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A91489 A treatise concerning the broken succession of the crown of England: inculcated, about the later end of the reign of Queen Elisabeth. Not impertinent for the better compleating of the general information intended. Parsons, Robert, 1546-1610. 1655 (1655) Wing P574; Thomason E481_2; ESTC R203153 79,791 168

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certain are their Conditions between him and the People As on the other side the more violent he getteth his authority as those ancient Tyrants of Assyria Nemrod and Belus did and at this day is done among the Turks the less Conditions of just dealing may be expected Therefore among the Christians this point of Mutual Oaths between Prince and Subjects hath been much more established made clear and reduced to a more sacred and Religious kinde of Union than before for that the whole action hath been done by Bishops and Prelats and the astipulation on both sides hath passed and been Regestred in sacred places and with great solemnitie of Religious Ceremonies The manner of Admitting Greek Emperors Anastatius The East or Greek Emperors of Constantinople after the Empire was translated from Rome thither by Constantine the great first Christian Emperor though their coming to the Crown were nothing so orderly as at this day it is used yet they were wont above a thousand years agone to have an Oath exacted at their hands by the Patriarch of Constantinople As of Anastatius the first writeth Zonaras Antequam coronaretur inquit fidei confessionem scriptam quâ polliceatur se in dogmatibus Ecclesiasticis nihil esse novaturum ab eo exegit Patriarcha Euphemius vir Sanctus Orthodoxus And divers other Conditions also did he promise before he could be Crowned as the taking away of some Tributes the giving of Offices without Money and other like points appertainting to reformation and good government Michaël Of Michael the first writeth the same Author in these words Michaël ubi diluxit magnam Ecclesiam ingressus à Patriarcha Nicephoro Imperatorio diademate est ornatus postulato priùs scripto quo promitteret se nulla Ecclesiae instituta violaturum neque Christianorum sanguine manus contaminaturum The Latine Emperors Otho 1. In the West Empire given to Charles the great and his posteritie this Point is yet more settled and more inviolably kept For albeit it went by succession for the most part at the beginning yet were they never admitted to the same without this circumstance of swearing to Conditions of righteous Government As Otho 1. who being Son and Heir to Emperor Henry 1. Duke of Saxonie sirnamed the Faulkner and named by him to the inheritance of the said Crown of Germanie did nevertheless make his Oath and received his new approbation of the People for the Archbishop of Moguntia chief Primate of all Germanie bringing him to the Altar where he must swear said these words unto the people Behold I bring you here Otho chosen by God and appointed out by his Father Henry our Lord and now made King by all the Princes of this Empire if this Election please you do you signifie the same by holding up your hands to heaven Which being done he thereupon tooke the Ornaments and Ensigns of the Empire and put them upon the Emperor telling him the signification of each thing and what it did binde him unto and taking his promise to perform all And after all includeth the storie Rex perfusus oleo Sancto coronatur Diademate aureo ab Episcopis ab eisdem ad solium Regale ducitur in eo collocatur Institution and manner of the Emperor's Creation used at this day In the year 996. Pope Grerory 5. in a Synod holden in Rome did by the consent of Otho 3. Emperor and Nephew unto this other Otho appoint this form of Election for the time to come of the Germane Emperors That he should be chosen by six Princes of Germanie Three Ecclesiastical which are the Archbishops of Moguntia Colen and Trevires and Three Temporal to wit the Duke of Saxonie the Count Palatine of the Rhene and the Marquess of Brandeburge and when these six voices should happen to be equally divided that then the Duke of Bohemia for then it was no Kingdom should have place also to determine the Election which was approved by all the Princes of Germanie and other Christian Princes and Estates of the world And Sleydan writeth the manner and conditions of the said Election to be these First of all that after any man is chosen Emperor he is to be called only Caesar and the King of the Romans and not Emperor until he be Crowned and presently after his Election he sweareth these Conditions To defend the Christian and Catholick Religion to defend the Pope and Church of Rome whose Advocate he is to minister justice equally to all to follow peace to keep all Laws rights and priviledges of the Empire not to alienate or engage the Possessions of the Empire to condemne no man without hearing his Cause but to suffer the course of law to have his place In all and whatsoever he shall do otherwise that it be void and of no validitie at all Whereunto he sweareth first by his Legates and then giveth a coppie of his Oath in writing to every one of the six Electors and after this goeth to the Citie of Aquis-gran to be Crowned in the great Church where about the middle of the Mass the Archbishop of Colen goeth unto him in the presence of all the People and asketh Whether he be ready to swear and promise to observe the Catholick Religion defend the Church minister justice protect the Widdows and Fatherless and yield dutiful honor and obedience to the Pope of Rome Whereunto he answering That he is ready to do all this the Archbishop leadeth him to the high Altar where he sweareth in express all these Articles which being done the said Archbishop turning himself to the Princes of the Empire and People there present doth ask them Whether they be content to swear Obedience and