item: #1 of 35 id: A03477 author: Churchman, Bartholomew. title: An answere to the Hollanders declaration, concerning the occurrents of the East-India. The first part. Written by certaine marriners, lately returned from thence into England date: 1622.0 words: 7983 flesch: 58 summary: But thanks bee to Almightie God who doth alwayes protect the innocent : This Declaration of the Hollanders entended and published for our vtter vn doing and disgrace , offereth vnto vs in two respects both hope and helpe , so that wee may say to the Hollanders as the primatiue Christians said of Iulian the Apostata ; Voluntatem nocendi habes , potestatem auiem non habes Iuliani : We vnderstand your intents O Hollanders , to ouerthrow vs , but you want power , wee doe not meane your Sea power ( which is too potent ) but we meane of your malice , which is by the iudgement of God vtterly confounded : if in this Declaration of yours , your will and malice had ioyned in equall power , wee the oppressed English might haue for borne to haue complained of our wrongs , with shame & confusion ; of whom or what should we complaine , if our selues vrged , prouoked and deserued our owne misfortunes . Let all such who harbour any such conceits , reade and consider what is before answered to such obiections : the Hollanders in their declaration being charged in the two first Currants , with may of these extreame wrongs inflicted vpon the English , they make no deniall of them : make a chalenge that the English did ayde and assist the Bandineses against them ; it hath formerly bene alleaged , and sufficiently proued , by their owne confession , that the English did not maintaine the Ileanders , by way of opposing against the Hollanders , but they did as much as in them lay , to defend the right of the King of England , they did defend that right which they had by consent , they did defend that people , who did so freely , and friendly trade and trafficke with them , other causes then their so honest , so iust agreeing with the Lawes of God , of nature , and Nations , they neither do or can alleadge any : some other inconsiderat people , who enuy the prosperity of the East-Indian Merchants will further say , to cloase with the Hollanders , that these extremities were offered in India , onely and no where else to the English , for proffe of the contrary , wee of the East-Indian Company do chalenge all the Merchants which trauaile or trafficke East , VVest , North , or South , to deliuer their knowledge what indignities they haue endured from the Hollanders in Turkey , in the Straights , in Moscony , in Groynland , at Neusoundland ; and where not so that not onely the East-Indian Company hath onely cause to complaine : yea , they wrong Englishmen in their owne seas , at home , as is generally knowne : Now because Hollanders may say , that they are charged with generalities , without perticular instances . keywords: bandineses; declaration; doe; east; england; english; hath; haue; hollanders; men; owne; text; time; vpon; wee cache: A03477.xml plain text: A03477.txt item: #2 of 35 id: A07886 author: Mun, Thomas, 1571-1641. title: A discourse of trade, from England vnto the East-Indies answering to diuerse obiections which are vsually made against the same. By T.M. date: 1621.0 words: 15791 flesch: 64 summary: East Indies -- Commerce -- Great Britain -- Early works to 1800. It is generally obserued that his Maiesties Mint hath had but little imployment euer sithence the East India Trade began ; Wherefore it is manifest , that the onely remedie for this , and so many euils besides , is to put downe this Trade : keywords: beene; doe; doth; east; east india; good; hath; haue; india; india trade; indies; kingdome; meanes; money; realme; siluer; sterling; time; trade; vnto; wares; yearely cache: A07886.xml plain text: A07886.txt item: #3 of 35 id: A12330 author: Smethwike, Thomas. title: A motion to the East India Company by Thomas Smethwike (an adventurer with them) vpon the reasons following date: None words: 1617 flesch: 68 summary: Proposal to reduce the time ships delay in India waiting for return cargo. Great Britain -- Commerce -- India. keywords: eebo; india; ships; tcp; text cache: A12330.xml plain text: A12330.txt item: #4 of 35 id: A19763 author: Dale, Elizabeth, Lady. title: A briefe of the Lady Dales petition to the Parliament date: 1624.0 words: 1810 flesch: 56 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A19763) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 28491) keywords: companie; eebo; estate; tcp; text cache: A19763.xml plain text: A19763.txt item: #5 of 35 id: A20442 author: Digges, Dudley, Sir, 1583-1639. title: The defence of trade In a letter to Sir Thomas Smith Knight, gouernour of the East-India Companie, &c. From one of that societie. date: 1615.0 words: 15213 flesch: 65 summary: But alas ! shée was but shewne , out of a cruell destinie shée was ouertaken with an vntimely death in her youth and strength , being deuoured by those Iron Wormes of that Countrie , that pierced her heart , and brake many a mans withal memorable in her misfortune , onely redounding to the Common-wealthes losse . The last cōsistance of shipping propounded , was that of the East Indies : which though yongest , was found in shew and state to haue ouer-topped all the rest ; as a Bird that maketh her selfe gay with the feathers of