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A54682 The antiquity, legality, reason, duty and necessity of præ-emption and prourveyance, for the King, or, Compositions for his pourveyance as they were used and taken for the provisions of the Kings household, the small charge and burthen thereof to the people, and the many for the author, great mischiefs and inconveniences which will inevitably follow the taking of them away / by Fabian Philipps. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1663 (1663) Wing P2004; ESTC R10010 306,442 558

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of the King Arch-Bishops Earls Barons and the most eminent men of the Kingdome with candles or torches burning in their hands in Westminster Hall denouncing excommunication direfull curses and Anathema's against the Infringers thereof by the candles or torches flung upon the ground and wishing that so their souls might burn in hell And the same Magna Charta being by thirty Parliaments since confirmed and accompted to be part of the peoples Birthright It can be no less then the greatest of reason that those his Liberties and Priviledges mentioned and agreed therein should be as well preserved unto him as those of the people unto them and with the greater reason in that his were alwaies his own and many of theirs but newly granted them And that he was not in the confirming of Magna Charta without some care of preserving his own rights and priviledges as appeareth by his Writ or Proclation better in former times then now obeyed sent unto the Sheriff of York in these words Cum probis hominibus nostris libertates concesserimus per Cartas nostras in quibus continetur that which we have of that excellent Law and Charter being by many learned men believed to be but a Transcript quòd nihilomninus salve sint omnibus libertates liberae consuetudines quas prius habuerunt libertates nostras de quibus maxime specialis mentio in Cartis praedictis facta non est nobis volumus inviolabiliter observari unde tibi districtè praecipimus quatenus omnes libertates nostras usitatas tempore domini Johannis Regis patris nostri quas quidem nobis non subtrahimus ex speciali mentione facta in praedictis Cartis nobis facias firmiter observari nullius obstante reclamatione sicut usitatae fuerunt temporibus antecessorum nostrorum maxime tempore predicti patris nostri wherein he having granted that their Liberties which they had before should not be prejudiced commanded him that all his Liberties and Priviledges which were not specially mentioned and granted away in those Charters should be specially observed notwithstanding any allegation to the contrary as they were used and accustomed in the times of his Ancestors and especially in the Reign of his Father King John For the reason which gives Aaron and his Sons the Clergie their Tythes and Pourveyance should perswade the people to think the Composition for Pourveyance to be no burden when as it is as short of the Tithes as one unto a hundred And it should be reason if any thing can be reason and it be not fled after Astraea into the upper Regions and left some counterfeit and false resemblance instead of it that all or many or most of the males and men of England and such as in the Court Leets and elswhere have taken the Oath of Allegiance which all the men of England and their generations are so born under as by the Laws and Customes of England it is and ought to be as Connaturall and Congaeniall unto them and the Oath of Supremacy to maintain and defend the Kings Rights and Jurisdictions and all the Citizens and Freemen of London and other Cities and Corporations of England taking an Oath to the like purpose all the Freeholders of the Kingdome holding of him immediately swearing in their homage and fealty to doe him service and be faithfull unto him all the Copiholders holding of him swearing unto him their Fealty and all the Freeholders and such as hold of their mesne Lords by Knights service or Socage in their homage and fealty unto them excepting their allegiance and duty to the King should have as great a care not to deny him those parts of his Jurisdictions Praeeminences and just rights as they would not to perjure and forswear themselves or bring the curses and woes attending such grievous sins or the breach of that part of Magna Charta upon the heads of them and their posterities which a Kings assent to any Acts of Parliament for the taking away or extinguishing such individua annexa Coronae jure diadematis potestatis atque authoritatis inseparable parts of Majesty and the Rights of his Crown Regal power and Prerogative If any Law or Sanction could enable him to that which all Laws both Civil and Common doe deny will not be sufficient to acquit or discharge for although the dispensation of Oathes by those to whom and for whose benefit they were made be in some cases allowed by the Canon Law and some Roman Casuists doe believe that violation of oathes have been well dispensed withall by those for whose interest and benefit they were made it will not be hard to determine in the greatest veneration of Parliaments which are to be obeyed actively or passively and of whose acts no man is so much as to think evil that Laws of that kind when they shall be by importunities and necessities made or enacted against the Lawes of God and right reason cannot give an absolution for oathes violated nor if they could be excused for the not payment of those most necessary duties to their King and common Parent in foro humano in this world will ever be excused in foro animae in the next And if the Parliament in Anno 18 Eliz. took it to be for the good of the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge that the Colleges Halls and Houses for Students therein should receive the third part of their Rents in Corn and Mal● and ordered them so to doe and that their Tenants who had then have since such comfortable Bargains and Leases under them as every man is glad to purchase or get them and inroll themselves for their Tenants wherein if a deer year comes once in 7 or 10 years and their Bargains happen to be so much the worser as the prises which are to be ruled according as the like was sold the Market day next before the Rent day exceeds the former or cheaper prices the yearly profit notwithstanding of their Lands being alwaies more then the Rent and six or nine cheap years to one may pacifie their complaints or grudgings the King certainly may expect as much or more care to be had of him and his house-keeping as there was of the Universities Colledges and Halls and not to be denied in his particular of Pourveyance or compositions for it that which every man thinks reasonable in his own Nor to be made so great a sufferer under those heaps of mischiefs and inconveniencies which by the great and excessive rates and prises put upon victuals and household provisions daily more and more encreasing doe assault and lessen his too smal a Revenue Neither should be rendred more helpless and in a worser condition then the Lords of Leets Sheriffs in their Turns Justices of Peace in their Counties Magistrates in Cities and Towns Corporate Judges in their Circuits the University of Oxford who hath liberty to punish the breakers of the Assise of Bread Beer and Ale and