Fealtie unto him who answering Yea he is anointed by the said Archbishop before the Altar and then do come the other two Archbishops of Moguntia and Treveris and lead him into the Vesterie where certain Deacons apparel him in his robes and do set him in a Chair upon whom the Archbishop of Colen saith certain Prayers and then delivereth him a Sword drawn and putteth a Ring upon his finger and giveth him a Scepter in his hand and then all the three Archbishops together do put on the Crown upon his head and leading him so Crowned and Apparelled unto the high Altar again he sweareth the second time That he will do the part of a good Christian and Catholick Emperor Which being ended he is brought back and placed in the Imperial Seat and Throne where all the Princes of the Empire do swear Obedience and Faith unto him beginning with the Electors and so to all the rest in order And it is to be marked That the Emperor sweareth three times once by his Deputies and twice by himself before his subjects swear once unto him The manner used in Polonia In Polonia which being first a Dukedom was made a Kingdom about the year 1000 the manner of the Coronation of their
this Reign drew all England into factions and divisions the States in a Parlament at Wallingford made an agreement that Stephen should bee lawful during his life onely and that Henry and his off spring should succeed him and Prince William King Stephen's son was deprived and made onely Earl of Norfolke King John to the prejudice of his Nephew Arthur This Henry 2 left Richard Jeffrey and John Richard sirnamed Coeur de Lyon succeeded him and dying without issue * John was admitted by the States and Arthur Duke of Britaine son and heir to Jeffrey * excluded who coming afterward to get the Crown by war was taken by his Uncle John who murthered him in prison Louys Prince of France to the prejudice of King John and King John's son afterward to the prejudice again of Louys But som years after the Barons and States of England misliking the government of this King John rejected him again and chose Louys the Prince of France to bee their King and did swear fealtie to him in London depriving also the young Prince Henry John's son of 8 years old but upon the death of King John that ensued shortly after they recalled again that sentence disannulled the Oath and Allegiance made unto Louys Prince of France and admitted this Henry * to the Crown who reigned 53 years The Princes of York and Lancaster had their best Titles of the autoritie of the Common-wealth From this Henry 3. take their first begining the two branches of York and Lancaster In whose contentions the best of their titles did depend upon the autoritie of the Common-wealth For as the people were affected and the greatest part prevailed so were they confirmed or disannulled by Parlament And wee may not well affirm but that when they are in possession and confirmed therein by these Parlaments they are lawful Kings and that God concurreth with them For if wee should deny this point wee should shake the states of most Princes in the world at this day The Common-wealth may dispose of the Crown for her own good And so to conclude As propinquitie of blood is a great preheminencie towards the atteining of the Crown so doth it not ever binde the Common-wealth to yield thereunto and to shut up her eies or admit at hap-hazard or of necessitie any one that is next by succession but rather to take such an one as may perform the dutie and charge committed For that otherwise to admit him that is an enemie or unfit is but to destroy the Common-wealth and him together What are the principal points which a Common-wealth ought to respect in admitting or excluding of any Prince that pretendeth to succeed wherein is handled largely also of the diversitie of Religions and other such causes CAP. IX Seeing the Common-wealth is to know and judg of the matter no doubt but God doth allow of her judgment HEe who is to judg and give the sentence in the things is also to judg of the caus for thereof is hee called Judg So if the Common-wealth hath power to admit or put back the Prince or pretender to the Crown shee hath also autoritie to judg of the lawfulness of the causes considering specially that it is in their own affair and and in a matter that depend's wholly upon them for that no man is King or Prince by institution of Nature but only by authoritie of the Common-wealth Who can then affirm the contrary but that God doth allow for a just and sufficient cause in this behalf the only Will and Judgment of the Weal-publick it self supposing alwaies that a whole Realm will never agree by orderly way of Judgement to exclude the next Heir in Blood without a reasonable Cause in the sight and censure The Pope is to obey the Determination of the Common-wealth without further inquisition except it be in Cases of injustice and Tyranny And seeing that they only are the Judges of this Case and are properly Lords and Owners of the whole business we are to presume that what they Determine is just and lawful though at one time they should Determine one thing and the contrary at another as they did often in England being led at different times by different motions and it is enough for every particular man to subject himself and obey simply their Determination without further inquisition except he should see that Open Injustice were done therein or God manifestly offended and the Realm endangered Open Injustice if not the true Common-wealth but some Faction of wicked men should offer to Determine the matter without lawful authoritie God offended and the Realm endangered where it is evident that he that is preferred will do what lieth in him to the prejudice both of God's glory and of the Common-wealth as if a Turke or some notorious wicked man and Tyrant should be offred to Govern among Christians Whence the Reasons of Admitting or Receiving