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A08119 Norfolkes furies, or a view of Ketts campe necessary for the malecontents of our time, for their instruction, or terror; and profitable for euery good subiect, to incourage him vpon the vndoubted hope of the victorie, to stand faithfully to maintayne his prince and countrey, his wife and children, goods, and inheritance. With a table of the maiors and sheriffes of this worshipfull city of Norwich, euer since the first grant by Henry the fourth: together with the bishops of that see, and other accidents here. Set forth first in Latin by Alexander Nenil. Translated into English, for the vse of the common people, by R.W. minister at Frettenham in Norfolke, and a citizen borne, who beheld part of these things with his yong eyes.; De furoribus Norfolciensium Ketto duce. English Neville, Alexander, 1544-1614.; Woods, Richard, minister of Frettenham. 1615 (1615) STC 18480; ESTC S102863 67,212 88

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by the commandement of the King authority was giuen vnto William Pari Marquesse of Northhampton to leuy an Armie of men with commandement to goe in all haste to the City of Norwich and there to doe his indeuour that because these so great furies could not by clemency and lenity be appeased to pursue with fire and sword Kett and his Confederates as Traytors and most cruell Enemies to his Maiestie Northampton all things prepared and made ready to his liking with fifteene hundred Souldiers as was commanded goeth shortly after towards Norwich There were with him in his Armie two Lords Sheffield and Wentworth besides Anthony Denny Richard Southwel Ralph Sadler Iohn Gates Thomas Paston Henry Beding field Iohn Suliard William Wilgraue Iohn Cuttze Thomas Cornwallies all Knights to these of Esquires Gentlemen aswell of England as of Italy a worthy traine When they were now but a mile from the City the Marquesse of Northampton sent presently an Herald which as the manner is should denounce Warre to the City except they would presently obey By whom al things which are accustomed to be done being proclaymed and performed in the City Augustine Steward the Maiors Deputy sendeth speedily Messengers to signifie vnto Codde the Maior who was as we said before most against his will detayned in the Campe what commandements were imposed vpon the City in the Kings name by the Marquesse of Northampton Hereunto speedily answere from the Maior was returned to the Herald That neuer any thing happened more grieuous vnto him al his life time then these euils which brought in of most seditious persons haue almost ouer-turned with an implacable villany his Country and City of Norwich flourishing before That asmuch as by mans reason could be foreseene hee had vsed all diligence that these tumults might haue been restrayned at the beginning yet could he not bring to that passe by reason of the rage of the mischiefes wherewith the mindes of all were holden intangled That he had indured the terror of imprisonment the perill of death finally all extremity at their hands and at this time was holden in the Campe with a guard of Souldiers round about him Otherwise he would come himselfe without delay as was meet to the Marquesse of Northampton Neuerthelesse that the City might be kept the better in order he had giuen his authority of gouernement to Augustine Steward a very carefull and wise man lest in his absence the people through ignorance might fall away from their duty That the City should be at his commandement and himselfe if Kett would permit would willingly come out of the Campe and receiue him and commit his owne and the state of the City to his protection This answere of the Maior was carryed with speede by the Herald to the Earle of Northampton The Maiors Deputy with the Sherifes and a great multitude of Citizens following went presently into the Armie of Northampton vnto whom he deliuered the Sword which is a signe of the Kings Maiesties presence and of his Authority and in the chiefe Cities of England is wont alwayes to bee carryed before the Maior declaring as the Maior had done before that hee could not come himselfe which he most desired but that he and the chiefe of the City were come to deliuer the City themselues and all that they had vnto the faith and authority of the King they confesse there are many of the Citizens which could not be terrified but that they would needes consent to the Rebels but yet the greatest part of the best Citizens doe remayne still in their faith and allegeance and haue not ioyned themselues with the others nor in any respect haue conspired against the Kings Maiestie and that this part is ready and willing to doe that which shall be inioyned them and most willing to receiue him and his Armie into the City Northampton againe incouraged the hearts of the Citizens with good words and promised he would haue care of the City and had good hope that ere long these great furies wherewith now almost all things were set on fire should be suppressed When he had made an end of speaking he deliuered the Sword to M. Southwel who carryed the same bare-headed before the Marquesse into the City This honor by an old and soiemne custome is giuen alwayes to the Kings Lieutenants And comming in at Saint Stephens Gate he gaue commandement that all the Citizens should come vnto him into the Market place There they long consulted and many things of many were deuised aswell for the defence of the City as for restrayning the assault of the Enemie Then were appointed Watch and Ward vpon the Walles and Citie Gates And in all places if any were thought too weake were appointed armed men that might be ready vpon euery occasion These things thus appointed and performed Northampton went at night vnto the house of the Maiors Deputie and supped there with his company of Nobles and Gentlemen when supper was ended although through the tediousnesse of the iourney and heat of the weather all in the house were weary yet they rested that night in their Armour lest they might be taken vnawares And here it came to passe whether by chance or of set purpose I cannot yet tell that certaine Italians skirmished with a great company of the Rebels and many wounds were giuen on both sides but one of the Spaniards while he went very boldly into the middest of the Rebels being a valiant man first the multitude beset him round at the length they tooke him and put him to a shamefull death for taking away all his garments and furniture which were vpon him very costly and cunningly wrought they stripped him naked and so hung him vpon an Oke in Mount Surry house not without many reuilings and shamefull contumelies before his death All men surely tooke great griefe from so cruell and miserable a death of such a worthy and most noble Souldier and would with a great summe of money willingly haue ransomed him if it had been possible from so cruell ignominie and shame But from this mans calamitie now in the very beginning was easily perceiued how great and detestable cruelty raigned in those that had wickedly taken vp Armes against their Country although not long after by the prouidence of God for hee suffereth not the wicked to indure long nor the shedding of innocent bloud alwaies to go vnreuenged Cayme himselfe the Author of this dreadfull villany with the same manner of death though somewhat too late receiued conding punishment of this so great crueltie But the Earle of Northampton fearing the breaking in of the enemie in the night commanded that the Porters and Watchmen which before wee said were bestowed vpon the Walles and Gates of the Citie should now more painefully and diligently then commonly they were wont walke round about the Citie Whereby both their eyes and minds prepared and attending vpon the enterprises of the enemie if
of them to London But the Citizens loden and ouer-whelmed with so many euils when all places were now filled with Enemies fearing violence and murther and all hostilitie which is accustomed to be done of Enemies to Cities ouer-come and all hope of redresse being taken away fled out of the Citie All mens hearts for the most part were smitten with so great feare as many through sorrow and anguish hauing their minds alienated from the regard of their goods left their wiues and children and all their possessions in the power of the Enemie But many when all mens conditions were lamentable followed euery man his owne hope and aduice for whatsoeuer gold siluer plate or good household stuffe they possessed that they hid in Priuies Welles and Pits digged in the ground Sorrow and lamentation occupied the Citie on euery side And the crying of Women and Children mixed with the shouting of the Enemies cracking of the fire and fall of the houses filled all places with an horrible noyse For the Rebels after the departure of the Earle of Northampton threw fire vpon the tops of the houses which did flye from house to house with fearefull flame and from one street to another which in small time consumed a great part of the Citie For all the houses in Holme-street were consumed with fire on both sides thereof Also the Hospitall dedicated to the reliefe and maintenance of the poore diseased Moreouer Bish●●s Gates Pock Thorpe Magd●lyn Bearstreet Gates and diuer● other buildings besides in many places were consumed with fire But it happened fitly by Gods speciall prouidence that there fell great store of raine at that time Whereby the fire being speedily quenched did not so generally preuaile as the Enemie wished Moreouer the Rebels entred the houses of the rich men in the Citie and rifled them and after they had emptied them set some of them on fire and committed so great and sundry examples of cursed cruelty as euery where it seemed at this time not men indued with reason were entred the City but wilde beasts vnder the shape of men Whence manifestly appeareth how lamentable and miserable the state of the City was at thi● time when nothing was seene or heard but lamentation and weeping of those that were vexed and troubled and contrary the reioycing of the Enemy the weeping of women the crying of men and the noise of them that ran about the streets then the clashing of weapons the flames of the burning the ruines and fall of houses and many other fearefull things which that I may not make lesse in speaking I willingly let passe which so filled with ●or●our not onely the mindes and eyes of the beholders but strooke with incredible sorrow the hearts and eares of all that heard it The City therefore taken after this sort by the conspirators set on fire spoyled and wasted when desolation occupied all places euery where except the enemies for they that remained in the City shutting their gates and doores hid themselues in the most secret places of their houses The Maiors Deputy alone as it were reserued to behold the miserable spectacle of his Counties downefall void of all aduice and helpe when he beheld from the vpper part of his house all things consumed with fire and ruinated supposing the enemies as they had brought destruction vpon the houses would not long after offer violence and death vnto men shutting his doores kept himselfe within his house But the power of the enemies in the meane time waxing great and gathering a band of men together they broke into the City at Saint Augustines gates and all of them being armed with clubs and such weapons as euery mans lotte could afford him they came running vnto the house of the Maiors Deputie and assayed to breake vp the doores at length when they began to set them on fire hee being greatly afraide for all his seruants were fled from him himselfe alone vnshut the gates whom presently they tooke and plucked off his gowne which hee vsed at that time calling him Rebel and threatning him a most shameful death except he would tel them in what place the Earle of Northampton was hidden when he answered They were all departed All of them tooke that answer with great indignation and outcryes most tumultuously rushing with all violence into his house they searched furiously all the corners thereof Afterward turning to the prey they depart loaden with the spoyle But many being restrained partly by reason of money and other things which they receiued of the Deputy and partly by the speech of a certaine person which said vnto them such doings were intolerable yea theft and villanie by all kind of punishment to be reuenged and repressed brought againe their packes and burthens which they had carryed away before and laide them in the shops and warehouses Neuerthelesse many of the Citizens into whose houses the Rebels had entred onely vnder pretence of seeking the Earle of Northampton were vtterly robbed of all that euer they had Chiefly they spoyled their houses which were gone out of the City proclaiming them Rebels and open enemies to the Kings Maiesty and therefore their goods to bee confiscate Notwithstanding some of the Citizens tooke order there should be deliuered to the furious multitude bread drinke and all kinde of victuall whereby it came to passe that the miserable and hungry people being pacified they were somewhat stayed from the rage of spoyling Neuerthelesse very many vpon this sodaine calamity sustained great losse and iniury and were so ouercharged with such great expenses that euer after while they liued and many liue at this day in their houshold affaires fared the worse In the meane season the remembrance of future times as it seemed came into the mindes of the Rebels Wherefore being now turned from violence they beginne to thinke of their owne safety therefore they commanded the Maiors Deputy and the chiefe of the City that watch and ward should be kept from house to house by the Citizens euery day at all the gates of the City which if they shall refuse to doe they threaten death and grieuous torments Moreouer in the Temple which is fearefull to tell in the Temple of the great God the Rebels as oft as it rained placed the tents of their furies And so farre grew their malapertnesse boldnesse and desire of ouerturning of things as neither the speeches of the wise nor the feare of Gods vengeance nor the teares and lamentations of women could remoue them from their villanies For the women when they saw the slaughter of harmelesse naked men oft times offered themselues in the streets intreating them to haue compassion vpon their Countrey vpon them their husbands and children and remember that they were men themselues begotten of men and that they had reuenged themselues sufficiently vpon those for whose cause they took vp Armes that they would at last cast a bridle vpon their rage so should they