all other Foules ; hauing borrowed , nay , hauing bought the best ships out of other Trades to honour their Uoyage , and plumed euen Constantinople her self , of her shipping : therefore that men are entertained extraordinarily in this Uoyage , it is apparant out of the greatnesse of the shipping ; the entertainment of them increasing , if should be a consequent that Sea-men increase this way : But that we may not by ambages triumph in their losse , or our calamities , we sée this way that our shippes perish , and therefore our men they shrinke , Nay , though ships come home , yet then leaue the men behind : so in this Uoyage , there is a two-fold way towards our want of Marmers . keywords: bee; captaine; companie; doe; east; euen; foure; good; hath; haue; hee; home; increase; india; kingdome; marchants; men; new; obiection; sea; shillings; shipping; ships; sir; timber; trade; voyage; wee cache: A20442.xml plain text: A20442.txt item: #6 of 35 id: A21080 author: Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. title: By the King, a declaration of orders made by the gouernour and Company of Merchants of London, trading to the East Indies concerning priuate trade, to, in, or from the said Indies, ratified and allowed by the King, and by His Maiesties consent may bee printed for the better publication thereof. date: 1628.0 words: 1871 flesch: 63 summary: Image sets were sent to external keying companies for transcription and basic encoding. By the King, a declaration of orders made by the gouernour and Company of Merchants of London, trading to the East Indies concerning priuate trade, to, in, or from the said Indies, ratified and allowed by the King, and by His Maiesties consent may bee printed for the better publication thereof. keywords: company; east; indies; london; tcp; text cache: A21080.xml plain text: A21080.txt item: #7 of 35 id: A21082 author: East India Company. title: The lawes or standing orders of the East India Company date: 1621.0 words: 24464 flesch: 65 summary: 37 Watchmen in the Yarde 36 Wages 61 Warrants . 17 LAWES OR STANDING ORDERS , MADE AND ORDEYNED BY THE GOVERNOVR AND COMPANY OF MARCHANTS OF LONDON TRADING TO THE EAST INDYES , For the better Gouerning of the Affaires and actions of the said Company heere in ENGLAND residing . Vnto which Commissions shall be fixed , onely the great Scale , which by his Maiesties Letters Patents , is graunted vnto the said Company . keywords: accompts; bee; booke; clarke; committees; companies; companies ships; company; court; deliuer; deputy; euery; generall; giue; gouernour; haue; hee; keepe; officers; prouisions; said; seuerall; ships; stores; time; vnto; vpon; yard cache: A21082.xml plain text: A21082.txt item: #8 of 35 id: A26167 author: Atwood, William, d. 1705? title: An apology for the East-India Company with an account of some large prerogatives of the crown of England, anciently exercised and allowed of in our law, in relation to foreign trade and foreign parts / by W.A. ... date: 1690.0 words: 12306 flesch: 66 summary: However they being taken in actual Rebellion , the Governour having by the King's Charter , [ In Case of Rebellion , Mutiny , or Sedition , as large and ample Power as any Captain General of the King's Army by Virtue of his Office ; ] hang'd some for Examples , and detaining others in Prison , sent a Narrative of the Fact signed by others of the Council there ; upon which Narrative , the then King thought fit to issue out his Commission of Martial Law for Trial of the rest , who were tried accordingly , and some executed . By W. A. Barrister at Law , Author of the first Answer to the late chief Justice Herbert's Defence of the Dispensing Power . keywords: company; england; english; goods; king; law; laws; liberty; merchants; power; sea; staple; statute; time; trade cache: A26167.xml plain text: A26167.txt item: #9 of 35 id: A28810 author: Boothby, Richard. title: A true declaration of the intollerable wrongs done to Richard Boothby, merchant of India, by two lewd servants to the honorable East India Company, Richard Wylde and George Page as also a remonstrance of the partiall, ingratefull and unjust proceeds of the India Court at home against the said Richard Boothby ... with petition to ... King Charles and the ... Parliament for justice ... date: None words: 21530 flesch: 27 summary: A true declaration of the intollerable wrongs done to Richard Boothby, merchant of India, by two lewd servants to the honorable East India Company, Richard Wylde and George Page as also a remonstrance of the partiall, ingratefull and unjust proceeds of the India Court at home against the said Richard Boothby ... with petition to ... A true declaration of the intollerable wrongs done to Richard Boothby, merchant of India, by two lewd servants to the honorable East India Company, Richard Wylde and George Page as also a remonstrance of the partiall, ingratefull and unjust proceeds of the India Court at home against the said Richard Boothby ... with petition to ... keywords: captain; companies; company; councell; court; end; england; god; good; governour; home; india; india court; man; men; president; richard; right; sea; selfe; servants; ships; sir; time; voyage; wrongs cache: A28810.xml plain text: A28810.txt item: #10 of 35 id: A29745 author: Brown, John, of London. title: A brief remonstrance of the grand grievances and oppressions