subdued and conquered as they were enforced to be shaved and wear their hair shorter their Lands being given away to his Normans the greatest part of the Nobility and Gentry extirped many of the common people glad to be vassals and Tenants to those Lands which before were their own and had nothing to recompence their losses but the retaining of their good old Laws and their Masters and Conquerors having gathered all the money and riches of the Kingdom into their Chests and possessions there was after the harrassed English had gained some peace and that the long languishing Olive branches began again to recover their Sap and Verdure so small an improvement of the rent of Land amongst the Normans plenty of money as in the valuation of Lands in the sixteenth year of the raign of William the Conqueror there was such a wonderful small value put upon Lands fifty or sixty and more to one less then it is now the commodities and Cattel raised thereupo● being in all probability proportionable thereunto as in Drayton no unfruitful place in Cambridgeshire the Abbot of Croyland had fourteen or fifteen yard Lands twelve Villaines three Bordmen three Soccage Tenants and two Meadows which in the time of Edward the Confessor were of the value of five pounds per annum and at that time but four pounds and ten shillings In the Raign of King Henry the first which began his Raign in the year of our Lord one thousand one hundred when the Normans had something more improved their Lands and possessions their plenty of money made out of the English miseries did not banish their cheapness of victuals and provisions but left them at those small rates of one shilling for the Carcase of an Ox and four pence for a sheep and no more for the Provender of twenty horses the Denarius or English penny then being probably as the Roman which was but the fourth part of an ounce of Silver which in coyn or money made no more then twenty pence In the latter end of the Raign of King Richard the first who began his Raign in Anno Domini one thousand one hundred eighty nine and after his redemption from his imprisonment by the Emperor of Germany in his return from the Holy Land when money was so scarce in England as to make up the sum of one hundred thousand Marks for his ransome the Church Plate and Chalices were pawned an Oxe or Cow was but of the price of four shillings a Hogg ten pence a sheep of the finer Wooll ten pence and six pence of the courser In the Raign of King Edward the first whose raign commenced in the year of our Lord God one thousand two hundred fifty two when there was as much plenty of mony as peace and an increase of Trade under his ●appy and prudent Government Scotland conquered and subdued and such a plenty of money as some Esterlings or men of Germany from whom our Sterling money is well conjectured by Sir Henry Spelman to receive its denomination were here imployed to coyn our money the Market price of an Oxe was eight shillings and six pence twenty six seames or sums or horse-loads or quarters of Barley was at fourty three shillings a quarter of Oats for fourteen pence and the yearly value of an Acre of Meadow was in Buckinghamshire apud altum firmam at the Rack but eight pence per Acre and so small a power had the plenty of mony then upon the price of victuals as upon the payment of mony agreed to be paid upon a Bond or Deed which was not likely to be for any long time as the Case at Law tempore E. 1. Cited in 9. E. 4. informs us the price of a quarter of Barley which was at the time of the making of the Bond or Deed but three shillings a quarter was before the time of payment for it come to be thirty and two shillings a quarter which might happen from some other causes and not at all by reason of any extraordinary store of money which the Kingdom was then blessed withal In the eighth year of the Raign of King Edward the second which was in the year of our Lord God one thousand three hundred and fifteen a Parliament was assembled at London where all or most of the Prelates and great Lords of England were with the Commons assembled ●aith Thomas Walsingham ad tractandum de statu regni alleviatione rerum venalium a matter now mo●e then ever necessary to consult of the State of the Kingdom and the taking down the price of victuals which saith Walsingham was then so high ut vix posset vivere plebs communis as the common people could scarce live and would have been in a worse condition if the Landlords had then let their Lands at the Rack or beyond the value as many of them do now and many of the houshold provisions had been sold as they are now more then twenty times and others ten or fifteen times more then they were then where it was ordained that an Ox not fed with grain should be sold for sixteen shillings and if with grain and fat for four and twenty shillings and no more a fat Cow of the best sort for twelve shillings a fat Hogg of two years old three shillings and four pence a Mutton fat and shorn for fourteen pence and for one that was unshorn one shilling eight pence a Goose for two pence half penny a Hen for a penny and four Pigeons for a penny And though immediately after in the same year there followed such a very great famine as Flesh and Corn were scarcely to be had Hens and Geese seldom found Pigs and Swine wanted Food and Sheep dyed of the Rot or Murrain yet a quarter of Malt was sold for a Mark and a quarter of Corn for twenty shillings and upon the great dearth which happened in the next year after making such a famine as Horse-flesh was good Diet for the poor and causing a repeal of the Act of Parliament which was made the year before touching the price of Victuals three quarts of strong Beer was then sold for three pence and of small for two pence which in that sad and horrid famine the Magistrates of London understood to be so unreasonable as they prohibited it to be sold at so high a rate in the City and ordained that no more then three half pence should be taken for three quarts of strong Beer and a penny for small and the King by his Proclamation likewise commanded that in all parts of the Kingdom three quarts of Beer should not be sold for more then a penny In the 21. year of the Raign of King Edward the third notwithstanding any enhaunce of prices made or occasioned by the great famine which was in the eight and ninth years of the Raign of King Edward the second his Father and the continuance of it for four or five years
of the County and enter into Recognizances not to forestall or ingross provided that all Cities and Towns Corporate may assigne and licence Pourveyors for their provisions Which power of regulating weights and measures and reduction of victuals to reasonable prices and rates was no stranger in Ireland whither many if not all of our then Laws were transmitted by King John by exemplification unde● his great Seal of England and all our Laws reasonable Customes and Acts of Parliament both before and afterwards were by Act of Parliament called Poynings Act or Law allowed and enacted to be Laws in that Kingdome in the Reign of our King Henry the seventh Nor in Scotland where the assises of weights and measures were ordained by King James the first in Parliament in Anno Domini 1426. And it was also ordained by King James the second in Parliament that Schireffes Bayllies and uther officiars baith to burgh and to land take and inquire at ilk Court that they haldquhat persons within their boundes by is victuall and haldis it till a dearth and punish them which sall be found to offend therein and besides their uther punishment the victuall that they have be escheated to the King All which may declare and give us to understand how unreasonable it would be that the King who by his Oath and Kingly Office is to keep all his people from oppression which being one of the great sins of Sodom as the Prophet Ezekiel tells us in that she strengthened not the hand of the poor and needy caused God to say he would come down nd see the oppressions of his people should take no order to preserve himself from the more then formerly deceipts of his own people and their enhaunce of prises King Edward the second therefore and his Councell after that the Commons of England had in the second year of his Reign granted him in Parliament an aid of the five and twentieth part of their goods upon condition that he would answer and redress their grievances which they in eleven Articles had then presented unto him in some of which they complained that their Corn Victuals Poultrie and Fish as well fresh as salt were taken by those which called themselves the Kings M●nisters and paid nothing for it nor gave them any manner of satisfaction by which they were greatly impoverished And he had answered that there was an Ordinance made of those prises in the time of his Father King Edward which was for the good of the King and his people and willed that it should be kept and observed in all parts did in the fifteenth year of his Reign upon occasion of his being at Cirencester in the County of Gloucester with divers of the Nobility and great men of the Kingdome not think it to be any violation of the Laws formerly made for the regulation of Pourveyance to command and ordain by his Letters Pa●ents directed to the Sheriffs of Gloucester Worcester and Wiltshire in the words following viz. Rex vic al. ministris de Com. Glouc. Wigorn. Wilts salutem cum sumus in partibus Cirencestr cum pluribus magnatibus pro negotiis c. pro nostra ipsorum sustentatione plura victualia oportet providere plures frumentum hab●ntes ea penes se retinent non curantes illa vendic exp●nere nisi excessiva Caristia nos volentes sustentac ●orum providere prout decet assignavimuus Johan Hampton al. ad supervidendum blada in Com. praedict ad emend ubi blada invenerint pro pretio rationabili jam currente de quo ipsi respondeant illa quo pretio empt●●runt ad liberand pistoribus braciatoribus furnend braciand vend dictis magnatibus c. that a reasonable price should according to the ordinary Market rate beset upon Corn. No●●ere the Writs or Commissions de providentiis pro Rege faciendis to buy and make provisions for the Kings houshold in 7 E. 2. 