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A54620 The political anatomy of Ireland with the establishment for that kingdom when the late Duke of Ormond was Lord Lieutenant ... : to which is added Verbum sapienti, or, An account of the wealth and expences of England, and the method of raising taxes in the most equal manner ... / by Sir William Petty ... Petty, William, Sir, 1623-1687.; Tate, Nahum, 1652-1715. 1691 (1691) Wing P1931; ESTC R4596 80,138 248

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the Secretaries singly and his Majesty under his hand-Writing doth Specify that his Majesty will have this done by Mr. Secretary Nicholas These Propositions made unto his Majesty by his Grace the Duke of Ormond Lord Steward of his Majesty's Houshold and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland were received and approved at the Council board the 22 day of Iune 1662 there being present the King 's most excellent Majesty his Royal Highness the Duke of York his Highness Prince Rupert the Lord Chancellor the Lord Treasurer Duke of Albemarle Duke of Ormond Marquess of Dorchester Lord Great Chamberlain Lord Chamberlain Earl of Barkshire Earl of Portland Earl of Norwich Earl of Anglesey Earl of Lauderdail the Lord Hatton Lord Hollis Lord Ashly Sir William Compton Mr. Treasurer Mr. Vice Chamberlain Mr Secretary Nicholas Mr. Secretary Morris By His Majesties Command EDWARD NICHOLAS At the Court at Hampton-Court IUNE 22. 1662. Present The King 's Most Excellent Majesty His Highness the Duke of York His Highness Prince Rupert Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer Duke of Albemarl Duke of Ormond Marquess of Dorchester Lord Great Chamberlain Earl of Berkshire Earl of Portland Earl of Norwich Earl of Anglesey Earl of Lauderdale Lord Hatton Lord Hollis Lord Ashly Sir William Compton Mr. Treasurer Mr. Vice-Chamberlain Mr. Secretary Nicholas Mr. Secretary Morris Charles R. HIS Majesty's express pleasure is That the Masters of Requests and every of them in their several Months of attendance at Court do Constantly observe these ensuing Directions viz. Not to move his Majesty in Petitions for any Irish Suit by way of Reward either for any of His Majesty's Servants or others before the ordinary Revenue of that Kingdom become able to maintain the necessary Charge of that Crown and the Debts thereof be fully cleared For any particular Complaint of Injustice or Oppression pretended to be done there unless it appear the Party made his first Address unto the Lord Lieutenant for confirmation of any Reversion of Offices within that Kingdom or any new Grant of Reversion hereafter any places in the Lord-Lieutenants gift either of the Civil or Military List when any such shall fall void Any erection of a new Office in that Kingdom before such time as the Lord-Lieutenant be therewithall acquainted his Opinion required and certified back accordingly By His Majesty's Command EDWARD NICHOLAS CHARLES R. THere being nothing more conducible to the quiet and safety of a Kingdom than a frugal and regular ordering and disposing of the Revenue that is to maintain the Publick Charge and Expence of the Government both Civil and Military We have thought fit with the advice of our Council upon a Prospect made of all our Revenue certain and casual and the just means in view upon the settlement of Estate in that Kingdom now in hand for improveing thereof to begin by this Establishment both to bring our Payments as near as may be to the compass of our Receipts and to provide especially for our Publick Affairs by supporting Civil Justice and Government and by maintaining our Forces in the present Strength and Fulness intending hereafter as our Charge may grow less and our Means encrease to extend our Favour and Bounty according to our gracious Inclinations and the Merit of persons to the further encouragement of Particulars as cause shall require Whereof we have already given a proof in the liberal Addition we have made to the Judges for their better Support in the impartial administration of Justice The LIST FOR CIVIL AFFAIRS Containing the several Entertainments by the Year of all Officers and others serving in our Courts of Justice in the several Provinces of Ireland Officers belonging to the State Officers of our Customs Officers of the Excise Creation-Money with other Perpetuities and particular Payments for our Service Which We require henceforth to be duely paid out of our Revenues there by the Hands of our