Selected quad for the lemma: city_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
city_n king_n time_n year_n 9,514 5 4.8121 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A81194 A compendium of the laws and government ecclesiastical, civil and military, of England, Scotland & Ireland and dominions, plantations and territories thereunto belonging, with the maritime power thereof, and jurisdiction of courts therein. Methodically digested under their proper heads. By H.C. sometime of the Inner Temple. Curson, H. (Henry) 1699 (1699) Wing C7686A; ESTC R231895 237,927 672

There are 16 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Honoured his Son J. Duke of Lancaster therewith for Term of his Life It is called Comitatus Palatinus a County Palatine à Comitatu Palatio Regis because the Owner be he Duke or Earl c. Hath in that County Jura Regalia as fully as the King had in his Palace And he may have his Chancery and Writs under his Seal for the Office of the Chancellor to Depute Justices as well touching Pleas of the Crown as all other Pleas and Execution of Writs and making Officers and Servants and all other as by the Letters Patents above mentioned granted in Parliament appears And the King may Erect a County Palatine without Parliament by his Letters Patents But now by the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 24. several of those Jura Regalia are taken from them and recontinued and annexed to the Crown And all Writs are now to be made in the King's Name but the Teste in Name of him who hath the County Palatine And they shall have Forfeiture of Lands and Goods for High-Treason which Forfeiture accreweth by the Common Law But Forfeitures given after the Erection of the County Palatine by an Act of Parliament they shall not have Justices of Assize of Gaol-Delivery and of the Peace are and ever since the Erection have been Assigned by Commission under the Seal of the County Palatine of Lancaster Fines were levied with 3 Proclamations c. before the Justices of Assize there or one of them and all Recoveries to be had of Lands there are to be had in the Court of the County Palatine at Lancaster and not at Westminster All Lands c. Parcel of this Dutchy given to the King by the Statute of Monasteries Chantries c. are still within the Survey of the Dutchy Lands within the County Palatine should pass by the Dukes Charter without Livery of Seisin or Attornment But of Lands parcel of a Manor annexed to the Dutchy without the County Palatine there ought to be Livery of Seisin and Attornment of Tenants and in the same Degree is it in the King's Case The Proceedings in this Court of the Dutchy Chamber at Westminster is as in a Court of Chancery for Lands and other Matters within the Jurisdiction of the Court by English Bill c. and Decree But this Chancery is not a mixt Court as the Chancery of England is partly of the Common Law and partly of Equity but admitting only some small mixture of the Common Law in some Cases And in some Cases they are led by their proper Customs and Prescriptions respectively The Process of this Court is by Privy Seal Attachment and Commission of Rebellion as in the Chancery The Officers of this Court be the Chancellor The Attorney The Receiver General Clerk of the Court The Auditors Surveyors The Messenger There is an Attorney of the Dutchy in Chancery and another in the Exchequer And there are Four Learned in the Law Assistants and of Councel with the Court. The Seal of the Dutchy of Lancaster remains with the Chancellor at Westminster And the Seal of the County Palatine remains in a Chest in the County Palatine under the safe Custody of the Keeper thereof All Grants and Leases of Lands Offices c. in the County Palatine of Lancaster shall pass under that Seal and no other And all those out of the County Palatine and within the Survey of the Dutchy under the Seal of the Dutchy See the Statute of 27 Hen. 8. cap. 24. For the great Royalties Priviledges c. the Duke of Lancaster had for him his Men and Tenants which are necessary to be known by all concerned in those Possessions and other matters concerning the same See Coke's 4 Institutes 36. and Books and Records their recited And the Statute of 16 and 17 Car. 1. c. 10. For dissolving the Court of Star-Chamber and annulling and making void the like Jurisdiction excercised in the Court called the Court of the Dutchy of Lancaster held before the Chancellor and Councel of that Court c. The Courts of the County Palatine of Chester THis is the most Ancicent and most Honourable County Palatine remaining at this Day with which Dignity the King 's Eldest Son hath been of long time honoured And this is a County Palatine by Prescription Within this County Palatine and the County of the City of Chester there is and aciently hath been a principal Officer called the Chamberlain of Chester who time out of mind hath had the Jurisdiction of a Chancellor and the Court of Exchequer at Chester is and hath time out of mind been the Chancery Court for the said County Palatine whereof the Chamberlain of Chester is Judge in Equity He is also Judge of Matters at the Common Law within the said County as in the Court of Chancery at Westminster for the Court of Chancery is a mixt Court There is also a Vice-Chamberlain which is the Deputy of the Chamberlain And also the Justice called the Justice of Chester who hath Jurisdiction to hear and determine Matters of the Crown and of Common-Pleas Of Fines and Recoveries levied and suffered as well within the County Palatine as of the City of Chester For which and much more concerning the same See Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 37. and the Statute of 16 17 Car. 1. c. 10. For disabling the Court of Star Chamber and Annulling and making void the like Jurisdiction exercised in the Court of Exchequer in the County Palatine of Chester held before the Chamberlain and Council of that Court. The Courts of the County Palatine of Durham THis is also a County Palatine by Prescription parcel of the Bishoprick of Durham and raised soon after the time of the Conqueror Here is a Court of Chancery which is a mixt Court both of Law and Equity as in the Chancery at Westminster But herein it differeth from the rest that if any Erroneous Judgment be given either in the Chancery upon a Judgment there according to the Common Law or before the Justices of the Bishop a Writ of Error shall be brought before the Bishop himself and if he give Erroneous Judgment thereupon a Writ of Error shall be sued Returnable in the King 's Bench. If the Bishop do wrong within his County Palatine for that he cannot be Judge in his own Cause Justices shall be Assigned to hear and determine the Cause as was done in the case when Richardus de Hoton Prior Dunelm ' queritur de Anthonio Episcopo Dunelm ' alledging several Plaints against the Bishop whereupon Issue was Joyned and Verdict given against the Bishop And by that Record which was Termino Paschae 30 E. 1. it appears the Bishop had within the County of Duresme Regalitatem suam And more concerning the same you may Read in Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 38. The Royal Franchise of Ely KIng Henry the first of the Rich Monastery of Ely made a Cathedral Church and of the Abbey made a Bishoprick and for his Diocess Assigned him the
Corporals 150 l. each The King hath many other Inferiour Officers which over-passing we come now to The Government of the Queen's Court IS suitable to the Consort of so Great a King Splendid and Magnificent And hath all Officers and a Houshold apart from the King For Maintenance whereof there is usually setled 40000 l. per Annum and is as followeth The Ecclesiastical Government of the Queens Court. THe Lord or Grand Almoner He hath Superintendency over all the Ecclesiasticks belonging to the Queen One Confessor to the Queen and Four Almoners One Treasurer of the Chappel Two Preachers Four Clerks of the Chappel and Four Boys Sixteen Chaplains Divers belonging to the Musick and Two Vergers or Porters The Civil Government of the Queen's Court. THere is a Counsel consisting of Persons of Great Worth and Dignity A Steward of the Revenue A Keeper of Her Majesties Great Seal A Chamberlain Master of the Horse A Vice-Chamberlain A Principal Secretary and Master of Requeste A Treasurer and Receiver General Attorney General Solicitor General A Surveyor General Six Gentlemen Ushers of the Privy Chamber Two Cup-bearers Two Carvers Two Sewers Five Gentlemen Ushers daily Waiters Ten Grooms ef the Privy Chamber Seven Gentlemen Ushers Quarter Waiters Six Pages attending at the Back-Stairs Four Pages of the Presence Officers of the Robes A Surveyor Proveditor Clerk Yeoman Groom Page Tayler and Brusher Twelve Grooms of the Great Chamber One Porter of the Back Stairs A Master of the Queens Barge and Twenty Four Watermen The Grooms of the Stole Lady of the Robes and of the Privy Purse Seven Ladies of the Bed-chamber One Keeper of the Sweet Coffers Six Maids of Honour and A Governess or Mother of the Maids Six Chamberers or Dressers A Laundress A Sempstress A Starcher A Necessary Woman These are all paid by Her Majesty out of her own Revenue There are besides Divers other Officers Below Stairs belonging to the Queens Table and Stable paid by the King for which is allowed 20000 l. more The Prince of Wales and other the King's Children have likewise their Courts or Housholds apart But these being not certain no certain Allowance or Settlement is of them but are rather at pleasure And therefore I shall not particularize them but refer to Chamberlain's Present State of England The Government of Cities ALthough every City is within some of the Counties herein before mentioned yet each of them are like a little Common-wealth Governed by Laws and Customs Ecclesiastical Civil and Military within themselves And this by Charter or Priviledges granted and cofirmed to them by several Kings of this Realm And there is for The Ecclesiastical Government of Cities A Bishop every City being or having been a Bishops See and hath a Cathedral to which belong a Dean A Chapter A Treasurer and Prebendaries who have Lands and Revenues belonging to them for their Maintenance and though the Bishoprick be dissolved the City remains as Westminster and Cambridge which was antiently reputed a City And for The Ecclesiastical Government of Parishes there is a Rector or Vicar for every Parish who is to have the Cure of the Souls of his Parishioners every one of which hath a Parsonage or Vicaridge-House and a Competent allowance of Tithes for their Maintenance And there is for The Civil Government of Cities A Mayor who is the King's Lieuetenant chosen by the Citizens and approved by the King and is for one year as a Judge to determine all Matters within his Jurisdiction and to Mitigate the Rigour of the Law And next in Government of Cities are the Two Sheriffs who are Judges in Civil Causes within the City and to see all Execution done whether Penal or Capital To Execute the Kings Mandates within the City c. And might rather be called State Reeves or Port-Reeves i. e. Urbis vel Portus Praefecti The Mayor Sheriffs and Aldermen of every City may make Laws called By-Laws for the Government of the City provided they are not Repugnant to the Laws of the Kingdom And these have several Courts which have Jurisdiction in all Civil and Criminal Causes only with Restraint that all Civil Causes may be removed from their Courts to the Higher Courts at Westminster But of all these we shall speak more at large when we come to treat of the City of London and other Cities in particular which may serve for an Example or Pattern of all the rest And therefore we shall begin with The City of London LOndon so called as some conjecture from the British word Longdin signifying in the Saxon Tongue Shipton or Town of Ships But others derive it otherwise And therefore not to insist thereon Nam utere