Difference between revisions of "Daniel Sloyer the younger"

From MarineLives
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
 
Line 19: Line 19:
 
|Has HCA evidence completed=No
 
|Has HCA evidence completed=No
 
|Has source comment completed=No
 
|Has source comment completed=No
 +
|Type of ship=N/A
 
|Role in Silver Ship litigation=Mentioned
 
|Role in Silver Ship litigation=Mentioned
 
}}
 
}}
Line 26: Line 27:
 
Probably born in Hamburg.
 
Probably born in Hamburg.
  
Resident in Cadiz in early 1650s, living "neare to the Torreon in Cadize".<ref>ADD HCA REFERECNCE IMG_117_07_1987</ref> Continued to be resident in Cadiz until at least 1664.<ref>[http://lib.ugent.be/fulltxt/RUG01/001/369/716/RUG01-001369716_2010_0001_AC.pdf Anne Blondé, Ontstaan en ontwikkeling van de functie van consul van de (Zuid) Nederlandse handelsnaties in Spanje tijdens de 16de en 17de eeuw (Universiteit Gent, 2008-2009), p.70]</ref>
+
Resident in Cadiz in early 1650s, living "neare to the Torreon in Cadize".<ref>ADD HCA REFERENCE IMG_117_07_1987</ref> Continued to be resident in Cadiz until at least 1664.<ref>[http://lib.ugent.be/fulltxt/RUG01/001/369/716/RUG01-001369716_2010_0001_AC.pdf Anne Blondé, Ontstaan en ontwikkeling van de functie van consul van de (Zuid) Nederlandse handelsnaties in Spanje tijdens de 16de en 17de eeuw (Universiteit Gent, 2008-2009), p.70]</ref>
  
 
Daniel Sloyer the younger's father was the Hamburg merchant Daniel Sloyer the elder, who lived in Hamburg and who was deceased by late 1652, leaving his widow in Hamburg, and Daniel the younger's brother, [[Franz Sloyer]]. Daniel Sloyer the younger had part-ownership of the ship the ''Saint George'' with his brother ffrancis (alt. Franz) Sloyer.<ref>ADD REFERENCE></ref>
 
Daniel Sloyer the younger's father was the Hamburg merchant Daniel Sloyer the elder, who lived in Hamburg and who was deceased by late 1652, leaving his widow in Hamburg, and Daniel the younger's brother, [[Franz Sloyer]]. Daniel Sloyer the younger had part-ownership of the ship the ''Saint George'' with his brother ffrancis (alt. Franz) Sloyer.<ref>ADD REFERENCE></ref>

Latest revision as of 05:56, September 8, 2017



Daniel Sloyer the younger
Person Daniel Sloyer the younger
Title
First name Daniel
Middle name(s)
Last name Sloyer
Suffix the younger
Spouse of
Widow of
Occupation Merchant
Secondary shorebased occupation
Mariner occupation
Associated with ship(s)
Training Not apprentice
Is apprentice of
Was apprentice of
Had apprentice(s)
Citizen Unknown
Literacy Signature
Has opening text
Has signoff text
Signoff image (Invalid transcription image)
Language skills German language
Has interpreter
Birth street
Birth parish
Birth town Hamburg
Birth county
Birth province
Birth country
Res street Near the Torreon
Res parish
Res town Cadiz
Res county
Res province
Res country Spain
Birth year
Marriage year
Death year
Probate date
First deposition age
Primary sources
Act book start page(s)
Personal answer start page(s)
Allegation start page(s)
Interrogatories page(s)
Deposition start page(s)
Chancery start page(s)
Letter start page(s)
Miscellaneous start page(s)
Act book date(s)
Personal answer date(s)
Allegation date(s)
Interrogatories date(s)
Deposition date(s)
How complete is this biography?
Has infobox completed Yes
Has synthesis completed No
Has HCA evidence completed No
Has source comment completed No
Ship classification
Type of ship N/A
Silver Ship litigation in 1650s
Role in Silver Ship litigation Mentioned


Biographical synthesis

Daniel Sloyer the younger (b. ?; d. ca. 1691). Merchant.

