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A31599 The second part of the present state of England together with divers reflections upon the antient state thereof / by Edward Chamberlayne ...; Angliae notitia. Part 2 Chamberlayne, Edward, 1616-1703. 1671 (1671) Wing C1848; ESTC R5609 117,915 324

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and of the Liberties thereof ought still according to the aforementioned Acts to pay 2 s. 9 d. in the pound according to the true yearly value of the Rent of their Houses and Shops from time to time but the Citizens who think 2000 l. per annum not enough for an Alderman or for a Lawyer and yet 200 l. too much for a Pastor of a Parish opposing the same the business lies yet unestablished to the great dishonor of the Reformed Religion The Civil Government is not as it is at Paris Rome Madrid Vienna and other Capital Cities by a chief Magistrate some Nobleman set over the City by the King or Supreme Governor or as it was here in the time of the Romans when the chief Magistrate was called as it is still in Rome the Prefect of London or as it was in the time of the Saxons when he was called the Portgreve that is Custos or Guardian and sometimes Provost of London but after the coming in of the Normans the chief Magistrate was called Bailive from the French word Bailler tradere committere that is Commissarius or one that hath Commission to govern others and there were sometimes two Bailiffs of London till King Rich. I. Anno 1189. changed the name of Bailiff into MAYOR which also being derived from the French hath continued ever since a Citizen chosen by the Citizens annually unless sometimes for the disloyalty of the Citizens their Priviledges and Franchises have been taken from them and a Guardian set over them as was done by Hen. III. and Edw. I. Of latter times the Mayor of London though alwayes a Citizen and Tradesman hath been of such high repute and esteem that in all writing and speaking to him the Title of Lord is prefixt which is given to none others but either to Noblemen to Bishops Judges and of later times to the Mayor of York or to some of the highest Officers of the Realm He is also for his great Dignity usually knighted by the King before the year of his Mayoralty be expired His Table is and also the Table of each Sheriff such that it is not only open all the year to all commers strangers and others that are of any quality but so well furnished that it is always fit to receive the greatest Subject of England or of other Potentate nay it is recorded that a Lord Mayor of London hath feasted four Kings at once at his Table His domestick Attendance is very honorable he hath seven Officers that wait on him who are reputed Esquires by their places that is the Sword-bearer the Common Hunt who keepeth a gallant Kennel of Hounds for the Lord Mayors Recreation abroad the Common Cryer and four Water Bailiffs There is also the Coroner three Sergeants Carvers three Sergeants of the Chamber a Sergeant of the Channel four Yeomen of the Water-side one Under-water Bailiff two Yeomen of the Chamber three Meal-weighers two Yeomen of the Wood-wharfs most of which have their servants allowed them and have Liveries for themselves His State and Magnificence is remarkable when he appears abroad which is usually on horse-back with rich caparison himself alwayes in long Robes sometimes of fine Scarlet cloth richly furred sometimes Purple sometimes Puke with a great Chain of gold about his neck with many Officers walking before and on all sides of him c. but more especially on the 29. of October when he goes to Westminster in his Barge accompanied with all the Aldermen all his Officers all the several Companies or Corporations in their several stately Barges with their Arms Colours and Streamers and having there in the Exchequer Chamber taken his solemn Oath to be true to the King returns in like manner to Guild-Hall that is the great Common Hall of Guilds or incorporated Confraternities where is prepared for him and his Brethren a most sumptuous Dinner to which many of the great Lords and Ladies and all the Judges of the Land are invited This great Magistrate upon the Death of the King is said to be the prime person of England and therefore when King James was invited to come and take the Crown of England Robert Lee then Lord MAYOR of London subscribed in the first place before all the great Officers of the Crown and all the Nobility He is usually chosen on Michaelmas day out of the 26 Aldermen all persons of great wealth and wisdom His Authority reaches not only all over this great City and a part of the Suburbs but also on the famous River of Thames Eastward as far as Yendale or Yenleet and the mouth of the River Medway and Westward as far as Colny ditch above Stanes Bridge He hath power to punish and correct all that shall annoy the Stream Banks or Fish onely the strength and safety of the River against an Invasion and securing Merchandizing and Navigation by Blockhouses Forts or Castles is the Care of the King To the Lord Mayor and the City of London belong divers Courts of Judicature of high importance The highest and most antient Court is that called the Hustings i. e. Domus Causarum which doth preserve the Lawes Rights Franchises and Customs of the City There is a Court of Requests or Conscience The Court of the Lord Mayor and Aldermen where also the Recorder and Sheriffs sit Two Courts of the Sheriffs one for each Counter The Court of the City Orphans whereof the Mayor and Aldermen have the custody The Court of Common-Council consisting as the Parliament of England of two Houses one for the Lord Mayor and Aldermen and the other for the Commoners in which Court are made all By-laws which bind all the Citizens of London for every man either by himself or by his Representative gives his Assent thereunto wherein consists the great happiness of the English Subject above all the Subjects of any other Prince in the world that neither in Laws nor By-laws neither in Taxes or Imposts any man is obliged but by his own consent There is another Court of the Chamberlain of the City to whom belongs the Receipts of the Rents and Revenues of the City and to his Court the business of Apprentices over whom he hath a great authority To the Lord Mayor also belongs the Courts of Coroner and of Escheator and another Court for the conservation of the River of Thames Lastly the Court of Goal-delivery held usually eight times a year at the Old-Baily both for the City and Middlesex for the Tryal of Criminals whereof the Lord Mayor is the chief Judge and hath power of reprieving condemned persons There are other Courts called Wardmote or the meeting of Wards whereof there are 26 in the whole City In which Court inquiry is made into all things that can conduce to the regulating and well governing of the City Also the Court of Hall mote or Assembly of every Gild or Fraternity for regulating what belongs to each Company in particular The Traders of London are divided into Companies or
Arches founded in a deep broad River and some say on a soft ozy Ground is Eight hundred Foot in length Sixty high and Thirty broad hath a Draw bridge almost in the middle and Twenty Foot between each Arch it was built Anno 1209. in the Reign of King John The first Stone-bridge in England having been built above One hundred years before by Queen Maud Wife to Henry the First at Stratford on the River Lee Three miles from London so called from the Highway there passing over a Ford and since called Stratford Bow from the Arched Bridge a piece of Architecture then new to the English Nation The building of this Bridge of London was an exceeding difficult and costly piece of Work and to those that consider the constant great Flux and Reflux at that place it seems almost impossible to be done again The charges of keeping it in repair is so great that it hath been thought fit by our Ancestors to have a large House a vast Revenue in Lands and Houses divers considerable Officers c. to be set apart for the constant care and repair thereof Concerning this Bridge and the stupendious site and structure thereof take here the fancy of an ingenious Person deceased WHen Neptune from his Billows London spi'd Brought proudly thither by a High Spring-Tide As through a Floating Wood he steer'd along And moving Castles cluster'd in a throng When he beheld a mighty Bridge give law Unto his Surges and their fury aw When such a Shelf of Cataracts did roar As if the Thames with Nile had chang'd her shoar When he such Massie Walls such Towers did eye Such Posts such Irons upon his back to ●ie When such vast Arches he observ'd that might Nineteen Rialto's make for depth and height When the Cerulean god these things survey'd He shook his Trident and astonish'd said Let the whole Earth now all Her Wonders count This Bridge of Wonders is the Paramount Not far below this famous Bridge is placed the Custome House where is received and managed all the Impositions laid on Merchandise Imported or Exported from this City which are so considerable that of all the Customs of England divided into three parts the Port of London pays Two thirds that is above 330000 l. yearly In this Office there are employed many persons of great ability and worth Collectors Customers Comptrollers Surveyors Registers whereof some have Salaries of 500 l. yearly besides many perquisites The House where this great Office was kept being destroyed by the late Fire is now rebuilt in a very much more magnificent uniform and commodious manner by the King and will cost His Majesty 10000 l. the building There are at present within this City of London divers other very considerable Offices whereof take the account following Of the Office of Post-Master General THe Profits of the said Office are setled by Act of Parliament on his Royal Highness the Duke of York but His Majesty doth constitute His Post-Master General by Letters Patents under the Great Seal of England and accordingly hath conferred that Office upon the Right Honorable Henry Lord Arlington His Principal Secretary of State The present Post-Master General keepeth one Grand or General Office in the City of London from whence Letters and Pacquets are dispatched Every Monday to France Italy Spain Flanders Germany Sweden Danemark c and to Kent Every Tuesday to the United Netherlands Germany c. And to all parts of England Scotland and Ireland Every Wednesday to Kent onely and the Downs Every Thursday to France Spain Italy and all parts of England and Scotland Every Friday to the Spanish and United Netherlands Germany Sweden Danemark and to Kent Every Saturday to all parts of England Scotland and Ireland And the Answers of the said Letters and Pacquets are received in the said Office in due Course And from thence dispersed and delivered according to their respective directions with all expedition The said Office is managed by a Deputy and other Officers to the number of Seventy seven Persons who give their actual attendance respectively in the dispatch of the business Upon this Grand Office depends One hundred eighty two Deputy Post-Masters in England and Scotland most of which keep Regular Offices in their Stages and Sub Post-Masters in their Branches and also in Ireland another General Office for that Kingdom which is kept in Dublin consisting of Eighteen like Officers and Forty five Deputy Post-Masters The present Post-Master General keeps constantly for the transport of the said Letters and Pacquets Between England and France Two Pacquet-Boats Flanders Two Pacquet-Boats Holland Three Pacquet-Boats Ireland Three Pacquet-Boats And at Deal Two Pacquet-Boats for the Downs All which Officers Post-Masters Pacquet-Boats are maintained at his own proper charge And as the Master piece of all those good regulations established by the present Post-master General for the better government of the said office he hath annexed and apropriated the Market Towns of England so well to the respective Post-stages that there is no considerable Market-Town but hath an easy and certain Conveyance for the Letters thereof to and from the said grand office in the due Course of the Mailes every Post Note also that all Letters are conveyed with more expedition and less charges then in any forreign Country A Letter containing a whole sheet of Paper is conveyed 80 miles for 2 d. 2 sheets 4 d. and an ounce of Letters but 8 d. and that in so short a time by night as well as by day that every 24 hours the Post goes 120 miles and in 5 dayes an answer of a Letter may be had from a place 300 miles distant from the Writer Moreover if any Gentleman desires to ride Post to any principal Town of England Post-Horses are alwayes in readiness taking no Horse without the consent of his owner which in other Kings reigns was not duly observed and only 3 d. is demanded for every English mile and for every Stage to the Post boy 4 d. for conducting Besides this excellent convenience of conveying Letters and Men on Horseback there is of late such an admirable commodiousness both for Men and Women of better rank to travel from London to almost any great Town of England and to almost all the Villages near this great City that the like hath not been known in the World and that is by Stage Coaches wherein one may be transported to any place sheltred from foul weather and foul ways free from endamaging ones health or body by hard jogging or over violent motion and this not onely at a low price as about a shilling for every 5 miles but with such velocity and speed as that the Posts in some forreign Countryes make not more miles in a day for the Stage Coaches called flying Coaches make Forty or Fifty miles in a day as from London to Oxford or Cambridge and that in the space of Twelve hours not counting the time for Dining setting forth not too early and
