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A54595 The constitution of parliaments in England deduced from the time of King Edward the Second, illustrated by King Charles the Second in his Parliament summon'd the 18 of February 1660/1, and dissolved the 24 of January 1678/9 : with an appendix of its sessions / observed by Sr. John Pettus ... Knight. Pettus, John, Sir, 1613-1690. 1680 (1680) Wing P1905; ESTC R18517 172,347 454

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of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To Our right Trusty and well beloved Counsellor Sir Edward Hide Knight Chancellour of England Greeting Whereas We by our Council for certain great and urgent Causes concerning Vs the good Estate and Common-wealth of this our Realm and of the Church of England and for the good Order and Continuance of the same have appointed and ordain'd a Parliament to be holden at our City of Westminster the eighth day of May next ensuing In which Case divers and sundry Writs are to be directed forth under our Great Seal of England as well for the Nobility of this our Realm as also for the Election of Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the several Counties Cities and Burrough Towns of the same to be present at the said Parliament at the Day and Place aforesaid Wherefore We Will and Command you forthwith upon receipt hereof and by Warrant of the same to cause such and so many Writs to be made and sealed under our great Seal for accomplishment of the same as in like Cases have been heretofore used and accustomed And this Bill signed with our Hand shall be as well to you as to every Clerk or Clerks as shall make or pass the same a sufficient Warrant in that behalf Given at Our Palace at White-hall this Eighteenth Day of February in the Twelfth Year of Our Reign and in the Year of our Lord One Thousand Six Hundred Sixty and One. Observations and Proceedings on this Warrant THe King of England by his undoubted Prerogative hath and his Predecessors ever had in himself the Power of Summoning as also to appoint the times of beginning continuing discontinuing or dissolving of Parliaments This Summoning for I shall speak of the rest in order or Uniting the chiefest Parts of his Kingdom into a Parliament or Representation of the Kingdom in a less Body than it self is performed by the King's Warrant in his Name and by his Authority only as Supreme not only of his Kingdom but of its Representation and from this Warrant all Writs of Summons for a Parliament are deriv'd The Warrant is in English Sign'd by the King 's own Hand and Seal'd with his Privy Seal or Signet but the Writs are always in Latin or anciently some few in French and are Seal'd with the King 's Great Seal in his Name with a Teste of his Approbation though not manually Sign'd or Seal'd by him The Warrant is General viz. for summoning the Nobility as also for Elections of Knights Citizens and Burgesses but the Writs deriv'd from those Warrants are to particular persons of particular degrees as will be shewn The Form of this Warrant is ancient and hath had little or no variation except in the leaving out of Abbots and Priors ever since the 36 of Henry the 8th and except in leaving out Prelates and Bishops in this very Warrant whereby the Bishops had no particular Writs before the sitting of this Parliament but within three Months after for which Omission Reasons will be given in the 7th Chapter Before this Warrant was issued the King and so former Kings did advise with their Privy Council which is manifested by the Words of the Warrant viz. Whereas We by our Council yet if these words had been omitted at any time and not inserted in the Warrant the Warrant was held good and sufficient for due Summons However for publick satisfaction the words of every Writ are always Quia de advizamento assensu Concilij nostri and this Council is call'd the King's Privy or Private Council of which I shall speak more and is the King 's constant or standing Council as well in time of Parliament as when there is none sitting so as before this Magnum Concilium or Parliament is summon'd this Privy Council consults and deliberates concerning the Motives and Reasons for calling it and after such deliberations and results doth advise the King to send out a Warrant And therefore I conceive it useful to set down the Names of such as were of the King 's Privy Council when the calling of this Parliament was advis'd and resolv'd upon At the Court of White-hall Feb. 1660 1. The KING Present His Royal Highness the Duke of York His Highness Prince Rupert William Lord Arch-Bishop of Canterbury Juxon Edward Earl of Clarendon Lord Chancellor of England Hide Thomas Earl of Southampton Lord Treasurer of England Wriothesley John Lord Roberts Lord Privy-Seal Baron of Truro John Duke of Latherdale Maitland Earl of Guilford James Duke of Ormond Lord Steward of the King's House Butler George Duke of Albemarle Monk Henry Marquess of Dorchester Pierpoint