Difference between revisions of "HCA 13/71 f.25v Annotate"

From MarineLives
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
Line 72: Line 72:
 
number of men, by what he hath seene, observed and heard, during his
 
number of men, by what he hath seene, observed and heard, during his
 
sayd four yeares abode att Ciprus, may receyve, and steeve upon a shipp
 
sayd four yeares abode att Ciprus, may receyve, and steeve upon a shipp
of such tonnage, about eight or att most nyne baggs ˹a day˺ one day with another
+
of such tonnage, about eight or att most nyne baggs a day one day with another
 
from the first beginning of her steeving till she have recyved her full
 
from the first beginning of her steeving till she have recyved her full
 
Cargo, and not more, the reason whereof he hath observed to be partly the greatnes
 
Cargo, and not more, the reason whereof he hath observed to be partly the greatnes

Revision as of 21:43, September 14, 2013

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 13/71 f.25v.

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

P1080936

Transcription

of the steeving geere are burst and other inconveniencies happen
to the great retarding of the worke, so as he saith that ordinarily
the number of men interrate in a vessell of the tonnage interro=
gate may receyve on board and steeve about eight baggs a day
one day with another, And otherwise he cannot depose.

To the 15th he saith that on the say interrate there was not roome in the
sayd shipp to have receyved the number of baggs interrate without
steeving, for he saith there was not roome enough safely to have
layd att that tyme one bagg without steeving. And otherwise
he cannot depose.

To the 16th he saith that when the Thomas Bonadventure ćame from Ciprus
shee could not have ćarryed thirty tonnes of cotton woolls more than were
laden in her, howbeit when she ćame to Zant she might and did
receyve thirty tonnes of Currants; the reason of which difference is
from the different qualities of the sayd merchandizes bećause Currants may
safely and well be stowed any where in the hold and in the traveway of
woolls, but the sayd traveway was not halfe long enough to receive such
a quantity of woolls in regard of the great length of the sackes, and
for that Currants are laden without steeving which wools cannot
safely be, neyther ćan be steeved without a sufficient trave way. And
otherwise saving that the sayd Currants were in butts he ćannot depose.

Samuell Donn [SIGNATURE, RH SIDE]

**************************

29th February 1655. ORIGINAL ANNOTATION USES "o", NOT "th"

Examined upon the sayd Allegation

6

Gregorie Creyk of Marton in the County of Yorke merćhant,
29. aged twenty four yeares or thereabouts a witnes produced
30. sworne and examined deposed and saith as followeth videlicet.

To the first and second Articles of the sayd allegation, This deponent saith, That the arlate
shipp The Thomas Bonadventure arrived att Ciprus from Scanderon
the voyage in question, after which her arrivall there
were laden on board her a great quantity of Cotton woolls by the allegat
Roger ffooke English Consull there, of the certayne knowledge
of this deponent, who was then att Ciprus (as he had bene for about four
yeares before) and lived and lodged in one and the same howse with the
sayd Consull, and saw the sayd woolls weighted. but the number of the
baggs hee remembreth not. And the greatest part of the sayd woolls
were, as he then heard, for the freighters of the sayd shipp, and
one smaller parcell was as he likewise heard, for one Mr Rich of London.
And otherwise he cannot depose.

To the 3. and 4th articles of the sayd allegation he saith that the sayd shipp the Thomas
Bonadventure was in this deponents Judgment of the burthen of about
two hundred and seventy, or two hundred and eighty tonnes, and had
about the number of men arlate in her the tyme aforesayd, which
number of men, by what he hath seene, observed and heard, during his
sayd four yeares abode att Ciprus, may receyve, and steeve upon a shipp
of such tonnage, about eight or att most nyne baggs a day one day with another
from the first beginning of her steeving till she have recyved her full
Cargo, and not more, the reason whereof he hath observed to be partly the greatnes
of the baggs and their bulke and weight, which renders them
difficult to mannage and steeve, and partly the extraordinary labour that
still encreases as the shipp fills, so as the greater quantity of goods a
shipp hath in her, the more and greater is the labour and difficulty of steeving
wools upon her. And soe much he hath well seene and observed as
aforesayd. And othewise cannot depose/

Suggested links


PhD Forum
PhD Forum Themes


HCA 13/71 Page Log & Planner
HCA 3/47 Page Log & Planner