coming in not too late This office is now kept in Bishopsgate-street Of the Kings great Wardrobe THis Office was usually kept within the City near Puddle Wharfe in an antient House built by Sir John Beauchamp Son to Guy de Beauchamp Earl of Warwick and afterward sold to King Edward the Third The Master or Keeper of the Great Wardrobe is an office of great Antiquity and Dignity High Privileges and Immunities were conferred by Henry the Sixth and confirmed by his successors King James enlarged the same and ordained that this Great Officer should be an incorporation or Body Politique for ever His Office is to make Provisions for Coronations Marriages and Funerals to furnish the Court with Beds Hangings Carpets and other necessaries to furnish Houses for Ambassadors at their first arrival here Presents for Foreign Princes and Ambassadors Cloaths of Estate and other furniture for the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Lord President of Wales and all His Majesties Ambassadors abroad to provide all Robes for Foreign Knights of the Garter for the Officers of the Garter Coats for Heralds and Pursuivants at Arms Robes for the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer c. Rich Liveries for the two Lords Chief Justice all the Barons of the Exchequor divers Officers in those Courts all Liveries for His Majesties domestick servants all Linnen for the Kings person c. To defray all the forementioned charges ordinarily there is expended yearly about twenty five thousand pounds besides all Extraordinaries as Coronations Funerals c. This Office is at present enjoyed by Edward Montague Earl of Sandwich one of His Majesties most Honourable Privy Council and Knight of the most Noble Order of the Garter The present Salary to his Lordship in compensation of all other antient Fees and Allowances is yearly 2000 l. The said House near Puddle Wharfe was long ago annext for ever to the Master of this Office but since the great Fire this Office is kept in the Savoy The chief Officers under the Master are a Deputy Thomas Townsend Senior Esq his Salary 200 l. and a Clerk Thomas Townsend Junior Esq whose Salary in compensation of all Fees and Allowances is yearly 300 l. Both these Officers had likewise fair dwelling houses which were also consumed by the fire Belonging to this Office are divers Tradesmen Artificers and others to the number of about 40 all sworn Servants to the King To this Office have lately been added by Patent during pleasure two cousiderable Officers viz. a Controuler Andrew Newport Esquire Brother to the Lord Newport and a Surveyour Colonel Bullen Reymes whose Salaries are 300 l. yearly to each one Of the Colledges in London THe Famous City of LONDON may not unfitly be stiled an University for therein are taught all Liberal Arts and Sciences not onely Divinity Civil Law Physick which in other Universities are usual are read here but also the Municipal or Common Law of the Nation is here taught and Degrees taken therein which can be said in no other Nation Moreover all sorts of Languages Geography Hydography the Art of Navigation the Art of Fortification Anatomy Chirurgery Chymistry Calligraphy Brachygraphy or Short-Hand the Arts of Riding Fencing Dancing Art Military Fire-works Limming Painting Enamelling Sculpture Architecture Heraldry all sorts of Musick Arithmetick Geometry Astronomy Grammar Rhetorick Poetry and any other thing that may any way contribute to the accomplishment of an ingenious Nobleman or Gentleman The Colledges of Municipal or Common-Law Professors and Students are 14 called still Innes the old English word for Houses of Noblemen or Bishops or of extraordinary note and which is of the same signification with the French word Hostel at Paris There are Two Inns of Sergeants Four Inns of Court and Eight Inns of Chancery The Inns of Chancery were probably so named because there dwelt such Clerks as did chiefly study the forming of Writs which regularly appertain to the Cursitors that are Officers of Chancery The first of these is called Thavies Inn begun in the Reign of Edward the Third and since purchased by Lincolns Inn as was also Furnivals Inn then there is Bernards Inn New Inn Clements Inn Cliffords Inn antiently the House of the Lord Clifford Staple Inn belonging to the Merchants of the Staple and Lyons Inn antiently a common Inn with the Sign of the Lyon These were heretofore preparatory Colledges for younger Students and many were entred here before admitted into the Inns of Court Now they are for the most part taken up by Atturneys Sollicitors and Clerks who have here their Chambers apart and their Dyet at a very easy rate in a Hall together where they are obliged to appear in grave long Robes and black round knit Caps These Colledges belong all to some Inns of Court who send yearly some of their Barresters to read to to these In these Inns of Chancery one with another may be about Sixty persons The Innes of Court were so named as some think because the Students therein are to serve the Courts of Judicature or else because antiently these Colledges received onely the Sons of Noble men and better sort of Gentlemen as Fortescue affirmeth Of these there are Four First The Two Temples heretofore the dwelling of the Knights Templers and purchased by some Professors of the Common Law above Three hundred years ago They are called The Inner and Middle Temple in relation to Essex House which was a part of the Knights Templers and called The Utter Temple because it is seated without Temple Bar. The two other Inns of Court are Lincolns Inn belonging anciently to the Earls of Lincoln and Greys Inn belonging to the Noble Family of the Greys In the Reign of Henry the Sixth they so flourished that there were in each of these about Two hundred Students and a Student then expended yearly about 20 l. Which was as much as Two hundred pounds now for they had usually as the French Nobles have now in their Academies every one an old discreet Servant and divers Masters for to instruct them in all laudable qualities and therefore saith the same Fortescue Ultra Studium legum sunt quasi Gymnasia omnium morum And the Students were onely saith he Nobilium Filii that is Gentlemen at least for so the word Nobilis was then taken here and is still in France And therefore by command of King James none were to be admitted into these Colledges but Gentlemen by descent Our Ancestors thought those of inferior rank would rather debase the honor of the Law and would be prone to chicane or play tricks and not like to be so fit for Trusts and Honors whereas the consideration of Birth and Fortune makes Men more careful of their Honor and Reputation These Societies are no Corporations nor have any Judicial Power over their Members but have certain Orders among themselves which have by consent the Force of Laws For lighter offences they are onely excommoned or put out of Commons not to eat with the rest and
THE SECOND PART OF THE PRESENT STATE OF England Together with DIVERS REFLECTIONS UPON The Antient State thereof By EDWARD CHAMBERLAYNE Dr of Laws and Fellow of the Royal Society The SECOND EDITION Corrected and newly Augmented In Magnis voluisse sat est In the SAVOY Printed by T. N. for John Martyn Printer to the Royal Society and are to be sold at the Sign of the Bell in St. Pauls Church-Yard 1671. ORNATISSIMO CONSULTISSIMOQUE VIRO D. JOS. WILLIAMSON ARMIG E SOCIETATE REGIA LONDINENSI IN REGNI COMITIIS SENATORI REGIAE MAJESTATI AB ARCHIVIS STATUS ET INTIMIORI CONCILIO A SECRETIS HOC QUALE-QUALE ENGHIRIDIUM L. M. D. C. Q. E. C. TO THE READER IN a former small Treatise intituled The Present State of England the Author having given a succinct Account of the Government in general as it is Monarchical and therein of the King Queen Princes and Princesses of the Blood of the Great Officers of the Crown of the Kings Queens and Duke of Yorks Courts of the Three States of England Clergy Nobility and Commons and of divers other remarkables In this Second Part of the Present State of England he hath endeavored to describe with the like brevity the Particular Government of England Ecclesiastical Civil and Military The several Courts of Justice the Offices and Officers belonging thereunto and for the sake of Foreigners to exhibite a particular Description of the Famous City of London of the Two Renowned Universities c. In erecting such a spacious and various Edifice the Spectator at first view will hardly conceive how much pains was bestowed in digging the Foundation in raising Scaffolds in finding conveying and fiting Materials in contriving the Architecture in removing the Rubbish c. Other Builders consult onely their own Brains and the Dead that is Books whereunto access may be had at all hours but in this Work the Living and the choicest among them were to be advised with whereof some were far distant others seldom at leisure some unwilling to communicate their Knowledge others not at all affable However if the Reader reaping in few hours the Fruits of many Moneths labor shall receive any content the Author will not onely be satisfied for this but encouraged for another like Enterprise THE CONTENTS A. ADmiral 176 Admiralty 179 Archbishops 16 Archdeacon 29 Arches Court 39 249 Audience Court 40 B. Becons 161 Benchers 111 Bishops Function 17 Bishops Jurisdiction 17 Bishop making 21 Bishops Consecration 24 Bishops Translation 26 Britains Burse 202 C. Castles 161 Chancellours 40 Chancery Court 131 Chancery Officers 138 Civilians Colledge 249 Civilians a List 251 Christmas at Inns of Court 241 Church-Wardens 31 Clerk of the Market 150 High Commission Court 38 Common Pleas 112 Common Pleas Officers 114 Company of Traders 213 Constables High 149 Constables Petty 152 Convocation 34 Coroners 149 Court of Archdeacons 35 Court of Delegates 39 257 Court of Kings Bench 109 Court of Lords 106 Cursitors 142 Custom-house 226 D. Dean and Chapter 27 Deans Rural 29 Doctors Commons 249 E. Ecclesiastical Government 15 Ecclesiastical Persons ib. Ecclesiastical Censures 20 Ecclesiastical Causes 41 Ecclesiastical Laws 42 Ecclesiastical Tryals ib. Ecclesiastical Punishments 43 Exchange Royal 202 Exchequer 118 Exchequer Officers 120 Exchequer lower 124 Excommunications 43 G. Garrisons 156 Government of Cities 150 Government Civil 49 Government of Counties 145 Government Ecclesiastical 15 Government Military 154 Government of Villages 152 Grammar School 275 H. Heralds Colledge 266 House of Commons 71 House of Lords ib. I. Innes of Court 234 Innes of Chancery 233 Inner Barristers 237 Judges 246 L. Lancaster Dutchy 130 Laws of Rhodes 180 London Bridge 224 London burnt 197 London Character 188 London City ib. London Colledges 232 London Government 206 London rebuilt 201 London Tower 215 London Tythes 207 Lord Mayor 209 Lords Lieutenants 298 M. Master of the Ordnance 216 Merchants 205 Military Government 154 Militia Maritime 162 Militia standing 158 Mint 217 Mooting 240 N. Navy Charges 187 Navy Office 183 O. Officers of Common Pleas 114 Officers of Exchequer 120 Officers of Kings Bench 111 Ordination of Deacons 32 Ordination of Priests 33 P. Parliament 49 Parliament men 73 St. Pauls London 193 Paper Office 14 Patrons of Churches 30 Peculiar Court 40 Penance 46 Post Office 227 Prebendary 28 Prerogative Court 40 256 Privy Council 2 Privy Council Clerks 12 Privy Councellors 6 Privy Seal Clerks 14 Physitians Colledge 258 Physitians a List 260 R. Reader at the Innes of Court 238 Records in the Tower 217 Rectors Office 30 River New 204 Rool'd Oleron 180 Royol Soveraign 166 S. Secretaries of State 116 Signet Clerks 12 Sexton or Clerk 32 Sheriffs of Counties 147 Ships a List 169 Sergeants at Law 243 Sergeants Inne ibid. Sergeants making 245 Southwark 280 T. Thames 203 Trade of London 205 Tower Lieutenant 222 V. Vice Admiral 176 Vicar General 257 Universities 281 Utter Baristers 237 W. Wardrobe Office 230 Westminster 277 Angliae Notitia OR THE PRESENT STATE OF ENGLAND The Second Part. Of the Government of England in particular and First of the Kings most Honourable Privy Council THe Government of England in particular is either Ecclesiastical Civil or Military wherein the King is supreme Governour in all Causes and over all Persons from him is derived all Authority and Jurisdiction He is quasi Intellectus Agens Forma formarum vel potius Mundi Anglici Deus And the Primum Mobile thereof from whence all the Inferiour Orbes derive their Motion is that Noble Honourable and Reverend Assembly called Concilium secretum Privatum vel Continuum Regis Concilium which is a Court of such Antiquity and Honour that it may be said to be higher then the highest Court of England as the Parliament is usually called for our Parliaments are not only much younger but also may truly be said to be the Productions of the Kings Privy Council as appears by the words of the Writ for summoning of a Parliament This is the highest watch Tower of the Nation wherein the King with all his good Centinels and Watchmen about him takes a careful survey of all his Dominions and sometimes of all the Domininons of the World as any of them have any Relation to his where he Consults and Contrives how to protect his numberless Subjects not onley from Injuries amongst themselves but from the wrongs and violences of all other Nations where he doth consult and watch for the publick good Honour Defence Profit and Peace of all his people Before the later end of Henry the Third Quod provisum fuit per Regem Concilium suum Privatum sigilloque Regis confirmatum proculdubio legis vigorem habuit saith Spelman The Primitive and ordinary way of Government in England was by the King and and his Privy Council and all our Kings have acted much by it determining Controversies of great importance soemtimes touching Lands and Rights between party and party whereof there are very many Precedents and the Judges of