Vice-Treasurer or Receiver General for the time being according to the Cautions here mentioned the same to begin for and from the First day of April 1666. THESE following Payments are the constant Fees to be continued to the several Officers without change from time to time   l. s. d. The Right Honourable Arthur Earl of Anglesey Vice-Treasurer and General Receiver 050 00 00 Sir Robert Meredith Kt. Chancellor of the Exchequer 100 00 00 Iohn Busse Esq Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer 600 00 00 Sir Richard Kennedy Kt. Second Baron of the Exchequer 300 00 00 Iohn Povey Esq Third Baron of the Exchequer 220 00 00 Sir Audly Mervin Kt. His Majesty's prime Serjeant at Law 020 10 00 Sir William Domvile Kt. His Majesty's Attorney General 075 06 00 Sir Iohn Temple Kt. His Majesty's Sollicitor-General 075 00 00 Philip Fernely Esq His Majesty's Chief Remembrancer 030 00 0● Sir Iames Ware Kt. His Majesty's Auditor-General for his ancient Fee per Ann. ●84 l. 6 s. 3 d. and for an Augmentation thereof allowed by the former Establishment 50 l. in all 234 06 0● Sir Allen Brodrick Kt. His Majesty's Surveyor-General 060 00 00 Frances Lee Escheatour of the Province of Leinster 006 13 04 Escheatour of the Province of Vlster 020 05 00 Escheatour of the Province of Munster 020 05 00 Escheatour of the Province of Connaght 020 05 00 Henry Warren Esq Second Remembrancer 007 17 06 Nicholas Loftus Esq Clerk of the Pipe 015 00 00 Roger Moor Esq Chief-Chamberlain 010 00 00 Sir Robert Kennedy Bart. Second Chamberlain 005 00 00 Maurice Keating Controllor of the Pipe 007 00 00 Iohn Longfield Usher of the Exchequer for his Fee per Annum 2 l. 10 s. and for his allowance for Ink for the Exchequer 10 l. per Annum In all per Annum 012 10 00 Thomas Lea Transcriptour and Forreign Opposer 015 00 00 Edward Ludlow Summonitor of the Exchequer 007 05 00 Iohn Burniston Marshal of the four Courts 004 00 00 Sir Theophilus Iones Kt. Clerk of the Pells 030 00 00 Iohn Exham Clerk of the first fruits and twentieth parts 027 10 00 Thomas Gibson Cryer of the Court of Exchequer 001 14 04 The Right Honourable Iames Baron of Santry Lord Chief Justice of His Majesties Bench. 800 00 00 Sir Will. Aston Kt. second Justice of the said Court 300 00 00 Thomas Stockton Esq third Justice of the said Court 300 00 00 Sir Will. Vsher Kt. Clerk of the Crown of the said Court 007 10 00 The most Reverend Father in God Michael Lord Arch-bishop of Dublin Lord Chancellor of Ireland 1000 00 00 Sir Iohn Temple Sen. Kn t. Master of the Rolls 144 03 04 Dr. Dudley Loftus one of the Masters of the Chancery 020 00 00 Robert Mossom Esq another Master of the Chancery 020 00 00 George Carlton Clerk of the Crown in Chancery 025 00 00 The said George Carlton Clerk of the Hanaper for his Fee per Annum 10 l. 1 s. and for an allowance of Paper and Parchment for the Chancery per Annum 25 l.
THE Political Anatomy OF IRELAND WITH The Establishment for that Kingdom when the late Duke of ORMOND was Lord Lieutenant Taken from the RECORDS To which is added VERBUM SAPIENTI or an Account of the Wealth and Expences of England and the Method of raising Taxes in the most Equal manner Shewing also That the Nation can bear the Charge of Four Millions per Annum when the occasions of the Government require it By Sir WILLIAM PETTY late Fellow of the Royal Society and Surveyor-General of the Kingdom of Ireland LONDON Printed for D. Brown and W. Rogers at the Bible without Temple-Bar and at the Sun over-against St. Dunstans Church Fleetstreet 1691. To His Grace the Duke of ORMOND MY LORD THE Celebrated Author of the following Treatise had not only the Honour to be known to Your Grace's Grand-Father the late Illustrious Duke of ORMOND but was likewise held by Him in that just Esteem which he never fail'd of expressing towards Men of Learning and Ingenuity This was a sufficient Encouragement to me having the Manuscript-Copy deliver●d into my Hands by a Worthy and Intimate Friend of the Authors to dispose of it to the Press for the publick Benefit to Address it to Your Grace's Patronage You are so true a Successor in all the generous Virtues of Your Ancestry that I cannot doubt of Your favourable Reception of this Posthumous Work Your Generosity that takes all occasions of exerting it self towards the Living cannot fail in doing Justice to the Memory of the Dead More especially to such Persons as in their Life took care to oblige Posterity The usefulness of the ensuing Discourse at this time when there