suffered by Sir William Courten and Sir Paul Pyndar, knts., deceased as also by their heirs, executors, administrators, and creditors : humbly represented to both Houses of Parliament, prorogued to 21 October 1680 : faithfully collected out of several courts of record, orders of counsel, and treaties of peace and common alliance : with several remarks thereupon for the improvement of naviagation, trade, and commerce / by John Brown. date: 1680.0 words: 18497 flesch: 43 summary: A brief remonstrance of the grand grievances and oppressions suffered by Sir William Courten and Sir Paul Pyndar, knts., deceased as also by their heirs, executors, administrators, and creditors : humbly represented to both Houses of Parliament, prorogued to 21 October 1680 : faithfully collected out of several courts of record, orders of counsel, and treaties of peace and common alliance : with several remarks thereupon for the improvement of naviagation, trade, and commerce / by John Brown. A brief remonstrance of the grand grievances and oppressions suffered by Sir William Courten and Sir Paul Pyndar, knts., deceased as also by their heirs, executors, administrators, and creditors : humbly represented to both Houses of Parliament, prorogued to 21 October 1680 : faithfully collected out of several courts of record, orders of counsel, and treaties of peace and common alliance : with several remarks thereupon for the improvement of naviagation, trade, and commerce / by John Brown. keywords: carew; company; councel; courten; creditors; damages; east; england; english; general; george; goods; grant; india; king; law; letters; london; lord; parliament; peace; peter; right; said; ships; sir; sir william; states; subjects; time; trade; treaty; william; william courten; year cache: A29745.xml plain text: A29745.txt item: #11 of 35 id: A29995 author: Buckingham, George Villiers, Duke of, 1628-1687. title: The Duke of Buckingham's speech in a late conference date: 1668.0 words: 2269 flesch: 64 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 47914) keywords: causes; court; eebo; tcp; text cache: A29995.xml plain text: A29995.txt item: #12 of 35 id: A32838 author: Child, Josiah, Sir, 1630-1699. title: A supplement, 1689 to a former treatise concerning the East-India trade, printed 1681. date: 1689.0 words: 4026 flesch: 64 summary: This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Early English books online. keywords: company; east; english; india; ships; tcp; text; trade cache: A32838.xml plain text: A32838.txt item: #13 of 35 id: A32839 author: Child, Josiah, Sir, 1630-1699. title: A treatise wherein is demonstrated, I. That the East-India trade is the most national of all foreign trades, II. That the clamors, aspersions, and objections made against the present East-India company, are sinister, selfish, or groundless, III. That since the discovery of the East-Indies, the dominion of the sea depends much upon the wane or increase of that trade, and consequently the security of the liberty, property, and protestant religion of this kingdom, IV. That the trade of the East-Indies cannot be carried on to national advantage, in any other way than by a general joynt stock, V. That the East-India trade is more profitable and necessary to the kingdom of England, than to any other kingdom or nation in Europe by Philopatris. date: 1681.0 words: 13423 flesch: 63 summary: 4. Above four fifth parts of the Commodities Imported by this Trade , are again Exported into Foreign parts ; by which the Navigation and Trade of this Kingdom is vastly encreased into Turkey , Italy , Spain , France , Holland , and other parts of Christendom ; by the Returns of which , more than treble the Bullion is Imported , that was first Exported to India ; and the Wealth of this Kingdom is as greatly encreased , as by the direct Trade to and from the East-Indies . The Company do likewise allow to all their Commanders , President , Agents , Factors and Servants , all kind of Trade in India , from and to any Port or Place within the Limits of their Charter , except to and from Europe : keywords: company; dutch; east; england; english; hath; india; india company; india trade; kingdom; merchants; ships; stock; trade; turkey cache: A32839.xml plain text: A32839.txt item: #14 of 35 id: A33690 author: Coke, Roger, fl. 1696. title: Reflections upon the East-Indy and Royal African Companies with animadversions, concerning the naturalizing of foreigners / by Roger Coke. date: 1695.0 words: 6716 flesch: 42 summary: But though the Company have not been pleased to make War upon any other Nation but the English , for Trading to the East Indies ; yet they were pleased to make War , without any Declaration , or Cause , upon the King of Syam , and the Mogull ; and rob the Mogul's Subjects to carry on the War , as Mr. White Observes , and whilest the Company have thus rent themselves from the rest of the English Nation , they patiently submit to the Dutch in forcing Poloroon from them , caused by their own neglect and avarice ; from which the Dutch are become the sole Proprietors in the Spice Trade ; and also from the Trade to Bantam for Pepper , whereby they are forced to Trade for it to the most unhealthful parts of Sumatra , ( which Queen Elizabeth forbid ) whereby we lose more English Men than the Trade is worth , which is little regarded by this Company ; and whilest