Montague Earl of Lindsey Lord great Camberlain Bertie Edward Earl of Manchester the King's Chamberlain Montague Aldjernoone Earl of Northumberland Piercy Robert Earl of Leicester Sydny Charles Earl of Berkshire Howard Thomas Earl of Cleveland Wentworth George Earl of Norwich Goring Henry Earl of St. Albans Jermin Edward Earl of Sandwich Montague Arthur Earl of Anglesey Annesly Charles Earl of Carlile Howard William Viscount Say and Seal Fiennes Francis Lord Seymour Baron of Troubridge Frederick Lord Cornwallis Baron of Ai. Anthony Lord Ashley Cooper Charles Berkley Knight and Baronet Sir George Carteret Knight Vice-Chamberlain Sir Edw. Nicholas Knights Secretaries of State Sir Will. Morrice Knights Secretaries of State After the Warrant is sign'd and seal'd by the King it is sent from the Signet-Office to the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper and Directions are given to the Heralds to make Proclamation at the Court-gate and Capital City of London of the King's Resolutions of which I shall speak more in the Chapter of Proclamations The Lord Chancellor c. upon the receipt of this Warrant doth issue out his Warrant also to the Master of the Rolls as the chief Clerk of the Pettibag-Office in this Form YOu are hereby requir'd forthwith to prepare for the great Seal of England the several Writs of Summons for the Lords Temporal As also for the Judges and others to appear at the Parliament to be holden the 8th of May next together with the several Writs of Election of the several Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the several Counties Cities Towns and Burroughs within the Kingdom of England Dominion of Wales and Town of Berwick upon Tweed as also of the several Barons of the Cinque-Ports to serve in the said Parliament in such Method and Form and directed to such persons as are and have been usual in such Cases all which said Writs are to bear date this present eighteenth of February 1661. and for the so doing this shall be your Warrant Dated c. Upon receipt of the Lord Chancellor's Warrant the Clerks of the Pettibag by the assistance of the former Precedents of Writs and anciently by help of the Masters of Chancery and by advice with the Heralds as to Titles and true Names of Persons do fix a Schedule or digest or Forms of Writs to be issued
any of the Bloud Royal only to other Lords Temporal as will be shewn in its proper place but in the 21. of King James Exemplar 16. 21 Jacob. An Exemplar Writ was to Charles Prince of Wales Duke of York for that one Parliament who was afterwards King Charles the First 17. 15 Car. 1. To Charles Prince of Wales who had an Exemplar Writ for one Parliament and after was King Charles the Second 18. 13 Car. 2. To James Duke of York who sat by vertue of the aforementioned Writ in the Parliament begun the 8th of May 1661. to the end thereof SECT IV. Observations on the Title of York THere were other Dukes of York besides these which are mention'd in this Collection viz. Edward the Son of Edmund Duke of York and upon Edwards Death his Brother Richard was created Duke of York and Henry the son of King Henry the 7th was created Duke of York who after was stiled King Henry the 8th but these 3 Dukes of York being not mention'd in any Clause Rolls to have Exemplar Writs I have omitted them in the Register of Exemplars 2. The City of York was dignified with the Title of an Arch-Bishoprick in the year 180 as some say but all agree that Taurus was Arch-Bishop there in the year 610. and also with the Title of a Dukedom in the 10th year of Ric. the 2d whereas London the Metropolitan of England hath onely a Bishoprick but no Dukedom Earldom or Marquesate appropriate to it and in Anno the Civil Government of the City was honour'd with the Title of a Lord Mayor as it was at London but how far the equivalency of that Title extends to those two Cities will be further discourst when I speak of London in its proper place and in my Annotations 3. Whilst the quarrel continued between the Dukes of York and Lancaster which lasted for many Ages York had the Title of White-rose the House of Lancaster call'd the Red-rose till both were inoculated into one Stock of Hen. 7th 4. The Title of this James Duke of York and Albany in Scotland is the same which was given by King James to Prince Charles afterwards call'd King Charles the First being first created Duke of Albany c. and at 4 Years of age Duke of York SECT V. Of Consimilar Writs to the Royal Exemplars NOw I should proceed to the Consimilars of these Exemplars but in respect that they consist of a very great number and it were too great a labour to treat of all Consimilars I shall forbear to recite them Especially being in hopes that my Learned Friend Sir William Dugdale will publish a particular Treatise of them and ease me of that labour so as I shall only take notice here of the Writ for this Parliament to Prince Rupert the Sisters Son to King Charles the First and this is Consimilar in all parts to