Commons is a little above 500 persons whereof commonly near 200 are absent upon business or sickness c. Note that the Barons of the Cinque Ports are at this day onely as other Burgesses in Parliament but are still called Barons after the antient manner because heretofore they got great renown by their exploits at Sea in defending the Kingdom in memory whereof they have yet the Priviledge to send Burgesses to bear the Cloth of State over the Kings Head on the day of his Coronation and to dine that day in the Kings Presence A List of all the Knights Citizens Burgesses and Barons of the Cinque Ports that at present serve in the Parliament of England Bedford SIR Humphry Winch Bar. Sir John Nappier Bar. Town of Bedford Pawlet St. John Esq Sir William Beecher Kt. Berks. Richard Nevil Esq Sir Richard Powle Kt of the Bath Burough of New Windsor Sir Richard Braham Kt. Sir Thomas Higgons Kt. Borough of Reading Sir Thomas Doleman Kt. Richard Aldworth Esq Burough of Wallingford Sir John Benet Knight of the Bath Robert Packer Esq Borough of Abingdon Sir George Stonehouse Bar. Bucks Sir William Bowyer Kt. and Bar. Sir William Terringham Kt. of the Bath Town of Bucks Sir Richard Temple Bar. Sir William Smith Bar. Borough of Chipping Wiccomb Sir Edmond Pye Kt. and Bar. Sir John Burlace Bar. Borough of Aylesbury Sir Richard Ingoldsby Knight of the Bath Sir Thomas Lee Bar. Borough of Agmondesham Sir Will. Drake Kt. Sir Thomas Proby Bar. Borough of Wendever Richard Hampden Esq Robert Crooke Esq Borough of great Marlowe Peregrine Hobby Esq Charles Cheyney Esq Cambridge Sir Thomas Chicheley Kt. Sir Thomas Wendy Knight of the Bath Vniversity of Cambridge Thomas Crouch Master of Arts Sir Charles Wheeler Bar. Town of Cambridge William Lord Allington Roger Pepis Esq Chester Sir Foulke Lucy Knight Thomas Cholmly Esq City of Chester Sir Thomas Smith Bar. John Radcliff Esq Cornwall Sir Jonath Trelawny Kt. Sir John Corryton Bar. Borough of Dunhivid alias Launceston Sir Richard Edgecombe Knight of the Bath Sir Charles Harbord Knight His Majesties Surveyor General Borough of Leskeard John Harris Esq Barnard Greenvile Esq Borough of Lestwithiel Charles Smith Esq Silas Titus Esq Borough of Truroe John Arundel Esq Edward Boscawen Borough of Bodmin Sir John Carew Bar. Hender Roberts Esq Borough of Helston Sir William Godolphin Bar. Sidney Godolphin Esq Borough of Saltashe Francis Buller Junior Esq John Buller Esq Borough of Camelford Thomas Coventry Esq Sir Will. Godolphin Kt. Borough of Port-Pigham alias Westlow Sir Henry Vernon Bar. John Trelawny Esq Borough of Grampound Charles Trevanion Esq John Tanner Esq Borough of Estlow Henry Seymour Esq Sir Robort Atkins Kt. of the Bath Borough of Penryn William Pendarvis Esq John Birch Esq Borough of Tregony Hugh Boscawen Esq Thomas Herle Esq Borough of Bossiny Robert Roberts Esq Richard Rous Esq Borough of St. Ives James Praed Esq Edward Nosworthy Esq Borough of Fowey Jonathan Rashley Esq John Rashly Gent. Borough of St. Germains John Elliot Esq Edward Elliot Esquire Borough of St. Michael Matthew Wren Esq Francis Ld Hawley Borough of Newport John Speccot Esq Nicolas Morice Borough of St. Mawes Arthur Spry Esq Sir Joseph Tredinham Borough of Kellington Sir Cyril Wych Kt. Sam. Roll Esq Cumberland Sir George Fletcher Bar. Sir John Lowther Bar. City of Carlile Sir Philip Howard Kt. Christopher Musgrave Esq Borough of Cockermouth Sir Wilfrid Lawson Kt. John Clark Esq Derby William Lord Cavendish Sacheveril Esq Town of Derby John Dalton Esq Anchetel Grey Esq Devon Sir John Roll Knight of the Bath Sir Copplestone Bamfield Kt. City of Exeter Sir James Smith Kt. Robert Walker Esq Borough of Totnes Sir Edward Seymour Bar. Sir Thomas Clifford Kt. Borough of Plymouth Sir William Morice Kt. Sir Gilbert Talbot Kt. Town and Borough of Okehampton Sir Edward Wise Knight of the Bath John Harris Esq Borough of Barnstable Sir John Norcot Bar. Nicholas Dennis Esq Borough of Plympton Sir William Stroude Kt. Sir Nicholas Slanning Kt. and Bar. Borough of Honiton Sir Courtney Poole Bar. Peter Prideaux Esq Borough of Tavistok George Howard Esq William Russel Esq Borough of Ashburton Sir Geo. Sonds Kt. of the Bath John Fowel Esq Borough of Clifton Dartmouth Hardnes William Harbord Esq William Gould Esq Borough of Beeralston Sir John Maynard Kt. the Kings Sergeant at Law Joseph Maynard Esq Borough of Tiverton Thomas Carew Esq Henry Ford Esq Dorset Giles Strangeways Esq Sir John Strode Kt. Town of Poole Sir John Moreton Bar. Thomas Trenchard Esq Borough of Dorchester James Gould Esq John Churchill Esq Borough of Kings Lime Sir John Shaw Kt. and Bar. Henry Henly Esq Borough of Weymouth Sir John Covenrry Kt. of the Bath Sir Winston Churchill Kt. Borough of Kings-mellcombe Bullen Reymes Esq Anthony Ashley Esq Borough of Bridport Humphrey Bishop Esq John Strangewaise Esq Bor. of Shaston alias Shastbury Henry Whittacre Esq John Bennet Esq Borough of Wareham George Pit Esq Robert Culleford Esq Borough of Corfe Castle Sir Ralf Banks Kt. John Tregonwell Esq Essex Banestre Maynard Esq Sir John Bramstone Knight of the B●rb● Borough of Colchester Sir Harbottle Grimstone Baronet Master of the Rolls Sir John Shaw Kt. Borough of Malden Sir John Tirril Kt. Sir Richard wiseman Kt. Borough of Harwich Thomas King Esq Sir Capel Luckin Gloucester John Grubham How Esq Sir Bainham Throgmorton Kt. City of Gloucester Sir Edward Massy Kt. Evan Seyes Serjeant at Law Borough of Cirencester Henry Fowle Esq John George Esq Borough of Tewksbury Sir Henry Capel Kt. of the Bath Richard Dowdswel Esq Hereford John Kerle Bar. Thomas Price Esq City of Hereford Roger Vaughan Esq Herbert Westphaling Esq Borough of Leompster Reynald Graham Esq Humphrey Cornwall esq Borough of Weobly John Barnaby Esq Sir Thomas Tompkins Kt Hertford Sir Richard Franklyn Knight and Baronet Will. Hale Esq Borough of St. Albans Sam. Grimston Esq Thomas Arris Doctor of Physick Borough of Hertford Sir Edward Turner Knight Speaker Thomas Lord Fanshaw Knight of the Bath Huntingdon Robert Vicount Mandeville Henry Williams Esq Borough of Huntingdon Sir John Cotton Bar. Lyonel Walden Esquire Kent Sir Thomas Peyton Bar. Sir John Tufton Kt. and Bar. City of Canterbury Thomas Hard●es Serj. at Law Sir Edward Masters Kt. City of Rochester Sir Francis Clerk Kt. Richard He●d Esquire Borough of Maidstone Thom●s He●l●ckenden Esquire Sir Robert Barneham Bar. Borough of Queenborough James Herbert Esquire Sir Edward Hales Bar. Lancaster Sir Roger Bradshaw Kt. Thomas Preston Esquire Borough of Lancaster Richard Kirkby Esquire Richard Harrison Esquire Borough or Town of Preston in Amounderness Edward Rigby Esquire John Otway Esquire Borough of Newton Richard Lord Gorges Richard Leigh Esq Borough of Wigon Charles E●rl of Ancram Sir Jeofry ●h●kerley Kt. Borough of Clitheroe Sir John Heath Attorney of the Dutchy Ambrose Pudrey Esq Borough of Liverpoole Sir William Bucknell Kt. Sir Gilbert Ireland Kt. Leicester John Lord Roos George Faunt Esq Town of Leicester
Sir William Hartop Kt. Sir John Prettyman Kt. and Bar. Lincoln George Vicount Castleton Sir Robert Car Kt. and Bar. City of Lincoln Sir Thomas Meres Kt. Sir John Mounson jun. Kt. of the Bath Borough of Boston Sir Anthony Irby Kt. Sir Philip Harcourt Kt. Borough of Great Grimsby Jervas Holles Esq Sir Frechevile Holles Kt. Town of Stamford Peregrin Bertue Esq William Montague Esq Borough of Grantham Sir John Newton Bar. Sir William Thorold Kt. and Bar. Middlesex Sir Lancelot Lake Kt. Sir Thomas Allen Kt. City of Westminster Sir Philip Warwick Kt. Sir Richard Everard Kt. London Sir John Frederick Kt. Sir William Thomson Kt. William Love Esq John Jones Esq Monmouth Sir Trevor Williams Bar. William Morgan Esq Borough of Monmouth Sir George Probert Kt. Norfolk Thomas Lord Richardson Sir Ralph H●re Bar. City of Norwich Christopher J●y Esq Francis Corey Esq Town of Lynn Regis Robert Wright Esq John Coke Esq Town of Great Yarmouth Sir William Coventry Kt. Sir William Doyly Kt and Bar. Borough of Thetford Sir Allan Apseley Kt. Joseph Williamson Esquire Borough of Castlerising Sir Robert Paston Kt. and Bar. Robert Steward Esquire Northamton Sir Justinian Isham Bar. George Clark Esquire City of Peterborough William Lord Fitzwilliams Sir Vere Fane Town of Northampton Lord O Bryon Sir William Farmer Town of Brackeley Sir Thomas Crew Kt Robert Spencer Esquire Borough of Higham Ferrers Sir Lewis Palmer Bar. Northumberland Henry Earl of Ogle Sir William Fenwick Bar. Town of Newcastle upon Time Sir Francis Anderson Kt. Sir John Marley Kt. Borough of Morpeth Sir George Downing Kt. and Bar. Edward Lord Morpeth Town of Berwick upon Twede Edward Gray Esquire Daniel Collingwood Esquire Nottingham Anthony Eyre Esquire Sir Francis Leeke Knight and Bar. Town of Nottingham Arthur Stanhop Esquire Robert Pierpoint Esquire Borough of Eastretford Sir William Hickman Bar. Sir Edward Deering Kt. Oxon. Sir Francis Wainman Kt. Sir Anthony Cope Knight and Bar. Vniversity of Oxon. Lawrence Hide Esquire Sir Henage Finch Kt. and Bar. His Majesties Atturney General City of Oxon. Robert Croke Esquire Brome Whorwood Esquire Borough of New-Woodstock Sir Thomas Spencer Bar Sir William Fleetwood Kt. Borough of Banbury Sir John Holeman Kt. Rutland Edward Noell Esquire Phillip Sherrard Esquire Salop. Sir Francis Lawley Bar. Richard Newport Esquire Town of Salop. Robert Leighton Esquire Thomas Jones Serjeant at Law Borough of Bruges alias Bridgenorth Sir William Whitmore Bar. Sir Thomas Whitmore Knight of the Bath Borough of Ludlow Sir Job Charleton His Majesties Serjeant at Law Somerset Fox Esquire Borough of Great Wenlock Sir Thomas Littleton Kt. George Weld Esquire Town of Bishops-Castle Edmond Waring Esquire William Oakeley Esquire Sommerset Edward Philips Esquire Sir Jo. Sydenham Bar. City of Bristol Sir John Knight Kt. Sir Humphrey Hook Kt. City of Bath Sir William Basset Kt. Sir Francis Popham Kt. and Bar. City of Wells Richard Lord Butler Earl of Arran Sir Maurice Berkley Kt. and Bar. Lord Fitzharding Borough of Taunton Sir William Portman Bar. Sir William Windham Kt. Borough of Bridgewater Edmond Windham Esquire Peregrine Palmer Esquire Borough of Minehead Sir Jo. Malet Kt. Sir Hugh Windham Kt. Borough of Ilcester Sir Edward Phillips jun. Kt. Henry Dunster Merchant Borough of Milborneport Francis Windham Esquire Michael Mallet Esquire Southampton Charles Lord St. John Sir John Norton Bar. City of Winchester Sir Rober Holmes Kt. Lawrence Hide Esquire Town of Southampton Sir Richard Ford Kt. Thomas Knowles Esquire Town of Portsmouth Richard Norton Esquire Sir George Carteret Kt. and Bar. Borough of Yarmouth Richard Lucy Esquire Edward Smith Esquire Borough of Peterfield Thomas Neal Esquire Arthur Bold Esquire Borough of Newport alias Medena Sir Robert Dillington William Glascock Esq Borough of Stockbridge Sir Robert Howard Kt. Robert Phillips Esquire Borough of Newtown Sir John Barrington Kt. and Bar. Sir Robert Worsley Kt. and Bar. Borough of Christchurch Humphry Weld Esquire Henry Tulse Esquire Borough of Whitchurch Henry Wallop Esquire Giles Hungerford Esquire Borough of Limmington Sir William Lewis Bar. Sir Nicholas Steward Bar. Town of Andover John Collins Esquire Sir John Trot Bar. Stafford Sir Edward Littleton Bar. Randolph Egerton Esquire City of Litchfield Richard Diot Esquire Sir Theophilus Bidolph Kt. and Bar. Borough of Stafford Robert Milward Esquire William Chetwinde Esquire Borough of Newcastel under Line Sir Caesar Colclough Bar. Edward Manwaring Esquire Borough of Tamworth Charles Lord Clifford John Swinfein Esquire Suffolke Sir Henry Felton Bar. Sir Henry North Bar. Borough of Ipswich John Wright Esquire William Bloise sen Esquire Borough of Dunwich William Wood Esquire Sir John Pettus Kt. Borough of Orford Sir Allen Broderick Knight Walter Devereux Esquire Borough of Aldborough Sir John Holland Bar. Jo. Bence Esquire Borough of Sudbury Sir Robert Cordel Bar. Thomas Walgrave Esquire Borough of Eye Sir George Reeve Kt. and Bar. Charles Cornwallis Esquire Borough of St. Edmonds-bury Sir John Duncomb Kt. Sir Edmond Pooley Kt. Surrey Sir Adam Brown Bar. Sir Edmond Bowyer Kt. Borough of Southwark Sir Thomas Bludworth Kt. Sir thomas Clarges Kt. Borouhg of Blechingly Sir William Hayward Kt. Sir Edward Bish Kt. Borough of Rygate Roger James Esquire Sir Edward Thurland Knight Borough of Guiltford Arthur Onslow Esquire Thomas De Mahoy Esquire Borough of Gatton Thomas Turgis Esquire Sir Nicolas Carew Kt. Borough of Haslemere George Evelyn Esquire Thomas Morrice Esquire Sussex Sir John Pelham Bar. Sir Will. Morley Kt. of the Bath City of Chichester Sir Henry Peckham Kt Serjeant at Law William Garaway Esquire Borough of Horsham Sir John Covert Kt. and Bar. Orlando Bridgman Esquire Borough of Midhurst Baptist May Esquire John Steward Esquire Borough of Lewis Sir John Stapely Kt. and Bar. Sir Thomas Woodcok Kt. Borough of New-Shoreham Edward Blaker Esquire Jo. Fag Esquire Borough of Bramber Sir Cicil Bishop Peircy Goring Esquire Borough of Steyning Sir John Fag Bar. Henry Goring Esq Borough of East Grimstead Charles Lord Buckhurst Sir George Courthop Kt. Borough of Arundel Roger Earl of Orrory Francis Lord Angier Warwick Sir Robert Holt Bar. Sir Henry Puckering alias Newton City of Coventry Sir Clement Fisher Bar. Richard Hopkins Esq Borough of Warwick Sir Francis Compton Kt. Foulk Grevile Esq Westmerland Sir Phillip Musgrave Bar. Sir Thomas Strickland Kt. Borough of Apulby Thomas Tufton Esq John Dalston Esq Wilts Henry Lord Cornbury Thomas Thin Esq City of New Sarum Sir Stephen Fox Kt. Richard Coleman Esq Borough of Wilton Sir John Birkenhead Kt. Sir Thomas Mompesson Kt. Borough of Downton Gilbert Rawleigh Esq Sir Joseph Ash Kt. Borough of Hindon Edward Seymor Esq Sir George Grubham How Bar. Borough of Westbury Richard Lewis Esq Thomas Wanklyn Esq Borough of Hetsbury John Jolliffe Esq William Ash Esq Borough of Calne William Ducket Esq George Low Esq Borough of the Devises Edward Lewis Esq George Johnson Borough of Chippenham Sir Edward Hungerford Kt. of the Bath Henry Baynton Esq Borough of Malmesbury Phillip Howard Esq Sir Edward Pool Kt.
