue pence called a Fynfer or fiue Pennick At Strasborough they vse Blapharts Grosses Strasborough Bohemicos of three Creutzers euerie Blaphart six pence of two Hellers or foure Ortlyn At Bohemia as in Germanie and the Bohemici Bohemia are whitgrosse of three Creutzers the Doller is twentie foure Bohemicos of twelue Angster euerie Bohemico ten pence and one Marke is fortie Bohemicos and Scoc is sixtie Bohemicos Vienna At Vienna the Ryckes Doller is eight shillings and the Ducat twelue shillings Trioll At Trioll the Doller at seuentie two Creutzers of fiue Fynfers or Hellers the Creutzer Hungarie
their bodies vntill the day of Iudgement For albeit the Spirit of man is rightly termed to bee the Facultie of the Soule The Facultie of the Soule is the Spirit of man yet the parts of the Soule concerning Vnderstanding and Will haue their proper relation for that part called Vnderstanding is seated chiefly in the Soule as Will is in the Spirit both to be accompanied with Knowledge The Phylosophers haue made this distinction by their Chimicall obseruation and such as place the Soule in the bloud dispersed through all the veynes of the bodie do also place the Will of man in the spirit residing in the heart of man which the Anatomists demonstrateth to be a little concauitie where the drops of the vitall bloud are placed in the heart which are feared vp and the place is shrunke in bodies which haue been poisoned To make application of this comparison betweene the Soule and Spirit Application of the comparison we shall find by the following discourse that euen as the Spirit of man is predominant ouer the Soule and Bodie in all the actions thereof which by the bloud are quickned and preserued euen so is the Exchange for moneys by Bills of Exchanges ouerruling the course of commodities and moneys in all places where the action of money is felt or seene directing the same by some due proportions accordingly CHAP. I. Of the Beginning of the Exchange for Moneys by Bills of Exchanges THE Exchange for moneys is of great antiquitie for as we haue declared the first Siluer moneys coyned by the Romanes is almost 1900 yeares since And euen as money was inuented to bee made of the best mettalls to auoid the troublesome carriage of commodities vp and downe and from one countrey into another So vpon the like consideration when other nations imitating the Romanes did coyne moneys The cause of the Exchanges Exchange by Bills for moneys was deuised to auoid both the danger and aduenture of moneys and the troublesome carriage thereof This money now being made by diuers Nations of seuerall standards and diuers stamps and inscriptions as a Marke of Soueraigntie caused them to appoint a certaine Exchange for the permutation of the seuerall sorts of coynes in diuers countreys without any transportation of the coyne but giuing Par pro Pari or value for value with a certaine allowance to accomodate the Merchant and the officers to execute the same were called Numularij Argentarij and Collybistae that is to say Numularij of Nummus or the coyne it selfe Argentarij because the Siluer coyne was most vsuall in the course of trafficke and Collybistae because it signifieth a reward for Exchanging Here now let vs obserue foure manner of Exchanges which haue beene vsed and in some countreys are yet continued albeit some of them are abrogated in England commonly called Cambio Commune Cambio Reall Cambio Sicco and Cambio Fictitio which denomination may be admitted The first manner of Exchange called Cambio Commune I Cambio Commune is properly that Exchange which the said Collibistae or common Exchangers did vse by the authoritie of Princes and Common-weales for the lawfull and currant moneys of their Kingdomes and Territories which was found to be verie expedient and necessarie and was established to preuent the exportation of money from one countrie into another countrie and these Exchangers did deliuer in all countries the Money in one specie for the Moneys in other species by them receiued as aforesaid Tables of Exchange Whereupon King Edward the third of England caused certaine Tables to be set vp at Douer and other places of the realme declaring the value of the said sundrie species of coyne of all countries trafficking with his subiects and the allowance which Merchants were to giue to haue their turnes serued as may appeare by the good Lawes made in his time when there was Moneys coyned in diuers places of this Kingdome and not in one mint onely within the Tower of London And this was long before the discouerie of the West-Indies from whence the ocean of Money did run into Christendome And for the gouernment of the said Tables all was at the direction of the Master of the Kings Mint at London and with a correspondence of other Mints namely at Canturburie at Kingston vpon Hull New-castle vpon Tine Bristoll and Exceter And the Exchanger for the King at London did also depute Exchangers in the most places except that certaine Merchants of Florence called Friscobaldi were the Kings Exchangers at Kingston Friscobaldi the Exchangers New-castle and Exceter who made the said Exchanges of value for value with a reasonable allowance and by their meanes were all the said Mints set on worke and the transportation of our Moneys was preuented for as Bishop Tursids booke of Arithmeticke declareth by giuing par pro pari or value for value there was no gaine left to the transporter The Kings of England did constitute these Exchangers Kings Exchangers euen as the Cambiadores and Banquers are vsed in other countries being authorised by the King or Prince of the said countries especially King Edward the first of England who had two Exchangers the one called Custos Cambij infra Turrim who had the charge in buying of bullion and to looke to the coynage of Money within the realme now called the Warden of the Mint the other was called Keeper of the exchange and rechange within or towards this realme for Moneys to be paied in specie by Bills of Exchanges beyond the seas And afterwards the said Exchanges were made without naming the species but according to the value of the seuerall coynes 2 Cambio Reall and this was called Cambium Regis or Royall Exchange which caused Queene Elizabeth to name the Burse in London accordingly This office appeareth to haue been in the eleuenth yere of the said King Edw. by an Act of Parliament made at Acton Burnel since which time the succeeding Kings and Queenes haue continued the same by sixteene seuerall Letters Patents And whereas it seemed that the said two Exchangers could not execute their offices conueniently being asunder it fell out that in Henrie the sixth his time a Law was made by which both offices were put into one mans hand and so continued many yeares vntill the time of King Henrie the eight Exchanges discontinued when he caused base Moneys to be made at the seige of Bulloigne whereupon no certaine Exchange could be grounded albeit that before that time in the two and twentieth yeare of his raigne he caused a Proclamation to be made according to an old Statute made in the time of King Richard the second The Chronicle of Graston That no person should make any Exchanges contrarie to the said meaning or Act of Parliament vpon paine to be taken to be the Kings mortall enemie and to forfeit all that he might forfeit For in his noble fathers time King Henrie the seuenth the Bankers had inuented a course of
