f [73] (20 May)
...
Taken more owt of the Cofers xxxiij s. vij d. paied to Mr Rigges maior the last yere which he gave to pore people to releive there necesseties owt of his purse more then he received and paid now to him x s. which he gave to the Quenes maiesties Trumpeters at her being in the Citie whilest he was maior in the whole | v l. iij s. vij d. |
...
Record title: Coffer Account Book
Repository:
HRO
Shelfmark: W/E6/2
Repository location: Winchester
These account books record transactions into and from the city coffer, the city's depository for its treasures, which was kept in the council house. Each entry is signed by the mayor of the time and by those of his brethren who were present. All 'paid in' entries are bound into the books before all 'taken out' entries.
In August 1590 the council house was entered and the
locked settle in which the coffer was kept was broken into. The coffer,
several silver seals, the city's seal, coin to the value of £80, and
plate, bonds and stock, '& the bookes of accompte' were stolen. So a
new Coffer Account Book had to be started and the first few pages
contain a summary of debts owed by various citizens to the coffer and
other important financial information which had been originally recorded
in the stolen accounts. In Proceedings Book A, W/B2/2, on f 1v, there is
a record dated 20 November 1591 of the payment of a reward of 5s to a
servant called Mr Clerke, who found some of the stolen items, including
'certaine writinges,' in November 1591.
1628–61; English; paper; i + 155 + i (last 10 pages bound in upside down); 290mm x 200mm; unnumbered; original parchment binding retained inside modern black leather binding, title on both board and spine: 'City of Winchester Coffer Accounts 1628 to 1661.'