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A31599 The second part of the present state of England together with divers reflections upon the antient state thereof / by Edward Chamberlayne ...; Angliae notitia. Part 2 Chamberlayne, Edward, 1616-1703. 1671 (1671) Wing C1848; ESTC R5609 117,915 324

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a Bishop for their Prolocutor and the Lower being required by the Highe House to choose them a Prolocutor or Speaker which done they present him to the Upper House by two of their Members whereof one makes a Speech in Latin and then the Elect person makes another Speech in Latin Lastly the Archbishop answers in Latin and in the name of all the Lords approves of the person Both Houses debate and transact only such matters as His Majesty by Commission expresly alloweth In the Upper House things are first proposed and then communicated to the Lower House The Major vote in each House prevailes Out of Parliament time they usually assemble every day about Nine of the clock and first the Junior Bishop sayes prayers in Latin beginning with the Letany and then for the King c. And in the Lower House the Prolocutor says prayers In Convocation are debated only matters concerning Religion and the Church and sometime of giving His Majesty assistance in Money for as the Laity cannot be taxed without their own consent signified by their Representative in Parliament so the Clergy cannot be taxed without their consent signified by their Representative in Convocation The Clergy in Convocation might antiently without asking the Royal Assent and now may with the Royal Assent make Canons touching matters of Religion to bind not only themselves but all the Laity with-out consent or ratification of the Lords and Commons in Parliament Till the late Rebellion the Parliament did not at all meddle in the making Canons or in matters Doctrinal or in Translation of Scriptures only by their civil Sanctions when they were thereto required did confirm the Results and Consultations of the Clergy that so the people might be the more easily induced to obey the Ordinances of their Spiritual Governors The Clergy of England had antiently their Representatives in the Lower House of Parliament as appears by that antient Record so highly prized by the late Lord Coke and as the Upper House had and still hath Lords Spiritual as well as Temporal so in the Lower House there were always Commons Spiritual as well as Temporal for that Record saith expresly that the Commons in Parliament consist of three degrees or kinds First ex Procuratoribus Cleri Secondly ex Militibus Comitatuum Thirdly ex Burgensibus and the words of the Writ directed now to the Procuratores Cleri seem to give them the very same right to sit in that House as the words of the Writ to the Knights Citizens and Burgesses do give to them All the Members of both Houses of Convocation have the same priviledges for themselves and menial Servants as the Members of Parliament have and that by Statute The Archbishop of York at the same time holds at York a Convocation of all his Province in like manner and by constant correspondence doth debate and conclude of the same matters as are debated and concluded by the Provincial Synod of Canterbury Now for the Executive power in Church matters throughout the Kingdom of England there have been provided divers excellent Courts whereof the highest for criminal Causes was the High Commission Court for the jurisdiction whereof it was enacted primo Elizabethae that Her Majesty and Successors should have power by Letters Patents under the Great Seal to nominate Commissioners to exercise jurisdiction throughout the whole Realm to visit reform and correct all Errors Heresies Schisms Abuses and Delinquencies that may by any Ecclesiastical power be corrected or reformed This Court consisted of the highest persons of England in the Church and State and was the principal Bulwark and Preservative of the Church of England against the practices and assaults of all her Adversaries whether Romanist Puritan or Atheist yet for some pretended abuses the use thereof was taken away in the late seditious long Parliament whereupon followed a deluge of Errors in Religion Apostacy Atheism Blasphemy Sacriledge Incest Adultery impious Libels Schisms Conventicles c. all which so overwhelmed the manners of English men and occasioned at length so many profest Atheists that until the re-establishment of this or the like Court there cannot a Reformation be reasonably hoped for For civil affairs that concern the Church the highest