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A09000 The life off the 70. Archbishopp off Canterbury presentlye sittinge Englished, and to be added to the 69. lately sett forth in Latin. This numbre off seuenty is so compleat a number as it is great pitie ther shold be one more: but that as Augustin was the first, so Mathew might be the last Stubbes, John, 1543-1591, attributed name.; Joscelyn, John, 1529-1603, attributed name. 1574 (1574) STC 19292A; ESTC S114022 30,512 96

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caution that nothinge shoulde be dispensed with againste the expresse will off God yet so vnrulye is the vn●ained and vnbrideled Arch●●p●scopall Iur●ssdiction that nether Lawe no● prou●so can prouide to keepe him vnder lawes As a perfection to all these is added his fowre Archiepiscopall courtes or fora which name I thincke is therfore equinocke to A Marke● and cour●e because in both a●l thinges are to be solde euen as in Rome These courtes are sett forth in there maiestye there Iudges Aduocates Proctors ● R●g●sters there seates off tribunall there Priuiledges and there powers all the solemnitye off pleadinge and installinge anye n●we Doctor not so much omitted as there sittinge downe and risinge vpp But aboue all this muste come often and euer in what a rule and absolute dominion Tharchbis beareth amonge them The auncientest off these is the mother courte off Bow Church nexte hir that off the audience but not so noble as the firste The thirde is the courte off prerogatiues which though● it be not so worthi●● as the other two yet it bring●th m●re to the Kitchin. The fourth 〈◊〉 that vpstarte courte off facu●ties 〈◊〉 trans●ated to that sea 〈◊〉 courte saieth the b●oke hath no mo●●tall f●are bel●ke b●cause it nether executeth 〈…〉 in the Archbish●ppes owne how●e as the bo●ke say●th An other 〈…〉 p●culiar courte there is for his owne Diocese wheare●s 〈◊〉 that booke that the maner and custome off the 〈◊〉 off 〈…〉 is that 〈…〉 thinges and deuine ●halbe 〈…〉 disposition 〈…〉 you sayeth that book● all th● pr●●minences priui●edges pr●rogatiues Immunites Iudgmente s●ates and courtes whearhy that 〈…〉 in all pointes perfected and 〈◊〉 And so farr is it of that thauthor theroff wou●de haue it reade as A probable reporte off tymes past that lest saye●h 〈◊〉 these thinges might be to you doubtfull or vncertaine I had my profes from suche and suche recordes which sayeth he be off suche force in lawe that no● on●ye in readinge but euē in 〈…〉 as ●noughe he tooke 〈…〉 he maketh a 〈…〉 betwene that 〈…〉 and victor●es 〈…〉 had againste his suffrag●s 〈…〉 at his pleasure the poore vnd●● bishopes sixe times It ti●e togither in that 〈◊〉 conclusion not once da●●●nge thē the name off bishopes and in the ende lappeth vpp all wi●h these 〈…〉 ād draweth vpp againe 〈…〉 licēcious raines off his vnbride●ed iurisdiction as thoughe be●●ke he wou●de make all Englande 〈…〉 for him to ride on and 〈…〉 his ambitious pleasure If in fiftene yeares this haughtynes 〈…〉 and put in priuate prince to flye with the ow●e by nighte there is no doubte but in fiftene hundreth yeares more it woulde growe to be well fethered and perf●ctlye s●●dge readie to flye abroode in the daye tyme with the other Birdes in publike writinges auowed and chalenged Th●ye therfore that will not prouide the medicine all to late muste resiste the beg●n̄inges leaste as it alreadye vaunteth it se●fe aboue all Ecclesiasticall degree so by creepinge vpp in tyme it will assaie in an other age to goe in the steppes off some off the forefathers off that sea and to treade on the neckes or to offer the stiroppe to the temporall Lorde her naturall soueraigne Princes We haue had to good experience in our Cronicles howe fast that ill weede Ambition groweth in there garden especiallye if it be dunged with to muche off that goulden carthe And euen he●rby maye somwhat apeare howe needfull it is to preuente suche mischiefs For who woulde haue beeleued that anye man not in the behalfe off him selfe but in the fauour off anye thoughe neuer so arch a Prelate would wrighte suche thinges as you haue hearde heere Whearin trulye I haue so kepte me to his wordes almost as if I had bene his transslatour especiallye in the wordes that are most proude ambicious and that do arrogate most Nether maye the author off that boke saye that he receiteth the bare historye for with all I say againe he alloweth plainly off it and euen in his transition from his said pretended preface off the auncienty off true religion in this land to his entended trety off Austen and his fellowes he speaketh as iff he weare in a matter off great earnest that for this cause he had more respecte to the Authors wordes alleaged