a Prince are to be taken Now to know the true Causes and principal Points which ought to be chiefly regarded as well by the Common-wealth as by every particular man in the furthering or hindering any Prince we must return to the End wherefore Government was appointed which is to defend preserve and benefit the Common-wealth because from this Consideration are to be deduced all other Considerations for discerning a good or evil Prince For that whosoever is most likely to defend c. his Realm and Subjects he is most to be allowed and desired as most conform to the end for which Government was ordained And on the contrary side he that is least like to do this deserveth least to be preferred And this is the Consideration that divers Common-wealths had in putting back oftentimes Children and impotent People though next in blood from succession Three Chief Points to be regarded in every Prince And here shall be fitly remembred what Gerard recounteth of the King of France that in his Coronation he is new apparrelled three times in one day once as a Priest and then as a Judge and last as a King armed thereby to signifie three things committed to his charge first Religion then Justice then Manhood and Chivalrie which division seemeth very good and fit and to comprehend all that a Weal-Publick hath need of for her happie State and Felicity both in soul and bodie and for her end both supernatural and natural And therefore these seem to be the three Points which most are to be regarded in every Prince Why it is here principally treated of Religion For the latter two because they have been often had in Consideration in the Changes aforesaid and Religion whereof then scarce ever any question or doubt did fall in these actions rarely or never And because in these our dayes it is the principal Difference and chiefest Difficultie of all other and that also it is of it self the first and highest and most necessarie Point to be considered in the Admission of a Prince therefore it
hee who represented her person was to bee preferred before her For the Duchess of Bragança and against the point of Representation Shee was born and bred in Portugal Philip and Parma were forrein 2. Shee was nearer by a degree unto Emanuel and Henry the Cardinal then the Duke of Parma 3. Against the representation urged by Parma that no representation was admitten in the Succession to the Crown of Portugal but that every pretender was to bee taken and preferred according to the Prerogatives onely of his Person as the next in propinquitie of blood or the man before the woman and the elder before the younger if they bee in equal degree of propinquitie to the former Kings Touching Representations Contra Sect. 40. The last King Sebastian entred the Crown by way of Representation not by propinquitie of blood the Cardinal beeing brother and hee but Nephew unto the former King John 3. Sect. 82. Answ. Hee was of the right descendant line of K. John 3. and the Cardinal but of the Collateral and all Law alloweth the right line to bee served and preferred before the Collateral bee admitted This was the caus of his coming to the Crown and not representation Allegations of King Philip's right to Portugal Seeing then that Representation was not admitted but every Pretendor considered in his own person onely Sect. 82. King Philip beeing in equal degree of propinquitie of blood with the Duchesses alleged hee was to bee preferred before them both becaus a man and born before them 2. The inheritance of Portugal besides that it belonged to the Crown of Castile of old evidently belonged to John King of Castile by the marriage of Beatrix daughter and heir of Ferdinand King of Portugal after whose death it was conferred by election of the People on John M. of Avis bastard-brother of the foresaid Ferdinand by him the said Beatrix and her posteritie wrongfully debarred and excluded King Philip his own carver in Spain When these contentions were at the hottest died the K. Cardinal before he could decide them Whereupon the K. of Spain taking his right to bee best and becaus a Monarch and under no temporal Judg thinking hee was not bound to attend any other or further judgment in the matter but might by force put himself in possession of his own as hee took it if otherwise hee might not have it hee entered upon Portugal by force of Arms and at this day holdeth it peaceably The end of the controversie An Objection in behalf of Representation in the Succession of England Representation taketh place in England So as the children of the son though women shall ever bee preferred before those of the daughter though men Therefore seeing the Ladie Philippes right to the Dukedom of Lancaster and Crown of England mentioned Sect. 70 72 c. is to bee preferred according to the Laws of England onely it followeth that the right of Succession pretended by the Princes of Portugal from the said Ladie Philippe should bee determined onely by the Laws of England which admit of Representation Answer to the former Objection The question is not here by what Law this pretence by Portugal to the Crown of England is to bee tried but rather who is the true and next heir of John of Portugal and the Ladie Philippe heir of Lancaster which once known it little importeth by what Law hee pretendeth his right unto England whether of Portugal or England though to determine this first and chief point of the Succession of Portugal the Laws of Portugal must needs bee the onely Judges and not those of England CAP. X. Whether it bee better to live under a Forrein or a Home-born Prince a great Monarch or a little King Against Forrein-Government the opinion of Law-makers ARistotle in all the different Forms of Common-wealths which hee prescribeth in his 8 books of Politicks ever presupposeth that the Government shall bee by people of the self-same Nation the same also do presume all the Law-makers therein mentioned as Minos Solon Lycurgus Numa Pompilius and the rest Of Orators and Writerr Demosthenes his famous invectives against Philip of Macedonia that desired to encroach upon the State of Greece and his Orations against Eschines who was thought secretly to favor the pretences of the said forrein Princes The books of the Italians when they speak of their former subjection to the Lombardes Germanes French and their present to the Spaniard The late writings of the French against the power of the hous of Guise and Lorrain whom they hold for strangers Of Nations by their Proceedings and Designs The desperate and bloodie executions of divers Nations to th' end they might rid themselvs from stranger's dominion are arguments of the very impression of nature herself in this matter for examples whereof see Q. Curtius lib. 5. 