Tools: Three Silver Ships

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The three silver ships



Editorial history

Created 28/06/2015 by CSG



Contents




Research goals and approach



Planned outputs


We plan two, possibly three, outputs from our collaborative research on the so-called Three Silver Ships

(1) Briefing notes and characterisations as input to the script of a radio play, being developed by Lorna Bower, an experienced producer and writer for television and radio. This play will form part of a proposed series of radio dramas based on Admiralty Court cases from the 1650s, written by Lorna Bower in collaboration with the MarineLives project team.

(2) An academic article using the case of the silver ships to illustrate interstate legal and diplomatic interaction in the English Admiralty Court. Drawing on Spanish, German and Flemish diplomatic (and possibly legal) correspondence and records from the early 1650s, as well as on records from the English Admiralty Court, the English State Papers, and the Thurloe Papers.

(3) Possible academic article on methodological and practical issues to do with collaborative historical research in an environment of increased used of digital tools for discovery, research sharing, annotation, and publication.



Our collaborative research team


Eight of our summer transcription and research training programme members and advisors are working on the Three Silver Ships project in England, Wales, Ireland, France, the Netherlands and the United States.


We welcome input from scholars and enthusiasts and are committed to the full acknowledgement of all such input in our planned research outputs.

To date we have received help from

  • Professor Steve Murdoch (source suggestions on civil law in Louvain; and on Hamburg connection)
  • @_mapnut: Identified Pieter Goos map of Flanders from 1666 showing Ostend and Dunkirk
  • José A. Pérez Díez @JoseAPerezDiez: Offer to transcribe Spanish language letter from Don Alonso de Cardenas to Council of State
  • Dr Kathrin Zickermann: Help on German aspects of the case, including primary and secondary sources on Hamburg/Iberian, and Hamburg/English trade and commercial diplomatic relations
  • Sam Kaislaniemi @samklai: Offer to help on correspondence times Dunkirk to Cadiz
  • Dr Sara Barker @DrSKBarker: Input on correspondence times Dunkirk to Cadiz
  • Harry Perton @Gelkinghe: Input on correspondence times Dunkirk to Cadiz
  • Vincenzo DM @DM_Vincenzo: Suggestions regarding sources for Archduke Leopold Willem and Simanacas archives in Valladodid
  • Ruth Selman @Historyscape: Identified correspondence of Don Alonso de Cardenas at TNA
  • @LeuvenU: Suggested University of Leuven archival contact




Case background



Narrative


Three large ships (The Salvador, the Sampson and the Saint George) were of supposed Lubeck and Hamburg build and ownership. The Saint George and the Salvador were allegedly built in Hamburg in 1642 and 1647 respectively, whereas the Sampson was allegedly built in Lubeck in 1647. Interestingly, a Hamburg born mariner and ship master believed the master shipwright in the building of the Salvador to have been Dutch born, though resident in Hamburg with his wife and family for at least fourteen years, and that many of the servants and workmen employed by the Dutch born master shipwright were Hollanders.[1]

The three silver ships were described by a number of witnesses as of "great burthen", which means they would have been of 400 or 500 tons burthen, possibly more.[2] Christian Cloppenburgh specifically states that the Sampson was "of the burthen of about 500 tonnes."[3] The Mercurius, which was in Cadiz at the same time as the three silver ships, was described as "a broad sterned shipp haveinge three or fower and twenty guns, Hollands built att least in appeareance and about 400 tuns burthen."[4]

The masters of each of the three silver ships were highly experienced mariners. The forty three year old Hamburger, Christian Cloppenburgh, master of the Salvador, attested to having twenty-six years experience of navigation.[5]

The three ships were part of a large number of foreign ships spending the summer of 1652 waiting for the Spanish "plate fleet" to arrive from the West Indies. The fleet, carrying great quantities of bullion, arrived in late summer. According to Joachim Beene, the master of the ship the White Swann, which was in Cadiz that summer, the plate fleet arrived two or three months after the departure in June of the ship the Golden Sunn from Cadiz for Ostend. This places the arrival of the plate fleet from the West Indies in August or September of 1652.[6]

Subsequently a number of foreign ships departed for Northern Europe carrying bullion and other goods from the Spanish West Indies and Spain, including cochineal and wool. Other foreign ships at Cadiz that summer were the Mercurius of Hamburg, the Golden Sunn, the White Swann and the Prophet Elias. The master of the Prophet Elias dying in Cadiz, her voyage was cancelled and her silver and other goods "were taken out and distributed and put into the said other shipps the Sampson, the Salvador, the Saint George and the Mercury".[7]

The three ships were captured by the English in mid/late October 1652 in the English Channel off of Portsmouth with highly valuable cargos of bullion (the date of seizure of the Sampson is given as "on or about the thirteenth day of October 1652 new stile").[8] The ships were on their way from Cadiz with bullion from the Spanish West Indies going northwards. It was disputed in court as to whether the ships were bound legally for the Spanish Netherlands (Ostend or Dunkirk), or illegally for Amsterdam in the United Netherlands, with which England had been at war since July 10th 1652.[9] The ships were brought from their place of seizure to the River Thames, where they were moored near Woolwich, and where they remained from 1652 until late 1654 or early 1655, when they appear to have been sold off by the Prize Office.[10]

The case was endowed with political as well as commercial weight - the Commonwealth and then the Protectorate was keen to have the bullion declared lawfull prize, but the Spanish government contested this. The many and varied court depositions and other English Admiralty (and English State Paper) records give very granular and highly colourful accounts of Seville and Cadiz, Hamburg and Lubeck, the Spanish Netherlands, the by-ways between the Spanish Netherlands and Amsterdam by which bullion could be smuggled overland and by canal, and the River Thames, where the ships and sailors were held following seizure. Thomas Violet, a rather dodgy goldsmith, was involved as an agitator on behalf of the Protectorate, and published a pamphlet pleading for reimbursement of his efforts, which supplements the HCA material on the MarineLives wiki.[11]


Admiralty Court cases


You will find more than one Admiralty Court case mentioning the three Silver ships. In addition to the three main cases brought by the Commonwealth against each of the three ships and their owners to have them declared lawful prize, you will find cases brought by Spanish, Flemmish, English and Irish merchants, demanding restitution of goods they claimed to have onboard on one or more of the three ships.[12]

Our provisional and still incomplete chronology of events shows the main Admiralty Court cases against the three silver ships and their goods to have them declared prize close to resolution in December 1652 in favour of the ships, only to be blocked by intervention of Thomas Violet, and Dr William Walker Judge advocate for the Council of State. Sentences were issued by the Judges of the Admiralty Court in early 1655 to have the ships and their freight set free, but were again blocked by an action of Thomas Violet, as evidenced by petitions from two of the masters of the detained ships. However, at the intervention of the goldsmith Thomas Violet, the ships were further detained.[13]

In the meantime, the Council of State resolved to have the bullion turned into English coinage, with accounts presented to the Mint Committee by Colonel John Berkstead on August 25th 1654 recording the minting of the bullion.[14] Then on December 13th 1654, an order in the Admiralty Committee requested the Protector and Council to dispose of the Sampson, Salvador and Saint George, the ships being "much injured by having lain 2 years in the Thames, and are in a perishable condition, and a great charge, by keeping men on board".[15]

The cause of the silver ships attracted attention from diplomats of countries not directly involved in the dispute. For example, Lorenzo Paulucci, Venetian Secretary in England wrote to Giovanni Sagredo, Venetian Ambassador in France, speculating that the dispute could lead to a rupture between England and Spain. He noted that that a number of ships had been seized and that "among the eight ships was one from Hamburg or Lubeck, carrying the dollars I mentioned. At the instance of a number of merchants here interested in them, the Spanish ambassador has demanded their release of the Council of State, though so far apparently with scant success. The rulers here seem inclined to avail themselves of it in their present need, paying interest to the king of Spain until the capital is restored, considering the money to be his ; a crafty device, by no means to the taste of the merchants. The Spanish ambassador also disapproves emphatically and on this account and some other matters which concern his private affairs he is not too well satisfied. If they persist in this course the detention of the money might cause an open rupture with Spain, as happened in the reigns of Queen Elizabeth and King Philip II, for a similar provocation."[16]



Prosopography


For a continuously updated prosopography built around the Admiralty Court witnesses in the Silver Ship cases see Silver Ship prosopography


Provisional legal and diplomatic chronology


1638

1638: Thomas Sanchez de Orisa, a merchant born in Valladolid, became acquainted with the merchant Antonio Stephen da Bolderas in Madrid[17]

1639

1639 or 1640: The merchant Thomas Sanchez de Orisa came from Spain to Lima in Peru, where he stayed until December 1651 (In May 1653, Thomas Sanchez de Orisa stated he had lived in Peru about twelve years until the end of 1651)[18]

1643

1643: The merchant Antonio Stephen da Bolderas came from Spain to the West Indies[19]

1651

Dec 1651: The merchant Thomas Sanchez de Orisa embarked on a ship in the Spanish fleet to return from Lima in Peru to Cadiz in Spain[20]

1652

Towards end of Apr 1652 (probably new style): Thomas Sanchez da Vicar advised Don Antonio da Ponte at "the Havana" to buy silver plate, rather than pieces of eight. Da Ponte followed this advice and bought six bars of silver, which he loaded onto the Saint Juan Baptista[21]

May 1652 (probably new style: Roderigo Alonzo remembered "that he this deponent being att the West Indies in the sayd moneth of May 1652 there [?saw] the arlate Don Antonio [da Ponte] buy the same att the Havana, and afterwards for his owne accompt to embarque the same upon the Saint Juan Baptista Juan Sericho Master to be transported to Cadize arlate"[22]

May 1652 (new style): The ship the Saint John Baptist or Saint Juan Baptista set sail from La Vera Cruz "about the moneth of May"[23]

Jun 1652 (new style): The ship the Saint John Baptist or Saint Juan Baptista "sett sayle from the Havana in June"[24]

Jul 1652 [possibly the latter end] (new style): The ship the Saint John Baptist or Saint Juan Baptista arrived at Cadiz from Havana (Captain: John Sericho), carrying as passengers Lewis ffernandez Angell and Don Antonio de Ponte, who subsequently laded silver onto the Sampson and went as passengers on the Sampson from Cadiz bound (allegedly) for Ostend[25] [26] The deponent Thomas John did not know the name of the ship in which ffernandez Angell's silver was brought to Cadiz, but described it as "one of the shippes of the Spanish Westindia fleet"[27]; Thomas Sanchez da Vicar stated that "about ten or twelve dates after the arrivall of the West India ffleet att Cadize which was towards the latter end of July last...laded the barrs of sylver by this deponent formerly deposed of"[28]

July 1652 (new style): The deponent Antonio Ala Rosa, a thirty-two year olf mariner of Sevile, stated that silver belonging to Lewis ffernandez Angell arrived "came in a shipp of the West India Spanish ffleet which arrived att Cadiz in July"[29]

July 26th 1652 (probably new style: Letter of advise sent by ffrancisco de la Sierpe from Cadiz to Peter Mathewes Arnold Beake and William Moore in London regarding shipment of silver in the Salvador for the three mens joint account[30]

Aug 14th 1652 (presumably new style): Heinrich Grouve stated that " on or about the 18. day of August 1652, Christian Cloppenbergh aboard his sayd shipp att Cadiz did deliver the sayd three
bills of lading for the sayd moneyes to Joachim Schaer aforesayd. And the sayd Joachim Schaer immediately delivered one of them back to the sayd Christian Cloppenbergh loose and without a Cover"[31]

Sep 6th 1652 (new style): Silver loaded onto the Sampson by Don Antonio da Ponte, merchant of Tenarife, for his own account, as witnessed by Lawrence de Veles, a merchant of Cadiz, who stated: "he this deponent saw the sayd Pedro da Campo Viela signe the bills of lading interrate aboard the shipp Sampson then riding att an anchor within the bay of Cadiz, upon or about the sixth day of September 1542. new stile![32]

Sep 6th 1652 (probably new style): Diego Maistre stated he "saw in that tyme videlicet about the 6 day of September att the lodging of his precontest Lorenzo da Veles att Cadiz and his possession there one large barr of sylver of the first marke in the margent being the barr of sylver arlate weighing one hundred and odd markes or thereabouts which sayd barr he then told this deponent was the sylver of the
arlate Pedro and Andreas Annakaert merchants of Antwerpe"[33]

Sep 9th 1652 (probably new style): Diego Maistre stated that "upon or about the ninth day of September 1652 he this deponent went aboard the arlate shipp Sampson Otto George master, and then and there heard the purser of the sayd shipp Sampson Pedro da Campo acknowledge that the sayd Peter Jansen Clomp had laden the sayd barr of sylver, and accordingly he the sayd purser in the presence and sight of this deponent signed three bills of lading all of one tenor for the sayd barr of sylver to be delivered att Ostend to the sayd Lorenzo de Veles for the Accompt aforesayd one of which bills of lading was left with him the sayd Purser"[34]

Sep 11th 1652 (new style): Thirteen bars of sylver laded by Lewis ffernandez Angell into the Sampson at Cadiz on behalf of ?XXXX[35] This date is contradicted by the deponent Thomas John, who states that he was on the Sampson at the "latter end of July .1652." when the silver was laden onto the ship[36] However, Antonio Ala Rosa, who like Thomas John, claims to be been present at the lading of the silver into the Sampson states "the tyme he well remembreth was about the tenth or eleventh day of September"[37]

Sep 27th (new style): The silver of Peter Arangel and John de Mann[?X]go was laden onto the Sampson "about the 27th day of September 1652 new style" according to Lorenzo de Veles, whilst the "rest of the sylver claymed was laden aboard the Saint George and Salvador about the 9th of October new style"[38]

Oct 8th 1652 (presumably new style): John Mexia da Herrera saw John martinsdorp, master of the Saint George, sign bills of lading for silver laden onto the Saint George by Pedro Calvo for the account of Paulus Cobrisse in Bruges in Flanders[39]

Oct 9th (new style): The silver of Peter Arangel and XXX was laden onto the Sampson "about the 27th day of September 1652 new style" according to Lorenzo de Veles, whilst the "rest of the sylver claymed was laden aboard the Saint George and Salvador about the 9th of October new style"[40]

?Early Oct 1652: A ship (Master: John de Vos) departed Cadiz for Ostend three days before the departure of the Saint George from Cadiz for Ostend. On John de Vos' ship were two merchants whose silver was on board the Silver ships (Thomas Sanchez de Orisa and Antonio Stephen da Bolderas, both of whom had been in Lima in Peru).

Oct. 13th 1652 (new style): Departure of the ship the Sampson from Cadiz bound allegedly for Ostend[41] According to various estimates by deponents, arrived in the English Channel twenty-eight or thirty days after departure from Cadiz, where it was seized.

Early Nov 1652 (old style): Seizure of the Sampson, the Salvador, and the Saint George in the English Channel by the English. The Salvador, and possibly the other two Silver Ships, was seized by Captain Penrose.[42] Captain Penrose may be Thomas Penrose, who is mentioned on Hunne 8th 1660 by Pepys in his diary, and who is descibed in the L&M Pepys Companion as "A captain in the Commonwealth navy, he held two commands 1665-7. He was arrested for debt in 1660, and Coventry's comment on him c. 1667 was 'grows debuached'."[43] The online ThreeDecks resource provides details of Thomas Penrose's commands, listing him as commanding officer of the Concord from January 1652 to December 1652, and as commanding officer of the Nonsuch from December 1652 to at least June 1653. He was later commanding officer of the Bristol, the Maidstone and the Monck.[44]

Nov 8th 1652: Council of State ordered the Admiralty Judges to attend the Committee for Foreign Affairs on Wednesday, by 8.am. [12th Nov 1652], "about the silver lately taken by Capt. Penrose; the ommittee to acquaint the judges with what they have received concerning this business, and to desire them to examine it, and acquaint Council with the state thereof." The Council of State also ordered the Committee for Foreign Affairs "to prepare an answer to the letter of the Spanish Ambassador read to Council."[45]

Nov 10th 1652 or earlier: Decree made by the Admiralty Court judges. There appear to have been depositions prior to the decree

Nov 10th 1652 or earlier: Letter or some form of writing from the Spanish Ambassador (probably to the Council of State) regarding the decree made by the Admiralty Court judges

Nov 10th 1652: Summary of legal procedings prepared in written form, possibly for the Council of State

Nov 12th 1652: "The Affidavit of Otto George, of the 12th of November 1652"[46]

Nov 12th 1652: Papers given in by the Spanish Ambassador in the evening to the Council of State on Nov. 12th, and on Nov 13th, Council of State ordered the papers to be set to the Admiralty Court Judges. The papers appear to have included an offer of security from Spain "that neither the plate nor any of the lading on board the Samson and Salvador shall suffer detriment by remaining aboard"[47]

Nov 12th 1652: Council of State ordered that the Commissioners of Dutch Prize Goods to take good care that none of the plate and goods remaining onboard the Samson (sic) and the Saint Salvador (sic) "be unladen or removed out of the ships, until Council shall give order therein, and that there be no embezzlement meantime. The plate and goods already removed from the ships "to be preserved in saftey, without embezzlement or disposal" The Committee for Foreign Affairs to present its opinion to the Council of State at 10 a.m., Nov 13th 1652, after hearing the views of the Admiralty Court Judges and Dr Walker at 8 a.m.[48]

Nov 13th 1652: Admiralty Court Judges and Dr. Walker to attend the Committee for Foreign Affairs[49]; [50]

Dec 1st 1652: "Three Acts of the Court of Admiralty, of the First of December 1652"[51]

Post Dec 3rd 1652: Admiralty judges and Dr Walker to attend the Committee for Foreign Affairs to "to attend, and report what has been done in that court about the ships Samson, Salvador, and George".

Dec 6th 1652: Council of State made an Order, on consideration of the proceedings in the Admiralty Court against the Samson, Salvadore, and George, that Council sees no reason to alter their resolutions, but the Admiralty Judges are to proceed against them according to law and justice."

Dec 8th 1652: "An Act of the Court of Admiralty, of the 8th of December 1652"[52]

Dec 9th 1652: Council of State referred "The petition of the officers and mariners of the Samson" referred to the Admiralty Judges.

Dec 10th 1652: Paper prepared for the Spanish ambassador (possibly in response to ambassador's letter of November 10th 1652 or earlier) to be sent to ambassador by Sir Oliver Fleming on December 11th 1652.

Extract from entry for Tuesday December 14th 1652, Journal of House of Commons, vol. VII (London, 1813), p.229

Dec 14th 1652: Lord Ambassador from the King of Spain attended parliament, speaking in Spanish, and presenting copies of his speech in writing in Spanish and English[53]

Dec 15th 1652: Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs had received several letters from the Senate of Hamburg concerning ships of Hamburg seized by the English

Dec 20th 1652: Debate in parliament resumed "upon the Papers delivered in by the Lord Ambassador from the King of Spaine, upon his last Audience, touching his Appeal from the Admiralty-Court to the Parliament, concerning the Goods aboard the Ships the Sampson, the Salvado, and the St. George", upon "An Order of the Council of State, of the 6th of December 1652; whereby the Council leave it to the Judges of the Admiralty to proceed with the abovesaid Ships, according to Law and Justice", upon "Three Acts of the Court of Admiralty, of the First of December 1652", upon "An Act of the Court of Admiralty, of the 8th of December 1652"; and upon "The Affidavit of Otto George, of the 12th of November 1652". Parliament determined that the matter "be referred to the Court of Admiralty to proceed in the Determination of this Business, according to Law and Justice" and that "these Papers, presented to the Parliament by the Spanish Ambassador, be referred to the Council of State, to prepare an Answer to be given to the Spanish Ambassador; and to report it to the Parliament".[54]

Dec ?XXXX 1652: An unfinished certificate prepared by the Admiralty judges to be submitted to parliament describing events and legal considerations in the case of the silver ships

1653

Jan 21st 1653: Abraham Johnson, sailmaker, told William Astell and William Pembridge "that the Samson, Salvador, and George belonged to Holland, and said he would confess it before the Prize Commissioners."[55]

Jan 27th 1653: Letter to be prepared by John Thurloe following apparent discussion in parliament (presumably of silver ships), which was to be sent to Archduke Leopold via the Spanish ambassador, and was to be signed by the speaker

Feb 1653 Account by the Admiralty judges of their proceedings in the Admiralty Court regarding the Samson, Salvador, and George ordered to be presented to the Order in the Council for Trade and Foreign Affairs[56]

Feb 2nd 1653: Otto George, commander of the Sampson, alleged to have come into the Office for Dutch Prize Goods in Bishopsgate street at half past nine in the morning desiring to speak with the Commissioners for prize goods
- witnessed by John Gover, a twenty one year old London merchant, who subsequently deposed on February 23rd of the same month that he, Gover, informed Mr Richard Hill[57] and Mr Robert Tur[?pin], two of the Commissioners then there, and they willed that Otto George come in. In Gover's account, Otto George "came into the Parlour where the said two Commissioners were sitting", and was asked by Mr Hill whether he had not conveyed some silver ashore out of his ship, which Otto George denyed. Gover describes further questioning by Hill leading to Otto George then at length confessing and acknowledging "that hee had conveyed some bullion and plate out of the said shipp ashore which hee pretended to be his owne, and for his owne private use if necessitie did require, which hee affirmed was to buy provisions for his shipp and to pay off some of her men who wanted money".[58]

Feb 5th 1653: Warrant by Col. John Barkstead, Lieutenant of the Tower, to all constables, officers, &c. of the Thames, and in Middlesex and Surrey, to assist Wm. Astell and Wm. Pembridge in finding out silver conceived to be embezzled from the Dutch prizes between the Tower and Gravesend, and to apprehend those concerned therein, and bring them before him, or a justice of peace near, to be proceeded against according to law. Tower, 5 Feb. 1652-3[59]

Feb 20th 1653: Alleged discovery of two pieces or little piggs of silver hidden in the bed of the gunner of the Saint George in the gun room of the ship. William Turner, one of the Prize Commissioners waiters on the Saint George subsequently deposed to this effect on March 19th 1653.[60]

Date unknown: Paper published "by the advocate of Flanders"[61]

Date unknown: Dr Walker's reply to paper published by the advocate of Flanders (as authorised by Committee of Foreign Affairs, the authorisation being conveyed to Dr Walker by John Thurloe)[62]

Mar 7th 1653: Deposition of Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[63]

Mar 11th 1653: Allegation made on behalfe of the State in the Acts of Court[64]
- "The Keepers of the Libertie of England by authoritie of Parliament against the shipp the Saint George John Martinsondorp master"

Mar 11th 1653: "Allegation made in the acts of Court on behalfe of the State the eleaventh of this instant March 1652"[65]
- "The Keepers of the Livebertie of England by authoritie against the shipp Sampson (Otto George commander) and silver and goods in the same"

Mar 17th 1653: Deposition of John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[66]

April 9th 1653 (presumably new style): Date of a letter from "his Excellency Don Lewis da Hara duke da Olivares his sayd Majesties first and cheife Minister of State directed to the sayd Lord Ambassador of Spaine" in London concerning wools seized in the Saint Augustin[67]

April 24th 1653 (presumably new style): Date of a letter sent from the King of Spain to his Ambassador in England, requesting him to seek restitution of belonging to him beings ent on the Saint Augustin from Alicant to Venice as part of a contract to suplly the Spanish army in Flanders[68]

Jul 4th 1653: Letter from Dr Walter Walker to Secretary John Thurloe requesting that Urian Martesen be examined urgently "about the silver in the Samson" since "the man iis soon going out of England"[69]

Aug 1 1653: Order of Council of State that the silver in the Tower of London brought in by the Michael Archangel and the Morning Star to be melted down for coining under the supervision of the Master of the Mint.[70]

Sep 20th 1653: Allegation given in by Mr Budd (Case: Lord Protector against the ship the Sampson etc)[71]

Sep 20th 1653: Allegation given in on the behalf of the State by ? (Case: Keepers of the Liberty of England against the ship the Salvador etc.[72]

Sep 26th 1653: Deposition of Jurian Martinson of Flintsborough in Holstein land Marriner aged 34, yeares

Sep 28th 1653: Deposition of Abraham Johnson of the precinct of Saint Catherines neere the Tower of London Sailemaker, aged 3[?5] yeares

Oct 12th 1653: Deposition of William Astell of the parish of Allhallows Barking London Chirurgeon aged 60 yeares

Oct 31st 1653: Deposition of Antonio Estevan de Balderas of Madrid an Inhabitant of Limma in the Indies merchant aged thirty eight yeares

Nov 4th 1653: Deposition of Antonio da Ponte of Teneriffa in the Canary Islands merchant aged twenty eight yeares
- regarding "The Clayme of Manuel Gomez" [for his wools in the Salvador]

Nov 4th 1653: Deposition of Antonio da Ponte of Tenariffa merchant aged 28 yeares
- regarding "The Clayme of fferdinando Numez for his woolls in the Saint George

Nov 15th 1653: Deposition of Antonio Estevan de Balderas of Limma in the West Indies merchant aged 38 yeares
- regarding the "The Clayme of Blases da La Pyna of Sevill for his goods in the shipp the Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is Captaine taken by a shipp of the Parliaments fleet under the Command of Capt PomXXX"

Nov 21st 1653: Deposition of Antonio Fernandez Caravashall of London Merchant aged 54 yeares

Dec 5th 1653: Deposition of Gaspar Tam of Hamborough Purser of the shipp the Goulden Sunn of Hamburgh aged 24 yeares
- regarding "The Clayme of Peter Tam for his sylver in the Salvadore

Dec 30th 1653: Deposition of Antonio Estevan de Balderas borne att Madrid in Spaine an Inhabitant of Limma in the West Indies, aged 38 yeares
- regarding "A Clayme of ?Frocato Millenes merchant of Cadiz for one barr of sylver marked in the margent in the shipp the Sampson Otto George Captaine taken by some of the Parliaments shipps

Dec 30th 1653: Deposition of Henrick Martens of Hamburgh Captaine of the shipp the Hope of Hamburgh aged 30 yeares
- regarding "The Clayme of Vincent Van Campen and others Owners of the shipp the Sampson whereof Otto George was Master for the sayd shipp and her tackle and furniture

1654

Jan 2nd 1654: Deposition of ffrancisco Lopez of Sevilia in Spayne aged 21 yeares
- regarding "The Clayme of fferdinando Nunez for his woolls in the Saint George

Jan 3rd 1654: Deposition of ffrancisco Lopez of Sevilia in Spayne merchant aged 21 yeares
- regarding "The Clayme of Manuel [?XXX] de Acosta for his [?XXXX] and [?XXXX] in the Salvador

Jan 3rd 1654: Deposition of ffrancisco Lopez of Sevilia in Spaine merchant aged 21. yeares
- regarding "The Clayme of Bla[?re]/[?ze] de La Pyna for his woolls in the Salvador

Apr 10th 1654: Affidavit of Christian Cloppenbergh of Hamburgh Mariner Master and Commander of the shipp the Salvadore of Hamburgh now lying in this River of Thames aged two and forty yeares

Sep 2nd 1654: Letter from Dr. Walter Walker to John Thurloe informing him of urgency of proceeding to a legal decision[73]

Nov 7th 1654: Deposition of John Bacon of the parish of Saint Giles Criplegate in the Citty of London Mariner Owner and master of the shipp the John of London aged five and forty yeares

Nov 8th 1654: Deposition of Stephen Puckle of Eastsmithfeild neere London merchant aged fifty nine yeares

Nov 9th 1654: Deposition of Magdalena Hendricks the wife of Abraham Johnson living in the Minneries neere London aged thirty two yeares

Nov 15th 1654: Further deposition of Magdalena Hendrickes the wife of Abraham Johnson living in the Minneries nere London wall saylemaker, aged thirtie two yeares

Nov 20th 1654: Deposition of Albert Bechere of the free Citie of Lubeck Mariner at present Master or Commander of the shipp the King David of London aged 47. yeares

Nov 29th 1654: Deposition of Peter Rokes of Lubeck in Germania Mariner Steeresman of the shipp the Goulden Grape of dantsick aged 43. yeares

Nov 29th 1654: Deposition of Henrick Vett of hamborough Mariner aged 36. yeares

Dec 1st 1654: Deposition of Carsten Franck of Lubeck Shipwright aged 32. yeares

Dec 1st 1654: Deposition of John Lowers of Masterland in Norway Mariner aged 26. yeares

Dec 2nd 1654: Deposition of Carsten Franck of Lubeck shipwright aged 32. yeares

Dec 2nd 1654: Deposition of Henry Slucker of hamborough Mariner aged 23 yeares

Dec 5th 1654: Deposition of John Martenson-Dorp of hamborough Mariner aged 53. yeares

Dec 6th 1654: Deposition of Christian Cloppenburgh of hamborough Mariner aged 43 yeares

Dec 9th 1654: Deposition of Giles Vandeputt of the parish of Saint Martins Orgers in the City of London Merchant aged 32 yeares

Dec 13th 1654: Order in the Admiralty Committee requested the Protector and Council to dispose of the Sampson, Salvador and Saint George, the ships being "much injured by having lain 2 years in the Thames, and are in a perishable condition, and a great charge, by keeping men on board".[74]

1655

Feb 14th 1655 : Instrument of transfference exhibited into Admiralty Court on14th of February 1654 in claim of Christopher Boone for silver and cutchineale previously claimed by Adrian Goldamith of Antwerp on the ships the Sampson Salvador Saint George and Morning Starr

Apr 3rd 1655: Item: Petition of Christian Cloppenburgh: Date: April 3rd 1655[75]

Apr 3rd 1655: Item: Petition of John Martindorp: Date: April 3rd 1655[76]

Jul 4th 1655: Deposition of Christian Cloppenburgh of Hamburgh Mariner Master of the said shipp Salvador aged 44 yeares
- regarding The Clayme of Jaspar Lorenzo Merchant of Antwerpe for 3 Cerons of Cuchineale seized in the shipp Salvador (Christian Cloppenburgh Master)

1656

Aug 29th 1656: Deposition of John Willmott of London Merchant aged twenty eight yeares
- regarding "The clayme of Christopher Boone of London Merchant for severall parcells of silver and Cutcheneale hereto fore specially claymed by Adrian Goldsmith of Antwerpe having bin seized} in the Shipps the Sampson Salvador Saint George and Morning Starr and since legally transferred to him the sayd Christopher Boone and perticulerly conteyned in the Instrument of transfference exhibited into this Court the 14th of ffebruary 1654 and remayning in the Registry thereof"

Oct 27th 1656: Deposition of ffrancis Thoris of London Merchant aged forty eight
- regarding "The clayme of Christopher Boone of London Merchant for severall parcells of silver and Cutcheneale hereto fore specially claymed by Adrian Goldsmith of Antwerpe having bin seized} in the Shipps the Sampson Salvador Saint George and Morning Starr and since legally transferred to him the sayd Christopher Boone and perticulerly conteyned in the Instrument of transfference exhibited into this Court the 14th of ffebruary 1654 and remayning in the Registry thereof"

Oc 27th 1656: Deposition of Beniamin Bathurst of London Merchant aged 19 yeares
- regarding "The clayme of Christopher Boone of London Merchant for severall parcells of silver and Cutcheneale hereto fore specially claymed by Adrian Goldsmith of Antwerpe having bin seized} in the Shipps the Sampson Salvador Saint George and Morning Starr and since legally transferred to him the sayd Christopher Boone and perticulerly conteyned in the Instrument of transfference exhibited into this Court the 14th of ffebruary 1654 and remayning in the Registry thereof"

1656

Feb 19th 1657: Deposition of John Hanschen of Antwerp Marchant aged 21 yeeres
- regarding "Boone pred in three silver ships


Geographical analysis of witnesses and others in Admiralty Court depositions


Silver Ship witnesses - by Geography


Evidence of the Spanish/Flandrian/Hamburg silver trade in the early 1650s


See: Evidence of the Spanish/Flandrian/Hamburg silver trade in the early 1650s

Evidence from Admiralty Court depositions


Young Spanish merchants

A number of young Spanish merchants gave evidence of goods laded on board the three silver ships, having themselves travelled as passengers on the ships. They described the transshipment via Cadiz of goods such as tobacco, cochineal, and mother of pearl from the Spanish West Indies, and the shipment of sherry from mainland Spain.

