Difference between revisions of "MRP: Francis Sanderson will"

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==Francis Sanderson will==
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'''Francis Sanderson will'''
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XXXX
  
 
'''Editorial history'''
 
'''Editorial history'''
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02/12/11, CSG: Created page & posted transcription to wiki
 
02/12/11, CSG: Created page & posted transcription to wiki
 
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===Abstract & context===
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__TOC__
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==Abstract & context==
  
  
 
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===Suggested links===
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==Suggested links==
  
 
See [[MRP: Sir William Ryder will|Sir William Ryder will]]
 
See [[MRP: Sir William Ryder will|Sir William Ryder will]]
 
See biographical profile of [[MRP: Sir William Ryder|Sir William Ryder]]
 
See biographical profile of [[MRP: Sir William Ryder|Sir William Ryder]]
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See [[MRP: Baltic|Baltic]]
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See [[MRP: Danzig|Danzig]]
  
 
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===To do===
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==To do==
 
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(1) Transcribe this will
  
 
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===Transcription===
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==Transcription==
  
  
  
 
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===Commentary===
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==Notes==
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===Francis Sanderson, Danzig correspondent of Sir William Ryder===
  
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Sir William Ryder appears to have a correspondent called Fr.[ances?] Sanderson in Dantzig, who wrote on Oct 3. 1665 to "Sir. Wm. Rider and Co.":
  
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"''Acknowledges the cargo of the East India ships; has no hopes of selling the indigo till next spring; wine, tobacco, rice and sugar are likely to be profitable, since the Dutch are beaten, and the last Polish letters advise and agreement between the King and Lubomirsky [11 lines more in the calendar summary] from Adm Papers''<ref>Mary Anne Everett Green, Francis Henry Blackburne Daniell, Francis Lawrance Bickley (ed.), ''Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles II: 1660-[1685]: 1665-66''; Ed. ;(London, 1864), p. 3</ref>
===Notes===
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'''Francis Sanderson, Danzig correspondent of Sir William Ryder'''
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Sir William Ryder appears to have a correspondent called Fr.[ances?] Sanderson in Dantzig, who wrots on Oct 3. 1665 to "Sir. Wm. Rider and Co.":
+
 
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"''Acknowledges the cargo of the East India ships; has no hopes of selling the indigo till next spring; wine, tobacco, rice and sugar are likely to be profitable, since the Dutch are beaten, and the last Polish letters advise and agreement between the King and Lubomirsky [11 lines more in the calendar summary] from Adm Papers''<ref>Mary Anne Everett Green, Francis Henry Blackburne Daniell, Francis Lawrance Bickley (ed.), ''Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles II: 1660-[1685]: 1665-66''; Ed. ;(London, 1864), p. 3 </ref>
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Another letter from Fr. Sanderson, also in Item 48 [I think it may be the enclosure]. It is a letter from Fr. Sanderson to Wm. Rider, dated Dantzic (sic), Oct. 10 and 14, 1665:
 
Another letter from Fr. Sanderson, also in Item 48 [I think it may be the enclosure]. It is a letter from Fr. Sanderson to Wm. Rider, dated Dantzic (sic), Oct. 10 and 14, 1665:
  
 
"''Vessels are delayed, not  being suffered to unload for fear of infection; grieves to hear of the heavy judgement of the plague in London; business disbursements at Riga; hears that the custom house officers at Pillau have refused to clear English ships till further order, because the King stayed in England two of the Elector of Brandenburg’s vessels. Particulars of Abraham of Dixon of Newcastle’s ship being stopped at Pillau.''" [Adm. Paper]<ref>Mary Anne Everett Green, Francis Henry Blackburne Daniell, Francis Lawrance Bickley (eds.), ''Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles II: 1660-[1685]: 1665-66'' (London, 1864), p. 26</ref>
 
"''Vessels are delayed, not  being suffered to unload for fear of infection; grieves to hear of the heavy judgement of the plague in London; business disbursements at Riga; hears that the custom house officers at Pillau have refused to clear English ships till further order, because the King stayed in England two of the Elector of Brandenburg’s vessels. Particulars of Abraham of Dixon of Newcastle’s ship being stopped at Pillau.''" [Adm. Paper]<ref>Mary Anne Everett Green, Francis Henry Blackburne Daniell, Francis Lawrance Bickley (eds.), ''Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles II: 1660-[1685]: 1665-66'' (London, 1864), p. 26</ref>
 
'''Background on Francis Sanderson'''
 
