Chronicon Preciosum ; Or, An Account of English Gold and Silver Money ; the Price of Corn and Other Commodities ; and of Stipends, Salaries, Wages, Jointures, Portions, Day-labour, &c. in England, for Six Hundred Years Last Past: Shewing from the Decrease of the Value of Money, and from the Increase in the Value of Corn and Other Commodities, &c. ... |
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... Occafion of writing this little Book ; and , in the following ones had given the Proofs of my Determination ; and , in the laft , had hewn the Ufe and Application of them , I thought I had made an End of my Bufinefs . But the Bookseller ...
... Occafion of writing this little Book ; and , in the following ones had given the Proofs of my Determination ; and , in the laft , had hewn the Ufe and Application of them , I thought I had made an End of my Bufinefs . But the Bookseller ...
Page 8
... Occafion could be left for any mental Reservation , or Exception in the Mind : But I think it can never be ; almost all Words are Equivocal : And it is impoffible to fix a determined Sense on the Denominations of Coin , when all Things ...
... Occafion could be left for any mental Reservation , or Exception in the Mind : But I think it can never be ; almost all Words are Equivocal : And it is impoffible to fix a determined Sense on the Denominations of Coin , when all Things ...
Page 43
... Occafion of high Complaint . And that when my Lord Trea- furer Burleigh , and Sir Thomas Smith , were called upon by Queen Elizabeth , to deliver their Opinions about the Change of Money , they ad- vised her to reduce the Standard to ...
... Occafion of high Complaint . And that when my Lord Trea- furer Burleigh , and Sir Thomas Smith , were called upon by Queen Elizabeth , to deliver their Opinions about the Change of Money , they ad- vised her to reduce the Standard to ...
Page 53
... Occafion , the Neceffity there is of remem- bering how near your Author lived to the Times he writes of ; be- cause most Men are apt to speak of Ages paft , according to the Ways and Customs of their own . Thus , in the Laws of King ...
... Occafion , the Neceffity there is of remem- bering how near your Author lived to the Times he writes of ; be- cause most Men are apt to speak of Ages paft , according to the Ways and Customs of their own . Thus , in the Laws of King ...
Page 110
... occafion'd many of them to turn Robbers , p . 265 . The fame A. B. the Month after , com- plains that the Priefts grew wanton , and were not content with reasonable Stipends , for serving Parish Cures ; but went about , rather chusing ...
... occafion'd many of them to turn Robbers , p . 265 . The fame A. B. the Month after , com- plains that the Priefts grew wanton , and were not content with reasonable Stipends , for serving Parish Cures ; but went about , rather chusing ...
Other editions - View all
Chronicon Preciosum; Or, an Account of English Gold and Silver Money; the ... William Fleetwood No preview available - 2018 |
Chronicon Preciosum, Or an Account of English Gold and Silver Money: The ... William Fleetwood No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
260 Years ago Account Acre alfo Allay alſo Angel Anſwer Barley becauſe beſt Bufhel called coin'd Coinage Conqueft Crown dear Denarius Diet Edward Edward III Eliz England Eſtate Fabian fafely faid Farthings feems ferve fhall fhould fignifies fince firft firſt fome fometimes fure fwear Gallon Gold greateſt Groats Half Half Angel Half Crowns Half-Groats Half-Pence Henry Henry VII Horfes Juftice King King's laft laſt lefs Libra Mafter Malt Marks moft Money moſt muſt neceffary Noble Number Oath Oats obferve Obolus Occafion OO OI OO OO Ounces Parliament Pence Penfion Penny Pound Pound Weight prefent Price III purchaſe Purpoſe Quar Quart Quarter Beans Quarter Noble Quarter of Wheat Queſtion Reaſon Rofe Saxon ſhall Shilling Spelman Spurr Royal Statutes Sterling Stow fays ſuch thefe theſe thoſe Tower of London uſeful Value VIII Weight Wheat was fold Wine Word ΙΟ ΟΟ
Popular passages
Page 94 - It was this year enacted that butchers should sell their beef and mutton by weight — beef for a halfpenny the pound, and mutton for three farthings ; which, being devised for the great commodity of the realm, as it was thought, hath proved far otherwise, for at that time fat oxen were sold for...
Page 94 - The butchers of London sold penny pieces of beef for the relief of the poor, every piece two pounds and a half, sometimes three pounds for a penny, and thirteen, and sometimes fourteen, of these pieces for twelvepence ; mutton eightpence the quarter ; and a hundredweight of beef for four shillings and eightpence.
Page 144 - Eliz. whereby it was provided, that a third part of the rent upon leases made by colleges, should be reserved in corn, payable either in kind or money, after the rate of the best prices in Oxford or Cambridge markets, on the next market day before Michaelmas and Lady -day.
Page 136 - ... quantity of corn, meat, drink, or cloth, nowadays. To this end, you must neither take a very dear year, to your prejudice, nor a very cheap one, in your own favour, nor indeed any single year, to be your rule ; but you must take the price of every particular commodity, for as many years as you can (20, if you have them) and put them all together ; and then find out the common price ; and afterwards take the same course with the price of things, for these last 20 years ; and see what proportion...
Page 49 - H.VI. days would purchase 5 Quarters of Wheat, 4 Hogsheads of Beer and 6 Yards of Cloth he who then had £5 in his pocket was full as rich a man as he who has now £20 if with that £20 he can purchase no more Wheat, Beer, or Cloth than the other [as quoted by Keynes 1930, p.
Page 142 - ... although for the present it may seem a tempting bargain, and a profitable exchange, and rid you of some trouble. You know not what time may bring forth, nor what great alterations may happen, nor what great mischiefs you, unwittingly, may do your successors.
Page 72 - ... parliaments cannot remedy,) and so the king was fain to revoke the former act, and leave people to sell as they could ; (for a trade will do as it can, and never be forced, one way or other...
Page 72 - But, notwithstanding this act of parliament, things could not be purchased at these rates, for people would not bring them to market, (and that is a thing...
Page 45 - Reign, to have remedied the greateft Abufe of Money, that was ever known in England, at a Time of the greateft Danger and Expence, with very little Grievance of the People. But...
Page 33 - French coin of the value of i8d. and he does not know but they might have gone for as much in England. He says it was brass, and covered over with silver, and went in H. VHIth's time for I2d. but i E. VI. it was brought down to yd. and then to (>d. which name it still retains.