Statutes of the Realm: Volume 5, 1625-80. Originally published by Great Britain Record Commission, s.l, 1819.
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'Charles II, 1660: A Subsidy granted to the King of Tonnage and Poundage and other summes of Money payable upon Merchandize Exported and Imported.', in Statutes of the Realm: Volume 5, 1625-80, ed. John Raithby( s.l, 1819), British History Online https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/statutes-realm/vol5/pp181-205 [accessed 23 November 2024].
'Charles II, 1660: A Subsidy granted to the King of Tonnage and Poundage and other summes of Money payable upon Merchandize Exported and Imported.', in Statutes of the Realm: Volume 5, 1625-80. Edited by John Raithby( s.l, 1819), British History Online, accessed November 23, 2024, https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/statutes-realm/vol5/pp181-205.
"Charles II, 1660: A Subsidy granted to the King of Tonnage and Poundage and other summes of Money payable upon Merchandize Exported and Imported.". Statutes of the Realm: Volume 5, 1625-80. Ed. John Raithby(s.l, 1819), , British History Online. Web. 23 November 2024. https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/statutes-realm/vol5/pp181-205.
In this section
A Subsidy of Tonnage granted.
French Wine imported, &c. into London £4. 10s. per Ton; by Aliens £6. into all other Ports £3.; by Aliens £4. 10s.; Sweet Wines imported into London £2. 58. per Butt; by Aliens £3.; into any other Port 38s.; Aliens £2. 5s.; Every Awme of Rhenish Wine imported 20s. Aliens 25s.; A Subsidy of Poundage, on Goods exported and imported, according to the Book of Rates.; Native Commodities exported by Aliens.; Proviso for Old Draperies, certain Wines, Fish, English taken, &c.
The Commons assembled in Parliament reposing Trust and Confidence in your Majesty in, and for the guarding and defending of the Seas against all persons intending or that shall intend the disturbance of Your said Commons in the intercourse of Trade and the invading of this Your Realme, For the better defraying the necessary Expences therof which cannot otherwise be effected without great charge to Your Majesty Doe by and with the advice and consent of the Lords in this Your present Parliament assembled, and by the authoritie of the same to the intent aforesaid Give and Grant unto You our Supreame Leige Lord and Soveraigne One Subsidy called Tonnage that is to say Of every Ton of Wine of the growth of France or of any the Dominions of the French King or Crowne of France that shall come into the Port of London and the Members therof by way of Merchandize by your Naturall borne Subjects the summe of Fower pounds and ten shillings of currant English Money and soe after that Rate, and by Strangers and Aliens Six pounds of like money, And of every Ton of the like Wine which shall be brought into all and every the other Ports and places of this Kingdome and the Dominions therof by way of Merchandice by Your Naturall borne Subjects the summe of three pounds, and by Aliens fower pounds and ten shillings. And of every But or Pipe of Muscadels Malmaseys [Cuts (fn. 1) ] Tents Allicants Bastards Sacks Canaries Malligoes Maderoes and other Wines whatsoever commonly called Sweet Wines of the growth of the Levant Spain Portugall or any of them, or of any the Islands or Dominions to them or any of them belonging or elsewhere that shal come or be brought into the Port of London by Your Naturall borne Subjects the summe of forty five shillings of currant English money and soe after that Rate, And by Strangers and Aliens three pounds of like money, And of every But and Pipe of the like Wine which shall come or be brought into all every or any the other Ports and places of this Kingdome and Dominions therof by way of Merchandize by Your Naturall borne Subjects the summe of thirty shillings, and by Strangers forty five shillings. And of every Awm of Rhenish Wine or Wine of the growth of Germany that shall be brought into this your Realme and the Dominions therof by your Naturall borne Subjects the summe of twenty shillings of currant English money, and by Strangers and Aliens twenty and five shillings, which severall Rates are the same which are expressed in a certaine Booke of Rates herein after mentioned and referred unto. And alsoe one other Subsidy called Poundage that is to say of all manner of Goods and Merchandize of every Merchant, Naturall borne Subject Denizen and Alien to bee carryed out of this Realme or any your Majesties Dominions to the same belonging or to be brought into the same by way of Merchandize of the value of every twenty shillings of the same Goods and Merchandice according to the severall and perticular rates and valewes of the same Goods and Merchandices as the same are perticularly and respectively rated and valued in the said Booke of Rates herein after mentioned and referred unto, twelve pence and soe after that rate. And of every twenty shillings value of any the Native Commodities of this Realme or Manufactures wrought of any such Native Co[m]modities to be carryed out of this Realme by every or any Merchant Alien according to the Value therof in the said booke expressed twelve pence over and above the twelve pence aforesaid Except and foreprised out of this Grant of Subsidy of Poundage all manner of Woollen cloathes made or wrought or to be made or wrought within this Realme of England commonly called Old Draperies and all Wines before limited to pay Subsidy of Tonnage, and all manner of Fish English taken, and brought by English bottomes into this Realme, and all manner of fresh Fish and bestiall that shall come into this Your Realme and all other Goods and Merchandices which in the said Booke of Rates are mentioned to be Custome-free.
II. A Subsidy of Woollen Cloth exported.
Broad Cloth 3s. 4d.; Every other Short Cloth of Old Drapery in Book of Rates 3s. 4d. exported by Aliens 6s. 8d.; The said Subsidies granted to the King during his Life.
And further We your said Co[m]mons by the Advice Assent and Authority aforesaid doe give and grant unto You Our said Leige Lord and Soveraigne for the causes aforesaid One other Subsidy that is to say Of and for every short Woollen cloth to be exported by Your naturall borne Subjects of this your Realme and the Dominions therof called Broad cloth not exceeding twenty eight yards in length and threescore and fower pounds in weight the summe of three shillings and fower pence of currant English money, and of every Cloth of greater length and weight [proporc[i]onably (fn. 2) ] according to the same rate, And of every other short cloth of old Drapery of lesser length and weight accounting soe many pieces to a short cloth as are limited and appointed therunto by the said booke of Rates to be likewise exported by Your said naturall borne Subjects the like summe of three shillings fower pence and soe after that rate, and by Strangers and Aliens six shillings and eight pence for every short cloth accounted as aforesaid, which severall rates are accordingly expressed in the said booke of Rates herein after mentioned and referred unto. To have hold take enjoy and perceive the Subsidies aforesaid and every of them, and every part and parcell of them unto your Majesty from the Fower and twentieth day of June inclusively in the twelfth yeare of Your Majesties Raigne for and during Your Majesties life which God long preserve.
III. Shipping, &c. for Exportation and not paying the Subsidy.
Penalty.; Merchant Aliens shall be well intreated.
And bee it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any Wines Goods or other Merchandice wherof the Subsidies aforesaid are or shalbe due shall at any time after be shipped or putt into any Boate or Vessell to the intent to be carryed into the parts beyond the Seas, or else be brought from the parts beyond the Seas into any Port Place or Creeke of this Realme, or other your Majesties Dominions by way of Merchandize, and unshipped to be laid on Land, the Subsidy, Customes, and other Duties due or to be due for the same not paid or lawfully tendered to the Collector therof or his Deputy with the consent and agreement of the Comptroller and Surveyor there or one of them at the least [not (fn. 3) ] agreed with for the same in the Custome house according to the true meaning of this Act, that then from the said Fower and twentieth day of June all the same Wines Goods and Merchandizes whatsoever shall be forfeit to your Majesty, the moyety of the rate thereof to Your Majesty, and the other moyety to him or them that will seize the same or sue for the same, And that it may please your Majesty that all Merchants as well Denizens as Strangers coming into this Your Realme be well and honestly intreated and demeaned for such things as Subsidy by this Act is granted as they were in the time of Your Noble Progenitors and Predecessors without oppression to them to be done paying the Subsidies aforesaid.
IV. Proviso for Goods taken by Enemies or Pirates or perished on the Sea.
Proof before the Treasurer of England or Chief Baron of the Exchequer.; The Customs of Goods shipped in Carracks or Gallies by Denizens.
And bee it further Enacted by the authority aforesaid that if any Goods or Merchandize as aforesaid of any Merchant being borne Denizen after the said fower and twentieth day of June hath beene or at any time hereafter dureing Your Majesties life shall bee taken by any Enimies or Pirates upon the Sea; or perished in any ship or ships that shall happen to bee taken or perished dureing Your Majesties Life wherof the Subsidies and other Duties aforesaid are or shall be duely paid or agreed for as aforesaid and that duely proved before the Treasurer of England, Co[m]missioners of the Treasury or Cheife Baron of the Exchequer for the time being by the examination of the same Merchants if they be alive, or of their Executors or Administrators if they be dead, or by two credible Witnesses at the least sworne, or other reasonable Witnisses and proofe sworne, then the same Merchant or Merchants his or their Executors or Administrators shall or may newly ship in the same Port where the goods and merchandice aforesaid were or shall be customed soe much other merchandize or goods as the same goods or merchandize are or shall be lost as aforesaid shall amount [to (fn. 4) ] in Custome without paying of any thing for the same, soe as the same proofe be recorded and allowed of in the Court of Exchequer and certified unto the Collectors of the Customes of the Port where the same wares or merchandize are to be newly shiped without custome as aforesaid And further That every Merchant Denizen who shall hereafter shipp any goods or merchandize in any Carrack or Gally shall pay to your Majesty all manner of Customes and all the Subsidies aforesaid as any Alien borne out of the Realme.
V. Proviso for Exportation of Herrings, &c. without paying Duties.
Provided alwayes That it shall and may be lawfull to all and every Your Subjects at his and their will and pleasure to convey and transport out of this Realme in Ships and other Vessells of any the Subjects of this Realme all and every kinde of Herrings and other Sea Fish to be taken on the Sea by any the Subjects aforesaid from or out of any Port or Harbour of this Realme to any place out of your Majesties Dominions without paying any Custome Subsidy or Poundage moneys for the same Herrings or other Fish soe carried or transported dureing your Majesties life, Any thing herein before contained to the contrary notwithstanding.
VI. Recital that no Rates can be imposed on Merchandize without Authority of Parliament.
A Book of Rates agreed by the Commons House of Parliament subscribed by the Speaker.
And because noe rates can be imposed upon Merchandize imported or exported by Subjects or Aliens but by co[m]mon consent in Parliament Bee it further Enacted and Declared by the Authoritie aforesaid that the rates intended by this present Act shall be the rates mentioned and expressed in one Booke of Rates intituled The Rates of Merchandize That is to say The Subsidy of Tonnage, The Subsidy of Poundage and The Subsidy of Woollen cloathes or old Draperies as they are rated and agreed on by the Commons House of Parliament sett downe and expressed in this Booke to be paid according to the Tenor of the Act of Tonnage and Poundage from the fower and twentieth day of June inclusively, in the twelfth yeare of his Majesties Raigne dureing his Majesties Life, and subscribed with the hand of Sir Harbotle Grimston Barronet Speaker of the House of Commons Which said Booke of Rates composed and agreed on by Your Majesties said Commons and alsoe every Article rule and clause therin contained shall be and remaine dureing Your Majesties Life as effectuall to all intents and purposes as if the same were included perticularly in the Body of this present Act.
VII. In what Case the Fees of the Custom Officers to be as in 4 Jac. 1.
And it is further Enacted that dureing the continuance of this present Grant where the Goods Exported or Imported amount to the value of five pounds or more the Customers and Collectors and all other his Majestyes Officers in the severall Ports shall take and receive such Fees and noe other as were taken in the fowerth yeare of the late King James untill such time as the said Fees shall be otherwise setled by Authoritie of Parliament.
VIII. Proviso for such as paid before the 24th July 1660.
Provided alwayes that noe person or persons who after the Fower and twentieth of June in the yeare One thousand six hundred and sixty, and before the Fower and twentieth of July in the same yeare have paid received or collected any Dutyes or Customes according to the Rates used in Aprill One thousand six hundred and sixtie shall be molested or any way impeached for or concerning the payment or receipt of the said Duties or any other Dutyes by this Act imposed.
