Difference between revisions of "HCA 13/72 f.481v Annotate"

From MarineLives
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 15: Line 15:
 
|Transcription image=P1160623
 
|Transcription image=P1160623
  
|Transcription=XXX
+
|Transcription=and raised much murmuring amongest them, hee still saying hee would [not GUTTER]
 +
tell them, nor was it (as hee said) their busines to know it. And saith that
 +
there was a greate pack of a certaine fruit or matter that was [XXXXXXX] from
 +
tXXXXs whereupon the same greew in the West Indies, having a very evell and st[XXXX GUTTER]
 +
smell, and called in Spanish [?winiliga], but the nature thereof hee knoweth not, and saith the same
 +
was aboard in the powder roome when the said shipp came to Milford haven
 +
into which haven the saud shipp was forced to enter through the extreamitie
 +
of storme and fowle weather. And otherwise hee cannot depose.
 +
 
 +
To the 4th hee saith that there was noe other that pretended to any [commandXX GUTTER]
 +
of the said shipp but only the said Captaine don Juan, who was both commander
 +
and marchant and ordered and disposed both as to the navigation and the [?fruit] and [XXXXX]
 +
and trade of the said shipp the said voyage. And otherwise hee cannot depose
 +
hee not comming aboard till the said shipp came to Comana as aforesaid.
 +
 
 +
To the 5th hee saith that there were severall papers and writings aboard the
 +
said shipp when shee came upon the coast of England, and that comming off
 +
Lundy Island (into which Channell shee next was forced by fowle weather) and her
 +
Company esoying two shipps (which were beleeved to be English) the Captaine
 +
called out and commanded then all Spanish papers and clothes should be taken and
 +
put downe in Hold, saying that if they be found, it will be ill for us
 +
or to that effect, whereupon the papers were ffetched out of the powder ?where
 +
to that time they had laine, and some of them were torne and throwne
 +
over board and others thrust downe in Hold and hidd in the
 +
h?iden part of the shipp, and the Spaniards clothes and persons put
 +
downe and hidd in hold. And saith that being come to Milford
 +
haven and a boat comming off to come aboard the said shipp, teh said
 +
Captaine seeing the said boate, gave this deponent a bundle of papers
 +
and bidd him hide them in his bosoum or otherwise, and rather than
 +
they should be seene to make them away by burning or otherwise
 +
and this deponent tooke them and but them betweene hi doublet and
 +
body at his breast, and afterwards this deponent put them in the
 +
drawer or under a table in the cabbin, and there left them. And saith
 +
hee did not see the Captaine deliver up any papers to any that made
 +
the seizure, nor knoweth of any delivered by him to them. And further
 +
hee cannot depose.
  
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 22:42, October 4, 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 13/72 f.481v.

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

P1160623

Transcription

and raised much murmuring amongest them, hee still saying hee would [not GUTTER]
tell them, nor was it (as hee said) their busines to know it. And saith that
there was a greate pack of a certaine fruit or matter that was [XXXXXXX] from
tXXXXs whereupon the same greew in the West Indies, having a very evell and st[XXXX GUTTER]
smell, and called in Spanish [?winiliga], but the nature thereof hee knoweth not, and saith the same
was aboard in the powder roome when the said shipp came to Milford haven
into which haven the saud shipp was forced to enter through the extreamitie
of storme and fowle weather. And otherwise hee cannot depose.

To the 4th hee saith that there was noe other that pretended to any [commandXX GUTTER]
of the said shipp but only the said Captaine don Juan, who was both commander
and marchant and ordered and disposed both as to the navigation and the [?fruit] and [XXXXX]
and trade of the said shipp the said voyage. And otherwise hee cannot depose
hee not comming aboard till the said shipp came to Comana as aforesaid.

To the 5th hee saith that there were severall papers and writings aboard the
said shipp when shee came upon the coast of England, and that comming off
Lundy Island (into which Channell shee next was forced by fowle weather) and her
Company esoying two shipps (which were beleeved to be English) the Captaine
called out and commanded then all Spanish papers and clothes should be taken and
put downe in Hold, saying that if they be found, it will be ill for us
or to that effect, whereupon the papers were ffetched out of the powder ?where
to that time they had laine, and some of them were torne and throwne
over board and others thrust downe in Hold and hidd in the
h?iden part of the shipp, and the Spaniards clothes and persons put
downe and hidd in hold. And saith that being come to Milford
haven and a boat comming off to come aboard the said shipp, teh said
Captaine seeing the said boate, gave this deponent a bundle of papers
and bidd him hide them in his bosoum or otherwise, and rather than
they should be seene to make them away by burning or otherwise
and this deponent tooke them and but them betweene hi doublet and
body at his breast, and afterwards this deponent put them in the
drawer or under a table in the cabbin, and there left them. And saith
hee did not see the Captaine deliver up any papers to any that made
the seizure, nor knoweth of any delivered by him to them. And further
hee cannot depose.