of Diuinity at this day in the time of our most renowned Queene Elizabeth Archbishop of Canterbury Hee minding to doe the office and duty of a good Pastor seeing all places inuironed with the flames of fury and mischiefe did that which became a prudent and behoued a resolute man For in rebuking of wickednesse he shewed himselfe stout and valiant and in wary auoiding of perils witty and carefull so as hee performed the faith that he ought to God and the King and diligently prouiding for himselfe hee shewed that prouidence that is principally in wise men But it came to passe one day what time hee went with his friends into Ketts Campe hee found Kett and other his Companions of that fellowship standing vnder the Oke communing of matters betweene themselues At which time the notable courage of the Maior M. Codde appeared and his worthy voice was plainely heard beseeming a valiant man For when Kett the Captayne of this conspiracy was earnest with him to deliuer the keyes of the City and all his authority and to resigne his gouernement into his hands Codde stoutly answered he would first giue his bloud and life out of his body before he would by villany trecherously leaue the City or cast off wickedly through feare and cowardise his allegeance to the King The matter thus debated on both sides and night drawing on Matthew seeing the miserable cōmon people drowned in drinke and excesse thought that sober and wholsome cōmunication would little profit drunkards ouer-charged with meat and drinke and strooken with the heate of the weather and sunne therefore thought good to say nothing vnto them that day Wherefore leauing all things as he found them full of fury and tumults hee departeth into the Citie The next day early which was Friday he returneth againe into the Campe with his brother Tho. Parker which was after Maior of Norwich where it is lamentable to tell he found them all vnder the Oke hearing prayers and in the middest of them one Thomas the Vicar of S. Martins at the Palace reading the Letanie Matthew hauing gotten this oportunity to teach went vpon the Oke and there made a Sermon full of wisedome modestie and grauitie All his Sermon was chiefly diuided into three parts In the first he wisely admonisheth them that those things which for their sustentation they had brought into the Campe being consumed and spent they would not spoyle wickedly the fruits of the earth and the gifts of God Next that they should not defile their hands with bloud following priuate and secret displeasures rashly carryed with a desire of reuenge neither to punish them with imprisonment and bands whom they held as Enemies or take away any mans life wickedly or cruelly Lastly in regard of common profit to surcease from these enterprises and not distrust the Kings Herald or Messenger but to giue vnto the King due honour euen in his yong and tender age whereby they might vse him hereafter when hee came to more ripe and flourishing estate the valour and prowesse of his Ancestors being confirmed in him and as it were deepe rooted with incredible delight and pleasure When in this place hee had inforced all the strength of his speech and all the company had heard him attentiuely and willingly standing round about him while hee preached at the voyce of one wretch of the basest of the people they began to cry out one by one tumultuously How long saith he shall we suffer this hireling Doctor which procured for his hire by the Gentlemen is come hither bringing words of sale and a tongue bound with rewards but we will cast a bridle vpon their intolerable power and will hold them bound with the cords of our Law spite of their hearts Then the common people began to murmur and openly to rage and many stirred vp with the speech of this Varlet vrged the matter with more bitter words and threats yea and fearefull speeches of some were heard and dangerous which came also to his owne eares Some of them cried out fiercely It were good that hee which hath spoken so well and hath powdred his Sermon with such eloquent words and sentences were compelled to come downe being shot through with pikes and arrowes Wherevpon a great feare came vpon this good man at that time and vnto this feare was added the terrour of another euill suspected for hee himselfe felt vnder his feet the points of the speares and Iauelings and was in great doubt lest hee should be thrust thorow of the raging multitude Neuerthelesse it was afterward perceiued that there was no such cause of feare for all that were vnder the tree for the most part had Matthew in great reputation and imbraced him with all loue and kindnesse and were greatly glad of his comming thither For they hoped it would haue come to passe that the people being strooken in conscience with his words and made more tractable or afraid of their wickednesse and villany would repent of their doing or at the least remit somewhat of their wonted furie and crueltie and by this meanes all that were present against their willes might obtaine more libertie Howsoeuer it was he was exceedingly afraid and seemed to be in great danger At what time on the sudden came Thomas of whom wee spake before Vicar of S. Martins hauing gotten two or three Musicions vnto him who began to sing Te Deum in English with solemne Musicke and distinct notes elegantly set for the delight of the eare by the sweetnesse of which Song they being rauished for they were vnwonted to Musicke their cruell and raging minds bewitched with these vnaccustomed delights by little and little were appeased Matthew hauing gotten this opportunitie thought it not good to tarrie while either these had made an end of their Song or the other should begin a new to rage therefore comming downe from the Oke with his brother as hee could get out he went from the Campe. And as they were going downe Saint Leonards Hill toward Pockethorpe Gates they came vpon him and other ministers of that societie following him with tumultuous clamours which contended with him chiefely for the great seale whereby he had licence to preach Matthew therefore perceiuing that all were infected with this villanie as it were running headlong with deadly furie and madnes being wearied with such tumults and lamenting the euils of his Countrie escaping priuily what way hee could leaueth his brother Thomas Parker behind him to reason with them of the matters and by this meanes withdrew himselfe from their furie The next day after Matthew Parker going into Saint Clements Church from one of the Lessons appointed to be read taketh vp the cause againe to speak some thing of these pernicious tumults many of the Conspirators standing round about him at what time they said nothing but waiting his comming out of the Church full of rage they stood round about him and being come out they followed
followed him and forsaking their former purpose and casting off their weapons betooke themselues to the Kings mercie All these with the Maior and Thomas Aldrich went into the Citie and forthwith the Maior commanded the gates to be shut especially Bishops Gates because from thence directly except speedily by this aduice they had beene preuented the Rebels might breake into the City Moreouer all the Gentlemen of whom we spake before that were throwne into the Castle by Ketts company were loosened from their bonds and imprisonment and set at liberty and were admitted into Counsell with the Maior and his Brethren and their aduice required which way best the assault of the Enemie might be let and hindred Againe they deuised for the defence of the City lest by the breaking in of the Rebels and licentiousnesse of the Souldiers all should goe to hauock It was thought best in conclusion that the City should be defended on euery side the Gates walles kept watch and ward to be had all enterance to be shut vp whereby the meanes of transporting victuals being cut off and taken away on euery side the mindes of the Rebels being strooken through want of victuall and weary of the Warres might faint at length Of these things which they long time debated betweene themselues deliberating and consulting without Iudges there came messengers vnto them from the Gates trembling and bringing fearefull tidings that many of the Citizens had bound themselues to the fellowship of this villany and that some of them had let in many of Ketts Campe into the City When this great and sudden danger vnlooked for came to passe and the Rebels were now entred the City all things immediately seemed to goe to ruine feare possessed the minds of all Request was made therefore and it was easily obtayned of the Magistrates of the City that the Gentlemen should bee shut vp in the Castle as before lest peraduenture while they might be seen at liberty in the City and free from bonds wherewith of late they had beene holden the mindes of the Rebels full of fury and rage should by that occasion be stirred vp to murther and bloudshed Therefore they were all called for and againe committed to close prison Notwithstanding it was afterward vnderstood that the enemies were gone againe out of the City into the Camp the same way they came When this danger was ouer the Maior and his Brethren perceiuing the Conspirators to plot on euery side the death and destruction of men and goods they gaue themselues wholy to study for the preseruation of the Citie Wherefore ten of the greatest peeces of Ordinance were planted against the enemies in the ditch called the Castle ditch and well placed for the defence of the Citie if any force and assault should bee made Moreouer they appoint watch and ward especially in those places where through tract of time the walles were weake and decayed Who were commanded forthwith to remayne in those places that if any danger should happen from the enemy in the night they might presently with stones Pikes and other prouision bee driuen from the walles and Gates of the City The rest of the multitude were commanded that all of them armed should bee ready in the Market place and crosse streets of the City for euery occasion And because it seemed that the Ordinance whereof wee spake placed in the Castle ditch and ruines of the walles did not much annoy the enemy not bring any defence vnto the City At the cōmandement of the Maior they were all brought into the plaine speedily bestowed in the Meddowes which lye to the lowest part of the City and all the night following for the most part was spent in fearefull shot on both sides The next day the Rebels perceiuing of all that tumult in the night more feare then hurt to the Citie because the bullets from their Ordinance mounting ouer the City had done no harme brought all the Ordinance they had from the Hill into the Plaine and planting them at the bottome of the Hill beganne to assault the City afresh but because soone after the Campe beganne to be distressed for victuall that they might more commodiously being prouision from the places neere adioyning they agree to make truce with the Citizens for a time Therefore they ordayne to this office as Ambassadours one Iames Williams and Rafe Sutton beastly men and of the common people of the City of Norwich the basest These came presently from the Camp to the City Gates with a Banner of Truce in their hands and by the permission of the Citizens were brought to the Maior and his Brethren and are said to speake after this manner OVr Captaine Kett and his Souldiers intreateth of this City and of you the Maior and your Brethren Peace Truce for a few dayes whereby he may haue liberty as the custome was of late to transport victuall through the City which thing except yee grant he will breake in by force into the City and threatneth destruction by fire and sword HEreunto the Maior answered that they were most wretched Traytors cladde with all disloyaltie and villany seldome heard of Therefore he would yeeld nothing vnto their uniust demands neither was it lawfull for him if he would especially vnto them the vilest men that euer were borne That they had committed so many and such intolerable villanies whereby they deserued not only to be shut out of the Citie but also if it could be raced out of the nature of mankinde That they despised the Kings Maiestie wasted the Countrey destroyed the City of Norwich almost on euery side had branded an euerlasting note of reproch for villany and treason vpon themselues and their posteritie all places through force and cruelty polluted troubled vexed and destroyed Notwithstanding doe they intreat to be admitted into the Citie to be Citizens to be partakers of the benefits thereof and diuine exercises And doe they intreat at the last that their want might be supplyed What doe they not repent of the wickednesse whereto they haue vowed themselues What not so much as are ashamed Verily I know not whether are more wicked they that haue done these things or more shamelesse they that make request for them Doe they hope of the Maior And of the same Maior whom of late they made to suffer the shame of imprisonment Of this City which they wish ouerthrowne by the foundation Of the people of Norwich vpon whom they haue brought violence and the danger of Warre on euery side Corne and victuall to be ministred vnto them as meate to the furies What madnesse were this at length to see Let them be packing therefore let them be packing and tell Kett that wicked Captaine of these outragious villanies these things The Citizens of Norwich will obey the Kings Maiesty not Traytors to their Countrey and most cruell beasts And that hee esteemeth little of the dangers and feares they intend against
Gates and admit the Kings power into the Citie Kett when he vnderstood that the Herald was come to the Gates willed Augustine Steward the Maiors Deputie and Robert Rugge chiefe men of the Citie to goe vnto him and inquire what hee demanded These being let out at a back gate the matter being vnderstood made answere to the Herald That they counted themselues the miserablest men aliue which had indured so many and great discomfitures both in minde and body as at the remembrance thereof all the parts of their body tremble Neuerthelesse this one thing was added vnto the rest which increased the height of their calamity griefe and shame because that fidelity which they ought and earnestly desired to performe to his Maiestie they were not able to fulfill at this time and iudg●d themselues the vnhappiest that liued in this age wherein they were euer compelled either to vndergoe the danger of their life or the hazard of their dignitie Notwithstanding they hoped well of the Kings Maiestie as those which had no wayes bound themselues in any consent of these villanies but had restrayned as much as was in them the rest of the Citizens with great losse of their goods and euer with an incredible danger of their liues Moreouer they most humbly besought this one thing of the Earle that because there were in the City an innumerable company of Ketts Campe vnarmed poore and naked who besides that through feare and conscience of their owne wickednesse were holden guilty Moreouer were weary of this cursed society as which had filled the very desire of working mischiefe with the sacietie of their furies it would please him once againe to trie that which hath been often prooued in vaine signifying that they greatly hoped if at this time might be offered vnto them againe the hope of impunitie it would come to passe that forthwith they would lay downe their weapons without slaughter and bloudshed Which thing if it might come to passe would be an eternall memorie vnto posteritie and a glory exceeding all victorie if they might carry home peace and their weapons vnstained with the bloud of ciuill dissention The Herald presently departeth from the Maiors speech into Warwicks Campe declaring all things as hee had receiued The Earle vnto whom nothing was more precious if by any meanes it could bee brought to passe then that this flame so dangerous and dreadfull might be quenched without slaughter and bloudshed decreed himselfe also the aduice in this matter that it should not be measured according to the villanies they had committed but according to the dignitie of the King and the vtilitie of the Kingdome He feared moreouer lest the Gentlemen that were holden bound in the Castle and other Prisons euery day tossed and turmoiled with the great waues of feare at the length might be cruelly slaine of them For many were threatned death euery houre and many chiefly Roger Woodhouse Knight was continually reuiled with contumelious speeches vpon whom without all doubt they exercised the vnsatiable crueltie of their minds vexing and abusing him For these causes therefore it pleased him to prooue whether now at the length by the hope of pardon and impunity they might be drawne from the errour of their mischiefe To this end the Herald was presently sent with a Trumpeter who entring into the Citie were met with fortie of the Rebels marching two and two together for they were Horsemen with great ioy and loud cries from Saint Stephens Gates to the Bishops Palace From thence the Trumpeter sounding his Trumpet gaue a signe whereat when great routs of Rebels came flocking by heapes vnto them from the hill The Horsemen with a swift course ranne vnto them commanding that diuiding themselues the one halfe should stand in ranke right ouer against the other in order Which when they had presently done the Herald with his Trumpeter and two other of the principall of the Citie going in the midst betweene the rankes of the Rebels were receiued on euery side with great shouts and outcries For euery one vncouering their heads as it were with one mouth and consent all at once for the most part cried God saue King Edward God saue King Edward becommended therefore of the Herald and chiefe of the Citie and willed to keepe their order awhile as they were appointed of late The Herald when in this sort hee had passed betweene them two hundred and fiftie paces at the length came vnto the top of the hill hauing on his rich Coate of Armes as solemne ensignes of his Office There he staied awhile for Kett was not yet come at the last hee spake after this manner THey were not ignorant from the first time euer since they had wickedly taken vp Armes against their Countrie how many and sundry waies by all meanes possible labour and study the Kings Maiestie had imploied his care to the ende to bring them from the crueltie of those villanies whereby they haue violated all Lawes of God and men to some consideration of their duties and regard of their owne safetie and had sent vnto them messengers and Proclaimers of Peace not once but often againe and againe Notwithstanding they regarded not but euer despised and by all meanes misused them through their de●estable madnesse and disloyaltie But now in the sight of God whither would they rush whither would they throw both themselues headlong and their goods with deadly furie what measure would they put to their most trecherous madnesse or what ende of their most filthie counsels How long being stirred vp through pestilent lusts which false and idle confidence of liuing better had once suffered to enter into their minds would they pursue alwaies with deadly folly How long would they adorne with counterfeit titles the most foule impietie of mischieuous treason How long would they wrappe in the garments of vertue horrible filthinesse and deceiueable villanies Finally how long would they be holden bound with the mortall desire of those things which if it were lawfull for them to obtaine the destruction of the Common-wealth would insue presently much more intolerable and lamentable but rather now at the last they should looke about them awhile and apply both their minds and vnderstanding and mark thorowly with more intentiue eyes their Common-wealth of which in all their talke no lesse foolishly then wickedly and vngodly they are wont to boast of Surely then may easily be seene whether they be faithful subiects and worthy the name of good Citizens which haue taken vp hostile Armes against the Kings Maiestie which haue gathered together routs of wicked men despised and vile which haue brought vpon their Countrie the common Parent of vs all vngodly and sacrilegious hands which haue let in the scumme of the people and the vilest of all mortall men cast out for the most part of all English Societies into the Common-wealth to the destruction of the good and ouerthrow of the Kingdome which haue defaced
