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A59100 Tracts written by John Selden of the Inner-Temple, Esquire ; the first entituled, Jani Anglorvm facies altera, rendred into English, with large notes thereupon, by Redman Westcot, Gent. ; the second, England's epinomis ; the third, Of the original of ecclesiastical jurisdictions of testaments ; the fourth, Of the disposition or administration of intestates goods ; the three last never before extant.; Selections. 1683 Selden, John, 1584-1654.; Littleton, Adam, 1627-1694.; White, Robert, 1645-1703.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. Jani Anglorum facies altera. English.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. England's epinomis.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. Of the original of ecclesiastical jurisdiction of testaments. 1683 (1683) Wing S2441; ESTC R14343 196,477 246

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Verses which Joseph Scaliger has rescued out of its rust and mouldiness has it Mars pater nostrae gentis tutela Quirine Et magno positus Caesar uterque polo Cernitis ignotos Latiâ sub Lege Britannos c. that is in English Sire Mars and Guardian of our State Quirinus hight after thy fate And Caesars both plac'd near the Pole With your bright Stars ye do behold And th' unknown Britans aw T' observe the Roman Law The stately Seraglio or Building for the Emperours Women at Venta Belgarum a City at this day called Winchester and other things of that kind I let pass In the time of the Emperours Vespasian Titus and Domitian Julius Agricola Tacitus his Wives Father was Lord Deputy Lieutenant here He encouraged the Barbarous people to Civil fashions insomuch that they took the Roman habit for an honour and almost every body wore a Gown and as Juvenal has it in his Satyr Gallia Causidicos docuit facunda Britannos The British Lawyers learnt of yore From the well-spoken French their lore T'imply hereafter we should sée Our Laws themselves in French would be CHAP. XVI In Commodus his time King Lucy embraces the Christian Religion and desires Eleutherius then Pope to send him the Roman Laws In stead of Heathen Priests he makes three Arch-Bishops and twenty eight Bishops He endows the Churches and makes them Sanctuaries The manner of Government in Constantine's time where ends the Roman account IN Commodus the Emperours time the Light of the Gospel shone afresh upon the Britans Lucius the first King of the Christians for the Romans as in other places so in Britany made use of even Kings for their instruments of slavery by the procurement of Fugatius and Damianus did happily receive from Pope Eleutherius the Seal of Regeneration that is Baptism and the Sacred Laws of eternal salvation He had a mind also to have the Civil Laws thence and desired them too Ovid long since had so prophesied of Rome Juráque ab hâc terrâ caetera terra petet that is And from this Countrey every other Land Their Laws shall fetch and be at her command Now Eleutherius wrote him this answer You have desired of us that the Roman and Caesarean Laws may be sent over to you that you may as you desire use them in your Kingdom of Britanny The Roman and Caesarean Laws we may at all times disprove of but by no means the Law of God For you have lately through Divine mercy taken upon you in the Kingdom of Britanny the Law and Faith of Christ you have with you in the Kingdom both pages of Holy Writ to wit the Old and New Testament Out of them in the name and by the favour of God with the advice of your Kingdom take your Law and by it through Gods permission you may govern your Kingdom of Britanny Now you for your part are Gods Vicegerent in your Kingdom Howsoever by injury of time the memory of this great and Illustrious Prince King Lucy hath been imbezill'd and smuggled this upon the credit of the ancient Writers appears plainly that the pitiful fopperies of the Pagans and the Worship of their Idol-Devils did begin to flag and within a short time would have given place to the Worship of the true God and that Three Arch-Flamens and Twenty Eight Flamens i. e. Arch-Priests being driven out there were as many Arch-Bishops and Bishops put into their rooms the Seats of the Arch-Bishops were at London at York and at Caerleon in Wales to whom as also to other Religious persons the King granted Possessions and Territories in abundance and confirmed his Grants by Charters and Patents But he ordered the Churches as he of Monmouth and Florilegus tell us to be so free that whatsoever Malefactor should fly thither for refuge there he might abide secure and no body hurt him In the time of Constantine the Emperour whose Pedigree most people do refer to the British and Royal Blood the Lord President of France was Governour of Britanny