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A29169 A continuation of the Complete history of England containing the lives and reigns of Edward I, II & III and Richard the Second / by Robert Brady ... Brady, Robert, 1627?-1700. 1700 (1700) Wing B4187; ESTC R8686 729,577 622

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Remembrances and Monuments they could find to his loss 2000 l. They also burnt part of the Gates of his Castles and Houses and took the Irons out of the Windows and Leads off the Houses c. and carried them away to the damage of 2000 l. and then names Ten Castles in Wales and the Marches which they took and destroyed and with the same Force and Power they stayed in his Lands totally to destroy them about 15 days in which time they forced the greatest part of all the Country to Swear to be of their Party and those that would not they imprisoned put to ransom and burnt their Houses and Goods and in the same time they robbed and plundered him of all the Moveables in and upon his Mannors 60 large Working Mares with Colts and Foals of two years 160 Heifers 400 Oxen 500 Cowes with their Breed for two years 10000 Sheep 400 Hogs and all other necessary things found upon them as Carts Ploughs Vessels all these they took drove and carried away without leaving any thing from his Mannors Lands and Towns in Wales which were 24 in number to his damage of 2000 l. They burnt his Granges and destroyed his Crop upon the Ground to his damage of 2000 l. and the Debts which were owing him there by force and cruelty they made his Debtors pay unto them to the value of near 3000 l. with Fee-Farm Rents and other Customs which amounted to near 1000 l. And from Wales with the same Power and Force they came into England upon his Castles Towns and Mannors there and cut up his Woods Vnchaced his Chaces Disparked his Parks pulled down his Houses robbed and rifled as much as they could any where find to his damage of 10000 l. and then seized upon his Friends and his People whereof some they put to ransom some they rifled and some they imprisoned to the great grievance of them and then by the same Cruelties and Hardships they made the greatest part of the People against their wills to be of their Party and Sworn to them And also with their Force and Power they came to the Parlement at Westminster and there upon false Accusations without calling the said Hugh to Answer against all manner of Right and Reason and against the Law of the Land Erroneously Awarded him to be Disherited and Exiled England wherefore he prays the King as he is bound by Right of his Crown and by the Oath he made at his Coronation to maintain all People in their Rights That he would please to cause to be brought before him the Process of the Award made against him that it may be Examined and that the said Hugh may be received to shew the Errors in it and if there shall be any found he would please to Repeal and Redress them and to do further according to Right and Reason and the said Hugh afterward shall be ready to stand to Right and to answer every Complaint and Accusation according to Reason And he sheweth the Errors of the said Process For that the The Errors of the Award Great Men who pursued and destroyed him prayed Pardon of the King for all those things which might be Judged Felonies or Trespasses in that Pursuit which they made by their own Authority by which wrongfully they made themselves Judges of him where they could not or ought not to be Judges also Error in that the said Hugh was not called into Court or to answer where the Award was made also Error in that the Award was made without the Assent of the Prelates who were Peers in Parlement Item Error in that there was no Record of their Pursuit or the Causes contained in the Award also Error in that the Award was made against the Form of the Great Charter wherein is contained That no Man shall be forejudged nor in other manner destroyed unless by Judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land with Request to the King to take notice that the Great Men were summoned to come duely to the Parlement but did not when they came with Horse and Arms and all their Force Whereupon the said Hugh came and rendred himself Prisoner to the King praying he would receive him into his Protection to prosecute his Complaint and that Right might be done him in these Matters and the King received him as he ought to do sicome faire devioms and caused his Petition to be carried to the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury the Bishops and other Prelates and the Clergy of the Province of Canterbury then being in a Provincial Council at London charging them by the Faith they ought him to advise about the Petition and let him know their thoughts concerning it and when they had well Advised concerning it they answered That it seemed to them that the Process and Award of the Exile and Disinheritance of Hugh the Son and Father were Erroneous and Wrongfully made wherefore they agreed and unanimously assented as Peers of the Land and prayed as Peers Spiritual That the Award which was made wickedly and wrongfully against God and all manner of Right contre Dieu tote manere de droit might be by the King repealed and annulled for ever and said further That they nor none of them ever assented to the Award but that every one of them at the time when the Award was made in Writing made Protestation That they could not or would assent to it for many Causes and the Earl of Kent the King's Brother the Earls of Richmond Pembroke and Arondel before the King and Prelates said the Award was wrongful and against Law and Right and prayed him with the Prelates and as they had done before to null and make void the Award and the Earls affirmed That for fear of the Force which the Great Men suddenly brought to the Parlement to make the Award which was to them unknown and unexpected they gave their Assent to it and also advised the King to suffer it to pass for which Offence and Mistake they prayed his Pardon And then afterwards another Petition was delivered to the King on behalf of 3 Ibm. Claus 15 Ed. II. ut supra Hugh Spens●r the Father's Petition to the King Hugh the Father setting forth That the same Great Men before named and their Adherents and Confederates with Force and Arms on the Day of St. Barnaby in the 14th Year of the King came to his Mannor of Fastern in Wiltshire and Twelve others in that Shire Six in the County of Glocester Four in Dorsetshire Five in Hampshire Two in Berkshire Six in Oxfordshire Three in Buckinghamshire Four in Surrey One in Cambridgeshire Two in Huntingtonshire Five in Leicestershire One in Yorkshire One in Lincolnshire Five in Cheshire and Five in Warwickshire in all 63 Mannors there named where they made the same Havock committed the same Spoils Devastations and Destructions upon his Houses and Lands they had done upon his Sons and used his Debtors Tenants Friends and People as
granted the last Parlement and that they might be Sworn in their presence That what was Received by them should wholly be expended upon the Wars and not otherwise and that the High Treasurer of England should receive nothing or any ways meddle herein But afterwards when they had 9 Ib. n. 21. Who were laid aside and the High Treasurer made Receiver considered what Sum the Wages of such Four Treasurers would amount unto by the year quel somme les Gaiges des sieux quatre Tresoiriers resident ●ur celle fait amonteroit per an the Commons departed from this Request and prayed the High Treasurer might be Receiver to the use of the War in manner accustomed The 1 Ib. n. 32. The Commons Petition Commons in this Parlement beseeched the King That the Patent lately granted viz. November the 4th as above by the great Council to the Major Aldermen and Commons of the City of London upon the Article That no Strange Merchant That the Patent granted to London might be granted to other Cities and Burghs ought to Sell to another Strange Merchant any Goods or Merchandise to Sell again in manner as in the said Patent is more fully contained might be renewed and granted as well to other Cities and Burghs as to them with a Charter or Clause of Confirmation Of which Patent the Copy follows Edward 3 Ib. Rot. Parl. 51 Ed. III. n. 33. The Patent it self King of England c. To whom these present Letters shall come Greeting Our Beloved and Faithful the Major Aldermen and the rest of the Citizens of the City of London by their Petition exhibited before us and our Great Council containing amongst other things That for that all Strangers do freely sell all sorts of Merchandise whatsoever within the Liberty of the said City that they may be sold again as the Citizens do whereas the said Strangers according to the Liberty of the said City anciently obtained ought not nor could so do Whereby as well the said Citizens are much impoverished and Goods and Merchandise much more dear c. for Relief of the Citizens and Common Profit of our People under a grievous Forfeiture to us to command they shall be restrained We being favourably enclined to the said Petition Will and Grant That no Stranger within the Liberty of the City aforesaid shall sell any Merchandise to a Stranger or any ways presume to do it that they may be sold again until by the Noble and Great Men of our Kingdom per Proceres Magnates Regni nostri it shall be duly debated in our next Parlement whether our present Grant may for the future redound to the Disprofit or Common Profit of our People Saving always to the Lords of our Kingdom and all others that they may buy such Merchandise of all Men in Gross for their own Vse and saving also to the German Hanse Merchants the Liberties Granted and Confirmed to them by us and our Progenitors In Witness whereof we have caused to be made these Letters Patents Witness our self at Westminster Novemb. 4. in the Year of our Reign of England 50th of France 37th The Answer to the Petition above with which this Patent was delivered and presented by the Commons was Le Roy 4 Ibm. Ro. The Answer to the Petition voet estre informe The King will be informed At the same time the 5 Ib. n. 34. A Petition of the Commons and Citizens of London about their Corner Commons with the Mayor Aldermen and Commons of the City of London Petition the King That for divers Mischiefs that often happened in the said City by reason the Coroner was not Justiciable nest pas justisable by the Major Aldermen or other Officers That they might chuse a Coroner of themselves and remove him when they pleased as it was practised in many Cities and Towns of the Land they answering to the King in manner as appertained to the said Office The King's Answer was Le Roy 6 Ibm. my voet mye depart a son ancien Droit The King The King's Answer to it will not depart from his ancient Right The Commons Petition the 7 Ibm n 35. The Commons Petition that Foreigners might be removed out of the Land c. King That for many Causes well known to his Privy Council as to them That it would be profitable to the Kingdom that all manner of Foreigners were commanded out of it during the Wars unless they were Merchants and Artificers which were not Adherents to his Enemies and such as their stay were advantageous to the Reaalm and for that he was their Liege Lord pur le que voz esterz nostre Seigneur Liege c. and had the Power of doing Justice in Right of his Crown in all things Temporal within his Kingdom and that they have no Obedience of any thing Temporal but to him as their King and Liege Lord That he would please to Order and Command That none of his Lieges be Farmer or Servant to any that have Estates in England unless to such as inhabit there or such as were in his Legiance and had special Leave to live out of the Kingdom And that he would please to Command his Sage Council to add more to this matter that might be needful for the Amendment and Profit of his Kingdom And they all his said Commons make Protestations before God Himself and all the Prelates and Clercs which were at that Parlement That their Intent and Will was That the True Estate of Holy Church shall not by them be Blemished in any Point but otherwise preserved and kept safe according to your Pleasure The Answer was Le Roy les 8 Ibm. Ro. The King's Answer Grantz de la Terre s'adviserent en ordeneront que mien y soit Affoire The King and the Great Men of the Land will Advise and order what is best to be done And further in this case they Petition 9 Ibm. n. 36. They Petition against Provisors That all Provisors of Benefices from Rome and that their Officers or Servants may be put out of the King's Protection if they Sue Prosecute or any way Disturb or cause to be Excommunicated the True Patrons This was the Answer The Pope hath promised Redress 1 Ibm. The King's Answer and if he makes it not the Laws in this case shall be in force Amongst their Petitions in this Parlement we find the 2 Ibm. n. 75. The Commons pray the Judgment against the Lord Latimer may be reversed Commons pray the King and Noble Lords of Parlement That whereas in the last Parlement by untrue Suggestions and without due Process the Lord Latimer one of the Peers of the Realm and sufficient to be of the King's Council as well for his Wars as otherwise was outed of all Offices and Privy Council with the King estoit oustrez de toutz Offices des Privez Consielx entrour le
