Violet, Thomas
2 works in one volume
£300
Rare Books, Manuscripts, Maps & Photographs
Auction: 13 July 2022 from 10:00 BST
Description
comprising:
An Appeal to Caesar: wherein Gold and Silver is Proved to be the Kings Majestie's Royal Commodity. London: Printed in the year 1660. 4to, [2], 58 (paginated erratically), lacks portrait of King Charles II [ESTC R34727]; bound with
Idem. To the Right Honourable the Lords in Parliament Assembled. The Humble Petition of Tho. Violet Goldsmith. [London: no publisher, 1660], 4to, 8pp. [ESTC R222565]; together 2 works in one volume, late 18th century half calf, library stamp on title and bookplate on front endpaper of the Library of the Institute of Bankers in Scotland, rubbed, upper cover detached
Footnote
Note: Thomas Violet was a goldsmith and trader who was active during the turbulent reign of Charles I and subsequent Interregnum. In 1627 he was discovered to have been playing the money market by trading English silver for French gold but, as his actions were profitable to the king, he was released from prison on the condition of paying £2000 to the Crown as its share of the profit.
Following his release, Violet found a new role inspecting the trade in coins and wire. He was responsible for marking wire as authentic but discovered that like coins (the best supplies being bought up by unscrupulous traders) a lot of inferior or counterfeit metal was being traded. He prosecuted several traders, which made him very unpopular among fellow merchants.
Violet was a royalist and, due to his unpopular activities in the 1630s, spent much of the Civil War imprisoned in the Tower, having his estates and wealth confiscated by the authorities of the City of London. During this time, Violet began to write down his ideas on trade, arguing for equal treatment of merchants and traders from all nations, the reduction of customs duties and the establishment of free ports across England. This, he hoped, would bring in cheap raw materials and would benefit ordinary workers.
After his release from the Tower in 1652, Violet resumed his work inspecting the gold and silver trade. He published several works defending his actions and attacking goldsmiths and traders who he believed were draining England of its wealth by exporting the commodity.
This book is one of those treatises, published following the restoration of Charles II, it appeals to the king to recognise the importance of gold and silver in defining the wealth of the nation.