HCA 13/72 f.389v Annotate
Volume | HCA 13/72 |
---|---|
Folio | 389 |
Side | Verso |
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Status | |
Uploaded image; transcribed on 27/11/2013 | |
Note | |
IMAGE: IMG_121_11_5104.JPG | |
First transcriber | |
Colin Greenstreet | |
First transcribed | |
2013/11/27 |
Contents
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Transcription
To the 11th hee saith hee being master of her the voyage in
question knoweth that the Mary and Joyce did come from Barbary
to the Canaries and that the arlate Thomas Warren had a great
interest in a great quantitie of wines which were laden aboard
the sayd shipp about the same tyme the sayd forty pipes of wine were
laden aboard her by the sayd de herrera as aforesayd And saith
the arlate William Warren the brother of the sayd Thomas went
Supracargo of the sayd shipp the voyage in question And further
hee cannot depose/
To the 12th 13th 14th and 15th articles of the sayd alleagtion hee saith
that the sayd forty pipes pf wine being as aforesayd laden by
the sayd da herrera at Oratava aboard the Mary and Joyce shee
departed thence with them and other her ladeing of wynes and
other goods bound for London and in her course thitherwards
was with the sayd forty pipes of wine aboard her and other her
ladeing seized by two men of warr Commissioned (as the
Captaines and Companyes gave out) by the King of Spaine for
seizing the shipps and goods of the subiect sof the Commonwealth
of England, of which ffrigotts the arlate Jacob Bolart and
John Van Sluce were or gave out themselves to bee Commanders, and as they sayd and gave
out the sayd ffrigotts belonged to dunkirke and Ostend, which
Captaines with their sayd ffrigotts having made seizure of the
Mary and Joyce and the sayd fforty pipes of wyne and other her lading
neere the North Cape carried her and her lading and Company
aboard her into the Groyne in Galisia And further to those
articles hee cannot depose of certayne knowledge for that hee was
gone from the Groyne (before the wynes arlate or any of them
were taken out of the Mary and Joyce and put aboard the Elizabeth arlate)
a passenger in a fflemish shipp for Rotchell, but saith hee
verily beleeveth divers of the wines laden aboard the Mary and
Joyce and amongst others the sayd fforty pipes soe laden by the
sayd de herrera Leyva or a great part of them were put aboard
the Elizabeth and shee surprized with them aboard her by some
shipp belonging to the Commonwealth of England for that
hee coming from Rotchell to London sawe a shipp called the
Elizabeth lying in the River of Thames with a great many
of the sayd forty pipes of wyne soe laden by sayd de herrera
aboard the Mary and Joyce at the Canaries and other
wines aboard her, and having the same markes upon them as
are