for there is nothing of this Accusation on the Parlement-Roll About the 6 Wals f. 310. n. 30. A. D. 1385. 8 Ric. II. The Duke of Lancaster goes into France makes only a Truce for 3 quarters of a year His extravagant Expences beginning of August the Duke of Lancaster went into France to Treat about a Peace or Truce He staid there long with many Noblemen and made a Truce only to the first of May next coming and then returned after the Expence of 50000 Marks While the * Ib. n. 40 50. John of Northampton's Trial and Judgment Duke was in France the King called many of the Noblemen together at Reding where John of Northampton was Tried for his late Practices in London when he was Convicted by the Testimony of his Clerc and Sentence was to be given upon him in the King's Presence He said such Judgment ought not to pass upon him in the Absence of his Lord the Duke which brought ill Suspicions upon him The Judge told him That he was to acquit himself by Duel of the Crimes laid against him or by the Laws of the Land to be Drawn Hanged and Quartered To which making no Answer he was condemned to perpetual Prison above 100 Miles from London and sent to Tintagel-Castle in Cornwal and the Goods to be seized to his King's Use Some time after the King * Ibm. f. 314. n. 50. The Duke of Lancaster was to have been Arraigned of High-Treason intending to Arraign the Duke of Lancaster upon several Articles of Treason before Sir Robert Trisilian Lord Chief Justice whereas he ought to have been Tried by his Peers he Victualled and Manned his Castle of Pontfract and stood upon his Guard until his Peace was made by the Princess of Wales his Mother On the 7 Rot. Parl. 8 Ric. II. n. 1 2 3. A Parlement The cause of Summons morrow of St. Martin or 12th of November a Parlement assembled at Westminster The Chancellor shewed the King's great Care of the Church Commons and Laws of England and further shewed how the Nation was invironed with Enemies the French Spaniards Scots and Flemings and that the chief cause of calling the Parlement was to provide for the Safety and Defence of the Kingdom and to consider how this Provision might best and most speedily be made and so as the poor People might be least burthened and withal let them know the King offered to go in his own Person for Defence of the Kingdom against any Enemy by the Advice of his Council These things considered 8 Ibm. n. 10. Two 15ths granted the Lords and Commons granted the King for the Defence of the Kingdom the Safeguard of the Sea and Marches of Scotland Two Fifteenths one to be paid at Lady-Day next coming the other at Midsummer upon condition that the last half Fifteenth granted at Salisbury might not be paid And in case the King went not in his own Person against his Enemies or that Peace or Truce should be made with them then the latter of these Two Fifteenths not to be Levied In this Parlement 9 Ibm. n. 13. The Judgment against Alice Perrers repealed Alice Perrers the Wife of Sir William Windsor petitioned to have the Judgment and Order made against her in the 50th of Edward III. and the Judgment and Statute made against her in the first of this King to be repealed and that she might be restored to all her Lands and Tenements 1 Ibm. Ro. Which was granted by Advice and Assent of the Lords and Commons so as the Gifts and Grants of any of the Lands Tenements and Houses repealed may remain in force There is nothing more concerning Scotland and England in our Historians for this Year but alternate Invasions as they found or made Opportunities and burning and plundering each others Countries Next Year 2 Knight col 2674 n. 60. The French and Scots join to invade England John de Vienna Admiral of France came from thence with a great Fleet and in June transported an Army into Scotland to join with the Scots to invade England The King prepares an Army to march into Scotland and sends the Duke of Lancaster with a good Force before to secure the Borders 3 Ibm. col 2675. n. 10. The King marcheth into Scotland with a great Army On the 7th of July the King was at Leicester and the Queen with him and there went before came with and followed him the Flower of the English Militia Earls Barons Knights Esquires Valets and others to a vast Number With this Royal Army the King marched into Scotland but could not find the Scots or at least could not follow them into the Woods Forests Fastnesses or the High-lands whither they drove with them their great Cattel 4 Ib. n. 20 30 40. The Scots fly into the Woods and High-lands Finding nothing in the Country he burnt Edinburgh and many other Towns cut down Woods and burnt them likewise While these things were doing by the English toward the High-lands about Edinburgh and in the East-Marches the Scots and French slipt the English entred the The French and Scots march into England West-Marches burnt Penreth plundered the Country took many Captives and made an Attempt upon Carlisle but hearing of the coming of the English got again into their own Country 5 Wals f. 317. n. 30. and do more Mischief there than the King with his Army did in Scotland A mighty Fleet prepared by carrying more out of England than the King with his Royal Army carried out of Scotland While the English Army was in Scotland the King of France was providing a mighty Fleet and Army at Sluis in Flanders to invade England Froysart 6 Vol. 2. cap. 53 53 54. the King of France to invade England says this Navy was Twelve hundred and eighty seven Ships in September 1386. at Sluis and Blanqueberg and adds since God created the World there was never seen so many great Ships together The Land-Forces were according to this mighty Fleet and the King having notice of these vast Preparations provided accordingly both by Sea and Land to intercept them or hinder their Descent 7 Ibm. c. 59. The Wind held contrary so as they could not pass toward England until after St. Andrew or 30th of November when a Council being called it was resolved it being so late in the Year the Expedition was laid aside until April or May following 8 Ib. c. 60. Froysard says he had an Account of the great Provision the Dauphin of Avergn made for this Voyage from himself In the 9th of this King a Parlement was 9 Claus 9 Ric. II. M. 45 Dors A. D. 1386. holden at Westminster on the Friday next after St. Luke in which the Lords Great Men and the Communities of Counties Cities and Burghs 1 Rot. Parl. 9 Ric. II. n. 10. A Tax granted for the Duke of Lancaster's Voyage into Spain Memorandum
and besieged the Castle and took it and within it William Lescrop Treasurer Sir John Bussy and Sir Henry Green all the King's Counsellors who the next day by the Clamor of the People had their Heads struck off The Duke of York the King's Uncle and Guardian of the Kingdom with several Bishops Noblemen and the King's Council consulted how they might oppose the Duke but could do nothing King Richard when he heard in Ireland of his Landing 9 Ibm. n. 40 50. The Nobility and People desert King Richard secured the Sons of the Duke of Lancaster and Glocester in Trim Castle and with the Dukes of Albemarle Excester and Surrey the Bishops of London Lincoln and Carlisle and many others Shipped themselves with all speed that they might raise such a Force as might hinder the Duke's Progress But when he landed understanding his own Condition That the People and greater part of the Lords had forsaken him and gone in to Duke Henry he laid by all thoughts of Fighting and likewise dismissed his Family giving them notice by his Steward Sir Thomas Percy That they might provide for and reserve themselves for better Times The King shifting up and down here and there for many days the Duke always following him with his Army at length fixed at Conway Castle and desired to have Discourse with the Arch-Bishop and Earl of Northumberland to whom he declared He would quit his Government if he might have his Life secured and an Honourable He offers to Quit his Government his Life and an Honourable Maintenance secured Which was Granted Provision made for himself and Eight Persons he should Name These things granted and confirmed he went to Flint Castle where after a short Discourse with the Duke of Lancaster they mounted their Horses and went to Chester Castle that night the Duke 's numerous Army following him At Chester 1 Clause 23 Ric. II. M. 3 Dors Writs for a Parlement in King Richard's Name He is secured in the Tower of London summons were issued in King Richard's Name for the meeting of a Parlement on the Morrow of St. Michael or 30th of September dated there on the 19th of August in the 23d of his Reign In the mean time the King was brought to and secured in the Tower of London until the Parlement should sit Holingshed tells us 2 Chronicle f. 501. a. col 2. The Duke's Obeysance to King Richard at their first meeting And Declaration of the Cause of his coming into England The Duke received at London with great Rejoycing ● The Instruments of the King's Resignation and Deposition contrived by his Order the Duke at the first meeting of King Richard which was at Conway Castle in Carnarvonshire as he came towards him made a Reverend Obeysance and going on did so a second and third time the King taking him by the Hand and bidding him Welcome whereupon humbly Thanking him said The Cause of his coming was to have Restitution of his Inheritance unto which the King readily assented and called for Wine and when they had drank mounting their Horses they rode to Flint and to Chester where they stayed two or three days and went from thence to Nantwich and so the common Rode to London where the Duke was received with all imaginable Expressions of Joy and the King sent to the Tower where we hear no more of him until Michaelmass-Day against which time the Instruments of his Cession Resignation and Deposition with the Articles against him were prepared which are here recited from the Parlement Roll exactly Translated The Roll of Parlement summoned and holden at Westminster in the Feast of St. Faith the Virgin or 6th of October in the Year of King Henry the Fourth after the Conquest the First Membrane xx The Record and Process of the Renunciation of King This Record is Printed in X. Authores Col. 2744. and in Pryn's Plea for the Lords p. 425. which I have compared with the Original Richard the Second after the Conquest and the Acceptation of the same Renunciation likewise with the Deposition of the same King Richard as it here follows BE it Remembred 1 1 Rot. Parl. 1 Hen. IV. N. 10. That on Monday in the Feast of St. Michael the Archangel in the Twenty third year of the Reign of King Richard the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and other Notable Persons That is to say The Lord Richard le Scrop Arch-Bishop of York John Bishop of Hereford Henry Earl of Northumberland and Ralph Earl of Westmerland the Lord Hugh Burnell Thomas Lord Berkley the Prior of Canterbury and Abbat of Westminster William Thyrninge Kt. and John Markham Justices Thomas Stow and John Burbache Doctors of Law Thomas de Erpingham and Thomas Gray Knights William de Feryby and Dionyse Lapham Publick Notaries being Deputed to that purpose came into the presence of King Richard within the Tower of London about Nine of the Clock when the Earl of Northumberland said before the King That at 2 2 Ib. n. 11. Conway in North-Wales and then at Liberty He promised to Thomas Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and himself That he would Quit the Crown of England and France and Renounce all Right to it and to Kingship for the Causes there by himself confessed of his Inability and Insufficiency and this he would do after the best Manner and Form he should be Advised by the Skilful in the Law The same King before the said Lords and others above-named kindly answered That he would with Effect perform what he had promised but first desired to have Conference with his Cousin Henry Duke of Lancaster and the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury before he did it and desired a Copy of the Renunciation he was to make might be delivered to him to Deliberate upon which was done and the Lords departed 3 3 Ib. n. 12. On the same day after Dinner the King much desiring the coming of the Duke of Lancaster and long expecting him at length he and the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury with the Lords and Persons above-named came to his presence in the Tower the Lords Roos of Willoughby and Abergavenny and many others then being present And after he had Conference with the Duke of Lancaster and Arch-Bishop looking about him with a Chearful Countenance as it seemed to the People about him the King called them all to him and said publickly he was ready to make his Renunciation as he had said before and presently taking the Parchment Schedule of his Renunciation into his Hands tho it was told him to spare the Labour and Trouble of Reading it he might have it done by another he said he would read it himself which he did distinctly and absolved his Lieges Renounced Quitted and Sware Read and Said other Things and Subscribed his Name with his own Hand as 't is more fully contained in the Latin Record the Tenor of which follows The Resignation of Richard the Second IN 4 4 4 Ib. n. 13. Name
