PREVIOUS to the
fifteenth century, the Scottish towns receiving any substantial
benefit from foreign trade were those situated on the east coast,
and at that early period three of the four burghs constituting the
Curia Quatuor Burgorum [Antea, p. 61.] each possessed a flourishing
sea-port. To that confederation some of the negotiations with
foreign merchants, relating to commercial transactions, were
probably entrusted; but owing to the absence of any record of its
proceedings, apart from the legislation attributed to the court and
a few fragmentary references, very little information on such
subjects has been preserved. It is, however, probable that it was
the members of this court who, on behalf of the community of this
country, joined with Andrew of Moray and William Wallace, "leaders
of the army of Scotland," in sending a letter to the mayors and
communities. of Lubeck and Hamburg representing that their merchants
might have safe access with their merchandise into all the ports of
Scotland, seeing that the kingdom had by war been redeemed from the
power of the English. The letter, in a postscript to which the
interests of two Scottish merchants, John Burnet and John Frere,
were commended to the care of the authorities in Lubeck and Hamburg,
was sent from Haddington on 11th October, 1297. where and when the
representatives of the Four Burghs are likely to have been in
attendance holding their annual court. [Ancient Laws and Customs,
vol. ii. p. ix. The letter was shown in the Scottish Exhibition, at
Glasgow, in 1911, and a facsimile is given in the Palace of History
Catalogue, i. p. 479.]
At subsequent periods
formal contracts were entered into between the merchants of this
country and the representatives of different towns in the
Netherlands for the regulation of international commerce. The
earliest of these of which there is any trace consists of an
agreement between the burgesses and merchants of Scotland and the
burgesses and merchants of Middleburgh, in Zealand, whereby that
town was constituted the staple port for the transit of merchandise
from this country. The date of that document is not given, but it
was ratified by King David's charter dated at Dundee, 12th November,
1347. [Convention Records, i. p. 537. Particulars regarding the
subsequent staple contracts will be found in the printed Convention
Records. In 1364 King David, with consent of his council, granted to
all his burgesses throughout the country free liberty to buy and
sell within the liberties of their own burghs, but prohibited them
from buying or selling within the liberties of other burghs. In its
application to Glasgow this provision secured to the burgh the
exclusive liberty of trading throughout the barony. The charter also
prohibited foreign merchants coming with their ships or merchandise
to trade with any persons except merchants of the king's burghs,
either in buying or selling (Ib. pp. 538-41) ; and to the privileges
thus secured to royal burghs Glasgow was also entitled by the terms
of its original charters.]
In each burgh
possessing facilities of export the crown was in the habit of
appointing a "custumar" or custumars, generally one or two of the
leading burgesses, to collect the king's great customs. Till the end
of the sixteenth century free trade in imports may be said to have
prevailed in Scotland, but from the earliest times the records of
which have been preserved, a duty was exacted from exports. In the
fourteenth century four burghs of export are noticed on the west
coast, Dumbarton, Ayr, Wigtown and Kirkcudbright, and there the
revenue was usually small in amount. For example, in the year 1327,
when the gross amount of custom, derived chiefly from exported wool
and skins, was £1,851, Berwick contributed £673; Edinburgh, £439;
Aberdeen, £349; Dundee, £240; Perth, £108; Linlithgow, £14; Cupar,
Fife, £13; Inverkeithing, £8; Ayr, £3; Stirling, £2; [Exchequer
Rolls, i. p. c. In the above list shillings and pence are omitted.]
and from the remaining three western burghs nothing was obtained.
Rates of duty on wool and hides were much increased when funds were
being raised to meet the instalments for King David's ransom, and
were long retained at the same figure, but the average yearly yield,
even during the reign of King James, did not much exceed £5,000.
Various other customs were from time to time imposed, including
duties on salmon, grilse and herring. The ports from which salmon
were exported were principally Aberdeen, Banff and Montrose, and the
average yearly custom from that source during the reign of King
James was £115, representing £920 worth of fish. The cumulo customs
obtained from the western burghs continued small in amount. In 1408
Ayr paid £2 on eleven last of hides; Dumbarton, in 1426, paid 28s.
custom on wool; and it was only at wide intervals that export duties
of any amount were accounted for by burghs in this district.