thoroughe out that volume off lyues then to thelegaucie off his owne stile for that he would not swerue from the truthe forsothe off the storie And besides to what end else worte he that booke the whole purpose whearoff is to proue thauncientie off that sea together with the dignitie off them that satt therin as apeereth by the title or sumes off eche chapter To proue which auncientye off the one and dignitie off the other these many other like popishe presumptions and presumptuous poperies are the best and onely argumentes Which iff they wear all gleaned or rather mowed by handfulls and seuered a part from that which is spoken directly and to the purpose for thancientye off the poore Christian churche in England ther wolde bee but a poore haruest off that mater which is so gailie pretended euen scarse enoughe to make a storie off two leaues This title therfore of antiquitie of the whole bodye off the generall Christian church in this our English Lād is but a bare title nothing lesse mēt then to bee entreated of but onely to make his waye therthoroughe to the extolling and hoysing vp euen vppō mēs shoulders that particular mēber or chapell of Canterburie The which is more manifest in the solēpne legend which followeth off Idolatrous Archiflamines the which were euery one all their life longe so farre as man may iudge by that that is left of thē euē sitting in that throne professed Baalites and sworne Rōanistes except that onely most trueli gracious bishope and blessed martyr holy Cranmer and this man that nowe occupieth the Rome All I saie except these two were euen while they sat superstitious Archsacrificers ād principall bread worshippers Nowe I praie you what good cā cōe to the church of god by takīge together out of w. of Couentrie Simiō of Dumelme H. of Hūtington the storie of Rochester and such authētike writers the wicked liues ād grosse blindnes off Dunstā Cu●bert Becket and other ther fellowes off later tymes or what godly estimatiō to the Christiā church off England to haue the liues of suche not mē but mōsters recorded in this tīe as though they weare to bee reckned good workmē in the church Or rather is not this to vncouer the shame ād priuities of Cāterbury church to stanpe in printed letters such a successiō of Idolaters cōiurers canōized traitors and rebells as that sea hathe yelded But if once to name then bee to muche and to bestowe that labor in peacing togither the ragges off their stories be a worke of smal edifieng especially for an architect and maister builder of the church of God ▪ what is it to reckē vp so many of ther popishe tales vncontrolled their enthronizations
The life off the 70. Archbishopp off Canterbury presentlye Sittinge Englished and to be added to the 69. lately Sett forth in Latin. This numbre off seuenty is so compleat a number as it is great pitie ther shold be one more but that as Augustin was the first so Mathew might be the last Imprinted M.D.LXXIIII HISTORIOLA A litle storne of the actes and life of Mathew now Archbishoppe of Canterb. NOwe sithens we haue declared many thinges which we thought specially worthye of rehersall concerning thestate off corpus Christi coll and the actes of certaine masters therof ▪ it remaineth that we drawe out the narratiō a litle longer for the fore said Mathew Parker his sake of whom we haue hitherto spoken those things which he onely did for the amplyfying and commoditie off the said colledge off the which he was mayster But his praise was not shut vppe onely wythin those walls but he being called from thence to other functions in the cōmon wealthe at the last did beare the highest office of the Ecclesiasticall ministerie for he was the archbischoppe of Canterburye Therfore in his hystorie because his fame was more renowmed then any of the maysters of whom we haue made mention we will staye a litle longer and repeate the course of his life euen from his cradell He was borne in that famous citie of theaft Angles which ys called Norwitche in the yeere of the incarnatiō of our lorde a thowsand fyue hundreth foure the sixt daye of the moneth of August of honest parēts citezens his father called williā and his mother Alice who caused his childhode to be instructed in thelements of grammer as the coustome was then in the citye to frame the witts of children within their owne house till he was xviij yeeres olde At wihich tyme being Past his Childhode his mother riddeth him of her house his father being dead and sent him to Cambridge to th entent that the foundation of learning beinge already laid by the knowledge of grammer he might finishe the rest of the building in lerning the arts Therfore in corpus Christi coll he was sustained at