The thirty-four year old merchant Manuell Corea gave evidence in multiple claims. He had been a passenger on the Salvadore and gave his residence and birth place as "Verina in the West Indies".[77] John Baptista Sabino also gave evidence in support of multiple claims, and is described as "of Cadiz in Spaine merchant aged 27 yeares." In answer to an interrogatory he clarified that he was Genoese by birth, though now living in Cadiz as a subiect of the King of Spain.[78]

The thirty-eight year old merchant Thomas Swan, despite his English sounding name, was born and resident in Cadiz, and had been a passenger on the Salvadore.[79] Swan had been at the island of Margarita when one of the claimants, ffrancisco Pellays, loaded mother of pearl on board his own ship for transport to Cadiz (and then later onto the Sampson and the Salvadore, assigned to his agent Cranbeene [CHECK NAME] in Ostend.[80]

The twenty-five year old merchant Guillermo Crombeen was well travelled. Giving Cadiz in Spain as his usual residence, he had been "borne at Courtrey in fflannders" and had lived "Marachais [CHECK NAME] Var[?inas] Gibraltar and other places in the West Indies for the space of fower yeares last past"[81]

The residences given for merchants who had lost goods on board the silver ships included Cadiz, Saint Lucar, Sevill, and several places in the Spanish West Indies, including XXX and XXX.

Sources of non-metallic goods on board the Silver Ships

The non-metallic goods shipped in the silver ships appear to have come from a variety of places, both in the Spanish West Indies and in Spain.

Sherry wine was shipped from Domingo de Padilla's own vineyards in Saint Lucar to Cadiz, where it was laden aboard the Sampson[82] Sack was purchased in Xeres in Spain by Christian Cloppenbergh, the master of the Salvador, from the Xeres merchant Pedro ffrancisco.[83] He bought it on behalf of the Hamburg merchant John Roopke (alt. Ropke), as he did at Cadiz a parcel of campechwood from the Spanish merchant Michael Perry Severino.[84]

Tobacco was shipped from Marrachio and elsewhere in the Spanish Indies to Cadiz, where it was laden onto both the Sampson and the Salvador.[85] Mother of pearl from XXX.[86] Cochineal from XXXX.[87] Sugar from XXXX.[88] Cochineal sylvester.[89]



Flandrian merchants

A Dunkirk based merchant named Phillip de La [?SXXXXpe] deposed in the claim of the English merchant Baldwyn Mathewes, for silver belonging to Mathewes seized in the ships the Sampson and the Saint George[90] Phillip stated that he was brother to ffrancisco de la [SXXXpe], who was factor and agent for Baldwyn Mathewes in Cadiz, where the two brothers lived.

He described loading a bar of silver into the Sampson in November (sic) 1652 at the instruction of his brother, the bar weighing "nine and twenty marks and six ounces of fine silver", and lading onto the Saint George three [?XXX] or small bars of silver, which weighed together seaventeene markes two ounces and a halfe. He alleged that the two parcels of silver were shipped for the account and adventure of Baldwyn Mathewes, and were to be delivered to Peter [Lam?es]/[Lams] of Ostend, and that Peter Cock [alt. Peter de Cock] of Gaunt [Ghent] was was to dispose of them, as factors and agents of Mathewes. Peter Mathewes, the London based merchant borther of Baldwin Mathews, deposed in January 1655 in the separate case of 'Peter Cock and Baldwin Mathewes for their silver in the ship' Saint John Baptist. He clarified that "Peter de Cock was and is this deponents cousin, and a native, as hee beleeveth of the Citie of Gant in fflanders where hee hath by and of this deponents knowledge resided and inhabited for about 12. yeares last past, and was and is a Subject of the king of Spaine". Peter Mathews clarified that he

In answer to an interrogatory about the bills of lading for the silver, which were signed by the purser of the Sampson and the master of the Saint George, he explained that De Cock's name was inserted, rather than that of Mathewes, as the recipient of the silver, for if an Englishman's name had been on the bill of lading, the silver would have been made prize should the ships have been taken by Hollanders.[91]

The same deponent testified in a second claim, on behalf of Peter Mathewes, Arnold Beake and William Moore, all London merchants. In this case he stated that "twoe Barretones of fine silver weighing together sixtie twoe markes and sixe ounces" were laden in August 1652 into the Salvador.[92] As for Balwyn Mathewes, the silver was to be shipped to Oastend for delivery to Peter Lams of Ostend, who in this case wsa to follow the directions and order of mr Robert Lamon of Antwerp, who was the factor and agentthere of Peter Mathewes et al. He described witnessing the silver being stamped with their weight, mark and numbers, which were recorded in writing. Working as servant to his brother, the deponent claimed to have read letters sent to his brother from the claimants directing his brother to buy the silver and to follow their instructions in determining the consignees.[93]



London merchants

Several London merchants gave evidence on behalf of the alleged owners of the three silver ships and the goods on board the same ships. For example, the thirty-two year old London merchant Giles Vandeputt reported receiving letters of advice in late October 1652 from John Bollart, a merchant and burger of Antwerp (in the Spanish Netherlands) stating that Bollart had caused his factors and correspondents at Cadiz to load quantities of silver and plate on board the Salvador and the Saint George to be transported for Ostend, where they were to be discharged and delivered for the account of Bollart. At Bollart's request, Vandeputt claims he took out several policies of assurance drawn at the Assurance Office in London for Bollart's silver.[94]

Two London merchants with extensive experience of Spanish trade (Roger Kilvert (b.?, d.ca.1657) and Antonio Fernandez Caravajall (b. ca.?, d. ca. 1659)) gave evidence regarding the illict bullion trade from the Spanish Netherlands to Amsterdam.[95] Kilvert had earlier acted as translator for at least one of the Spanish merchants testifying in the Admiralty Court on bhalf of Spanish claimants.[96]Kilvert stated that the lading and export of bullion from Spain was absolutely forbidden without special licence, and that any bullion found on board ships without licence was subject to confiscation. Nevertheless, many merchants exported bullion illegally, putting "feigned and unknowne names" in their bills of lading for the senders of the bullion, or leaving blanks where the names should be. But "the contents of the plate laden and the parties to whome consigned is usually plainely expressed."[97] Kilvert suggested that the Dutch were active exporters of illegal bullion, just as were merchants of other nations. Evidence from a separate case in the English Admiralty Court from November 1656 suggests that a commercial relationship existed between Kilvert and Caravajall.[98]



Profile of the mariners on the Silver Ships

John Martinsdorp, the master of the Saint George, stated that the mariners of the Salvador "were Hamburghers, and others subiects of free states and principalities neere to Hamburgh in freindship and amity with this Commonwealth".[99]

Christian Cloppenburgh's house described as "upon the Sand att Hamburgh".[100]

John Martinsdorp described himself as "a native and burgher if Hamborough".[101]

One English crew member of the Spanish ship the Nostra Signora Del Rosaria, thirty-two year old John Perryn from Faversham in Kent, gave evidence on behalf of the claim of Manuell Corea, having witnessed Corea load tobaccoes onto that ship in the West Indies, which brought them to Cadiz, and then helping to lade those tobaccoes onto the ships the Salvador and the Saint George at Cadiz.[102]

A number of mariners from the three silver ships were called as witnesses on behalf of the ships and their owners. These included Hance Ramke, a forty year old mariner of Hamburg, who was formerly a member of the company of the Salvador, and who had been to Spain in her on her last but one voyage. He had left the Salvador at Amsterdam to return to Hamburg on her previous voyage, and was now once again a member of her company now in London, though not present on her when she was seized by the English. Ramke testified to being present at the building and launching of the Salvador at Hamburg in 1647.[103] He identified the ship's owners as Hamburg merchants and gave the names of four of them as Daniel Brandes, Jerome Switger, Jerome Peterson and Henderick Hambrooke.[104] Another witness was the thirty-six year old Hamburg resident and mariner, Henrick Vett - formerly a member of the crew of the Saint George. He was a brother-in-law of John Martindorp, the ship's captain. He testified to having witnessed the ships's building at Hamburg in 1642, and appears to have kept the books for the ship for the last 19 months prior to his deposition in the English Admiralty Court in November 1654.[105]

Another Hamburg mariner (though not on any of the three silvers ships), thirty-five year old Joachim Beane, similarly reported having witnessed the building of the Salvador, and the departure of the same ship on her first voyage, which was in June 1647.[106] Beane had been present in Cadiz himself in the summer of 1652, as master of the ship the White Swann, and had sent the Salvador riding there under the command of Christian Cloppenburgh. Beane was able to list eight owners of the Salvador - in addition to the four named by Ramke, Beane added John Baptista Parker, Vincent Clingeburgh, Derrick Rourke and Gerrit Bowmaster, claiming that all eight were merchants of Hamburg.[107]



Goods owned by the mariners on the Silver ships

There is some evidence that a number of the mariners in the three Silver Ships had trade goods on board their ships. John Martinsdorp, master of the Saint George, deposed he saw laden aboard the Salvador "three butts of sack for the accompt of the mariners of the shipp the Salvadors company". The goods were said to have been purchased at the port of Santa Maria in Spain.[108]



Trip to the Prize Office on Bishopsgate Street, London

Otto George, commander of the Sampson, came to the Office for Dutch Prize Goods in Bishopsgate street at half past nine in the morning on the second day of February 1653. It was a Sunday and Otto George was desiring to speak with the Commissioners for Prize Goods. He was met by John Gover, a twenty one year old London merchant working in the Prize Office. At Otto George's request, Gover informed Mr Richard Hill[22] and Mr Robert Turpin, two of the Commissioners then there, and they willed that Otto George should enter the office.

In Gover's account, Otto George "came into the parlour where the said two Commissioners were sitting", and was asked by Mr Hill whether he had not conveyed some silver ashore out of his ship, which Otto George denyed. Hill persisted with his questioning, and leading at length the Sampson's commander confessed and acknowledged "that hee had conveyed some bullion and plate out of the said shipp ashore which hee pretended to be his owne", which was" for his owne private use if necessitie did require, which hee affirmed was to buy provisions for his shipp and to pay off some of her men who wanted money".[109]



Waiters for the Prize Commissioners and the Customs House

On the same day in mid-March 1653, William Turner and Roger Thorpe made gossipy depositions in the Admiralty Court. They were both waiters on board the ship the Saint George, which then lay under seizure in the River Thames. Turner was in the employ of the Prize Commissioners, whereas Thorpe worked for the London Customs House.[110]

Turner dramatically described the finding of two bars of silver hidden in the gunner's bed in the gunroom of the Saint George and the gunner's subsequent confession. Supposedly, the gunner admitted to having taken the two pieces of silver from out between deck under the gunroom. But, Turner "and partners" (namely the other waiters) "were of opinion that hee the said gunner and the stiersman had some confederacie or contrivance together about imbeazelling or carrying away silver out of the said shipp, and that the said gunner had got or fetched the said two peeces or small piggs out of the Masters cabbin, and that with the first opportunitie hee would have conveyed them away".[111]

Moreover Turner noted "there was a negro a servant to a marchant passenger that had severall peeces of eight about him and was going to carry them out of the shipp which hee had taken out of a trunck aboard." The servant was frustrated, having the peieces taken away from him and allegedly "lay long afterwards, watching (as hee conceiveth) an opportunitie to convey silver out of the shipp."[112]

To the list of sinners, Turner added the ship's surgeon, who allegedly "endeavoured many times and saith did others of the shipps company and passengers to goe downe into the hold and to look as they pretended for necessaries and provisions belonging to them."[113]

Turner concluded portentously that "the said silver to bee in greate danger by reason of soe many sorts of people of severall nations and conditions belonging to the said shipp as of her company and frequently attempting to goe downe into her hold."[114]



A motley band

A motley band of witnesses (William Astell, Abraham Johnson and William Pembridge) gave evidence of alleged conversations with one of the crew of the Salvador. They appear to have been hired by the London based Prize Office to spy on the crew of the silver ships in the inns and victualling houses of Woolwich, close to where the ships were moored. These witnesses claimed to have been drinking with the trumpeter of the Salvador in a house knowne by the sign of the shipp at the Woolwich Waterside on the evening of Friday 21st January 1653 and the early morning of the ensuing Saturday, together with "one Mr Simonds belonging to the prize office."[115] The alleged conversations took place in a mixture of Dutch and English. The witnesses were of varied background and no doubt incentivised by the prospect of monetary reward from either the Prize Office, or possibly from Thomas Violet.

William Astell was a sixty year old surgeon of the parish of Allhallowes Barking. A "Lieutenant of horse for the Parliament for the most part of the late warrs", he had fallen on hard times. He paid his parish dues, but "not any thinge to the taxes of the army or navie, not being of abilitie thereto, having bin plundred by the kings partie.[116] William Pembridge was a forty-two year old haberdasher of the parish of Saint Magnus London. He had a pre-existing connection with the London prize office, and "useth to waite aboard shipps for the prize office".[117]

Abraham Johnson was a thirty-five year old sail-maker, living at the time of his first Admiralty Court deposition in Saint Catherine's Lane near the Tower of London.[118] Apparently English by birth, with English as his mother tongue he also spoke fluent Low Dutch, "having lived 26 or 27 yeares in holland (ended about 14 monethes since)" (that is in September 1652).[119] Abraham Johnson claimed additionally to have known Otto George, the master of the Sampson, when Johnson dwelled in Amsterdam. Moreover Johnson claimed to have been the sailmaker on board the Sampson on a former voyage, havings served for eighteen months on her, about seven or eight years before his deposition.[120] His evidence contradicted that of Astell and Pembridge, recalling that they conversed with mariners from the Salvador in the Bell, rather than the Ship, in Woolwich.[121] Johnson claimed to have witnessed the delivery of silver out of the Sampson by Otto George on a prior voyage of the Sampson.[122] Johnson claimed to have been in Amsterdam in the summer of 1652 and to know that the Mercurius sailed to Amsterdam, delivering her silver to Mathew ffransen, a sailmaker dwelling there. Moreover, Johnson claimed subsequently to have met in Amsterdam with sailors from the Golden Sunn, whom he claimed acknowledged that "they came from Cadiz with silver and other goods bound for Amsterdam and that in their course they were chased into Ostend, and being there they there delivered the silver (as they said) which they brought from Cadiz."[123]

Jurian Martinson, a thirty-four year old mariner from Flensburg (fflintzborough) in Holsteinland, was a witness for the Commonwealth. He claimed to have been in Amsterdam in late 1652. Somewhat before Christmas 1652, according to Martinson, news arrived there "of the seizure of the said three shipps the Sampson, the Salvador and the Saint George with the silver and other goods in them brought from Cadiz; and saith that upon the said newes there was much sorrowing and generall lamentations at Amsterdam for and by reason of the said seizure, and it was then and there generally and commonly said that the said silver or a great part thereof was belonging to them of Amsterdam and other the subiects of the States of the United Netherlands, and that they would have a very greate losse and dammadge by the said seizure".[124] Martinson, according to his own testimony, had been a sailor on board the Mercurius, and stated that the ship had been bound for Amsterdam "but afterwards therev comming newes of warrs betwixt England and holland, they the said masters gave out that they were all bound for Ostend or dunquirke and as hee heard got passes at Cales to that purpose, and of his knowledge the said shipp the Mercurius got a passe for fflanders, notwithstanding that shee was (to the time of the said newes of the said warrs) intended for Amsterdam."[125]

The fifty nine year old London merchant Stephen Puckle of East Smithfield was also a witness for the Commonwealth. He told the Court that he had been a resident of Rotterdam for twenty years until the recent war with the United Netherlands, and that he spoke fluent Dutch.[126] Puckle reported being in London when the three silver ships were brought to England, and shortly afterwards, in November of 1652 "had occasion to repair agayne into Holland for the selling, and disposing of an house, and garden and some other things which he had att Roterdam."[127] Puckle described being ar Rotterdam, Leyden, Delft and the Hague that month and that at that time it was "commonly and generally talked of and reported, that the States of the United Provinces and their subiects had an exceeding great losse by reason of the seizure of the sayd shipps by the English and there was of this deponents sight and observation a generall and great lamenting in those places for the sayd loss."[128] Giving more detail, Puckle described being in the company of a number of Dutchmen on November 22nd 1652 (new style), travelling on a barge or skute from Delft to the Hague. He stated that "the sayd Dutch amongst other matters fell into discourse about the takeing of the sayd three shipps by the English which had the plate and sylber in them, meaning and speaking of the sayd shipps Sampson Salvador and Saint George above mentioned, And in that discourse one of the sayd dutch men who was one of the Lords of delph and a Bewinthebber of the Dutch East India Company did then and there in the presence and hearing of him this deponent confidently affirme to the rest of the gentlemen in company together in the sayd skute, that the plate and sylver which was on board those shipps then lately seized by the English meaning and speaking of the foresayd three shipps did belong to severall dutchmen of Amsterdam and harlem or to that effect, And further also sayd that although it might be pretended that the sayd sylver did belong to Hamburgh, yet att last (sayd he) it will fall upon our owne heads, meaning and speaking of the Dutch that were subiects of the States aforesayd, And further then likewise added that the English were subtile enough to find out the ground of the busines, or to the selfe same effect and purpose, for which reasons this deponent for his part did and doth verily beleive that the plate and sylver in the sayd three shipps did and doth really belong to the subiects of the sayd States of the United Netherland Provinces."[129]



Other potential Sources


In addition to a large volume of records produced by the Admiralty Court and held at the National Archives, Kew, there is considerable information about the silver ships in the English State Papers (which you can access through British History Online), and in the Thurloe papers in the the Bodleian Libary, Oxford.

A key printed primary source is a pamphlet by the goldsmith Thomas Violet, titled: "A true narrative of the proceedings in the Court of Admiraltie against the ships Sampson, Salvador, and George, their silver and lading and an accompt presented what silver was taken out of the said ships and coined in the Tower (being above two hundred seventy eight thousand pounds,) all which silver the Common-wealth got by the chargeable prosecution and discovery of Tho. Violet, who saved the Common-wealth this silver, Dec. 16. 1652", and published in 1659.

You can find some secondary material on the conversion of the seized bullion into English coinage in Henry William Henfrey's Numismata Cromwelliana.[130]

You can find short profiles and contemporary maps of a number of countries and places of importance in this case within the MarineLives wiki. See Spain, Spanish Netherlands, United Netherlands, Cadiz, Seville, Amsterdam, Hamburg, Lubeck and the River Thames.



Context



Cadiz in 1650s


Patrick O'Flanagan, Port Cities of Atlantic Iberia, c. 1500–1900 (Aldershot, 2008)
Ma. Guadalupe Carrasco González, Comerciantes y casas de negocios en Cádiz, 1650-1700 (Cadiz, 1997)
Enrique Martínez Ruiz, Magdalena Pi Corrales, Commerce and navigation between Spain and Sweden throughout history (XXXX, 2000)



Spanish plate fleets in 1650s


[ADD DATA]



Dispute over King of Spain's wool in the silver ships


"To his Highnes Oliver, Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland,

The humble petition of the fons of fir Peter Richaut deceafed,

Sheweth,

(Vol.xi.p.71) [RH MARGIN]

THAT fince it hath pleased the laft council of state to free from the arrest of yourpetitioners certain woolls belonging to the king of Spaine, for a debt of above twenty thousand pounds owning by the faid king unto your petitioners, and acknowledged under his hand; and that your petitioners have used all possible meanes, both by forraine sollicitationj and domestique endeavours, for recovry of thir said debt, and yett could never obtain any effectuall satisfaction or returne of their expensive labours:

Your petitioners humbly pray, that it would please your highnes to interpose your mediation with the king of Spaine, for a certaine and lymitted tyme of payment of the aforesaid

(A.D.i653.) [LH MARGIN]

aforesaid debt; that your petitioners, being natural subjects of this commonwealth, may not be deprived of their hereditary right to your due protection, nor be exposed to oppression and injury, without proportionable amends therein; nor their whole family be utterly ruined by the long delays and protraction of juftice, which their defire is peaceably to procure, without haveing recourse to your highnes for some more extraordinary remedy. This they doubt not to obtain out of the great zeale you bear to righteousnes, and your continual profesions to relieve the oppressed.

And your petitioners shall ever pray, &c.

P. RYCHAUT.
JAMES RYCHAUT.
SAMUEL RYCHAUT.
March 23. 1653."[131]


"(Vol.xii.p.500.) [LH MARGIN]

Don Alonzo de Cardenas, of the council of his catholick majesty, and his embassador to the parliament of the commonwealth of England,

DOTH remonstrate and represent, that his catholick majefty did by his agents and minifters, caufe to be laden aboard the ships the Samson, Salvadore, and St. George, in the port of Cadiz, being his own port; several bags of wools, to be transported to another port of his own in Flanders, for his own account, there to be delivered to his assistants, for his own account, towards the payment of his armies.

That these ships were upon the high sea surprised by the ships of this commonwealth, and forcibly brought in hither againft their wills, with thesfaid bags of wool then aboard them.

That afterwards the matter coming in debate in the admiralty court, though it was much pressed, that the said ships ought not to be unladen, yet that court over-ruled it, and unladed the said wools and lading againft the mind of the retainers.

That his catholick majesty having upon full and undoubted evidence proved his right and true property in the said wools, upon full debate plenary restitution was adjudged him.

That a judgment and definitive decree of restitution in such cases doth by the law of nations import, that the same be full, free, and intire, with security and defence, that they be again reladen a shipboard, and have free passage out of the territories of this commonwealth, free of all private arrests, attachments, disturbances, and molestations.

That by the law of nations, restitutio in integrum in these cases is and doth import reposition, or placing in pristino siatu. Thus as they were brought in hither by the fleet of this commonwealth againft their wills, fo they shall by the judgment of restitution have freedom and defence against all difturbances, to go out of those territories to the high seas again in pristinum locum & slatum, to the same place, and in the same free condition, as they were at the time of the surprisal.

That yet notwithstanding, Peter Richaut, James Richaut, Samuel Richaut, and Philip Richaut, upon pretence of levying a plaint before the sheriff of London, per exemplum manifeftum inter gentes, hath disturbed the lading of the faid wools again on shipboard, in retardation of the faid judgment of restitution, and de facto still hinders the same in contemptum dicli decreti curia admiralitatis, & in manifestam violationem juris gentium.

That a seculo non est audiium, that ever till now the goods of any supreme king in the world, having been brought by force into another nation in amity, and under pretence of a seizure at sea, as the goods of an enemy, and being brought to the test in judgment in a court of admiralty, and there adjudged free, as the goods of a king in amity, and restitution in integrum awarded, should notwithstanding be arrested in the territory at the suit of a private person, upon pretence to draw that king to answer there to a private action, whether he will or no.

That the pretended debt, now in demand by Peter Richaut, James Richaut, Samuel Richaut, and Philip Richaut, is claimed by them as executors of Sir Peter Richaut their father, who was a native and subject of the crown of Spain ; and it was never attempted in any nation, for a subject to cause the goods of his own king to be arrested in any foreign nation at his private suit, thereby to compel his own king (to whom by all the rights divine and human he owes allegiance and subjection) to answer him, as a private person in alieno territorio.

That it is a received principle inter gentes, that par in parem non habet imperium, & neque contrahendo nee delinquendo officitur subditus alieno territorio, & licet voluntarie subjiciendo. A supreme power may compromit or submit an oath to a neutral, and so be obliged ex facto suo voluntario to stand to the judgment; yet it is otherwife, where an attempt is made made againft his perfon per institutionem actiones in alieno territorio; for non rogatur respondere; and the general rule of the law is;

That no private person can enter an action against the person of any king or supreme power, to compel his person to appear or put in bail to answer in alieno territorio, nor attach any goods of his, to cause him to enter such bail.

For though where the actio is inftituted per rei vindicationem, that is, to the property of the thing itself, whoever hath right, must become a voluntary reclaimer, to shew the thing to be his, or else suffer the thing, the accord being in rem, to pass by default; yet where the action is not in rem, but in personam, and the goods only attached upon pretence of debt or trespass, owing by the person, for that only end, to cause the person to appear, or put in bail to answer: the goods of no supreme power are subject: to such attachment or arrest, the same being utterly against the law of nations.

Every embassador of a king, or supreme power, is both in person and goods free from arrests by the laws of nations; much more the person and goods of the king, or supreme power themselves.

The proceedings againft kings and supreme power is, concurrentibus his, qua in jure requiruntur per concessionem repraesaliarum, & non per privatum actionem.

The embassador doubts not, but you will take this contempt of the right and laws of nations into consideration, and cause right to be so done thereupon, that so exorbitant a proceeding may not be drawn into example."[132]


"Thursday, 23 March, 1653,
At the council at Whitehall.

(Vol xii.p.498.) [RH MARGIN]

ON confideration of a certificate from the judges of the admiralty, bearing date in February laft, concerning the wools claimed by the lord embafssador of Spain, as appertaining to the king of Spain, being taken in the ships Morning Star and Auguftine; and of a report made this day by major general Lambert from the committee of the council, to whom the said certificate was referred; ordered by his highness the lord protector and the council, that the said wool shall be delivered unto the faid embassador, or such as he shall appoint to receive the same, upon sufficient security first given in the
court of admiralty by English merchants refiding there, that in cafe the said wools shall be condemned in the said court of admiralty as confiscate to the state, the full value thereof shall be paid to the use of this commonwealth. Whereof the judges of the admiralty, as alfo the advocate for the commonwealth, are to take notice, and to proceed accordingly.

Ex. W. Jessop,
Clerk of the council."[133]

A. D. 1654.
In the possession of the right honourable Philip ld. Hardwicke lord high chancellor of Great Britain [RH MARGIN]

The Spanish embassador to the proteclor.

MOST HIGH LORD,

HAVING seen what your highness hath been pleased to write unto me the 14/4. of this month, upon the petition of the sons of Peter Richaut, deceased, (whereof a true copy was transmitted unto me) importing, that considering the justice of their cause, the delays and expences they have been at for the recovery of the debt, which they do pretend to be due unto them, I mould apply some effectual means for their speedy relief, to the end they may have no further occasion to importune your highness for your interposition by extraordinaiy ways; what doth occur unto me to say unto your highness upon this matter is, that I had notice only in general, that the said Peter Richaut their father didpretend Satisfaction for some iron guns, which he sent into Portugal about thirty-eight or forty years ago, the price whereof (as I have been informed) did not come to one thousand pounds; and if satisfaction thereof hath not been given all this while, the exorbitancy of the sum, which they do pretend, (having raised the same unto twenty thousand pounds) might have haply been the cause of it; and this being a particular and civil contract betwixt his majesty and one of his subjects, as the said Peter Richaut was, being born in Antwerp in Flanders, it doth not seem just, that his son might now pretend extraordinary remedies, when their father could not obtain them in the time of the late king Charles, whom he did very much solicit by petition, (a memorial whereof secretary Windebank shewed then unto me by order of the king) that his majesty would grant him letters of reprisal. And I having then represented, what a new thing it would be, to give letters of reprisal to a subject againft his sovereign, the same was immediately upon view thereof in the privy council denied him; and his sons having no other right than that of the father, it is evidently seen, that they cannot demand or obtain juftly any other extraordinary remedy, than what their father in his life-time could, who was the person, with whom the contract was made, and in whom did reside the quality of subject. But to the end they may know, how much power the authority of your highnefs hath upon me, I will (notwithstanding their ill deportment hath very much disobliged me) write efficaciously in their behalf to the king my master, that in contemplation of your highness's recommendation, an expedient course may be taken, whereby they may receive all just satisfaction. I wish God to preserve your highness for many years.

London, 25/15. of July, 1654. Most high Lord,

I kiss your highness's hands, and am
Your moft affected servant,

DON ALONSO DE CARDENAS."[134]



Cadiz to Northern Europe bullion trade in 1650s


Fernand Braudel briefly describes the sending of silver coins and ingots from Spain to Flandrs in the early/mid-C16th, often to be melted down and coined at the Antwerp Mint. Bullion export supplemented the export of goods from Spain, the Canaries and the Spanish West Indies to balance the deficit in Spanish/Flandrian trade.[135]



Spanish Netherlands in 1650s


Map of county of Flanders; cartographer: Mathias Quad; engraver & publisher: Johannes Bussemacher, Cologne; 1609; source: Wikimedia

In October 1652 the English seized three extremely valuable ships carrying bullion (the Sampson, the Salvador and the Saint George), bound from Cadiz to Northern Europe. It was subsequently disputed in the English Admiralty Court whether the ships were bound from Cadiz for Ostend or Dunkirk within the Spanish Netherlands, or in fact for Amsterdam within the United Provinces.

Several depositions in the English Admiralty Court suggest that the silver ships were bound for either Ostend or Dunkirk. However, Dunkirk was in French hands (though besieged by the Spanish) through to early September 1652, when the town surrendered to the Spanish. It is neverthless possible that news of Dunkirk's return to Spanish control would have reached Cadiz by early October 1652, when the three silver ships are alleged to have departed Cadiz for Ostend or Dunkirk.[136]

In late 1652, at the time of the English seizure of the three silver ships, the ports of Dunkirk and Ostend were both under the control of the Spanish, and were located in the Flemish speaking province of Flanders, which was part of the Spanish Netherlands.[137] Lost to the French in 1648, Dunkirk had been recaptured, together with Graveslines, earlier in 1652 by the Spanish, but was lost again in 1658, following a Franco-English siege. It was then briefly awarded to England in 1659, before its subsequent sale by Charles II to France in October 1662.[138]

Archduke Leopold (b.1614, d.1662) governed the Spanish Netherlands between 1647 and 1656.[139] His court was located in Brussels.