While Berwick
remained a Scottish town its position as a commercial port was fully
maintained, and the amount of customs collected there formed a
substantial part of the national revenue. For the period from 29th
November, 1331, to 3rd November, 1332, its collectors accounted for
£570, as the custom received on the export of wool and hides; and a
supplementary account brought down to 22nd February of the following
year added £86 to that amount. [Exchequer Rolls, i. pp. 419, 428.]
From 2nd March, 1330-1, to 3rd March, 1332-3, the customs collected
at Edinburgh amounted to £812. As the result of the Scottish defeat
at the battle of Halidon Hill, Berwick came into the hands of the
English in July, 1333, and the town, as the price of English
support, was formally surrendered by Balliol in February of the
following year. Berwick being thus deprived of the privileges it
enjoyed as a member of the Court of Four Burghs, the English king,
on the application of the community, authorised the governor and
mayor of the town, with twelve of the most discreet and law-worthy
burgesses, to assemble within the town, yearly, on the fifteenth day
after Michaelmas, and there to exercise the functions of the court ;
and this was to continue "until the men of the said Four Burghs can
assemble peacefully" to issue their judgments as formerly.
[Convention Records, ii. p. 482. The ordinance is dated at
Guildford, 30th March, 1345.]
Shortly after the
Berwick severance Roxburgh also fell under English control, and in
the altered circumstances parliament, on 6th March, 1368, ordained
that so long as these border towns should be held by "our enemies of
Ingland" the burghs of Lanark and Linlithgow should take their place
as "twa of the Four Burghis whilk have of auld to mak the court of
the chalmerlan ance a year at Hadyngton." [Ancient Laws and Customs,
i. p. 191.] By this time Linlithgow, [Linlithgow had its port at
Blackness, about the same distance from the burgh as Edinburgh was
from its port at Leith.] as a burgh of export, was of considerable
consequence, the customs collected there, in 1367, amounting to
£597, as against £2,459 collected in Edinburgh, £88 in Stirling and
£5 11s. 11½d. in Ayr. Like Roxburgh, Lanark was not a burgh of
export, but its liberties extended over a wide area, embracing the
whole of Lanarkshire, excepting the barony of Glasgow and the
district assigned to the burgh of Rutherglen.
For any transactions
connected either with imports or exports by the east coast there
need be little doubt that the inhabitants of Lanarkshire, including
those of the burgh and barony of Glasgow, resorted mainly to
Linlithgow as being the most convenient port. In confirmation of
this view reference may be made to the account of the custumars of
Linlithgow for the year 1384, in which allowance is made for 18s.
paid for the hire of a waggon to carry wine to Glasgow for the use
of the king, and in the corresponding account for 1387-8 the sum of
20s. is allowed for a similar service. Another supply, consisting of
eighteen pipes of wine, probably imported to Linlithgow in the usual
way, though its carriage to Glasgow has not been traced, was carried
by water from Glasgow bridge to Renfrew, where it was stored.
Remissions of export duty were granted to a Glasgow physician on two
occasions between 1393 and 1396. As is gathered from the accounts of
the custumar of Linlithgow for 1393-5 William, "medicus" of Glasgow,
sent to Linlithgow two sacks of wool for export, the duty on which
would have been four merks or £2 13s. 4d., but the king, by letters
under his privy seal, relieved him of payment.' A similar concession
was granted to the Glasgow physician in the following year, as is
noted in the account of the deputy chamberlain for 1396-7, but here
the burgh of export is not named. These two remissions were probably
granted in return for services rendered, but frequent remissions on
a larger scale and often for inadequate consideration made serious
encroachments on the crown revenues.
On payment of export
duty the sender of the goods obtained a certificate under the seal
of the proper officer authorising the export of the articles in
respect of which custom had been paid. This document was called a
cocket, and lords of regality, lay or spiritual, who owned burghs of
export, had generally the grant of a cocket which entitled them to
export merchandise duty free.
So far as can be
ascertained it was not till a comparatively late period that the
Bishops of Glasgow were accorded this privilege. In the second year
of his reign King James IV., while confirming to the bishops all
their existing possessions and privileges, and apparently doubtful
if there had hitherto been a free tron in the city, authorised the
bishops to have one in future, to appoint a troner of the customs
and clerk of the cocket, and to uplift and apply to their own uses
the customs of all goods and merchandise of the citizens and tenants
of the barony. Cockets were to be issued certifying payment of duty,
and on production of these the owner of the goods was to be free of
customs in all other towns, ports and places within the kingdom. By
another provision of the charter the bishops were enabled to export
wool, hides, fish, and all other goods and merchandise, so far as
for their own purposes, without payment of custom thereon.