He together with the rest those of Illyricum or Slavonia of the East and of Italy were appointed by the Emperour In his time the Lord Deputy of Britanny whose Blazonry was a Book shut with a green Cover was honoured with the Title of Spectabilis There were also under him two Magistrates of Consular Dignity and three Chief Justices according to the division of the Province into five parts who heard and determined Civil and Criminal Causes And here I set up my last Pillar concerning the Britans and the Roman Laws in Britanny so far forth as those Writers which I have do supply me with matter CHAP. XVII The Saxons are sent for in by Vortigern against the Scots and Picts who usurping the Government set up the Heptarchy The Angles Jutes Frisons all called Saxons An account of them and their Laws taken out of Adam of Bremen AFterwards the Scots and Picts making incursions on the North and daily havock and waste of the Lands of the Provincials that is those who were under the Roman Government they send to desire of the Romans some Auxiliary Forces In the mean time Rome by a like misfortune was threatned with imminent danger by the fury of the Goths all Italy was in a fright in an uproar For the maintaining of whose liberty the Empire being then more than sinking was with all its united strength engaged and ready prepared So this way the Britans met with a disappointment Wherefore Vortigern who was Governour in Chief sent for supplies from the neighbouring Germans and invited them in But according to the Proverb Carpathius leporem He caught a Tartar for he had better have let them alone where they were Upon this account the Saxons the Angles the Jutes the Frieslanders arrive here in their Gally-Foists in the time of Theodosius the younger At length being taken with the sweetness of the soil a great number of their Countrey-men flocking over after them as there were at that time fatal flittings and shiftings of quarters all the World over and spurred on with the desire of the chief command and rule having struck up a League with the Picts they raise a sad and lamentable War against their new entertainers in whose service they had lately received pay and to make short in the end having turned the Britans out of their Ancestors Seats they advanced themselves into an Heptarchy of England so called from them Albeit they pass by various names yet in very deed they were all of them none other but Saxons A name at that time of a large extent in Germany which was not as later Geographers make it bounded with the Rivers of the Elb of the Rhine and the Oder and with the Confines of Hessen and Duringen and with the Ocean but reached as far as into the Cimbrian Chersonesus now called Jutland It is most likely that those of them that dwelt by the Sea-side came over
came in his way as he was passing by holding up their Ploughshares in token that their Husbandry was running to decay for they were put to a world of trouble upon occasion of the provisions which they carried from their own quarters through several parts of the Kingdom Thereupon the King being moved with their complaints did by the resolved advice of his Lords appoint throughout the Kingdom such persons as he knew were for their prudence and discretion fit for the service These persons going about and that they might believe their own eyes taking a view of the several Lands having made an estimate of the provisions which were paid out of them they reduced it into a sum of pence But for the total sum which arose out of all the Lands in one County they ordered that the Sheriff of that County should be bound to the Exchequer Adding this withal that he should pay it at the Scale Now the manner of paying the tryal of the weight and of the metal by Chymical operation the Melter or Coyner and the surveyor of the Mint are more largely handled and explained by my self in some other work of mine 13. That he might the more firmly retain Kent to himself that being accounted as it were the Key of England 't is the famous Mr. Camden tells the Story he set a Constable over Dover-Castle and made the same person Warden of the Cinque Ports according to the old usage of the Romans Those are Hastings Dover Hith Rumney and Sandwich to which are joyned Winchelsey and Rye as Principals and other little Towns as Members 14. To put the last hand to William I add out of the Archives this Law not to be accounted among the last or least of his William by the Grace of God King of the English to all Counts or Earls Viscounts or Sheriffs and to all French born and English men who have Lands in the Bishoprick of Remigius greeting This Remigius was the first who translated the Episcopal See from Dorchester to Lincoln Be it known unto you all and the rest of my Liege Subjects who