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A47628 Three diatribes or discourses first of travel, or a guide for travellers into forein [sic] parts, secondly, of money or coyns, thirdly, of measuring of the distance betwixt place and place / by Edward Leigh, Esq. ...; Three diatribes or discourses Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1671 (1671) Wing L1010; ESTC R12004 37,962 106

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Breves which I have purchased from France Alexandre de Rhodes in the third part of his Voyages ch 13. Speaks of Monsieur de Boulaye which hath published Vn tres beau liure de ses voyages ou il faut voir ec autant de fidelite Yanaquillus Faber in his notes on the sixth book of Lucretius c. 1. saith Lambertus Massiliensis hath left a little Book De Peregrinatione Aegyptiaca printed at Paris which he undertook 1626. que de nettete d'esprit la Conduite qu' il a monstree sans des Royaumes si differents He hath travelled over saith he the greatest part of Europe Asia and Africa I have seen that French Book also There is Alex. Geraldini Itinerarium ad regiones sub Aquinoctiali in sixteen Books There are also Relations of Divers Curious Voyages by Monsieur Thevenot There are also the Republicks of several nations in little portable books in three Tomes and Relation Du voyage de l'Eveque de Breyte per la Turquie la Perse les Indes c. jusques au Royaume de Siam autres lieux par M. de Bourges Prestre c. Both mentioned in the Philosophical Transactions I have mustered up these several Itineraries and Voyages both because I have perused most if not all of them except the two last when I was about my great book of Geography though it be not yet printed And because I suppose Travellers may hereby furnish themselves with the best writers of those parts of the world whether they intend to go either to instruct them about those places before they go or to carry with them Who ever since the beginning of things and men hath been so often by royal imployment sent Embassador to so many Princes so distant in place so different in rites as Sir Robert Sherlie There are the three English Brothers and Sir Robert Sherley his Embassy into Poland both Printed See Finets Observat page 136 137. 172 173 174 to 177. Two Emperours Rodolph and Ferdinand two Popes Clement and Paul twice the King of Spain twice the Polonian the Muscovite also have given him Audience And twice also though not the least for a born subject to be Embassador to his Soveraign his Majesty hath heard his Embassage from the remote Persian Purchas his Pilgrims part 2. l. 10. c. 10. Dr. Nicholas Wotton Uncle to Sir Henry Wotton was Privy-Counceller to four successive Soveraignes Viz. King Henry the 8th Edward the 6th Queen Mary Queen Elizabeth He was nine times Embassadour for the Crown of England to the Emperour the Kings of France and Spain and other Princes Camdens Hist of Q. Elizabeth Some have instanced in several English Embassadours how well they have acquitted themselves but I shall single out one as very deserving The Appendix to the History of Mr. Medes life Sir Thomas Rowe after many Ambassages to almost all the Princes and States in Christendome all which were managed with admirable Dexterity Success and Satisfaction was last of all Ambassador Extraordinary to Ferdinand the third Emperour of Germany who gave him this Character I have met with many Gallant Persons of many Nations but I scarce ever met with an Ambassador till now Bishop Bedell was Chaplain to Sir Henry Wotton at Venice Dr. Featly to Sir Thomas Edmonds in France Dr. John Burgesse to Sir Horatio Vere in Germany Mr. Boyle in his Preface to his Experiments touching Cold commends Captain James his Voyages it being scarce and not to be met with in Purchas's Tomes having been written some years after they were finished and his Voyages published by the last Kings command He stiles him in his Book that Ingenuous Navigator He being bred in the University and acquainted with the Mathematicks He commends also Mr. Ligon of the Barbado's Neither of these two have I seen and stiles him ingenious Mr. Ligon But enough if not too much of this Geographers who write of the four parts of the Earth are as large in Europe as in the other three Asia Africa and America To which one part all learning seemeth now to be in a manner confined which within this hundred or two hundred years hath produced so many able men of all professions Divines Lawyers Physicians and Philosophers Papists and Protestants Bolton in his Nero Caesar c. 29. sect 1. speaking of ancient Rome saith The wonder of the feat did not grow from the greatness only but from the innumerable ornaments of publick and private works erected for use delight and glory dispersed over all the fourteen