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By Johan Frederik Bense

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Additional resources for The Anglo-Dutch Relations from the Earliest Times to the Death of William the Third: An Historical Introduction to a Dictionary of the Low-Dutch Element in the English Vocabulary

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220-1. ; Ann. 146. 1066-1272 17 fer with the Count of Flanders; it was on the way back from Dover at Barham Downe that the conspiracy was discovered by William 1 ). One of the first things Henry II. did when he had succeeded Stephen in 1154 was, as might be expected and was only natural after all the havoc and ravages 2) wrought by the followers of Stephen's all-powerful Flemish leader, to send them all out of the kingdom and to raze the castles 3), as had been arranged by the Treaty of Wallingford').

These must have been very strong inducements for the emigrants to settle in England, where they were welcome to ply their trade under royal protection, wherever they chose to dwell, especially if they would amalgamate with the native population, which it was not hard to do, for by the end of the 13th century the English municipalities had advanced so far that they were able to absorb the foreign artisan 1). This very absorption of the Flemish artisans in the native population makes it all the more difficult to trace them.

There only seems to have been a company of English merchants under a mayor at Antwerp 10). The first mention made of wool conveyed to Dordrecht is dated 1267; it seems that the English staple was estaI. C. I. 307 note 1 • - 1 ) A. I. 58. - •) I. C. I. 192. - ')Ibid. 194. - 6 ) Ibid. 182. Ibid. 338. The Merchant-Adventurers of the 15th century, however, claimed to exercise privileges granted by the Duke of Brabant in the time of King John, which would seem to point to the presence of English traders in Brabant in the early years of the 13th century (I.

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