Sheriff of each County hath a double function first Ministerial to execute all Processes and Precepts of the Courts of Law and to make returns of the same Secondly Judicial whereby he hath authority to hold two several Courts of distinct nature the one called the Sheriffs Turn which he holdeth in several places of the County enquiring of all Criminal Offences against the Common-Law not prohibited by any Statute The other called the County Court wherein he hears and determines civil Causes of the County under 40 s. which antiently was a considerable summe so that by the great fall of the moneys now the Sheriffs authority in that part is much diminished He is said to be the life of Justice of the Law and of the County for no suit begins and no process is served but by him then no Execution of the Law but by him lastly he is the chief Conservator of the Peace in the whole County Every County being subdivided into Hundreds so called at first either for containing an hundred houses or 100 men bound to find Armes or Wapentakes so called from touching a weapon when they swore Allegiance as the manner at this day is in Sweden at their solemn weddings for the chief witnesses to lay all their hands upon a Lance or Pike every such Wapentake o● Hundred hath commonly a Bayliff a very antient Officer but now of small Authority also Officers called High Constables first ordained by the Statute of Winchester 13 Edw. 1. for conservation of Peace and view of Armour they disperse Warrants and Orders of the Justices of Peace to each Pety Constable There are also in every County two Officers called Coroners whose Office is to enquire by a Jury of Neighbours how and by whom any person came by a violent death and to enter the same upon Record which is matter Criminal and a plea of the Crown and thence they are called Crowners or Coroners These are chosen by the Free holders of the County by vertue of a Writ out of the Chancery They were antiently men of estates Birth and Honour and therefore in the Reign of Edward III. a Merchant being chosen a Coroner was removed quia communis Mercator fuit whereas he ought to have been a Gentleman which have no Trades man is reckoned to be by our Laws Every County also hath an Officer called Clerk of the Mercat whose Office is to keep a Standard of all Weights and Measures exactly according with the Kings Standard kept in the Exchequer and to see that none others be used in the same County to Seal all Weights and Measures made exactly by the Standard in his custody and to burn such as are otherwise He hath a Court and may keep and hold Plea therein Of the Civil Government of Cities EVery City of England by their Charters or Priviledges granted by several Kings is a little Common-wealth apart governed not as the Cities of France by a Nobleman or Gentleman placed there by the King but wholly by themselves they choose amongst themselves their own Governor in Cities a Mayor is chosen commonly out of 12 Aldermen In some other Co●porations a Bailiff is chosen out of a certain number of Burgesses They are not taxed but by their own Officers of their own Corporation every trade having some of their own alwayes of the Council to see that nothing be enacted contrary to their profit Every City by Charter from the King hath haute moyenne basse Justice a jurisdiction amongst themselves to judge in all matters criminal and civil onely with this restraint that all civil causes may be removed from their Courts to the Higher Courts at Westminster The Mayor of the City is the Kings Lieftenant and with the Alderm●n and Common Council as it were King Lords and Commons in Parliament can make Laws called By-Laws for the Government of the City He is for his time which is but for one year as it were a Judge to determine matters and to mitigate the Rigour of the Law The next in Government of Cities are two principal Officers called though improperly the Sheriffs who are Judges in civil causes within this City and to see all execution done whether penal or capital and should rather be called Stat-reeves or Port-reeves i. e. Urbis vel Portus Praefecti In Cities the people are generally made more industrious by Manufactures and less idleness suffered then in other places so that in some Cities children of six or seven years old are made to gain their own expences In the City of Norwich it hath of late yeares been computed and found that yearly children from 6 to 10 years of age have gained 12 thousand pounds more then what they spend and that chiefly by knitting fine Jersey Stockings The Government of Burroughs and other Towns corporate is much after the same manner In some there is a Mayor in others one or two Bailiffs who have equal power with a Mayor and Sheriffs and during their Offices they are Justices of the Peace within their Liberties and have there the same power that other Justices of the Peace have in the County For the better Government of Villages the Lord of the place hath ordinarily power to hold a Court-Baron so called because antiently such Lords were called Barons as they are still in many parts of France or else Court Baron i. e. Court of Freeholders as the Barons of Germany are called Frey herren so the Barons of the Cinque Ports in England are but the Freeholders of the Cinque Ports And this Court may be held every 3 weeks Also for the Government of Villages there is a Pety Constable chosen every year by every one that is Lord of the place this Officer is to keep the Peace in case of quarrels to search any house for Robbers Murdrers or others that have any way broken the peace to raise the Hue and Cry after Robbers fled away to seize upon them and keep them in the Stocks or other Prison till they can bring them before some Justice of Peace to whom the Constables are subservient upon all occasiions either to bring crrminals before them or to carry them by their command to the common Prison Every little Village almost hath an Epitome of Monarchical Government of Civil and Ecclesiastical policy within it self which if duly maintained would render the whole Kingdome happy First for the civil Government there is the Lord of the Soyl who from the Crown immediately or mediately holds Dominium soli and is said to have in him the Royalty as if he were a little King and hath a kind of Jurisdiction over the Inhabitants of the Village hath his Court-Leet● or Court-Baron to which they owe suit and service and where may be tryed smaller matters happening within the Mannour Escheats upon Felonies or other accidents Custody of Infants and Lunaticks power of passing Estates and admitting of Tenants Reliefs Hariots Hunting Hawking Fishing c. under the Lord is the Constable or
conjectured by the charges of building and rigging of Ships and of one Months expences at Sea afore specified so that the English Subject need no longer wonder how their late large Contributions and Aides have been spent but rather how the Kingdomes necessary Expences should be discharged with so little Of the City of LONDON LONDON being the Epitome of England the Seat of the British Empire the Chamber of the King and the chiefest Emporium or Town of Trade in the World it will not be impertinent to give some account thereof To describe particularly all things in this City worthy to be known would take up a whole Volumn therefore according to the intended brevity of this Treatise here shall be inserted onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Magnalia Londini such things as strangers and foreigners commonly count remarkable Take then a summary account of the Name Antiquity Situation Magnitude Streets Houses Number of Inhabitants Parish-Churches Cathedral Royal Exchange River Conduits Aqueducts Trade Government Publick Halls of Companies of the Tower Bridge Custom-House Publick Offices Colledges Schooles Hospitals Work-houses c. Name LONDON so called as some conjecture from Llongdin the British word signifying in the Saxon Tongue Shipton or Town of ships was built as some write 1108 years before the Birth of our Saviour that is 2778 years agoe Antiquity in the time of Samuel the Prophet and about 356 years before the building of Rome Situation In the most excellent situation of London the profound wisdom of our Ancestors is very conspicuous and admirable It is seated in a pleasant ever green valley upon a gentle rising Bank in an excellent Aire in a wholesome soyl mixt with gravel and sand upon the famous Navigable River Thames at a place where it is cast into a Crescent that so each part of the City might enjoy the benefit of the River and yet not be far distant one from the other about 60 miles from the Sea not so near that it might be in danger of Surprisal by the Fleets of Forreign Enemies or be annoyed by the boysterous Winds and unwholesome Vapours of the Sea yet not so far but that by the help of the Tide every twelve hours all the Commodities that the Sea or World can afford may by ships of great burden be brought into her very bosome nor yet so far but that it may injoy the milder warmer Vapours of the Eastern Southern and Western Seas yet so far up in the Country as it might also easily partake even of all the Country commodities in an excellent air upon the North side of the River for the Villages seated on the South-side are noted to be unhealthy in regard of the Vapours drawn upon them by the Sun burroughed by gentle hills from the North and South Winds it lies in 51 Degree 34 Minutes Latitude The High-ways leading from all parts to this Noble City are large straight smooth and fair no Mountains nor Rocks no Marshes nor Lakes to hinder Carriages and Passengers so that as Corn may easily be brought and Cattel commodiously driven unto it by Land so those heavy though necessary Commod●ties Hay and Fuel are more cheaply conveyed by water in a word all the blessings of Land and Sea near about and by the benefit of shipping all the blessings of the Terrestrial Globe may be said to be here injoyed above any City of the world Magnitude The City of LONDON with its Suburbs and places adjacent is of a vast extention From Lime House measured to the end of Tothill or Tuttle street from East to West is above 7500 Geometrical paces that is above 7 English Miles and a half and from the farther end of Blackmanstreet in Southwark to the end of St. Leonard Shoreditch is 2500 paces or two Miles and a half Streets In this great City the streets lanes and allyes as they are called are in number above 500 and yet some of them above half a measured mile in length Dwelling houses before the late dreadful Fire were computed onely within the Walls above fifteen thousand and that was accounted but a fifth part of the whole City as may be judged by the weekly Bills of Mortality Houses The Buildings especially of late years are generally very fair and stately but within the City the spacious Houses of Noble men rich Merchants the Halls of Companies the fair Taverns are hidden to strangers by reason that they are generally built backward that so the whole room towards the street might be reserved for Tradesmen shops If they had been all built toward the street as in other Countries no Forreign City would even in this particular much surpass London Yet if a Stranger shall view Lincolns-Inne fields Southampton Buildings Covent Garden St. James Fields Hatton-Garden Cheapside Lumbard street Canon street Fleet street c. He must confess that for fair Piazza's or open Places for stately uniform buildings for spatious streight streets there is scarce the parallel in Europe Number of Inhabitants That the Reader may the better guess at the number of Inhabitants or humane Souls within this great City he must know that in one year there were computed to be eaten in London when it was less by one fourth part 67500 Beefs ten times as many Sheep besides abundance of Calves Lambs Swine all sorts of Poultry Fowl Fish Roots Milk c. Also that communibus annis to supply London with Newcastle Coal there is brought into the River of Thames two hundred and seventy thousand Chaldron and every Chaldron is 36 Bushels Again the number of Inhabitants may be guessed at by the Burials and Births in London which in ordinary years when there is no Pestilence amount of late to Twenty thousand in a year three times more then in Amsterdam and but one 20th part less then in Paris as may be seen by the Bills of these three Cities As also by the quantity of Beer drank in London in a year which to all Forreigners will be incredible for in the year 1667 according to exact computation there was brewed within that year in London four hundred fifty two thousand five hundred sixty three Barrels of strong Beer sold at 12 s. 6 d. the Barrel and five hundred and eighty thousand four hundred twenty one Barrels of Ale sold at 16 s. the Barrel and four hundred eighty nine thousand seven hundred ninety seven Barrels of Table Beer or small Beer sold at 6 s 6 d. the Barrel The Beer strong and small is 36 Gallons to the Barrel and the Ale 32 Gallons to the Barrel and now since the Pestilence and the Fire that this City is again fully peopled there is much more Liquor brewed It is true that some he●eof is transported beyond the Sea but that is scarce considerable Besides all this Beer and Ale there is consumed in London a vast quantity of French and Spanish wines much Rhenish-wine Sider Coffee Chocolatte Brandy and other Drinks The Excise
Corporations and are so many Bodies Politique Of these there are 12 called the chief Companies and he that is chosen Lord Mayor must be free of one of these Companies which are 1 Mercers 2. Grocers 3. Drapers 4. Fishmongers 5. Goldsmiths 6. Skinners 7. Merchant-Taylors 8. Haberdashers 9. Salters 10. Ironmongers 11. Vintners 12. Clothworkers All which Companies have Assembly places called Halls which are so many Basilikes or Palaces and many of them worthy to be viewed by all Strangers It hath been the custom of some of our Kings to honour some of these Companies by taking their freedom thereof and the present King was pleased to be made free of the Company of Grocers and the present Prince of Orenge lately chose to be made free of the Company of Drapers There are besides near 60 other Companies or Corporations all enjoying large Priviledges by the Kings Gracious Charter granted unto them and fair Halls to meet in For the security and defence of this famous City and River there have been antiently divers Fortresses but that called the Tower of London hath been eminent above all others It is not only a Fort or Cittadel to defend and command both City and River but a Royal Palace where our Kings with their Courts have sometimes lodged a Royal Arsenal where are Arms and Ammunition for 60000 Soldiers the Treasury for the Jewels and Ornaments of the English Crown the only Mint for coyning of Gold and Silver the great Archive where are conserved all the Records of the Court of Westminster the chief Prison for the safe custody of great Persons that are Criminal in short if the great extent thereof within the Walls be considered and its authority over the several Hamlets without and the many high Priviledges and Liberties belonging thereto it may rather be reputed a City then a Cittadel The Tower of London is out of all County or Parish only a small part some hold to be in Middlesex is a liberty of it self exempt from all Taxes to the King to the Church or to the Poor It hath a Parochial Church exempt ftom all Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of the Archbishop and is a Donative bestowed by the King without Institution or Induction There are Thirteen Hamlets in several Parishes of large extent belonging to the Tower whose Trainbands are all bound to assist the Constable or Lieftenant of the Tower they are all called the Kings Company are to wait on the Kings person in time of need and to go no farther than the King Within the Tower is kept the Office of Master of the Ordnance called in France le grand Mastre de l' Artillerie so called ab arte telorum mittendorum and hath been alwayes an Office of great Account and Importance commonly conferred on persons of great eminency and integrity It hath the ordering of that grand Magazin there lodged wherein and at the Minories Woolwich and Chatham is Ammunition at all times for as many Land and Sea forces as may not onely defend England but be formidable to all our Neighbours The place of Master of the Ordnance is since the death of that accomplished Gentleman Sir William Compton executed by Commissioners viz. by the Lord John Berkley now Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Sir John Duncomb Knight and Thomas Chichely Esquire Lieutenant of the Ordnance is David Walter Esquire and Groom of his Majesties Bed-chamber and the Pay-master is Captain George Wharton Surveyor is Jonas More Esquire Keeper of the Stores is Richard March Esquire Clerk of the Ordnance is Richard Sherborn Esquire Clerk of the Deliveries is George Clerk Esquire Under which several Officers there are many Officers and Servants for brevity sake to be passed over The forementioned Commissioners have the charge and superintendence of all the Ordnance Arms offensive Ammunition of War by Sea and Land The Lieutenant of the Ordnance is Treasurer doth receive and disburse all moneys touching this Office The Surveyor of the Ordnance doth supervise all Arms. Clerk of the Ordnance is to record all Orders touching that Office Keeper of the Stores is to have the custody of all the Arms offensive Clerk of the Deliveries takes Indentures