Hugh Eliot (Elyot) | |
---|---|
Occupation | merchant |
Years active | 1485-c.1518 |
Organization | Company Adventurers to the New Found Land |
Known for | Exploration voyages to North America |
Hugh Eliot (fl.1485-c.1518) was a fifteenth-century Bristol merchant who was involved in the port's early Atlantic exploration voyages to North America. He was identified in the sixteenth century as one of the English 'discoverers of the Newfound Landes'. [1]
Little is known of Hugh Eliot's early life or career. He is not mentioned in the surviving published Bristol customs accounts of the 1470s. [2] [3] [4] [5] He was, however, involved in a Chancery action of 1485 and appears in the Bristol customs accounts from 1492 onwards. [1]
In a 1527 letter to Henry VIII the Bristol merchant Robert Thorne the younger claimed that Hugh Eliot and his father (also called Robert Thorne) were 'the discoverers of the Newfound Landes'. [6] Writing in 1578, Queen Elizabeth's chief advisor on scientific matters, John Dee, claimed that Robert Thorne and Hugh Eliot made this discovery in 1494. [7] However, it is not clear whether Dee had any evidence for this. [8] It has often been assumed that Thorne and Eliot were involved in John Cabot's expeditions from the city from 1496-98, since it is known that Bristol merchants accompanied the 1497 expedition that resulted in the European discovery, or rediscovery, of North America. [9]
Eliot's involvement in the Bristol exploration voyages of the years 1501-5, along with Robert Thorne and his brother, William, is better documented. [10] On 7 January 1502, William Thorne, Robert Thorne and Hugh Eliot received a reward from Henry VII for buying a ship from Dieppe, which they renamed the Gabriel of Bristol. [11] This immediately followed on from a personal reward by the king ‘men of Bristolle that founde thisle’. [12] Hugh Eliot sailed on the ship as an 'assign' of a group who had been granted Letters Patent for western discovery in 1501. He was almost certainly one of the two 'merchauntes of bristoll that have bene in the newe founde landes’, who received a £20 reward from the King in late September 1502. [13] This expedition brought back three native Americans who seem to have been taken into the King's household, a contemporary reporting two years later that he had seen:
two of them apparelled after [the manner of] Englishmen in Westminster Palace, which at that time I could not discern [i.e. tell them apart] from Englishmen, till I learned what men they were. [10]
Following the expedition, Henry VII granted Eliot an annual pension (annuity) of £13 6s 8d (20 marks) by way of further reward. Eliot was also the one who claimed, on behalf of the explorers, the right to import merchandise from the new land free of customs duties, which in their case consisted of fish. [13] At some time between 1502 and 1504 Eliot also received a reward of £100 from Henry VII towards his costs for sailing two ships to the 'Isle of new finding'. [14]
On 9 December 1502, Henry VII issued a new and revised patent for exploration to a group of merchants. This included Hugh Eliot as the first named merchant. [15] It is unclear whether they undertook an expedition in 1503, albeit they may have done, given that the king's household books recorded the receipt of Hawks 'from the newe founden Ilande’ in November 1503. There was certainly another expedition in 1504, organised by Eliot and Thorne, which included their ship, the Gabriel, along with another vessel called the Jesus of Bristol. On this voyage Sebastian Cabot (John Cabot's son) served as a pilot. [16]
The 1504 expedition seems to have been the last undertaken by a group known as the Company Adventurers to the New Found Land. Relationships among the patentees broke down. By 1506 Hugh Eliot and another merchant William Clarke of London were suing each other over alleged debts relating to the expeditions, while a Portuguese member of the group, Francisco Fernandes, was appealing to the king over his imprisonment for a debt of £100 Eliot claimed he owed him. [17] [18]
Like his business partner, Robert Thorne, Eliot was a member of Bristol's civic elite. In 1500, Eliot was granted a 10-year farm (a type of lease) of prise wines (a type of tax on wine). The impost was collected in Bristol, as in other ports, on behalf of the Crown. [19] In September 1500 Eliot was elected to serve as one of the two sheriffs of Bristol for the coming year, a post that was typically reserved for those who had been members of the town council for several years. [20]
Eliot continued his regular commerce throughout the period of the exploration voyages. He is cited as one of the merchants who laded goods on the Bonaventure of Bristol in March 1500 for a voyage from Lisbon to Bristol. [21] In 1502 'Hugh Eliott' is recorded, along with William Thorne, as the purser on the Augustine of Bristol carrying wine from Bordeaux to Bristol. [22] The surviving Bristol customs account for 1503/4 refers to goods he imported or exported to Andalusia, Algarve and Ireland worth £164. [23] This included goods dispatched on the Matthew of Bristol, which had been employed by John Cabot on his 1497 expedition. [24] In March 1505 Eliot imported Bay salt from the well-known saltpans of Brouage in Gascony. [25] Further details of his trade are lost with the loss of so many of Bristol's customs accounts.
In the early 1500s, Eliot's apprentices included Thomas Howell, who would later become one of England's richest cloth merchants. [26] Howell's own mercantile accounts show that Eliot owed him a substantial sum of money. Still owing in 1522, by 1528 Howell thought that the debt was probably uncollectable. [27]
A Hugh Elyot (or Ellyot) is recorded trading woollen cloth in 1517 through Bristol. In 1525 a man with this name was importing fish from Ireland in 1525 and exporting grain. [28] It is unclear these references are to the explorer, or whether they relate to another person of the same name.
Amerigo Vespucci was an Italian explorer and navigator from the Republic of Florence for whom "America" is named.
