Lewes Roberts

Sir Lewes Roberts, also Lewis Roberts (1596–1641), was a British merchant with the Levant Company and writer.

Early life

Roberts, second son of Gabriel Roberts a successful merchant by his wife Ann, daughter of John Hawarden of Appleton near Widnes, was born at Beaumaris, Anglesey, in 1596. Expecting to attend university but compelled ‘by adverse fortune or cross fate’ to devote himself to commerce he was apprenticed in 1612 to Thomas Harvey, a London overseas merchant and member of the Drapers. For Harvey Lewes Roberts visited such places as Newfoundland, Malaga, Algiers and Tunis and lived in France, Italy, the Ionian Islands, Constantinople and Asia Minor. After Harvey's death in 1623 while Roberts was in Asia Minor Harvey's brothers obtained for Roberts the freedom of the Levant Company. In 1625 he was admitted into the Merchant Adventurers at Delft and also joined the French company.

City of London

The next year he married Anne, daughter of Edward Williamott, a mercer and later acquired Williamott's stock in the East India Company. In 1628 he became a captain in the Artillery Company — which provided officers for the trained bands — and the following year became a citizen of London joining the Drapers Company. In the Levant Company he was an assistant from 1630 to 1633 and its husband from 1633 to 1641. He was also a director of the East India Company for 1639-1640 but he fell ill at the time of the following election and he was not re-elected because he was, falsely, reported to have died.

He leased a town house in Threadneedle Street and a country house at Mason's Hill, Bromley, Kent.

Author

Roberts had been well educated and had expected to attend university before he was obliged to be apprenticed to Harvey the overseas merchant. His first appearance in print was as author of verses inserted at the front of friends' books, the first in 1633. He enjoyed the society of Izaak Walton and other literary men, and they returned the compliment in his own major work, The Merchants Mappe of Commerce, published 1638. An immediate success with the merchant community new editions were published until 1700.

Economics

The Treasure of Traffike, or, A Discourse of Forraigne Trade was published in 1641, Roberts' closely reasoned analysis showing the benefits of the export trade and how imports supported local industry. Furthermore he demonstrated that the re-export trade should not be taxed at all. Some protection for domestic manufacturers was advocated and his treatise continued to be cited for more than a century.

Family

Roberts married Anne, daughter of Edward Williamott, mercer, of London, on 28 Nov. 1626, at St Andrew Undershaft, London, Their children included:

He died in London and was buried in St. Martin's Outwich on 12 March 1640/1641. His wife Anne, who died 24 February 1665, is buried beside him.

A portrait is prefixed to the first edition of the ‘Merchants Mappe of Commerce.’[1]

Works

Further reading

References

Sonia P. Anderson, Roberts, Lewes (1596–1641), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004

  1.  "Roberts, Lewes". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
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