37 E. 3. 3 R. 2. 1 H. 4. and other Kings Reigns directed to the Sheriffs of several Counties to whose oaths and Offices it belonged by the just and antient Laws and Customes of England to cause men to sell victuals and necessary provisions at reasonable rates and prices or Writs sent to the Sheriffes to make provisions for some of the Kings of Scotland and their Trains in their passage as they came to London to do their homage unto some of our Kings esteemed to be any breach of the peoples Liberties Neither did Queen Elizabeth that delight and love of her people enriching as well as easing and filling them with peace and plenty who was never of the opinion of Oliver Cromwel that grand Master of Iniquity who as carefull as he would seem to be of the peoples ease and liberties in his afterwards counterfeit kindness of taking away the Royal Pourveyance could when he was Lievtenant Generall of an Army of a distempered and disobedient part of the Parliament being moved by a Gentleman of Bedfordshire for some ease of their great Assessements and Burdens answere that he could never believe that the Country-men were poor or not able to bear them as long as they could whistle at the Plow and Cart but so contented them in her happy Government as the 20. day of November the beginning of her Reign is yet though above one hundred years agoe gratefully remembred with the ringing of Bells in many of the Churches of England conceive or understand it to be any grievance to the people for the Soveraign or Lex viva the maker Protector and Preserver of many of those good Laws which they enjoyed to ordain and publish by the advice of her Privy Councel who by the happy and sage conduct of all her affairs were well known by the effects as well as the causes the Mediums as well as the success to be as wise and prudent a Councel as any Prince of Christendome had to attend them That the Clerk of the Market in avoiding of the danger of the loss of his Office and further punishment at her pleasure should duly and substantially put in execution all such things as to his charge appertaineth as well for vittails to be had seasonable good and wholsome in the Towns and places near unto the Court as for the just observing of Weights and Measures assigned and assessed and likewise for setling of convenient and reasonable prises as well upon Meat and Drink Horse-meat Lodging Bedding and other things in such cases accustomed so as the Noblemen attending in the Court and all Suitors others following the same be not compelled in default of the said Clerk to be put unto excessive charges for their expences but such indifferency to be used therein as the plenty or sterility considered should accord with equity And straightly charged that no person of what estate or degree soever should in any wise pay m●re for Vittail Horsemeat Lodging or otherways then after the prises that
the comfort of the Lands belonging to a Deanery Prebenda or Prebendship of Lands and other Revenues annexed to the Cathedrals many if not most of which with the Deanerles and Prebendships thereunto belonging as the Deanerie and twelve Prebends of Westminster by Queen Elizabeth were of the foundation and gift of the Kings Royal Progenitors Which comfortable and necessary supports of our Bishops administred by their Clergie are ex antiquo and long agoe resembled by some or the like usages in Ireland where the Coloni or Aldiones such as hold in Socage of the Irish Bishops did besides their Rents and Tributes erga reparationes Matricis Ecclesiae quidpiam conferre give something yearly towards the reparation of the Cathedral or Mother Churches and the Herenaci another sort of Tenants so called did besides their annual rent cibarià quaedam Episcopo exhibere bring to the Bishop certain provisions for his Houshold which was very frequent with the Tenants of Lands holden of our English Abbies and Religious Houses by an inquisition in the County of Tirone in anno 1608. it was by a Jury presented upon oath that there were quidam Clerici sive homines literati qui vocentur Herinaci certain learned men of the Clergy who were called Herinaci ab antiquo seisiti fuerunt c. And anciently were seised of certain lands which did pay to the Arch-bishop or Bishop of the Diocess quoddam charitativum subsidium refectiones pensiones annuales secundum quantitatem terrae consuetudinem patriae a dutifull and loving aid and some provisions and pensions according to the quantity of their lands and custome of their Country and the grants of such lands as appeareth by a Deed of the Dean and Chapter of Armach in Anno Domini 1365. to Arthur and William Mac Brin for their lives and the longer liver of them at the yearly rent of a mark and eight pence sterling una cum aliis oneribus servitiis inde debitis consuetis with all other charges and services due and accustomed had in them sometimes a condition of quam diu grati fuerint obedientes so long as they should be gratefull and obedient unto them Wherefore the Barons Nobility and Gentry of England who did lately enjoy those beneficiall Tenures by Knight-service now unhappily as the consequence and greater charges and burdens upon the people will evidence converted as much as an Act of Parliament in the twelfth year of the Reign of his Majesty that now is can doe it into Socage which were at the first only given for service and assistance of their King and Country and their mesne Lords in relation thereunto and have besides the before recited conditions many a beneficiall custome and usage annexed and fixed unto them and at the dissolution of the Abbies and Religious Houses had much of the Lands given and granted unto them and their Heirs in tail or otherwise with a reservation of a Tenth now a great deal below the value can doe no less in the contemplation of their honours dignities and priviledges received from them and many great favours continued unto their Heirs and Successors from Generation to Generation then doe that in the matter of Praeemption Pourveyance or Contribution towards the Composition or serving in of victuals or Provision for his Majesties Royal Houshold and the honor of his House and Kingdome which their Ancestors did never deny The Lord Maiors of London who doe take and re-receive yearly a payment or Tribute called Ale-silver and the Citizens of London who doe claim and enjoy by the Kings Grants Charters or Confirmations a freedom from all ●olls Lastage throughout England besides many other large priviledges and immunities and the Merchants of England and such as trade and trauell through his Ports and over his Seas into forrain parts and are not denied their Bills of Store to free their Trunks and wearing Clothes and other necessaries imported or exported from paying any Custome and other duties which with many other things disguised and made Custome-free under those pretences for which the Farmers of the Customes have usually had yearly allowances and defalcations would amount unto a great part of the peoples pretended damage by the compositions for Royall Pourveyance should not trouble themselves with any complaints or calculations of it when as both Citizens and Merchants can derive their more then formerly great increase of trade and riches from no other cause or fountain then the almost constant ●esidence of the King and Courts of Justice in or near London and the many great priviledges granted unto them and obtained for them by the Kings and Queens of England The Tenants in ancient Demeasne claiming to be free from the payment of Tolls for their own houshold provisions and from contribution unto all wages assessed towards the expences of the Knights of the