what he was could confide in him yea he was reputed so Unfaithful and Inconstant that he was not only a Scandal to his own Person but to the whole Kingdom and all Strangers that knew him 26. Though the Lands Tenements 8 8 Ibm. n. 43. Goods and Chattels of all Free-men by the Laws of the Land ought not to be seized without Forfeiture yet the said King intending to enervate those Laws in the Presence of many Lords and others of the Community of the Kingdom he often said and affirmed That the Life of every Subject his Lands Tenements Goods and Chattels were his to be disposed as he pleased without Forfeiture which was altogether against the Laws and Customs of his Kingdom 27. Although it had been made a 9 9 Ibm. n. 44. Law which had hitherto been confirmed That no Free-man might be taken c. nor any ways destroyed nor that the King should proceed against him but by lawful Trial of his Peers or the Law of the Land yet according to the Will Command and Appointment of the said King very many of his Lieges being maliciously accused for having spoken publickly or privately Words that might tend to the Scandal and Disgrace of the King's Person were taken imprisoned and brought before the Constable and Marshal in the Court Military where being accused they could not be admitted to give any other Answer than Not Guilty and could defend themselves no otherwise than by their Bodies their Accusers being young Men Iusty and sound whereas they were old impotent lame and infirm from whence not only the Destruction of Lords and Great Men but of singular Persons of the Community of the Kingdom very likely might have followed When therefore the said King willingly contravened this Law it was no doubt but he incurred Perjury 28. Altho the People of 1 1 Ibm. n. 45. England by virtue of their Ligeance were sufficiently bound to their King and if they offended in any manner he might Correct and Punish them by the Laws and Customs of the Kingdom yet the said King desiring to supplant and too much oppress his People that he might more freely execute and be able to follow the Fancy of his foolish and unlawful Will he sent his Letters into all Counties of his Kingdom That all his Lieges as well Spiritual as Temporal should take certain Oaths in general which were too burthensome to them and which very likely might cause the final Destruction of his People and that under their Letters and Seals they should confirm these Oaths Which Command the People obeyed lest they should incur his Indignation and for fear of Death 29. When the Parties 2 2 Ibm. n. 46. contending in the Ecclesiastick Court in Causes merely Ecclesiastick and Spiritual indeavoured to procure Prohibitions to hinder Process in the same from the Chancellor of England who out of Justice refused to grant them yet the same King often granted them under his Signet wickedly infringing the Church Liberties granted in Magna Charta which he had Sworn to Preserve damnably incurring Perjury and the Sentence of Excommunication Pronounced by the Holy Fathers against the Violators of Church Liberties 30. The said King in Parlement 3 3 Ib. n. 48. compassed about with Armed Men without Reasonable Cause or Legal Process contrary to the Laws of the Kingdom Banished Thomas Arundel Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and his Spiritual Father being then absent by his Contrivance 31. Upon perusal of the said 4 4 Ib. n. 48. Kings Will under his Great Seal Privy Seal and Signet there was in it this Clause Also we Will That the Debts of our House Chamber and Wardrobe being paid for which we allow Twenty thousand Pounds and the Leprose and Chaplanes we appointed to be maintained at Westminster and Bermondsey for which we allow Five or six thousand Marks The Residue of our Gold shall remain to our Successor upon Condition he Approves Ratifies Confirms Holds and causeth to be Holden and Observed all Laws Statutes Ordinances and Judgments made had or done in the Parlement held at Westminster on the 17th of September in the 21st of our Reign and continued or adjourned to Shrewsbury and all things done at Coventry on the 16th of September in the 22d of our Reign as also what was done at Westminster on the 18th of March in the same year by Authority of the same Parlement But if he shall Refuse to do these things then we Will that Thomas Duke of Surrey Edward Duke of Aumarle John Duke of Excester and William le Scrop Earl of Wiltshire my Debts c. as aforesaid being paid shall have the said Residue for the Defence of the Statutes Ordinances Judgments and Stabiliments aforesaid to the utmost of their Power yea to Death if it be necessary Upon all which things we burthen their Consciences as they will Answer it at the Day of Judgment By which Article it appears evidently That the same King endeavoured pertinaciously to maintain those Statutes and Ordinances which were Erroneous Wicked and Repugnant to all Law and Reason not only in his Life but after he was Dead neither regarding the Danger of his Soul or the utmost Destruction of his Kingdom or Liege People 32. In the Eleventh year of the said 5 5 Ib. n. 49. King Richard at his Mannor of Langley in the presence of the Dukes of Lancaster and York and many other Lords desiring as it seemed That his Uncle the Duke of Glocester there also present might Trust and have Confidence in him of his own accord Sware upon the Venerable Sacrament of the Lords Body placed upon the Altar That he would pardon unto him all things which were said to be committed against his Person and that he should never receive any Damage for them yet afterwards the said King notwithstanding this Oath caused the Duke for those Offences horribly and cruelly to be Murdred damnably incurring the Guilt of Perjury 33. After a Knight of the Shire 6 6 Ib. n. 50. who had a Vote in Parlement impeached the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury publickly before the King and all the States of the Kingdom upon certain Defects committed against the King with little Truth as 't was said Altho he offered presently to answer what was objected against him and desired to be admitted by the King so to do sufficiently trusting as he said to demonstrate his Innocency yet the same King contriving by all the Ways and Means he could to oppress and reduce to nothing the State of the Arch-Bishop as the Event shewed kindly spake to and earnestly desired him that he would say nothing then but expect a more fit time That day being past for five days and more together the King deceived him advising and perswading him not to come to Parlement but to remain at his own House promising that in his absence he should not receive injury but the said King in that Parlement Banished the Arch-Bishop during his
Pleasure being absent and not called to answer without any reasonable Cause confiscating all his Goods against the Laws of the Land and all Justice by which he incurred Perjury Further the King intending to palliate his inconstancy by flattering Words endeavoured to cast the Injury done him upon others Whence the Arch-Bishop having Discourse with the King the Duke of Norfolk other Lords and Great Men lamenting said He was not the first had been Banished nor should be the last for that he thought within a short time the Duke of Norfolk and other Lords would follow him and constantly told the King That the Consequences of the Premisses would fall upon his own Head at last To which the King as if he had been astonished presently answered he thought it might so happen he might be expelled his Kingdom by his Subjects and further said if it should be so he would go to the Place where he was and that the Arch-Bishop might believe him he shewed him a great Jewel of Gold which he would send to him as a Token that he would not defer his coming to the Place where he was And that the same Arch-Bishop might have greater Confidence in him he sent to him advising him That he should privately send all the Jewels belonging to his Chapel to be safely kept lest under the colour of the Judgment of Banishment they might be seised it being so done the King caused the Goods to be put in Coffers which he caused to be Locked and Sealed by one of the Arch-Bishops Clerks by whom he sent the Keys to him and afterwards caused the Coffers to be broken taking the Goods and disposing of them as he pleased The same King also faithfully promised the Arch-Bishop That if he would go to the Port of Hampton in order to go out of the Kingdom that by the Queen's intercession he should be recalled And if it should so happen as he should go out of the Kingdom yet after Easter next coming without fail he should return into England nor should he any way loose his Arch-Bishoprick This he faithfully Promised Swearing to it touching the Cross of Thomas the Martyr Arch-Bishop of Canterbury Which Promises notwithstanding the King caused the Arch-Bishop to go out of the Kingdom and wrote to the Pope for his Translation and thus and otherwise by the Frauds and Cheats of the King was the Arch-Bishop a Man of good Faith craftily Circumvented These were the Thirty three Articles read in the Parlement against King Richard And because it seemed 7 Ib. n. 51. to all the States of the Kingdom it being singly and in common propounded to and asked of them That these Causes of Crimes and Defects were sufficient and notorious to Depose the same King his Confession also and other things considered contained in his Renunciation and Cession all the States aforesaid unanimously consented to proceed to the Deposition of him for the greater Security and Tranquility of the People and Profit of the Kingdom and accordingly appointed certain Commissioners the Bishop of Asaph the Abbat of Glastonbury the Earl of Glocester the Lord Berkeley Thomas Erpyngham and Thomas Grey Knights and William Thirnyng Justice to pronounce Sentence of Deposition against King Richard from all Royal Dignity Majesty and Honour in the Name and by Authority of all the States as in like Cases according to the ancient Custom of the Kingdom had been observed The Commissioners take upon them their Charge and the Commission being drawn up in Writing the Bishop of Asaph read it in these Words In the Name of God Amen 8 Ib. n. 52. We John Bishop of Asaph John Abbat of Glastonbury Thomas Earl of Glocester Thomas Lord Berkeley Thomas de Erpyngham and Thomas Gray Knights and William Thirning Justiciary by the Spiritual and Temporal Peers and Great Men of the Kingdom of England and by the Communities of the same representing all States thereof being specially deputed Commissioners for the things underwritten duely considering the many Perjuries