abide in England that I by the common advice of my Arch-Bishops and the rest of the Bishops and Abbots and all the Princes of my Kingdom have thought fit to order the amendment of the Episcopal Laws which have been down to my time in the Kingdom of the Angles not well nor according to the Precepts of the holy Canons ordained or administred Wherefore I do command and by my Royal Authority strictly charge that no Bishop or Arch-deacon do henceforth hold Pleas in the Hundred concerning Episcopal Laws nor bring any cause which belongs to the Government of Souls i.e. to spiritual affairs to the judgment of secular men but that whosoever according to the Episcopal Laws shall for what cause or fault soever be summoned shall come to a place which the Bishop shall chuse and name for this purpose and there make answer concerning his cause and do right to God and his Bishop not according to the Hundred but according to the Canons and Episcopal Laws For in the time of the Saxon Empire there were wont to be present at those Country Meetings the Hundred Courts an Alderman and a Bishop the one for Spirituals the other for Temporals as appears by King Edgar's Laws CHAP. V. William Rufus succeeds Annats now paid to the King Why claimed by the Pope No one to go out of the Land without leave Hunting of Deer made Felony AFter the death of William his second Son WILLIAM sirnamed RVFVS succeeded in his room All Justice of Laws as Florentius of Worcester tells us was now husht in silence and Causes being put under a Vacation without hearing money alone bore sway among the great ones Ipsaque majestas auro corrupta jacebat that is And Majesty it self being brib'd with gold Lay as a prostitute expos'd to th' bold 15. The right or duty of First-Fruits or as they are commonly called the Annats which our Kings claimed from vacant Abbies and Bishopricks Polydor Virgil will have to have had its first original from Rufus Now the Popes of Rome laid claim to them anciently a sort of Tribute which upon what right it was grounded the Council of Basil will inform us and by what opinion and resolution of Divines and Lawyers confirmed Francis Duarenus in his Sacred Offices of the Church will instruct us 'T is certain that Chronologers make mention that at his death the Bishopricks of Canterbury Winchester and Salisbury and twelve Monasteries beside being without Prelates and Abbots paid in their Revenues to the Exchequer 16. He forbad by publick Edict or Proclamation sayes the same Author that any one should go out of England without his leave and Passport We read that he forbad Anselm the Arch-Bishop that he should not go to wait upon Pope Vrban but that he comprehended all Subjects whatsoever in this his Royal order I confess I have not met with any where in my reading but in Polydor. 17. He did so severely forbid hunting of Deer saith William of Malmesbury that it was Felony and a hanging matter to have taken a Stag or Buck. CHAP. VI. Henry the First why called Beauclerk His Letters of Repeal An Order for the Relief of Lands What a Hereot was Of the Marriage of the Kings Homagers Daughter c. Of an Orphans Marriage Of the Widows Dowry Of other Homagers the like Coynage-money remitted Of the disposal of Estates The Goods of those that dye Intestate now and long since in the Churches Jurisdiction as also the business of Wills Of Forfeitures Of Misdemeanors Of Forests Of the Fee de Hauberk King Edward's Law restored WIlliam who had by direful Fates been shewn to the World was followed by his Brother Henry who for his singular Learning which was to him instead of a Royal Name was called Beau-clerk He took care of the Common-wealth by amending and making good what had slipt far aside from the bounds of Justice and by softning with wholsome remedies those new unheard of and most grievous injuries which Ralph afterwards Bishop of Durham being Lord Chief Justice of the whole Kingdom plagued the people with He sends Letters of Repeal to the High Sheriffs to the intent that the Citizens and people might enjoy their liberty and free rights again See here a Copy of them as they are set down in Matthew Paris HENRY by the Grace of God King of England to Hugh of Bockland High Sheriff and to all his Liege people as well French as English in Herefordshire Greeting Know ye that I through the mercy of God and by the common advice of the Barons of the Kingdom of England have been crowned King And because the Kingdom was opprest with unjust exactions I out of regard to God and that love which I bear towards you all do make the holy Church of God free so that I will neither sell it nor will I put it to farm
