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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

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and Goods by vertue hereof to be taken proved to belong to the said States General or any of their Subjects to be lawfull prize to the said Sir Edmond Turnor and George Carew their Executors Administrators or Assigns as aforesaid according to our Princely intention hereby signified and expressed and to take care that this Our Royal Commission be duly executed and favourably interpreted and construed in all respects to the benefit and best advantage of the said Sir Edmond Turnor and George Carew their Executors Administrators and Assigns as aforesaid In Witness whereof We have caused these Our Letters to be made Patents Witness Our self at Westminster the 19. day of May in the 17. Year of Our Reign Per ip'm Regem It is to be considered that upon some Spoyls and Depredations done by the West-India Company of Holland to the English upon the Coast of Guinny whereby the Affrican Company suffered great Dammages and Affronts the King and His Royal Highness the Duke of York having particular shares and proportions therein for want of Satisfaction and Reparation In conclusion General Reprizals were Proclaimed against the States and their Subjects before this grant aforesaid passed for Particular and Special Reprizals in Courtens Case although it was in agitation some years before Yet after all this the Proprietors Applyed themselves respectively to the States and Directors of the East-India Company to accomodate that Affair rather then to put the said Grant into Execution and when nothing would prevail several Commissions in the year 1666. were Assigned to Captain Edward Lucy Nicholas Carew Iohn Holmes Edward Manning Tyrence Byrne and other Captains and Commanders who brought in several Ships and their Ladings as Prize but in regard the Hollanders Traded under the Colours and Trusts of the Swedes Hamburgers Flemmings Breamers Dantzickers Lubeckers and other Nations in Common amity with England the Ships and Goods so brought in were most of them claimed by several Agents from the Subjects of those Nations or the Residents of those Princes and States whereupon they were restored by the Judge of the Admiralty so that there was not bona fide Fifteen Hundred Pounds recovered as by the Register in the Court of Admiralty appears before a Proclimation Issued forth on the 10th of August 1666. to suspend the Execution of the said Letters Patents under pretence of Misdemeanours in the Captains with an Order of the Councel Table of the same Date to Commit the said George Carew who granted the said Commissions although neither of the said Captains nor the said Carew were ever Summoned or Questioned judicially to answer any charge against them Then the Proprietors and Persons interested Presented their Petition to His Majestie to have some satisfaction for the present out of the Prizes taken from the East-India Company of Holland and others by the Kings Ships but answer was given that they were to be disposed for other Services the War being Proclaimed for General Reprizals and that the Petitionors might resort to their own special Grant in a more seasonable time the Seamen being wanting for the Kings Ships Then some of the most considerable Creditors made several inspections into His Majesties Speeches and Orders of both Houses in relation to the War against Holland A very remarkable one being deliver'd by the Earl of Manchester Lord Chamberlain of His Majesties Household with his Speech made to the Lord Mayor Aldermen and worthy Citizens of London at a Common-Hall on Tuesday the 1. of December 1664. viz Die Veneris 25. November 1664 Ordered by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in Parliament Assembled that the thanks of both Houses of Parliament be given unto the City of London for their forwardness in Assisting His Majesty and in Particular for Furnishing Him with several great Sums of Money towards His preparations for the Honour Safety and Trade of this Nation And more Especially well weighed several Periods of His Majesties Speech to both Houses of Parliament on the 24th of November 1664. as followeth viz. Mr. Speaker ANd you Gentlemen of the House of Commons I know not whether it be worth My pains to endeavour to remove a vile Iealousie which some ill Men scatter abroad and which I am sure will never sinck into the breast of any Man who is worthy to sit upon your Benches that when you have given me a Noble and proportionable Supply for the support of a War I may be induced by some evil Councelors for they will be thought to think very respectively of my own Person to make a suddain Peace and get all that Mony for my own private occasions But let me tell you and you may be most confident of it that when I am compelled to enter into a War for the Protection Honour and Benefit of my Subjects I will God Willing not make a Peace but upon the obtaining and securing those ends for which the War is entred into and when that can be done no good Man will be sorry for the determination of it WHereupon the Commons of England acknowledging in the Preamble of their Acts with all humility and thankfulness to His Majestie for his abundant care in their preservation at Sea and of the great Charge necessary for the defence thereof Granted at several times Five Millions Four Hundred and Four Thousand Seven Hundred and Fifty Pounds Eleven Shillings and Eight Pence for Extraordinary Supplies towards the Wars out of which his Royal Highness the Duke of York had the Sum of One Hundred and Twenty Thousand Nine Hundred and Two Pounds Fiftéen Shillings and Eight Pence a Months Tax for his Heroick courage at Sea against the Hollanders Upon this consideration the said Creditors and those intrested in the Letters Patents for the special Reprizals applied themselves again in season and out of season to His Majestie and the Councel for some Reparations out of the Imbeazilments of the Prizes taken by the Kings Ships from the Dutch or out of the Monies given by Parliament but answer was made that His Majestie had done for the Petitioners already all what the Law required and so they might rest satisfi'd therewith the Debt being stated and ascertained by a Grant for reparation under the Great Seal of England Afterwards in the Month of Iune 1667. Preparations being made for a Treaty of Peace and common Alliance at Breda the Creditors and Proprietors concern'd in the Bona Esperanza and Henry Bonadventura applied themselves to the King and Ambassadors Extroardinary on both sides as also unto the Directors of the East-India Company of the Netherlands that satisfaction might be given in that singular Case of Courten to take away the continual Claim and Execution so intailed by the Especial Grant under the Great Seal of England that would perpetually be incumbant upon the States General and the East-India Company of the Netherlands until Restitution be made then Iohn de Wit the Pensionarie of Holland who offered Four Hundred Thousand Guilders in the year