the Duke of Yorks Exemplar except in the Title so I need not set it down at large but by abbreviation shall thus render it viz. Carolus c. Rex c. Praecharissimo Consanguinco Duci Cumbriae Salutem and so Verbatim with the Dukes Exemplar Duke of Cumberland being his English Title SECT VI. Observations on these Consimilars 1. FIrst in most of the Clause-Rolls and Pawns from the 15. of Edw. the 2. to this time after the Exemplar Writs are set down these words following are in the Clause-Rolls and Pawns viz. Consimilia Brevia diriguntur Subscriptis and in some Consimiles Literae instead of Brevia directae Subscriptis and in some Consimiles Literae directae Conscriptis thereby seeming to retain the ancient words of Patres Conscripti which the Romans did usually apply to their Elected Senators But here it is only Consimile Breve in the singular Dirigitur praecharissimo c. Ruperto there being no other of the Bloud in England 2. Princes of the Bloud have been Consimilars when Princes of the Bloud have been Exemplars as in the 25 Edw. 3d. Edward Prince of Wales was Consimilar to Henry Earl of Lancaster his Uncle of the Bloud but not where any were Exemplars who were not of the Bloud and so many more might be cited which may be seen in Cottons Collections of the Tower Records 3. In this Consimilar Writ Prince Ruperts Foraign Titles are omitted because none of the Peers do sit in the Lords House but in respect of their English Titles yet in the Proxy-writs which they allow to others their Foraign Titles are recited without scruple as will be shewn in the 10th Section of the 12th Chapter 4. I cannot but take notice here that till the Union with Scotland there was a Chair plac'd in the Lords House on the right hand of the Kings Chair for the King of Scots and call'd the King of Scots Chair Yet I cannot find by any Records of the House of Lords or elsewhere that the King of Scots did ever sit there or was Summon'd or had any proxy to sit there for him by vertue of any Exemplar or Consimilar Writ And now I shall proceed to the Exemlar for Bishops CHAP. VII The second Exemplar viz. To the Archbishop of Canterbury Section I THe Examplar for Bishops of which I am now to speak is not entred into this Pawn in the Pettibag which I have recited verbatim as all the other Exemplars are but it is entred in the Chancery Crown-Office an Office of Record also as I have shewn being issued after the Parliament was sitting nor would I have entred it here in respect my design in this first part is to write only of such Writs as were previous to the sitting of this Parliament had not I found that the Exemplar for Bishops is constantly entred in all the Clause-Rolls extant from the 15 of Edw. 2d and in all Pawns extant from the 21 of Hen. 8. except in this of the 13. Car. 2d which omission proceeding from the reasons which will be given in the following Chapter was upon the first sitting of this Parliament rectified and therefore I thought fit rather a little to deviate from my method than to defer or puzzle the Reader with the discourse of it at too great a distance from all the other Writs of Summons of which I intend to treat according to the order of the Pawn and so I crave leave as most suiting to all former precedents to treat of this Exemplar in the second place especially having the Act of Precedency unrepeal'd also to justifie my proceedings 2. Before I proceed to discourse of Archbishops or Bishops it is convenient to look back to the several Titles which were given to those who were Managers of the Religion practis'd in this Island before the name of Bishop was here known This Religion was by the Jews call'd Paganism and the Professors thereof Pagans Panims Ethnicks Gentiles Heathens and Infidels which Titles are all of the same nature The word Pagan comprehending the other five only the word Infidel was not
concedo G. de M. pro servitio suo heredibus suis post eum hereditabiliter ut sit Comes de Essexia habeat tertium denariorum Vicecomitatus de placitis sicut Comes habere debet in Comitatu suo So here was both the Honor the Service and the Reward mention'd in less then thirty words There is nothing alledged for the length of these Patents but that the latter Ages as 't is said are more cautious than the former and that abundans cautela say we non nocet which occasions an abundance of words more than anciently were in use As to the sinalness of the Creation-Money those who have taken pains in Writing about raising of the price of Money both Gold and Silver since Edward the Third's time tell us That there are three ways of raising it First By encreasing the Value of it that is by giving more parts to it than originally it had as by ordaining an Angel of Gold to be valued at a 11 s. which was Coin'd for 10 s. or a Shilling to be valued at 14 d. The Second By diminishing the Matter but leaving the same Name and Value to the Money which it had before as when Angels or Shillings are Coin'd by the same Name and Value as