[1093] Ibid., 70. Cf. ibid., 370 (1661), for mention of a case of seduction.

[1094] At "ffort James in New Yorke the 24th day of October 1670."—Munsell, Annals of Albany, IV, 20.

[1095] Earle, Colonial Days in Old New York, 48.

[1096] For this case (July 11, 1665) see Valentine, Manual of the Corporation (1852), 486, 487, 489, 494.

Some further details are given in the Records of New Amsterdam, V, 262-65: "Lodowyck Pas, his wife and daughter (the wife of Arent Jurriaansen Lantsman), entering the aforesaid Lantsman's wife's request to be divorced from her husband, as she cannot keep house with him. Decreed to postpone the matter until the next court day when the said Lantsman is to be heard and the aforesaid Lodowyck Pas was allowed to retain his daughter with him during that time" (262). Then Beletje produces a remonstrance against being obliged to go to her husband (263). Lantsman next appears, and is ordered to produce his witnesses by next court day (264, 265). No further mention of the matter appears in these documents. Whether the proceedings just indicated were preliminary or after failure of arbitration is, of course, not clear; but the former seems more probable.

[1097] Earle, op. cit., 49.

[1098] New York Col. MSS., XXIII: Calendar of Hist. Man. (1664-1776), 26; cf. ibid., XXIII, 269, 390; XXV, 84, 85.

[1099] Earle, op. cit., 48, 49.

[1100] Ibid., 50.

[1101] Ibid.