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A48960 Analogia honorum, or, A treatise of honour and nobility, according to the laws and customes of England collected out of the most authentick authors, both ancient and modern : in two parts : the first containing honour military, and relateth to war, the second, honour civil, and relateth Logan, John, 17th cent.; Blome, Richard, d. 1705. 1677 (1677) Wing L2834; ESTC R17555 244,594 208

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by birth though they have no other Creation but shall not be partaker of these or other Priviledges incident to the Lords of the Parliament Thirdly Those that are Barons and of the Nobility of Scotland or Ireland if upon the like Offence committed in England they be apprehended in England they shall not have this Tryal by Peers no though they were born in England for they received their Dignity from a King of England of other Nations But if the King of England do at this day create one of his Subjects of Scotland or Ireland an Earl Viscount Baron or other Peer of this Realm or by his ordinary Writ of Summons under his Great Seal do call him to the Upper House of Parliament and assign him a place and to have Voice free amongst the Lords and Peers there assembled he shall be partaker with them in all priviledges And thus much concerning the restraint of the Priviledges in respect of the persons 39 Ed. 3. And touching the manner of proceeding it appeareth by the said Statute of Magna Charta chap. 29. That a Peer of the Realm shall be tryed by his Peers only in case where he is indicted at the King's Suit of Treason or Felony for the words of the Statute be Nec super eum ibimus c. But if any Appeal of Murther of Felony be sued by any common person against a Peer of the Realm he shall be tryed by common persons and not by his Peers And so was Fines Lord Dacres tryed in Appeal of Murther The Nobility of this Realm do enjoy this priviledge That they are not to be impannelled on any Jury or Inquest to make tryal or inquiry upon their Corporal Oaths between party and party for they may have a Writ for their Discharge to the Sheriff But it is a Rule in Law Vigilantibus non dormientibus subveniant jura For if the Sheriff have not received any such Writ and the Sheriff have returned any such Lord on Juries or in Assize c. and they thereupon do appear they shall be sworn if they do not appear they shall lose their Issues 35 Hen. 6. and in such case they must purchase a Writ out of the Chancery reciting their priviledges directed to the Justices before whom such Noble persons are so impannelled commanding to dismiss him or them that were so impannelled out of the said Pannel F.N.B. 165. This priviledge hath in two causes not been allowed or taken place 1. If the enquiry concern the King and the Common-wealth in any necessary and important degree or business of the Realm And therefore divers Barons of the Marshes of Wales were impannelled before the Bishop of Ely and other Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer to enquire of a notable outrage committed by Gilbert de Clare Earl of Glocester against Humphrey de Bohun Earl of Hereford and Essex and his Tenants in Wales in the Twelfth year of Edward the First where Iohn de Hastings Edmond de Mortimer Theobald Beardmoe and other Barons of the Marshes challenged their priviledges aforesaid and much insisted upon the same But it was afterwards answered by the Court as by the words in the Record appeareth The Barons aforesaid did persist in the Challenge and in the end both the said Earls between whom the said outrage had been perpetrated submitted themselves to the King's Grace and made their Fines Secondly This priviledge hath no place in case of necessity where the truth of the case cannot otherwise come to light for the words in the Writ in the Register are Nisi sua praesentia ob aliquam causam specialiter exigatur c. If any Nobleman do bring an Action of Debt upon Account in case where the Plaintiff is to be examined which is always intended to be upon Oath upon the truth of his cause by vertue of the Statute of the fifth of Henry the Fourth chap. 8. it shall suffice to examine his Attorney and not himself upon his Oath And this priviledge the Law hath given to the Nobility That they are not Arrested upon any Warrant of a Justice of Peace for their good behaviour or breach of Peace nor by a Supplicavit out of Chancery or from the King's Bench For such an Opinion hath the Law conceived of the peaceable disposition of Noblemen that it hath been thought enough to take their promise upon their Honour in that behalf And as in Civil Causes the like Rule doth the Court of Equity observe in Cases of Conscience for if the Defendant be a Peer of the Realm in the Star-Chamber or Court of Chancery a Subpaena shall not be awarded but a Letter from the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper in lieu thereof And if he do not appear no Attachment shall go out against him For in the Fourteenth year of Queen Elizabeth this Order and Rule was declared in the Parliament Chamber That an Attachment is not awarded by Common Law Custome or President against any Lord of Parliament And if he do appear and make his Bill of Complaint upon his Honour only he is not compelled to be sworn But by the Statute 5 Eliz. cap. 1. it is enacted That all Knights and Burgesses of Parliament shall take the Oath of Supremacy and so shall Citizens and Barons of the Cinque Ports being returned of the Parliament before they enter into the Parliament House which Oath shall be according to the tenor effect and form of the same as is set forth in the Statutue of 1 Eliz. Provided always that forasmuch as the Queens Majesty is otherwise sufficiently assured of the Faith and Loyalty of the Temporal Lords of her High Court of Parliament therefore this Act nor any thing therein contained shall not extend to compel any Temporal person of or above the Degree of a Baron of this Realm to take the said Oath nor to incur any penalty limited by the said Act for not taking the same If a Peer be sued in the Common Pleas in an Action of Debt or Trespass and Process be awarded by Capias or Exigit against him then he may sue out a Certiorari in the Chancery directed to the Justices of the Common Pleas testifying that he is a Peer of the Realm For unless the Court be certified by the King 's Writ out of the Chancery that the Defendant is a Peer of Parliament if a Capias or Exigit issue forth against him it is no Error neither is it punishable in the Sheriff his Bailiffs or Officers if they execute the said Process and arrest the body of such a Noble person for it appertaineth not to them to argue or dispute the Authority of the Court But if the Court be thereof certified as aforesaid they will award a Supersedeas which is in the Books of Entries in the Title of Error Sect. 20. And there are two Reasons or Causes wherefore no Capias or Exigit lieth against any Peer one because of the dignity of their persons and the other by intendment of Law
