Of trade 1. In general. 2. In particular. 3. Domestick. 4. Foreign. 5. The East-India. 6. The African. 7. The Turky. 8. The Spanish. 9. The Hamburgh. 10. The Portugal. 11. The Italian. 12. The Dutch. 13. The Russia. 14. The Greenland. 15. The Swedeland. 16. The Denmark. 17. The Irish. 18. The Scotland. 19. The plantation. 20. The French, &c. Also, of coyn. Bullion. Of improving our woollen manufacture. To prevent exporting wooll. Of ways and means to increase our riches, &c. By J.P. esq; to which is annex'd, the argument of the late Lord Chief Justice Pollexphen, upon an action of the case, brought by the East-India Company against Mr. Sands an interloper.

About this Item

Title
Of trade 1. In general. 2. In particular. 3. Domestick. 4. Foreign. 5. The East-India. 6. The African. 7. The Turky. 8. The Spanish. 9. The Hamburgh. 10. The Portugal. 11. The Italian. 12. The Dutch. 13. The Russia. 14. The Greenland. 15. The Swedeland. 16. The Denmark. 17. The Irish. 18. The Scotland. 19. The plantation. 20. The French, &c. Also, of coyn. Bullion. Of improving our woollen manufacture. To prevent exporting wooll. Of ways and means to increase our riches, &c. By J.P. esq; to which is annex'd, the argument of the late Lord Chief Justice Pollexphen, upon an action of the case, brought by the East-India Company against Mr. Sands an interloper.
Author
Pollexfen, John, b. ca. 1638.
Publication
London :: printed for John Baker, near the Kings-Armes in Little Britain,
1700.
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Subject terms
East India Company -- Early works to 1800.
Commerce -- Early works to 1800.
Coinage -- England -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"Of trade 1. In general. 2. In particular. 3. Domestick. 4. Foreign. 5. The East-India. 6. The African. 7. The Turky. 8. The Spanish. 9. The Hamburgh. 10. The Portugal. 11. The Italian. 12. The Dutch. 13. The Russia. 14. The Greenland. 15. The Swedeland. 16. The Denmark. 17. The Irish. 18. The Scotland. 19. The plantation. 20. The French, &c. Also, of coyn. Bullion. Of improving our woollen manufacture. To prevent exporting wooll. Of ways and means to increase our riches, &c. By J.P. esq; to which is annex'd, the argument of the late Lord Chief Justice Pollexphen, upon an action of the case, brought by the East-India Company against Mr. Sands an interloper." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A55327.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 24, 2024.

Pages

Page [unnumbered]

Page [unnumbered]

The Contents.

  • THE Introduction Page 1, 2
  • Ballance of Trade no Mistery. Page 3, 4
  • Those Trades good that Export our Products. Page 5
  • Those suspicious that Export Bullion. Page 6
  • Against Raising our Coyn. Page 12
  • That will occasion great Loss to the Publick, and Advantageous only to Debtors. Page 24
  • What Governs the Price of Bullion. Page 30
  • The necessity of Severe Laws to prevent Counter∣feiting our Coyn. Page 38
  • The necessity of looking into Trade. Page 40
  • Of Trade Domestick. Page 41
  • That only Trade can Advance the Price of Lands. Page 42
  • Of the Original of Riches. Page 43
  • From the Labour of People. Page 44
  • How Idleness hath Increased, and how should be prevented. Page 45
  • Of an Act for a General Naturalization. Page 51
  • How necessary to prevent the Export of Wooll, and Making false Goods. Page 53
  • What Inquiries should be made to Discover how the Ballance of Trade stands. Page 55
  • What Trades may be esteem'd Good. Page 58
  • What Bad. Page 59
  • VVhat Effect the reducing of Interest would have. Page 60
  • Of Paper Credit. Page 63

Page [unnumbered]

  • Of Free Ports. Page 78
  • Of the good Effects of Labour and good Hus∣bandry. Page 80
  • Of Sumptuary Laws. Page 82
  • VVhat Trades have Carried out our Coyn. Page 83
  • That the Mony Coyned the last Reigns hath been most Exported by the French, Northern and India-Trade. Page 84
  • Of our several Trades to
    • ...Spain Page 85
    • ...Portugal Page 85
    • ...Italy Page 85
    • ...Turky Page 85
    • ...Plantations Page 85
    • ...Holland Page 85
    • ...Ireland Page 85
    • ...Scotland Page 85
    • ...Hamburgh Page 85
    • ...Greenland Page 85
    • ...Ruffia Page 85
    • ...Swedeland Page 85
    • ...Denmark Page 85
  • Of the French Trade. Page 92
  • Of the East-India Trade. Page 96
  • Of the African Trade. Page 128
  • Against Settling the East-India, or Guiny Trade in having Joynt-Stocks. Page 130
  • Proposals for Regulated Companys. Page 139
  • Of Protection at Sea. Page 144
  • Of the Book of Rates. Page 146
  • Of the Act of Navigation, and how our Navi∣gation may regain Repute. Page 147
  • Of the Necessity of Laws to Regulate Trade. Page 147
  • Of the declining State of our Woollen Goods.

Page [unnumbered]

  • Of Ways and Means to Increase our Riches, Page 150
  • with Proposals and Arguments to put them in Practice. Page 151

The Argument of a Learned Councel, upon an Action of the Case brought by the East-India-Company against Mr. Sands an Interloper.

The END.
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