Volume 1
The economic writings of Sir William Petty together with the Observations upon the bills of mortality, more probably by Captain John Graunt / edited by Charles Henry Hull.
- Petty, William, Sir, 1623-1687.
- Date:
- 1899
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The economic writings of Sir William Petty together with the Observations upon the bills of mortality, more probably by Captain John Graunt / edited by Charles Henry Hull. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by Royal College of Physicians, London. The original may be consulted at Royal College of Physicians, London.
378/418 (page 280)
![The qua- lifications of Seamen for de- fence. [55] The Num- ber of Sea- men in France. Experience; I shall not make use of that Argument, having bound my self to shew, that the impediments of France, (as to this purpose) are natural, and perpetual. Ships, and Guns do not fight of themselves, but Men who a6t and manage them; wherefore it is more material to shew ; That the King of France, neither hath, nor can have Men sufficient, to Man a Fleet, of equal strength to that of the King of England, (viz.) The King of Englands Navy, consists of about seventy thousand Tuns of Shipping, which requires thirty six thousand Men to Man it; these Men being supposed to be divided into eight parts, I conceive that one eighth part, must be persons of great Experience, and Reputation, in Sea Service: another eighth part must be such as have used the Sea seven years and upwards; || half of them, or | parts more, must be such as have used the Sea above a twelvemonth, viz. two, three, four, five, or six years, allowing but one quarter of the whole Complements, to be such as never were at Sea at all, or at most but one Voyage, or upon one Expedition ; so that at a medium I reckon, that the whole Fleet must be Men of three or four years growth, one with another. Fournier1, a late judicious Writer, makeing it his business to persuade the World, how considerable the King of France was, or might be at Sea, in the ninety second and ninety third pages of his Flydrography, saith, That there was one place in Britany, which had furnished the King with one thousand four hundred Seamen, and that perhaps the whole Sea-Coast of France, might have furnished him with fifteen times as many : Now supposing his whole Allegation were true, yet the said number amounts but to twenty one thousand ; all which, if the whole Trade of Shipping in France were quite and clean abandoned, would not by above a third, Man out a Fleet equivalent, to that of the King of England: And if || 1 Hydrographie contenant la theorie et la practiqve de tovtes les parties de la navigation. Compose par le Fere Georges Fournier. A Paris, chez Michel Soly. M.D.C.XLIII, f°. “Les gens de Mer y sont en telle quantite, que durant le siege de la Rochelle, la Roy tira d’vn seul Bourg quatorze cents Maletots, Soldats, bien que ce lieu ne soit pas (possible) le quinziesme de cette coste en bonte & reputation.” The estimate that the coast could furnish fifteen times as many is omitted from the second edition of Fournier (1667), p. 69.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b28146220_0001_0380.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)