to place the Ordinance before the gates that being throwne downe and battered way might be made for the souldiers to enter the City Which while they were about to doe the Earle had knowledge from Augustine Steward the Maiors Deputy that there was a gate not farre off which the common people call Brazen doore This the enemy had made fast with great beames and peeces of timber and rampired vp with stones and earth notwithstanding with no labour might easily be shaken and broken downe The Pyoners are sought for Commandement giuen to breake vp the gates which broke open there they first entred the City and killing many they easily remoue the enemy from that place And now the Master Gunner had shottred and broken the Port-cullis at Saint Stephens gates and ouerthrowne the one halfe of the gates being shaken with the often shot Where the Earle of Northampton one Drury a man of excellent valour with their Bands hasting into the City driue the Campers from thence many being wounded and many slaine Also on the other sides of the City the Maiors Deputy brought to passe that the gates called Westwicke gates were opened which being vnlocked and set open Warwicke with all his Host were let in almost none resisting and came into the market place There they found almost threescore of the Rebels whom in warlike manner they punished For without hearing the cause all of them were presently as the manner of warres is manifestly conuict of their wickednesse and receiued their last punishment Not long after all Carts and carriages which could not come in both by reason of the hardnesse of the draft as also the often and sodaine incursiōs of the enemies are brought into the City at these gates also But it came to passe as it chanced by the rashnesse and folly of the keepers of the carriage while our men were occupied about their weighty businesse that they went out of the City thorow Bishops gates towards Moushold which certaine of the Rebels perceiuing they sent some of their company to set vpon the carelesse keepers thereof and bereaued our men of the whole carriage Whereat greatly reioycing for before they were vtterly vnprouided of such things they carryed into the Campe Carts loaden with Gunnes Gunpowder and all kinde of instruments of warre But in very good season Captaine Drury came vpon them with his Band which recouered part of the carriage from the enemy yet not without some losse of his Souldiers Then the Traytours tooke this counsell to lay waite in the Lanes and crosse Streets by Companies supposing to stay our men quickly and vnwares being ignorant of the wayes not accustomed thereto and by reason of the greatnesse of the City Wherefore they diuided themselues by Parishes Some of them stood at Saint Michaels of Mospoole part at Saint Simons others at Saint Peters of Hungate and others in East Wymer Warde all ready to battell There setting vpon some of our men on the sodaine they most cruelly slew three or foure Gentlemen before any helpe could come The matter being knowne and noysed in the market place Warwicke goeth with all his Host to remooue the enemy When they came thorow the Street called Saint Iohns Street and were now come to Saint Andrewes Church the enemy vnlooked for with his Bowmen discharged vpon vs a mighty force of Arrowes as flakes of snow in a tempest But while they were yet shooting intending to mixe heauen and earth together On the sudden came Captayne Drury the second time with his charge of Harquebusiers yong men and of an excellent courage and skill who payed them home againe with such a terrible volly of shot as if it had beene a storme of hayle and put them all to flight as in a moment trembling There were slaine at this skirmish about three hundred thirty And many being found creeping in the Church-yard and vnder the Walles were taken and put to grieuous punishment All the rest of that filthy company flowed againe to the Campe at Moushold as into a sinke Which being auoyded the Citizens seemed at the length to be greatly releeued and comforted because they had vomited vp and cast out so grieuous a plague The Rebels after this sort chased out and driuen from the City Warwick the better to fortifie the same furnished the walles with Souldiers and other prouision fit for the repulsing of the Enemie and gaue commandement that armed men out of hand should be placed in euery street and that all the passages into the City and Gates one or two excepted should bee blocked vp For by those Gates our men carryed out great store of Ordinance which stood there ready charged to bee conueyed the next day to Moushold But Ketts company supposing our men to bee greatly distressed for powder all other necessary furniture for Ordinance perceiuing also some few to stand straggling with our Carryage and Carts not carefull for any sudden euent of warre whom through the rage of the swelling pride of their heart being mad they greatly despised both because of their small company as also being negligent and fearing no such danger they supposed they might easily ouer-come they thought there was offered vnto them great oportunity of doing some notable exploit Therefore while Warwicks Souldiers what for the defence of the City and the number of other waighty businesse were hindred with greater cares One Myles a man as it seemeth most bold and skilfull in discharging of Ordinance watching the time and oportunity of this villany shot thorow the Kings Master Gunner with a bullet Whom when they perceiued to bee fallen downe dead some of them naked and vnarmed some armed with staues b●ls and pitchforkes moued as it were with a frensie made an assault vpon our men running downe the Hill Who abode not so much as the first incounter so great was the feare on euery side and force of the enemie vnlooked for but astonished and terrified with the disordered cries and horrible noise of their feete as they came running downe the hill leauing all the Baggage and Carts ranne away on all sides with great out-cries and a swift course A few therefore after this sort put to flight by many the Rebels tooke and carried away into the Campe certaine Ordinance which they found there and Carts loaden with all things necessarie for the warres before any helpe of our men could come Which thing was very hurtfull vnto vs and much out of our way For besides that afterward we wanted those instruments and weapons wherewith the enemie had furnished himselfe Ketts Gunners discharged often vpon vs and most cruelly those iron bullets from the Ordinance and Gunnes which they tooke from vs and battered the Citie grieuously And many being slaine torne and rent in sunder with the rage of the shot this villany and wickednesse they adde to the rest that they beate downe most furiously a great part of the Wall
NORFOLKES FVRIES OR A VIEW OF KETTS CAMPE NECESSARY FOR THE MALECONTENTS OF our Time for their instruction or terror and profitable for euery good SVBIECT to incourage him vpon the vndoubted hope of the Victorie to stand faithfully to maintayne his PRINCE and COVNTREY his Wife and Children goods and Inheritance With a Table of the Maiors and Sheriffes of this Worshipfull City of NORWICH euer since the first grant by HENRY the Fourth Together with the Bishops of that See and other Accidents there Set forth first in Latin by ALEXANDER NEVIL Translated into English for the vse of the common People by R. W. Minister at Frettenham in Norfolke and a Citizen borne who beheld part of these things with his yong Eyes ROM 13. 5. Wherefore yee must needes obey not only because of vengeance but also because of conscience LONDON Printed by William Stansby for Henry Fetherstone and are to be sold at his shop in Pauls Church yard at the signe of the Rose 1615. To the right Worshipfull Sir Thomas Hiren Knight Maior of the Worshipful Citie of Norwich and his brethren the Aldermen Master Sheriffes and the whole Comminaltie R. W. wisheth all increase of Worship Prosperitie and Peace from God euen our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ our Sauiour RIght Worshipfull and my beloued Countriemen the Citizens of Norwich when in the house of my friend among other Bookes I found vnlooked for this Treatise written in Latine by one Alexander Neuil an English man The very Title of the Booke drew mee into a farther desire of looking into the matter the rather because lying at that time and in that place where these Furies were committed I beheld something with my young eyes and receiuing many strange things from the report of others I desired and was glad to see the thing in order which when I entred vpon the elegancie of the Phrase together with the Argument promised mee a double fruit viz. not only to know the Storie in order but also to reuiue and sharpen my poore skill in that Tongue now through disuse and tract of time declining so as I made it from my other Studies my recreation In the pursuit whereof I found as the Queene of Sheba saith of the wisdome of Salomon that the one halfe of the calamities and miseries of this worshipfull Citie my Mother was neuer sufficiently knowne vnto me Neyther the miraculous deliuerance sufficiently acknowledged by mee for I finde it farre greater then I thought Wherefore reading it ouer now once and againe and communing with diuers of my friends about the matters therein contained I found a generall desire in them all to haue it in English Whereupon my selfe hauing found such pleasure mixt with profit in the reading heereof if I should not bee enuious hauing also certaine intelligence that it was not extant by any particular Treatise thought good to satisfie their expectation though of many the vnfittest That so prayse might be giuen vnto God of many And as the benefit increaseth in our eyes so our thankesgiuing might grow and abound Wherefore vnto that godly order taken alreadie for the yearely remembrance of this deliuerance and solemnitie of Thankes giuing as the Poet sayth in the like Annuus assuetum Domine natalis honorem Exigit ite manus ad pia Sacra meae Goe thou the labour of my hands and receiue vnder your Worshipfull protection the good meaning of a poore friend which wisheth well as hee hath good cause to your Worships and this Citie Your Worships for life R. W. To the Christian Reader CHristian Reader hauing read ouer this Treatise with great pleasure and not a little profit both in regard of the matter and elegancie of the stile in respect whereof in my simple iudgement the Author hath deserued great commendation I wished with many other that some man would take the paines to translate the same into our Mother Tongue that the thing which concerned so many might be knowne of all But seeing hitherto no man hath vndertaken the Worke especially being now twentie yeares olde since the first setting it forth in Latine by the Author fearing also le●t the matter might be buried vnder obli●ion in the ages to come I ha●e ventured vpon the labour my selfe and by the goodnesse of God haue finished the same for thy benefit Wherein I haue omitted nothing to my remembrance but deliuered truly as I receiued it from the Author neyther haue I in my simple iudgement altered the sence though through the daintinesse of the Phrase not fitting our English Tongue I haue sometime and that very seldome altered his wordes as the Learned can beare me record Wherfore I beseech thee courteous Reader accept of my poore labour and let not Dame Disdaine nor Idle Enuie offer me● that discourtisie to ●arpe at my trauaile while I meane well to all and meddle but with the refuse of other men The Worke is worthie the looking vpon and especially in these dayes when the like is wished of many and looked for of some For who can be ignorant of the malice of the enemies of the grace of God against vs hauing knowne their se●erall attempts for our destruction in the dayes of our late Soueraigne of blessed Memory and seene and heard of the continuance therof no lesse cruell since his Maiesties comming to the Crowne wherof their Powder Plot a thing m●st immane and barbarous with manie practices besides is sufficient witnesse and testifieth their malice to be implacable as those that had sworne against Paul neuer to eate nor drinke till they had s●aine him whose hope lieth not so much in their owne prouision as in the intertainment and helpe they looke for amongst vs which was the cause that sometime they attempted so farre vpon our Coasts as was made knowne vnto vs by Proclamation in the dayes of our late Queene and the like by his Maiestie that now swayeth the Scepter since To the which end a number of ●esuites at that time were dispatched into the Land and at this day vnder his Maiestie haue beene and are still creeping and croking in corners like the Frogges of Egypt that perswading his Maiesties Subiects to defend their Catholike Religion they may be readie to stirre vp Ciu ill Dissention at home or else prepare themselues to ioyne with Forraine Forces if at any time which God forbid they shall in●ade the Land Both which are most dangerous and bring as our Sauiour Christ saith ruine and destruction to Kingdomes or Cities Moreouer it is a thing against Nature for Dogges of the same Kennell seldome fight together except at meate seruants of the same Family commonly make a side Abraham vsed it for a great reason to Lot Let there be no strife I pray thee betweene thee and mee neyther betweene thy Heardsmen and mine for we are brethren And Moses would haue pacified the matter betweene the two Hebrewes contending together because they were brethren that is both Iewes