salt Francis the first made the same perpetuall as the domaines of the crowne and all men are compelled to buy it at the Magazins vpon paine of punishment This impost is letten to farme for two millions of crownes or six hundred thousand pound sterling yearely The right of the sea belongeth to the King and he may lay impositions thirtie leagues from the land into the sea if no other soueraign prince be not within that precinct There are eight courts of Parlement in France and eight chambers of account At Paris erected 1302 by Philip le Bell. At Paris Courts of parlements At Tholouze also and confirmed by Charles the 7. In Britaigne At Grenoble 1453 by Lewis the 11. At Dion Courts of accounts At Bourdeaux 1462 by Lewis the 11. At Monpellier At Aix 1501 by Lewis the 12. In Dolphine At Dion 1476 by Lewis the 11 for Burgondie In Prouence At Roan 1449 by Lewis the 12 for Normandie At Blois At Rheames 1553 by H. the 2 for Britainie At Roan Of the Salique Law of France IT is an vsuall receiued opinion that Pharamond was the author of this law others thinke it was so called of the Gaules that were called Salie amongst whom that law was established for the auncient Gaules termed all their lawes either Ripuarie or Salique and in the time of Charlemaine they were called Saliques Neuerthelesse it is thought to haue beene inuented of latter time as by Philip le Long to frustrate the daughters of Lewis Huttin or else to haue had the first strength from an vsuall custome of all Barbarians which was neuer to suffer the females to inherit the crowne and so being begun in the first and second line of the kings it hath continued in the third and by custome it is rather confirmed than to be proued to be a law at any time ordained hauing beene little account made thereof vntill the controuersies betweene Philip le Long and Endes duke of Burgondie who claimed it for his neece Iane daughter to Lewis Huttin and Philip de Valois with Edward king of England The booke of the Salique lawes is but a collection howbeit there is no example euer heard of that any woman gouerned Of the lawes of the higher and low Germanie concurring with the Ciuile Law and the Courts of Equitie in substance THe courts of Equitie beyond the seas after bill and answere replication and reioynder and sometimes duplication and at last conclusion with the examination of witnesses in serious manner The whole proceedings are deliuered to certaine Doctors or learned men which are as masters of the Chancerie or belonging to certaine Vniuersities to be abreuiated which is called ad rotulandum who doe cut off all superfluous things which vpon the matter are confessed on both sides To abreuiate long processe or are not materiall to the state of the cause to bring the differences betweene the parties to certaine points or heads wherupon the said parties with the aduice of the aduocates or learned counsell do dispute and debate the said differences to bring them as it were ripe and perfected before the Iudge For if the defendant will take couertly any exceptions against the Iudge of that iurisdiction he may haue the whole processe made vp in the name of A.B. and C.D. as it were complainant and defendant without naming either of the parties and the same to be sent vnder the towne seale vnto Doctors or other learned men of Vniuersities elected thereunto in other iurisdictions which do giue their sentence or iudgement thereupon and returne the same back againe vnder seale before the Iudge where the cause was depending who calling both parties before him demandeth of them whether he shal open the proces and whether they will stand to the iudgement therein contained and if the complainant descend thereunto then is the defendant thereby concluded seeing he had his choice and did in a maner appeale from the Iudge whereupon execution is presently had and matters are ended with expedition By the premisses we may obserue how other lawes are variable and subiect to alteration and that the Law-Merchant is constant and permanent in her customes which therefore are not to be infringed but seriously to be maintained by all the foure precedent meanes or some selected course of execution to be deuised concurring with the same For the better furtherance wherof and more exact explanation by contraries I haue for a Corrollarie of this worke added hereunto three Paradoxes alluding to the said three Essentiall parts of Trafficke which will illustrate the most materiall consideration to be had in the course of Trafficke and Trade CHAP. XVIII Three Paradoxes alluding to the three Essentiall parts of Trafficke HAuing heretofore published a Treatise intituled Englands view in the vnmasking of two Paradoxes which had beene presented vnto the French King Henrie the fourth as a matter of great consequence and considerable in the gouernement of common-weales and finding that the true vnderstanding of them with a third Paradox obserued by me did properly allude to the contents of this booke or the three Essentiall parts of Trafficke namely Commodities Money and Exchange for Money I did resolue to handle the substance of them for a Corrollarie of the same Paradox what it is the rather because Paradoxes are things contrarie to the vulgar opinion and will also make all the premisses more manifest and apparant by their conclusion The said two Paradoxes presented by Monsieur Malestroit one of the officers of the Finances or Treasurie in France were as followeth saying 1 That to complaine of the generall dearth of all things in France was without cause Commodities for there was nothing growne deere these three hundreth yeares 2 That there is much to be lost vpon a crowne Money and or any other money of gold and siluer albeit one do giue the same in payment at the price he did receiue the same The third Paradox which I haue added hereunto is 3 That the imaginarie moneys supposed in Exchanges for money Exchange made by Bills of Exchanges do ouerrule the course and propertie of Reall and Substantiall moneys in specie Monsieur Malestroit saith that since the ancient permutation hath beene changed in buying and selling and that the first riches of men which consisted of cattell was transferred to the gold and siluer whereby all things haue receiued their estimation Gold and Siluer are the Iudges of good cheape or dearth it followeth that those mettalls are the right judges of good cheape or dearth of all things Wee cannot say that any thing is deerer than it was three hundred yeares ago vnlesse that for the buying thereof wee must now giue more Gold and Siluer than wee did then But for the buying of all things wee doe not giue now more Gold or Siluer than wee did then therefore saieth he nothing is growne deerer in France since that time To proue this he doth alledge That during the raigne of
5400 Geometricall Miles or 21600 ordinarie Miles But whereas the Miles in all Kingdomes and Countries and almost in euerie Prouince or Shire doe differ I haue thought conuenient to admit one measure of one million of Acres of ground to measure the whole Globe therby according to the Map which is not only intelligible vnto al men but al merchants also may haue vse hereof For by the number of the millions of Acres comparing one Kingdome vnto another or one Countrie vnto another Countrie they may know the bignesse and spaciousnesse thereof which we haue particularly obserued in Europe with a distinction also of the Dominion of Princes in these seuerall Countries knowne by the name France Italy Germany and others which many times falleth into consideration vpon singular occasions This Globe of the world is diuided to be two third parts Water or Seas and one third part Land and of this Land there is one third part not inhabited and the other two third parts are as followeth The whole Circumference by the aforesaid measure is 19 803 575000 which is 29 milliars 803 millions 575 thousand Acres and the milliar is tenne hundreth millions A Milliar is ten hundreth Millions So the ⅔ part water is 19 milliars 869 millions and 50 thousand acres