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A04988 A Catholicke apologie against the libels, declarations, aduices, and consultations made, written, and published by those of the League, perturbers of the quiet estate of the realme of France Who are risen since the decease of the late Monsier, the Kings onely brother. By E.D.L.I.C.; Apologie catholique. English Belloy, Pierre de, ca. 1540-1613.; Aggas, Edward, attributed name. 1585 (1585) STC 15137; ESTC S108196 138,975 314

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auncient or mightie soeuer as beeing aboue 1200. yeeres since vnder one forme and with one kind of lawes it was gouerned vnder the maiestie and authoritie of Kings of whom this last race hath continewed 600. yeres But among the chiefest and most perfect ordinances of this Crowne that is most commendable whereby the realme doth by succession belong by vertue of the Salick law to the next Male of the deceased King discending of the Masculine ligne For in trueth our Kings knowing that those of their owne blood are to succeede them haue the greater cause to keepe housband and preserue the estate and demains of their Realme as their owne and certaine Patrimonie besides that the successors of the Crowne that are nourished and brought vp in this greatnesse doe neuer become tyrants because euen from their mothers wombes they are vsed to command and ordinarily doe become the better more iust valeant hardy and couragious by representing to their owne view the greatnesse commendation and maiestie of their predecessors On the otherside the subiects of the Realme that haue s●●e the birth nourishing and bringing vp of their Princes do the better know their humors and willes and doe more freely obey such as are borne to rule their estate thē others that are newly elected whom they remember to haue knowen in the like calling as them selues without either preeminence authoritie or gouernment so as there is nothing so perfect as that which neerest doth imitate nature and which seemeth to be altogether immortall aud infinite by Succession from the Father to the Sonne Besides that thereby the Kings subiects howe wealthy or mightie so euer doe conteine themselues in duetie humilitie and obedience to their soueraigne Prince when they remember that so long as any of the royall blood doe suruiue the same be capaple to attaine to that marke and that purposing to attempt any bad matter against the Estate and person of the King there remaine as many reuengers of the iniurie offered to his Maiestie as there be Princes of his bloud Herevpon doe I presume y t in our France wherein this royall succession hath time out of minde bene strictly obserued it was neuer found neither doe we reade that the French men did at any time enterprize or practize aught against the person of their King whether in respect of that naturall affection that alwaies they haue borne him and whereof they beare the bell among all other Nations in Europe or els because God neuer permitted the royall bloud of Fraunce to rest onely in one whereby the presumpteous conspirators might after the trespasse committed escape without punishment This royall succession therefore resting without doubt or cōtradiction in this Realme the subiects thereof doe well knowe euen naturally and presumptiuely who is most likely to become their King so as now to call in question this succession is the only direct way to cause the King y t holdeth the Scepter ouer vs to think and with himselfe to imagine that in his Realme there are some who for the satisfying of their ambitiō could willingly wish to haue his place and for the same purpose do harken after his ende But sith the bolde impudencie of men is so great that they blush not neither are ashamed to disclose themselues to giue all men to vnderstande of their bad entents besides that necessarily the Commune must bee satisfied who otherwise might sooner beleeue the false then the true before wee proceede any further in aunswering the chiefe poynts of the Lybelles that they scatter abroade to the end to say that after the decease of the most Christian King without issue male it is not the nowe King of Nauarre but his Vnckle the Lord Cardinall of Bourbon that lawfully should be King or the better to expresse their entents that it is neither the one ne the other but that they must proceede to a newe election and nomination of a Prince I will here protest that I neuer desire to see the aduenture of that substitution which they pretende but hartely doe wish to the King my soueraigne Lorde a most long and happie life with as great number of issue capable of this Crowne as there be Starres in the Firmament 9 After which protestation to come to the purpose and succession of the house of Frāce I will first speake to those y t are not brought vp in the state of this Realme but onely haue learned of their Fathers that the Famely of Bourvon hath the honor to be issued from our Kinges therefore that the Princes thereof may succeede when God shall permit to the Crowne by the Lawe of succession of the realme Turning my selfe then to these commons I say that it is well knowen that King Lawes the ninth canonized and called saint Lewes had two sonnes the elder Phillip the bould of whome are come our Kings yet raigning who also had two sonnes the eldest Phillip the fayer who succeeded him and after him his three sonnes Lewes Phil. the long Charles the fayer the yōger Charles County of Valois who begat Phillip of Valois who succeeded in the Realme after his Cousen Charles the fayer After Phillip succeeded his soune Iohn after him Charles the fifth called the wise sonne to Iohn This Charles had two sonnes the eldest Charles the sixth King of Fraunce vnto whome succeeded Charles the seuenth Lewes the eleuenth and Charles the eight his sonne petie sonne and petie Neuew The yonger Lewes Duke of Orleance who by Lady Valentine of Millan had two sonnes Charles the elder father to Lewes the twelfth King of France after his Cousen Charles the eight was deceased without issue and Iohn Earle of Angoulesme who was Father of Charles also Earle of the same lande and Grandfather to king Francis the first who succeeded his cossen Lewes the twelfth of which King Francis came Henrie his second sonne and father to Henry now raigning Hetherto therefore the branch of Phillip the bould eldest Sonne to Saint Lewes neuer failed so must that fable needes be false which the enimies of the house of Bourbō haue sought to root in mens mindes namely that the discontentation of the late King Frācis the first against Charles of Bourbon that dyed at Rome was for his pretence to the Crowne of France which since haue continued in al the Princes of this house and from whence should be deriued the troubles and Ciuill Warres of this realme during the minoritie of the Kings Francis the second and Charles the ninth brothers to the King nowe raigning A matter vtterly false and falsely inuēted to the ende more and more to bring into the hatred of the people the Princes of Bourbon who neuer accompted more deerely of any thing or had greater delight in ought then to acknowledge obey and faithfully serue the Maiesties of our Kings as their true and souereigne Lordes hauing the honor so neerely to be to them allyed that they are of the same House and Armes without
briefe that to the ende by the death of the late Mounsier the Duke to insinuate himselfe further in his Maiesties fauour and to bee neerer vnto him he had determined to al●er his Religion Which was a subtile ●llicie both to bring him into suspition with his owne partakers and into contempt among the Catholickes so as by that meanes both parts might haue forsaken and despised him and so he might become a pray to their fayned League as a man light vnconstant and of small stedfastnesse which is one of the chiefest things that euery Christiā Prince ought to abhorre especially in causes of Religiō which we may not lightly chāge neither without great notice of the cause and the discourse thereof publickly argued in the Church of God but especially in our awne consciences Wherefore good men neither ought ne cā mislike that the sayd Lord King of Nauarre doth protest to liue and dye in his Religion permitted vnder the Kings authoritie by his Maiesties Edicts published euen by y e decree of the States of the Realm neither are wee to terme him an hereticke or obstinate person vntill wee haue lawfully by a free vniuersall or nationall Counsaile whether shall seeme most expedient condemned that opinion which he holdeth Will ye likewise that I shewe you what mistrust the Catholickes may conceiue of his goodnesse and singuler clemencie Then would I pray the most passionate to consider and looke vpon his famelie They shall finde the same to consist for the most part of Catholicke Officers But of what sorte Euen such as are neerest about his person who haue him in their hāds vpon their honors and consciences to whom he committeth himselfe and vpon whom of himself he doth depend as vpon his keepers Maisters of his Guardrobe Stewardes and many others who before his face with his liking and contentation being in his trayne do ordinarely go to the Masse assist at the deuine Seruice ministred after the maner of the Catholick Romish Church To be brief euen with this qualitie he acknowledgeth thē for his good faithfull and loyall seruants This could they not assure themselues of neither yet serue him with good hearts beeing such men of honor as they are if in his behauiours they could perceiue any mistrust which is the nource of hatred and mallice against the professors of their Religion or if they could finde which were easie to doe that he did euill entreate or forbid them to serue God after their maner and so sought to bee the tormentor of their consciences To conclude al these cōsiderations alledged against the King of Nauarre which are neither true neither of any outwarde apparence cannot in y e cōsciences of good men truely Frēch debarre him from beeing sufficient and capable of the Crowne of France yea further I say that the same notwithstanding he is your true and lawfull King to whome onely you are bound to obeye in cace during his life the sayde occasion of substitution should fall out which God forbid and which also neither he ne wee ought or should desire if either wee were Christians either els did beare any iot of hartie good will or affection to our King 18 To proceede let vs see whether a king houlding the Scepter or raigning ouer any estate especially ouer ours may appoint and nominate any other successor then him whom nature and the Lawe of the Realme haue giuen him This question I do not moue without cause for in trueth the perturbers of the peace of this Crowne and such as iniustly do pretend to set thereinto a foote haue made a League which they entitle Holy but al good med doe truely name Bloody with the Pope the Spanierd and the Sauoyan the conspired enemies to France and the Royall blood thereof through whose helpe they hope to leauy an Army wherwith to come into the hart of the Realme onely say they simply to sommon the most Christian King to name a successor at their deuotions Oh what an execrable mischiefe to seeke to force vs to enfringe the successiue lawe of this Realme whereof we haue so many worldes enioyed the blessed good hap What impudency those that haue not almost whereof to liue in their owne houses to goe about to preuent and ouerthrowe the order and Estate of so great an Empire This is a wonderfull bouldnesse to endeuour to compell so mightie a Monarcke as the French King and their owne lorde being yong healthy and such a one as it if please God hee may graunt him the blessing of the posteritie of Abraham to choose him a man to be his Heir But the French men doe assure them selues that they haue a King that is of better bringing vp then so one that is valeant feareth God and is ielous of his honour yea such a-one as would not for the getting of the whole worlde make such a breache in his conscience reputation vertue and memory that our Children should haue cause atro carbone illum notare saying that he had so farre hated himselfe and his owne blood as to haue corrupted the Lawes whereby after his predecessors he doth raigne euen since the originall of the Monarchie and to haue transferred the Crowne out of his owne famely for the satisfying of the rashnesse of those who finding them selues in Armes might hasten his time to the end to cause him the sooner to leaue them his roume For what dareth not Ambition and desire to Raigne vndertake Moreouer I doe most humbly beseech his Maiestie to pardon me though I boldly shew him that it is a thing that hee may not doe Also that the Lawe of the Realme whereby him selfe is King forbiddeth hym to meddle therewith because the same taken order therin vnto whom it is commendable in the Maiestie of a Monarke to acknowledge him selfe bounden And thus was it iudged declared and put in execution by the Parliament of the Peeres of France for Charles the seauenth against the treaty which king Charles the sixt in the yere 1420. made in y e towne of Troye in Champagne at the Mariage of his daughter Lady Katherin vnto King Henrie the fifth of Englande which imported the graunt and minde of the sayd King Charles the sixt to be that the sayd King of England or his issue male comming of the sayd mariage shonld be called to y e Crowne of France the said Charles the seueuth be thereof debarred and disinherited for euer This is not now say our Maisters the first time that it hath bene and perpetually shall be obserued by y e Salick law of this florishing Crowne which the King that houldeth the Scepter cannot alter because he is but a tutor protector collector and administrator thereof salua eius substantia itaque nec donare nec perdere poterit neither otherwise dispose of the proximitie of his bloud then the law of the Realm will beare neither yet transferre it into any other hand then that whereto it apperteineth although hee