when he had tryed all meanes in vaine and perceiued that neither intreaty nor reward could preuaile any thing at all to draw the mindes of the Conspirators from so great wickednesse to the consideration of peace presently returneth into the City After whose departure the Rebels conceiued as it was indeede which also they beganne to perceiue by little bowes in the hands of certaine men which fled vnto them out of the City that if they tarried any longer scattered and separated one from another their enterprise presently without any difficulty would be disappointed and they resisted To preuent this they thought it safest that all their cursed companies should be drawen together into one place Whereupon without delay they went to Eaton wood which when they had viewed thorowout and found no conuenient place to pitch their campe in by publique consent it was agreed vpon that from thence they should presently depart to Moushold And chiefly they did chuse that place wherein they might appoint seates for their wicked purposes and dennes for their robberies Therefore when this aduice liked them all and night before they were aware came on they sent messengers vnto the Maior to signifie vnto him that they intended without iniury to any man to passe thorow the City because that way was more easie and readier and therefore they request to doe it with his good leaue Hereunto the Maior answered that they were men of a lewd minde and enemies to the weale publique and therefore he would giue them no passe thorow the City Moreouer he rebuked them sharpely and with threatning words as men seditious and desirous to trouble and ouerturne all things that so striking a feare into them he might by all meanes possible terrifie them from so great mischiefe and cruelty Moreouer he gaue them to vnderstand that if they proceeded in their fury and rage it would sho●tly come to passe such desperat attempts would come to a fearefull end But this speech of the Maior was so farre from terrifying them as they departed from him more obstinate and confirmed in their resolution then when they came Thus Ketts Company disappointed of their hope and intention lurked all that night in Eaton wood In the meane season the Maior with his Brethren called a Councell as it behoued them for the Common-weale of their City There it was longtime and much debated as of them whose mindes were carryed into doubtfull opinions Some thought there is neede of expedition and that without delay they are to be put to flight For being desperately mad and raging if they be not in the beginning repressed they would bring a plague and destruction to the whole City Other thought otherwise that it is a matter of great danger deliberation and aduice and that this speede in resisting comming as from courage and magnanimity so it may seeme vncertaine and vnaduised whose whole commendation is in the euent Which course as it bringeth alwayes a doubtfull so for the most part a dolefull end And therefore they perswade to fortifie the City and appoint watch and ward carefully and to bestow the Citizens vpon the walles and other conuenient places of the City As for other things because by the Law of raising Force and Armes it is prouided that no Bands bee mustered without the commandement of the King therefore nothing to be attempted as they aduise but to expect his will and authority All men easily inclined to this sentence as held for the best proceeding from the matter in question and most safe against euery assault of Fortune And forthwith messengers are sent post with letters vnto the King wherein all things are carefully reported commanding that with as much speed as was possible they should be deliuered to the Kings Councell The next day after that was the eleuenth of Iuly when they could not obtaine liberty of the Maior to passe thorow the City and all hope therof being taken away it seemed best to them and they all agreed to goe ouer at Hailsdon Bridge which because they could not easily doe for the straightnesse of the Bridge the way whereof was too narrow for the drift of the Cattell and carriage they threw great store of wood into the riuer and so vpon the boughes and bodies of the trees heaped vp together men horse and cart might passe ouer the Riuer After this manner being gone ouer the night following they lodged at Drayton The next day they went towards Moushold casting downe on euery side hedges and diches Moreouer they pulled downe a Chappell of one Corbetts and brought a desolation and miserable ruine vpon all places Into this cursed rout of wretched men destroying and wasting all things and rushing into all places with headlong rage wheresoeuer they came Roger Woodhouse Knight and the brethren of the Appleyards fell into their company while vnwarily they went to see which way these Rebels came These they tooke and against their wills carried with them Then they tooke the hill called Saint Leonards hill right ouer against Norwich in which place the Earle of Surry had built a faire and sumptuous house which hath beneath it the maine Riuer running betwixt the City and hath on the East and South the wood and a little village called Thorpe but on the East and North Moushold Heath which containeth in length and breadth more then sixe miles Heere they placed the Chambers and as it were tents of their furies and lurking those thicke woods as dogs in their kennels they violated all Lawes of God and man Moreouer they entred that goodly house in all places thereof left the markes of their villanies And now whatsoeuer of the vilest and basest of the people were in any place these came running thither and all the dregges and filth of the people of Norfolke ioyned themselues to this Campe besides a great number out of Suffolke also of men dwelling in other places and Countries by the ringing of Belles and firing of Beacons c●me stocking thither Moreouer they adde one mischiefe to another for this so horrible villany and desire seldome heard of of destroying all things they couer with a certaine shew of counterfeit holinesse for they got vnto them a certaine Minister of the City whom they appoint to say prayers Morning and Euening Furthermore they endeuour to ioyne to the societie of these outrages men any way excellent for Religion and Doctrine and for vertue and innocencie of life commendable Among whom was Robert Watson Preacher Thomas Cod Maior of Norwich Thomas Aldrich of Mangreene a man while he liued beloued of all men These three because they refused to be bound to their wicked agreements and trecherous Couenants against their willes they constrained to bee present at all their Consultations and to take vpon them the administration of all things with Kett the chiefe Rebell Which thing fel out marueilous wel for if it happened at any time which happened often that Kett or
any of the principal Conspirators as they were prone and headlong to all villany stirred vp by the mad multitude to goe about any wicked and vngracious worke which might tend in conclusion to the spoile either of the Citie the Fields or Townes neere the City the wise and careful diligence of these men often hindred such pestilent enterprises Although Kett set on fire with mischiefe and spurred forward by the rude furies of his companions was wont sometimes to send foorth Commandement as from authoritie of prescript formes which were called Ketts writs whereunto sometime this importunate beast abused the names of these honest men The Coppie of which writs followeth WE the Kings Friends and Delegates giue authoritie to all men for the searching out of beasts and all kind of victuall to be brought into the Campe at Moushold wheresoeuer they find it so as no violence or iniurie bee done to any honest or poore man charging all men by the authoritie hereof that as they wish well vnto the King and the afflicted Common wealth they be obedient to vs his Delegates and vnto them whose names are vnderwritten Robert Kett. Then in order other followed for the number of Delegates were many for besides the chiefe of this wicked societie they chose two out of euery hundred and there were sixe and twenty hundred and with these and the like Warrants many worthy and Great persons whom the furie and rage of the common people made guiltie were arested And many as though they had been guiltie of great crimes were led away to Moushold and there shut vp in hold and prison Moreouer the ditches and hedges of common Pastures inclosed by the authoritie of the same Commission were throwne downe and in diuers places many were charged to be assistant and helpers in these tumults And all these things were done these three the Maior Watson and Aldrich not only holding their peace and winking at the matter but also in shew sometime consenting being often compelled to serue the time whereby they might relieue their Country tost to and fro in the deepe seas of sedition and discord lest if not resisting at all the aduersarie and cruell common people should haue perceiued it and so they should haue brought present death to themselues and destruction to their Countrie which then without doubt if they had openly resisted or plainely denied as farre as man could perceiue such was their rage and vnbridled madnesse had vtterly perished ouerthrowne with robberies burning and all kind of common calamitie In the meane season the Citie of Norwich carefull of this estate of things with an vncertaine hope and continuall expectation for reliefe remained doubtfull of these sturres for hitherto no answere was brought vnto them from the King neither vnderstood they what the Councell had decreed to be done and the Citizens without commandement durst attempt nothing but remained in the Citie still looking for the Kings authoritie And it chanced at that time many obscure and vile persons were in armes in sundry places as bound by a common consent of villany they had conspired to teare in sunder the bowels of the Common wealth for although the fury of rude and beastly men did much more and cruelly rage in the Countie of Norfolke then any where else yet the same mortall plague of destroying all things was spred abroad almost through all parts of the land Not onely Norfolke but Buckingham Oxford Surrey Essex Kent Cambridge-shire and many other places were troubled with the like sturres Whereby it came to passe that when all the counsels care and studie was occupied in quenching the flames of so great seditions lest if they had not gone presently against the fire all the Common-wealth had burned they came somewhat later to represse these Norfolke Commotions then they wished In the meane while sedition groweth and loseth nothing but daily increaseth in so much that of beastly men in Kets Campe there were almost sixteene thousand and these went about to fortifie themselues with all meanes of defence Kett being their Captaine and they brought from diuers parts prouision for the warres and al kind of weapons into the Campe. Moreouer great store of Gun-powder and Gunnes of all sorts a great number To the obtaining whereof they ran into all places and entred the houses of Worshipfull persons and Gentlemen robbing them and whatsoeuer cattel they found in the field money in the houses or corne in the barnes that vngodly and wickedly they tooke away yea the owners looking vpon them and carried it into the Campe. And many when after this sort they had wasted powled and emptied all places and left miserable monuments euery where of their villanies and made a discomfiture of all things a great part of the prey was priuily turned another way and thrust into holes and corners and euery one heaped vp by stealth for himselfe as much as their dennes could hold This being knowne and brought before Kett and the other Gouernours for so would they bee called they being desirous aboue all to prouide against this inconuenience by common consent they agreed that some place should be chosen where they might sit to minister Iustice. Now there was an old Oke with great spred boughes this they laid ouer with raftes and balkes acrosse and made a roofe with boordes where for the most part the people standing round about they determine and decree of complaints and quarrels if any were done to any as the cause required and sometime they binde with straighter bands the insolent and ouer-much greedy couetousnesse of some by violent taking all away This Oke was called the Oke of Reformation whereunto at the first none came but Kett and the Gouernours of the which some and among these the Maior of the City especially Aldrich and others of whom we spake before against their wils appointed in this number contended vehemently by all meanes possible as much as was in them to restraine the needy and hungry cōmon people from this importune liberty of rifling and robbing To the which end they went often vpon the Oke and with their graue speeches perswaded that there might be at the length if not an end yet they would prouide some meanes against such rapine and so generall violence in all excesse There were besides also other graue Persons and good Diuines who endeuoured by all meanes possible study and diligence to reduce the tumultuous people hauing now cast off all feare of Law and glutting themselues in all villany from robbery and burning wherewith they had confounded all things vnto the consideration of peace And these in the day preaching and in the night watching armed in the City omitted nothing that belonged vnto them as they were faithfull Ministers or lay vpon them as they were good Subiects At this time among the rest the wisedome faithfulnesse and integrity of D. Matthew Parker was notable a worthy man and euery way adorned with vertue then Professor
him presently saying They vnderstood he had three or foure good and able Geldings which might serue the King therefore they willed him that immediatly after dinner they should bee readie for they were to vse them presently Hereunto Matthew answered little or nothing but called vnto him speedily a Smith and taking the shooes off the feet of some of them he caused them to be pared to the quicke The other he willed to bee anointed with greene Coperasse all ouer as though they had been tired with ouermuch trauell and dressed with medicine The Rebels supposing the matter to be euen so indeed for anon after as they were led to pasture seeing some swadled about the feete and other anointed with greene medicine they left off their purpose Mathew not long after going out at the gates as it were to walke about two miles from the Citie had his horse brought him to Kringelford bridge where hee tooke their barks and began his iourney towards Cambridge But in the way what he saw what he heard what furies and villanies by the seditious which met him in his iourney hee beheld to speake of all were an infinite labour Neuerthelesse by the goodnesse of God when hee had escaped all these garboyles and popular hurliburlies at the length being free from so great dangers he came safe to Cambridge The speech therefore of this worthy man as an Oracle from heauen was after this manner wickedly neglected and despised of most vile and beastly persons forsaken not onely of all health but of all hope which although at that time blind and headlong through fury and madnes as deadly and to so great meanes of recouering their libertie an enemie and dangerous they despised and refused yet without all doubt from the most dolefull chances which insued the horrour of Gods vengeance possessed all their soules For as we said before hee was the minister of this heauenly voyce that quenching as it were so great a fire of mischiefe in their mindes they would speedily repent lest the impiety of Treason spreading further should at length become lamentable to their Countrey and in the end sorrowfull and deadly to themselues for all things that were diuinely and wittily spoken by him as though they had beene fitted by destiny to the people of Norfolke came to passe And the Rebels falling from one villanie to another receiued at the last condigne punishment for their so great furies In the meane time the Rebels of whom we spake before thirsting after the goods and fortunes of Great men had filled all places with robbery theft Being now satiate and glutted with the spoyles they turned at length from the desire of the prey to violence and cruelty going through all the Country of Norfolke threatning terrour and perill to all that would not stand on their part And now the worshipfull and Gentlemen in all places whithersoeuer their rage carryed them being taken and brought into the Castle it caused such a generall feare vpon all men that many forsaking house and inheritance and changing their apparel lest being perceiued in their flight iourney they might be knowne escaped by obscure by-pathes and fearing all extremity from the Enemy hid themselues in Caues of the earth and thicke woods And many hauing horse and cart were constrayned to serue and if they had none were compelled to get elsewhere And vnto these was commanded that bestowing their labour and bearing their owne charges they should carry corne and victuall to the Campe at Moushold To whom except they presently obeyed was threatned the destruction of their houses and fields and violence to their wiues and children Moreouer what worshipfull persons and Gentlemen soeuer they tooke and they tooke many them they bound surely with cords as though in all villanie they had exceeded themselues Many were deliuered to be kept in Norwich and some committed to the prison commonly called the Guild Hall others to the Castle Some shut vp in the Earle of Surryes house as theeues and felons Yea heereunto it came that if at any time they wanted money which they wanted often they compelled the Maior of the City out of the common treasure alwayes to supply their necessity Whose importune demands if the Maior had denied without all