of ground answerable and the other part third is 9 milliars 934 millions 525000 acres Hereof deduct ⅓ part not inhabited which is 3 milliars 311 millions 508 thousand acres So rest 6 milliars 623 millions 17 thousand acres of land inhabited whereof followeth a particular distribution First for Europe or Christendome England containeth 29 millions 568 thousand acres Scotland containeth 14 millions 432 thousand acres Ireland containeth 18 millions So these three Kingdoms with all their dominions of lands and Ilands adiacent vnder the Diademe of King Iames containe 62 millions of acres of ground c. England is by this computation accordingly with the dominion of Wales and all Islands thereunto belonging the thousand part of the whole Globe or the 222 part of the earth inhabited or the 333 part of the whole earth and Scotland may be full the one halfe of this computation that is the 444 part of the earth inhabited or the 666 part of the whole earth and the Monarchie of great Brittaine and the Kingdome of Ireland is the 480 part of the whole Globe vnnecessarie fractions in cypher omitted The bodie of the Sunne is 166 times bigger than the whole Globe of the world and so accordingly for the seas and earth as aforesaid The 17 Prouinces of the Low-countries Containe 10 millions 797 thousand acres whereof The reconciled prouinces with Spaine containe 7 millions 197 thousand acres The vnited prouinces vnder the States containe 3 millions 599 thousand acres The Kingdome of France diuided into 32 prouinces containeth in all 82 millions 879 thousand acres The kingdomes of Spaine being eight in number containe as followeth     m. Castile 25 Millions 730. Andalusia 2 millions 425 Granado 2 millions 128 Nauarre 1 million 458 Leon galisia 9 millions 124 Arragon 13 millions 104 Biscaye 3 millions 412 Portugal 10 millions 154 In all containing 67 millions 535 thousand acres ITALIA Vnder Spaine     m. Naples 11 millions 704 Lombardie 1 million 640 Vnder Venice     m. Treuisana 2 millions 584 Verona 0 millions 480 Frioul 1 million 047 Mantua 0 millions 480 Vnder Rome     m. Liguria 1 million 415 Romagnia 1 million 085 Latium 0 millions 480 Hetruria 0 millions 540 Sauoy 1 million 910 Piedmont 1 million 160 Toscana c. 4 millions 785 Suria and Florence 480 Marca 1 million 412 Ancona Parma 0 millions 885 Sicilia 3 millions 113 Cypres 1 million 601 Candia 2 millions 060 Corsica 1 million 395 Sardegna 4 millions 089 Containing in all 44 millions 257 thousand acres GERMANIA     m. Saxonia 3 millions 484 Misina 3 millions 249 Turnigia 1 million 093 Lusatia 2 millions 572 Bauaria 3 millions 249 Helsatia 3 millions 644 Heluetia 12 millions 328 Basle 0 millions 842 Swebourgh 2 millions 109 Salsbourgh 1 million 063 Trier Ments 4 mill 237 Spiers Strasbourgh and Wormes Iuliers 0 millions 348 Cleaue 0 millions 258 Westphalia 2 millions 300 Osnab 0 millions 358 Silesia 5 millions 706 Bohemia 7 millions 024 Austria 6 millions 121 Morauia 4 millions 114 Pomerania 3 millions 249 Brandenbourgh 6 millions 208 Machalbourgh 2 millions 107 Franconia 6 millions 361 Tiroll 3 millions 249 Carinthia 1 million 588 Stiria 1 million 779 Palantine Rhene 4 millions 361 Wirtenborgh 1 million 223 Embden 0 millions 230 Oldenbourgh 0 millions 449 Liege 0 millions 548 Coloigne 0 millions 215 Containing in all 95 millions 646 thousand acres Prussia 10 millions 240 thousand acres     m. Russia 9 millions 607 Volhimia 5 millions 762 Massouia 1 million 916 Liuonia 34 millions 115 Poland 19 millions 205 Heretofore named Polonia containing in all 80 millions m. 845. DENMARKE     m. Denmarke 10 millions 426 Norway 28 millions 492 Holsten 1 million 065 Ditinars 0 million 337 Containing in all 40 millions 326 thousand acres SVVETHEN Sweathen 57 millions 430 thousand acres Finland 7 millions 531 thousand Gothia 20 millions 936 thousand Containing in all 85 millions 897 thousand acres Part of Russiia or Moscouia and Situam vnder Europe 232 millions 558 thousand acres so that whole Europe or Christendome doth but containe 802 millions 740 thousand acres EVROPE which is not the 12 part of the whole earth Hungarie Dalmatia Transyluania and all Turkie 385 mill m. 367. Moscouiae Pars 128 millions 817 thousand acres Tartaria 299 millions 110 thousand ASIA Persia 385 millions 367 thousand Calicut and East-India 587 millions 200 thousand acres Africa containeth 1541 millions 883 thousand acres AFRICA America containeth 1152 millions 400 thousand acres AMERICA Noua Hispania 1349 millions 133 thousand acres Summa totalis of the inhabited parts of the World six Milliars six hundreth and twentie three Millions and seuen tenne thousand Acres of Land Vt supra THE vse of this description to know the bignesse of one Countrey compared vnto another Countrey is for example England containeth twentie nine Measures and odde Bohemia containing seuen Measures and odde is the fourth part of England or thereabouts The seuenteene Prouinces of the Low Countryes being tenne Measures and odde is the third part of England or thereabouts The Monarchy of Great Brittaine being fortie foure Measures and odd is as big as all Italy and the fiue Ilands of Sicilia Cyprus Candia Corsica and Sardignia and is also more populous And so for all other Countryes insomuch that England onely containing twentie nine of those Measures or Millions 568 thousand Acres of ground if wee deduct the fiue Millions and 568 thousand Acres for wilde waste grounds and High-wayes One penny an Acre is one hundred thousand pounds in England there will remain foure and twentie Millions of Acres which at one penny an Acre amounteth to one hundreth thousand pounds a
found prettie store of Pearles and the climate being colder maketh the colour of them to be dimme albeit I haue seene some very faire and pendants also The small Pearle is also very wholesome in medicinable Potions Of the Commodities of Great Brittaine England THe Commodities of Great Brittaine containing the Kingdomes of England and Scotland and the dominion of Wales are rich and Staple wares and very aboundant with a continuall increase namely Woollen Clothes of all sorts broad and narrow long and short called and knowne by the names of seuerall Shires being 250 thousand Clothes made yearely besides the new Draperies of Perpetuanaes and the like commodities Tinne wrought and vnwrought aboue twelue hundreth thousand pounds yearely Lead transported and vsed aboue eight thousand Fodders euerie yeare Allomes made in aboundance aboue seuen hundreth Tunnes yearely Copperas made according to the quantitie vsed some 250 Tunnes yearely Yron of all sorts setting 800 Furnaces on worke Yron Ordnance or cast Pieces according to occasion made Wools and Woolfels and Calfe skinnes in great quantitie and Conie skins Stockins of all sorts of Silke Wooll and Yarnsey Yearne and Woolls Buffins Mocadoes Grograines Sattins Calamancos Veluets Worsteds Sarges Fustians Durance Tukes and all other Norwich wares and Stuffes Saffron the best that can be found in any countrey Glasse and Glasses of all sorts Venice gold Sea-coale and Salt Scotland Scots-coale Wheat Barley and all kind of graines in both Kingdomes Linnen Cloth and all Ironmongers wares Hides Tallow Leather drest and vndrest Trayne Oyle Salmons Pilchards Herrings Hake Conger Red-Herring Hops Woad Butter Cheese Beere Salt-peter and Gun-powder Honny and Wax Alablaster and many other Stones The Commodities of the Kingdome of Ireland are Ireland VVOolles Felles Yarne Furres Flax Linnen Cloth Hides Tallow Hempe Honny Wax Herring Cods Hake-fish Salmonds Eeles Ruggs Mantles Irish Cloth Pipestaues Yron and Lead Wheat and all kind of graine Salt-beefe Butter and Cheese and many Manufactures The Commodities of the Kingdome of France are WInes Prunes