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A29737 A chronicle of the Kings of England, from the time of the Romans goverment [sic] unto the raigne of our soveraigne lord, King Charles containing all passages of state or church, with all other observations proper for a chronicle / faithfully collected out of authours ancient and moderne, & digested into a new method ; by Sr. R. Baker, Knight. Baker, Richard, Sir, 1568-1645. 1643 (1643) Wing B501; ESTC R4846 871,115 630

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the yeare 1290. in the time of King Edward the first 44 Thomas Langford an Englishman a Dominican Fryer of Chemsford in Essex writ an Universall Chronicle from the beginning of the world to his owne time and lived in the yeare 1320. in the time of King Edward the second 45 Radulphus de Rizeto an Englishman writ a Chronicle of the English Nation and lived about the yeare 1210. in the time of King John 46 Robertus Montensis a benedictine Monke writ a Chronicle from the yeare 1112. to the yeare 1210. at which time he lived 47 Johannes Burgensis an Englishman a benedictine Monke writ Annals of the English Nation 48 Thomas Spot●ey an Englishman a benedictine Fryer of Canterbury writ the Chronicles of Canterbury and lived about the time of King Edward the second 49 Matthaeus Westmonasteriensis called Florilegus for collecting Flores Historiarum chiefly of Bri●aine containing from the beginning of the world to the yeare 1307. about which time he lived 50 Ranulphus Higden a benedictine Monke of Chester writ a Booke which he called Polychronicon containing from the beginning of the world to the sixteenth yeare of King Edward the third in whose time he lived 51 Matthew Paris a benedictine Monke of Saint Albans writ a History chiefly Ecclesiasticall of the English Nation from William the Conquerour to the last yeare of King Henry the third and lived about the time of King Edward the third 52 William Pachenton an Englishman writ a History of the English Nation and lived about the tim● of King Edward the third 53 Bartholmeus Anglicus a Franciscan Fryer writ a Booke Intituled De Proprietatibus rerum and a Chronicle of the Scots and lived in the yeare 1360. in the time of King Edward the third 54 Nicholas Trivet borne in Norfolke of a worshipfull Family became a Domidican Fryer writ many excellent workes in Divinity and Philosophy also Annals of the English Kings from King Stephen to King Edward the second and lived in the yeare 1307. in the time of King Edward the third 55. Alexander Essebiensis Pryor of a Monastery of Regular Canons writ divers learned workes amongst other an Epitome of the British History and lived in the yeare 1360. in the time of King Edward the third 56 John Froyssart borne in the Low Countries writ a Chronicle in the French tongue containing seventy foure yeares Namely beginning with King Edward the third and ●nding with King Henry the fourth in whose time he lived whose Chronicle Sir John Bourchier knight translated into English and John Sleyden a French man hath lately contracted into an Epitome 57 Thomas de la Moore borne in Glocestershire in the time of King Edward the first by whom as having twenty pounds land holden by knights service he was made a Knight and afterward being very inward with King Edward the second writ a History of his life and death 58 Thomas Rodbourne an Englishman and a Bishop writ a Chronicle of his Nation and lived in the yeare 1412. in the time of King Henry the fourth 59 John Trevisa borne in Glocestershire a Priest translated Polychronicon into English adding to it an Eighth Book Intituled De Memorabilibus eorum temporum containing from the yeare 1342. to the yeare 1460. He writ also of the Acts of King Arthur and Descriptions both of Britaine and Ireland and lived in the time of King Edward the fourth 60 John Harding a Gentleman of a good Family in the North writ a Chronicle in verse of the Kings of England to the Reigne of King Edward the fourth wh●rein he all●dgeth many Records which he had got in Scotland that testifie the Scottish Kings submissions to the Kings of England he lived in the yeare 1448. in the time of King Henry the sixth 61 John Capgrave borne in Kent an Hermit Fryer writ many learned workes in Divinity and a Catalogue of the English Saints and lived in the yeare 1464. in the time of King Edward the fourth 62 John Lydgate Monke of Saint Edmundsbury in Suffolke writ divers workes in verse and some in prose as the lives of King Edward and King Ethelstan of the round Table of King Arthur and lived in the yeare 1470. in the time of King Edward the fourth 63 John Weathamstead Abbot of Saint Albans in his worke of English Affaires accuseth Geoffrey of Monmouth of meere Fabulousnesse and lived about the yeare 1440. 