for all Stores issued out All these hold by Patent immediately from the King All Inferior Officers and Artificers places are in the gift of the Master or Commissioners of the Ordnance Moreover in the Tower is kept the office of Warden of the Mint where onely of later times is minted all the Bullion that is minted in England The Warden of the Mint is a very considerable charge and is at present Sir Anthony St. Leger Master Worker is Henry Slingsby Esquire Comptroller is James Hore Esquire These hold by Patent of the King Assay-Master to try the pureness of the Mettal is Mr. John Brittle Surveyor of the Meltings and Clerk of the Irons is Mr. Thomas Swallow There is moreover a Weigher a Teller and a Graver all which five last named Officers hold also by Patent from the King but are to be approved by the three first Commissioned Officers in whose custody is all Money or Bullion brought in by the Subject There are besides many other Inferior Officers and Servants belonging to the Mint The office of His Majesties Records kept in the Tower of London is of venerable Antiquity and the place of Keeper and Deputy of the same dignified with special trust whereof Sir Algernon May Knight is at present the Keeper salary 500 l. per annum and William Ryley Esquire of the Inner Temple is Deputy thereof This place is properly in the Master of the Ro'ls his gift and then His Majesty by His Letters Patents hath usually confirmed it As the Chappel of the Rolls in Chancery-lane and Petty-Bag office doth fill with Records out of other Offices they are transmitted into the Tower after some years for it hath been the wisdom and care of former Ages to send the Records of several Courts to the Tower for their preservation and safety not onely as a Policy of State but the particular Interest of all Men having Estates requiring it there being many precedents for it remaining in the Records of the Tower and a particular Form of a Writ to send the Records in the Chappel of the Rolls to the Tower of London The Records of the Tower amongst other things contain the Foundations of Abbeys and other Religious Houses and the Records in the Rolls contain the dissolution of those Abbeys and the donation of the Lands of which many Families are now possest and if those Records were all in one place the people might have access unto them all under one and the same search and charge which would be a great ease and benefit to the people and a safety to the Records of this Nation Besides these Records at the Rolls being joyned to those in the Tower will make a perfect continuance of all the Ancient Rights of the English Nation which are now set forth in the Records of the Tower whereof these
the like whereof for spatiousness beauty and exact proportion no King in Europe can parallel of another Royal Palace called Saint James's of Clarendon-House which for situation and a uniform solid structure is admirable of the many stately uniform Piles in S. James's Fields of Northumberland-House of Britains Burse or the New Exchange a place excellently furnished with all kinde of choice Commodities and Wares for Ladies of York Salisbury and Worcester Houses of the Savoy a vast building first erected by Peter Earl of Savoy and Richmond Uncle to Eleanor Wife to our King Henry the Third who after purchased the same for Her Son Edmund Duke of Lancaster and is now a famous Hospital built all of huge Stone and more like a Kings Palace of another Palace called Somerset-House built by Edward Duke of Somerset Uncle to King Edward the Sixth of the uniform stately Buildings and forementioned large Piazza's or open places for which the Cities in Italy are so highly esteemed in Covent-Garden Lincolns-Inn Fields and Southampton Buildings not to be equalled in any of our Neighbor Countreys As for the Borough of Southwark granted by King Edward the Sixth by His Letters Patents to the Major Commonalty and Citizens of London called The Bridge Ward without and governed by one of the Twenty six Aldermen of London it hath nothing much remarkable onely that it is so rich and populous that it pays more in a Subsidy to the King and musters more Men then any other City in England besides London Lastly Very remarkable also is the Campaign or Country on all sides of this great City for the number of Royal Palaces the multitude of Stately Houses and Gardens of Noblemen the innumerable fair Summer Dwelling-Houses of the Wealthy Citizens the pleasant fertile Meadows enclosed Pastures and Corn Fields the abundance of Nurseries and Seminaries where are to be sold all sorts of Fruit-Trees Flowers Herbs Roots as well for Physick as for Food and Delight the frequency populousness and wealthiness of the Villages whereas the Campaigns about Rome and Madrid are more like Desarts The Arms of the City of London are Argent Cross-Gules with the Sword of S. Paul not the Dagger of William Walworth as some have conceited for this Coat did belong to this City before Walworth slew Wat Tyler the Rebel as Learned Antiquaries affirm Of the Vniversities of England THe English Universities are so famous beyond the Seas and so much surpass all other in the World that they abundantly deserve a larger account then can sute with the designed brevity of this Manual however they shall not be passed over in silence Nothing was ever devised more singularly beneficial to Gods Church and Mans happiness then what our Ancestors have to their eternal renown performed by erecting such admirable Structures for Learning as our Universities do contain and by providing thereby that choice parts after reasonable time spent in contemplation may be called forth to act and practice in Church and State In the beautiful Fabrick of the Kingdom of England the Two Eyes are the Two Universities Oxford and Cambridge those Two Nurseries or Seminaries of Learning and Religion which for number and magnificence of richly endowed Colledges for liberal Stipends to all sorts of Publick Professors for well furnished Publick and Private Libraries for large Charters Priviledges and Immunities for number and quality of Students for exact Discipline and Order are not to be parallel'd in the whole World They were anciently called Academies from a Grove so named new Athens whither Plato Xenocrates and other Philosophers retired for the study of Sciences Of later times they have been stiled Universities A Professione Universalium Scientiarum Artium liberalium An University now is properly an Incorporation under one Government of many Publick Schools ordained especially for the Study and Profession of Divinity Civil Law and Physick and also of Philosophy and of other Liberal Sciences and Arts as Hand-maids to the former Oxford Quasi Ousford Isidis Vadum the name of the cheif River whereon it is seated or perhaps from Bovis Vadum a Ford for Oxen to pass through before the use of Bridges as Thracius Bosphorus signifying the like is by the Germans called Ochenfurt It is seated at the meeting of two clear Fishy Rivers in such a healthy Air and pleasant rich Soyl that it hath anciently been called Bellositum or Baulieu It lies in 51 Degrees 50 Minutes Latitude and about 22 Degrees Longitude Oxford was a place of Publick Studies above Nine hundred years ago and much augmented not founded by the Learned Saxon King Alfred hath been very anciently reckoned the Second University amongst the Four Principal of Europe whereof the others are Paris in France Bononia now called Bologna in Italy and Salamanca in Spain and although Paris hath usually been named in the first place yet it hath been acknowledged to be Oxoniae Propago and if Paris for a time was more flourishing yet since in many respects is it excelled by this of Oxford Oxford is an antient City consisting of two sorts of Inhabitants viz. Students and Citizens living one amongst another though wholly separate for Government and Manners for when former Kings of England perceived that they could not as at Paris be separated by a River they thought best to disjoyn them as much as might conveniently be by Priviledges and whole manner of Government so that there are not the same limits for the University have them much larger nor the same stroke and Authority of Justice or power of Magistrates for the Chancellor of the University and in his absence his Vice-Chancellor is not onely in place but in all affairs of Moment though concerning the City itself superior to the Mayor of the Town Nor are they governed by the same kind of Laws for all Members of the University are subject to the Vice-Chancellors Judicial Courts which are ruled wholly by the Civil Law Over the University next under the King is placed the forementioned Magistrate called the Chancellor who is usually one of the Prime Nobility and nearest in favour with the Soveraign Prince Elected by the Students themselves in Convocation to continue durante vita whose Office is to take care of the Government of the whole University to maintain the Liberties and Priviledges thereof to call Assemblies to hear and determine Controversies call Courts punish Delinquents c. This great Honour is enjoyed at present by James Duke of Ormond Lord Steward of the Kings Houshold The next in Dignity amongst the Officers of the University of Oxford is the high Steward who is nominated by the Chancellor and approved by the University and is also durante vita whose Office is to assist the Chancellor Vice-Chancellor and Proctors upon their Requests in the execution of their Places also to hear and determine Capital Causes according to the Laws of the Land and Priviledges of the University so oft as the Chancellor shall require him This Honour is held by
but for avoiding of tumults and trouble it was enacted by H. VI. that none should have any suffrage in the election of Knights of the Shire but such as were Freeholders did reside in the County and had yearly Revenue 40 s. which till the discovery of the Gold and Silver in America was as much as 30 or 40 l. now whence it came to pass that the Lay-Commons were then elected as the Clergy-Commons the Procuratores Cleri were and ever have been viz. sine Prece sine Pretio sine Poculo c. The persons elected for each County are to be Milites Notabiles or at least Esquires or Gentlemen fit to be made Knights as it is in the Statutes of H. VI. They ought to be de discretioribus Militibus ad laborandum potentioribus as the words in some Writs have been they ought not to be of younger years for then it would be Juvena●us si sic loqui liceat potiús quam Senatus not lazy Epicures but men of years vigorous active and abstemious men that will be content to give their constant attendance in Parliament or else to enjoy neither Priviledge nor Expences allowed to every Member of the Commons House They ought to be native English men or at least such as have been Naturalized by Act of of Parliament No Alien or Denizon none of the Twelve Judges no Sheriff of a County no Ecclesiastical person that hath cure of souls may be chosen a Parliament man to serve for any County City or Burrough Two things are said to be requisite to the legality of sitting in Parliament first that a man should be of full age that is 21 years old at the least for if no man under that age can dispose of his Estate nor make one legal Act to that purpose then much less may he bear any part in the supreme power of the Nation to Judge Vote or Dispose of the Estate of the whole Realm yet the practice in the House of Commons though never in the House of Lords hath sometimes been otherwise All Members of Parliament both Lords and Commons that they may attend the publick Service of their Countrey are priviledged with their menial Servants attending on their persons together with all their necessary Goods brought along with them from all Attachments and Imprisonments for Debts Trespasses Account or Covenant all the time that they are on the way to the place of Parliament all the time they are at Parliament and all the time they are on the way home again Eundo Morando ad propria redeundo for so were the old words but they are not priviledged from Arrests for Treason Felony or breach of the peace The place of meeting for the High and Honourable Assembly is in whatsoever City Town or House the King pleaseth but of latter times it hath been usually held at the Kings antient Palace and usual Residence at Westminster all the Lords in a fair Room by themselves and the Commons not far from them in another fair Room which was heretofore the antient free Chappel of S. Stephen The manner of sitting in the Lords House is thus The King as oft as he comes which hath usually been only at the opening of Parliaments or at the passing of Bills or at some solemn debates as the present King hath frequently done is placed at the upper end of the room in a Chair of State under a Cloth of State under which on either hand none but the Kings Children On the Kings right hand is a seat antiently for the King of Scotland when he was summoned to Parliament as he sometimes was in side legiantia but now it is for the Prince of Wales On the Kings left hand is a Seat for the Duke of York On the Kings right hand and next the wall are placed on a Form the two Archbishops next below on another Form the Bishops of London Durham and Winchester all the rest of the Bishops sit according to the priority of their Consecration On the Kings left hand upon Forms are placed the Lords Chancellor Treasurer President of the Kings Council and Lord Privy Seal if they are Barons above all Dukes except those of the Royal Family if they are not Barons then they sit uppermost on the Woolsacks On the same side sit the Dukes Marquisses and Earls according to their Creations Upon the first Form a cross the House below the Woolsacks sit the Viscounts and upon the next Forms the Barons all in Order The Lord Chancellor or Keeper if the King be present stands behind the Cloth of Estate otherwise sits on the first Woolsack thwart the Chair of State his Great Seal and Mace by him He is Lord Speaker of the Lords House Upon other Woolsacks sit the Judges the Privy Counsellors and Secretaries of State the Kings Council at Law the Masters of Chancery Th●se being not Barons have no suffrage in Parliament onely sit to give their advice when it is required The reason why these Sages are placed upon Woolsacks may probably be to mind them of the great importance of Wooll and Sheep to the Nation that it-never be neglected On the lowermost Woolsack are placed the Clerk of the Crown now Henry Barker Esquire and Clerk of the Parliament at present John Brown Esquire whereof the former is concerned in all Writs of Parliament and Pardons in Parliament the other recordeth all things done in Parliament and keepeth the Records of the same This Clerk hath also two Clerks under him who kneel behind the same Woolsack and write thereon Without the Bar of the Lords House sits the Kings first Gentleman Usher called the Black Rod from a black sttaff he carries in his hand under whom is a Yeoman Usher that waits at the door within a Cryer without and a Sergeant at Mace always attending the Lord Keeper When the King is present with his Crown on his head none of the Lords are covered The Judges stand till the King gives them leave to sit When the King is absent the Lords at their entrance do reverence to the Chair of State as is or should be done by all that enter into the Kings Presence-Chamber The Judges then may sit but may not be covered till the Chancellor or Keeper signify unto them the leave of the Lords The Kings Council and Masters of Chancery sit also but may not be covered at all The Commons in their House sit promiscuously onely the Speaker hath a Chair placed in the middle and the Clerk of that House near him at the Table They never had any Robes as the Lords ever had but wear every one what he fancieth most which to strangers seems very unbecoming the Gravity and Authority of the Great Council of England and that during their attendance on Parliament a Robe or grave vestment would as well become the Honourable Members of the House of Commons as it doth all the Noble Venetians both young and old who have right to sit in the Great Council