Canuas Linnen cloth Salt Veluets Raw silke France and diuers stuffes of Silke Buckrames Boxes with Combes Paper playing Cards Glasse Graine to dye Rozen Wheat and all kind of Graine corne The Commodities of Spaine and Portugall are WOols Madera Sugar Almonds Wines Oyles Anny-seeds Spaine and Portugall Anchoues Bay-berries Bariglia Figs Raisons Traine-oyle Yron Oranges Leamons Sumacke Saffron Soape Coriander Cork Licoras Woad and the commodities of the West Indies Sugar of Brazill Fernandebucke Wood Tabacco and other commodities The Commodities of Italy and certaine Ilands VEnice Gold Veluets Sattines Cipres Silkes Italy Cloth of Gold and Siluer Cottones Fustians Wines Currans Cloues Rashes Rice Sarcenets Raw Silke Allomes and Vitrioll Glasses and other Manufactures The Commodities of Germany and places adioyning WOolles Argall Steele Latine Copper Yron̄ Germany and all kind of Manufacture made of them Copperas Allomes Lead Fustians Paper Linnen cloth Quick-siluer Bell-mettall Tinne Renish Wines and Mather The Commodities of East-land and thereabouts AShes Bowstaues Cables Canuas Buffe-hides Flaxe Hempe Eastland Honny Wax Stock-fish Spruce Yron Match Wheat Rye Meale Woolles Waynscott Pitch and Tarre and Linnen cloth Cordage and Ropes The Commodities of Denmarke and Norway and Sweaden WHeat Rye Woolles Deales Clap-boord Pipe-staues Denmarke Norway Sweaden Masts Waynscot Copper Timber Fish and Furres Allomes in some places The Commodities of Russia Russia TAllow Hides Caueare aboundance of rich Furres Blacke Fox Martins Sables and the like Honny Wax Cables Ropes and Cordage The Commodities of Barbary Barbary GOat skinnes Almonds Dates Aneale Gumme Feathers Salt-peter Gold plentifully and from Guynea Hides Oliphant teeth and Graine The Commodities of the Low Countries Low Countries TApestrie Battery worke Steele Cambrickes Lawnes Hoppes Mather Butter Cheese Grograines Bozatoes Chamblets Mocadoes Brushes Tape Linnen cloth Pots Bottles Wheat Rye Salt Chimney backes Blades Horses Soape Fish Herrings Cods Ling and many things as Diaper Smalt Hoopes of Yron The Commodities of the West Indies FRom the Low Countrie beginning the West India Trade let vs set downe the commodities of it seeing that the States of the vnited Prouinces haue made lately a Societie of Merchants bearing date the ninth of Iune 1621 wherein other Nations may be aduenrors as by their letters Pattents appeareth prohibiting all other their subiects or inhabitants that they shall not trade from the said countries nor out or from any other kingdome and countrie whatsoeuer Letters Pattents for the West India Trade by the States c. vnto the coasts and countries of Africa from Tropicus Cancri along to the cape of Bona Speranza neither in the countries of America from the South end of Magellanes le Mary and other straits to the straits of Anian on euery side Noua Guinea included vpon forfeiture of the ships and goods and all their possessions within their iurisdiction and command and arrests of their persons vnlesse they be of the said Company made and established for the West India Trade Gold and Siluer Cucheneale Sugars rich Indico Donnigo Ginger Pearles Emeraulds Hydes Campeche or Logwood Salsaparilla Tabacco Canafistula Cocos-wood Lignum vitae Cottonwooll Salt and some other druggs for Physicke or dying of Stuffes And this may suffice for a declaration of the principall commodities of most countries CHAP. VIII Of Commutation or Bartring of Commodities WE haue compared Commodities vnto the bodie of trafficke which did vphold the world by commutation and Bartring of Commodites before money was deuised to be coined whereof we are now to intreate For commutation barter or trucke of Commodities was first effected in specie by deliuering one Commoditie for another according to the commodious and behoofull vse of man so that one did deliuer so many measures of Corne for so many measures of Salt as was agreed vpon another so many pound of Wooll against so many pound of Pepper Sugar or other commodities an other so many peeces of such a commodity for such a commodity or so many Hides for one barre of Yron or so many peeces of Siluer vncoyned but weighed and exchanged as yet is vsed in some places of America Barbarie and Guynea and other countries This may be properly called an exchange of commodities or rather a permutation of commodities albeit the Ciuilians when there is scarcitie of Gold and Siluer in a countrie and when the commodities in value surmount the money paied for them they do call that a permutation and denie the same to be an emption by their distinctions how soeuer this manner of commutation or barter was made by number weight and measure of commodities in kind but moneys being inuented and valued by the publicke authoritie of princes according to their seuerall stampes or coyne and by common consent made Publicae Mensura or the publicke measure to set a price vpon euerie thing This commutation barter or exchange of commodities for commodities was and is since that time made
within the citie of London being the kings Chamber After this follow the particular Letters for the deliuerie of seuerall countries and townes as Caours Carsin Monstreull Calice Rochell Turaine Poitiers Poitou Xantes Xantogne Dagonois Perigot and diuers others besides many Letters concerning the French Kings libertie and his Hostages and of the homage to be made by the Earles and Barons to the King of England who remaineth with the title of Soueraignetie and Domayne besides many other memorable things so that all matters concerning the seas and land were established for those seas and King E●ward tooke sixe pence a tunne for fishing ships King Henrie the fifth who did conquere all France and had the possession of Mare Britanicum lost nothing of his right no more did Henrie the sixth and King Henrie the seuenth as may appeare by their Proclamations Treaties Chro Holl●ngshed and Contracts not onely with the French but with the Archdukes of Burgondie as by Guicchardins Chronicle Chr. Froiszart Guicc●ar●in and the said Treatise or Historicall description of the Low-countries appeareth And as Docter d ee in his booke of Nauigation affirmeth King Henrie the seuenth in consideration of the fishing trade properly belonging vnto England in his seas and dominions had resolued to settle a trade thereupon which he preferred aboue all voyages for in those daies there was no fishing trade established in the Low-countries By original antiquitie And it is not yet one hundreth yeares compleate that one Violet Stephens and other discontented Fishmongers departed the realme of England and went into Holland to the towne of Enckhusen where they procured the inhabitants to fish for them in his Maiesties of great Brittaine seas streames and dominions which inhabitants vpon the decease of the said Englishmen Fishmongers tooke the whole trade to themselues dispersing the same into many other townes whereby the same is admirably increased Queene Marie being maried with King Philip the second of Spaine vnder whom all the seuenteene Low Prouinces were vnited granted a lease vnto the said King for the fishing of his subiects in the North parts of Ireland for one and twentie yeares for a certaine fine and paying one thousand pound yearely into the Treasurie of Ireland and Edward Fitton knight then Treasurer And the Companie of the old Haunce in primo of the said Queene Marie had also libertie to sish within the said seas vpon certaine conditions as appeareth in the Chappell of the Rolls of the Chancerie And for England Northwards licences were giuen at Scarborough Castle To this distinction of dominion of the Seas Inuention of the Porteullis I call to memorie the proceedings of that victorious