Analogia Honorum OR A TREATISE OF Honour and Nobility According to the LAWS and CUSTOMES OF ENGLAND Collected out of the most Authentick Authors both Ancient and Modern In Two Parts THE FIRST Containing Honour Military and relateth to War THE SECOND Honour Civil and relateth to Court and City Illustrated with variety of SCULPTURES sutable to the several Subjects LONDON Printed by Tho. Roycroft Anno Dom. MDCLXXVII To the Right Noble Iames Duke of Monmouth and Buccleuth Earle of Doncaster and D● Lord Scott of Askdale Tendale and Wichester Lord high Chamberlaine of Scotland cheife●y and Iustice in Eyre of all his Matys Parks Chaces and Forests on the South side of Trent L d L●● of the County and Steward of the Towne of Stafford Lord Leivtenant of the East Rideing of York shire Governor of the Towne and Citadel of Kingston upon Hull Chancellor of ● University of Cambridge Master of the Horse to his Maty Captaine of his Matys Guard of H●● Knight of the Garter Captaine Generall of his Matys land Forces and one of ● Lords of his Matys most Honourable privy Councell c a. This Plate with the Treatise of Honor Military and Civill is in all Humility dedicated to your Grace by m● your Graces most Submissive Servant Richard Blome HONI SOIT QVI MAL Y PENSE THE FIRST PART OR Honour Military CHAP. I. ALL Honours may not improperly be said to receive their Birth either from the City Court or Camp which of all is esteemed the most worthy and honourable raising some to Imperial and Princely Dignities and disthroning others And in all Kingdoms even amongst the barbarous Americans War hath ever been and yet is held in high esteem and of great Importance as well for the preservation of their Laws and Rights as for the defence of their Dominions for which War is permitted by the Laws of God is taught by the Laws of Nature and commanded by the Laws of Nations And to excite men to valour and noble Atchievments Reward or Honours is conferred upon such that merits the same according to their Deserts for the defence of holy Church their King and Country War being therefore of such concern it behoveth every prudent Prince for the welfare of his People to be always prepared for Peace or War either Offensive or Defensive both for Forreign Invasion or the suppressing Domestick Insurrections wherefore it hath been found expedient to joyn good Laws the Friends of Peace and Rest unto Arms War being always accompanied with men of audacious and furious Spirits Iustinianus for the uniting of Laws and Arms appointed one Officer called a Praetor to command both Martially and Civilly which Name the Romans continued for their General of War and by his Office had Authority both Martial and Civil By which it appears that War cannot endure without the assistance of Law and wise men in former Ages did hold that Prudence and Power ought not to be separated of which Opinion was Horace saying Vis expers consilii mole ruit sua Likewise for the same reason learned Writers were induced to commend valiant Captains and wise Counsellors as it were joyntly and in one rank for with Simonides they joyned Pausanias with Craesus Solon and with Pericles Anaxagoras Of War and the Causes thereof DIscord is common to all men and that occasioned either by Revenge for Injuries done out of covetousness in gaining that which belongs to others for ambition in gainning Fame by noble Victories or such like Reasons and this maketh one City to wage war against another one Province to invade another and whole Kingdoms to oppress one another even to a Conquest if they can Aristotle proveth that some men by nature are born to Command and others to Obey by which it appears that War is necessary as well to compel those to Obedience as the others to hold their Authority The Romans did sometimes judge it convenient to make War only to train up their Youth fit for Service and to keep them from idleness which breedeth Intemperance and Dishonesty And by Action Princes that are martially inclined have not only gained Renown but also much enlarged their Dominions Yet I am of the Opinion That War ought not to be made without just cause and when the Enemy cannot be perswaded to reason by Embassadors prudent Princes and Commanders do not wage War unadvisedly and when they do they should follow the Example of Trajanus who observed these Cautions to be careful to supply the places of his slain Souldiers to repress the enemies pride and according to Military Discipline constrain Mutiners to Obedience and Order Of Souldiers SOuldiers or men professing Arms according to Vlpianus were called Milites à malitia id est duritia that is were so named in respect of the hardness and danger they endure in defence of other people or because they keep off the injuries which enemies do offer He that desireth to enjoy the Honour belonging to Arms ought first to prove himself a Souldier which by the Civil Laws may be done three ways the first is by Certificate from the Captain or Officers secondly he ought to make proof of his experience and manhood in Martial Affairs and thirdly to be registred in the List of received Souldiers and none other properly ought to be termed Souldiers By ancient Custom Souldiers always took an Oath not to abandon their Captain or Camp not to commit Treason nor consult with one another privately to cause mutining and the like Martianus the great Doctor did reject Bondmen as persons unfit and unworthy to be called Souldiers and no person that hath committed any infamous Crime of which he is convicted ought afterwards to bear Arms so honourable is the Name and Dignity of a Souldier The persons excused from bearing Arms are Priests and all in Holy Orders all Graduates in Schools all men above the Age of 60 years and those under the Age of 17 years Those Souldiers that had long served the Romans either in their Legion or elsewhere and deported themselves obediently to their Officers and honestly to all men were called Veterani and had great favour shewed them and that when any Veteran had honestly served them the space of twenty years he was then called Emeritus and might have his dismission to end his days in peace and quietness with the enjoyment of divers Immunities besides signal marks of Honour according to their merit which was a great encouragement to Youth to be trained up in Military Service which oft-times they made use of appointing Tutors to instruct them therein and these they called Tyrones And as on the one hand the Romans rewarded them for good Service so on the other they inflicted punishments according to the heinousness of the Offence as for Treason Disobedience Abandoning their Colours and Assisting the Enemy also for Theft Murther and Cowardise which they esteemed most vile The experience of which was seen when Spractacus defeated the Romans conducted by