or Borough and before lawful men he cannot deny it afterwards before the Justices And if the same person without Seisin with Seisin in this place is the same as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as we commonly say in our Language taken with the manner shall recognize or acknowledge any thing of this nature before them this also in like manner he shall not be able to deny before the Justices 70. If any one shall dye holding in Frank Pledge i. e. having a free Tenure let his heirs remain in such Seisin as their Father had on the day he was alive and dyed of his fee and let them have his Chattels out of which they may make also the devise or partition of the deceased that is the sharing of his goods according to his will and afterwards may require of their Lord and do for their relief and other things which they ought to do as touching their Fee i. e. in order to their entring upon the estate 71. If the heir be under age let the Lord of the Fee take his homage and have him in custody or keeping for as long time as he ought let the other Lords if there be more of them take his homage and let him do to them that which he ought to do 72. Let the Wife of the deceased have her Dowry and that part of his Chattels which of right comes to her In former times peradventure it was a like generally practised by the English that the Wife and Children should have each their lawful Thirds of the estate each of them I say if they were in being but half to the Wife if there were no issue and as much to the Children if the Wife did not survive her Husband as it was practised by the Romans of old according to the Falcidian Law and of later time by the Novells of Justinian that they should have their Quarter-part For I see that those of Normandy of Arras of Ireland people that lay round about them had the same custom Of this you are to see Glanvill Bracton the Register of Briefs or Writs and William Lindwood beside the Records or yearly Reports of our Law 73. Let the Justices take the Fealties of our Lord the King before the close of Easter and at furthest before the close of Pentecost namely of all Earls Barons Knights and Free-holders and even of Rusticks or Vassals such as have a mind to stay in the Realm and he who will not do fealty let him be taken into custody as an enemy of our Lord the King 74. The Justices have also this to give in charge that all those who have not as yet done their homage and allegiance to our Lord the King do at a term of time which they shall name to them come in and do homage and allegiance to the King as to their Liege Lord. 75. Let the Justices do all acts of Justice and rights belonging to our Lord the King by a Writ of our Lord the King or of them who shall be in his place or stead as to a half-Knights fee and under a Knights fee in an old Book which pretends to more antiquity by far than it ought concerning the manner of holding Parliaments is said to be twenty pounds worth of Land in yearly revenue but the number prefixt before the Red Book of the Exchequer goes at the rate of Six Hundred and Eighty Acres unless the complaint be of that great concern that it cannot be determined without our Lord the King or of that nature that the Justices by reason of their own doubting refer it to him or to those who shall be in his place and stead Nevertheless let them to the utmost of their ability intend and endeavour the service and advantage of our Lord the King 76. Let the Justices provide and take care that the Castles already demolisht be utterly demolished and that those that are to be demolished be well levelled to the ground And if they shall not do this our Lord the King may please to have the judgement of his Court against them as against those who shew contempt of his Precept 77. A Thief or Robber as soon as he is taken let him be put into the Sheriffs hands to be kept in safe custody and if the Sheriff shall be out of the way let him be carried or brought to the next Constable of a Castle and let him have him in custody until he deliver him up to the Sheriff 78. Let the Justices according to the custom of the Land cause inquiry to be made of those who have departed or gone out of the Realm And if they shall refuse to return within a term of time that shall be named and to stand to right in the Kings Court i. e. to make their appearance and there to answer if any thing shall be brought in against them let them after that be outlawed and the names of the Outlaws be brought at Easter and at the Feast of St. Michael to the Exchequer and from thence be sent to our Lord the King These Laws were agreed upon at Northampton CHAP. XVIII Some Laws in favour of the Clergy Of forfeitures on the account of Forest or hunting Of Knights fees Who to bear Arms and what Arms. Arms not to be alienated No Jew to bear Arms. Arms not to be carryed out of England Rich men under suspicion to clear themselves by Oath Who