64 Gulielmus Elphinston a Scotchman Bishop of Aberdene writ the Antiquiti●s of Scotland and the Statutes of Councells and lived in the yeare 1480. in the time of James the third King of Scotland 65 George Buchanan a Scotchman writ the story of Scotland from Fergusius to Queene Mary in whose time he lived 66 William Caxton an Englishman writ a Chronicle to the three and twentyeth yeare of King Edward the Fourth which he cals Fructus Temporum also a Description of Britaine the life of Saint Edward and the History of King Arthur and lived in the yeare 1484. 67 Thomas Walsingham borne in Norfolke a Benedictine Monke of Saint Albans writ two Histories One shorter the other larger the first beginning from the yeare 1273. and continued to the yeare 1423. The other beginning at the comming in of the Normans and continued to the beginning of King Henry the sixth to whom he Dedicated his worke 68 Robert Fabian a Sheriffe of London writ a Concordance of Histories from Brute the first King of the Britaines to the last yeare of King Henry the second and another worke from King Richard the first to King Henry the seventh in whose time he lived 69 Sir Thomas Moore borne in London Lord Chancellour of England besides many other learned workes writ the Life of King Richard the third and dyed for denying the Kings Supremacy in the Reigne of King Henry the Eight in the yeare 1535. 70 Hector Boethius a Scotchman writ a Catalogue and History of the Kings of Scotland also a Description of that kingdome and lived in the yeare 1526. in the time of James the fifth King of Scotland 71 Polydor Virgill an Italian but made here in England Arch-deacon of Wells amongst other his learned workes writ the History of England from its first beginning to the thirtyeth yeare of King Henry the Eighth to whom he Dedicated his Worke. 72 Edward Hall a Lawyer writ a Chronicle which he cals the Union of the two Roses the Red and the White containing from the beginning of King Henry the fourth to the last yeare of King Henry the eighth and dyed in the yeare 1547. 73 John Leland a Londoner amongst divers other workes writ a Booke of the Antiquity of Britaine and of the famous men and Bishops in it and lived in the yeare 1546. in the time of King Henry the Eighth 74 John Rogers first a Papist and afterward a Protestant amongst other his learned workes writ a History from the beginning of the world and lived most in Germany in the yeare 1548. in the time of King Edward the sixth
Saxons was Kingills who was the first Christian King of this kingdome converted by Berynus an Italian Divine to whom hee gave the City of Dorchester neere to Oxford who therein erected his Episcopall See The seventh King was Kenwald who at first an Apostata was afterward converted and founded the Cathedrall of Winchester and the Abbey of Mamesbery whose wife Segburg also built a house of devotion in the Isle of Sheppey wherein herselfe became a Nunne and was afterward elected Abbesse of Ely The eleventh King was Ine who ordained many good lawes which are yet extant in the Saxon tongue and are translated into Latin by the learned Master William Lambert This King built a Colledge at Wells bearing the name of St. Andrews which afterward King Kenulph made an Episcopall See He also in most stately manner new built the Abbey of Glastenbery and out of his devotion to the See of Rome he injoyned every one of his Subjects that possessed in his house of any one kinde of goods to the value of nineteene pence to pay yearely upon Lammas day one penny to the Pope which at first was contributed under the name of the Kings Almes but afterward was paid by the name of Peter pence At last hee went to Rome and there tooke upon him the habit of Religion and therein died His wife also became a veyled Nunne and afterward was made Abbesse of Barking neere London The thirteenth King was Cuthred who first permitted the bodies of the dead to be buried within the walls of their Cities which before were used to bee buried in the fields The foureteenth was Sigebert who for his cruelty and exactions was by his subjects forced to fly into the woods to hide himselfe where by a swinherd hee was slaine The fifteenth was Kenwolph who founded the Cathedrall Church of St. Andrews at Wells and was afterward slaine by Kynoard whom he had banished The sixteenth King was Brithrick whose Queene Ethelburg having prepared a poyson for another the King chanced to tast it and thereof died In feare of which chance the Queene fled into France where Charles the then King for her excellent beauty offered her the choyce of himselfe or his sonne in marriage but she out of her lustfull humour choosing the son was thereupon debard of both and thrust into a Monastery where committing adultery she was driven from thence and ended her life in great misery For her sake the West Saxons ordained a Law that no Kings wife should hereafter have the Title or Majesty of a Queene which for many yeares after was severely executed The fourth Kingdome being of the