Colledges and Vniuersities of this Realmes are abrogated as are also the conseruators Ecclesiasticall of the Vniuersities together with the priuiledged of this Crowne It forbiddeth such as haue made vowe of Religion in any wise to dispose of their gotten goodes whether moueable or immoueable contrary to the ordinance of the States of Orleans conformably with the decree of the Counsaile of Mogonce holden in y e time of Charlemaign It permitteth the begging Fryers to enioye and possesse rents landes reuenues and immoueable goodes contrary to the Counsaile of Vienna holden in the yeere of 1310. and infinite auncient arrestes of the Court It taketh from the King the nomination in Couents and Monasteries reguler which to him apperteyneth also the Triennalitie of Abbesses and Prioresses appointed by the sayde Estates It permitteth Munckes to meete and hold congregations and Chapters generall which in an Estate is perilous and daungerous and a matter whereby they bee accustomed to withdrawe themselues from vnder the authoritie and power of the King and all other temporall Magistrates in respect whereof also such assemblies haue by the arrest of the Court bene many tymes declared abusiue It giueth the Bishop authoritie to institute newe Feastes which haue bene reproued by many arrestes of Parliament namely by the prouinciall Counsayle holden at Sens in the yeere 1527. It encrocheth Lay patronages if the patrones by authenticall writings proue not the presentations continued and hauing taken effect 50. yeeres together and reiecteth al other kinde of proofe It giueth to the Ecclesiasticall Iudge notice of the right and possession of the sayd patronages obteyned by foundation donation or construction within these fortie yeeres which is a great intrusion vpon the King and his Magistrates It erecteth a newe kind of Iudges delegate whom it calleth Apostolick and authorizeth the Bishops to choose them euery one in his owne Dioces without the Kings knowledge or authoritie which are so many creatures not subiect to that Maiestie where-vnder they liue It declareth the Pope to be aboue him and forbiddeth Bishops to humble and submit themselues to Kings and Lordes It commaundeth all Clergie hauing of right and custome voyce in the prouincial Counsaile to receiue this pretēded Counsaile to sweare obedience to the Pope and thereof to make publicke profession It enioyneth Vniuersities not to teach any thing but what shalbe conformable to the decrees of the sayde Counsaile and to take solemne and yeerely oathes to his holinesse It commaundeth all Lordes Princes to keepe the sayd Canons renewing the auncient vsurpatorie Decretals of Boniface the eight and others heretofore abrogated in Fraunce as well by Edicts and ordenances Royall as by the arrestes of the Courtes of Parliament and great Counsaile By the sayd Counsaile the causes of our French Bishops are drawne to the Court of Rome and Popes Consistorie contrary to the dignitie of the royall Maiestie and the auncient Canons of the vniuersall Church whereby the criminall causes of Bishops yea in cace the same concerned their depriuation or discharging did belong to the Bishops of the Countrey or Synodes prouinciall and not to the Pope as by many the arrestes of the Court concurring with the generall Counsailes of Constantinople and Carthage it doth appeare besides that herein the sayd Counsaile greatly derogateth frō the Kings soueraigntie and Iurisdiction that euermore he hath had ouer the Bishops of his Realm witnesse the examples of Giles Bishop of Rheims of Pretextatus Bishop of Roā of Didier Archbishop of Vienna and many others of whom Gregory of Tours Aimoinus Ado Vincent the Historiall doe make mention In brief to vse few words this pretended Counsaile taketh away the most auncient liberties of our Church so to make a Proppe to the Popes abu●ions It also dissolueth reuoketh and maketh voyde Mariages not contracted in the face of the Romish Church wherein consisteth the Seede of a million of troubles Ouarels Processes and strifes in infinite families of this realme which vnder the authoritie of the King with his good liking and vnder the protection of his Edicts of pacification haue contracted Matrimony and begotten Children who thereby should be declared illegitimate depriued of their Parents Successions and their ●Wues denounced Concubines Harlots to their true Housbands contrarie to all equitie which in summe is as much as to bend themselues against God to erect in other mens Realmes assemblies of people not subiect to the same to bring into the Church a greater deformation and to make the King of Fraunce his Serieant or executioner of his commaundements yea such a one as should haue no authoritie to order his Realme So that those which now so earnestly doe prosecute that publication of the sayd Counsaile shall neuer perswade mee that they are French men but rather that they shewe them selues Solliciters of the Popes affayres and dignitie rather his Seruants thē their Kings and soueraigne lords Thus doe you seee howe by the aduice and iudgement of the honestest greatest French Catholikes liuing vnder the traditions of the Romish Church this Counsaile of Trent may not be accompted other then a notorious conspiracie and coniuration against the authoritie and dignitie of this Crowne aud of the Subiectes thereof of whatsoeuer calling that shall find them selues offended and therfore we should greatly iniury any one of ours of whatsoeuer estate in calling him Heretick for not obeying submitting him selfe or consenting against his Countrey to the malicious conspiracies of the Pope and straungers that doe enuie the greatnesse of this Estate Especially the King of Nauarre whome the matter chiefliest doth concerne should haue greatest cause to be agrieued in respect that at this day he hath the Honor to be the principall branch of the Royall tree of France and so consequently more neerely bound then any other to preserue and mainteyne the rightes liberties and dignities of this glorious and redoubtable Monarchie 56 Moreouer the sayd Lord King of Nauarre demaundeth of you by vertue of what doe you esteeme hym an Heretick and obstinat parson For it is certaine that he onely may be tearmed an Heretick who vpholdeth a false doctrine contrary to the holy Scriptures of the ould and newe Testament beleeuing amisse in any one of the Articles of our faith as did y e Manicheans Nestorians Sabellians Arrians and their like Now to say trueth they would perswade vs that the opinion houlden by the saide Lorde King of Nauarre was monstrous we haue bene hallowed after them like Dogges wee haue bene forbidden their company as of infidels and miscreants I beseech you therefore let vs carefully looke into the confession of their faith and we shall find them Christians such as agree with vs in the articles of our belief doe worship the same God seeking saluation in the same Iesus Christ Chrildren of the same father beleeuing the same Bible assuring them selues in the same Gospell as in the same Buckler of their faith requiring part in the same inheritance and in vertue of
Nauarrre and all that be of his opinion by apparant reasons For the vnderstanding whereof assemble the Catholicke Church so consequently the Christian Princes of the same heare the parties cause the King of Nauarre to appeare at the least summon him to come in in al assurance In such an assembly denounce him an Hereticke excommunicate him or deale otherwise with him according as the holy Ghost shall thincke meete Vntill you so doe you are but theeues enemies to the Catholicke Church perturbers of Christian peace and very Atheistes in seeking to vse Catholicke Religion which you doe least respect to estabish your prosperitie withall 27 It is requisite saye you to roote out Heretickes That is a good godly and Catholicke Counsaile I am of your opinion But marke ye Frenchmen the meanes effects and purpose which these zealous persons these firme pillers of the Church and these bucklers of the faith doe goe about to take herein Weapons fellonie and depriuation of our King both of his Scepter life for if wee flatter not our selues this is their marke We must giue almouse to the poore but not by robbing the rich We must punish transgressors but we must not proceede therto by cutting the Magistrates throate whom we thinke ouerslowe in perfecting the proceducers We must relieue the people but neither wee nor you nor any other must deale therein or enterprize to do it chiefly by rebellion or warres against our King This is not the first tyme that the Commons haue complayned of the Kings exactions and yet did they not thereupon take occasion to oppose thēselues against their Maiesties good pleasures neither was there euer found Cleargie man being the seruāt of God who to the mutinous would become a trompet of rebellion against their Prince vpon such consideration as these perturbers doe represent vnto vs the Lord Cardinall of Bourbon the Popes Legat in France and which is more himselfe a Prince and of the race of the Kinges The Prophet Esay complayned of these too great exactions of his tyme. Ezechiel noteth them and discouereth the vices of Princes Amos calleth them oppressors of the poore cruell to the needie Micheas setteth before them the reproach that God will lay vpon them if they flay the poore Sophony doth bitterly reproue them yet doth it not appeare that euer these men of God embraced conspiraties or entered League to the ende vpon any such considerations to arme the subiects against their Lord. The King say our Censors must reforme himselfe but we must not tell him so with weapons reprouing and iniurying his Maiestie by worde writing and deede yea by captiuating his affections and forcing him to hate that which he loueth as if hee were not a man capable of the loue of those whom perticulerly hee acknowledgeth for his faithfull seruants This were a miserable state for a King to be forced to hate where he loueth and to loue where he would hate to bee able to doe what he would not and to desire to doe that he cannot to be briefe to be a slaue to the enuies strifes and diuersities of his subiects It is too much euen the greatest Aristarchians cannot like of it Whervpon I would fayne aske these reformers what made them so rich and mightie as now to vndertake to raise warre against their King but euen the excessiue benefites of his Predecessors him selfe What place doth or may the stateliest of them hold in France but of meane Gentlemen and such as it hath pleased the King to loue Were they not our Kings that haue aduanced them and mainteined them in their wealth wherefore then doe they so much enuie the good hap of those who haue no other beginning or aduauncement then such as vrged themselues on Why doe they so much mislike that the King should loue the Lorde Duke of Espernon or any other like as his predecessors fauoured their aūcesters Know they not that all things haue their time their beginning progresse encrease and end what further fauour doe they hope for at the successor whom they would cause the King to nominate by prouision sith in the meane tyme they suborne his subiects yea so farr to turne them from receiuing any Garnison on his behalfe and spread a brute among the people that there yet remaine some of the race of the aunciēt Gods worthy to rule ouer them To bee briefe they take the course too truely to fulfill the prophesie of the late King Frances our Kings Grandfather whom many honorable persons did many times heare saye that if they vsed the seruice of those who now set not a strawe by them they would doe their endeuours to strip his Children into their dublets and his people into their sherts and vnhappely these Mastiues haue so well learned to barke that now they seeke to byte their Lord. Call to minde ye Frenchmen a true saying of Sainct Austen importing that it is vnpossible for that Counsaile to bee blamelesse whose meanes ende and effects are vile vicious and reprehensible Neither is it Religion or pietie that stirreth them vp but a South winde and Spanish heate wherwith they be driuen that kindleth them For in troth it is of more importance for the King of Wisigotes wholy to subdue the King of Nauarre and to destroye him whatsoeuer it cost thē to lose all his low Countries which by that onely meanes hee might perpetually assure together with not onely the rest of whatsoeuer hee wrongfully nowe deteyneth of the Realme of Nauarre which seemeth to be already prescript but also generally of the whole Spaynes and most of his other Lordships whereof he might stand in great feare if GOD should permit him to haue so strong and mightie an enemie as the King of France Let not therefore the most Christiā Maiestie and the King of Nauarre flatter themselues but bee assured that the Piedmontain and the Pope with their partakers are determined to doe y t Spaniard that good turne and to employe whatsoeuer their habilities to assure him on that side Considering that withall the purse of the Romish Court which findeth great ease in the Frēch Crownes of the summe which often do passe the Mounts by reason of the Annates renewed in this Tridentine conspiracie might in tyme stray by the way as by the auncient Edictes of our Kinges and arrestes of our Courtes of Parliament they haue hetherto done haue interest therein For this cause none neede to maruaile that the Pope will not willingly forgoe so lickerous a morsell and the best dish on his table Besides it is most certaine that the subiects of Fraunce and others that are boūd to the Crowne and Maiestie of our King who haue risen and doe dayly rise are but the instruments and gates whereby to make way for the loades of golde which the Spanyard sendeth to doe his businesse in this Realme by the same meanes giuing them occasion to take holde of and vse the tyme to doe also