tuo Judicio nihil impedio It was Built as some Write 1108 years before the Incarnation of our Saviour In the time of Samuel the Prophet Is in length about 7 Miles and half and about 2 Miles and half in breadth Hath above 500 Streets and Alleys and 15000 Houses within the Walls which may not be accompted above a Sixth part of the whole City The Cathedral Church of St. Paul was Built or begun by Ethelbert King of Kent about Anno Christi 610 and is the only Cathedral of that Name in Europe Besides this there are 130 Parish Churches besides Chappels which is double the number to be found in any other City in Christendom The Ecclesiastical Government OF London is as before mentioned of Cities in General By a Bishop and was in the time of the Britains by an Archbishop but by the Saxons the Archiepiscopal See was removed to Canterbury for the sake of St. Austin who first Preached the Gospel there to the Heathen Saxons and was there buried since which there have been 100 Bishops to the present Bishop there To this Cathedral belongs a Dean a Chapter and 30 Prebendaries maintained in like manner before mentioned in the General Government of Cities The Ecclesiastical Government of Parishes is as before mentioned by a Parson Rector or Vicar To have cure of Souls in every Parish who have a Parsonage or Vicaridge-House and a competent Allowance in Tithes which was anciently besides the Tithes of Tradesmen's gains and mortuaries c. 3 s. 5 d. in the pound Rent which they paid by a Half every Sunday and Holiday Afterwards by 25 Hen. 8. It was ordained and afterwards confirmed by 27 Hen. 8. and 37 Hen. 8. That 2 s. 9 d. in the pound should be paid for the Rent of all Houses Shops c. to the Parson with power to the Lord Major to Imprison any Person should refuse to pay the same The Civil Government OF London is by a chief Magistrate anciently called The Prefect of London In the Saxons time Portegreeve by the Norman's Bailiff or Bailiffs till King Rich. the First Anno 1189 changed the name of Bailiff to Mayor which is now The Lord Mayor and is a Citizen yearly chosen by the Citizens and approved by the King unless sometimes for Disloyalty their
or Confirmed at home or abroad Tenures of all the Lands in England Extents of Mannors and Lands Inquisitions Post mortem being of great Advantage upon Trials of Interest or Descent Liberties and Priviledges granted to Cities Towns Corporate or private Men as Court Leets Waifs Estrays Markets Fairs Free Warrens Felons Goods c. Or what else could come to the Crown or pass out of it Writs Pleadings and Proceedings as well in Chancery as at Common Law and in the Exchequer Inspeximus Inrolments c. Deeds and Contracts between party and party and The Just Establishment of all the Offices in the Nation The Metes and Bounds of all Forests with the Rights of the Inhabitants therein and many other And therefore in the Petitions of the Commons in Parliament 46 E. 3. said to be perpetual Evidence of every man's Right and the Records of the Nation These Records are reposited in the place called Wakefield Tower being many Cart Loads Thus distinguished Rotuli Patentium Chartarum Parliamentorum Clausarum Finium Scotiae Vasconiae Franciae Hiberniae Walliae Normanniae Almaniae Oblatae Liberatae Extractae Perambulationes Forestae Scut ' Rotul ' Marshal ' Romae de Treugis Chart ' Patent ' fact ' in Partibus Transmarinis Patent ' de Domibus Judaeorum Protection ' de Perdonation ' c. Stapulae cum multis aliis Depicted lately upon every Press belonging to each King's Reign and very easie to be brought forth for use This Office is to be open from 7 till 11 in the Morning and from 1 till 5 in the Afternoon on all Working-days only in December January and February they open an Hour later in the Morning and shut up an Hour earlier at Night All Records since Richard the Third are yet in the Chappel of the Rolls The Money allowed by the King for the Maintenance of all these Officers and keeping thls Vast Structure in Repair amounts to a vast Sum. Saint Katherines NEar the Tower is St. Katherines which hath a Royal Jurisdiction for the Ecclesiastical Causes and Probate of Wills and belongeth to the Queen from whom if any will Appeal it must be to the King in his Chancery who thereupon Issueth out a Commission under the Great Seal as in Appeals from the Arches or Prerogative The Bridge SUrpasseth all others in Europe It hath 19 Arches 20 Foot between each Arch is 800 Foot in Length 60 High and 30 Broad and hath a Draw-Bridge almost in the Middle Built 1209 in the Reign of King John The Charge of keeping it in Repair is so Great that our Auncestors thought fit to have a Large House a vast Revenue in Lands and Houses and divers Officers to be apart for the constant Care and Repair thereof The Principal whereof are the Two Bridgmasters chosen yearly out of the Body of the Liveries upon Midsummer-day after the Sheriffs and Chamberlain The Bridge over the River Lee at Stratford was built an Hundred years before and being the first Arched Stone-Bridge seen in England gave it the Name of Stratford-Bow Not far below this Famous Bridge is the place for Receipt and Management of all Impositions laid on Merchandizes Imported and Exported into and from this City which is called The Custom-House WHerein are Employed a great Number of Officers whereof the First and Chief are Six Commissioners who have Charge of all His Majesties Customs in all Ports of England Salary to each is 2000 l. a year And these have many Deputies Customers Collectors Comptrollers Surveyors Searchers Waiters c. in the Port of London and in all the Out-Ports Collector of Subsidies or Customs Outwards Fee Two hundred seventy six pounds Collector of Customs Inwards Fee Four hundred sixty six pounds Thirteen shillings Four pence Customer Inwards Fee Sixty two pounds Six shillings Eight pence Customers of Cloth and Petty Customs Fee Two hundred seventy seven pounds Customers of the Great Customs Two Fee Fifty pounds a piece Comptroller of Customs Inwards and Outwards Fee Two hundred fifty five pounds Comptroller of Cloth and Petty Customs Fee One hundred pounds Surveyors of Customs Inwards and Outwards Fee Three hundred pounds Surveyor General Fee Five hundred pounds Comptroller of the Great Custom Fee Thirty pounds Register of the Seizures Fee One hundred and six pounds Chief Searcher Fee One hundred Twenty pounds Five Under-Searchers Eighteen King's Waiters Fee to each Fifty two pounds Surveyor of the Out-Ports Fee Two hundred and Fifty pounds The Perquisites to each of these Officers are very considerable and to some more than their Salaries In all the Out-Ports the King hath the like Officers who all Receive Salaries likewise out of His Majesty's Revenue The General Post-Office THe King by Letters Patent doth Constitute his Post-Master General who keeps one General Office in the City of London from whence Letters and Packets are dispatched Monday to France Italy Spain Flanders Germany Sweden Denmark c. and to Kent Tuesday to the United Netherlands Germany c. and to all Parts of England Scotland and Ireland Wednesday to Kent only and the Downs Thursday to France Spain Italy and all Parts of England and Scotland Fryday to the Spanish and united Netherlands Germany Sweden Denmark and to Kent Saturday to all Parts of England Scotland and Ireland And the Answers of these Letters are Received in the said Office in due Course and dispersed from thence according to the Directions This Office is managed by a Deputy and other Officers to the number of Seventy seven Persons who give their actual Attendance Upon this Grand Office Depends 182 Deputy Post-Masters in England and Scotland Most of which keep Regular Offices in their Stages and Sub-Post-Masters ink their Branches And also in Ireland another General Post-office for that Kingdom which is kept in Dublin consisting of 18 like Officers and 45 Deputy Post-masters The Post-master General keeps for Transport of Letters to France Two Packet-boats to Flanders Two to Holland Two to Ireland Three at Deal Two for the Downs which he Maintains at his proper Charge And the Market Towns of England are so well Appropriated to the Respective Postages that they have an easy and certain conveyance of Letters in due Course of the Mails every Post The number of the Letters Missive in England tho' formerly inconsiderable yet are now so great that the Office hath been Farmed at 30000 l. a year The Charge of Letters here is Less and the Expedition Greater than in any Foreign Country A Letter of a Sheet of Paper costs 2 d. for 80 Miles Two Sheets 4 d. and an ounce 8 d. and in 24 Hours the Post goes 120 Mile and in Five days an Answer may be had from a place 300 Miles distant And for Riding Post you pay only 3 d. a Mile and 4 d. to the Post Boy at every Stage For Study of Law IN London are the Colledges or Houses of the Municipal or Common Law Professors and Students Which are Fourteen still called Inns the
the use of the Clergy in London and Liberties ●hereof and a part thereof for Twenty ●oor People for which he gave Three Thousand pounds and for the Main●enance of the poor People 120 l. yearly for ever and 40 l. yearly for a Sermon in Latin at the beginning of ●very Quarter and a plentiful Dinner ●or all the Clergy that shall meet ●here There was a Spacious Library ●uilt by John Sympson Rector of St. Olaves Hartstreet and well furnished with Books The Chartreaux in London THis was heretofore a Convent of Carthusian Monks called in French Des Chartreaux It is called Sutton's H●●pital also and consists of A Master o● Governour A Chaplain A Master and Usher to Instruct 44 Scholars beside● 80 Decayed Gentlemen Souldiers an● Merchants who have all a plentif●● Maintenance of Dyet Lodging Cloath and Physick c. The Scholars fit for the University have Twenty pound● yearly allowed them for Eight year after they come to the University 〈◊〉 and others fitter for Trades have a considerabl Sum of Money to bind them out Apprentices And they have all Officers expedient for such a Society as Physician Apothecary Steward Cooks Butlers c. who have all Competent Salaries This vast Revenue was the Gift of an ordinary Gentleman Mr. Thomas Sutton Born in Lincolnshire and was of such Account that by the King's Letters Patents Persons of the Highest Quality as the Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Chancelor Lord Treasurer and Thirteen others are Governours and Overseers thereof Schools in London ARe St. Paul's Founded An 1512. by John Collett Dr. of Divinity and ●ean of St. Paul's for 153 Children to ●e Taught gratis There being a Master Usher and Chaplain who have ●arge Stipends and the Master Wardens and Assistants of The Company of ●ercers in London have the oversight ●hereof And divers other Schools which are ●ndowed as Merchant-Taylors Mercers-Chappel c. which for brevity sake I ●mit The Arms of the City of London ●re Argent A Cross Gules with the Sword of St. Paul not the Dagger of William ●alworth as some have conceited ●or this Coat did belong to the City before Walworth slew Wat Tyler as ●earned Antiquaries affirm Southwark THis Burrough was granted by King Edward the Sixth by Lett●ers Patents to the Major Commonal●y and Citizens of London and is cal●ed the Bridge-Ward without and Governed by One of the 26 Aldermen of London It hath nothing Remarkable but that it pays more in a Subsidy to the King and Musters more Men than any City in England except London The City of Westminster THE Ancient Stately Abby Church here was Founded by the Pious King Edward th● Confessor and richly Endowed afterwards Rebuilt by King Henry the Third with that rare Architecture now seen Wherein are most Magnificent Tombs and Monuments of our Kings Queens and Greatest Nobles To the East-end of which is added A Chappel by King Henry the Seventh which for curiou● Artificial Work without and within For a Monument of Massy Brass most curiously wrought is