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A47247 The late history of Europe being a narration of all remarkable actions and other various affairs, both civil and military, that have happened in the several kingdoms and republicks : from the Treaty at Nimiguen in anno 1676 to the conclusion of the late peace at Res-Wick in September 1697 : which makes up a history of one and twenty years : accuratly and succinctly abridg'd / by Captain David Kennendy. Kennedy, David, Captain. 1698 (1698) Wing K290; ESTC R13952 122,066 192

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King of Great Britain he would take it as a Rupture of the Peace and resent it accordingly SECT 4. Sect. 4 Soon after this King James is informed more certainly of the preparations in Holland and that the design was against him England and believed it so And now began to turn Car in pan declaring in Council on the 2d of October that he would restore the Charter of London and on the 5th declared that he would dissolve the Commission for Ecclesiastical Causes King James allarm'd And impowers the Bishop of Winchester to resettle all the Affairs of Magdalen Colledge but hearing of the disaster of the Dutch Fleet at Sea he recalled that Commission and hearing afterward of their approach he renewed it again so sickle was he and so at last the said Bishop perfected that business The Wind continued for three Weeks still at west and in London the question every Morning was have we a Protestant Wind yet and a Seaman cursed openly the Dragon on Bow steeple for turning his Head where his Tayle should be But about the latter end of October the Wind came Easterly Prince of Orange lands at Torbay and the Dutch Fleet consisting of near five hundred Saile whereof there were fifty one Men of War and eighteen Fire Ships came with a fair Gale upon the English Coast and Landed all safe at Torbay the 5th of November And in a short time the Princes Army was encreased by the Junction of diverse persons of good quality with him And soon after his Declaration was published Which was dated at the Hague the 10th of October 1688. His Declaration published The substance whereof was a Relation of the Subversion and Violation of all the Laws of England both in Church and State all which he imputed to the Kings Evil Councellors which disorders could not possibly be rectified nor Affairs regulated but by a lawful and Free Parliament the calling and sitting whereof was the main cause of his coming to England The Declaration being very large and withal supposing it well known to all intelligent observing persons I thought the transcribing of it unnecessary Prince of Orange writes to the Protestant Officers in England About the same time The Prince wrote a Letter to all the Protestant Officers in the Kings Army laying before them their Error in joining with a Popish party and their dauger if they persisted and earnestly invited them to concurr with him for preservation of the Protestant Religion and freedom and Priviledges of the Subjects This Letter did very much influence most of those to whom it was directed About the midle of November the Lord Delamare came to the Prince with a considerable ●arty Association at Exeter Before the Prince left Exeter there was an Association drawn and Sworn to by all the Noble●en and Gentlemen then present for a close adherence to the Prince of Oran●e and to one another an prosecuting of that work they now engaged in and for avengeing the Princes Death if done by any barbarous indirect means The 1st Bloodshed On the 20th of November a Skirmish happened at Win●anton between eighty Horse and Dragoons Commanded by Sarsfield and thirty of the Princes Horse Commanded by one Campbel where notwithstanding the inequality of the Number the former were defeated which much daunted King James's Army and as much encouraged the other party Associ●●ion a● Not●ingham On the 22d of November The Nobility and Gentry assembled at Nottingham delaring their just greivances in eight material points and implying many moe indefinitly Associate and bind themselves much to the same purpose as these at Exeter had done The Nobility about the King labour earnestly to perswade him to call a free Parliament but he continued inexorable Prince George Dukes of Graslon and Ormond and other Nobles go to the Prince On which the Duke of Graston the Lord Churchil and several other Noblemen lest him and went over to the Prince then as Sherb●●● And on the 25th of November Prince George the Duke of Ormond and Sir George Hewet followed them Before Prince George went off he wrote to the King a very pertinent Letter for his Excuse as did also the Lord