IX. Proviso for Persons having shipped Goods before the said 24th July.
And it is hereby further Declared That noe person who hath shiped any Goods since the said Fower and twentyeth of June and before the said Fower and twentyeth of July shal be lyable to the payment of any Dutyes therefore other then such as were used to be paid in the said moneth of Aprill One thousand six hundred and sixty.
X. Goods described which may be exported immediately after the passing this Act.
Provided alwayes And bee it Enacted [by the Authority aforesaid (fn. 5) ] That it shall and may be lawfull for any person or persons i[m]mediately from and after the passing of this Act to transport ship and carry out of this Kingdome or out of any Port therof by way of merchandize any of these Commodities Goods and Merchandices following That is to say Iron Armor Bandeliers Bridle-Bitts Halbert Heads and Sharps Holsters Muskets Carbines Fowling peices Pistels Pike-heads Sword or Rapier blades Sadles Snaffles Stirrops Calveskins dressed or undressed Geldings Oxen Sheepe-skins dressed without the Wooll, and all sorts of Manufactures made of Leather paying the respective rates appointed by this Act and noe other. Any Lawes Statutes Prohibitions and Customes to the contrary notwithstanding
XI. Goods which may be exported being at certain Prices.
His Majesty by Proclamation may prohibit transporting Gunpowder, &c.
And bee it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid that it shall and may be lawfull ĩmediately after the passing of this Act for any person or persons to ship carry out and transport by way of merchandize these severall sorts of Goods following that is to say Gunpowder when the same doth not exceed the price of five pounds the Barrell, And Wheate Rye Peas Beanes Barley Mault and Oates ( (fn. 6) ) Porke Bacon Butter Cheese Candles when the same doe not exceed in price at the Ports from whence they are laden, and at the time of their Lading these prises following that is to say Wheate the Quarter Forty shillings, Rye Beanes and Pease the Quarter Twenty fower shillings, Barley and Mault the Quarter twenty shillings, Oates the Quarter Sixteene shillings, Beefe the Barrall Five pounds, Porke the Barrel Six pounds ten shillings, Bacon the pound six pence, Butter the Barrel Fower pounds ten shillings. Cheese the hundred One pound ten shillings, Candles the dozen pound Five shillings paying the respective rates appointed by this Act and noe more. Any former Law, Statute, Prohibition or Custome to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding. Provided alwayes That it shall be free and lawfull for his Majesty at any time when he shall see cause soe to doe, and for such time as shall be therin expressed by Proclamation to prohibit the [transportation (fn. 7) ] of Gunpowder or any sort of Arms or Ammunition into any parts out of this Kingdome. Any thing in this Act contained, to the contrary notwithstanding.
XII. An additional Subsidy upon Wines, French, &c. imported, £3. per Ton. other Wines £4. Security by Importer.
The said additional Subsidy to be repaid upon Exportation.; Allowance on Payment of Duties in ready Money.
And bee it further Enacted by the Authoritie aforesaid That over and above the rates herein before mentioned there shall be paid unto your Majesty of every Tun of Wine of the growth of France Germany Portugall or Madera brought into the Port of London or elsewhere the summe of three pounds currant English money within the space of Nine moneths after the importing, And of every Tun of all other Wines brought in as aforesaid the summe of Fower pounds of like currant money within the space of Nine moneths after the importing thereof, For the payment of which dutyes accordingly the Importer shall give good Security, And if any of the said Wines for which the addic[i]onall Duty in this clause mentioned, is paid, or secured at the Importation be exported within twelve moneths after their Importation, then the aforesaid addic[i]onall Duty in this clause mentioned shall be returned, or the security discharged as to soe much as shall be soe exported. And if at the Importation the Importer shall pay for the same ready money he shall be allowed after the rate of Ten per Cent. for a yeare.
XIII. All Wines imported discharged of Excise.
And be it further Enacted That from and after the said Fower and twentyeth day of July all manner of Wines whatsoever to be imported into the Port of London or elsewhere shall be freed and discharged of and from the Imposition of Excise.
XIV. Prisage Wines not to pay any Tonnage or Subsidy.
Provided and it is hereby Declared and Enacted That the prizage of Wines or Prise-Wines ought not to pay Tonnage or Custome, and shall not be charged with the payment of any Custome, Subsidy or summe of money imposed upon Wines by this Act or any thing therin contained.
Har: Grimston Barronet
Speaker of the House of Commons.
( (fn. 8) ) THE RATES OF MERCHANDIZE That is to say The Subsidy of Tonnage The Subsidy of Poundage and. The Subsidy of Wollen Cloths or Old Drapery as they are rated & agreed on by the Co[m]mons House of Parliament sett downe & exprest in this Booke to bee paid according to the Tenor of the Act of Tonnage and Poundage from the Four & twentieth Day of June [inclusively (fn. 9) ] in the twelveth Yeare of his Ma[jes]ties Raigne, during his Ma[jes]ties Life.
Har: Grimston Barronet
Speaker of the House of Commons.
The Rates of Merchandizes.
That is to say The Subsidy of Tonnage The Subsidy of Poundage & The Subsidy of Wollen Clothes or Old Drapery as they are rated & agreed on by the Co[m]mons House of Parliament set downe & expressed in this Booke to bee paid according to the Tenor of the Act of Tonnage & Poundage from the four & twentieth Day of June inclusively in the Twelveth Yeare of his Ma[jes]ties Raigne, during his Ma[jes]ties Life.
C. | |||
---|---|---|---|
Cabinets | or Countores small the peece | ij li. | |
or Countores large the peece | iiij li. | ||
Cables tard or untard the hundred weight cont. One hundred & xij li. | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Caddus or Cruel Ribbon the dozen peeces every peece cont. xxxvj yards | iij li. | ||
Calves skins in the hayre the peece | x d. | ||
Cambogium vid. Druggs. | |||
Camaletto halfe silke halfe haire the yard | x B. | ||
Candles of Tallow the pound | iij d. | ||
Candle plates or Wallers of Brasse or Lattin the pound | j s. iiij d. | ||
Candlesticks | of Brasse or Lattin the pound | j s. iiij d. | |
of wyre the dozen | vj s. viij d. | ||
Candleweeke the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | iij li. x s. | ||
Callicoes fine or course the peece | x s. | ||
Canes or Reeds the thousand | ij li. x s. | ||
Canes of Wood | the dozen | iiij s. | |
the shocke cont. sixty canes | j li. | ||
Cant sparrs the hundred cont. six score | j li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Capers the pound | vj d. | ||
Capravens the hundred cont. six score | iij li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Capp hookes or hooke ends the groce cont. xij dozen | xv s. | ||
Capps vocat. | double turfed or Cockered Capps the dozen | ij li. viij s. | |
for children the dozen | j li. | ||
Night caps of Sattin & Velvet the dozen | iij li. | ||
Night caps of Silke knitt the dozen | iiij li. | ||
Night caps of wollen the dozen | j li. | ||
Night caps of Linnen the dozen | viij s. | ||
Cards vocat. | Playing Cards the groce cont. xij dozen payre | vj li. | |
Woll cards [old (fn. 10) ] the dozen paire | vj s. | ||
Wool cards new the dozen paire | x s. | ||
Carpetts | of Tonny the peece cont. two yards & an halfe long | j li. xs. | |
of Scotland the peece | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
of Cornix the Carpet cont. 2 yards & an halfe long | j li. v s. | ||
Brunswicke Carpets stript & unstript the peece | x s. | ||
China of Cotton course the peece | iiij s. | ||
Gentish the dozen | iij li. | ||
Turkey or Venice short the peece | j li. x s. | ||
Turkey or Venice long cont. four yards & upwards | viij li. | ||
of Persia the yard square the yard | ij li. v s. | ||
Carrells the peece cont. xv yards | j li. vi s. viij d. | ||
Cases for looking glasses guilt. | of No. 3 & 4 the dozen | iiij s. | |
of No. 5 & 6 the dozen | vij s. | ||
of No. 7 & 8 the dozen | x s. | ||
of No. 9 & 10 & upwards the dozen | j li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Cases for looking glasses unguilt | of No. 3 & 4 the dozen | ij s. | |
of No. 5&6 the dozen | iij s. vj d. | ||
of No. 7 & 8 the dozen | vs. | ||
of No. 9 & 10 the dozen | xvj s. viijd. | ||
Cases | wth wooden Combs garnished the dozen | j li. | |
wth small Ivory Combs garnished the dozen | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
with middle sort Ivory Combes garnished the dozen | ij li. | ||
wth large Ivory Combes garnished the dozen | iiij li. | ||
for Combs single the groce cont. xij dozen | j li. | ||
for Combs double the groce cont. xij dozen | ij li. | ||
for Spectacles guilt the groce cont. xij dozen | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
for Spectacles unguilt the groce cont. xij dozen | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
for Needles or Pin cases ye groce cont. xij dozen | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
for Needles Frence guilt ye dozen | v s. | ||
Cattle greate | Imported from Ireland into England a peece after ye rate of | ij li. x s. | |
Casketts | of Iron small the dozen | j li. x s. | |
of Iron middle sort the dozen | ij li. viij s. | ||
of Iron large the dozen | iij li. | ||
of Steele the dozen | vj li. | ||
Caveare the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | j li. | ||
Cawles | of Linnen for women the dozen | viij s. | |
of Silke the dozen | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
Cesternes of Lattin the pound | j s. iiij d. | ||
Chafing dishes | of Brasse or Lattin the pound | j s. iiij d. | |
of Iron the dozen | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Chaines | for Keys or Purses fine the dozen | viij s. | |
for Doggs course the dozen | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Chaires of Walnutt tree the peece | x s. | ||
Chambletts | unwatered or Mohaires the yard | iij s. | |
watred the yard | v s. | ||
halfe silke halfe haire the yard | x s. | ||
Cheese the hundred weight con cxij li. | vj s. viij d. | ||
Cherries the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | j li. | ||
Chesse bords the dozen | j li. | ||
Chess-men the groce cont. xij dozen | xij s. | ||
Chests | of Iron small or middle sort ye peece | v li. | |
of Iron large the peece | vj li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
of Cipresse wood the nest cont. 3 chests | viij li. | ||
of Spruce or Danske the nest cont. 3 chests | j li. x s. | ||
painted the dozen | ij li. | ||
Chimny backes | small the peece | vj s. viij d. | |
large the peece | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
China Pease the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Chizells for Joyners the dozen | iiij s. | ||
Citternes the dozen | iij li. | ||
Clapholt or Clapboord | the small hundred cont. 6 score boords | xv s. | |
the Ring cont. two small hundred | j li. x s. | ||
the great hundred conteyning. xxiiij small hundred | xviij li. | ||
Claricords the payre | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Clokes of Felt the peece | ij li. | ||
Cloth. All manner of Wollen Cloth imported p[er] yard | viij li. x s. | ||
Cochaneile | vocat. Silvester or Campeacha cocheneile the pound | j s. viij d. | |
of all sorts of Cochaneile except Silvester and Campecha cochaneile the pound | vj s. viij d. | ||
Coles of Scotland ye Tonne | vj s. viij d. | ||
Coffers. | covered wth gilt leather the dozen | ij li. | |
covered wth Velvett the dozen | iiij li. | ||
wth Iron barrs the nest cont. 3 coffers | j li. xij s. | ||
plaine [yel] nest cont. iij coffers | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
painted the nest cont. three coffers | xvj s. | ||
Comashes out of Turkey the peece | iiij li. | ||
Combes | for wool the paire old or new | v s. | |
of bone the pound | iiij s. | ||
of box the groce cont. xij dozen | x s. | ||
