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Captured ship: Santa Catherina or Santa Catharina (master João de Faria Leitão, or...

Catalogue reference: HCA 32/1833

What’s it about?

This record is about the Captured ship: Santa Catherina or Santa Catharina (master João de Faria Leitão, or... dating from c1748-1750 in the series High Court of Admiralty: Prize Court: Prize Papers. It is held at The National Archives, Kew.

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Full description and record details

Reference
HCA 32/1833
Date
c1748-1750
Description

Captured ship: Santa Catherina or Santa Catharina (master João de Faria Leitão, or Joas de Faria Leitas). Allegedly, formerly the Marie Joseph of Chandanagore.

History: a French merchant ship (200 tons, 12 guns, 49 officers and crew, and about 15 passengers and servants) leased to Armenian merchants from New Julfa, Isfahan, sailing under Portuguese colours, bound from Basra to Bengal, laden with 50 chests of silver zolotas, fruit, dates, almonds, wine and rosewater; taken on 30 April / 11 May 1748 off Negapatam / Nagapattinam by HMS Medway's Prize (William Holmes commanding) (part of Admiral Thomas Griffin's squadron) and taken into Fort St David, near Cuddalore, India.

There were three Armenian passengers on board: Minas de Eliaz, the supercargo; Johannes de Nazar, Minas's clerk and brother-in-law; and Johannes de Gregory, a merchant trading on his own account and for others.

The ship and cargo were sold in India, and with the involvement of the East India Company, the case was brought to the prize court in London, where a claim for part of the cargo was made by Stephen Cogigian (Stepan di Khojijian) on behalf of the Armenian merchants. The High Court of Admiralty found in favour of the claimants on 10 February 1752, but the captors lodged a successful appeal against the sentence, disputing Cogigian's authority to represent the claimants. No claim was made for the ship.

Documents:

The court put the bulk of the papers taken from the ship in four bundles, which they labelled A to D. In addition, there are a small number of papers which have been grouped in three artificial bundles, given the designation E, F and G. This piece, HCA 32/1833, contains Bundles C and D, papers translated for the court, and the artificial bundles E, F and G:

  • Bundle C, numbered 1 to 237 (61A-D missing). Originals of papers translated for the court;
  • Bundle D, now numbered D1 to D15. Originals of papers translated for the court;
  • [Bundle E], now numbered [E1 to E23]. Receipts;
  • [Bundle F], now numbered [F1 to F18]. Fragments;
  • [Bundle G], now numbered [G1/1 to G8/9]. Covers of letters written in Arabic and Persian (see printed list in the box). Some of the letters they originally enclosed may be among those in the British Library: Lansdowne MSS 1046-1048. Four of them have court numbers, which should correspond to the court numbers of letters originally in the court's bundles A or C.

Related material

HCA 42/25, HCA 42/47/1, HCA 32/1832, HCA 13/91.

Held by
The National Archives, Kew
Legal status
Public Record(s)
Language
Armenian, Persian, Ottoman Turkish and Spanish
Closure status
Open Document, Open Description
Publication note(s)
Gagan Sood, India and the Islamic Heartlands (CUP 2016); Sebouh Aslanian, Trade Diaspora versus Colonial State: Armenian Merchants, the English East India Company, and the High Court of Admiralty in London, 1748–1752, Diaspora 13:1 2004.
Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C4251596/

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Series information

HCA 32

High Court of Admiralty: Prize Court: Prize Papers

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Within the series: HCA 32

High Court of Admiralty: Prize Court: Prize Papers

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Captured ship: Santa Catherina or Santa Catharina (master João de Faria Leitão, or...

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