Cruelty and many other Crimes committed by King Richard in the time of his Government and publickly Exhibited and Recited before the States which were so publick notorious manifest and famous as they could no way be denied and also his Confession acknowledging and truely of his own certain knowledge judging himself to have been altogether insufficient for the Government of the Kingdoms and Lordship aforesaid and that for his notorious Demerits he was worthy to be Deposed which things by his own Will and Command were published before the States Having had diligent Deliberation upon these things for the greater Caution to the Government of the Kingdoms and Dominion aforesaid the Rights and Appertinences of the same in the Name and Authority to us committed do Pronounce Decree and Declare that very Richard to be Deposed deservedly from all Royal Dignity and Honour and for the like Caution we Depose him by our Definitive Sentence in this Writing expressly inhibiting all and singular Arch-Bishops Bishops and Prelates Dukes Marquesses Earls Barons Knights Vassals and Valvassors and all other Men and Subjects of the said Kingdoms and Dominion or Places belonging to them for the future to obey the said Richard as King Furthermore the said States 9 Ib. n. 53. desiring there might be nothing wanting which was or might be required in this Matter being severally asked agreed to certain Persons to be their Proctors or Agents named by the Commissioners to go to King Richard to resign their Homage and Fealty had been made to him and give him notice what had been concerning his Deposition and Renunciation And presently it appeared from the 1 Ibm. Premisses and the Occasion thereof That the Kingdom of England was vacant when Henry Duke of Lancaster rising from his Seat and standing so right up as he might sufficiently be seen of the People humbly crossing himself in his Forehead and Breast first calling upon the Name of Christ challenged the Kingdom of England being void with the Crown and all its Members and Appertinences in his Mother Tongue lingua materna in this Form of Words In the Name of Fader 2 Ibm. Son and Holy Ghost I Henry of Lancaster chalenge this Rewme of England and the Croune with all the Membres and the Appurtenances al 's I am descendit by ryght lyne of the Blode coming fro the Gude Lord King Henry therde and throghe that ryght that God of his grace hath sent me with helpe of my Kyn and my Frendes to recover it The which Rewme was in poynt to be ondone for default of Governance and undoying of the gude Lawes After this Claim 3 Ibm. n. 54. as well the Lords Spiritual as Temporal and all States there present were asked one by one what they thought of it who without any difficulty or delay unanimously consented the Duke should Reign over them and immediately so soon as he shew the States of the Kingdom King Richard's Signet which he gave him as
If a Murderer If for all excess of Villanies odious and execrable both to God and Man Surely he deserveth the highest degree of Punishment and yet must not the Son lift up his Hand against him for no Offence is so great as to be punished with Parricide but our Country is dearer unto us then our Parents and the Prince is Pater Patriae the Father of our Country and therefore more Quintil. in declam offic lib. 1. sacred and dear to us then our Parents by Nature and must not be violated how Imperious how Impious soever he be Doth he Command or Demand our Persons or our Purses we must not shun for the one nor shrink for the other for as Nehem. 9. 37. Nehemiah saith Kings have Dominion over the Bodies and over the Cattle of their Subjects at their Pleasure Doth he enjoin those Actions which are contrary to the Laws of God we must neither wholly obey nor violently resist but with a constant Courage submit our selves to all manner of Punishment and shew our Subjection by Enduring and not Performing Yea the Church hath declared it to be an Heresie to Alphons● a Castro in lib. de haeresi in Verb Tyrannus Dom. S●to lib. 5. de just jure hold that a Prince may be Slain or Deposed by his Subjects for any Disorder or Default either in Life or else in Government there will be Faults so long as there are Men and as we endure with Patience a Barren year if it happen and unseasonable Weather and such other Defects of Nature so must we tolerate the Imperfections of Rulers and quietly expect either Reformation or else a Change But alass good King Richard what such Cruelty What such Impiety hath he ever committed Examine rightly those Imputations which are laid against him without any false Circumstance of Aggravation and you shall find nothing objected either of any Truth or of great Moment It may be that many Errours and Oversights have escaped him yet none so grievous to be termed Tyranny as proceeding rather from Unexperienced Ignorance or Corrupt Counsel than from any Natural and Wilful Malice Oh! how shall the World be pestered with Tyrants if Subjects may rebel upon every pretence of Tyranny How many good Princes shall daily be suppressed by those by whom they ought to be supported If they Levy a Subsidy or any other Taxation it shall be claimed Oppression If they put any to Death for Traiterous Attempts against their Persons it shall be exclaimed Cruelty If they do any thing against the Iust and liking of the People it shall be proclaimed Tyranny But let it be that without Authority in us or Desert in him King Richard must be Deposed yet what Right had the Duke of Lancaster to the Crown Or what Reason have we without his Right to give it to him If he make Title as Heir unto King Richard then must he yet stay until King Richard's Death for no Man can succeed as Heir to one that Liveth But it is well known to all Men who are not either wilfully Blind or grossly Ignorant that there are some now alive lineally descended from Lionel Duke of Clarence whose Offspring was by Judgment of the High Court of Parlement holden the Eighth year of the Reign of King Richard declared next Successor to the Crown in case King Richard should die without Issue Concerning the Title from Edmund Crouchbacke I will pass it over seeing the Authors thereof are become ashamed of so absurd Abuse both of their own Knowledge and our Credulity and therefore all the Claim is now made by Right of Conquest by the Cession and Grant of King Richard and by the general Consent of all the People It is a bad Wooll that can take no colour but what Conquest can a Subject pretend against his Sovereign where the War is Insurrection and the Victory High and Heinous Treason As for the Resignation which King Richard made being a pent Prisoner for the same Cause it is an Act exacted by force and therefore of no force or validity to bind him and seeing that by the Laws of this Land the King alone cannot alienate the ancient Jewels and Ornaments pertaining to the Crown surely he cannot give away the Crown it self and therewithall the Kingdom Neither have we any Custom that the People at Pleasure should Elect their King but they are always bound unto him who by right of Blood is right Successor much less can they confirm and make good that Title which is before by Violence usurped for nothing can then be freely done when Liberty is once restrained by fear So did Scilla by Terrour of his Legions obtain the Law of Velleia to be made whereby he was created Dictator for Fourscore years and by like Impression of Fear Caesar caused the Law of Servia to be promulged by which he was made Perpetual Dictator but both these Laws were afterwards adjudged void As for the Deposing King Edward the Second it is no more to be urged than the Poysoning of King John or the Murdering of any good and Lawful Prince We must live according to Laws and not to Examples and yet the Kingdom was not then taken from the Lawful Successor But if we look back to Times lately past we shall find that these Titles were more strong in King Stephen then they are in the Duke of Lancaster for King Henry the First being at large Liberty neither restrained in Body nor constrained in Mind had appointed him to succeed as it was upon good Credit certainly affirmed the People assented to this Designment and thereupon without Fear and without Force he was Anointed King and obtained full Possession of the Realm Yet Henry Son of the Earl of Anjowe having a nearer Right by his Mother to the Crown notwithstanding his Father was a Stranger and himself born beyond the Seas raised such rough Wars upon King Stephen that there was no end of spoiling the Goods and spilling the Blood of the unhappy People besides the ruines and deformities of many Cities and Holds until his Lawful Inheritance was to him assured It terrifieth me to remember how many Flourishing Empires and Kingdoms have been by means of such Contentions either torn in pieces with Intestine Division or subdued to Foreign Princes under Pretence of Assistance and Aid and I need not repeat how sore this Realm hath heretofore been shaken with these several Mischiefs and yet neither the Examples of other Countries nor the Miseries of our own are sufficient to make us to beware O Englishmen worse bewitched than the foolish Galathians Our unstayed Minds and restless Resolutions do nothing else but hunt after our own Harms No People more Hated Abroad and none less Quiet at Home In other Countries the Sword of Invasion hath been shaken against us in our own Land the Fire of Insurrection hath been kindled amongst us And what are these Innovations but Whetstones to sharpen the one and Bellows to blow up the
fervently to assist the Cardinals of the Roman Church whom the Wisdom of God had taken into part of the Apostolick Care thereof and to whom the fulness of Reverence was due from all Sons of the Church a cunctis Ecclesiae filiis debetur Reverentiae plenitudo yet they presumed to give them great trouble and to do unto them and their Agents grievous Injuries especially unto Neapoleon of St. Adrian and Francis of St. Mary in Cosmedin Deacon Cardinals notwithstanding they had done such things as promoted the King's Honour and hindred the contrary from being done 2. There was another Cause of profound Trouble arose in the Judgment of the Pope himself praeterea sensibus ipsius Pontificis alia profundae Turbationis causa consurgit c. That whereas sometimes imitating the Steps of his Predecessors he had provided the Ecclesiastick Dignities and Benefices of his Kingdom and other Lands with sufficient and worthy Persons and they having deputed certain Persons their Agents the King's Officers glorying in Licentious Wickedness altho they had no just Power or Jurisdiction given them in such Matters either from God or Man yet they rashly presumed to inhibit their Agents to act for them or form any Processes or cause them to be published whereby the Hinderers of such Proceedings damnably incurred the Sentence of Excommunication 3. Also adding worse things to the former not fearing any Citations concerning Matters that belonged to Ecclesiastick Jurisdiction granted by the Apostolick See tho against Ecclesiastick Persons they prohibit all such Citations to be executed and also that no Man go to the Apostolick See by virtue of such Citations nor make Instruments upon them or obey them under most grievous Punishment in Person and Goods against the Canon by which they do ipso facto damnably incur Excommunication 4. Also for that the Pope cannot sufficiently admire and feels the cruel Prickings in his Mind Item ex eo summus Pontifex non sufficit admirari diras sentit in animo Punctiones c. because the Nuncio's of the Holy See when sent into your Kingdom about Business they dare not publish them before they are shown to your self and if they do they are chased out of the Kingdom by Terrors and Frights and sometimes seised by your Officers as Vile and Reprobate Persons not attending what great Detraction of Honour and Reverence from the Holy See is made thereby in Contempt and Disgrace of the same as by the detestable boldness of the said Officers concerning Mr. William Piat a Messenger of the Holy See it doth most evidently appear who because as he ought not would not forbear gathering the Profits of Ecclesiastical Benefices reserved in your Kingdom by the Pope himself according to the prohibition of your Officers in Reproach of the Holy See and the Pope was by your Sheriff of Yorkeshire not attending that the Supereminent Authority of