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A60879 A brief history of the succession collected out of the records, and the most authentick historians, written for the satisfaction of the Earl of H. Somers, John Somers, Baron, 1651-1716. 1681 (1681) Wing S4638; ESTC R11938 27,921 19

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to it frequently In the 25th year of his Reign an Act passed St. 25 H. 8. cap. 22. wherein the Parliament say they were bounden to provide for the perfect surety of the Succession they did not certainly reckon themselves bound to do a thing that was not in their Power And then they take notice of the great Mischiefs and Effusions of Bloud which had happened by reason of the doubtfulness of the true Title and for the avoiding of all future Questions do Enact That the Imperial Crown of this Realm shall be to King Henry 8th and the Heirs of his Body Lawfully begotten on Queen Anne and the Heirs of the Bodies of such several Sons respectively according to the course of Inheritance and for default of such Issue then to the Sons of his Body in like manner and upon failure of such Issue then to the Lady Elizabeth and after her to any other Issue in Tail and then the Remainder is limited to the right Heirs of Henry the 8th By the same Statute every Subject at his full Age is oblig'd to take an Oath to defend the Contents of it and the refusal is made Misprision of Treason And the next Parliament 26 H. 8. c. 2. which was held in the year following does particularly Enact an Oath for that purpose Some few years after these Acts were Repealed 28 H. 8. Rast Crown 4. and the Parliament Entailed the Crown upon the King and the Heirs of his Body by Queen Jane And Power is given the King for want of Issue of his Body to dispose of the Succession by his Letters Patents or his last Will. It is also made Treason if any Usurp upon those to whom it is so appointed Here the Parliament do not only use their power of changing the Succession but they Delegate it to another And in the thirty fifth Year of this King's Reign 35 H. 3. cap. 1. the Parliament by another Act take notice of the great and high Trust which the Subjects had in him in putting into his hands wholly the Order and Declaration of the Succession Yet the King being then ready to go into France they do Enact that after his Death and the Death of Prince Edward without Issue the Crown should be to the Lady Mary and the Heirs of her Body but both subject to such Conditions as the King should limit by his Letters Patents or by his last Will sign'd with his Hand And if the Lady Mary performed not those Conditions that then the Crown should go to the Lady Elizabeth as if the Lady Mary had been dead without Issue and if the Lady Elizabeth neglected to perform such Conditions then it should go to such other Person as the King should appoint in the same manner as before as if the Lady Elizabeth had been dead without Issue And Authority is given to him by his Letters Patents or his last Will signed with his own Hand to appoint the Crown to remain to such Person or Persons and for such Estate and under such Conditions as he should please An Oath also for observing this Statute is appointed and it is made Treason to refuse it or to disturb or interrupt any Person to whom it is limited by this Act or should be by the King pursuant to the Power given him thereby This is abundantly sufficient to prove That it was the universal Opinion of that Age That the Succession was wholly under the Controul of Parliament who not only limited it as they pleased themselves but subjected it to Conditions and to the Appointments of others But the thing was in its own Nature so evident that they who had the greatest Reason and were most concern'd to do it did never presume to question the Power of a Parliament in this Point Lethington Burn. Hist Reform Collect. 268. Secretary of Scotland in a Letter of his written to Sir William Cecill then Secretary of State here wherein he argues in behalf of the Title of his Mistriss Mary Queen of Scots to succeed Queen Elizabeth against a pretended Disposition made by the last Will of Henry the Eighth to his Neece the Lady Frances Daughter to the French Queen if his own Issue fail'd says of these Statutes that gave the King Power to dispose of the Crown That they were against Equity to disinherit a Race of Forreign Princes and that they were made in an abrupt Time as he terms it but yet he confesses that since the thing was done it was now valid and unavoidable unless some Circumstances did annihilate the Limitation and Disposition made by King Henry's Will And so he proceeds to prove that the power which was given to the King by these Statutes was not pursued which it ought to have been most strictly and in a precise Form for that the King never signed the Will but that his name set to it was forged Nay I will venture to say that in all the Books which were written to support the Claim of the Scottish Queen against King Henries Will though the whole power and wealth of the Guises were employed to set every wit at work on that Design there was never any stress laid upon it Treatise of the Title of Queen Mary to the Succession pag. 38 39. c. lib. 2. Dodd Engl. Lawyer pag. 8. or so much as a pretence that these Acts of Parliament were void or ineffectual in themselves In that Discourse which was published by Philips and composed by Sir Anthony Brown one of the Justices of the Common Pleas who was in judge Dodderidges opinion a person of an incomparable sharpness of Wit There was all the help that learning either in Divinity Civil or Common Laws could give yet there the Authority of the Parliament in the case and the validity of these Statutes is all along admitted Indeed they endeavour to put some other construction upon the Statutes but their great Argument is That King Henry as King had no power to dispose of the Crown and therefore these Laws only gave him an Authority and made him only as it were a Commissioner and therefore as all other Authorities especially being in Derogation of the course of the Common Line was to be strictly followed They allow that he had sufficient power to Devise and that he might Honourably have used that Power but that he ever did exercise that Authority is the thing denyed But it is time for us to go on Edward the Sixth succeeded his Father and took upon him a power which surely no King ever had to dispose of his Crown by the Will But that disposition serving to no other purpose but to the Ruine of the Lady Jane Gray His Sister Queen Mary first and after Queen Elizabeth enjoy'd the Crown according to the Limitation of the Statute 35 H. 8. c. 1. and that one of them had no other Title must be agreed by all For Queen Catherine was alive at the time when Elizabeth was born so that if the