scarce to be parallel'd in the whole World This huge Fabrick stands where first was the Temple of Apollo and afterwards King Sebert the First Christened King of the East Saxons who first Built St. Paul's Church in London Built here likewise this Church to St. Peter It taketh the name from this Monastery which Minster signifieth it being called Westminster in respect of the East Minister not far from the Tower of London This Monastery 30 Hen. 8. was Surrendred to the King who Erected thereof a Dean and Chapter Anno 33 Hen. 8. It was raised to a Bishop●ick and Tho. Thurlby made the first and last Bishop thereof Queen Eliz. Converted it into a Collegiate Church and therein placed a Dean Twelve seculiar Canons or Prebendaries Pety Canons and others of the Quire to the number of Thirty Ten Officers belonging to the Church as many Servants belonging to the Collegiate Diet Two School-Masters Forty Scholars Twelve Alms-men with plentiful Allowance for all besides Stewards Receivers Registers Collectors and other Officers The Principal whereof is the High Steward of Westminster who is usually one of the Prime Nobility The Dean is intrusted with the Rega●ia at the Coronation and Honoured with a place of necessary Service at ●ll Coronations and with a Commis●ion of the Peace within the City and Liberties of Westminster The Dean and Chapter invested with all Jurisdiction both Ecclesiastical and Civil not only within the City and Liberties of Westminster but within the Precincts of St. Martins le Grand and in some Towns in Essex Exempted in the one from the Jurisdiction of the Bishop of London And in the other from that of the Archbishop of Canterbury It hath a Royal Jurisdiction for Ecclesiastical Causes and Probate of Wills and a Commissary from whom is no Appeal but to the King in his Chancery Who thereupon Issueth out a Commission of Delegates under the Great Seal of England When the Convocation is Adjourned from St. Pauls for the conveniency of being nearer the Parliament to Westminster The Bishops first declare upon a Protestation made by the Dean there that they intend thereby not to violate that High Priviledge viz. That no Archbishop or Bishop may come there without leave of the Dean first obtained There is also a fair publick Library free for all Strangers to Study both Morning and Afternoon always in Term time Within this City are Twelve Wards Out of which are Elected One Burgess and One Assistant in every Ward and out of these Twelve Two are Elected yearly on the Thursday in Easter Week to be Chief Burgesses and so to continue for the year ensuing These Burgesses have Authority by Act 27 Eliz. To Hear Examine Determine and Punish according to the Laws of the Realm and lawful Customs of the City of London Matters of Incontinency Common Scolds Inmates and Common Annoyances and to commit such Persons as shall offend against the Peace and thereof give knowledge within Twenty four hours to some Justice of Peace within the County of Middlesex Next the Abbey Church stood the Palace Royal and usual Place of Residence of the Kings of England who ordinarily held their Parliaments and Courts of Judicature in their Dwelling Houses and many times sate themselves in the said Courts of Judicature as they do still in Parliament But after the Parliament was divided into two several Houses which was about 50 Ed. 3. The Commons assembled in the Chapter House of the Abbot of Westminster until 1 Ed. 6. which gave to the King Colledges Chauntries Free Chappels c. The King being thereby Possessed of the Ancient Beautiful Free Chappel of St. Stephen Founded by King Stephen which had Revenues of the old yearly value of 1085 l. It afterwards served for the House of Commons A great part of this Huge Palace was in the time of Hen. 8. destroyed by Fire what remained hath still been Employed for the use of the Parliament and Courts of Judicature The
Great Hall where those are kept Built by King William Rufus or by Richard the Second as some hold being for all Dimensions not to be equalled by any Hall in Christendom Radulphus de Ingham Chief Justice of England a very poor Man being Fined before him at 13 s. 4 d. in another Term moved with Pity caused the Record to be rased and made 6 s. 8 d. For which he for his Fine made the Clock to be heard into Westminster Hall and the Clock-house which cost 800 Marks Tempore Ed. 1. and continueth to this Day Anno 37 Hen. 8. The King's Mannor of Westminster was made an Honour The City of Norwich THis is an Ancient City For in Ancient Manuscripts it appears That In tempore Steph. Regis de nova Fundata ut Villa populata Communitas fact● And it is highly commended for many things Quod suis Opibus Frequentia Aedificiorum Elegantia Templorum Pulchritudine Numero Paraecias enim plus minus 30 complectitur Civum sedulitate in Principem fide in Exteros Humanitate inter Celebrrimas Britanniae Urbes merito connumeranda c. Moenibus Validis in quibus crebrae dispositae Turres Undecim Portae undique Obsepta nisi ad ortam qua Flumen cum sinuoso flexu 4 Pontibus pervium Septentrionalem urbis partem interluerit profundo alveo praecipitibus Rupis defendit It is preferred before all the Cities in England except London hath above 30 Parishes and is as large within the Walls as London it had within it and the Liberties Six Religious Houses and One Hospital Anno 27 Hen. 8. The Bishoprick of Norwich becoming void by the Death of Richard Nick commonly called the Blind Bishop The King nominated the Abbot of the Monastery of St. Bennets de Hulmo in the County of Norwich to be Bishop of Norwich And afterwards 4 Feb. 27 Hen. 8. It was Enacted by Authority of Parliament That such Person as should be Elected and Consecrated Bishop of Norwich should have and enjoy united to the said Bishoprick the Monastery of St. Bennets And all Manors c. belonging to the same And should be Abbot of the said Monastery of St. Bennets and have the Dignity of the said Abbacy United Incorporated and Knit to the said Bishoprick For the Courts of Justice in this City we have Treated of the like in London and therefore shall only mention an Act of Parliament concerning the Jurisdiction thereof 2 R. 2. N. 39. Not in Print Whereby it is Enacted for the Citizens of Norwich That if their Customs and Usages heretofore used or hereafter to be used be Difficult or Defective in part or in all Or that the same need any due amendments for any matter arising whereof Remedy was not aforetime had That then the Bailiffs and Twenty four Citizens of the same City so therefore yearly to be Chosen or the greater part of them shall from henceforth have Power to Ordain such Remedies as are most agreeable to Faith and Reason and for the most Profit the Good and Peaceable Government of the same Town and of Strangers thereto repairing as to them shall seem best So as such Ordinance be profitable for the King and his People By the Statute of 14 Hen. 4. The Merchants and Artificers of Worsteds in Norfolk may sell their single Worsteds to any Place or Persons in Amity with the King notwithstanding any Inhibition or Liberty to the contrary In the time of King Edward the Confessor there were 1300 Citizens within this City and they paid 20 l. to the King and 10 l. to the Earl And besides these 20 s. and Four Prebendaries and Six Sextaries of Honey a Bear and Six Dogs to Bait him Now it pays 70 l. to the King and 100 l. to the Queen and a Palfrey and 20 l. of White Rent to the Earl It is a County of it self and hath Two Sheriffs and large Liberties without the Walls See the Statute of 33 He● 8. How many Attorneys should be at Norfolk See Rot. Parl. 18 Ed. 1. f. 5. Concerning the ancient Liberties of this City Burgi Civitat ' Fundat ' Aedificat ' sunt ad Tuitionem Gentium Populorum Regni idcirco obsi●vdri debent cum omni Libertate Integ●itate Ratione The Beautiful Cathedral was begun by Herbert Bishop of Norwich Anno 9 Willielmi Rufi The Strong Castle called ●●anch Flower Environed with the City but no part thereof but of the County of Norwich was not Built by Bigott Earl of Norwich for we find a Charter of King Stephen Rex c. Sciatis me Dedisse in Feode Hereditate Willielmo Commiti Warren Filio meo Castellum Norwici cum Toto Burgo c. And Reef de W●et Earl of Norwich Defended this Castel against William the Conquerour who was driven out of England and Travelled with his Wife to Jerusalem Vide Coke's 4 Inst cap. 52. The Two Vniversities in England THese are the Two Eyes or Luminaries of the Kingdom and are now Stiled Universities A Professione Universalium Scientiarum Artium Liberalium A University being properly an Incorporation under one Government of many publick Schools ordained especially for the Study and Profession of Divinity Civil-Law and Physick as also Philosophy and other Liberal Arts and Sciences And of these Universities the first and most ancient is thought to be Oxford QUasi Ousford Isidis Uadum From the name of the Chief River Isis whereon it is Seated It lies in 51 Degrees 42 Minutes Latitude and above 22 Degrees Longitude almost the same Climate with the Famous University of Athens and was a place for publick Studies above 900 years ago and much Augmented by the Learned Saxon King Alured And is an ancient City consisting of Two sorts of Inhabitants viz. Students and Citizens living one amongst another yet wholly Separate for Government Laws and Manners The University next under the King being Governed by The Chancellor who is commonly some of the prime Nobility Elected by the Students in Convocation to continue Durante Vita And 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. And next to him in Dignity is The High Steward nominated by the Chancellor and approved by the University and is also Durante Vita and to Assist the Chancellor the 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 And the Third Officer is The Vice Chancellor who is commonly the Head of some Colledge nominated yearly by the Chancellor And in the Chancellors Absence may do almost whatever the Chancellor might do if present Moreover he takes care that Sermons Lectures Disputations and other Exercises be performed That Heretiques Fanatiques Nonconformists Panders