Realm to do Justice shew Mercy keep Peace and Unity c. The King is enabled to perform this great and weighty Office by certain extraordinary powers and priviledges which he holds by the Law of Nations by the Common Law of England or by Statutes The Regalia were anciently called Sacra Sacrorum as his Lands are called in Law Patrimoni●● S●c●●● now commonly Royal Preroga●ives The King being Principium Cap●● ●inis Parli●menti may of his meer will and pleasure Convoke Adjourn Remove and Dissolve Parliaments He may to any Bill that is passed by both Houses of Parliament refuse to give his Royal Assent without rendring a Reason and without his Assent a Bill is as a ●ody without a Soul He may at his pleasure encrease the number of the Members of both Houses by creating more Peers of the Realm and bes●owing priviledges upon any other Towns to send Burgelles by Writ to Parliament and he may refuse to send his Writ to some others that have sate in former Parliaments He hath alone the choice and nomination of all Commanders and Officers for Land and Sea-service the choice and election of all Magistrates Counsellors and Officers of State of all Bishops and other Ecclesiastick Dignities also the bestowing and conferring of Honours and the power of determining Rewards and Punishments By Letters Patent his Majesty may erect new Counties Universities Bishopricks Cities Boroughs Colledges Hospitals Schools Fairs Markets Courts of Judicature Forests Chases Free Warrens c. The King by his Prerogative hath power to enfranchise an Alien and make him a Denison whereby he is enabled to purchase Lands and Houses and to bear Offices He hath the power to grant Letters of Mart or Reprisal to grant safe Conducts c. He hath at all times had the right of Purveyance or Preemption of all sorts of Victuals within the Verge viz. Twelve miles round of the Court and to take Horses Carts Ships or Boats for the Carriage of his Goods at reasonable rates Also by Proclamation to set reasonable rates and prices upon Flesh Fish Fowl Oats Hay c. sold within the limits of the Verge of the Court in the time of his Progress Debts due to the King are in the first place to be satisfied in case of Executorship and Administratorship and until the King's Debts be satisfied he may protect the Debtor from the Arrest of other Creditors He may dis●rein for the whole Rent upon one Tenant that holdeth not the whole Land He may require the Ancestors Debt of the Heir though not especially bound He is not obliged to demand his Rent according to the Custome of Landlords He may distrein where he pleaseth and sue in any of his Courts No Proclamation can be made but by the King No protection for a Defendant to obstruct the course of the Law against him if he be not one of his Majesties Menial Servants In case of loss by Fire or otherwise his Majesty granteth Patents to receive the Charitable Benevolences of the people No Forest Chase or Park to be made nor Castle Fort or Tower to be built without his Majesties especial Licence Where the King hath granted a Fair with Toll to be paid yet his Goods shall be there exempted from the said Duties of Toll His Servants in Ordinary are priviledged from serving in any Offices that require their Attendance as Sheriff Constable Church-warden or the like All Receivers of Money for the King or Accomptants to him for any of his Revenues their Persons Lands Goods Heirs Executors and Administrators are at all times chargeable for the same for Nullum tempus occurrit Regi His Debtor hath a kind of Prerogative Remedy by a Quo minus in the Exchequer against all other Debtors or against whom they have any cause of personal Action supposing that he is thereby disabled to pay the King and in this Suit the King's Debtor being Plaintiff hath some priviledges above others In doubtful Cases semper praesumitur pro Rege no Statute restraineth the King except he be especially named therein The quality of his Person alters the descent of Gavelkind the Rules of joynt Tenancy No Estoppel can bind him nor Judgment final in a Writ of Right Judgments entred against the King's Title are entred with Salvo Iure Domini Regis That if at any time the King's Counsel at Law can make out his Title better that Jugment shall not prejudice him which is not permitted the Subject The King by his Prerogative may demand reasonable Ayd-money of his Subjects for the Knighting his Eldest Son at the Age of Fifteen years and to marry his eldest Daughter at the Age of Seven years which Ayd is 20 s. for every Knights Fee and as much for every 20 l. per annum in Soccage Moreover if the King be taken prisoner Ayd-money is to be paid by the Subjects for his Redemption The King upon reasonable Causes him thereunto moving may protect any of his Subjects from Suits of Law c. In all Cases where the King is party his Officers with an Arrest by force of a Process at Law may enter and if any entrance be denied may break open the House of any man by force A Benefice or Spiritual Living is not full against the King by Institution only without Induction although it be so against a Subject None but the King can hold Plea of false Judgments in the Courts of his Tenants The King by his Prerogative is Summus Regui Custos and hath the Custody of the Persons and Estates of such as for want of understanding cannot govern themselves or serve the King that of Ideots to his own use and that of Lunaticks to the use of the next Heir So the Custody or Wardships of all such Infants whose Ancestors held their Lands by Tenure in Capite or Knights Service were ever since the Conquest in the King to the great honour and benefit of the King and Kingdom But abuses which too often happened made the people complain thereof which was the cause of its laying aside His Majesty is Vl●imus Haeres Regni and is as the great Ocean is of small Rivers the Receptacle of all Estates for want of Heirs or by Forfeiture Revert or Escheat to the King All Spiritual Benefices for want of presentation in due time by the Bishop are elapsed to the King All Treasure Trove that is Money or Gold and Silver plate or Bullion found and the owners unknown belongs to the King So doth all Waifs Strays Wrecks not granted away by him or any former Kings All waste Ground or Land recovered from the Sea All Lands of Aliens dying before Naturalization or Denization and all other things whereof the property is not known All Gold and Silver Mines in whose Ground soever they are found Royal Fish as Whales Sturgeons Dolphins c. Royal Fowl as Swans not mark't and swimming at Liberty on the River belong to the King In the Church the King's prerogative and power is