doubt they had emptied the treasury and set the house on fire and brought a miserable plague and destruction vpon all mens goods And surely they often entred wicked counsell for the rifling of the City and the thing had beene done vndoubtedly if by the industry and diligence of the Maior they had not beene alwayes put by their hope and indeuour Notwithstanding many Gunnes and much Artillery and instruments of warre whatsoeuer could bee found in the City they tooke and carryed away fearing lest any thing might happen heereafter at any time against them and carryed them into the Campe charging moreouer all the Citizens they should bee ready at the first call to defend and helpe them if neede require Crying out that they were the Kings friends and being vniustly oppressed had taken vpon them the defence of the Lawes and of the Kings Maiesty And not contented with this they abused the Kings name to serue their villanie and wretchednesse Moreouer there were certaine Commissions sent from the Kings Maiesty giuing authority vnto diuers worshipfull and Gentlemen whose names were inserted in the Commissions with commandement carefully to preuent the dangers that might insue to the Common-wealth and to prouide that these sturres and commotions might be repressed in the beginning When they had gotten these letters putting out the names of the men of Worship they caused their owne names to be written in and pulling off the Kings Seales set them to fo●ged Commissions of their owne and setting them vp in open places abused the ignorant people that knew not this great deceite And now they were come to such rage and madnesse as the fury and force of so great tumults could not be restrained neither by the gouernours nor yet by Kett himselfe the arch and chiefe Rebel Moreouer they held them for enemies not onely which refused to ioyne with them in their villanies but many good Citizens which to saue themselues fled out of the City with their wiues and children they accounted enemies Who being driuen out of their houses through the feare of so great danger when they durst remaine no longer any where wandered heere and there separated and dispersed by the meanes of this generall rage and violence And with exceeding lamentation and many teares bewayled the iniquity of those times the miserable condition of their Countrey Moreouer they threaten the City with fire and burning insomuch as they which remained in it looked for nothing else but the ouerthrow and ruine of all things In the Campe was an horrible and lamentable fate of things for when there met together a great multitude of theeues and bankrouts from all parts of England whome the hope of
prey and desire of ease called from their daily labour and tilling of the ground such monsters of mischiefe were conceiued and such vnlawfull lusts in all kinde of daliance that my tongue abhorreth and is ashamed to tell This also is most euident that as they had brought an vnspeakeable waste and desolation vpon all fields and houses on euery side so whatsoeuer was brought into the Campe was quickly spent in most gluttonous manner surfetting and reuelling Insomuch as it seemeth almost incredible how so much prouision could be deuoured in so short a time For besides Swannes Geese Hennes Ducks and all kind of fowles without number about three thousand Bullocks and twenty thousand Sheepe were royotously spent in the Campe within few dayes Besides paled parkes and hedged wherein Deere were kept were pulled downe and laide open and what Deere soeuer they could any way come by them they violently tooke and carried away Nothing was shut vp to their lust no regard had of future times no foresight of the euils that might ensue no measure of wickednesse and wasting but all places were ouerthrowne and emptied in a miserable sort and such a slaughter was made of Sheepe and other cattell euery where as they sold openly a Wether for a groat the head and purtenance as contemptible and vile meat were cast away because there was none in the aboundance of more dainties that would eate them What should I remember the spoyling of Groues and Woods which were almost vtterly rooted vp and cut downe by the ground all which as much as could be cut they burned or which is more vile they consumed in building their dennes and lodgings Moreouer there is added to this so terrible licenciousnesse the companion for the most part of such practices cruelty For these filthy beasts and of all people the vilest laide chaines vpon the most honest and harmelesse men and manicles and fetters vpon many wherewith they coupled them two and two together and made them indure long the most bitter torture and butchery of the Gaole Moreouer they appoint to euery of the gates and entrance into the City Porters that none should issue out and command the Constables of the Wards to see that none went out of the City And a great company of rude Countrymen were gathered together who were appointed to watch and ward in certaine places these men were prouided for by the Constables to the satisfying of their desire insomuch as many honest men consuming their stocks in so great and wastfull expences became vtterly impouerished for euer And the hatred conceiued against all in generall that most cruelly they vttered vpon those that they could come by There was at that time one Wharton a man of great courage but not fauoured of the people he being led towards the City to the Castle bound with cords as a thiefe a great companie of Rebels went round about him to defend him lest hee should haue beene slaine in the way by the vnruly multitude But neither his good behauiour towards them nor honest promise neither the diligent care of the Rebels appointed to guarde him were sufficient to defend him who escaped hardly that he was not murthered for many attempted his death and spoile his body also in many places was stabbed in with the points of their Speares and Pikes Moreouer it hapned about the time that this was done that the Rebels were going towards the City haling one of Molton as prisoner against whom they burned with most cruell hatred because he was alwayes a subtill fellow and a man set to sale for mony for he was a Lawyer and as men thought of a reuenging minde and one that vsed to raise vp Spirits with fearefull signes superstitious wonders While therefore as is said before this man of Molton was drawne out of a wood by the bewraying of a certaine woman where he had hid himselfe a little before among thornes and b●yers for lack of better prouision him they haled with them with all reproch and contumely the heauens thundering horribly not without the great astonishment of them that heard it also mighty showres fell mixt with haile which couered the earth and was very deepe not farre from the Oke called the Oke of Reformation But this fearfull Tempest as a signe from heauen was so farre from appalling or terrifying them that as if they had beene stirred vp by a heauenly voice they are more fierce to all kinde of villanie and more incensed then before And with no lesse Tempest were the mindes of the worshipfull Gentlemen whom the Clownes with notable cruelty and detestable fury raging vniustly held in bands afflicted All which either feared death euery day whereof some surely are reported to haue felt most vndeserued or else more grieuous torture then death it selfe and whatsoeuer else might be deuised by these filthy Robbers For certaine of them as if they had committed some notable villanie were summoned before the company of these desperate Persons as vnto iudgement and being set before the Oke as at the Barre were compelled to pleade their cause out of chaines and when the ignorant and rude multitude were asked what they would haue done with them all as with one mouth cryed out Let them be hanged Let them be hanged And when the Gentlemen inquired againe of them why they should vse such cruell speeches especially against them whom they knew not and were guilty of no crime they fiercely answered Such wordes of others were vsed towards them and therefore they would vse the same againe to them and had nothing else to obiect Though there were others that gaue this a reason of their cruel sentence that they were Gentlemen and therefore to be taken out of the way for they knew well if once they might get the Victorie they should indure at their hands all kinde of torment and cruelty And therefore it were better their liues should bee taken away whom now they had in bands so should they enioy their ease and security then to giue vnto them the vse thereof if it were but one houre of whom anon after they might be slaine as sheepe So enuyed at this time and hated was the name of a man of Worship or Gentleman as the basest of the people burning with more then hostile hatred desired to extinguish and vtterly cut off not only the Gentry themselues but if it were possible all the off-spring and hope of them In this sort when all the Countrey of Norfolke in a māner was shaken and beaten with the bloudy tempests of these dangerous tumults and now almost twenty dayes had passed from the beginning and nothing in the meane season any where done but wasting burning robbing and all things not only miserable to behold but horrible and fearefull to heare so great griefe had now possessed all good men and especially the Citizens of Norwich as at the sight of this lamentable fate of
the Citie Let them breake in destroy cast downe cut off lay euen with the ground and make spoile of all things but let them know that God is the rewarder and the reuenger And let them tremble at length in the conscience of so great wickednesse for they shall no doubt ere long be seuerely punished which they haue iustly drawne vpon themselues by their furie and madnesse These things with speed returned to Kett and his companions in the Campe being much mooued hereat with a brainsicke rage as wild furies they came running downe the hill with a cruell and despitefull noise crying out And when they came neere the Gates they practized with all their forces to breake into the Citie but being driuen backe with pikes and arrowes they left that enterprise At that time all the Ordinance as was said before being placed in the meddowes beneath the Citie was spent vpon the enemie but for lacke of powder and want of skill in the Gunners to small or little purpose Yet many being shot with arrowes were wounded which when they fell thicke vpon the ground the beardlesse boyes of the Countrie whereof there were a great number and others of the dregges of the people men most filthy gathered them vp and carried them to the enemie And the minds of them all were so inflamed as the very naked and vnarmed boyes as though a certaine frenzie had bereaued them of the sense of vnderstanding running about prouoked our men with all reprochfull speeches There was added also to their importune cursed words an odious inhumane villany for with reuerence to the Readers one of these cursed boyes putting downe his hose and in derision turning his bare buttocks to our men with an horrible noise and out-cry filling the aire all men beholding him did that which a chast tongue shameth to speake much more a sober man to write but being shot thorow the buttocks one gaue him as was meete the punishment he deserued It is reported also that some hauing the arrowes sticking fast in their bodies a thing fearefull to tell drawing them out of the greene wounds with their owne hands gaue them as they were dropping with bloud to the Rebels that were about them whereby yet at the least they might bee turned vpon vs againe so great a desire was there almost in all ages of spoiling and so great a thirst of shedding bloud In the meane season when on the other side of the Citie a fearefull crie began To your weapon To your weapon Citizens if ye be men to your weapon the enemies are entred the Citie and all men on the sudden ran thither as is the manner of men in feare where especially the greatest tumult and noise is heard The Rebels beholding these things from the hill and perceiuing the Citizens thinne vpon the walles and before the Gates of the Citie resolued presently to enter the Citie where it was void of defence There the boyes of whom wee spake before and a great company of Country Clownes did hazard a thing not only marueilous to see but incredible to heare For the vnarmed multitude and others part with Clubbes and Swords others with Speares Staues and Iauelins as chance could arme euery man on the sudden cast themselues headlong into the Riuer that cōpasseth the Citie at the Bridge called Bishops Gates Bridge Who without feare swimming ouer and flying to the Gates with out-cries and most tumultuous noise strooke such a terrour in the minds of all men as there was none almost which thought not that day the day of doome both to their Citie and to themselues Therefore all for the most part being afraid and discomfited fled and as euery man could find the way to his house and the secret places thereof they creepe in leauing the Citie vndefended But the Rebels pulling off the barres of the Gates whatsoeuer Ordinance or instruments of warre they found in the Citie they carried with them into the Campe. There when some of our friends among them vpon the miserable sight of these things were strooken with sorrow and compassion and with lamentable voice and waterie eyes prayed God to turne these calamities from the Citie The Boyes and Country Clownes which stood round about mocked them calling them traitors and in most vile maner they were vexed and grieued with cursings and reuilings But the Gates after this sort set open as was said before when all things were disordered through the boldnesse and violence of the Rebels for they came to and fro out of the Campe into the City The Herald for as yet he was in the City neither was the last day appointed by the King for the multitude to lay downe their weapons yet past came with the Maior into the market place accompanied with a great number of Citizens There againe in the Kings name hee commandeth them to put off their armour to leaue the Campe euery one to depart home to his owne house and to vse reuerently and humbly the Kings mercy and clemency If they would so doe then they should be safe and free from all punishment Otherwise there is nothing to be looked for but grieuous torments bitter death and all extremity When hee had made an end of speaking the Rebels cryed out very arrogantly and fiercely saying Let him depart with a pestilence and on the deuils name with his idle promises He was mad that infusing such flattering speeches into their eares did beleeue that they being bewitched with such intising words would bee oppressed and circumuented in the end They detested such mercy and vtterly defied it as which in apparant offering a slender and vaine hope of impunity would cut off treacherously all safety The Herald perceiuing now all of them giuen ouer and as it were bondslaues to fury and villanie and that they could neither by the feare of punishment nor hope of impunity be brought from their intended wickednesse without anything done presently leaueth the City and returneth to the Court. Soone after whose departure the Rebels commanded Leonard Sutterton to bee brought before them that so they might lay him in chaines because hee had beene companion with the Herald in his iourney But Sutterton vnderstanding the matter fearing also lest the mad and turbulent people burning towards him with malice as they did towards all good men might deale cruelly with him hid himselfe priuily in the City amongst his friends and kindred Then Kett tooke the Maior Robert Watson William Rogers Iohn Homersone William Brampton and many others and commanded them to bee brought out of the City into the Campe and so to prison where chaines were put vpon them all and they were shut vp in Mount Surrey and there remained prisoners and in irons vntill the last day of this conspiracy at the length some of them were set at liberty others cruelly slaine While these and the like were tumultuously done in the Campe Kett perceiuing the matter was come