allowed to swear against a Free-man Timber for building of Ships not to be carryed out of England None but Free-men to bear Arms. Free-men who Rusticks or Villains not such 79. THat henceforth a Clergy-man be not dragg'd and drawn before a Secular Judge personally for any crime or transgression unless it be for Forest or a Lay-fee out of which a Lay-service is due to the King or to some other Secular Lord. This priviledge of the Clergy the King granted to Hugh the Popes Cardinal Legate by the Title of S. Michael à Petra who arrived here on purpose to advance the Popish interest 80. Furthermore that Arch-Bishopricks Bishopricks or Abbacies be not held in the Kings hand above a year unless there be an evident cause or an urgent necessity for it 81. That the Murderers or Slayers of Clergy-men being convicted or having confest before a Justice or Judge of the Realm be punished in the presence of the Bishop 82. That Clergy-men be not obliged to make Duel i. e. not to clear themselves as others upon some occasion did by single combat 83. He ordained at Woodstock we transcribe these words out of Hoveden that whosoever should make a forfeit to him concerning his Forest or his hunting once he should be tyed to find safe Pledges or Sureties and if he should make a second forfeit in like manner safe Pledges should be taken of him but if the same person should forfeit the third time then for his third forfeit no pledges should be taken but the proper body of him who made the forfeit Moreover
them often or at least too great a part of them to the use either of themselves or of the Church and so defrauded those to whom by the right of natural succession they pertained For that of the Lords Bracton his noting it as a thing denyed them compared with what we find among Articles granted in the Synod of London held under Boniface Arch-bishop of Canterbury in 42 H. 3. proves it Idem quod mortuo so is the Article laico sine Testamento non capiantur bona ipsius in manus dominorum Sed inde solvantur debita ipsius residua in usus filiorum suorum proximorum indigentium pro salute animae defuncti in pios usus per Ordinarios committantur nisi quatenus fuerit domino suo obligatus Here we see by the way plainly that the distribution in pios usus was the devising them among the next of kin according to their nearness and want not an imploying them to other uses at the Ordinaries arbitrary disposition But also that the Ordinary did in this Age sometimes usurp the Goods of Intestates against the next of kin is enough proved out of that Legatine Constitution of Othobon cum mortis incerta c. where it was ordained as you see before so in the words of it that they should not dispose of them otherwise than according as that Grant was in the Grand Charter that is to the benefit of the next of blood But the Ordinaries had about this time against the intent of that Charter so abused the right of succession that it was related for a constant truth that the Custome in Britania was that tertiae pars bonorum decedentium ab intestato in opus Ecclesiae pauperum dispensanda c. as Innocent the Fourth his words are who lived and wrote in the time of H. 3. What other ground than the Ordinaries ill dealing with the next of blood was for that tertia pars I conceive not unless the Pope had some such other Testimony touching it as we find in an old Manuscript Volume titled Statuta Synodorum written in an hand of near seven hundred years since being a Collection out of the Fathers and old Councils made as it seems by some Britain or Irish-man as we have elsewhere conjectured In that Statuta Synodorum occurrs Orig. in lib. de haeredibus pater moriens det tertiam partem filiis tertiam Caesari tertiam Ecclesiae si non habuerit Ecclesiam det pauperibus si non habuerit Caesarem nec Ecclesiam dividat inter filios pauperes But what Author this is cited out of I am equally ignorant as I know not at all who was the Author of the whole Collection or whence he had many other of his Authorities And other things that Volume hath out of some old Synod of Ireland which makes to our present purpose if the Canons of that Synod had been at all binding in this State And it was no such wonder that some such practice might be under H. 3. for since also in the time of E. 3. the Church so usurped in their Jurisdiction of Probates that they made the Executors wait on their Officials at uncertain and remote places and then also put them at times to the Ransom of the fourth or fifth part of the Testators Goods before they would give them Probate which was complained of in Parliament amongst the Grievances of the Commons CHAP. V. Of that of bona Intestatorum in manus Domini Regis capi solebant FOr that of bona Intestatorum in manus Domini Regis capi solebant for which is