at pleasure and so it is adjudged and declared by Parliament in the First and Second of Philip and Mary cap. 8. fol. 156. But not between the Majestical Style of the King and the Title of Honour appertaining to a Subject this difference is between Grants or Purchases made by or to a Nobleman c. For in that first case it is necessary that the Name King be expressed otherwise they are void But if a Duke Earl or other Degree of Nobility do Purchase or Grant by the Name of Baptisme and Surname or other Title of Honour it is not void for it is a Rule in Law That every man's Grant shall be construed most to the benefit of him to whom the said Grant is made that it may rather be strengthened than made void for there is a great diversity in the Law between Writs and Grants For if Writs are not formally made they shall be abated which is only the loss of the same but if a Grant should be made void then the party hath no remedy to have a new one and for that cause the Law doth not favour Advantages by occasion of false Latin or such like mistake And if an Earl be Plaintiff or Demandant and having the Writ shall not abate but nevertheless he shall proceed and count by the Name of an Earl according to such Title of Honour as he did bear at the time of the Commencement of his Action But if the Plaintiff in a Quare Impedit be made Knight having the Writ shall abate There is a Statute made in the First of Henry the Fifth cap. 5. wherein is contained as followeth Item It is ordained and established That every original Writ of Actions personal Appeals and Indictments in which the Exigent shall be awarded in the names of the Defendants in such Writs original Appeals and Indictments additions shall be m●de of their Estates Degrees and Mysteries and the Towns Hamlets and Places and the County where they were or be conversant And if by Process upon the said original Writs Appeals or Indictments in which the said additions are omitted any Outlawries be pronounced that they be clearly void and that before these Outlawries pronounced the said Writs and Indictments shall be abated by the exceptions of the party wherein the said additions are omitted Provided that though the said Writs of Additions Personal be not according to the Records and Deeds by the surplusage of the Additions aforesaid that for this cause they be not abated And that the Clerks of Chancery under whose Names such Writs shall go forth written shall not leave out or make omission of the said Additions as aforesaid upon pain of punishment and to make fine to the King by the discretion of the Lord Chancellor or Keeper And this Ordinance shall begin to hold place at the suit of the party from the Feast of St. Michael then next ensuing Although addition of Estate Degree and Mystery to be added unto Names be written in the Statute first before the additions of the Places and Counties yet it hath been used always after the making of the said Statute to place the Addition of Estate Degree and Mystery after the Places and Counties in all Writs● Appeals and Indictments against common persons But the use is otherwise in Appeals and Indictments of Treason or Felony against Dukes Marquisses and Earls for their Names of Degrees are in such case put before the Additions of Places and Counties as Charles Earl of Westmoreland late of Branspit in the County of Durham Names of Dignity as Dukes Earls Barons Baronets Knights c. are contained within the word Degree for the Sate of a man is his Mystery Brook Chief Iustice of the Common Pleas in Abridgment of the Case of 14 Hen. 6. fol. 15. titulo Nosme de Dignitate Injuries done to the Name and Honour of a Nobleman IN the Second of Richard the Second c. 1. that Counterfeits and Spreaders abroad of false and reproachful words and lies against the Nobility Prelates and Great Men in publick Offices as the Lord Chancellor or Keeper the Lord Treasurer Lord Steward of the King's Houshold the Judges c. whereby Debates and Discord may arise between the said Lords and Commons to the great detriment of the Realm if due Remedy be not provided It is s●raitly Enacted upon grievous pain to eschew the said Dangers and Perils That from thenceforth none presume to tell or report any false and scandalous News against any of the persons aforesaid whereby discord or any slander might arise and he that doth the same shall incur the punishment ordained by the Statute of Westminster cap. 33. which wills that he be taken and imprisoned till he have found him that first reported the same And further by another Statute Anno 12 Rich. cap. 12. it was enacted moreover That when the said Offender is taken and imprisoned and cannot find him that first spake them then he shall be punished by the advice of the Council And to the intent that such evil disposed persons which by their lewd speeches and slanderous words or reports do endeavour to break and disquiet the peace of the Realm might the sooner be enquired of found out and punished by a Statute made in the first and second of Philip and Mary it was established That the Justices of the Peace in every Shire City and Town Corporate within the Limits of their several Commissions shall have full power to hear and determine the Causes abovesaid in the two Acts of Edw. 1. and 2 Rich. 2. specified and to put the said Statutes and every part thereof in due execution that condign punishment be not deferred from such Offenders And besides the said Penalties to be so inflicted on Transgres●ors every Nobleman or great Officer of the Realm against whom any scandalous words false news or lies are spoken may prosecute the Offender in any Action de scandalis magnatum and recover damages against him And in like manner may every inferiour person for any such like words of infamy spoken against him recover damages against the Offender And in former times speeches tending to the reproach of others were so odious that King Edgar ordained That his Tongue should be cut out that spake any infamous or slanderoas words of another And the said Lord Beauchamp did sue an Action upon the Statute of Richard the Second cap. 5. de scandalis magnatum against Sir● Richard Ch●●fts because he did sue a Writ of forging of false Deeds against the said Lord Beauchamp and the Defendant doth justifie the said slander by use of the said Writ c. And upon Demurrer the matter of Justification was good so that he was not liable to the punishment of the said Statutes but was quite discharged from the same There is no foul puddle that ariseth from the same corrupt Quagmire and distilled likewise out of a heart infected with Malice and Envy but it devised and practised by another meaner than