to this passe that he must of necessity either haue a bloudy victory against his Countrey or else shortly receiue an end worthy his deseruing thought it best for his affaires if hee could draw a huge multitude together for the increase of his Army Wherefore he allured by rewards and faire promises all fugitiues on euery side as many as could be gathered together and men that had nothing to take to and were without hope of any thing to ioyne themselues to the fellowship of this cursed company Whereupon it is incredible to tell how great and almost innumerable multitudes of gracelesse persons on the sodaine were assembled But the Citizens tooke it grieuously that their Maior a worthy and vpright man should bee holden bound of wretched murtherers and as it now seemed thirsty of bloud moreouer in bonds should sustaine the contumely and shame of the prison fearing also lest in the end hee might bee slaine by violence because some of them threatned him many grieuous things others scurrilously and scoffing iested at the good mans name and that dangerously as pretending death vnto him after a sort For being called Codde by name and there is a fish of the Sea called after the same manner in Latine called Capite in contempt of the worthy Maiors name and to his no little danger one varlet ministring occasion vnto another of laughter and scoffing they made an O yes and cryed As many as would come to the Campe to morrow should buy a Cods head for a penny Herevpon the Citizens fearing lest the seditious should determine any thing grieuously against him and being marueilously troubled in minde and carefull of the Maiors danger hauing deserued so well of them they came vnto Thomas Aldrich complaining one by one of this importunate boldnesse and vnbridled violence This Aldrich as wee said before was a man beloued of all men and ruled with such wisedome grauity and modesty for he was a man of a fine and sharpe wit that euen his name was fearefull to the most barbarous enemie For when al men loued him exceedingly maruailing at his singular courtesie and modesty in as much as among the chiefe of the Rebels he had that command in short time as neither his aduice nor enterprises were at any time in vaine Therefore much of the goods that were taken away of the Rebels by violence through his industry were restored again to the owners many pestilent attempts of the seditious by his prouidence diligence were restrained When therfore he vnderstood in how great danger the safety of the life of the Maior was being moued with the indignity of the thing hee went to Kett into the Campe and willeth him to set at liberty and out of bonds the Maior of the City Hereunto when Kett as it were perplexed in minde said nothing Aldrich cryed with a loud voyce Art thou not ashamed wretched Traytour to hold in prison and irons I say not alone an harmelesse man but a Maior which is the Kings Maiesties most faithfull Lieutenant Art thou so fierce and cruell that when through ryot and excesse thou hast wasted the goods and commodities of all men thou canst now not bee satisfied nor filled except thou mayest drinke vp at last also the bloud of innocent persons Therefore thou the wretchedst man the earth beareth command him forthwith to bee brought out of prison These words as flashes of lightning sharpely bent against Kett whether it were for the reuerence of the man that spake or which is most like of a conscience of his wickednesse strooke such a feare and terrour in him as the thing which others could not obtaine with intreaty and all perswasion he brought to passe with threats and grauity of speech By whose wisdome the Maior hauing obtained his liberty although he could not altogether auoid al the storms of that turbulēt time yet he escaped happily both the grieuousnes of imprisonment and danger of his life Wherefore hauing liberty to goe all about in the City his care and diligence was a great comfort to many of the Citizens afterward against those euils which at that time oppressed the City And for as much as he could not sit continually in the gouernment of the City because for the most part hee was constrained to abide in the enemies Campe he deputed one Augustine Steward in his roome to take the charge of desending and gouerning the City in his absence Who taking vnto him Henry Bacon and Iohn Atkinson then Sheriues of Norwich ruled the City carefully and kept all the Citizens easily in order except the vnruly whō no good order could command But here must needs be remembred what seuere and sowre Iudges the seditious were vpon them whom hauing in prison and bonds they afflicted with all opprobry and shame whose cruelty and wickednesse was so great as those whom they had first oppressed with vnspeakeable villany and seldome heard of them at the length vexed and afflicted with extreme miseries they deliuered to the mad multitude to be slaine For a day was appointed when they that were in hold should be brought forth openly as malefactours that after a preposterous manner of Iudgement a quest might passe on them Then Kett openly all men beholding him went vpon the Oake which they called the Oake of Reformation and there fate downe euery one of the prisoners in order were called by their names then his manner was to inquire of his fauorites and companions in that villanie what they thought of them The furious varlets being made Inquisitors and Iudges of the liues of innocent men if they found nothing of the man in question cryed out A good man bee is a good man and therefore ought to bee set at liberty But if by the least suspicion of any small crime his fame that was named was but once touched or if any thing though the least were found wherein perhaps he had offended any one of them some one of the people answered whose voyce the other of the common sort followed as it were stirred vp of the furies Let him bee hanged Let him bee hanged although they were vtterly ignorant of the man in question whether white or black old or yong as one whose name was neuer heard of before yet after this manner they were alwayes wont to cry out And in this manner these pestilent Traytors not led by iudgement or reason lest they should be vnlike themselues but led by a certayne blinde and headlong rage of the minde as by a mighty Tempest oftentimes with a word and as it were with a madde nod of their furies they inflicted most cruell punishment vpon innocent and iust men And surely so great was the strength of the disease and as it were corruption that possessed the mindes of them all as being almost without sense and through the crueltie of so great villany hardened they violated all Lawes of God and Man with their great fury and boldnesse Not many dayes after
peraduenture any tumultuous rage should be raised in the night might easily with their helpe and without any great adoe be met withall and resisted Which surely was faithfully performed by the Captaines ouer hundreds And all the other souldiers watched in the Market place where gathering great heapes of wood together they set them on fire lest if any thing should happen on the sudden our men being hindred by reason of the darkenesse of the night and ignorance of the place might be inclosed vnawares by the practices of the enemies Edward Warner one of the company of the Gentlemen and at that time Gouernour ouer the souldiers commonly called Marshall gaue the Watchword And vnto Thomas Paston Iohn Clere William Walgraue Thomas Cornwallis Henry Bedingfield men of approoued valour and wisdome diuers parts of the Citie were disposed for the defence thereof which tooke their charge and with all their indouour performed their parts valiantly continually coursing from place to place incouraging and animating our m●n sometime with their words sometime with their countenance sometime with their owne trauell and labour And thus by their wise counsels they preuented the pestilent enterprises of the Rebels All things now done to their liking the Earle and all his company they onely excepted as was said before to whom the care and defence of the Citie was committed being wearied with three daies trauell purposed now to take their rest But when our men were in their sweete sleepe and in the dead of the night the Rebels as if they should presently breake into the Citie with a terrible peale of Ordinance and most fearefull with out-cries filled all places Although by Gods prouidence it came to passe in this businesse as the iron bullets discharged from the great Ordinance against the Citie flying continually ouer our heads did no great harme whether it were by reason of the violent force of the powder mounting them or the vnfaithfull hands of the Gunners of set purpose leueling somewhat higher then was requisite for there bee some that thinke the Gunners were corrupted with money for the nonst Which things verily while they were done after this manner though alwaies without hurt yet they were very often done of these vile and importune robbers which with their continuall rushings and horrible ecchoes brought such a terrour as our watchmen on the Walles and keepers of the Gates cried often To your weapons which while they did many times for the enemie neuer left raging the Earle which gaue charge that if the Rebels should tumultuously in the night attempt any thing against the Citie he should haue knowledge being awaked by one of the Captaines came presently into the Market place garded with his Nobles Gentlemen that were with him Afterward the better to prouide for the fewnesse and seldome returne of the souldiers and that the Citie might be the easier defended they tooke this Counsell that all the Gates that were on the other side of the City from the enemy and the breaches of the walles should be blocked vp supposing that so neither the souldiers should be wanting to desend the Walles if the Forces were drawne to a neerer straite and the Enemy without danger might be driuen from enterance into the City While matters began thus to bee ordered and were almost brought to an end The Rebels all at once as a violent streame came running from their dens with confused cries and beastly howlings and ran into the Citie There some goe about to set the Gates on fire and to hew them downe others clime vp vpon the Walles some swim through the Riuer many conuey themselues into the Citie by the lower places and breaches of the old Walles On the other side our men begin to practise all meanes against them and to resist with all violence and repulsed valiantly the enemy on euery side being already entred into the Citie and manfully driue them backe now comming and flocking thither and with Pikes Arrowes Swords and other instruments of warre put them to flight and brought the matter to that passe as the force of their incursions by little and little being broken and cut off they began somewhat to wauer and doubt of the matter But the fight was on both sides with most inflamed minds cruell fierce and bloudie while these by force if by any other way goe about to conuey themselues into the Citie and our men indeuour to put them from all entrance Therefore by the space almost of three howers they fought with most deadly hatred betweene themselues and the battell was performed more fiercely in diuers parts of the Citie then a man would beleeue or thinke euen with so dangerous and dolefull an euent as except the exceeding desire of our men to fight and the worthy valour of Paston Walgraue and the rest of the Gentlemen had remained inuincible that night without doubt had been vnto vs all the most miserable night that euer was For the minds of the Rebels were so set on fire and incensed and the desire to fight so exceeding as although they were fallen downe deadly wounded yet would they not giue ouer but halfe dead drowned in their owne and other mens bloud euen to the last gaspe furiously withstood our men Yea many also strooken thorow the brests with swords and the synewes of their thighes and hammes cut asunder I tremble to rehearse it yet creeping on their knees were mooued with such hellish furie as they wounded the buttocks and thighes of our souldiers lying amongst the slaine almost without life But our men perceiuing at the length the force of the enemie to abate and weaken rushed vpon them with such violence as they could no longer abide the fight nor stand to resist but their forces being ouerthrowne and beaten downe on euery side with a mightie slaughter they were chaced and driuen out of the Citie for three hundred fell in that fight and betooke themselues againe to their filthy dens and caues The battell ended few of our men were found dead but many wounded And now at the last being secure from all practices of the enemy the rest of that night that remained and there remained but little they gaue vnto their rest In the Morning assoone as it was day certaine of the Citizens signified vnto the Earle of Northampton that there were many of the Rebels in Ketts Campe whose furie was greatly abated and the heate of their rage quenched these easily and without any great adoe might bee perswaded that forsaking that cursed fellowship of desperate persons they would suffer themselues to be drawne to the remembrance of their duties and more wholsome counsell for they were wearie of the wickednesse they had long committed and there were now abiding at Pockthorpe Gates foure or fiue thousand men which waite for nothing else and desire nothing more then peace and pardon Which if now at the last might be offered vnto them by him they hoped that forth with they
obtaine without doubt peace and pardon and all good things else of the Kings Maiesty but as wee saide before neither threatnings nor the counsell of the wise nor flattering prayers nor any thing else could restraine them from so great rage of villanie vntill they had brought a miserable destruction vpon the Country and drawne vpon themselues at last an ende worthy such wickednesse For the King after hee vnderstood that his Maiesty was daily more and more despised the company of lewd persons to increase all things confounded with this execrable and raging tumult the clemency of the King set at nought and now no place left for mercy soft medicines to auaile nothing at all their mindes to be without cu●e and infected with deadly pestilence Finally all hope of recouery taken vtterly away but onely that which consisted in force and seuerity of punishment hee thought good to put this first in execution Wherfore in the Country of Lyncolne other shires of the Kings Kingdome he commandeth and appointeth a muster and presse of Souldiers Also a great number of Swyssers to be sent for supposing as the thing required that this wicked rout and their followers ought to be vtterly taken away by the sword Otherwise if it should spread further and infect the neighbour Countrey people with the contagion of this villanie it could very hardly be stayed when the heat of that infection had spred further and fallen as it were into the veynes and bowels of the Kingdome and had inclosed all the parts thereof with that deadly flame of disloyalty Vnto this army was Iohn Dudley Earle of Warwick a man of great Nobility and marueilous courage appointed Lieutenant and vnto him the chiefe soueraignety is committed by Letters and Commandements from the King At that time the opinion by the report of all men for the most part was receiued among our Countreymen of him that this Noble man was of such Magnanimity and experience in Martiall affaires as it was thought the Rebels should be suppressed by him or else surely put to flight by none Therefore these speeches of the Kings preparation and power being disperst abroade and entring the eares of the common people came at the length vnto the hearing of the Campe. And when they vnderstood of a surety that they were mustered and a Captayne Armour Bands of men and all instruments for the terror of Warre prouided against them to bee readie and at hand they beganne euery day to fortifie themselues and to looke about for all things necessary and to trayne themselues that they might bee the more able to make resistance So farre was it from them that either reason could mitigate their crueltie and boldnesse or terror breake their stout mindes To this end when some of the Citizens obserued that many things were done euery day more tumultuously fearing all violence slaughter robberie burning and a lamentable ouer-throwing of all things At the length lest if they should abide in the Citie they might be constrayned to be on the Rebels side gathering all their goods together in heaps asmuch as they could conueniently and hiding them in the ground or else by Masons helpe couering them with lime and stone they fled priuily in the night out of the Citie The Earle of Warwick after he had furnished himselfe with Souldiers at home and from beyond the Seas with Money Weapons and all things necessary for the Warres departeth from London accompanyed with all his forces There were in that Armie the Marquesse of Northampton who of late had the Gouernement of the Warres against the Campe Ambrose and Robert Dudley Warwicks sonnes Willoughby Poijsi Bray and many