East Saxons THe fourth Kingdom of the Heptarchy was of the East Saxons began by Erchenwyn in the yeare 527. containing Essex and Middlesex and continued 281 years during the Raignes of foureteene Kings of whom the third was Sebert who first built the Cathedrall of St. Paul London which had formerly beene the Temple of Diana He likewise Founded the Church of St. Peter in the West of London at a place called Thorny where some time stood the Temple of Apollo which being overthrowne by an Earthquake King Lucius new built for the service of God that againe being decayed this King restored to a greater beauty with his Queene Athelgarda was there buried The ninth King was Sebba who after thirty yeares peaceable Raigne relinquished the Crowne tooke upon him a Religious habit in the Monastery of St. Paul London where dying his body was Intumbed in a Coffin of gray Marble the cover coaped and as yet standeth in the North wall of the Chancell of the same Church The twelveth was Offa famous for the beauty of his countenance who both enlarged with buildings and enriched with lands the Church of Westminster and after eight yeares Raigne went to Rome and was there shorne a Monke and in that habit died The fourteenth was Suthred whom Egbert King of the West Saxons subdued and made his Kingdome a Province to his owne And thus besides the former Shires these two also were lopped off from the Britaines Dominion and this was a fourth impairing The fifth Kingdome being of Northumberland THe fifth Kingdome was of Northumberland and began by Ella and Ida in the yeare 547. Containing Yorkeshire Durham Lancashire Westmerland Cumberland and Northumberland and continued 379. yeares during the Raignes of three and twenty Kings of whom nothing is recorded of these two first but that they builded the Castle of Bamburg The seventh King was Ethelfryd who at Caerlegion now Westchester made a slaughter of twelve hundred Christian Monkes and was himselfe afterward slaine by Redwald King of the East Angles The thirteenth King was Osred whose wife Cutburga out of a loathing wearinesse of wedlocke sued out a divorce from her husband and built a Nunnery at Winburne in Dorsetshire where in a Religious habit she ended her life The sixteenth King was Cednulph who after eight yeares Raigne left his Royall robes and put on the habit of a Monke in the Isle of Lindesfern or Holy Island Unto this King the Venerable B●de a Saxon and a Priest in the Monastery of Peter and Paul at Werimouth neere to Durham Dedicate● his worke of the English History which hee continued from the first entrance of the Saxons into this Island to the yeare 731. containing after his owne account 285. yeares The seventeenth King was Egbert who after twenty yeares Raigne forsooke the world also and shore himselfe a Monke whose-brother being Archbishop of Yorke erected a notable Library there and stored it with an infinite number of learned bookes The last King was Oswald after whom this Kingdome yeelded to the protection of Egbert King of the West Saxons who was now in the yeare 926. become absolute Monarch of the whole Island And thus by the erection of this fifth Kingdome were the six Northerne shires lopped off from the Britaines Dominion and this was a fifth impairing The sixth Kingdome being of Mercia THe sixth Kingdome was of Mercia and began in Crida in the yeare 522. containing Huntington Rutland Lincolne Nottingham Warwickshire Leycester Northampton Derbyshire Oxfordshire Cheshire Shropshire Glostershire Staffordshire Buckinghamshire Bedfordshire and Hartfordshire and continued 202. yeares during the Raignes of twenty Kings eight of whom in a continued succession kept the Imperiall Crowne of the Heptarchie for though other Raigned as Kings in their owne Territories yet among them ever one was the supreme head of the rest and was called King of Engle-lond till Egbert the West Saxon brought them all into one The fifth of these Kings of Mercia was Penda who was the first Christian King of the Mercians and laid the Foundation of a faire Church at Medeshamstead now called Peterborough The seventh King was Ethelred who Raigned thirty yeares ●nd then gave over the Crowne and became a Monke in the Monastery of Bradney in Lincolnshire where in the yeare 716. he died The eighth King was Kenred who after foure yeares raigne went to
