HCA 13/63 f.31v Annotate

From MarineLives
Revision as of 10:18, December 3, 2015 by ColinGreenstreet (Talk | contribs)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Expand this area to see details of page purpose, how to register, how to add footnotes, and useful links.




Purpose

This page is for the annotation of HCA 13/63 f.31v.

Annotations can be viewed by everyone on a read-only basis.

For more information on MarineLives and the MarineLives Annotation Project read our Shipping News blog entries:

Annotating Marine Lives, May 1st 2013
Adding value to primary documents, May 8th 2013
Witnesses in Court, 1657-1658 (May 9th, 2013)




Registration to annotate documents

Registration is required to contribute annotations to this page and to other pages in the wiki.

You can register using the following Form, and we will issue you with a UserName and Password for the wiki.




Text formatting

The MarineLives transcription platform is built on MediaWiki, which uses wiki markup to format text. For a guide showing how to produce italics, bold, escaped text and headings, see the MediaWiki page on formatting; there are also guides for internal and external links, image embedding, tables, and more on lists.




Adding footnotes

  • Go into edit mode
  • Insert immediately after the sentence or phrase you wish to annotate the following macro:<ref>This is the footnote text</ref>
  • Replace 'This is the footnote text' with the footnote you wish to add, using the format: first name, surname, title, (place of publication, date of publication), page or folio number
  • Save the page


For more information and advanced formatting, including how to add and format links within the footnote, see the Wikipedia help on footnotes. This uses the same markup formatting.

Example footnote template:

  • ''HCA 13/XX f.XXXX Case: XXXX; Deposition: XXXX; Date: XXXX. Transcribed by XXXX''<ref>[http://XXXXX Electronic link to a digital source]</ref>




Suggested links

Annotate HCA 13/64 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/65 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/68 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/69 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/70 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/71 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/72 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/73 Volume Page
Annotate HCA 13/74 Volume Page
Marine Lives Tools

Image

HCA 13/63 f.31v: Right click on image for full size image in separate window

Transcription

there by the space of Allmost two Moneths nmext before
the said tyme as an Emptie shipp (as indeed shee then was)
haveing finished her voyage And saith that the palce
wherein the said shipp was soe laied up was such and
soe out of the way that in all probabilitie shee could neither
doe or suffer any wrong to or from any ship unlesse
they would willfully runne upon her as the shippe
the Saint Jacob did, as is hereafter
expressed reddens rationem scientia sua hee this deponent
haveing knowne the said ship the Phillip ladied up
in the said place upon her former comeing home form a
voyage next before this her last voyage Et alr nescit
deponere salvis infrascrptis ad qua se refert.

Ad 7um deponit that about the time in the 6th article of
the Allegation mentioned tha Company of the said
shippe the Saint Jacob being (as iit seems) unskilled or negligent in
bringing up a shippe or haleing of her ashore in the River
of Thames arlkate did runne theire said ship aground
upon the Northside of the said River as is arlate
neere unto the said shippe the Phillip att such tyme as
the Tyde of Ebb wa fallen about two foote; And saith
that at the same tyme the said shipp the Saint Jacobn
came soe violently a shore that her Boltspritt stucke
into the maine shrowds of the Phillip and broke her
Ratlings. The premisses he deposeth hee this deponent
seeing the said ship imediatly after she soe ranne ashore
att dickeshore and being then abord the said ship the
Phillip and seeing the same soe had and done as aforesaid
Et alr nescit deponere.

Ad decimum et 11um deponit that att the tyme arlate the Company
abord the said ship the Saint Jacob did without any care or veiwe
before hand made (as they ought to have done) runne their
said shippe a shoare upon a hole where lighter men
take up Ballast as is arlate and by meanes thereof
the said ship laye with her Bilge and midshipps in the said hole in at least 6 [?XXXX] with
her head a fdrye ground at Lowe water and her stearne
sitting upon the chaine to which ships rideing in the said
River of Thames are usually fastned by reason whereof
the said shippe being a deepe laden shippe was much [?XXX]
and strained and her seames thereby much opened which
hee is confidently assured that what damage
soever did happen into the said shipp the Saint Jacob
which faine was done and did soe come by her said
Running aground both at Dickshore and before that at
Cuckolds point arlate And not by any Anchor or [?XXXX]
of