prouoked vnder pretence of the sayd interdiction did him some displeasure Howbeit so soone as hee seemed willing to mend his maners toward the English natiō they fell at his feete and expulsed Lewes of Fraunce whom they had subrogated in his place so soone as the sayd Iohn was dead admitted his sonne Henry King Henry the eight of the same Ile was very faithfully obeyed by his subiects after that Pope Paule the third had excommunicated interdicted aggrauated and reaggrauated the curse against him wherby some were somewhat shaken frō his obediēce Su●noo King of Denmarke about the yeere of our Lord 850. was iustly excōmunicated by y ● Bishop of Roscholech for becomming an Apostata and procuring to slay sundry of the Princes of his blood in the Church founded in the name of the holy Trinitie in the same Towne of Rhoscholech the entry into which Church this Bishop forbad him together with the communiō of the faithfull but he did not neuerthelesse depriue him of his Crowne neither did his subiects refuse him their faithfull seruice although Canutus and Wademarus two of his chiefest fauorites and priuy Counsailors who sought to share the Realme with Suercherus King of Sueden did thereto suborne them Brigerus King of Sueden who raigned about the yere 1300. was one of the most wicked and cruell Kings that could be especially against the Church and Churchmen but chiefly against Nicholas Archbishop of Vpsale whom together with the rest of his Bishops he committed to prison wherevpon they excommunicated him and Turgillus Canutus his Lieutenant general and author of his behauiours neuerthelesse the people though therby stirred vp against their King and hauing greater opportunitie to rebel and shake of the yoke of his obedience vnder the conduct of Wademarus and Henry his brothers who sought no better occasion to put out their brother would neuer hearken to thē neither hinder or become cruell to their naturall Lord so as the two brothers were forced to employe their other friendes for the executing of their intēts against Brigerus whom when they had taken prisoner they were neuerthelesse compelled to force al the townes neither found they any one that would yeeld to them so greatly did the Subiectes of the Realme accoumpt themselues bound to the seruice of their King whom they knew to be wicked excommunicate and an euill liuer besides a prisoner and captiue in the power of his brethren whom in the ende they forced to set him at libertie to submit themselues to his obedience Of such force is the bond of good people to their King whatsoeuer he be In Poland Boles●aus a Prince of most wicked life a commō adulterer an enemie to the Church and Cleargie after Stanis●aus Bishop of Cracouy had often admonished him to amend was by him at length excommunicated whereat the King being offended did put the sayd Bishop to death for which cause Pope Gregory the seuenth did confirme and aggrauate the sayd excommunication with a generall interdiction against the Realme about the yeere 1079. yet did he still raigne by the consent and with the obedience of the Polonians ouer whom he ruled a whole yere and more vntill in his iourney to Ladislaus King of Hungary hee flewe himselfe peraduenture through the iust iudgement of God The Emperour Sigismund and his faction could neuer winne the Bohemians from the due affection that they ought to his brother Winceslaus their naturall King though vicious wicked filthy for the which offences through the practises of the said Sigismund he was often emprisoned and excommunicated by the Bishops of that coūtrey yea by the Electors deposed from the Empire so as in the ende he dyed in Boheme still taking the place order and qualitie Royall through the goodwill of his Subiects who deemed that the same could not perticulerly conteyne any dispensation to discharge the subiects therof of the oath and faith that to him they ought as also they may not be discharged frō his bondage but onely by death or his owne liberall cession which he would make to an other as did Albert King of Sueden about the yeere 1388. beeing prisoner to Margaret Queene of Denmark and Norway to whom he yeelded whatsoeuer his right to the Crowne of Gothland and Sueden whereby the States of the countrey sware their faith and homage to the sayde Margaret and after they had secretly enquired of their King sundry times solemnly desired him to shew them his mind or els to discharge them of the duetie wherein they stood bound to him although vndoubtedly the Suedens had great cause to seeke his mishap for all Histories doe agree that neuer Prince committed so many outrages and wrought so many iniuries to his subiects as had this Albert. It therefore remaineth that by the lawe of Nations the inuiolable keeping of the obligation that the subiectes doe owe to their naturall Prince and not to depart therefro at the appetite or sentence of others haue euen among the most barbarous people bene euermore obserued so as wee ought in respect of the bonde that wee owe him say of the King and his bloud as of Matrimonie whom God hath ioyned together let no man put a sunder 22 But let vs more perticulerly learne whether the sentence of excommunication were lawfully vppon reasonable cause and exemplary occasion pronounced against a King and done by the iudgements of many Popes of Roome within these fiue hundred yeeres against such Kings and Emperours to whō they haue borne bad minds Although I thinke it not meete to ground any lawe vpon the examples of these men in troth full fraught with ambition more then humaine affection but it is requisite to examine this question by the rules of Gods lawe and politicke reason established for the preseruation of the societie of mankinde Herein therefore I say y t the sentence of excōmunicatiō denoūced against a King how iust soeuer the cause bee and conteyneth dispensation for the oath and duetie that the subiects do owe vnto him this licence and tolleration vnto the people graunted is repugnant to the lawe of God and all mans reason For sith the subiects are by Gods commandement bound to obeye their Princes whatsoeuer without any further enquirie of their consciences and behauiours they cannot by any tradition or permission of man either generall or perticuler be dispensed with because no man can enterprize vpon Gods ordenances and euery dispensation so graunted is voyde as beeing repugnant to the deuine prouidence As Pope Leo and Vrban haue very wisely confessed Especially sith this dispensation cannot bee put in execution without great sclaunder and shedding of bloud by reason of such warres and quarels as will be raysed through the rebellion of the Subiects against their Prince their Kings resistance not onely in respect of his conscience but also for his Estate and the defence of his Crowne In such necessities therefore Pope Gelasius teacheth vs that we are especially
their owne and if they may to seaze vpon this Crowne which they haue leueled at euer since the decease of the late Henry the second without employing themselues in any other affaires then seeking the meanes to atteyne thereto yea euen partly they giue out that it were better to conquer the Realme of France then to goe to Hierusalem to seeke for the succession of Godfrey of Buillon I doe therefore most humbly beseech the Queene the Kings mother whom our Espaniolized Frenchmen doe call vpon for their succour to be ware of being deceiued in the faire pretences of these conspirators but to assure her selfe that notwithstanding whatsoeuer their flattering sweete tongue they will neuer bee satisfied but with the life and Scepter of her sonne her selfe Moreouer I beseech God to graunt the King the wisedome of Salomō whē his mother Bethsabe came to desire him to like of the mariage of Adonias with Abisag the Sunamite who had bene King Dauids Concubine in his latter daies vnder the pretence whereof he had vndertaken with the helpe of Abiathar the Priest Ioab and Semei to haue depriued the King of life and kingdome which this fountaine of wisedome speedely perceiuing after he had heard the petition of the Queene his mother in liew of graunting it and considering how this traytor vnder a false proposition had abused her commaunded to put him to death together with Ioab and Semei and depriued Abiathar of his Priestly office and function 28 Know we not the occasions of Dauid the Aduocates one of the wickedest men that euer liued iourney to the Pope and Court of Rome whose instructions these good Schollers doe from point to point ensue and those men that haue sene the same can tell whether their beginning and the course that still they take be not at large therein conteyned Who is he that perceiueth not the importāce of the disputation holden at Sorbonne about three or foure yere since by a poore bachel●r drawē in who had dedicated his Theses to the Abbot of Cluny the late Card. of Lorrains Bastard Wherein hee did what in hym laye to prooue that it was lawfull for the people to depose driue out kill and murder tyrannous wicked euill liuing and Hereticall Kinges whereat the King beeing moued as at a most daungerous and detestable proposition this poore instrument of Satan was at the barre of the sayde Colledge of Sorbonne slaine by one who of late dayes haue withdrawen hym selfe loaden with Spanish Pistolets and Iewels and then cloked this goodly deede least the author of this so vnchristian learning and knowledge should by his mouth haue bene disclosed Might not we haue noted what seruants were procured to be placed abont Monsier the Kings brother and to what end amōg whom the forwardest had bene trayned vp in the Schole of these perturbers of our peace as being their creature witnesse that nowe he is with them and then vsed all his endeuour to plonge that yong Prince in all voluptuousnesse lechery and heate of youth yea hee did better his businesse for hee betrayed him to the King of Spaine sould the Spaniard to the States and the Huguenotes to all others Whereby hee made money of all with the price of the honor reputation and life of his Maiestie or rather of all France The like did also three or foure other bad parsons who all had bene brought vp and were giuen to his highnesse by one selfe hand to the ende to habandon hym for a praye to the first mischaunce that might happen among a greate number that night and day they deuised for the atteining to their entents yea they went so farre as to set him at debate with the King his brother and by meanes of some of theirs that were neere to either of them to cause nature and bloud to liue in mistrust of it selfe so to procure the ruine and losse of one or the other or of both togither and with them of this miserable Realme During which their sleightes they did neuerthelesse perticulerly thinck vpon the king whom when they found to be merueylous zealous in Catholike religion they began to practise some Spanish workemen to drawe vnto him and vnder the vaile of Religion to bewitch him and so wholy endeuoured themselues if they could to haue cast him headlong into some mishap as great as the same wherein they ꝓlonged poore King Sebastian of Portugall who by such meanes serued for a warme breakefast to the Spanish King and got hym a faire corner of lande through the subtelties of the Spanish Iesuites concurring with the Portingal Iesuites or peraduenture both cōspired against the estate of that poore yong King so to cause hym desperatly to venture hym selfe whether he dyed with him the Scepter of Portugall which vndoubtedly God had long vsed to the great benefite blesse of all Christiandome These were the driftes of the good seruants of our Kings who thanked bee God was more circumspect and wary to put from about him such wicked spirites Certainly it is most necessary and expedient for a King to be Christian deuout zealous of Catholicke faith and to feare God but withall it is most daungerous for his person and Estate if hee become supersticious and an hypocrite First he thereby loseth all iudgement to discerne the enuious friends or enemies to his Scepter then he forgetteth the principall cause for the which he is a King which is the care and gouernement of his people for the exercize whereof onely he is bound chosen and bound to serue God in that ministerie lastly in the world that we liue in amōg the most corrupt soules that euer were the whole worlde doth mistrust and wonderfully suspect him whom they see make so great a shewe whether for enuy that euery one beareth to his more then common zeale either els for that in trueth it often falleth out that things of greatest apparance conteyne least trueth Now then these malicious persons haue but one onely subtile entent left which also it is meete for the people to knowe For yet they goe reasonably gently about their matters and doe giue out that they require onely abolition of the Edicts of pacification and to procure the exercize of one onely Religion in France to the ende vnder that pretence to embarke the King and almost to force him as aforetyme fearing least the ouer long peace of this Realme should close vp the passed vlcers they had done to breake off that amitie and good wil which it pleased him to shewe to the King of Nauarre and those of the pretended reformed Religion so that by such meanes they will cause him with the sworde that he should holde in one of his hands to cut off the other wherof must ensue the losse and sworne death of the sayde Lorde King of Nauarre against whose person perticulerly as beeing their principall mark they are determined to arme themselues After whose end also if the King of whom they shall then