308 Civil Government of the King's Court 312 Compting-House 314 Court of Green-Cloth 315 The Knight Marshal 320 Court of the Marshalsea 321 Court of the Palace 322 Court of the Lord Steward Treasurer and Comptroller of the King's Houshlod concerning Felony c. 324 Court of the Lord Steward of the King 's House or in his Absence of the Treasurer Comptroller and Steward of the Marshalsea 325 King 's great Wardrobe 332 The Office of the Tents 335 The Office of the Robes ibid. Military Government in the King's Court 338 The Band of Pensioners 339 The Yeomen of the Guard 340 Court of the Queen of England Government of the Queen's Court 341 Ecclesiastical Government of the Queen's Court 341 Civil Government of the Queens Court 342 Officers of the Robes ibid. Government of Cities Government f Cities 34● Ecclesiastical Government of Cities 344 Civil Government of Cities 345 City of London 34● The Ecclesiastical Government of London 347 The Civil Government of London 34● Court of Hustings 351 Sheriffs Court in London 352 Court of Conscience 354 Court of the Mayor and Aldermen 356 Court of Orphans 356 Court of Common Council 357 Court of Wardmote Inquest 358 Court of Halmote ibid. Chamberlain 's Court for Apprentices 359 Court of the Conservators of the Water and River of Thames 360 Court of the Coroner in London ibid. Court of the Escheator in London ibid. Court of Policies and Assurances 361 Military Government of London 363 Tower of London 365 Office of the Ordnance 368 Office of the Warden of the Mint 373 Office of Records in the Tower 375 St. Katherine's 378 Bridge ibid. Custom House 379 General Post-Office 381 Law Study 383 Inns of Chancery ibid. Inns of Court 384 Mootings in the Inns of Court 388 Mootings in the Inns of Chancery 390 Keeping Christmas in the Inns of Court ibid. Manner of holding Parliaments in the Inns of Court 392 Serjeants Inns ibid. Call or Creation of Serjeants 393 The Judges 394 Colledge of Civilians in London 396 Colledge of Physicians in London 400 Gresham Colledge in London 402 Sion Colledge in London 40● Chartreux in London 40● Schools in London 40● Southwark ibid City of Westminster 40● City of Norwich 41● Government of the Two Universitie● The two Universities in England 41● Oxford ibid Cambridge 42● Government of Boroughs Government of Boroughs is England 43● Government of Villages Government of Villages in England 43● Ecclesiastical Government of Villages 43● Civil Government of Villages ibid Islands adjacent to England Islands adjacent unto England 43● Isle of Man ibid Anglesey 43● Jersey olim Caesarea 437 Guernsey olim Servia ibid Insula Vectis or Vecta 43● Sorlings 44● Island Lindisfarne 44● The Government of Scotland Scotland 445 The Islands near Scotland The Lesser Islands near Scotland 459 Orcades ibid. Schetland ibid. Hebrides 460 The Government of Ireland Ireland 463 English Plantations in Asia English Plantations in Asia 491 Bantan ibid. Bombaine ibid. English Colonies in Africa English Colonies in Africa 492 Guinea ibid. Tangier ibid. English Plantations in America 492 Newfoundland 494 New England 496 New York 500 New Jersey 504 Pensylvania 505 Mariland 507 Virginia 510 Carolina 512 Bermudas 515 Caribee Islands 519 Barbuda ibid. Anguilla 520 Montserrat 521 Dominica 522 St. Vincent 523 Antegoa 524 Mevis or Nevis ibid. St. Christophers 526 Barbadoes 527 Jamaica 530 See the Alphabetical Table at the End of the Book Finis Tabulae OF GOVERNMENTS c. The Original of Governments OF GOVERNMENTS there can be but Three kinds viz. One or More or All must have the Sovereign Power of a Nation If one then it is a Monarchy If more as an Assembly of Choice Persons then it is Aristocracy if All that is a General Assembly of the People then it is a Democracy And now in course we are first to speak of The Monarchical Government which as most resembling the Divinity and approaching nearest to Perfection being esteemed the most Excellent is of two sorts Regal and Political The first sort Monarchy Regal was begun by Nimrod who after the World began to increase got unto himself a Dominion over others and yet in Scripture he is not called a King but a Mighty Hunter before the Lord So Belus did subdue the Assyrians and Ninus the most part of Asia and so did the Romans usurp the Empire of the World And thus having set forth the beginning of the Regal Government of Kingdoms which Law Regal was no other thing but the Pleasure of the Prince as in the First of Kings you may read more at large We will now as being more for our purpose declare how Kingdoms of Political Government were first begun which we may term Monarchy Political St. Augustine in the 19th Book De Civitate Dei saith A● People is a Multitude of Men associated by the Consent of Law and Communion of Wealth And yet such a People without a Head is not worthy to be called 〈◊〉 Body as in Natural things the Head cut off is not called a Body but a Trunk Wherefore Aristotle in his Civil Philosophy saith Whensoever One is made of Many among the same One shall be the Ruler and the other shall be the Rule● And this Ruler thus raised and appointed in Kingdoms is called a King from the Saxon word Koning intimating Power and Knowledge wherewith every Sovereign ought especially to be Invested And thus of a Multitude of People ariseth a Kingdom which is a Body Mystical And in this Body Mystical or Political the Intent of the People like Blood in the Natural Body is the first lively thing that is Politick provision for the Utility and Wealth of the same People which is imparted to the Head and members of the same Body whereby it is Nourished and Maintained and by the Law which cometh from Ligando of Binding this Mystical Body is knit and preserv'd together and the Members and Parts thereof as the Natural Body by Sinews do every one retain their proper Functions And as the Head of a Natural Body cannot change his Sinews nor withhold from his Inferiour Members their peculiar Powers of Nourishments no more can a King which is the Head of the Body Politick change the Laws of that Body or withdraw from the said People their proper Substance against their Wills And therefore it now follows that we speak somewhat of the Fundamentals of laws in General and then descend to the particular Fundamentals of the Laws of England and afterwards briefly declare the Executive Powers of the same And first of Laws in General WHich are Four that more properly belong to this our Business viz. The Law Enternal The Law of Nations Divine Law and Human Law The Law Eternal LEx Aeterna is the Reason of the Divine Will whereby God will ●ave all things of him Created to be moved and directed to a good End and it is called The first Law and all other Laws are derived from it And this Law Eternal none may be able to
the Kingdom and not by the Country And these Maxims are not alone taken for Law but also all other like cases and all things necessarily following upon them are to be placed in like Law and they are in the same force and strength in Law as Statutes and althô all these Maxims might conveniently be numbred amongst the aforesaid General Customs since Ancient Custom is the sole Authority as well of these as those yet because those General Customs are diffused and known they may easily and without study in the Laws be known but these Maxims are only known in the Kings Courts or by those who are Learned in the Law and now for example sake we will mention a few of them since to declare them fully great Volumes would not suffice And first there is a certain Maxim in the Laws of England that no Prescription in Lands maketh a Right also that Prescription in Rents and Profits to be taken in the Lands of another maketh a Right also that the limitation of Prescription is generally taken à tempore cujus centrarij Memoria hominum non existit c. And further there are many other Maxims as in certain Actions The Process is by Summons Attachment and Distress Infinite and in some by Capias Infinite c. and that there should be these divers Processes in divers Actions may seem expedient and reasonable but that there should be these divers Processes had in the Law of England and none other cannot be proved by Reason therefore they must necessarily have their force from the Maxims aforesaid or the Ancient Custom of the Kingdom And some Maxims seem to be founded upon Reason Secundary and therefore some may think they may be put unto the first Fundamental of other Laws of England as if any command a Trespass he is a Trespassor c. And there are other Maxims and Customs which are not so manifestly known but may be known by the Law of Reason partly by Books of the Law of England which are called Year Terms partly by Records in the Kings Treasury and remaining in the Kings Courts and by a Book called the Register and by divers Statutes in which such Customs and Maxims are often recited Vide Doctor Student The Fifth Fundamental of the Law of England consists of Divers particular Customs used in divers Countries Towns Lordships or Mannors and Cities of the Kingdom which said particular Customs because they are not against Reason nor the Law of God altho' they are contrary to the aforesaid General Customs and Maxims of Law yet they retain the force of Laws And they ought not always to be determined by the Judges whether there be such a Custom or not unless in a few particular Customs sufficiently known and approved in the Kings Courts but ought to be tryed by the Country And of these particular Customs I shall put a few for Example As there is a Custom called Gavelkind in Kent where all the Brothers shall Inherit as the Sisters do at Common Law By Burrough English in the Town of Nottingham the younger Son shall Inherit In some Countries the Wife shall have all the Inheritance of her Husband in Name of Dower so long as she continues a Widow And in some Countries the Man shall have half the Inheritance of the Wife during his Life although he hath no Issue by her In some Countries the Infant may make a Feoffment at his Age of Fifteen years And in some Countries when he can Measure an Ell of Cloth yet such Infant may not make Warranty for if he do it is void in Law neither may he in such case make a Release Thus are held many other particular Customs The Sixth Fundamental consists of Divers Statutes Ordained in Parliament when other Fundamentals of the Law of England are not sufficient for it is to be known that altho' the Law of Reason may be assigned to be the first and principal Fundamental of the Law of England yet the Law of Reason is not of so great force and efficacy in the Laws of England that it alone being known all the Law of England is known For besides the Law of Reason he who desires to know the Laws of England ought to know the Custom of the Kingdom as well General a Particular and the Maxims and Statutes of Law or otherwise altho' h● were the wisest of Men he will understand but few things of the Truth o● the Law of England From these things before contain'd it may be deduced which often fall out That in one and the same case two or three Fundamentals of Law ought to concur together before the Plaintiff may obtain his Right as by Example may appear As if any afte● Entry by him made into any Land with a strong hand make a Feoffmen● for Maintenance to defraud the Possessor of his Action then the Demandant by the Statute of 8 Hen. 6. cap. 9. shall recover his treble Damages according to what Damages shall be assessed by the Jury In which case it appeareth that such Entry is prohibited by the Law of Reason Secundary but that the Demandant shall Recover his treble Damages is by the aforesaid Statute And that the Damages shall be Assessed by the Jury is by the Custom of the Kingdom And thus Three Fundamentals of Law concur in this case And it is to be noted that there are many Customs as well General as Particular and also Divers Laws called Maxims which take not their force from strong Reason but from the Custom of the Kingdom For by Statutes they may be changed into the contrary and what can be changed can never be affirmed to be the Law of Reason Primary As for Example How doth it stand with Reason or Conscience That if one bound in an Obligation to pay Money pay part of the Money but takes no Acquittance or lose it by the Laws of England he shall be compell'd to pay that Money again because of the General Maxim That in an Action of Debt upon Bond the Defendant may not plead Nihil debet or Quod poecuniam solvit nor otherwise discharge himself unless by Acquittance or other sufficient Writing amounting to a Discharge in Law and this to avoid the great Inconvenience which would follow if every one by word alone might avoid an Obligation And thus having briefly set forth the Fundamentals of the Law of England we shall proceed to the Government and the Legislative and Executive Power of the Laws of England The Government of England THe Government of England is 〈◊〉 the first and best kind viz. Monarchical Political Government The King BEing Supream Governour in 〈◊〉 Causes and over all Persons fro● Him is derived all Authority and Jur●diction He being Quasi Intellectus Age●● Forma formarum c. And from th● King with the Advice of His Majesties Privy Council THat most Honourable Assemb●● in the Kings Court or Palace a● others receive their Motion It is calle● Concilium Secretum Privatum