Spanish Netherlands, c.1700; source: Wikimedia

[TO DO: REPLACE MAP OF LOW COUNTRIES WITH ONE FROM 1650S, SHOWING DUNKIRK UNDER LEOPOLD'S CONTROL]



Spanish West Indies


See: Spanish West Indies



Amsterdam in 1650s


[ADD DATA]



Ostend, Dunkirk, Bruges and Ghent in Flanders in 1650s


Anthony Sola of Ostend in fflanders Mariner Master of the said shipp the Trowe alias Mariage, aged 44[140]
Hendrick Lawrenson Veger of Ostend in fflanders Mariner Master of the sayd shipp the Morning Starr aged 35 yeares[141]
John Baptisra Rulands of Gaunt in fflanders gentleman aged 23 yeares[142]
John de [?ffrond] of Dunkirke Marriner aged 35 yeares[143]
Guillermo Crombeen of Vadiz Spaine Merchant aged about twenty five yeares[144]
- "borne att Courtrey in fflannders yet hee hath lived in the condition of a Merchant att Cadiz arlate his usuall place of Residence and att Marachais Var[?inas] Gibraltar and other places in the West Indies for the space of fower yeares last past"[145]



Antwerp and Brabant in 1650s


See Antwerp and Brabant in 1650s


Hamburg and Lübeck in 1650s


Hamburg and Lübeck merchants in 1650s

Two of the three silver ships were allegedly built in Hamburg (the Salvador and the Saint George), and the third allegedly in Lübeck (the Sampson).

Hamburg merchants and ship owners

A concerted physical effort is needed in the Hamburg archives to find the Hamburg merchants and ship owners mentioned in the Silver ship cases.

So far we have found in the digitally available metadata of the Staatsarchiv Hamburg traces of Vincent Von Kampen [alt. Vincent van Campen], Daniel Sloyer, Franz Sloyer and Johann Baptista Yuncker [alt. Juncker; Juncquer] The first of the three was a part-owner of both the Saint George and the Sampson, the second and third were part-owners of the Saint George, and the fourth ws a part-owner of the Salvador. A "Jan Baptista Juncker" and a "Johann Baptista Juncker" (apparently the same man) also appears in the archival metadata of the J.A.L. Velle Collectie NEHA Bijzondere Collecties in a commercial transaction and legal dispute in 1657 and 1658 with Franz Sloyer[146]



Owners of the Saint George of Hamburg

Henrick Vett, a Hamburg mariner familiar with the building of the Saint George, and brother-in-law of the master of her, deposed that "the said shipp the Saint George (whereof John Martens dorp was Master) was in the yeare 1642. Originally built at hamborough by a shippwright and Burger of hamborough named Joachim Moller, by the order and direction of the said John Martens dorp (who bought and provided the timber for the said ships structure) Vincent van Campen now dwelling at Cadiz in Spaine, Daniel Sloyer, Abraham de Bois, Decloffe Classoft Mathys Heyndrick and others all Burghers and subjects of the ffree Citie and State of hamborough"[147] The spelling of the owners names differs slightly in the deposition of another Hamburg mariner, Joachim Beene, who stated that in addition to the master "John Marten dorpe" the owners were "Abraham de Bois Daniel Sloyer dittelof Classoft Mathys hendricx and others all Burghers and subjects of the free state of hamborough". In contrast to Vett, Beene does not mention Vincent Van Campen as an owner of the Saint George.[148]



Owners of the Salvador of Hamburg

The Hamburg mariner Joachim Beane deposed "hee well knoweth Daniell Brandes Jeronimus Switger, John Baptista Yoncker, Vincent Clingeburgh Jerom Peterson, Derrick [?Rourke] Gerrit [?Bowmaster] and Henry Hambrooke' to be all Hamburgers and merchants of Hamborough of very great fashion, and to be commonly accompted and reputed owners of the said shipp, And saith the forenamed owners are persons of soe good qualitie that hee beleeveth they would not suffer any meane or slight person to be a part owner of any shipp with them"[149]



Owners of the Sampson of Lübeck

According to Henrik Martens, the Hamburg resident master of the Hope, the Sampson was in Cadiz in 1651, where she took on goods and set sail bound for Genoa, but was seized by the French in 1651 en route for Genoa and was carried to Toulon and declared prize. Otto George, her master, redeemed her on behalf of her owners, whom Martens listed as "Vincent Van Campen John de Windt ffrederique Bevan, Daniel de Loon, ffrancisco Pennincque Don Joseph and ffrancisco Peralti and Company". Otto George left his ship at Toulon and went to Genoa, where he arranged for 12,000 pieces of eight to be paid to redeem the vessel by Jacomo Maria and [?Thomaso] Van Harten, two merchants of Genoa. These Genoese merchants were satisfied by Vincent Van Campen from Cadiz, with whome Van Campen had a corresponding relationship.[150]



Diplomatic correspondence between Hamburg and London

The Hamburg Senate was in correspondence with the Council of State or with the Committee or Trade and Foreign Affairs regarding the seizure and retention of the two Hamburg ships, together with other Hamburg built and owned ships seized in 1652 and 1653 by the English during the English war with the Dutch (July 1652 - April 1654).[151]

Dec 15th 1652: Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs had received several letters from the Senate of Hamburg concerning ships of Hamburg seized by the English[152]

Sep 2nd 1654: "It appears by yours that the Hamburg agent urges a judgment on the Samson, Salvador, and George"[153]

Feb 9th 1655: Letter, in Latin and English, from Joachim Petersen, the Hamburg Resident, to Oliver Cromwell, complaining of the unjust detention of two ships of Hamburg, the St. Salvador and the St. George, which is dated February 9th 1654 (presumably 1655 modern style)[154]



Other Hamburg ships seized by English 1652-55

Listed in HCA 13/67: The ffortune; the Saint George; the Saint Peter (Master: Jasper Jacobsen); the Saint Peter (Master: Peter Hausen); the Hamborough (built at Rotterdam); the Morning Starr

Listed in HCA 13/68:

Listed in HCA 13/69: The Saint John Baptist

Listed in HCA 13/70: The Angel Gabriel, The Augustine, The Hope, the Morning Star, the Orbus Mundi, the Patriach, The Peter



Primary Sources

Hamburg

SP 82/9/f1 Joachim Petersen, Secretary of Hamburg, to Council of State 1653 Jan 31
SP 82/9/f3 Joachim Petersen, Secretary of Hamburg, to Council of State 1653 Feb 2
SP 82/9/f8 Joachim Petersen, Secretary of Hamburg, to Council of State 1653 Feb 2
SP 82/9/f11 J Petersen to Council of State 1653 Feb 21
SP 82/9/f34 J Petersen to Council of State 1653 Mar 22
SP 82/9/f36 J Petersen to Council of State 1653 Mar 29
SP 82/9/f42 J Petersen to Council of State 1653 Apr 13
SP 82/9/f101 J Petersen to Council of State 1653 Aug 8
SP 82/9/f153 J Petersen to Council of State 1653 Nov 21
SP 82/9/f181 J Petersen to Cromwell 1654 Jan 9
SP 82/9/f183 J Petersen to Cromwell 1654 Jan 21
SP 82/9/f189 J Petersen to Council of State 1654 Apr 11
SP 82/9/f193 J Petersen to Cromwell 1654 May 24
SP 82/9/f195 J Petersen's memorial on claim for ship taken [1654 c June]

[INCOMPLETE LIST - ADD FROM TNA DISCOVERY CATALOGUE]

Staatsarchiv Hamburg
Findbuch der Reichskammergerichtsakten im Staatsarchiv Hamburg, Teile 1-4 (Hamburg, 1993-1995)
Friedrich Battenberg, Bernd Schildt, Das Reichskammergericht im Spiegel seiner Prozessakten: Bilanz und Perspektiven der Forschung (Köln, 2010)
Hamburg Museum - Historical museum, Hamburg
Schleswig Holstein & Hamburg web database
Archivportal


Vincent van Campen [alt. Vincent von Campen; Vicente del Campo]


Vincent van Campen, in various name variants, is emerging as an important figure in the Silver Ships litigation. He was a significant Hamburg born merchant resident in Cadiz. He is named as the first of the part-owners of the Saint George of Hamburg and the Sampson of Lübeck by multiple deponents, and had silver on board all three Silver Ships. He died sometime between 1654 and 1656, apparently in dire financial straits, either during or shortly after the conclusion of litigation in the English High Court of Admiralty. Secondary sources suggests that he was naturalised in Cadiz in XXX, and was married to a Spanish woman, Susana [alt. Sussana] Escon. Several sources suggest that he had been awarded a title of Spanish nobility, and there is secondary reference both to "Marqués del Campo (D. Vicente del Campo)", though with an apparent error in the year.[155]

See Vincent van Campen (alt. Vincent von Campen; Vicente del Campo)


Woolwich in 1650s


[ADD DATA]



Spanish ambassador in London


Don Alonso de Cardenas was the Spanish ambassador in London between 1638 and 1655.[156]

Reference is made to interaction with the Spanish ambassador over the silver ships in the Calendar of State Papers Domestic in the early 1650s and in the Catalogi Codicum Manuscriptorium Bibliothecae Bodleianae: Pt. V: Ricardi Rawlinson (Oxford, 1862). Reference is also made to the sending of a letter from the English parliament, via the Spanish ambassador, to Archduke Leopold.

The English State Papers contain a paper from Don Alonso de Cardenas complaining as to the behaviour of the Commissioners for Prize Goods in two cases which were contemporaneous with the three silver ships.[157]

A letter from the ambassador addressed to the Council of State, dated November ? 1653 was published in Spanish in the 1742 edition of Thurloe's papers.

Letter from Spanish Ambassador to the Council of State, Nov. 1653; source: Thurloe Papers, vol. I (London, 1742), pp.578-9

Spanish Transcription of Letter from Spanish Ambassador to the Council of State, Nov. 1653[158]

The Spanish ambassador to the council of State

Vol. viii. p.79.

Don Alonso de Cardenas del consejo de su mag. Catt. y su embaxador al parlamento
de la repub. de Inglaterra representa al hon. consejo de estado que algunos assentistas o
factores de su mag. Catt. han cargado de su orden en Cadiz de un aňo a esta parte diversas
sacas de lana en los navios Sampson, San Salvador, y san Jorge a consignar en Flandes por
quenta de la paga de sus reales exèrcitos.

Que dhos navios y su carga fueron tomados y traydos por fuerza a esta republica.

Que haviendose traydo el negocio a la corte del Almirantazgo fueron los dhos navios por
orden della descargados y las lanas puestas en custodia de los comisarios de presas para que
las guardassen en especie hasta el juycio final de dha corte.

Que su mag. hizo reclamacion de dhas lanas, y por induvitables evidencias y testimonios
probo que eran suyas.

Que sobre dhas evidencias y testimonios hallando la corte del Almirantazgo que pertene-
cian al rey su S[re] dieron decreto para que se las restituyessen enteramente.

Que por las leyes y derechos de naciones se deve executar la restitucion con bolver a em-
barcar dhas lanas con proteccion de l corte para que seguramente se puedan sacar de aqui
sin embaraço y interupcion.

Que por la brevedad del despacho dise el decreto que dhas lanas se entreguen al dho em-
baxador o, aquien tuviere dicho poder para el uso del rey o sus vasallos.

Que aunque el dho embaxador ha dado poder a Egidio Mottet para recevir dhas la-
nas sin embargo de esto Pedro Richaut, Jacabo Richaut, Samuel Richaut, y Felipe Ri-
chaut, han de hecho propio estorbado que el dho embaxador no reciviese dhas lanas con
procurar un embargo de la corte de los cherises contra, dhas lanas con pretexto de una pre-
tendia deuda que dizen ellos les debe el rey su S[re].

Que el dho embaxador dio` orden que se diesse quenta sumariamente de esta accion a la
corte del Almirantazgo juzgando que dha corte mandaria quitar luego este embargo y dar
orden que se executasse el decreto de restitucion de dhas lanas con efecto pero los dhos
Pedro

Pedro Richaut, Jacobo Richaut, Samuel Richaut, y Felipe Richaut haviendose opuesto a
ello, reconoce el dho embaxador que el negocio va encaminandose a debate pues no han dado
dha orden.

Con que hallando el dho ambaxador que este modo de proceder no solamente es de suma
violacion de las leyes de naciones y materia de tanta import. y de razon de estado con el co-
nociemento della toca pro p'ramte a este consejo sino tambien que la reputacion y justicia de
esta repub. esta en sumo grado interesada en que el decreto justo de su corte del Almirantazgo
seu executado enteramente y con efecto con restituir la hazienda y bienes de principes y estados
sorasteros que estan en amistad con esta republica, no siendo dhos bienes traydos aqui' por
via de comercio sino por fuerza apresados y traydos por los propios navios de guerra d'esta
republica y des pues por examinaciones y evidencias declarados por libres.

Y que no se publique en partes sorateras que esta republica embia su armada a la mar para
apresar has haziendas de sus amigos que pretexto de que son[de] enemigos della para que quando
despues por evidencias se hallaren ser de amigos se de lugar a que puedan ser con este color
embargados por quales quiera preten[es] particulares en virtu de pretensiones.

Y assi el dho embaxador no teniendo aqui por aora letrado suyo y hallando que el honor,
justicia, y interes de esta republica esta unido en este part. con el del rey su S[re], suplica al
consejo se sirva de reservar asta' la decision de este negocio y con el abogado de este estado
sea asignado y permitido de abogar por su mag. en esta causa, y con entretanto se sirva el
consejo de dar orden expresa para que sin ning[a]. interrupcion se puedan embarcar dhas lanas
en los navios que ha sletado para sa transportacion a Flandes, a fin que esten listas par que
puedan sin' ulterior dilacion hazerse a la vela. Luego que el consejo huviere tornado en con-
sideracion este negocio, y mandado remover todos los embarasos como lo espera de la justicia
del consejo. Fha en Londres a [?25] de Nov. 1653.

Don Alonso de Cardenas.

Translation into English of Letter from Spanish Ambassador to the Council of State, Nov. 1653

Translation by Nga Phan-Bellis

Don Alonso de Cardeas [member] of the council of his Most Catholic [Majesty] and his ambassador at the Parliament of the Republic of England represented the [Honourable?] State Council that some suppliers or business agents of his Most Catholic [Majesty] loaded, under his order at Cadiz of one year at this part, severall big sacks of wool on the ships Sampson, San Salvador and San Jorge to consign in Flanders in order to do the payment of his royal armies.

That the said ships and their cargo were taken and brought by force to this republic.

That having himself brought the case to the Court of Admiralty, the said ships were ordered to unload and the wool put into custody of the officers responsible for seizures, who would keep them in kind (in nature) until the final decision of the said court.

That his Highness did the reclamation of the said wool, and for undoubted evidences and testimonies proved that those were his (property).

That upon the said evidences and testimonies, was found in the Court of Admiralty that (the goods) belong to the King his Lordship, they gave the order to restitute them entirely to him.

That in reason of the laws and rights of Nations, the restitution should be executed by loading back the ships with the said wool with the protection of the Court, so that they can get out of here in security without any obstacles or interruptions.

That because of the brevity of the dispatch/sending, the decision ordered the said wool to be delivered to the said ambassador or, anyone who would have the said power in service the King or his vassals.

That although the said ambassador has given power/procuration to Egidio Monttet to receive the said [lanas], despite this fact, these Pedro Richaut, Jacobo Richaut, Samuel Richaut, and Felipe Richaut, have done [strict nuisance] so that the ambassador doesn't receive the wool, in requesting a seizure by the court of the [cherises ?] against the said wool pretexting a pretended debt they said due to them by the King his Lordship.

That the said ambassador gave order that account should be given summarily on this lawsuit to the Court of Admiralty, judging that the said court would tell/send to [remove] soon this seizure, and gave order that the decision to restitute the [lanas] should be executed with effect, but the said Pedro
Richaut, Jacobo Richaut, Samuel Richaut and Felipe Richaud having opposed to them, the said ambassador recognizes that the business were set for debating, (so) then they didn't give the order.

With what the said ambassador, finding this way to proceed not only of extreme violation of the laws of Nations and matter of such importance and of reason of State, with the knowledge of the [toca pro p'rampte] of this Council, but also that the reputation and justice of this republic is in the highest degree interested in that the just decision of its court of Admiralty would be executed entirely and with effect of restituting the property and goods brought here by way of commerce, if not by force captured and taken by the ships of war of this republic itself, and then for examinations and evidences declared as free.

[??] And do not make public in foreign parts that this republic sends its armada in sea to capture the properties of its friends, pretexting that [they are ?] its enemies so that when later, by evidences, it's found to be friends, they can be instead, with this color, seized for such particular pretentions, in virtue of pretensions.

As soon as the said ambassador doesn't have here for now his lawyer, and finding that the honor, justice and interest of this republic is united in this part with those of the King his Lordship, implores the Council keep until the decision of this case and as the lawyer of this state is paid in kind and permitted to defend his Most [Catholic Majesty]'s cause, and meanwhile the Council uses to give express orders so that without any interruption one can load the said [lanas] to the ships chartered for the transportation to Flanders, so that those lists by which they can, without ulterior delay, have the sailing being done. As soon as the Council have taken in consideration this case, and ask to remove all the obstacles as it is expected of the justice of the Council.

Done in London, the 25 of November 1653.

Don Alonso de Cardenas.

See: Deposition of Egidio Mottet Secretary to his Excellency the Lord Ambassador of his Catholique Majesty the King of Spayne aged 30 yeares, dated November 4th 1653[159]

See: Deposition of Egidio Motet Secretary to his Excellency the Lord Embassador of Spaine, aged 33 yeares, dated January 24th 1655 (1654 old stile)[160]

See: PRO 31/12/43 Simancas, Secretaría de Estado: A de Cárdenas; dispatches from London, Oct 1652-Dec 1655; presented by Dr S R Gardiner[161]



Civil lawyers of Louvain


Documents inventoried in the Oude Universiteit Leuven

- Item. 626: Dossier van het proces tussen het Strikte college en een van zijn leden, prof. Ch. de Vignacourt die gevraagd had om de rekeningen in te zien; de rector gaf hem ongelijk, de Raad van Brabant staafde zijn recht. 1651- 1655. 1 omslag (Archief van de Universiteit van Leuven 1426-1797 [II. Het archief van de vijf faculteiten; 2. De rechtsfaculeiten; b. Het personeel; (2) Het "Collegium strictum"[162]

- Item 643: Dossier van een proces ingespannen door de Faculteiten tegen prof. Jan de Liser voor zijn onjuiste rekeningen van de werken uitgevoerd aan de rechtszalen en aan de vergaderzaal van de Faculteiten in de Hallen. 1676-1692.[163]

- Item 651: Nota's van de cursus kerkelijk recht. 1580-1600, en 17de eeuw. [II. Het archief van de vijf faculteiten; 2. De rechtsfaculeiten; d. Het onderwijs en de academische proeven; (1) Cursussen en onderricht[164]

- Item 652: Bundel van vraagstukken kerkelijk recht: vraagstelling en oplossing. 16de en 17de eeuw.[165]

- Item 653: Bundel van consulten en adviezen m.b.t. huwelijken, testamenten, benoemingen tot beneficiën, enz., door de professoren Antonius Brenard, Z.B. van Espen en Antonius Bauwens. 1660-1724.[166]

- Item 654: Cursus burgerlijk recht: stukken 1633-1643; nota's van de professoren. 16de-18de eeuw. [=Civil law course: pieces 1633-1643; notes from the professors. 16th-18th century.][167]

- Item 660: (Gedrukte) opsomming van de bij de Disputationes te verdedigen thesissen. 1603-1796.[168]

- Item 661: (Gedrukte) opsomming van de uiteen te zetten en te verdedigen thesissen bij de Repetitiones. 1595-1795.[169]

- Item 663: Het doctoraat in de rechten: reglementen en briefwisseling m.b.t. de toelating of de weigering van bepaalde kandidaten. Lijst van de geslaagden, onkosten nota's. 1620-1789. [
The doctorate in law: regulations and correspondence relating to the acceptance or refusal of certain candidates. List of successful candidates, expense reports. 1620-1789.][170]

- Item: Feesten ter gelegenheid van de doctoraten: Ordo Doctoratus en Missae Doctorales bij de banketten; incidenten in dit verband: nota's brieven, memoranda, enz. 1630-1776. [Celebrations on the occasion of the doctorates: Ordo Missae Doctoratus and Doctorales at banquets; incidents in this field: notes letters, memos, etc. 1630-1776..][171]

- Item 665: Orationes in Aula Doctorali(uitgesproken door de professoren: 1610-1616; Oratio in Licentia D[omi]ni U. Narez. 17de-18de eeuw. [Orationes Aula Doctorali (pronounced by the professors: 1610-1616; Oratio in Licentia D [omi] ni U. Narez 17th-18th centuries..][172]

- Item 667: Register van de "akten", graden en proeven. Baccalaureaat, licentie en doctoraat. 1639-1649. [Register of the 'Acts', degrees and taste. Baccalaureate, license and doctorate. 1639-1649.][173]

- Item 668: Bezoldigingen geïnd op de proeven en hun verdeling: stukken hierover. 1630-1788. [Remuneration collected on the trials and their distribution: pieces about this. 1630-1788.][174]

- Item 670: Statuten van het Collegium Baccalaureorum of vereniging van de baccalaurei die de proeven en disputen organiseerde: verkiezing van de decanus, fiscus en notarius van dit college. 1623-1779. [Statute of the Collegium Baccalaureorum or association of baccalaurei who organized the trials and disputes: election of the serjeant, tax and notary of this college. 1623-1779.][175]

- Item 676: Rekeningen van de uitgaven en inkomsten van de rechtsfaculteiten door de pedellen P. de Zangré en P. Paugart. 1622-1646. [Accounts of expenditure and revenue of the law faculties by the beadles the Zangré P. and P. Paugart. 1622-1646.][176]

- Item 677: Rekeningen voorgelegd door de Prior Stricti Collegii: door Gul. Masius,J.A. Perez en Ch. de Vignacourt. 1646-1648. [Bills submitted by the Prior stricti Collegii: by Gul. Masius, J. A. Perez and Ch. the Vignacourt. 1646-1648.][177]

- Item 678: Rekeningen van de pedellen J. van der Borcht en P. de Zangré. 1648-1660, 1682-1683, 1691-1695. [Bills beadles J. van der Borcht and P. the Zangré. 1648-1660, 1682-1683, 1691-1695.][178]

- Item 679?BIS: Rekening van de diploma's van de Rechtsfaculteit. 1579-1769. [Taking the diplomas of the Faculty of Law. 1579-1769.][179]

- Item 684: Stukken m.b.t. de studenten: door de regering verleende vrijstellingen, getuigenissen over hun verblijf, lijsten, enz. 1623-1789. [Documents regarding the student: exemptions granted by the government, testimonials about their stay, lists, etc. from 1623 to 1789.][180]

- Item 688: Bundel getuigschriften van licentie. 1619-1786. [Bundle vocational license. 1619-1786.][181]


Thomas Violet


Charles William Sutton, 'Violet, Thomas', Dictionary of National Biography, vol.56, p.374, repub. by Wikisource
Ariel Hessayon, '‘The Great Trappaner of England’: Thomas Violet, Jews and crypto-Jews during the English Revolution and at the Restoration' in Michael J. Braddick & David L. Smith (Eds.), The Experience of Revolution in Stuart Britain and Ireland (Cambridge, 2011), p.216

Thomas Violet (b.?, d. 1662/3). Described by Anita McConnell in her ODNB profile of Thomas Violet, published in 2004, as a "goldsmith and writer on trade".[182]

An earlier entry for Violet in the Dictionary of National Biography, written by Charles William Sutton, suggests he flourished between 1634 and 1662, and described him as a writer on trade, and as a goldsmith and alderman of London. Rather vividly, Sutton summarise Violet as being "probably a restless, meddling man, who failed to please his friends, while he certainly displeased his enemies."[183]

The character of Thomas Violet has attracted some recent historiographical attention. Adrian Hessayon devotes a chapter to him in a volume of essays edited by Michael Braddick and David Smith, focussing on XXX.[184] Gijs Rommelse devoted a paragraph to him in the context of Violet's polemic against the export of bullion.[185]

H.S.Q. Henriques, writing on the subject of Jews and the English Law, makes reference to an alleged petition by Violet against the Jews presented to the King and Houses of Parliament in December 1660, and to an anonymously published pamphlet in which Violet was lampooned as the "Great Trappaner of England".[186]



Dr Walter Walker


Extract, John Venn, J.S.Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses, pt. I, vol. IV (Cambridge, 1927), p.319

Dr Walter Walker (b. ca. 1600, d. 1674) was the judge advocate of the Commonwealth in the Admiralty Court in the early 1650s. Often referred to simply as Dr. Walker.

Venn's Alumni Cantabrigienses lists him as transferring to Christ's College Cambridge from Oriel College, Oxford, with the award of an LL.B. in 1628 and an LL.D. in 1640, followed by admission to the Inner Temple in 1642. He was knighted in 1661.[187]

He is described in secondary literature, but without clarification as to dates, as "a judge of the admiralty and prerogative courts"[188] Another secondary source describes him "Sir Walter Walker" to be "judge advocate to the queen consort Catherine" and states that he died in 1674, when his son George succeeded him to the manor of Goldicote, which itself was held of the manor of Alderminster.[189]

Appointed by the parliament to the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, March 12th 1659[190]

Author of the "Statute of Distributions" (1670)[191]

Samuel Pepys mentions Dr Walter Walker a number of times in his diary. In his entry for Jan 21st 1666/67 he describes Walker at Doctors Commons discoursing most understandingly of Pepys' matters, despite being "not very well". Pepys "was mightily taken to hear his manner of discourse"[192] Pepys suggested in his diary entry of Thursday March 21st 1666/7 that Walker was receptive to a little inducement, writing that "Yesterday, Walker was mighty cold on our behalf, till Sir W. Batten promised him, if we sped in this business of the goods, a coach; and if at the next trial we sped for the ship, we would give him a pair of horses. And he hath strove for us today like a prince, though the Swedes’ Agent was there with all the vehemence he could to save the goods, but yet we carried it against him.[193] Five days later, Pepys' recounted the pleading of his case in Court, commenting favourably on Walker: "Sir [Edward] Turner, Sir W. Walker, and Sir Ellis Layton being our counsel against only Sir Robert Wiseman on the other. The second of our three counsel was the best, and indeed did speak admirably, and is a very shrewd man."[194]

Potential Sources

SP 89/4/35 Folio 84: Dr. W. Walker to Admiralty Committee. His legal opinion on the seizure of the 9 English Brazil ships. Date and place: 1651 Mar 31 London.; Original, autograph
DEL 2/158 The Percy: Dr Walker's report on; paper 2 fos; 1650s no date (Registrar of the High Court of Delegates and of the High Court of Admiralty: Cause and Miscellaneous Papers)



The Prize Commissioners


Richard Hill

Feb 2nd 1653: Otto George, commander of the Sampson, alleged to have come into the Office for Dutch Prize Goods in Bishopsgate street at half past nine in the morning desiring to speak with the Commissioners for prize goods
- witnessed by John Gover, a twenty one year old London merchant, who subsequently deposed on February 23rd of the same month that he, Gover, informed Mr Richard Hill[195] and Mr Robert Tur[?pin], two of the Commissioners then there, and they willed that Otto George come in. In Gover's account, Otto George "came into the Parlour where the said two Commissioners were sitting", and was asked by Mr Hill whether he had not conveyed some silver ashore out of his ship, which Otto George denyed. Gover describes further questioning by Hill leading to Otto George then at length confessing and acknowledging "that hee had conveyed some bullion and plate out of the said shipp ashore which hee pretended to be his owne, and for his owne private use if necessitie did require, which hee affirmed was to buy provisions for his shipp and to pay off some of her men who wanted money".[196]

Robert Turpin

See "Turpin (Robert). Appointment of, as Commissioner for Dutch Prizes, with other papers, 1654. 5500.f.9"[197]



Admiralty Court Judges


Dr John Exton: Heard the depositions of a number of Silver ship witnesses in March 1653



Evidence in Whitelocke papers


Whitelocke Papers, Volume XIII, Jan-Sep 1653

"Item 11: 'The case concerning the Sampson and other silver ships, stated in the matter of fact, and an opinion thereupon in the Admiral Court’, addressed ‘For the Lord Commissioner Whitelocke’. These ships having been laden in Spain and being bound to the United Provinces, were by the way seized in the Downs. The Court had ordered Otto George, master of the Sampson, to specify the names of the persons to whom the goods belonged, and of those to whom they were assigned. This order was protested against by George and the Spanish Ambassador; 25 February 1653, f.20."[198] [199]



Evidence in Thurloe papers


Three references to the cases of the silver ships appear in the Thurloe papers. The first reference is to "An answeare to what is sett forth by the Spanish ambassador, concerning the decree made by the judges of the admiralty, the 10th of November [1652]" regarding the unlading of two Plate ships, the Sampson and S. Salvador[200] The second reference is to the "Proceedings on the court of admiralty, 10 Nov. 1652, with depositions concerning the two Plate ships", and is an eleven page document.[201] The third reference is to a letter, in Latin and English, from Joachim Petersen, the Hamburg Resident, to Oliver Cromwell, complaining of the unjust detention of two ships of Hamburg, the St. Salvador and the St. George, which is dated February 9th 1654 (presumably 1655 modern style).[202]

Catalogi Codicum Manuscriptorium Bibliothecae Bodleianae: Pt. V: Ricardi Rawlinson (Oxford, 1862), p.6
Catalogi Codicum Manuscriptorium Bibliothecae Bodleianae: Pt. V: Ricardi Rawlinson (Oxford, 1862), p.18


Involvement of the Council of State and the Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs


1652

Apr 1652: Manuell Correa saw Tobacco in Marachaio in the Spanish West Indies, which was subsequently shipped in the Nostra Seigniora del Rosario to Cadiz[203]

Dec 3rd: The Council of State recorded on Dec. 3rd 1652 that "The Committee for Foreign Affairs to sit on Monday. The Admiralty Judges and Dr. Walker to attend, and report what has been done in that court about the ships Samson, Salvador, and George."[204]

Dec 6th: The Council of State recorded on Dec. 6th 1652 making an "Order, on consideration of the proceedings in the Admiralty Court against the Samson, Salvadore, and George, that Council sees no reason to alter their resolutions, but the Admiralty Judges are to proceed against them according to law and justice."[205]

Dec 7th: The Council of State recorded on Dec. 7th 1652 that "The Committee for Foreign Affairs to consider Mr. Violet's paper concerning the silver on board the Samson, Salvador, and George."[206]

Dec 9th: The Council of State recorded on Dec. 9th 1652 that "The petition of the officers and mariners of the Samson referred to the Admiralty Judges."[207]

Dec 10th: Of possible relevance, the Council of State recorded on Dec. 10th 1652 that "The paper for the Spanish Ambassafdor, now read, to be signed and sent to him to-morrow by Sir Oliver Fleming."[208]

Dec 13th: The Council of State recorded on Dec. 13th 1652 that "Mr. Violet to assist, on behalf of the commonwealth, in the prosecution of the suits now in the Court of Admiralty against the Samson, Salvador, and George, and to acquaint Dr. Walker from time to time what he has to offer in reference to them."[209]

Dec 15th: Of possible relevance, the Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Dec. 15th 1652 "Mr. Thurloe to look over the several letters from the Senate of Hamburg, concerning their ships stayed here, and to inquire into the proceedings in the Admiralty Court against those ships, and report."[210]

Dec 20th: Of possible relevance, Council of State recorded on Dec. 20th 1652 that "The Commissioners for Sale of Dutch Prize Goods to send all bullion, gold, and silver, taken from time to time and adiudged prize, to the Tower to be coined."[211]

