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A50052 Choice observations of all the kings of England from the Saxons to the death of King Charles the First collected out of the best Latine and English writers, who have treated of that argument / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1661 (1661) Wing L987; ESTC R11454 137,037 241

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his Father At a time upon the repulse of a certain suit the Archbishop brake forth into discontentment expostulated sharply against the King and in a humorous heat offered to depart But the King stayed him fell down at his feet desired pardon and promised satisfaction in the best manner that he could The Nobility which were present put the Archbishop in minde that he should cause the King to arise nay answered the Archbishop let him alone let him still abide at St. Peters feet So with much ado he was appeased and entreated to accept his suit By reason of sickness he kept his chamber a long time whereat the French King scoffing said The King of England lyeth long in Childbed Which when it was reported unto King William he answered When I am Churched there shall be a thousand lights in France alluding to the lights that Women used to bear when they were Churched and that he performed within few dayes after wasting the French Frontiers with fire and sword Malmesb. de Wilielmo primo l. 4. Some of the Earls conspiring against him he perceiving his estate to be now brought into no small danger and loath to put all upon the hazard and fortune of a Battell against men so well provided and with desperation armed as a man perplexed entred into consultation with L●nfrancke then Archbishop of Canterbury what course were now best for him to take for the appeasing of these so great and dangerous troubles By whose advice he came to a parl with the English Nobility where after much reasoning and debating of the matter a peace was at length concluded and agreed upon so that the English men laying down their Arms the Conquerour in the presence of the Archbishop Lanfrancke and others took a solemn Oath upon the holy Evangelists and all the reliques of the Churches of St. Albans from thence forth to observe and keep the good and ancient Laws of the Realm which the noble Kings of England his Predecessors had before made and ordained but especially those of St. Edwar● of all others supposed to be most equall and indifferent for the gene●all good of the people He courteously received and honourably maintained Edgar Etheling in his Court allowing him a pound weight of silver every day to spend a rare example of a victorious Conqueror shewed upon a man so unconstant who twice had broken his Oath of fidelity and dangerous to be so near unto his person being as he was a competitor of his Crown During all his Raign either the sword was not put up into the scabbard or if it were the hand was alwayes upon the hilt ready to draw it So unwilling on the one part were the English men to bear the yoke and so haughty on the other part were the Norman Conquerors that to be called an English man was in their eyes a great concumely insomuch as it made some of the more light-conceited of the English to seek to better their esteem by imitating the Normans both in apparrell and language which among the graver sort bred the Proverb that Jack would be a Gentleman if he could speak French He favoured learned men and drew out of Italy Lanfrancke Anselme Durand Trahern and divers others famous at that time for learning and piety 'T is better with William Hunter than with William the Conqueror 'T is better to have a name in the Book of Martyrs than in the Book of Chronicles Mr. Nortons life of Mr. Iohn Cotton Perceiving his own defects in some points for want of learning he did exhort his children oftentimes to learning with this saying An unlearned Prince is a crowned Ass which speech took great impression in his son Henry This is one speciall honour attributed unto him that from him we begin the Computation of our Kings of England From the Normans bearing of Armes began amongst us Ab eo posteriores series Regum inchoavere perinde acsi de integro ille regnum ipsum institu●isset Regesque qui se●uti sunt usi similiter sunt ut nunc utuntur insignibus Regiis quae dedisset Polyd. Virg. Ang. hist. l. 9. Nostrates priusquam in Angliam penetrasset Wilielmus primus hunc armorum cultum à Normannis videntur accepisse Spelmanni Aspilegia p. 40. Vide etiam p. 44. He ended his life upon the ninth day of September full both of honour and of age when he had raigned twenty years eight moneths and sixteen dayes in the threescore and fourth year of his age His dead body was not only abandoned but left almost naked upon the ground Being conveyed from Roan where he died to Cane one Fitz Arthur denied the King buriall in the Abbey-Church as ground which was wrongfully taken by the King from his Father till he had a hundred pounds paid him for it Mr. Ienkyn in his Exposition of the Epistle of Iude vers 4. p. 351. saith Of our twenty five Monarchs since