before but diminished some Grains in the weight or if new Names be given to them and the same Value retain'd but the weight diminished for in this case there being really less Gold or Silver in weight in the price than was before and the value remaining the same this Silver and Gold which remains hath an high price set upon it The Third is When the Value remaining the same of the Species of Money and the Weight the same the fineness is abated by putting more Allay to it so as really then there is less Gold or Silver in fineness for it is supply'd by Copper which is usually the Allay to either whereby the Weight is made the same as before but the Fineness so much less They further tell us That the Causes of these Allays are first the Gain which the States make by it the better to supply themselves in their necessities for Money the other Cause is an Art which all States do frequently use as it were to rob one another of their Money by vying one upon another who shall raise their Money highest and this occasions the raise and fall of Exchanges of Money among our Merchants which is a Mystery worth the knowing by every one that serves in Parliament thereby to prevent Injuries and to maintain the Honour and Profit of our Kingdom But whatever uncertainties are in the raise or fall of Money this is certain That 20 l. per Annum in those days did go as far if not farther in managing Mens occasions where Money was to be us'd as 200 l. per Annum now and one great Reason was Because in almost all matters of Wars or Peace the Tenants were obliged by their Tenures to supply their Lords especially in Provisions for Hospitality and Labour without Wages or very little so as a little Money was lookt on as a great Reward as may be seen in the Tenure of the Lord of the Mannor of Carlton in Norfolk who is oblig'd every year with himself and his Servants to present to the King a certain number of Herrings from the City of Norwich with which the Town of Tarmouth are oblig'd by their Patent to supply that City for that purpose and after three days stay upon delivery of the Herrings to the King the Lord of Carlton is to be presented by the Master of the Green-Cloth with a Groat to buy him a pair of Gloves as a full Recompence of his Trouble and this continues to this day So as if we look upon the gift of 20 Mark or 20 l. according to the present Adequation of Money to the rates of other things it may seem a Sum derogatory to the Honour of the King that gives it as to him that receives it and therefore it must be considered as the Groat a Gift of Antiquity Noble and Liberal in its first Intention but had the large Encomium to it before recited been as ancient as the Gift I should not at this time have taken notice of its exuberancy However in pursuance of my Design these Patents of Creations do intitle them where to sit in the Lords House c. Thus having done with the Patents which concern the Lords Spiritual and Temporal I intended to have writ something here concerning the Antiquity and present Use of Seals and Labels to Patents and Writs and of various Superscriptions to the Lords and Commons c. as also of Wax Parchment c. as necessary Utensils for carrying on the Constitution of a Parliament but I shall reserve the Discourse of them till I have past through the Parliament-Writs as well concerning the House of Lords as House of Commons and Convocation-Houses and so now proceed to the General Titles given to the Grandees of the House of Lords viz. Nobles Lords and Peers CHAP. XI Of Nobles Lords and Peers I Have past through the four first Exemplar Writs in the Pawn concerning the Lords Spiritual and Lords Temporal and given an account also of so much of their Patents of Creations as relate to Parliaments But in respect these Nobles are sometimes call'd Lords and sometimes Peers and thereupon the very place where they sit in their High Judicatory is call'd the House of Lords or House of Peers I think fit to hint some few Memorials before I proceed to the Fifth Exemplar of Assistant Writs 1. It is agreed by all Inspectors of Words that Lords and Peers are of the same signification with us that Domini and Pares had with the old Romans so as we and the French are equally beholding to the Latin for them but when the word Dominus was chang'd into the word Lord having no more affinity of sound or Orthography than Comes and Earl or when Pares into Proceres of a nearer sound may be a question but it may be sufficiently evident that the word Lord was the Abbreviation of Louerd which the Saxons at their first coming about the year 448. used here instead of Dominus 2. As for the word Peer we commonly use it as signifying a Defence as Dover-Peer and Yarmouth-Peer c. which is from Petra a Rock which the French write Pierre and we Peer these Artificial Peers being made in imitation of Rocks to defend the Land against Inundations and it may very aptly allude to the Noble Peers in Parliament who are the Rocks or Peers of our Safety 3. To pass this it is allow'd That Pares in Latin Paires in French and Peers in our English Dialect are all three words of the same sence signifying Parity or Equality and as the French had it from the Romans by whom they were call'd Pares Curiae viz. Qui ab eodem domino feudum retinent so we had it from the French who