stand no longer in neede will not in the meane tyme dye either through melancholy or choller so speedely quit them his roume they knowe in their Italian League Articifers enough to sende him into Abrahams bosome whereby they shall for so many good and commendable seruices done to our France bee thought more worthy to be crowned then now notwithstanding at this present they cause ouer loude to bee song their pretended merites by all the Spanish pentioners and feede Spyes in the Court at whose mouthes they set out their woundes receiued in the wasting of this Crowne after the maner of the auncient Romaines who exhibited themselues naked to the people in beggiug the Suffrages of dignities and offices Thus when through their wisedome they shal haue killed the King and the King of Nauarre who are y ● two thornes that trouble their feete for the one they will procure the singing of a Deprofundis and for the other Te Deum laudamus whereby together with an absolution sealed in leade in the Cource of Roome they shall bee whiter then Swannes For of the rest of the Princes of the bloud they make no accoumpt neither doe thincke them subiect sufficient to put thē in any chafe about the rooting of them out so greate is the furie of Sathan in these daies This is the whole story which those that loue them are forced to confesse Neuerthelesse it seemeth that we sleepe our our mishap or ratherthat we make hast to this fire euen with our backe burdens of woode to kindle it in stead of water to quench it withall 29 Hereafter I pray you what dignitie or Maiestie may restraine from vice those that are so cruell to their King as to take armes against his person against the peace of his estate whose subiects they are and against the establishment of his Realme Neither Equitie Iustice Custome Lawes respect of land loue of their fellowe Citizens or reuerence to the Magistrate can permit those men that contemne the soueraign authoritie of the Maiestie royall and such as without respect to Iustice or publick honestie doe shew them selues more cruell and barbarous in procuring vnder pretence of reformation and zeale to Catholicke Religion the engendring in France of an immortall warre the mother of all impietie wrong reuenge ruine deformation and vtter subuertion of most mightie Kingdomes and florishing Empires to blush for shame What eminencie is the Church to looke for among the execrable blasphemies and infinite sacriledges that will be committed in the warres What power what authoritie what light may wee attend of Iustice when she is snared mastered become prisoner and ouerruled by the weapons of the most vicious and corrupt persons of this Realme What honour what degree what respect may the Nobilitie hope for beeing in perpetuall hazarde to loose life children wealth peace and free cōmandement ouer their vassals and subiects What ease what profite or what encrease may the ouertoyled laborer the venterous Marchant the quiet Burgesse or any other whosoeuer in this poore Realm buyld vpon Euery one must prouide for famine pestilence fire bloud and spoyle to be briefe for all the scourges that spring of the disorder barbarousnesse ambition and insatiable desire of those who if they maye finde assistance among the French will neuer lay downe weapons but either by an establishment of a perfect tyrannie proceeding out of their affections more grieuous and inspportable to those that shall remaine then warre it selfe or els by the selfe ruine and vtter extirpation of their wretched followers together with most of the good men that shal haue withstoode them Let vs not O Frenchmen perswade our selues that this mischiefe will be a matter of three or fower moneths onely For if it be Religion for the which they seme to bring you into the fielde your selues doe knowe that our Kinges haue not spared life state meanes or friendes for the remedying thereof within these fiue and twentie yeeres which notwithstanding what effect haue so many murders such plentie of battailes and such store of bloud spilt wrought Weene you that these who so long haue found meanes to defend themselues cannot withstand you but must so easely yeeld vnto you See you not the straunger that looke vppon you and doe prepare to hasten our destruction if we bee so foolish as to beate our selues The authors of this cōspiracie being now alone are no strōger then when they fought so sharply vnder the authoritie of King Charles the 9. and the King now raigning and were vpholden by the same meanes that now they assure them selues of out of Spayne Italy and other places You know they were chiefe of their Maiesties Counsaile Leaders of their Armyes or rather authors of all passed mischiefes enterteyning the King in that will and opinion wherein he then was namely that weapons were y e instruments to appease Gods wrath and to reunite vs in one onely Religion vntill his Maiestie vpon better aduice confessed the fruites and effects of the contrary and by the exāples of his neighbours did very wisely cōsider that the disease of Religion is so rooted in mans mynd that he were farre better to tollerate it sith we all agree in one belief and Creede of the Apostles then to hazarde his whole Estate by weening to heale vp a wounde which God willing maye by daylie conuersation bee suppled for vndoubtedly some diseases are of such a nature that it is more expedient for the Patient to beare the griefe thereof then for his cure to vse ouer daungerous and doubtfull remedies whose tryall is more sharpe and intollerable thē the disease it selfe With which counsaile truely royall fatherly and worthy a Christian and peaceable Prince these zelators of their own wealth rather then of Christianitie being offended doe now euidently shewe their bad mindes and do buyld their pretēces vpon the diuersitie of Religions vpon the oppressions of the people vpon the deformations of Iustice and vpon the distribution of Dignities notwithstanding all men knowe that in respect of the last they are better prouided and haue greater cause to praise the parting then to complaine of that honor that the King hath done them As for the rest themselues are the onely cause of all mischiefe engendred by ciuill warres which euer since the resolution vpon their forecast thei haue nourished in this Estate because it is certaine that peace is the mother of pietie establishment of Iustice and the true spring of mans ease Neither can we denie the good holy and commendable affection wherwith our most Christian and peaceable Prince set hand to the worke so long as it pleased God to let vs enioy peace whether in the example that he set vs in his Religion desire that hee shewed in reformation of Iustice or in the ease that so much as he might he procured to his good subiects What is there more to doe then fellowe countrymen but againe to sheath vp our weapons and deuoutly to pray to God to
to bee borne ouer vs Will wee graunt that to force that belongeth to reason In my opinion we deceiue our selues if we weene by weapons to wrest any thing from Mars especially in whatsoeuer concerneth Religion which among honest and the best men goeth nearer and is of greater efficacie then all other humaine actions So as to the contrary I doe stedfastly beleeue that wee haue the more cause to hope well of the gouernment of the said Lord King of Nauarre if it should happen For sith his enemies are forced to cōfesse that of himself he is a Prince wise well taught discreete and reasonable also that our selues see him assured and by weapons in expugnable in that which from his infancie hee hath bene perswaded to bee good for him in respect of y t feare that he hath of God how great a peece of the work soeuer offereth it self to his view or whatsoeuer humaine hazard there be any apparance that he should feare in the conseruation of a mightie earthly Kingdome whereof as yet he is presumptiue heire it is an inuincible argument for vs to knowe that hee loueth and feareth God aboue all things Let vs therefore giue him a taste of our reasons sith he is so very capable to the ende we may at his hand winne that we desire and which wee ought and may spedely hope for without perticulerly hating his person without offending him without prouoking him and without encurring the wrath of God by procuring the shedding of the innocent bloud of so many thousands of our brethren and together with them the destroying of our poore Countrey As yet in troth it is too great an abuse to terme the said Lord King of Nauarre a Rebell or Traytor to the Kings Maiestie for keeping himselfe from being slayne and for opposing to his enemies the walles of those who being shadowed in their owne houses did onely withall instance and most humble petition require the King to permit them to liue in peace of conscience vnder his obedience against the which they did n●uer striue neither would euer had recourse vnto or craued the said Lord King of Nauarres protection whome they know neuer to haue so much loued any thing as to liue his Maiesties most humble most obedient subiect whereof wee all in our consciences are eye witnesses neither neede we any greater proofe for the iustification of him who neither doth neither euer did desire of the King his Lorde any other thing then to liue in his good fauour and to bee of him accoumpted a most humble and most obedient subiect and kinsman 3 For this cause in this action let al good Frenchmen cōsider that the sayd Lord King of Nauarre is as they the Kinges good subiect a Christian one that feareth God and a louer of his Countrey so as for his sake wee neede not take armes or beate our braynes as doe some that be perswaded by the wicked counsaile of these firebrandes he is the sonne of the famely he is not a Spaniard that commeth to your walles and to y e doores of your houses he is a true Frenchman one that desireth peace and one that would obey the King his Lord in whatsoeuer lyeth in him he is a louer of the lawes of the Realme a sworne enemy to the sedicious an oppressor of the wicked and a defender of the Commonwealth Besides he hath aboue all other the French nation the honor to bee the first Prince of the bloud royal heire apparant to the Crowne in case God should cal our King without leauing any issue male of his body Let euery one therefore consider that al his enemies obiections are but meere cauillations Let the French nation iudge whether they haue not more cause or are not greatlier bound to loue and acknowledge the King of Nauarre then and other next to the Maiestrie of our soueraigne Lord the King seeing we haue chosen for our tutors gouernours and lawfull administrators the most noble and couragious famelie of the Capets to bee our Kinges of Fraunce from whence is discended in right masculine ligne on the fathers side the sayde Lord King of Nauarre as is aforesayde also that euery other way he hath thence taken his originall for his Grandmother on the fathers side was Lady Frances of Alencon daughter to Rene Duke of Alencon and sister to Charles last deceased all discended in right ligne of y e males of Charles of Valois who first tooke the name and title of Alen●ō and was brother to Philip of Valois King of France both sonnes to Charles of Valois brother to King Philip the Faire which two were sonnes to Philip y e Bould eldest sonne to S. Lewes and his successor in the Realm Againe the sayd King of Nauarres Grandmother by the mother was Lady Margaret of Fraunce sister to King Frances the first As for the Kings of Nauarre whom by his mother Iane of Albret daughter and heire to Henry of Albret King of Nauarre whom he hath succeeded they also are discended from father to the sonne of the house of France by the interposition of daughters capable of succession in the Realme of Nauarre for Henry Earle of Champagne and Brye by his mother Blanch King of N●uarr● maried a daughter of Robert Earle of Arthois sonne to King Lewes the 8. of Franc● and brother to S. Lewes of which marriage was borne Iane heire of 〈◊〉 and wife of Phillip the Faire King of France of them two came Lewes Hutin successor in the Realmes of France and Nauarre when he dyed he left a daughter Iane who after her Vnkles Phil. the Long Charles y t Faire was Queene of Nauarre she maried Phil. of Eureux sonne to Lewes of Eureux Sonne to Phillip the bould King of France and brother to Phillip the fayre Of their mariage issued among other children Charles King of Nauarre who maried the daughter of King Iohn of Frāce and of them was borne a Sonne of the same name for whose sake King Charles the sixt erected the lande of Nemours into a Dutchy At his decease hee left two Daughters of which Blanch the elder succeeded in the sayd Realme and of her and Iohn of Castile her houseband issued Eleoner wife to Gaston of Foix who seazed vpon the Succession of the realme of Nauarre and other great goods Of that mariage came Gaston of Foix that maried Magdalein of France sister to King Lewes the eleuenth who had Frances Phebus king of Nauarre after his grandmother Eleoner and Catherin who succeeded her brother Phebus shee maried with Iohn of Albret father to Henry of Albret and grandfather to Queene Iane late deceased at Paris mother to the said King of Nauarre now raigning So as it adpeareth that he is on euery side true french and issued of the bloud royall of Fraunce Let vs not therefore any longer giue eare to these sclauuders but only haue recourse to God by hartie praier that if the sayd Lorde King of Nauarre or
Vnckle after the decease of Earle Robert because he was sonne to the elder who dyed afore his father True it is that for entering vpon the sayd Countie and taking vpon him the title of Earle before he had taken his oath done homadge to his Maiestie he was arrested at Paris and imprisoned in the Castle of Louure from whence he was soone after deliuered againe An other solemne arrest passed in the tyme of Phil. of Valois about the yeere 1328. for the Dutchie of Brittain by reason of the decease of Duke Iohn who dyed without issue leauing behind him his third brother Ih. Earle of Montfort and the daughter of his second brother Guy Vicountie of Limoges then wife to Charles Earle of Blois vnto whom by sentence of the Court the sayd Dutchie in the yerre 1341. was adiudged because Charles of Blois shewed y ● by the custumes of Brittaine the succession belonged to the eldest thē to the second and lastly to the third thereupon inferring that his wife daughter to the second did represent the same person But where the house of Montfort did afterward enioye the same Dutchie that came by vertue of a certaine agreement afterwarde made at the entrie of Charles the fifth in the yeere 1364. An other sentence passed in the tyme of Frances the 1. in the yeere 1517. for the Countie of Foix and other the landes belonging to the same famely betweene Odet of Foix Lord of Lautrect and Villemur and Henry of Albret King of Nauarre Grandfather to the King of Nauarre now raigning for Gaston of Foix and Eleanor of Nauarre had two sonnes Gaston the eldest and Iohn Vicountie of Narbonne the yonger Gaston dyed before both father and mother leauing suruiuours by his wife Lady Magdalem of Fraunce daughter to Charles the seauenth two children Philip Phebus and Ratherine whereupon their Vnckle Iohn Vicountie of Narbonne hauing maried the sister of King Lewes the 12. made suite against the sayde Phebus his neuewe pretending eldership by the decease of his brother Gaston The cause pleaded in the Court of Parliament was by the Counsaile compounded in the yere 1488 but soone after began againe by Gaston of Foix Duke of Nemours sonne to the sayde Iohn being in great fauour with his Vnkle King Lewes the 12. but because hee dyed at the battaile of Rauenna without issue it seemed this processe might haue ended but it fell out otherwise for Odet of Foix his Cossen and pretended heire tooke the same cause in hand against Katherin sister to the sayd Phebus deceased and proceeded so farre that by arrest of the Court in the yeere 1517. he was put by the sayd Coūtie together with other the Lordships of the same famelic adiudged vnto Henry of Albret sonne to the sayde Katherine and his posteritie of whom as is aforesayd is discended the now Lorde King of Nauarre In England after the decease of Edward the third in the yeere 1378. Richard sonne to Edw. Prince of Wales was without contradiction crowned and preferred before his Vnckles the Dukes of Lancaster of Clarence of Glocester and Yorke but aboue twentie yeeres after for his euill behauiour and