vocat. lightwood combes the groce cont. xij dozen | vj s. viij d. | ||
of horne for Barbors the dozen | ij s. | ||
of Ivory the pound | x s. | ||
vocat. Horse Combes the dozen | iiij s. | ||
Comfetts the pound | ij s. | ||
Compasses | of Iron for Carpenters the dozen | ij s. | |
of brasse the dozen | iiij s. | ||
for Ships the dozen. | vij s. vj d. | ||
Copper. | unwrought brickes or plates round or square the hundred weight cont. cxij li. or rose Copper | x s. | |
Chaines the Chaine | ij s. | ||
purles or plate the marke | vj s. viij d. | ||
Copras green the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | xv s. | ||
Cordage or Ropes tard or untard the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Corke tackes | of Iron the thousand | vj s. viij d. | |
of Steele the thousand | j li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Cork | for Shoemakers the dozen peeces | iiij s. | |
of all other sorts the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | xvj s. viij d. | ||
Corne | Wheat | Wheate imported not exceeding the price of v s. vj d. the Bushell at the place of importac[i]on by the bushell | v s. |
When it shall exceed that rate by the quarter | vj s. viij d. | ||
Rye | Imported not exceeding the price of iiij s. vj d. the bushell at the place of importac[i]on by the bushell | iij s. iiij d. | |
when it shall exceed yt rate by yeq[uar]ter | v s. | ||
Beanes Barly Mault | Imported not exceeding the price of iij s. vj d. the bushell at ye place of importac[i]on by ye bushell | iij s. iiij d. | |
When it shall exceed that rate by ye quartr | v s. | ||
Coverlets of Scotland the peece | xv s. | ||
Counters of Lattin the pound | j s. | ||
Crosbows. | Lathes the pound | viij d. | |
Thred the pound | viij d. | ||
Rackes the peece | x s. | ||
Cruses of Stone wthout covers the C cont. five score | x s. | ||
Cruses of stone wth covers the hundred cont. five score | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
Cushons of Scotland the dozen | x s. | ||
Cushon cloths | course the dozen | ij li. x s. | |
of Tapestry the dozen | iiij li. x s. | ||
Cuttle bones the thousand | j li. vj. s. viij d. |
D. | |||
---|---|---|---|
Daggs wth fire lockes or Snaphances the peece | j li. | ||
Daggers. | blades the dozen | j li. vj s. viij d. | |
for children the dozen | iiij s. | ||
of bone for children the dozen | ij s. | ||
blacke wth velvet sheathes the dozen | iij li. | ||
gilt wth velvett sheaths the dozen | iiij li. | ||
Deales vocat | Meabro deales the hundred cont.six score | iiij li. | |
Norway deales the hundred cont. 6 score | v li. | ||
Bur[g (fn. 11) ]endorp deales the hun-cont. six score | xij li. | ||
Spruce deales the hundred cont. six score | xv li. | ||
Desks | or stayes for bookes the dozen | iiij s. | |
for women to worke upon covered wth wollen the peece | v s. | ||
for women covered wth velvet the peece | x s. | ||
Dialls | of wood the dozen | iij s. | |
of bone the dozen | xij s. | ||
Dimitty the yard | iij s. | ||
Doggs of earth the groce cont. xij dozen | iiij li. | ||
Dornix | wth caddas the peece cont. xv yards | j li. x s. | |
wth silke the peece cont. xv yards | ij li. | ||
wth woll the peece cont. xv yards | j li. v s. | ||
wth thred the peece cont. xv yards | j li. | ||
French making the ell | ij s. vj d. | ||
French making the yard | ij s. | ||
Dudgeon the hundred peeces cont. five score | j li. | ||
Durance or Duretty | wth thread the yard | vj s. viij d. | |
wth silke the yard | x s. | ||
Dutties the peece | j li. | ||
Druggs vocat | Accacia the pound | iiij s. | |
Accorus the pound | j s. | ||
Adyanthum Album the pound | viij d. | ||
Adianthum Nigrum the pound | vj d. | ||
Agaricus or Agarick trim'd or pared the pound | j li. | ||
Agaricus rough or untrimbd yepd | v s. | ||
Agnus Castus seeds the pound | j s. | ||
Alkanet rootes the pound | j s. | ||
Alkernes | Sirupe the pound | vj s. viij d. | |
Confectio the ounce | iiij s. | ||
Aloes Sicotrima the pound | v s. | ||
Aloes Epatica the pound | ij s. | ||
Allum Romish or Roch the hundred conteyning one hundred & twelve pounds | j li. | ||
Ambergreece black or gray the ounce Troy | iij li. | ||
Ameos seed the pound | viij d. | ||
Amomy seed the pound | viij d. | ||
Anacardium the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Angellica the pound | j s. | ||
Antimonium crudum the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | j li. | ||
Antimonium p[er]paratum or Stibium the pound | viij d. | ||
Argentum Sublime or limum the pound or Quicksilver | iij s. | ||
Aristolochia longa & rotunda the pound | j s. iiij d. | ||
Arsnicke white or yellow or Rosealger the pound | iiij d. | ||
Asarum rootes the pound | j s. | ||
Aspalathus the pound | j s. vj d. | ||
Assafœtida the pound | j s. ij d. | ||
Almonds bitter the hundred wt cont. cxij li. | ij li. | ||
Alumen plume the pound | j s. | ||
Balastium the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Balsamum artificiall the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Balsamum naturall the pound | x s. | ||
Bayberries the hundred & xij li. | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Barley hul'd or French barley the cxij li. | j li. | ||
Bdellium the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Ben album or rubrum ye pound | ij s. | ||
Benjamin of all sorts the pound | v s. | ||
Bezor stone of the East India the ounce Troy | iij li. | ||
Bezor stone of the West India the ounce Troy | x s. | ||
Blacke lead the cxij li | j li. x s. | ||
Blatta Bizantia the pound | ij s. | ||
Bolus co[m]munis or Armoniacus the hundred weight 9t. cxij li. | vj s. viij d. | ||
Bolus verus the pound or fine Bole | viij d. | ||
Borax in past or unrefined co[m]monly called Tinkull the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Borax refined the pound | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Bunkins or Holliworsles or pistolachia the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Callamus the pound | viij d. | ||
Camphire refined the pound | v s. | ||
Camphire unrefined the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Cancri occulus the pound | iiij s. | ||
Cantharides the pound | v s. | ||
Carraway seeds the cxij li. | j li. iiij s. | ||
Cardamons the pound | iij s. | ||
Carpo balsami the pound | iiij s. | ||
Carrabe or Succinum the pound | j s. | ||
Carthamus seeds the pound | viij d. | ||
Cassia fistula the pound of all sorts | j s. vj d. | ||
Cassia lignea the pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Castorium or Bever cods ye pound | x s. | ||
Cerussa the hundred & xij li | j li. x s. | ||
China rootes the pound | vj s. viij d. | ||
Ciceres white & red the pound | vj d. | ||
Ciprus longus & rotundus the cxij li | j li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Ciprus Nuts the pound | viij d. | ||
Civett the ounce Troy | ij li. | ||
Coculus Indiæ the pound | ij s. | ||
Coloquintida the pound | ij s. | ||
Corall white or red in fragments for phisicall uses the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Corall whole the pound | j li. | ||
Coriander seeds the cxij li | j li. | ||
Cortex quaci the cxij li | iij li. | ||
Cortex Caperum the pound | j s. | ||
Cortex Tamerisci the pound | viij d. | ||
Cortex Mandragoræ the pound | ij s. | ||
Coscus dulcis and amarus the pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Cubebs the pound | j s. iiij d. | ||
Cumin seed the cxij li | j li xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Cuscuta the pound | j s. | ||
Cyclamen or panis porcinus the pound | ij s. | ||
Citrago the pound | j s. | ||
Cetrach the pound | js. | ||
Cinabrum or Vermillion the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Copras | white the hundred & twelve pound | ij li. | |
blew of Dansk or Hungary the cxij li | xij s. | ||
Cambogium or Gutta Gambæ ye pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Christall in broken peeces for phisciall uses the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Carlina the pound | j s. | ||
Carolina the pound | iiij d. | ||
Cortex winteranus the pound | viij d. | ||
Daucus Creticus the pound | iiij s. | ||
Diagredium or Scamony the pound | j li. | ||
Diptamus. | leaves the pound | j s. | |
rootes the pound | j s. vj d. | ||
Doronicum the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Eleborus albus & niger ye pound | viij d. | ||
Epithemum the pound | j s. | ||
Es ustum the pound | j s. iiij d. | ||
Euphorbium the pound | viij d. | ||
Fennell seeds the pound | vj d. | ||
Fenugreeke the cxij li | xv s. | ||
Flory the pound | ij s. | ||
Folium Indiæ the pound | v. s. | ||
Fox lungs the pound | iij s. | ||
Frankincense of France or Parrosin the cxij li | xij s. | ||
Galbonum the pound | j s. vj d. | ||
Gallanga the pound | j s. vj d. | ||
Generall the pound | j s. iiij d. | ||
Gentiana the pound | vj d. | ||
Guiny pepper the pound | j s. | ||
Grana Pinæ the pound | j s. | ||
Green ginger the pound | ij s. | ||
Gum Animi the pound | j s. | ||
Gum Armoniack the pound | j s. | ||
Gum Carannæ the pound | iiij s. | ||
Gum Tragagant the pound | j. s. | ||
Gum Elemni the pound | x d. | ||
Gum Hederæ the pound | iiij s. | ||
Gum Lack the pound | j s. | ||
Gum Opopanax the pound | vj s. viij d. | ||
Gum Sarcocol the pound | j s. vj d. | ||
Gum Serapinum the pound or Segapemum | j s. vj d. | ||
Gum Tacchamahaccæ the pound | iiij s. | ||
Grana Tinctorum the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Graines of Guiny or French Graines the cxij li | j li. x s. | ||
Gum Arabeck or Gum Seneca the cxij li | j li. x s. | ||
Gum Sandrack or Gum Juniperi the cxij li. | j li. viij s. | ||
Gum Guiaci the pound | iiij s. | ||
Gum Caramen the pound | vj d. | ||
Hermodactilus the pound | ij s. | ||
Hypocistis the pound | ij s. | ||
Hornes of Harts or Staggs the hundred | j li. x s. | ||
Incense or Olibanum the cxij li | v li. | ||
Ireos the cxij li | ij li. x s. | ||
Isinglass the cxij li | v li. | ||
Jujubes, the pound | j s. | ||
Jolop the pound | iiij s. | ||
Juniper berries the cxij li | j li. | ||
Labdamum or Lapadomum the pound | j s. | ||
Lapis Calaminaris the cxij li | xvj s. viij d. | ||
Lapis Hematitis the pound | j s. | ||
Lapis Judaicus the pound | j s. | ||
Lapis Lazuli the pound | x s. | ||
Lapis Tutiæ the pound | j s. | ||
Leaves | of Roses the pound | j s. | |
of Violets or Flowers the pound | viij d. | ||
Lintiscus or Xilobalsamum the pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Lignum Aloes the pound | x s. | ||
Lignum Asphaltum the pound | j s. | ||
Lignum Rhodium the cxij li | x s. | ||
Lignum vitæ the cxij li | x s. | ||
Lithrage of gold the cxij li | xij s. | ||
Lithrage of silver the cxij li | x s. | ||
Locust the pound | j s. iiij d. | ||
Lupines the cxij li | x s. | ||
Lentills the pound | iij d. | ||
Lapis contragerva the ounce | v s. | ||
Lignum Nepheticum the pound | iiij s. | ||
Madder Rootes or Rubea Tinctorum the pound | j s. | ||
Manna the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Marmalade the pound | j s. | ||
Masticke white the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Masticke red the pound | j s. | ||
Mechoacan the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Mercury sublimate the pound | iij s. | ||
Mercury præcipitat the pound | vj s. viij d. | ||
Methridate Venetiæ the pound | x s. | ||
Millium solis the pound | j s. | ||
Mirabolons dry the pound | j s. | ||
Mirabolons condited the pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Mertle berries the pound | j s. | ||
Mummia the pound | j s. | ||
Muske the ounce Troy | ij li. | ||
Musk Codds the dozen | ij li. | ||
Mirrha the pound | iij s. | ||
Nigella the pound | viij d. | ||
Nitrum the pound | ij s. | ||
Nutmegs condited the pound | iiij s. | ||
Nux de Benn the pound | j s. | ||
Nux Cupressi the pound | viij d. | ||
Nux Indica the peece | vj d. | ||
Nux Vomica the pound | viij d. | ||
Nux Pini, or Grana Pini ye pound | j s. | ||
Nardus Celtica or Spica Romana the hundred and twelve pound | v li. xij s. | ||
Opiam the pound | x s. | ||
Olibanum or Incense the cxij li | v li. | ||
Osipium Huirredum the pound | vj d. | ||
Orcant or Almiet the pound | j s. | ||
Oringe Flower | Oyntment the pound | ij s. vj d. | |
Water the gallon | v s. | ||
