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Cement G&T Earle Limited Bag Seal

Cement G&T Earle Limited Bag Seal

Date: 13/12/11 Views: 2398938

Cloth Seal, Alnage, Kersey, 1660 0nwards

Cloth Seal Alnage CA SA, Image by StuE, Found by Mrs George Angel Eyes Clooney.
Found in Yorkshire, 34 x 15mm, 8.4g.

Complete four lobed cloth seal, possibly an alnage seal. Partial inscription on one side in a raised circular border - CA with SA beneath. From another seal says CAR over SAY.

See No.199 Fig.29, Egan, Lead Cloth Seals and Related Items in the British Museum. "A distinct, late seventeenth-century series of seals gives the name of a kind of textile ... carsay - i.e. kersey. Seals in this series have a date in the 1660s to the early 1680s. Kersies were a common kind of cheap, woollen cloth widely produced in England, notably in Devon, Hampshire and Yorkshire."

A description of this cloth is given by Reginald R. Sharpe, editor of the Calendar of letter-books of the city of London: E: 1314-1337:- ""Kersey" or "carsey" was also the name of a coarse cloth. Some have supposed it to denote coarse say, but more probably it derives its name from the village of Kersey, co. Suffolk." This reference also mentions attempts by Edward II to impose an alnager on the City of London 13 years prior to the first of the two statutes of Edward III concerned with alnager sealing of cloths.

An interesting dispute over the amount of alnage payable on kerseys can be found in the Journal of the House of Commons: volume 10: 1688-1693, 11/6/1689:-
"Upon the Petition of the Yorkshire Clothiers ... Resolved, That it is the Opinion of this Committee, That the Collecting of more Aulnage, or Subsidy of Aulnage, than One Peny for One Piece of Kersey Cloths, is a Grievance."

Record of a Kersey cloth seal found in Iceland located by Svavar Níelsson, “2004-25-356: Cloth seal comprising a thin sheet, folded over and formed into two joining circles. One of them has a shield on one side and the inscription Carsay 66 (Stands for the year 1666) on the other. Dimensions: 31.5 x 15 mm maximum, weight 8,21 g. Seals of this type were attached to Kersey cloth from England. Similar seals are kept in the British Museum (Egan 1994, eg. No. 199, fig. 29). Found in floor [2128] of the Phase 4i church. Figure 5.2.3.” Guðrún Sveinbjarnardóttir, Reykholt: The Church Excavations.

Date: 30/11/11
Full size: 518x729
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Cloth Seal, Alnage, Kersey, 1660 0nwards
Keywords: Unique Identification Number - BSG.CS.00021 Date late 17th century
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