Prayers The Parliament when required confirms the Consults of the Clergy that the People may be thereby induced to obey the Ordinances of their Spiritual Governours The Archbishop of York at the same time holds a Convocation for his Province at York in like manner and by Correspondence doth debate and conclude the same Matters with the Convocation for the Province of Canterbury Inter Leges Inae Anno Domini 727 A Convocation of the Clergy is called Magna Servorum Dei frequentia All the Members of both Houses have the like Priviledges for themselves and Menial Servants as the Members of Parliament and this by Statute Now they are required to subscribe Three of the XXXIX Articles Vide Stat. 13 Eliz. cap. 19. And the Canons ratified by King James 1 Jac. 1. And for The Executive Power in Causes Ecclesiastical THere are provided divers Excellent Courts the chief whereof for Criminal Causes was The High Commission Court THe Jurisdiction whereof was Enacted 1 Eliz. That Her Majesty Her Heirs and Successors should have power by Letters Patents under the Great Seal to Nominate and Authorize such person or persons being Natural born Subjects to Her Highness as Her Highness her Heirs or Successors should think fit to Exercise and Execute all manner of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction within the Realms of England and Ireland or any other Her Highness Dominions to Visit and Reform all Errours Heresies or Schisms Abuses Offences and Contempts c. which by any manner of Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Power can or may be lawfully Reformed c. And that such person or persons should have full Power by Virtue of the said Act and Her Majesties Letters Patents to Exercise and Execute the Premisses according to the Tenour and Effect of the said Letters Patent And upon Declaration of this Act the Lord Coke raises two Questions First What Causes should belong to this Court Secondly In what cases they may Fine and Imprison As to the first it is certain That by the principal Clause of Restitution in that Act all Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction heretofore exercised or used or which might have been lawfully exercised or used were by the Authority of that Parliament annexed and united to the Imperial Crown of this Realm For whatever Power or Jurisdiction did belong to or was exercised by the Pope De facto doth now De jure belong to the King But by reason the Ecclesiastical Judges before the making of that Act ought to have proceeded according to the Ecclesiastical Censures of the Church and could not Fine and Imprison unless they had Authority by Act of Parliament Therefore the Lord Coke by reason of the Clause i● this Act That the Commissioners shall Execute the Premisses according to the Teno●● of the Letters Patent which Clau●● refe●s ●o the former parts of this Act viz The Ancient Jurisdiction restore● by this Act ●a●th the Commissione● had not power to Fine and Imprison This Commission was usually grante● to persons of the Highest Quality i● Church and State so often and for 〈◊〉 long time as the King did thin● fit In Queen Elizabeths Time saith th● Lord Coke it was Resolved the Hig● Commission should be limitted to certia● Enormities and Exorbitant Causes And many Presidents were brought 〈◊〉 Prohibitions against their Authority 〈◊〉 Fine and Imprison both out of th● Kings-Bench and Common-Pleas B●● this Court being now Abrogated by th● Statute of 16 17 Car. 2. cap. 11. The Courts of the Archbishop 〈◊〉 Canterbury come next in course th● Highest of which is The Court of Arches SO called from the Arched Church of St. Mary in Cheapside where this Court hath been usually kept as appears by Record in Edward the First 's time The Judge hereof is the Dean of the Arches who under the Archbishop of Canterbury hath Jurisdiction over a Deanery consisting of Thirteen Parishes within London exempt from the Jurisdiction of the Bishop of London Hither are directed all Appeals in Ecclesiastical Matters within the Province of Canterbury And to this Court belong divers Advocates all Doctors of the Civil Law Two Registers and Ten Proctors The next Court of the Archbishop is The Court of Audience KEpt within the Archbishop's Palace and medleth not with any manner of Contentious Jurisdiction but only with Matters pro forma as Confirmation of Bishops Elections Consecrations and Matters of Voluntary Jurisdiction as granting the Guardianship of the Spiritualties Sede vacante of Bishops Admission and Institution to Benefices Dispensing with Banns of Matrimony and such like The Court of the Faculties THis is also a Court although it holdeth no Plea of Controversie 〈◊〉 belongeth to the Archbishop and his Officer is called Magister ad Facultates And the Authority is raised by the Statute of 25 H. 8. cap. 21. whereby Authority is given to the Archbishop and his Successors to grant Dispensations Faculties c. by himself or his sufficient Commissary or Deputy for any such matter heretofore had at the See of Rome or by the Authority thereof The Prerogative Court of Canterbury THis is the Court where Testaments are proved and Administrations granted where the Party dying within his Province hath bona Notabilia within some other Diocess than where he dieth which regularly is to be to the value of Five pounds but in the Diocess of London it is Ten pounds composition By 16 Rich. 2. Rot. Par. not in Print It is assented in full Parliament that the King may make his Testament which before that was doubtful and Hen. 4th made his Testament and his Executors refusing Administration was granted by the Archbishop of Canterbury with the Testament annexed to the same When the King is made Executor he Deputes certain Persons to take the Execution upon them and appoints others to take the Accompt The Probate of every Bishop's Testament or Granting Administration of his Goods althô he hath not Goods but within his own Jurisdiction doth belong to the Archbishop From this Court the Appeal is to the King in Chancery The Archbishop of York hath the like Courts and also the Court of Audience The Court of Peculiars THe Archbishop of Canterbury hath a peculiar Jurisdiction in divers Parishes within the City of London and other Diocesses c. and there are Fifty seven such Peculiars within the Province of Canterbury It is an Ancient Priviledge of the See of Canterbury that wheresoever any Manors or Advowsons do belong unto that See that place forthwith becomes exempt from the Ordinary and is reputed a Peculiar and of th● Diocess of Canterbury And there are certain peculiar Juri●dictions belonging to some certain Par●shes the Inhabitants whereof are exem●● from the Archdeacon's Jurisdiction an● sometimes from the Bishops Jurisdictio● And a Dean or Prebendary having 〈◊〉 Rectory or Impropriation in anoth●● Bishop's Diocess hath often a Court 〈◊〉 Peculiars held for him in that partic●lar Parish Note That there are some Deans 〈◊〉 England without any Jurisdiction on● for Honour so Stiled as
Chancelor Lord Treasurer c. Rich Liveries for the Two Lord Chief Justices All the Barons of the Exchequer All the Officers of those Courts All Liveries for His Majesty's Domestick Servants All Linnen for the King's person c. In which there is ordinarily Expended yearly about 25000 l. besides all Extraordinaries as Coronations Funerals c. His Salary in compensation of all Ancient Fees is 2000 l. per Annum This Office is now kept in the Savoy Under the Master is A Deputy whose Salary is 200 l. A Clerk whose Salary in compensation of all Fees and Allowances is 300 l. per Annum To this Office have been lately added by Patent during pleasure A Comptroller and Surveyor Salary to each 300 l. Belonging to this Office are divers Tradesmen Artificers and others to number of about Forty all sworn Servants to the King Besides the Great Wardrobe the King hath divers Standing Wardrobes at Whitehall VVindsor Hampton-Court the Tower of London Greenwich c. Whereof there are divers Officers And Lastly There is a Removing Wardrobe which attends upon the Person of the King Queen and Children Ambassadours Christnings Masks Plays c. at the Command of the Lord Chamberlain who hath the disposing of the Vacant places Here are six Officers one Yeoman two Grooms and three Pages The Salary of the Yeomen 200 l. each Groom 100 pounds and each Page 100 Marks To All these together is allowed six Dishes each Meal All Moveables belonging to this Office are at length Divided into Three parts whereof the Yeoman hath one for his own use the Grooms another and the Pages the Third part The Office of Tents c. IN this Office of Tents Toyls Hays and Pavilions are Two Masters Four Yeomen one Groom one Clerk Comptroller one Clerk of the Tents The Office of the Robes BEsides the Master before-mentioned there is one Yeoman three Grooms one Page Two Surveyors one Clerk and Persons of several Trades Faulconers MAster of the Hawks and other Officers under him about London and other Places belonging to the King in all Thirty Three Huntsmen MAster of the Buck-Hounds a Serjeant and Thirty Four others one Master of the Otter-Hounds one Master of the Harriers and Five under him Messengers OF the Chamber in ordinary two Clerks of the Cheque and Forty others Musitians in ordinary Sixty Two Trumpeters in ordinary and Kettle-Drummers in all Fifteen Drummers and Fifes Seven Tradesmen one or two of all sorts Watermen Fifty Five Comedians Seventeen Men and Eight Women Keeper of Birds in St. James's Park one Keeper of the Volery and Serjeant Painter one of each With divers other Officers and Servants under the Lord Chamberlain to serve His Majesty upon Extraordinary occasions Many of these Offices and Places are of good Credit great Profit and Enjoyed by Persons of Quality Officers under the Master of the Horse FOur Querries from the French Escurie a Stable of the Crown-Stable and Eight of the Hunting-Stable Their Office is to attend the King in Hunting or Progress or on any occasion of Riding abroad to help His Majesty Up and Down from his Horse Fee to each of these is 20 l. yearly the ancient Fee but have 100 l. yearly Allowance for Diet besides Lodgings and two Horse Liveries Avenor from Avena Oats Fee 40 l. This Place with all the following is in the Gift of the Master of the Horse One Clerk of the Stable Four Yeomen besides Four Child Riders Yeoman of the Styrup Serjeant Marshal and Yeoman Farriers Four Groom Farriers Serjeant of the Carriage Three Surveyors A Squire and Yeoman Sadler Four Yeomen Granators Four Yeomen Purveyors A Yeoman Peck-man A Yeoman Bill-maker Four Coach-men Eight Litter-men A Yeoman of the Close Wagon Sixty four Grooms of the Stable whereof Thirty Grooms of the Crown-Stable and Thirty four of the Hunting and Pad-Stable Twenty six Footmen in their Liveries to Run by the King's Horse c. The Clerk of the Market who within the Verge is to keep a Standard of all Weights and Measures and to burn all False Weights and Measures And from the pattern of this Standard are to be taken all the Weights and Measures of the Kingdom The Military Government in the King 's Court. THe Horse Guards Life Guard or Guard of the King's Body consisting of Five hundred Horsemen all or most of them Gentlemen and old Officers commanded by their Captain who is at all times of War or Peace to Wait upon the King's Person as oft as he Rides abroad with a considerable number of those Horsmen well Armed His pay is 30 s. per diem These Horse have been divided into Three parts whereof 200 under the Command of the Master of the Horse and 150 under another Officer and the other 150 Commanded by another Officer The Pay to each of these Officers 20 s. per diem Under the Captains of the Guards are Two Lieutenants a Coronet a Quarter-Master and Four Brigadiers The Horsmens Pay is 4. s. per diem The Band of Pensioners FIrst Instituted by King Henry the Seventh and chosen out of the Best and most Ancient Families of England not only as a Faithful Guard to the King's Person but to be as a Nursery to breed up hopeful Gentlemen and fit them for Employment Civil and Military abroad or at home as Deputies of Ireland Ambassadors Counsellors of State Captains of the Guard Governours of Places and Commanders in Wars both by Sea and Land Their Office is to attend the King's Person to and from his Chappel and all publick Solemnities A Peer of the Realm is usually Captain whose Pay is 1000 l. per Annum his Lieutenant 200 l. yearly his Standard-Bearer 200 l. yearly Clerk of the Cheque 120 l. 1 s. 3 d. yearly and Forty Gentlemen Pensioners Fee to each is 100 l. yearly a Gentleman Harbinger to provide Lodging for them his Fee 70 l. 11 s. yearly These Wait one Half by Quarter Upon Extraordinary occasions All are Summoned Their ordinary Arms are Gilt Poleaxes their Arms on Horseback in time of War Curassiers Arms with Sword and Pistol They are not under the Lord Chamberlain but their own Officers and always Sworn by the Clerk of the Cheque who takes Notice who are absent from their Duty The Yeomen of the Guard ARe at present 100 Men in daily Waiting and 70 more not in Waiting as any of the 100 dye his Place is filled out of the Seventy these are chosen of the best Men under Gentlemen and of Larger Stature than ordinary for they were formerly to be six Foot high Their Office is in their Coats and Caps one Half with Harquebusses and the other Half with Partizans to wait upon the King in his Standing Houses Forty by Day and Twenty to Watch by Night and about the City to Wait on the King's Person abroad by Water or Land Their Captain 's Fee is 1000 l. yearly the Lieutenant 500 l. Ensign 300 l. Clerk of the Cheque 150 l. Four