cited the Close Roll of 7 H. 3. Rot. 16. it is also most true if rightly apprehended All that appears in the Record is that the King wrote to the Sheriff of Lincoln that constat nobis per inquisitionem nobis missam sub sigillo Stephani de Segrave aliorum proborum legalium hominum quod Richardus filius Dunae non obiit intestatus and therefore he commands that the Sheriff should deliver all the Goods of the said Fitz-dune in manus nostras capta to the Prior of Loketon and others his Executors ad faciendum Testamentum neither are there any words that tell us of any capi solebant or that these were taken in regard of dying intestate only Indeed it appears not sufficiently in the Writ why they were taken but it is most probable that the seisure was for some debt due to the Crown from the Intestate which afterward not appearing or being satisfied or it appearing that the Executors by the taking upon them the execution of the Testament would subject themselves to the payment of it it was fit enough to amove the Kings hands and deliver all over to the Executors He that well considers the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 18. Si quis tenens and compares it with that of Bracton where he tells us that the Law was clear that if any man dyed indebted to the King the Sheriff might imbreviare attachiare cattalla defuncti will soon see the probability of this howsoever the words of the Statute are only of the Kings Tenants And it concludes also as if it were only in case of the death of a Testator in regard of relinquatur executoribus ad faciendum testamentum defuncti but plainly that ad faciendum c. hath equal reference to the Intestates as to Testators for no name of an Administrator being then usually known all were called Executors that medled with the Intestates Goods and those Executors were executores qui faciebant Testamentum that is which instead of the Intestate did take such order after his death with his Goods as they thought he would have done if he had made a Testament which may be conceived also out of the use remembred in that time wherein sick men being unable neither having time to express their meaning chose out some friends that might be super hoc expressores executores which friends appointing of Legacies as if the Intestate had given them and making disposition of Intestates Goods were as Testaments of those Intestates and they did truly as Executors facere Testamentum defuncti in which sense it might be spoken of any Executors or Administrators that intermedled in those times And many Writs occurr in the Close Roll of King John and H. 3. that have expresly in them the amoving of the Kings hands from the Goods of the dead when the seisure had been only for the debts to the Crown according to the Statute of Magna Charta which in substance is the Law at this day and Bracton by reason whereof I see not cause enough why we should understand that of 7 H. 3. to prove any such thing as a Custom of the Kings disposing or seising of the Intestates Goods especially in regard that in the passages of the Law Lawyers and Records of that time no mention
we meet with these Military Laws or Laws of Knights fees made for Tenants and other people of the common sort 84. He who hath one Knights fee 't is the aforesaid Hoveden speaks let him have an Habergeon or Coat of Male and a Helmet or Head-piece and a Buckler or Target and a Lance and let every Knight have so many Habergeons and Helmets and Targets and Lances as he shall have Knights fees in his demeans 85. Whatsoever Free-holder that is a Lay-man shall have in Chattel or in Rent and Revenue to the value of Sixteen Marks let him have a Coat of Male and a Head-piece and a Buckler and a Lance. 86. Whatsoever Lay-person being a Free-man shall have in Chattel to the value of Ten Marks let him have a little Habergeon or Coat of Male and a Capelet of Iron and a Lance. 87. Let all Burghers or Towns-men of a Corporation and the whole Communities of Free-men have a Wambais and a Capelet of Iron and a Lance. 88. Let no one after he hath once had these Arms sell them nor pawn them nor lend them nor by any other way alienate them from himself or part with them nor let his Lord alienate them by any manner of way from his man i. e. his Tenant that holds under him neither by forfeit nor by gift nor by pledge nor by any other way 89. If any one shall dye having these Arms let them remain to his heir and if the heir be not of such estate or age that he may use the Arms if there shall be need let that person who shall have them the heir in custody have likewise the keeping of the Arms and let him find a man who may use the Arms in the service of our Lord the King if there shall be need until the heir shall be of such estate that he may bear Arms and