of Venice and as it doth the Senators of Rome at this day c. The time of sitting in Parliament is on any day in the morning or afore dinner onely it hath antienly been observed not to assemble upon some high Festival days but upon ordinary Sundays oft-times as days accounted by all Christians less solemn then divers other Festivals which are celebrated but once a year When the day prefixt by the King in his Writs of Summons is come the King usually cometh in person with his Crown on his Head and clothed with his Royal Robes declares the cause of the Summons in a short Harangue leaving the rest to the Lord Keeper who then stands behind His Majesty the Commons in the mean time standing bare at the Barr of the Lords House are afterwards in the Kings name commanded to choose them a Speaker which without the Kings Command they may not do whereupon they returning to their own House make choice of one of their own Members whom afterwards upon another day they present to the King and being approved of by His Majesty sitting in his Chair and all His Lords both Spiritual and Temporal in their Robes of Scarlet he makes a modest refusal which not allowed he petitioneth His Majesty that the Commons may have during their sitting First a free Access to his Majesty Secondly Freedom of Speech within their own House Thirdly Freedom from Arrests Before any affair be medled with all the Members of the House of Commons take the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy in the presence of an Officer appointed by the King By that old Manuscript called Modus tenendi Parliamentum it doth appear that the House of Commons did antiently as the House of Lords at this day consist of Clergy-men as well as Lay-men there sate the Procuratores Cleri two for each Diocess representing all the Clergy-Commons of the Diocess as the Knights of the Shire doth all the Lay-Commons of the Shire for it was then judged expedient that every Freeman of England as well Clergy as Laity should in passing of all Laws touching propiety whereunto they were to be subject give their consent personally or immediately by themselves or else by some that by their Election should mediately undertake for them and the words of the Writ for summoning the Procuratores Cleri as aforesaid seem to warrant the same at this day The Power and Priviledges of both Houses of Parliament are divers and distinct one from an other The Lords House hath a power not onely in making and repealing Laws but also in tractando consilium impendendo as the words of the Writ are also in judging of Controversies judging in the arraignment of any Peer of the Realm putting men to their Oaths especially in matters of importance as the Corruption of Judges and Magistrates in Errours Illegal proceedings in other Courts in Appeals from Decrees in Chancery c. The Lords that in their Religion conform not to the Church of England may yet sit and have Suffrage in the Lords House All the Lords Spiritual and Temporal have this Priviledge That if by reason of Sickness or other business they cannot appear they may make Proxies to vote in their stead after Licence obtained by a Letter under the Kings Signet to be excused for their absence so that in every Parliament every person in England either by himself Proxy or Representative is said to be there and to have his Suffrage for making or repealing any Law The Commons have also a power in making and repealing Laws they also have their Negative Voyce for Levying of any money upon the Subject the Bill is to begin in the Commons House because from them doth arise the greater part of Moneys The Commons have the Priviledge to supplicate and propose Laws to impeach publick Delinquents even the highest Lords of the Kingdom both Spiritual and Temporal The House of Commons is the Grand Inquest of the Realm summoned from all parts to present publick grievances and Delinquents to the King and Lords to be redressed and punished by them and to this purpose the Lords sit in their Robes on the Bench covered as Judges do in other Judicatories they swear and examine Witnesses and at length pass sentence whilst the Members of the Commons House stand bare at the Bar of the Lords House produce Witnesses mannage evidence c. Note that although every Member of the Commons House is chosen to serve for one particular County City or Burrough yet he serves for the whole Kingdom and his voyce equal to any other his power absolute to consent or dissent without ever acquainting those that sent him or demanding their assent as the States General of the United Neatherlands are obliged to do in many Cases Yet are they to make that their special care to promote the Good of that County City or Borough for which they serve Although the Lords of Parliament are to bear their own charges because they represent there only themselves yet all the Commons both Lay and Clergy that is the Procuratores Cleri are to have rationabiles Expensas as the words of the Writ are that is such allowance as the King considering the Prices of all things shall judge meet to impose upon the people to pay In the 17 Edward 2. it was 10 groats for Knights and 5 groats for Burgesses but not long after it was 4 s. a day for dubbed Knights and 2 s. for all others which in those days as appears by the prices of all things was a considerable sum above 20 times more than it is now for not onely their expences were considered though that was great by reason of the sutable attendance that then every Parliament man had but also their pains their loss of time and necessary neglect of their own private affairs for the service of their Country and when the Countries Cities and Burroughs paid so dear for their expences they were wont to take care to choose such men as were best able and most diligent in the speedy dispatch of affaires by which means with some other more business in those times was dispatched in Parliament in a week then is now perhaps in ten so that the Protections for Parliament men and their Servant from Arrests were not then grievous when scarce any Parliament or Session lasted so long as one whole Term. In the Raign of Edward 3. the Parliaments sometimes sate but eight days and sometimes less as may be seen in the Records of the Tower and yet transacted several and weighty affairs of the Nation many things being prepared before hand as some think by the King and his privy Council as they are at present in Sweden and that commonly they then debated onely upon such things as the King did propose which is now done by the Convocation of the Clergy of England The afore-mentioned expences being duly paid did cause all the petty decayed Burroughs of England to become humble Suitors to the King
be spared because it intimates a distinct interest between the King and His Subjects which is not onely false but very dangerous to be allowed of The King is Pater patriae the Money given to him is for our use and benefit if we are niggardly to him we injure ourselves c. The Bill for the Kings general Pardon hath but one reading in either House for this reason because they must take it as the King will please to give it so the Bill of Subsidies granted by the Clergy assembled in Convocation for the same reason When the Bill for the general Pardon is passed by the King the Answer is thus les Prelats Signeurs communes en ce Parlament assemblez au nom de tous vos autres sujets remercient tres humblement vostre Majeste prient Dieu vous donner en sante bonne vie longue All Acts of Parliament before the Reign of Henry 7. were passed and enrolled in French now in Engli●h Most of our antient Acts of Parliament run in this stile The King at the humble request of the Commons with the assent of the Prelates Dukes Earles and Barons hath ordained or enacted After it was thus The King by the Advice and Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and with the Assent of the Commons doth enact of later times it hath been thus Be it enacted by the Kings most excellent Majesty by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and of the Commons although the words of the Writ for summoning the Commons which ought to be the main rule is onely ad Consentiendum and not ad Consilium impendendum as it is in the Writ to the Lords and it is evident that the Commons in the late long Parliament made that an advantage for justifying their usurpations against the King in that point and so in another Parliament the Commons endeavoured to maintain that the Concurrence of the Lords was not always necessary in an Act of Parliament because 1 Edward 6. cap. 5. in passing that Act against transportation of Horses the Lords were casually omitted yet by the Register of the Lords House it appears that that Bill began first in the Lords House and there passed before the Commons took it in debate and therefore the Kings Council at Law is very curious in wording rightly all Acts before they are brought to the King and the Clerks of the Parliament as carefull in transcribing and registring them However it is to be wished that to prevent future mischief to this Nation some clauses in the late Act of Oblivion and Indemnity might be amended or at least explained and more especially about the beginning of that Act these words That all manner of Treasons c. since January 1637. and before June 1660. by vertue of any Authority from His late Majesty King Charles or His Majesty that now is be pardoned c. which words might possibly be foisted in designedly to insinuate as if according to that most absurd and Traiterous position of some of the Rebellious Members of the Long Parliament the Kings person or any commissionated by him could be guilty of Treason against the Kings Authority or against His two Houses of Parliament by pursuing of Rebels to bring them to Justice according to the Laws of the Land It were also to be desired that to prevent the great dishonour of making additional and explanatory Acts of Parliament so frequently as hath of late been done all considerable Bills of Publick concernment once read in either House of Parliament may before they be passed be exposed to the view of all comers as antiently among the Romans was usual to the end that any other person besides those of the two Houses may within the space of certain days freely propose in Writing or otherwise his exceptions additions alterations or amendments Sed haec obiter When those things for which the Parliament was summoned have been sufficiently treated and brought to a conclusion then the King doth usually adjourn prorogue or dissolve the Parliament in maner following The adjournments are usually made in the Lords House by the Lord Keeper in the Kings Name to what other day the King pleaseth and also to what other place if he think fit to remove them as sometimes hath been done and then all things already debated and read in one or both Houses continue to the next meeting in the same state they were in before the adjournment and so may be resumed In the like maner the Parliament is Prorogued but by a Prorogation there is a Session and then the Bills that were almost ready in both Houses for the Royal Assent not having it must at the reassembling of the Parliament begin anew The Speaker of the House of Commons upon notice given that it is the Kings pleasure that House shall also adjourn doth say with the assent of the House This House is adjourned When the Kings pleasure is to prorogue or dissolve the Parliament His Majesty commonly cometh in person with His Crown on his Head sendeth for all the House of Commons to come to the Bar of the Lords House and after the Kings answer to each Bill signified as aforementioned His Majesty usually makes a Solemn Speech the Lord Keeper another and the Speaker of the House of Commons a third then the Lord Keeper by the special command of the King doth pronounce the Parliament prorogued or dissolved Note That the King being head of the Parliament if his death doth happen during the sitting of the Parliament it is ipso facto dissolved Antiently after every Session of Parliament the King commanded every Sheriff to proclaim the several Acts and to cause them to be duly observed yet without that Proclamation the Law intended that every one hath notice by his representative of what is transacted in Parliament of later times since Printing became common that Custom hath been laid aside The Number of Persons that have have Place and Suffrage in both Houses To the Lords House belong 3 Dukes of the Royal Blood though one be infra aetatem 7 other Dukes 3 Marquises 56 Earls 9 Vicounts and 67 Barons in all 154. Then there are two Archbishops and 24 Bishops so that the Total is 180. But many being under age some sick and infirm others abroad in the Kings Service the ordinary number is about 100. To the House of Commons belong first for the 40 Shires of England two for each in all 80 Knights then one for each of the twelve Counties of Wales 12 Knights For 25 Cities in England two to each and London four in all 52 Citizens For the Cinque Ports 16 Barons for the two Universities two Burgesses for each For 168 Burroughs there are about 330 Burgesses for some few of those Burroughs send but one Burgess apiece Lastly in each of the 12 Counties of Wales there is one Burrough that sends only one Burgess so the total Number of the House of
concerning the Kings Revenue either certain or casual All Securities either by Bond or Recognizances to the Kings Majesty for any of his Debts are taken here All Proceedings upon any Statute by Information for Custom Excises or any other penal Law All proceedings upon the said Bonds or Recognizances or any other Bonds taken in the Kings name by Officers appointed thereunto under the Great Seal of England and transmitted into this Office for recovery thereof From hence issue forth Process to cause all Accountants to come in and account In the Court of Exchequer there being a Court of Equity all proceedings touching the same are in this Office with many other things concerning the Kings Revenue This Office is in the Kings Gift Next is the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer John Osburn Esquire whose Office is to make Process against all Sheriffs Receivers Bailiffs c for their Accounts and many other things of moment as Estreat-Rules all Charters and Letters Patents whereupon any Rents are reserved to the King In this Office there were heretofore twelve sworn Clerks whereof the two first were called Secondaries but since the Tenures were taken away the said Office is declined and the number of Clerks diminished This Office also is in the Kings Gift Clerk of the Pipe is Sir Robert Crook Knight who hath all the Accounts and Debts due to the King drawn down out of the Remembrancers Office and chargeth them down in the Great Roll or Pipe and therefore probably was it called the Pipe Office He hath under him eight sworn Clerks William Burnet Esquire chief Secondary Nicholas Highmore Wil. Satterthwayte Burnet Junior Caryl c. Here also Accountants have their Quietus est and here are made Leases of extended Lands Comptroller of the Pipe Brewster Esquire who writeth out Summons twice every year to the High Sheriffs to levy the Farms and Debts of the Pipe he also keepeth a controlment of the Pipe that is keepeth a Roll of the Pipe Office Accounts whereby to discover any thing that shall be amiss Clerk of the Pleas is Richard Beresford Esquire in whose Office all the Officers of the Exchequer and other Priviledged persons as Debtors to the King c. are to have their Priviledge to plead and be impleaded as to all matters at the Common Law And the proceedings are accordingly by Declarations Pleas and Tryals as at the Common Law because they should not be drawn out of their own Court where their attendance is required Forrein Opposer is Charles Whittaker Esquire whose Office is whereunto all Sheriffs repair to be by him opposed of their Green Wax and from thence is drawn down a Charge upon the Sheriff to the Clerk of the Pipe this Office is kept in Greys-Inn Clerk of the Estreats Williams Esquire whose Office is to receive every Term the Estreats or Extracts out of the Office of the Remembrancer of the Lord Treasurer and to write them out to be levied for the King also to make Schedules for such Summs as are to be discharged Auditors of the Imprest Bartholemew Beal and Robert Wylde Esquires who audit the great accounts of the Kings Customs Wardrobe Mint First Fruits and Tenths Naval and Military Expences Moneys imprested c. Auditors of the Revenue there are seven Sir Edmond Sawyer Kt. John Philips Esq Sir Joseph Seymour Kt. Aldworth Parsons Morice Esquires and Sir William Godolphin Kt. These audi● all the accounts of the Kings other Revenue that ariseth by Aydes granted in Parliament Remembrancer of First Fruits and Tenths James Roger Esq whose Deputyes George Farrington and William Prettyman take all Compositions for First Fruits and Tenths and make process against such as pay not the same this Office is kept in Hatton Garden There are also two other considerable Officers called Deputy Chamberlains Mr. Vines and Mr Lawrence in whose Office at Westminster are preserved all the Counterfoyles of the Talleys whereof more anon so exactly ranged by Months and years that they may presently be found out to be joyned with their respective Stock or Tally when thereunto required which being done and proving true they deliver the same attested for a lawful Tally to the Clerk of the Pipe for to be allowed in the Great Roll but in case any corruption hath been used the same is easily and soon discovered and the Offender severely punished by Fine and imprisonment There are also divers other Officers as Clerk of the Parcels Clerk of the Nichils Marshals Usher of the Exchequer whose Office is executed by a Deputy also 4 under Ushers Of the other part of the Exchequer called by some the Lower Exchequer where the Kings Revenue is received and disbursed with admirable Order and Frugality THe Principal Officer is the Lord Treasurer of whom see the First Part of the Pres State of England Since the Death of the Earl of Southampton 1667. This great Office hath been in the hands of five Commissioners Now there are but three Commissioners the Lord Ashley Sir Thomas Clifford and Sir John Duncomb who execute the same at Whitehall They have each one a considerable Salary from the King There is one Secretary Sir George Downing Knight and Baronet Next is the Chancellour of the Exchequer who is also an Officer of great Account and Authority he hath a principal power not onely in the Exchequer Court but also here in the managing and disposing of the Kings Revenue he hath also the Custody of the Exchequer Seal This Office is injoyed by the forementioned Lord Ashley Then there are two Chamberlaines of the Exchequer Sir Nicholas Steward and Mr. Hyldiard in whose Custody are all Antient Records Leagues and Treaties with forreign Princes the Standards of Moneys Weights and Measures those antient famous Books called Doomes-day and the Black book of the Exchequer whereof the former is Liber Censualis totius Angliae the Tax Book of England made by William the Conqueror wherein is described all the Lands of England with the true value and their Owners name it was six years in making viz. from the 14th to the 20th year of that King and called at first Rotulus Wintoniae but since named Doomes-day Book because therein was set down an exact Account not onely of all the Cities Towns and Villages of England but the number of Families of Men Souldiers Husbandmen Bondmen Servants Cattle how much mony what Rent how much Meadow Pasture Woods Tillage Common Marsh Heath every one possessed and when any one cited or any difference arose about those things or Taxes c. there was no place for denying or deceiving the King whereof many men ever made little Conscience though all good Christians ever counted it a grievous and hainous sin when this Book was opened like as it will be at the opening of the Book at the great day of doom or general Judgment of the World This Book is kept under three Locks and Keys not to be lookt into under 6s 8d and for every line transcribed is to be paid 4d