he had left very able men to sit at the Helme there in his absence yet he knew that as it is the Masters Eye that makes the Horse fat So it is the Prince's presence sometimes that keeps out many distempers in a State that would otherwise creep in● and now when in his staying six Months there he had seen all things well setled both in the Ecclesiasticall State and in the Temporall and made it appeare that he resided not in England out of any neglect of Scotland but to the end he migt be in the place of most conveniency to both Kingdoms on the fifteenth of September he returned to London not more to the griefe of the Scots to leave him than to the joy of the English to receive him so much was King Iames as a just and wise Prince beloved of both the Nations Now comes to be related a matter of speciall observation Sir Walter R●wlegh had lived a condemned man many yeares in the Tower and now his Destiny brought him to his end by liberty which it could not do by imprisonment for out of a longing for liberty he propounded a project to the King upon which as he was a well spoken man and of a great capacity he set such coulours of probability especially guilding it over with the Gold he would fetch from a Mine in Guyana and that without any wrong at all to the King of Spa●ne if he might be allowed to go the Iourney that the King if he gave not credit that he could performe it at least gave way that he should undertake it and thereupon with diverse ships accompanied with many Knights and Gentlemen of quality he set forward on the Voyage but when after long search or shew of search no such place of Treasure or no such treasure could be found whether it were that he thought it a shame to returne home with doing nothing or that his Malus Genius thrust him upon the Designe He fell upon Saint Th●m● a Towne belonging to the King of Spaine sacked it pillaged it and burnt it and here was the first part of his Tragicall Voyage acted in the death of his eldest son the last part was Acted in his own death at his returne For Gundomore the Spanish Lieger did so aggravate this fact of his to the King against him that it seemed nothing would give satisfaction but Rawlegh's head without which he doubted there would follow a breach of the League between the two Nations Rawlegh excused it by saying that he was urged to it by the Spaniards first assaulting of him and besides that he could not come at the Myne without winning this Town but Gundomor was too strong an Adversary for him and the King preferring the publique Peace before the life of one man already condamned gave way to have the Sentence of his former Condemnation executed upon him and thereupon brought to the Kings Bench Ba●●e he was not newly Arraigned or Indicted as being already M●rtuus in Lege but only hath the former Sentence averred against him and so carryed to the Gate-house and from thence the next morning to the Parliament Yard a Scaffold was there erected upon which after fourteen yeares reprivall his head was cut off at which time such abundance of bloud issued from his v●i●es that shewed he had stock of Nature enough left to have conti●ued him many yeares in life ●hough now above threescore yeares old if it had not been taken away by the hand of Violence And this was the end of the great Sir Walter Rawlegh great sometimes in the ●●vour of Queene Elizabeth and next to Drake the great scourge and hate of the Spaniard who had many things to be commended in his life but none more than his constancy at his death which he tooke with so undaunted a resolution that he might perceive he had a certaine expectation of a better life afte● it so farre he was from holding those Atheisticall opinions an aspersion whereof some traducing persons had cast upon him About this time King Iames made a progresse to the Vniversity of Cambridge who delighted with the Disputations and other scholasticall exercises he stayed three whole dayes and could have been content to have stayed as many yeares for next being a King he was made to be a Scholler In the yeare 1619. being the seventeenth yeere of King Iames his Raigne that knot of love which above twenty yeares had beene tyed betweene him and his Queene was by death dissolved for on Tuesday this yeere the second of March Queen Anne dyed at Hampton Court whose Corps was brought to Denmark house and from thence conveighed to Westminster wherein the Royall Chappell with great solemnity it was interred a Princesse very memorable for her vertue and not a little for her Fortune who besides being a Queene was so happy as to be Mother of such admired children as she brought into the World But the dissolving of this knot cast the King into an extreame sicknesse and after some recovery into a Relaps from which notwithstanding it pleased God to deliver him as having yet some great worke to doe This yeare on Munday the third of May one Mr. Williams a Barrister of the Middle Temple was arraigned at the Kings Bench for civilling and for writing Bookes against the King and upon Wednesday following was hanged and quartered at Charing Crosse. But an action of another nature was performed this yeare the seventeenth of Iuly not unworthy the relating which was this that one Bernard Calvert of Andover rode from St. Georges Church in Southwarke to Dover from thence passed by Barge to Calice in France and from thence returned back to Saint Georges Church the same day setting out about three a clock in the