Dec ?: Nine and a half page, unfinished, certificate of the Admiralty Judges to Parliament, dated Dec. ? 1652, "on their order to peruse the acts made by the Admiralty Court concerning the seizure of the ships St. Salvador and St. George of Hamburg, and the Samson of Lubec, as also their lading, and to state the whole matter of fact thereupon, as it stands in their court; also to consider the reasons given by the Spanish Ambassador against their proceedings, as being injurious and against the law and practice of nations. That it was alleged in November 1652, that the Samson and Salvador belonged to subiects of the King of Spain, and the Ambassador complains that the Admiralty Court, instead of ordering the takers to prove them enemy's goods, order the Spaniards to prove the contrary, which is against law, they being in possession. Arguments on both sides. Presumptions that the goods are Hollanders', because the States gave particular order for them to be protected against the English, which were needless had they been from Spain, with which there is free trade and no war. The rule is that neutral powers are to be impartial, and not colour the goods of nations in hostility. Any silver or goods of the Hollanders, though laden in ships of Spain, Flanders, or Hamburg, are prize."[212]



1653

Jan 3rd: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Jan. 3rd 1653 that "The deposition of Mr. Violet to be considered to-morrow, Sir Sack. Crowe, Pompey Kalendrine, the Admiralty Judges and Dr Walker to attend."[213]

Jan 7th: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Jan. 7th 1653 that "The Admiralty Judges to send an account to Mr. Thurloe tomorrow of their proceedings against the Samson, Salvador, and George, and the whole state of that business."[214]

Jan 7th: The Council of State recorded on Jan 7th 1653 that "The Committee for Foreign Affairs to consider what further allowance should be made to Dr. Walker, as advocate for the commonwealth in the Admiralty Court; and whether it may not be fit to add two able civilians to assist him for the effectual managing of the business."[215]

Jan 10th: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Jan 10th 1653 an "Order on Council's reference of the 7th instant, that as Admiralty employment is very much increased by the war with Holland, Dr. Walker's allowance of 100 l. a year as advocate in the Admiralty Court be made 200 l. for the ensuing year. Also that for better managing the multiplied and weighty affairs in that court, Dr. Clerk, late one of the Admiralty Judges, be added to Dr. Walker for a year, with the same allowance."[216]

Jan 27th: Of possible relevance, the Council of State recorded on Jan 27ththat "Mr. Thurloe to prepare the letter to Archduke Leopold this day passed in Parliament, for the signature of Mr. Speaker, and Fleming to send it to the Spanish Ambassador, that he may forward it."[217]

Jan. 27th: The Council of State recorded on Jan 27th that "The papers sent from Parliament concerning the Samson, Salvador, and George referred to the Committee for Foreign Affairs, who are to prepare them to be presented to Parliament by Wednesday next."[218]

Jan 28th: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Jan 29th that "The Admiralty Judges then to bring in the case of the Samson, Salvador, and George, avowed under their hands."[219]

Feb 11th: Of possible relevance, the Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Feb 11th "The business of Spanish wools, represented to this Committee by the Admiralty Judges, to be reported to Council in the afternoon."[220]

Feb 18th: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Feb 18th that "Dr. Walker to move the Admiralty Court to give a speedy order on the Samson, Salvador, and George, according to justice."[221]

Feb 18th: Of possible relevance, The Council of State recorded on Feb 18th "The appointed Committee to meet the Spanish Ambassador next Monday at 4 p.m., in Whitehall. Fleming to give him notice."[222]

Mar 4th: The Council of State recorded on Mar 4th that "Mr. Thurloe to declare to Dr. Walker that he may give such answers as he think fit to the paper published by the advocate of Flanders, upon the proceedings in the Admiralty Court upon the Samson, Salvadore, and George, and publish the same if he see cause."[223]

Mar 11th: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Mar 11th that "The former report concerning Drs. Walker and Clerk, recomitted for further consideration, to be again offered to Council, after debate thereof."[224]

Mar 14th: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Mar 14th that "Dr. Walker to give a full accoun, with all speed, of some speeches lately used in open court, much derogating from the due respect and honour thereof, upon the trial of the ship Samson in the Admiralty Court."[225]

Mar 25th: The Council of State recorded on Mar 25th that "The petition of Juan de Lassa barrona and Juan Mexia de de Herrera, referred to the Committee for Foreign Affairs."[226]

Mar 25th: The Council of State recorded on Mar 25th that "The petition of Thos. Violet referred to the Committee for Foreign Affairs, who are to hear what he has to say."[227]

Mar 25th: Of possible relevance, the Council of State recorded on Mar 25th that "The petition of Manuel Corea, with others, referred to the Committee for Foreign Affairs, to confer with Dr. Walker and others as they think fit, and report."[228]

Mar 30th: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Mar 30th that "The Commissioners for Prize Goods to attend Dr. Walker, and give him their evidence on the Samson, Salvador, and George, to use as appertaining to his place."[229]

Mar 30th: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on Mar 30th that "Mr. Violet to put in writing his information about Mr. Budd, proctor in the Admiralty Court, and Budd to attend the Committee and give in his answer."[230]

Mar 31st 1653: The Council of State recorded on March 31st 1653 that Dr Walker, the advocate for the Commonwealth, was "to print his arguments against the pleas of the advocate from Flanders, and the arguments of the civilians of Louvaine (?), made upon a sentence lately given in the Court of Admiralty against the plate ships."[231]

Mar 31st: The Council of State recorded on March 31st 1653 that an "Order on consideration of the great increase of labour in the Admiralty Court in the present state of things, that 100 l. a year be added to Dr. Walker's salary of 100 l.; that Dr. Wm. Clerke be the other next advocate, and that he have 200 l. a year; and order for Dr. Clerke's appointment accordingly"[232]

Apr 1st: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on April 1st 1653 that "the petitions of Juan Mexica de Herrera and Juan de Lossa Barrona to be sent to the Admiralty Judges, to report to this Committee what should be done in the cases, returning the petitions."[233]

Apr 7th: The Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs recorded on April 7th 1653 on the petition and remonstrance of severall Spaniards "claiming tobacco in the Samson, Salvador, and George, now in the Thames," that Thurloe confer with Drs Walker and Gierke and others, and inquire into the state of their case, and what should be done thereon, and report.[234]

May 3rd 1653: The Council of State recorded on March 3rd 1653 in the day's proceedings that: "9. Account by the Commissioners of Prize Goods of the malpractices of Otho George and others interested in the three silver ships, Salvador, Samson, and George. That they made the purser alter his book, taking out the names of all Hollanders and Zealanders That they threw letters overboard tied to an iron bar, on comng into the Downs. That they threatened and attacked the surgeon and others who could bear evidence against them. That they said at Calais they were for Amsterdam, but hearing of the war breaking out, said they were for Ostend. That they altered their bills of lading, and tried to hide the silver. That they contradict themselves in swearing, pretend to be Hamburghers, [?XXX]landers, and inserting others.itheow though only speaking low Dutch, "c. "c. [3 pages][235]

[ADD MORE DATA]

Sep 1st: The Council of State recorded on Sep 1st 1653 that "The Commissioners for Prize Goods and their agents, the State solicitors and proctors, and Mr. Violet, to be ordered forthwith to meet and confer with Dr. Walker, and to look up ail their informations touching the silver and lading in the Samson, Salvadore, and George, and to take down in writing all the preparations of evidence and proofs thereupon, and draw a full plea by his advice for the protection for the State's interest, and to give in the names of all the material witnesses they know of, that the points may be proved by them, and the witnesses brought in and examined, that the commonwealth may suffer no default in those"[236]

Sep 2nd 1653: The Council of State recorded on Sep 2nd 1653 that "Mr. Thurloe to prepare something declaratory for preventing frauds to the State in the not making of ships prizes, by their calling themselves Hamburgbers and Lubeekers when they really belong to the enemies of the State ; and if possible, to offer the same to Council to-morrow morning."[237]

Sep 3rd: Item 46. and Item 47. "[Sept. 7.] 45. Petition of Geo. Boachaert of Hamburg to the Council of State, for speedy hearing of his cause by the Admiralty Judges, that he may be preserved from rum. Returning from Spain, was taken by English ships, and has waited many months to prove his interest in what he claims, being his whole livelihood, but wanting friends, must perish unless some one or more of the Admiralty Judges be ordered to hasten his cause. Has waited 10 months, and they will not proceed on the present order. [Sept. 7.] 46. Order thereon that the Admiralty Judges proceed speedily to determine the case. Also note that Mr. Advocate answer to Council for the contents of this order"[238]

Sep 7th: Of possible relevance, the Council of State recorded on Sep 7 1653 that "The Committee of Council appointed to treat with the Spanish Ambassador to meet him at 5 next Friday at Whitehall. Fleming to give him notice."[239]

Sep 7th: The Council of State recorded on Sep 7th 1653 "To order Major Wigan to withdraw the guard of soldieirs which, by order of Council, was placed upon the ships Samson and Salvadore."[240]

Sep 15th: The Council of State recorded on Sep 15th 1653 that "The Mint Committee and the Lieutenant of the Tower to consider what allowances should be made to those employed on the business of the silver taken out of the Samson, Salvadore, and George, over and above the officers of the Mint, and to report."[241]

Sep 30th: Item 151 "Report hy Dr. Walker to Council, on the petition of George Boschaert, referred to the Admiralty Judges. He represents in general terms that being a Hamburgher, on his return from Spain, he was taken by our ships, and has waited many months to prove his interest in what he claims. His claim, often agitated, is for 20,000 l.. if not 40,000 li. of silver in the Samson, Salvador, and George. The masters alleged the ships were free, being laden in free ports and to and from free ports. I required specification, and the rule of the Court was consonant thereto, and after long debate between the English and Spanish advocate, I obtained an order for it.

The shipmasters asked 6 months to make their claims, but meanwhile many particular claims were put in, and among them this of Boschaert, on 24 May 1653, for several great parcels of silver, on which I protested.

Many witnesses were examined, but weighty affairs prevented my having the matter heard before Council. Perusing Violet's book offering to prove the falsity of the bills of lading, and the frauds used by the Dutch, to make it out that most of the silver belonged to them, I tried to gain all the information I could from him, the Commissioners for Prize Goods, and the agents and solicitors. By the late order of 1 Sept. they were to confer with me, and I urged them to write down all their evidence, and issued a warrant for the claims, bills of lading, &c. to be shown to Violet.

Some examinations have since been taken, but more are required. Violet promises his help as soon as he has despatched something now before Council.

Therefore the matter is not ready for settlement, for though the proofs are published on Boschaert's part, they have to be made on the other side. But lest the time should run out and the claimers press an hearing, dispatch should be used that Violet may produce his evidence, it being very important that the case be managed according to the laws and practice of nations. [2 2/3 pages. Date endorsed on the reference, of 7 Sept. No. 46.]"[242]

Oct 12th: The Council of State recorded on Oct 12th 1653 that "Thos. Violet to be authorised from time to time to produce before the judges in the Admiralty Court such witnesses as he has to offer for the commonwealth, against the Samson, Salvadore, and George, or any of the goods brought in them, and to assist in bringing the same to trial."[243]

Oct 21st: The Council of State recorded on Oct 21st 1653 an "Order on consideration of the business of the wools taken in the Salvadore, Samson, and George, and in the Morning Star and Augustine, now depending in the Admiralty Court, which are claimed by the Spanish Ambassador as belonging to the King his master, that the Admiralty Judges proceed to sentence upon the wools, according to law."[244]

Oct 31st: The Council of State recorded on Oct 31st 1653 " The petition of Jas. Walker and Rich. Scott, Scotchmen, and Peter Nott, a Lubecker, for three butts of sack taken in the Samson, being their own proper adventure, referred to the Admiralty Committee."[245]

Nov 7th: The Council of State recorded on Nov 7th 1653 that "Rouse, Jones, Roberts, Fleetwood, Goddard, and Col. Cromwell, to be a Committee to consider of a paper from the Spanish Ambassador, presented this day, concerning bags of wool taken out of the Samson, Salvador, and George, to examine the fact, to send for Dr. Walker and such other persons, papers, and witnesses as they find necessary, and to report."[246]



1654

Feb. 22. "Item 52. Petition of Thos. Violet to the Protector. By several orders of the late Council of State I have assisted 14 months in prosecuting in the Admiralty Court the silver ships Samson, Salvador, and George, I find hundreds of claims put in for the silver and merchandise, by Spaniards, Flandrians, and Hamburghers, and scores of examinations to prove them to belong to Spaniards and Hamburghers, and I think it my duty to acquaint you therewith.

I beg you to appoint a Committee to take an exact account of all the transactions in that business, and of how it stands in the Admiralty Court, what claims are fit to come to trial, and what should be respited till the return of commissions from foreign parts. Also to order Dr. Walker and me to attend the said Committee, to advise how the business may best be carried on, and vindicate the justice of this nation for staying the silver and merchandise. With reference thereon to Council, 3 Feb. 1654. [1 page.]

Order in Council referring the same to Lambert, Lisle, and Sydenham, who are to send for the petitioner and Dr. Walker, and any other persons or papers they think fit, and report. [1. 75, p. 131.]"[247]

Mar 28th: "March 28. Item 60. Account presented by Thos. Violet to the Committee on the plate ships [see 22 Feb. 1654] of all his previous proceedings relating to the said ships; of the best mode to prevent embezzlement; of the nature of the claims made upon the silver, &c.; suggestions as to the best mode of proceeding in reference to them, and details of his own expenditure and services therein. [53/4 closely written pages.]"[248]

Mar 31st: The Council of State recorded on March 31st 1654 that "Order on petition of Wm. Astoll and Wm. Pembridge, about the discovery of the silver ships, that the master of requests procure the Admiralty judges' report mentioned, so that further order may be taken."[249]

May 4th The Council of State recorded on May 4th 1654 that "21. Order — on representation that the goods in the Samson, Salvadore, St. George, Golden Morning Star, and St. Augustine, having remained many months in warehouses, will decay and he rendered of little value to the State or their claimers, if order be not taken for their disposal; — that the Admiralty Commissioners order their sale, unless on speaking with Dr. Walker, they see cause to the contrary; if they are sold, Council will order satisfaction to those claiming interest in them according to their rate of sale, if, on determing their claims in the Admiralty Court, there shall appear just cause. Approved 4 May."[250]

Aug. 25th "Aug. 25, 21. Accounts presented to the Mint Committe by Col. John Berkstead, on their order of 3 May, of the money lately coined in the Tower : —

Silver received from the Samson, Salvador, £ s. d.

George, Morning Star, and Angel of Flushing, from 17 June 1653 to 10 May 1654, when coined at 3 l. the pound-weight £276,702 16 s 0 d
Expense of coinage, 9,223 l. 8 s. 6 d.
Paid on orders given to G. Frost, the Navy treasurer, deputy treasurer of the fleet, Col. Wm. Goffe and Lieut-Col. White, and the Treasurers-at-war £239,560 0 s 0 d

Balance £37,142 16 s 0 d

Received back in part of two of the above orders £9,260 0 s 0 d

Balance £46,402 16 s 0 d

Account of the sheer money of the aforesaid silver, adding 594 l. 6 s.. 4 d. gold, taken from the silver ingots. Total £1,?673 12 s 5 d

Paid for Treasury contingencies, counting rooms, and service from other than the Mint officers £1,122 14 s 2 d

Total receipts £287,536 8 s 5 d

Total payments £240,682 14 s 2 d

Balance in hand £46,853 14 s 3 d

Also a parcel of gilt plate and of West India bezar.

List of the persons employed about the silver from the Samson, Salvador, and George, and other services connected with the aforesaid accounts. Account of receipts and payments from 10 May to 15 Aug., leaving the balance in hand £37,225 l. 10 s. 5 d., of which 3,400 l. being already charged on the Treasury by an order of Council, the remainder is 3,225 l. 10 s. 5 d. Noted as carefully examined by Wm. Jessop, [7 sheets.]"[251]

Aug 31st [ADD ENTRY FROM PP. 346-347 CSPD 1654]

Sep 2nd: "[Sept. 2.] Item 12. Dr. Walter Walker to Sec Thurloe. It appears by yours that the Hamburg agent urges a judgment on the Samson, Salvador, and George. I waited on you yesterday at Whitehall about it, but could not see you.

The matter of the silver is much stronger than that of the ships. I attended a Committee of Council upon it, on a reference from his Highness on Mr. Violet's petition, and sent a report, which remains with Council, about the silver, the ships, and the tobacco, and other goods.

The ships have lain so long in the river that they are much injured, and grow worse daily, and ought to come to judgment; and the owners are clamorous for a hearing before they perish. The reason of the firet opposal was to prevent the enforcement of the argument upon the silver, that it should not be pressed upon us that it came In free ships, but cautions may be taken that this should
not be ui^ed as a consequence.

The judges have been threatened in court for not assigning a hearing, which, by the rules of juaticc, cannot be denied, but I leave
it to your wisdom and reason of State. [1 page.^

Sept. 2. Order in Council that the Admiralty judges determine the ease of the said ships according to law and justice. Approved 2 Sept. [7. 75,3Jp. 558,.565.]"[252]

Dec 13th: The Council of State recorded on Dec 13th 1654 an "Order in the Admiralty Committee to request the Protector and Council for an order to dispose of the Samson, Salvadore, and George, which had the great quantity of silver on board, to the best
advantage of the State, the Prize Goods' Commissioners reporting that they are much injured by having lain 2 years in the Thamea,
and arc in a perishable condition, and a great charge, by keeping men on board. Noted as read 28 Dec, but respited till Gen. Desborow be present. [1 page.]"[253]



1655

Feb ?X: "Note of a petition referred to the Committee for Petitions of Henrique Geo. Mendez, on behalf of Ferdinando Montesines Assentista, of the kingdom of Spain, for restitution of Spanish wools and cochineal imported in the St. George and Salvador, Order in Council — as to wools brought in by the Peter, Swan, and Hope, and the proceeds assigned for the King of Spain in Flanders, but the vessels taken at sea, and restitution ordered in the Admiralty Court to Montesines, in spite of which part has been seized by attachment from the Court of the Sheriff of London, at suit of Antonio Duarte Rodrigues Lamego, merchant of Rohan, — that the wools be entirely freed, as decreed in the Admiralty Court, Approved 23 Feb. [I.92, No.144; I.75, pp. 685, 695.]"[254]

Apr 25: "Notes of petitions, the consideration of which was transferred in 1654 to the Committee for Petitions, but on which nor reports were made, nor Council orders given...John Dethick, Nathan Wright, &c, that Serjeant (?) Eltonhead may receive a determination in the Admiralty on 8,000 l., in pieces of 8, taken in the silver ships Salvadore, &c., he pretending the dependence there a bar for doing them justice upon a contract for a sum of ryals. [No.228.]"[255]

Jul 4th "July 4. Item 14. Wm. Astell to the Protector. Abr. Johnson, a Dutchman, pretends to be an Englishman, and the discoverer of the 3 silver ships. I confess he discovered them to me and Wm. Pembridge, and we were examined before the Prize Commissioners, who sent us to Woolwich, to see what we could gather from the Dutch, when we heard that the trumpeter had confessed that the ships, with their silver and lading were of Holland, but Johnson never acted with us after. He was very obstinate and drunken, and would hardly be examined unless he knew what he should have for it, and by his contradictions, we lost the ships, though three of their own men said they were of Holland. He pretends to have lost a ship worth 300 1. by a Flushinger. He sold the sails and cables of a Mr. Baron who employed him. He was pressed on board the Plymouth frigate, but got off with a month's pay, by pleading that he was a Dutchman, and should be hanged if he were taken. [1 sheet]"[256]

Jul 4th: "July 4. Item 15, Petition of Wm. Astell to the Protector. Thanks for your gracious promises to put an end to my long waiting, but there is a stop by one, Johnson, a Dutchman, pretending to be English, who has laid a great scandal on me, which I hope you will not believe, as he is a vile wretch ; I bear it patiently, for wicked men scandalize you without cause, and the servant must not be above his master. Pray let me see the paper put in against me, and give me a reference to the Admiralty Judges, or Prize Office Commissioners. [1/2 page]"[257]

Jul ?4th "July 4? Item 16. Wm. Astell to Wm. Jessop. Thanks for your promise of help. I have long lived in a sad condition for my fidelity to the State, having left my calling and joined the people of God, to help the Lord against the mighty. I have been an officer throughout, am much in arrears, and never had a penny; yet I undertook the labour of prosecuting those silver ships, and have only had 40 l. on a report from the judges to his Highness; and now I suffer on a wrong information; yet I am content if I may obtain a place. I dare not speak to Maj.-Gen. Skippon, for he has been the best friend in England to me and my wife. Let me know if his Highness or Council have been moved for a place for me. [1 page.]
Annexing,

Item 16. I. Warrant by Council, on an Order of 3 May, to Gualter Frost, to pay to Wm. Astell 40 l., for special service, out of Council moneys. Whitehall, 8 May 1654. [Copy 1 page.]"[258]

Jul 12th: The Council of State recorded on Jul 12th 1655 "The petition of Abr. Johnson and his wife Magdalene, which was referred to the Committee on the Salvadore and other silver ships; also the petitions of Wm. Astell and Anne Pembridge concerning the same matter, referred to Lambert, Jones, Strickland, Sydenham, and Montague, to report."[259]

Aug 20 "[Aug. 20.] Tem 38. Abstract by Wm. Astell of his proceedings in reference to the silver ships

On 21 January 1652-3, Ab. Johnson told me and Wm. Pembridge that the Samson, Salvador, and George belonged to Holland, and said he would confess it before the Prize Commissioners. They sent 4 of us to Woolwich to make discoveries, and we met with the trumpeter of the Salvador, Corn. Petersen, who discovered to us what I have already alleged, and said they could get at the silver and fill their pockets when they pleased. I told the Prize Commissioners this, in order that the waiters might search them, and they gave me and Pembridge a letter to Col. Barkstead, who gave us a search warrant; but our intentions were soon known; though we took no silver, we kept them from stealing, as the seamen were to be searched before leaving the ship; but 2 bars taken by the gunner and hidden in his cabin were seized.

I showed my paper of discovery to Dr. Walker, and he was angry that it had not been brought in before; then I sent it to the Council of State by Maj.-Gen. Desborow, who hade me see what more I could discover.

I was from January to October before I could get my witnesses examined, and then the examinations were delivered to Mr. Violet, who pretended to the discovery, and my labour would have been imputed to him, but my wife informed Dr. Walker to the contrary. I often went to the Admiralty Judges for publication, but could get none, so I thought all was done, and begged a gratuity, when his Highness sent to the Judges for examination and report. At last the Judges brought a report, I know not what; Judge Godolphin said it was not ripe, but I might ask for charges, when I got 40 l. I had then been 16 months on the business, and still went on, till at last I got publication, and then the trial was 3/4 of a year, and I followed it to the end; but by means of Ab. Johnson and his wife, the Samson was cleared, though afterwards made prize, because some Spaniards were part owners. It was in the height of our Holland war, and I prosecuted the ships because they sailed from Amsterdam, and were bound to Amsterdam, and that not on Johnson's discovery, but on what I heard from Corn. Petersen, the trumpeter. Johnson claims the discovery, but he never put in a paper, nor brought witnesses, nor was at any charge. [41/2 pages.]"[260]

Aug 20th "Aug. 20. Item 39. Similar paper, but more lengthy in its details. [61/2 pages.}
Annexing,

Item 39. I. Warrant by Col. John Barkstead, Lieutenant of the Tower, to all constables, officers, &c. of the Thames, and in Middlesex and Surrey, to assist Wm. Astell and Wm. Pembridge in finding out silver conceived to be embezzled from the Dutch prizes between the Tower and Gravesend, and to apprehend those concerned therein, and bring them before him, or a justice of peace near, to be proceeded against according to law. Tower, 5 Feb. 1652-3. [Copy, 1 page.]

Item 39. II. Dr. Walter Walker to Sec. Thurloe. The bearer begs that Urian Martesen may be examined about the silver in the Samson, &c. I tell him this cannot be without Council's order, hut he is so importunate, because the man is soon
going out of England, that I trouble you with these lines. 4 July, 1653. [I page.]"[261]

Sep "[Sept] Item 162. Answer by Wm. Astell to the report about him sent by the Prize Commissioners to Council. It was Mr. Violet, not my wife and I, who accused Ab. Johnson of perjury. I repeated it because Johnson said he had spent 300 l.. in maintaining me and the rest of the witnesses, whereas he never spent a penny, for all the charge lay on me, and he said a thing one day and denied it the next. I have not been perfidious, as he accuses me. The Commissioners join me with Mrs. Pembridge, but she had nothing to do with it. I only asked them for my charges in lying 4 months on the Thames, but am not yet paid.

Dr. Walker said that no one came in on the case except Mr. Violet, and so the onus prohandi was cast upon them, but I had given in my paper long before to the Commissioners of Prize Goods, and thought they would look after it, I showed a copy to Dr. Walker when I heard the Spanish agent plead, and he was angry because it was not brought in before, which was the Prize Commissioners' fault.

It was the long delay, and the death of some of our witnesses that caused the claimers' proofs to be more effectual than ours. The Commissioners say they have paid me 5 l. 8 s. 0 d. more than ever I have received. [4 pages, containing beside the above, much repetition of his other statements] Annexing,

Item 162. I. Depositions on 39 interrogatories of Urian Marteson. {51/4 pages.] Also,
Information of Roger Thorpe as to the taking of 2 bars of silver by the gunner of the George, 30 Jan. 1654-5. [I3/4 pages.] Also,
Answer of Wm. Astell, surgeon, of Allhallows, Barking, aged 60, to 10 interrogatories, 13 Oct, 1653. [3 pages.]

Item 162. II. Further depositions of Urian Marteson, 7 Aug. 1655. [2 pages.]

Item 162. III. Certificate by Geo. Parker that Ah. Johnson did not maintain Wm. Astell nor Wm. Pembridge with meat or drink in his house. 22 Sept. 1652. [Scrap.]

Item 162. IV. Affidavit of Barbara, wife of Wm. Astell, that when Ab. Johnson had been examined several times ahout the silver ships, he would come no more, and told her he would be hanged before he would come, unless he knew what he should have; she persuaded Mr. Arnold to send for him. which was unusual, as those that come in for the State should come freely, and then he and Urian Marteson both were exainined at the Admiralty Court, in Sept. 1653. 24 Sept. 1655. [1 page.]

Item 162. V. Depositions of Ab. Johnson's witnesses, in the case of the
Samson, &c., viz. : —

Rich. Chambers, 20 Sept. [3/4 page.]
Hen. Groome. [1/4 page.]

162. VI. Certificate hy Edw. Bendall, rector of Cotgrage, co. Notts, that he found on enquiry that Johnson was the prime discoverer, and that Astell and the others who wished to share in the premium, had no right thereto; and that he promised to try to get Johnson a reward from the Prize Cowmissioners, if he would not join the others. Attended the Commission thereon, when the objections raised were, —
1. Whether Johnson was the primary discoverer?
2. That they could pay nothing till it it was fully proved that the ships were prizes. [3 pages.]"[262]

Oct 5th "Oct. 5 Prize Office, London. Item 19. Commissioners for Prizes to Wm. Jessop, Whitehall. We request you to annex the enclosed to the papers already delivered you concerning Ab. Johnson and the other petitioners about the Samson, &c. [1/2 page.]"[263]

Oct 12th "Oct. 12. Note of a petition, referred to the Committee for Petitions, of Anne, widow of Wm. Pembridge, searcher for the Port of London, for allowance for his charges as one of the discoverers of the plate ships, Astell, another discoverer, having had 501. ; reported for lOL from Council's contingencies. [I.92, No. 242.][264]

Oct 12th: "Oct. 12. Like note of a petition of Wm. Astell, for consideration of his pains, time, and charge about discovering the silver ships, for which iOl. or 501. was ordered him, S May 1651. [I.92, No. 192.]"[265]

Oct 12th: "Oct. 12. Like note of a petition of Abr. Johnson for payment for his aervJees in discovering the silver ships. Order in Council on a report of the Committee of Council, who were to consider a report from Dr. Walker and the Prize Goods' Commissioners on the petitions of Johnson and Astell, and Anne Pembridge, — that neither the said persons nor Mrs. Urdge obtained any advantage to the State by their testimony, and that they have been paid for their pains, — that the said petitions be dismissed. [I.92, No 469, I. 76, p.334.]"[266]



1656

Jan 16th: The Council of State recorded on Jan 16th 1656 that "The petition and papers of Thos. Violet referred to Montague and Sydenham, to report."[267]

Jan 22nd: The Council of State recorded on Jan 22nd 1656 "Strickland added to the Committee on Thos. Violet's petition."[268]

Jan 26th The Council of State recorded on Jan 26th 1656 the "Petition of Chris. Boone, merchant of London, to the Protector. Having lately resided and traded in Spain, since my return, I delivered to Adrian Goldsmith of Antwerp goods value 200,000 ryals, and for payment, on 6 Nov. 1654, he assigned to me some silver and cochineal on board the Samson, Salvador, &c., which were seized and brought in, and his claim thereto proved.

As such transfers are always held good among merchants, and cannot well be denied for the upholding of trade, and as the assignment was made 14 Feb. 1654-5, long before the differences with Spain, I beg the benefit of the assignment, and of Goldsmith's right to the goods. With reference thereon to Council. [1 page.][269]

Mar 21st: The Council of State recorded on Mar 21st 1656 an "Order on report from the Commissioners on Thos. Violet's petition, — praying that certain bonds seized by the Committee of Salop may be restored to him; as they were for 40 l., used by the Committee for public good, — that on his paying 40l. he receive the bonds, which he may sue, as he might have done before, and that John Corbett see the bonds delivered. Approved 31 March."[270]



Timeline


Please enter below all events relating to the Admiralty court case of three Silver ships. Be as specific as possible in terms of day, month, and year.