Ea or Watry Enemy and it is no small honour now to the Earl of Bedford to be Governour of 365000 Acres of Fenny Grounds intituled by his name of Bedford Level subject to inundations but by his vigilance preservs it 6. And when this Title of Earl was first given in England as t is said by William the first to Hugo de Aurank or de Ibrinks making him Earl of Chester it was doubtless from some eminent Service done in preserving the Banks or Brinks of that County against the inundations of the River Dee upon the South-side of Worrcl Ealand aforesaid reaching from the Town of Chester to the Hebrea for shortness call'd Heber and so round that Hundred besides the Banks in other parts of that County Some do question whether this d'Aurank or d'Ibrink was the first Earl but t is likely he was so Titularly and other the like Earls before him but that which is agreed on is that Albericus or Aubry d'Vere was the first that was by Charter or Patent created Earl by Henry the 2d who had the additional Title of Earl of Oxford or Oxenford in Oxfordshire and continues in that Family to this day but I cannot pass the word Ford which doth imply a passable Ea or Water which was necessarily to be preserved from the overflowing of at least 7 several Rivers in that little County for the more safe passage of Men and Oxen. 7. To conclude Ihope I may be allow'd so much of the Art of Tachygraphy or short writing as may render my application of this word more plausible by writing Earl for Ea Regalia so as whether Ea be consider'd as a Saxon word or the plural of the pronoun Ea it confirms my notion and may serve as well to explain the word Earl as SPQR the Senate and People of Rome or DNS to signifie a Baron of the Realm or Chr. Chevaleer 8. I have said sufficiently of the word now as to the antiquity of it in England it is Authentick from History and Record that the word Earl and Honour of it was in use in the Saxons and Danes time and continued with the Normans and Earls had the like extensive power in Shires and Counties as they have had since their formal creation by Charter which it seems was a mode and form not us'd till this to the Earl of Oxford since which there hath been some variations in the Form but especially in the time of Henry the eighth and King James as will be seen when I come to recite so much of their Charters of Creation as relate to their interests in Parliament 9. The learned Selden divides this Title into two sorts a Local and a Personal Earl by Local he means such Counties Cities Castles Towns or Burroughs as are fix'd to the Title of Earl or Comes as Earl of Oxford Earl of Kent c. being not County Palatines or of such as are County Palatines whereof there are five viz. Cheshire Lancashire which are in the Crown Pembrokeshire in the present Earl of Pembroke Durham and Ely which two are County Palatines belonging to the Bishops of those Counties never granted to any Temporal Earls so as the Bishops of Ely and Durham do sit in Parliament Virtute Tenurae and not Virtute Comitatus Palatinae As for Personal Earls there are but three remaining at this day viz. the Earl or Lord Great Chamberlain granted to Berty Earl of Lindsey with a large intale to that Family 2ly the Title of Earl Marshal granted to Hen. Howard Earl of Norwich and after Duke of Norfolk with a large intale as I have shewn 3ly granted by Patent to Savage Earl Rivers being made a Baron in 5 Edw. 6. and also Viscount of Colchester in 19 Jacobi and in the 2d of Charles the first was made Viscount Savage of Rock Savage in Cheshire whereby he is a double Viscount and Earl Rivers which is the Name of an illustrious Family and not of a Place but all the other Earls are intituled from some noted Place 10. Forty nine Earls Summon'd the 18th February 1661. and six more Summon'd the 29th of Aprill 1661. See the Pawn Cap. 2. The next I am to treat of is the Vicecomes Vice Earl or Viscount SECT V. Of a Viscount Obs I WHat hath been said of a Duke or a Count whilst their Titles were interchangeably us'd may be also appli'd to a Viscount for when Dukes and Counts increas'd in their number there was a kind of necessity to take in others to their assistance who afterwards by merit and the favour of their Prince arrived to an Interest of their own and therefore the word Vicecomes or Viscount may properly here intend a Companion for the word Comes doth as well signifie a Companion or Associate as a Count or Earl and the addition of Vice which signifies instead or by course or turns of which word Turn I shall speak more did intimate thar when the Turn of this Comes came to Govern he was for that time called Vicecomes all other times Comes only or as