6. And the Sicilians who at one Evensong-tide slew all the French within their Iland whom themselvs had called and invited thither not long before And the English who murthered all the Danes at one time and would have don as much for the Normans if themselvs had been strong enough or the advers partie less vigilant And the French in the time of Charles the 7. when nothing could repress them from revolting every where against the English Government of which at length by hook and crook they wholly free'd themselvs Of Holy Scripture The autoritie of holy Scriptures is evident in this behalf Deut. 17. 16. Thou shalt make them King over thee whom the LORD thy GOD shall choos out of the number of thy brethren thou mai'st not set a stranger over thee which is not of thy brethren In the behalf of Forrein Government This hatred of Stranger's Government is but a vulgar aversion of passionate or foolish men Passionate by corruption of nature whereby men are inclined to think evil of others especially their Governors and the more the farther they are from us in kindred or acquaintance foolish as those that weigh not the true reasons causes or effects of things but onely the outward shew and popular apprehension grounded for the most part in the imagination or incitation of others who endeavor onely to procure tumults It importeth not what Countrimam the Prince bee so his Goverement bee good All passion against stranger or unto others laid aside wee are onely to respect the fruits of good and profitable Government the peace and proprietie of the Subject which what Prince bee hee native or forreign soëver procureth us is fittest for ours or any other Government for after a Prince is established the common subject hath no more conversation with him nor receiveth further personal benefits of him than of a meer stranger Then if hee govern ill what is the Subject the better by his beeing Home-born Home-born Princes and Tyrants As in the like case the children of Israël said of Rehoboam Quae nobis pars in David vel quae haereditas in filio Jesse 3 King 12. 16.
either for Valor Prowess length of Reign acts of Chivalrie or the multitude of famous Princes his Children left behind him was one of the noblest Kings that ever England had RICHARD 2d Richard the 2d Son to the black Prince of Wales for having suffered himself to be misled by evil Counsellers to the great hurt and disquietness of the Realm was deposed also after 22. years reign by a Parliament holden at London the year 1399. and condemned to perpetual Prison in the Castle of Pomfret where he was soon after put to death and in his place was by free Election chosen the noble Knight Henry * Duke of Lancaster who proved afterwards so notable a King as the world knoweth HENRY 6th Henry 6th after almost 40. years reign was deposed imprisoned and put to death also together with his Son the Prince of Wales by Edward 4th of the House of York And this was confirmed by the * Commons and afterwards also by publick Act of Parliament because the said Henry did suffer himself to be over-ruled by the Queen his Wife and had broken the Articles of Agreement made by the Parlament between him and the Duke of York and solemnly sworn on both sides the 8th of Octob. 1459. though otherwise for his particular life he were a good man and King Edward 4th was put in place who was one of the renownedest for Martial Acts and Justice that hath worn the English Crown RICHARD 3d. This man having left two Sons his Brother Richard Duke of Glocester put them to death and being the next Heir Male was authorised in the Crown but Deposed again afterwards by the Common-wealth which called out of France Henry Earle of Richmond who took from him both life and Kingdom in the Field and was King himself by the name of Henry 7. And no man I suppose will say but that he was lawfully King also which yet cannot be except the other might lawfully be deposed If the said Deprivations were unjust the now Pretences are unlawful Moreover is to be noted in all these Mutations what good hath succeeded therein to the Common-wealth which was unjust and is void at this day if the Changes and Deprivations of the former Princes could not be made and consequently none of these that do pretend the Crown of England at this day can have any Title at all for that from those men they discend who were put in place of the deprived If Kings established may be Deprived much sooner Pretenders And if this might be so in Kings lawfully set in Possession then much more hath the said Common-wealth power and authoritie to alter the succession of such as do pretend Dignitie if there be due reason and causes to the same Wherein consisteth principally the lawfulness of Proceedings against Princes which in the former Chapter is mentioned What interest Princes have in their Subjects Goods or Lives How Oaths do Binde or may be Broken by Subjests towards Princes And finally the difference between a good King and a Tyrant CAP. IV. 1. Objection against the Assertions in the last Chapter BUt although by Nature the Common-wealth