Churchil and Princess Ann withdrawing privatly from London after the Princes departure left a very passionate Letter to the Queen begging her Majesties pardon for leaving the City without her leave and waiting upon her The King comes to London The 26. of November the King returns to London and Issu●s writes for a free Parliament to sit the 15 of January but this was too late for by this time the Nation was generally in such a ferment as nothing he could either do or promise would appease them The Prince of Orange understanding that most of the considerable Cities and Towns in England had complyed published as was said another Declaration at She●burne Castle the 28. of November But it appeared soon after by the Princes disowning it that this Declaration was contrived by some private person who had put his name to it to give it Authority The main purport of the Declaration was a strict order to all Magistrates both in the Cities and Countrey to disarme and secure all Papists and tho this was a bold and presumptuous attempt of a private person yet it happened to have very good effects Proposals by the King to the Prince The Prince of Orange being at Windsor the King sends ●a●●●sax Nottingham and Godolphine to him desiring him to make what proposals he thought necessary for sitting of the Parliament and for their security while they sat The King leavs London They return the next day with seven Proposals which were so unsatisfying to the King as that night he left London and went to Rochester Before he went he wrote to the Lord Feversham Exhorting him and all the Officers to continue him in their Loyal Principles but gives him no orders for any Action On Receipt of which Letter Feversham disbands his Forces being about Four thousand and presently after acquaints the Prince therewith by a Letter Returning the 16 of December On the 16 of December the King returns to London being advised and invited thereto by some Lords On the 17. at twelve at Night he receives a Letter from the Prince advising his removal to Ham Goes to Rochester but he inclining rather to go to Rochester moves that to the Prince who assented and so on the 18. he goes thither accompanyed with the Earl of Arran and some others That same day the Prince came to St. James's innumerable Acclamations The Prince comes to London Bells and Bon-fires signifying how welcome a Guest he was to London King James and the Queen go to France On the 23 of December the King Embarked at Dover for France the Queen Landing there the 10th Before he went he left a Letter written with his own hand declaring his Reasons for leaving the Kingdom desiring it
Proposals for Peace which was earnestly seconded by the Aga who brought the Letter To which the Duke answered That he had no Instructions to listen to any Overturs for Peace but that he would acquaint His Imperial Majesty with the Serasquiers Proposals And so we leave Affaires here and see what the Gern●an● have been doing in other places all this time General Leslie Commanding in Croatia formed a designe against Esseck and on the ninth of August directed his march thitherward General Leslie takes Esseck The Town of Michalowitz lying in his way and hearing it was keept by sixty Turks only he forced it to surrender at discretion and so continued his march towards Esseck to which he drew near the fourteenth of August where being opposed by a Bodie of Turks he attached them and drove them into the Town and followed them so closs that his men presently scaled the Walls which were not very strong and made themselves Masters of the Town the pillage whereof the General gave to the Souldiers And so with the loss of no more then sixty Men he returned to Michalowitz Esperies taken by General Leslie In upper Hungary General Schultz layes Seige to Esperies which was stoutly Defended but at last the Governour understanding some Additional Forces were coming to the Beseigers on the 11 of September he desired a Parley when Articles being agreed on the Town is put into the Germans hands on the 12. And Baschaw by Caprara And soon after the City of Baschaw was taken by General Caprara Agria was Bombarded by the Baron de Merci and all the Country round it ravaged and destroyed After which the Troops went into their Winter Quarters SECT 5. Sect. 5 We find but smal Feats of the Poles this Campaign for they suffered the Provinces of Podolia to be ravaged by the Tartars Poland They came late into the Feild under the Crown General Poland does but little made two or three smal skirmishes with the Enemy and so returned to their Winter Quarters Francisco Morosins Venetians Captain General of the Venetian Forces set Sail for Coron