they are making their Causeless Wars , upon the King of Syam and the Mogul they permit the Sophy of Persia , whose Predecessor An. 1621. Yet sure it would be a strange Impudence in the Zealanders , to forbid the rest of the Inhabitants of the United Netherlands to Trade to any part of the World , because they have erected a Fort in the Scheld called Lillo ; yet they may do this , as well as these Companies forbid all the other English to Trade to Africk and the East Indies , because one Company has Fort St. George , and the other a Fort at one of the Mouths of Gambo . keywords: company; east; england; english; foreigners; king; men; nation; rest; trade cache: A33690.xml plain text: A33690.txt item: #15 of 35 id: A34767 author: Courten, William, 1642-1702. title: To the Kings Most Excellent Majesty the humble peticion of William Courten, esquire, grandchild and heyre of Sr. William Courten, deceased and George Carew, esquire, administrator of the goods and chattells of Sr. William Courten on the behalf of themselves and several others, your Majesties good subjects of England. date: 1674.0 words: 1216 flesch: 57 summary: To the Kings Most Excellent Majesty the humble peticion of William Courten, esquire, grandchild and heyre of Sr. William Courten, deceased and George Carew, esquire, administrator of the goods and chattells of Sr. William Courten on the behalf of themselves and several others, your Majesties good subjects of England. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1567:17) To the Kings Most Excellent Majesty the humble peticion of William Courten, esquire, grandchild and heyre of Sr. William Courten, deceased and George Carew, esquire, administrator of the goods and chattells of Sr. William Courten on the behalf of themselves and several others, your Majesties good subjects of England. Courten, William, 1642-1702. keywords: courten; tcp; text; william cache: A34767.xml plain text: A34767.txt item: #16 of 35 id: A36823 author: J. D. (John Darell) title: A true and compendious narration or, second part of Amboyna, or sundry notorious or remarkable injuries, insolencies, and acts of hostility which the Hollanders have exercised from time to time against the English nation in the East-Indies, &c. and particularly of the totall plundering and sinking of the Dragon & Katharine both ships and men : with undeniable and convincing proofs for evidencing the truth thereof, and satisfaction of the reader / by a person of long observation and experiences employed first and last in the affairs of the Indies, fifty years, to wit, from Sr. Walter Rawleigh, his voyage, 1615 to this present year 1665 by J. D. date: 1665.0 words: 13832 flesch: 55 summary: upon a War or Difference between the King of Coelon & the Portugals there Inhabiting ; The Hollanders Vpperland States of their Vnited Provinces of Battavia , Amboynia , Tewan , &c. neglecting no opportunity to advance their foresaid designs of Conquest and Trade Complied with , and assi●ted the for●said King against the said Por●ugals ( being very antient in●abitants there ) and undoubtedly it was that very same Fleet going upon th●t occasion to Coelon ( before the Dragon and Catherine set saile for England ) that extinguished , and most barbarously destroyed both those two ●hips and Men , according to the several Relations of English , Portugals , and Dutch , &c. And that done ; Then the said Fleet proceeded upon their design at Coelon aforesaid , where in few years after , they conquered and vanquished the foresaid Portugals both by Sea and Land , and took and surpriz'd all thrir ships and goods ( with their chief Town or City of Collombo and the rest ) with all their Castles , Fortifications and Houses or Towns , with all the Good● and Treasure ; Ordinance , Amunition and Appurtinances , therein and thereto belonging , and so quickly possest and dispatcht the Riches and Subjects of two Eminent Kings in Europe out of their way ; and the third , the King of the said Island and his Subjects escaped not altogether free ; For ( by good report ) when the said King desired to know their demands for their assi●tance , and the same being produced , the said King was thereat much amazed and said , that he and all his Subjects were not worth the one half or quarter of what the said Hollanders demanded , ( notwithstanding the exceeding great plunder and booty taken from the English and Portugals aforesaid ? And so the said King being altogether unable to sati●fie their said demands in any reasonable measure ( and to be rid of them , as he once well hoped , but they never intended ) prosecuting the said discovery set forth Fleet after Fleet , and the English shortly after them and both of them discovering and arriving at the aforesaid Islands , and other places in the South Seas , as China , Iapan , &c. but made their Rendevouz upon Iava major , the English at ●antum ( a place formerly possest and walled about with bricks by the Portuguez , but the Natives had expelled them : ) the Dutch at Iaccatra , a small Village of Fishermen with a little Fort taken by the Dutch from the Natives and afterwards taken by Sir Thomas Dale from the Dutch , whom the Natives demanded to be their prisoners , but Sir Thomas aforesaid would not deliver a Christian into a Heathens hand , and thereupon gave the Dutch again possession of the Fort , and bid them fight for their