only of Beer and Ale for the City of London though it be a very moderate Imposition is farmed or rented of the King at above one hundred and twenty thousand pounds a year and about one fourth part of all that Excise throughout England Churches Parish Churches besides Chappels there were in all 130. that is double the Number of Churches parochial to be found in any City of Christendom the Mother Church whereof is dedicated to the memory of Saint Paul the only Cathedral of that Name in Europe and founded by Sebert a Saxon King about the year 610. in a place where had stood a Temple dedicated to Diana and afterward enlarged by Erkenwald the 4 th Saxon Bishop thereof and that old Fabrick being almost destroyed by Fire Mauritius another Bishop of London in One thousand eighty three began and finished a great part of the present magnificent Pile in the space of 20 years but the Quire and Tower were not finished till 1221 and then it was dedicated in a most solemn manner as was the Temple of Solomon the King the Bishops and a vast number from all Parts of the Nation assisting thereat It is seated on the highest part of all the City and was more conspicuous perhaps then any Cathedral Church in the World it was a structure for length height and antiquity surpassing all other Churches the length thereof was 690 Foot therein excelling by 20 foot St. Peters in Rome which for beauty proportion and divers other things excels all other Temples it was in height 102 foot and in breadth 130. The Church was built as other Cathedrals in a perfect Cross and in the midst of the Cross upon mighty high Arches was a Tower of Stone 260 foot high and on that a spire of Timber covered with Lead in height 260 foot more in all from the ground 520 foot above which was a ●ole of Copper Gilt of 9 foot in compass whereon stood the Cross 15 foot and a half high and almost 6 foot a cross made of oak covered with Lead and another cover of Copper over the Lead above all stood the Eagle or Cock of Copper Gilt four foot long and the breadth over the Wings 3 foot and a half In the year 1561. a part of this magnificent Pile was much wasted and the rest endangered by a fire begun in that stately Timber Spire by the negligence of a Plummer who left his Pan of Fire there whilest he went to Dinner as he confest of later years on his Death Bed But by the great Bounty and Piety of Queen Elizabeth of the Citizens of London and of all the Clergy of the Province of Canterbury it was again repaired in the space of Five years After which the Stone work decaying apace by reason of the corroding quality of the abundance of Sea-coal smoak the Learned and Pious Doctor Laud coming to be Bishop of London and after of Canterbury was so zealous and vigorous for upholding this most Ancient Church and Stately Monument of England and glory of the City of London that by the Kings favor and liberal contribution of Godly People maugre all opposition of the Puritans the work was so eagerly pursued that before the year 1640. the whole Body was finished with Portland Stone excellent against all smoak and weather and the Tower scaffolded up to the top with a purpose to take it all down and to rebuild it more fair and of a greater height with a stately Pinnacle at each corner because the Arches were not thought strong enough to support another Steeple and to place in that Tower the biggest and most tunable Bells in the World For performance whereof and for adorning the Church there was in the Chamber of London above One hundred and seventy thousand pounds all taken out soon after and employed in an Unnatural War by a stiff necked People against the best of Kings in which one single act a great part of the Citizens of London and of the Long Parliament became deeply guilty of a horrid Rebellion and detestable Sacriledge After the Murder or rather Martyrdom of the forementioned Archbishop the Skaffolds were taken away and sold with some of the Lead which covered this famous Structure and this House of God made a Stable for Horses by the Disloyal Army and almost all suffered to decay till the Restauration of the King who having a pious intent to set upon the repair thereof again it was all ruined by the late dreadful Conflagration in 1666. Which yet hath not so discouraged our gracious King and the rest of our Church Governors but that in a short time they intend to begin again the repair of the Mother Church of the Mother City of this Kingdom to the glory of God and high honor of this City and Nation for the speedy promoting whereof both King and Parliament City and Countrey Clergy and Laity high and low seem to stand engaged to lend their aid and assistance Of the forementioned Fire that was able to destroy such a vast solid Structure as the Cathedral of S. Paul a brief account may here be acceptable especially to Foreigners who have had imperfect relations thereof THe City of LONDON within the Walls was seated upon near Four hundred and sixty Acres of Ground whereon was built about Fifteen thousand Houses besides Churches Chappels Halls Colledges Schools and other Publick Buildings whereof about Four parts of five were utterly devoured in the late dismal Conflagration and about One part of five of the whole City and Suburbs counting therein Westminster and Southwark There were then destroyed Eighty seven Parochial Churches Six Consecrated Chappels all the Principal Publick Edifices as the forenamed Cathedral of S. Paul the great Guild-Hall wherein are held Nine several Courts belonging to the City the Royal Exchange the Custome-House most Halls of Companies c. whereof the whole damage is almost incredible In that one commodity of Books onely wherewith London abounded was lost as Judicious Stationers have computed One hundred and fifty thousand pounds for the loss fell most upon that and Three or four other cumbersome commodities not easie on a sudden to be removed viz. Wines Tobacco Sugars and Plumbs wherewith this City was furnished beyond any City in the World Yet in this vast Incendy not above Six or eight persons were burnt Of this dreadful Fire there were many concurrent occasions First The Drunkenness or Supine negligence of the Baker in whose House it began or of his Men. Next The dead time of the night wherein it began viz. between One and two of the Clock after Midnight when some were wearied with working others filled with drink all in a dead sleep Thirdly The dead time of the week being Saturday night when Traders were retired to their Countrey Houses and none but Children or Young Servants left behind Fourthly The dead time of all the year being then the long Vacation on the Second of September when Tradesmen were generally abroad
in the Countrey some in the remotest parts of England to fetch in their debts Fifthly The closeness of the Buildings in that place facilitating the progress of the Fire and hindring the usual remedy which was by Engines to shoot Water Sixthly The matter of the Buildings thereabouts which was generally wooden and of old Timber Seventhly The long continued drought of the preceding Summer even to that day which had so dryed the Timber that it was never more apt to take fire Eighthly The matter of Wares in those parts where were the greatest Magazines and Store-houses of Oyls Pitch Tar Rozin Wax Butter Brimstone Hemp Cordage Cheese Wine c. Ninthly An Easternly Wind the driest of all other that had continued long before and then did blow very strongly Tenthly The unexpected failing of the Water the Thames Water-Tower then out of order and burnt down immediately after the beginning of the fire so that most Water Pipes were soon dry Lastly An unusual negligence at first and a confidence of easily quenching the Fire on a sudden changed into a general consternation and despondency all People chusing rather by flight to save their Goods then by a vigorous opposition to save their Houses and the City These causes thus strangely concurring to say nothing of Gods just anger for the notorious impenitency of the Citizens for their abetting and instigating the shedding of the precious innocent Blood both of Gods Anointed and of their other cheif Governors both in Church and State for their still going on in their old hainous sins of Despising Dominions and speaking evil of Dignities till there was no remedy those forementioned causes so wonderfully concurring by a general prodigious Conflagration did make a greater spoil in the space of Three days viz. From Sunday morning to Wednesday morning then Three or four Armies unresisted could probably have done in twice the time for to give the Reader some little Prospect of the huge damages done by this Fire it hath been computed by an ingenious person that there were burnt in all within the Walls of this City Twelve thousand Houses and without the Walls One thousand Houses all which valued one with another at no more then 25 l. yearly Rent which at the low rate of Twelve years purchase will amount in the whole to Three millions and nine hundred thousand pounds sterling Then the Eighty seven Parish Churches the most spacious Cathedral Church of S. Paul Six Consecrated Chappels the Royal Burse or Exchange the great Guild-Hall the Custome-House the many magnificent Halls of Companies the several Principal City Gates with other Publick Edifices may well be valued at Two millions The Wares Houshold-stuff Moneys and other moveable Goods lost and spoiled by the Fire may probably amount to Two millions of pounds some say much more The Money spent in a general removing of Wares and Goods during the Fire and bringing them back afterward in the hire of Boats Carts and Porters may be well reckoned at the least Two hundred thousand pounds the total whereof is Nine millions and Nine hundred thousand pounds which reduced into French Money will amount unto One hundred twenty eight millions and seven hundred thousand Livres Tournois And yet the Citizens recovering after a few months their Native Courage have since so chearfully and unanimously set themselves to rebuild the City that within the space of four years they have erected in the same streets ten thousand houses and laid out for the same Three millions of pounds sterling counting but 300 l. a house one with another besides whole Streets built and now building in the Suburbs by others as if the late Fire had onely purged the City the Buildings are become infinitely more beautiful more commodious and more solid the three main vertues of all Edifices then before nay as if the Citizens had not been any way impoverish'd but rather inrich't by that huge Conflagration they may be said to be even wanton in th●ir Expences upon the stately Italian Facciatta's or Fronts of their new Houses many of Portland stone as durable almost as Marble upon their richly adorned Balconies Signes Portals c. They have made their Streets much more large and straight and whereas before they dwelt in low dark deform Wooden Cottages they now live in lofty lightsome uniform Brick Buildings so that although our gracious King cannot say of this His Capital City as one of the Emperors said of Rome Lateritiam inveni Marmoream reliqui yet he may say of it what is almost equivalent Ligneam inveni Lateritiam reliqui And of a Principal Structure of this City the Royal Exchange His Majesty may say Lateritiam inveni Saxcam reliqui whereof take here this following brief Account THe former Burse began to be erected in the year 1566. just one hundred years before it was burnt it was built at the cost and charges of a noble Merchant Sir Thomas Gresham and in a solemn manner by a Herald and Trumpet in the presence and by the special Command of Queen Elizabeth proclaimed and named the ROYAL EXCHANGE it was built most of Brick and yet was the most splendid Burse all things considered that was then in Europe before the building whereof the Burse for Merchants was kept in Lumbard-street Now it is built within and without of the forementioned excellent stone with such curious and admirable Architecture that it surpasseth all other Burses Quantum lenta solent inter Viburna Cupressi It is built Quadrangular with a large Court wherein the Merchants may assemble and the greatest part in case of rain or hot sun-shine may be sheltered in side-Galleries or Portico's The whole Fabrick cost above fifty thousand pounds whereof one half is disbursed by the Chamber of London or Corporation of the City and the other half by the Company of Mercers and to reimburse themselves there will be let to hire 190 Shops above stairs at 20 l. yearly rent each and 30 l. for fine besides the several Shops below on the East and West sides and the huge vaulted Cellers under ground so that it will be the richest piece of ground perhaps in the whole world for according to exact dimensions the ground whereon this goodly Fabrick is erected is but 171 foot from North to South and 203 foot from East to West for it is Quadratum oblongum so that it is but very little more then three quarters of an Acre of Ground and will produce above 4000 l. yearly Rent The River whereon is seated this Great City for its breadth depth gentle strait even course extraordinary wholesome water and Tides is more commodious for Navigation then perhaps any other River in the world The Sea flows gently up this River fourscore miles that is almost to Kingston twelve miles above London by land and twenty by water bringing the greater Vessels to London and the smaller beyond then against the Stream boats are drawn to Oxford and higher many miles It is high water
following are a few heads or particulars of them viz. The Leagues of foreign Princes and the Treaties with them And all the Atchievements of this Nation in France and other Foreign Parts The Original of all the Laws that have been Enacted or Recorded until the Reign oi Richard the Third The Homage and Dependency of Scotland upon England The Establishment of Ireland in Laws and Dominions The Dominion of the British Seas totally excluding both the French and Hollander to Fish therein without Licence from England proved by Records before the Conquest The Interest of the Isle of Man and the Isles of Jersey Gernsey Sark and Alderny which four last are the remaining part of the Norman possession The Title to the Realm of France and how obtained And all that the Kings or Princes of this Land have until that time done abroad or granted or confirmed unto their Subjects at home or abroad Tenures of all the Lands in England Extents or Surveys of Mannors and Lands Inquisitions post mortem being of infinite advantage upon tryals of Interest or Descent Liberties and Priviledges granted to Cities and Towns Corporate or to private Men as Court-Leets Waiffs Estrays Mercats Fairs Free warren Felons Goods or what else could come to the Crown or pass out of it Several Writs Pleadings and Proceedings as well in Chancery as in all the Courts of Common Law and Exchequer Inspeximus's and Inrolments of Charters and Deeds made and done before the Conquest Deeds and Contracts between party and party and the just establishment of all the Offices in the Nation The Metes and Bounds of all the Forests in England with the several respective Rights of the Inhabitants therein to Common of Pasture c. Besides many other Priviledges and Evidences which are too long to be here repeated or inserted And are therefore in the Petition of the Commons of England in Parliament An. 46 Edw. 3. num 43. said to be the perpetual Evidence of every Mans right and the Records of this Nation without which no story of the Nation can be written or proved These Records are reposited within a certain Place or Tower called Wakefield Tower adjoyning to the Bloody Tower near Traytors Gate There is another place called Julius Caesars Chappel in the White Tower The going up to this Chappel is in Gold Harbor Eighty four Steps up with Six or eight great Pillars on each side and at the upper end thereof there was a Marble Altar which in the late times of Rebellion was caused to be beaten down as a Monument of Tyranny and Superstition There are many Cart load of Records lying in this place out of which William Prynne Esquire late Keeper of the same with indefatigable labor