Court is the Court of Delegates for the jurisdiction whereof it was provided 25 H. 8. that it shall be lawful for any subject of England in case of defect of justice in the Courts of the Archbishop of Canterbury to appeal to the Kings Majesty in his Court of Chancery and that upon such appeal a Commission under the Great Seal shall be directed to certain persons particularly designed for that business so that from the highest Court of the Archbishop of Canterbury there lies an Appeal to this Court of Delegates and beyond this to none other Next to the Court of Delegates are the Courts of the Archbishop of Canterbury where any Ecclesiastical Sutes between any persons may waving all inferior Courts be decided amongst them the highest Court is the Court of Arches so called from the Arched Church and Tower of S. Maries in Cheapside London where this Court is wont to be held the Judge whereof is called Dean of the Arches having jurisdiction over a Deanery consisting of 13 Parishes within London exempt from the jurisdiction of the Bishop of London Hither are directed all Appeals in Ecclesiastical matters within the Province of Canterbury To this Court belongs divers Advocates all Doctors of the Civil Law two Registers and ten Proctors the Dean at present is Doctor Sweat In the next place the Archbishop of Canterbury hath his Court of Audience kept within the Archbishops Palace and medleth not with any difference between parties but concerning Elections and consecration of Bishops Admission and Institution to Benefices dipensing with Banes of Matrimony c. The next Court is called the Prerogative Court which judgeth of Estates fallen by Will or by Intestates so called because the Archbishops jure Praerogativae suae hath this power throughout his whole Province where the party at the time of death had 5 l. or above in several Dioceses and these two Courts hath also the Archbishop of York Lastly the Court of Peculiars which dealeth in certain Parishes lying in several Dioceses which Parishes are exempt from the jurisdiction of the Bishops of those Dioceses and are peculiarly belonging to the Archbishop of Canterbury in whose Province there are 57 such Peculiars Besides these Courts serving for the whole Province every Bishop hath his Court held in the Cathedral of his Diocess over which he hath a Chancellor tearmed antiently Ecclesiecdicus Episcopi Ecdicus the Church Lawyer or the Bishops Lawyer who being skill'd in the Civil and Canon Law sits there as Judge and if his Diocess be large he hath in some more remote place a Commissary whose authority is only in some certain place of the Diocess and some certain Causes limited to him by the Bishop in his Commission and these are called Consistory Courts
447 150 38 Welcome 400 150 38 Yarmouth 608 180 44 Fifth Rate       Augustin 300 110 26 Briar 180 90 18 Colchester 287 110 24 Convert 250 110 26 Coventry 200 110 20 Dartmouth 220 110 22 Dolphin 130 80 14 Eagle 299 110 22 Forester 230 110 32 Fame 200 95 20 Gift 300 100 26 Garland 2●5 1●0 20 Greyhound 150 90 22 Half-Moon 300 110 26 Happy Entrance 200 100 20 Hector 150 90 20 Hound       Lizard 100 170 16 Milford 262 115 22 Mermaid 287 110 22 Norwich 258 110 22 Nightingale 300 110 22 Oxford 240 105 22 Constant Warwick   80 22 Pearl 285 110 22 Pembroke 210 110 22 Paul 240 95 22 Richmond 235 110 22 Rosebush 300 100 24 Success Frigat 230 115 24 Speedwell 200 100 20 Sorlings 250 110 22 Success 380 130 34 Satisfaction 220 110 26 Saphire 300 100 26 Westergat 300 100 26 Sixth Rate       Bramble 120 70 14 Blackmore 90 50 12 Carnation 100 60 12 Chesnut 90 45 10 Cag-way 60 40 8 Cignet 60 40 6 Drake 146 70 12 Dolphin 50 25 4 Diver Smack       Eaglet 60 40 8 Fox 120 70 14 Francis 90 50 10 Griffin 90 50 12 Gift 120 70 12 Hind 60 40 8 Hawk 60 40 8 Harp 60 40 6 Hart       Hunter 50 30 6 Henrietta Pinnace 65 25 6 Kingsale 90 50 10 Lark 80 50 10 Lilly 60 40 6 Martin 130 70 12 Mary 120 60 12 Marygold Hoy       Nonsuch Catch 60 40 8 Minion       Paradox 127 70 12 Pearl Brigant 50 25 4 Roe 60 40 8 Rose 60 40 6 Sparrow 90 60 12 Swallow 60 40 6 True Love 100 60 12 Vulture 100 60 12 Weymouth 120 70 11 Wolf 120 70 16 Besides the above mentioned Vessels there was the New Gally the Eagle Stork Violet Ostridge Church and Elias in all 160 sail During the late War with the United Netherlands France and Denmark some of these forementioned Vessels were lost and since the Peace concluded many have been new built even this present year four Ships of the first Rate and three of the third Rate have been to his Majesties great expences built and perfectly finished