Please note whether the dates you enter are New or Old style (typically non-English witnesses will use New Style dates, and English witnesses will use Old style dates. In the 1650s the same day in New style was ten days ahead in terms of date compared with Old style.[271]



1642


Month unspecified: The ship the Saint George was built at Hamburg.[272]



1643


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1644


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1645


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1646


Month unspecified: The ship the Sampson was built and completed in Lubeck in 1646.[273]



1647


Month unspecified: The ship the Salvador was built at Hamburg[274]

June 1647: Departure of the Salvador on her first voyage from Hamburg to Spain[275]



1648


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1649


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1650


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1651


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1652


June 1652: The ship the Golden Sunn (Master: Peter Tam) departed Cadiz bound for Ostend. The ship ws laden with cutcheneale by the Governor of Cadiz "in the service of his Catholique Majestie in fflanders.[276]

?July/August/September 1652: Arrival at Cadiz of the "Plate fleete of Spaine" from the West Indies[277]

September 1652: The ship the Mercurius (Master: Hance Yonger) departed Cadiz a full month and above before the ships the Sampson, Salvadore and Saint George departed from the same port.[278] According to Henry Slegar, a sailor on the Salvadore, the Mercuius set sail from Cadiz in the company of the Saint John Evangelist (Master: John de Vas).[279]

October 10th, 11th or 12th 1652 [old style]: Departure of the ships the Sampson, Salvadore and Saint George from Cadiz bound allegedly for Ostend.[280]

As early as October 28th 1652; as late as November 2nd 1652 [old style]: Seizure of the ships the Sampson, Salvadore and Saint George by the English in the English Channel. Matter of legal dispute as to the intended destination of the ships. Hamburg sailor Henry Slegar, who was onboard the Salvadore at the time of her seizure, states that she was seozed "in the English Channell off of Portsmouth" about eighteen days or three weeks after departing Cadiz.[281] Christian Cloppenburgh, master of the Salvador, states the three silver ships departed Cadiz on October 10th, 11th or 12th 1652 and were seized in the English channell eighteen or twenty days later.[282]

October 28th 1652: London merchant Gyles Vandeputt claims he took out several policies of assurance drawn at the Assurance Office in London for Antwerp merchant John Bollart's silver on bord the ships the Saint George and the Salvador.[283]

November 22nd 1652 [new style] [November 12th old style]: London merchant Stephen Puckle described being in the company of a number of Dutchmen on November 22nd 1652 (new style), travelling on a barge or skute from Delft to the Hague. He stated that "the sayd Dutch amongst other matters fell into discourse about the takeing of the sayd three shipps by the English which had the plate and sylber in them, meaning and speaking of the sayd shipps Sampson Salvador and Saint George above mentioned, And in that discourse one of the sayd dutch men who was one of the Lords of delph and a Bewinthebber of the Dutch East India Company did then and there in the presence and hearing of him this deponent confidently affirme to the rest of the gentlemen in company together in the sayd skute, that the plate and sylver which was on board those shipps then lately seized by the English meaning and speaking of the foresayd three shipps did belong to severall dutchmen of Amsterdam and harlem or to that effect, And further also sayd that although it might be pretended that the sayd sylver did belong to Hamburgh, yet att last (sayd he) it will fall upon our owne heads, meaning and speaking of the Dutch that were subiects of the States aforesayd, And further then likewise added that the English were subtile enough to find out the ground of the busines, or to the selfe same effect and purpose, for which reasons this deponent for his part did and doth verily beleive that the plate and sylver in the sayd three shipps did and doth really belong to the subiects of the sayd States of the United Netherland Provinces."[284]

November & December 1652: Spanish Ambassador in London and various agents of Duke Leopoldus and Licencees of the King of Spain living in Antwerp asserted to the Admiralty Court, the Council of State and the English Parliament that "all the lading, both silver and merchandize in the said ships, did appertain to the King of Spain and his subjects, and none other"[285]

Early December 1652: Order of English Parliament to the Admiralty Court Judges to proceed to judgement concerning the three silver ships[286]

December 8th 1652: The goldsmith Thomas Violet laidd a paper before the Council of State begging a strict enquiry relative to the three silver ships as they awaited judgement in the Admiralty Court as to whether they were good prize.[287] Violet claims subsequently that his paper or writing was referred to the Committee for Foreign Affairs, and that in his writing "Your Supplicant discovered the fraudulent Practises of the Spanish Embassadour, an[?d] Duke Leopoldus and his Agents, to defraud the Parliament of a Vast Summ of Treasure, above three hundred Thousand Pounds; which was brought up into the River as a Prize, in three ships, viz. The Sampson, Salvador, and George".[288]

December 13th 1652: Council of State ordered that Thomas Violet assist Dr Walker, the Commonwealth advocate, in prosecuting the three silver ships.[289]

December 17th 1652: Thomas Violet made a protest in the Admiralty Court "against the Judges and their Proceedings." Apparently this was the day the Judges were intending to discharge the ships.[290]

December 17th 1652: Thomas Violet was required to appeare before the Council of State at 3 pm, at the demand of the Admiralty Court, "to answer before the Counsel for his actions. Judge Exton, for the Admiralty Court, apparently clained that Violet's protest was "made against and contrary to an order of Parliament". Violet claims that "upon full debate in the Counsel of State, these three ships and silver were all (by Order of Counsel) stayed" and Violet thanked for his service, "and presently commanded with all diligence to make his proof, whereby to disprove the Spanish Ambassadors Claims"[291]



1653


Possibly early 1653: Petition of Juan de lossa Barrona, a Spaniard born in Segovia, Spain, regarding the seizure of his goods in the ship the Saint George of Hamburg (Master: John Martin), leading to he himself being detained in London hoping that the ship with her lading would be released "to finish her voyage to Ostend". The ship not being released, the petitioners business affairs pressed for him to depart to Flanders.[292]

January 21st or 22nd 1653: Various Admiralty Court deponents testifying on behalf of the Commonwealth claim to have been in company of Cornelius Peterson, trumpeter of the ship the Salvador at the sign of the ship in Woolwich, and that Petrson confessed that all three silver ships belonged to Holland and specifically that the ship the Salvador was bound for Amsterdam when she was seized.[293]



1654


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1655


April 3rd 1655: Petition to the English Admiralty Court judges of Christian Cloppenburgh, master of the ship the Sampson, on behalf of himself and the rest of the owners of the ship. States his ship has been detained for more than two years depending on a suit in the Admiralty Court about proving her to be prize and that a sentence had recently been passed by the Court setting the ship and her freight free. However, Thomas Violet had put in information that some silver had been purloyned or embeazled out of a different ship (the Salvadore (Master: Otto George)), and that under this pretence the ship had been further detained. Asked the Court that his ship be speedily discharged to save him and it from utter ruin.[294]

April 3rd 1655: Petition to the English Admiralty Court judges of John Martindorp, master of the ship the Saint George, on behalf of himself and the rest of the owners of the ship. Similar plea to the petition of the same date made by Christian Cloppenburgh.[295]



1656


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1657


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1658


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1659


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Witness list



Witnesses in HCA 13/66


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Witnesses in HCA 13/67


Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[296]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[297]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[298]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[299]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[300]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[301]
Guillermo Crombeen of Cadiz Spaine Merchant aged about twenty five yeares[302]
Anthonio Da La Rosa of Sivill in Spayne Marriner aged about 32 yeares[303]
Antonio De La Rosa of [?XXX] [?XXX] in the West Indies Mariner aged 32 yeares[304]
Anthonio Da La Rosa of Sivill in Spayne Marriner aged about 32 yeares[305]
Anthonio Da La Rosa of Sivill in Spayne Marriner aged about 32 yeares[306]
Philipp de La [?Surpe] of Dunkirk merchant where he hath lived for fifteene yeares or thereabouts aged 23 yeares[307]
John Gover of London Merchant aged 24 yeares[308]
Thomas Juan of Cadiz in Spayne Marriner aged about [?40] yeares[309]
Domingo Padellas of Saint Lucar in Spayne Merchant aged 29 yeares[310]
Domingo Padellas of Saint Lucar in Spayne Merchant aged 29 yeares[311]
Domingo Padilla (sic) of Saint Lucar in Spayne merchant where he hath lived for most the part from his birth being there borne aged 29 yeares[312]
John Perryn of Feversham in Kent mariner aged 32 yeares[313]
Joachim Pesler of der [?Meuble] in Prussia, Chirurgeon and late Chirurgeon of the said shipp the Sampson aged 36 yeares[314]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[315]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[316]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[317]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[318]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[319]
Thomas Swann of Cadiz in Spaine Marriner aged 40 yeares[320]
Thomas Swann of Cadiz in Spaine Marriner aged 40 yeares: upon Interrogatories[321]
Roger Thorpe one of the Weighters of the Custome house London, aged 43 yeares[322]
William Turner of Blackffryars London one of the Waiters under the Commissioners for prize goods, aged 39 yeares[323]
Thomas Sanchez de Vacar of Cadiz in Spayne Merchant about 30 yeares[324]


Witnesses in HCA 13/68


Antonio Estevan de Balderas of [?XXXX] an Inhabitant of Limma in the West Indies merchant aged 38 yeares[325]
Antonio Estevan de Balderas of Madrid an Inhabitant of Limma in the Indies merchant aged thirty eight yeares[326]
Antonio Estevan de Balderas of Limma in the West Indies merchant aged 38 yeares[327]
Egidio Mottet Secretary to his Excellency the Lord Ambassador of his Catholique Majesty the King of Spayne aged 30 yeares[328]
Antonio da Ponte of Teneriffa in the Canary Islands merchant aged twenty eight yeares[329]
Antonio da Ponte of Tenariffa merchant aged 28 yeares[330]
Antonio de Ponte pf Teneriffa merchant aged 30 yeares[331]


Witnesses in HCA 13/69


Roderigo Alonzo of Cadize in Spayne merchant aged three and thirty yeares[332]
Roderigo Alonso of Cadiz in Spaine merchant aged 33 yeares[333]
Pasquall Andrada of Garachicho in the Island of Teneriffa Servant aged twenty yeares[334]
Pasquall Andrada of Garachicho in the Island of Teneriffa Servant aged twenty yeares[335]
Joos Arnoult of Dunkerke in fflanders merchant aged thirty yeares[336]
Antonio Aevan Balderas by birth of Madrid in Spayne by habitation of Lima in the West Indies merchant aged eight and thirty yeares[337]
Antonio Estevan da Balderas borne att Madrid in Spaine an Inhabitant of Limma Merchant aged thirty eight yeares[338]
ffrancisco Boesdonck of Antwerp merchant aged 20 yeares or thereabouts, servant of James [?Puiquet][339]
Manuel Corea of the Citty of Varinas in the West Indies merchant of the age of four and thirty yeares[340]
Antonio da Ponta of Garachicho in the Iland of Teneriffa Merchant aged thirty yeares[341]
Antonio da Ponta of Garachicho in the Iland of Teneriffa Merchant aged thirty yeares[342]
John Mexia de Herrera borne at Temblick in the Territories of the [?Archbishop] of Toldeo in Spaine living for the most part at [?Lima] in the West Indies aged thirty yeares[343]
Lawrence de Veles of Cadize in Spayne merchant aged eight and thirty yeares[344]
Lorenzo da Veloes of Dunkirke in fflanders merchant aged thirty eight yeares[345]
Larenzo de Veles [CHECK] of Dunkirke in fflanders merchant aged eight an thirty yeares[346]
Lorenzoe Veles of Duinkerke in fflanders merchant aged eight and thirty yeares[347]
Thomas Sanchez de Vicar of Valladolid in Nova Castilia in Spayne Merchant aged thirty four yeares[348]
John de la Barona by birth of Segovia in Spaine by habitation of Lima in the West Indies merchant aged forty yeares[349]
ffrancois du Boys of Cadiz in Spayne Merchant aged thirty yeares[350]
Thomas Sanchez Durissa of Peru in the Indies borne att Spaine Merchant aged about thirty four yeares[351]
Hendrick Grube of [?Vemar] in the Jurisdiction of the Duke of Holsteyn Mariner Steersman of the said shipp the Salvador aged thirty yeares[352]
Thomas John of Caddiz in Spayne aged forty yeares[353]
Anthonie Lois of Antwerp in Brabant Merchant aged thirtie yeares[354]
Diego [?Maestre] of Sevilia in Spayne, Merchant aged four and twenty yeares[355]
Diego Maiestre of Sivil in Spayne merchant aged twenty four yeares[356]
Diego Maistre of Sevilia in Spayne Merchant aged twenty four yeares[357]
Diego Maestre of Sevill in Spaine merchant aged four and twenty yeares[358][359]
John Martinsdorp of Hamburg Mariner master of the shipp Saint George aged one and fifty yeares[360]
John Moller of Antwerp, servant of the said Mr Boscaert one of the producents, aged 22 yeares[361]
Jan [?Stueten] Paep of Naer in Luke Land Merchant aged three and thirty yeares[362]
John [?Stueten] Paep of Naer in Lukeland merchant aged three and thirty yeares[363]
Michael Perry of Severino of Saint Lucar in Spayne merchant, aged eight and twenty yeares[364]
Michael Perry Severino of Saint Lucar in Spaine merchant aged four and twenty yeares[365]
Michael Perry Severino of Saint Lucar in Spayne merchant aged four and twenty yeares[366]
Michael Perry Severino of Saint Lucar in Spaine merchant aged four and twenty yeares[367]
Antonio Ala (sic) Rosa of Sevill in the Kingdome of Spayne Mariner, aged two and thirty yeares[368]
Tobias Sollicoffre, of the Citie of Saint Gallen in Switzerland Consull for the Hansa Townes in the Maritime parts of Provence in ffrance aged 27. yeares also deposed on the seizure of the Sampson by the French[369]
Michael van Lubkin of Hamborough Mariner aged [BLANK IN MANUSCRIPT][370]
Adrian Valzolio of Antwerp Merchant aged 25 yeares[371]
John Vervoort of Antwerp in Brabant , Cashier and Bookekeeper to the said John Smoosters, aged 25 yeares[372]


Witnesses in HCA 13/70


William Astell of the parish of Allhallows Barking London Chirurgeon aged 60 yeares[373]
William Astell of the parish of All Hallowes Barking London Chirurgeon, aged 60 yeares[374]
John Bacon of the parish of Saint Giles Criplegate in the Citty of London Mariner Owner and master of the shipp the John of London aged five and forty yeares[375]
Albert Bechere of the free Citie of Lubeck Mariner at present Master or Commander of the shipp the King David of London aged 47. yeares[376]
Joachim Beene of hamborough Mariner aged 35. yeares[377]
Joachim Beene of hamborough Mariner aged 35. yeares[378]
Antonio Fernandez Caravashall of London Merchant aged 54 yeares[379]
Antonio Fernandez Caravashell of London Merchant aged 54 yeares[380]
Christian Cloppenburgh of hamborough Mariner aged 43. yeares[381]
Christian Cloppenburgh of Hamborough Mariner Master of the shipp the Salvadore aged 44 yeares[382]
Christian Cloppenburgh of Hamburgh Mariner Master of the said shipp Salvador aged 44 yeares[383]
Christian Cloppenburgh of hamborough Mariner aged 43 yeares[384]
Carsten Franck of Lubeck Shipwright aged 32. yeares[385]
Carsten Franck of Lubeck shipwright aged 32. yeares[386]
Magdalena Hendricks the wife of Abraham Johnson living in the Minories neere London aged thirty two yeares[387]
Magdalena Hendrickes the wife of Abraham Johnson living in the Minneries nere London wall saylemaker, aged thirtie two yeares[388]
Abraham Johnson of the precinct of Saint Catherins neere the Tower of London Sailemaker aged 35 yeares[389]
Roger Kilvert of London Marchant, aged 67 yeares[390]
Robert Kilvert of London Merchant aged 67. yeares[391]
John Lowers of Masterland in Norway Mariner aged 26. yeares[392]
John Lowers of Masterland in Norway Mariner aged 26. yeares[393]
John Martenson-Dorp of hamborough Mariner aged 53. yeares[394]
Jurian Martinson of fflintzbourgh in Holsteinland Mariner, aged 34 yeares[395]
William Pembridge of the Parrish of Saint Magnus London Habberdasher aged 42 yeares[396]
William Pembridge of the parish of Saint Magnus London haberdasher, aged 48 yeares[397]
Stephen Puckle of Eastsmithfeild neere London Merchant aged fifty nine yeares[398]
Stephen Puckle of Eastsmithfeild neere London Merchant aged fifty nine yeares[399]
Stephen Puckle of East Smithfeild neere London Merchant aged fifty nyne yeares[400]
Hance Ramke of Hamborough Mariner aged 40 yeares[401]
Hans Ramkey of hamborough Mariner aged 40 yeares[402]
Peter Rokes of Lubeck in Germania Mariner Steeresman of the shipp the Goulden Grape of dantsick aged 43. yeares[403]
Henry Slegar of hamborough Saylor aged 23. yeares[404]
Henry Slucker of hamborough Mariner aged 23 yeares[405]
Giles Vandeputt of the parish of Saint Martins Orgers in the City of London Merchant aged 32 yeares[406]
Henrick Vett of hamborough Mariner aged 36. yeares[407]


Witnesses in HCA 13/71


Beniamin Bathurst of London Merchant aged 19 yeares
John Hanschen of Antwerp Marchant aged 21 yeeres[408]
ffrancis Thoris of London Merchant aged forty eight
John Willmott of London Merchant aged twenty eight yeares



Consolidated witness list, HCA 13/66 - HCA 13/71


William Astell of the parish of Allhallows Barking London Chirurgeon aged 60 yeares[409]
William Astell of the parish of All Hallowes Barking London Chirurgeon, aged 60 yeares[410]
John Bacon of the parish of Saint Giles Criplegate in the Citty of London Mariner Owner and master of the shipp the John of London aged five and forty yeares[411]
Beniamin Bathurst of London Merchant aged 19 yeares
Albert Bechere of the free Citie of Lubeck Mariner at present Master or Commander of the shipp the King David of London aged 47. yeares[412]
Joachim Beene of hamborough Mariner aged 35. yeares[413]
Joachim Beene of hamborough Mariner aged 35. yeares[414]
Antonio Fernandez Caravashall of London Merchant aged 54 yeares[415]
Antonio Fernandez Caravashell of London Merchant aged 54 yeares[416]
Christian Cloppenburgh of hamborough Mariner aged 43. yeares[417]
Christian Cloppenburgh of Hamborough Mariner Master of the shipp the Salvadore aged 44 yeares[418]
Christian Cloppenburgh of Hamburgh Mariner Master of the said shipp Salvador aged 44 yeares[419]
Christian Cloppenburgh of hamborough Mariner aged 43 yeares[420]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[421]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[422]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[423]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[424]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[425]
Manuell Corea Citizen of Varines in the West Indye Merchant aged about 34 yeares[426]
Guillermo Crombeen of Cadiz Spaine Merchant aged about twenty five yeares[427]
Anthonio Da La Rosa of Sivill in Spayne Marriner aged about 32 yeares[428]
Antonio De La Rosa of [?XXX] [?XXX] in the West Indies Mariner aged 32 yeares[429]
Anthonio Da La Rosa of Sivill in Spayne Marriner aged about 32 yeares[430]
Anthonio Da La Rosa of Sivill in Spayne Marriner aged about 32 yeares[431]
Antonio da Ponte of Teneriffa in the Canary Islands merchant aged twenty eight yeares[432]
Antonio da Ponte of Tenariffa merchant aged 28 yeares[433]
Antonio Estevan de Balderas of Madrid an Inhabitant of Limma in the Indies merchant aged thirty eight yeares[434]
Antonio Estevan de Balderas of Limma in the West Indies merchant aged 38 yeares[435]
Philipp de La [?Surpe] of Dunkirk merchant where he hath lived for fifteene yeares or thereabouts aged 23 yeares[436]
Carsten Franck of Lubeck Shipwright aged 32. yeares[437]
Carsten Franck of Lubeck shipwright aged 32. yeares[438]
John Gover of London Merchant aged 24 yeares<ref?HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1529</ref>
John Hanschen of Antwerp Marchant aged 21 yeeres[439]
Magdalena Hendricks the wife of Abraham Johnson living in the Minories neere London aged thirty two yeares[440]
Magdalena Hendrickes the wife of Abraham Johnson living in the Minneries nere London wall saylemaker, aged thirtie two yeares[441]
Abraham Johnson of the precinct of Saint Catherins neere the Tower of London Sailemaker aged 35 yeares[442]
Thomas Juan of Cadiz in Spayne Marriner aged about [?40] yeares[443]
Roger Kilvert of London Marchant, aged 67 yeares[444]
Robert Kilvert of London Merchant aged 67. yeares[445]
John Lowers of Masterland in Norway Mariner aged 26. yeares[446]
John Lowers of Masterland in Norway Mariner aged 26. yeares[447]
John Martenson-Dorp of hamborough Mariner aged 53. yeares[448]
Jurian Martinson of fflintzbourgh in Holsteinland Mariner, aged 34 yeares[449]
Domingo Padellas of Saint Lucar in Spayne Merchant aged 29 yeares[450]
Domingo Padellas of Saint Lucar in Spayne Merchant aged 29 yeares[451]
Domingo Padilla (sic) of Saint Lucar in Spayne merchant where he hath lived for most the part from his birth being there borne aged 29 yeares[452]
William Pembridge of the Parrish of Saint Magnus London Habberdasher aged 42 yeares[453]
William Pembridge of the parish of Saint Magnus London haberdasher, aged 48 yeares[454]
John Perryn of Feversham in Kent mariner aged 32 yeares[455]
Joachim Pesler of der [?Meuble] in Prussia, Chirurgeon and late Chirurgeon of the said shipp the Sampson aged 36 yeares[456]
Stephen Puckle of Eastsmithfeild neere London Merchant aged fifty nine yeares[457]
Stephen Puckle of Eastsmithfeild neere London Merchant aged fifty nine yeares[458]
Stephen Puckle of East Smithfeild neere London Merchant aged fifty nyne yeares[459]
Hance Ramke of Hamborough Mariner aged 40 yeares[460]
Hans Ramkey of hamborough Mariner aged 40 yeares[461]
Peter Rokes of Lubeck in Germania Mariner Steeresman of the shipp the Goulden Grape of dantsick aged 43. yeares[462]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[463]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[464]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[465]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[466]
John Baptista Sabino of Cadiz in Spaine Merchant aged 27 yeares[467]
Henry Slegar of hamborough Saylor aged 23. yeares[468]
Henry Slucker of hamborough Mariner aged 23 yeares[469]
Tobias Sollicoffre, of the Citie of Saint Gallen in Switzerland Consull for the hansa Townes in the Maritime parts of Provence in ffrance aged 27. yeares also deposed on the seizure of the Sampson by the French[470]
Thomas Swann of Cadiz in Spaine Marriner aged 40 yeares[471]
Thomas Swann of Cadiz in Spaine Marriner aged 40 yeares: upon Interrogatories[472]
ffrancis Thoris of London Merchant aged forty eight
Roger Thorpe one of the Weighters of the Custome house London, aged 43 yeares[473]
William Turner of Blackffryars London one of the Waiters under the Commissioners for prize goods, aged 39 yeares[474]
Thomas Sanchez de Vacar of Cadiz in Spayne Merchant about 30 yeares[475]
Giles Vandeputt of the parish of Saint Martins Orgers in the City of London Merchant aged 32 yeares[476]
Henrick Vett of hamborough Mariner aged 36. yeares[477]
John Willmott of London Merchant aged twenty eight yeares


Primary source material other than depositions



HCA 15/6 Box 2


Item: Petition of Christian Cloppenburgh: Date: April 3rd 1655[478]

Item: Petition of John Martindorp: Date: April 3rd 1655[479]



Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Interregnum


"1652: 26. The Committee for Foreign Affairs to sit on Monday. The Admiralty Judges and Dr. Walker to attend, and report what has been done in that court about the ships Samson, Salvador, and George. 27. Orders for regulating Council's proceedings to be considered on Monday. 28-30. Serjeant Dendy, Mr. Scutt..."[480]

"Jun 1653: ...Admiralty Court, and deliver in on oath after the usual manner the papers now sealed up, which were taken out of the Samson, Salvadore, and George. 10, 11. Mr. Perrott and Mr. Throckmorton, prisoners with the Serjeant-at-arms for being engaged in a challenge, to be dismissed on bonds in 1,000 l . and two..."[481]

"Dec. 1654: Warrants of the Council of State, Generals of the Fleet, &c ...Bristol, to transport 40 draugh t nags to Barbadoes, for the use of the sugar mills, on the same terms as others. 120 — — " 21 " Pass For Eliz. Meutis to Flanders 127 — — " " " Comrs. for Sale of Dutch Prizes. To seize and secure some gold and silver embezzled from the Samson, Salvador, and George in the..."[482]

"1654: the Admiralty Committee to request the Protector and Council for an order to dispose of the Samson, Salvadore, and George, which had the great quantity of silver on board, to the best advantage of the State, the Prize Goods' Commissioners reporting that they are much injured by having lain 2 years in..."[483]

"Sep 1653: the Samson, Salvadore, and George, and to take down in writing all the preparations of evidence and proofs thereupon, and draw a full plea by his advice for the protection for the State's interest, and to give in the names of all the material witnesses they know of, that the points may be proved by..."
[484]

"Nov 1653: consideration of a paper from the Spanish ambassador presented this day to the council, concerning certain bags of wooll, taken out of the Samson, Salvador, and George, and to examine the matter of fact, and for their better information to send for doctor Walker, and such other persons, papers, and witnesses as..."
[485]


NEED TO COMPLETE LINKING OF TEXT BELOW

Volume 32 - January 1653

Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Interregnum, 1652-3

send an account to Mr. Thurloe tomorrow of their proceedings against the Samson, Salvador, and George, and the whole state of that business. 3. The petition of Col. Ryley to be considered on Wednesday, and he to be here. 4. Mr. Thurloe to draw up a paper to be offered to Council, to be sent to foreign

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=53415

Volume 34 - March 1653

Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Interregnum, 1652-3

referred to the Committee for Foreign Affairs. 15. Mr. Thurloe to declare to Dr. Walker that he may give such answers as he thinks fit to the paper published by the advocate of Flanders, upon the proceedings in the Admiralty Court upon the Samson, Salvadore, and George, and publish the same if he see

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=53417


Volume 33 - February 1653

Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Interregnum, 1652-3

February 1653 Feb. 1. 4. Order in the Council for Trade and Foreign Affairs, that the account brought in by the Admiralty Judges of their proceedings in the Admiralty Court, on the Samson, Salvador, and George, be presented to Council. [ I . 132, p . 61.] Feb. 1. 1, 2. Petition of Thomas Jennings

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=53416


Volume 76 - September 1654

Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Interregnum, 1654

into one treasury. [ Excise Coll. pp . 149–154, Vol . 98, June 1655.] [Sept. 2.] 12. Dr. Walter Walker to Sec. Thurloe. It appears by yours that the Hamburg agent urges a judgment on the Samson, Salvador, and George. I waited on you yesterday at Whitehall about it, but could not see you. The matter of

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=53456


State Papers, 1654 - March (5 of 5)

A collection of the State Papers of John Thurloe, volume 2

ships the Samson, Salvadore, and St. George, in the port of Cadiz, being his own port, several bags of wools, to be transported to another port of his own in Flanders, for his own account, there to be delivered to his assistants, for his own account, towards the payment of his armies. That these ships

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=55311


Volume 36 - May 1653

Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Interregnum, 1652-3

of Otho George and others interested in the three silver ships, Salvador, Samson, and George. That they made the purser alter his book, taking out the names of all Hollanders and Zealanders, and inserting others. That they threw letters overboard tied to an iron bar, on coming into the Downs. That

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=53419


Volume 130 - October 1656

Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Interregnum, 1656-7

the next post after I have received the value. I am surprised your friends do not put another address on your letters. [1 page, French .] Oct. 20. 63. Shorthand notes of proceedings in the Committee upon the case of the [silver] ships Samson, Salvador, and George. [3¼ pages, undecyphered .] Oct. 21.

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=54487

[ADD DATA]



List of individuals


Peter Eleston/Eleson, innkeeper of the Goulden Posthorne on the sea dike in Amsterdam
John Martindorp (Master: The Saint George)
Tam (Master: The Goulden Sunn)
Hanse Younger (Master: The Mercurius)



Cast of Characters


Please add key characters in the affair of the silver ships, together with short referenced profiles of the characters.



Christian Cloppenburgh


Master of the ship the Salvadore of Hamburg. Aged forty-four in June 1655.[486]



Antonio Estevan de Balderas


Spanish merchant, resident in Lima in the Spanish West Indies.[487]



Otto George


Master of the ship the Sampson of Lubeck (December 1646-November 1654). According to the Hamburg mariner Joachim Beene, Otto George was earlier the commander of the ship the Saint Lucar de Barrameda, and sailed her in 1646 from Cadiz to Hamburg, where in December 1646 Otto George left the ship and went on to Lubeck "expressely (as hee the said Otto then declared to this examinate) to buy the said ship the Sampson.[488] Joachim Beene suggests that Otto George was "first made skipper of her about December 1646, or in the beginning of the ensueing yeare 1647, in which yeare this deponent saw her in Spaine under the conduct of the said Otto George." Beene states that the very first voyage of the Sampson was made from Lubeck to Spain in 1647.[489]

Born in Hamburg, Otto George died in 1654 a married man, keeping his wife in Lubeck from at least 1647.[490] Despite his birth in Hamburg, Otto George was "a citizen and inhabitant of Lubeck".[491]

According to the steeresman of the Danzig ship the Goulden Grape, Otto George left the city of London in roughly November 1653 "sick and weake" and returned to Lubeck where he "shortly after did depart this life", and was buried in Lubeck.[492] The Hamburg mariner Joachim Beene adds the detail that Otto George "being sick and diseased" imbarqued himself on the ship the Neptune of Hamburg (Master: Martin Holst) bound for Hamburg "with an intention to goe to Lubeck."[493]



Jaspar Lorenzo


Spanish merchant claiming to have lost three cerons of cutchineele in the ship the Salvadore.[494]



John Martindorp


Master of the ship the Saint George of Hamburg



Ferdinando Nunez


Spanish merchant.[495]



Ships


Please create profile of ships named in the case of the three silver ships.



Angel Michael, or Saint Michael


The Angell Michael of Hamburg (Master: John Lowe).[496]

The Angel Michaell or Saint Michaell sailed from Hamburg to Cadiz with a lading of deale boards, which were sold at Cadiz "for the accompt and adventure of the master and owners of the sayd shipp".[497] She took on a lading of silver and other goods at Cadiz in November 1652, and departed Cadiz in ?November 1652 allegedly bound for Hamburg. Seized by Captain John Bonner of the Marmaduke frigate en route from Cadiz near the Isle of Wight and carried to the River Thames.[498] The steersman of the ship gave a detailed deposition regarding silver laden on board ship for the accompt of the widow of Danyel Sloyer [the elder].

The steersman, Peter Scholenburg, gave a separate deposition regarding "five sackes or bagges of peeces of eight" similarly laden on board ship at Cadiz, for the account of a Spaniard with the wonderful name of Vande [?VenXXe] y Guarto Pedro De Villa Reall Ropez Roble[?ds]. These pieces of eight, which Scholenburg described also as "silver coins", were, like the silver, alleged to have been destined for Hamburg, where they were allegedly to be delivered to [?Samuel] [?Rockesloe], a merchant of Hamburg, who was the Spaniard's agent or factor there.[499]

In a third deposition in the claim of the master of the Angell Michaell for silver of his seized in his ship, Scholenburg listed the ship's owners as "Otto Boyer Thomas [?Neadome] Thomas Crock Hans and Asmes Egler, who are twoe brothers, Peter Simons Van Hereson thelder, and Peter Nicholson", together with the master John Lowe. He gave the reason for being certain of the ownership of the ship because he had seen all the men "att fflentzburg in Holsteine about tenne monethes since att which tyme the said producent and they did perfect the Accounts and reckeninges concerning the said shipp ".[500] All the ship's owners, with the exception of her master were "accompted to be Subiects of the Duke of Holsteine and are knowne to Live in fflintzburge in the Dominion of the said Duke and other parts and places in the said Dukedome". In contrast the master was a long term Hamburg resident and subject.



Golden Sunn


The Golden Sunn of ? (Master: Peter Tam)

The Golden Sunn was laden with cochineal in June 1652 at the port of Cadiz by Conte de Molino, Governor of Cadiz, and departed that month for Ostend.[501]



Mercurius


The Mercurius of Hamburg (Master: Hance Young)

Sailes from the Straights to Cadiz about Whitsuntide, 1652.[502]



Prophet Elias


Master of the Prophet Elias died whilst the ship was at Cadiz, in summer 1652. Bullion was then transferred from the Prophet Elias to the Salvador, the Sampson, the Saint George and the Mercury.