King Henry the eight who during the time that Calice was vnder the Crowne of England as it hath beene full 211 yeares vsed the inuention of the signe of the Portcullis signifying the power of locking vp of the narrow Seas betweene Douer and Calice which was thought conuenient to bee vsed vpon the coyne made for the East-Indies at the beginning of that trade being peeces of the value of eight Royalls of Spaine whereof there was coyned in the Tower of London for a triall in Ianuarie 1600 some six thousand pounds which could not be made currant there because the Spanish peeces of eight Royalls had beene before that time counterfeited by other nations which made the East-Indians to doubt of our coyne although without cause This noble King Henrie hauing procured the Emperor Charles the fifth to meet with the French King went ouer in person with a great power to besiege the towne of Bulloigne in France and when he saw that the Emperors Tent or Pauillion was made with the two pillars of Hercules and the inscription Plus vltra and likewise the French Kings Tent with the three Flower deluces and the title of Primus Christianorum Rex He caused an Archer to be made vpon his Pauillion with Bow and Arrowes and his inscription was Cui adherio praeest declaring thereby his present strength whereby hee did qualifie those warres and peace was made between the Emperor and the said French King it being true that the state of a Prince doth as much consist by reputation as by strength Our Soueraigne Lord King Iames hath also beene mindfull of his right of distinct dominion for the great blessings which almightie God hath allotted to the Kingdomes of Great Brittaine Ireland and the Isles adiacent vnder his Maiesties Dominions is so visible to all the world as that thereby they are rauished with admiration For albeit that the earthly blessings are produced in seasonable times yet the blessings of the Seas are directed and pointed at by the finger of God at infallible seasons causing those watrie creatures to offer themselues for our sustenance and for the generall good of all creatures in places certaine within his Maiesties Seas Streames and Dominions and not into the maine where fishing cannot bee effected Whereupon his Maiestie before his comming into England did let the fishing of Scotland to the Hollanders for fifteene yeares it being agreed by more ancient Treaties betweene them that the fishing then agreed vpon should be eightie miles from the Coast to the end the Scoles of Herrings should not bee interrupted His Maiestie in the fourth yeare of his Raigne of Great Brittaine made a Graunt to one Collyns of Couentrie for twentie one yeres for the fishing in some parts of Ireland Graunts made for fishing and the like Graunts haue beene made for the Isles of Garnesey and Iarnesey according to the Common Law of England By the Common Law which in this point concerning his Maiesties right of dominion is very copious the handling whereof I leaue to the learned and judicious of the said Law In the seuenth yeare of his Maiesties said raigne his Highnesse caused a Proclamation to be made concerning his Dominion of fishing which being compendious and substantiall I thought conuenient here to be inserted Verbatim IAMES By the Grace of God King of Great Brittaine France and Ireland Defendor of the Faith c. To all and singular persons to whom it may appert●ine greeting Although We doe sufficiently know by Our experience in the Office of Regall dignitie in which by the fauour of Almightie God Wee haue beene placed and exercised these many yeares as also by obseruation which Wee haue made of other Christian Princes exemplarie actions how far the absolutenesse of Our Soueraigne Power extendeth it selfe And that in regard thereof Wee need not to yeeld account to any person vnder God for any action of Ours which is lawfully grounded vpon that iust Prerogatiue Yet such hath euer beene and shall be Our care and desire to giue satisfaction to Our neighbour Princes and friends in any action which may haue the least relation to their Subiects and Estates as We haue thought good by way of friendly Praemonition to declare vnto them all and to whomsoeuer it may appertaine as followeth Whereas Wee
1500 Markes of Gold of eight ounces 1500 Markes of Pearles 1 Chest Emeraulds From Mexico For the King 1900 thousand Pesos of Siluer 1100 Markes of Gold For particular persons 2 millions in Siluer 64 thousand Hides 25 thousand ll Indico From Santo Domingo Island 35 thousand Hides 900 Chest Sugar of 1000 ll weight 22 thousand Kintals of Ginger 13 thousand Kintals of Logwood 50 Kintals of Salsaparilla 48 Kintals of Caniafistula 64 Roues of Cottonwooll All the Gold and Siluer was valued at thirteene millions and all the commodities at three millions whereof the King had twelue millions and one halfe De claro wherewith we conclude this Chapter of the Mines Royall and are moued to write also of other Mines and Minerals contrarie to our first intention but briefely as followeth * ⁎ * CHAP. III. Of Mines and Mineralls THe next in order to be treated of are Tin Mines which are but few in number in all countries Tin Mines and in Germanie onely found somewhat plentifull but the Tin is blackish and corrupt so that our English Tin in Deuonshire and Cornewall is the only Tin of all the World which containeth foure ounces of Gold in a thousand whereof there is some twelue hundreth thousand made yearely It hath been sold for many yeares at an vnder value but his maiestie hath by way of Praeemption aduanced the price thereof which belongeth to the Dukes of Cornewall and consequently vnto the noble Prince of Wales Charles sonne and heire apparant to our soueraigne Lord king Iames. This Praeemption is letten to ferme to certaine Merchants and the gouernment of the Staneries with all the good orders obserued therein and the coynage of Tin to demonstrate the goodnesse is profitable to the kingdome and deserueth great commendation as is alreadie noted Lead Mines Leade Mines are found in all cold countries especially in Germanie in the dukedome of Brown●wike but it is blacke of colour and vntill it be refined it is vnseruiceable and consequently not vendible The old Duke had almost made a wall abo●t the citie of the sowes and pigges of Leade vntill our Leade became deere and scant and that an Antuerpian did teach them how to refine their Leade in taking away the cobble which is like vnto a knot in a peece of timber which made the Leade brittle and by his meanes all the Dukes Leade was sold in Italie Spaine and other places in France and elsewhere Scotland and Ireland haue many Leade Mines containing also Siluer The Leade Mines of England are scituated in diuers places of the kingdome but most in Darbishire in the hills of Peake Somersetshire and Wales There is great difference in the Ore as hath beene noted There are also many Lead Mines in Richmondshire vnder the countie of Yorke where I went to view them anno 1606 about Arkendale and the new Forest hauing prepared a long Yron boare of eighteene foot long for that purpose Description of many Leade Mines in Yorkshire and there I did obserue within the compasse of ten miles that the scituation of Arkendale i● betwixt two hills the one lying North called Windike and the other South-West called Moldersey adioyning vnto another hill called Pouncy lying West from Moldersey all belonging vnto the King and by lease vnto sir Iohn Maillorie knight There are also adioyning vnto it certaine other hills where lead Mines are as Swailedale where my lord Wharton hath his workes also Readhurst Cocka and Fellind being East from Wyndecke The Mines of Arkendale haue neuer been wrought to any purpose There is but three smelting cottages