or will be in a short time Those new built Ships of the first Rate are the Royal James Prince St. Andrew London All his Majesties Maritime Forces are under the Command of the Lord High Admiral of England touching whose Name Titles Power Priviledges c. See the first part The Lord Admiral hath under him many Officers of high and low condition some at Sea others at Land some of a Military some of a Civil capacity some Judicial others Ministerial so that the Dominion and Jurisdiction of the Sea may justly be stiled another Commonwealth or Kingdom apart In Mari sunt Regna distincta idque Jure Gentium sicut in arida terra saith Baldus that learned Oracle of the Civil Law And the Lord High Admiral of England may fitly be stiled or at least reputed as a Vice-Roy of the Maritime Kingdom of England The Vice-Admiral of England is an Officer to whom next under the High-Admiral it belongs to see the Royal Navy kept in good repair the wages of Mariners and Ship-wrights duly paid and the Ships provided of all things necessary for any Expedition The Lord High-Admiral of England doth by virtue of his place appoint in divers parts of the Kingdom his several Vice-Admirals with their Judges and Marshals by Patent under the Great Seal of the High Court of Admiralty These Vice-Admirals and Judges do exercise Jurisdiction in Maritime affairs within their several limits and in case any person is agrieved by any Sentence or Interlocutory Decree that hath the force of a definitive Sentence he may appeal to the High Court of Admiralty The present Vice-Admirals of the several Coasts of England with their Judges are these that follow in Alphabetical order Bristol City Sir Thomas Bridges Vice-Admiral Cheshire and Lancashire the Earl of Derby Vice-Admiral Sir Tim. Baldwin Kt. Dr. of Laws Judge Cornwall South parts Trelawny Vice-Admiral Cornwall North parts Sir John Godolphin V. Admiral Mr. Scawen Judge Cumberland Earl of Carlile V. Admiral Durham Earl of Carlile V. Admiral Devonshire John Vowel Esq V. Admiral Dr. Masters Judge Dorsetshire Bullen Reyms Esq Essex Sir John Bramston V. Admiral Sir Mundiford Bramston Judge Glocester Thomas Cheston Esq V. Adm. Kent Duke of Richmond V. Adm. Lincoln Lord Castleton V. Adm. Newcastle Earl of Carlile V. Adm. Norfolk Lord Townsend V. Adm. Sir Justinian Lewen Kt. Dr. of Laws Judge Northumberland Earl of Carlile V. Adm. Somersetshire Sir Thomas Bridges V. Admiral Sussex Sir John Pelham V. Adm. Dr. Low Judge Suffolk Sir Henry Felton V. Adm. Dr. Clark Judge Southampton and Isle of Wight Sir Robert Holms V. Adm. Dr. Lloyd Judge Wales North parts Col. John Robinson V. Adm. Mr. Walter Mansel Judge York Earl of Mulgrave V. Adm. For handling of Maritime Affairs the Lord High Admiral hath Courts of his own whereof that at London is the principal or supreme where all Process and Proceedings run in his name and not in the Kings as it doth in all Common-Law Courts in this Court usually call'd the Court of Admiralty he hath a Lieutenant called Judge of the Admiralty who is commonly some learned Dr. of the Civil Law and is at present Doctor Jenkins lately knighted for his great worth and now called Sir Lionel Jenkins The Proceeding in this Court in all Civil Matters is according to the Civil Law because the Sea is without the limits of the Common-Law but under the Admirals Jurisdiction therefore the Civil Law onely all Common Law secluded is made use of and by Libel they proceed to the Action the Plaintiff giving Caution to prosecute the Sute and to pay what shall be judged against him if he fail in the Sute the Defendant on the contrary securing the Plaintiff by sufficient surety or caution as the Judge shall think meet that he will appear in Judgment and pay that which shall be adjudged against him and that he will ratifie and allow all that his Proctor shall do in his name whereby the Clients are well assured to obtain that which by Law shall be adjudged to them let the Cause fall on which side soever In the Admiralty Court of England use is made not onely of the Civil Laws but the Laws of Rhodes and Oleron whereof the former is an Island in the Mediterranean Sea about twenty miles distant from the Continent of Asia Minor and is now under the Turk the antient Inhabitants whereof by their mighty Trade and Power at Sea grew so expert in the Regulation of all Maritime Matters and Differences and their Determinations therein were esteemed so just and equitable that their Laws in such affairs have ever since been observed for Oracles Those Laws were long ago incorporated into the Volumes of the Civil Law And the Romans who gave Laws to other