wards or regions thereof Temples Forums Libraries Therms Aquaducts Theaters Amphitheaters Circi Porticus Arches Columns Statues Palaces and the rest whose bare names scarce remaining do fill up Volums with their inventories The best Circuit a Traveller can take is to go through Holland towards Germany thereby to satisfie his curiosity by degrees for Germany will afford more satisfaction than the Low-Countries France more then Germany Italy more then France Gerbiers subsidium Peregrinantibus Paris Rome and Constantinople are the Court of the World Venice Geneva and Lisbon the City Provence Andaluzia and Italy the Garden Africk and America the Desart and Wilderness Flecknoes Relation of twenty years Travels Letter 22. Johnson in his Relation of the most famous Kingdoms l. 1. of Travel adviseth a Traveller to take heed of the Pride of Spain Dr. Hall thinks Italy a dangerous place for Youth Vrsin in a Gratulatory Epistle to a friend returned out of Italy addes Ex cloaca diabolorum Necesse est peregri●aturam habere duos saccos patientiae unum pecuniae alterum Commenii Praxis Senicae par 5. Actus 4. S●ena 1. the Poyson of Italy the Treason of France and the drink of Flanders Those who have a desire to travel to Jerusalem should take heed to themselves that they make no Shipwrack of Conscience for if they come not well commended or well monyed or both there is no being for them except they partake with them in their Idolatrous Services Purchas his Pilgrimage part 2. l. 8. ch 9. Lud. Bartema Relates that they that Travel over the Desarts of Arabia which are all covered with light and fleeting Sands so that no Track can ever be found do make certain boxes of wood which they place on Camels backs and shut themselves in them to keep them from the Sands and by the help of the Load-stone like the Marriners Compass they steer their Course over the vast and uncouth Desarts The Latine the French the Sclavonick and the Arabian Tongue are known in many places For Africa Leo * Leo Af●● in rebus Africanis fere instar omnium esse potest Hosmanni mantica Leo Africanus A man of no small credit among them who are well versed in the History of the World Dr. Casaubon of Credulity and Incredulity part 1. Some say Golnitz is the best Itinerary for France le Voiageur Irancois Jodocus Sincerus his Itinerarium Gallia is well liked is
the best for the Levant Blunt is a good book to take with thee thither and some others I have before-named for Italie Scotti Capugnani Itinerarium Italiae Raimunds Mercurio Italico will be useful for France Dallingtons View of France and Mr. Evelins little book for the Polity or Government for Holland Colnitzius for Germany Zeiler Sir Benjamin Ruddierd whose discourse and speeches were full of Apothegmes was wont to say France was a good Country to ride through Let Italy glory in this that it is for pleasure the Garden of the World It may be truly said of great Britain that it is the Court and presence Chamber of the great King Esa 8.8 Ezek. 48.35 Surely few parts of all the Earth are like England for the Showers of Heaven and the Riches of the precious Ordinances of God Mr. Baxters Direct to the Converted for their Establishment Italy a good Country to look upon Spain a good Country to understand but England a good Country to live in So wishing the Traveller a prosperous Voyage There cast Anchor A Diatribe OF MONY OR COYN Printed in the Year MDCLXXI A DIATRIBE OF MONY Or COYN COyn seemeth to come from the French Coin a Corner because the ancientest sort of Coyn was cornered and not round Cowells Intepreter Coyning of Money is a special right and Prerogative of Soveraigne * Freherus in his Diatribe or Exposition of Constantines Silver Coyn saith the Roman Princes in cunenda moneta non minimam majestatis suae partem posuerunt and that Constantine the Emperour first ingraved the Crosse upon his Coyn which his successors after observed as we may see among Antiquaries Majesty Mony is as the sinews and strength of a state so the life and soul of Commerce Mony Commonly is the mean for all Commodities and answereth to all Eccles 10.19 Yet the Spaniards Coming into the West-Indies had many Commodities of the Country which they needed brought unto them by the Inhabitants to whom when they offered them Money goodly pieces of Gold Coyn the Indians taking the Mony would put it into their Mouths and spit it out to the Spaniards again signifying that they could not eat it or make use of it and therefore would not part with their Commodities for Money unless they had such other Commodities as would serve their use That Money hath been anciently used in a way of Commerce we may see Gen. 33.19 And the most ancient was the purest Gold Medals are certain pieces of Money dispersed at the Coronation of Kings They call them