morning and returned about eight a clock in the Evening fresh and lusti● In the yeare 1621. a Parliament was holden at Westminster wherein two great examples of Iustice were shewed which for future terrour are not unfit to bee here related One upon Sir Gyles Montpesson a Gentleman otherwayes of good parts but for practising sundry abuses in erecting and setting up new Innes and Alehouses and e●acting great summes of money of people by pretence of Letters Patents granted to him for that purpose was sentenced to bee degraded and disabled to beare any office in the Common-wealth though he avoyded the execution by flying the Land but upon Sir Erancis Michell a Iustice of Peace of Middlesex and one of his chiefe Agents the sentence of Degradation was executed and he made to ride with his face to the horse tayle thorough the City of London The other example was of Sir Francis Bacon Viscount St. Albans Lord Chancelour of England who for bribery was put from his place and committed to the Tower but after some few dayes enlarged in whose place Doctor Williams Deane of Westminster was made Lord Keeper The Count Palatine being now strengthned with the allyance of the King of Great Brittaine was thought a fit
neere in blood than different in conditions of equall 〈…〉 of personage both but not of equall goodnesse of minde Sir Thomas 〈◊〉 of in honest and sober disposition but Sir Iames of a turbulent spirit and one 〈…〉 after preferment would not stick to make a fortune out of any villany 〈◊〉 told of this man as he was sitting at the close-stoole he presently ro●e and 〈◊〉 to him where being met the ma●ch is soon made up between them for he 〈◊〉 Sir Iames more ready to undertake the work than he was himselfe to set him 〈◊〉 it It onely remained to procure him free passage to the place where the 〈◊〉 was to be done for King Richard had formerly sent a trusty Privado of his 〈◊〉 Iohn Greene to Sir Robert Brackenbury then Lieutenant of the Tower think 〈…〉 having been raised by him would not have refused to doe the deed himselfe but when he heard how averse he was from it Good Lord saith he whom 〈◊〉 man trust Once he saw plainly that whilst he was Lieutenant there was 〈…〉 to effect it To remove therefore this Rub he sends his Letters Man●●●● to Br●ckenbury to deliver presently the keyes of the Tower to Sir Iames 〈◊〉 who being now Lieutenant for the time and having the two innocent 〈◊〉 under his custodie gets two other as very villaines as himselfe the one 〈…〉 the other Iames Dighton his horse-keeper a bigge sturdy knave and 〈…〉 makes his under-agents who comming into the childrens chamber in the 〈◊〉 for they were suffered to have none about them but one Black Will or 〈◊〉 ●●●●ghter a bloody rascall they suddenly lapped them up in their cloaths 〈…〉 down by force the featherbed and pillowes hard unto their mouths so 〈…〉 that their breath failing they gave up their innocent soule to God 〈◊〉 when the mur●herers perceived first by their strugling with the paines of 〈◊〉 and then by their long lying still to be throughly dead they laid their bodies out upon the bed and then fetched Sir Iames to see them who presently caused their bodies to be buried under the staires under a heap of stones from whence they were afterward removed to a place of Christian buriall by a Priest of Sir Robert 〈◊〉 who dying within a few dayes after and none knowing the place but 〈◊〉 was cause that it hath not been known to this day and gave occasion afterward●● the Imposture of Perkin Warbeck in King Henry the Seventh's Raign Some 〈◊〉 that king Richard caused their bodies to be taken up and closed them in lead and then to be put in a Cossin full of holes hooked at the ends with Iron and so 〈…〉 a place called the Black Deepes at the Thames mouth to be sure they should 〈◊〉 rise up not be seen againe And now see the Divine revenge upon the actors 〈…〉 ●●cerable murther Miles Forrest at St. Martins le Grand peece-meale rot●●● away Dighton lived at Callice a long time after but detested of all men dyed 〈◊〉 misery Sir Iames Tyrrell was beheaded afterward on the Tower-hill for 〈◊〉 and king Richard himselfe after this abhominable fact done never had 〈◊〉 minde troubled with fearfull dreames and would sometimes in the night 〈◊〉 of his bed and run about the Chamber in great fright as if all the Furies of 〈◊〉 were hanging about him that it was verefied in him ●ltrix Tisiphone vocat 〈◊〉 seva sororum Con●●deracies in evill are seldome long-lived and commonly end in a reciprocall 〈◊〉 and so was it now with king Richard and the Duke of Buckingham They had confederated together to the destruction of many and now their confederacy dissolves in both their ruines but what the cause was of their dissolving is not so certaine whether it were that the Duke thought not himselfe so well rewarded as his great services had deserved or whether it were that King Richard thought not himselfe