Shires or Burgesses sent unto the Parliament which Sir Edward Coke believes was in regard of their helping to furnish the Kings Houshold provisions though since granted to other persons and their services turned into small rents now much below what they would amount unto and many Towns and Corporations of the Kingdome the Resiants in the Cinque Ports and Romney Marsh Universities of Oxford and Cambridge and the Colledges and Halls therein and the Colledges of Winton and Eaton claiming to be acquitted from the payment of Subsidies by antient Exemptions may be willing to pay or bear as much as comes to their share in that one of the smallest parts of duty which is not to be refused by such as will fear God and honour the King And all the Subjects of England who enjoy their Common of Estovers in many of the Kings Woods or Forrests Pannage or feeding of Swine with Acorns or fetching of Ferne from thence Priviledges of Deafforrestations Assart lands Pourlieus and Browse wood and have Common of Vicinage and Common appendant not only therein but in most of his Manors by a continuance or custome of the charity or pitty of his Royal Progenitors and where they have no grant to produce for those and many other favours will for refuge and to be sure not to part with it fly to praescription and time beyond the memory of man and suppose that there was a grant thereof because that possibly there might have been one should not think much to let him pertake of some of their thanks and retributions which will not amount to one in every twenty for all the benefits which they have received of his Royal Ancestors or doe yearly receive of him Nor should forget that God Almighty the maker of heaven and earth giver of all good things and bestower of blessings who fed his people of Israel with Quails in the Wilderness where none were bred Manna where none was either before or since and made the Rocks to yeild water did in his Theocraty or Government of them by his Laws and Edicts written
exemption by an Assessement to be made for that purpose Or by the West Indians in Guaxara who by order of the high Justice do deliver unto Fryers travailing that way if they have no money Horses to ride on or to carry their carriages or provision without money so that at their departure they write it down in the Town book what they had spent and not abide above four and twenty hours in the Town where by a contribution their expences are defrayed Or by the old Irish one of which being a Tenant of Termonland or Land belonging to the Church and unwilling to change his old customes for new said to the Bishop of Dermot of whom he held his Lands non debet dominus mutare censum antiquum sed si careat rebus necessariis vaccis pinguibus c. debet ad nos mi●tere Et nos debemus subministrare nam quaecunque nos habemus Domini sunt nos etiam ipsi illius sumus My Lord ought not to change his ancient Customes Rents or services due out of the Land but if he wanteth necessary provisions for his house and family as fat Cows c. we ought to furnish them for whatsoever we have are his and we our selves are the Lords Or by the modern Irish or inhabitants of Ireland who notwithstanding the Pourveyance or Compositions for Pourveyance and Prae-emption allowed to the Kings Lord Lieutenant of that kingdom could since the abolition of that most useful necessary custome in England offer if Fame did not mistake her self an yeerly supply of 3000. Irish Oxen or Cattel towards the support of the King and his Family and have besides in their Act of Parliament lately made for the execution of his Majesties Declaration for the setlement of that kingdom consented That the Lord Chief Justice of his Majesties Court of Kings Bench the Lord Chief Baron of his Majesties Court of Exchequer and the Master of the Rolles or any other his Majesties Officers of that Kingdom for the time being shall and may have and receive such Port Corn of the Rectories Impropriations or Appropriate Tythes forfeited unto or vested in his Majesty his heirs ●nd successors which have been formerly paid or reserved Or by the Scots a people never as yet exceeding or so much as keeping even pace with their neighbors of England in civilities kindness and gratitudes who when their King Malcolme who raigned in Scotland in Anno Dom. 1004. had given and distributed all the Lands of the Realm of Scotland amongst his men and reserved na thing as the Act of Parliament of 22 Jac. 3. beareth in property to himself but the Royal dignity and the Mute hill in the Town of Scone could give and grant to him the ward and relief of the heir of ilke Baron quhan he sold happen to deceis for the Kings sustentation And did notwithstanding so well esteem and allow of those ancient rights of Pourveyance or Compositions for them as in the Raign of their King James the 4. in the year of our Lord 1489. The Lords spiritual and temporal and uthers his Leiges did declare in Parliament that it was the Kings property for the honorable sustentation of his house according to his Estait and honor quhilk may not be failized without great derogation of his noble Estaite and that his true lieges suld above all singular and particular profit desire to prefer the noble Estaite of his Excellence like as it was done in the time of his maist noble progenitors of gud minde And did therefore think it neidful expedient and reasonable And did statute and ordain that full derogation cassation and annullation be maid of all Gifts Donations Infeftments Fewes life Rents given by his Hieness to quhat sumever person or persons sen the day of his Coronation swa that all Lands Rents Customes Burrow Mailles Ferme● Martes Mutton Poultery avarage carriage and uther Dewties that were in the hands of his Progenitors and Father the day of his decease notwithstanding quhat sumeuer assignation or gift be maid thereupon under the Great Seal Privy Seal or uthers be all utterly cassed and annulled so that the haill profits and Rents thereof may cum to the King to the honorable sustentation of his house and noble Estaite Or so much degenerate from the Brittaines our Ancestors and predecessors who were heretofore so glad of any occasions to express their love and honor of their Princes as when they made their progress or had any occasion to visit any of their houses they flung the doors off the Hinges and gave them open hearted and free entertainment Nor deny those respects and duties to our Kings which no other Nations do refuse to their Kings or Princes which may make us to be an hissing and reproach to other Nations and by using our head so ill to be esteemed as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 people without an head or the Sciopedes who are reported to have such large feet as they can when they please cover their head with it and never let it be said that when a factious and rebellious part of our people could in the year 1656. suppose it to be their Interest to exchange with Cromwell their Antichrist or Mahomet their Religion Laws and liberties for his Tyrannical and Arbitrary will and pleasure and petition him in their Conventicle or pretended Assembly of Parliament that he would besides the remainder of the Kings Queens and Princes Revenues not disposed of except Forrests and Chaces and the Mannors thereunto belonging and of all the Lands of Delinquents in the Counties of Dublin Kildare Clare and Katerlaugh the forfeited Lands in Scotland which were great and considerable two parts of the Recusants Lands in England not compounded for and all Debts Fines Penalties Issues and casual profits belonging to the Keepers of the liberties of England so miscalled which was by them and their fellow Usurpers setled upon him and was of it self a Revenue too great for all the Brewers of England to accept of ten hundred thousand pounds sterling per annum to be leavyed upon the people with such other supplies as should be needful to be raised from time to time by consent of that which they Nick named a Parliament and three hundred thousand pounds per annum to be raised for the charge of the Administration of Justice and support of Government which he thinking not enough to serve his wicked occasions designes or desires to ●lay or keep in exile the heir of the Kingdoms tells his dutiful Parliament at a conference in April 1657. that the charge of the Government would yearly amount unto ninteen hundred thousand pounds sterling and therefore though the war with Spain should cease desired that the thirteen hundred thousand pounds per annum might have six hundred thousand pounds per annum more added thereunto and that that could be willingly assented unto and all the Loyal party enforced and driven to submit