lives , and left them ; which now is become a Famous and Metropolitan City called ●attavia , or new Holland ; keywords: amboyna; anno; captain; commander; company; dragon; dutch; east; england; english; general; great; holland; india; iohn; katherine; king; men; portugals; sea; ships; time; william; ● ● cache: A36823.xml plain text: A36823.txt item: #17 of 35 id: A37163 author: Davenant, Charles, 1656-1714. title: An essay on the East-India-trade by the author of The essay upon wayes and means. date: 1696.0 words: 11802 flesch: 56 summary: Should we quit the Hold we have in India , and abandon the Traffick , Our Neighbours the Dutch will undoubtedly engross the whole : And if to their Naval Strength in Europe , such a Foreign Strength and Wealth be added , England must hereafter be contented to Trade by their Protection , and under their Banners . Some of Our Gentry have been for many Years of Opinion , That the Intire Welfare of England depends upon the High Price of Wooll , as thinking thereby to Advance their Rents , but this proceeds from the Narrow Mind , and Short View of such , who have all along more regarded the Private Interest of Land , than the Concerns of Trade , which are full as Important , and without which , Land will soon be of little Value . keywords: consumption; east; england; goods; home; india; kingdom; manufactures; nation; people; trade; traffick; woollen cache: A37163.xml plain text: A37163.txt item: #18 of 35 id: A37550 author: East India Company. title: By-laws proposed by the governour, deputy-governour, and committee of nine, pursuant to an order of the general court for the better manageing and regulating the companies affairs and approved of in a general court of the East-India Company, holden the 17th. of January, 1694/5. date: 1695.0 words: 2847 flesch: 55 summary: And it is hereby further Order'd and Resolved , That if any Governour or Deputy , or any one or more of the Court of Committees , or Sub-Committees of this Company , shall wittingly or willingly , at any time hereafter , act contrary to any the Rules prescribed in the several Charters , granted to this Company , Or to such By-Laws as are , or shall be made by the General Court , Or shall Sign any Warrant , for the giving or paying away any Money , not relating to the Trade and Affairs of the Company , without leave first had of the General Court , And that the Company are damnify'd thereby ; That then , and in each of the said Cases , Every such Person being Governour , Deputy-Governour , or of the Court of Committees , or Sub-Committees , and all other the Members of the said Corporation , who shall order , consent , agree to , or wittingly approve of the same , and be Convicted thereof by a General Court of the said Company , within three Years time after the Fact done , and declared Guilty by their Vote , Each and every such Person , shall for every such Offence , forfeit to the Use of the said Company the Sum of Five Hundred Pounds , to be answer'd and paid , to the Governour and Company of Merchants of London , Trading into the East-Indies . That if any of the Companies Officers , shall without Order from the Court of Committees , or Sub-Committees of the said Company , respectively , at any time hereafter , make out any Warrant for payment of Money ; Or if the Cashire General shall pay any Sum of Money , without a Warrant , first Signed by the Governour or Deputy , and four of the Committees for the time being ; Or if any of them shall wittingly and willingly , do any other Act , or thing , in the Execution of their several Offices , whereby the Company shall receive any Dammage , Every such offending Officer shall , for each Offence , Forfeit and Pay to the said Governour and Company , the Sum of Fifty Pounds , and be also turned out of his Place : Provided That this By-Law shall not debar the Accomptant General from making out Warrants , nor the Cashire General from Paying any Sum or Sums of Money , due upon Bills at Interest , or Bills of Exchange drawn upon the Company , and accepted by the Governour or Deputy , or for Moneys due for Interest on Bills . keywords: committees; company; court; general; governour; time cache: A37550.xml plain text: A37550.txt item: #19 of 35 id: A37551 author: Blackborne, Robert. title: The case of the governour and company of merchants of London, trading to the East-Indies, humbly represented to the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, in Parliament assembled. date: 1698.0 words: 6229 flesch: 58 summary: That We , Our Heirs and Successors , ( during all the Time that these Our Letters Patents shall be , and remain , in Force , as aforesaid ) will not grant Liberty , License or Power , to any Person or Persons whatsoever , contrary to the Tenor of these Our Letters Patents , to Sail , Pass , Trade or Traffick , to the said East-Indies , or into , or from , any the Islands , Ports , Havens , Cities , Towns , or Places aforesaid , or any of them , contrary to the true Meaning of these Presents , without the Consent of the said Governour and Company of Merchants of London , Trading into the East-Indies , or the most part of them . The case of the governour and company of merchants of London, trading to the East-Indies, humbly represented to the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, in Parliament assembled. keywords: bill; charter; company; east; india; new; stock; trade cache: A37551.xml plain text: A37551.txt item: #20 of 35 id: A41166 author: Ferguson, Robert, d. 1714. title: The East-India-trade a most profitable trade to the kingdom. And best secured and improved in a company, and a joint-stock. Represented in a letter written upon the occasion of two letters lately published, insinuating the contrary. date: 1677.0 words: 12199 flesch: 45 summary: Trade yet more advantageous to the Kingdom in some respects , than at present it is , are chiefly the Trades to China and Iapan ; at which places were our Trade once well setled , in all likelyhood more considerable quantities of our Woollen-Manufactures might be there vended , and from thence in return thereof , both Gold , Silver , and Copper might be brought to supply at least ( in a great measure ) the Trade in other parts of India ; without carrying out so much from Europe : He would have the English Merchant to buy dear , and sell cheap ; to buy Cloth dear of the Clothier , and sell Callico cheap to the Linnen-Draper ; and he desires a freedom of Trade , that the multiplicity of Buyers for the one , and of Sellers for the other , might effect it ; and thereby ( as he would have us believe ) the Kingdom would be enriched ; keywords: commodities; company; east; england; english; goods; india; kingdom; persons; pounds; stock; trade cache: A41166.xml plain text: A41166.txt item: #21 of 35 id: A45304 author: Hall, Joseph, 1574-1656. title: A modest offer of some meet considerations, tendred to the English about their coyne and trade, and particularly to East India date: 1695.0 words: 3451 flesch: 66 summary: 2005-11 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2005-12 Apex CoVantage Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2006-10 Taryn Hakala Sampled and proofread 2006-10 Taryn Hakala Text and markup reviewed and edited 2007-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion A Modest Offer of some Meet Considerations , tendred to the ENGLISH about Their Coyne and Trade , and particularly to East India . The Kings Customs and our Wealth will encrease , and the French being without Trade and Captures at Sea , will the sooner be reduced to Extremity . keywords: company; english; india; tcp; text; trade cache: A45304.xml plain text: A45304.txt item: #22 of 35 id: A46567 author: England and Wales. Sovereign (1685-1688 : James II) title: A proclamation for restraining all His Majesties subjects, but the members and agents of the East-India Company, to trade in the East-Indies, and recalling such as are there by James R. date: 1685.0 words: 1863 flesch: 53 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Image sets were sent to external keying companies for transcription and basic encoding. keywords: company; east; subjects; tcp; text cache: A46567.xml plain text: A46567.txt item: #23 of 35 id: A46578 author: England and Wales. Sovereign (1685-1688 : James II) title: By the King, a proclamation, for the recalling all His Majesties subjects from the service of foreign princes in East India date: 1686.0 words: 1525 flesch: 60 summary: Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 742:57) By the King, a proclamation, for the recalling all His Majesties subjects from the service of foreign princes in East India England and Wales. Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 97137) keywords: east; india; service; tcp; text cache: A46578.xml plain text: A46578.txt item: #24 of 35 id: A46620 author: James, Elinor. title: To the right honourable the House of Lords date: 1688.0 words: 1739 flesch: 61 summary: Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 100046) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; english; god; tcp; text cache: A46620.xml plain text: A46620.txt item: #25 of 35 id: A46717 author: East India Company. title: The Argument of the Lord Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench concerning the great case of monopolies, between the East-India Company, plantiff, and Thomas Sandys, defendant wherein their patent for trading to the East-Indies, exclusive of all others, is adjudged good. date: 1689.0 words: 19706 flesch: 51 summary: yet he may make an Alien a Denizen , and by that means he becomes to have as much priviledg as any of the King 's natural Subjects hath , as to Trade and Commerce , which is the onely question now before us ; and I cannot help being of Opinion , that this Kingdom was in greater regard abroad , and the Inhabitants thereof more prosperous at home , when the Prerogative of the Crown was more absolute than now it is ; therefore it is our Duty as good Judges as well as good Subjects , to endeavour to support it as much as we can by Law. If the King proclaims a War with any Country , which is a general Prohibition of Trade , and should order , that John a Styles , or a dozen or any greater number of his Subjects , &c. and give them Instructions to treat for a Peace , and the Persons so appointed should carry on a Trade , would not Mr. Sands , do you think , have as much reason to murmur , that he was none of those Ambassadors , as he has now by being not comprized within the Charters ? And would it not be thought an Arrogancy and Sauciness in him to demand an account of the Instruction given by the King to such Ambassadors ? or durst he Trade there till a Peace were proclaimed with that