commonly Medallias in the Italian Spanish and French Languages saith Antoninus Augustinus De veterum numismatum Antiquitate from the Latine word Metalla since those three Languages had their Original from the Latine Pope Gregory the 13th after he had received tidings in the Consistory of the Massacres in France So in France Medals were made in remembrance of the Massacres the Image of Charles the ninth siting in his royal Throne and in one side Virtus in Rebelles and on the reverse of it the Arms of France Pietas excitavit Justitiam Horae subcesivae On some of Vespatians Coyn the State of Judea is Deciphered in form of a Captive Woman with a ruefull Aspect sitting under a Palm-Tree one thousand five hundred and seventy two went to the Church that night to give thanks made Bonfires and gloried in the bloody feats of those Emissaries having a Coyn with his own Face on one side and an Angel on the other with a Cross in one hand and a Sword in the other with this Motto Hugonothorum Strages Lewis the 12th of France a moderate Prince when his Realm was interdicted by Pope Julius the second caused Coyn to be stamped with his own image Id. Ibid. with this superscription See the Expositors on Act. 19.24 Perdam Nomen Babylonis In Athens the Tower excelled Mr. Selden before the English Historians Printed by Mr. Bee Citeth Ludovicus Paruta his Originale de Yet Mr. Selden in h●s notes on Eadmerus saith Caeterum ad vetustum Archiepiscoparum in Cantuaria jus spectat etiam forsan priscunumisma cujus pars altra Plegmundi Archiepiscopi altera Eicmundi cusoris nomine signata est vide plura Ibid. in which there was a Temple to Minerva Juleus Pollux writes that the Attick tetradrachme was stamped with the face of Minerva and he might have added with the Noctua on the reverse Mr. Greaves of the Denarius Hugh Broughton said it was portended by his Arms that he should be a Grecian for he gave the house Athens There is a Medal in Oxford made upon the sinking of the Spanish ships in 88. Goltzius is the most copious best writer about Medals with a Navy on one side and a Rock on the other See Cambdens Annals The Lydians first invented Gold and Silver Money Janus Brass Money Gutherius * De Officio Domus Augustae l. 3. c. 1. Bonitas Monetae est intriuseca vel extrinseca Intrinseca consistit in preciositate materiae in pondere Extrinseca bonitas consistit in aestimatione publica vel voluntariam Contrahentium Angelocrator De Monetas c. 2. out of Isidore saith three things are required in Money the Metal the Figure and the Weight Gold is the most excellent of all Metals saith Georgius Agricola Gold hath Greatness of Weight Closeness of Parts Fixation Pliantness or Softness Immunity from Rust Colour or Tincture of Yellow Sir Francis Bacon's Natural History Centuary 4. Experiment 328. Martiall calls Gold Yellow Mony The pureness and fineness of the Coyns and the weight for the intrinsick and the outward form or Character and inscription of the Prince or State for the Extrinsick of Coyns is observed by knowing bankers Mr Greaves of the Denarius Has nisi de flaxa loculos implere moneta Non decet argentum vilia ligna ferant Silver is next to it it is not consumed in the fire It is more ductile than any other metal except Gold It s white colour is delightful Yet Budaeus De Contemptu Rerum Fortuitorum l. 3. saith well At Vsu sublato quid tandem aurum argentum aliis praestat metallis Diligent inquiring into Coyns Felix sine diphthongo Consensus librorum nummorum Fecundus sine diphthongo Eadem monum enta antiqua Dilherri Apparatus Philologiae Vide Vossii Etymologicon Linguae Latinae Melius scribitur hoc nomen cum aspiratione Hadrianus nam ita nummi lapides Constanter Casaub notae in Aelii Spartiani Hadrianum Scilicet ex statuis numis atibusque cognoscere licet qualis fuerit vultus habitusque clarorum virorum faeminarumque illustrium quorum nos actiones auditae delectant qua forma fuerint Dii de aeque Heroes prisci cum suis illis insignibus Cujusmodi fuerint sive ornamenta sive instrumenta religionum bellornm magistratuum Coronae Curras triumphi sed ilia inumeraquc id genus alia Vide Gassendii