Priviledges and Franchises are taken from them and a Guardian set over them as was done by Hen. the Third and Ed. the First He is usually Knighted by the King before the end of his Mayoralty if he had not that Honour before His and the Sheriffs Tables are open to all comers and for his Grandeur is allowed● 1000 l. for his Sword-bearers Table His Domestick attendance is very Honourable and hath Four Officers reputed Esquires by their places viz. The Sword-bearer Common Hunt who keepeth a Kennel of Hounds Common Cryer and the Water Bailiff There is also the Coroner Three Serjeant Carvers Three Serjeants of the Chamber A Serjeant of the Channel Four Yeomen of the Water-side One under Water Bailiff Two Yeomen of the Chamber Three Meat weighers Two Yeomen of the Wood-wharfs most of which have their Servants allowed them and have Liveries for themselves Upon the Death or Demise of the King he is said to be the Prime Person of England On the day of the Kings Coronation he claims to be chief Butler and to bear the Kings Cup amongst the Highest Nobles of the Kingdom His Authority reaches not only over all the City but part of the Suburbs and on the River of Thames Eastward as far as Yendale or Yenleete and Westward as far as Colney Ditch above Stanes Bridge and keeps several Courts in the Counties adjacent to the Thames for Conservation of the River and Punishment of Offenders therein And there are Two Sheriffs of London who are also Sheriffs of the County of Middlesex and are Annually chosen by the Citizens from among themselves in the Guild-hall upon Midsumer day approved by the King and then upon Michaelmas Eve Sworn and presented to the Barons of the Exchequer to be allowed by the Barons and Sworn If the Persons so chosen refuse to hold they incur a Penalty unless they will make Solemn Oath they are not worth 10000 l. Twenty six Aldermen Preside over the 26 Wards of the City When any of these die The Lord Mayor and Aldermen chuse another out of the most substantial Men of the City and if any so chosen refuse to hold he is commonly fined 500 l. All the Aldermen who have been Lord Mayor and the Three eldest who have not yet arrived to that Honour are by their Charter Justices of Peace And this City of London is Camera Regis Reipublicae Cor totius Angliae Epitome To the Lord Mayor and the City of London belong divers Courts of Judicature amongst which the chief is The Court of Hustings DOmus Causarum Hus being in the Saxon Tongue House and Dhing Things It is the Highest Court of London And is holden before the Lord Mayor and Sheriff or now in the Sheriffs absence Six Aldermen which sit in Court there every Tuesday altho' that it may not seem to Vary from the Command of St. Edward the Confessor that it should be holden every Monday it is still written to be holden on the Monday And hath Cognizance of all Pleas Real mixt and Personal For the Rule in the Register is Quodlibet breve quod tangit Liberum Tenementum in London dirigitur Majori sive Custodi Vicecomitibus Et ●lia Brevia tantum Vicecomitibus By Fleta lib. 28 48. It appears that the name or Court is not appropriated to London only for the King hath his Court in Civitatibus Burgis Locis Exemptis sicut in Hustingis London Winton Lincoln Eborum apud Shepway ubi Barones Cives Recordum habent c. One Week the Judges sit upon Pleas Real The next upon Actions mixt or of any other nature So that all Lands Tenements Rents and Services within London and the Liberties and Suburbs thereof are Pleadable at Guild-Hall in two Hustings one called Husting de placito Terrae and the other Husting Commun ' Placitorum And if a Man be impleaded in the Common Pleas of Lands in London The Tenant shall say the Lands are in London and time out of mind c. every one hath been impleaded for them within the City in the Hustings But since Real Actions have grown out of use by trying Titles by Ejection● firmae The ancient Customs and Practise of this Court are much declined The Sheriffs Court in London THe Two Sheriffs keep each of them a Court of Record within the City by Prescription or Custom where they hold Plea of all personal Actions and have belonging to these Courts Two Prisons called Compters the one in Wood-street The other in the Poultry They hold Two Court-days each in every Week That for Wood-street on Wednesdays and Fridays And that for the Poultry Compter on Thursdays and Saturdays In Plaint of Debt the Custom is the Sheriffs Ore Tenus send to the Serjeants to Summon or Attach the Defendant without Warrant and upon Nihil Returned within the City the Serjeants by Commandment from the Sheriff have used to Attach and Arrest the Defendant to have his Body at the next Court before the Sheriff at the Guild-Hall They certifie their Records in that manner but the usual practise is to enter an Action in the Office for that purpose at one of the Compters which Action must be carefully entred for it is the Original of that Court by which you declare and from which there can be no variance And when an Action is entred the Serjeant may Arrest the Defendant and bring him into Custody until he find Bail to answer the Condemnation which Bail is taken by one of the Clerk Sitters at the Compter who constantly attend The Plaintiff ought to declare the first Court after the Defendant is Arrested although further time is usually given Ex gratia Curiae per mot ' But if the Plaintiff have no Attorney the first Court a Non-suit may be had by the Defendant If the Defendant be a Freeman he hath four defaults But they are allowable only in Debt Accompt or Covenant broken and not otherwise If the Defendant be in the Compter he is brought to the Bar by a Duci facias which is but the Sheriffs Mandate made by the Clerk of the Papers They have in each Court a Steward or Judge who is Learned in the Laws and besides their particular Customs their Proceedings are generally according to the Common Law at Westminster But of their particular practise Vide Compleat Sollicitor and others There is also in London a Court of Chancery or Equity held before the Lord Mayor which is commonly called The Court of Conscience WHerein they do proceed by English Bill Answer Replication and Rejoynder much like the Proceedings in the High Court of Chancery And the Custom of London is when a Man is Impleaded before the Sheriff The Mayor may send for the Parties and for the Record upon Suggestion of the Defendant and Examin the Parties upon the Pleas and if it be found upon Examination that the Plaintiff is satisfied The Mayor may award the Plaintiff shall be Barred But by no Custom he
can Examine after Judgment 10 Hen. 6.14 15. Also there is a practise called Marking of a Cause before the Lord Mayor which is after a Verdict given for the Plaintiff in the Sheriffs Court the Defendant may get the Cause marked by one of the Clerks in the Lord Mayor's Court to stay Judgment and Execution until the matter be Examined in Equity where the Lord Mayor doth oftentimes mitigate the Damages or give the Defendant time to pay it c. This Court is held Mondays Tuesdays and every day if the Lord Mayor please to sit The Court of the Mayor and Aldermen THis is a Court of Record consisting of the Lord Mayor Recorder and Twenty three Aldermen whereof the Two Sheriffs are part And their Proceedings is by Arrest of the Body or Attachment of the Defendants Goods and in that case much like the other Courts of Common Law By the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 12. They have power to correct Errors used for default of good Governance c. in the City The Court of Orphans THe Mayor and Aldermen by Custom have the Custody of Orphans within the City And if they commit the custody to another Man he should have a Ravishment of Ward if the Orphan be taken away And they shall have custody of the Lands and Goods of such Orphans A Recognizance may be acknowledg'd in this Court before the Mayor and Aldermen to the Chamberlain for Orphans and he being a sole Corporation the Recognizance and Bond made to him and his Successors concerning Orphans shall by Custom go to his Successors Executors or Administrator are to Exhibite true Inventories before the Lord Mayor and Aldermen and give Security by Rocognizance or the Court may commit them to Prison till they do it If the Father advance any of his Children by part of his Goods that shall bar him to demand any further unless the Father under his Hand or by Will declare it was but in part of Advancement and then that Child putting his part in Hotchpot with the Executors and Widow may have a Third part of the whole and this the Civil Law calls Collatio Bonorum How the Goods of a Freeman shall be divided See Coke's 1 Inst Sect. 207. The Court of Common Councel THis is held by the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Commonalty Resembling the High Court of Parliament The Commonalty being chosen out of every Ward constitute the Lower House and Represent all the Commonalty of the City Here they make Acts for the better Government of the City For the Execution of the Laws and Statutes of this Realm Pro Bono publico and for the better advancement of Trade and Traffick Provided such Constitutions be not contrary to the Laws of the Realm And these being made by Mayor Aldermen and Commonalty do bind within the City And they of the Common Assembly do give their Assent by holding up their Hands The Court of Wardmote Inquest THis Resembles the Country Leets Every Ward being as a Hundred and the Parishes as Towns And in in every Ward there is an Inquest of Twelve or more Sworn every year to Inquire of and present Nusances and other Offences within the Ward The Court of Hallmote THis is as much as to say The Court of the Hall being the Court which every Company in London keeps in their Halls which was anciently called The Hallmote or Folke Mote The Chamberlain 's Court for Apprentices BEfore the Chamberlain all Indentures of Apprentices are or ought to be Inrolled and if they be not Inrolled and if they be not Inrolled the Apprentice may refuse to Serve and Sue out his Indenture in this Court at his Pleasure and be discharged of his Master The Chamberlain is Judge in all Complaints either of the Servant against the Master or Master against the Servant and punisheth the Offenders at his Discretion In this Court are all Apprentices made Free And that may be Three manner of ways By Service as are Apprentices By Birthright as being the Son of a Freeman which is called Freedom by his Fathers Copy or by Redemption by Order of the Court of Aldermen