hath authoritie over the Prince to chuse and appoint him at the beginning yet having once made him and given up all their authoritie unto him he is no more subject to their correction but remaineth absolute of himself As every particular man hath authorised to make his Master or Prince of his inferior but not afterwards to put him down again howsoever he beareth himself towards him 2. Objection When the Children of Israël being under the Government of the High Priest demanded a King of Samuel he protesting unto them Well quoth he you will have a King hearken then to this that I will say Hoc erit jus Regis qui imperaturus est vobis He shall take away from you your Children both Sons and Daughters your Fields and Vineyards c. and shall give them to his servants and you shall cry unto God in that day from the face of this your King and God shall not hear you for that you have demanded a King to Govern over you Assertions of Bellay Yea Bellay and some other that wrote in flatterie of Princes in these our days do not only affirm That Princes are lawless and subject to no accompt or correction whatsoever they do But also That all goods chattels possessions and whatsoever else commodities temporal of the Common wealth are properly the Kings and that their Subjects have only the use thereof so as when the King will he may take it from them by right Answer to Bellay his First Assertion But for the first That Kings are subject to no Law Is against the very Institution of a Common-wealth which is to live together in Justice and Order for if it holdeth so insteed of Kings and Governors to defend us we may set up publick murtherers ravishers theeves and spoylers to devour us Then were all those Kings before mentioned both of the Jewes Gentiles and Christians unlawfully deprived and their Successors unlawfully put up in their places and consequentlie all Princes living at this day are intruders and no lawful Princes Answer to Bellay his Second Assertion Of the second saying also That all temporalities are properly the Princes and that Subjects have only the use thereof no less absurdities do follow First it is against the very first principle and foundation of the Civil Law which at the first entrance maketh this division of Goods That some are common by Nature to all men as the Aër the Sea c. Others are publick to all of one Citie or Countrie but yet not common to all in general as Rivers Ports c. Some are of the Communitie of a Citie or Common-wealth but yet not common to every particular person of that Citie as common Rents Theaters the publick hous and the like Some are of none nor properly of any man's Goods as Churches and Sacred things And some are proper to particular men as those which every man possesseth of his own Besides it overthroweth the whole nature of a Common-wealth maketh all Subject to be but very slaves for that slaves and bondmen in this do differ from freemen that slaves have only the use of things without property or interest and cannot acquire or get to themselves any dominion or true right in any thing but it accreweth all to their Master Lastly If all Goods be properly the King's why was Achab and Jezabel so reprehended and punished by God for taking away Naboth's vineyard Why do the Kings of England France and Spain ask Money of their Subjects in Parlament and that termed by the names of Subsidies Helps Benevolences Loans Prests Contributions c How have the Parlament oftentimes denied them the same Why are there Judges appointed for matter of Suits and Pleas between the Prince and the People Why doth the Canon Law inhibit all
both Polydore and Stow do affirm never to have been offered before to any Prince of England Admission is of more importance and hath prevailed against Right of succession Whence it is gathered That the Title of Succession without the Admission of the Common-wealth cannot make a lawful King and that of the two the second is of far more importance which may be proved by many examples As of William Rufus that Succeeded the Conqueror King Henry the first his Brother King Stephen's King John's and others who by only Admission of the Realm were Kings against the Order of Succession Henry and Edward the 4th did found the best part and most surest of their Titles and the defence thereof upon the Election Consent and good will of the People And for this cause the most Politick Princes that had any least suspicion of Troubles about the Title after their deaths have caused their Sons to be Crowned in their own days As Hugh Capetus Robert his eldest Son and Robert Henry the first his second Son excluding his elder Henry also procured the same to Philip the first his eldest Son And Louys le Gros unto two Sons of his first to Philip and after his death to Louys the yonger And this Louys again unto Philip 2. his Son The Prince of Spain is Sworn alwaies and admitted by the Realm during his Father's Reign The same Consideration also moved King David to Crown his Son Solomon in his own days And in England King Henry 2. considering the alteration that the Realm had made in admitting King Stephen before him against the Order of Lineal Succession and fearing that the like might happen also after him caused his eldest Son Henry the third to be Crowned in his life time So as England had two Kings Henry's living at one time with equal Authoritie How the next in succession by Propinquitie of Blood hath oftentimes been put back by the Common-wealth and others further off admitted in their Places even in these Kingdoms where Succession prevaileth with many Examples of the Kingdoms of Israël and Spain CAP. VII Examples of the Jews SAUL David Elected to the prejudice of Saul's Sons ALbeit God made Saul a true and lawful King over the Jews and consequently also gave him all Kinglie Prerogatives whereof one Principle is To have his Children succeed after him in the Crown yet he