Moreover every Archdeacon hath his Court and Jurisdiction where smaller differences arising within his limits are pleaded Also the Dean and Chapter hath a Court and take cognizance of Causes happening in places belonging to the Cathedral Lastly there are certain peculiar Jurisdictions belonging to some certain Parishes the Inhabitants whereof are exempt sometimes from the Archdeacons Jurisdiction and sometimes from the Bishops Jurisdiction Causes belonging to Ecclesiastical Courts are Blasphemy Apostasie from Christianity Heresies Schisms Ordinations Institutions of Clerks to Benefices Celebration of Divine Service Rights of Matrimony Divorces general Bastardy Tythes Oblations Obventions Mortuaries Dilapidations Reparation of Churches Probate of Wills Administrations Simony Incests Fornications Adulteries Solicitations of Chastity Pensions Procurations Commutation of Pennance c. the cognizance whereof belongs not to the Common Law of England The Laws and Constitutions whereby the Ecclesiastical Government doth stand and the Church of England is governed are first general Canons made by general Councels also the Arbitria sanctorum Patrum the opinion of Fathers the grave Decrees of several Holy Bishops of Rome which the Kings of England from time to time have admitted Next our own Constitutions made antiently in several Provincial Synods either by the Legats Otho and Othobon sent from Rome or by several Archbishops of Canterbury all which are by 25 H. 8. of force in England so far as they are not repugnant to the Laws and Customs of England or the Kings Prerogative Then the Canons made in Convocations of later times as primo Jacobi and confirmed by his Royal Authority Also some Statutes enacted by Parliament touching Ecclesiastical affairs And lastly divers Customs not written but yet in use beyond the memory of man and where these fail the Civil Law takes place The manner of Tryals by these Laws and Customs are different from the Tryals at Common Law and are briefly thus First goes forth a Citation then Bill and Answer then by Proofs Witnesses and Presumptions the matter is argued pro and con and the Canon and Civil Laws quoted then without any Jury the definitive sentence of the Judge passseth and upon that Execution And this is the manner of trying Ecclesiastical Civil Causes but Ecclesiastical criminal Causes are tryed by way of Accusation Denunciation or Inquisition The first when some one takes upon him to prove the crime the second when the Churchwardens present and are nor bound to prove because it is presumed they do it without any malice and that the crime is notorious Lastly by Inquisition when by reason of common fame inquiry is made by the Bishop ex officio suo by calling some of the neighborhood to their Oaths or the party accused to his Oath ex officio so called because the Ecclesiastical Judge doth it ex officio suo which is very antient and was usual among the Jews so Joshua to Acan Fili mi tribue gloriam c. So God himself to Adam upon his first transgression and likewise afterward to Sodom but by the prevailing faction in the long Parliament this power was extorted from the Church the want whereof is one main cause of the great libertinisme and debauchery of the Nation Now the punishments inflicted by these Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Courts according to these Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Laws proceed in this manner First the party delinquent is admonish'd next goes forth minor Excommunicatio whereby he is excommunicated or excluded from the Church or if not from the Church yet from the Communion of the Lords Supper is disenabled to be Plaintiff in a Law Sute c. And this commonly for stubborness shewed by not appearing in the Ecclesiastical Court upon summons or not obeying the Orders of the Court which though in smallest matters yet may be a very great crime for Res praecepta quo facilior est observatu eo praecepti violatio est gravior cum fit magis spontanea as S. Austin observes of the first sin of Adam Any command by how much the easier it may be observed by so much the more grievous is the breach thereof because it is the more voluntary besides in contempts it is not so much the violation of the Law as of the Authority which ought to be resented And herein the Church of England proceedeth no otherwise than the State of England for so odious in the eye of the common Law of Enland is the contempt thereof that not only for Felonies but even in an Action of the case in an Action of a small Debt Account or Detinue