THREE DIATRIBES OR DISCOURSES First of Travel Or a Guide for Travellers into Forein Parts Secondly Of Money or Coyns Thirdly Of Measuring of the Distance betwixt Place and Place By Edward Leigh Esq and Mr. of Arts of Magdalene-Hall in Oxford Teucri vox apud Ciceronem Tuscul quaest l. 5 Socrates cum rogaretur Cujatem se esse diceret Mundanum inquit totius enim mundi seincolam civem arbitrabatur Cicero ibid. LONDON Printed for William Whitwood at the sign of the Golden Bell in Duck-Lane near Smithfield 1671. The Epistle DEDICATORY To his deservedly Honoured Friend Francis Willughbie Esq SIr Since I have had the happiness to be known to you my Habitation being not far distant from yours I have found so much Candour and Civility in you that I thought I needed not to seek further for a person to whom I should dedicate this little Tract of Travel and Coyns you having Travelled into the most famous Countries of Europe Mr. Firth in his Sts. Monument reports of my Lord Willughbies eldest Son that he had seen Rome though he was not at all tainted with her errours he brought over many of the rarities of other Nations but none of their sins and being inquisitive after all Curiosities also improved your travel both to the acquiring and knowledge of Coyns and many other rarities some of which you were pleased formerly to shew me and others and have for the better completing of this Treatise communicated to me several Observations about Forein coyns especially I would our Gentry generally were more studious and would spend their time as profitably as you and some others do That would confirm what Mr. Burton in his Melancholly Part 1. Sect. 2. Subsect 15. observes of some of our English Gentry that they are excellently well learned like those Fuggeri in Germany Du Bartas Duplessis Sadael in France Picus Mirandula Scottus Barottus in Italy There is an Honourable Gentleman Robert Boye Esq now of the Royal Society whereof you are likewise a worthy Member who hath Travelled abroad to good purpose and by his Philosophical Experimenta Fructi fera Luci. fera Experiments and other useful Treatises hath much honoured the Nation I may here relate what I have heard from a very worthy Divine that he never knew a Family wherein the Men and Women both were of so obliging a Carriage and of such great abilities There is also a learned Knight and Baronet Sir Nor●on Knatchball of this Parliament mentioned among the Benefactors to the Polyglott Bible who hath written Critical notes in Latine on the New Testament I shall onely adde this that it may seem strange for me to publish a Discourse of Money who when I had the honour to be a Member of the House of Commons was alwaies silent when that Subject came into debate Sir Your Affectionate Friend to serve you Edward Leigh TO THE Candid READER REader It is said of Ulysses Qui mores hominum multorum vidit urbes Horat. De Arte Poetica Yet I would not have thee read my Discourse of Travel Peregrinante animo The Commodity which comes to humane Societies by the Travells of prudent pious and well governed persons is very great The Apostles the Disciples of Christ and also their Disciples and many others have gon through a great part of the World to convert the Gentiles So if a Voyage be undertaken to know the rites and customes of several places and the forms of Cities as the Roman Decemviri were sent to Greece that they might know the Laws of that Countrey and especially Solons Pythagoras Plato Apollonius did go into divers Countries to increase their knowledge Diodorus Siculus Strabo Travelled into several parts of the World that they might be acquainted with the History and Scituation of those places Pausanias He hath written that excellent book of the Monuments and Antiquities of Greece remaining in his time compassed Greece Arrianus the Euxine Sea and Cluverius Travelled into many Countries of Europe that they might more exactly describe those parts The knowledge of Languages hath incited many to Travel Vossius De Orig. Prog. Idololat l. 3. c. 37. instanceth in Jacobus Golius that famous Arabist who not satisfied with the instruction of Thomas Erpinus in the Arabick Language In Aethiopicis operam impendebat ●uam D. M. Wanslebius qui ad perpoliendum ejus in iisdem ingenium in varias orientis oras longa atque periculosa suscepit Itinera D. Cast Praelat ad Lexic Heptaglot Christianus Rarius Clenard and Warner travelled ar for the same purpose Dr. Casaubon of Credulity and Incredulity part 1. saith that Jo. Ernestus Burgravius professeth to have travelled the greatest part of Europe to satisfie his Curiosity Erasmus in his Colloquia entitles one of them Peregrinatio Religionis ergo went first into Mouritania and being chosen Successor to Erpenius in his place after his death he took a long Voyage into Syria and there staid till he had perfected his skill in that Language I may very well here mention our worthy professor of the Hebrew and Arabick Tongues in Oxford Dr. Edward Pocock who was long abroad at Aleppo and other places on the same account Where he so demeaned himself that he was very much respected by the Natives and chosen for an Vmpire amongst them to compremise such differences as fell out there The learned works he hath published give ample Testimony of the skil he attained in the Arabick especially by that long Voyage The Jesuits themselves and others write much how industrious the Jesuits were in the propagation of the Christian