suffered not any of his Generation to succeed him but elected David who was a stranger by birth and no kinn at all to the deceased King Rejecting thereby from the Crown not only Isboseth Saul's elder Son though followed for a time by Abner Capt. General of that Nation with eleven Tribes but also Jonathan his other Son who was so good a man and so much praised in holy Scripture Whereby it is evident that the fault of the Father may prejudicate the Son's Right to the Crown albeit the Son have no part in the fault DAVID Solomon to the prejudice of Adonias and his Brethren David being placed in the Crown by Election free Consent and Admission of the People of Israël though by motion and direction of God himself no man will deny but that he had given him all Kinglie Priviledges and Regalities as among other the Scripture testifieth that it was assured him by God That his Seed should Reign after him yea and that for ever Yet this was not performed to any of his elder Sons but only to Solomon his yonger and tenth Son who by the means and perswasions of Queen Bersabé his Mother and Nathan the Prophet was chosen and made King by his Father to the prejudice of his elder Adonias and the rest of his Brethren * Whereby we are taught that these and like determinations of the People Magistrates and Common-wealths when their designments are to good ends and for just respects and causes are allowed also by God and oftentimes are his own special drifts and dispensations though they seem to come from man Jeroboam to the prejudice of Roboam Solomon's Son and Heir After Solomon's death Rehoboam his Son and Heir coming to Sichem where all the people of Israël were gathered for his Admission and having refused to yield to certain Conditions for taking away of some hard and heavie Impositions laid upon them by Solomon his Father which the People had proposed unto him ten Tribes of the twelve refused to admit him for their King but chose one Jeroboam his Servant a meer stranger and of poor Parentage and God allowed thereof for the Sins of Solomon leaving Rehoboam over two Tribes and Jeroboam over ten God's dealing in his Common-wealth a president for all others Although we may say that in the Jewish Common-wealth God almightie did deal and dispose of things against the ordinary course of man's Law as best liked himself whose Will is more than Law and is to be limitted by no Rule or Law of man and therefore that these Examples are not properly the act of a Common-wealth as our Question demandeth yet are they well brought in because they may give light to all the rest For if God permitted and allowed this in his own Common-wealth that was to be the Example and Pattern of all others no doubt but he approveth also the same in other Realms when just occasions are offered either for his service the good of the People and Realm or else for punishment of the sins and wickedness of some Princes Examples of SPAIN Four Races of Spanish Kings Spain since the expulsion of the Romans hath had Three or Four Races of Kings The first is from the Gothes which began to reign about the year 416 and endured by the space of 300. years until Spain was lost to the Moors And to them the Spaniard referreth all his old Nobility The second from Don Pelago who after the Invasion of the Moors was chosen King of Austurias about the year 717. and his Race continued adding Kingdom to Kingdom for the space of 300. years until the year 1034. The third from Don Sancho Mayor King of Navarra who having gotten into his Power the Earldoms of Arragon and Castilia made them Kingdoms and divided them among his Children And Don Fernando his second Son King of Castilia sirnamed afterward the Great by marrying of the Sister of Don Dermudo King of Leon and Asturias joyned all those Kingdoms together and this Race endured for 500. years until the year 1549 When for the Fourth the House of Austria came in by Marriage of the Daughter and Heir of Don Ferdinando sirnamed the Catholick which endureth until this day The First Race For the First Race because it had express Election joyned with Succession as by the Councils of Toledo it appeareth it can yield no valuable examples for this place The Second Race Don Alonso to the prejudice of Don Favila his Children In the Second Though the Law of Succession by Propinquitie
hous of York that challenged the Crown and died in the quarrel His son was Edward the 4. The Issue of the Duke of Glocester Thomas of Woodstock had onely one childe Anne married to the Lord Stafford whose issue came after in regard of this marriage for Thomas was Earl of Buckingham too to bee Duke of Buckingham som of whose blood are yet in England The Issue of John of Gant by his first Wife John of Gant had three Wives 1 Blanch the heir of Lancaster aforesaid by whom hee had Henry 4. and Philippe married to John King of Portingal from whom are lineally descended such as at this day claim interest in that Crown and Elisabeth married to John Holland Duk of Exceter whose grand-childe Henry left onely Anne married to Sir Thomas Nevil Knight from whom the Earl of Westmerland is lineally descended By his second Wife By his second Ladie Constance daughter of Peter King of Castile hee had onely one daughter Katharine married to Henry the third King of Castile of whom the King of Spain that now is is lineally desended By his third Wife Henry 7. his Title His third Katharine Swinford daughter to a Knight of Henault and attending on his wife Blanch hee used as his Concubine in his wife Constance's time and begat of her three sons and one daughter and after married her to Swinford an English Knight who dead and his wife Constance also hee married her Anno 1396 and caused his said children by her to bee legitimated by Parlament Anno 1397. Henry 7. his Title from Lancaster His sons were 1. John Duke of Somerset 2. Thomas Duke of Excester 3. Henry Bishop and Cardinal