the Conquest thirteen taking in three who are thought to be poysoned are said to have had violent and untimely deaths CHAP. XII K. William the second sirnamed Rufus or the Red. KIng William the first took to wife Matilde daughter to Baldwin Earl of Flanders a man for his wisdome and power both reverenced and feared even of Kings but because she was his Cousin-germane he was for his marriage excommunicate by his own Uncle Mauger Archbishop of Roan Hereupon he sued to Pope Victor and obtained of him a dispensation and afterwards so wrought that by a provinciall Counsell his Uncle Mauger was deprived of his dignity This King had by his Wife four sons Robert Richard William and Henry Robert his eldest son sirnamed Courtcuise by reason of the shortness of his thighs succeeded him in the Duchy of Normandy He was a man of exceeding honourable courage and spirit for which cause he was so esteemed by the Christian Princes in the great Warre against the Saracens that when they had subdued the City and Territory of Hierusalem they offered the Kingdome thereof first unto him The King of England to whom the Schola Salernitana was dedicated was this Robert eldest son of the Duke of Normandy which begins thus Anglorum Regi scribit Schola tota Salerni and it seems to be written when this Robert returned out of Palestina into Apulia and by reason of a Fistula from his poysoned wound he had consulted with the School of Salerne concerning it and preserving his health Neither doth that hinder that this Book is written to the King of England but Robert never raigned here for the Kingdome of right belonged to him which his younger Brother William Rufus possessed in his absence and for recovering of that he warred with his Brother but was overcome by him Richard had raised the good expectation of many as well by his comely countenance and behaviour as by his lively and generous spirit But he died young by misadventure
the eighth reckons him amongst other learned men of the Kings Progenitors The chiefest of his works for the service of God and good of his Subjects was the translation of the Bible into the Saxon tongue which was then the mother-tongue of the Land out of the Hebrew Of this work Leyland also speaks in the work before-mentioned His Laws are mentioned by Lambard in his Saxon Laws He raigned in great honour the space of fifteen years and odd moneths Edmund The twenty sixth King of the West Saxons and twenty seventh Monarch of the English men The good Laws he made are extant in Saxon and Latine by the industry of Mr William Lambard He had by his Queen Elgina two sons Edwin and Edgarus sirnamed Pacificus which both raigned after him By him were expelled the Danes Scots Normans and all forraign enemies out of the Land He raigned six years and a half At his Mannor of Puclekerkes in the County of Glocester whilest he interposed himself between his Sewer and one Leof to part a fray he was with a thrust through the body wounded to death when he had prosperously raigned the space of five years and seven moneths Rogerus de Hoveden annal part 1. Malmesbury l. 2. c. 7. and others say this Leof was a thief which the King espying at a festivall he pulled him by the hair and cast him to the ground but he drawing out his weapon stabbed the King Vide Polyd. Virg. Ang. hist. l. 6. Edred The twenty seventh King of the West Saxons and twenty eighth Monarch of the English men He suffered his body to be chastised at the will and direction of Dunstan Abbot of Glassenbury unto whose custody he also committed the greatest part of his treasure and richest Jewels to be lockt in his chests and under the keys of this Monastery where it remained till the King fell sick of his last sickness at which time it was demanded but never restored for Dunstan being on his journey with the same to the King a voice from heaven spake unto him and said Behold King Edred is now departed in peace at the hearing of which words his horse immediately fell down and died Whereupon he returned again to his Monastery and though he lost his horse yet was he recompenced thereby with the gain of the Kings treasure and Jewels He raigned in great honour nine years and odd moneths Edwin or Edwy The twenty eighth King of the West Saxons and twenty ninth Monarch of the English men He was but thirteen years old when he began to raign He was Nephew to Edred He favoured not the Monkes which made them write so scandalously of him He thrust them out of Malmesbury and Glassenbury placing married Priests in their room and banished Dunstan their great Champion into Flanders The true causes of his banishing him ejecting the Monkes and seizing their lands and treasures was that Dunstan had so bewitched Edmund Edward Aethelstan and Aedred his predecessours with the love of Monkery as they not only took violently from married Priests their livings to erect Monasteries but also lavishly wasted much of their own royall treasures lands and revenues upon them which they should rather have imployed in resisting the common enemies of God and their Countrey the Danes Ioscelin