other noble and famous Captaynes besides of Knights Esquires and Gentlemen of the Switsers and of all kinde of common Souldiers about foureteene thousand When they came to Cambridge some of the Aldermen of the Citie of Norwich and other of the Citizens met with Warwick at the Townes end Which Citizens as we said before being afraid and astonished at the fearefull and mad boldnesse of the Conspirators had fled the City These pale and forlorne and falling vpon their knees cast themselues euery one at his feet and with weeping lamentable voice beganne earnestly to intreat him that he would lay no grieuous thing to their charge for they were innocent persons and guiltie of no crime Yet they besought the mercy and fauour of the Prince For they had verily conceiued an incredible griefe of this miserable destruction and spoile of their Countrey and had further indured all extremitie at the Rebels hands In the end to prouide for their liues they were constrayned to flye the City and with sword and fire were cast out not only from the City but from their wiues and children and all their friends In so great misery where with they were pressed on euery side they craue nothing else but if in this common and exceeding feare through ignorance and folly vnwittingly they haue wrapped themselues in any offence the same might not be imputed vnto them but vpon their repentance and humble petition it might be pardoned Hereunto Warwick answered that he perceiued how great perill they were in and that without doubt the strength of those desperat men was great which had driuen them from all these things as de●re vnto them as life it selfe Affirming that they had done nothing amisse to his knowledge In that they had left the Citie in so great feare and danger it was but the infirmitie of man and to be borne withall Notwithstanding in one thing they were somewhat ouer seene that they withstood not these euils in the very beginning for a few valiant and wise men might haue dispatched those companies in a moment if while the matter was in the beginning they had opposed themselues for the health of their Countrey Notwithstanding he granted pardon at their request and offered the Kings fauour to them all willing them when they haue furnished themselues with weapons and with the furniture of Souldiers to be in a readinesse to follow the Host hauing Laces about their necks to bee discerned from the rest These things done after this manner he departeth from Cambridge And the tenth of the Kalends of September hee came with all his Armie to Intwood Intwood is distant from Norwich about two miles There Thomas Gresham Knight had a faire and large house where Warwick abode that day and the night following with his companie All the men notwithstanding were armed and ready to the battell if peraduenture the Enemie should rayse vp any tumult on the sudden which surely beheld from the holes in the Walles and Towers what should be done Warwick in the meane season while as is said before hee made his abode with all his Armie at Intwood sendeth his Herald which in the name of the King as the manneris proclaymeth warre against the City and Citizens except forth with they set open the
with mercilesse fire the greatest part of this most worthie Citie which hath laid in most filthie Prison and Bands many worthy and excellent persons and haue slaine some with most extreme torture which haue vtterly emptied the best furnished houses and polled and shauen the neighbour Uillages which haue alienated to their owne vse the goods of many of late rich men but now through their crueltie miserable and needie and carried them into their wretched Campe by most cruell robberies which haue forged fained Lawes false Letters and Commissions in the Kings name which haue prophaned the Temple of the great and mighty God ouerthrowne the houses of priuate men wasted and spoiled the fields on euery side which haue conuerted all their thought studies and enterprises to destruction slaughter wasting burning and stealing Finally which knew nothing remaining whither the rage and madnesse of their furie could further carrie them but either their riotous lusts vtterly deuoured or their filthie importunitie scattered abroad When they see themselues bound by these so many so great and so horrible pollutions of wickednesse to God the King and the Common-wealth and when now they see all their goods and substance to be brought into that place and so confiscate and lost that to bee in a worse condition then now they are in for they are in the worst they cannot be if they would then let them thinke with themselues into how large a Sea of euils they haue throwne themselues headlong and let them thinke what they may feare ouer whose heads alwaies hangeth the iust wrath of God which surely by no meanes can be auoided and the ineuitable power of the King offended and displeased For his Maiestie had decreed not to suffer any longer these so great euils to abide in the bowels of his Kingdome neither to leaue any longer vnpunished and vnreuenged this so brutish crueltie and intolerable boldnesse And therfore hath chosen the Earle of Warwicke a man of renowned Honour and of great name and vnto this worke appointed Generall from his Maiestie who must pursue them with fire and sword and hath further inioyned him neuer to leaue off vntill hee hath vtterly rooted out that cursed and horrible company Notwithstanding such is his great bountie and clemencie that whom he hath appointed a reuenger of this desperate wickee rout if they perseuere the same also he would haue to be if they shall doe otherwise a messenger and minister of his mercie The which except they would imbrace at this time refusing al sinister aduice Warwicke hath most solemnely sworne shall neuer hereafter be offered vnto any of them again but as he was commanded of the King he would pursue with fire and sword all the companions of that most pernitious conspiracy the officers ministers and abetters thereof as the most pestilēt enemies to the Kings Maiesty neither would he make an end of pursuing them vntil they which had defiled all places with their new vnheard of and vnpardonable treason and had drowned themselues in such furious waues of wickednes had receiued condigne punishment of God and the King When he had made an end although many were very doubtfull of the euent of things and trembled what for the guilt of Conscience and remembrance of their wretchednesse yet neuerthelesse all of them for the most part being grieuously offended with his speech so inwardly burned in minde as presently they reuiled the Herald on euery side with shouts and cursings some calling him Traytor not sent from the King but had receiued his lesson from the Gentlemen and subo●ned by them to bring them asleepe with flattering words and fairer promises to deceiue them in the end whereby napping as it were and carelesse they might the easier bee taken while they feared no such things Others said that pardon in appearance seemed good and liberall but in truth would proue in the ende lamentable and deadly as that which would be nothing else but Barrels filled with Ropes and Halters And that painted coate distinct and beautified with gold not to bee Ensignes of an Herald but some peeces of Popish Coapes sewed together Many things besides in their pestilent madnesse turbulent and headlong raging and furiously they laid vpon him while euery one round about powred forth the bitternesse of their venome in most cruell speeches sauoring of death it selfe Notwithstanding the Herald goeth from thence with Kett into another place where hee proclaimeth the same thing to the rest of the people for before all could not heare for presse It happened before he had made an end of his speech that an vngracious boy putting downe his breeches shewed his bare buttockes and did a filthy act adding therunto more filthy words At the indignity wherof a certaine man being moued for some of our men were on the riuer which came to be hold with a bullet from a Pistoll gaue the boy such a blowe vpon the loines that sodainly strooke him dead Which when the Traitours perceiued there came twelue of the horsemen most furiously coursing out of the Wood crying O my companions we are betrayed Do you not see our fellow Souldiers cruelly slaine before our eyes and shot thorow what shall wee hope for being dispersed and vnarmed when yet being in armes violence is offered For surely this Herald intendeth nothing else but we being inclosed all of vs on euery side with traynes and weakned may most cruelly be slaine of the Gentlemen When he had spoken these words they were all scattered and as it were stirred vp with a certaine rage they fled asunder Notwithstanding Kett ioyned himselfe with the Herald and minded to haue spoken with Warwicke face to face but now when they were almost come to the bottome of Sturt hill a mighty rout of Rebels followed him with cries inquiring all at once whither hee went saying they were willing to vndergoe with him what fortune soeuer though neuer so sharpe and if he would needs goe any further he should haue them his companions and partners both in life and death The Herald when hee looked behinde him and saw such a company of men following willed Kett to goe backe againe and and stay this concourse and tumult who being returned to his Company they were presently quiet and went backe all of them againe into the Campe. But the Earle of Warwicke when hee perceiued that they were all carried headlong with a certaine frenzy and as it were a blinde rage of the minde to destruction and that neither by intreaty or faire promises nor yet by the feare of punishment they could bee wonne to cease from their filthy enterprize It seemed best vnto him to leaue off for euer the hope of peace a thing aswell by himselfe as by others often proued in vaine and now at the length to deale by open warre Therefore he leadeth his army to Saint Stephens gates which the enemies had shut vp letting downe the Portcullis and he commanded the Kings master Gunner
and the Tower vpon Bishops Gates though surely through the goodnesse of God such was the lot of the people of Norwich at that time as the bullets flying euery where whether by chance or of set purpose or which rather I suppose by the rashnesse and ignorance of the Gunners which sometime happeneth leuelling somewhat too high mounted ouer the toppes of the houses without doing any great harme which except it had so come to passe with the continuall force of shot from those vile and wretched Rebels the houses being shattered and shaken the greatest part of the Citie had beene beaten downe and made euen with the ground in short time And without doubt in the opinion of all men a greater losse that day had come vnto all common affaires except Drury with his valour and slaughter of his souldiers not to bee despised making satisfaction for this inconuenience by putting the enemies to flight and chasing them had recouered the greatest part of the prouision they droue away Warwicke these things done after this manner some of the Gates of the Citie being broken and fallen downe and now ramperd vp againe placed vpon the Bridges and winding Streetes of the Parishes and Lanes diuers of his Garisons and appointed a great companie of Armed men at Bishops Gates and committed the charge thereof to my Lord Willoughby and so compassed and fortifyed all places as the same night hee cut off from the Enemy all entrance into the Citie Notwithstanding the next day the Rebels came ouer the Riuer called Contsford and confounded all things with a terrible fire and lamentable to behold For all the houses in two Parishes being burnt downe the fire so spred abroad as it got hold with an horrible flame vpon many of the Neighbour Parishes There was a certayne house wherein the Marchants of Norwich did vsually bestow their marchandize which they receiued daily from Yarmouth called the common Stathe Hereunto the Rebels set fire whereby within a moment the house it selfe and great store of Corne and much other commodities of many honest Marchants were vtterly burnt with fire and consumed The report goeth and it is not vnlikely that they intended to haue destroyed the whole City with fire and to that end threw fire vpon the roofes of many houses whereby they might bring to passe that while all men should runne to saue the fired houses the Rebels at the same instant casting downe the Rampires and opening all the Gates might distresse our men being scattered and helping one another hauing the fire on the one side and the sword on the other Which thing being wisely obserued both disappointed the deuice of the Rebels and brought our men in the minde to suffer the fire spreading euery where vpon the tops of the houses with a speedy wasting and consuming of all things neither would they so much as quench it in the very beginning But when in this sort vnhappily these things for the most part befell the Citizens God bringing alwayes one calamity on the neck of another great astonishment and sorrow strooke many mens mindes in somuch as languishing through despaire and feare they almost faynted now deuoide of all counsell These came vnto Warwick declaring vnto him that the City is great and all the Gates either broke open or burnt downe the number of men for the warre but few the power of the Enemie to be great and cannot be resisted They humbly besought him in regard of their safetie he would leaue the Citie not suffer the matter to be brought to vtter extremity Warwick as hee was a man alwayes of a great and inuincible courage valiant and mighty in Armes and thought scorne of the least infamie said What are ye so soone dismaid and is so great a mist on the sudden come ouer your mindes which hath taken away the edge of your courage that you would either desire this thing or thinke it can come to passe while I am aliue that I should forsake the City I will first suffer fire sword finally all extremity before I will bring such a stayne of infamy and shame either vpon my selfe or you With these words hee drew his sword so did the rest of the Nobles for they were all there gathered together and hee commanded after a warlike manner and as is vsually done in greatest danger that they should kisse one anothers sword making the signe of the holy Crosse and by an Oath and solemne promise by word of mouth euery man to binde himselfe to other not to depart from the City before they had vtterly banished the Enemie or else fighting manfully had bestowed their liues cheerfully for the Kings Maiestie While these things were in doing the Rebels broke in at another side of the City where our men little thought they could enter but when they were almost come to the Bridges they were speedily incountred by our men and with a mighty slaughter and many wounds were driuen back againe and retyred headlong the way they came But Warwick the better to take vtterly away from the Rebels all ability of entrance into the City commanded all the Bridges on euery side to bee cut on sunder yet after for certayne causes it was commanded otherwise and only that which is commonly called white Fryers bridge was broken downe All the rest were defended with good Souldiers And al places else and especially the gates because for the most part they were all either broken downe or else fired were deliuered in charge to men of courage and experienced in warlike affaires to bee defended vpon euery sudden occasion whereby it came to passe that al the desperate and night incursions of the Enemie were voide and of none effect The next day after which was the seuenth of the Kalends of September one thousand and forty Switsers valiant and notable Souldiers as the report goeth commonly came from London to Norwich These were ioyfully receiued of our men who testified their gladnesse and cheerfulnesse by many vollies of shot At the length being diuided by Parishes and houses and liberally courteously intertayned and inuited of the Citizens as it reuiued the hearts of our men and stirred them vp vnto a sure hope with confidence of performing the businesse well So it danted the hearts of the Enemies being now confounded with a new feare and astonishment at this doubtfull knowledge of their future ouerthrow In the meane season the seditious coueting nothing more then to sucke out the bloud of all good men whereof they had now drunke in their most greedy mindes some hope thought all the waight of the matter to consist in this if Warwicks Army might be put to flight at the first assault And surely as they forsooke the good and mighty God so againe being despised and reiected of him they gaue ouer themselues bond-slaues to the Deuill Who bewitching their mindes with an old wifes superstition brought to passe that being once
