Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

Table of figures

< >
[Figure 121]
[Figure 122]
[Figure 123]
[Figure 124]
[Figure 125]
[Figure 126]
[Figure 127]
[Figure 128]
[Figure 129]
[Figure 130]
[Figure 131]
[Figure 132]
[Figure 133]
[Figure 134]
[Figure 135]
[Figure 136]
[Figure 137]
[Figure 138]
[Figure 139]
[Figure 140]
[Figure 141]
[Figure 142]
[Figure 143]
[Figure 144]
[Figure 145]
[Figure 146]
[Figure 147]
[Figure 148]
[Figure 149]
[Figure 150]
< >
page |< < of 679 > >|
11,100 Rhenish guldens, were distributed to each one hundred and twenty-eighth
share.
From the Annaberg mine which is known as the Himmelich Höz,
they had a dole of eight hundred thaler; from a mine in Joachimsthal
which is named the Sternen, three hundred thaler; from the head mine at
Abertham, which is called St.
Lorentz, two hundred and twenty-five thaler12.
The more shares of which any individual is owner the more profits he takes.
I will now explain how the owners may lose or obtain the right over a
mine, or a tunnel, or a share.
Formerly, if anyone was able to prove by
witnesses that the owners had failed to send miners for three continuous
shifts13, the Bergmeíster deprived them of their right over the mine, and
gave the right over it to the informer, if he desired it.
But although miners
preserve this custom to-day, still mining share owners who have paid
their contributions do not lose their right over their mines against their will.
Formerly, if water which had not been drawn off from the higher shaft of
some mine percolated through a vein or stringer into the shaft of another
mine and impeded their work, then the owners of the mine which suffered
the damage went to the Bergmeíster and complained of the loss, and he sent
to the shafts two Jurors.
If they found that matters were as claimed,
the right over the mine which caused the injury was given to the owners
who suffered the injury.
But this custom in certain places has been changed,
for the Bergmeíster, if he finds this condition of things proved in the case
of two shafts, orders the owners of the shaft which causes the injury to
contribute part of the expense to the owners of the shaft which receives the
injury; if they fail to do so, he then deprives them of their right over their
mine; on the other hand, if the owners send men to the workings to dig
and draw off the water from the shafts, they keep their right over their
mine.
Formerly owners used to obtain a right over any tunnel, firstly, if
in its bottom they made drains and cleansed them of mud and sand so that
the water might flow out without any hindrance, and restored those drains
which had been damaged; secondly, if they provided shafts or openings to
supply the miners with air, and restored those which had fallen in; and
finally, if three miners were employed continuously in driving the tunnel.
But the principal reason for losing the title to a tunnel was that for a period
of eight days no miner was employed upon it; therefore, when anyone
was able to prove by witnesses that the owners of a tunnel had not done
these things, he brought his accusation before the Bergmeíster, who, after
going out from the town to the tunnel and inspecting the drains and the
ventilating machines and everything else, and finding the charge to be true,
placed the witness under oath, and asked him: “Whose tunnel is this at the
present time?” The witness would reply: “The King's” or “The

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index