01947nam 2200421Ia 450 99639536830331620210104171440.0(CKB)3810000000017660(EEBO)2240937709(OCoLC)ocn751970548e(OCoLC)751970548(EXLCZ)99381000000001766020110912d1575 uy 0engurbn||||a|bb|By the Queene[electronic resource] The Queenes Maiestie vpon consyderations very great, and presently importyng the mayntenaunce of her people in peace with her neyghbours, and the conseruation at home of great multitudes to be in redynesse, as naturally they are bounde to serue the state of their natiue countrey, as well in the necessary trades of marchaundise, by sea faryng and fyshyng ..Imprinted at London, by Richarde Iugge, printer to the Queenes Maiestie.[1575]1 sheet ([1] p.)Title from caption and first lines of text.Date of publication suggested by STC (2nd ed.)."Gyuen at her Maiesties castle of Wyndsor, the. xxviii. day of October, the. xvii. yeere of her Maiesties raigne.""Line 3 of text ends: 'bounde to serue the'. Cf. STC (2nd ed.)."Cum priuilegio Regiae Maiestatis."Reproduction of original in: Queen's College (University of Oxford). Library.eebo-0119ShipsEnglandEarly works to 1800Great BritainHistoryElizabeth, 1558-1603SourcesEarly works to 1800BroadsidesEngland16th century.rbgenrProclamationsEngland16th century.rbgenrShipsElizabethQueen of England,1533-1603.996842UMIUMIUMIBOOK996395368303316By the Queene2299089UNISA