Saint George


The Saint George of Hamburg (Master: John Martindorp)

Henrick Vett, a Hamburg mariner familiar with the building of the Saint George, and brother-in-law of the master of her, deposed that "the said shipp the Saint George (whereof John Martens dorp was Master) was in the yeare 1642. originally built at hamborough by a shippwright and Burger of hamborough named Joachim Moller, by the order and direction of the said John Martens dorp (who bought and provided the timber for the said ships structure) Vincent van Campen now dwelling at Cadiz in Spaine, Daniel Sloyer, Abraham de Bois, Decloffe Classoft Mathys Heyndrick and others all Burghers and subjects of the ffree Citie and State of hamborough"[503]

The spelling of the owners names differs slightly in the deposition of another Hamburg mariner, Joachim Beene, who stated that in addition to the master "John Marten dorpe" the owners were "Abraham de Bois Daniel Sloyer dittelof Classoft Mathys hendricx and others all Burghers and subjects of the free state of hamborough". In contrast to Vett, Beene does not mention Vincent Van Campen as an owner of the Saint George.[504]

XXX named Vincent Van Campen ("now dwelling at Cadiz in Spaine") as one of the individuals who commissioned the building of the Saint George in Hamburg in 1642.[505]

John Martins (dorp), master of the Saint George, stated in his first deposition in the English Admiralty Court on January 3rd 1653, that "his shipps company consisted of fourtie persons men and boyes at the time of the said seizure of which one was a hollander and came first aboard at Cales this voyage, and the rest were and are all Easterlings"[506]

John Martins (dorp) also stated that "having delivered the foresaid goods caried from Amsterdam to Cales, hee was there freighted in the service of the kinge of Spaine to carry masts, cables, and other materialls for shipping thence to Maiorca, which having there delivered the said shipp retourned in ballast for Cales and there tooke in her said lading that was aboard at the time of the seizure. And for the foresaidgoods carried from Amsterdam hee saith that the deales were for the accompt of his owners, and were sold by this deponent at Cales for money for the shipp and companies chardges, and the rest of the goods were laden by [?Everard] Scott, Nicholas van [?hulten], Henrick [?Multheson] and others of Amsterdam and delivered at Cales to their factors. But saith that noe part of the silver or other goods nowe seized are retourne or pro[?pXXX] of any of the said goods soe carried from Amsterdam"[507]


Salvadore


The Salvadore of Hamburg (Master: Christian Cloppenburg). Built in 1647 in Hamburg.

The forty year old Hamburg mariner Hance Ramke claims to have been an eye witness to the building of the ship the Salvador at Hamburg. Ramke names the exact place of building as "a place called the Tarr-host where this deponent sawe her as shee was building upon the stocks, and sawe her finished and sawe her launched, and ever since her said building shee hath belonged to the port of Hamborough."[508]

The thirty-five year old Hamburg mariner Joachim Beene similarly claims to have witnessed the building of the Salvador, and named her master shipwright as one John Henderson. Beene stated that "the said Henderson as hee taketh is a Hollander borne, but this deponent hath knowne him to be living in Hamborough thise foureteene or fifteene yeares where hee is a burgher, and an inhabitant and hath bin there maried about tenn yeares or upwards, and there hath kept his wife and family for the said space."[509] Bene also beleived that many of the servants and workmen employed by Henderson were Hollanders.[510]

Christian Cloppenbergh stated that "the said shipp being finished and fitted for sea, this deponent departed from Hamburgh with her about Michaelmas in the yeare 1647 bound for Saint Lucars in Spaine, and since that time shee hath never bin at home namely at Hamburgh, but hath bin imployed in merchants service in the straights and [?ports] of Spaine and Italy and thereabouts ever since her first proceeding from Hamburgh, and that the last port shee came from before her seizure was Cadiz in Spaine"[511]

Cloppenbergh further stated that "there were aboard the said shipp when shee was seized by the Parliaments frigot about sixteene hundred arobes of wooll about sixteene hundred hides, about foure hundred and fiftie potacks of tobaccoe about eightie butts of Spanish wine for the merchants and eighteene or thereabouts for this deponents accompt, foure hundred ninetie eight peeces of campecha wood which hee saith is alsoe belonging unto him this deponent, together with three potacks of tobaccoe, eightie chests and fardles of Indigo and cochenela, and a quantitie of silver in barrs, snall peeces and baggs, but how much hee knoweth not, but for the quantitie thereof and of the rest of his lading hee referreth himselfe to his bills of lading, papers, and book[?e] which were seized and came to the hands of States officers at dover and to the bills nowe by him produced at his examination; and saith that all the said goods and silver were laden at Cadiz aforesaid in the monethes of August, September and October last past...the said goods were and are consigned to many severall merchants of Antwerp, Ostend, Bridges, London and Hamburgh and other places mentioned in his said bills and papers to which hee in that matter referreth himselfe not being able as hee saith to remember them without booke, and hee was not told or understood from any but that the said goods were and are belonging in propertia to the said severall persons to whom they are soe consigned, only the said woolls were laden by the officers of the kinge of Spaine and entred at Cadiz for his accompt whereof hee hath a dispatch or manifest as hee saith amongest his said papers, in which dispatch there are more woolls mentioned than are in his shipp, part thereof being distributed into other shipps. And further saith that hee had 20 peeces of iron ordnance aboard at the time of the said seizure foure and twenty muskets and [?XXXXX] namely a dozen of each, twelve pistolls, eighteene broad swords, twelve pikes, about five hundred bullets tenn or eleaven barralls of powder, and a parecell of foure or five [?bundles] of match."[512]

Cloppenbergh further stated that: "the said shipps company at the time of her seizure consisted of 35 persons, namely thirtie men and five boyes, all which five and thirtie persons were and are as hee saith were and are natives of and dwellers in Hamburgh and other places in the East countr[?ie] and none of them borne or living in Holland or other place whatsoever of [?XXX] the dominion of the said States of the United Netherland Provinces, nor subiect unto them, nor soe reputed"[513]

Cloppenbergh further states that: "there were two peaces of silver aboard at the time of the said seizure worth about five or six hundred peaces of eight which was belonging to his owners as the profitt of freight that the shipp had earned, and this deponent had in a small peace of silver uncoined and in coyned silver about 300 peeces of eight for his owne accompt, and hee doth not knowe of any of the merchandize aboard belonging to his owners saving what belongs to himselfe as aforesaid, but referrs himselfe therein to his said bills, and that hee was to receive his freight in fflannders of the severall merchants to whom the goods are consigned according to his said bills"[514]

Cloppenbergh further states that: "hee went from Cadiz for Barcelona to carry soldiers thither for the service of the kinge of Spaine, and having delivered them hee retourned thence in Ballast for Cadiz and then tooke in his said lading"[515]; John Martinsdorp, master of the Saint George , provides some details of the timing of the Salvado's recent voyages, saying that: "the sayd shipp Salvador went from Hamburgh about three yeares agoe to Cadiz with corne and other Eastland goodes as this deponent beleiveth, and from Cadiz made a voyage into the Straits in the service of the King of Spaine and from thence returned about June 1652 to Cadiz in her balast"[516]


Sampson


The Sampson of Lubeck (Master: Otto George)

Built by the shipwright Jurian Steeckman, a burger and inhabitant of Lubeck, in 1646.[517]

Vincent Van Campen and other owners of the Sampson[518]
Christian Cloppenburgh (master of the Salvador) listed some of the owners of the Sampson, saying "Vincent van Campen, ffrederick Bevia, and John de Windt Merchants of principall worth and qualitie at Cadiz, and othrs of great qualitie at Sevill, (who are each of them severallty esteemed capable to be Owners of such a shipp as the Sampson and to freight her upon their owne particular accompt"[519]

Gaspar Cordes, the twenty-four year old cook of the Sampson, stated that "the shipps company consisted of about 44 persons, foure or five whereof were accompted Hollanders, and the rest Hamburgers Lubeckers, Swedes, English, Scots and of other places, and this deponent of Lunnenburgh in the dominion of the duke of Brunswicke, and the skipper of Lubeck."[520]

According to Henrik Martens, the Hamburg resident master of the Hope, the Sampson was in Cadiz in 1651, where she took on goods and set sail bound for Genoa, but was seized by the French in 1651 en route for Genoa and was carried to Toulon and declared prize. Otto George, her master, redeemed her on behalf of her owners, whom Martens listed as "Vincent Van Campen John de Windt ffrederique Bevan, Daniel de Loon, ffrancisco Pennincque Don Joseph and ffrancisco Peralti and Company". Otto George left his ship at Toulon and went to Genoa, where he arranged for12,000 pieces of eight to be paid to redeem the vessel by Jacomo Maria and [?Thomaso] Van Harten, two merchants of Genoa. These Genoese merchants were satisfied by Vincent Van Campen from Cadiz, with whome Van campen had a corresponding relationship. [521]

Tobias Sollicoffre, of the Citie of Saint Gallen in Switzerland Consull for the hansa Townes in the Maritime parts of Provence in ffrance aged 27. yeares also deposed on the seizure of the Sampson by the French[522]

Otto George stated that "hee this examinate hath bin master of the said vessell ever since buying her, saving that the last yeare hee was interrupted in his said commannd for the space of three monethes
by the ffrench who tooke her comming from Spaine bound for Gen[?oa] and sold her againe to this deponent, and saith shee was new built when this deponent soe bought her at Lubeck, and this deponent was constituted master by his said owners"[523]

Otto George stated that "he said shipp went in the yeare 1649 from Amsterdam for the Downes and there tooke in goods brought from London to be transported for Cadiz, and [?and] [?come] from Cadiz last before [?her] late comming into the downes and his staying there, and that in the [?XXXX] while hee traded to and againe betweene Cadiz and [?parts] in the straights at Genuoa, Ligorne and others, and that when shee came into and was staid in the downes shee was bound for Ostend or Dunkirke"[524]

Otto George stated that "hee brought bales of silke and paper and other peace goods from Genoa to Cadiz when hee was last there, which were laden at Genoa by severall Genoeses, and were delivered at Cadiz
to Genoeses and Spaniards"[525]

Otto George stated that "hee went first from Lubeck with the said shipp with pipestaves and came therewith in the downes and there tooke in 139 [?XX XXX] peaces of goods for Cadiz, and there dischardged the same, and this hee saith was in the yeare 1647. and thence hee came with [?money] and tobaccoe and other goods into the downes and thence to Amsterdam (having landed part [?thereof] in the Downes) And there hee laded peace goods, and came thence three yeares since into the downes and tooke other peace goods aboard from London bound againe for Cadiz, where the same were delivered, and ever since till his coming [?XXX] lately into the Downes, where hee was stopt, hee hath bin trading with the said vessell betwixt Cadiz and [?ports] in the Streights as aforesayd. To the second hee saith hee was never freighted in grosse, but [?XXX] to be paid for each peace according to bills of lading, and was not to carry the worth of a penny of any of his present lading for Amsterdam or other place of the dominions of the States of the United Netherlands"[526]

Otto George stated that "when hee was taken as aforesaid by the ffrench which was about a yeare since, hee was carried with the said shipp to Tolon, and saith that when hee went last to [?Lighorne] hee went [?XX] [?lade] goods, and thought to have gonne with some English and a dutch convoy thence for Cadiz, but meeting none hee went alone, and this hee saith was about [?XX] moneth[?s] since and before any trouble betwixt England and Holland"[527]

Otto George stated that "hee came last to Cadiz in May last and [?staid] there till the moneth of October last"[528]


List of ships crews, passengers and freighters


Mercurius

Jurian Martinson - one of company of the Mercurius
Hance Young - master of the Mercurius

Morning Starr

Nostra Seignora del Rosario

Antonio de la Rosa - master of the Nostra Seignora del Rosario[529]

Saint Augustine

Saint George

John Martindorp (aka. Martenson-Dorp) - master of the Saint George
John Lowers - member of the crew of the Saint George. A twenty-six year old mariner of Masterland in Norway.
Juan de Lossa Barron - passenger on the Saint George. Spanish merchant.
Henrick Vett - formerly a member of the crew of the Saint George. A thirty-six year old mariner of Hamburg. Brother-in-law of John Martindorp, the ship's captain. Witnessed the ships's building at Hamburg in 1642. Appears to have kept the books for the ship for the last 19 months prior to his deposition in the English Admiralty Court in November 1654.[530]

Saint John [of Hamburg]

Salvadore

Christian Cloppenburgh - master of the Salvadore
Carsten Franck - ships carpenter on the Salvadore
Hance Ramke - formerly a member of the company of the Salvadore. A forty year old mariner of Hamburg.
Henry Slegar - member of the company of the Salvadore at the time of her seizure. A twenty-three year old sailor of Hamburg.
fferdinando Numez - merchant of Sevill, laded 46 sacks of unwashed wool and 110 sacks of washed wool on the Salvador for transport to Ostend[531]
Manuell Corea - passenger on the Salvador citizen of Varines in the West Indye merchant aged about 34 yeares[532]
Thomas Juan [aka Thomas John]- passenger on the Salvador; of Cadiz in Spayne Marriner aged about [?40] yeares[533]; according to Manuel Corea, Thomas Juan was gunner of the ship the Nostra Seignior Del Rosario, in which Juan brought tobacco on his own account, which was subsequently laden into the Salvador[534] Stated he was born at Cadiz and had lived there constantly.[535]

Sampson

Otto George (alt. Octavio George) - master of the Sampson
Antonio da Ponte - passenger on the Sampson accompanying goods from Cadiz. A twenty-eight year old merchant of Teneriffa in the Canary Islands.
[?Frocato] Millenes - merchant of Cadiz and owner of one bar of silver sent on the Sampson[536]
Anthony Rodriques - passenger on the Sampson from Cadiz; resident of Cadiz
ffrancis Machado - passenger on the Sampson from Cadiz; resident of Port Saint Mary near Cadiz
John Baptista Sabino - passenger in the Sampson from Cadiz (according to Manuel Correa [TBC])[537]
Anthonio Da La Rosa - passenger in the Sampson; resident of Sivill in Spayne Marriner aged about 32 yeares[538]
Joachim Pesler of der [?Meuble] in Prussia, Chirurgeon and late Chirurgeon of the said shipp the Sampson aged 36 yeares; came onboard the ship at Genoa as a passenger, but the existing ship's surgeon leaving, he was hired by Otto George for ten months at a fixed rate; gripes about not being paid[539]
Peter Hor[?seld] - alleged by Joachim Pesler to have been the Sampson's purser[540]
- The purser appears to have had a German and a Spanish name, or at least that is one interpretation of the deposition of Lorenzo de Veles, who states "the purser of the shipp Sampson arlate whose name is Peter Huckfelt or Pedro da Campo [?vieta]"[541]
Peter [?Maddt] - alleged by Joachim Pesler to have been the Sampson's stiersman[542]
Unamed carpenter - alleged by Joachim Pesler to have been involved in stealing silver on the Sampson[543]
Unnamed steward - alleged by Joachim Pesler to have been involved in stealing silver on the Sampson[544]
Jacob Elers - cabin boy on the Sampson; "of [?Barnestey] about foure miles from Hamburg, late Cabbin-boy of the said shipp the Sampson, aged 17 yeares; came on board at Genoa as the stiersman's boy, but at Cadiz was made captain's boy after Otto George's previous cabin boy left[545]
Lewis ffernandez Angell - passenger on the Sampson; owner of 13 bars of silver on the same ship; born a Spaniard, but resident in Caracas in the West Indies for the last 16 years[546]
Antonio da Ponte - passenger on the Sampson[547]
Pedro da Campo - Purser of the Sampson (mentioned by deponent Antonio da Ponte, who himself travelled on the Sampson)[548]
Michael Perry Severino - passenger on the Sampson; twenty-four year old merchant[549]
Lorenzo de Veles - passenger on the Sampson; merchant of Flanders



All legal cases and petitions relating to the three Silver Ships


Allegation made on behalfe of the State in the Acts of Court[550]
- The Keepers of the Libertie of England by authoritie of Parliament against the shipp the Saint George John Martinsondorp master

"Allegation made in the acts of Court on behalfe of the State the eleaventh of this instant March 1652"[551]
- "The Keepers of the Livebertie of England by authoritie against the shipp Sampson (Otto George commander) and silver and goods in the same"

The Lord Protector against the shipp the Saint George (whereof John Martendorpe is Master) and against daniel [?Sloter] and others coming in for their interest

The Lord Protector against the Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenburgh is master and against Brandes and others[552]

The Lord Protector against the shipp the Sampson (whereof Otto George was Master) and against Vincent van Campen and others comeing in for their interest[553]

The Clayme of Lewis ffernandez Angell for thirteene barrs of sylver in the shipp the Sampson whereof Otto George is Captaine taken by some of the Parliament shipps.[554]

The Clayme of Manuel Gomez Arosta merchant of Sevile Assentista of his Majestye of Spayne and of Anthony Chavez of the same place for their respective goods in the shipp the Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is Captaine taken by some of the Parliaments ffleet}[555]

The clayme of Christopher Boone of London Merchant for severall parcells of silver and Cutcheneale hereto fore specially claymed by Adrian Goldsmith of Antwerpe having bin seized} in the Shipps the Sampson Salvador Saint George and Morning Starr and since legally transferred to him the sayd Christopher Boone and perticulerly conteyned in the Instrument of transfference exhibited into this Court the 14th of ffebruary 1654 and remayning in the Registry thereof
- See also: The clayme of Christopher Boone et cetera[556]

The Clayme of Manuall Correa for one hundred and seaventeene potacchaes of Tobacchoe of the first marke and for twoe patachaes of the second marke laden on board the Shipp the Salvadore whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is master and allsoe for three potachas Laden onboard the Shipp the Saint George of which John Martyn is Captaine or master marked with the third Marke [?XXXX] seized by some of the ffleet[?s] belonging to this Commonwealth[557]

The Clayme of don Sebastian Cortizes for 120 sackes of wooll et cetera in the Saint Augustine[558]

The clayme of Nicholas Crombeene of Cortee[?p] in fflanders for sixtie one Potackes of Tobaccoe whereof sixtie are without marke and one Potaccoe marked laden on board the shipp called the Salvadore whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is Master lately seized by some of the shipps of this Commonwealth[559]

The Clayme of Blases da La Pyna of Sevill for his goods in the shipp the Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is Captaine taken by a shipp of the Parliaments fleet under the Command of Capt PomXXX[560]

The Clayme of Anthonye da Ponta merchant of Spayne for his plate in the ship the Sampson whereof Otto George s Captayne lately seized by some of the Parliaments shipps[561]

The Clayme of Anthony de la Rosa for fourescore petacchoes of Tobacchoa of the first marke and one of the second and forre butts of wyne laden aboard the shipp the Samson whereof Octavio George is master of the third marke in the margent and allsoe of sixe potacchoes of Tobachoe and one hundred hydes laden aboard the Shipp the Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is master marked with the fourth marke in the margent seized by some of the Shipps of this Commonwealth[562]

The Clayme of Thomas Juan for twelve Pptacchoes of Tobacchoe Ldaen on board the shipp the Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is master marked as in the margent seized by some of the Parliaments ffleete[563]

The Clayme of Jaspar Lorenzo Merchant of Antwerpe for 3 Cerons of Cuchineale seized in the shipp Salvador (Christian Cloppenburgh Master)[564]

The Clayme of Baldwyn Mathewes English man for one Barre [?bono] of Silver marked and numbred as in the margent laden aboard the Shipp the Sampson whereof Otto [?Jurjus] is master and allso for three peeces of silver numbred as in the margent laden aboard the Shipp the Saint George wherepf John artynes is master lately seized by some or one of the Parliaments Shipps[565]

The Clayme of Peter Mathewes Arnold Beake and William Moore for twoe Cases of Silver of the marke number and weight under written taken and seized in the Shipp the Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is master taken by some or one of the Parliaments Shipps[566]

The Clayme of fferdinando Numez (sic) merchant of Sevill for his goods and merchandizes in the shipps the Saint George John Martins Captaine, and in the shipp Salvador Christian Cloppenbergh Captaine taken by some of the Parliament ffleet[567]

The Clayme of fferdinando Nunez for his woolls in the Saint George

The Clayme of Domingo de Padilla of Cadiz merchant for 12 butts of sherry wines taken and seized in the shipp Sampson whereof Octavio George is Captaine taken by a Parliament ffrigott under the Command of Generall Blake[568]

The Clayme of ffrancisco Pellays a Subiect of Spaine for six barrells of mother of pearle of the first marke laden in the Salvadore Christian Cloppenbergh Master, and alsoe for six barrells of mother of pearle of the second marke laden on board the shipp cllaed the Sampson, of which Captaine Octavio George is master lately seised by some of the shipp sof this Comon wealth[569]

The Clayme of Anthony Rodriques of Cadiz of Spayne for twelve Potaccoes of Tobaccho marked with the first marke in the Margant and likewise of ffrancis Markadoe for fower Potacchoes of Tobacchoe of the second marke and countermarked with the third marke in the Margent Laden aboard the Shipp the Sampson whereof Octavio George is Master [?XXXed] by certayne of the States Shipps[570]

The Clayme of John Baptista Sabino for sixe Potacchoes of Tobaccho laden on board the Shipp the Sampson whereof Octavio George is master And for nine Potacchoes of Tobacchoe laden aboard the Shipp the Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is master seized by some of the Parliaments Shipps[571]

"The petition of the officers and mariners of the Samson", dated before or on Dec 9th 1652 (mentioned in CSPD, Council of State proceedings) [No physical copy found to date, but mentioned in CSPD]

Te Clayme of John de [?Caudle] of Cadiz in Spayne Marchant for seaven butts of Sherrie wyne marked with the marke in the margent taken and seized in the Shipp Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenbergh was and is master by some of the Parliaments ffleete under the Command of Generall Blake[572]

Petition of Juan de lossa Barrona[573]
- referred on March 25th 1653 to the Committee for Foreign Affairs (CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 25th 1653, p.232)
- referred by Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs on April 1st 1653 "to the Admiralty Judges, to report to this Committee what should be done in the cases, returning the petitions" ( CSPD, XXXV. April 1st 1653, p.249)

Petition of Juan Mexia de de Herrera [No physical copy found to date, but mentioned in CSPD]
- referred on March 25th 1653 to the Committee for Foreign Affairs (CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 25th 1653, p.232)
- referred by Committee for Trade and Foreign Affairs on April 1st 1653 "to the Admiralty Judges, to report to this Committee what should be done in the cases, returning the petitions" ( CSPD, XXXV. April 1st 1653, p.249)

The petition of Manuel Corea [No physical copy found to date, but mentioned in CSPD]
- referred on March 25th 1653 to the Committee for Foreign Affairs (CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 25th 1653, p.232)

Petition of Christian Cloppenburgh: Date: April 3rd 1655[574]

Petition of John Martindorp: Date: April 3rd 1655][575]


Archives


Belgium

Belgian academic libraries

Union Catalogue of Belgian Libraries
Universiteits Bibliotheek Ghent - overview

FelixArchief, Antwerpen

FelixArchief - home page
Address: Oudeleeuwenrui 29 2000 Antwerpen
Contact: stadsarchief@stad.antwerpen.be

- Archief Insolvente Boedelskamer
--1518 individuals declared insolvent by the Antwerpse stadsmagistraat

Rijksarchief, Brussels

Rijksarchief in België - Online
- Archief van de Raad van Vlaanderen: inventaris online en nieuwe gebruikersgids
- Het archief van de Raad van Vlaanderen (1386-1795): Gids voor de gebruiker, 2014, Algemeen Rijksarchief, Gidsen 86, Publ. 5356, 8,00 €
- Belgian parochial registers online
- Guide to using Belgian provincial archives (in Dutch), PDF
- Rechercher dans les archives Un plan par etapes, PDF (in French)
- Oostende, parochie Sint-Petrus en Paulus: Archive structure: Parochial material
- [XX Oostduinkerke (Koksijde), parochie Sint-Niklaas: Archive structure: Parochial material

A.G.R. / J. Bolsée, Inventaire des archives des Conseils et Sièges d'Amirauté. Exemplaire annoté Salle de lecture A.G.R./J. Bolsée - Online Guide in French
- Admiralty archive contains 80 metres of inventory, covering 1597 to 1781
- Housed at Algemeen Rijksarchief / Archives générales du Royaume (Brussels)

Rijksarchief Leuven

- Overview of archival structure for province of Leuven - Dutch language, Online
- Items of interest:
-- Titel toegang: Inventaris van het archief van de gemeente Leuven; Identificatie van de toegang: 351/21; Archiefbewaarplaats: Rijksarchief te Leuven; Datering: 1799
-- Titel toegang: Inventaire des archives de la chambre pupillaire de Louvain + Index alphabétique des noms de famille des pupilles / A. Louant; Identificatie van de toegang: 67/1-2; Archiefbewaarplaats: Rijksarchief te Leuven; Datering: 1448-1795
-- Titel toegang: Inventarissen van het notariaat Vlaams-Brabant Notaris Thomas Henri, Leuven; Identificatie van de toegang: 882/821; Archiefbewaarplaats: Rijksarchief te Leuven; Datering: 1649-1683
-- Titel toegang: Inventarissen van het notariaat Vlaams-Brabant Notaris Van Baren Cornelius, Antwerpen, Leuven en Brussel; Identificatie van de toegang: 882/179; Archiefbewaarplaats: Rijksarchief te Leuven; Datering: 1685-1710
-- Titel toegang: Procesdossiers in het archief van de Raad van Brabant. Voorlopig algemeen overzicht, p. 5-24 / E. Put; Identificatie van de toegang: T 36/3; Archiefbewaarplaats: Rijksarchief te Anderlecht / Archives de l'Etat à Anderlecht; Datering: 1608-1794
-- Titel toegang: DUT: Inventaris van het archief van de Raad van Brabant processen van de steden(behalve Brussel); Identificatie van de toegang: I 54; Archiefbewaarplaats: Rijksarchief te Anderlecht / Archives de l'Etat à Anderlecht; Datering: 1596-1794
-- Titel toegang: Inventaris van het archief van de Raad van Brabant. Processen van de particulieren (eerste reeks); Identificatie van de toegang: I 57; Archiefbewaarplaats: Rijksarchief te Anderlecht / Archives de l'Etat à Anderlecht; Datering: 1574-1794

Henri De Vocht, Inventaire des archives de l'Université de Louvain 1426-1797 (XXXX, 1927) - Online listing f all 6338 items in Vocht's inventory
- archive created by (1) Universiteit van Leuven, 1425-1797 (2) Commissie beslast met het beheer van de goederen van de afgeschafte universiteit te Leuven
[Henrik De Vocht, Registres d'inscription d'étudiants (matricules) - Inschrijvingsregisters van studenten (matrikels) (XXXX, 1927)

Other

Bram Vannieuwenhuyze, Wie is wie in laatmiddelleeuws Brussel? Hanleiding bij de consultatie van de databank van middeleeuwse Brsselaars (Mei 2015), pp.1-25
- Contains useful Dutch language register of late medieval document types, pp.17-19



Europe

Archives Portal Europe - Online



Germany

Staatsarchiv Hamburg - Overview, German language
Stadtarchiv Lübeck - German language finding aids
Stadtarchiv Lübeck - Findbuch
Archivportal - German language



Netherlands

Dutch archive search engine - Dutch language

Nationaalarchief - Netherlands

Nederlandsch Economisch-Historisch Archief (NEHA)
- Jacques van Gerwen, Co Seegers, To Promote and Facilitate: The NEHA 1914-2014, Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiednis, vol. 11, No. 2, 2014, pp1-44

Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Gechiednis - Dutch language website
Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Gechiednis - Catalogue search engine
- History and structure of Collectie Jos Velle
- Highlights uit 100 jaar NEHA



Spain

Portal de archivos españoles - Spanish language portal simple search
Portal de archivos españoles - Spanish language portal advanced search

Archivo Histórico Provincial de Cádiz
Archivo General de Simanacas - Spanish portal
General Archive of Simanacas - English portal

del Museo Naval de Madrid
- Armada Espagnol


Finding Aids


Biographical resources

Deutsche Biographie - Online
Biographisch Portaal van Nederland - Online
Digitale Bibloothek voor de Nederlandse Letteren - Online



General finding aids

Digitaal Platform Historische Pratijk - University of Gent
- Guide to Archieven & Bibliotheken in Belgium
- Felixarchief Antwerpen
- Stadsarchief Brugge
- Stadsarchief Brussel
- Stadsarchief Gent
- Archiefbank Vlaanderen - Onlinedatabase van private archieven



Genealogical finding aids

Belgium

Frederic Lyna, Catalogue des Manuscripts de la Bibliotheque Royale de Belgique: Heraldique-Genealogie, vol. 13 (Bruzelles, 1948)

Spain

Genealogía Española - España GenWeb

de Genealogía hispana

Sevilla Genealogy

Reading Spanish handwritten records
- Spanish Script lesson

Family Heritage Guide - Spanish Genealogy
- The Guia de la Iglesia en España (Madrid, 1951) is a published guide that breaks down each diocese by parish and tells when the records began for about 90% of the parishes in Spain. Over 30% of the parish records for Spain have been microfilmed and are available to order from any local family history center

JosÈ M™ MartÌ Bonet (ed.), GuÌa de los Archivos de la Iglesia en España (Barcelona, 2001)

Municipal Archives, Sevile



Palaeographical guides

Brigham Young University, The Spanish Script Tutorial, online guide



Professional bodies

Royal Historical Commission on Belgian History (Dutch Language) - Online
Royal Historical Commission on Belgian History (English Language) - Online


Bibliography



Books


Theodor Anckelmann, Inscriptiones antiquissimae et celeberrimae urbis patriae Hamburgensis ... (Heidelberga 1663)
- See p.14 'Joachimus Vam Kampe'
- See p.65 'Joachimus Petersen'
Antonella Alimento (ed.), War, Trade and Neutrality: Europe and the Mediterranean in the Seventeenth and Eighteen Centuries (XXXX, 2011)
Ángel Alloza, Europa en el mercado español: mercaderes, represalias y contrabando en el siglo XVII (Milano, 2006)
G. Asaert, Admiraliteiten (tweede helft 14de eeuw - 1794), Aerts (E.), Baelde (M.) e.a., eds. De centrale overheidsinstellingen van de Habsburgse Nederlanden (1482-1795). Brussel, Algemeen Rijksarchief, 1994, I, pp. 180-187.
G. Asaert, Honderd huizen aan de Grote Markt van Antwerpen. Vijf eeuwen bewoningsgeschiedenis, Zwolle, 2005. (XXXX,2005)
Bethany Aram, Bartolomé Yun-Casalilla (eds.), Global Goods and the Spanish Empire, 1492-1824: Circulation, Resistance and Diversity (XXXX, 2014)
Paul Arblaster, From Ghent to Aix: How They Brought the News in the Habsburg Netherlands, 1550-1700 (Leiden, 2014)
- Examine for means by which news of the seizure of the Silver Ships would have been transmitted