the first wholly by his mothers charges of the which after a fewe monethes she being eased he was chosen into the number of those scollers which are called bibleclarkes of the especiall duetye which they execute He traueiled in logicke and Philosoph●e first in S· Maries hostell the title and gouernment wheroff partained then to corpus Christi coll vntill it ceased to be an house of learning for schollers In these kindes of studye whē he had spent three yeres and a litle more before the fourth was fully complete he was made bachelor of arte and three yeeres after that mayster off Arte and fellowe besides off corpus coll being first ētred in all the rites of holye orders But nowe he being very well and perfectly instructed in the libera●l sciēces he applied all his mynde to the studye of diuinitie and to the readinge of the volūes of th'ecclesiasticall fathers and that so earnestlye that in shorte space of tyme he bestowed his labor not vnprofitablye in this behalfe for after the space of foure or fiue yeeres he issuing frō his secret and solitarie studie into open practise in the common welthe preached euerie where vnto the people wih greate commendation and that in the most famōs cities and places of this realme by the auctoritie of king Henry the viij by whose lettres patentes this was graūted vnto hī togither with the licence of the. Archb. of Canterbury In executing of this fūctiō of preaching he gained this commoditie that the fame of him came vnto the eares of king Henry whervppon he being called into the kings courte was ther first made chapleyne to Queene Anne while she liued afterward to king Hēry the viij and last off all to Edward the vj. when he Ruled the common wealth All which prīces bestowed on him very large and plentifull Rewards for his diligence for by fauor off Queene Anne he was made deane off Stoke neere vnto Clare in suffolke by the liberalitie off king Henrye ther was geuē vnto him a Prebend off the new erection in the churche off Elye when he was now Bachelor off diuinitie after when he had clymed to the degree off doctorshippe by the kings letters off commendation he was made master off corpus Christi colledge where he had spent his youth in lerning Edward the sixt not interior to his father in bountifull and liberall nature in rewarding with free giftes the seruice off suche as partained vnto him gaue him also his desert in the seconde yeere off his raigne the deanerye off Līcolne and the prebēd off coringhā in the same churche He had besides by the gifte off the coll where he was mayster a benefice in the diocesse off Elye called Landbeache neere vnto Cambrydge further at this tyme he retayned and safelye held the deanrye off Stoke against all the importunate suit and complaints off diuers that labored for it vntill the first yeere off Edward the sixt when by a statute made at that tyme he was constrained to leaue that preferment receyuing notwithstanding in recompence a yeerely summe off 40. pounds out off the kings common treasorie But the case was so that at his first comming thither he was the author off building a scoole within the coll off Stoke and off the apointing a yeerly stipend vnto the scoolemaster to the ēde that the youthe mought be ther instructed in grammer and in the whole studye off humanitie whervpō by and by ther repaired thither on heapes the sonnes aswell off noble as meane mē so that it grieued him aboue all thīges either him selfe to forsake that goodlye compaigny off youthes or that it shuld be seuered and dispersed againe althoughe that by his trauaile he had prouided before that the scoole shold haue some assurāce although weake and vnstedfast But cōcernīg the promotions wherwih the boūty as I haue said ▪ off H●nrye the father and Edward the sonne had largely enriched him he reaped off them very pleasant fruite vntill the hard and troublesome tymes off Queene Mari● In the seconde yeere off whose raigne he was dispossessed off all his goodes not enioying any eyther cōmoditie or yeerely stipend The which extreame calamitie was cōmon vnto him with almost all the Bishoppes off England and other ministers off the churche for many causes and pointes of Religiō and especially for that one that they had maried wiues the which was lawfull to the ministers off the church by the statutes off king Edward the sixt established in two seuerall parliamentes and by the eternall word off God aboue which for any mortall man to presume it is bothe extreame madnes into●erable pride ● permitteed and specially for auoyding off whoredome commanded by S· Paule for this cause therfore he being depriued off all thinges which he had attained to by the bountye off his lordes he lurked