the Author of Antiq. Brit. Bishop Godwin Speed and others conceive that the true cause why the Mercians and Northumbrians and those only not the rest of his Subjects and Kingdome rejected him and set up his Brother Edgar whose vices were more exorbitant in some degrees than Edwins was the malice of Dunstan and Odo the pillars and Oracles of the Monkish Clergy who stirred up the Mercians and seditious rebellious Northumbrians against him to set up Edgar in his stead who was totally devoted to them and Dunstan by whose counsels he was afterwards wholly guided and built no less than forty seven new Monasteries for the Monks besides all those he repaired intending to build three more had he lived to make them fifty compleat He raigned but four years CHAP. VII EDGAR THe thirtieth Monarch of the English men The Raign of this King is said to have been altogether in a calm tranquillity and therefore he was sirnamed Pacificus the Peaceable His vertues were many and vices not a few the one gloriously augmented and the other fairly excused by those Monkish writers unto whose professions he was most favourable Tunc ordo Monasticus jamjudum lapsus p●acipuè caput erexit Malmesb. l. 2. c. 8. He unravelling the web his Brother had weaved recalled Dunstan out of banishment and made him Archbishop of Canterbury His Summer progresses and yearly chief pastimes were the sayling round abou● this whole Isle of Albion guarded with his grand Navy of four thousand sail at the least parted into four equall parts of petty Navies each being of a thousand Ships Dee's Brittish Monarchy p. 56 57. he calls him there that Saxonicall Alexander See more there and p. 55 58 59 60. He appointed the Prince of North Wales to bring him yearly three hundred skins of Wolves for a tribute which continued for three years space but in the fourth was not a Wolf to be found and so the tribute ceased Upon the River Dee he had seven petty Kings to row his Barge to shew his greatness He was very lascivious Leges apprimè utiles tulit quas vetustas in oblivionem fermè adduxit Of his Laws vide Lambardum de pris●is Anglorum legibus It is sure enough there have not been more famous men than some of no great stature as the instance of King Pipin in the French History and this King in our own will make manifest In the time that the Saxons had this Realm in subjection he had subdued all the other Kings Saxons and made them his Tributaries On a time he had t●all all with him at dinner and after it was shewed him that Rynaud King of Scots had said that he wondered how it should happen that he and other Kings that were tall and great personages would suffer themselves to be subdued by so little a body as Edgar was Edgar dissembled and answered nothing but faining to go on hunting took with him the Scottish King in his company and purposely withdrew him from them that were with him causing by a secret servant two swords to be conveyed into a place in the forrest by him appointed As soon as he came thither he took the one sword and delivered the other to Rynaud bidding him to prove his strength and to essay whether his deeds would ratifie his words Turpe est enim Regi in convivio esse dicaculum nec esse in praelio promptulum Whereat the Scottish King being abashed beholding the noble conrage of Edg●r with an horrible fear confessed his errour desiring pardon which he with most humble submission at the last obtained For his excellent vertues and prosperou● Raign he was called
out of French by Queen Elizabeth and written with her own hand in the life time of her father and sent to her brother Prince Edward for a new years gift she being at that time not above thirteen years of age Abraham Hartwell in his Regina literata written in Verse speaks of Queen Elizabeths coming and doings at Cambridge She was honourably received in Kings Colledge where she lay during her continuance there At the breaking up of the Divinity Act there she made within St. Maries Church a notable Oration in Latine beginning thus Etsi faeminilis iste 〈◊〉 us pudor c. See Dr. Heylins Ecclesia restaurata p. 163 164. Vide Hadriani Juni● Epist. Elizabethae Angliae Reginae inter Epistolas suas p. 544. She was of personage tall of hair and complexion fair and therewith well favoured but high nosed of limbs and feature neat and which added to the lustre of those exteriour graces of stately and majestick com●ortment She was crowned in St. Peters Church in Westminster by Dr. Oglethorp Bishop of Carlisle according to the Order of the Roman Pontificall There was great speech of a match between her and a French Mounsieur the Duke of Alencon of which he had great hopes being ignorant as Bernardine Mendoza wrote from London to the Prince of Parma Reginam singulis annis sponsam esse nunquam vero nuptam That the Queen was every year a Spouse but never married The silencing and ejection of Ministers in her dayes Reformation being newly begun and the enemies to it many the friends and those that faithfully engaged few was looked upon by the godly prudent of that age as very unseasonable because