misgouernment he was deposed and his Cossen Henry sonne to Iohn Duke of Lancaster set vp in his place In Portugall King Alphons the fifth had two children Fernand and Henry who beeing the elder deceased before his father leauing a sonne named Iohn after the decease of the said Alphons the said Iohn commonly called Iohn the second whō the common Histories doe falsly terme sonne to the sayd Alphons did peaceable enioye the Crowne from the yeere 1482. vnto the yeere 1495. when he dyed without issue and then his Cossen Emanuell sonne to Ferdinand succeeded him The sayd Emanuell hauing raigned 22. yeres among other children left his sonne Iohn the third who was crowned after him and Henry the Cardinal Iohn the 3. during his raigne had a sonne of the same name who dyed before his father leauing his wife with childe of Sebastien who after his Grandfather Iohn the 3. was preferred before his great Vnckle Henry brother to the sayd Iohn the 3. notwithstanding the sayde Sebastiens father was neuer King and that the said Henry might haue obiected the same but he raigned not vntill the sayd Sebastien dyed and left no issue which question sayth Tiraquell doth so resemble ours as one Bee may an other In Castile King Alphons the 10. had two sonnes the elder Ferdinand who maried Blanch daughter to S. Lewes and of her begat Ferdinand and Alphons The younger called Sanxi who seeing his elder brother dead and waying his neuewes right to the Realme could not tary the decease of his father the sayde Alphons but during his life time raised warres to the ende to procure himselfe to bee declared heire whereat this good olde man was so wrath that he accursed him Besides that the French King Phillip the third Vnckle by the mother to the sayde yong Princes after he had therevpon asked aduise of the wise men of his Realme led an armie vnto the frontiers of Spayne and had gone forward had not the Popes Legat lingered him with wordes together with the assurance which the sayde Alphons made him viz. that he would vpholde the right and cause of his sayd neuewes which neuerthelesse he soone after he forgat and sent out his Letter sealed with gold and his owne Image therein grauen to his subiects repugnant to the former and by meanes of the same by forc●establish●d Sanxi his seconde sonne so as the orphelins were not ouercome but with the swor● without any shewe of reason as the historie doe import In Sicill the like quarell being moued betweene the sonne and the neuewe of Agathocles in the extremitie of his sicknesse the neuewe by the will and iudgement of God ouerthrew his sayd Vnkle and remayning victor was King ouer the whole Land In Germany vpon the like controuersie vnder Henry the 3. after vnder Ottho the Great the histories doe report that the States of the Empire met and agreed that this debate should as the custome of that time required be ended by a cōbat wherein the defendants of the cause of y ● neuew sonne to his brother y t would haue had his fathers roume were conquerors and thereupon the sayd Estates did so conclude and adiudge it More solemne also is the sentence which Licurgus the true Oracle of humaine wisedome gaue in his owne cause about the 17. Olimpiade in the time of Numa King of the Romaines for wee reade that his father Enomus King of the Lacedemonians had two sonnes Polidectes and Licurgus the first dyed before his father leauing his wife with childe Enomus dead Licurgus tooke the royall Diadem and kept it a fewe moneths vntill at a banquet among his friendes his neuewe the after borne was offered vnto him whome hee named Charilaus withall set the Crowne vpon his head To
A CATHOLICKE APOLOGIE AGAINST THE LIBELS DECLARATIONS ADVICES AND CONSVLTATIONS MADE WRITTEN and published by those of the League perturbers of the quiet Estate of the Realme of France Who are risen since the decease of the late Monsier the Kings onely brother By E. D. L. I. C. Answere a foole according to his folly least he should thincke him selfe wise Prouerb 26. ❧ Imprinted at London for Edward Aggas THE PREFACE to the Reader O Christian and Catholick Frenchman neuer was there offered better meanes then at this time to discouer and smel out the subtelties of our enemies with what money Sathan vsually paieth his seruants whē we see some of thē so blinded that beeing vppon the poynt of their destruction they promise to themselues all assuraunce still coueting to conceale their abhominable wickednesse with sleights shiftes and lyes Neuerthelesse when they do most hide themselues they are foonest spied For to say the trueth what goodlier or more apparant pretēce could the perturbers of the quiet of our Fraunce take holde of then Religion and the reliefe of the people but as the enemie of trueth hath allured thē vnto him by lyes so hath hee for their repaste left them no other foode vpon his Table and yet doth that also faile them when they make it an vsuall messe and trueth remaineth Mistresse According hereto the lyes and horrible slaūders that to this day haue bene spued foorth against the King of Nauarre the Lord Prince of Condie by certaine straungers enemies to this Crowne the Royall Progenie vnder the pretence of zeale of Religion doth ouerthrowe them because cōtinually they haue sought to perswade our souraigne Lord the King and all the French Nation that these Princes were his euill seruaunts Rebels and disobedient persons enemies to his Estate in the preseruation and encrease whereof they haue greater interest then any other worldly person next vnto his Maiestie vnto whom they haue the honor very nerely to appertaine As also in truth we are hartely to giue GOD thankes especially in that after so many false and slaunderous inductions made vnto the most Christian Maiestie against these two Princes his good kinsmen and most faithfull subiects and seruants by whose reliefe this feeble weake and pale Realme hath oftentimes escaped falling it hath pleased him to open the Kings eyes to let him perceiue that all the illusions vnto him presented tended only to the ouerthrow of himself his Crowne and Estate in offering hetherto to his viewe one thing in liewe of an other For herevpon his Maiestie smelling out the causes of passed mischiefe hath finally in earnest done as the good Phisitiō who whē he seeth his Patient pale weake faint and grieuously sicke beginneth his cure with bringing him to his bed discharging him frō all painfull toyle causing him to take some rest euen so our King casting his eyes vpō his poore realm afflicted with ciuill warres which so long haue bene kindled vnder a false and slaunderous pretence to the end to begin the cure hath first sought to set it in peace that after some time of rest he might haue better opportunitie to heale the rest of the causes of the disease to put from about him those who vnder his authoritie had by their false wicked perswasiōs so hardly entreated it Which when his euill Councellors perceiued seeing that they could no longer goe forward in the same path they haue sought with open play to compasse that which so lōg they had craftely practised now haue plainly shewed that it was the State Crowne that they leueled at procuring the writing of diuers Libels aduices and consultations of their suffragās to the end not only to diminish and blemish the King of Nauarres vndoubted lawfull succession if it should please God to worke his will of the Kings Maiestie without leauing any issue Male but also to aduaūce their own false slaunderous and supposed titles and pretēces Howbeit although the said Lord King of Nauarre neede not yet to pleade his cause or presently to aunswere all these sleights and counsailes of the wicked in respect of the sufficient terme small likelihood of occasion euer to put the same in executiō cōsidering the King is thāks be to God yong in health in good disposition together with the small interest that in my opinion the sayd Lord King of Nauarre pretendeth to any such successiō as being a Prince both wise circumspect such a one as hath not so smal forecast but that he knoweth vndoubtedly that the greatest wealth reliefe good hap contentation that may redound to him cōsisteth in the prosperitie health long and happie life of the King his Lord to the ende perpetually to be vnder him the same that he is to liue vnder his liking in his protection wherby vnder the fauour wherof he shalbe not only preserued from the cōspiraties which his enemies worke against him but also which is more if it please God to encrease him he shal alwaies be by the King fauoured aduanced vnto whō he hath the honor to be the first Prince of his bloud Neuerthelesse how euer it be I do not thinke that any man at this day cā with reason and iudgement conceiue any bad or sinister opinion of the sayde Lorde King of Nauarre though he lay open his iust causes sith those that haue no right and for whō there can be no likelihood at all are so impudent rash vndiscreete as to bring to the barre a matter wherevpon euen their most affectionate seruāts durst not before haue thought which to saye the trueth is one of the cōsideratiōs that moued me to set hand to the pen to the aunswering of such diffamatorie Lybelles discourses aduices cōsultatiōs as within this yeere haue come to my hands and I protest that I haue done it without either cōmaundemēt or commission of the sayd Lord King of Nauarre vnto whom I neuer had the honor to approach neither is it of any affectiō or desire to aduaunce the Religiō that he professeth sith my self am and all my life time haue bene a Catholick and liued vnder the authoritie of the Apostolicke Romish Church But the onely cause hath bene that being borne a Frenchman I haue thought it my duetie to vphold the rightful cause of the French Princes vnto whome after his soueraigne Maiestie for whose seruice we are naturally bounde and holden to procure all honor wealth prosperitie to maintain and defend them from slaūders and such deceipts as Sathan would stirre vp against their excellēcie greatnesse besides that euery mā may perceiue that these Tragedies are kindled to the vtter ruine losse fubuertion of this miserable Realm so as the loue of my Countrey Christian piety and that compassiō that I take in beholding my fellow Citizens and my self with them in daunger to consume our selues in that fire that by those ciuill warres which vnder this
cursed and detestable pretence are like to bee kindled will seaze vpon al degrees haue beene to mee as a spurre to hasten my penne to aunswere these damnable writings fearing least the people should suffer themselues to be won thereby so might withstād y ● truth equitie if euer occasiō to debate thereof were ministred or that these pretēders should propoūd or bring this cōtrouersie in questiō I doe therefore most humbly desire the French Catholike Reader laying a way al passions to cal to mind first the bond commaundement wherein by God he is bound to the King and the Princes of his bloud according to the order and natural succession by the Lawes of this Crowne Secondly the loue of his Countrey considering wee all are men all Christians all Frenchmen and al louers of our selues that if we should stoope vnder the yoke of these tyrāts that would bring vs into subiection and abuze vs with lyes falshoodes and forged titles they would afterward beare vs the like minde and their faith as tainted corrupt as by corruption fa●●ehood and vntrueth they had abused our simplicitie and suborned withdrawne vs from the obedience of our true and natural Lords For in asmuch as they are deriders riders and contemners of God in whose name they haue dared to begin and endeuoured that the most abhominable fellony that euer was might be made manifest to all it can not be that wee should looke for any other thing of thē but that hope that they haue conceiued to entreate and handle vs after the Turkish manner with a more detestable daungerous inquisitiō then that which now raigneth vnder the Spanish tyrannie Let therefore euery person diligently aud faithfully employ himselfe to serue our King and the Princes of his bloud whose cause we ought euē with the price and venture of our liues to vphold to the end the state of this Realme being assured at the least our childrē may liue peaceably vnder the obediēce of their naturall Lords who by that meanes shall haue the greater occasion to cherrish and entreate them well as they haue done vs remembring that with the grace of God by our fidelitie loyaltie they haue bene preserued in that greatnesse and dignitie wherein the diuine goodnes hath suffered them to bee borne in this Realme to the glorie of the King of Kings to whom only it be and remaine euerlastingly So be it FINIS The names of the chiefe Authors cyted in this Apologie ABbot of Vspergue Ado of Vienne Aegn Agathius Aimoinus Alexāder the Martir S. Ambrose Anges Antonius Appian Aristotle Auentinus Augustin de Ancona S. Augustin Baldus Bale Benno Blondus Capitolinu Cassiodore Charles Molins Chron. of Chronikles Chrisostome Collenutius Counsailes Cromer Decrees Decretals Demosthenes Dyon Dionis of Hali●ar Doctors ciuil and Canonistes Edmond Boulay Euripides Eusebius Floart Fulgentius Gaguin Garib Geof of Viterb Geof Ardoyn Goth. Iornandes Gratian. Grego of Tours S. Gregory Guichardine Guil. Occham Guil. de Monte. Heman Herodote S. Hierome Hillary Hostiensis Iames de Terano Iohn Andrew Ignatius Illustrations of Gaule Innocent 3. Pope Io. Magnus Iohn of Terrano Irineus Isidore Iustin. Iuuenall Lawyers Ciuill and Cannon Maister of Sentences Marianus Siculus Martinus Polonus Massaeus Matthieu Zampin Molinaeus Munster Nicephor●● Nice●● Vignier Nicol. Aegidius Nicol. de Vbald Oldrad Onuphrius Optatus Milcuitanus Osorius Otho of Erisingen Paulus Diaconus Paul Emile Pausanias Platine Plin. Jun. Plutarque Polid. Virg. Procope Regino Renatus Chopinus Richard of Wassenbourg Robert Cenalis Rozieres Salicke law Sanctiones Pontif. Iuris Orient Sansouin Sigisbert Socrates Sosomenes Strabo Suetonius Tacite Tertullian Tiraquell Tite Liue. Tritemius Turpin Valere the great Vgo Gemblac Vigneus Vincent Historial Witichi●dus Xiphilinus ❧ THE CONTENTS OF THE first part of this Booke 1. The causes of the troubles of this Realme 2. The Genealogie of the Lords of Lorrain by Edmond Boulay 3. The true discent of the house of Lorrain from the Counties of Louayn 4. The Salick Lawe taketh not place in the Duchy of Lorrain 5. An Inhibition not to dispute of succession during the kings life decreed by the Counsails 6. The Realme of France is successiue