Probably born in Hamburg.

Resident in Cadiz in early 1650s, living "neare to the Torreon in Cadize".[1] Continued to be resident in Cadiz until at least 1664.[2]

Daniel Sloyer the younger's father was the Hamburg merchant Daniel Sloyer the elder, who lived in Hamburg and who was deceased by late 1652, leaving his widow in Hamburg, and Daniel the younger's brother, Franz Sloyer. Daniel Sloyer the younger had part-ownership of the ship the Saint George with his brother ffrancis (alt. Franz) Sloyer.[3]

Franz Sloyer had a commercial relationship with his brother Daniel Sloyer the younger, frequently shipping goods to Daniel in Cadiz and receiving returns to Hamburg from Daniel.

Anne Blondé in her University of Ghent master's thesis (2008-2009) reproduces a list of "Mayordomos" for Cadiz from 1663 to 1703, citing Hendrik Vandeginste, De Vlaamse natie te Cádiz (1665-1700). Een socioculturele benadering, Gent, RUG (onuitgegeven licenciaatsverhandeling) (Gent, 2000) as her source. As Mayordomo for 1664 she lists "vermoedelijk Daniel Sloyer" (translation: probably Daniel Sloyer).[4]

Daniel's brother Franz Sloyer predeceased him. A Reichskammergericht record contains the "Testament von 1691 des Daniel Sloyer, Kaufmann in Cadix". The same record contains an "Inventar von 1687 des Nachlasses des Franz Sloyer, Kaufmann in Hamburg".[5]

Evidence from High Court of Admiralty

Daniel Sloyer the younger was the lead claimant in the High Court of Admiralty for the ship the Saint George, which had been seized in 1652 by the English parliament's ships. The full title of the claim was "The clayme of Daniel Sloyer Abraham de Boyes Detliffe Classof and others of Hamburgh, and Vincent van Campen of Cadize in Spaine but borne in Hamburgh for the shipp the Saint George whereof John Martyns is master and her tackle apparell and furniture lately taken by some of the Parliaments shipps."[6]

Harman Reyndorp and ffrancis Sloyer, both merchants of Hamburg, freighted the ship the Saint Paul of Hamburg (Master: Hendrick Luck) in 1653 to go in ballast from Lubeck, where she had been built, to Dronten in Norway to take in a lading of 6000 deals on behalf of Harman Rayndorp and ffrancis Sloyer "and carried and delivered them at Cadiz to Daniel Sloyer brother of the said ffrancis for accompt of the said Hance Reynsdorp and ffrancis Sloyer". Harman Reyndorp and ffrancis Sloyer together owned a sixteenth part of the ship.[7]

ffrancis Sloyer freighted the ship the Crowne Imperial (Master: Hans Meynerson) in July 1653 at Hamburg for Cadiz "to goe to Cadiz and carry barley, beanes and peece goods, which were laden by him and Peter (?Roodt), Derrick Dobbelar, Albert Ankelman, and other merchants of Hambourough”. At Cadiz the goods were delivered to “Daniel Sloyer, Vincent Van Campen, John Scrother and others, factors and merchants there residing".[8]

Comment on sources

See Sloyer/Schloyer family
  1. ADD HCA REFERENCE IMG_117_07_1987
  2. Anne Blondé, Ontstaan en ontwikkeling van de functie van consul van de (Zuid) Nederlandse handelsnaties in Spanje tijdens de 16de en 17de eeuw (Universiteit Gent, 2008-2009), p.70
  3. ADD REFERENCE>
  4. Anne Blondé, Ontstaan en ontwikkeling van de functie van consul van de (Zuid) Nederlandse handelsnaties in Spanje tijdens de 16de en 17de eeuw (Universiteit Gent, 2008-2009), p.70
  5. Staatsarchiv Hamburg, 211-2_M 42 Teil 1
  6. HCA 13/67 f.216v Silver IMG 117 07 1847
  7. HCA 13/68 f.237r
  8. HCA 13/68 f.238r