of the scarcity of preachers at that time Beams of former Light c. 7. She had so great a command over her appetite that her brother Edward usually called her by no other name but his sweet sister Temperance* She was so far from pressing her Subjects with Impositions that when the Parliament once offered her a great summe of money she refused a great part thereof giving them thanks and adding withall that the money was as sure in her Subjects Co●●ers as her own A Prince above her sexe of a manly courage and high conceit who lively resembled as well the royall qualities of her Grandfather as she did his princely presence and countenance the worlds love and joy of Brittain A Virgin for the space of fourty four years so ruled the royall Scepter as that her Subjects loved her enemies feared her and every one with admiration honoured her She was about seventy years old when she died A most gracious and excellent Prince worthy of superlative praise for her most wise and politick government of the Commonwealth and for her heroick vertues far above that sexe In Queen Elizabeth besides her sexe there was nothing woman-like or weak Sclater Yet S●nders calleth her Lupam Anglicanam Rhiston Leaenam nostram omnes Athalias Maachas Jezabeles Herodiades superantem The very Heathen and Mahumetans the Persians and Idolaters the Aethiopians and Muscovites do name her with reverence Balsac in his second Book of Letters Letter 1. to my Lord Cecil saith Even he that excommunicated her spake of herwith honour Some think my Lord of Essex his death and the long concealing of the message he sent to her when discovered occasioned a deep melancholy first and after her death Osborn in his Miscellanies saith No act of hers was registred so contrary to the grain of her own people as the death of the Earl Others say the death of the Queen of Scots In her time the pure interest of England was the protection of Protestants and War with Spain For her mercifull returning home certain Italians which were taken prisoners in the eighty eight Invasion she was termed Saint Elizabeth by some at Venice One told the Lord Carleton being there Embassadour that although he were a Papist yet he would never pray to any other Saint but the Saint Elizabeth Mr. Trap on Ezra●c 1. My Lord Howard in his Manuscript in Oxford Library a learned piece worthy to be published stiled A dutifull defence of the lawfull regiment of women dedicated to Queen Elizabeth quotes divers Papists commending her In his Defensative against the poyson of supposed Prophesies c. 16. he saith thus When divers upon greater scrupulosity then cause went about to disswade her Majesty lying then at Richmond from looking on the Comet which appeared last with a courage answerable to the greatness of her state she caused the window to be set open and cast out this word Jacta est alea The Dice are thrown Affirming that her stedfast hope and confidence was too firmly planted in the providence of God to be blasted or affirighted with those beames which either had a ground in nature whereupon to rise or at least no warrant out of Scripture to pretend the mi●haps of Princes She equalled the best of her Predecessors and in learned endowments excelled them all A wise man that was an eye witness of many of her actions and of those which succeeded her many times hath said That a Courtier might make a better meal of one good looke from her then of a good gift from some other King The Parliament having been a moneth Queen Elizabeth sent for Mr. Popham the Speaker of the House and asked him What past since they sate He answered Iust twenty eight dayes Much might be said of her prosperity 1. She was advanced to the Regall Throne from a private and adverse fortune The more happy was her Government because it ensued upon the stormy times of Queen Mary She came as a fresh Spring after a sharp Winter and brought the Ship of England from a troublous and tempestuous Sea to a safe and quiet harbour Though the Author of Ierusalem and Babel saith she profest her self a Catholick during the Raign of her sister and speaks of the Duke of Feria's Letter to King Philip yet to be seen wherein is certified that the Queen had given him such assurance of her belief and in particular concerning the point of reall presence that for his part he could not believe she intended any great alteration in Religion yet I suppose he wrongs her therein as he doth Dr. Reynolds likewise in saying that he framed that combate which he published between himself and Mr. Hart at his own pleasure Anti-Sanderus in his second Dialogue saith thus Non solum nobilium potentissimos sed Episcopos omnes à quorum aliquo juxta priscam Angliae consuetudinem ungi coronari debuit factio Pontificia sic abripuerat ut cam quod Lutherano dogmate tingi crederetur solennitatibus illis usitatis decorare ad tempus procacissimè recusaverint Vide plura ibid. p. 179. Tot magnatibus in Anglia tempore Reginae Mariae deficientibus animosè perstitere Elizabetha postea Regina Johanna Graia Voet. Sel. Theol. Disputat part 3. Her time produced a world