I conceive as the one was call'd Comes because he commanded a County the other was called Vicecomes from the Latin word Vicus because he commanded a Village Street or Structure or some lesser Command than that of a County 2. The dignal Title of Vicecomes is also ancienter in foreign parts than in England and is the same with Vidame or Vicedominus which are properly the foreign Titles of a Substitute to a Bishop but as we take the Title in an officiall sence it signifies the King's Deputy or Sheriff in every County and so is as ancient as the Saxons who made Comes to signifie Earl and Vicecomes or Viscount to signifie the Office of Shereeve or Sheriff for we had the words Earl and Sheriff from the Saxons and the Count and Viscount from the Romans Comes and Vicecomes and probably for the same reason that Marquess was interpos'd to Duke and Earl in Richard the Second's time so it was thought fit in Henry the Sixth's time though some say in Henry the Fifth's time to interpose the Title of Viscount to Comes or Earl and the Noble Baron there having been the like promiscuous use of the Titles of Comes or Earl and Baron as had been of Duke and Comes and thereupon I conceive John d'Beaumont was Created the first Viscount of this interposing Dignity it being as Mr. Cambden saith an old Name of Office but a new Name of Dignity or a Vicecomes or Sheriff turn'd from an annual Office into a Dignity hereditary 3. Yet this Office of Vicecomes or Shereeve or Sheriff was and still is an Office of dignity only the difference is that the Vicecomes dignified as I said by Hen. the 6th is a Parliamentary and Nobilitated Dignity and Place both in their Patent of Creation and in the Act of Precedency fixt between Earl and Baron c. made Hereditary but the other Viscountship or Sherifdom is Official and Annual and not Hereditary and
determin Causes yet appealable to the Lord Chancellor 5. There are other Masters of Chancery call'd Extraordinary and six Clerks of eminent Quality and other Clerks imployed both in the Chancery and Rolls but these are not Summon'd to Parliaments of whom I shall speak more but in in those capacities which I have mention'd the Master of the Rolls as Master of the Rolls or chief Clerk of the Pettibag or both or chief Master of Chancery or in all three Capacities he is very Assisting to a Parliament especially in the business of Summons c. For as I have shewn in Cap. 2. whenever the Kings Warrant is sent to the Lord Chancellor to issue out Writs for a Parliament his Lordship either sends it or a like Warrant to the Master of the Rolls who as chief Clerk of the Pettibag causeth the other Clerks of the Office to ingross all the Writs both for the House of Lords and House of Commons so as they may be fit for the Great Seal and these being thus done and fairly abstracted and ingross't into a Roll which is call'd the Parliament Pawn and lies there as a Memorial and Record of what they have done and as a President for the future all the particular Writs mention'd or intimated in that Pawn being fitted are carried to the Lord Chancellor and being in his presence Seal'd they are immediately delivered to Messengers belonging to the Chancellor who do take care to dispose some to the Persons to be Summon'd for the Lords House and others to the respective Sheriffs of all Counties and Comitated Cities for Elections of such as are to sit in the House of Commons and so the Master of the Rolls and the Clerks of the Pettibag having done all their parts and the Messengers and Sheriffs theirs the same Writs which concern the Lords House are or ought to be return'd to the Clerk of the Lords House at the first Sitting and the Writs for Elections are to be return'd by the respective Sheriffs to the Clerk of the Chancery Crown Office and not to the Pettibag as hath and will be shewn for they come no more there till some time after Dissolution of a Parliament and then for ease of that Office and more safely preserving them they are order'd to be carried to the Rolls and from thence to the Tower all which will be more fully shewn which method I often repeat in this Treatise because I find it so much neglected As to the Imployment of the other Eleven Masters of the Chancery in time of Parliament I shall shew it in a distinct Chapter This Master of the Rolls doubtless hath been anciently Summon'd to Sit in the Lords House yet I find no Writs issued to him till the 36th of Henry the Eighth and then as Master of the Rolls not as chief Master of Chancery and after that he was Summon'd to all Parliaments except the 39th of Eliz. and first of King James and in this very Parliament a Writ was prepared for him but being Elected a Member of the House of Commons his attendance was not requir'd in the House of Lords for what reason I know not but he hath his place whenever he Sits there next to the Lord Chief Justice of England upon the second Woolsack as will be shewn in the Chapter of Places The Consimilar Writ to the Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas THE Patent which invests this Chief Justice to his Imployment in this Office is in haec verba Carolus c. Omnibus ad quos Patentes Litterae nostrae pervenerint salutem Sciatis quod Constituimus dilectum fidelem Orlandum Bridgman Militem Capital'Justitiarium nostrum de Banco suo Duran ' bene placito Teste c. Observations HIS Writ of Summons to Sit in Parliament is also Capitali Justitiario nostro de Banco mutato nomine in all other words agreeing with the Exemplar and here it may be again observed to prevent vulgar misunderstandings That the Lord Chief Justice of England is Chief Justice of the Kings Bench or upper Bench and this is Chief Justice of the Common Bench and sometimes one is call'd Chief Justice of the Pleas of the Crown as in the Latin words De placitis Coronae and this Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas or Communia Placita yet in the Latin Writ it is de Banco so as both Courts are call'd Bancks or Benches and both call'd also Courts of Pleas in respect of Pleas or Pleadings one properly concerns the King in matters Criminal the other concerns the Pleas or Pleadings of the Commonalty or Common People among themselves in matters Civil and one also is call'd the Upper Bench the other the Common Bench and therefore what ever the Patent or Writs are yet for an easier distinction I here intitle one the Chief Justice of the Kings Bench the other Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas 2. As for the names Bench or Banc Pleas or Placita I refer them to my Annotations 3. The Chief Justice hath three more Justices to assist him in this Court 4. That which makes the eminency of this Court is That only the learned Serjeants of the Coife of whom I shall speak in order being the next Degree to Judges do Plead in this Court yet not prohibited from Pleading in all other Courts but all other Graduans of Law have the liberty to Plead in all other Courts but not in this 5. The Pleas of this Court cannot be so well ascertain'd as that of the Kings Bench because the Pleas held by Common Persons or between Subject and Subject are devided into as many Branches as Actions and the Actions into as many Causes as there are variety of Contests in the Kingdom yet all these Actions Causes and Contests are included under three notions Real Personal and Mixt which are here tried as they happen according to the strict Rules of Law As for Personal and Mixt Actions they are tried in other Courts but Real Actions are only Pleadable here nor are any Fines of Concord which is observable levied in any Court but this so that as Sir Edward Coke saith the Motto of this Court may be Haec est finalis Concordia 6. Upon these and other considerations the necessity of requiring Assistances from the Justices of this Court may appear For as the Justices of the Kings Bench may acquaint the Lords with what concerns the King so the Justices of the Common Pleas may most properly acquaint them with what concerns the People whereby Laws for either may be corrected repeal'd or made de novo as shall be thought most expedient 7. The Justices of this Court are not concern'd in the managing of any Summons to a Parliament as the Lord Chancellor and Master of the Rolls are Of the Consimilar Writ to the Chief Baron of the Exchequer THE Title of this is different from the two Chief Justices for his Pattent is thus Carolus c. Omnibus ad quos Patentes Litterae nostrae pervenerint Sciatis
return of Writs concerning the House of Commons the method consists of much trouble and perplexity not only from the time of the executing the Writs but in undue returns as will be shewn in their proper place This Chapter concluding all the Patents and Writs of Summons and Returns which concern the Lords House by vertue of which the Persons so Summon'd by Writ do sit there now I must speak of such as sit there without Patent or Writ of Summons and first of the Masters of Chancery CHAP. XVI Of the Masters of Chancery THE Secretaries of State did bring up the Rear of the State Officers and now the Masters of Chancery do bring up the Rear of the Assistants and though I have spoke something of the Master of the Rolls partly as chief of the twelve Masters of Chancery yet there he was considered as Master of the Rolls or Records rather than one of the twelve Masters of Chancery whereof as I said he is the chief and these twelve are called Masters in Ordinary 2. For there are also other Masters in Chancery called Extraordinary which are of an uncertain number according to the businesses of the respective Counties wherein they are imployed 3. As for the twelve they usually are chosen out of Barresters of the Common Law or Doctors of the Civil Law and eleven of them do sit in the Chancery or in the Rolls as Assistants saith Sir Edward Coke to the Lord Chancellor and to the Master of the Rolls every day throughout each Term of the year and to them are committed Interlocutory Reports and stating of