it goeth by Seniority The Opinion of some men lately hath been That Knights Lieutenants that is to say such Knights as either have been Ambassadors in Foreign Parts or Judges within the Realm may and ought to have during their lives precedency above men of their own rank after their Offices expire and sub Iudice his est not determined by Judgment But admitting it so to be by way of Argument in that case yet the Heralds do deny that priviledge to the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of London or Justices of the Peace who have their limited Jurisdiction of Magistracy confined them but the former are generally Magistrates throughout the Realm and their employment concerneth the whole Commonwealth and having the publick Justice and Honour of the whole Estate committed unto them do more meritoriously draw from thence a great respect of Honour according to the generality of their Administration and Employments which an inferiour and more con●●ned Magistrate cannot have The name of a Knight is a name of Dignity and a Degree as is the name of Duke Earl c. and in all Actions he shall be slyled Knight otherwise the Writ shall abate A Knight also must be named by both his Chri●tian and Surnames as Sir A. B. Knight But those Degrees honourable that are made by Patent may be named only by their Christian Names and by their Title of Honour as Gilbert Earl of Shrewsbury and that for two causes First because of their solemn Creations nomen dicitur à noscendo Secondly there is but one part of that Title of Honour within England and therefore it is certain what person he is but otherwise of Knights as it is certainly known in the 8 Edw. 4.24 a. And Prisot Chief Justice saith in the 32 Hen. 6. 26. b. That if an Esquire be made a Knight he loseth his Name of Esquire but though a Knight be made a Nobleman or of any higher Degree he doth still retain the name of Knight and so ought to be styled in all Writs Also if a man do recover in an Action by the Name of Iohn Stiles Esq and afterwards be made a Knight he must sue his Scire Facias by the Name of Knight And this name shall not die with him for if they were bound in an Obligation by the Name of Gentlemen or Esquires and afterwards one is made a Knight and dieth the Plaintiff in the Action to be brought against his Executors must name him Knight otherwise the Writ shall abate If a Grant be made to H. D Knight when he is not a Knight it is a void Grant but if it be a Feoffment with Livery the Livery maketh it good If the Plaintiff or Demandant do in his Writ name the Defendant or Tenant Esquire when he is a Knight the Writ shall not only abate but also the Plaintiff may not have another Writ by Iourneys accompt But by the Statute made 1 Edw. 6. chap. 7. it is amongst other things enacted That albeit any person or persons being Justices of Assize Justices of Goal-delivery or Justices of the Peace within any of the King's Dominions or by any other of the King's Commissions whatsoever shall have the fortune to be made or created Duke Archbishop Marquess Earl Viscount Bishop Baron Knight Justice of the one Bench or of the other Serjeant at Law or Sheriff yet that notwithstanding he and they shall remain Justices and Commissioners and have full power and authority to execute the same in like manner and form as he or they might or ought to have done before the same By the Satute of 1 Hen. 5. chap. 5. it is enacted as followeth That every Writ Original of Actions personal Appeals and Indictments and in which an Exigit shall be awarded to the names of the Defendants in such Writs Oginal Appeals and Indictments shall be made the Additions of their Estate Degrees c. And a little after it is provided That if the said Writs of Actions Personal be not accordding to the Record and Deed by the Surplusage of the Additions aforesaid that for this cause they are not Iohn S●iles Gent. is bound by Obligation to one W. B. the Obligor is afterwards made Knight the Bond is forfeited W. B. by his Attorney draweth a Note or Title for an Original according to the Defendants Degree although it varies from the Original Specialty as it ought to be made by the Statute But the Cursitor mistaking did make the Original only according to such Addition as was specified in the Obligation omitting his Degree or Dignity and the Entry of the Capias alias pluris was according to the said Original But in the Exigit and Proclamation and Entry of it the Defendant was named according to his Degree of Dignity upon a Writ of Error after a Judgment doubt was If this might be amended in another Court than where the Original was mâde and at the last it was resolved by all the Court That the Record should be amended by the Cursitor and made according to the Note and Title delivered unto him by the Attorney It appeareth in our Books of Law that the highest and lowest Dignities are universal for as if a King of a Foreign Nation come into England by his Majestie 's leave as it ought to be in this case he shall sue and be sued by the Name of a King So shall a Knight sue or he sued by the name of a Knight wheresoever he received that Degree of Honour But otherwise it is as if a Duke Marquess Earl or other Title of Honour given by any Foreign King or Emperor yea although the King by his Letters Patents of safe Conduct do name him Duke or by what other Foreign Title of Dignity he hath For Experience teacheth that Kings joyned in League together by a certain mutual and as it were a natural power of Monarchs according to the Law of Nations have admitted one anothers Servants Subjects and Ambassadors graced with the Title of Knighthood Therefore though a Knight receive his Dignity of a Foreign Prince he is so to be stiled in all Legal Proceedings within England And Kings were wont to send their Sons unto their Neighbour Princes to receive Knighthood at their hands thinking that it was more honourable to take Arms of some other le●t affection might seem to prevent Judgment when the Father gave them that Honour Thus our King Henry the Second sent unto David King of Scots and Malcombe King of Scots unto our Henry the Second and our Edward the First unto the King of Castile to take of them Military Arms For these terms and phrases they used in that Age for the Creation of a Knight And Knights in all Foreign Countries have ever place and precedency according to their Seniority of being Knighted which priviledge is denied to Noblemen for be they never so ancient in Foreign Countries they shall go below as Puisnes The Degree of Knighthood is not only a Dignity and Honour