Such small craft as
frequented the Clyde estuary in the fourteenth century would be more
adapted for fishing purposes and for cruising about the Western
Isles than for making long voyages; but it is known that in the
course of the next hundred years regular trading communication with
France, in which Glasgow merchants took a share, had been fully
established. According to popular belief, formed perhaps less on
actual knowledge than on consideration of the natural order of
things, the earliest trading ventures of the citizens, connected
with the river, consisted of the capture of salmon and herring and
their cure and transit to foreign markets. Fishergait, traversed by
the fishermen after mooring their boats on the margin of the Old
Green at the bridge, is one of the earliest street names on
record."At first the river afforded no advantage for general trading
purposes, and when the merchants required port facilities they made
their way by the nearest neck of land for the most convenient shore.
In this way Irvine port, for the CIyde, was long frequented by
Glasgow merchants, in the same way as Linlithgow port had been
resorted to for the Forth traffic. According to Tucker's Repoyt,
[Tucker's Report of 1656, reprinted in Miscellany of Scottish Burgh
Records Society, pp. 1-48.] Irvine, even so late as 1656, was
maintaining "a small trade to France, Norway and Ireland, with
herring and other goods, brought on horseback from Glasgow, for the
purchasing timber, wine and other comodityes, to supply theyr
occasions with." Glasgow itself at that time was trading with
France, taking plaiding, coals and herring, and returning with salt,
paper, rosin and prunes; getting timber from Norway, carrying coals
in open boats to Ireland and bringing back hoops, barrel staves,
meal, oats and butter; and obtaining from Argyllshire and the
Western Isles plaiding, dry hides, goat, kid and deer skins, in
return for which the inhabitants of these districts purchased from
Glasgow traders such commodities and provisions as they required.
But no vessels of more than six tons could then come nearer to
Glasgow than the vicinity of Dumbarton, about fourteen miles below
Glasgow bridge, at which distance they had to unload and transfer
their cargoes to small boats, cobles or rafts, which thence made
their way to Glasgow bridge or other destination.
Glasgow's earliest
waulk or fulling mill was situated either on the Molendinar or
Camlachie Burn, or perhaps below the confluence of these two
streams, at the foot of the Walkergait, and it may be supposed that
in this vicinity hand-loom weavers, linen manufacturers, tailors and
other workers in cloth, would be chiefly accommodated. The obtaining
of raw material, including wool for weavers and skins for the
manufacture of leather, would give employment to a body of itinerant
merchants who, in the earlier stages at least,$ made their journeys
more by land than by water. Within the bounds of the barony itself,
where there were upwards of three hundred rentallers, and also the
outlying commons belonging to the burgesses, considerable supplies
of wool and skins must have been obtainable, for besides the
cultivated fields there existed large areas of pasture land suitable
for the rearing of flocks and herds. Among the artisans obtaining
employment by the manipulation of the raw material, thus procured
far and near, were the skinners and furriers, who supplied such
wearing apparel and useful articles as were appropriate to their
special trade; and the "barkers," [So called from their using the
bark of trees in the tanning process. Tanning was usually practised
at the side of a burn, and rules to obviate complaints of neighbours
were common. In old titles of properties, such as those on the south
side of Bridgegait, near the Molendinar Burn, references to tan
holes, bark holes and lime holes often occur.] who by tanning and
other processes converted the skins into durable leather, suitable
for the purposes of those who plied the cordiner or shoemaker craft.
The remaining craftsmen, latterly composing the fourteen
incorporated trades, were the hammermen, maltmen, bakers, wrights,
coopers, fleshers, masons, gardeners, barbers and dyers; and though
we have no definite information on the subject it may be assumed
that shortly after the establishment of the burgh each of these
classes would be represented within its bounds. Taking into account
all the known circumstances connected with the burgh and barony in
combination, and keeping in view the opportunities within the reach
of the inhabitants for extending, to mutual advantage, their
commercial and industrial pursuits, it may be assumed that no
inconsiderable population was gathered within this district before
the end of the fourteenth century. The estimate of the number of the
burgh inhabitants at about 1,500 or 2,000 seems a not unreasonable
calculation. |