INDEX.] 



Navi/. 



1573 Fleet of 146 fliips, whereof 13 belong to the 



crown - - - i'l 155 



1588 Ii\ the fleet fent againft tlie invincible armada 

 there arc 76 (hips paid by the queen, being 

 private vetlels hired - . 1X5 



— - Another (iatement of the navy, Sec - 187 



- — ^ Naval eftablilhments at Greenwich, &c 188 



j6o3 The navy conlifts of 13 (hips from 600 to 1000 

 tuns (biu See V. iv, p. 547) — itisraifed to 

 24 (hips in the reign of King James I 230 



610 A (llip of 1400 tuns and 64 guns built bythe king 259 

 6j2 Allowance of victuals, &c in the navy 31S 



62j Twelve rommiHioners appointed . 331 



Navy (aid to con(l{t of 82 (hips of war . 336 



626 Pay of the officers andmenraifcd . 338 



632 Arfenals, docks, &c built - - 371 



634 Ships fuinilhed by cities, &;c - 37S 



635 A (llip of 1740 tuns and 96 guns built — a fleet 



built by the counties, as iji 1401 - 385 



636 A contract for viiUialing the navy - 393 



Stores at Deptford, Chatham, Portfmouth 394 



642 A Cpecinien of the expenfe of the navy 412 



645 Fleet equipped by the parliament . 4:9 



6^2 Fngliili have 204 fliips of war, which are larger 



and carry heavier (hot than thofe of the 



Dutch - - - 450>4J3 



654 Expenfe of the navy ... 459 



656 The fire of calUes upon land difregarded by 



Admiral Blake - - 471 



675 Parliament grant /"30o,ooo for building 20 



large (hips — the fir(t rate 1,400 tuns 578 



677 And now ;f 584,000 for 30 (liips - 58 1 



68S Navy increafed fince 1660 from 62,594 to 



101,032 tuns - - - 630 



695 Comparative view now and 1607 - 664 



710 Atl tor fortifying Portfmouth, &c - iii, 12 



720 Number of fliips and guns - - 115 



749 Tunnage of the navy in variousyears 274 



758 Afts for fortifying Milfoid haven, Portf. 



mouth, Chatham, and Plymouth 309,311,321 

 761 Number of fliips of war of each rate - 350 



763 Propofals to keep foine (hips, officers, and 



men, employed during peace - 368 



765 A (hip of 74 guns built at Milford haven 419 



772 Dertroyersof (hips, &c punilhed with death 521 



Aftforpreferving large fliip timber - 521 



779 Ships built in the Were, Tine, and Forth 648 



793 Navy allowed wine and tobacco without duty iv,270 

 795 Quotas of men furnlflied by fliires, &c - 338 



Alio by ports — aCl for prefllng idlers, &c 340 



797 Great mutiny in the navy, and the commerce 



of the Thames interrupted - 425 



798 Liquor may be (hiftcd from fliip to (hip - 442 

 8oi Tunnage of the navy from 1547 to 1760, and 



prefent ftate of it - - 547 



Negroes of Africa — See S/are trade, Afrkan company, 



Guinea, Soiith-Jea company, 

 'i *Negrocs employed in the Carthaginian armies i, 51 

 ^*Their filent trade with the Carthaginians . 55 

 947 The great extent of their country, and the 



trade on the we(t fide of it, noted - 2')9 



1443 They are brought to Europe as flaves 661 



1783 Negroes from the United (fates are fettled in 



a town in Nova Scotia, others go to the 



Weft Indies - - — iv, 36 



1787 Negroes from London fettled at Sierra Leona 127 



Wile conduct of the king of Alniainy - 128 



178S Cieneral charaifcr, lie of the Negroes in Africa 141 



How tliey become Haves — opinions for and 



againll their civilization - - 143 



1794 King ofFoulah fends an anibaffy to Sierra Leo- 

 na — learning, manufaftures, &c of Koulah 301 

 1797 Manners, manufaftures, trade, &c of the in- 



land Negroes, as related by Mr. Park 430 



'3» 



144 



160 

 i6z 



Negroes* 



1797 And oftJiofe of Dar.Fur, by Mr. Ricvre iv, 4.^ . 



Kcthcr'uwds, including Flanders and alf th'. nther di'ninrnn ■ 

 of the dukes of Bur/finJy, till the cflabli/liment of ihe Stver 

 United provinics — See itandrrs, Hnllund, Hrahar.t, i3c. 