Dr Ernst Baasch, Die Handelskammer zu Hamburg 1665-1915, Band I: 1665-1814 (Hamburg, 1915)
Ernst Baasch, Hamburgs Convoyschiffahrt und Convoywesen: ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Schifffahrt und Schifffahrtseinrichtungen im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert (Hamburg 1896)
Roland Baetens, De nazomer van Antwerpens welvaart. De diaspora en het handelhuis De Groote tijdens de eerste helft der 17de eeuw, vol. 1 [TBC] (XXXX, 1976)
- Book Review: Bromley, J.S.(1981) BMGN - Low Countries Historical Review, volume 96, issue 1, pp. 105 - 108
- [Google searchable volume
Roland Baetens, De nazomer van Antwerpens welvaart. De diaspora en het handelhuis De Groote tijdens de eerste helft der 17de eeuw, vol. 2 [TBC] (XXXX, ?1976)
Wolf-Rüdiger Baumann, The merchants adventurers and the continental cloth-trade (1560s-1620s) (XXXX, 1990)
David Baute, Cort relaas sedert den jare 1609: de avonturen van een Zeeuws koopman in Spanje tijdens de Tachtigjarige Oorlog (Hilversum, 2000)
Margrit Schulte Beerbuhl, The Forgotten Majority: German Merchants in London, Naturalization, and Global Trade 1660-1815 (XXXX, 2014). First published as Margrit Schulte Beerbuhl, Deutsche Kaufleute in London: Welthandel und Einbuergerung (1660-1818) (Muenchen, 2007)
Lennart Bes, Edda Frankot, Hanno Brand, Baltic Connections: Archival Guide to the Maritime Relations of the Countries Around the Baltic Sea (Including the Netherlands) 1450-1800, vol. 1: Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany (Leiden, 2007)
- searchable copy through Google Books
Wim Blockmans, Walter Prevenier, The Promised Lands: The Low Countries Under Burgundian Rule, 1369-1530 (Philadelphia, 1999 & 2010)
- Originall published as Wim Blockmans, Walter Prevenier, In de ban van Boourgondië (XXXX, 1988)
Lucassen Peter Boorsma and Jan Lucassen, Guide of the collections of the Netherlands Economic History Archive of Amsterdam (Amsterdam, 1992)
F. Georg Buek, Die Hamburgischen Oberalten, ihre bürgerliche Wirksamkeit und ihre Familien (XXXX, 1857)
Hanno Brand, Leos Müller (ed.), The Dynamics of Economic Culture in the North Sea and Baltic Region: In the Late Middle Ages and Early Modern Period (Hilversum, 2007)
Friedrich Georg Buek, Handbuch der Hamburgischen Verfassung und Verwaltung (Hamburg, 1828)
Friedrich Georg Buek, Genealogische und biographische Notizen über dei seit der Reformation verstorbenen hamburgischen Bürgermeister (Hamburg, 1840)
Jan Butinx, Gustav Asaert, Willy Butinx, Jan Albert Van Houtte, Recht en instellingen in de oude Nederlanden tijdens de Middeleeuwen en de Nieuwe Tijd : liber amicorum Jan Buntinx / [red. G. Asaert ... et al. ter inl. J.A. van Houtte (Leuven, 1981)

Hamburgum Literatum Anni M DC XCVIII (Hamburg, 1698)
Capell, Hamburgum literatum anni 1716 Cal. Septembris editum (Hamburg, 1716)
- See p.18 'Lucase vom Campe'
- See p.35 'Everh. de Campe'
- See p.7 'David Langerman, SEnat'
- See p.26 'Eberh. Langerman'
- See p.26 'Georg Langerman'
- See pp.15, 24 'Johannes Muller'
- See p.22 'M.W. Schröteringk
Huguette Chaunu, Pierre Chaunu, Guy Arbellot, Séville et l'Atlantique (1504-1650): 1621-1650 (XXXX, 1956)
Albrecht Cordes & Serge Dauchy (ed.), Eine Grenze in Bewegung: Öffentliche und private Justiz im Handels- und Seerecht (Muenchen, 2012)
- Ch: Karl-Otto Scherner, Formen der Konfliktlösung im Handles- und Seerecht in Nürnberg, Hamburg und Leipzig zwischen 1500 und 1800, pp.117-140.
- Ch: Christian Pfister-Langanay, Mer et drot à Dunkerque ou l'impossible conciliation (XVIIe-XiXe siècles, pp.155-176
W. Couvrier, Antwerpen in de XVIIde eeuw, Antwerpen, Genootschap voor Antwerpse Geschiedenis (XXXX, 1989)

Christina Dalhede, 'Handelsfamiljer pa Stormaktstidens Europamarknad, 3 vols. (Stockholm, 2001)
Marc Damrath, Die Entwicklung Hamburgs im Dreißigjährigen Krieg. Studienarbeit aus dem Jahr 2014 im Fachbereich Geschichte Europa - and. Länder - Mittelalter, Frühe Neuzeit, Note: 1,3, Universität Rostock (Historisches Insitut)
Pit Dehing, Geld in Amsterdam: Wisselbank en wisselkoersen, 1650-1725 (Amsterdam, 2012)

Endters Erben, Commentatio succincta in codicem statutarii norici (Von Gerichten und gerichtlicher Process (etc.), vol.1 (Nürnberg, 1737)
- Das III. Gesetz: Von dem Bauerngericht, pp.538-540
- Das IV. Gesetx: Von dem ?Bawgericht, pp.541-544
- Das V. Gesetz: Von dem Straf oder [?Xünfergericht, pp.544-XX]
- Das II. Gesetz: Wie den Aresten und Verpoten nachgegangen werden soll (von Fortsetzung der Arresten), pp.618 - 630

Richard Ehrenberg, Das Zeitalter der Fugger (Jena, 1922)
J. Everaert, De internationale en Koloniale Handel der Vlaamse firma’s te Cadiz (1670-1700) (Brugge, 1973)

Jo. Albertus Fabricius, Memoriarum Hamburgensium, vol.6 (Hamburg, 1730)
Eva Christine Frentz: Das Hamburgische Admiralitätsgericht (1623-1811) (Frankfurt am Main, 1985)
- Buch synopsis: "Der Spruchtätigkeit des Hamburgischen Admiralitätsgerichts kommt für die dogmatische Entwicklung des Seehandels- und Seeversicherungsrechts und die allgemeine Rechtsfortbildung durch Richterrecht bis ins 19. Jahrhundert Bedeutung zu. Anhand zahlreicher ungedruckter, hier erstmals ausgewerteter Quellen untersucht die Autorin Verfassung, Verfahren und Rechtsprechung des Gerichts. In die rechtsvergleichende Analyse werden vornehmlich das niederländische und französische Seerecht sowie die zeitgenössische internationale Kommentarliteratur einbezogen"

Antonio García-Baquero González, Comercio y Burguesía Mercantil en el Cádiz de la Carrera de Indias (XXXX, 1991)
- This may be a doctoral thesis
- Mentions Juan de Vint and Pedro de la O y Fabrique de Lila
Beatriz Cárceles de Gea, Comercio y riqueza en el siglo XVII: estudios sobre cultura, política y pensamiento económico (XXXX, 2009)
- See Chapter 4: Comercio privilegiado. El negocio de las licencias espciales (1625-1643)
H. Enno Van Gelder en M. Hoc, Les monnaies des Pays-Bas bourguignons et espagnols, 1634-1713 (Amsterdam, ?1960)
- Review by Lafaurie Jean, Revue numismatique, Année 1961, Volume 6, Numéro 3, p. 251
Maartje van Gelder, Trading Places: The Netherlandish Merchants in Early Modern Venice (Leiden, 2009)
- Extremely useful book as context for the Silver Ships research project
Oskar Gelderbloom, Zuid-Nederlandse kooplieden en de opkomst van de Amsterdamse stapelmarkt (1578-1630) (Hilversum, 2000)
- See Bijlage 4 De onderzoekspopulatie (contains names of 852 Zuid-Nederlandse
e.g. BASSELIERS, Jan, koopman uit Antwerpen, verbleef eerst in Hamburg (1591)
Oscar Gelderblom, Cities of Commerce: The Institutional Foundations of International Trade in the Low Countries, 1250-1650 (Princeton, 2013)
Susanne, Gmoser (compiler), Chronologische Liste der Reichshofräte nach Oswald von Gschließer, Wien, June 2014, PDF
- Based on Oswald von Gschließer, Der Reichshofrat. Bedeutung und Verfassung, Schicksal und Besetzung einer obersten Reichsbehörde von 1559-1806 (=Kommission für neuere Geschichte des ehemaligen Österreich
33), Wien 1942.
- pp.48-59 cover Ferdinand III (1637-1657)
Pierre Génard, L'hôtel des monnaies d'Anvers: mémoire couronne le 25 février 1872 (XXXX, 1874)
Albert Girard, Antonio García-Baquero González, El comercio francés en Sevilla y Cádiz en tiempo de los Habsburgo: contribución al estudio del comercio extranjero en la España de los siglos XVI al XVIII (XXXX, 2006)
Albert Girard, Le commerce français a Séville et Cadix au temps des Habsbourg. Contribution à l'étude du commerce étranger en Espagne aux XVIe et XVIIIe siècles (Paris, Bordeaux, 1932)
Albert Girard, La rivalidad comercial y marítima entre Sevilla y Cádiz: hasta finales del siglo XVIII (XXXX, 2006)
Fernando Fernández González, Comerciantes vascos en Sevilla, 1650-1700 (XXXX, 2000)
Ma. Guadalupe Carrasco González, Comerciantes y casas de negocios en Cádiz, 1650-1700 (Cadiz, 1997)

Gunther Handl, Joachim Zekoll, Peer Zumbansen (eds.), Beyond Territoriality: Transnational Legal Authority in an Age of Globalization (Leiden, 2012)
- Chapter: James Gordley, 'Extra-territorial legal problems in a world without nations; what the medieval jurists could teach us, pp.35-52
Donald J. Harreld, High Germans In The Low Countries: German Merchants And Commerce In Golden Age Antwerp (Leiden, 2004)
Donald J. Harreld (ed.), A Companion to the Hanseatic League (Leiden, 2015)
Enrique García Hernán et al. (ed.), Irlanda y la monarquía hispánica: Kinsale, 1601-2001: guerra, política, exilio y religión (?Madrid, 2002)
Paul Herre and others (ed.), Quellenkunde der deutschen Geschichte. Unter Mitwirkung von Ernst Baasch et al. 8th ed.(Leipzig, 1912)
Ariel Hessayon, 'The Great Trappaner of England': Thomas Violet, Jews and crypto-Jews during the English Revolution and at the Restoration' in Michael J. Braddick & David L. Smith (eds.), The Experience of Revolution in Stuart Britain and Ireland (Cambridge, 2011)
Lodewijck Huygens, The English journal: 1651-1652 (Leiden, 1982)

Jonathan Irvine Israel, The Dutch Republic and the Hispanic World, 1606-1661 (XXXX, 1982)
Jonathan Israel, Empires and Entrepots: Dutch, the Spanish Monarchy and the Jews, 1585-1713 (London, 1990)

D. H. Jacobj, Geschichte des Hamburger Niedergerichts (Hamburg, 1866)
- see Section: Von 1622 bis 1811

Dietrich Kausche, Harburger Erbregister von 1667: ein Dokument zur Geschichte des alten Amtes Harburg, seiner Dörfer, Höfe und Bauern (Herausgeber: Verein für Hamburgische Geschichte) (?Hamburg, 1987)
Hermann Kellenbenz, Unternehmerkräfte im Hamburger Portugal-und Spanienhandel 1590-1625 (Hamburg, 1954)
- See review by Jürgen Bolland, in 'Zeitschrift des Vereins fuer Hamburgische Geschichte', Band XLIII (Hamburg, 1956), pp.226-228
Hermann Kellenbenz, Sephardim an der Unteren Elbe: Ihre wirtschaftliche und politische Bedeutung vom Ende des 16. bis zum Beginn des 18. Jahrhunderts (Wiesbaden, 1958)
Hermann Kellenbenz (ed.), Fremde Kaufleute auf der iberischen Halbinsel. Kölner Kolloquien zur internationalen Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte; Band 1 (1970)
Hermann Kellenbenz, Die Fugger in Spanien und Portugal bis 1560: Ein Grossunternehmen des 16. Jahrhunderts (Schriften der Philosophischen....) (1990)
Sean Kelsey, Inventing a Republic: The Political Culture of the English Commonwealth, 1649-1653 (Manchester, 1997)
André Van Keymeulen, Munten van de Zuidelijke Nederlanden van Albrecht en Isabella tot Willem I : catalogus (Brussels, 1981)
Georg Arnold Kiesselbach, Die wirtschafts- und rechtsgeschichtliche Entwickelung der Seeversicherung in Hamburg (XXXX, 1901)
Wim Klooster, Illicit Riches: The Dutch Trade in the Caribbean, 1648-1795 (XXXX, 1995)
Henriette De Bruyn Kops, A Spirited Exchange: The Wine and Brandy Trade Between France and the Dutch Republic in Its Atlantic Framework, 1600-1650 (Leiden, 2007)
Martin Krieger, Geschichte Hamburgs (Hamburg, 2006)
Karl Kroeschell, Albrecht Cordes, Karin Nehlsen-von Stryk (ed.), Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte, Band. 2: 1250-1650 (XXXX, 2008)
Karl Kroeschell, Karin Nehlsen-von Stryk (ed.), Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte, Band 3: Seit 1650 (XXXX, 2008)

Johann Martin Lappenberg, Die milden Privatstiftungen zu Hamburg (Hamburg, 1845)
Joseph Lefèvre, Étude sur le commerce de la Belgique avec l'Espagne au XVIIIe siècle, vol. XVI. Lettres, etc. (Bruxelles, 1921)
Aron Di Leone Leoni, The Hebrew Portuguese Nations in Antwerp and London at the Time of Charles V and Henry VIII: New Documents and Interpretations (XXXX, 2005)
Clé Lesger, Entrepreneurs and Enterpreneurship in Early Modern Times: Merchants and Industrialists Within the Orbit of the Dutch Staple Market (XXXX, 1995)
Clé Lesger, The Rise of the Amsterdam Market and Information Exchange: Merchants, Commercial Expansion and Change in the Spatial Economy of the Low Countries, C. 1550-1630 (Aldershot, 2006)
Alfred Lichtwark, Das Bildnes in Hamburg, vol. I (Hamburg, 1898)
Mary Lindemann, Patriots and Paupers : Hamburg, 1712-1830 (Ocford, 1990)
Mary Lindemann, The Merchant Republics: Amsterdam, Antwerp, and Hamburg, 1648-1790 (Cambridge, 2015)
- pp.27-30 review literature on Hamburg, and compare economic growth of Hamburg with Amsterdam
Reinhard Löhmann, Die Familie Wolters in Hamburg während des 17: Jhs (Hansen, 1969)

Guido Marnef, Antwerp in the Age of Reformation: Underground Protestantism in a Commercial Metropolis, 1550–1577. Translated by J. C. Grayson. (Baltimore and London, 1996)
- Includes lengthy introduction on urban society in sixteenth-century Antwerp
Anke Martens, Hamburger Kaufleute im vorpetrinischen Moskau (XXXX, 1999)
Linda Martz, A Network of Converso Families in Early Modern Toledo (Michigan, 2003)
William Monter, Cultural Exchange in Early Modern Europe, vol. 2 (Cambridge, 2006)
Leos Müller, The Merchant Houses of Stockholm, C. 1640-1800: A Comparative Study of Early-modern Entrepreneurial Behaviour (Uppsala, 1998)

Patrick O'Flanagan, Port Cities of Atlantic Iberia, c. 1500–1900 (Aldershot, 2008)
- Ch.2: Formation and Georgaphy of the Atlantic and Transatlantic Economies, pp.19-38, especially The Inner Atlantic, pp.20-21, The Portuguese Atlantic, pp.22-24, The Spanish Atlantic, pp.25-26; Ships and ports of Atlantic Iberia, pp.34-38
- Ch. 3: Seville, pp.39-78
- Ch. 4: Cadiz and La Bahia de Cadiz, pp.81-113
Friedrich Plass, Friedrich Robert Ehlers, Geschichte der Assercuranz und der Hanseatischen Seeversicherungs-börsen: Hamburg, Bremen, Lubeck (Hamburg, 1902)

Ruth Pike, Aristocrats and traders: Sevillian society in the sixteenth century (Cornell, 1972)
Friedrich Plass, Friedrich Robert Ehlers, Geschichte der Assercuranz und der hanseatischen Seeversicherungs-Börsen: Hamburg, Bremen, Lubeck (Hamburg, 1902)
François Joseph Pons, A Voyage to the Eastern Part of Terra Firma, Or the Spanish Main, in South-America, During the Years 1801, 1802, 1803, and 1804, vol. III (New York, 1806)
- "Containing a Description of the Territory Under the Jurisdiction of the Captain-General of Caraccas, Composed of the Provinces of Venezuela, Maracaibo, Varinas, Spanish Guiana, Cumana, and the Island of Margaretta; and Embracing Every Thing Relative to the Discovery, Conquest, Topography, Legislation, Commerce, Finance, Inhabitants and Productions of the Provinces, Together with a View of the Manners and Customs of the Spaniards, and the Savage as Well as Civilized Indians"
- Francois Pons was former agent of the French goovernment at Caraccas
Jorun Poettering, Handel, Nation und Religion: Kaufleute zwischen Hamburg und Portugal im 17. Jahrhundert (Goettingen, 2013)
Floris Prims, Geschiedenis van Antwerpen, 29 parts (Brussels/Antwerp 1927-1949)
Jeroen Puttevils, Merchants and Trading in the Sixteenth Century: The Golden Age of Antwerp (Abingdon, 2015)
- See bilbliography, pp.

Martin Reißmann, Die hamburgische Kaufmannschaft des 17. Jahrhunderts in sozialgeschichtlicher Sicht (Hamburg, 1975)
- Book review: Gerhard Beneke, University of Kent, Histoire Scociale: Social History, vol. 11. No. 22 (1978), pp.502-504
Antonio Acosta Rodríguez, Adolfo Luis González Rodríguez, Enriqueta Vila Vilar (eds.), La Casa de la Contratación y la navegación entre España y las Indias (Sevilla, 2003)
Manuel Bustos Rodríguez, Burguesía de negocios y capitalismo en Cádiz: los Colarte (1650-1750) (Cádiz, 1991)
- appears to be printed version of doctoral thesis
Manuel Bustos Rodríguez, Cádiz en el sistema atlántico: la ciudad, sus comerciantes y la actividad mercantil (1650-1830) (Madrid, 2005)
Enrique Martínez Ruiz, Magdalena Pi Corrales, Commerce and navigation between Spain and Sweden throughout history (XXXX, 2000)

Thomas Max Safkley (ed.), A companion to multiconfessionalism in the early modern world (Leiden, 2011)
- Chapter: Marnef Guido. Multiconfessionalism in a commercial metropolis : the case of 16th-century Antwerp. See Guido Marnef publication list, Universiteit Antwerpen
Georges Scelle, La traite négrière aux Indes de Castile, contrats et traités d'assiento: étude de droit public et d'histoire diplomatique puisée aux sources originales et accompagnée de plusierus documents inédits, vol. 1 (Paris, 1906)
Werner Scheltjens, Dutch Deltas: Emergence, Functions and Structure of the Low Countries’ Maritime Transport System, ca. 1300-1850 (Leiden, 2015)
Johann Schulte, Briefe des Hamburgischen Bürgermeisters Joh. Schulte an seinen in Lissabon etablirten Sohn Joh. Schulte, geschrieben in den Jahren 1680 - 1685 (Hamburg, 1856)
Wolfgang Sellert, Reichshofrat und Reichskammergericht: ein Konkurrenzverhältnis (XXXX, 1999)
Wolfgang Sellert, Rechtsbehelfe, Beweis und Stellung des Richters im Spätmittelalter (XXXX, 1985)
Johann Siebmacher, J. Siebmacher's grosses und allgemeines Wappenbuch: Der Adel der freien Städte Hamburg, Bremen and Lübeck, Vol. 3, Iss. 1 (Nürnberg, 1871)
Oskar de Smedt, De Engelse Nation te Antwerpen in de 16e Eeuw (1496-1582), 2 vols. (Antwerp, 1950-4)
- Book review: Peter Ramsey, 'The English Historical Review', Vol. 72, No. 284 (Jul., 1957), pp. 500-503
Frank Hall Standish, Seville and its vicinity (London, 1840)
- Lists parishes of Seville as Saint Andrew, Saint Bartholomew, Saint Bernard Extramuros, Saint Catharine, Saint Cruz (or Holy Cross), Saint Gil, Saint Ildefonso, Saint Isidorus, Saint James, Saint John of Acre, Saint Julian, Saint John de la Palma, Saint Lawrence, Saint Lucia, Saint Mark, Saint Martin, Saint Marina, Saint Mart la Blanca (or De las Nieves), Saint Mary Magdalen, Saint Mary the Mayor (or Sagrario) (pp.62-166)
Johann Anselm Steiger, Sandra Richter (ed.), Hamburg: Eine Metropolregion zwischen Früher Neuzeit und Aufklärung (Berlin, 2013)
Hans-Konrad Stein-Stegemann, Findbuch der Reichskammergerichtsakten im Staatsarchiv Hamburg (?Hamburg, 1993)
S.J. Stein, B. Stein, Silver, Trade and War. Spain and America in the Making of Early Modern Europe (Baltimore, 2000)
Jan Van der Stock (ed.), Antwerp: Story of a Metropolis, 16th–17th Century (Antwerp and Ghent, 1993)
- Collection of articles written by leading scholars
Eddy Stols, Spanish Brabanders or commercial relations of the Southern Netherlands with the Iberian world from 1598 to 1648, 2 vols (Brussels, 1971)
E. Stols, De Spaanse Brabanders, of de handelsbetrekkingen der zuidelijke Nederlanded met de Iberische wereld (1598-1648) 2 vols. (Brussel, 1971)
R.A. Stradling, The Armada of Flanders: Spanish Maritime Policy and European War, 1568-1668 (Cambridge, 1992)
- See Chapter 6: 'The Flanders Fleet in the South', pp.113-130
- See Chapter 7: 'The prize of Dunkirk', pp.131-150
- See Chapter 10: 'Prizetaking - plunder of a century', pp.204-228
Daviken Studnicki-Gizbert, A Nation upon the Ocean Sea : Portugal's Atlantic Diaspora and the Crisis of the Spanish Empire, 1492-1640 (New York, 2006)

Barry Taylor, Society and Economy in Early Modern Europe, 1450-1789: A Bibliography of Post-war Research (Manchester, 1989)
Alfons K. L. Thijs, Van "werkwinkel" tot "fabriek": de textielnijverheid te Antwerpen : einde 15de-begin 19de eeuw (XXXX, 1987)
Bert Timmermans, Patronen van patronage in het zeventiende-eeuwse Antwerpen: een elite als actor binnen een kunstwereld (Antwerp, 2008)
- Contains useful lists of Antwerp family names

Vegiano, M. de, Seigneur d'Hovel; Herckenrode, Jacques Salomon François Joseph Léon, baron de, Nobiliaire des Pays-Bas et du comté de Bourgogne, vol.1 (Gand, 1865)
Enriqueta vila vilar, Una amplia nómina de los hombres del comercio sevillano del S.XVII, (XXXX, ?2000), available as PDF, pp. 139-191 [APPEARS TO BE A BOOK CHAPTER, BUT UNCLEAR WHICH BOOK OR PUBLICATION DATE]
- Based on a conference presentation at IX Congreso Internacional de Americanistas, Badajoz, September 2000
- alphabetical list of merchants (comerciantes) from p.145

Suzanne Walter & Hermann Kellenbenz, Oberdeutsche Kaufleute in Sevilla Und Cadiz (1525-1560): Eine Edition Von Notariatsakten Aus Den Dortigen Archiven...(2001)
K. Weber, Deutsche Kaufleute im Atlantikhandel 1680-1830. Unternehmen und Familien in Hamburg, Cádiz und Bordeaux (München, 2004)
- Matthias Manke: Rezension zu: Weber, Klaus: Deutsche Kaufleute im Atlantikhandel 1680-1830. Unternehmen und Familien in Hamburg, Cádiz und Bordeaux. München 2004, in: H-Soz-Kult, 02.09.2004
H. van der Wee, , Antwerpens bijdrage tot de ontwikkeling van de moderne geld- en banktechniek, in Tijdscrift voor Economie (Leuven, 1965)
Joachim Whaley, Religious Toleration and Social Change in Hamburg, 1529-1819 (Cambridge, 1985)
Wiert Jan Wieringa (ed.), The Interactions of Amsterdam and Antwerp with the Baltic region, 1400–1800: De Nederlanden en het Oostzeegebied, 1400–1800 (?Dordrecht, 1983)
- Ch.3: A. Attman, 'The bullion flow from the Netherlands to the Baltic and the Arctic, 1500-1800', pp.19-22
Justyna Wubs-Mrozewicz, Stuart Jenks (ed.), The Hanse in Medieval and Early Modern Europe (Leiden, 2012)

Joachim Zekoll (ed.), Introduction to German Law (The Hague, 2005)
- see Ch.1: Reinhard Zimmermann, Characteristic Aspects of German Legal Culture, pp.1-52, which includes a discussion of tradition of Roman Law, the legal tradition of the Holy Roman Empire, and the shift from civil law to civil code (pp.1-4)
Kathrin Zickermann, Across the German Sea: Early Modern Scottish Connections with the Wider Elbe-Weser Region (Leiden, 2013)
Julia Zunckel, Rüstungsgeschäfte im Dreißigjährigen Krieg: Unternehmerkräfte, Militärgüter und Marktstrategien im Handel zwischen Genua, Amsterdam und Hamburg (XXXX, 1997)

XXXX, Portuguese Jews in Amsterdam (XXXX, 1967)


Chapters


R. Baetens, 'The Organisation and Effects of Flemish Privateering in the Seventeenth Centuy', pp. 48-75 in Acta Historiae Neederlandicae, vol. IX (The Hague, 1976)
Mark Haeberlein, 'German Communities in 18th-Century Europe and North America', pp.19-35, in Matjaz Klemenic, Mary N. Harris (ed.), European Migrants, Diasporas and Indigenous Ethic Minorities (Pisa, 2009)
- mentions German communities in Cadiz
Ma. Guadalupe Carrasco González, La colonia británica de Cádiz entre 1650 y 1720, pp.331-342 [UNCLEAR FROM WHICH LARGER PUBLICATION]
C. Rahn Phillips, The growth and composition of trade in the Iberian Empires, 1450-1750, in J.D. Tracy (ed.), rise of merchant empires. Long-distance trade in the early modern world, 1350-1750 (XXXX, XXXX), pp. 34-101
Manuel Bustos Rodríguez, Consulats et consuls à Cadix au xviiie siècle : une approche, pp.259-277, in Jörg Ulbert, Gérard Le Bouëdec (ed.) La fonction consulaire à l'époque moderne (Rennes, 2006)
- Extensive use of Spanish language archival sources



Conferences and conference presentations


Catia Brilli, 'Genoese merchants in the eighteenth-century Spanish imperial trade. The central role of Gaditan Institutions', at IX Congreso Internacional de la Asociación Española de Historia Económica, Sesión B-8, Sept 2008; PDF, pp.1-20

Congreso Internacional de la Asociación Española de Historia Económica, Murcia, 9, 10, 11 y 12 de septiembre de 2008
- Session of interest: B-8: Instituciones locales, mercado y desarrollo económico en la Europa mediterránea a través del espejo atlántico, 1500-1900; Coordinadores: Fernando Ramos (Universidad Pablo de Olavide) y Bartolomé Yun (Instituto Europeo Universitario de Florencia)
-- Session paper: El dilema moentaril de la monarquía española en el siglo XVII: pequeñas monedas o crédito internacional; Carlos Álvarez Nogal (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid)
-- Session paper: Genoese merchants in the eighteenth-century Spanish imperial trade. The central role of Gaditan Institutions; Catia Brilli (University of Pisa)
-- Session Paper: The political economy of the Spanish Imperial rule, revisited; Regina Grafe (Northwestern University) y Alejandra Irigoin (College of New Jersey)
-- Session paer: Estructura de incentivos e instituciones en el pensamiento mercantilista castellano del siglo XVII. Victoriano Martín Martín y Nieves San Emeterio Martín (Universidad Rey Juan Carlos)



Electronic resources


Ivan Derycke, Antwerpse straatkelders: historische gegevens (pagina onder constructie)



Journals


Antwerpsch Archievenblad
Ernst Baasch, 'Hamburg's Seeschiffahrt und Waarenhandel vom Ende des 16. bis zur Mitte des 17. Jahrhunderts', special reprint from (Zeitschrift des Vereins für Hamburgische Geschichte, Vol. 9 (1893), pp.295-420
- Ernst Baasch has published some important statistical material in his article
- Note the date of the special reprint is 1893 (not 1894)
K. Degryse, 'Die zuiderhandel van Henrico F. Schilders (1673-1680), Studia Historica Gandensia, 191, Overdruk uit Album Charles Verlinden, 1975, pp.117-127
- includes review of academic literature as of mid-1970s on "De Zuidnederlandse Spanjehandel tijdens de 17e eeuw" (p.117)
Maartje van Gelder, 'How to influence Venetian economic policy: collective petitions of the Netherlandish merchant community in the early seventeenth century' in Mediterranean Historical Review, vol. 24, no. 1, June 2009, pp.29-47
'Droit et pratiques du cosmopolitisme marchand: la bourse de Hambourg au XVIIe siècle', in P. GONZALES-BERNARDO, M. MARTINI et M.-L. PELUS-KAPLAN, Etrangers et sociétés. Représentations, coexistences, interactions dans la longue durée, P.U.R., Rennes, 2008, p. 351-360.
Erik Lindberg, 'The Rise of Hamburg as a Global Marketplace in the Seventeenth Century: A Comparative Political Economy Perspective', Comparative Studies in Society and History, Volume 50, Issue 03, July 2008, pp 641-662
Jacques van Gerwen, Co Seegers, To Promote and Facilitate: The NEHA 1914-2014, Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiednis, vol. 11, No. 2, 2014, pp1-44
F. Prims, De verdwijnende straatkelders, in Gazet van Antwerpen, 6-7/2/1932. (XXXX,1932)
M. Bustos-Rodriguez, Población, sociedad y desarrollo urbano (una aproximación al Cádiz de Carlos II), in Cádiz en su hisoria, IV jornadas de historia de Cádiz, 1985, p. 83 e sgg
Hermann Kellenbenz, La Place de l'Elbe inférieure dans le commerce triangulaire au milieu du XVIIe siècle. In: Revue française d'histoire d'outre-mer, tome 62, n°226-227, 1er et 2e trimestres 1975. La traite des Noirs par l'Atlantique : nouvelles approches. pp. 186-195



Reviews


Review: Gaston Beterams, Antwerpse Schepenbrieven bewaard op het Rijksar chief te Antwerpen 1300-1794, 1959, Revue du Nord (1960), vol. 42, Numéro 168, p. 435
Review: J. Everaert review in BMGN - Low Countries Historical Review, pp.486-489, of Eddy Stols, De Spaanse Brabanders of de handelsbetrkkingen der Zuidelijke Nederlanded met de Iberische wereld (1658-1648) (Brussel, 1971)
Review: Michel Morineau review of Eddy Stols, De Spaanse Brabanders of de Handelsbetrekkingen der Zuidelijke Nederlanden met de Iberische Wereld, 1598-1648, in Annales. Économies, Sociétés, Civilisations, 1981, vol. 36, n° 2, pp. 301-302


