Difference between revisions of "MRP: Canaries"

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===Notes===
 
===Notes===
  
Canary wine was frequently sent to Sir George Oxenden and other at the Surat factory as a gift, accompanying letters
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Canary wine was frequently sent to Sir George Oxenden and others at the Surat factory as a gift, accompanying letters
  
 
- Cesar Chambrelan, writing to Sir George Oxenden from Carwar, mentions  a dozen bottles of french wine and 2 dozen bottles of Canary which Chambrelan’s father asks Sir George Oxenden to accept from him<ref>[[MRP: 30th November 1663, Letter from Cesar Chambrelan to Sir GO, Carwar|30th November 1663, Letter from Cesar Chambrelan to Sir GO, Carwar]]</ref>
 
- Cesar Chambrelan, writing to Sir George Oxenden from Carwar, mentions  a dozen bottles of french wine and 2 dozen bottles of Canary which Chambrelan’s father asks Sir George Oxenden to accept from him<ref>[[MRP: 30th November 1663, Letter from Cesar Chambrelan to Sir GO, Carwar|30th November 1663, Letter from Cesar Chambrelan to Sir GO, Carwar]]</ref>

Revision as of 12:10, December 27, 2011

Canaries

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27/12/11, CSG: Created page





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Notes


Canary wine was frequently sent to Sir George Oxenden and others at the Surat factory as a gift, accompanying letters

- Cesar Chambrelan, writing to Sir George Oxenden from Carwar, mentions a dozen bottles of french wine and 2 dozen bottles of Canary which Chambrelan’s father asks Sir George Oxenden to accept from him[1]

- Paul French, a London merchant, sent a case of canary wine to Mathew Gray in Surat. ------There is á Case of Canary for M:r Gray (if liveing w:ch God Grant) if not pray please to except of it in Custody of Cap:t ffisher m’ked in y:e wood GM:[2]

- Henry Dawes and Hugh Squire included an invoice with a letter to Sir George Oxenden for six cases of canary wine"[3]

Humphrey Giffard praised the Canaries as a source of sack, in contrast with clarets from France:

- pray God in heaven conferme it by his power & goodness, That o:e Noble brave King & kingdome may flourish in a lasting peace & prosperity, the East India trade, & all be advanced to y:e height of yo:e Ambition shipps of Golde flow in daylie from Affrica, silver from America, silks from Italie, ?sackes from Canaries, Clarets from ffrance, suger from Portugall, etc from etc, & nothing from Holland[4]



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  1. 30th November 1663, Letter from Cesar Chambrelan to Sir GO, Carwar
  2. 26th March 1663, Letter from Paul Ffrench to Sir GO
  3. 14th April 1667, Letter from Henry Dawes & Hugh Squire to Sir GO, London, Letter 2
  4. April 1667, Letter from Humphry Gyffard to Sir GO