humble petition ●●●● for pardon and mercie VVould they be Plowmen themselues and ●●●row their owne lands These speeches appeased greatly the desire of reuenge and brought to passe that many which before burned wholly with cruetly afterward not withstanding were farre more courteous towards the miserable Common people The same night the bodies of the slaine were buried le●t there might breed some infection or sicknesse from the sauour of the dead bodies The day after that was the day before the fourth of the Kalends of September the most worthy Earle of Warwicke and famous for wisdome and courage with all his Nobles and a great company not only men but women of all degrees and ages and an Assembly of all Estates went to Saint Peters Church and there made prayers and gaue thanks to Almightie God for the thing so worthily performed which being ended he departed the Citie with all his Armie But the Citizens being filled with ioy and gladnesse all with one consent extolled Warwicke with commendations to the heauens and spake all manner good of him with clapping of hands ioy and thankfulnesse filled and confounded all things and renowned with most excellent speeches the fame of so worthy a Captaine and the memorie of so great courage and attributed to his wisdome and good successe the preseruation of their liues their wiues and children Finally all their goods and possessions And morcouer decreed for the eternall note and ignominie of those times that vpon the same day wherein the enemies were discomfited and put to flight all men should repaire to their Churches and make Prayers vnto Almightie God with the Ministers of the Congregations euery yeere by a solemne custome established Which being receiued for a Law they decreed moreouer that a Sermon should be made at the common place to the which al the Citizens should resort which ordinance from such beginning hath continued vntill this day But Ket the Ring-leader of these villanies together with VVilliam Kett a man famous for many lewd behauiours and his brother not so neere ioyned in communion of bloud as in lewdnesse and wretchednes of life were drawne to London and laid in the Tower After certaine daies although they were manifestly conuict of treason against the Kings Maiestie and by the iudgement and reproches of all men together with the gilt of conscience for their villanies condemned yet were they drawne to open iudgement after the common manner and a quest passed vpon them for their triall and being condemned they were led away the one to Norwich the other to Windham where a deserued punishment passed vpon them both For Robert Kett at the Castle in Norwich had chaines put vpon him and with a rope about his necke was drawne aliue from the ground vp to the Gibbet placed vpon the top of the Castle and there hanged for a continuall memorie of so great villanie vntil that vnhappy and heauy body through pu●rifaction consuming shall fall downe at length But VVilliam Kett ended his life with the same kinde of death at Windham whence all these Furies flowed as from the Fountayne for there they both dwelt But after this sort the City and all the Countrey of Norfolke when this vile and deadly plague of treason to the destruction of many had continued a most three score dayes and had shaken all things with most lamentable ruine at the length through the goodnesse of God and wonderfull valour of Warwick that excellent noble man these so bloudy and wofull tumults ended and the Countrey had rest Da Deo gloriam FINIS ¶ The Names of the Mayors and Sherifes of Norwich from the first of HENRIE the fourth vntill the eleuenth yeere of King IAMES Anni Dom. Anni Regn. The Names of the Bai●ifes of the Citie for foure yeeres before the graunt of Mayors Bish. of Norwich other accidets 1399 Ann. 1. Hen. 4 Wal. Daniel Rob. Dunston Ric. Whit. Geo. Eaton H●n Spencer B. sate 6. yeres 1400 2 Wat. Daniel Bar. Blackney Tho. Garrard H. Skeyi Alexander B. the 9. of H. 4. sate 6. yeres 1 3 Io. Daniel Edm. Warner G. Apleyard W. Euerara   2 4 Ro. Hunworth Io. Harston W Sedman Io. Coppin   Anni Dom. Anni Regn. MAYORS SHERIFES Bish. of Norwich other accidets 3 5 W. Appelyard Rob. Brasier Io. Daniel   4 6 W. Aplyard 2. Sampson Barker Io. Skeye   5 7 W. Aplyard 3. Io. Harston Ric. Spurdance   6 8 Gual Daniel Edm. VVarner Ric. Dreue This yere it did freeze so greatly as the Frost continued 15. weekes 7 9 Io. Daniel Tho. Gerrard Io. VVurlike   8 10 Edm. Warner Tho. Bartlet Io. Bixley   9 11 Gual Daniel 2. Gual Mozley Io. Manning   1410 12 Ro. Brasier Io. Scotham Geo. Au●ley   1 13 W. Aplyard 4. Io. Leuerech Io. VVake   2 14 W. Aplyard 5. Ric. VVhit Io. Gruntho●p   3 Ann. 1. Hen. 5 Ric. Dreue VV. Sedman Rob. Luffyeld The first yeere of Hen. 5 a great part of the Citie of Norwich was burnt and consumed with suddaine fire 4 2 Io. Bixley Tho. Cooke Hen. Raffman   5 3 Io. Manning Ric. Mozley Tho. Occle   6 4 Hen. Raffman Io. Asger Io. Michel   7 5 Io. Daniel 2. VV. Roose Hen. Iacques Richard Courtney Bishop 1. H. 5. and sat two yeeres 8 6 VV. Aplyard ● Ro. Baxter Io. Cambridge   9 7 Gua. Daniel 3. Hen. Pecking Io. Scothan   1420 8 Ric. Spurdance Tho. Ingham Ro. Asger Io. Wakering Bish. began 3. Hen. 5. sat nine yeeres 1 9 VV. Sednam VV. Nich. Simon Cooke   2 Ann. 1. Hen. 6. Io. Manning 2. Io. Gerard. Tho. Daniel   3 2 Io. Daniel 4. Io. VVright Io. Hodkins   4 3 Thomas Baxter W. Gray Peter Brasier W. Amwicke tenne yeeres Bishop 5 4 Tho. Ingham Thomas Welbei Rob. Chaplin   6 5 Iohn Asger Iohn Copping Iohn Gleder   7 6 Thom Wetherby Iohn Wilby Ric. Pilbey Ione a Sorceresse in great estimation with the Dolphin of France rode armed in mans aparrell in warre the space of 2 yeers and did many wonderfull feates and got from the Englishmen many Townes and Holds 8 7 Richard Mozley Iohn Alderford Greg Draper   9 8 Robert Baxter 2 W. Ifelham Iohn Sipater   1430 9 Iohn Cambridge Rob. Toppies Iohn Penning   1 10 Tho. Ingham 2. W. Aswel Thomas Graston   2 11 Tho. Wetherby 2 Iohn Dunning August Bange   3 12 Ric. Spurdance 2 Rob. Langley W. Hempstead   4 13 Iohn Garrard Roger Boten Thomas Ball   5 14 Robert Toppes Ed● Bretion Peter Roper Thomas Browne Bishop nine yeeres 6 15 Rob. Chaplin Rich. Brasier Gualter Crump This yeere for foure yeeres together the Citie of Norwich was depriued of all their liberties and lost all gouernment 7 16 Io. Cambridge 2 Sim Walsoker Clem. Fishman   8 17 Io. Welles gouernour Watt. Eton. Iohn Lingford   9 18 Io. Welles Custos Wat. Eaton Iohn Lingford   1440 19 Io. Clistōmileust Iohn Brofiard
Lawes Rog. Cowper   4 26 Aug. Steward W. Lin. Thomas Greenwood Ladie Elizab. borne the 2● he 7. of Septem at Greenwich 5 27 Nicholas Syphat Robert Browne Henry Crooke   6 28 Robert Ferrer 2. Edmund Wood. Tho. Thetford   7 29 W. Layer Robert Rugge Robert Palmer 1532. Monke of Aye burnt at Norwich 8 30 Tho. Pickerel 3. Nic. Osborne Io. Humberste● Rugge Bishop 14. 9 31 Nic. Soterton Iames Marsham Th. Walters Iohn Tracie Six Articles 1549 32 Tho. Grew● Thomas Codde Iohn Spencer   1 33 Robert Leech Foelix Puttocke Iohn Quasse   2 34 W. Rogers Thomas Cocke Richard Dauie   3 35 Edward Reede Rich. Alee W. Morrant Tho. Marsham   4 36 Henry Fuller Edmund Warden Rob. Martin   5 37 Robert Rugge Ric. Suckling Robert Ling   6 38 Aug. Steward 2. Rob. Michels Bern. Vdbeard   7 Edw. 6 1 Robert Rich. Thomas Dowsing W. Heed   8 2 Edmund Wood 2 W. Rogers 2 Henry Bacon Iohn Atkins   9 3 Thomas Codde Richard Fletcher W. Ferrer Ketts Campe this yeere 1550 4 Robert Rugge 2 Thomas Morley Iohn Walters Thomas Thursbey Bishop sate 4. yeeres 1 5 Richard Dauie Iohn Aldrich Thomas Gray   2 6 Thomas Cocke Rob. Norman Iohn Bungey Sweat 4. Iuly 8. this yeere was the Voyage to Muscouie 1651 3 Marie 1 Thomas Crooke Nicholas Norgate Iohn House   4 2 Tho. Marsham Foelix Puttocke Thomas Marsham W. Mingay   5 3 Thomas Goddez Thomas Greene. Iohn Bloome Iohn Hopton Bishop sate 6. yeres 6 4 Aug. Steward 3. Tho. Sutterton Leo. Sutterton   7 5 Henry Bacon Edm. Wolsey Thomas Lin Iohn Beniamin S. Quintens wonne Aug. 18. 8 Eliza. 1 Iohn Aldrich Thomas Parker And. Quash Calice lost in foure dayes after 216. yeeres possession 9 2 Rich. Fletcher Thomas Culley Tho. Tesmund   0 3 Robert Michels Thomas Whale Richard Heed Iohn Parkhurst sate 16. yeeres 1 4 W. Mingay Robert UUood Thomas Pecke   2 5 W. Ferrer Thomas Ferrer Tho. Beomund Many Noblemen came to Norwich to visit the Duke of Norfolke and to shoot 3 6 Richard Danie 2 Christopher Some Eliz. Bate   4 7 Nichol. Norgat Rob. Suckling Iohn Gibbes   5 8 Tho. Sutterton Iohn Sutterton Tho. VVinter Strangers Dutch Wallounes had leaue from her Maiestie to exercise such trades not vsed before in Norwich 6 9 Henry Bacon 2. Thomas Pettis Iohn Sucklin   7 10 Thomas Whale Iohn Worsley Thomas Layer   8 11 Thomas Parker Iohn Reede Simon Bowde   9 12 Robert Wood Christopher Layer Rich. Bate   1570 13 Iohn Aldrich 2. Tho. Gleane Robert Gostling Iohn Throgmorton and his Companie suffered for rebellion The same yeere was Candlemasse Floud 1 14 Thomas Greene Henry Greenwood Edm. Pye   2 15 Robert Suckling Nich. Sutterton Fran. Rugge   3 16 Thomas Pocke George Bowgeon Thom. Stokes   4 17 Christoph. Some Nich. Baker Thomas Gooche The Massacre in France August 26. 1572. 5 18 W. Ferrer 2. Rich. Baker Clement Hirne   6 19 Thomas Layer Cut. Bryarton Fran. Morley Edm. Freeke Bishop 9. yeeres 7 20 Thomas Culley Richard Howes Rich. Bauges   8 21 Robert Wood. 2. Iohn Elwin Thomas Sacker Queene Elizabeth at Norwich August 16. 9 22 Simon Bowde Robert Dauie Iohn Pye   1580 23 Christoph. Some 2 Laurence Wood. Nic. Bradford Haman the Blasphemer burnt at Norwich 1 24 Christoph. Layer Richard Ferrer Thomas Pye Plague great also this yeere at Norwich Earthquake April 6. at 6. of the clocke in the afternone 1580. 2 25 Rob. Suckling 2. Rob. Yarrou Iohn Wilkinson   3 26 Thomas Gleane Henry Pye Edward Iohnsons   4 27 Iohn Suckling Laurence Watts Titus Norris   5 28 Thomas Layer 2 Rob. VVelles Iohn Tesmund Edmund Scambler Bishop sate 9. yeeres 6 29 Thomas Pecke 2. Henry Dauie Ios. Culley   7 30 Francis Rugge Aliz. Thurston Greg. Howlton Cole the Anabaptist burnt at Norwich Iuly 8 31 S●mon Bowde 2 Robert Rooke VV. Ramsey Ket the Iewish Arriā burnt at Norwich Ian. 14. 9 32 Christo. Layer 2. Randol Smith Iohn Siluer   1590 33 Thomas Pettis Robert Hall VV. Peters   1 34 Robert Yarrom Nicholas Layer Thom Lane The Inuincible Nauy of Spaine destroyed in the Sea by GODS hand August and September 1588. 2 35 Tho. Gleane 2. Iohn Sutterton Roger Ramsey   3 36 Clement Hirne Rob. Blackbornt Aug. VVhale   4 37 Christ. Some 2 Richard Tooley VV. Iohnson Edm. Browne Rog. Gaywood W. Redman Bishop sate 9. yeres 5 38 Thomas Layer 3 Ri. Sadler Cales sacked 6 39 Richard Ferrer Tho. Anguish Ro. Gybson This yeere Christs Church spoyled by thunder and lightning A feareful Earthquake about noone the 24. of December 1600. 7 40 Thomas Pye Tho. Hirne Pet. Barker   8 41 Francis Rugge Iohn Pettis George Downing   9 42 Roger UUelles Ro. Gatshead Hen. Galyard   1600 43 Alex. Thurstone Thomas Pettis Robert Debney   1 44 Iohn Tesmund Tho. Gleane 3 Ioh. Chapman Spen. Peterson Another the 8 of April following about midnight 2 45 Francis Rugge Iohn Mingay VV. Drake   3 Iames. 1 Thomas Lane 1 Ed● N●●ting Iohn Simons Iohn Gyggons Bishop 1. Iacobi 4 2 Thomas Hirne 1 George Birch George Cocke A lamentable chance about able men and women were in the crowde trodden to death at night 5 3 Tho. Sutterton Mic. Aldrich Fran. S●●al peece   6 4 Iosi Culley Thomas Blosso Iohn Shouel   7 5 Geor. Downing Rob. Craske Iames Allen The Bishops house at Ludham vtterly consumed with fire by negligence as thought 1611. 8 6 Sir Iohn Pettis Knight Rob. Hernsey H. Fasset   9 7 Sir Tho. Hirne Knight Bas. Throgmortō Th. Doughty Prince Fredericke Count Palatine of Rhene and the Ladie Elizabeth the Kings daughter was married Februarie 14. 1612. 1610 8 Roger Ramsey Peter Gleane Rich. Goldman   1 9 Thomas Anguish Ric. Rosse Simon Dauie   2 10 Thomas Blosse Bussey Iohn Norris   3 11 George Cocke Lionel Claxton Mich. Parker   4 12 Thomas Pettis Th. Spendelaw Matt. Peckeuer 1614. Two great Flouds in Norwich 1. the 30. of Nouember Second not so great the 15 of March. 5 13       Now more then twenty yeeres since Tristibus Elegia 6. This was translated twentie yeeres since Act. 23. 12. Gen. 13. 8. Exod. 2. 13 Act. 7. 23. Rom. 14. 3. Phil. 2. 2. 1. Cor. 11 ●● The Rebels complaint Ahellish paritie The Rebels desire Windham game Rebels sute to Ket Kets answere Ket a ranke Rebel The Rebels came to Hetherset The Cōmon wealth of Rogues Towne Close Maior Tho. Cod. A signe frō the Citizens to the Rebels Rebels request to the Maior The Maiors Answere The Maior calleth a Councell The Rebels goe ouer at Hailsdon Bridge Roger Woodhouse Knight taken To Rebellion they ioyne deuotion Gods prouidence Ketts Writs 2600. Rebels at this time 16000. Rebels in the Campe. The Rebels rob one another The Oke of Reformation Ketts request The courage and fidelity of the Maior Matthew Parkers Sermon A Tumultuous wretch Conceite is strong Rebels desirous of the great Scale The Rebels deceiued Great cruelty The City treasury forced to ayde the Rebels The Rebels pretence A trecherous forgery Idlenesse the mother of mischief 3000. Bullocks and 20000. Sheep spent in few daies Good 〈…〉 Wretched cruelty Wharton hardly carried aliue to prison A horrible thunder rayne with hayle The Gentlemen in great danger Ketts triall of prisoners A Rebels reason Hatred of the Gentry Sutterton at London An Herald sent to Norwich Proclamation Ketts Ansswere Vnholy League Kett pronounced Traytor Many forsake the Campe. Gentlemen set at liberty admitted to Counsell Delay breedeth danger The Gē●lemen shut vp in prison againe Ordinance in the Castle ditch A fearefull night Ketts truce The Maiors ●●swere A beastly villany A fearefull and desperate crueltie The enemies policy Pardon offered again Pardon refused Leonard Sutterton sought The Maior put in prison Kett distressed maketh the worst choise The Citizens carefull of their Maior The Maior in great danger Aldrichs speech to Kett for the Maiors liberty The order of trying innocent men Northamptons Army 1500. Lords Knights Gētlemen The Maiors answere The Maior kept by a guard in the Campe. Cayme the author of this murther Some think Ketts Gunners corrupted A fearefull fight in the night Desperate rage 300. Rebels slaine in fight Flotman an Arch-Rebell Resolution is good in a iust cause not in Rebellion 140. Rebels slaine L. Sheffield slaine Traytors without naturall affection The Rebels are 20000. ours but 1500. The City in a miserable case Rebels fire the City Holmstreet Hospital with diuers Gates burnt Gods prouidence Augustine Stewards house abused Christs Church abused of Rebels The women intreate Rebels inexorable Earle of Warwick appointed Lieutenant The Rebels fortifie Citizens flye the City Warwicks Army 14000. Citizens suit to Warwick His answer Laces fur distinction The 23. of August Bras●n doore Two great extremities A glory exceeding all Victory Roger Woodhouse vsed cruelly The Heralds oration The Rebels reuile the Herald A boyly tricke iustly punished Kett would haue spoken with Warwicke S. Bennets 60. Rebels hanged The K. carriage taken by Rebels Captaine Drury 3. or 4. Gētlemen slaine Three hundred and thirty Rebels slaine at S. Andrew alia Editio 130 Myles killed the Kings Gunner The Rebels tooke the Kings prouision the second time Drury satisfieth the former inconuenience Warwicke fortifies the Citie Rebels come ouer at Cōtsford and fire the City Common Stath burnt Rebels policy Better a mischiefe then an incōuenience The coward linesse of the Citizēs Souldiers kisse one anothers swords White Friers bridge broken The 26. of August 1040. Switsers sent to Norwich A Snake in Ketts wifes bosome The Deuils Oracles are obscure doubtfull and as men are aff●cted so they choose The Rebels were twenty ancients Aug. 27. S. Martins Behold the difference betweene a naturall Prince and a Tyrant Obstina●ie will not suffer a man to be amended Warwicks exhortation to the battell A cruell policie Gods Prouidence Miles stew the Kings Standerd-bearer Kett flied cowardly Traytors can haue no hope 3500. Rebels slaine Magnanimity stands not in the outward reuenge Warwicke goeth himselfe and they inbrace Pardon Kett taken 9. hanged on the Oke Warwicks speech to the Gentlemen Warwicke after praising God departeth the Citie A Law made for the continuall remem brance Kett tried and condemned at London Executed Campe lasted 60. daies