Origanum the pound | viij d. | ||
Ossa de Corde Cervi the pound | ij li. | ||
Oyle of Amber the pound | x s. | ||
Oyle of Rosemary the pound | viij s. | ||
Oyle de Bay the cxij li | ij li. | ||
Oyle of Mace or Nutmegs ye pound | vj s. | ||
Oyle de Benn ye pound | vj s. viij d. | ||
Oyle of Spike the pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Oyle of Almonds the pound | j s. | ||
Oyle of Scorpions the pound | ij s. viij d. | ||
Oleum Petrolium the pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Oleum Turpentine the pound | vj d. | ||
Orabus the pound | vj d. | ||
Orpement Auripigmentum the hundred & twelve pound | ij li. | ||
Panther the pound | iiij li. | ||
Panis porcinus vid. Cyclamen. | |||
Pearle beaten the ounce Troy | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Pellitory the pound | vj d. | ||
Pepper long the pound | j s. | ||
Perrosin vid. Frankincense | |||
Pyony seeds the pound | viij d. | ||
Pistachias or Nux Pistachiæ the pound | j s. | ||
Pix Burgondiæ the cxij li | xv s. | ||
Polium Montanum the pound | viij d. | ||
Polipodum the pound | iiij d. | ||
Pomegarnet pills the cxij li | ij li. | ||
Poppy seed the pound | viij d. | ||
Precipitate vid. Mercury p[re]cipitate | |||
Psyllium the pound | viij d. | ||
Prunellais or Pruans of Brunolia the pound | j s. | ||
Quicksilver vide Argentū vivum | |||
Raponticum the pound | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Radex Esule the pound | j s. | ||
Red lead the cxij li | xvj s. viij d. | ||
Rhabarbarum or Rubarb ye pound | j li. | ||
Rosalger the pound vide Arsenick | |||
Rosset the pound | vj d. | ||
Radex contra yerva the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Radex Scorcionera the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Radex Peonæ the pound | viij d. | ||
Sal Alkali the pound | iiij s. | ||
Sal Armoniacum the pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Salgem the pound | viij d. | ||
Sal Niter the pound | j s. vj d. | ||
Sandracha or Gum Sandracha or Gum Juneperi the cxij li | j li. viij s. | ||
Sandiver the cxij li | x s. | ||
Sanguis draconis the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Sarsaperilla the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Sarsafrax Wood or Rootes ye cxij li | j li. | ||
Saunders white the pound | j s. | ||
Saunders yellow the pound | ij s. | ||
Saunders red alias stocke the hundred & twelve pound | iiij li. | ||
Scamony vide Diagredium | |||
Scincus Marinus the peece | iiij d. | ||
Scordium the pound | vj d. | ||
Scorpions the peece | iij d. | ||
Sebestines the pound | j s. | ||
Seeds for Gardens of all sorts ye pound | viij d. | ||
Selæ Montanus the pound | viij d. | ||
Semen Cucumeris Cucurb citron melon the pound | viij d. | ||
Sena the pound | ij s. vj d. | ||
Sordonella the pound | viij d. | ||
Sperma cæti fine the pound | v s. | ||
Sperma cæti course oyly the hundred & twelve pound | iiij li. | ||
Spica celtica vide Nardus Celtica or Spica Romana. | |||
Sanguis Hirci the pound | j s. | ||
Spicknard the pound | vj s. viij d. | ||
Spodium the pound | j s. vj d. | ||
Spunges the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Squilla the cxij li | j li. v s. | ||
Squinanthum the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Stecadoes the pound | x d. | ||
Staphisager the cxij li | ij li. | ||
Stibium vide Antimonium p[re]paratū | |||
Storax Calamita the pound | v s. | ||
Storax Liquida the pound | j s. | ||
Succus Liquoritiæ the pound | j s. | ||
Sulphur vivum the pound | viij d. | ||
Tamarindes the pound | x d. | ||
Terra Lemnia the pound | v s. | ||
Terra Sigillata the pound | iij s. | ||
Thlaspii semen the pound | j s. | ||
Tornsal the pound | viij d. | ||
Torcisci de Vipera the ounce Troy | v s. | ||
Triacle co[m]mon the pound | ij s. | ||
Triacle of Venice the pound | x s. | ||
Turbith the pound | v s. | ||
Turbith Thapsiæ the pound | ij s. | ||
Turmericke the pound | j s. | ||
Turpentine of Venice Scio or Ciprus ye pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Turpentine Co[m]mon the cxij li | x s. | ||
Talke white the pound | vj d. | ||
Talke green the pound | ij s. | ||
Verdigrece the pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Vernish the cxij li | ij li. | ||
Vermillion vid. Cinabrum | |||
Vitr[i (fn. 12) ]olum Romanum the pound | j s. | ||
Umber the hundred weight cont. cxij li | j li. | ||
Viscus quercinus the pound | iiij s. | ||
White lead the cxij li | j li. | ||
Wormeseeds the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Zedoaria the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Xilobalsamum vide Lentiscus |
All Drugs imported directly from the place of theire groweth in English built Shipping to bee rated one third part of what is charged in the Booke of Rates & no more,
F. | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Fanns | For Corne the peece | vj s. viij d. | ||
of Paper the dozen | vj s. viij d. | |||
for women and children French making the dozen | ij li. | |||
Feathers | for beds the hundred cont. cxij li | vj li. | ||
vo¯ Estridge, or Ostridge Feathers undrest the pound | j li. | |||
Estridge or Ostridge drest ye pound | ij li. | |||
Feather beds old or new the peece | ij li. xiij s. iiij d. | |||
Felts for Cloakes French making three yards & halfe long one yard & halfe broade the Felt | iiij li. | |||
Fiddles for Children the dozen | iiij s. | |||
Fire shovells the dozen | xiij s. iiij d. | |||
Fire shovell plates the hundred weight cont. one hundred and twelve pound | xiij s. iiij d. | |||
Figuretto the yard | viij s. iiij d. | |||
Files the groce cont. xij dozen | ij li. | |||
Fish voc. | Codd fish the barrell | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Codfish the last conteyning xij barrells | viij li. | |||
Codfish the hundred cont. six score | ij li. vj s. viij d. | |||
Codsheads the barrell | iij s. iiij d. | |||
Cole fish the hundred cont. 6 score | j li. | |||
Eeles voc. | Pimper Eeles the barrell | j li. | ||
Shaft Kine or Dole Eeles the barrell | j li. xs. | |||
Spruce Eeles the barrll | ij li. | |||
Stubb Eeles the barrll | ij li. vj s. viij d. | |||
Quicke Eeles the Shipps lading | xx li. | |||
Gull Fish the barrell | vj s. viij d. | |||
Haddockes the barrell | vj s. viij d. | |||
Herrings | white full or shotten the barrell | viij s. iiij d. | ||
white full or shottenye last cont. xij barlls | v li. | |||
red the cade cont. five hundred | viij s. iiij d. | |||
red the last cont. xx cades | viij li. vjs. viij d. | |||
Lamprills the peece | j s. | |||
Lings of all sorts the hundred cont. six score | iii li. vj s. viij d. | |||
Newland | fish small the hundred cont. six score | xs. | ||
fish middle sort the hundred cont. 6 score | j li. | |||
fish great the hundred cont. 6 score | j li. xs. | |||
Salmon | the barll | ij li. | ||
Girles the barll | xv s. | |||
Seale fish the fish | xiij s. iiij d. | |||
Stock fish voc | Cropling | the hundred cont. 6 score | xiij s. iiij d. | |
the last conteyning a thousand | vj li. xiijs. iiij d. | |||
Lubfish | the hundred cont. six score | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
the last cont. a thousand | xiij li. vj s. viij d. | |||
Titling | the hundred cont. six score | vj s. viij d. | ||
the last cont. a thousand | iij li. vj s. viij d. | |||
Whitings the barrell | iij s. iiij d. | |||
Note That all Sorts of Fish English taken and brought in English Ships ought to pay noe Custome as by Stat. 5° Eliz. Reg. | ||||
Flannell the yard | j s. viij d. | |||
Flaskes | covered wth leather the dozen | vs. | ||
covered wth velvett the dozen | ij li. | |||
of horne the dozen | vj s. viij d. | |||
Flax. voc. | Spruce Moscovy & all Flax undrest the hundred weight conteyning cxij li | j li. | ||
drest or wrough flax the hundred cont. cxij li. | xv li. | |||
Fleames to let blood the peece | ij d. | |||
Flockes the hundred weight cont. cxij li | ij li. | |||
Flutes course the groce cont. xij dozen | j li. | |||
Freeze of Ireland the yard | ix d. | |||
Frizado the peece cont. twenty four yards | viij li. | |||
Furrs voc. | Armins the Timber cont. forty skins | ij li. | ||
Badger skins the peece | ij s. | |||
Bare skins | black or red the peece | j li. | ||
white the peece | ij li. | |||
Beaver | skins the whole peece | vj s. viij d. | ||
wombs the peece | j s. viij d. | |||
Budge | white tawed the hundred cont. five score skins | ij li. | ||
black tawed the dozen skins | j li. vj s. viij d. | |||
untawed the hundred cont. five score skins | iij li. x s. | |||
Poules the fur cont. four panes | j li. | |||
Naverne the hundred leggs cont. five score | viij s. iiij d. | |||
Rumny the hundred leggs cont. 5 score | vj s. viij d. | |||
Calaber | untawed the timber conteyning forty skins | vj s. viij d. | ||
tawed the timber cont. forty skins | viij s. | |||
seasoned the paine | j li. | |||
stag the paine | xij s. vj d. | |||
Catts | skins the hundred cont. five score | ij li. | ||
poults | the hundred cont. 5 score | j li. | ||
the mantle | vj s. iij d. | |||
wombs the panes or mantle | vj s. iij d. | |||
Dokerers the timber conteyning forty skins | xiij s. iiij. d. | |||
Fitches | the timber cont. forty skins | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
the pane or mantle | xij s. vj d. | |||
Foxes. | the blacke Fox skinn | x li. | ||
the ordnary skinn | j s. iiij d. | |||
the pane or mantle | xv s. | |||
wombes, poules or peeces the paine | x s. | |||
Foynes | backes the dozen | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
tailes the pane or mantle | xij s. vj d. | |||
wth tayles the peece | iij s. iiij d. | |||
wthout tailes the peece | iiij s. | |||
raw the peece | j s. | |||
Poults the hundred cont. 5 score | j li. vj s. viij d. | |||
Wombs seasoned the pane or mantle | j li. vj s. viij d. | |||
Wombes stagg the paine or mantle | xv s. | |||
Grays | untawed the timber cont. 40 skinns | viij s. iiij d. | ||
tawed the timber cont. forty skinns | xij s. vj d. | |||
Jennets. | blacke raw the skinn | xij s. vj d. | ||
blacke seasoned the skin | xvj s. viij d. | |||
grey raw the skinn | iij s. | |||
grey seasoned the skin | iiij s. | |||
Letwis | Tawed the Timber cont. fourty skinns | viij s. iiij d. | ||
Untawed the Timber cont. forty skinns | vj s. | |||
Leopards | skins the peece | j li. v s. | ||
wombs the paine | v li. | |||
Lewzernes skins the peece | ij li. x s. | |||
Ma[r (fn. 13) ]trons | The timber cont. 40 skins | xij s. | ||
the pane or mantle | ix li. | |||
Pouts the pane or mantle | x s. | |||
Gils the timber cont. 40 skinns | xij s. | |||
Tailes the hundred cont. five score | ij li. | |||
Miniver the mantle | xiij s. iiij d. | |||
Minkes | untawed the timber cont. forty skinns | iij li. | ||
tawed the timber cont. forty skinns | iiij li. | |||
Mole skins the dozen | vj d. | |||
Otter skins the peece | v s. | |||
Ounce skins the peece | xij s. vi d. | |||
Sables of all sorts the timber cont. forty skinns | xxx li. | |||
Weazell skinns the dozen | iiij d. | |||
Wolfe skins | tawed the peece | j li. x s. | ||
untawed the peece | j li. iij s. | |||
Wolverings the peece | xij s. vj d. | |||
Fustians vocat. | Amsterdam Holland or Dutch fustians the peece cont. two halfe peeces of fifteen yards the halfe peece | viij li. | ||
Barmillions the peece cont. two halfe peecs | viij li. | |||
Cullen fustians the peece cont. two halfe peeces | viij li. | |||
Holmes and Bevernex fustians the bale cont. forty five halfe peeces | lxxx li. | |||
Holmes & Bevernex fustians the peece cont. two halfe peeces | iij li. xiiij s. | |||
Jeane fustian the peece cont. two halfe peeces | iii li. vij s. | |||
Millian fustians the peece cont. two halfe peeces | viij li. | |||
Naples fustians tript or velure plaine the halfe peece cont. seven yards and a halfe | iiij li. | |||
Naples fustians tript or velure plaine the peece cont. 15 yards | viij li. | |||
Naples fustians tript or velure plaine the yard | x s. | |||
Naples fustians wrought vocat. Sparta velvet, the halfe peece conteyning seven yards and an halfe | vj li. | |||
wrought or Sparta velvet ye yard | xvj s. | |||
Osbro or Augusta fustians ye peece cont. two halfe peeces | iiij li. x s. | |||
wth silke the yard | viij s. | |||
of Weazell the peece cont. two halfe peeces | viij li. | |||