absolute King as long as the Duke by whose means he came to be King was in such a height of greatnesse or whether it were as was rather thought that the Duke being a man ambitious and of an aspiring spirit though he had himselfe been the means to bring King Richard to the Crown yet when the Crown was put upon his head so envied at it that he turned his head another way ●s not enduring the sight and for the same ca●se was willing not to have been present at the Coronation pretending sicknes in excuse of his absence but that King Richard sent him a sharpe Message requiring him to come or he would fetch him whereupon the Duke went but with so ill a minde that he bore it in minde ever after Whatsoever it was certaine it is that presently after the Coronation there grew great jealousies between them and the Duke retired himselfe to his Castle at Brecknock where he had the Bishop of Ely in custody And here we may observe the unsearchable depth of the divine Providence the bottome whereof the soundest judgement of Man can never sound as working effects by contrary causes for where King Richard had committed the Bishop to the Duke as to one that would have a most watchfull eye over him This which the King did for the Bishops greater punishment proved a means afterward of the Bishops greater advancement and a means at the present of King Richards ruine For the Duke being retyred home and having his head so full of thoughts that of necessity it required ●ent for his own recreation would sometimes fall in talke with the Bishop with whose discourse as he was a man of great wit and solid judgement the Duke was so taken tha● he grew to delight in nothing more then to be conferring with him One time it happened that the Duke had opened his minde something freely to him and the Bishop following him in his own way and cunningly working upon that humour of the Duke which he found most working in the Duke which he conceived to grow out of envy to king Richard he said to this purpose My Lord you know I followed first the part of king Henry the sixth and if I could have had my wish his Sonne should have had the Crown and not king Edward But after that God had ordained king Edward to Reigne I was never so mad that I would with a dead man strive against the quick And so was I to king Edward also a faithfull Chaplaine and glad would have been that his childe had succeeded him How be it if the s●cret Judgement of God have otherwise provided I purpose not to labour to set up that which God pulleth down And as for the Lord Protectour and now King● and even there he left saying he had already meddled too much with the world and would from that day meddle with his Books and his Beads and no further Then longed the Duke exceedingly to heare what he would have said because he ended with the king and there suddenly stopped and thereupon intreated him to be bold to say
the Siege but afterward 〈…〉 with Verdugo the Spaniard at N●rthone even when the Vi 〈…〉 gotten Roger Williams having put the enemies to flight 〈…〉 of the War turned Norris is vanquished wounded and a great 〈…〉 his men slain amongst whom were Cotton Fitz● Williams and 〈…〉 Commanders Here it must not be omitted● That the English 〈…〉 the dwellers in the Northern parts of the World were hither 〈…〉 Drinkers and deserved praise for their sob●iety in these Dutch 〈…〉 to be Drunkards and brought the vice so far to over-spread 〈…〉 ●ome that Laws were fain to be enacted for repressing it 〈…〉 whilst the States and the King of Spain con●end about a few 〈…〉 the Low-Countries he seizeth upon the whole Kingdom of Por●●● 〈…〉 For the last yeer Henry King of P●●tingall dying many Compe 〈…〉 allenge the Kingdom as the Duke of Savoy the Prince of Par 〈…〉 Natharine Bracant and the Queen of France But Philip King of 〈…〉 son of Henries eldest sister putting the case to his Divines and 〈…〉 and adjuring them to pronounce to whom of Right it belonged 〈…〉 For him whereupon he sent Duke D'Alva who put to 〈…〉 ●●tonio whom the people had elected King and within seventy dayes 〈…〉 all Portingall The Queen of France angry hereat and enviously be 〈…〉 the King of Spain's Dominions thus enlarged being now Master 〈…〉 gall the East Indies and many Islands besides adviseth amongst 〈…〉 P●●●ces Queen Elizabeth to bethink themselves in time of restrayn 〈…〉 ●o excessive Dominions Whereupon the Queen received Don 〈◊〉 and l●vingly relieved him which she thought might be done without 〈…〉 breath of the League with Spain seeing Don Antonio was descended of 〈…〉 Blood and of the House of Lancaster and that no Cau●ion was 〈…〉 ●eague That the Portuger should 〈◊〉 be admitted into England And now the Queen-Mother of Frano● and the King her son mo●e 〈◊〉 then ever pursue the Ma●ch with Alanson now Duke of A●gio● 〈…〉 transacting whereof they sent in Ambassage into England● Francis 〈◊〉 Prince of C●sse● Marshall of France and many 〈◊〉 