if a man will not appear and submit himself to a Tryal at Law a Process of Outlawry is grounded against him and he being once Outlawed he is out of the protection of the Law Caput gerit lupinum saith Bracton an Outlaw'd was antiently lookt upon as a Wolf lawfully to be killed by any man that should meet him as most just that he who contemned the Law and therein the King should not have benefit by the Law nor protection from the King and at this day he is to loose all his Goods and Chattels The Reader will easily pardon this digression when he considers the general cry against Excommunications at this day This power of lesser Excommunication the Bishop may delegate to any grave Priest with the Chancellour Excommunicato major is not only an exclusion from the company of Christians in Spiritual Duties but also in Temporal affairs and this commonly for Heresie Schism Perjury Incest and such grievous crimes and that it may be done with the more solemnity and terror it is to be pronounced by the Bishop himself in his proper person and being so Excommunicated a man cannot in any Civil or Ecclesiastical Court be Plaintiff or Witness And in case any man be so stubborn as to continue 40 days excommunicated the Kings Writ de excommunicato capiendo is granted forth of the Chancery against him whereupon he is cast into prison without Bail there to lie till he hath satisfied for his offence Next there is Anathematismus to be inflicted only upon an obstinate Heretick whereby he is declared a publick Enemy of God and rejected and cursed and delivered over to eternal damnation and this to be done by the Bishop also in his own person assisted by the Dean and Chapter or twelve other grave Priests Lastly there is Interdictum whereby is prohibited all Divine Offices as Christian an Burial Administration of Sacraments c. in such a Place or to such a People and if this be against a People it follows them wheresoever they go but if against a Place only then the People of that Place may go to Divine Offices elsewhere Besides these general censures of the Church which respect Church Communion there is another which toucheth the body of the Delinquent called Publick Penance when any one is compelled to confess in publick his fault and to bewail it before the whole Congregation in the Church which is done in this manner the
in the Countrey some in the remotest parts of England to fetch in their debts Fifthly The closeness of the Buildings in that place facilitating the progress of the Fire and hindring the usual remedy which was by Engines to shoot Water Sixthly The matter of the Buildings thereabouts which was generally wooden and of old Timber Seventhly The long continued drought of the preceding Summer even to that day which had so dryed the Timber that it was never more apt to take fire Eighthly The matter of Wares in those parts where were the greatest Magazines and Store-houses of Oyls Pitch Tar Rozin Wax Butter Brimstone Hemp Cordage Cheese Wine c. Ninthly An Easternly Wind the driest of all other that had continued long before and then did blow very strongly Tenthly The unexpected failing of the Water the Thames Water-Tower then out of order and burnt down immediately after the beginning of the fire so that most Water Pipes were soon dry Lastly An unusual negligence at first and a confidence of easily quenching the Fire on a sudden changed into a general consternation and despondency all People chusing rather by flight to save their Goods then by a vigorous opposition to save their Houses and the City These causes thus strangely concurring to say nothing of Gods just anger for the notorious impenitency of the Citizens for their abetting and instigating the shedding of the precious innocent Blood both of Gods Anointed and of their other cheif Governors both in Church and State for their still going on in their old hainous sins of Despising Dominions and speaking evil of Dignities till there was no remedy those forementioned causes so wonderfully concurring by a general prodigious Conflagration did make a greater spoil in the space of Three days viz. From Sunday morning to Wednesday morning then Three or four Armies unresisted could probably have done in twice the time for to give the Reader some little Prospect of the huge damages done by this Fire it hath been computed by an ingenious person that there were burnt in all within the Walls of this City Twelve thousand Houses and without the Walls One thousand Houses all which valued one with another at no more then 25 l. yearly Rent which at the low rate of Twelve years purchase