Difference between revisions of "HCA 13/71 f.617r Annotate"

From MarineLives
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 3: Line 3:
 
|Folio=617
 
|Folio=617
 
|Side=Recto
 
|Side=Recto
 +
|Status=First cut transcription started on 18/03/13 and completed on 21/03/13; pasted into wikispot on 12/04/14 by Colin Greenstreet
 +
 +
|First transcriber=Colin Greenstreet
 +
 +
|First transcribed=13/03/21
 +
 
|Editorial history=Created 11/04/14, by CSG
 
|Editorial history=Created 11/04/14, by CSG
  
 
}}{{PageHelp}}
 
}}{{PageHelp}}
 
{{PageTranscription
 
{{PageTranscription
|Transcription=XXXXX
+
|Transcription image=P1140483
  
 +
|Transcription=1. áway the papers, bookes and writings of the master companies and factors
 +
2. of the said shipp Lyon and providence, and only this deponent while hee was
 +
3. kept prisoner in the said shipp found three of the said bookes which had bin
 +
4. throwne by some of the takers into the skuppers, and preserved there and
 +
5. hath them with him, whereby hee the better remembreth the particularities
 +
6. of the said gold, goods and valew. And after they had bin kept about five
 +
7. or six weekes prisoners, the said Scrawle put the master of the Lyon and
 +
8. Providence and company and factors into a small vessell with a very small
 +
9. pittanse of badd victualls, and fXXX sent them away, and they were
 +
10. shorty soe distressed with want of victualls, that they were forced to put
 +
11. into Saint thoma, and sell their vessell and get a smaller, and with the
 +
12. rest of the money to get victualls. And with the said John Scrawle was
 +
13. by his owne confession a native of Munickendam neere Amsterdam
 +
14. and a subiect of the States of the united Netherlands, and for such ˹hee was˺ commonly
 +
15. accounted, and the companies of the said two shipps were most of them
 +
16. also dutch and subiects of the said States by their owne confessions,
 +
17. and the said two shipps were dutch built and belonging the mary
 +
18. to Amsterdam, and the unicorne to Middleborowe where this deponent
 +
19. (who was borne and lived long there) hath bin often aboard ˹the unicorne˺ her, and
 +
20. ˹and that both the shipps˺ and sailed both out ˹of˺ the texel the said voyage for the coast of Guinney
 +
21. on a trading voyage for Negroes, and that their owners lived at
 +
22. Amsterdam and Middleborowe and were subiects of the said Stattes
 +
23. and named mr Caymans and ˹Marsellis˺ vandergoos for two of their owners,
 +
24. which Marsellis vandergoos, this deponent well knoweth to be a dutchman
 +
25. living in Middleburowe and a subiect of the said States. And
 +
26. otherwise hee cannot depose.
  
 +
27. To the tenth article hee saith and deposeth that the said Alderman and
 +
28. William ˹Morrice˺ Thompson before the departure of the said shipp from this port, lent the summe of one hundred pounds sterling upon bottomerie
 +
29. upon the said shipp, for which they were to have and receive upon her retourne
 +
30. to London one hundred and fourtie pounds, which is utterly lost by the
 +
31. said seizure and spoile, which lending this deponent knoweth seeing
 +
32. the money delivered.
  
 +
33. To the 11th ˹and 12th˺ hee saith that in case the said spoile and surprizall had not
 +
34. happend, the said shipp and her lading of gold and goods might
 +
35. have and would in all probabilitie have arrived at the parts of East
 +
36. India and invested the same into goods of the parts, and brought
 +
37. the same into theise parts and quarters, which if shee had donne, the
 +
38. said ninetie five markes, one ounce and six angles of gold might
 +
39. be and other goods of the said Alderman and William Tho Morrice
 +
40. Thompson soe seized and taken away, might have and would in all
 +
41. probabilitie have and produced and yeelded their seaven thousand
 +
42. pounds sterling, and that saith that according to the common repute and
 +
43. report, the produce of godl from Guinney to the East Indies and
 +
44. thense in East India commodities to theise parts is two for one.
 +
45. and saith each marke of the said gold at the time of the said seizure was
 +
46. worth two and thirtie pounds sterling.
  