Fusses of Cloves the pound | iij s. vj d. |
G. | |||
---|---|---|---|
Gadza of all sorts wthout gold or silver the yard | ij s. viij d. | ||
Gadza stript wth gold or silver the yard | v s. | ||
Gally dishes the dozen | ij s. vj d. | ||
Garnets | small rough the pound | j li. | |
small or great cut the pound | iij li. | ||
Gantlets the payre | iiij s. | ||
Gart[er]s of silke French making the dozen payre | iij li. | ||
Gaules the hundred [weight (fn. 13) ] cont. cxij l. | ij li. | ||
Gimlets for Vintners the dozen | viij s. | ||
Girdles | of cruell the groce conteyning xij dozen | ij li. xiij s. iiij d. | |
of leather the groce cont. 12 dozen | iij li. vj s. viij d. | ||
of silke the dozen | ij li. | ||
of velvet the dozen | iiij li. | ||
of wollen the dozen | j li. xij s. | ||
of counterfeite gold & silver the dozen | j li. | ||
Glasses for Windows vocat. | Burgundy white the chest | iij li. xv s. | |
Burgundy coloured the chest | v li. v s. | ||
Normandy white the case | j li. x s. | ||
Normandy coloured the case | iij li. xv s. | ||
Renish the weigh or webb cont. sixty bunches | iiij li. xs. | ||
Muscovy glasse or slude the pound | ij s. | ||
Drinking glasses voc. | Venice drinking glasses the dozen | xviij s. | |
Flanders drinking glasses the hundred glasses | j li. vs. | ||
Scotch and French drinking glasses the hundred cont. 5 score | xv s. | ||
course drinking glasses the dozen | iij s. | ||
Glasses voc. | Burning glasses the dozen | iij s. | |
Balme glasses the groce cont. xij dozen | vij s. vj d. | ||
Violls the hundred cont. 5 score | xv s. | ||
Water glasses the dozen | xij s. | ||
Looking glasses | Halfe penny ware the groce cont. xij dozen | viij s. | |
Penny ware the groce cont. xij dozen | xvj s. | ||
of Steele small the dozen | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
of Steele large | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
of Christall small the dozen under No. 6. | j li. xs. | ||
of Christall middle sort the dozen No. 6. | iij li. | ||
of Christall the dozen No. 11. 12. | xlv li. | ||
of Christall small the dozen 7: 8: 9: 10: | vj li. | ||
Hower glasses | of Flaunders making course the groce cont. xij dozen | iij li. | |
of Flanders making the dozen fine | j li. | ||
of Venice making the dozen | iij li. | ||
Glasse stone plates for spectacles rough the dozen | j li. | ||
Glass plates or sights for looking glasses unfiled | of Christall small under No. 6. the dozen | j li. | |
of Christall No. 6. the dozen | ij li. | ||
of Christall No. 7. 8. 9. 10. the dozen | iiij li. | ||
of Christall No. 11. 12. the dozen | xxx li. | ||
Glass pipes | Glasse pipes small the pound | vij s. vj d. | |
great the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | vij li. x s. | ||
All other glass Manufactures not above particularly rated except glass Beads rated at p li. | j s. vj d. | ||
Glew the hundred weight cont. 112 li. | j li. | ||
Globes. | small the payre | iij li. | |
large the paire | vi li. | ||
Gloves. | of Bridges or French making the groce cont. xij dozen | ij li. x s. | |
of Canary Millane or Venice unwrought the dozen payre | j li. | ||
of Canary Millane Venice or French wrought wth gold or silver the dozen pair | iiij li. | ||
of Vaudon the dozen paire | x s. | ||
of silke knit the dozen payre | ij li. | ||
of Spanish plaine ye dozen paire | xv s. | ||
Gold and Silver thred counterfeite voc.. | Bridges gold & silver the pound cont.. 16 ounces Avordupoiz | xiij s. iiij d. | |
Cap gold & silver the pound cont. 16 ounces Avordepoiz | j li. | ||
Copper gold & silver upon quills & rolles or in sk[a (fn. 13) ]ine the pound cont. 16 ounces Avordepoyz | x s. | ||
Cullen gold & silver the mast conteyning two pound & a halfe at twelve ounces to the pound | j li. vi s. viij d. | ||
French copper gold & silver the marke cont. eight ounces Avoir du poiz | v s. | ||
Lyons copper gold & silver double gilt the marke cont. eight ounces Haber de poiz | li. vj s. viij d. | ||
Gold & silver thred right vocat. | Venice Florance or Millane gold & silver ye pound cont. xij ounces Venice weight | iij li. vj s. viij d. | |
French and Paris gold & silver the marke cont. eleven ounces & ½ Venice weight | ij li. | ||
Gold foile the small groce cont. xij dozen | vj s. viij d. | ||
Gold paper the small groce cont. 12 dozen | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Granies French or Guiny the pound | viij d. | ||
Graines | or Scarlett powder the pound | vj s. viij d. | |
of Sevill in berries & granies of Portugall or Rotta the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Grindle stones the chaldron | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
Grocery Wares vocat. | Almonds the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | vj li. | |
Anniseeds the hundred weight cont. cxij | iij li. | ||
Cloves the pound | x s. | ||
Currans the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | vj li. | ||
Dates the hundred weight cont. cxij | vi li. | ||
Ginger | of the East Indyes ye pound | iij s. | |
of the West Indyes ye pound | j s. iiij d. | ||
Licoras the hundred weight cont. 112 li. | j li. xs. | ||
Maces the pound | j li. | ||
Nutmegs the pound | viij s. | ||
Pepper the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Pepper imported directly from the place of its growth in English built shipping the pound | j s. viij d. | ||
Cinomom the pound | vj s. viij d. | ||
Raisins | great the hundred weight cont. cxij li | j li. xs. | |
of the Sun the hundred weight cont. cxij li | j li. | ||
Raisins of Smirna | blacke the hundred weight cont. cxij li | j li. | |
red the hundred weight cont. cxij li | j li. | ||
Figgs the hundred cont. cxij li | j li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Prunes the hundred weight cont. cxij li | xv s. | ||
Suger | Candy browne the hundred weight cont. 112 li | x li. | |
Candy white ye hundred weight cont. cxij li | xv li. | ||
Muscovados the hundred weight cont. one hundred & twelve pound | iiij li. | ||
Refined double & single in loves the hundred weight cont. cxij li | xvij li. | ||
St Thome & Panneils ye hundred weight cont. cxij li | ij li. | ||
white the hundred weight cont. cxij li | vij li. vj s. viij d. | ||
white Sugers from the English Plantac[i]ons the hundred weight cont. cxij li | v li. | ||
browne Sugers & Muscovadoes from ye English Plantat[i]ons the hundred weight cont. cxij li | j li. x s. | ||
All Spicery except Pepper imported directly from the place of its groweth in English built shipping to bee rated one third part of what is charged in the Booke of Rates & no more | |||
Grogrames Turky the yard | iij s. ix d. | ||
Guns voc. | Calervers the peece | v s. | |
Muskets the peece | x s. | ||
Gunpowder voc. | Serpentine the hundred weight cont. cxij li | v li. | |
Corne powder the hundred weight cont. cxij li | viij li. |
L. | |||
---|---|---|---|
Lace voc. | Bone lace of thred the dozen yards | iiij li. | |
Brittaine lace the groce cont. twelve dozen yards | vj li. | ||
Cruell lace the small groce cont. twelve dozen | viij li. | ||
Gold & Silver lace the pound cont. xij ounces Troy | xij li. | ||
Gold & Silver lace the ounce Troy | j li. | ||
Pomet lace the groce cont. xij dozen yards | ij li. | ||
Purle or antlet lace of thred the groce cont. xij dozen | j li. | ||
Silke bone lace the pound cont. sixteen ounces | xl li. | ||
Silke lace of all other sorts the pound cont. xvj ounces | x li. | ||
Ladles voc. melting ladles the hund: weight cont. 112 li. | ij li. | ||
Lapis magnata [falce (fn. 14) ] the pound | iij s. | ||
Lattin vocat. | blacke Lattin the hundred weight cont. a hundred & xij li. | ij li. | |
shaven Lattin the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | iij li. vj s. viij d. | ||
Lead oare the Tonne | iiij li. | ||
Leomons pickled the Pipe | iiij li. | ||
Lemon water | the Tonne | x li. xiij s. iiij d. | |
the Gallon | xj d. | ||
Leather vocat. | Bazill leather the dozen | xx li. | |
Spanish leather or Cordivant the dozen skinns | v li. | ||
Hangings gilt the peece | iiij li. | ||
Spruce or Dansk leather the dozen skinns | ij li. | ||
Leather for Maskes the pound | vj s. viij d. | ||
Turkey & East India Cordivant the dozen | ij li. | ||
Leaves of Gold the hundred leaves cont. five score | v s. | ||
Lewers for Hawkes the peece | j s. iiij d. | ||
Lime for Dyers the barrell | v s. | ||
Lines of Hambrough for ships the peece | vj d. | ||
Lin-seed the bushell | v s. | ||
Linnes blew or red the dozen | j li. x s. | ||
Linnen cloth or. | Callicoes. Cambricks. | Callicoes fine or course ye peece | x s. |
the halfe peece cont. six ells & ½ | j li. | ||
the peece cont. 13 ells | ij li. | ||
Canvas voc.. | Dutch Barras & Hessens Canvas the hundred ells contayning six score | iij li. x s. | |
French or Normandy Canvas & lyne narrow browne or white the hundred ells, conteyning one hundred and twenty | vj li. | ||
French Canvas & line broade for tabling being an ell & halfe quarter & upwards the hundred ells cont. six score | xv li. | ||
Packing Canvas guttings & Spruce Canvas the 100 ells. conteyning 6 score | ij li. x s. | ||
Poledavies the bolt cont. xxviij ells | j li. | ||
Spruce Elbing or Quinsbrow canvas the bolt cont. twenty eight ells | xv s. | ||
Stript or tufted canvas wth thred the peece cont. xv yards | ij li. | ||
Stript tufted or quilted canvas wth silke the peece cont. fifteen yards | iiij li. | ||
Stript canvas wth copper the peece cont. xv yards | iiij li. | ||
Vandolose or Vittry canvas the hundred ells cont. cxx. | v li. | ||
working canvas for cushons narrow the 100 ells cont. 120 | iij li. | ||
working canvas broade the 100 ells conteyning one hundred & twenty | v li. | ||
working canvas of the broadest sort the hundred ells cont. 120 | vj li. | ||
Damask | Tabling of Holland making ye yard | j li. | |
Towelling & napkening of Holland making the yard | vij s. | ||
Tabling of Silesia making ye yard | iiij s. | ||
Towelling & napkening of Selisea making the yard | j s. iiij d. | ||
Diaper | Tabling of Holland making ye yard | ix d. | |
Towelling & napkening of Holland making ye yard | iij s. | ||
Napkins of Holland making ye dozen | j li. xvj s. | ||
Tabling of Selisia making ye yard | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Towelling & napkening of Slesia making the yard | j s. iiij d. | ||
Lawnes | the ½ peece cont. 6 ells ½ | iij li. | |
the peece cont. 13 ells | vj li. | ||
Callico lawnes the peece | j li. vj d. viij d. | ||
French lawnes the peece | j li. x s. | ||
Slesia lawnes ye peece cont. betwixt 4 & 8 yards | x s. | ||
Flaunders Holland cloth | Flemish cloth | the ell v s. | |
Gentish cloth | |||
Isingham cloth | |||
Overisils cloth | |||
Rowse cloth | |||
Brabant cloth | |||
Embden cloth | |||
Freeze cloth | |||
Bag Holland | |||
Browne Holland | |||
Brittish the 100 ells cont. 5 score | vj li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Cowsseild cloth or platts the ell | j s. viij d. | ||
Drilling & pack ducke ye 100 ells cont. 6 score | ij li. | ||
Elbing or Danske cloth double ploy the ell | j s. viij d. | ||
Hambrough & Slesia cloth broade the 100 ells cont. 6 score white or browne | x li. | ||
Hambrough cloth narrow the hundred ells cont. 6 score | viij li. | ||
Hinderlands middle good Headlake & Muscovia linnen narrow the 100 ells cont. six score | ij li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Irish cloth the 100 ells cont. 6 score | ij li. | ||
Lockrams vocat.. | Treager great & narrow or co[m]mon dowlace ye peece cont. 106 ells | v li. | |
Broad dowlace the peece cont. 106 ells | |||
Minsters the roll cont. 1500 ells, at 5 score to the hundred | lvj li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Ozenbrigs the roll cont. 1500 ells, at 5 score to the hundred | lx li. | ||
Soulthwitch the hund: Ells cont. 6 score | iiij li. | ||
Polonia Ulsters Hanovers Lubecke narrow Slesia narrow Westphalia narrow Harford, plaine napkening & all other narrow cloth of high Dutchland & the East Countrey white or browne not otherwise rated the 100 ells cont. 6 score | iiij li. |
All Linnen of Germany or high Dutchland & Silesia not above ¾ & a halfe broade shalbee accompted narrow linnen & all above that breadth shalbe accompted broad & pay accordingly.