the Holy See is Honoured or Despised in its Ministers committed to Prison and there detained until he redeemed himself by paying 10 l. Sterling 5. Also your Officers refuse to cause to be taken such as are Excommunicated by Authority of the said See at the Request of the said Nuncio's or Judges sent from the Apostolick See 6. Also your Officers and Ministers do hinder the Delegates of the Apostolick See us and other Ordinaries nos alii ordinarii and all Ecclesiastick Persons whatever to judge of Causes meerly belonging to Ecclesiastick Jurisdiction and strictly forbid us and them tho unjustly That we nor they do any ways meddle with the Judgment of them minus juste nobis eis ne de cognitione hujusmodi intromittamus vel intromittant aliqualiter and if we or they do contrary to this Prohibition which ought not to be obeyed the same Ministers and Officers take unduely our and their Goods manifestly thereby hindring Ecclesiastick Jurisdiction which with Divine Reverence and as an help to their Salvation they ought with great Care to Defend Quam debent pro reverentia Divina eorum salutis argumento intentis studiis defensare 7. Also we and the Ordinaries aforesaid dare not take or keep in Custody any Ecclesiastick Person nor do Justice upon him what great Fault soever he hath committed being affrighted by the Threats of your Ministers 8. Also your Officers and Ministers not taking notice that Laics have no Power given unto them over Clercs Religious Ecclesiastic Persons tho they be in Priests Orders yea Bishops without Licence from the Pope or their Superiors in Derogation of your Honour do amercy them in Pecuniary Mulcts amerciant in paena pecuniaria and otherwise unjustly condemn them at their pleasure and force them to answer before themselves seising their Persons and Goods against their Wills in Criminal Personal and other Actions altho they alledge the Priviledge of Clerks to avoid their Jurisdiction ipsosque per captionem personalem bonorum suorum aliis tam super criminalibus quam personalibus aliis actionibus quibuscunque renitentes invites etiam eorum forum declinantes Clericale privilegium allegantes coram se respondere compellunt 9. Also your Officers and Ministers do condemn Clercs in Priests Orders as Thieves and Murderers and cause them to be put to Death offending thereby the Supreme King who hath forbidden his Anointed to be touched by any Secular Power in supremi Regis offensam qui Christos suos per quamcunque secularem potestatem tangi prohibuit and in these Cases Twelve Lay-men are admitted as Witnesses i. e. Jury-men against the Clerk who if they say they believe they committed the Fault for which they are accused upon this saying of the Witnesses they are condemned to Death for which things they undoubtedly incur the Sentence of Excommunication ipso facto 10. Also your Officers and Ministers take the Goods Rents and Profits of Prelates and Clerks at their pleasure not offering or giving them satisfaction 11. Also as well your Officers and Ministers as the Noblemen pretending that Churches and all Monasteries were founded by them do go and come into Religious Houses and the Houses of other Ecclesiastics at their pleasure and do so oppress them and make so great Exactions upon them that they scarce have sufficient to support themselves they sometimes extorting by violence half sometimes a fourth or other certain part of their Goods 12. Also when the Guard of Bishopricks Monasteries Priories and other Benefices of holy Church belonging to them by vacancy or otherwise his Officers and Noblemen destroyed and wasted the Houses Woods Warrens Fishponds Parks Beasts Mills and other Goods belonging to them so as in long time they could not be repaired or put into their former Estate for which such as were Counselling Aiding or Assisting in such Destruction incurred the Wrath of God and other grievous Pains from the Commission of which Wickedness the King ought to restrain his Officers After these Grievances 6 Ib. f. 7. a. the Pope complains he had often
or Tenths to be otherwise paid then they were granted that is the Ninths by such as held a Barony or used to be summoned to Parliament And then the King 1 Ib. n. 35. granted for him and his Heirs That if any Person do any act against the form of the Great Charter or any other good Law that he should answer in Parliament or other place where he ought by Law to answer The Statutes and the Conditions above-mentioned are enter'd Where the Statutes and Conditions are into the back of the Roll and Printed in the Statutes at Large this year and are a true Translation of the Record in French In the Third Chapter of the Statutes it was agreed That the Chancellor Treasurer Barons and Chancellor of the Exchequer the Great Officers to be sworn in Parliament Justices of both Benches Justices assigned in the Country Steward and Chamberlain of the King's House Keeper of the Privy Seal Treasurer of the Wardrobe Controllers and those that were appointed to remain and be about the Duke of Cornwall should then be sworn in Parliament and so from thenceforth at all times when they should be put in Office to keep and maintain the Privileges and Franchises of Holy Church the Points of the Great Charter the Charter of the Forest and all other Statutes without breaking any Point In the 4th Chapter of the same Statutes it is said it was agreed Orders about the Justices and great Officers That if any of the Officers aforesaid or Controullers or Chief Clerk in either Bench by Death or by other Cause be put out of his Office that the King by assent of the Great Men which should be nearest him in the Country and by the good Counsel he should have about him should put another convenient into his Office who was to be Sworn according to the Form aforesaid And that in every Parliament the King should take into his Hands at the third day thereof the Offices of all the Ministers aforesaid and so to remain four or five days except the Offices of the Justices of both Benches Justices assigned and Barons of the Exchequer so as they might be put to answer every Complaint And if by Complaint or otherwise they or any of them should be found faulty then to be attainted in Parliament and punished by Judgment of the Peers and outed of his or their Office and another convenient put in his place And the King was to cause Execution to be done without delay according to the Judgment of the Peers in Parliament Contrived by the Clergy It is very probable that these Agreements concerning the Officers were the Contrivances of the Arch-Bishop Bishops and Clergie for it was a great trouble to them that the Chancellor Treasurer and many other Officers who were Clerks had been put out of their Offices as hath been related before at the King's arrival in England and others that were Lay or Secular Persons placed therein 2 Walsingh f. 150. l. 13. Rex Edwardus Angliam intravit ministros suos videlicet Cancellarium Thesaurarium alios amovit non Clericos imo Seculares ad placitum suum substituit The Statutes above-mentioned were some months after the The Statutes and Conditions above-mentioned revoked making of them that is on the first of October next following revoked by the King as contrary to the Laws and Customs of the Land his Prerogatives and Royal Rights by the Advice and Consent of the Earls Barons and other Wisemen as appears by the Revocation it self of the same Date directed to the Sheriff of Lincoln Printed in this year in the Statutes at Large and in Pulton as likewise by a Writ directed to the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury The King 3 Append. n. 88. The King 's Writ to the Arch-Bishop that in a Provincial to be holden at London to the Venerable Father in Christ John Arch-Bishop of Canterbury Primate of all England Greeting Whereas some time since in our Parliament at Westminster assembled in the Quinden of Easter last past there were certain Petitions made expressly contrary to the Laws and Customs of England and not only very prejudicial but reproachful also to our Royal Dignity which if we had not permitted to have been drawn into a Statute the said Parliament had been without success and dissolved in Discord and so our Wars with France and Scotland which we principally undertook by your Advice had very likely been which God forbid in ruin And we to avoid such dangers permitting Protestations of revoking those things when we could conveniently that had so been extorted Nothing be done prejudicial to him or his Crown from us against our will yet permitted them to be sealed with our Seal at that time And afterward by the advice and assent of the Earls Barons and other Wisemen for Lawful Causes because our consent was wanting or as it is in the Revocation directed to the Sheriff of Lincoln because we never consented to the making of the Statute but as then it behoved us we dissimuled in the Premisses c. we have declared it null and that it ought not to have the name and force of a Statute And we understand you have commanded a Provincial Council to meet at London on the morrow of St. Luke next coming in which you intend to excite the Bishops of your Province against us and to Nor to confirm the Statute and Conditions ordain and declare some things prejudicial to us about confirming the said pretended Statute and for the enervation depression and diminution of our Royal Jurisdiction Rights and Prerogatives for the preservation whereof we are bound by Oath also concerning the Process depending between us and you for certain Matters charged upon you by us and that you intend to promulge grievous Censures concerning these things We willing to prevent so great mischief do strictly forbid that in that Council you do not propound or any ways attempt or cause to be attempted any thing in derogation or diminution of our Royal Dignity Power or Rights of the Crown or of the Laws and Customs of our Kingdom or in prejudice of the Process aforesaid or in confirmation of the pretended Statute or otherwise in contumely of our Name and Honour or to the grievance or disadvantage of our Counsellors or Servants Know ye that if you do these things we will prosecute you as our Enemy and Violatour of our Rights with as much severity as lawfully we may Witness the King at Westminster the first day of October The Revocation was confirmed or rather the Statute vacated in Parliament the 17th of Edward the Third in the very next Title or Number to the Acquittal of the Arch-Bishop as followeth 4 Append. n. 89. The Revocation confirmed in Parlement Also it is accorded and assented unto That the Statute made at Westminster in the Quinden of or fifteen days after Easter shall be wholly repealed and annulled and loose the