is so fair a prospect of a new Settlement in IRELAND were sufficient to recommend it to Your Grace's Protection Your Grace's Interest in the Re-establishment of that Kingdom tho it be considerable yet is much less than your Share in the glorious Enterprize towards its Recovery You had the Honour of accompanying His MAJESTY in an Adventure that shall shine in the Annals of Fame as long as the Boyne shall maintain its Course But a single Gallantry appear'd not sufficient for the Heir of ORMOND and OSSERY You have since accompanied our Royal Master to other Shores to be partaker with him in new Scenes of Action Undertakings of no less Consequence and Importance than the Deliverance of Europe This will afford sufficient matter for Panegyrick and oblige the Muses to place you in the same high Rank of Renown with Your Noble and Heroick Predecessors In the mean time be pleas'd to permit this useful Treatise to wait on you to the Camp and bring you the hearty wishes of all good Men here for Your happy Expedition and Your safe Return which is desir'd by none with a more particular Zeal than by Your GRACE'S Most Devoted Servant N. TATE THE Author's Preface SIR Francis Bacon in his Advancement of Learning hath made a judicious Parallel in many particulars between the Body Natural and Body Politick and between the Arts of preserving both in Health and Strength And it is as reasonable that as Anatomy is the best foundation of one so also of the other and that to practice upon the Politick without knowing the Symmetry Fabrick and Proportion of it is as casual as the practice of Old-women and Empyricks Now because Anatomy is not only necessary in Physicians but laudable in every Philosophical person whatsoever I therefore who profess no Politicks have for my curiosity at large attempted the first Essay of Political Anatomy Furthermore as Students in Medicine practice their inquiries upon cheap and common Animals and such whose actions they are best acquainted with and where there is the least confusion and perplexure of Parts I have chosen Ireland as such a Political Animal who is scarce Twenty years old where the Intrigue of State is not very complicate and with which I have been conversant from an Embrion and in which if I have done amiss the fault may be easily mended by another 'T is true that curious Dissections cannot be made without variety of proper Instruments whereas I have had only a commōn Knife and a Clout instead of the many more helps which such a Work requires However my rude approaches being enough to find whereabout the Liver and Spleen and Lungs lye tho' not to discern the Lymphatick Vessels the Plexus Choroidus the Volvuli of vessels within the Testicles yet not knowing that even what I have here readily done was much considered or indeed thought useful by others I have ventur'd to begin a new Work which when Corrected and Enlarged by better Hands and Helps I believe will tend to the Peace and Plenty of my Country besides which I have no other end ADVERTISEMENT THE Reader is desired to take notice That by Letter●es are meant persons restored to Land by virtue of the Letters of King Charles the Second and by Nominees such persons are intended as were restored to their Lands by being named in the Act of Settlement and Papists per Proviso were such as had Provisoes in that Act for their Lands And by the 49 Officers are meant such Commission Officers under the King who served in Ireland before the year of our Lord 1649. The following Treatise of Sir William Petty's Political Anatomy of Ireland is Printed after a Copy Transcribed from the Original writ by the Author 's own hand and all the Blanks as here Printed were in that Original And which tho' it may be suppos'd he could easily have fill'd up yet was it not held proper for any other to attempt or to add to any thing done by so great a Master This his work of The Political Anatomy of Ireland ends in page 113. P. 114. begins the famous Report from the Council of Trade in Ireland which was not only Drawn but wholly Composed by Sir William Petty and with which that Council concurred unanimously P. 132. followeth the Copy of the Commission of the late Duke of Ormond to be Lord Lieutenant and an Account of the Establishment of the Civil and Military List in his time faithfully and carefully taken out of Authentick Records And to the Nature of which the continued Title of The Political Anatomy of Ireland on those Pages agrees well enough The Volume concludes with Sir William Petty's Verbum Sapienti which relates wholly to England and shews how Taxes may be equally laid and how the Nation may well bear the Tax of Four Millions per Annum The Reader is now left with his most Critical attentive Judgment to enjoy the benefit of the great Political knowledg that Sir William Petty hath taught the Age and for which as one of the greatest Ornaments of it he deserveth perpetual celebrations Know Reader in a word That Nulla ferent talem saecla futura virum The CONTENTS of the Political Anatomy of IRELAND OF the Lands of Ireland with the present distribution and Values of the same Page 1 Of the People