Linen Cloth or. | Strawsbrough or Hambrough linnen the ell | iij s. |
Twill & Ticking of Scotland the hundred ells cont. cxx | iij li. |
All linnen shall pay one full Moytie over & above what is before rated for wch additionall duty the importer giveing security at the Custome house shall have twelve monthes time for paym[en]t of the same from the time of ye Importac[i]on, or in case such Importer shall pay ready mony hee shall have 10 p[er] Cent of the said Duty abated to him, And if any of the said Linnens for wch this said Duty is paid or secured at the Importac[i]on be exported wthin 12 mo. after the Importac[i]ons, then the aforesaid Duty shalbe wholy repaid, or the Security vacated, as to what shall bee exported.
S. | |||
---|---|---|---|
Sackcloth | the 100 ells cont. six score | viij li. | |
of single threds the peece cont. fifteene yards | x s. | ||
wth white threds the yard | j s. | ||
wth silke the yard | j s. vj d. | ||
Saddles of steele the peece | j li. | ||
Saffora vide Barillia. | |||
Safflora the pound | j s. | ||
Saffron the pound | j li. x s. | ||
Salt voc.. | white or Spanish Salt ye bushell | viij d. | |
white or Spanish Salt the way cont. forty bushells | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
Bay or French Salt the bushell | vj d. | ||
Bay or French Salt the way cont. forty bushells | j li. | ||
Salt peter the hundred weight cont. one hundred & xij li. | j li. | ||
Saws voc. | Hand sawes the dozen | vj s. viij d. | |
Tenant sawes the dozen | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Whip sawes the peece | v s. | ||
Legg sawes the peece | vj s. viij d. | ||
Says | Double Sayes or Flaunders [Serges (fn. 15) ] the peece cont. xv yards | ix li. | |
Double Say or Serge ye yard | xij s. | ||
Mild Sayes the peece | vj li. | ||
Hounscot Say the peece cont. four & twenty yards | vj li. | ||
Scamoty the yard | j s. | ||
Scamoty the peece cont. seven yards ½ | vij s. vj d. | ||
Scissers the groce cont. 12 dozen | iij li. | ||
Sea holly rootes the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | j li. | ||
Sea morse teeth the pound | iij s. | ||
Serge. | of Athens the yard | ij s. | |
of Florence the yard | j li. | ||
Sheares | for Shearmen new the paire | j li. | |
for Shearmen old the paire | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
for Glovers the paire | j s. | ||
for Seamesters the dozen | iij s. iiij d. | ||
vocat. Forceps the groce cont. xij dozen | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
for Taylers the dozen | xvj s. | ||
Sheepe imported from Ireland to England by the score | v li. | ||
Shubs of Callaber the peece or shub | ij li. | ||
Shumacke the C weight cont. cxij li. | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Shruff or old Brasse the C weight cont. an hundred & twelve pound | iij li. | ||
Syder the tonne | iiij li. | ||
Silke voc. | Bridges silke the pound cont. xvj ounces | ij li. | |
Ferret or Floret silke ye pound cont. sixteen ounces | j li. | ||
Fillozell or Paris silke ye pound contayning sixteen ounces | xv s. | ||
Granado | Silke blacke the pound cont. sixteen ounces | iij li. | |
Silke in colours the pound cont. sixteen ounces | iiij li. | ||
Naples | Silke blacke the pound cont. 16 ounces | ij li. | |
Silke in colo[r]s the pound cont. sixteene ounces | ij li. x s. | ||
Silk voc. | Orgazine [silke (fn. 15) ] the pound cont. 16 ounces & all throwne silke in the gum | xvj s. viij d. | |
Pole & Spanish silke the pound cont. 16 ounces | ij li. | ||
Raw China silke ye pound cont. 24 ounces | j li. | ||
Raw Morea silke the pound cont. 24 ounces | x s. | ||
Raw long silke of all sorts (except China) ye pound cont. 24 ounces | x s. | ||
Raw short silke or Capiton ye pound cont. 24 ounces | vj s. viij d. | ||
Satin silke ye pound cont. 16 ounces | ij li. | ||
Sleave silke course ye pound 9t 16 ounces | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Sleave silke fine or Naples sleave the pound cont. 16 ounces | ij li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Silke Nubbs or Husks of silke ye pound cont. 21 ouncs | ij s. | ||
Throwne silke the pound dyed cont. 16 ouncs | v li. | ||
Silk wrought | Imported in ships English built directly from the East Indyes the pound weight cont. 16 ounces | xv s. | |
of the Manufacture of Italy imported from thence in English built ships the pound weight cont. 16 03s | j li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Imported from the East Indyes in other bottomes the pound weight cont. 16 ounces | j li. | ||
from Italy | ij li. | ||
from any other parts of ye World the pound weight cont. xvj ounces | ij li. |
Provided That all forraigne Silkes wrought exported wth in one Yeare from the Importac[i]ons shall have 2/3 of the aforesaid Rates repaid at the Custome house.
All Silke wrought shall pay one full Moity over & above what it stands rated in this Booke for which addic[i]onall Duty the Importer giveing Security at the Custome house shall have 12 mo. Time for Paym[en]t of the same from the Time of the Importac[i]ons Or in case such Importer shall pay Ready Mony he shall have 10 li. p[er] Cent. of the said Duty abated to him, And if any of the said Silkes for which the said Duty is paid or secured at the Importac[i]on, be exported within xij Months after theire Importac[i]on then the foresaid Duty shall be wholy retorned or ye Security vacated, as to what shalbe [so (fn. 16) ] exported.
Skins voc. | Bucks Skins | in the haire ye skin | ij s. vj d. |
drest the skin | v s. | ||
Calve skins | of Ireland raw ye dozen | vj s. viij d. | |
tanned | x s. | ||
Cordivant of Turky East Indyes or Scotland ye doz: | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
Dog fish skins for Fletchers the dozen | vj d. | ||
Fox skins drest the dozen | xvj s. | ||
Gold skins the skinn | vj d. | ||
Goate skins | of Barbary [or (fn. 16) ] ye East Country in ye haire ye dozen skins | j li. | |
of Scotland & Ireland in ye haire the dozen | vj s. viij d. | ||
tanned the dozen | ij li. | ||
Husse skins for Fletchers the skinn | vj d. | ||
Kidd skins | in the haire the hundred cont. five score | j li. | |
drest the hund[red] cont. 5 score | ij li. | ||
Portugall skins the dozen | ij li. | ||
Seale skins the skinn | j s. viij d. | ||
Shamway skins the dozen | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
Sheep skins in ye woll the skinn | iij d. | ||
Spanish Civill or Cordivant skinsye dozen | v li. | ||
Spruce skins tawed the dozen | ij li. | ||
Skeets for Whitsters the Skeet | j s. | ||
Slip the barll | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Smalts the pound | j s. vj d. | ||
Snuffers of all sorts the dozen | vj s. viij d. | ||
Soape voc. | Castle or Venice the c weight cont. 112 li. | iij li. | |
Flemish the barrell | iiij li. | ||
Spangles of Copper the thousand | j s. | ||
Sparrs small the hundred cont. 6 score | j li. | ||
Spectacles without cases the groce cont. xij dozen | j li. | ||
Spoones of horne the groce cont. xij dozen | xvj s. | ||
Spunges vide Drugs | |||
Standishes | of Wood the dozen | iiij s. | |
of Brasse the dozen | xij s. | ||
covered with Leather gilt the peece | vj s. viij d. | ||
vocat. Pocket Standishes the dozen | ij li. | ||
Starch white the c weight cont. cxij li. | v li. | ||
Staves voc. | Barrell staves the c cont. 6 score | iij s. iiij d. | |
Firkin staves ye c cont. 6 score | ij s. | ||
Steele voc. | Long steel, Wisp steel & such like the ct weight cont. cxij li. | j li. x s. | |
Gad steele the ½ barrll | x li. | ||
Stockings of Wadmol the paire | j s. | ||
Stone birds or Whistles the small groce cont. xij dozen | iiij s. | ||
Stones voc. | Blood stones the pound | xv s. | |
Cane stones the tonne | xv s. | ||
Dogg stones the Last cont. 3 paire to the last | xxxix li. | ||
Stones voc. | Mill stones the peece | x li. | |
Querne stones small the Last | ij li. v s. | ||
Querne stones large the Last | iiij li. x s. | ||
Slick stones the c cont. 5 score | xv s. | ||
Sturgeon | the firkin | j li. xs. | |
the cagg | xv s. | ||
Stuffs of all sorts made [of (fn. 16) ] or mixt wth wool p[er] yard | j li. v s. | ||
Succade wet or dry the pound | iij s. | ||
Sword blades | of Venice Turky or fine blades ye dozen | j li. xs. | |
course of Flaund[er]s making ye dozen | j li. |
All Tobacco of the English Plantac[i]ons shall pay over & above the last mentioned rate by the Merchant Importer one penny per li at nine months after importac[i]on & give security for the same,
Provided that such Tobacco as shall bee exported by any person within twelve months from the importac[i]on shall have this whole duty of one penny per pound repaid,
And in case any Merchant or Importer shall desire to pay ready mony hee shall have an abatement after the rate of 10 li. p[er] cent. per ann[um].
The Subsidy of Tonnage upon all Wines to bee brought into ye Port of London and all other Ports of England & the Dominions thereof by Englishmen.