Collected and Printed many of Publick Utility Annis 1659 1660 1662 1664. in Four several Volumes beginning Primo Regis Johannis for before that time there are no Rolls but onely Chartae Antiquae or Ancient Transcripts made and done before and since the Conquest until the beginning of King John Then follows His Son Henry the Third where the first Offices Post Mortem begins Then there is Edward the First Second and Third Richard the Second Henry the Fourth Henry the Fifth Henry the Sixth and Edward the Fourth and the Inquisitions Post Mortem of Richard the Third who reigned onely Three years The Rolls of that King are in the Chappel of the Rolls in Chancery Lane The Rolls in the Tower are variously distinguished viz. Rotuli Patentium Cartarum Parliamentorum Clausarum finium Scotiae Vasconiae Franciae Hiberniae Walliae Normanniae Alemanniae Oblatae Liberatae Extractae Perambulationes Forestae Scutag Rotul Marescal Romae de Treugis Chart. Patent fact in partibus transmarinis Patent de Domibus Judaeorum Protection de Perdonation c. Stapulae cum multis aliis which are lately depicted upon the outside of every Press in the Repository belonging to each Kings Reign and very easily to be brought forth for the use of the Client By a Table of Orders hanging up in the said Office and subscribed by the Keeper hereof The same is to be kept open and constantly attended for all Resorters thereto from the hours of Seven till eleven of the Clock in the Morning and from One till five in the Afternoon every day of the week except in the Moneths of December January and February and in them from Eight till eleven in the morning and from One to four in the Afternoon except on Holidays Publick Fasting and Thanksgiving days and times of great Pestilence The Governor of this great and important Fortress being called The Lieutenant of the Tower is usually a Person of great worth and fidelity who is Virtute Officii to be in Commission of the Peace for the Counties of Kent Surrey and Middlesex He is High Steward of a Court there held hath a Deputy and may refuse an Habeas Corpus may give Protection to all Debtors belonging to the Tower Infra Regnum Angliae Hath the Priviledge to take Unam lagenam Two Gallons and a Pint Ant● malum retro of all Wine Ships that come and to be as some hold Custos Rotulorum of the County of Middlesex His Salary is 200 l. per annum His usual Fee for every Prisoner sent to the Tower who are commonly Men of Estates is 20 l. and 3 l a week for an Esquire and 5 l. for a Knight For a Baron or above 50 l. at entrance to whom the King allows weekly 10 l. whereof two parts go to the Prisoner the third to the Lieutenant for Lodgings and Diet and 50 l. to the Lieutenant upon the Prisoners discharge The present Lieutenant of the Tower is Sir John Robinson Baronet The Gentleman Porter of the Tower holds his place by Patent and at the entrance of a Prisoner hath for his Fee Vestimenta superiora or else a Composition for the same The Gentleman Jaylor is put in by the Lieutenant of the Tower his Fee is 41 s. of a Gentleman and 5 l. of a Knight Then there are Forty Warders of the Tower accounted the Kings Domestick Servants and sworn by the Lord Chamberlain of His Majesties Houshold or by the Clerk of the Check The Moneys allowed by the King to the several Officers and Servants in the Tower and for keeping in repair that huge structure amounts to a vast sum Near the Tower is S. Katherines which hath a Royal Jurisdiction for the Ecclesiastical Causes and Probate of Wills and belongeth to the Queen Dr. Bud is Commissary from whom if any will appeal it must be to the King in His Court of Chancery who thereupon issueth out a Commission under the Great Seal as in Appeals from the Arches or Prerogative The next thing remarkable in the City of London may be the Bridge which for admirable Workmanship for vastness of Foundation for all Dimensions and for the solid stately Houses and rich Shops built thereon surpasseth all others in Europe it hath Nineteen
to behave themselves in that Port Gravity and Authority as if they were so in the Kings House that so hereafter they may know the better to behave themselves in case they should be promoted to that Honour for these Gentlemen are usually of such quality as come not hither with intent to profess the Law but to learn so much Law as may be necessary to preserve their Estates and to make themselves accomplisht in other qualities necessary for Gentlemen At such time they have here divers divertisements as Feasting every day singing dancing Musick which last is allowed there to all Comers and is so excessive that what the Dicers allow out of each winning to the Butlers box usually amounts to above 50 l. a day and night wherewith and a small contribution from each Student are the great charges of the whole Christmas defrayed Sometimes when their publick Treasury is great they create a Prince among themselves with such Title as they please to give him and he hath all his Officers and a Court sutable to a great Prince and many of the prime Nobility and great Officers of State are feasted and entertained by him with Enterludes c. From All Saints day to Candlemas each House usually hath Revels on Holy-dayes that is Musick and Dancing and for this is chosen some young Student to be Master of the Revels Note that the manner of their Parlament is briefly thus Every Quarter commonly the Benchers cause one of the standing Officers of the House to summon a Parlament which is onely an Assembly and Conference of Benchers and Utter-Baristers which are called the Sage Company and meet in a place called the Parlament Chamber and there Treat of such matters as shall seem expedient for the good ordering of the House and the Reformation of such things as they shall judge meet to be Reformed Here are the Readers for Lent and Summer vacation elected also the Treasurer is here chosen and the Auditors appointed to take the Accounts of the old Treasurer c. Here offences committed by any of the Society are punished c. These Innes of Court are most wisely situated by our Ancestors between the Kings Courts of Judicature and the most opulent City of London In the Four Innes of Court are reckoned about 800 Students Lastly there are two more Colledges called Sergeants Inne where the Common-Law Student when he is arrived to the highest degree hath his Lodging and Dyet These are called Servientes ad Legem Sergeants at Law and are as Doctors in the Civil Law only these have heretofore been reputed more Noble and Honourable Doctoris enim appellatio est Magisterii Servientis vero Ministerii and therefore Doctors of Law are allowed to sit within the Bar in Chairs and covered whilst Sergeants stand without the Bar bareheaded only with Coiffs or Caps on To arrive to this high Degree take this brief account The young Student in the Common Law being born of a Gentile Stock and bred two or three years in the University and there chiefly versed in Logick and Rhetorick both expedient for a Lawyer and gotten some insight into the Civil Law and some skill in the French Tongue as well as Latin he is admitted to be one of the Four Innes of Court where he is first called a Moot man and after about Seven years study is chosen an Utter Barister and having then spent Twelve years more and performed the Exercises before mentioned he is chosen a Bencher and some time after a Reader during the Reading which heretofore was Three weeks and Three days the Reader keeps a constant and sumptuous Feasting inviting the chief Nobles Judges Bishops great Officers of the Kingdom and sometimes the King himself as that most accomplished Lawyer the present Atturney General did that it costs them sometimes 800 or 1000 l. Afterward he wears a long Robe different from other Baristers and is then in a capacity to be made a Sergeant at Law when His Majesty shall please to call him which is in this manner When the number of Sergeants is small the Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas by the advice and consent of the other Judges make choice of Six or Eight more or less of the most Grave and Learned of the Innes of Court and presents their Names to the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper who sends by the Kings Writ to each of them to appear on such a day before the King to receive the State and Degree of Sergeant at Law at the appointed time they being habited in Robes of two colours viz. Brown and Blew come accompanyed with the Students of the Innes of Court and attended by a train of Servants and Retainers in certain peculiar cloth Liveries to Westminster-Hall there in publick take a solemn Oath and are clothed with certain Robes and Coyfs without which they may no more be seen in publick after this they feast the great persons of the Nation in a very magnificent and Princely manner give Gold Rings to the Princes of the Blood Archbishops Chancellor and Treasurer to the value of Forty shillings each Ring to Earles Bishops Rings of Twenty shillings to other great Officers to Barons great Prelates c. Rings of less value Out of these are chosen all the Judges of the Kings Bench and Common Pleas wherefore all those Judges do alwayes wear the white Linnen Coyfe which is the Principal Badge of a Sergeant and which he had ever the Priviledge to wear at all times even in the Kings presence and whilst he spake to the King though antiently it was not permitted to any Subject to be so much as capped in the Presence of the King of England as at present it is not allowed in the presence of the Pope or of the Emperour When any of the aforementioned Judges are wanting the King by advice of His Council makes choice of one of these Sergeants at Law to supply his place and constitutes him by Letters Patents Sealed by the Chancellor who sitting in the middle of the rest of the Judges in open Court by a set Speech declares to the Sergeant that upon this occasion is brought in the Kings pleasure and to the people the Kings goodness in providing the Bench with such able honest men as that Justice may be done expeditely and impartially to all His Subjects and then causes the said Letters Patents to be read and being departed the Chief Justice places the said Sergeant on the Bench junior of all the rest and having taken his Oath well and truly to serve the King and His people in the Office of Justice to take no reward to do equal and speedy Justice to all c. he sits himself to the Execution of his Charge The Sergeant being thus advanced to be a Judge hath thereby great Honour and a very considerable Salary besides certain perquisits for each one hath at least One thousand pound a year from the King and now in some things his former habit
among the learned is very considerable saith of one Colledge of Oxford in his time what might be said of some others there and in Cambridge Non credo in orbe terrarum extra Angliam simile esse addam aut fuisse Magnae illic opes vectigalia c. Verbo vis dicam Unum Oxoniense Collegium rem inquisivi superat vel decem nostra The whole number of Students in Oxford that partake of the Revenues of the Colledges are about One thousand and of other Students about twice as many There were anciently in this University before the founding of Colledges Two hundred Hospitia Studiosorum Inns Hostels or Halls and as Armachanus Writes there were Thirty thousand Students and Twenty miles round Oxford were by the Kings of England set apart for Provision in Victuals for this City The Discipline of these Colledges and Halls is far more exact and excellent then in any Foreign University First All that intend to take any Degree are to take their Dyet and Lodging and have a Tutor constantly in some Colledge or Hall then they are to perform all Exercises to be subject to all Statutes and to the Head of the House Next they are to be subject to the cheif Magistrate of the University to perform Publick Exercise and to be subject to the Publick Statutes thereof They are to suffer themselves to be shut up by night in their several Houses They are never to be seen abroad out of their Chambers much less out of their Colledges without their Caps and Gowns an excellent order no where observed in Foreign Parts but in Spain Their Gowns are all to be black onely the Sons of the higher Nobility are herein indulged and all Doctors are honored with Purple or rather Scarlet Robes which anciently were allowed onely to Emperors or Kings but now in England besides the King all Peers in Parliament all Doctors in the Universities all Majors and Governors of Cities and all the Principal Judges are at certain times cloathed in Scarlet The Degrees taken in the University are onely two viz. Of Bachelar and Master for so they are anciently called as well in Divinity Law and Physick as in the Arts. At present the Degrees in those Three Professions are called Bachelars and Doctors onely in the Arts Bachelar and Master Yet is it not to be supposed That because in Musick one of the Liberal Arts he that takes the second Degree is usually now stiled a Doctor therefore to be preferred before a Master of Arts who is Doctor of all the Liberal Arts yet Men otherwise Learned have sometimes committed such Errors by their Ignorance in words and names Every year at the Act or time of compleating the Degree of Master both in the Three Professions and Arts which is always the Monday after the Sixth of July there are unless some extraordinary occasion hinders great Solemnities not onely for Publick Exercises but Feastings Comedies and a mighty concourse of Strangers from all parts to their Friends and Relations then compleating their Degrees whereby and by the set Fees it usually costs a Doctor of Divinity Law or Physick about One hundred pounds sterling and a Master of Arts 20 or 30 l. sterling In these Three Professions and in the Arts there proceed Masters or Doctors yearly about One hundred and fifty and every Lent about Two hundred Bachelars of Arts. The time required by Statute for studying in the University before the taking of the forementioned Degrees because it is much longer then what is required in any Foreign University shall here be set down more particularly To take the Degree of Bachelar in Arts is required four years and three years more for to be Master of Arts. To take the Degree of Doctor of Divinity the Student must necessarily first have taken the Degree of Master of Arts and then after seven years more he is capable of being Bachelar in Divinity and then four years more is requisite before the Degree of Doctor can be had To take the Degree of Doctor of Laws the more ordinary way is in three years after Master of Arts one may be capable of the Degree of Bachelar and in four years more of Doctor of Laws the like for Doctor in Physick The Exercises required for taking these Degrees are many and difficult enough yet not such but that may be performed in less time by any Men of good abilities But it was the Wisdom of our Ancestors so to order that before those degrees were conferred upon any and they allowed to practice they might first gain Judgment and Discretion which comes with Time and Years and perhaps that those of slower parts might by Time and Industry make themselves capable of that Honor as well as those of quicker abilities To speak now particularly of the Publick Schools in Oxford of the large Salary to each Publick Professor of the most famous Bodlean Library that for number of choice Books curious Manuscripts diversity of Languages liberty of Studying facility of finding of any Book equals if not surpasses the famous Vatican To speak of the curious Architecture and vast charges of the New Theater fabricked by the most ingenious Dr. Christopher Wren at the sole cost and charges of the most Reverend Father in God Gilbert the present Archbishop of Canterbury for the use of Scholastick Exercises and of that most excellent Printing Press there To speak of the beautiful solid Stone Buildings Chappels Halls Libraries large Revenues admirable Discipline of several Colledges To describe the most delightful Publick Physick Garden abounding with variety of choice Plants and surrounded with stately Stone Walls at the sole expences of the Right Honorable Henry Earl of Danby would require another Volume What hath been said of Oxford the like may be said of Her Sister Cambridge which for Antiquity Beautiful Colledges large Revenues good Discipline number of Students plenty of Diet and of all other things necessary for advancement of Learning if in complaisance she will at any time give place to Oxford yet at the same time will challenge precedence before any other University of the Christian World These are the two glorious Fountains of Learning to the fame whereof Foreigners come on Pilgrimage to offer up Honor and Admiration and yet even these had lately been like to be dried up by the over-heated Zeal of some ignorant Fanaticks These are the cheifest Store-houses of Lettered Men which sends forth yearly a great number of Divines Civilians Physitians c. to serve all parts of this Kingdom To supply these great Store-houses there are in several parts of England Grammar Schools whereof the principal are Pauls Westminster Winchester Eaton Merchant-Taylers the Charter-house all richly endowed to maintain Masters Ushers and a certain number of Scholars so that a childe once admitted into these Schools if he become capable may at length be preferred to be Scholar or Fellow in some Colledge of one of these Universities and will want little or no assistance