which do feed vpon the poore people and inhabitants thereabouts which at their leasure seeke for Lead Ore vpon sufferance and bring the same to the melting places where they fell the same for 20 or 24 ss the load giuing to the owners three or foure parts in ten as they can agree and one tenth to the Parson or Vicar of the Parish or Chappell A loade of Ore with them is as much as foure or fiue horses can conueniently carrie which by computation is some ten hundreth weight and is also deliuered by a measure called Load foure of these Loads will make a Fother of Lead of twentie hundreth their weight being 120 ll to the hundreth London weight so one hundreth of Lead Ore maketh but 30 ll of Lead which commeth to passe for that their manner of melting is by foot-blast and small furnaces with wood and charcoale Foolish maner of melting casting the Ore of Lead betweene them in small peeces and so still augmenting their melting which can yeeld but little the heat of the fire being choaked with the fewel and drosse of the Lead whereas flame is the greatest meane of melting of all mettaline Ores which require furnaces to be made accordingly where thirtie six or fortie hundreth may be molten together they melting three or foure hundreth There is no wood to be had but within two miles but sea coale and good peate is neere hand which may serue better cheape for they reckon 7 or 8 ss for the charge of a fother for the melting The Lead being cast into small Piggs of somewhat more than one hundreth weight are brought on horse-backe through Richmond to Burroughbridge being about thirtie miles distant and are conueyed by water to Yorke for 2 ss the hundreth and from Yorke to Hull for other two shillings so that a Fother of Lead with all charges will not stand in three pounds and there is a neerer way by Stockton on the sea-side about twentie and fiue miles which will lessen the said charges Now we are come to Yron mines Yron Mines whereof almost all countries in Europe are prouided which do much differ in goodnesse yet may be vsed according to the seuerall workes whereunto it is imployed as the Sp●nish Yron seruing for Blades not so good for other things England hath great store of Yron Mines for by computation there are aboue eight hundreth furnaces The melting of it by flaming sea coale or Scots coale saueth a great deale of charges There are lately found more Yron Mines in Fraunce which Yron being made into bars is transported into Guinea Binea and other parts vpon the coasts of Africa where it hath continually beene in great estimation and now becommeth so aboundant that their profit is but small of those voyages and so it falleth out at this present for the price of Leade The Yron stone in Wales is found to differ from the Steele stone by meanes whereof a Germane made good Steele in barres Steele stone and also Gad Steele But the patent of sir Baesell Brooke for the making of Steele did hinder the proceedings therein and Germane Steele is best vntill of late that a Frenchman shewing the imperfection of ordinarie Steele caused his maiestie to make void the said patent and to grant another for the making of perfect Steele surpassing in goodnes the Steele of all countries So we find
accordingly The double Guilder of Albertus tenne ounces 15 pennie weight and 14 ⅗ peeces The single Guilder the halfe and quarters of the same finenes and peeces accordingly The peeces of foure two and one Stiuer since 1590. The peeces of eight Ryalls of Spaine of eleuen ounces foure pennie weight and 13 ½ peeces The said peeces made at Mexico in the Indies eleuen ounces fine and 13 ⅔ peeces The Lion Doller of the Prince of Orange of nine ounces fine and thirteene peeces The siluer Ryder of Guilders and Frize-land correspondent with the States Doller of nine ounces The Dollers of Guelders and Vtrecht tenne ounces tenne and twelue pennie fine and thirteene peeces The great siluer Royall of the States correspondent with the Phillip Doller The 1 20 part of the said great Royall with the Arrowes accordingly The Doller of Zealand with the Eagles of nine ounces fine and 13 ½ peeces The Edward Doller of England of eleuen ounces two pennie weight fine and 11 ¾ peeces The Doller of Scotland with the crosse Daggers eleuen ounces two pennie weight fine and 11 ¾ peeces The Marke of Scotland eleuen ounces two pennie weight fine and 54 peeces The Doller of Frize-land coyned 1601 of nine ounces fine and 13 ½ peeces Coynes made of meere Copper THe Ortgens whereof foure make one Stiuer and two the halfe Stiuer The Duyts also foure make one Stiuer The Negenmannekens the eight make a Stiuer and foure the halfe Stiuer The three Mites whereof eight peeces to the Stiuer is 24 Mites The sixteene pence Hollandts make one Stiuer and eight the halfe Stiuer For other Copper Moneys read the fifth precedent Chapter of Moneys Error of Triall peeces for the Standard So I doe conclude this Chapter with an errour committed in the making of the Standard Triall Peeces vsed in most Kingdomes and States to charge the Mint-masters to make the Moneys by wherein they doe not proceed according to the Rule of Arithmatike by obseruing true weight and finenesse For if it bee appointed to make a Standard peece of tenne ounces fine they will take certaine ounces of fine Siluer and Copper proportionable thereunto and melt them together and being made into a plate of Siluer diuide the same into three equall parts to be deliuered one to the King another to the Warden and the third to the Mint-master and hereof are Assayes made both of this peece and the moneys and so compared together As if a man should take eleuen ounces two pennie weight of fine Siluer and eighteene pennie weight of Copper both in weight and melt them together making twelue ounces by weight and neuer weight them after they bee commixed But say this is sterling Standard whereas the weight both of the one and of the other doth proportionate the Standard by weight for in regard of the waste of copper this is better than Standard and ought to bee made exactly so that the peeces also are to be correspondent to the pound weight for the foundation riseth from hence as in the following Chapter appeareth CHAP. IX Of the Valuation of Moneys and the Proportion betweene Gold and Siluer VAluation of Moneys is the Spirit which giueth life vnto coynes for without it weight and finenesse are in the nature of Bullion or Materialls This Valuation is twofold Two fold is the valuation of moneys the first is done by publicke authoritie of Princes and States whereby the peeces of coynes are esteemed at a price certaine both for Gold and Siluer to go currant for that value within their kingdomes and dominions the second is the Valuation of Merchants by way of Exchange betweene vs and other nations which is predominant and ouerruleth the former as heretofore hath beene touched and now will be proued The Kings or Princes Valuation is effected three manner of waies Kings valuation viz. by inhauncing the price of the coyne by Proclamation secondly by embeasiling the standard of money by allay and thirdly by altering the proportion betweene Gold and Siluer The Merchants Valuation is also effected three manner of waies Merchants valuation viz. by the price of Exchange for moneys rising and falling from time to time by the tolleration of the coynes at a higher rate betweene them and by the combination with Mint-masters inhanceing the price of the Marke of Gold and Siluer Of all these in order briefely The Kings Valuation is deriued or drawne from the verie peece or peeces made out of the pound weight of twelue ounces or the marke of eight ounces which the Romans did call Nummus à numerando to tell or reckon by The Saxons gaue it the name Pfemimg