will amount in the whole to Three millions and nine hundred thousand pounds sterling Then the Eighty seven Parish Churches the most spacious Cathedral Church of S. Paul Six Consecrated Chappels the Royal Burse or Exchange the great Guild-Hall the Custome-House the many magnificent Halls of Companies the several Principal City Gates with other Publick Edifices may well be valued at Two millions The Wares Houshold-stuff Moneys and other moveable Goods lost and spoiled by the Fire may probably amount to Two millions of pounds some say much more The Money spent in a general removing of Wares and Goods during the Fire and bringing them back afterward in the hire of Boats Carts and Porters may be well reckoned at the least Two hundred thousand pounds the total whereof is Nine millions and Nine hundred thousand pounds which reduced into French Money will amount unto One hundred twenty eight millions and seven hundred thousand Livres Tournois And yet the Citizens recovering after a few months their Native Courage have since so chearfully and unanimously set themselves to rebuild the City that within the space of four years they have erected in the same streets ten thousand houses and laid out for the same Three millions of pounds sterling counting but 300 l. a house one with another besides whole Streets built and now building in the Suburbs by others as if the late Fire had onely purged the City the Buildings are become infinitely more beautiful more commodious and more solid the three main vertues of all Edifices then before nay as if the Citizens had not been any way impoverish'd but rather inrich't by that huge Conflagration they may be said to be even wanton in th●ir Expences upon the stately Italian Facciatta's or Fronts of their new Houses many of Portland stone as durable almost as Marble upon their richly adorned Balconies Signes Portals c. They have made their Streets much more large and straight and whereas before they dwelt in low dark deform Wooden Cottages they now live in lofty lightsome uniform Brick Buildings so that although our gracious King cannot say of this His Capital City as one of the Emperors said of Rome Lateritiam inveni Marmoream reliqui yet he may say of it what is almost equivalent Ligneam inveni Lateritiam reliqui And of a Principal Structure of this City the Royal Exchange His Majesty may say Lateritiam inveni Saxcam reliqui whereof take here this following brief Account THe former Burse began to be erected in the year 1566. just one hundred years before it was burnt it was built at the cost and charges of a noble Merchant Sir Thomas Gresham and in a solemn manner by a Herald and Trumpet in the presence and by the special Command of Queen Elizabeth proclaimed and named the ROYAL EXCHANGE it was built most of Brick and yet was the most splendid Burse all things considered that was then in Europe before the building whereof the Burse for Merchants was kept in Lumbard-street Now it is built within and without of the forementioned excellent stone with such curious and admirable Architecture that it surpasseth all other Burses Quantum lenta solent inter Viburna Cupressi It is built Quadrangular with a large Court wherein the Merchants may assemble and the greatest part in case of rain or hot sun-shine may be sheltered in side-Galleries or Portico's The whole Fabrick cost above fifty thousand pounds whereof one half is disbursed by the Chamber of London or Corporation of the City and the other half by the Company of Mercers and to reimburse themselves there will be let to hire 190 Shops above stairs at 20 l. yearly rent each and 30 l. for fine besides the several Shops below on the East and West sides and the huge vaulted Cellers under ground so that it will be the richest piece of ground perhaps in the whole world for according to exact dimensions the ground whereon this goodly Fabrick is erected is but 171 foot from North to South and 203 foot from East to West for it is Quadratum oblongum so that it is but very little more then three quarters of an Acre of Ground and will produce above 4000 l. yearly Rent The River whereon is seated this Great City for its breadth depth gentle strait even course extraordinary wholesome water and Tides is more commodious for Navigation then perhaps any other River in the world The Sea flows gently up this River fourscore miles that is almost to Kingston twelve miles above London by land and twenty by water bringing the greater Vessels to London and the smaller beyond then against the Stream boats are drawn to Oxford and higher many miles It is high water