Page:The principal navigations, voyages, traffiques and discoveries of the English nation 16.djvu/122

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

approued skill in nauigation: who, together with his ships and company (because we haue heard no certaine newes of them since the moneth of February next after their departure) we do suppose, may be arriued vpon some part of the coast of China, and may there be stayed by the said Emperour, or perhaps may haue some treacherie wrought against them by the Portugales of Macao, or the Spaniards of the Philippines.


Elizabetha Dei gracia Angliæ, Franciæ, et Hiberniæ Regina, veræ et Christianæ fidei contra omnes falsò Christi nomen profitentes inuictissima propugnatrix &c. Altissimo, Serenissimóq[** ue ?; Principi, potentissimo magni regni Chinæ dominatori, summo in illis Asiæ partibus Insulísq adiacentibus imperatori, et magno in orientalibus mundi regionibus Monarchæ, salutem, multósq; cum omni optimarum rerum copia et affluentia lætos et fœlices annos. Cum honesti et fideles subditi nostri, qui has literas nostras ad serenitatem vestram perferunt, Richardus Allott et Thomas Bromefield, ciuitatis nostræ Londini in dicto nostro regno Angliæ mercatores, impensè a nobis efflagitauerint, vt eorum studia ad imperij vestri regiones (commercij gracia) nauigandi commendarimus: Cúmq[ue]ue; regni vestri fortitèr prudentérq; administrati fama, per vniuersam terrarum orbem disseminata et diuulgata, subditos hos nostros inuitauerit, non solum vt dominationis vestræ regiones inuisant, sed vt regni vestri legibus et institutis, dum in illis mundi partibus commorati fuerint, regendos se et moderandos permittant, prout mercatores decet, pui mercimoniorum commutandorum causa ad tam longè dissitas, nec adhuc nostro orbi satis cognitas regiones, penetrare cupiunt, illud vnum spectantes, vt mercimonia sua, mercimoniorumq; quorundam, quibus ditionis nostræ regiones abundant, exemplaria quædam siue specimina, serenitatis vestræ subditorúmq: vestrorum conspectui offerant, et diligenter cognoscere studeant, si quæ aliæ sint apud nos merces quæ vestro vsui inseruiant, quas honesto et vbique terrarum licito commercij ritu alijs mercibus (quarum in imperij vestri regionib tam artis quam naturæ beneficio magna copia est) commutare possint. Nos æquissimis honestorum hominum precibus acquiescentes, quia, nihil ex iustissimo hoc mercaturæ vsu incommodi siue dispendij oriturum, sed plurimun potius emolumenti vtriusq; regni tum principibus