of Winchester His daughter Jane married to the Earl of Westmerland The Issues of all these were soon spent except of John of Somerset who had two sons John and Edmund John one onely daughter Margaret married to Edmund Tidder Earl of Richmond by whom hee had Henry 7. Edmund and his three sons all died in the quarrel of the Hous of Lancaster without Issue The line of Clarence and Title of the Earl of Huntington George Duke of Clarence second brother of Edw. 4. had Issue Edw. Earl of Warwick put to death by Henry 7. and Margaret Countess of Salisbury married to Sir Richard Poole of Wales by whom hee had Henry Arthur Geoffroy and Reynald after Cardinal Henry Lo. of Montague put to death with his mother by H. 8. had Katharine married to the Earl of Huntington they the now Earl c. and Wenefred married to Sir Tho. Barrington Arthur Marie married to Sir John Stanny and Margaret to Sir Tho. Fitzherbert Geoffrey Geoffrey Poole hee Arthur and Geoffrey which yet live in Italie Henry 7. his Issue The Title of Scotland and of the Ladie Arbella Henry 7. had by the eldest daughter of Edw. 4. for of all the other three remaineth no issue besides Hen. 8. Margaret first married to the K. of Scots they James 5. who Mary mother to the now King After married to the Earl of Anguis they Margaret married to the Earl of Lenox they Henry married to the last Queen and murthered 1566. and Charles married to Elisa Ca4dish by whom the Ladie Arbella The Title of the Lord Beacham and his brother Marie the second daughter first married to Lewis 12. of France without issue then to Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk they Francis married to Henry Gray Marquis Dorset after Duke of Suffolk beheaded by Q. Mary they Jane married to Dudley both beheaded Katharine first married to the Earl of Pembroke and left by him to the Earl of Hartfort as themselves affirmed in the Tower from whom descendeth the Lord Beacham and Edward Seymer his brother The Title of the Hous of Derbie Eleonor second daughter to Ch. Brandon and the Queen of France was married to Henry Clifford Earl of Cumberland they had issue Margaret married to Henry Earl of Derbie who had issue the last and the now Earl CAP. IV. The Controversie between the Houses of Lancaster and York The Pretence of the Hous of York BY Richard Duke of York son of Richard Earl of Cambridg aforesaid c. That considering hee had by descent joined in him the right aswell of Lionel Duke of Clarence second son to Edw. 3. as of Edward Duke of York the fourth son of Edw. 3. hee was to bee preferred before the Hous of Lancaster claiming onely from John of Gant the third son of Edward 3. Richard 2. Deposed Edward 3. in his old age for the love hee bare to the black Prince confirmed the Succession by Parlament to Richard 2. his son and caused the rest of his sons to swear thereunto Richard 2. for his misgovernment was deposed by common consent and Henry 4. chosen in his place which himself and his issue possessed about 60 years The question is Whether King Richard were rightfully deposed or no That a King may bee deposed on just causes First that a King on just causes may bee deposed is proved by Reason becaus the rule beeing given by the Common-wealth on condition of just government that much violated the condition is broken and the same Common-wealth may take the forfeiture This proved by the autoritie of all Law-makers Philosophers Divines and Governors of Common-wealths and by example of divers Depositions which God himself hath blessed with good success Proved by reasons and examples of Divinitie An ill Prince is an armed enemie with his feet set on the Realm's head whence hee cannot bee plucked but by force of Arms Object God may cut him off by sickness or otherwise and therefore wee are to attend his good pleasure Answ. God alwaies bindeth not himself to work miracles nor often with extraordinary means but hath left upon earth unto men and Common-wealths power to do justice in his Name upon offendors Examples hereof are Ehud stirr'd up by God to kill Eglon King of the Moabites by a stratageme Judg. 3. and the Philistins to kill David to persecute Saul Jeroboam to rebell against Roboam the son of Solomon 2 Reg. 11. 12. Jehu to depose Joram and Q. Jezabel his mother 4. Reg. 9. The Captains of Jerusalem at the persuasion of Jehoiada the high-Priest to conjure against Q. Athalia whom they deposed and Joash chosen in her room 4. Reg. 11. All which hee might have removed without blood-shed if hee would But hee appointed men to work his Will by these violent means to deliver that Common-wealth from oppression and for the greater terror of all bad Princes Allegations of the Lancastrians that King Richard 2. was justly Deposed Just causes of Deposing Richard 2. were Hee murthered his Uncle the Duke of Glocester without form of Law or process Hee put to death the Earl of Arundel banished Warwick Thomas Arundel Archbishop of Canterbury and Henry Duke of Hereford and Lancaster and after King whose goods and inheritance descending to the said Henry from his Father hee wrongfully seized on Hee suffered the Earl of Oxford