illis some Knights were returned upon every Venire Facias By the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 12. It is ordained that Assizes of Novel Disseison and Mortdancester should not be taken any where but within the Countries where they happen by the Justices of Assize and the Knights of the Shire vide Westminster 2. chap. 30. And by the Seven and twentieth of Edward the First chap. 30. de finibus levandis amongst other things it is enacted That for the utility of the Realm and the more assured conservation of the Peace the Justices assigned to take Assizes in all Shires where they take Assizes as it is ordained immediately after the Assizes taken in the Shires shall remain both together if they be Lay and if one of them be a Clerk then one of the most discreet Knights of the Shire being associated unto him that is a Lay-man by our Writ shall deliver the Goals of the Shires as well within the Liberties as without of all manner of Prisoners after the form of the Goal Delivery of those Shires be●ore time used Also in the Statute of Westminster 21. cap. 38. de non ponendis in Assizis Iuratis it is provided that the said Statute shall not extend to Grand Assizes in which it behoveth many times Knights to pass not resident in the County for the scarcity of Knights so that they have Lands in the Shire And by the Law Knights having Land may be returned upon Juries in ordinary Trials between party and party as other Freeholders may be And therefore in a Challenge to the great Assize under Edward the Third one was challenged pur ceo qu'il fait abaner or as the Abridgment hath it a Baronet but it was not allowed and the Reason is given Car s'il soit à Baner ne tient pas per Baronie il serra en l'assise Of the double parity of England that is of Barons and all Dignities above them being Peers of the Realm and all other under them are Peers amongst themselves for notwithstanding that Dignity of Knighthood they are reckoned amongst the Commons And we daily see that Knights do serve in Parliament as Members of the Commonalty Nevertheless the Sheriff in his discretion will not impannel Knights but in special and great Causes As in Cases of Indictments of a Peer of the Realm they are to be enquired and found by Knights and Esquires though their Trial shall be only by their Peers And in 38 Hen. 8. Henry Howard Earl of Surrey Son and Heir apparent of Thomas Duke of Norfolk was attainted of High Treason and was tried also by Knights Esquires and Gentlemen and not by Lords or Peers of the Realm because he was not of that Dignity by Creation Since the use of making every Earl first a Baron of some place which began as most Writers treat about the time of Henry the Eighth it hath been a Custome to style their Heirs apparent Lords and Barons with the Title of their Father's Barony when Viscounts or Baron's Heirs apparent are only styled Esquires but this is only a piece of Civility and of meer fashion yet it is allowed of in Heraldry with whom the Rule is That the eldest Son of every one of a created Degree is as of the next Degree under him which may be applied to Dukes Earls and the like But in Legal Proceedings they enjoy no such matter nor have by their being Heirs Apparent any Prerogative of the greater Nobillty And in case where a Peer of the Realm is party Plaintiff or Defendant in any Action or Suit if the Sheriff do not return one Knight at the least to be of the Jury the said Noble Person may Challenge and for that only cause quash the whole pannel By the Statute of Carlisle 15 Edw. 2. it was enacted That he who levied a Fine should appear in proper person to the intent that his Age Idiocy or other defect might be discovered by the Judges Nevertheless upon Impotency whereby he cannot come in Court two or one of the Justices by the consent of the rest of the Justices shall go unto him and take his Recognizance and if but one of them go he shall take a Knight with him and shall certifie it in the Bench of Record to the intent that all things incident to the fine be examined by them and then the fine may be levied But after this good Statute a worse Custom and Use hath come in place For by a Dedimus potestatem out of Chancery to one Knight and to a Justice of the Peace of the County in such cases is procured and directed to a Knight and two others who perhaps be neither Knights nor Justices but perhaps men of small estimation and unto two or three of them without saying Quorum the Knight shall be one and two of them without the Knight have taken the Recognizance of the Fine ibid. 101. b. But great prejudice this practise of omitting the interposing of the usual Service of Knights in this behalf hath been to many and scandalous to the Law of the Land they sometimes taking Recognizances of a Fine from a Feme Covert as if she were sole and many times acknowledged by Justices If a Tenant do lay an Essoin de morbo lecti he may have a Writ out of the Chancery to warrant it by which it shall be commanded to four Knights to view him and if they see him sick then they are to give him day to the end of a year and a day Note the Register fol. 177. b. Quod Coronator non elegatur nisi sit miles in c. juxta formam Statuti Westm. 1. cap. 10. It is a received Opinion that Knights are excused from attendance at Leets and Britton 29. 36. is cited to prove it And by a large understanding of the intent and meaning of the Statute of Marlbridge chap. 10. For the ancient Common Law had such respect to the Degree of Knighthood that they nor their eldest Sons were compelled to find Pledges in the Leet or Law-days for the Statute of Marlbridge aforesaid was not Introductiva novae Legis for it was before the Conquest And the Common Law is not by this Statute abridged And by the Book called the Mirror of Iustice mentioned in the Preface to Coke's ninth part it is said that Knights are excepted And so it appears that the practice was as well before as immediately after the making of that Statute of Marlbridge and Interpretatio Practica is a principal way and form of Interpretation of Laws The Lord Chancellor's Speech in the Case of Postnati fol. 58. And in Divinity Praxis sanctorum est interpretatio praeceptorum ibid. 66. But a Knight and all Superiors and Inferiors are bound by Law to attend the County or Sheriffs Court wherein he dwelleth and at his peril to take notice of the proceedings thereof For if a Man be Outlawed of Felony at a County Court and one of the same County not