Court of Kings-Bench in the time of his Grandfather Edward I. He also 2 Ibm. wrote to Robert de Wodehouse Arch-Deacon of Richmond That he had notice that he and some others were contriving by divers Processes to put the Cardinal in corporal Possession of the Treasury of York to the great Prejudice of his Crown and strictly prohibited him That he should do nothing to the impairing of his Right and if any thing had been done by himself or others by his procuring he should without delay revoke it And so behave himself in this matter as he might not have cause grievously to chastise him as a Violator of the Rights of his Royal Dignity After the same manner Directed his Writs to these under-written The Arch-Bishop of Canterbury The Bishop of Lincoln Manser Marmyon The Bishop of Worcester The Bishop of Salisbury The Prior of Lewis The Prior of Linton The Dean of the Church of Aukland Mr. Richard de Byntworth The Arch-Deacon of Lincoln Mr. Ischer de Concoret Mr. Guido de Calm In the 10th of his Reign the King 3 Append. n. 98. wrote to the Pope Benedict X. That his Progenitors had long since Founded and Endowed the Church of England and freely collated to the Cathedral Churches by their Royal Right That afterwards upon the Petition of the Clergy and for the Reverence and at the Request of the Pope that then was the King that then was Granted to the Chapiters of the Cathedral Churches Power of Chusing a Bishop when the See was void saving to him and his Successors the Prerogative That when the Church was void the Chapiter should let him know it and make their Request to have Licence to Chuse a Bishop and when he was Chosen to present him to the King for his Assent before he proceeded further in the Business of his Election And then after he had been Confirmed he was to request of the King the Temporalities belonging to the Bishoprick and do him Fealty for them And what was done against this Form was void That the Bishoprick of Norwich being vacant he had given the Prior and Chapiter leave to Chuse who presented their Elect to him but having a desire to be fully satisfied concerning something he had heard of him before he gave his Consent by the Advice of Wise Men he gave him a short Day to receive his Answer But he scornfully rejected this way of Proceeding and prosecuted the Business of his Election in the Court of Rome to his Reproach and in Contempt of his Royal Right the Depression of his Royal Prerogative and manifest Danger of Disheritance Wherefore he implored his Favour to take the Premisses into due Consideration and deny him Audience for the Confirmation of his Election until he had obtained his Assent according to the Form aforesaid which he was ready to grant without difficulty if there was no reasonable cause for which he ought not to do it Concluding That if he should not take notice of this Supplication of the Elect of Norwich to the Pope yet his Subjects would not suffer it The King supposing 4 Rot. Rom. 16 Ed. III. n. 2. his Sacred Palace who were such to whom the Pope referred the Hearing of Causes in his Palace though otherwise good Lawyers yet might be ignorant of the Laws and Customs of England wrote to them and gave them notice That all Causes about Right of Patronage whatsoever were pleaded determined and ended in his Court before his Justices and ought not to be discussed any where else Then That if any Man Married a Woman that was Patroness of any Church or Ecclesiastic Benefice and had Issue by her and she died before him upon any Vacancy he was to present during his Life and his Clerc was to be instituted by those unto whom it belonged And further That if any Tenents in Capite died possessed of Lands to which the Patronage of any Benefices were annexed that if there hapned any Vacancies after the Death of the Tenant while the Lands were in the King's hands it was his Right to present to them And therefore desired that if any of these Matters came before them they might be duly considered and nothing done in prejudice of his Court or the Laws of his Kingdom And in these 6 Stat. at large 14 Ed. III. Presentments as also of those made in the Vacancies of Arch-Bishopricks Bishopricks a Plenarty or that the Church was full was no more an Exception or Plea against the King than if they had been made in Right of his Crown until by the Statute for the 6 Ibm. Clergy made upon the Petition of the Arch-Bishops Bishops and Clergy in the 14th Year of his Reign Chap. 2. he granted it should be a Barr to him and his Heirs Before that the King had his Remedy against the Incumbent if he had not been duly presented For then Institution though upon a wrong Presentation against a common Person made a Plenarty but to make it against the King Induction or actual Possession of the Church was also required Yet before this Statute neither could be pleaded against him In the 17th Year of his Reign there was Complaint made in Parlement 7 Ro● Parl. 17 Ed. III. n. 39. of Strangers holding so many Benefices in England That the Alms which wont to be were not performed That much of the Treasure of the Land was carried beyond Sea for the Maintenance of the King's Enemies the Secrets of the Nation discovered and by this means the Able and Loyal Clercs of the Nation the less advanced That of late there were many Cardinals made to Two whereof the Pope had granted by his Bulls Benefices in this Land to the value of Six thousand Marks Sur ce ore de novel plusours Cardinalx sont faitz dont le Pape par ses Bulles ad grantez as deux de eux Benefitz en ceste Terre a la Montance de vj. M. Marcs That the Commons understood that one of the Cardinals namely he of Perigort was the most fierce Enemy and the most against the King's Designs of any in the Court of Rome That in time the Nation by such Grants would be filled with Strangers and in a short space no Clerc of his Country though the Son of a Great Lord or other would find any Benefice to which he might be advanced and this to the great Damage of the King and whole Commons by reason of such Reservations and Provisions For which things the Commons pray Remedy par la dite Comune ne le poet ne le voet plus endurere for that they could not nor would longer endure it because all the Foundations and Advowsons of Arch-Bishopricks Bishopricks Abbeys Priories Churches Parochial and the whole Spiritual Revenue of this Land were of the Foundations of the Kings Earls Barons and the Commons sont des Fundacions des Roys Countes Barons de la Comunes That it would please the King to write to
The Bishop of Norwich his 2d Offer Accepted by the King and his Council and approved by the Commons having had time to consider of his first Profer makes a second To serve the King one Year with 2500 Men at Arms and 2500 Archers well Arrayed and Mounted for the whole Fifteenth granted by the Laity of which Number 1000 Men at Arms and 1000 Archers should be ready to pass the Sea for the Relief of Gaunt and the Country of Flanders within 20 Days after the first Payment and that he would take upon him to pay the Charge of Shipping and other Charges 5 Ibm. This Profer was accepted by the King and his Council and much approved of by the Commons This Bishop some time before had received 6 W●●s f. 291. n. 30 40. The Bishop of Norwich had Bullsfrom Pope Urban for a Croysado against the Anti-Pope Clement Bulls from Pope Vrban for a Croysado and to sign all with the Cross that would go with him into France for the Destruction of the Anti-Pope who called himself Clement and to Sanctifie the War against all his Adherents which were the 7 Knighton col 2671. n. 20 30 c. The Ladies give their Jewels Necklaces Rings c. toward this Croysado French Scots Flemings and many other Nations By virtue of these Bulls he collected a great Sum of Money besides Jewels Necklaces Rings Dishes Spoons and other Silver Implements especially of Ladies and other Women And many gave 8 Ibm. to be pardoned and absolved from their Sins beyond their Ability as it was believed to obtain the Benefit of Absolution and Pardon for their Sins For otherwise they were not absolved unless they contributed according to their Ability Many found Men at Arms others Archers and many went in their own Persons The Form of Absolution was this By Apostolic Authority to me committed 9 Append. ● 105. The Form of the Absolution I do Absolve thee A. B. from all thy Sins which thou dost with a contrite Heart confess or would confess if thou didst remember them and give thee a Full Remission of them the Retribution of the Just and do promise the Increase or Addition of eternal Salvation And I Grant to thee the same Privileges that are Granted to such as go to the Defence of the Holy Land and do impart to thee the Benefit of the Prayers and Suffrages of the Holy Catholic Church To publish this Croysado and to absolve according to this Form there were a sufficient number of Preachers sent beyond Sea and all England over besides all the Mendicant Friers to stir up the People to contribute with a Clerc to take the Names and receive Money of the Contributors not omitting Labourers Knighton Col. 2673. Toward the latter end of 1 Wals f. 298. n. 30 40. The Bishop passeth beyond Sea with his Army May the Bishop passed the Sea with his Army staid a few Days at Calais besieged Graveling and took it by Assault Dunkirk yielded without much trouble where some Flemings joining with the French and Britans to the number of 30000 came toward the Town 2 Ibm. f. 301. lin 11. Knight ut supra n. 50 60. His great Success He besieged Ypre against whom the Bishop tho' but with a small Number in respect of theirs marched out of Dunkirk and gave them Battel taking many and killing 3000 Walsingham says 12000. Afterwards he took in Cassal Dixmude Burburgh Fern Newport and Popering Then he besieged the 3 Knight ib. His Army left the Siege and revolted from him Town of Ypre a long time assaulted it often and was always repulsed and beaten off and at length without his Knowledge the Army left the Siege and Revolted from him The Battering Engines were all left behind with one great Gun called Canterbury-Gun 4 Ibm. col 2672. lin 3. cum una magna Gunna vocata Gunna Cantuariensis The Bishop followed his Army and went to Dunkirk with Sir Hugh Caverse and part of it and from thence to Gravelin Sir Thomas Trivet Sir William Elingham and others went to Burburgh with other part of the Army and fortified it 5 Ibm. n. 10 20 30. The King of France takes Burburgh The King of France comes suddenly upon them with a great Army besieged the Town assaults it and was beaten off with loss Yet within few Days they treated and yielded the Town to the King of France upon Condition to march away with Horse and Arms and all their Goods and so they did to Calais After 6 Wals f. 304. n. 50. f. 305. n. 10 20 30. and Gravelin Burburgh was taken the French Army marched before Graveling and summoned the Bishop to yield the Town The French offered him 15000 Marks to quit the Town with liberty to demolish it and to depart and go whither he would and all with him with all their Goods He desired Time to consider of the Terms and appointed a Day to give his Answer and in the meant time sent to England for Relief which not coming at or before that Day he accepted the Terms levelled the Town to the ground and came for England after Michaelmas And thus ended the Croysado or the Pontifical War Before the Return of the Bishop of Norwich Writs Dated the 20th of August had been 7 Claus 7 Ric. II. M. 37. Dors A. D. 1384. A Parlement called The Reasons of calling it given in the Writ of Summons sent forth for a Parlement to meet on Monday before All-Saints In which Writs notice was given That by Advice and Assent of the Council the Parlement was called for their Mediation and Assistance in a Treaty of Peace to be had then between the King his Kingdom Dominions and Subjects on the one part and Robert King of Scotland his Lands Dominions and Subjects on the other part and for other Difficult and Urgent Business which concerned him the State and Defence of the Kingdom and Church of England Sir Michael de laPole then Chancellor 8 Rot. Parl. 2 Ric. II n. 3. The same and other Causes of Summons declared by the Chancellor shewed the Causes of Parlement to be for that the Truce with the Scots was to end at Candlemas next and whereas the Duke of Lancaster had been sent to renew it he was returned and brought back That the Scots would send Commissioners to London to manage the Treaty about it Another Cause was 9 Ib. n. 4 5 to provide against Three Powerful Enemies Spain France and lately Flanders And here he offered several Reasons to prove it was better for us to begin and make War upon them than they upon us or suffer them to invade us Further shewing That these Wars were not to be imputed to the King seeing that with the Crown they descended to him And the last Cause was 1 Ib. n. 6. for the Maintenance of good Laws and Security of the Peace when he put them in mind of