The Court of the Conservator of the Water and River of Thames THe Lord Major of London for the time being is the Conservator or Governor of the River of Thames and the Issues Breaches and Lands overflown from Stanes Bridge to the Waters of Yendal or Medway And hath Authority for punishment of such as use unlawful Netts or Engins in Fishing or take Fish under Size or unseasonably c. 4 Hen. 7. cap. 15. And in all Commissions touching the Water of Lee the Lord Mayor shall be one 3 Jac. cap. 14. The Court of the Coroner in London THe Mayor is Coroner within the City And this Court is holden before him or his Deputy See Coroner before in the Counties The Court of Escheator in London THe Lord Mayor is also Escheator within the City And this Court is holden before him or his Deputy Vide Escheator before in Counties The Court of Policies and Assurances THis Court Sitteth by Force of the Commission under the Great Seal Warranted by Act of Parliament Ann. 43 Eliz. cap. 12. there being an Officer or Clerk to Register Assurances The Jurisdiction of which Court you may read in that Act of Parliament being for Incouragement of Trade The Judge of the Admiralty Recorder Two Doctors of Civil Law Two Common Lawyers Eight Merchants or any five of them to determine all differences concerning Assurances as they shall think fit without Formalities of Pleadings And to Commit to Prison without Bail all such as disobey their Decrees And to that end they are to meet once a Week at the Assurance Office and not to take any Fee If any be grieved by their Decree he may Exhibit his Bill in Chancery for Re-examination of that Decree The Lord Mayor is Chief Judge at the Court or Sessions of Gaol Delivery held Eight times in the year or oftner at the Sessions-House in the Old Baily for the City of London and County of Middlesex for the Tryal of Criminals and hath power to Reprieve Condemned persons The Tradesmen in London are divided into Corporations or Companies and are so many Bodies Politick of these Twelve are called Chief Companies and he that is chosen Lord Mayor if he be not before must be made Free of one of these Companies viz. Mercers Grocers Drapers Fishmongers Goldsmiths Skinners Merchant Taylors Haberdashers Salters Ironmongers Vintners Cloth-Workers All which Companies have Assembling places called Halls and each of them hath a Master chosen Annually from amongst themselves and Subordinate Governours called Wardens or Assistants And these in their Companies exactly correspond to the General Government of the City Several of our Kings have to honour some of these Companies taken their Freedom of it as VII several Kings had been of the Taylors Company whereof the last of these Seven being King Henry the 7th gave them the Name and Title of Merchant Taylors
the Government of the Office as likewise all Patents and Grants and the Names of all Officers Clerks Artificers Attendants Gunners Labourers and others who enjoy the said Grants or any other Fees from the King for the same To draw all Estimates for Provisions and Supplies to be made and all Letters Instructions Commissions Deputations and Contracts for His Majesty's Service To make all Bills of Imprest and Debentures for the payment and satisfaction of the respective Artificers and Creditors of the Office for Work done or Provisions received and Quarter-Books for the Salaries Allowances and Wages of all Officers Clerks and other Ministers belonging to the said Office and also to keep Journals and Liegers of the Receipts and Returns of His Majesty's Stores that nothing be Bought Borrowed Given Received Lent or Employed without due Record thereof to serve as a Cheque between the Two Accomptants of the Office the one for Money the other for Stores The Storekeeper is to take into his Custody all His Majesty's Ordnance Munitions and Stores thereunto belonging and to Indent and put in Legal Security for the safe keeping thereof and to make Just and True Accompt from time to time to Receive no Provisions whatsoever that are manifestly inserviceable or before they have been Reviewed by the Surveyor nor to Issue any proportion of Ordnance c. but what is agreed upon and signed by the Officers according to the appointment of the Master of the Ordnance grounded upon the Order of the King or six of the Privy Council or the Lord Admiral for Matters concerning the Navy Nor to Receive back any Stores issued till they have been Reviewed by the Surveyor and Registred by the Clerk of the Ordnance in the Book of Remains To look that all His Majesties Store-Houses be well Repaired and well Accommodated and the Stores kept in such order and lustre as is fit for the Service and Honour of the King The Clerk of the Deliveries is to Draw all Proportions for Delivery of any Stores and Provisions and to be present at the Delivery and by Indenture to Charge the particular Receiver of the King's Munitions whether Captain Gunner or other and to Register as well the Copies of all Warrants for Deliveries as the Proportions delivered whereby to discharge the Store-keeper The Treasurer and Paymaster of the Office was formerly an Appendix to that of Lieutenant of the Ordnance But the late King Charles Erected it into a particular and distinct Office and granted the same as all the other before-mentioned are by Letters Patent And there are other Subordinate Officers which likewise hold by Patent as The Master Gunner of England who is to teach all such as desire to Learn the Art of Gunnery and to oblige every Scholar by Oath not to serve any Foreign Prince or State without leave nor to Teach any other the said Art but such as have taken the said Oath and to certifie the Master of the Ordnance the Sufficiency of any person Recommended to be one of the King's Gunners and his Ability to discharge the said Duty The Keeper of the Small Guns who hath the charge and custody of the King 's Small Guns as Musquets Harquebusses Carabines Pistols c. with their Furniture There are many other Inferiour Officers and Ministers Attendants and Artificers as Clerks Proof-Masters Messengers Master Smith Master Carpenter Master Wheelwright Master Gunnsmith Furbusher c. which for Brevity are here omitted as likewise the King 's principal Engineer The Master of the Ordnance hath a Superintendency and Jurisdiction over all the King's Engineers Employed in the several Fortifications of the Kingdom most of whom have their Salaries and Allowances payable in the said Office to which they are accountable and from whence they receiev their particular Orders and Instructions according to the Directions and Commands given by the King and signified by The Master of the Ordnance Nota The several sorts of Cannon seem to be denominated from the Rapacious kind of Creatures whose Names they bear as Faulcons Faulconets Sakers Culverins from the Latin Coluber Basilisks Griffons Dragons c. The Office of the Warden of the Mint WHere is minted all the Bullion that is Minted in England although the King may set up a Mint in any other Place of the Kingdom In this are divers Persons of Quality and Worth whereof the principal is The Warden of the Mint who is to Receive the Silver and Gold brought in by Merchants or Goldsmiths or others to pay them for it and to Oversee all the rest his Fee is 100 l. per Annum And next is The Master Worker who Receives the Bullion from the Warden causes it to be Melted delivers it to the Moneyers and receives it from them again when Minted and hath an Allowance by the Pound weight but no set Fee And next is The Comptroller who sees all the Money be made according to the Just Assize to oversee the Officers and Comptrol them if the Money be not as it ought to be his Fee is 100 Marks and these three last above hold by Patent of the King The next is The Assay-Master who weighs the Bullion and sees it be according to the Standard his Fee is 200 Marks The Auditor to take the Accounts and make them up The Surveyor of the Melting who is to see the Bullion cast out and not to be alter'd after it is delivered to the Melter which is after the Assay-Master hath made Tryal thereof There are moreover A Clerk of the Irons A Graver A Weigher A Teller Melters Blanchers Moneyers and other Officers belonging to the Mint The Office of Records in the Tower IS of Venerable Antiquity and the Keeper and Deputy dignified with Special Trust The Keeper hath a Salary of 500 l. per Annum and is properly in the Gift of the Master of the Rolls and afterwards His Majesty hath usually by Letters Patents Confirmed it As the Chappel of the Rolls and Petty-Bag Office fill the Records are sent hither by a Writ formed for that purpose and these Records amongst other things contain the Foundations of Abbeys and Religious Houses as The Chappel of the Rolls contain those of their Dissolution and the Donation of the Lands of which many Families are now possessed The Leagues and Treaties with Foreign Princes The Atchievements of this Nation in France and Foreign parts The Original of All Laws that have been Enacted or Recorded until Richard the Third The Homage and Dependency of Scotland upon England The Establishment of Ireland in Laws and Dominions The Dominion of the Brittish Seas totally excluding French and Dutch to Fish therein without License from England proved by Records before the Conquest The Interest of the Isles of Man and of Jersey Guernsey Sarke and Alderney the Four last being the Remaining part of the Norman Possessions The Title of our Kings to the Realm of France and how obtained And all that our Kings and Princes have till that time Done
Chancellor To observe and conserve the Rights Priviledges and Liberties of the University of Oxford And every year on the day of St. Scholastica being 10 February a certain number of the Principal Burgesses Publickly and Solemnly do pay each one a Penny in token of their Submission to the Orders and Rights of the University By Charter of Hen. the Fourth It is left to the choice of the Vice Chancellor whether any Member in the University there Inhabiting accused for Felony or High Treason shall be tried by the Laws of the Land or by the Laws and Customs of the University Tho' now where Life or Limb is concerned the Criminal is left to be Tried by the Laws of the Land No Student of the University may be Sued at Common Law for Debts Accompts Contracts Injuries c. but only in the Courts of the Vice-Chancellor who hath Power as aforesaid to Determine and Punish Delinquents To Imprison Inflict Corporal Punishment To Excommunicate To Suspend and to Banish The Universities are Subject to the Visitation or Correction of none but the King or whom he please to Commissionate The Chancellor and in his absence the Vice-Chancellor is not only in Place but in all Affairs of Moment though concerning the City it self Superiour to the Mayor of the Town All Members of the University are subject to the Vice-Chancellor and his Judicial Courts which are Ruled wholly by the Civil Law By the Statute of 13 Eliz. The Two Universities are Incorporated albeit they were ancient Corporations before All Letters Patent Liberties Priviledges c. granted to either of the Universities are Established and Confirmed King James the First Honoured both Universities with the Priviledge of sending each Two Burgesses to Parliament The Terms in Oxford begin the First on the 10 of October and ends the 17 of December and is called Michaelmas Term Second called Hillary or Lent Term begins the 14 of January and ends the Saturday before Palm Sunday The Third called Easter Term begins the 10 day after Easter and ends the Thursday before Whitsunday The Fourth is called Trinity Term beginning the Wednesday after Trinity Sunday and ends after the Act sooner or later as the Vice-Chancellor and Convocation think meet There are besides in Oxford many stately publick-Schools The famous Bodleian Library which for a Noble Lightsom Fabrick number of choice Books