 
R.W.K. Hinton, ''The Eastland Trade and the Commonweal in the Seventeenth Century'' (Cambridge, 1959), references a number of letters from Frances Sanderson to XXXX Williamson inn 1673 and 1674, which appear to be in the UKNA State Papers [e.g. SP 88/13, 13 May 1673 to 7 April 1674 referenced in FN 2, p. 158, Ibid. in which Sanderson asks Williamson advice on the best nationality to give a new 350 ton ship he was building in Danzig; and SP 88/13, 15 December 1674, in which Sanderson "gave Williamson an account of the Eastland company's trade  on which he attached no importance to exports other than cloth and dealt cursorily with imports"<ref>R.W.K. Hinton, , "The Eastland Trade and the Commonweal in the Seventeenth Century" (Cambridge, 1959), p. 156</ref>
 
 
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===Possible primary sources===
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===Background on Francis Sanderson===
 
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R.W.K. Hinton, ''The Eastland Trade and the Commonweal in the Seventeenth Century'' (Cambridge, 1959), references a number of letters from Frances Sanderson to XXXX Williamson inn 1673 and 1674, which appear to be in the UKNA State Papers [e.g. SP 88/13, 13 May 1673 to 7 April 1674 referenced in FN 2, p. 158, Ibid. in which Sanderson asks Williamson advice on the best nationality to give a new 350 ton ship he was building in Danzig; and SP 88/13, 15 December 1674, in which Sanderson "gave Williamson an account of the Eastland company's trade  on which he attached no importance to exports other than cloth and dealt cursorily with imports"<ref>R.W.K. Hinton, , ''The Eastland Trade and the Commonweal in the Seventeenth Century'' (Cambridge, 1959), p. 156</ref>
 
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==Possible primary sources==

Latest revision as of 17:51, January 19, 2012

Francis Sanderson will

XXXX

Editorial history

02/12/11, CSG: Created page & posted transcription to wiki






Abstract & context



Suggested links


See Sir William Ryder will
See biographical profile of Sir William Ryder

See Baltic
See Danzig



To do


(1) Transcribe this will



Transcription




Notes

Francis Sanderson, Danzig correspondent of Sir William Ryder


Sir William Ryder appears to have a correspondent called Fr.[ances?] Sanderson in Dantzig, who wrote on Oct 3. 1665 to "Sir. Wm. Rider and Co.":

"Acknowledges the cargo of the East India ships; has no hopes of selling the indigo till next spring; wine, tobacco, rice and sugar are likely to be profitable, since the Dutch are beaten, and the last Polish letters advise and agreement between the King and Lubomirsky [11 lines more in the calendar summary] from Adm Papers[1]

Another letter from Fr. Sanderson, also in Item 48 [I think it may be the enclosure]. It is a letter from Fr. Sanderson to Wm. Rider, dated Dantzic (sic), Oct. 10 and 14, 1665:

"Vessels are delayed, not being suffered to unload for fear of infection; grieves to hear of the heavy judgement of the plague in London; business disbursements at Riga; hears that the custom house officers at Pillau have refused to clear English ships till further order, because the King stayed in England two of the Elector of Brandenburg’s vessels. Particulars of Abraham of Dixon of Newcastle’s ship being stopped at Pillau." [Adm. Paper][2]



Background on Francis Sanderson


R.W.K. Hinton, The Eastland Trade and the Commonweal in the Seventeenth Century (Cambridge, 1959), references a number of letters from Frances Sanderson to XXXX Williamson inn 1673 and 1674, which appear to be in the UKNA State Papers [e.g. SP 88/13, 13 May 1673 to 7 April 1674 referenced in FN 2, p. 158, Ibid. in which Sanderson asks Williamson advice on the best nationality to give a new 350 ton ship he was building in Danzig; and SP 88/13, 15 December 1674, in which Sanderson "gave Williamson an account of the Eastland company's trade on which he attached no importance to exports other than cloth and dealt cursorily with imports"[3]



Possible primary sources

  1. Mary Anne Everett Green, Francis Henry Blackburne Daniell, Francis Lawrance Bickley (ed.), Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles II: 1660-[1685]: 1665-66; Ed. ;(London, 1864), p. 3
  2. Mary Anne Everett Green, Francis Henry Blackburne Daniell, Francis Lawrance Bickley (eds.), Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles II: 1660-[1685]: 1665-66 (London, 1864), p. 26
  3. R.W.K. Hinton, , The Eastland Trade and the Commonweal in the Seventeenth Century (Cambridge, 1959), p. 156