Accounts and sometimes by way of reference to them they are impowr'd with a final Determination of Causes there depending 4. These twelve have time out of mind sat in the Lords House yet have neither Writs nor Patents for many Ages past impowering them so to do but I conceive as the Master of the Rolls is as is said by that Institutor an Assistant to the Lord Chancellor the remaining eleven may fairly be said to be Assistants both to the Lord Chancellor and Master of the Rolls in all or most Matters depending in both or either Courts and so Virtute Officij they are inclusively capacitated by the Writs to the Lord Chancellor or Master of the Rolls to be Assistants to them in the Lords House as they are in Chancery without any particular VVrit or Patent to them 5. Anciently this Title was higher than what Sir Edw. Coke affords them for I find in an old Manuscript in the hands of Sir J. C. one of the Masters but I have not the opportunity of searching the Records therein mentioned Intitutled De Cancellario Angliae ejus Cojudicibus de authoritate eorum and then follows viz. In dicta Curia Cancellarij sunt ordinati duodecem Cojudices viz. Magistri sive Clerici de prima forma ad Robas which in the 13. Chap. I call the first Orb pro Arduis negotis Regis Regni Reipublicae expediendis which agree verbatim and 't is observable with the very words of all Writs of Summons to Parliaments eidem Cancellario omnino assistentes secum continuo consedentes which in a manner Intitles them to sit in the Lords House with him and many other matters are mentioned therein which I shall refer to my Annotations because I cannot now warrantably insert them but I find in other Books that anciently they had the care of inspecting all Writs of Summons to Parliaments committed to them which is now as I have shewn performed by the Clerks of the Pettibag 6. As to the Title of Maister from Magister and from Magus a Wiseman it is as ancient as most of our borrow'd words from the Latin and was still apply'd to Persons of Knowledge and other Abilities above the Degrees of Yeomandry Amongst the old Romans as may be read in Livy Pomponius Aurelius and others they had twelve great Officers to whom that Title was given viz. Magister Populi or Dictator Magister Equitum Magistri Census Magister in Auctionibus Magistri Epistolarum Magistri Memoriae Magistri Militum Magister Navis Magistri Officiorum Magistri Scriniorum Magister Curiae Magistri Aeris and many more of a lesser Rank for I speak not of Magistri Familiae or Privatae or as the word is vulgarly applied to its relative word Servant but as a Title applied to Persons of Eminency for their Integrity and Learning and of these there are also twelve sorts with us which are found in the Law Books whereof the first we meet with in the Statutes is the Master of the Mint in 2 H. 6. c. 14. 2. the Master of the Rolls in the first of H. 7. Cap. 20. for till then he was call'd Clerk of the Rolls or Custos Archivorum and chief Clerk of the Chancery of which there are twelve as I said since which six chief Clerks and a greater number of a lesser Form are there Constituted whereby they are distinguisht from the ancient Clerks now the 12. Masters of Chancery which may be accounted the Third sort in point of time mentioned in the Statutes the Fourth The Master of the Horse in the first of Edw. the Sixth the Fifth The Master of the Postern in 2 Edw. 6. the Sixth The Master of the Kings Houshold in the 32 H. 8. chang'd to the Lord Stuard of the Kings Houshold Charles Duke of Brandon being the first of that Title mentioned in any Statute the 7th The Master of the Court of Wards in the 33 of Hen. the 8. now of no use the Eighth The Master of the Musters after in the 33 Eliz. called Muster Master General the 9.10.11.12 viz. The Master of the Armory the Master of the Kings Jewels the Master of the Ordinance and Master of the Kings Wardrop are mentioned in the Statute of 39 Eliz. not but these Officers were before but the Statutes as I said do not take notice of them till the times that they are quoted in the said Statutes 7. Now as the old Romans had others which had the Titles of Magistri viz. Magistri Vniversitatis vel Societatis so we in imitation at Cambridge have the Title of Magister fixt at the head of every College in that University which is an argument of their Antiquity of which I shall speak more whereas Oxford hath but three which bear that Title 8. It is also applied to the Heads of Halls of Companies in London and other Cities and it hath been formerly applied to all the Members of the House of Commons who were not actually Knights or Esquires or of higher Degrees but in the House of Lords I do not find it used to any to whom Writs of Summons were sent to sit there except to some Priors and Deacons who were sometimes called Magistri in their Writs and others of Religious Orders call'd also in their Writs Magistri as also to Officers in Chancery viz. 49 Edw. 3. Magistro Thomae Yong Officiario