Tolls marked on 1778 John McArthurs map

Moderators: John, Sharon, Fossil, Lucky Poet, crusty_bint, Jazza, dazza

Tolls marked on 1778 John McArthurs map

Postby jaffamuffin » Wed May 08, 2024 2:01 am

Hi all

I just saw this map for the first time https://www.gla.ac.uk/myglasgow/library ... r1778.html

It's an amazing map, lots of interesting things in it.

that is a good link, you can full screen it and zoom in.

I noticed all the tolls marked, it seems you had to cross a toll to access Glasgow from any road coming in, does anyone have information on these ?

Was this only for goods, or any horse drawn carriage? How much, when did they abolish? did they move the tolls as Glasgow grew, could people on foot move freely etc?

Any information appreciated. my searching skills are only turning up modern toll schemes, such as erksine bridge etc.
jaffamuffin
Just settling in
Just settling in
 
Posts: 5
Joined: Sat Dec 26, 2009 11:50 pm

Re: Tolls marked on 1778 John McArthurs map

Postby jaffamuffin » Wed May 08, 2024 11:20 pm

This page has an interesting bit of text about tolls in Germany. From the same period, it reference anyone even on foot having to pay.

https://www.habsburger.net/en/chapter/t ... -pay-tolls

It was a burden on travellers’ pockets but for rulers it meant more money in their coffers. It cost money to pass a toll station.

Whether they were on foot or in a post coach, almost everyone had to pay; the only exceptions were craftsmen, skilled workers and traders.

In general people’s freedom of movement was restricted: anyone who wanted to leave a sovereign territory or even his home town or village needed both a passport and a permit. This regulation did not apply to the nobility, the clergy and civil servants. But that did not mean that the people of the early modern period were not mobile. On the one hand there was migration of labour – for example the travels undertaken by journeymen. On the other hand in most cases the authorities simply did not have sufficient means to keep an effective check on people’s movements.

Until the eighteenth century the right to collect customs duties and tolls was a right conferred by a sovereign prince. In the 1760s Maria Theresia had numerous internal tariffs abolished, and in 1775 a legal distinction between duties and tolls was made for the first time. In contrast to customs duties, it was laid down that the revenue from tolls had to be used for the maintenance of roads and bridges. Tolls were levied when people, animals or vehicles entered a ‘foreign’ territory, that is to say one outside their home jurisdiction, or made use of certain bridges, canals or roads. Toll stations had to be at least four miles (the equivalent of thirty kilometres) apart. So-called ‘fortified toll posts’ were intended to prevent people simply avoiding the toll stations.

Despite the abolition of internal tariffs there were as many as sixty toll stations just on the Danube between Ulm and Vienna until well into the nineteenth century. In addition to the bridge, road and waterway tolls there were the so-called ‘line tolls’, which were levied at city boundaries. Customs duties levied on import, export and transit goods were on the other hand charged at a customs ‘line’.

Christina Linsboth
jaffamuffin
Just settling in
Just settling in
 
Posts: 5
Joined: Sat Dec 26, 2009 11:50 pm


Return to Glasgow Chat (Coffee Lounge)

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Google Feedfetcher and 10 guests