1915.
Not exceeding 1 ounce1d.
Not exceeding 2 ounces2d.
For every 2 ounces, or fraction of 2 ounces, thereafter, ½d.

II. FOREIGN RATES IN THE BRITISH SERVICE

One of the earliest regular posts in England was the post to Dover, established for the transmission of despatches to and from the Continent.[675] This post early assumed considerable importance relatively to the other posts. The settlement of foreign artisans in this country, in consequence of the persecutions on the Continent, naturally led to the growth of a considerable intercourse with places abroad. There was besides a large cloth trade. Letters were not, however, sent exclusively by the King's post. Frequently the merchants made their own arrangements for the conveyance of their letters; and since one of the functions of the post in those days was to enable the authorities to keep a close watch on all correspondence passing within the realm, in order that conspiracies against the State might be detected, this proceeding of the merchants was viewed by the Government with much jealousy. It led to the first assumption by the State of the monopoly of the carriage of letters. In 1591, before the use of the posts for the transmission of inland letters for private individuals had been officially recognized, a royal proclamation forbade the conveyance of letters to or from places outside the realm except by the King's post. A further proclamation to the same effect, so far as it related to foreign letters, was issued in 1609.[676]

In 1619 the foreign post was separated from the ordinary post, and a foreigner, Matthew De Quester, who had been appointed by

Lord Stanhope, then Master of the Posts, to superintend the foreign post, was appointed to control the service. In 1626 De Quester published the following tariff applicable to foreign letters:—

To or from the Hague, Brussels, Paris, and Vienna30s.
To or from any part of Germany6s.
From Venice for a single letter9d.
From Venice for any letter other than a single letter2s. 8d.
From Leghorn and Florence for a single letter1s.
From Leghorn and Florence for any letter other than a single letter3s. the ounce.[677]

The tariff was incomplete, but is noteworthy as the first set of rates of any description issued in England for the conveyance of letters by post. Stanhope had charged certain fees on letters for the Continent. On letters to or from Amsterdam or Hamburg, for example, his fee had been 8d.[678] But, until this time, no general table of rates had been issued.

By the Ordinance of 1657[679] the following rates for foreign letters were established:—

For a Single Letter.Double Letter.Per ounce.
d.d.d.
To Leghorn, Genoa, Florence, Lyons, Marseilles, Aleppo, Constantinople122445
To St. Malo, Morlaix, Nieuhaven61218
To Bordeaux, Rochelle, Nantes, Bayonne Cadiz, Madrid91824
To Hamburg, Frankfort, Cologne81624
To Dantzic, Leipsic, Lübeck, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Elsinore, Königsberg122448