not hereditary 7. The nerest male in blood by agnatiō succedeth in whatsoeuer degree 8. Realmes successiue are more perfect then electiue 9. Sainct Lewes the common stocke of the house of Fraunce Bourbon 10. Robert S. Lewes yonger Sonne His mariage with the heyr of Bourbon The cause of the name of Bourbon in that family the erection thereof into a Dutchy The Countie Dauphin of Auuergne in the house of Bourbon 11. The Alliance of the house of Sauoy Bourbon 12. The cause of discōtentmēt of Charles of Bourbon Baronage of Mercure issued out of the house of Bourbon The erectiō of the Dutchy of Montpensier 13. The Coūties of Vendosme Castres The principalitie of Conde others in the house of Bourbon 14. The first Alliance of the houses of Bourbon and Nauarre Iames of Bourbon King of Naples The erection of the Dutchy of Nemours 15 The alliance of the house of Boulogne and Bourbon 16 The erection of the Dutchy and Pairry of Vendosme Antoinet of Bourbon wife to the L. of Guise A Catholicke Apologie against the Libels Declarations Aduices and Consulatations made writen and published by those of the League perturbers of the quiet estate of the Realme of France who are risen since the decease of the late Monsier the Kings onely brother By E. D. L. I. C. 1 IF wisely we do consider the ambitiō of some that are borne nourished and brought vp in the greatest honors wealth and fauours of this Realme we shall as it were with our fingers touch and euidētly perceiue that they resemble y e same which the auncients doe write concerning Vipers who doe eate out the entrailes of her that giueth them life and doe malitiously endeuour by such ciuill wars as they haue kindeled in this Estate within these 25. yeres to become as occasion may serue masters aud vsurpers thereof by such sleights wresting the true French from that bond and duetifull good will that they ought to beare to their naturall Princes For it is most certain and vnfallible that as the course of the Water mainteineth the Riuer so the continuance of ciuill warres yeeldeth the bad mindes of the people immortall yet are wee neuerthelesse so blinded vndiscreet and vnconstant as neuer to haue had iudgement to knowe our disease since the time we were first afflicted with the condition of such as can not bee satisfied with the Dominion of the whole world and who voluntarily doe hazard whatsoeuer their owne assured as welth quiet and life to make themselues Lords of that which they can conceaue no hope of without merueilous effusion of blood and vtter ruine of their Countrey Whereunto vndoubtedly it seemeth that time through the diuersitie of religion among vs hath inuited them as also in that they see a number of our
not long before we doe not finde in any Historie that the Kings of France were euer annointed or consecrated but onely simply crowned as Gregorie of Tours maketh mention in his historie whereby it appeareth that none of our Kings of the first famely did euer obserue this ceremonie The first then that vsed it was Pepin father to Charlemaigne whome Boniface Archbishoppe of Mentz did consecrate annoint and crowne by the commaundement of Pope Zachary of Rome that in my opinion because he was the first of his race who of a priuate and perticuler person was established King against the Merouingiens After his decease Pope Stephen the second did the like to Charles sonne to the sayd Pepin when he was King of France whom also Pope Adrian againe consecrated annoynted and crowned when he was declared King of the Lombards and finally Pope Leo the third did the like to him with the Imperiall Diadem And this ceremonie haue euer since bene obserued by our Kings of France not that thereby they bee Kings but to the ende it may seeme as a testimonie that they are Christians and Catholickes and of priuate persons are become Kings to commaund the people So that in consideration hereof the first French Emperours Lewes the Meeke Lothaire Lewes the second and the rest who being by natural succession Kings were promoted to the Empire did not vse to take the title of Emperor at the day of their consecration or coronation but at such time as their father or former predecessor thought good to nominate them for their successors from which they began to number the yeeres of their Empire nothing respecting the ceremonie or solēnitie of their Coronation as appeareth by many the auncient Charters and documents of their daies Yea the Histories doe note that Charles the Fat yongest sonne to Lewes the Meek was the first that in his yeeres made mention of the day of his Coronation and tooke not vpō him the title of Augustus vntill the 8. Calendes of Ianuary ensuing in the yere 866. on which day Pope Iohn the 8. anointed and crowned him which in subteltie he thought good to note as one that obteyned not the Empire by succession for Lewes the second his neuewe last deceased had not named nor instituted hym his heire much lesse had any chosen him but the histories doe affirme that hee for a great summe of money bought the Imperial dignitie of the Pope because there were other more fitter for it then he that layd clayme thereto as his elder brother Lewes and his children Kings of Germany so that Charles fearing least as reason and iustice required they should be preferred before him thought good to aduance himselfe and to get the Pope to consecrate him To conclude therfore it is most certaine that this ceremonie doth make nothing to the right of the Kings lawful succession neither is any more then a simple token of honor in his behalfe whom nature and vsuall order hath caused to be borne or suffered to bee elected to rule and gouerne the Estate so that to weene to perswade that he that is borne to be your lawful King by the Lawes of the Realme hath no authoritie ouer you before he be consecrated annointed and crowned is a meere fallation 13 It followeth sith I haue proued vnto you that in this cace the sayde King of Nauarre whom the deepe dissemblers dare not openly in their Libelles denye to be the nearest of the bloud should be your natural true and lawfull King let vs agree together that it were meere wrong for you to withstand or resist him I say further that in this Realme there is neither lawe nor order that debarreth him from lawfull raigne and the Crowne notwithstāding he would remaine in his now professed Religion But contrariwise that such as are of and doe professe the same are declared meete and capable of all kindes of succession by infinite the Edicts Decrees and declarations of our Kings published enrouled and dayly put in execution by the Arrestes of the soueraigne Courtes and other Magistrates who vnder his Maiesties authoritie doe minister Iustice in this Estate whose common crye tendeth to obliuion and perpetuall forgetting of the passed miseries and troubles As also in trueth it is more then a Catholicke passion to compare the Huguenot with a Iewe or Turke For besides that our Kings doe auctorize and permit the one and not the other in trueth and without affection for my selfe am a Catholick and in the same faith doe wish to dye we all doe agree in our faith so as there remaineth no more but to decide for the most part of controuersie the institution of outwarde ceremonies which either the tyme or the necessitie of the peoples instruction haue procured to bee brought into y e Church be not conteined or authorized in the holy Scripture Sith therfore wee doe agree that in the first times the Christians did liue and serue GOD without them we can not now lesse doe then heare the reasons of those that craue abolition before we condemne or pronounce them Heretikes least the condemnation goe before the proofe and so they haue greater cause to complaine as already they doe that wee haue iudged them vnheard and haue ended their Proces vpon defaultes and contumacie Wherefore the● protest they are ready to pourge themselues if we would graunt them free accesse into the assembly of the church and not stand vpon the pointes of not receiuing them groūded vpon the long time that wee haue bene in possession of the obseruing of these traditiōs from hand to hand receiued by the cōsent and common agreement of the Church because if we had no other argument wee should not be able to deny but that our fathers whē they brought them in were men and therefore subiect to humaine frailtie as in many other things experience may teach vs. I will content my selfe with one onely example to our purpose Virgill Bishop of Saltzbourg in a Sermon about the yeere of our Lorde 755. saying that there were Antipodes in y e world was for the same by Boniface Archbishop of Ments accused of Heresie because by inducing the Antipodes it seemed he would also bring in an other Christ This matter was debated before Vtilo King of Bauiere who at the commaundement of Zachary denounced the sayd Virgilius to bee one of the most abhominable Heretikes that euer was So great was the obstinacie of the knowledge conceaued in this age of the Antipodes or Arteques and yet since it hath bene verefied for trueth This neuerthelesse I doe not alledge to the ende to reproue the institution of the ceremonies of the Church with which I doe dayly serue GOD especially knowing that in alteration of Lawes aud Orders necessity must be very apparent in the correction of matters long before allowed but onely to admonish all men that in as much as they are men it is no meruaile though some will be inquisitiue whether the authors
to beware of those things that cannot be receiued without great inconueniences Besides that the Iurisdiction and power of the Church extendeth not to temporall goodes or causes but as all men knowe Caesar shareth Empire with Iupiter neither is the Ecclesiasticall power other then Spirituall concerning the Kingdome of heauen and therefore vnprofitably and wrongfully they should thrust their Sythe into other mens haruest and without authoritie or Iurisdictiō should meddle with the gouernment of mās policie and the gouernments of Realmes or earthly Empires considering the kingdome of God whereof they are Stewards and doe weare the keyes is not of this world As also of such dispensation would ensue to great iniustice because that sith the holy Church giueth remission for whatsoeuer sinne and receiueth the excommunicated after he hath made sufficient satisfaction and done penance worthy his misdeede it should come to passe that such a King or Prince notwithstanding he were reunited to the Church and had satisfied the commaundement thereof must neuerthelesse remaine banished from his estate already possessed by the first of his neighbors that shall haue receiued this rebellious people and of this trouble taken occasion to become maister thereof at whatsoeuer price from whence it would be vnpossible to auoyd him without warres and generall trouble arising of such dispensation and so should the domage done to the excommunicate King through the sentence of excommunication which was layd vpon him only for correction and admonition to cōfesse his fault to aske pardon openly of GOD and his Church remaine irreparable To be briefe of extreme lawe would arise extreme iniurie whereof this poore miserable excommunicate and desperate Prince finding himselfe agrieued with the permission to his subiects to rebel would growe more obstinate in his vice for feare of losing his Crowne so in liew of vrging him to penance and satisfaction to the Church for the offence arising of his sinne he shall waxe worse and the Ecclesiasticall discipline bring forth no fruite and thereby growe into contempt And vndoubtedly therein consisteth the discretion of a Lawyer and Iudge so to make his lawes so well to order his iudgements that immediatly without difficultie how notable soeuer they be they may bee put in execution 23 Consequently a question may be propounded whether it be lawfull for a King or Prince to appeale therefro as of abuse but also by weapons to resist and withstande the execution of such a sentence because it permitteth the subiectes to shake of the yoke of his obedience refuse him the duetie of their obligation which is the same question which Lewes the 12. of Fraunce moued to the Bishops assembled in Tours in the yeere 1510. concerning the peeuish and rash excommunications layd vpon him and his confederates by Iulius the second whereto the said Bishops made aunswere that by all lawes the sayde King was permitted by whatsoeuer meanes yea euen by armes to withstand such the Popes friuolous and wrongfull declarations Which aunswere in my opinion is founded vpon all reason aswell naturall as ciuill because it is certaine and euident that the clause of the sentence of excommunicatiō of the King which conteyneth permission to the subiects to r●bel against him is a publick force and violence that the Pope wrongfully employeth contrary to his function and authoritie and against the which the King may oppose himselfe and withstande him with the like or a greater power Secondly it ought not to be lawful for the Pope vnder pretence of a Shepheard and the care that hee should haue of the Christians to enterprize or attēpt any vnreasonable thing to the iniurie of his flocke For if the Magistrate doth any thing iniuriously either as a perticuler person either vpon confidēce of his authoritie he may be sued of iniurie Besides that wee haue before proued that the ordering Iurisdiction and notice of worldly causes and Kingdomes belongeth not to the Cleargie to whom is committed onely the publication of the spiritual and heauenly s●orde and so consequently sentence pronoūced by an incompetent Iudge is voyd in this head neither is any man bounde to obeye that Magistrate that hath iudged aboue his authoritie To this purpose Pope Gelasius writing to the Bishops of the East doth confesse that if the iudgement be vniust the lesse neede the condemned to care for that such a sentence cannot make the cōdemned guiltie before God and his Church And therfore he concludeth that he should neuer sue for absolution beeause it hurteth him not In an other place Pope Gregorie confesseth that he cannot incurre canonicall paines that is not canonically condemned In the interpretation of which place Iohn Andrew the gloser doth teach vs that it is lawfull to withstande the execution of a iudgemēt knowne to be none and giuen by such a one as hath no authoritie The same doth Celestin graunt whē he speaketh of the election of a Bishop against the minds of the Cleargie of that Dioces where he should sit and the Glose expressely saith that the superiour abusing his power willing pretēding by force to bee obeyed it is not forbidden to withstande him especially in cace the hurt be irreparable as in this now in question because euery one naturally is permitted to withstand violence yea euen against his superiour In an other place wee learne that it is for euery one in default of the Magistrate to doe himselfe right or to bend himselfe against the wrongful oppression of an other Infinite are the examples of Emperours and Catholicke Kings who authorized by the Church haue made no difficultie to take Armes against the bishop of Rome and his adherents whensoeuer he so farre forgat his duetie as by force to enterprize that which Princes could not with reason graunt hym When Pope Iohn the eleuenth writ to the Hungarians and perswaded them to rebel against the Emperour Ottho the first and the sayd Emperor being in Italy this Pope togither with Albert Marquize of Spolete raysing warre against him the Bishops and Prelates assembled at Rome deposed the sayd Pope and hauing surrogated Leo the fifth into his roume permitted the Emperour by Warres to pursue him When Henry the blacke vnderstood that Benedict the ninth Siluester the third and Gregory the sixt Antipopes sought each to thrust other out of Italie and to establish him self by armes he went speedely to Rome with a great power to decide the cōtrouersie with the aduice of a Coūsaile assembled by his imperiall authoritie these three Popes were all deposed and disgraded and in their roume the Emperour established Suidiger Bishop of Bambergue who named him selfe Clement the second When the Emperour Henrie the fourth vnderstood that Pope Gregory the seauenth had forbidden the Bishops to require inues●iture of the Emperour also that he found that y ● wicked man stirred him vp enemies yea procéeded so farre as to cause the sonne to rebell against the father against whom he opposed