Faith and how they have sown the seed of saving truth in China or elsewhere Mr. Baxter in the 2d part of his last Book of Christianity c. 14. p. 488. saith The attempts of the Jesuits in Congo Japon and China were a very noble work and so were the Portugal Kings encouragements but two things spoiled their success First That when they took down the Heathens Images they set them up others in their stead and made them think that the main difference was but whose Image they should worship Secondly But especially that they made them see that while they pretended to promote Religion and to save their souls they came to promote their own wealth or the Popes Dominion and to bring their Kings under a Forein power The honest attempts of Mr. Eliots in new-New-England is much more agreeable to the Apostles way Videsis Voretii Disputat Select Theol. partem fecundum De Gentilismo pag. 650. and maketh more serious spiritual Christians Justus Heurnius son to John Heurnius the learned Physician left the study of Physick and wholly gave himself to the study of Divinity that thereby he might be the better inabled to promote the Conversion of the Indians and taking an Evangelical Embassie to the Indies he there abode above 14 Years preaching to the Indians in their Mother Tongue Catechising them and admonishing them privately and by his singular
for which she gave them money of the purest silver such as passed commonly by the name of Easterling or Sterling money Esterlingus Sterlingus apad Matthaum Parisium atque alios praecipue Anglicanos scriptores legas Nec tamen eo rejiciendum quando hoc nihilo deterius est quam vulgata illa vocabula daleri ducati floreni ac similia Nam peouniae novitas nova exigebat vocabula Notat ea vox Anglis denarium vox Sterling est ex eo inqu it Watsius quia stellae figura in ea compareret Vossius de Vitiis Sermonis l. 2. c. 5 since which time no base money hath been Coyned in England but only of pure Gold and Silver to pass for current in the same save that of late times in relation to the Necessity of poor people a permission hath been given to the Coyning of Farthings which no man can be forced to accept in satisfaction of a Rent or Debt In all other States of the Christian World there are several sorts of Copper money as current with them for publick uses as the purest metal Queen Elizabeth supplyed the King of Navarre in his straits with twenty two thousand pounds of English money in Gold a sum of Gold Coyn so great as he professed he had never seen together before and sent him Arms and four thousand men under the Command of Peregrine Lord Willoughbey Camdens Annals of Queen Elizabeth 4th Book Anno 1589. the 32d of her Reign Sterlings are used in England Scotland and Ireland That name of Sterling began in time of Hen. II. and had its original of name from some Esterling making that kind of money which hath its Essence in particular weight and fineness not of the Starling Bird as some nor of Sterling in Scotland under Edw. 1. as others absurdly for in Records much more ancient I have read the express name Sterlingorum Mr. Selden on the 17th song of Draytons Poly-olbion Sterling is a proper Epithete for money currant within the Realm Occurrit Esterlingus interdum simpliciter pro ipso denario interdum ad distinguendam monetam probam a re proba pro numo legali ingenere Spelmanni Glossarium vide plura ibid. A certain pure Coyn stamped first of all by the Esterlings here in England Cowells Interpreter Esterling money now called Sterling not from Striveling in Scotland nor from a Star which some dreamed to be Coyned thereon Camdens Remains That denomination came from the Germans of their Easterly dwelling termed by English men Esterlings whom John King of England first sent to reduce the silver to the due fineness and purity Camdens Britain in Scotland There is one Thomas Hylles that put out the Art of Vulgar arithmetick 1600. who hath p. 262. A Table of the names and values of the most usual Gold Coyns in Christendome and begins with our own Country Gold He mentions the Rose Noble or Royal Half Rose Noble Old Noble Half Old Noble George Noble Half George Noble Angel Half Angel Old Crown K. H. Base Crown K. H. Half Crown Soveraigne of K. H. other Sou. of all sorts Double Soveraign Great Soveraign Half Soveraigne Unicorn of Scotland Scottish Crown There is for † The English Gold being at a higher value beyond the Seas then in our own Nation it is a great Cause of the transportation of it Peachams Worth of a Peny Gold The Carolus or Piece 20 s And the Ginie Pieces 22 s The Angel 10 11 s And Crown 5 s. 5 s. 6 d. and 2 s. 9 d. For Silver The Crown 5 s. Half Crown 2 s. 6 d. Thirteen pence half penny   Half and quarter that and 4 d. ob Shilling 12 d.   9 d.   6 d. Groat 4 d. Three Pence 3 d. Two