Country ? And the gloss upon that Law says Mercatores non faciant inter Monopolium de re non vendenda nisi pro certo pretio , vel de non exercendo officium nisi per eos recipiatur Officiales & Socios : Possunt tamen haec facere cum consensu & scientia Regis & contra facientes perpetuo exulabunt , & eorum bona Regi applicantur . Ex Privilegio ergo Regis possunt similiter & Consuetudine vel praescriptione , quia quod Privilegio acquiritur , etiam praescriptione acquiri potest . keywords: act; attorney; bar; cap; case; charter; commerce; company; councel; east; england; fol; forein; general; good; grant; india; king; law; laws; lord; merchants; monopolies; nations; parliament; power; prerogative; publick; question; says; subjects; time; trade cache: A46717.xml plain text: A46717.txt item: #26 of 35 id: A48185 author: Fair merchant. title: A letter to a member of Parliament concerning clandestine trade. Shewing how far the evil practices at the custom-house at London tend to the encouragement of such a trade. Written by a Fair Merchant. date: 1700.0 words: 3648 flesch: 54 summary: It would be worth enquiry to know to whom the Mony has been paid , and what Sums they have levied upon themselves since the Commencement of the Combination ; and such a Power as that of your House may command the original Instrument of Combination to be laid before you , which I understand is yet in being . EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). keywords: combination; house; king; officers; tcp; text; time; trade cache: A48185.xml plain text: A48185.txt item: #27 of 35 id: A49560 author: Langhorne, William, Sir, 1629-1715. title: Considerations humbly tendred, concerning the East-India company. date: 1688.0 words: 1551 flesch: 59 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 36952) keywords: company; english; tcp; text cache: A49560.xml plain text: A49560.txt item: #28 of 35 id: A57014 author: East India Company. title: A reply on behalf of the present East-India Company, to a paper of complaints, commonly called, The thirteen articles delivered by their adversaries, to the members of the honourable House of Commons. date: 1698.0 words: 4175 flesch: 60 summary: This were much more proper to be objected by the Present Members of the Company , than by those , some of whom at least wise were the chief Promoters of it : And having since sold themselves out , would render the present Managers Criminal , for those very Actions which they committed , while Members of the said Company . Image sets were sent to external keying companies for transcription and basic encoding. keywords: art; companies; company; english; india; tcp; text; trade cache: A57014.xml plain text: A57014.txt item: #29 of 35 id: A60565 author: Smith, Thomas, Gent. title: A brief abstract of the case concerning the letters patents for reprizals (hereunto annexed) against the States-General and their subjects whereupon Capt. Compton Gwyther, William Coates, Joseph Bullivant, John Baxter, Francis Wansell, Francis Martin, John Gibson, and William Jones, prisoners in the Marshalsea, are to be tryed for their lives, according to the common law of England, on the 18th of February instant, upon the Statute of 28 Henry 8. cap. 15 under the pretence of piracy, for taking a Galliot-Hoy (called the Love of Rotterdam) laden with 160 tun of wine, and prunes, on the 3d of December last, bound from Bourdeaux to Dort / faithfully recollected out of all the originals by Thomas Smith Gent. ; with some remarkable observations both upon the matters of fact, and the law in the whole case. date: 1681.0 words: 5697 flesch: 44 summary: His Majesty and divers Ministers of State , having duly considered the great Services and Sufferings of Sir William Courten and Sir Paul Pyndar for the Crown of England , and their Loss and Damages of the Bona Esperanza and Henry Bona Adventura . Upon the application of the persons mentioned in the said Letters Pattents , wherein His Majesty declares , That he was concerned in Honour and Justice to see them satisfied ; after a years examination and debate of the whole matter by Sir Robert Wiseman and Sir William Turner , ( Advocates General to His Majesty , and the Duke of York , Lord High-Admiral of England for the time being ; ) Assistants to Dr. Exton upon the King's Command in that Case , the Grant passed with those special Clauses of continuance , until satisfaction of the Debt and Damages , which was also controverted several months by the Lord Chancellor Hyde , before he gave his Fiat , who then injoyned the said Carew to give a Discharge to the Farmers of the Customs for 10000 l. due to him in right of Sir Paul Pyndar , which was paid to Mr , Charles Cox , Dr. Robert Gayer , and the Executors of Sir William Vdall , Elizabeth Feilding , Joas Godscal , Henry Marsh and others , by Sir Edmund Turnor , upon the Accompt of Sir John Wostenholme , Sir John Jacob and Sir John Harrison ; out of Mr. Carew's allowance granted by the King. keywords: company; damages; debt; england; john; king; law; letters; patents; sir; states; william; year cache: A60565.xml plain text: A60565.txt item: #30 of 35 id: A62738 author: Emerson, Joseph, fl. 1685. aut title: To the honorable the knights, citizens and burgesses, in Parliament assembled. The humble petition of Robert Tayloe, Joseph Emerson, John Sawbridge and Edward Pearce on the behalf of