the same Testament as we The whole controuersie betweene them and vs consisteth in that that they finding many mens additions and constitutions in the Church and among the simple and pure ordenances of the Gospell doe craue pourging and reformation and in cace of refusall thereof for feare of their soules and desire of saluation haue withdrawn themselues as men content with the simple forme ordeyned in the Primitiue Church wee haue thought that sauing our consciences wee may stay therein attending necessary reformation Either of vs seeke saluation and tend to one ende and by the same meanes are all one and the same woorke of Gods hand all faithfull seruants in the faith in one Baptisme all Grapes of one Vine yea all braunches of one Grape wee must therefore knowe why one should be an Hereticke rather then an other sith wee are all of like faith vse like bookes tend to like end This is it in my iudgement that causeth the King of Nauarre to complaine that wrongfully he is termed an Hereticke before his opinion hath bene condemned in a free holy and determined Counsaile whereat euery one may safely appeare As for the obstinacie to him obiected I would weete for what benefite hee should in this cause bee obstinate what good what aduancement what peace what ease may he therein hope for He hath habandoned the Courte of his Soueraigne Lord the King he hath long through the subtelties and slaunders of his enimies bene out of his fauour which is the mishap that with greatest impatience he hath borne Hee hath bene depriued of most of his houses alwaies in the fielde sometimes badly prouided armed enuironed his life in a thousand daungers where as otherwise he had bene assured at his Maiesties handes of all fauour amitie honor peace and humaine felicitie Any man therefore of iudgement can neuer be perswaded that this Prince whom in other matters we know to be wise and discrete would haue chosen to haue spent the most parte of the flower of his youth in miserie and perpetuall care only vpon a contradictorie and obstinate mind not proceeding other thē frō his affection to the honor of God and the saluation of his soule Moreouer besides the infinite abuses of the sayd Counsayle whereby it is vtterly none it is not vnknowne to al men that in France the King of Nauarre is not such a one as by the policie of the Realme ought to bee depriued of the succession of the Crowne when it should fall to him because those of his partie liuing therein vnder the Kings good liking and obedience are not incapable to enter vppon all kinde of goodes and inheritances which to them may apperteyne either naturally or ciuilly according to the lawes commōly receiued in this Monarchie by the ordenances of the generall Estates of the same as the subiects thereof doe knowe ordinarely it is adiudged in the soueraigne Courts of France therein ensuing the Edicts made within these twentie yeres vnder Charles the nineth and Henry the third now raigning so as to esteeme the sayde Lorde King of Nauarre to bee in worse estate concerning succession in the Realme then the meanest subiect thereof and to his preiudice to restrayne the publicke and generall lawe were vnder correction besides all reason order or apparance sith the cause both of one and other is all one These bee the effects of the reasons which euery one according to his capacitie may extend whereby the sayd Lord King of Nauarre sayth and vphouldeth that he is no Hereticke First the lawe and decree whereon the enemies ground their slaunder which is the Counsayle of Trent is argued of diuers nullities That we must accoumpt of it as of foreiudgements for the force of law is to be maeinteyned vntill the cause of Nullitie be decided with this exception Quod praeiudicium legis fiat Especially in France where the most Christian King and Soueraigne Courtes did neuer approue the sayde Counsaile as it is most certaine and euident So that although the nullities thereof might bee couered vnder a consequent approbation of the Counsaile yet could not that take place in this Realme which by the testimonie of the Popes themselues is not bound to take law or to accommodate it self to the sentence publication or pleasure of any Prince or Potentate whatsoeuer in the world Let therfore the Spanyard or Sauoian cōpell their subiects to liue according to the decrees therof yet haue not the most Christian King and his Parliaments prescribed it for a lawe to them selues Besides to come more perticulerly thereto the King of Nauerre notwithstanding he bee a Christian King and soueraigne Prince and so acknowledged by his aduersaries especially by the Pope yet was he neuer summoned or heard in the sayde Counsaile so that consequently the decrees and iudgements there passed are not deemed against him to binde him either to force him to the obseruing of the same Againe admit hee had bene heard also that the lawe of the Coūsaile of Trent had bene lawfull yet who did euer heare that the sentence of death or other punishment was executed against those that sinned or did transgresse the law contrarie to the order established but y e Magistrate Guardian or Priest thereof had first examined heard or conuinced them at the least called summoned proclaymed thē to the outlawrie or otherw●se after exact obseruing of the solemnities of law Doe ye vse my Maisters to sende euen the ranckest thiefe in the worlde to the gallowes without other forme of lawe Will ye then execute your passions vpon one of the greatest Christian Princes that Heauen hath permitted to bee borne capable of ruling you whensoeuer it shal please God to permit or depriue him of that right which Nature hath giuen him without hearing or summons either vnderstāding of his reazons Is the maner to proceede in such causes to come with the sworde drawne and force men to beleue you at whatsoeuer price Wil you be his Iudges that be his enemies and are armed to depriue him of his life and goodes Shall the Pope whose reformation is chiefly in question bee his partie No no Warres and weapons were neuer meanes to atteyne to vnion If one be in the darke mē vse to light him and not to cut his throte If he be infected he must be washed not drowned If he bee sicke tende him ende him not Who so will reunite the Church must seeke to bring backe those that are out of the way and to call againe such as haue strayed for on the other side warre and rigour tendeth to stay and roote them out not to bring them againe but to make them to be no more at all which in deede is a remedie worse then the disease For so mē may say we haue but a bad cause in hand when in liew of reason we haue recourse to force But Christians what must ye then do as men capable of reason ye must conuince the King of
this example hath relation also the same iudgement that Pausanius writeth of the Senat of Sparta aboue 400. yeeres after Licurgus concerning the children of their King Cleomenes who had two sonnes Cleonimus and Acrotatus the elder who dying beforr his father and leauing his sonne Areus the Realm came in question betweene them where sentēce passed for Areus against Cleonimus who was so wroth therewith that he called Pirrhus King of Epiro sonne to Earida and caused him to enter the land whereupon he was declared enemie to the Commonwealth In Italy Robert the second King of Sicill sonne to Charles the second about the yere of Iesus Christ 1310. when there was controuersie for the County of S. Seuerin betweene Thomas sonne to the elder and Iames the younger gaue sentence for the neuewe so that the sayd Robert whome our Doctors terme an other Salomon being in Auignon accompanyed with a number of Doctors and other skilfull personages adiudged the sayd Countie to him Ottho of Frisingen rehearseth the custome of Bourgondy which saith he was euermore obserued among the Gaules concerning the fathers succession which was adiudged to the eldest and his posteritie vnto whom the rest as to their Lordes ought to yeeld all respect honor and duetie Demosthenes also maketh mention of the Athenians lawe whereby brothers children had parte in the succession of their Grandfather as braunches and bodies substituted in the Roumes of their deceased parents So as the great number of arrestes passed might at this day be reason sufficient to restrain the Lord Cardinall of Bourbon and those who vnder pretence of fauouring his cause do practize their own aduancement by the destruction of the Royall famelie especially sith these iudgements passed not without great notice of the cause ripe most sound considerations which learned men shal conceiue as drawne out of the fountaine of the Ciuill and Cannon lawes from whence the best and most of our pollicie is taken 3 The first reason is because the father and the sonne sayth Iustinian are natura but one person so as the father seemeth not dead in respect of the substitution that nature hath made in the person of his sonne who is parte of his flesh and bones and is therefore termed sonne of the houshould as the other father of houshould with the sole difference of the title of generation And in Ecclesiastes it is written The father is dead and in a maner not dead because he hath left one like himselfe And after the fathers decease the sonne purchaseth not a newe his rightes and succession but taketh vpon him the administration and vse of the same whereby the same matter that was to bee considered in the father is no doubt transported to the person of the sonne how personall soeuer the same be and he is thereof capable as a straunger enheritour cannot be in such wise that the sonne by nature and ciuill lawe substituted in his fathers roume and place is to enioye all priuiledges dignities and rightes that might to the deceased haue apperteyned This ciuill reason conformeth it selfe to infinite examples of the lawe First wee knowe that the sonne dying before his father the neuewe entereth the roume of the deceased and enioyeth the same rights as his father if he had liued should in his Grādfathers succession as appeareth in the Counsaile of Gallus Aquilius by the law Vellea and other the heades of our wisedome so that no reason can be alleadged why we should otherwise thincke in this deede which dependeth of the right obteyned by the father in respect of seuioritie in the succession of his predecessors for although the sonne of the deceased elder doe maintaine the seuioritie to bee his by his owne right and person yet is he as it were substituted in the place and person of his sayd father and admit the qualitie of senioritie were by the fathers decease dead and extinct yet the power habilitie to succeede thereby is not extinct and lost which beeing diuers and seperated from the eldership is continued and transported into the person of the sonne Wherevpon in lawe we doe say that the same departing before the father his sonne succeedeth in his possibilitie because the same occasion if any dyeth without children is accomplished in the wise counsaile of the testator if there remaine any issue of the afore deceased sonne Hereupon by the arrest of the Court in the yeere 1555. was the daughter of the eldest sonne of Thibault of Vitry preferred before her Vnckles in the right of eldership to the landes and noble Lordships of the said Thibault Secondly it was determined that the free borne childrē were not bound to lay together their owne goodes in pertitiō of their fathers or if it happened the same beeing vnder his fathers iurisdiction to decease leauing his sonne alienated to some one of his brethren of the same calling the neuew who in his owne person could not attend the relation of his Vnckles proper goodes in the succession of his Grandfather might neuerthelesse demaund the same in the behalfe and as substitute to the person of his deceased father and therefore the same right that he had in the same relation is adiudged to his sonne who of himselfe was vnperfect badly groūded in his demaund By our Lawes also the brother by father and mother is in the succession of his deceased brother to bee preferred before the rest of his brethren of the same bellie or kinsmen Let vs now presuppose the brother both waies were deceased leauing one sonne The sonne is to take vp the inheritance of his Vnkle before the rest of the brethren of the deceased beeing of one bellie or kindred which hee cannot doe by his owne right because he was not brother to the deceased and therefore necessarily he taketh it in right of substitution and succession to his late father transported into his person wherby he not onely succeedeth with his Vnkles but which is more excludeth them as might his father haue done if he had liued Moreouer that which is noted in parte must take place in the whole and yet in the substitution of the deceased fathers succession the children of the deceased do take their part and portion of their deceased Grandfathers goodes by stocke not by head that is in consideration of their fathers person which wee call in stirpes non in capita which also concurreth with Gods lawe as wee may note in the portion that Abraham gaue to his neuewe Lot the sonne of his brother Aram in the succession of their generall father Thare In the collaterall ligne the text of Iustinians nouell saith that the neu●we sonne to the brother succeedeth in such part as his deceased father might haue done why thē should we not obserue the same in things wholly vndeuided as in a Realme Empire Dutchie and such other like which can haue but one maister so that the neuewe taking his fathers roume
