Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n daughter_n die_v marry_v 20,315 5 9.6582 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A29745 A brief remonstrance of the grand grievances and oppressions suffered by Sir William Courten and Sir Paul Pyndar, knts., deceased as also by their heirs, executors, administrators, and creditors : humbly represented to both Houses of Parliament, prorogued to 21 October 1680 : faithfully collected out of several courts of record, orders of counsel, and treaties of peace and common alliance : with several remarks thereupon for the improvement of naviagation, trade, and commerce / by John Brown. Brown, John, of London. 1680 (1680) Wing B5025; ESTC R27230 34,787 30

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

A Brief REMONSTRANCE Of the Grand Grievances and Oppressions Suffered by Sir William Courten and Sir Paul Pyndar K nts deceased As also by their Heirs Executors Administrators and Creditors Humbly Represented to Both Houses of PARLIAMENT Prorogued to 21. October 1680. Faithfully Collected out of several Courts of Record Orders of Councel and Treaties of Peace and Common Alliance With several REMARKS thereupon For the Improvement of Navigation Trade and Commerce By JOHN BROWN of London Gent. LONDON Printed in the Year 1680. To the Right Honourable Sir ROBERT CLAYTON K nt Lord Mayor of the City of LONDON And to the Right Worshipful Sir THOMAS PLAYER K nt William Love and Thomas Pilkington E sqs MEMBERS of PARLIAMENT Chosen for the Honourable City of LONDON Right Honourable and Right Worshipful IT 'S agreed by all Divines Philosophers and Lawyers that every Man hath a Right to hold and injoy those things which he hath Righteously obtained even as the first Occupants of Lands retain a Reall Interest and Property by a Natural and civil Possession But the Hollanders and Zealanders of late would perswade Soveraign Princes and their Ministers to make no difference between Reason of State and common Right In whose Provinces the Soveraign Power resting in the Common People their Deputies were so bold in the infancy of their State soon after King Iames had delivered their cautionary Towns and quitted a great Sum of Money due to the Crown of England and perswaded the French King to discharge a greater That they at all times afterwards refused to settle any Regulation of Commerce and Navigation in the East-Indies and the Whale-Fishing the proper Discovery of the Russia Merchants but gave Laws concerning the old English Draperies Banishing all Died and Dressed Cloaths disputing the Tare of the rest after they had invited the Merchant Adventurers successively to Middleburgh Delfe and Rotterdam with priviledges since taken away yet some of the said Company are now Resident in Dort The People of Holland Zealand and Friezland having also incroached upon the Rights of Fisheries on the Coasts of England Scotland and Ireland Denying any Tribute although Spain and France at the same time purchased Licence by Treaty or Special Commission Sir DUDLEY CARLETON Demanded satisfaction and a regulation in those points in the year 1618. And also for reducing their Coyns to such a Standard that might hinder the Transporting of English Gold and Silver out of His Majesties Dominions The Prince of Orange their General after many Debates then told the Embassador Carleton that the Deputies of the several Cities in Holland Zealand and Freizland durst not touch upon those things especially that concerning Fisheries there being in those three Maritine Provinces one Hundred and fifty thousand People and upwards that had their Livelihoods and Dependencies upon the Fisheries on the British-Coasts but desired him to Write to Secretary NAUNTON to move the King that those Rights of Fisheries might be redeemed and Purchased for a Sum of Money King Iames being unwilling to treat upon those terms all the Debates rested re in facta What inestimable loss and Damages the Crown of England and the Subjects thereof and more particularly the City of London have suffered in the premises is fit for a Parliament to inquire after whereby they may find what is become of all the old broad Gold abased in Holland and afterwards bought up again for the English East-India Company The main Scope of this following Remonstrance is to give Your Honours an Exact account of the matters of Fact wherein those two Worthy Persons Sir William Courten and Sir Paul Pyndar were so grieved and oppressed that had been so necessary and serviceable to the Crown and Kingdom of England and after them their Heirs Executors Administrators and Creditors there wants no Vouchers within the Walls of this City to make Evident to the World the truth of every Paragraph herein that calls Aloud for Relief from the Justice of a Parliament The several Abstracts of the following Cases being of High Import to the Honour and Interest of the King and Kingdom may easily invite every Person that is a Lover of his Country to a thorow perusal thereof and even to Gratifie himself with some Remarks not Vulgarly known Obliging thereby Right Honourable And Right Worshipfnl Your most Obedient and Humble Servant JOHN BROWN A Brief Remonstrance of the grand Grievances and Oppressions suffered by Sir William Courten and Sir Paul Pyndar Knts. deceased As also by their Heirs Executors Administrators and Creditors with several Remarks thereupon Humbly represented to both Houses of Parliament Prorogued to the 21 of October 1680. THAT upon confidence and expectation of Protection and Preservation of their Lives Liberties and Estates with the quiet injoyment of the Protestant Religion under the Government of Queen Elizabeth and Her Successors Many Worthy persons related to Sr. William Courten transported Themselves and their Families out of Flanders Brabant and the other Spanish Netherlands amongst whom the Father and Mother of Sr. William Courten arrived in England from Menen in Flanders in the year 1567. And having remitted their Monies and other Effects from beyond the Seas exercised the Trade of Merchandizing in Silks and Linen during their Lives in the City of London and left two Sons and a Daughter named William Peter and Margaret Courten unto whom they gave plentiful Estates Sr. William Courten being the eldest Son intermarried with the Daughter and Heir of Peter Cromeling a Linen-Merchant of Coutrick in Flanders who left a personal Estate of sixty Thousand Pounds Sterling to his said Daughter provided that fifty Thousand Pounds thereof should be laid out in Lands in the Kingdom of England and settled upon Peter Courten his Grandchild begotten of his said Daughter by the said Sr. William which settlement was made accordingly And the said Peter afterwards being made a Barronet married with the Lord Stannop's Daughter but died without Issue and left the Estate to Sr. William Courten his Father In the Year 1606 Sr. William Courten Peter Courten his brother and Iohn Moncy of London Merchant who married the said Margaret Courten Widow of Matthias Boudaen entred into a Trade of Partnership with a joynt Stock two parts whereof belonged to Sir William Courten and to the said Peter Courten and Iohn Moncy each a fourth part This Trade in Company was carried on for 24 years together to several parts of the World wherein they returned yearly 200000 l. Sterling and upwards Communibus Annis in the Linen Trade Italian Trade Barbary Trade French Trade and Whale-Fishing upon their Joynt Stock aforesaid then Peter Courten in the year 1630 being lately Knighted in England dyed at Middleburgh in Zealand where he lived and had gotten the greatest part of the effects abroad into his hands and left Peter Boudaen Son of the said Matthias his Executor And in the year following Iohn Moncy transported himself from London to Zealand to settle the Accompts