HCA 13/71 f.38v Annotate
Volume | HCA 13/71 |
---|---|
Folio | 38 |
Side | Verso |
← Previous Page | |
Status | |
First cut transcription started and completed on 22/04713 by Colin Greenstreet; edited by Jill Wilcox 23/8/13; pasted into wikispot on 28/03/14 by Colin Greenstreet | |
First transcriber | |
Colin Greenstreet | |
First transcribed | |
13/04/22 | |
Editorial history | |
Created 19/12/13, by CSG |
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Suggested links
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Transcription
1. that in foure dayes this deponent in the shipp the Unicorne of London
2. whereof hee was commander tooke in in foure dayes on the Salina's
3. aforesaid 110 sacks of cotton wools with fiftie men, and carried them
4. to Scandaroon and there steeved them, and comming back thence to Cyprus
5. this deponent with his said company laid and steeved 220 sacks in eighteene
6. dayes, which for steeveing amounted to 11 sacks and saith that a shipp of
7. the burthen of 280 tonnes having in her 100 baggs of Cyprus cotton
8. wools steeved and 40 sacks of galls steeved, may take in with 44 men
9. ˹Brian harrison SIGNATURE, LH MARGIN thirteene˺ 20 baggs more of cotton wools every day for 12 days together with
10.
11. <margin value="Left">TEXT INSERTED IN MARGIN
12. Repeated touching this alteration}
13. of 20 to thirteene before doctor}
14. Godolphin with consent of the}
15. proctors himcinde 19th XXtÿ 1655}</margin>
16.
17. ease, ˹and more˺ the weather being faire and the baggs readie ashore: and
18. saith that the said 44 men making working 16 houres in 24 houres daily for
19. 12 dayes together may lay and steeve tenn ˹twelve thirteene˺ bagges per day of cotton
20. wools, one day with another, and may within that time of twelve
21. dayes receive 40 baggs more aboard (winde and weather permitting)
22. and steeve them afterwards, And otherwise hee cannot depose.
23. Upon the rest hee is not exámined by direction of the producent.
24.
25. To the Interrogatories CENTRE HEADING
26. To the first hee saith hee cometh requested by mr Cherenets and Captaine Gadlad to
27. depose the trueth in this cause, wherein hee hath noe interest, neither
28. will it be any proffit or losse to him which of the parties soever prevaile
29. or be over throwne therein.
30. To the second hee saith hee hath bin three or foure times at Cypprus
31. steevinge cotton woolls in the said shipp Unicorne, which was of the
32. burthen of the 360 tonnes, and this deponent hath brought ˹home˺ 330 baggs
33. or thereabouts in one voyage from Cyprus and about 340 in another
34. besides fine Goods and Gawls, but never laded wholly with cottons.
35. And saith shee had 3 decks and carried 150 men, or the and this
36. deponent was last there about 15 yeares since; and saith that
37. Cyprus baggs are bigger than Smyrna baggs.
38. To the third hee saith that in two voyages hee hath made Cyprus
39. his last port of lading homewards, and in one of them another
40. voyage or two hee from Cyprus hee hath touched at Zant in
41. coming home, and otherwise negatively saving as aforesaid
42. and saying that unlesse a shipp comming from Cyprus want
43. lading or provision for her company ˹shee˺ never toucheth at Zant
44. but comes the neerest way home as aforesaid.
45. To the fourth hee saith hee doth not knowe the Thomas
46. Bonadventure interrogated, and otherwise saving his foregoing
47. deposittion to which hee referreth himselfe hee cannot depose.
48. To the 5th hee cannot depose.
49. To the 6th negatively.
50. To the 7th hee saith that there is noe other way from Cyprus
51. for England with a shipp but by the Strreights mouth. and that
52. the Thomas Bonadventure must of necessitie come that way
53. and saith that the ˹winde and˺ weather may cause that a shipp cannot keepe
54. a direct course from Cyprus but must saile sometimes on one
55. hand and sometime on the other to take the advantage of the winde
56. and may saile farr out of the way if the winde be contrary. And
57. otherwise hee cannot answer.
58. <margin value="Bottom right, under main body of text, as lead to next page">To</margin>