Unpublished masters and doctoral dissertations


Anne Blondé, Ontstaan en ontwikkeling van de functie van consul van de (Zuid)Nederlandse handelsnaties in Spanje tijdens de 16de en 17de eeuw (Universiteit Gent, 2008-2009)

Christian Jan van Bochove, The economic consequences of the Dutch; Economic integration around the North Sea, 1500-1800 (Utrecht, 2008)
Kevin Coornaert, De Vlaamse Natie op de Canarische eilanden in de 16de eeuw (Gent, 1999-2000)

- Scriptie voorgelegd aan de Faculteit Letteren en Wijsbegeerte, voor het behalen van de graad van Licentiaat in de Geschiedenis, Academiejaar: 1999-2000, Universiteit Gent
- Promotor: Prof. Dr. J.G. Everaert
- Makes use of (Archivo Histórico Provincial de Las Palmas (The Provincial Archives of Las Palmas)
- Makes use of the central records of the Inquisition at the Archivo Histórico Nacional in Madrid, i.e. the archives of the 'Consejo Supremo de la Inquisición "(Supreme Council of the Inquisition), the "relaciones de causas" (short reports on the cases that have occurred in the courts)

Carolina Abadía Flores, Los flamencos en Sevilla en los siglos XVI-XVII (De Vlamingen in Sevilla in de 16de en 17 de eeuw.) (Gent, 2006-2007)

James John Inglis-Jones, The Grand Condé in exile: Power Politics in Frane, Spain and the Spanish Netherlands, Christ Church, Oxford (1994)

Karlien Jordens, Het management van een zeventiende eeuwse kunstfirma: Case study: de Firma Forchoudt, masters thesis, kunstwetenschappen, Universiteit Gent (2009-2010)
- see especially 'Handelsgebied...Iberische schiereiland', pp.40-41
- see especially 'Firmahuizen...Cadiz', pp.46-47

Thomas Lambrecht, Van den Princelicke Huyse ende Hove van Dendermonde", masters thesis, Universiteit Gent (2013-2014)

Hendrik Vandeginste, De Vlaamse natie te Cádiz (1665-1700). Een socioculturele benadering, Gent, RUG (onuitgegeven licenciaatsverhandeling) (Gent, 2000)
- CHECK WHETHER THIS HAS BEEN PUBLISHED OR IS AVAILABLE AS AN ONLINE THESIS
- See Hendrik Vandeginste talk summary, March 23rd 2015, 'West Vlamingen in Cádiz op het einde van de 17 de eeuw'


  1. HCA 13/70 f.736r
  2. HCA 13/70 f.739r
  3. HCA 13/70 f.144r
  4. HCA 13/70 f.743r
  5. HCA 13/70 f.142v
  6. HCA 13/70 f.139r
  7. [[HCA 13/70 f.710v Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.710v
  8. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2548]
  9. Wikipedia, First Anglo-Dutch War
  10. [ADD REFERENCE]
  11. "A true narrative of the proceedings in the Court of Admiraltie against the ships Sampson, Salvador, and George, their silver and lading and an accompt presented what silver was taken out of the said ships and coined in the Tower (being above two hundred seventy eight thousand pounds,) all which silver the Common-wealth got by the chargeable prosecution and discovery of Tho. Violet, who saved the Common-wealth this silver, Dec. 16. 1652"
  12. For example, The Clayme of Blases da La Pyna of Sevill for his goods in the shipp the Salvador whereof Christian Cloppenbergh is Captaine taken by a shipp of the Parliaments fleet under the Command of Capt PomXXX; and The clayme of Christopher Boone et cetera.
  13. Item: Petition of Christian Cloppenburgh: Date: April 3rd 1655; Item: Petition of John Martindorp: Date: April 3rd 1655
  14. CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXXV, Aug 25th 1654, p.336
  15. [XXXX CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXXVII, Dec 13th 1654, p.?412]
  16. 'Venice: November 1652', Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice, Volume 28: 1647-1652 (1927), pp. 302-313, viewed 12/09/14
  17. HCA 13/69 Silver 5 f.1v
  18. HCA 13/69 Silver 5 f.1r
  19. HCA 13/69 Silver 5 f.1r
  20. HCA 13/69 Silver 5 f.1r
  21. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.12r
  22. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.13v
  23. [IMG_118_07_2563]
  24. [IMG_118_07_2563]
  25. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.1r; HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.2v
  26. [IMG_118_07_2563]
  27. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.4r
  28. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.12v
  29. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.4v
  30. HCA 13/69 Silver 12 f.6r
  31. HCA 13/69 Silver 10 f.16v
  32. XX
  33. HCA 13/69 Silver 4 f.15r
  34. HCA 13/69 Silver 4 f.15r
  35. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.2r
  36. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.3v
  37. [IMG_118_07_2557]
  38. HCA 13/69 Silver 7 f.5r
  39. HCA 13/69 Silver 8 f.12r
  40. HCA 13/69 Silver 7 f.5r
  41. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.1v
  42. HCA 13/69 Silver 1 f.15r
  43. 'Friday 8 June 1660': The Online Diary of Samuel Pepys
  44. 'Thomas Penrose (d. 1667)' in Three Declks Online Resource
  45. 1651-52, vol. XXV, p.482
  46. 'House of Commons Journal Volume 7: 20 December 1652', Journal of the House of Commons: volume 7: 1651-1660 (1802), pp. 231., viewed 12/09/14
  47. CSPD, 1651-52, vol. XXV, p.492
  48. CSPD, 1651-52, vol. XXV, p.491
  49. 1651-52, vol. XXV, p.482
  50. CSPD, 1651-52, vol. XXV, p.480
  51. 'House of Commons Journal Volume 7: 20 December 1652', Journal of the House of Commons: volume 7: 1651-1660 (1802), pp. 231., viewed 12/09/14
  52. 'House of Commons Journal Volume 7: 20 December 1652', Journal of the House of Commons: volume 7: 1651-1660 (1802), pp. 231., viewed 12/09/14
  53. Journal of the House of Commons: Aug 15 1651-Mar 16th 1659, vol. VII (London, 1813), p.229
  54. 'House of Commons Journal Volume 7: 20 December 1652', Journal of the House of Commons: volume 7: 1651-1660 (1802), pp. 231., viewed 12/09/14
  55. CSPD, 1655, p.293
  56. [ADD REFERENCE]
  57. Richard Hill: Treasurer of Sequestrations 1642-9 and a Prize Commissioner 1652-9 (Robert Latham, The Diary of Samuel Pepys: Companion (?London, 1983), p.185)
  58. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1529
  59. CSPS, 1655, p.293
  60. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1522
  61. [ADD REFERENCE]
  62. [ADD REFERENCE]
  63. HCA 13/67 f.1r Special
  64. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1522
  65. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1526
  66. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1416
  67. HCA 13/68 f.62r
  68. HCA 13/68 f.62r
  69. CSPD, 1655, pp.293-294
  70. CSPD, 1653-54, vol.XXXIX, Aug 1653
  71. HCA 13/70 f.717v
  72. HCA 13/70 f.728r
  73. [ADD REFERENCE]
  74. [XXXX CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXXVII, Dec 13th 1654, p.?412]
  75. HCA 15/6 Box 2 no fol.
  76. HCA 15/6 Box 2 no fol.
  77. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1443
  78. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1442
  79. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1447
  80. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1447
  81. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1466
  82. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1494
  83. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2654]
  84. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2655]
  85. HCA 13/67 ADD REFERENCE
  86. ADD REFERENCE
  87. ADD REFERENCE
  88. Christian Cloppenburgh was gifted a chest of sugar in Cadiz. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2657]ADD REFERENCE
  89. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2665]
  90. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1504
  91. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1505
  92. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1506
  93. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1506
  94. HCA 13/70 f.148v Annotate
  95. HCA 13/70 f.733r; HCA 13/70 f.714v; PROB 11/267/429 Will of Roger Kilvert, Merchant of London 17 September 1657; PROB 11/296/118 Will of Anthony Fernandez Carnajall, Merchant of London 03 December 1659
  96. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1459
  97. HCA 13/70 f.733r
  98. Deposition of Charles Chillingworth in case of 'Michaell de Haze ffoppe Wessell and other owners of the Sea ffortune against Antonio ffernandez Caravaihall and Roger Kilvert, Nov. 25th 1656', HCA 13/71 f.423v
  99. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2555]
  100. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2556]
  101. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2556]
  102. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1459; 1460
  103. HCA 13/70 f.734v
  104. HCA 13/70 f.735r
  105. HCA 13/70 f.752v
  106. HCA 13/70 f.735v
  107. HCA 13/70 f.735v
  108. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2655]
  109. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1529
  110. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1522; 1523
  111. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1523
  112. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1523
  113. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1523
  114. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1523
  115. HCA 13/70 f.713r
  116. HCA 13/70 f.712v; HCA 13/70 f.713r
  117. HCA 13/70 f.713r
  118. HCA 13/70 f.711r
  119. HCA 13/70 f.711v; HCA 13/70 f.709r
  120. HCA 13/70 f.711v; HCA 13/70 f.711v
  121. HCA 13/70 f.711v
  122. HCA 13/70 f.711r
  123. HCA 13/70 f.710v
  124. HCA 13/70 f.710v
  125. HCA 13/70 f.710v
  126. HCA 13/70 f.717v
  127. HCA 13/70 f.718r
  128. HCA 13/70 f.718r
  129. HCA 13/70 f.718r; HCA 13/70 f.718v
  130. Henry William Henfrey, Numismata Cromwelliana: or, The medallic history of Oliver Cromwell, illustrated by his coins, medals, and seals (London, 1877), pp.31-33
  131. John Thurloe, A collection of the state papers of John Thurloe, vol 2 (London, 1742), pp.187-188
  132. John Thurloe, A collection of the state papers of John Thurloe, vol 2 (London, 1742), pp.188-189
  133. John Thurloe, A collection of the state papers of John Thurloe, vol 2 (London, 1742), p.189
  134. John Thurloe, A collection of the state papers of John Thurloe, vol 2 (London, 1742), p.461
  135. Fernand Braudel, Civilization and Capitalism, 15th-18th Century (Berkely, 1992), p.151
  136. British Civil War project timeline for September 1652 states that on Sep. 4th 1652 "Blake destroys a French supply convoy on its way to relieve the siege of Dunkirk, resulting in the surrender of Dunkirk to the Spanish the following day."
  137. Wikipedia: Dunkirk; [Wikipedia: Ostend
  138. Wikipedia: Dunkirk; Geoffrey Treasure, Richelieu and Mazarin (Routledge, 2002), p.81
  139. Wikipedia: List of governors of the Habsburg Netherlands; Wikipedia: Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria
  140. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1357
  141. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1386
  142. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1375
  143. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1399
  144. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1466
  145. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1466
  146. J.A.L. Velle Collectie, Antwerpen, Inventaris: NEHA Bijzondere Collecties 471: Sec. 2, p.18 See items: 2.4.48.7; 2.4.48.8; 2.4.48.10
  147. HCA 13/70 f.752r
  148. HCA 13/70 f.753r
  149. HCA 13/70 f.735v
  150. HCA 13/68 f.419v
  151. Wikipedia: First Anglo-Dutch War
  152. [ADD REFERENCE]
  153. [XXXX CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXVIII, Sep 2nd 1654, p.357]
  154. Catalogi Codicum Manuscriptorium Bibliothecae Bodleianae: Pt. V: Ricardi Rawlinson (Oxford, 1862), p.18, referring to p.174 of the Rawlinson manuscripts
  155. Pedro Parrilla Ortíz, La esclavitud en Cádiz durante el siglo XVIII (Cádiz, 2001), p.74
  156. Wikipedia: Alonso de Cárdenas (ambassador); Geoffrey Parker, 'The world beyond Whitehall: British historiography and European archives', in Malcolm Smuts (ed.), The Stuart Court and Europe: Essays in Politics and Political Culture (Cambridge, 1996), p.276]
  157. SP 46/101/fo37 Don Alonso de Cardenas (Spanish Ambassador) to -. Complaining that the Commissioners for Prize Goods refuse to deliver the wool on the "Morning Star" and "St. Augustine". London. 18/8 May 1654. In Spanish
  158. Letter from Spanish Ambassador to the Council of State, Nov. 1653; source: Thurloe Papers, vol. I (London, 1742), pp.578-9
  159. HCA 13/68 f.61v
  160. HCA 13/70 f.71v
  161. PRO 31/12/43
  162. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557636/level/file
  163. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/ead/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/node/c%3A0.c%3A0.c%3A2.c%3A1.#c:0.c:0.c:2.c:1.
  164. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557651/level/file
  165. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557652/level/file
  166. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557653/level/file
  167. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557654/level/file
  168. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557660/level/file
  169. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557661/level/file
  170. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557663/level/file
  171. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557664/level/file
  172. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557665/level/file
  173. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557667/level/file
  174. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557668/level/file
  175. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557670/level/file
  176. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557676/level/file
  177. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557676/level/file
  178. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557678/level/file
  179. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I10429710455767900000BIS/level/file
  180. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557684/level/file
  181. http://search.arch.be/nl/zoeken-naar-archieven/zoekresultaat/inventaris/index/eadid/BE-A0518_104297_104557_DUT/inventarisnr/I104297104557688/level/file
  182. Anita McConnell, ‘Violet, Thomas (d. 1662/3)’, first published 2004
  183. Violet, Thomas, Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 56, p.374, repub. by Wikisource
  184. [ADD REFERENCE]
  185. Gijs Rommelse, The Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665-1667): Raison D'état, Mercantilism and Maritime Strife (Hilversum, 2006), pp.48-49
  186. H.S.Q. Henriques, The Jews and the English Law (Oxford, 1908), pp.99, 122; XXXX, 'The Great Trappaner of England Discovered' (XXX, XXX)
  187. John Venn, J.S.Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses, pt. I, vol. IV (Cambridge, 1927), p.319, viewed 19/07/2015
  188. Richard Lee Bradshaw, God’s Battleaxe: The Life of Lord President John Bradshawe (USA, 2010), p.194
  189. 'Parishes: Alderminster', in A History of the County of Worcester: Volume 4, ed. William Page and J W Willis-Bund (London, 1924), pp. 7-12 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/worcs/vol4/pp7-12, viewed 19/07/2015
  190. The Book of Dignities: Containing Rolls of the Official Personages of the British Empire
  191. W.D.Rollison, Principles of the Law of Succession to Intestate Property, 11 Notre Dame L.Rev. 14 (1935), pp.19-20, viewed 19/07/2015
  192. The Diary of Samuel Pepys Online, Monday 21st January 1666/67
  193. The Diary of Samuel Pepys Online, Thursday 21 March 1666/67
  194. The Diary of Samuel Pepys Online, Tuesday 26 March 1667
  195. Richard Hill: Treasurer of Sequestrations 1642-9 and a Prize Commissioner 1652-9 (Robert Latham, The Diary of Samuel Pepys: Companion (?London, 1983), p.185)
  196. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1529
  197. F.Madden, Index to the Additional Manuscripts, with Those of the Egerton Collection, Preserved in the British Museum, and Acquired in the Years 1783-1835, vol. I (London, 1849), p.461
  198. Whitelocke Papers, Volume XIII, Jan-Sep 1653
  199. See Wikipedia: Bulstrode Whitelocke (b.1605, d.1675)
  200. Catalogi Codicum Manuscriptorium Bibliothecae Bodleianae: Pt. V: Ricardi Rawlinson (Oxford, 1862), p.6, referring to p.485 of the Rawlinson manuscripts
  201. Catalogi Codicum Manuscriptorium Bibliothecae Bodleianae: Pt. V: Ricardi Rawlinson (Oxford, 1862), p.16, referring to pp.486-496 of the Rawlinson manuscripts
  202. Catalogi Codicum Manuscriptorium Bibliothecae Bodleianae: Pt. V: Ricardi Rawlinson (Oxford, 1862), p.18, referring to p.174 of the Rawlinson manuscripts
  203. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1468
  204. CSPD, vol. XXVI., Dec. 3rd 1652, p.7
  205. CSPD, vol. XXVI., Dec. 6th 1652, p.11
  206. CSPD, vol. XXVI., Dec. 7th 1652, p.15
  207. CSPD, vol. XXVI., Dec. 9th 1652, p.19
  208. CSPD, vol. XXVI., Dec. 10th 1652, p.20
  209. CSPD, vol. XXVI., Dec. 13th 1652, p.23
  210. CSPD, vol. XXVI., Dec. 15th 1652, p.27
  211. CSPD, vol. XXVI., Dec. 20th 1652, p.45
  212. CSPD, vol. XXVI., Dec. ? 1652, Item 76, p.66
  213. CSPD, vol. XXXII., Jan. 3rd 1653, p.75
  214. CSPD, vol. XXXII., Jan. 7th 1653, p.87
  215. CSPD, vol. XXXII., Jan. 7th 1653, p.88
  216. CSPD, vol. XXXII., Jan. 10th 1653, p.92
  217. CSPD, vol. XXVII., Jan. 27th 1653, p.127
  218. CSPD, vol. XXVII., Jan. 27th 1653, p.128
  219. CSPD, vol. XXXII., Jan. 28th 1653, p.129
  220. CSPD, vol. XXXIII., Feb 11th 1653, p.160
  221. CSPD, vol. XXXIII., Feb 18th 1653, p.171
  222. CSPD, vol. XXXIII., Feb 18th 1653, p.172
  223. CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 4th 1653, p.198
  224. CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 11th 1653, p.209
  225. CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 14th 1653, p.210
  226. CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 25th 1653, p.232
  227. CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 25th 1653, p.233
  228. CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 25th 1653, p.233
  229. CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 30th 1653, p.241
  230. CSPD, vol. XXXIV., Mar 30th 1653, p.241
  231. CSPD, Vol. XXXIV., March 31st 1653, p.245
  232. CSPD, March 31st 1653, Vol. XXXIV. pp.245-246
  233. CSPD, XXXV. April 1st 1653, p.249
  234. CSPD, Vol. XXXV, April 7th 1653, p.316
  235. CSPD, 1653-53, May 3rd 1653, p.355
  236. CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XL, Sep 1st 1653, p.123
  237. CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XL, Sep 2nd 1653, p.125
  238. CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XL, Sep 1rd 1653, p.135
  239. CSPD, Vol. XL, Sep 7th 1653, p.137
  240. CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XL, Sep 7th 1653, p.137
  241. CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XL, Sep 15th 1653, p.151
  242. CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XL, Sep 30th 1653, p.178
  243. CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XL, Oct 12th 1653, p.199
  244. CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XLI, Oct 21st 1653, p.209
  245. CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XLI, Oct 21st 1653, p.224
  246. CSPD, Vol. XLI, Nov 7th 1653, p.233
  247. [XXXX CSPD, 1653-1654, Vol. XLI, Feb 22nd 1654, p.412]
  248. CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXVIII, Mar 28th 1654, p.55
  249. CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXVIII, Mar 31st 1654, p.65
  250. CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXXI, May 4th 1654, p.150
  251. CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXXV, Aug 25th 1654, p.336
  252. [XXXX CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXVIII, Sep 2nd 1654, p.357]
  253. [XXXX CSPD, 1654, Vol. LXXVII, Dec 13th 1654, p.?412]
  254. CSPD, 1655, Vol. XCIV, Feb ? 1655, p.44
  255. CSPD, 1655, Vol. XCVI, Apr 25th 1655, p.143
  256. CSPD, 1655, Vol. XCIX, Jul 4th 1655, p.228
  257. CSPD, 1655, Vol. XCIX, Jul 4th 1655, pp.228-229
  258. CSPD, 1655, Vol. XCIX, Jul 4th 1655, p.229
  259. CSPD, 1655, Vol. XCIX, Jul 12th 1655, p.241
  260. CSPD, 1655, Vol. C, Aug 7th 1655, pp.292-293
  261. CSPD, 1655, Vol. C, Aug 7th 1655, pp.293-294
  262. CSPD, 1655, Vol. C, Sep 1655, pp.360-361
  263. CSPD, 1655, Vol. CI, Oct 5 1655, p.372
  264. CSPD, 1655, Vol. CI, Oct 12 1655, p.379
  265. CSPD, 1655, Vol. CI, Oct 12 1655, p.379
  266. CSPD, 1655, Vol. CI, Oct 12 1655, p.379
  267. CSPD, 1655-1656, Vol. CXXIII, Jan 22 1656, p.117
  268. CSPD, 1655-1656, Vol. CXXIII, Jan 22 1656, p.129
  269. CSPD, 1655-1656, Vol. CXXIII, Jan 26 1656, p.139
  270. CSPD, 1655-1656, Vol. CXXV, Jan 22 1656, p.235
  271. Add reference
  272. HCA 13/70 f.752r
  273. HCA 13/70 f.135r
  274. HCA 13/70 f.387v
  275. HCA 13/70 f.735v
  276. HCA 13/70 f.139r
  277. HCA 13/70 f.140r
  278. HCA 13/70 f.138v
  279. HCA 13/70 f.141v
  280. HCA 13/70 f.144r
  281. HCA 13/70 f.141v
  282. HCA 13/70 f.144r
  283. HCA 13/70 f.148v Annotate
  284. HCA 13/70 f.718r; HCA 13/70 f.718v
  285. [XXX, p.9]
  286. [XXX, p.10]
  287. https://archive.org/stream/cu31924029825373#page/n49/mode/2up Henry William Henfrey, Numismata Cromwelliana: or, The medallic history of Oliver Cromwell, illustrated by his coins, medals, and seals (London, 1877), p. 32]
  288. [XXX, p.8-9]
  289. https://archive.org/stream/cu31924029825373#page/n49/mode/2up Henry William Henfrey, Numismata Cromwelliana: or, The medallic history of Oliver Cromwell, illustrated by his coins, medals, and seals (London, 1877), p. 32]
  290. [XXX, p.11]
  291. [XXX, p.11]
  292. HCA 15/6 Box 2 no fol.
  293. HCA 13/70 f.712v
  294. HCA 15/6 Box 2 no fol.
  295. HCA 15/6 Box 2 no fol.
  296. HCA 13/67 f.1r Special
  297. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1437
  298. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1463
  299. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1463
  300. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1470
  301. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1509
  302. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1468
  303. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1473
  304. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1484
  305. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1486
  306. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1511
  307. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1504
  308. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1529
  309. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1461
  310. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1420
  311. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1421
  312. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1472
  313. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1459
  314. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1526
  315. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1416
  316. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1422
  317. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1424
  318. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1440
  319. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1495
  320. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1418
  321. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1435
  322. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1523
  323. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1522
  324. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1494
  325. HCA 13/68 f.59v
  326. HCA 13/68 f.167v
  327. HCA 13/68 f.175r
  328. HCA 13/68 f.61v
  329. |HCA 13/68 f.61r
  330. |HCA 13/68 f.169r
  331. HCA 13/68 f.215r
  332. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2573]
  333. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2690]
  334. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2566]
  335. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2579]
  336. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2594]
  337. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2627]
  338. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2635]
  339. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2941]
  340. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2559]
  341. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2547]
  342. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2576]
  343. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2576]
  344. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2562]
  345. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2644]
  346. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2651]
  347. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2665]
  348. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2570]
  349. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2623]
  350. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2597]
  351. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2582]
  352. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2669]
  353. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2551
  354. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_3023
  355. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2602
  356. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2621
  357. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2639
  358. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2647
  359. Menions "Hjeronimo Brudgmans, merchant of Seville in Spaine" to be owner of silver plate and money together with "Christian Aelst merchant of Antwerpe in fflanders". See possible reference to death of Brudgmans (alt. Brughmans): XX, Verzameling den Graf- en Gedenkschriften van de Provincie Antwerpen, pt. I (Antwerpen, 1863), p.LX
  360. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2654]
  361. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2937
  362. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2590
  363. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2605
  364. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2585
  365. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2657
  366. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2659
  367. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2662
  368. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2555]
  369. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2505]
  370. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_3044]
  371. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2946}
  372. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_3019]
  373. HCA 13/70 f.712v
  374. HCA 13/70 f.731v
  375. HCA 13/70 f.715r
  376. HCA 13/70 f.134r
  377. HCA 13/70 f.137r
  378. HCA 13/70 f.753r
  379. HCA 13/70 f.714v
  380. HCA 13/70 f.733v
  381. HCA 13/70 f.142v
  382. HCA 13/70 f.387v
  383. HCA 13/70 f.435v
  384. HCA 13/70 f.725v
  385. HCA 13/70 f.140v
  386. HCA 13/70 f.755r
  387. HCA 13/70 f.720r
  388. HCA 13/70 f.724r
  389. HCA 13/70 f.709r
  390. HCA 13/70 f.713v
  391. HCA 13/70 f.733r
  392. HCA 13/70 f.139v
  393. HCA 13/70 f.754v
  394. HCA 13/70 f.145v
  395. HCA 13/70 f.728r
  396. HCA 13/70 f.713r
  397. HCA 13/70 f.732r
  398. HCA 13/70 f.717v
  399. HCA 13/70 f.746v
  400. HCA 13/70 f.749r
  401. HCA 13/70 f.734v
  402. HCA 13/70 f.754r
  403. HCA 13/70 f.136r
  404. HCA 13/70 f.141v
  405. HCA 13/70 f.756r
  406. HCA 13/70 f.148v
  407. HCA 13/70 f.751v
  408. HCA 13/71 f.593v
  409. HCA 13/70 f.712v
  410. HCA 13/70 f.731v
  411. HCA 13/70 f.715r
  412. HCA 13/70 f.134r
  413. HCA 13/70 f.137r
  414. HCA 13/70 f.753r
  415. HCA 13/70 f.714v
  416. HCA 13/70 f.733v
  417. HCA 13/70 f.142v
  418. HCA 13/70 f.387v
  419. HCA 13/70 f.435v
  420. HCA 13/70 f.725v
  421. HCA 13/67 f.1r Special
  422. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1437
  423. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1463
  424. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1463
  425. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1470
  426. HCA 13/67 f? IMG_117_07_1509
  427. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1468
  428. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1473
  429. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1484
  430. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1486
  431. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1511
  432. |HCA 13/68 f.61r
  433. |HCA 13/68 f.169r
  434. HCA 13/68 f.167v
  435. HCA 13/68 f.175r
  436. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1504
  437. HCA 13/70 f.140v
  438. HCA 13/70 f.755r
  439. HCA 13/71 f.593v
  440. HCA 13/70 f.720r
  441. HCA 13/70 f.724r
  442. HCA 13/70 f.709r
  443. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1461
  444. HCA 13/70 f.713v
  445. HCA 13/70 f.733r
  446. HCA 13/70 f.139v
  447. HCA 13/70 f.754v
  448. HCA 13/70 f.145v
  449. HCA 13/70 f.728r
  450. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1420
  451. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1421
  452. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1472
  453. HCA 13/70 f.713r
  454. HCA 13/70 f.732r
  455. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1459
  456. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1526
  457. HCA 13/70 f.717v
  458. HCA 13/70 f.746v
  459. HCA 13/70 f.749r
  460. HCA 13/70 f.734v
  461. HCA 13/70 f.754r
  462. HCA 13/70 f.136r
  463. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1416
  464. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1422
  465. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1424
  466. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1440
  467. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1495
  468. HCA 13/70 f.141v
  469. HCA 13/70 f.756r
  470. [HCA 13/69 ? Annotate|XXX
  471. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1418
  472. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1435
  473. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1523
  474. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1522
  475. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1494
  476. HCA 13/70 f.148v
  477. HCA 13/70 f.751v
  478. HCA 15/6 Box 2 no fol.
  479. HCA 15/6 Box 2 no fol.
  480. CSPD:Interregnum: Volume 26 - December and Undated, 1652. 1652
  481. CSPD:Interregnum: Volume 37 - June 1653
  482. CSPD:Interregnum: Volume 77 - December 1654
  483. CSPD:Interregnum: Volume 77 - December 1654
  484. CSPD:Interregnum: Volume 40 - September 1653
  485. A collection of the State Papers of John Thurloe, volume 1: State Papers, 1653 - November (2 of 5)
  486. HCA 13/70 f.387v
  487. HCA 13/68 f.175r
  488. HCA 13/70 f.137v
  489. HCA 13/70 f.138r
  490. HCA 13/70 f.135v
  491. HCA 13/70 f.136r
  492. HCA 13/70 f.136r
  493. HCA 13/70 f.138r
  494. HCA 13/70 f.387v
  495. HCA 13/70 f.387v
  496. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1498
  497. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1499; 1500
  498. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1498
  499. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1501; 1502
  500. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1508
  501. HCA 13/70 f.139r
  502. HCA 13/70 f.741r
  503. HCA 13/70 f.752r
  504. HCA 13/70 f.753r
  505. [[HCA 13/70 f.752r Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.144r
  506. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2495
  507. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2495
  508. HCA 13/70 f.734v
  509. HCA 13/70 f.736r
  510. HCA 13/70 f.736r
  511. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2451
  512. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2451
  513. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2452
  514. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2452
  515. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2452
  516. HCA 13/69 Silver 4 f.6v
  517. HCA 13/70 f.135r
  518. HCA 13/68 f.419r
  519. [[HCA 13/70 f.144r Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.144r
  520. [[|HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2475]]
  521. HCA 13/68 f.419v
  522. [HCA 13/69 ? Annotate|XXX
  523. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2467
  524. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2467
  525. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2468
  526. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2469
  527. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2469
  528. HCA 13/66 Silver IMG 118 07 2469
  529. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1466
  530. HCA 13/70 f.752v
  531. HCA 13/68 f.167v
  532. HCA 13/67 f.1r Special
  533. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1461
  534. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1509
  535. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2554]
  536. HCA 13/68 f.419r
  537. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1468
  538. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1473
  539. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1526
  540. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1526
  541. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_2666
  542. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1526
  543. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1526
  544. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1526
  545. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1527
  546. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2547; 2548]
  547. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2547]
  548. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2547]
  549. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2660]
  550. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1522
  551. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1526
  552. HCA 13/70 f.734v
  553. HCA 13/70 f.134r
  554. [HCA 13/69 f.? IMG_118_07_2547]
  555. HCA 13/68 f.59v
  556. HCA 13/71 f.382r
  557. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1455
  558. HCA 13/68 f.61v
  559. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1416
  560. HCA 13/68 f.175r
  561. [HCA 13/69 f.? UMG_118_07_1562]
  562. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1463
  563. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1386; 1509
  564. [HCA 13/70 f.435v Annotate|HCA 13/70 f.435v]]
  565. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1504
  566. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1505
  567. HCA 13/68 f.167v
  568. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1494; 1511
  569. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1440
  570. HCA 13/67 f.1r Special
  571. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1468
  572. HCA 13/67 f.? IMG_117_07_1470
  573. HCA 15/6 Box Two: Item: Petition of Juan de lossa Barrona a Spaniard borne in Segovia: Date: XXXX
  574. Item: Petition of Christian Cloppenburgh: Date: April 3rd 1655
  575. Item: Petition of John Martindorp: Date: April 3rd 1655