in July Morosins beseiges Coron To which he laid Seige but was soon Assaulted by a Bodie of Turks whom he defeated killing four Hundered of them and as many wounded yet in a few days after the Turks rallied again and on the 30th of July made a new attempt of brea●ing into the Venetian Trenches Be●ts the Tu●ks tuice but were valiantly repulsed and beaten back to their own Retrenchments lossing near four Hundered more and Kalib Basha killed with a Cannon bullet yet for all this the Beseiged make a brave Resistance and will not listen to any proposals trusting alwayes for releif from the Turkish Camp which lay not far from the Venetians the Captain General understanding this resolves wi●h consent of all his Officers to force the Enemyes Camp He forces the Turks Camp and and outs them which the next morning early they attempted and proved therein very successful for the Turks expecting no such thing were mightly surprysed both with the suddenness and boldness of the attempt and being in great Terrour and Confusion forsook their Camp and fled the Venetians making a horrible slaughter of them in their flight They found in the Camp a rich Booty of Artillery Arms and all sorts of provisions After this the Beseiged began to flag and loss Courage yet holding out obstinatly till at last after 49 days Seige the Beseigers made a General Assault and porsecuted the same so eagerly as they took the Town by meer Force He takes Coron be storm puting all to the Sword without respect of age or sex In the Town they found a Hundred and twenty eight Peices of Cannon whereof sixty six were Brass with a great deal of Riches and Provisions of all sorts After this he took the stronge Garison of Zarnata which surrendered to him the 11 of September thence coming to Calamata he was attached by the Captain Bassa and ten Thousand Turks whom he valiantly fought and defeated possessed himself of Calamata and brought the whole Province of Mayna under the Jurisdiction of the Re-publi●k This was a fatal year to the French Protestants for for by an Edict the 22d of October An. 1686 the Edicts of Nants and Nisines are repealed P●rsecution of the French Protestants began whereon followed a severe Persecution CHAP. XI Anno 1686. SECT 1. Sect. 1 We return again to England The late Parliament being dissolved the King indeavours to get all the Judges in Westminster Hall to be such as would Justifie all his Actions England so as he might at least seemingly have the Law on his side To which end he begins to Bargain with them that they should declare the Kings Power of dispensing with the Penal Laws and Tests made against Recusants out of Parliament and manadged this design so as he brought it a great length The high Commission In the next place he gives a Commission of Ecclesiastical Affaires to the Bishop of Chester the Bishop of Canterbury refuseing the Imployment and several others of Clargie and Ley-men which Commission is to be seen at large in Cokes Detection c. The first that this Commission fastened upon Bishop of London suspended by it was the Bishop of London whose Crime was that he did not suspend Doctor Sharp for Preaching in his Parish Church of St Giles against the Frauds and Corruptions of the Church of Rome for which he is suspended ab Offici● tho the real cause was for moving in the last Parliament that the Kings speech might be Debeated which stuck in the Kings stomach and is now remembered to the Bishop Also the fellows of Magdalen Colledge The next blow the Commission gives is at the Fellows of Magdalen Colledge in Oxford for chuseing for their President Doctor Hough a person very well qualified and refuseing the Bishop of Oxford Recommended to them by the King but after they had chosen the other for which cause the Commissioners not only turns them out of their Fellowships but makes them uncapable of any other Ecclesiasticall Preferments Now comes on the stage Thomas Dangerfe●d who discovered the Meal-tub-plot Dangerfend killed for which he is sentenced to be whip't with Doctor Oats and at his return from Tyburne towards Newgate he is run into the eye with a Tuck on the end of a cane by Robert Francis a Papist of which and the agony of his severe whipping he dyed soon after However Francis is hauged for that base and Barbarous Act. Mr. Johnson whip't and for what crime And Mr. Samuel Johnson a Minister was Sentenced also to stand 3 times in the Pillory and to be whip't between Tyburne and Newgate which was executed severely his crime being a humble and hearty addresse to the Protestant Officers in the Kings Army Showing them the sin and danger of Associating themselves with Papists and earnestly exhorting them