Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950

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1tain reasons by the Bergmeister; in another the money which one mine
supplies to another for drawing off water or making machinery; and in
another the decisions of the Bergmeister and the Jurors, and the disputes
settled by them as honorary arbitrators.
All these matters he enters in the
books on Wednesday of every week; if holidays fall on that day he does it
on the following Thursday.
Every Saturday he enters in another book the
total expenses of the preceding week, the account of which the mine manager
has rendered; but the total quarterly expenses of each mine manager, he
enters in a special book at his own convenience.
He enters similarly in
another book a list of owners who have been proscribed.
Lastly, that no one
may be able to bring a charge of falsification against him, all these books
are enclosed in a chest with two locks, the key of one of which is kept by the
Mining Clerk, and of the other by the Bergmeister.
The Share Clerk enters in a book the owners of each mine whom
the first finder of the vein names to him, and from time to time replaces the
names of the sellers with those of the buyers of the shares.
It sometimes
happens that twenty or more owners come into the possession of some
particular share.
Unless, however, the seller is present, or has sent a letter
to the Mining Clerk with his seal, or better still with the seal of the Mayor
of the town where he dwells, his name is not replaced by that of anyone else;
for if the Share Clerk is not sufficiently cautious, the law requires him
to restore the late owner wholly to his former position.
He writes out a
fresh document, and in this way gives proof of possession.
Four times a
year, when the accounts of the quarterly expenditure are rendered, he
names the new proprietors to the manager of each mine, that the manager
may know from whom he should demand contributions and among whom
to distribute the profits of the mines.
For this work the mine manager pays
the Clerk a fixed fee.
I will now speak of the duties of the mine manager. In the case of the
owners of every mine which is not yielding metal, the manager announces
to the proprietors their contributions in a document which is affixed to the
doors of the town hall, such contributions being large or small, according as
the Bergmeister and two Jurors determine. If anyone fails to pay these
contributions for the space of a month, the manager removes their names
from the list of owners, and makes their shares the common property of the
other proprietors.
And so, whomsoever the mine manager names as not
having paid his contribution, that same man the Mining Clerk designates
in writing, and so also does the Share Clerk.
Of the contribution, the
mine manager applies part to the payment of the foreman and workmen,
and lays by a part to purchase at the lowest price the necessary things for
the mine, such as iron tools, nails, firewood, planks, buckets, drawing-ropes,
or grease.
But in the case of a mine which is yielding metal, the TitheĀ­
gatherer pays the mine manager week by week as much money as suffices
to discharge the workmen's wages and to provide the necessary implements
for mining.
The mine manager of each mine also, in the presence of its
foreman, on Saturday in each week renders an account of his expenses to

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