the King and his Kingdom After this 5 Ibm. col 2705. n. 10 20 30. Many sent to Prison Others removed from Court the King commanded many there named to be sent to the Castles of Nottingham Dover Bristol Rochester Glocester c. to be kept until next Parlement to answer their Demerits There were also then Removed from the Court John de Fordham Bishop of Durham the Lords Beaumont Zouch Burnel and Lovell Sir Thomas Camoys the Son of the Lord Clifford Sir Baldwin Bereford the Bishop of Chichester the King's Confessor the Lady Mohun the Lady Poynings and the Lady Molineux 6 Ibm. col 2706. n. 10. The Judges taken off the Benches and sent to the Tower And on the first Day of the Parlement Sir Roger Fulthrop Sir Robert Belknap Sir John Cary Sir John Holt Sir William Burgh all Judges and John Loketon Serjeant at Law were taken off the Benches doing their Offices and sent to the Tower On the 17th of 7 Claus 11 Ric. II. M. 24. Dors A Parlement called The Cause of Summons Decemb. Writs were issued for a Parlement to meet on the 3d of February or on the morrow of the Purification of the Virgin Mary next coming On that Day Thomas Fitz-Alan Bishop of Ely and Chancellor of England Brother to the Earl of Arundel from whence his Name of de Arundel from that Title declared the cause of Summons to be 8 Rot. Parl. 11 Ric. II. n. 1. part 1. To consider by what means the Troubles in the Kingdom for want of good Government might be ended the King better Advised the Realm better Governed Misdemeanours more severely punished and good Men better encouraged how the Kingdom best defended the Sea best kept the Marches of Scotland best guarded Guyen preserved and how the Charges of these things was most easily to be born And then gave notice That who would complain in that Parlement of such things as could not well be redressed by the Common Law might carry their Petitions to the Clercs in Chancery there named appointed to receive them Thomas Duke of Glocester 9 Ibm. n. 6. The Duke of Glocester's suspicion of himself The King declares him not guilty kneeled before the King and said he understood the King had been informed that he was about to depose him and make himself King and profered to stand to the Award of his Peers in Parlement The King declared openly That he did not think him Guilty and had him fully excused The Lords Spiritual and Temporal then present * Ibm. n. 7. claimed as their Liberty and Franchise That all great Matters moved in that Parlement and to be moved in other Parlements in time to come touching Peers of the Land should be discussed and judged by the course of Parlement and not by the Law Civil or the Common Law of the Land used in lower Courts of the Kingdom Which Claim Liberty and Franchise the King benignement kindly allowed and granted in full Parlement The Five 1 Ibm. n. 8. The Protestation of the 5 Lords Appellants Lords Appellants Thomas Duke of Glocester Henry Earl of Derby Richard Earl of Arundel Thomas Earl of Warwic and Thomas Earl of Nottingham and Earl-Marshal made open Protestation in full Parlement That what they did touching their Appeal and Suit in that Parlement and had done before and all the Men and People being in their Company or of their Retinue or Assembly and with them in all that Affair was done principally to the Honour of God and in Aid and Safety of the King and all his Kingdom and the Safety of their Lives The Lords and Commons 2 Ibm. n. 11. Half a 10th and half a 15th granted granted half a Tenth and half a Fifteenth before the Parlement ended with Protestation That it was done of Necessity and that it might be no Prejudice to the Lords and Commons in time to come because it was granted And further they pray the King That notwithstanding the Grant so made the Parlement might hold on its course and be Adjourned if need were and that all things touching the said Parlement might be done and executed as if the Grant had not been made until the end of the Parlement in manner accustomed And the King granted their Request as a thing he ought to do of Reason Friday the 21st of March which was the 46th Day of Parlement 3 Ibm. n. 12. in fine The Prelates Lords and Commons swear the Prelates Lords and Commons made the Oath following upon the Cross of Canterbury in full Parlement Tou shall 4 Append. n. 106. Their Oath Swear That you will keep and cause to be kept the good Peace Quiet and Tranquillity of the Kingdom And if any will do to the contrary thereof you shall oppose and disturb him to the utmost of your Power And if any People will do any thing against the Bodies of the Persons of the Five Lords that is to say Thomas Duke of Glocester Henry Earl of Derby Richard Earl of Arundel and Surrey Thomas Earl of Warwic and Thomas Earl-Marshal or any of them you shall stand with them to the end of this present Parlement and maintain and support them with all your Power to live and die with them against all Men no Person or any other thing excepted saving always your Legiance to the King and the Prerogative of his Crown the Laws and good Customs of the Kingdom The Lords and Commons grant to the King in Defence of the The Subsidy of Leather Wooll c. Realm a Subsidy upon Leather Wooll and Woollfells 5 Rot. Parl. 117 Ric. II. n. 16. granted upon condition upon Condition the Five Lords Appellants should have out of it 20000 l. by Assent and Grant of the King for their Costs and Labour and Expences before that time for the Honour Profit and Safety of the King and whole Kingdom The Commons 6 Ib. n. 23. The Commons Request to the King pray That no Person of what Estate soever do intermeddle with the Business of the Kingdom nor the Council of the King but those assigned in his Parlement unless it be by Order of the Continual Council And prayed also That they might have Power to remove all Persons from the King which they thought fit to remove and put others in their Places As to the first Point of this Article 7 Ibm. Ro. His Answer le Roy le voet the King granteth it As to the second if any Lord of the Council or other Lord of the Kingdom will inform the King that he had about him any Person not Sufficient or Honest he willeth That if it be proved he shall be put away and removed and another Sufficient by Advice of himself put in his Place In this 8 Ib. part 2. Alexander A Bp. of York the Duke of Ireland and Earl of Suffolk accused Parlement Thomas Duke of Glocester Constable of England Henry Earl of Derby
he was very Angry especially because they desired him to be under Good Government but by Divine Providence and the Resistance and Power of the said Lords the King could not bring his Design to effect Thirdly When the Lords 3 3 Ibm. n. 20. Temporal in Defence of themselves resisted his Malice and Craft the said King prefixed a Day for the Parlement to do them and others Justice who upon Faith and Confidence therein remained quietly in their own Houses the King privately with his Letters or Commission sent the Duke of Ireland into Cheshire to raise Arms against the said Lords Great Men and Officers of the Commonwealth Publickly exciting his Banners against the Peace he had Sworn to from whence Homicides Captivities Dissentions and other infinite Evils followed in the whole Kingdom for which cause he incurred Perjury Fourthly That although the said 4 4 Ibm. n. 21. King had Pardoned the Duke of Glocester the Earls of Arundel and Warwic and all their Assistants in full Parlement and for many Years had shewn chearful Signs of Peace and Love towards them yet the same King always bearing Gall in his Heart taking Opportunity caused to be seized the Duke of Glocester and the said Earls of Arundel and Warwic and sent the Duke to Calais to be imprisoned under the Keeping of the Earl of Nottingham one of his Appellants and without Answer or lawful Process caused him to be strangled and inhumanly and cruelly murdered The Earl of Arundel Pleading his Charter of Pardon and Demanding Justice in Parlement was encompassed with great Numbers of Armed Men and had his Head Damnably struck off and committed the Earl of Warwic and Lord Cobham to Perpetual Prison confiscating their Lands against Justice the Laws of the Land and his express Oath giving them to their Appellants Fifthly At the time 5 5 Ibm. n. 22. when in his Parlement he caused the Duke of Glocester and Earls of Arundel and Warwic to be adjudged that he might more freely exercise his Cruelty upon them and in others fulfil his injurious Will he drew to him a great multitude of Malefactors out of the County of Chester who marching up and down the Kingdom with the King as well within his own House as without cruelly killed his Lieges beat and wounded others plundering the Goods of the People refusing to pay for their Victuals violating and ravishing Men's Wives and other Women And although Complaints were made to the King of these Excesses yet he took no care to apply Remedy or do Justice in them but favoured those People in their Wickedness confiding in them and their Assistance against all others of his Kingdom wherefore his Good Subjects had great matter of Commotion and Indignation Sixthly Though the said 6 6 Ib. n. 23. King caused Proclamation to be made through the Kingdom That he caused his Unkle the Duke of Glocester and the Earls of Arundel and Warwic to be Arrested not for any Rebellious Congregations or marching with Horse within the Kingdom but for many Extorsions Oppressions and other things done against his Regality and Royal Majesty And that it was not his Intention that any of their Company at the time of the Congregation and Marchching with Horse aforesaid should for that Reason be Questioned or Disturbed Yet the same King afterwards in his Parlement Impeached the said Lords not for Extorsions Oppressions or other things aforesaid but for Rebellious Tumults and Congregations and Marching with Horse adjudged them to Death and caused many of their Company for fear of Death to make Fine and Ransom as Traitors to the great Destruction of many of his People and so he craftily deceitfully and maliciously Deceived the Lords their Followers and People of the Nation Seventhly After many of these 7 7 Ibm. n. 24. Persons who had paid their Fines and Ransoms and had obtained his Letters Patents of full Pardon yet they received no Benefit by them until they made new Fines for their Lives by which they were much impoverished And this was much in Derogation to the Name and State of a King Eightly In the last 8 8 Ibm. n. 25. Parlement holden at Shrewsbury the same King propounding to Oppress his People subtilly procured and caused to be granted That the Power of Parlement by Consent of all the States of the Kingdom should remain in some certain Persons who after the Parlement should be Dissolved might Answer the Petitions depending in Parlement then undetermined under pretence whereof they proceeded to other General Matters touching that Parlement ac-according to the King's Will in Derogation to the State of Parlement great Disadvantage to the Kingdom and a pernicious Example And that these Actions might seem to have some Colour and Authority the King caused the Rolls of Parlement to be changed and blotteed contrary to the Effect of the Grant aforesaid Ninthly Notwithstanding the said King at his 9 9 Ibm. n. 26. Coronation sware That he would do in all his Judgments equal and Right Justice and Discretion in Mercy and Truth according to his Power yet the said King without all Mercy rigorously amongst other things Ordained under great Punishments That no Man should intercede with him for any Favour toward Henry Duke of Lancaster then in Banishment in so doing he acted against the Bond of Charity and rashly violated his Oath Tenthly That though the 1 1 Ibm. n. 27. Crown of England the Rights of the Crown and Kingdom it self have been in all times so Free as the Pope or any other Foreign Power had nothing to do in them yet the said King for the confirming of his erroneous Statutes supplicated the Pope to confirm the Statutes made in his last Parlement whereupon he obtained his Apostolic Letters or Bull wherein were contained grievous Censures against all such as should presume to contravene them All which things are known to be against the Crown and Royal Dignity and against the Statutes and Liberty of the Kingdom Eleventhly Though Henry now Duke of Lancaster 2 2 Ibm. n. 28. by the King's Command exhibited his Bill or Accusation against the Duke of Norfolk concerning the State and Honour of the King and duly prosecuted it so as he was ready to make it good by Duel and the King had ordered it yet the same King put it by and without any lawful Cause Banished the His own Father John D. of Lancaster was the First Commissioner in this Judgment in Parlement See Pleas of the Crown 21 Ric. II. Duke of Lancaster for Ten Years against all Justice the Laws and Customs of the Kingdom and the Military Law Damnably incurring Perjury Twelfthly After the said King had graciously granted 3 3 Ibm. n. 29. to the now Duke of Lancaster by his Letters Patents That while he was in Banishment his Attorneys might sue for Livery of any Inheritance might fall to him for which Homage was due which should be respited for a