Pence 2 d. Penny † There are so many kinds of Pence as there are several Countries or Nations Our English Penny is a Scottish Shilling See more there Ibid. 1 d. Half-Penny ob Here in England that which was sold about an hundred years agone for ten Groats which then weighed and ounce now since the discovery of the Indies can hardly be bought for ten shillings of our current Money or two ounces of the same goodness and weight Sir Henry Savill on a Place in Polybius In the Low-Countries and Germany the usual Coyns in Gold are Duckats and double Duckats the Duckats are called Hungars at Venice and are worth nine shillings English In the Low-Countries the usual silver pieces are Ducatoons equal to ten Dutch shillings or sixty stivers Paracoons equal forty eight stivers or eight Dutch shillings Shillings equal to six stivers But the States money is a little under this value stiver in brass the fourth part of stivers pieces In Germany the most Common pieces in silver are Dollars Copsticks and half Copsticks equal just to our shillings and six-pences Tafiletta the great Emperour of Barbary allows to every Horseman sixteen Dollars a Month and to every Footman eight so that his men are not chargeable to the Countrey Relation of some part of his life and there is abundance of our shillings and sixpences which pass under that name This word Copstick comes from Caput as the Italian Teston from Testa Kreutzers so called from the Mark of the Cross Weiss-penny equal to two Kreutzers Grasse equal to three Kreutzers ten Weiss-pennies are equal to five Copsticks Guilders equal to three Copsticks and half Guilders a Weiss-penny a White Penny in Dutch these lesser peices are of a mixt metal The German Dollars furnisht all the Mints of Europe The German silver Dollar called Rix Dollar in England is worth 4 s. 6 d. or as some say 4 s. 8 d. before the Mines of Mexico and Potosi were discovered in America There were the Latine Attick and Greek pounds Libra Numaria or pound Spelmanni Glossarium See Ezra 2.69 took its name from the weight because it weighed in times past a Trojane pound that is twelve Ounces Thence the Saxon punde and the English pound The pound sterling in Britain saith Angelo Crator De Monetis c. 1. is esteemed ten Brabantine Florenes or four Spanish Dollars In Spain for Gold † The Spanish Pistoll is about seven pence better than the Italian The value of Money in Spain is very often varied according to the wills and Interests of the Princes Pistolls and half Pistolls and double Pistolls In Silver the common pieces there are a piece of eight a half piece of eight a quarter piece of eight a half quarter piece of eight and a piece that is but a sixteenth part of a piece of the Royal eight In France for Gold the common pieces are the Lewis equal not many years since to eleven Livers the half Lewis half so much The Escud ' or now about six Livers For Silver the Escue equal to three Livers the thirty fifteen and five Sous pieces The Quart D'Escu because the fourth part of the Escud ' or equal
to one Liver Mixt metal the Souse and the Souse Marque For Brass the Denier and the Lyard eequal to two Deniers at first stamp'd for three Deniers Johnson adviseth Travellers if they carry over money with them that it be in double Pistolets or French Crowns of weight by these saith he He is sure to sustain losse in no place and in Italy to gain above twelve pence in the pound Bizantines or Bezants Constantinopolis primum Bizantium dicta formam antiqui vocabuli praeferunt Imporatorii Nummi Bizantini Vocati Spelmanni Glossarium Vide Cotgrave Dictionar Gallico Anglic verbe Besant as coyned at Constantinople somtimes called Bizantium and not at Besanson in Burgundy plates of Gold are called Bezantes and in the Court of England where a great piece of Gold valued at fifteen pound which the King offereth upon high Festivall days is yet called a Bizantine which anciently was a piece of Gold Coyned by the Emperours of Constantinople Camdens Remains of money in his Britannia in Middlesex He speaks of Bizantines of Silver vallued at two shillings antiently Lar is a Coyn much used in the East both in Persia and the East-Indies There is one of them to be seen within the Gallery above the publick Library in Oxford The Asper in Turkie is worth a Peny Turkish Asper and often mentioned one of which I have seen In Italy at Venice for Gold there is the Chequeen equal to seventeen Livers the Ducat for silver a Scudo which by a Bando anno 1663 was rated at nine Livers six Sous one half one quarter and the eighth part of a Scudo a Ducaton For brass Soldo and half Soldo and Soldino also a Denier Genoa for Gold double Pistolls Pistolls The Pistoll is called Doppio or Dobla the double Pistoll Doblone The silver pieces there are a Croison or Scudo