The Life of Sir Henry Morgan
Реклама. ООО «ЛитРес», ИНН: 7719571260.
Оглавление
E. A. Cruikshank. The Life of Sir Henry Morgan
The Life of Sir Henry Morgan
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I
HIS FAMILY AND HIS EARLY LIFE
CHAPTER II
THE DUTCH WAR AND THE RAID ON CENTRAL AMERICA
CHAPTER III
OLD PROVIDENCE, PUERTO PRINCIPE, AND PUERTO BELLO
Fort Triana at Puerto Bello See p. 87
CHAPTER IV
MARACAIBO AND GIBRALTAR
Gateway to the Fort at Puerto Bello See p. 94
CHAPTER V
THE RESUMPTION OF HOSTILITIES
Inside the Castle at Chagres See p. 171
The Burning of Panama See p. 189
CHAPTER VI
OLD PROVIDENCE, CHAGRES, AND PANAMA
Old Providence See p. 166
Ruins of Cathedral Tower at Panama See p. 190
CHAPTER VII
THE DOWNFALL OF MODYFORD
See p. 210
See p. 210
See p. 210
See p. 210
CHAPTER VIII
THE QUARREL WITH LORD VAUGHAN
CHAPTER IX
CARLISLE'S CONTEST WITH THE ASSEMBLY
Plan of Port Royal See p. 263
CHAPTER X
GOVERNOR AND COMMANDER IN CHIEF
Laurencefield in 1923 See p. 316
Cabaritta Island, Port Maria See p. 346
CHAPTER XI
DISCORD AND POLITICAL ECLIPSE
Llanrumney Hills See p. 346
Llanrumney River See p. 346
CHAPTER XII
THE HISTORY OF THE BUCCANIERS AND MORGAN'S SUITS FOR LIBEL
CHAPTER XIII
LAST YEARS AND DEATH
APPENDIX I
A LIST OF SHIPS UNDER THE COMMAND OF ADMIRAL MORGAN[625]
APPENDIX II
THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF SIR HENRY MORGAN, KNT
INDEX
Footnote
Отрывок из книги
E. Cruikshank
Published by Good Press, 2021
.....
His additional instructions, dated a few weeks later, contained the following significant and outstanding article.
"You shall endeavour by all fitting means to obtain and preserve a good correspondence and free commerce with the plantations and territories belonging to the King of Spain, for all such our subjects as shall trade there with security to their persons, ships, and goods, and with regulations for the benefit of trade as shall seem to you and the council most advantageous to the same; but if the governor of the King of Spain shall refuse to admit our subjects to trade with them, you shall in such case endeavour to procure and settle a trade with his subjects in those parts by force, and by doing any such acts upon and against them as you and the council shall judge most proper to oblige them to admit you to a free trade with them according to your commission and the instructions now given you herein or which you shall hereafter receive from us declaring whom we have treated and accounted as enemies to us."[34]
.....