knowing of the Felony doth receive him he is Accessory Also when the King doth Summon his Parliament Writs shall be sent to the Sheriff to make choice of Knights of every Shire in this form Rex Vicecom N. Salutem quia de avisamento asse●su nostri Concilii pro quibusdam arduis urgentibus negotiis nos statum defensionem Regni nostri Angliae Ecclesiae Anglicanae concernentibus quoddam Parliamentum nostrum apud Civitatem nostram Westm. duodecimo die Novembris proxime futuro teneri ordinavimus ibidem cum Praelatis magnatibus proceribus dicti Regni nostri colloquium habere tractare tibi praecipimus firmiter injungentes quod facta Proclamatione in prox Comit. tuo post receptionem hujus brevis nostri tenendi die loco praed duos Milites gladiis cinctos Magisidouers Discretos Com. praed c. electionem partes sub sigillo tuo sub sigillis eorum qui electioni illi interfuerunt nobis in Cancellaria nostra ad dictum diem locum certifices indilate See the Statute 23 Hen. 6. cap. 15. where amongst other things it is enacted That the Knights of the Shires for Parliaments hereafter to be chosen shall be notable Knights of the same Counties for the which they shall be chosen or else such notable Esquires or Gentlemen being of the same Counties as shall be able to be Knights Peers of the Realm are by intendment of Law sufficient of Freehold and that is one of the Reasons wherefore no Capias or Exigit lieth● against them for Debt or Trespass But the Law hath not that Opinion of the Knights sufficiency of Freehold for he may be a Knight without Land therefore and then he is not to be returned of any Jury or Inquest howsoever he may be worthy and sufficient to serve the Commonwealth in Marshal Affairs The Wives and Widows of Knights in Legal Proceedings and in Courts of Justice have not the Title of Lady as the Wives or Widows of Noblemen have yet by the Courtesie of England that Title is given them And if in any action they be not called Ladies for that cause the Writ shall not abate for that Surplusage because Domina is general to Women as Domini to Men. So where Women after Fourteen years of Age are called Dominae for Ladies or Dames and with us anciently marriageable Women were called Dominae and in our old English Leets Dames First Dominae is often used for Women generally as a special Honour for that Sex being not out of fashion at this day nor with the French as also amongst the Italians Domina for them is familiar But if she be named Comitessa or Baronessa whereas she is no Countess or Baroness in Law then without question the naming of her so shall abate the Writ By the Statute of Magna Charta chap. 21. Knights are freed from Cart-taking that no Demesne Cart of them shall be taken By the Statute 1 Iacobi cap. 27. it seemeth that Knights Sons may keep Greyhounds and Setting-Dogs and Nets to take Pheasants and Partridges in though they cannot expend Ten pounds per Annum nor be worth Two hundred pounds for by the express words of the Statute all the Sons of Knights are excepted Observations concerning Knights Batchelors A Baronet cannot claim the Priviledge that Knights have from Cart-taking by Magna Charta 23. A Baronet's Son cannot keep a Grey-hound c. because he is not within the Statute of 1 Iac. 27. unless he hath Ten pounds per Annum tamen qu●re See the said Statute and Statute 22 23 Car. 2. Quaere whether the Baronets Addition doth abate any Action If one be Knighted in the life time of his Father it frees him from Wardship but contra of a Baronet Knights are excused from attendance at Leets which Baronets are not Note That by the Statute 12 Car. 2. chap. 24. the Court of Wards Tenures in Capite Liveries Ouster le maines and other dependance upon the Court is taken away and then was repealed the Statute 32 Hen. 8. chap. 6. 33 Car. 22. A Knight Batchelor is a Title as before noted borrowed from Horsmanship and therefore ought to be represented by the Ef●igies of a Captain of a Troop of Horse I shall here set down the manner of making Knights about the year of Christ 500 near which time King Arthur Reigned in England as I find it in Sir William Segar's Book of Honour Military and Civil page 53. where he saith That a Prince being minded to make a Knight commanded a Stage or Scaffold to be erected in some Cathedral Church in his Kingdom or some spacious place near unto it to which place the Gentleman was brought to receive that Honour and being come was forthwith placed on a silver Chair adorned with green Silk Then it was demanded of him if he were of a healthy Body and able to undergo the Travel required in a Souldier also whether he were a man of honest conversation and what credible Witnesses he could produce to affirm the same Then the Bishop or chief Prelate of the Church took the Bible and holding it open before the Knight in presence of the King and all others spake these words Sir you that desire to receive the Order of Knighthood swear before God and by this Holy Book that you shall not fight against this mighty and excellent Prince that now bestoweth the Order of Knighthood upon you unless you shall be commanded so to do in the service of your own King for in that case having first yielded up the Collar Device and other Ensigns of Honour now received it shall be lawful for you to serve against him without reproach or offence to all other Companions in Arms. But otherwise doing you shall incur Infamy and being taken in War shall be subject to the pains of death You shall also swear with all your force and power to maintain and defend all Ladies Gentlewomen Widows Orphans and distressed Women and you shall shun no adventure of your person in any War wherein you shall happen to be My Author further saith That this Oath being taken two of the chief Lords led him to the King who presently drew forth his Sword and laid it upon his Head saying God and St. George or what other Saint the King pleaseth to name make thee a good Knight Then came to the Knight seven Noble Ladies attired in white and begirt a Sword unto his side which being done four Honourable Knights put on his Spurs These Ceremonies being past the Queen took him by the right Arm and a Dutchess by the left and led him to a rich Seat placed on an Ascent where they seated him the King sitting on his right hand and the Queen on his left then the Lords and Ladies also sate down upon other Seats three Descents under the King And being all thus seated they were entertained with a Delicate Banquet or Collation and so the