Hono●rable Personages who were entertained with great respect a 〈◊〉 being purposely built at Westminster for that use Royally furnished ●●tings and Justs proclaimed by Philip Earl of Arundel Frederick Baron 〈◊〉 Windsor Sir Philip Sidney and Sir Fulk Grevill against all come●s● The ●●●●gates that were to confer with the French concerning the Marriage 〈◊〉 Sir William Cecill Lord Treasurer Edward Earl of Lincoln Lord Ad●●●●ll Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester Sir Christopher Hatton and Sir 〈◊〉 Walsingham Secretary● by whom Covenants of Marriage were at ●●th agreed on First That the Duke of Angio● and the Queen of Eng●●●● within six weeks after the ratification of the Articles should contract ●●trimony● and the rest most of them such as were before agreed on in the ●arriage between Queen Mary and King Philip chiefly consisting in confer●●ng Honour upon the Duke but Power upon the Queen It was also ar●●ed That all pa●ticulars should be ratified within two Months● by the ●●●thfull Promise and Oath of the French King for him and his Heirs and ●eservation also was added apart with the Hands and Seals of every 〈◊〉 〈…〉 Delegates That Queen Elizabeth is not bound to finish the Marriage ●●till she and the Duke have given each other satisfaction in some 〈◊〉 and have certified the French King of the same within six we●ks● Be●ore those six weeks were expired Simier Secretary to the Cou●●●ll is 〈◊〉 into France to require the King of France his Confirmation● The 〈◊〉 will not hear him but presseth to have the Marriage accomplished 〈…〉 was contracted and that nothing else was to be done ●i●●ier on the 〈◊〉 side sheweth by the Articles That a League offen●●●e and defensive 〈◊〉 first be concluded This the French King disclayme●h Whereupon W●lsinghams is presently sent ●o compose this differan●e who joyntly with Henry C●bham the Embass●●our in ordina●●●● and Simier alleadgeth to the French King these Partic●l●●s That Queen Elizabeth for no other reason was willing to marry but for the ●atisfaction of he● people and seeing many Impediments were come in the way since the first Treaty namely the Civill Warre in Franc● and the Dukes engagement in a war with Spain w●● makes the wi●est of her subjects to be now against the Ma●ch This hath made her to deferre the accomplishment of it although her affection be still constant toward the Duke● For this cause the Queen would have no further Treaty to be held● till the French Duke be freed from the Spanish warre and a Leauge of mutuall offe●●● and defence be agreed on The French King willingly accepted of ●●e L●agu● defensive but of the offensive he would heare no speech till th● marriage were finished No● long aft●r● the French D●k● himself came into England having with good successe raised the Si●ge of C●●bray he was here received with as great humanity as he cou●● w●sh and nothing omitted● where by he might judge himsel● to be truly welcome Insomuch th●● in November when the Anniversari● of the Qu●●●s Inauguration came to be solemnized the Q. while they were in Love conference drew a Ring off from her finger and put it upon his upon some private conditions The standers by imagined that by this Ceremonie the Marriag● was confirmed between them and Aldeg●nd Governour of Antwerp being there presently dispatched messengers into the Low-Countries● to give notice of it and thereupon Bonfires were made and all shewes of Rejoycing● But the Earl of Leicester who priv●ly plotted to crosse the Ma●ch H●●ton the Vice-Chamberlain and Secretary Walsingham fr●● and are enraged as if the Kingdom the Queen and Religon were now utterly ov●●throwne The Maids of Honour and Ladi●s that were familiar wi●● th● Queen made grievous lamentation and so 〈◊〉 and daunted her that she could take no rest that night The nex● day● she calleth to her the French Duke and causing all companie to go aside they privately ●n●er●ain a long discourse At length the Duke returning to his lodging cast the Ring away from him and after a while takes it up again terribly exclayming against the Levity and inconstancie of Women The Queen at this time was much troubled at a Book lately put forth with this Title The Gulph wherein England will be swallowed by the French Marriage whereof conceiving that some Puritan was the Author it made her highly displeased with the Puritans whereupon within a few dayes Iohn Stubbes of Lincolnes-Inne a Zealous Professour and the Author of this booke w●ose sister Thomas Cartwright the father of the Puritants had married William Page that dispersed the copies and Singleto● the Printer were apprehended● against whom Sentence was pronounced That their Right hand should be cut off● by vertue of a Law made in the Raigne of Phillip and Ma●ie against the A●thors and dispersers of Seditious Writings though the cheife Lawyers and Judges of the Kingdom could not agree concerning the f●●ce of that