the University of Cambridge who may require the Maior of the Town to make the Assise in the presence of the Chancellor of that University and if it be not well observed may himself punish the offenders by the authorities and power only derived from the King Who may with better reason justice and equity claim and keep his Rights of Praeemption Pourveyance and compositions for it then the Stret gavel was in 4. Ed. 1. claimed by the Lord of the Manor of Cholmton in the County of Sussex that every Tenant of that Manor should yearly give two shillings then a good summe of money pro itu reditu for his going out of the Manor or returning into it or as the Town of Maldon in Essex did in the fifteenth year of the Reign of that King claim by antient custome Totteray which was a payment of four pence for every bushel and a half of corn sold there 4 pence for Stallage and a Mark penny viz. 1 d. per illos qui truncos extra domum in vicis ejusdem ville habuerunt for every one which had pipes or gutters laid or made out of their houses into the streets de omnibus pascentibus mariscum de pecoribus of all that had cattel going or feeding in the Marsh for every Horse two pence Oxe two pence Bullock a penny and for every five Sheep two pence quae praestatio vocatur which in the language of the Civil and Common Law was usually understood to be Pourveyance or furnishing of necessary provisions Or as the Town of Yarmouth which was made a Port or Haven by Letters Patents of King Edward the first did antiently and doe now take and receive of the Herring-Fishers a certain Prize of Pourveyance of Fish and Herring towards the maintenance and repair of their Haven Or as the Lord Roos of Hamlake from whom the Earls of Rutland are descended did claim and enjoy as belonging to Belvoir Castle custumam ibidem vocat Palfrey silver quae levari debet annuatim de villis a Custome called Palfrey silver which ought to be levied every year of the Towns of Botelesford Normanton Herdeby Claxton Muston Howes Barkeley Queenby aliis Hamlettis and of other Hamlets Or as King Edward the third had to send his Writ or Com●●ssion to the Magistrates of the Town of Barwick 〈◊〉 Tweed to inquire Si pisces marini Salmones in aqua de Tweed capt usque villam praedictam duci in vico vocat Narrow Gate venditioni exponi de custumis inde Regi solvend if the Sea Fish and Salmons taken in the River of Twede were brought to the Town of Barwick upon Tweed and put to sale in the street called Narrow-gate and of the Customes to be paid for them to the King More especially when the Judges in 11 Hen. 4. did resolve it to be Law as well as reason that the Pourveyor or taker for the King might take victuals or provisions at a reasonable price to the use of the King against the will of the party ●elling them Which unless the Laws of God Nature and Nations and the Laws of the Land reasonable Customes Liberties Rights and Priviledges should be all and every thing in the peoples own cases and concernments and nothing at all in the Kings and that the duty of Subjects honor of the King and support and maintenance of him who supports and defends them and all that is theirs in their just and legal Interests should be but as the Astronomers lines and terms of art in the firmament as Zones Tropicks Meridian Zodiack and the Ursa major and minor c. meerly imaginary and undemonstrable may with as much or greater reason be understood to be no burden as the late design if it should take effect of the Petition of the Lord Maior Aldermen and Common Councel of the City of London lately presented vnto the House of Common in Parliament in order as they alleage to the honor happiness and prosperity of the Kingdom that the Governor Deputy and Assistants of their desired Company of th●●nglish Merchants trading into Italy and the Domini●● of the French King and the King of Portugal and of all other Merchants thereafter to be taken into that Association may besides other emoluments to be taken of the Merchants have power for the maintenance of the Government to take and receive upon all goods to be exported and imported not exceeding one twentieth part of the Customes as they are on all goods except Wines and on wines not exceeding one fourtieth part of the Customes as they now are Which twentieth part after no greater a reckoning then four hundred thousand pounds per annum for the Customes which if not too much defrauded are more likely to be eight hundred thousand pounds per annum will be twenty thousand pounds per annum and if eight hundred thousand pounds per annum will come near unto as much as the pretended losses of the Counties in the Compositions for the Pourveyances And the people of England would find the Pourveyance and Compositions for them to be for their own good and profit as well as there is a great and every where to be acknowledged reason for it not denied to be reason in their own cases affairs dealings one with another by the want of greater benefits if the King should shut up all his Ports and forbid all Trade with forreign Merchants inward or outward as some Kings and Princes have commonly and ordinarily done and as Common-wealths and those that call themselves Estates do as well as Kings and Princes in case of hostilities and upon reason of State or some other extraordinary occasions Or put down as God forbid he should or seise as forfeited by misuser which many will be found to have deserved all the Fairs and Markets in the Kingdome or some great part of them or forbid for some time as hath been antiently done all the Markets in two or three Counties and command the people to bring their victuals and provisions to be sold where the Kings or the Publick necessities or occasions wanted them or allow but one or two in a County at the chiefest or greatest of Cities or Towns or as King Henry the third did strictly command the assise of bread wine beer and victuals to be kept in Oxford in debito statu secundum precium bladi sicut in aliis Burgis Villis as it ought according to the price of corn and as was used to be in other Towns and Burrows threatning them that if they neglected to doe it he would seise and take the Town into his own hands and at the same time setting a rate or price upon wines gave the Magistrates of that Town to understand that whoever did otherwise ad corpus suum graviter se caperet omnia vina sua a Vice-comite suo Oxon. in manum suam capi praeciperet should be arrested and
nine pounds per annum Cheshire having sixty eight Parishes and furn●shing but 25. lean Oxen at the Kings price 2l 13s -4d a peice Total 66 l. 13 s. 4 d. at the Market price 6 ● 10 s. Total 162 l. 10 s. 0. Difference 95 l. 16 s. 8 d. was not thereby charged with more then one pound nine shillings upon every parish Cornewall having an hundred sixty one Parishes and furnishing but Ten fat Oxen at the Kings price 4 l. Total ●0 l. Market price 10 l. Total 100 l. Difference 60l did bear not so great a contribution as eight shillings upon every Parish The County of Devon having three hundred ninty four Parishes and furnishing but Ten fat Oxen at the Kings price 4 l. Total 40 l. Market price 10 l. Total 100l Difference 60 l. Muttons fat 150. at the Kings price 6 s. 8 d. Total 50 l. Market price 18 s. Total 135l Difference 85l paid no greater a sum in that yearly Composition then ten shillings upon every parish Gloucestershire which hath two hundred and eighty parishes paid but four hundred twenty two pounds seven shillings eight pence which was not one pound eleven shillings upon every parish Hertfordshire numbering one hundred and twenty parishes paid but one thousand two hundred fifty nine pounds ninteen shillings four pence which laid upon every parish but abou● ten pounds ten shillings Herefordshire furnishing but 18. fat Oxen at the Kings price 4 l. Total 72 l. Market price 10 l. Total 180l Difference 108 l. and having one hundred seventy six par●shes made every one of them a contributary of no more then about twelve shil●ings six pence upon every parish Kent having three hundred ninety eight parishes and