those of his Son except that the loss of his Goods moveable and immoveable in and upon his Mannors and Lands were greater as namely two Crops of Corn one in the Barns or Granges the other upon the Ground 28000 Sheep 1000 Oxen and Heifers 1200 Cows with their Breed for two Years 40 Mares with their Breed for two Years 560 Cart-Horses 2000 Hogs 400 Kids 40 Ton of Wine 600 Bacons 80 Carcasses of Beef 600 Muttons in the Larder and 10 Tons of Cyder Armour for 200 Men and other Warlike Engines and Provisions with the Destruction of his Houses to his Damage 30000 l. And at the same time they entred the Abby of Langley in Wiltshire broke up his Coffers and carried away 1000 l. in Silver also his Charters Evidence and Bonds Cups of Gold and Silver and other Silver Vessels and Jewels to his Damage of 10000 l. And at the same time with Force and Arms entred the King's Castle of Marlborough where he was the Constable and took his Goods there found 36 Sacks of Wooll 6 Pair of rich Vestments a Library a Golden Chalice for the Sacrament one Cross of Gold another of Ivory and Ebony and other Ornaments belonging to the Chapel Cloths of Gold Carpets Coverings and many other things and his whole Wardrobe entirely to his Damage of 5000 l. Excepting these Differences of Losses the Petition is the same with his Sons verbatim and The Petition of the Spensers brought into Parlement the Errours assigned in the Process and Award are the very same his rendring himself Prisoner to the King and his Reception into the King's Protection the same and expressed in the same Words And then it follows by the King Et nous apres a nostre Parlement summons a Everwyk as treis semeins de Pasch en an nostre Regne Quinzisme feisems devant nous le Proces del dit Aegard a la suite les ditz Hugh le Fitz Hugh le Pere en cestes Paroles A 15 Edw. II. The Writ of Summons to this Parlement bears Date March 14 1321. Easter-day was April 11. 1●22 l Honeur de Dieu Seinte Eglise c. And we afterwards at our Parlement at York three Weeks after Easter in the 15th Year of our Reign caused to come before us the Process of the Award at the Petition of the said Hugh the Son and Hugh the Father in these Words To the Honor of God and Holy Church c. the whole Award being cited in this Record After which Recital it follows a quen Parlement c. At which Parlement at York the said Hugh the Son and Hugh the Father being brought before us in Court prosecuting their Complaints and praying us to do them Right and the said Hugh the Son for himself shewed and alledged the Errors in the Process as abovesaid and also Hugh the Father alledged the same Errors and prayed severally and jointly That as the Award was made erroneously and wrongfully against the Laws and Usages of the Realm and against common Right and Reason that we would annull and defeat the said Award and that they might be remitted and reconciled to our Faith and to such Estate as they had and were in before the Award And hereupon hearing the The Process against them examined in Parlement Reasons of the said Hugh and Hugh we caused the Process to be examined in full Parlement in the presence of the Prelates Earls Barons Knights of Counties and the People that were come by reason of the Parlement en presence des Prelates Countes Barons Chivalers des Countes le People estoit venutz pur Encheson du dit Parlement And we found the said Award was made Reasons why the Award ought to be made void without calling them to Answer and without the Assent of the Prelates which are Peers of the Realm in Parlement and against the Great Charter of the Franchises of England which says no Freeman shall be Banished or other way Destroyed but by lawful Judgment of his Peers or the Law of the Land and for that they were not called in Court to make Answer and for these Errors and for that the Causes in the said Award were not duly proved pur ceo que les Causes contenues en la dit Agard ne furent pas duement approvets And further having regard to that that we caused the Parlement at Westminster to be summoned in due manner and commanded by our Writs the said Great Men who made the Award not to make Assemblies and Alliances or come with armed Men yet they came with all their Force to that Parlement notwithstanding our Command And when they came to London in that manner they held their Councils and Assemblies at London without coming to us at Westminster according to Summons and then we sent to them to come to the Parlement at Westminster as they ought yet they would not come nor let us know their Mind nor the cause of the Award tho' we had begun and held the Parlement for 15 Days and more and caused to come before us the Prelates and some Earls and Barons Knights of Counties and others which came for the Commons of the Realm avioms fait venir devant nous Prelates aucunes Countes Barones Chivalers des Countes autres que vindrent pur la Commune du Royalm and caused it to be published That those that had Petitions to promote should deliver them And after Proclamation thus made no Petition was delivered or Complaint made against the said Hugh and Hugh until they came as aforesaid And the Contrivance of the said Award they wholly concealed and kept from us unto the very Hour they came to Westminster with Force and Arms and made their Award against Reason as a thing treated and agreed on amongst themselves on their own Authority in our absence and encroached upon the Royal Power Jurisdiction and Conusance of Process and Judgment of those things which belong to our Royal Dignity wherefore we could not at that time stop the said Award nor do right to the said Hugh and Hugh as it belonged to us And further taking notice that those Great Men after the Award made prayed our Pardon and Release for Confederating themselves by Oath Writing or in other manner without our Leave in pursuing them and Trouping with Banners of ours and their own Arms displayed and taking and possessing Castles Towns Mannors Lands Tenements Goods and Chattels and also taking and imprisoning People of our Allegiance and others and some they wounded and some they killed and many other things they did in order to destroy the said Hugh and Hugh in England Wales and other where of which some might be called Trespasses and others Felonies also it appeared those Great Men were Enemies to and hated them at the time of the Award and before wherefore they ought not to be their Judges in their own Prosecution of them nor have Record ne
Record aver upon the Causes of the said Award And we are bound by the Oath we made at our Coronation and obliged to do Right to all our Subjects and to redress and cause to be amended all Wrongs done to them when we are required according to the Great Charter by which we are not to sell or delay Right and Justice to any one and at the pressing Advice and Request of the Prelates given us for the safety of our Soul and to avoid Danger and for to take away an ill Example for the time to come of such Undertakings and Judgments in the like case against Reason Wherefore we seeing and knowing the said Process and Award made in the manner aforesaid to be as well to the Prejudice of us the Blemishment or Hurt of our Crown and Royal Dignity against us and our Heirs as against the said Hugh and Hugh and for other reasonable Causes of our Royal Power in a full Parlement at York by the Advice and The Award made void by Assent of the whole Parlement Assent of the Prelates Earls Barons Knights of Counties the Commons of the Realm and others being at our Parlement at York pur le Conseil lassent des Prelatz Countes Barons Chevalers des Countez le Commun du Royalme altres a nostre dit Parlement a Everwyk Estauntz do wholly null and defeat de tut Anentissoms Defesoms the said Award of the Exile and Disheritance of the said Hugh and Hugh and all things in the Award quant que cel Agard touche and do fully remit and reconcile the said Hugh the Son and Hugh the Father to our Faith and Peace and to the Estate they had and were in before the making of the Award in all Points And we Award That they have again reeient Seisin of their Lands and Tenements Goods and Chattels c. And we Will and Command That where this Award is enrolled in any Places of our Court it be cancelled and annulled for ever And so the Roll was cancelled and crossed and remains so at this day with this Memorandum written under the Award Les choses susescrites sont anenties e chaunceles per force dun Agard que se sit au Parlement le Roy a Everwyck a treis semains de Pasch lan du Regne nostre Seign Quinsime sicome est contenue en un Roule que est consu pendant a ceo Roul en le Mois de May prochien These things above written are nulled and cancelled by force of an Award made in the Parlement at York held three Weeks after Easter in the 15th Year of the Reign of our Lord as 't is contained in a Roll sowed to and hanging at this Roll in the Month of May. In 4 Great Stat. Roll. from Hen. III. to 21 Ed. III. M. 31. Biblioth Cotton Claud. D. 2. f. 232. a. The Ordinances examined and annulled in Parlement A. D. 1322. 15 Ed. II. this Parlement at York the Prelates Earls Barons and the Commons of the Realm amongst which were the Ordainers then alive there assembled by the King's Command caused to be rehearsed and examined the Ordinances dated the 5th of October the 5th of Edward II. And for that by Examination thereof it was found in the said Parlement That by the things which were Ordained the King's Power was restrained in many things contrary to what was due to his Seignory Royal and contrary to the State of the Crown And also for that in times past by such Ordinances and Provisions made by Subjects over the Power Royal of the Antecessors of the Lord the King Troubles and Wars came upon the Realm by which the Land or Nation was in danger It was accorded and established in the said Parlement by the Lord the King the Prelates Earls Barons and all the Commonalty of the Realm at that Parlement assembled That all those things Ordained by the Ordainers and contained in those Ordinances from thenceforth for the time to come should cease and lose their Force Virtue and Effect for ever And that from thenceforward in no time no manner of Ordinances or Provisions made by the Subjects of the Lord the King or his Heirs by any Power or Commission whatever over or upon the Power Royal of the Lord the King or his Heirs or against the State of the Crown shall be of value or force But the things that shall be established for the Estate of the King and his Heirs and for the State of the Realm and People may be treated accorded and established in Parlement by the King and by the Assent of the Prelates Earls Barons and Commonalty of the Realm as hath been accustomed This Year the King raised an Army and about the Feast of St. James marched into Scotland the Scots fearing his Power went over the Scots Sea 5 Tho. de la Moor f. 596. n. 20. 30. The King raiseth an Army against the Scots and goesin Person The Army b●ffled The Scots invade England plunder and burnt almost as far as York ultra Mare Scoticum se conferunt that is Edinburgh Frith carrying with them and destroying all the Victuals on this side and in a short time the King returns into England his Army not having wherewithal to subsist The Scots come over the Frith and follow him by Night-marches and almost surprized him in his Camp in Blackmore-Forest but he escaping with a few they took the Earl of Richmond and the King of France his Envoy with many others and waste the Country with Fire and Rapine almost as far as York they burnt Ripon and compounded with Beverly for 400 l. Sterling and returned home laden with Spoils 3 Wals Hypo● N●ustr f. 503. n. 40. Hist f. 17. n. 50 f. 18. lin 1 c. The King Kingdom of Scotland send to Rome to take off the Excommunication and Interdict but prevail not The Two Cardinals 6 sent from the Pope in the 10th of the King as there noted to make Peace between the Two Nations of England and Scotland and Reconcile the King and Earl of Lancaster but their Negociation being without Effect in Scotland Excommunicated Robert Brus King thereof and put the whole Kingdom under Interdict for their Perfidiousness to the King of England To take off both the 7 Ibm. f. 505. n. 30 40. Hist u● supr● Bishop of Glasco and the Earl of Murray were sent to Rome by King and Kingdom but prevailed not Satisfaction not having been given to the Pope nor King and Kingdom of England Whereupon Robert Brus desired of the King of England a Truce 8 De la Moor ut supra A Truce for 53 years between England and Scotland which was granted to him for Thirteen Years Philip the 9 Mexer Hist f. 345. Fair of France left Three Sons who all Reigned after him Lewis the Eldest Reigned but Nineteen Months to him succeeded Philip called the Long he Reigned Five Years and Six Weeks 1 Ibm. f