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To the twentith Interrogatory, that he hat … To the twentith Interrogatory, that he hath knowne it to be<br />
inviolably observed at the Morea for the theise seaven yeares<br />
past that noe man hath gone to the Bashaw without a druggerman<br />
or leave from the Consull or Vice Consull of the said place of the Morea, And<br />
further he cannot answeare./
To the 24th he answereth that the interrate William ffowke did foe<br />
unto the interrate Bashaw (as himselfe acknowledged to this Rendent)<br />
on or about the nineteenth day of September 1654, And that<br />
the said ffowke then went unto the Vice Bashaw without any<br />
Druggerman, Janisary o any other sent with hom by this<br />
REndent (who was then Vice Consull) and that then this Rendents<br />
brother Mr Richard Middleton who was Consull of the Morea,<br />
was dead, And further he cannot answeare.
To the 22th Interrogatory he answereth that Nathalagoe is distant from<br />
Petras (over Land) 35 miles, and that Vesticha and Lepanto are 9<br />
miles distant crosse the Gulfe of Lepanto, and that<br />
Vesticha is from Nathalagoe betweene forty and fifty miles and<br />
from Petras about twenty miles, and that Leoanto and<br />
Nathalagoe are distant about 27 miles, and Lepanto and Petrasse<br />
about 13 miles, And he saith that he this Rendent on the<br />
behalfe of the said producents agreed with the said Bashaw for all<br />
the Currance at 2 Dollars and an halfe per Sacke, and the<br />
said Bashaw payd the Owners severall pirces for their Currance<br />
and that the said Owners did willingly agree to the sale of<br />
the said Currance at the prices agreed on between them and<br />
the said Bashaw, And that the factors of the said Taylor and<br />
Company did receive of the Currance soe bargained for in<br />
Petras twenty thousand nine hundred-fifty seaven pound<br />
weight, and that they had without any disturbance received<br />
the remainder being about 18000 weight if the said ffowke<br />
had not raisd such disturbance, And further he cannot<br />
answeare./
To the 23d Interrogatory he referreth himselfe to his former<br />
deposition And further he cannot answeare/
To the fower and twentith he answereth that he conceiveth it<br />
equity that if any man doe buy currance or other commodities of<br />
another man, and the buyer leave the country having not payd<br />
for such Currance of Commodities, the party with whom he contracted<br />
may sell them to another man.
To the five and twentith he answereth that he had some moneys<br />
and some commodities when the shipp interrate came away from<br />
Petras, and that the said moneys and goods and creditt which<br />
he had there would have payd for more Currance than were<br />
taken from them by the meanes of the said ffowke, And to the<br />
rest he answereth that he doth not remember that ever he<br />
spake any such words as are interrate./
To the 26th he answereth that the contract or agreement interrate<br />
was putt into writing and registred at the [?Caadiz=office] at Petras<br />
in that the said contract or agreement soe putt into wryting<br />
is now aboard the shipp ''George'' at Southampton, amongst<br />
other writings there of this Rendent.-
To the 27th Interrogatory he answereth that if he had not had a<br />
[?Ballardee] from the Bashaw besides the writing of agreement<br />
mentioned in his answare to the foregoeing Interrogatory, he could not<br />
have laded the Currance he did lade, and he saith the<br />
said Ballardee was registred in the Cadiz=books of Lepanto<br />
Petras and Vesticha, and remayneth at this present with the<br />
said writing of agreement And further he caanot answeare./
Toement And further he caanot answeare./
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