being a very great gainer by the Kings so constant abode in his Chamber of London more then its charge of Pourvey●nce amounted unto paid but three thousand three hundred thirty four pounds and six shillings which laid upon ever parish for Composi●ions for the Pourveyance no more then about eight pounds ten shillings Lincolnshire which hath six hundred and thirty parishes and paid but one thousand one hundred seventy five pounds thirteen sh●llings and eight pence charged every parish with no more then about nineteen sh●llings six pence or thereabouts The County of Northampton having three hundred twenty six parishes and being like to be no looser by its gainful vicinity to London and the Royal Residence paid no more towards the Pourveyance and Compositions then nine hundred nine●y three pounds eighteen shillings four pence which was for every parish very little more then three pounds The County of Norfolke having six hundred and sixty parishes paid but one thousand ninety three pounds two shillings and eight pence which charged every parish not with one pound eleven shillings Somersetshire which hath three hundred eighty five parish●s and paid no more then seven hundred fifty five pounds fourteen sh●llings eight pence laid no greater a leavy for the Composition for Pourveyance upon every Parish then about fourty shillings The County of Surry having one hundred and fourty parishes and paid no more then one thousand seventy nine pounds three pence rendered every parish a contributer for the Pourveyance of not above seven pounds nineteen shillings The County of Sussex which hath one hundred and twelve parishes and paid no more to that kind of contribution then one thousand and sixteen pounds two shillings six pence makes every Parish to be charged with no greater a sum or proportion then three pounds thirteen shillings six pence or thereabouts And London which is and hath been the greatest gainer by the residence of the King and his principal Courts of Justice at Westminster and by the confluence of the people not onely of this Nation but many Merchants and people from all parts of the Christian word is grown to be the grand Emporium and Town of Trade in England mighty and strong in shipping a Merchant-like Tyrus for many Isles and as great and famous as any City or Mart Town of the World to whom all the Ships of the Sea with their Mariners do bring their Merchandize the most of Nations are her Merchants by reason of the multitude of the Wares of her making and with the multitude of her riches and Merchandize makes all the other parts Counties Cities and Borough Towns of the Kingdom as to riches money and Trade her vassals and retailers doth for all these benefits contribute with the out Ports only for the Kings Grocery ware which if it could be called a contribution did in some years amount according to the full price but unto two thousand pounds per annum and in other years but unto sixteen hundred pounds or there abouts and is raised and charged by way of Impost upon the gross quantites of such kinde of Merchandise and being repayed the Merchant by the retailer and by the buyer to the retailer was no more in the fifth year of the Raign of King Charles the fi●st in the Impost or Rates of Composition then as followeth viz. Rates of Composition for Grocery wares for his Majesties House Pepper The hundred pound xviii d. Cloves The hundred pound xviii d. Mace The hundred pound xviii d. Nutmeggs The hundred pound xviii d. Cynamon The hundred pound xviii d. Ginger the hundred pound xii d. Raisons of the Sun the hundred waight iii. d. Raisons great the piece i. d. ob Proyns the Tun xvi d. Almonds the hundred waight v. d. Corrants the Tun ii s. Sweet oyle the Pipe iii. s. Sugar refined the hundred waight viii d. Sugar powder and Mukovadoes the C. waight v. d. The Chest xx d. Sugar corse and paneles the C. waight iii. d. Figges the Barrell i. d. Figges the Piece ob q. Figges the Topnet ob Dates the hundred waight viii d. Rice the hundred waight iiii d. ob Olives the Tun iiii s. Castel and all other hard Soap the C. waight vi d. Anniseeds the hundred waight ii d. Licorish the hundred waight ii d. And so petit as in a pound of Raisins of the Sunne now sold for four pence a pound it falls to be less then the eighth or tenth part of a farthing increase of price in every pound of Raisins of the Sun And as inconsiderable in the charge or burden of it laid upon the Grocers or Retailers as that of their pack-thred and brown paper which in the vent of those commodities and accommodation of Customers are freely and willingly given into the bargain And when the Brewers in London and four miles about did before the granting of the Excise upon Ale and Beer and taking away of the Pourveyances or Composition for them pay four pence in every quartet of Malt which they Brewed the Composition thereof amounting but unto three thousand five hunded pounds per annum being now remitted and not paid by reason of the said Excise that yearly Impost or Composition did not onely lye upon the Brewers but was dispersed and laid upon
rates and prices for victuals and houshold provisions In France the Paysants which are the greatest part of the people will tell us that there is mony little enough and that there would if it were not for their Hydras and multitudes of Taxes and Gabels be cheapness enough of all manner of houshold provisions when their Wines and flesh notwithstanding that or any supposed plenty of money are cheap enough In Scotland the moneys and riches which that Nation gained from England by King James his coming to the English Crown and the bounties of that King and his Son King Charles the Martyr with the three hundred thousand pounds sterling for brotherly assistance given to a factious and Rebellious part of them by a party of Covenanting English Rebels to ruine their King and the race and posterity of their benefactors together with the two hundred thousand pounds sterling far exceeding the pay as well as wickedness of their Master Judas given them to sell their pious and distressed King who in a confidence of their Covenanting pretences Faith and promises had fled to their Army for refuge which with the help of his loyal English subjects might easily have preserved him as well as themselves from the miseries and destruction which afterwards happened never appeared to be any cause of the dearness of victuals and houshold provisions more then ordinary or what proceeded from other accidents or causes In Germany where the Bavarian Silver Mines have of late made a plenty of it and every petty Prince and principality hath a regality and priviledge of coyning their Dollars are much allayed and mixed with a baser mettal and their Hanse and Imperial Cities do enjoy a great commerce by Sea and Land they do not complain of the high rates and prices of victuals and houshold provisions The Kingdom of Sweden whose Copper Mines are their Indies and do furnish plenty of Copper money with a value in its weight and materials as much as their denominations which the coyns of Gold and Silver necessarily requiring an allay and some mixture are never blessed with hath in a plenty of that base money no high rates or prices upon their native commodities but 〈◊〉 reasonable as fish enough may be bought for three pence to dine twenty men Rome which receives the money as well as feet of many strangers is the Mart or Forum for the dispatch of most of the Ecclesiastical and too much of the civil affairs of the Catholike Nations and by her claimed Vicariat or Lieutenancy from Jesus Christ and an Empire in Ecclesiastical affairs hath her Taxes Tenths first fruits Oblations Jubilees Indulgences pardons and other attractions of money large Territories Church Land Revenues and the disposal of many priviledges and principalities and famous Channels cut for the Gold and Silver of the Catholike and most enriched Nations to run into the Ocean of its ever filling and never emptying Treasury can at the same time whilst she fits as Queen and delights her self in the several Magazines and Store-houses of her abundance of riches enjoy a very great plenty and cheapness of houshold provisions The Commonwealth of Venice with her wonderful Amass of Treasurs by which she hath for some years last past made wars with the g●and Seignior the Behemoth and Leuiathan of the East doth notwithstanding as