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Richard ap Meryk, anglicised to Richard Amerike was a British merchant, royal customs officer and later, sheriff of Bristol. Several claims have been made for Amerike by popular writers of the late twentieth century. One was that he was the major funder of the voyage of exploration launched from Bristol by the Venetian John Cabot in 1497, and that Amerike was the owner of Cabot's ship, the Matthew. The other claim revived a theory first proposed in 1908 by a Bristolian scholar and amateur historian, Alfred Hudd. Hudd's theory, greatly elaborated by later writers, suggested that the continental name America was derived from Amerike's surname in gratitude for his sponsorship of Cabot's successful discovery expedition to 'the new World'. However, neither claim is backed up by hard evidence, and the consensus view is that America is named after Amerigo Vespucci, the Italian explorer.
The naming of the Americas, or America, occurred shortly after Christopher Columbus's death in 1506. The earliest known use of the name America dates to April 25, 1507, when it was applied to what is now known as South America. It is generally accepted that the name derives from Amerigo Vespucci, the Italian explorer, who explored the new continents in the following years on behalf of Spain and Portugal, with the name given by German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller. However, some have suggested other explanations, including being named after the Amerrisque mountain range in Nicaragua, or after Richard Amerike, a merchant from Bristol, England.
The 16th century in Canada saw the first contacts, since the Norsemen 500 years earlier, between the indigenous peoples in Canada living near the Atlantic coast and European fishermen, whalers, traders, and explorers.
Sebastian Cabot was a Venetian explorer, likely born in the Venetian Republic and a Venetian citizen. He was the son of Venetian explorer John Cabot and his Venetian wife Mattea.
The Cantino planisphere or Cantino world map is a manuscript Portuguese world map preserved at the Biblioteca Estense in Modena, Italy. It is named after Alberto Cantino, an agent for the Duke of Ferrara, who successfully smuggled it from Portugal to Italy in 1502. It measures 220 x 105 cm.
Bristol is a city with a population of nearly half a million people in south west England, situated between Somerset and Gloucestershire on the tidal River Avon. It has been among the country's largest and most economically and culturally important cities for eight centuries. The Bristol area has been settled since the Stone Age and there is evidence of Roman occupation. A mint was established in the Saxon burgh of Brycgstow by the 10th century and the town rose to prominence in the Norman era, gaining a charter and county status in 1373. The change in the form of the name 'Bristol' is due to the local pronunciation of 'ow' as 'ol'.
Matthew was a caravel sailed by John Cabot in 1497 from Bristol to Newfoundland, North America. There are two modern replicas – one in Bristol, England and one in Bonavista, Newfoundland.
The Company of Merchant Adventurers to New Lands was an early joint stock association, which began with private exploration and enterprise, and was to have been incorporated by King Edward VI in 1553, but received its full royal charter in 1555. It led to the commencement of English trade with Russia, Persia and elsewhere, and became known informally, and later formally, as the Muscovy Company.
Fr. (Brother) Giovanni Antonio de Carbonariis was an Augustinian Friar from Milan who served in London as envoy between the Duke of Milan and King Henry VII. He is known to have sailed with John Cabot during his 1498 expedition to North America. He may have founded a mission settlement and North America's oldest church at Carbonear, Newfoundland and Labrador.
John Cabot was an Italian navigator and explorer. His 1497 voyage to the coast of North America under the commission of Henry VII, King of England is the earliest known European exploration of coastal North America since the Norse visits to Vinland in the eleventh century. To mark the celebration of the 500th anniversary of Cabot's expedition, both the Canadian and British governments declared Cape Bonavista, Newfoundland as representing Cabot's first landing site. However, alternative locations have also been proposed.
Alwyn Ann Ruddock was a noted British historian of the Age of Discovery, best known for her research on the English voyages of the 15th-century explorer John Cabot. Cabot and other navigators of the time were trying to find lands to the West, such as the mythical "Isle of Brasil" or the North American lands reached by Icelanders in previous centuries.
William Weston, a 15th-century merchant from Bristol, was probably the first Englishman to lead an expedition to North America, the voyage taking place most likely in 1499 or 1500. Evidence of Weston's leadership has been discovered only in the early 21st century, and it changes interpretations of the discovery era.
Robert Sturmy was a 15th-century Bristol merchant.
Alfred Edmund Hudd was a native of Clifton, Bristol, England. An accountant as a young man, his means were such that he was able to pursue his interests as a naturalist and antiquarian. He was a member of a number of societies, often assuming leadership positions. Hudd is perhaps best known for his roles as author of Catalogue of the Lepidoptera of the Bristol District, editor of the Proceedings of the Clifton Antiquarian Club, supervisor of the excavations undertaken by the Caerwent Exploration Fund, and author of "Richard Ameryk and the name America."
Robert Thorne the elder (d.1519) was a fifteenth-century Bristol merchant who was involved in the port's early Atlantic exploration voyages to North America. He was identified in the sixteenth century as one of the English 'discoverers of the Newfound Landes'.
The Portuguese expeditions to North America were a series of voyages led by Portuguese navigators in the late 15th and early 16th centuries. These voyages aimed to explore lands across the North Atlantic, particularly after the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) and John Cabot's 1497 discovery of Newfoundland. Notable figures involved include Gaspar Corte-Real, Miguel Corte-Real, João Fernandes Lavrador and Pêro de Barcelos.
Thomas Howell (c.1480-1537) was a merchant and philanthropist of Welsh origin, who trained in Bristol and London. His surviving commercial ledger (1517-27) is the first example of double-entry bookkeeping in English. He is best known for the large charitable bequests he left on his death, which included the monies used to found Howell's School in Llandaff, Cardiff and Howell's School in Denbigh.
Robert Thorne the younger (1492-1532) was a sixteenth-century Bristol merchant. He is known both for promoting exploration voyages in the 1520s and for co-founding Bristol Grammar School, along with his brother Nicholas Thorne.