Butlerage

Chambers's Encyclopaedia, Volume 2: Beaugency to Cataract, p. 584

Butlerage, otherwise called the prigase of wines, was a right exercised by the crown in England to take two tuns of wine from every ship (English or foreign) importing into England twenty tuns or more, which, by charter of Edward I., was exchanged into a duty of two shillings for every tun imported by merchant strangers, and called butlerage, because paid to the king's butler.

A detailed botanical illustration of Butomus, showing a cluster of flowers on a long, slender stem. The flowers are bell-shaped with prominent stamens and are arranged in a whorl-like pattern at the top of the stem. The leaves are long and narrow, emerging from the base of the stem.
Butomus.
Source scan(s): p. 0597