she did before those wars bless her inhabitants with a competent cheapness The Kingdom of Naples and Dutchy of Milan who with their Garrisons and Armies of Spaniards to the natives in a forced and unwilling obedience are the expenditors and wasters of much of the King of Spaines incomes from India and other his Dominions do not finde that to be the cause or occasion of any dearth or high prices of victuals amongst them The grand Duke of Florence with his great commerce and riches brought into that Country by granting of great priviledges to his Port of Legorn and the Merchants of other Nations trading thither filling his subjects and people with more then formerly and ordinary plenty of money did not thereby so establish the unhappiness of buying their victuals and provisions at unreasonable prices but that there as well as in other principalities and Provinces of Italy which by the Trade of Legorn and neighborhood of Rome and her Ecclesiastical Merchandize are greatly enriched there is so little reason for an enhaunce of the prices and rates of food or provisions as they can be honest gainers by an easie Banda or Reiglement of what is to be paid for them In Spain where the common people do onely hear of the arrival of many millions of Gold and Silver from the West Indies and have little of that but a great deal of black money or Maravedis their great rates for flesh do not arise from the abundance of their money either of the one kinde or of the other but from the barrenness of the Country and the little use thereof procuring no dearness in their Oranges Olives and Lymmons and other fruits and delicacies of that mountainous Country In the East Indies which is one of the Suns darlings whether our English Merchants carry more mony then they should where their mountains hills bring forth great quantities of precious stones and Jewels Gold and Silver and bestows upon them an abundance thereof enough to adorn themselves and the people of the utmost Isles there are no high rates put upon food or victuals In China where there is no want of money they have Rice and other meat for the sustenance of man very cheap and to be had for almost nothing in the Philippina Islands three Hens were sold not long ago for a Rial which is no more then six pence English mony a Dear for two Rials and a Hogg for eighteen And our Countriman Mr. Gage in his journey in Anno 1625. from St. John de Ulhua to Mexico in the West Indies where the world had as it were laid up its Treasures of Gold and Silver found Beef Mutton Kid Hens Turkies Fowles and Quailes to be so plentiful and cheap as he was astonished at it nor was it any store of money in Virginia which heightened there for some times the prices of all things but the Merchants giving greater sums of money to the Savages then they needed neither in New England in Anno 1636. when a Cow was sold for two and twenty pounds which the next yeer after upon the arrival of more might be had for eight pounds And as little is any supposed plenty of money in old England when three millions of Gold too much of which is since transported were coined here betwixt the yeers 1622. and 1630 and two hundred thousand pounds per annum brought hither from Spain to be coined for some years betwixt that and 1640. now no more coming so long a voyage to our Min● the cause or reason of those excessive and intollerable p●ices and rates of victuals and houshold provisions even to an oppression of the buyers and
a consumption of their estates making the greatest most universal and extended g●ievances and oppression of the Nation When as there is and hath been for some yeers of late in England the greatest want of money and Trade which should introduce and procure it that ever it languished and groaned under for three hundred years last past by an universal poverty and want of it by reason of twenty years great and heavy Taxes which yearly enforced and called for more money then the King of Spain during that time received for his West Indies for his own account or England ever paid in Taxes all being summed up together in the space of 500. years before together with a gene●al pride luxury since wasting and carrying away that little that was left of our money whilst all or the most of our Gold have been inticed and transported into Foraign Countries by reason of the fineness of our Standard and their putting a greater value upon our coyne much of our Silver hath in coyne or Plate been carried into Ireland and Scotland and from thence or from England into Foraign parts and that little which remained of it together with a great part of our Silver converted into Gold and Silver Lace or other vain and needless manufactures some millions of money imployed here by the Dutch at interest because that their own Country yeelded not above four per cent for it called home and taken away by reason of our distempers and troubles the bringing of interest by our usu●ping Legislators to six per cent whereby to advance the sale of loyal mens lands which they had without law or reason taken from them eighty thousand pounds in coyne and Silver Bullion or Ingotts of our small ●emainder of mony yearly carryed out of England by our East Indian company into the East Indies or Persia to purchase Spices many superfluous and transmarine commodities without which our forefathers could live longer more plentifully and healthy then now they do And so little money left in the Nation in general or amongst the common people as they are many of them being dragged by their necessities enforced to endure the greatest bitings and extortions from the Usurers and the Cancer or Gangreen of Usury Brokage grown so high and intollerable as by a judicious computation lately made there are no less then 3000. publike and private Brokers and Harpies in and about the City of London taking fourty sixty or eighty per cent far exceeding that of the Jews or the Caursini when they to●m●nted England with their unmerciful Usuries untill they were banished many of our Merchants by reason of the adulterating of our Commodities and taking away the credit of them or by the inticements of an unlawful gain buying their Corants at Zant and Silks and other Commodities in the Levant and Turky with pieces of eight and their Deal and Timber in Norway with Dollars which hath made such a scarcity and want as all the Silver money coyned in the Kingdom by the late Parliament so called with their dolorous Cross and ill tuned Harp amounted when it was called into the Mint after his Majesties restoration to no more with some store of Brass Copper or Lead counterfeit money crept in amongst it then five hundred thousand pounds sterling or thereabouts and that which went about of the Coynes of Queen Elizabeth King James and King Charles the Martyr not being estimated to be much above as much more no● making a total with both included together of more then a million and a half of sterling monies which amongst four millions of people if that should be the account of the number of the inhabitants men women and children in England there being not likely to be many less would afford but seven shillings and six pence to every one and if the money in the Kingdom should as some have guessed it more at random then upon certainty or p●obability amount unto twenty seven hundred thousand pounds or to make it numerum rotundum for the more even and easie computing of it three millions sterling would yeild every one but fifteen shillings which renders the mony of the kingdom to be lamentably scarce too little for the people may without the blame of being over sanguine or credulous induce any man to believe that the credit which the people have one with another far exceeds the money of the Nation that they which are any thing rich in the Kingdom the Nobility Gentry and such as live upon their Lands and Estats without trading onely excepted are but as the Pikes in the Ponds or Rivers which devour and feed upon the multitude and smaller Frye of F●shes that there is no such plenty of money now in England when poverty and want are as Regiments of armed men breaking in upon every County and part of England and Wales the lamentations of the poor and such as are undone for want of trade and imployments are as the noise of many waters and the excessive rates and prices of victuals and houshold provisions are to seek for some other