All Merchant Strangers bringing in any sorts of the said Wines are to pay thirty shillings in the Tonn over & above the foresaid rates which the Native payes, including xxs. the Tonn formerlie paid to his Ma[jes]tie by the name of Southampton Duties for Muskadells Malmeseyes and all other wines of the growth of the Levant for which sorts of Wines the Stranger is also to pay to the use of the Towne of Southampton for every Butt or Pipe the sum of tenn shillings
Moreover the Stranger is to pay the ancient duty of Butlerage which is two shillings upon every Tonne
Note that such Wines as shalbe landed in any of the Out Ports & Custome paid, & afterwards brought to the Port of London by Certificat shall pay so much more Custome as they paid short of ye duty due in the Port of London
THE RATES OF MERCHANDIZE.
RATES OUTWARD.
B. | ||
---|---|---|
Bacon the flitch | x s. | |
Baggs the dozen | x s. | |
Bandaleirs the hundred collers | x s. | |
Beefe the barrell | iij li. | |
Beere the tonn vide after Merchandize outward | ||
Beere Egar the tonne | j li. | |
Bell mettall the hundred weight cont. cxij li. | iiij li. | |
Bellowes the dozen | vj s. | |
Billets the thousand | ij li. | |
Birding peeces the peece vide Iron ware | ||
Birdlime the c cont. cxij li. | j li. x s. | |
Boxes voc. Tobacco boxes vide Haberdashry | ||
Bodyes | voc. stich't Bodyes with silke the paire | |
of whalebone the paire vide Garments | ||
Bones called Oxe bones the thousand | vj s. viij d. | |
Bookes printed unbound or bound the c weight [at (fn. 17) ] 112 li. | v s. | |
Brasse manufactures of all sorts ye c weight [at (fn. 17) ] 112 li. | xvj s. viij d. | |
Bridles the dozen | j s. viij d. | |
Brushes English of Heath the dozen | x s. | |
Buckweed the quarter vide Corne | ||
Buttons of haire the small groce coñ xij dozen | vj d. | |
Butter good or badd the barrell | iij li. | |
Bays | Barnstaple course of xx pound weight & under the bay | xij s. vj d. |
Manchester or Barnstaple fine & all other single bayes not exceeding 34 li. weight the peece | j li. | |
Double bayes the peece in weight from xxxiiij li. weight to sixty pound weight | ij li. | |
Minikin bayes cont. in weight from 60 li. weight to 90 li. weight to pay as three single bayes | iij li. | |
And if they doe cont. above 90 li. in weight & not above 112 li to pay all duties as for 4 single bayes & no more | iiij li. |
C. | ||
---|---|---|
Calves skins the dozen of thirty six pound weight undrest & drest | ij li. x s. | |
By strangers | v li. | |
Noe one skinn in any dozen drest or undrest to exceed four pound in weight | ||
Cambodium the pound | j s. vj d. | |
Candles. | the dozen pound | v s. |
the barel coñ x dozen pound | ij li. x s. | |
Canvas English [tufted (fn. 17) ] ye peece cont. 30 yards vide Linnen. | ||
Canvas Shropshire making ye c ells cont. 5 score vid Linnen. | ||
Capps voc. | Monmouth capps plaine the dozen | vj s. |
Monmouth capps trimd ye dozen | xij s. | |
buttond English making the dozen | viij s. iiij d. | |
of Wool blacke the dozen | x s. | |
Cards voc. | Stocke cards the dozen | j li. iiij s. |
Tow cards new the dozen | v s. | |
Woll cards new the dozen | x s. | |
Wool cards old the dozen | vj s. | |
Playing Cards the hundred weight at an hundred & twelve pound | v s. | |
Card bords the small groce cont. twelve dozen | j li. | |
Carpets Northerne the peece | xj s. viij d. | |
Catlings or English Hatt makers strings the groce cont. twelve dozen | xvj s. | |
Cheese the c weight coñ cxij li. | j li. | |
Cloakes old the peece vide Garments | ||
Cloke baggs the dozen | xv s. | |
Coaches and Chariots of all sorts the peece | v li. | |
Coales vocat.. | Sea Coles the Chalder New Castle measure exported by English in English built Bottomes | viij li. |
Sea Coles the Chalder London measure exported by English in English built Bottoms | v li. | |
Sea Coles of Wales or the West countrey which shall be transported into Ireland the Isle of Mann or Scotland to pay xij d. the Chalder water measure | ||
The Offic[er]s of ye Ports to take good security for the landing of the said Coles respectively | ||
The Merchant Stranger to pay double Custome if hee carry out Coles in a forraigne Bottome, but [if (fn. 17) ] in any English Bottoms then xiiij s. the Chaldron | ||
That if any English transport Coles in strange built Bottomes to pay Strangers Custome. | ||
Combes of wood bone or horn or any other sort vide Habberdashry. | ||
Cobwebb Lawnes the yard | viij d. | |
Comfets the pound vide Confectionary | ||
Cony haire or Wool blacke or white the pound | vj s. | |
Copper manufactures of all sorts the hundred weight at one hundred and twelve pound | xvj s. viij d. | |
Cordage tard or untard the hundred weight cont an hundred and twelve pound | x s. | |
Coverletts | of Wool & haire the peece | j s. viij d. |
of Caddace the peece | j s. iij d. | |
Curricombes vide Iron ware. | ||
Cushons of Yorkeshire the dozen | j li. | |
Cottons Northerne, Manchester, Tanton and Welch Cottens the hundred Goades | ij li. | |
Cottons called Welsh plaines the hundred Goades | ij li. x s. | |
Corne | Barley the quart[er] conteyning eight bushells | x s. |
Mault the quarter | x s. | |
Beanes the quarter | x s. | |
Oates the quarter | vj s. viij d. | |
Pease the quarter | x s. | |
Wheate the quarter | j li. | |
Rye the quarter | x s. | |
Buck wheate the q[ua]rter | x s. |
K. | |
---|---|
Knives voc. | Shomakers paring knives Sheffeild knives Cutting knives Lond: knives, vid. Iron ware. |
M. | ||
---|---|---|
Maps & Sea Carts of all sorts ye c weight conñ 112 li. | v s. | |
Muster[d (fn. 18) ] seed the c weight cont. cxij li. | x s. | |
Malasses or Rameales the tonn | x li. |
N. | |
---|---|
Nailcs of all sorts the hundred weight cont. an hundred & twelve pounds | v s. |
Nutts small the barll cont. 3 bushells | vj s. viij d. |
P. | |
---|---|
Parchment the rolle | xiij s. iiij d. |
Pas[t (fn. 18) ] bords the groce cont. xij dozen | xij s. |
Pictures of English making the hundred weight printed or painted | v s. |
Pilchers the tonn by strangers | xx li. |
Points of Leather the small groce cont. xij doz. | vj d. |
Purles of Broadcloth the peece | ij d. |
Porke the barrell | iiij li. |
S. | |||
---|---|---|---|
Saddles | Great saddles the peece | v s. | |
All other saddles of all sorts a peece | iij s. | ||
Saddle-trees the dozen | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Sackcloth to make sacks vide Linnen. | |||
Saffron the pound | j li. x s. | ||
Salt peter the hund weight cont. cxij li. | iiij li. | ||
Sea morse teeth the pound | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Scabbards for swords the dozen | j s. viij d. | ||
Shag. | wth thred the yard | vide Linnen | |
wth thred the peece | |||
Shovells. | shod the dozen | iiij s. | |
unshod the dozen | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Shreds & peeces of Broad cloth the pound | vj d. | ||
Shoes. | old the hundred dozen paire | iiij li. | |
all new Shoes Bootes and Slippers the pound weight | x d. | ||
Silke voc. English thrown silke the pound cont. xvj ounces | iij s. iiij d. | ||
All other [silke (fn. 18) ] manufactures made of silke only or of silke & worsted or of silk & thred or haire the pound weight | j s. viij d. | ||
Skims vocat. | Cony skins | Tawed and dyed into colors the hundred cont. cxx | j li. |
Gray stagg the c cont. 6 score | x s. | ||
Grey seasoned the c coñ six score | j li. | ||
Grey tawed ye c cont. six score | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Blacke wth silver haires or wthout the hundred cont. 6 score | ij li. xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Kid skins | In the haire the hundred contayning 5 score | x s. | |
Drest the hundred cont. 5 score | xiij s. iiij d. | ||
Lambe skins. | voc. Morekins untawed ye wool the hundred the hundred cont. 6 score | xvj s. viij d. | |
vot. Morekins tawed wth ye wool the hundred cont. 6 score | xvj s. viij d. | ||
white or blacke untawed the hundred cont. six score | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
white or black tawed wth the wool the hundred coñ 6 score | j li. x s. | ||
Otter skins | raw the peece | j s. | |
tawed the peece | js. iiij d. | ||
wombs the mantle | xs. | ||
Sheep & Lamb skins | tawed wth the wool the c conteyning 6 score | iij li. | |
drest wthout wool the hundred cont 6 score | ij li. x s. | ||
Pelts the hundred conteyñg five score | iij li. vjs. viij d. | ||
Rabiit skins blacke the hundred | xv s. | ||
Hare skins the peece | iij d. | ||
Cats skins the hundred | j li. vj s. viij d. | ||
Fox skins the peece | ij s.vj d. | ||
Dogs skins the dozen | ij s. vj d. | ||
Elke skins the peece raw | j li. | ||
Wolfe skins tawed the peece | vj s. | ||
Badgers skins the peece | j s. | ||
Squirrell skins the thousand | ij s. x d. | ||
Sleeves of leather v. Garments | |||
Soape. | hard English make the hundred conteyning cxij li. | x s. | |
the barrell | j li. | ||
Spanish Sattins | English making the single peece cont 15 yards vide silks | ||
The double peece cont 30 yards vide Silkes | |||
Spratts the Cade cont a thounsad | j s. viij d. | ||
Starch the C weight conteyning a hundred and twelve pound | j li. | ||
Steel voc. Gad steele the hundred weight conteyning cxij li. | j li. | ||
Stockings | Irish the dozen | v s. | |
Kersey long the paire | j s. iij d. | ||
Kersey short the dozen payre | iij s. ix d. | ||
Leather the dozen vide Garments | |||
Sik stockings vide Silke manufactures | |||
Wollen for children the dozen | j s. viij d. | ||
Worsted for children the dozen | iij s. iiij d. | ||
Wollen for men the dozen | v s. | ||
Worsted for men the dozen | xij s. vj d. | ||
Lower ends of worsted stockings the dozen | vj s. xiij d. | ||
Stones vocat | Hilling stone the thowsand | iij s iiij d. | |
Slate the thousand | xv s. | ||
Stuffs vocat | Perpetuanoes & Serges in regard of the coursness the pound weight | j s. iij d. | |
All other Stuffs made of wool or mixed wth hayre or thred the pound weight | j s. iiij d. | ||
Sugers of all sorts formerly brought into this Kingdome & after resined & made into loaves & exported by way of Merchandize the hundred cont cxij li. | x s. |
V. | ||
---|---|---|
Velules English the single peece cont seven yards | x s. | |
Velures the double peece conteyning fifteen yards | j li. | |
Viniger of wine the tonne | ij li. vj s. viij d. | |
Virginalls the payre | j li. |
W. | ||
---|---|---|
Watches of sorts the peece | x s. | |
Wadmoll the yard | iiij d. ob. | |
Wast Coates | of Wadmoll the dozen | vide. Garm[en]ts |
of Cotten the dozen | ||
of Kerseys of Flannell the peece | ||
of Worsted knit the peece | ||
of Wollen knit the peece | ||
Wax. | English the hundred weight cont a hundred and twelve pound | vj li. |
English hard wax the pound | ij s. | |
Weld the hundred weight cont cxji li. | j li. v s. | |
Whalebone [cut or (fn. 19) ] wrought vide Haber dashry | ||
Whale finns the groce cont xij dozen | ij s. | |
Woad English the tonne | xv li. | |
Woad nets the hundred cont 5 score | x s. | |
Wood | Redwood the hundred weight cont an hundred & twelve pound | i li. x s. |
Gambray wood the hundred cont an hundred and xij li. | iiij s. vj d. | |
Box wood the tonne | iiij li. | |
Worsted | narrow English the peece | xv s. |
broade English the peece | j li. | |
Wine leeze the butt | j li. | |
Wool Spanish free. |
Tonnage. | ||
---|---|---|
Beere | For every tonn of Beere to be exported in shipping English built, in money | ij s. |
For every toon of Beere exported in any other shipping in mony | vj s. |
Goods Inwards not rated to pay five per Cent
And if there shall happen to be brought in or carryed out of this Realme any goods layble to the payment of Custome & Subsidy wch either are omitted in this booke or are not now used to bee brought in or carryed out or by reason of the great diversity of the value of some goods could not bee rated That in such case every Customer or Collector for the time being shall levy the said Custome and Subsidy of poundage according to the value & price of such goods to bee affirmed upon the oath of the Merchant in the p[er]sence of the Customer Collector Comptroller & Surveyor or any two of them
Directions for the payment of the Subsidy upon Wollen Cloths [or (fn. 19) ] ould Drapery
And so after that rate for all other sorts of clothes of greater length and weight allowing not above 28 yards & 64 li. to a short cloth, that is to sayd for every pound weight over & above 64 li. 2 farthings and halfe a farthing & for all other sorts of lesser clothes to be allowed to a short cloth as hereafter is expressed
And so after that rate for all other sorte of cloth of greater
length and weight and for all sorts of lesser cloths to bee allowed to a short cloth as hereafter is expressed.