part by reason of the late Rebellion do not sit in Parliament By about 3000 Freeholders and the Members of about 100 Corporations the University at Dublin reckoned for one represented in the House of Commons by about 270 Knights Citizens and Burgesses The Parliament so constituted have a Negative upon any Law that the Lord Lieutenant and Councel shall offer to the King and which the King and his Councel in England shall under the Great Seal remit to the said Parliament The Sheriffs of Counties and of Cities and Counties in Ireland are 40 finally appointed by the Lord Lieutenant each of which hath about Ten Bailiffs The Chief Governour called sometimes Lord-Lieutenant sometimes Lord-Deputy sometimes Lords Justices with a Council at this time consisting of about 50 Members do govern in all Matters belonging to the Peace Prerogative c. There be five Courts viz. a Chancery consisting of a Lord-Chancellor Master of the Rolls and two three or four Sallariated Masters of Chancery The King's-Bench of a Lord-Chief-Justice and two other Judges The Common-Pleas of the like The Exchequer of a Lord-Chief-Baron and two other Barons with the Treasurer and Chancellor of the Exchequer And a Prerogative whereof the Primate of Armagh is Judge There is also a Palatinate-Courtih Tipperary whereof the Duke of Ormond is Lord of the Liberties and Regalities to it belonging There is also a Court of Admiralty Every Bishop hath also two Courts And there have been formerly and lately but now An. 1672. suspended a Presidency of Munster and another of Connaght who meddle not with Life or Limb nor Titles of Land There is also a Court Marshal for the Affairs of the Army who in times of peace often transmit accus'd persons to the Civil-power To all these Courts do belong Officers Councellors of Law whereof I reckon are of the first Classis gaining by Estimation about 600 l. per Ann. each of the 2d gaining about 300 l. per Ann. And of the 3d gaining not above 100 l. per Ann. There are also sworn Attornies gaining about 120 l. per Ann. one with another There are in Ireland about 950 Justices of the Peace appointed by the Lord-Chancellor an Head-Constable for each Barony or Hundred being 252 and a Petty Constable for each Parish whereof are about 2278. The Ecclesiastical Government is by Arch-Bishops Bishops Arch-Deacons Deans of Cathedral-Churches in all which there are now actually but one Quire entire and that in Dublin serving both at Christ-Church and St. Patrick's And the Parsons Vicars and Curates for the Protestant-Religion are in all Ireland at this day near 500 and about half the Tythes are Impropriate and belonging to Lay-men This is the State of the External and Apparent Government of Ireland so far as it concerns the Number and Species of Persons managing the same But the Internal and Mystical Government of Ireland is thus viz. 1. There are always about Twenty Gentlemen of the Irish Nation and Popish-Religion who by reason of their Families good Parts Courtly Education and Carriage are supported by the Irish to negotiate their Concernments at the Court of England and of the Vice-Roy in Ireland These men raise their Contributions by the Priests who actually and immediately govern the People The Priests are govern'd by at least 24 Romish Bishops all of whom have a long time been conversant in France Spain Italy Germany England whereas Chaplains and Almoners c. they have made an interest with the governing Men and Ministers of State in those several Kingdoms and have obtained some Benefits and Preferments from them So as the Body of the Irish-Papist's being about 800 M. whereof near 700 M. do live in wretched Cabbins without Chimney or Window are govern'd by about 1000 Secular Priests and 2500 Friars and Regulars of several Orders whereof most are Franciscans next Dominicans and Augustins but few Capuchins