then let him have them 90. Whatsoever Burgher shall have more Arms than it shall behove him to have according to this Assize let him sell them or give them away or so dispose of them from himself to some other man who may retain them in England in the service of our Lord the King 91. Let no one of them keep by him more Arms than it shall behove him according to this Assize to have 92. Let no Jew keep in his possession a Coat of Male or an Habergeon but let him sell them or give them or in some other manner put them away in that wise that they may remain in the service of the King of England 93. Let no man bear or carry Arms out of England unless it be by special order of our Lord the King nor let any one sell Arms to any one who may carry them from England nor let Merchant or other carry or convey them from England 94. They who are suspected by reason of their wealth or great estate do free or acquit themselves by giving their Oaths The Justices have Power or Jurisdiction given them in the case for this purpose If there shall be any who shall not comply with them the Justices the King shall take himself to the members or limbs of such persons and shall by no means take from them their Lands or Chattels 95. Let no one swear upon lawful and free-men i. e. in any matter against or concerning them who hath not to the value of Sixteen or Ten Marks in Chattel 96. Let no one as he loves himself and all that he hath buy or sell any Ship to be brought from England nor let any one carry or cause to be carryed out of England Timber for the building of Ships 97. Let no one be received or admitted to the Oath of bearing Arms ' but a Free-man To bring once for all something concerning a Free-man that may not be beside the purpose The ancient Law of England bestowed that name only upon such persons as many as either being honoured by the Nobility of their Ancestors or else out of the Commonalty being of ingenuous Birth to wit of the Yeomanry did not hold that rustick fee or Tenure of Villenage dedicated to Stercutius the God of Dunghils and necessarily charged and burthened with the Plough tail the Wain and the Dray which are the hard Countrey-folks Arms and Implements To this purpose makes the term of Rustick or Countrey-man above mentioned in the Statutes of Clarendon and the place of Glanvill cited in the Tryal of Ordeal That the business may be more clearly asserted a Suit of Law being waged in the time of Edward the First betwixt John Levin Plaintiff and the Prior of Bernwell Defendant I have taken the Story out of an old Manuscript and the Reports of our Law and the Collection or Body of the Royal Rescripts do agree to it it was then after several disputes bandied to and fro and with earnestness enough decided by the judgement of the Court that those Tenants which hold in fee from the ancient Domain of the Crown as they call it are by no means comprehended under the title of free-men as those who driving their labour around throughout the year pay their daily Vows to Ceres the Goddess of Corn to Pales the Goddess of Shepherds and to Triptolemus the Inventer of Husbandry or Tillage and keep a quarter with their Gee Hoes about their Chattel And now death hath put an end to King Henry's Reign And I also having made an end of his Laws so far as Histories do help me out do at the last muster and arm my Bands for the guard of my Frontiers I wish they may be of force enough against Back-biters CHAP. XIX Of Law-makers Our Kings not Monarchs at first Several of them in the same County The Druids meeting-place where Under the Saxons Laws made in a general Assembly of the States Several instances This Assembly under the Normans called Parliament The thing taken from a custome of the ancient Germans Who had right to sit in Parliament The harmony of the Three Estates BUt however Laws are not without their Makers and their Guardians or they are to no purpose It remaineth therefore that we say somewhat in general of them They are made either by Use and Custom for things that are approved by long Use do obtain the force of Law or by the Sanction and Authority of Law-givers Of ancient time the Semnothei the Kings and the Druids were Law-givers amongst the Britans I mean Concerning the Semnothei whatsoever doth occurr you had before The Kings were neither Monarchs of the whole Island nor so much as of that part of Brittany that belonged to the Angles For there were at the same time over the single County of Kent four Kings to wit Cyngetorix Carvilius Taximagulus and Segonax and at the same rate in other Counties Wherefore we have no reason to make any question but that part wherein we live now called England was governed by several persons and was subject to an Aristocracy according to what Polydore Virgil John Twine