or three S 7. yet 't is plain it was his own Will because he commanded it to be drawn written and sealed and never revoked it Besides it is subscribed by many witnesses and inrolled in the Chancery by his own command enough to make it good against the assertion of those few who to please the time wherein they spake in Queen Maries time might say and ghess the King was past memory when his stamp was put to it Now to make good what he did two Acts of Parlaments 28 35. of his Reign gave him full authoritie to dispose of this Point of Succession as he and his learned Council should think best for the Common-wealth By a Statute made in the 27th of Elisabeth 27. Elisah a Statute was made That whosoever shall be convinced to conspire attempt or procure the Queens death or is privie or accessary to the same shall loose all right title pretence claim or action that they or their heirs have or may have to the Crown of England Now the late Queen of Scots being attainted and executed by the authoritie of the said Parlament and for breach of the said Statute 't is easie to determine what Title her Son hath claiming only by her The Uniting of Scotland with England dangerous to the English or like to be 1. Only the increase of Subjects but those rather to participate the Commodities of England than to impart any from Scotland 2. The natural hatred of that People unto us and their ancient inclination to joyn with our enemies the French and Irish against us are Arguments of great mischiefs likely to ensue by that conjunction 3. The Scot must needs hold in jealousie so many Englishmen competitors of the Blood Royal and therefore will fortifie himself against them by those Forrein Nations of whom he is discended with whom he is allyed as the Scots French Danes and uncivil Irish which will prove intolerable to the English 4. The King both for his own safety and for the love he beareth to his own Nation will advance them and plant them about him in chief Places of credit which must needs breed Emulations and Controversies between them and the English Then must he of Force secretly begin to favor and fortifie his own to the incredible calamitie of the other as Canutus did his Danes and William the Conqueror his Normans neither of them enemies to the English blood nor evil Kings but careful of their own safeties for herein it is impossible to be neutral 5. The Romans with all their Power and Policie could never unite the hearts of England and Scotland in peace nor hold the Scots and North-Irish in obedience of any authority residing in England What then are we to hope for of this King herein The Religion of Scotland unpleasing to our State His Religion is neither fit for our State wherein Archbishops c. and Officers of Cathedral Churches are of much dignitie and there suppressed nor will be pleasing to our Nobilitie to be subject to the exorbitant and popular authoritie of a few ordinary Ministers which the King himself is there content to yield unto And therefore it is likely that few will be forward to entertain that King for the reforming of Religion here that hath no better Order in his own at home For the Ladie Arabella For the Ladie Arabella is alleged her being an equal degree of Discent with the King of Scots Her being above him in all hopes for herself or benefit to the English that can be expected in an English Prince and a Prince born in England Against Her Neither she nor the Scot are properly of the House of Lancaster and the Title of Lancaster is before the Pretence of York ut suprà 2. The testament of King Henry 8. barreth her as well as the Scot 3. Her Discent is not free from Bastardie for Queen Margaret soon after the death of her first Husband married Steward Lord of Annerdale who was alive long after her marriage with Anguis and it is most certain also That Anguis had another Wife alive when he married the said Queen All this confirmed by the Lord William Howard Father to the now Admiral sent into Scotland by Henry 8. of purpose to enquire thereof who reported it to King Henry Queen Mary and divers others For this cause King Henry would have letted the marriage between Anguis and his Sister and chiefly caused him to exclude her issue 4. She is a Woman and it were perhaps a great inconvenience that three of the weak sex should succeed one the other 5. All her Kindred by her Father is meer Scotish In England she hath none but by her Mother the Candishes a mean Familie and Kindred for a Princess CAP. VI Examination of the Title of the House of Suffolk being Darby and Hartford Sect. 29. 30. The Earle of Hartford's Children illegitimate THe Children of the Earle of Hartford Discending of Ladie Frances the eldest Daughter of Charles Brandon are proved illigitimate 1. Because the Ladie Katharine Gray their Mother was lawful Wife to the Earle of Pembroke when they were born not separated from him by lawful authority or for any just cause but abandoned by him because her House was come into misery and disgrace 2. It could never be lawfully proved that the said Earle and Ladie Katharine were married but only by their own Assertions not sufficient in Law Therefore was the marriage disannulled in the Arches by publick and definitive sentence of Parker Archbishop of Canterbury not long after the Birth of the said Children 3. When the Marquess of Dorset married their Grandmother the Ladie Frances he had another lawful Wife sister to H. Fitz-allen Earle of Arundel whom he put away to obtain so great a marriage as was the Lady Frances This bred much hate between the Marquess and Earle ever after but the Marquess favor with K. Henry deprived the other of all remedy And therefore may their Mother the Lady Katharine seem illegitimate too Bastardie in the issue of Charles Brandon Charles Brandon had a wife alive when he married the Queen of France by which wife he had issue the Ladie Powyse wife of the Lord Powyse and this wife of his lived some time after his marriage with the Queen Darby's Evasion This Wife say the Friends of Darby died before the birth of the Lady Eleonor the yonger daughter their ancestor though after the Birth of the Lady Francis Hartford's ancestor Hartford's Confutation of the first Bastardie To the first Bastardy of Hartford their Friends affirm That the Contract between the Lady Katharine and the Earl of Pembrook was dissolved lawfully and judicially in the time of Queen Mary Hartford's evasion of the second Bastardie in the behalf of his Second born Edward Seymore The Lady Katharine being found with Child affirmed the Earle of Hartford to be the Father Hereupon he being sent for out of France where he was with Sir N. Throgmorton and had got leave to