For Brass D' otto pieces equal to eight Deniers de Quatro equal to four Deniers and the Deniers At Florence for silver the Scudo equal to ten Julios the Teston equal to three Julios so called from having a Head upon it which is in Italian Testa Julios half Julios and Quarto Julio pieces the Grats equal to five Quatrins In Brass the Quatrin equall to the third part of a Soldo In the Popes Territories in silver a Scudo equal to ten Julios a Teston Julio half a Julio and a quarter of a Julio At Banonia Bajocks * The Pope who hath six and twenty thousand Crowns a day to spend on the day of his Coronation scattereth among the people Baiocchi and Bagatini half pence and farthings saying with St. Peter Act. 3.6 Silver and Gold I have none but such as I have I give thee Peter Du Moulius Confutat of Lurgat ch 5. and two Bajocks pieces of a mixt metal Naples in silver Carolines equal to ●ulios but not altogether so good two Caroline pieces In Brass Granos Publicas equal to one and a half of a Grano There are pieces of Gold called Florentini or Floreni Florens because first coyned in the City of Florence and having the shape of the flower of the Lilly in one side and of John Baptist in the other it is called in Italian Florino Vossius de Vitiis Sermonis l 3. c. 12. saith that the French had also in times past its Florene thence called Franc saith he A Franc is one shilling six pence in England so is a Livre saith he and the English also of the best Gold thence called † Auri Nummis apud Anglos geuus ante nostram memoriam Exoletum Spelmanni Glossarium Noble There were also the Rhenish Florens first coyned by the four Electors at Rhene that of Mentz Trevers Colen and the Palatine after used by others somthing inferiour to those first The pieces of Gold called Ducats were first coyned by the Venetians and those of Genoa There are saith Georgius Agricola the Hungarian Venetian The Polomans Gold Ducats are of the same value with the Hungarian Spanish and Turkish Ducats Artiabalipa King of Peru payed for his ransom ten millions three hundred twenty six thousand Ducats in Gold Du miroir des Francois Liure premier The Turkish Sultanie is of the same Standard firmness and value with the Hungarian Duckat The Venetian Chequeen in England 9 s. 6 d. the Barbary Duckat the Egyptian and Turkish Erif are almost all of the same pureness in respect of the Gold MGreaves of the Denarius and not differing above a grain in the weight The old Denarius The Giulii or Pauli are two names of the same price from two Popes Drachma Dutch shilling Spanish Reall Roman Julios or Paulos are neer of an equal value The French Escu or silver Crown the Spanish Piice of eight the German Dollar the Low-Dutch Patacon are of an equal value Mr. Broughton saith he asked a simple Mariner which had been in the West-Indies what they called Gold there he said Cethem just the Scripture term Broughtons Epistle to the Require or Consent to the grounds of Divinity studies Their currant money in the West-Indies is of the fruites of certain trees like our Almonds which they call Cachoas Pet. Mart. first Decade ch 4. The Coyns of the West-Indies are Wampon Peague the sixth part of a penny with us which goes by number and Ronokco which goes by weight In the East-Indies the Rupihes of Ropees of divers values and Mah Mudies They have in the West-Indies also a Golden Coyn which they call a Castellan it exceedeth the Ducaet it is commonly a third part called Pesus The Coyn or Bullion brought to the East-Indies from any place is presently melted and refined and the Moguls stamp which is his Name and Titles in Persian Characters put upon it The Coyn there is more pure than in any other part of the world being made of pure silver without any Allay Sir Thomas Roes Voyage into the East-Indies Madines are the small silver Money currant in Egypt The Arabick useth to express the least piece of money that is by Phals for two Mites Mark 12.42 They read Phalsam Mr. Greaves in his Denarius saith at his being in Egypt five Madines passed for a Dollar Sands in his Travels saith forty Most Countries saith Mr. Greaves use the same weights for Silks Gold and Silver The Persians loved shooting so well Pliny l. 7. c. 5. writeth that Perses the son of Persius of whom the Persians had their Surname Should be the first deviser of Shafts Yet the Scripture which is ancienter then any kind of learning mentions Archers Gen. 21.20 1 Sam. 31.3 2 Chron. 35.23 that they set an Archer on the reverse of their Coyn of Gold which was of great value The King of Persia being offended at Agesilaus gave the Athenians ten thousand pieces of this great Coyn of Gold of theirs and so corrupted them which thing when Agesilaus understood he said merrily but yet truly That he was driven away with ten thousand Bowmen