and Iesuits or Carthusians These I say are govern'd by their respective Bishops and Superiors whom the Ministers of Foreign States do also govern and direct So as upon the whole matter the Irish who are the Bulk of the Nation are govern'd indirectly by Foreign Power and so are the aforenamed Lay-Patriots their support coming from the Clergy constituted as aforesaid and who do notoriously exercise their Spiritual Jurisdiction in Ireland And do also exert a Temporal Power by prevailing with Papist Justices of the Peace to send such to Gaol as are disobedient to the Clergy upon feigned or frivolous Complaints which they cause to be brought against them The Judges aforenamed all but the Chancellor go Circuits whereof there are five twice every year excepting only the one County of Kerry There is an University at Dublin but lying for the most part within one College wherein are a Provost and seven Senior and Ruling Fellows Nine Junior Fellows sixty Sch lars and at this time Commoners and other Students There was about the year 1669 erected a College of Physicians consisting of a President and 13 Fellows There are belonging to the Prerogative Arch-Deacons Courts Court-Martial and Admiralty-Courts not above to Advocates and 30 Proctors There are in the City of Dublin a Lord-Mayor 2 Sheriffs 24 Aldermen 48 Sheriffs Peers and 96 of the Common-Council There are besides Companies or Corporations of Trades-men There is lately instituted an Hospital for poor Children not yet fully perfected nor endowed There is also an Hospital for Sick Lame and Old Soldiers but without Endowment and standing but at discretion and pleasure There are in and near Dublin three Publick Prisons and one House of Correction Lastly I must intimate that the Footmanship for which the Irish 40 years agone were very famous is now almost quite lost among them every man now keeping a small Garran to ride on unless in such rocky and craggy places where 't is easier to go a foot than to ride Of the Militia and Defence of IRELAND THERE be in Ireland as elsewhere two Militias one are the Justices of Peace their Militia of High and Petty Constables as also the Sheriffs Militia of his Servants and Bailiffs and Posse Comitatus upon extraordinary occasions Of these all together there are in Ireland near 3000 all of which are bound within their several Districts there to act and not elsewhere There is or hath lately been an Army in Ireland of about thirty Troops of Horse and sixty Companies of Foot with a Regiment of Guard at Dublin as a Life-Guard for the Lord Lieutenant making in all about five thousand Men. There is also a Protestant Militia of about 24000 Men viz. about ten thousand Horse and the rest Foot The people of Ireland are all in Factions and Parties called English and Irish Protestants and Papists Though indeed the real distinction is vested and devested of the Land belonging to Papists Ann. 1641. Of which the Irish that are vested by Restoration seem rather to take part with the devested And the chief Pique which the Popish-Clergy have at the Protestants is
during His Majesty's Pleasure and only in our Absence until we shall return into this Kingdom ORMOND WHereas We the Lord-Lieutenant received Instructions from the King 's Most Excellent Majesty under His Royal Signatures bearing date the 22d day of June 1662. We do herewith deliver you a Copy of the said Instructions signed by Vs. And We do hereby require you to observe those Instructions inall such Parts of them as were to be observed by Vs and are now appliable to you in the Place of His Majesty's Deputy of this His Kingdom You are to take care That in your giving Commands or Warrants for Payments of any of His Majesty's Treasure or Moneys you observe the Rule prescribed to you in such Cases by His Majesty's Letters Patents whereby you are constituted His Majesty's Deputy of this His Kingdom Given at His Majesty's Castle of Dublin the 30 th day of May 1664. G. LANE The ESTABLISHMENT and LIST Containing all the Payments to be made for Military Affairs in Ireland to be duly paid by the Hands of our Vice-Treasurer and Treasurer at Wars according to the Cautions hereafter mentioned the same to begin for and from the 1st Day of April 1666. Signed CHARLES Rex OFFICERS General   l. s. d. THE Lord-Lieutenant and Governour-General of Ireland for his Fee per Ann. viz. for his Diet at 100 l. per mensem a Retinue of 50 Horse with Officers at 2 l. 19 s. 6 d. per diem an Allowance of 1000 l. per Ann. in