causes or originals then a supposed plenty of money when as there is no housekeeper but feels the burden and smart of them and may hear almost every body not as Usurers which do it to conceal their money from such as might over importune them to borrow it or to heighten the necessities of such as they may scrue up to their exactions or in a greedy humor or appetite never think they have money enough but as a people exhausted and impoverished by wars and luxury lamenting their want of money and that every Town Corporation City and County of the Kingdom the more vain and prodigal part of the people who make hast to spend all that they have or can come at onely exepted have too many symptomes and signs of a poverty and want of Trade and tire themselves with the complaints of it And it cannot be either want or plenty of money which causeth such extraordinary rates and prices of food and houshold provisions servants and workmens wages greatness of Rents and the intollerable and unreasonable prices of all that are to be bought either for the Belly or the Back now more then it was twenty years ago and then more then it was some hundred years before making the sin of oppression and cozening one another to rise like the waters of Noahs Flood prevailing and increasing greatly but the wickedness in the hearts of men doing and devising evil continually oppressing and cheating one another For it was not an abundance of mony that hath made Beef to be at three pence Mutton four pence a pound and to be much dearer at Christmas and other Festivals then at other times in the year but an evil custome only the will pleasure of the Butchers or that hath raised ●he Board wages of a Footmen to be seven shillings and a valect du Chambre or extraordinary Serving-man ten shillings
sold Puertes secos or for goods or commodities carryed to be sold by Land a Tax upon Cards besides many Almoxariffadgo's laid upon the Towns and people a particular Tax upon Tunny Fish a third pa●t yeerly collected of the Rents and profits of all the Revenues belonging to every City and Town in the Kingdom every one having some appropriate unto them and of Fines and penalties imposed upon any quen●s therein Doth not do as the Emperor and German Princes do by their people and subjects who besides the Dranksteur Bierrecht Biersteur or Excise upon drink and their Schoorstein oder Caming gelt or Chimny money Frawlensteur certain quantities of Wine appropriate to the Prince those many Consuetudines quae praestantur in recognitionem Dominii directi Jurium Dominicalium Customes and services which are to be performed to the Emperors or chief Lords of whom they hold and their Laudemia's Leh●wahrs or Reliefs which if it be a Hahe Leh●wahr is of great men or Estates a Twentieth penny in Ecclesiastical Fees or Revenues two Dollers per cent and in the Kleine lehne wahr or small Estates or Revenues a sixteenth penny and over and above what is paid for Licences of Alienation or for lehn gel● for a Live●y or investiture into Lands Han●●ohn an Oblation for any thing written in a subjects favour by the Prince and Recht steur a payment of money towards the maintenance of the Courts of Justice do take Turkensteur a Tribute for war or defence against the Turks Krieg steur a Tax for the payment of souldiers Forst gelt Forrest money Mase gelt money paid for measures Malschwein for Swine Last gelt Ton money or gaging of vessels Pf●ug gelt a Tax upon every Plow B●lcken gelt Timber money Haupt vizh money for the head of every Beast Zehenden vam Fleisch wein corne Erbsen Tenths of Flesh Wine Corn and Herbs Hausen gelt a Tax upon houses Frey gelt money upon the making men to be free Schuck gelt Shoo money Brucken gelt Bridge money ●eg gelt way money or for passage Auf●nauch gelt or Auf●arth money paid in Cities and Towns for being chosen into any Office or Magistracy and Abefarth Abschusz Ablosung when one removeth his Family or houshold from one City or Town to another and is to pay a tenth of any goods sold upon such removals Toll or Foriscapium to be paid by the buyer over and above the price agreed to be paid to the seller Accisz upon all Commodities sold and spent and a Land steur Tribute upon Lands which is ex voluntate superioris ob necessitatem supervenientem variantur imposed for the other as aide against the Turks and for payment of souldiers are to be by publike assent ordained at their Diets or Parliaments it the pleasure of the Prince and varied according to occasions or necessities And so many other Taxes and payments for the publike saith B●soldus ut nominibus laboretur as there are scarce names enough for them so that as free and full of liberties as that Nation did heretofore suppose themselves to have been they do find by their Taxes and payments that the feathers which their Electors Dukes Margraues Counts Barons and Imperial Cities have e●ther taken by force gained by favor or purchased for money from the Imperial Roman Eagle which Crantzius and other good Authors do heavily complain of have but increased rather then eased the burdens of the common people Doth not as the King of the French who besides his Foüages or Chimney money which though they of Gulen did heretofore so little like of as they rebelled against our famous English Black Prince for imposing twelve pence upon every Chimney they believe in that and the other parts of France to be accustumez de toute Anciennete allowed by all Antiquity the services and profits Feodall le Paulet or a Tax of four Deniers upon every liuer or two shillings of the yeerly value of Offices profits of Prizes at Sea and of the Admiralty Tenths and first fruits payable by Ecclesiastical persons Escheates Ottroyes Licenses and Dons gratuits gifts or oblations and Regalities doth continue as perpetual a Tax called le Tailon imposed by King Henry the second in the year one thousand five hundred fourty nine to increase the Wages of the soldery in regard of the dearness of victuals and the burdens which the men at Arms or Gens d' armes did lay upon the Laborers and common people la Creüe or augmentation for the pay of the Army an Impost of the twentieth penny upon Wine sold in gross the eighth upon all in Normandy by retail and a Tax upon all drink now made a constant Revenue of the Crown a Tax upon every vessel of Wine which in the time of Julius Caesar had no Imposition or burden laid upon it carryed into Walled Towns or the Suburbs and to pay as much though it be transported from thence again before it be sold The Gabell upon Salt which being imposed by Philip the long with a Protestation that it should continue but a while and afterwards by Philip de Valois in the year one thousand three hundred twenty eight who declared that he intended not to incorporate it to the Royal Demeasnes being remitted by Charles the fifth in the year one thousand three hundred sixty nine is since made perpetual and annexed to the Royal Revenue and the King and his successors are become the only Merchants of Salt whereof every house is to take a certain proportion loaded with the Kings Taxe and Imposition upon it though it be more then he have occasion to expend the aequivalent or aequipollent which in Narbonne was granted for the abolition of an old Tax of the twentieth part of the price of all moveables sold by retail about the year one thousand four hundred and sixty and agreed to be paid by a Denier in every Liure not onely for all moveables but of Flesh and Fish sold by Retail and the sixtieth part of all the Wine bought to sell again and is paid in Au●erg●e for a liberty to buy their Salt where they please and to be exempt from the Tax and Imposition of buying it at the Kings Granaries or Salt Magazines being with Wine a great part of the natural commodities of the Country besides the other Impostes Entries or Customes to be paid in Towns or for Peages and passages by Land or Water la subsistance which in the Raign of King Henry the fourth and since have been leavyed pour faire subsister les soldats dans les quartiers d' hyver moyennant quoi on devoit estre exempt du logement de la Gens d' armes durant l' hyver to keep the souldiers in or to maintain them in their quarters all the Winter and to be exempt from the trouble of lodging them in their houses la solde d● 50 mille hommes a Tax for the wages of fifty thousand men first laid upon the Cities and Walled Towns