themselves and other poor marriners, to the number of five hundred and upwards, who served the East-India Company in their late wars against the great mogul, and other heathen princes: and on the behalf of the widows and orphans of other marriners to the like number, that perished in the said wars. date: 1685.0 words: 1827 flesch: 56 summary: The humble petition of Robert Tayloe, Joseph Emerson, John Sawbridge and Edward Pearce on the behalf of themselves and other poor marriners, to the number of five hundred and upwards, who served the East-India Company in their late wars against the great mogul, and other heathen princes: and on the behalf of the widows and orphans of other marriners to the like number, that perished in the said wars. 1685 Approx. The humble petition of Robert Tayloe, Joseph Emerson, John Sawbridge and Edward Pearce on the behalf of themselves and other poor marriners, to the number of five hundred and upwards, who served the East-India Company in their late wars against the great mogul, and other heathen princes: and on the behalf of the widows and orphans of other marriners to the like number, that perished in the said wars. keywords: company; petitioners; tcp; text; wars cache: A62738.xml plain text: A62738.txt item: #31 of 35 id: A65974 author: Preston, Thomas, 1563-1640. title: The tryal and execution of Father Henry Garnet, superior provincial of the Jesuits in England for the powder-treason collected by Roger Widdrington, a Roman Catholick, and by him addressed unto Pope Paul the Fifth, printed in Latin 1616 in his appendix to his Humble Supplication, p. 124, and thence translated. Now published to make it further evident, that it is no new thing for Jesuits to curse and ban, to justifie a lie. date: 1679.0 words: 5057 flesch: 55 summary: The tryal and execution of Father Henry Garnet, superior provincial of the Jesuits in England for the powder-treason collected by Roger Widdrington, a Roman Catholick, and by him addressed unto Pope Paul the Fifth, printed in Latin 1616 in his appendix to his Humble Supplication, p. 124, and thence translated. The tryal and execution of Father Henry Garnet, superior provincial of the Jesuits in England for the powder-treason collected by Roger Widdrington, a Roman Catholick, and by him addressed unto Pope Paul the Fifth, printed in Latin 1616 in his appendix to his Humble Supplication, p. 124, and thence translated. keywords: catesby; catholicks; english; father; father garnet; garnet; king; tcp; text cache: A65974.xml plain text: A65974.txt item: #32 of 35 id: A67893 author: Copland, Patrick, ca. 1570-ca. 1655. title: A second courante of newes from the East India in two letters. The one written by Master Patricke Copland then preacher to the English in the East India, to master Adrian Iacobson Hulsebus preacher to the Dutch. The other written by Master Thomas Knowles factor there &c. By both which letters you may vnderstand of some other occurrents betwixt the English and Dutch in those parts date: None words: 3223 flesch: 70 summary: Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 19295) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1475-1640 ; 579:10, 644:15) The one written by Master Patricke Copland then preacher to the English in the East India, to master Adrian Iacobson Hulsebus preacher to the Dutch. keywords: english; haue; master; peace; ships; tcp; text cache: A67893.xml plain text: A67893.txt item: #33 of 35 id: A69858 author: Child, Josiah, Sir, 1630-1699. title: A discourse concerning trade, and that in particular of the East-Indies wherein several weighty propositions are fully discussed, and the state of the East-India Company is faithfully stated. date: 1689.0 words: 7501 flesch: 69 summary: I● it not evident that the Dutch since their being Protestant , are increased m●r● in Trade and Wealth in one Hundred Years , then the ancient and fortunate Romans did in four Hundred Years , after the Foundation of their flourishing Common-Wealth ? H●ve not the French since they were part Protestants and part Papists increased more in Trade and Shiping in one Hundred Years , th●● they did in five Hundred Years before ? Within the said seven Years ( the Company having lost Banta● ) They have built , fortif●e● , and garrisoned three Forts in several Parts of India for security of the Pepper Trade , wh●ch h●ve and will cost them 400000 l. keywords: company; dutch; east; england; english; india; men; ships; stock; trade; ● ● cache: A69858.xml plain text: A69858.txt item: #34 of 35 id: A78260 author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons. title: The case of the marriners which served the East-India Comapny in their wars in the East-Indies. And of the widows and orphans of those that perished in the said wars, to the number of five hundred, and as many widows. : Humbly presented to the honourable House of Commons. date: 1690.0 words: 1511 flesch: 63 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: east; marriners; tcp; text cache: A78260.xml plain text: A78260.txt item: #35 of 35 id: A92659 author: Scotland. Privy Council. title: Proclamation anent petitoning [sic]. date: 1699.0 words: 1454 flesch: 58 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A92659) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 153559) keywords: eebo; english; privy; tcp; text cache: A92659.xml plain text: A92659.txt