lieu of cess an Allowance of 235 l. per Ann. in lieu of 235 Beefs formerly paid to the Lord-Lieutenant out of the County of Cavan an Allowance of 240 l. per Ann. formerly paid to the Lord Lieutenant out of the Tythes of Dunbogne making in all per Ann. 3860 17 06 As General of the Army per Ann. 4331 06 08 As Cap t. of a Troop of Horse per Ann. 0723 18 04 As Collonel of Foot per Ann. 0608 06 08 As Cap t. of a Foot-Company per Ann. 0261 11 08   9786 00 10 For His Guard of Halberteers consisting of a Cap t. at 11 l. 4 s. each Calendar Month a Lieutenant at 9 l. 16 s. two Serjeants at 3 l. 10 s. each and 60 Halberteers at 2 l. 2 s. each making per Ann. 1848 00 00 The Lieutenant-General of the Army at 1 l. per diem 365 00 00 To Cease post mortem or other Determinations of the Grant made to Thomas Earl of Osserey   l. s. d. The Serjeant Major-General of the Army at 1 l. per diem per Ann. 365 00 00 To Cease post mortem or other Determinations of the Grant made to Roger Earl of Orery   l. s. d. Sir Henry Titchburn K t. Marshal of Ireland for his Entertainment at 3 s. 9 d. per diem a Trumpeter at 6 d. ob q. per diem and a Retinue of 30 Horse at 9 d. a piece per diem making per Ann. 489 06 07 The Commissary General of the Horse at 1 l. per diem per Ann. 365 00 00 To Cease post mortem or other Determinations of the Grant to Iohn Lord Kingston   l. s. d. The muster-Muster-Master General and Clerk of the Cheque for his Entertainment at 4 s. per diem at 10 Horse-Men at 1 s. the piece per diem for any encrease of his Entertainment 3 s. 6 d. per diem with an Allowance for one Clerk at 2 s. 6 d. per diem making per Ann. 365 00 00   3066 08 03 Six Commissaries of the Musters at 100 per Ann. each 600 00 00 One Corporal of the Field viz. Collonel Beverly Vsher at 5 s. per diem per Ann. 091 05 00 To Cease post mortem or other Determinations of the Grant in being   l. s. d. The Advocate General of the Army at 6 s. 8 d. per diem 121 13 04 The Physician-General of the Army at 10 s. per diem 182 10 00 Chirurgion of the Army in Ireland and of the Hospital of Dublin 121 13 04 OFFICERS Provincial   l. s. d. q. THE Lord President of Munster for His Fee at 100 l. Sterling per An. for his Diet and the Councils there at 7 l. 10 s. per Week and for his Retinue of 30 HorseMen and 20 Foot-Men at 1 l. 2 s. 6 d. ob per diem in all per Annum 908 19 09 ob The Lord President of Connau●ht for his Fee at 100 l. Sterling per Ann. for his Diet and the Councils there at 7 l. 10 s. per Week and for his Retinue of 30 Horse-Men and 20 Foot-Men at 1 l. 2 s. ● d. ob per diem in all per Ann. 908 19 09 ob The Provost-Marshal of Lemster for His Entertainment at 4 s. 2 d. ob q. per diem making per Ann. 077 03 07 ob   2126 14 02 ob The Provost-Marshal of Munster for his Entertainment at 4 s. 2 d. ob q. per diem making per Ann. 077 03 07 ob The Provost-Marshal of Connaught for his Entertainment at 4 s. 2 d. ob q. per diem making per Ann. 077 03 07 ob The Provost Marshal of Vlster for his Entertainment at 4 s. 2 d. ob q. per diem making per Ann. 077 03 07 ob All the said Provost-Marshals with the Entertainment due unto them respectively to cease post mortem or other Determinations of their Grants CONSTABLES   l. s. d. q. The Constable of DublinCastle for his Entertainment at 20 l. per Ann. 020 00 00   The Porter of Dublin-Castle at 9 d. per diem per ann 013 13 09   The Constable of LimerickCastle for his Entertainment at 10 l. per ann and a Porter at 6 d. ob q. per diem per ann 018 07 09 ob The Constable of Athlone-Castle for his Entertainment at 8 l. 2 s. 6 d. per ann and a Porter at 6 d. ob q. per diem per ann 018 07 09 ob The Constable of Roscomon-Castle for his Entertainment at 3 s. 4 d. per diem 060 16 08   The Constable of Carrickfergus for his Entertainment at 2 s. 6 d. per diem per ann 045 12 06     178 06 00 ob The Master of the Ordnance with other Officers thereunto belonging and Train of Artillery   l. s. d. The Master of the Ordnance for himself at 6 s. 8 d. per diem a Lieutenant at 1 ● 6 d. per diem a Cornet ● 9 d. and 18 Horsemen at 1 s. the piece per diem per an 491 04 07 The Lieutenant of the Ordnance at 7 s. per diem per an 127 15 00 To cease after the death of Albert Cunningham now Patentee or other determination of his Grant   l. s. d. The Ingineer Overseer Surveyor and Director-General of His Majesties Fortifications c. at 5 s. per diem per annum 091 05 00 To cease after the death of Captain Iohn Payne and Capt. Iohn Ha●●am now Patentees or other