What & how many sorts of the lesser Wollen cloths herafter specified shalbe allowed to a short cloth.
The new sort [of cloth (fn. 20) ] called Spanish cloth otherwise narrow list Westerne broad cloth not exceeding 25 yards in length & 43 li. in weight to be accompted two thirds of ye short cloth before rated.
And for evry pound weight exceeding 43 li. 2 farthings & ½ a farthing ye pound weight
Cloth Rashes als cloth Serges con 30 yards weying 40 li. to be accounted 3 / 1 of ye short cloth before rated.
And for every pound exceeding 40 li. weight 2 farthings & halfe a farthing the pound wt.
And for any other sort of wollen Cloth of the old or new Drapery & not mencont.ned in this booke to pay 2 farthing & ½ a farthing for the Subsidy of every pound weight thereof.
V. If any Merchant Denizon or Stranger shall export any Spanish or forraigne wolls hee shall have liberty so to doe wth this further Condition that such Spanish or other forraigne wools whatsoever bee not exported in any other Ship or Vessell whatsoever wth intent to bee arrived beyond the Seas out of the Kingdome of England & dominyon of Wales then only in English shipping upon paine of Confiscac[i]on.
VI. Every Merchant as well English as Stranger wch shall ship & export any Currans wch formerly were duly entered, and paid the Subsidy and Custome inwards shall have allowed or repaid unto them respectively all the Custome and Subsidy paid inwards for the same except eighteen pence for every hundred weight to the English and two and twenty pence halfe penny for every hundred weight to the Stranger, upon due prose of the due entry and payment of the custome, and Subsidy thereof Inwards, and of the shipping thereof to bee exported to be made in manner as in the second Article is declared.
VII. If any Merchant having duly paid all Dutyes inwards for forragne goods, and in regard of bad sales, shall be inforced to keepe the same or any part thereof in his hands after the space of a yeare shall bee elapsed in this case hee or any other person is to bee permitted to shipp the same out for the parts beyond the Seas, if they soe thinke fitt wth out payment of any subsidy for the same outwards upon due profe that ye same was duly entred & Subsidy paid inwards.
VIII. Every Merchant bringing in any sort of Wines into this Kingdome by Way of Merchandize & shall make due entryes of the same in the Custome house shall bee allowed twenty p[er] Cent. for Leacage.
IX. Every Hoghshead of Wine wch shall bee run out and not full seven inches or above left therein, aud every Butt or Pipe not above 9 inches shall bee accompted for outs, & the Merchant to pay no Subsidy for the same.
X. If any wines shall prove corrupt & unmarchantable, & fitt for nothing but to distill into hott waters, or to make Viniger, then every owner of such wines shall bee abated in the Subsidy, according to such his damages in those wines, by the discretion of the Collectors of the Customes & one of the principall Offic[er]s.
XI. If any Tobacco or other goods or merchandize brought into this Kingdome, shall receive any da[m]mage by salt water or otherwise, so that the owner thereof shall be p[re]judiced in the sale of such goods, the principall Offic[er]s of the Custome house or any two of them, whereof the Collector for the time being to bee one, shall have power to choose two indifferent Merchants, experienced in the values of such goods, who upon visiting of the said goods shall certify and declare upon theire corporall oaths, first administered by the said Offic[er]s what damage such goods have received, & are lessened in theire true value, & according to such damage in relation to the Rates set on them in this booke, the said Offic[er]s are to make a proportionable abatement unto the Merchant or Owner, of the Subsidy due for the same.
XII. The Merchant stranger, who according to the Rates & Values in this booke conteyned doe pay double Subsidy for Lead Tinne Wollen clothes shall also pay double custome for Native manufactures of wool or part wool, & the sayd strangers are to pay for all other goods as well Inwards as Outwards, rated to pay the Subsidy of poundage three pence in the pound or any other duty payable by Charta Mercatoria besides the Subsidy
XIII. That the Merchants trading into the Port of London have free liberty to lade & unlade theire goods at any the lawfull Keyes & places of shipping & landing of goods between the Tower of London & London bridge, and between Sun rising & Sunn setting from the tenth [day (fn. 21) ] of September to the 10th day of March and between the hours of six of the clocke in the morning and six in the evening from the tenth day of March to the tenth day of September, giveing notice thereof to the respective Offic[er]s appointed to attend the lading & unlading of goods, And such Officer as shall refuse upon due calling to bee p[re]sent, hee shall forfeite for every default five pounds the one moytie to the King & the other moity to the partie agreived and suing for the same.
XIV. The Merchants of Yorke Kingston upon Hull, & New Castle upon Tine & the members thereof, shalbee allowed free of Custome & Subsidy, two of the Northerne Clothes & Kersies in tenn to be shipped in those Ports in the names of double wrappers, as formerly hath been [there (fn. 21) ] allowed them.
XV. The Merchants of Excester & other Westerne parts shalbe allowed free of Subsidy one Perpetuano in tenn for a wrapp, & three Devon dozens in twenty for wrappers the same to bee shipped out of ye Ports of Excester Plymouth Dartmouth Barnstaple Lyme Regis or the members thereof
XVI. All Merchants transporting any sorts of Wollen whether new or old Drapery, as also Bayes and Cottons shall bee allowed one in tenn for a wrapper free of Custome & Subsidy
XVII. Every Merchant shall be allowed upon all other goods & merchandize appointed to pay to any the Subsidy of Poundage, according to the rule of this booke, to be imported five in the hundred of all the said Subsidyes of Poundage soe appointed to bee paid.
XVIII. The Offic[er]s who sit above in the Custome house of the Port of London shall attend the service of theire severall places, from nine to twelve of the clocke in the forenoone, and one Officer or one able Clerke shall attend [wth1] the booke in the afternoone, during such time as the Officers are appointed to waite at the water side, for the better deciding of all controversies that may happen concerning Merchants warrants. All other the Offic[er]s of the out Ports shall attend every day in the Custome house of every respective Port for dispatch of Marchants & Shippers, between the houres of nine of the clocke and twelve in the morning, & two and four of the clocke in the afternoone.
XIX. Every Merchant making an entry of goods either inwards or outwards shall bee dispatched in such order as hee cometh, and if any Officer or his Clerke shall either for favour or reward put any Merchant or his Servant duly attending by his turne, or otherwise delay any Person so duly attending & making his entryes aforesaid, to draw any other reward or gratuity from him then is limitted in the Act for Tonnage and Poundage and this Booke, if the Master Officer bee found faulty herein hee shall uppon complaint to the cheife Officers of the Custome house bee strictly admonished of his duty, but if the Clerke be found faulty therein, hee shall upon complaint to the said cheife Offic[er]s bee p[re]sently discharged of his service & not permitted to sit any more in the Custome house.
XX. The Lord Maior Cominalty and Cittizens of the Citty of London theire Officers or Deputyes for & touching the Offices of Paccage, Scavage, Baleage or Portage of any Goods or Merchandize of Aliens, or theire Sonns born wthin this Kingdome or Unfreemen imported or exported into or out of the Citty of London or the Liberties or Parts thereof, unto, or from the Parts beyond the Seas, for or concerning the receiving or taking of any fees or rates heretofore usually taken, for or in respect of the said Offices or any of them might & may receive & take the same, Any thing in the Act for Tonnage & Poundage or this Booke or any former Act to the contrary notwthstanding.
XXI. All ancient dutyes heretofore lawfully taken by any Citty or Towne Corporate, theire Fermors Deputies or Officers under the name of Towne Custome or the like for the maintaynance of Bridges Keyes, Harbors Wharfes or the like shall and may bee received & enjoyed as formerly Any thing in the said Act or any other Act or Booke to the contrary notwthstanding
XXII. The under Searcher or other Officers of Gravesend having power to visite and search any Ship outward bound, shall not wthout just & reasonable cause deteyne any such ship under color of searching the goods therein laden above three tides after her arrivall at Gravesend under paine of losse of theire office & rendring damage to the Merct & Owner of the Ship And the Searcher or other Officer of the Custome house in any of the out ports having power to search & visite any ship outward bound, shall not wthout just & reasonable cause deteyne any such ship und[er] Color of Searching the goods therein laden above one tyde after the [s[ai]d (fn. 22) ] Ship is fully laden & ready to set saile, under paine of losse of the office of such offender & rendring damage to the Merchant & Owner of ye ship.
XXIII. Note That all Timber in Balkes, wch shalbee of eight inches square or upwards, that shalbe imported or brought from any part beyond the Sea into the Realme of England Dominion of Wales, Port and Towne of Berwick or any of them shalbe rated according to the measure of Timber the foote square iij d. for the Value thereof, & according to that Rule shall pay for Subsidy twelve pence in the pound according to poundage, & all under eight inches square & above five inches square, shall pay for Subsidy according to the Rates mentioned in this Booke of Rates for middle Balkes, & all of five inches sqare or under shall pay according to the Rate of small Balkes.
XXIV. For avoiding [of (fn. 22) ] all oppressions by any of the Offic[er]s of the Customes in any Port of this Kingdome, in exacting unreasonable fees from the Merchant by reason of any entrye or otherwise touching the shipping or unshipping of any Goods Wares & Merchandize: It is ordered, that noe Officer Clerke or other, belonging to any Custome house whatsoever shall exact require or receive any other or greater fee of any Merchant or other whatsoever then such as are or shalbee established by the Co[m]mons in Parliament assembled, If any Officer or other shall offend contrary to this order, hee shall forfeite his Office & Place & bee for ever after uncapable of any office in the Custome house
XXV. All Fees appointed to bee paid to the Customer Comptroller, Surveyor or Surveyor Generall in the Port of London for any Cocquet or Certificat outwards shalbe paid altogether in one sum to that Offic[er] from whom the Merchant is to have his Cocquet or Certificat above in the Custome house, and after the Merchant hath duly paid his Custome & Subsidy & other duties above in the Custome house as is appointed by this booke of Rates, hee is to be Mr of & keep his owne Cocquet or Certificat untill hee shall ship out his goods so entred, when as hee is to deliver the same to the head Searcher, or his Ma[jes]ties under Searcher in the Port of London or other Ports together wth ye marke & number of his goods.
XXVI. The Officers of the Custome house for the time being shall allow & make good, unto all Persons all such monyes as are or shall bee due unto them, for the halfe subsidie, and also the Algier duty of Forraigne Goods formerly exported now due & unpaid.
XXVII. The duties & sums of mony appointed to bee paid by the Act of Subsidy of Tonnage and Poundage passed this Parliament & by the Booke of Rates therein mentioned & noe other shall bee paid to his Ma[jes]ties Officers during the continuance of the said Act upon Goods imported or exported Any Law Statute or Usage to the contrary notwthstanding Nevertheles it is declared, That prizage of Wines the duty called Butlerage & the duty of Twelve pence upon every Chalder of Sea Coles exported from Newcastle upon Tyne to any other Port or Ports of this Realme shalbe continued.
Har: Grimston Barronet
Speaker of the House of Commons.