or Pennimick in Ducth from whence the word pennie is deriued for they cutt●ng twentie peeces out of the pound Troy of twelue ounces made twentie pence euerie way that is to say twentie pence in weight twentie pence in value Weight and finesse both alike with the number of peeces and consequently diuiding the finenesse also by twentie pennie weight and euerie pennie weight in twentie and foure graines which was the auncient sterling standard of Osbright the Saxon King seuen hundreth yeares past which Valuation so continued vntill King Edward the third and vntill Henrie the sixth and then was valued at thirtie pence the said ounce and continued vntill Edward the fourth The ounce of siluer aduanced because of the inhancing of money beyond the seas and then valued at fortie pence and so continued vntill King Henrie the eight and then was valued at fortie and fiue pence and so continued vntill Queene Elizabeth who after the decry of the base money made by King Edward the sixth which King Henrie his father had caused to be coyned did restore the sterling standard to her great benefit by valuing the said ounce at sixtie pence or 5 ss inhauncing the same one full third part so that one of those pence became three pence by valuation and Gold was raised according to the proportion of eleuen of fine Siluer to one of fine Gold or eleuen of standard Siluer to one of Crowne Gold which valuation of Siluer hath continued hitherto with little alteration But beyond the seas there hath been great inhancing both for the coynes of siluer and gold as wel in Fraunce as in the Low-countries and Germanie to Englands incredible losse as is at large declared in our * The Canker of Englands Common-wealth Treatise of Exchange This daily inhauncing beyond the seas began in the time of King Henrie the eight who went about to reforme the same but afterwards finding that if he should inhance his price of moneys likewise they would still aduance theirs more and more he began but moderately and whereas the Angell Noble so called was at six shillings eight pence Angell Noble inhanced he ●aused the same to be valued at seuen shillings and foure pence by a Proclamation in the eighteenth yeare of his raigne and within two moneths after at seuen shillings
to one of gold In France the marke of gold valued at seuentie foure Crownes and the siluer at 6 ⅓ Crownes maketh the proportion 11 11 19 parts but valuing the French Crowne at three Frankes is eleuen to one In England the Angel at ten shillings and the siluer at sixtie shillings the pound Troy of 12 ounces being that six Angels did weigh an ounce made also eleuen to one In Germany one marke of Siluer at 8 ½ Gold guilders maketh 11 ⅔ for 1 but the valuation of moneys being altered hath also altered the same In Rome the pound of siluer at 108 Carlini and the Ducat of gold 99 ¼ is 12 to 1. So at Millaine the Ducat 112 and the Teaston 28 is but 9 ⅓ for 1. The siluer being so in request there for the making of gold and siluer threed that is to say siluer threed guilt and white Now for all places of momentarie trafficke it is 12 to 1 and in England 13 ½ to 1 as hath beene declared The valuation of forreine coyne of gold and siluer published in the vnited Low Prouinces on the 21 day of Iulie 1622 with the orders established by the Estates of the said Countries for the better obseruation of the said valuation which neuer the lesse are continually infringed from time to time And the like is done in other countries so that to obserue our owne rule according to Equalitie and Equitie will be found the best and safest course of Politicke gouernment   Guilders Stiuers Flemish The great golden Ryder of the vnited Prouinces 11 6 or 37 s● 8 d The halfe of the said Ryder 5 13 18 10 The double Ducat of the said Prouinces with the Letters 8 10 28 4 The French Crowne 3 18 13 0 The Pistolet of Spaine of foure Pistolets 15 8 51 4 The double Pistolet of Spaine 7 14 25 8 The single Pistolet after the rate 3 17 12 10 The Albertins or ducats of Albertus of Austria 5 13 18 10 The double Rose Noble of England 18 12 62 0 The Rose Noble of Henricus Edward and Queene Elizabeth 9 6 31 0 The Henricus Noble 8 6 27 8 The Flemish Noble old and new of the vnited Countries 8 0 26 8 The old Angell of England 6 4 20 8 The new Ryder of Guelders and Freeseland 3 13 12 2 The gold Guilder of those Mints 3 2 10 4 All which coynes are to bee weighed with their accustomed weight and the remedie of two graines and no more with some little aduantage ouer or at the least being within the rest of the ballance Prouided alwaies that the coynes of their due finenesse although they be lighter shall be currant paying for euerie graine wanting two stiuers Siluer Coynes   Guilders Stiuers Flemish       ss d. The Lyon Doller of the Low Prouinces 2 0 6 8 The Rickx Dollers in generall 2 10 8 4 The Crosse Doller of Albertus 2 7 7 10 The Spanish Ryalls of 8 2 8 8 0 The Doller of Zealand and Frise with the Eagle 1 10 5 0 The Floren or Guilder of Friseland 1 8 4 8 The English Shilling and of great Brittaine 0 10 ½ 1 9 The Marke peece or Thistle of Scotland 0 12 2 0 The Harpe of Scotland and Ireland 0 8 1 4 And if any of the said peeces be found to want of their weight and the appointed remedy within the rest of the ballance or some little aduantage ouer they shall be currant paying for euerie graine wanting two pence Hollandts whereof 16 make one stiuer and the English groats are made bullion or shall not be currant Small Moneys for ordinarie payments THe Shillings of all the seuerall Prouinces respectiuely and of the Mints of Nimogen Deuenter Campen and Swoll 6 Stiuers The halfe Shillings after the rate 3 Stiuers The peeces called Flabs of Groninghen 4 stiuers the double 8 Stiuers The twintigst part of the great siluer Royall 2 ½ Stiuers The double and single stiuers of all these countries 2 1 Stiuer The tenth to be receiued in copper monies 1 Of all which small moneys for the payments of rents interest or abatement of the same as also of all manner of Merchandise exceeding in one parcell the summe of one hundreth Guilders no man shall be bound to receiue more than the tenth pennie 2 The Duyts according to the order of the Prouinces made in the Prouinciall Mints and none other are as yet tollerated for a Duyt and all other copper moneys of the Prouinciall Mints are also tollerated to be paied out for one pennie the peece the 16 whereof make one Hollandts Stiuer and not aboue whereas we do intend hereafter to prohibit the same to be currant for any price because wee will prouide our selues forthwith with so much copper mony as the commodiousnesse shall require 3 We do also prohibit from henceforth no copper moneys to be brought into these countries aboue two stiuers vpon paine often stiuers for euerie peece to be forfeited and whosoeuer shall issue any copper moneys aboue the said price shall incur the like penaltie of ten stiuers for euerie peece 4 And all the said coynes shall be currant in these Prouinces for the prices aforesaid declaring all other peeces for bullion All other coynes made bullion to be molten which by this Our proclamation are not valued prohibiting any of the said peeces to be offered or receiued as also to presse any of those which are valued to be paied at a higher price than they are valued and likewise offer to put forth other coynes of gold and siluer valued which are clipped washed broken mended neiled or otherwise augmented in weight vpon forfeiture of all the said coynes so to be offered at higher rates than this proclamation doth permit and if the fact be not instantly discouered to forfeit the value thereof and moreouer the quadruple or the value thereof or 24 guilders in liew thereof if the said coynes did not amount to sixe guilders for the first time the second time double and for the third time quadruple and moreouer arbitrable correction according to the qualitie of the fact 5 Without that any distinction shall be made whether the said coynes were instantly paied from forreine parts or sent from some one Prouince or Towne into another in which case if the receiuer thereof will be freed of the said forfeiture he is to giue notice of it within twentie and foure houres after the receipt thereof vnto the Magistrates or other Officers to be thereunto appointed to the end they may proceed therein against the sender of the said coyne as it shall or may appertaine 6 Yet shal the said Receiuer keepe the said coyns wholly to himselfe if the said moneys be sent vnto him in paiment of a former debt and neuerthelesse haue his action against the partie for so much as they shall want of the said valuation and if the said coynes be sent for any debt as yet not due or to be made the said