 1493 The trade with Kn^land interrupted ii, k 



1496 A treaty with England, called the great inter- 



courfc . . . % 



1497 A fupplementary one admits Englifli cloth 



without any duty, except in Flanders 15 



1499 A new treaty, and further regulations . i| 



1506 A new treaty more favourable to England if 



1J07 Tolls, which diitrelfed the trade, aboliflicd 30 



1508 The chief cities (ocurity for the duke - 31 



1509I' Garden fluff carried to England - 3S 



1516 A new treaty with England - - io 



1520 n he great intercourfc renewed - ^< 



1528 Free trade llipulatcd for the Netherljnds 69 



15.50 Commerce aft'efted by the inquilitioii - jo6 



1560 The woolen inanufattiire declined . i^i 



200,000 pieces of wooUn goods from England, 



25,000 packs of Spanifli, and 1,200 facks of 

 Englilh, wool, annually imported I2&,ii7 



- Herring fi(hery, woolen and linen manufactures 133 

 1564 Prohibition of trade with England — (bon re- 

 voked — trade with England for 12,000,000 

 ducats . - - 



1567 Va(t numbers fly out of the country and fprcad 



their nianufaiffures into other countries 

 1567 Spanifh garrifons expelled from Holland, &c 

 157S Queen Elizabeth treats with the revolters 

 1579 The republic of the Seven United provinces 

 (I'or their fubfequent tran(ai5tions, fee Holland, the chief 



of the feven.) 

 1585 Commerce of Spanifh Netherlands ruined, and 

 manufaflures difperfed, after the fiege of 

 Antwerp - - - J76 



1668 Many towns ceded by Spain to France s"-,^ 



i6t! The French conquer many more - 581 



1C7S Treaty between France and Spain refpefling 



the Netherlands - . 595 



1765 State of the Britiih trade in Flanders iii, 427 



Keutral nations, — See Armed neutrality. 

 129; Neutral nations not allowed to fail to France i, 454 

 1326 Not to be molefted by Englifh velfels - 498 



'338 Kiijht of neutrality allerted by the k. of Spain 520 

 i6i8 h'evis colonized from St. Chriftopher's ii, 350,355 

 1705 Plantations deftroyed by the French - 733 



1711 D.iniagcs partly conipenlated by parliament iii, 14 

 1772 'I he houfes deftroyed by a hurricane - 526 



1782 Hland taken by the French . - 707 



The produce iHU admitted as Britith - 710 



1783 Reliorcd to Great Kritain - - iv,2 



Neutral velfels admitted for a time - 14 



1787 Imports and exports of flaves 17S4-17S7 155 



Population, value of land, &c - 156 



1788 Exports to Great Britain 17S7-8S - 197 



1798 Sugar and rum exported to Great Britain 464 



1784 here Brunjuici made a (eparate province iv, 54 

 1793 Pitch, tar, 6;c admitted from the United ftatcs 271 

 1077 NewcaJiU upon T/?ie—OTi'^\n - . 1,301 

 1200 Advancing in profperity . . 366 

 1245 The coal trade apparently begun before now 395 

 12S1 Wool ihipped at Ncwcaltle - 437 

 1325 A French nicrthaiit loi.li coal at Newcaflle 497 

 133011 A coal wharf worth 4o/'a-year - J04 

 1350 The burgefles autlionz-d to dig coal and flone 541 

 1379 Vetlels carrying coal pay for guarding the fca 5S9 

 1401 Coals ai;d grindflones chief objects at Newcaflle 589 

 1429 An exemption, fimilar to that of Berwick, 



having been fome time enjoyed, isiiowre- 

 fcinded - . 609 n, 644 



i4<3 The privilege of the northern wool reftorcd 675 

 1465 And wool of York, &£ (hipped . 67J 



h I 