thē due together with that which was assessed vpon the heads of euery of his Apostles euermore referring the reward of his grace reuenge of trespasses against him committed vnto the kingdome of heauen enioining his Apostles to doe the like and to imitate his example as they haue done The Apostle Sainct Paule sayd Let no man that fighteth in the Lordes warfare trouble himselfe with the matters of this life Againe The minister of the Lorde ought to be louing to all men meet to teach paciently bearing with the wicked with modestie reprouing such as withstād the trueth Briefly in one word to say all there be two kinds of Iurisdictions the one earthly cōmitted into the hands of Kings and Princes to whome euery one of whatsoeuer degree or calling Spirituall or Temporall Priestes Bishops or high Priestes ought to obey as it is written Let euery soule bee subiect to the superiour powers vpon which place Chrisostome sayth the Apostle vsed this word euery to shew that there is no creature that may be exempt whether he be saith he Apostle Prophete Euangelist Priest Monk or other whosoeuer We also finde that in the Primetiue Church before pride Ambition tooke roote in the Bisshops hartes that the Popes of Rome neuer made any question thereof Wee haue also amoug vs a request exhibited by Boniface the first to Honorius Emperour of the West wherein hee beseecheth him to decree that afterwarde the Bishops and Popes of Rome might not bee chosen by fauour or any other vnlawfull meane whereto the same most Catholike Prince maketh an aunswere worthie such a request In the time of Odoacer King of the Herules who began to raigne at Rome in the yeere 471. and ruled full 14. yeres after hee had put to death Orestes and his Sonne Augustulus the last Emperour of the West vntill Charlemagne there were goodly decrees published and receiued in the Church by the Clergie vntill such tyme as Theodoricke the Wisigot whome Zeno the Emperour of the Eeast sent into Italy had ouerthrowen hym Pelagius the first made confession of his faith and sware in the hands of Ruffin the Embassadour of of Childebert King of France Pope Leo the fourth sware and protested that he would and did intend to obserue the Lawes which the Emperour Lothair the first sonne to Lewes the Meek and Neuew to Charlemagne made at Rome in the presence of Pope Eugenius the second whereof some are inserted into the Booke of Digestes the inscription whereof do import that the Emperour made them ante ianuas beati petri ad limina in atrio which was the place where the Christian Emperours were wont to make and publish their Edicts if we maye beleeue Cassiodore and others The said Emperour also created certaine Magistrates in the Towne to exercize the imperiall Iurisdiction The same Leo doth sufficiently declare what respect the high Priests of Rome did in those daies beare to the Emperours when he sued to the same Lothaire and his sonne Lewes the second to conferre the Church of Rheatine or Tusculum to one Colonus a Deacon assuring their Maiesties of his sufficiency and promising in the name of the sayde Colonus that he should praye to God for them This was the same Leo that pleaded his cause and purged himselfe of the treazon whereof hee was accused before the Emperour Lewes the seconde sonne to the sayd Lothaire as appeareth in the decree of Gratian. The like declaration did Pope Iohn the eight make to the same Emperour Lewes the second sonne to Lothaire By the decretall Epistle of Honorius the third who liued about the yeere 1216. it appeareth that as yet the remembraunce of the Emperours lawes was not vtterly abolished out of the Catholick Church and that the Priestes and high Priestes had not as yet wholy shaken of the yoke of y ● same no not in those that they terme Spirituall causes as if any question were moued of an oath in law for the decision of proces in which cace he reneweth the auncient edict of Martian and Iustiniā the first To cōclude for the stopping of the mouthes of those that doe maintaine that the Pope Bishops or other of the Cleargie may establish any earthly Kingdome apart which shal not bee subiect to the Emperours and Kings of this world but rather such a one as may at pleasure commaunde and supplant the same let them dilligently search throughout the whole Scripture what authoritie the Kings and Princes of Israel had ou●r the Priestes and Cleargie in Gods lawe which since the tyme of grace is not deminished and there shall they euidently finde their great authoritie ouer them notwithstanding it was neuer lawfull for the Kings to execute the office of the Priestes for vndoubtedly the ministerie is one thing and the orders discipline of the Cleargie is an other and meerely temporall The other head of Iurisdiction is in heauē which we are to looke for at the iudgement of GOD and yet not to perswade our selues that the lawe of Iesus Christ is lame or vnperfect because in it it conteineth not any punishment or earthly reuenge of trespasses against euill liuers considering that the same beeing heauenly and spirituall it will yeeld reward or punishment in the euerlasting world so that as sayd Alexander Seuerus of periury Whosoeuer offendeth against God hath God a sufficient reuenger our good God hath referred to himselfe all the punishment to the end the sinner may haue meanes to acknowledge his offence and repent the same in this world True it is that if y e earthly Magistrate hath in his pollicie taken any order for such causes then is it his office to reuenge the iniurie done to his edicts and decrees for so as saith Isidore The Kingdome of God encreaseth through the meanes of earthly Realmes to the ende such as be of the body of the Church if they offende or blaspheme may be punished by the rigor of Princes and so that discipline whereto the Church can not binde them may neuerthelesse bee preserued through the authoritie of Monarchies The like wherof haue bene vsed against heretickes by all Christian Princes especially in our France by an infinite number of lawes both olde and newe of our most Christian Kings And in troth if the Bishops or Priestes should take notice of the punishmēt of hereticks it would breede confusion of Iurisdictions and offices aswell might the Goldsmith be iudge of the golde that himselfe had wrought The Phisition of his owne cure to bee briefe euery one should pleade and decide his owne cause contrary to al reasonable order The example also of the Apostle Sainct Paule whome the Iewes accused of heresie doth sufficiently teach vs when by himself it appeareth that he was brought before Festus the Emperours Lieutenant vnto whom the accused did confesse that y ● notice of his cause did apperteine and therefore required
assignation for his accusers before the Imperiall Maiestie The Emperour Honorius appointed the Prouost Marcellus for Iudge Arbitrator betwene the Catholickes and Donatistes Dulcius also was Prouost of the Empire who at the pursuit of the Catholickes was enioyned to make vp the processe of the said Donatistes in Affricke as Sainct Augustin doth report and they required to haue them condemmed by his ordenaunces as testifieth Gratian in his decree wherein in an other place is written the opiniō of Pope Pelagius importing that it were meete that hereticks were punished by the seculer power according to which reason Sainct Austen also doth testifie that the Emperour Valentinian sent the Prouost Dalmatius vnto him to assigne him in his priuie Counsaile So as we are not to doubt but that the punishment of heretickes apperteyneth to the Princes temporall Iurisdiction who by his decrees hath limited the punishments which they may deserue 20 In deede it is the duetie of the Priestes and Bishops to know and withall to declare by the holy Scriptures together with the iudgement of the vniuersal Church who it is that hath transgressed the will of God and being a Christian hath departed or disunited himselfe from the body of the Church Those bee the true kayes of heauen which God hath put into their handes and the two Swordes that they beare whereby the Priest sheweth and poynteth out such as are soluti vel legati ab Ecclesia wherein onely consisteth his power to bind or lose in heauen as S. Hierome doth very well note in his opening of y ● place of Sainct Mathewe which concerneth this authoritie as also the Maister of Sentences is of the same opinion neither is this power so small that the faithfull Christians should contemne it For without doubt sinne proceedeth of offence and so immediatly is brought in the bond that thereby we make to Gods enemie which vnlesse we doe reuoke we must of necessitie be driuen out of the Church and as rotten members of the same be giuen ouer to Satan Neuerthelesse he who by contrition for his sinnes and confession of the same will reclayme himselfe doth immediatly recouer three benefites repugnant to the other which are forgiuenesse of sinnes the cancelling and discharge of the Obligation made vnto the deuill and reconsiliation to the Catholicke Church wherein consisteth the true penance that the Priest or Bishop doth minister and enioine vs by vertue of his authoritie to binde or lose in heauen or in earth So as it is euident that the order of Priesthood and Ecclesiastical power hath euermore bene necessary in the Church of God to keepe teach and maintaine our soules in the knowledge of his holy will to the ende thereby to obteine his grace and fauour in the life to come For notwithstanding man was created to the Image of God and of his euerlasting Kingdome whereby he was perfect and needed no other instruction or Schoolemaister yet after his fall and the corruption of our first father he stood in great neede to bee restored to his former knowledge and the fauour of his Creator for the obteyning whereof hee was enioyned to keepe sundry precepts and very straight lawes vnder paine of deadly and euerlasting dānation vntill the tyme of grace wherein it pleased God to breake and take away the vayle and rigor of the auncient law and to forgiue our offences through the passion of his deare Sonne Iesus Christ for the enioying of the fruites whereof he hath left vs in pledge his holy Sacraments for the administrations and discipline of the which he hath cōmitted and sent his Apostles Priestes and Doctors the administrators and guardians of the same In such wise that as the ende and purpose of the Architect is the perfection and finishing of his building house so the onely end and office of the Cleargie is sufficiently to teach vs those things that appertayne to our faith and beliefe reforming our actions by admonitions and gentle perswasions that thereby together with Gods grace wee may atteyne to euerlasting saluation neither hath God giuen them any other dominion ouer vs but onely admonition and instruction in his knowledge setting before vs the reward of well doing and the reuenge of wickednesse in the vniuersall doome of the heauenly Maiestie 21 But in asmuch as the people haue not to deale therewith also that the Bishoppe of Roome in that qualitie which he pretendeth hath no such power his authoritie beeing meerely and simply Spirituall and in no poynt concerning the Realmes of the world what shal we then say if Emperours or other soueraigne Kings were as they are men and subiect to corruption hereticks or otherwise euill liuers were it not a marueilous offence to see them raigne with all power and be as scourges and persecutors of Gods Church In this question I am to desire the French to weigh the aunswer of that wise and great personage Sainct Augustin If Emperours sayth he be in error and according to their error do prescribe lawes against the trueth wherby the righteous may be tryed and crowned he aunswereth not that they must be expelled or deposed of their Empire but onely wee must not doe those things that wickedly they commaund Neither doth Sainct Ambrose finde fault with the obedience that the Christian Souldiers yeelded to the Emperour Iulian the Apostata onely he warneth them to doe nothing repugnant to the honor of God S. Peeter perswaded not the Church to depose Nero the conspired enemie of Iesus Christ but contrariwise admonished all Christians to honor and pray for him The holy Legion Fulminatory made no difficultie to go to the Warres and to venture their liues vnder the Emperour M. Antonius the Philosopher a Prince that was but a bad Christian and such a one as contrary to the pietie of Religion made a seuere Decree the markes whereof are yet to be seene in our Pandects and Eusebius Capitolinus Dion Xiphilinus and others doe make mention of the same Tertullian in his Apologeticall treatize sufficiently setteth downe the mallice of the Emperour Seuerus against the Church of the Christians and yet let vs mark what he writeth of their affection to the Prince Wee are saith he discryed vnto the Emperours Maiestie and yet were the Christians neuer proued to bee Albinians Nigrians or Cassians who were the conspirators against the Emperors M. Antonius the Philosopher Commodus Pertinax and Seuerus each after other but contrariwise those that lately tooke the oath condemned the Christians haue bene found to be the Emperours enemies neuer a Christian was there in that faction as knowing that the Imperiall Maiestie ordeyned of God must bee loued reuerenced and honored whose prosperitie as also the welfare of the whole Romaine Empire they are to desire so long as the world standeth for so long shall the same continue We doe therfore worship the Prince according as is lawfull and requisite his Maiestie