XXX
+
47. <margin value="Bottom right, under main body of text, as lead to next page">To</margin>
  
 
|Suggested links=[https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AoNoOr05QRMtdHAyNmxuVnNmYkJ3Q0ZiNEQ0R0V2S3c#gid=0 HCA 13/71 Page Log & Planner]
 
|Suggested links=[https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AoNoOr05QRMtdHAyNmxuVnNmYkJ3Q0ZiNEQ0R0V2S3c#gid=0 HCA 13/71 Page Log & Planner]

Revision as of 09:10, April 12, 2014

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.617r.

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

P1140483

Transcription

1. áway the papers, bookes and writings of the master companies and factors
2. of the said shipp Lyon and providence, and only this deponent while hee was
3. kept prisoner in the said shipp found three of the said bookes which had bin
4. throwne by some of the takers into the skuppers, and preserved there and
5. hath them with him, whereby hee the better remembreth the particularities
6. of the said gold, goods and valew. And after they had bin kept about five
7. or six weekes prisoners, the said Scrawle put the master of the Lyon and
8. Providence and company and factors into a small vessell with a very small
9. pittanse of badd victualls, and fXXX sent them away, and they were
10. shorty soe distressed with want of victualls, that they were forced to put
11. into Saint thoma, and sell their vessell and get a smaller, and with the
12. rest of the money to get victualls. And with the said John Scrawle was
13. by his owne confession a native of Munickendam neere Amsterdam
14. and a subiect of the States of the united Netherlands, and for such ˹hee was˺ commonly
15. accounted, and the companies of the said two shipps were most of them
16. also dutch and subiects of the said States by their owne confessions,
17. and the said two shipps were dutch built and belonging the mary
18. to Amsterdam, and the unicorne to Middleborowe where this deponent
19. (who was borne and lived long there) hath bin often aboard ˹the unicorne˺ her, and
20. ˹and that both the shipps˺ and sailed both out ˹of˺ the texel the said voyage for the coast of Guinney
21. on a trading voyage for Negroes, and that their owners lived at
22. Amsterdam and Middleborowe and were subiects of the said Stattes
23. and named mr Caymans and ˹Marsellis˺ vandergoos for two of their owners,
24. which Marsellis vandergoos, this deponent well knoweth to be a dutchman
25. living in Middleburowe and a subiect of the said States. And
26. otherwise hee cannot depose.

27. To the tenth article hee saith and deposeth that the said Alderman and
28. William ˹Morrice˺ Thompson before the departure of the said shipp from this port, lent the summe of one hundred pounds sterling upon bottomerie
29. upon the said shipp, for which they were to have and receive upon her retourne
30. to London one hundred and fourtie pounds, which is utterly lost by the
31. said seizure and spoile, which lending this deponent knoweth seeing
32. the money delivered.

33. To the 11th ˹and 12th˺ hee saith that in case the said spoile and surprizall had not
34. happend, the said shipp and her lading of gold and goods might
35. have and would in all probabilitie have arrived at the parts of East
36. India and invested the same into goods of the parts, and brought
37. the same into theise parts and quarters, which if shee had donne, the
38. said ninetie five markes, one ounce and six angles of gold might
39. be and other goods of the said Alderman and William Tho Morrice
40. Thompson soe seized and taken away, might have and would in all
41. probabilitie have and produced and yeelded their seaven thousand
42. pounds sterling, and that saith that according to the common repute and
43. report, the produce of godl from Guinney to the East Indies and
44. thense in East India commodities to theise parts is two for one.
45. and saith each marke of the said gold at the time of the said seizure was
46. worth two and thirtie pounds sterling.

47. <margin value="Bottom right, under main body of text, as lead to next page">To</margin>

Suggested links


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