There is none of the Nobility but have sufficient Freehold which the Plaintiffs may extend for their payment or satisfaction But a Capias or Exigit lieth against a Knight for the Law hath not that Opinion of his Freehold And if any of the Nobility happen to be so wilful and not to appear the Court will compel the Sheriff to return great Issues against him and so at every default to encrease the issues as lately against the Earl of Lincoln hath been in practice By the ancient Laws of this Realm before the coming of William the Conqueror many good Laws were made for keeping the Peace and amongst others That all above the age of twelve years should be sworn to the King which we in remembrance thereof do keep at this day in the view of Frank Pledge or the Court Leet But Noblemen of all sorts are neither bound to attend the Court Leet nor to take the Oath as appeareth by Britan. c. 29. treating of the Court called the Sheriffs Tourn out of which the Leet to be extracted And agreeable thereunto is the Statute of Marlbridge cap. 10. See the Lord Chancellor's Speech in the case of Postnati fol. 78. If a Writ of Error be brought in Parliament upon a Judgment given in the King's Bench the Lords of the higher House alone without the Commons are to examine the Errors ibid. fol. 22. In the 11 th of Henry the Fourth fol. 26. in a Case concerning a Distress taken for Expences and Fees the Knights of the Parliament are not contributary for such Lands as are parcel of their ancient Lordships and Baronies but for other Lands they are But there is a Question made If one which is no Baron but ignoble do purchase any ancient Barony whether he shall be discharged of such Expences and Fees or not Which is not worthy the questioning For as Land holden by Villainous Service doth not make him a Villain or Bondman which being free doth purchase the same although by his Tenure he shall be bound to do such Villainous Service So on the other side Land that is holden by Barony doth not make the Villain or Ignoble which purchaseth the same to be Noble although the charge of such Tenure do lye upon him in respect of the Service of the Realm It is said in our Books That a day of Grace or by the favour of the Court is not to be granted to the Plaintiff in any Suit or Action whereby a Nobleman is Defendant because thereby a Nobleman should be longer delayed than the ordinary course of the Court is and such a Lord is to have expedition of Justice in respect that he is to attend the person of the King and the Service of the Commonwealth But if there be no Noble person to the Suit the Judges do and may at their discretion upon a motion grant a day more of Grace otherwise than by the strict course of the Law the Plaintiff may challenge Cambden f. 169. writing upon this Subject saith Where a Nobleman is Demandant the Defendant may not be assoyned for the delay and cause aforesaid To which I could also subscribe but that the Book in the fifth of Hen. 4. 15. b. is otherwise adjudged There the King brought a Quare Impedit against a common person and the Defendant was essoyned by a Rule of Court If any Peer of the Realm be Plaintiff or Defendant in any Action real or personal a-against any other whereupon any Issue is to be tryed by a Jury the Sheriff must return one Knight at the least to be of the Inquest otherwise upon challenge made the whole pannel shall be quashed Which by order of the Law is appointed to be done for honour and reverence due to the person of that degree For when a Peer of the Realm is party it is otherwise than when the Suit is between private persons F. N. B. Title Challenge 115. 13. Edward the Third in a Quare Impedit against a Bishop adjudged But the Earl of Kent in the fourteenth year of the late Queen's Reign and the parties did plead to an Issue the Venire Facias is awarded which the Sheriff did return ●●rved and a pannel returned accordingly in which is no Knight named The truth of which Case was that after the return made the Demand is published and demanded by the Queen and the Heralds to be Earl of Kent in right and discent although he had not been so reputed or named before and also after that time that is to say at the then last Parliament the Tenant is made a Baron by Writ of Parliament and then the Jury doth appear in the Court of Common Pleas and the Earl of Kent did challenge the Array because no Knight was returned but it was not allowed him by the Court for the admittance of both parties is to the contrary and no default can be laid to the Sheriff for he had no notice of the honourable Es●ate of either of the parties the Demandant not being then known or reputed to be an Earl by descent or of the Tenant then also being no Baron How much the Common Law hath always prohibited perpetuity in Lands and Tenements you may see in Corbet's Case in the first part of Coke's Book fol. 48. and in many other Cases in the rest of his Books As also Littleton fol. 145. saith it is a principle in the Law that every Land in Feesimple may be charged with a Rent But if the King's Majesty upon a Creation of any Peer of the Realm of what degree soever do as the manner is by Letters Patent give unto any such new created Nobleman an Annuity or Rent for the support of his degree which they call Creation-money this is so annexed to the dignity that by no Grant Assurance or any manner of Alienation it can be given from the Lord but is still incident and a support of the same Creation In all Cases wherein is any Suit a Baron or Peer of the Realm is to be amerced no less than five pounds but the amercement of a Duke is One hundred pounds Although the Statute of Magna Charta chap. 14. be in the Negative viz. Comites Barones non amercientur nisi per pares suos non nisi secundum modum delicti yet use hath reduced it into a certainty As also by the same Statute it appeareth that such Amercements should be assessed per pares suos but that it were troublesome to assemble Barons for so small a matter such Amercements in times past have been assessed by the Barons of the Exchequer who sometime were Barons of the Realm as is already taken notice of and so writeth Bracton lib. 3. tract cap. 1. fol. 116.8 Whereas by Statute 32 Hen. 8. cap. 16. it is enacted That the Subjects of this Realm shall not keep in their Houses or Families above the number of four Strangers born nevertheless by a Proviso in the same Act every Lord of the Parliament hath this