haue spent time labour and no small charges in hope that hereafter it may do good to the publicke Pawne houses if some Diuine be moued to further it The first is according to the manner of Amsterdam to which end the substance of the petition of honest and religious men his maiesties subiects is as followeth First that authoritie be giuen to A. B. to erect Pawne-houses in all conuenient places of the realmes of England Ireland and the dominions of Wales for and during the terme of one and twentie yeres vpon these conditions That all person and persons shall and may haue at all conuenient times moneys vpon pawnes of or vpon all moueable goods chattels and leases or any thing which shall be agreed vpon after the rate of ten vpon the hundreth by the yeare That the vndertakers may be authorised or licenced to take for the attendance labour and paines recompence of Officers and Seruants wages house-rent and all other charges incident thereunto as followeth For registring and keeping of all pawnes that do amount to fiftie pounds or more one farthing for euerie pound by the moneth For all pawnes that do amount to ten pounds or more vntill fiftie pounds for euerie pound one halfe pennie by the moneth For all pawnes that do not amount to ten pound for euerie pound one pennie by the moneth For euerie bill giuen for pawnes vnder ten pounds one pennie and being of ten pounds or aboue whatsoeuer it commeth vnto but two pence with such clauses conditions and cautions as shall be requisite for the securitie of the said vndertakers and agreeable with the laws of the realm of England paying vnto the Kings maiestie a reasonable summe of money yearely c. The said allowances are inferiour to the moderation of the Emperor Iustinian his Lawes and will be found verie reasonable considering that by the tolleration of Vsurie politicke men can deliuer their moneys in verie great summes at ten in the hundreth freely and without such trouble CHAP. XIII Of Mons pietatis or Banke of Charitie THe second meane to suppresse the biting vsurie of extortion vpon the common people is by prouiding a course that they may haue moneys vpon pawne without paying any interest or vsurie for the loane of it according to the manner of Bridges in Flanders which is more pleasing but it is not so vniuersall as the Pawne houses are where great summes are to be had to accommodate Merchants and all men to preuent the generall abuse albeit it cannot be denyed but that the extortion vpon the meaner sort of people is more haynous and detestable which was the cause that by the Lawes of the Romans he that tooke vsurie of the poore was more punished than he that did steale from the rich as is before declared In Italie there are Montes pietatis that is to say Mounts or Bankes of Charitie places where great summes of money are by legacies giuen for reliefe of the poore to borrow vpon pawnes and to pay onely after three or foure in the hundreth at the most to maintaine the officers and to beare the charges of such an erected Mount for euer But the manner of Bridges as aforesaid may be thought more reasonable paying the officers out of the contributions which by their means may be much increased according to the orders which are hereafter declared Moneys to be giuen to suppresse vsurie for euerie man is willing to giue for the suppression of intollerable and abhominable vsurie The rich that are charitably disposed will giue because vsurie politicke should not be biting the meaner sort of people will be contributarie because of the commodiousnes of it for who will not giue six pence or twelue pence euerie quarter of the yeare when he may borrow a reasonable summe of money without paying any vse for it for one yere or a longer time according to occasions I am sure of most mens inclinations by an attempt made of the practise hereof some yeares since for after the names taken of aboue 1500 persons that were willing to contribute yearely and some Diuines and others that would lend freely 50 ll 100 ll or more for some yeares and some 500 ll I made an alphabetical register of them which was deliuered into the hands of a great personage who as it seemeth was not worthie of the honour thereof but to my remembrance it amounted to some 2000 ll for moneys giuen and to be lent and aboue six hundreth pounds yearely during the liues of the benefactors so that no man hath cause to doubt of the collection of a great stocke for so godly a worke if authoritie were had when this was done vpon the onely hope and surmise thereof to the effecting whereof I will be willing still to doe my best endeauour Now the orders are as followeth Orders to be obserued for the gouernment of the Mount of Charitie consisting of two houses within the citie of London and the suburbes thereof and one house at Westminster where all men may borrow moneys in small summes without paying any vse or loane for the same vpon pawne to be deliuered for caution or securitie of the said moneys according to the manner of Bridges in Flanders and other countries 1 IMprimis That all men of what qualitie or condition soeuer they be being destitute of money shall haue money at all conuenient times without paying any vse or loane for the same but deliuering onely a pawne of any moueable thing so it be not aboue fortie shillings at any one time vntill a competent stock be raised for the maintenance of the said Mount of Charitie for euer 2 Item Whereas the said stocke is raised and to be increased by meanes of charitable and conscionable persons which either do freely lend moneys without taking interest for the same or do freely giue in money and yearely contributions according to their vertuous d●sposition which moneys may in progresse of time amount to a notable summe the Treasurer generall therefore shall be a man sufficient and of honest behauiour carefull to appoint sworne honest men vpon sureties to collect the said moneys and for keeping of the pawnes with their Clarkes and other attendants and the Surueior of accounts shall be a man diligent and skilfull in accounts all for the better incouragement of the said charitable giuers and free lenders for the aduancement of this charitable worke 3 Item Whereas the like House called Saint George was heretofore erected at Genoua in Italie by noble Knights bound in honour to see the people relieued from oppression biting vsurie and extortion which by all vertuous Knights is at all times approued and commended There shall be kept one paire of tables in euerie house containing the names of such honourable persons and vertuous Knights ' as shall be yearely contributaries by quarterly paiments during their naturall liues or lend any summe of money gratis for a time together with the names of such well disposed persons as by