curious Manuscripts diversity of Languages Liberty of Studying Facility of finding any Book may equal the Famous Vatican The Curious Architecture of the Theater The Excellent Printing Presses The Publick Physick Garden c. are not for our purpose further to describe Cambridge WHat hath been said of Oxford may suffice for the University and Town of Cambridge which if she will in Complaisance at any time give place to Oxford yet at the same time she will Challenge it before any other University in the Christian World But in some few things she differs from Oxford as for that The Chancellor is not so Durante Vita but may be elected every Two years Aut manere in eodem Officio durante Tacito Consensu Senatus Cantabr ' He hath under him a Commissary who holds a Court of Record of Civil Causes for all Priviledged Persons under the Degree of Master of Arts where all Causes are Tried and Determined by the Civil and Statute Laws and by the Customs of the University The High Steward is chosen by the Senate and holds by Patent from the University The Vice Chancellor is chosen yearly by the Senate on the 3d day of November Out of Two Persons nominated by the Heads of the several Colledges and Halls The Two Proctors are chosen every year as at Oxford according to the Circle of the Colledges and Halls There are also Two Taxers who with the Proctors have care of Weights and Measures as Clerks of the Market There are also Three Squire Beadles and one Yeoman Beadle The Students here have no Houses but what are Endowed For the Colledges and Halls differ only in name And these Houses Endowed are but Sixteen viz. St. Peters Colledge Clare Hall Pembroke Hall Corpus Christi Colledge alias Bennet Colledge Trinity Hall Convile and Cains Colledge Kings Colledge Queens Colledge St. Katherines Hall Jesus Colledge Christs Colledge St. Johns Colledge Magdalen Colledge Trinity Colledge Emanuel Colledge Sussex and Sidney But these are generally so large that the number of Students is commonly little different from those of Oxford Degrees at Cambridge are usually taken as at Oxford Except in Law and Physick whereof after Six years they may take the Degrees of Batchelour and after Five years more that of Doctor The first Tuesday of July is always Dies Comitiorum there called the Commencement Wherein the Masters of Arts and the Doctors of all Faculties compleat their Degrees respectively as the Batchelours of Arts do in Lent beginning at Ashwednesday Many Priviledges have been likewise granted by several Kings to this University As every Michaelmass-day The Mayor of the Town at the Entrance into his Office takes a Solemn Oath before the Vice Chanceller to Observe and Conserve the Priviledges Liberties and Customs of the University Also on Friday before St. Simon and Jude at a Magna Congregati in St. Maries Church The Mayor brings with him Two Aldermen Four Burgesses and Two of every Parish to take their Oaths before the Vice Chancellor for the due search of Vagabonds Suspected Persons c. At the same are Sworn 14 Persons for the University and Fourteen for the Town to look to the Paving and Cleansing of the Street The University hath also a Court Leet held twice every year wherein are presented all Nusances c. The Terms in Cambridge begin Lent Term the the 13 of January and ends the Friday before Palm-Sunday Easter Term the Wednesday after Easter Week and ends the Week before Whitsuntide Trinity Term the Wednesday after Trinity Sunday and ends the Friday after the Commencement and Michaelmass Term begins the 10 of October and ends the 16 of December Cambridge lies in 52 Degrees 20 Minutes Northern Latitude Both these Universities are Two easie days Journey from the Capital City of London and about the like Distance from each other The Government of Boroughs in England ANd other Towns Corporate Is much after the same manner with Cities In some there is a Mayor in others One or Two Bailiffs who have equal Power with the Mayor and Sheriffs and during their Offices they are Justices of Peace within their Liberties and have there the same Power that other Justices of Peace have within their County The Government of Villages in England IN every Village is a Government Ecclesiastical and Civil which if only observed might render the whole Kingdom Happy And first the The Ecclesiastical Government of Villages THe Parson or Vicar who hath Curam Animarum The care of the Souls of his Parishioners For which he hath the Tithes Glebe and Church Offerings And hath under him The Church-wardens and Sides Men
expresly forbid the same as heretofore hath sometimes been done It is free for any Man of the Parliament or not of the Parliament to get a Bill drawn by some Lawyer and give the same to the Speaker or Clerk of the Parliament to be presented at a time convenient and this Bill may be put first either in the Lords House or the Commons House Whatever is proposed for a Law is fir●t put in Writing and called a Bill which being read commonly after Nine of the Clock in a full Assembly it is either unanimously Rejected at first or else allowed to be Debated and then it is committed to a certain Number of the House presently nominated and called a Committee After it hath been amended and twice read two several Days in the House then it is Ingrossed that is written fair in Parchment and read the third time another Day and then if it be in the Lords House the Lord Chancellor in the Commons House the Speaker demandeth if they will have it put to the Question Whether a Law or no Law If the Major Part be for it there is written on the Bill by the Clerk Soit Baille aux Communes or Soit Baille aux Seigneurs retaining still in this and some other things about making Laws the Custom of our Ancestors who were generally skilled in the French Tongue Note That when the Speaker finds divers Bills prepared to be put to the Question he gives notice the Day before That on the Morrow he intends to put such Bills to the Passing or third Reading and desires the special Attendance of all the Members Note also That if a Bill be Rejected it cannot be any more proposed during that Session A Bill sent by the Commons up to the Lords is usual to shew their Respect attended with Thirty or Forty of the Members of the House As they come up to the Lords Bar the Member that hath the Bill making three profound Reverences delivereth it to the Lord Chancellor who for that purpose comes down to the Bar. A Bill sent by the Lords to the Commons is usually sent by some of the Masters of the Chancery or other Person whose Place is on the Wooll-sacks and by none of the Members of that House and they coming up to the Speaker and bowing thrice deliver to him the Bill after one of them hath read the Title and desired it may be there taken into Consideration if aftewards it pass that House then is written on the Bill Les Communes o●t assentez When any one in the Commons House will speak to a Bill he stands up uncovered and directs his Speech only to the Speaker then if what he delivers be confuted by another yet it is not allowed to answer again the same Day lest the whole time should be spent in Debate Also if a Bill be debating in the House no Man may speak to it in one day above once If any one speak words of Offence to the King's Majesty or to the House he is called to the Bar and sometimes sent to the Tower The Speaker is not allowed to perswade or disswade in passing of a Bill but only to make a short and plain Narrative nor to Vote except the House be equally divided After Dinner the Parliament ordinarily assemble not though many times they continue sitting long in the Afternoon Committees sit after Dinner where it is allowed to speak and reply as oft as they please Note By Death or Demise of the King the Parliament is ipso facto dissolved Anciently 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 intending 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 See before in High Court of Parliament Page 51. To the Court of the High Steward of England BUT now by Stat 7 W. 3. Upon the Trial of any Peer or Peeress either for Treason or Misprision all the Peers who have Right to sit and Vote in Parliament shall be duly summoned Twenty days at least before every such Trial to appear at every such Trial and every Peer so summoned and appearing at such Trial shall Vote in the Trial of such Peer or Peeress so to be tried every such Peer first taking the Oaths mentioned in the Act of Parliament made 1 W. M. Intituled An Act for Abrogating the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and Appointing other Oaths And subscribing and audibly repeating the Declaration mentioned in the Act made Anno 30 Car. 2. Regis For disabling Papists to sit in either House of Parliament Provided that neither the Act nor any thing therein contained be construed to extend to any Impeachment or other Proceedings in Parliament in any kind whatsoever Provided also That the Act nor any thing therein contained shall any ways extend to any Indictment of High Treason nor to any Proceedings thereupon for Counterfeiting the King's Coyn his Great Seal or Privy Seal his Sign Manual or Privy Signet See before in The Court of the High Steward of England Page 81. Of the Power and Authority of the Protector and Defender of the Realm and Church of England during the King's tender Age. And Guardian c. of England in the King's Absence FOR his Authority Place and Precedency See Rot. Parl. Anno 1 Hen. 6. Nu. 26 27. 2 Hen. 6. Nu. 16. 6 Hen. 6. Nu. 22 23 24. 8 Hen. 6. Nu. 13. 11 Hen. 6. Nu. 19. 32 Hen. 6. Nu. 71. The Lord Coke in his 4th Inst. Cap. 3. saith The surest way is to have him made by Authority of the Great Council in Parliament Richard Duke of Gloucester Uncle to King Edward the 5th and afterwards King by the Name of Richard the 3d. was by the Council then Assembled made Protector of King Edward the 5th and his Realm during his Minority Holinshead's Chron. fol. 1363. And for the Government of the Realm and Surety of the Person of King Edward the 6th his Uncle Edward Earl of Hertford was by Order of the Council and the Assent of his Majesty appointed Governour of his Royal Person and Protector of his Realms Dominions and Subjects and so proclaimed the 1 st of February Anno 1547. by an Herauld at Arms and Sound of Trumpet through the City of London in the usual places thereof And on the 6th of Feb. Anno 1547. the said Earl of Hertford Lord Protector Adorned King Edward with the Order of Knighthood remaining then in the Tower and therewith the King standing up called for Henry Hubblethorn Lord Mayor of the City of London who coming before his Presence the King took the Sword of the Lord Protector and Dubbed the said Hubblethorn Knight Holinshead Chron. fo 1614. The King when he intends to go or is in remotis out of the Realm appoints a Guardian c.
of Felony c. Yet when the Sea doth ebb the Land may belong to a Subject The King shall have Flotsam Jetsam and Lagan when the Ship perisheth or the Owners of the Goods are unknown A Man may have Flotsam and Jetsam by the King's Grant and Flotsam by Prescription as before is said Resolved that the Stat. of Westminst 1. cap. 4. by which it is Enacted That of Wreck of the Sea it is agreed That where a Man Dog or Cat escape alive out of the Ship or Vessel not any thing within them shall be accounted Wreck but the Goods shall be saved and kept by the View of the Sheriff Coroner or King's Bailiff c. So that if any sue for those Goods and can prove that they belonged to him or that they perished in his keeping within a year and a day they shall be restored to him without delay c. was but a Declaration of the Common Law And therefore all that which is provided as to Wreck extendeth also to Flotsam Jetsam and Lagan The Common Law gave all these three as also Estray Treasure-Trove and the like to the King for when no Man can claim Property in Goods the King shall have them by his Prerogative But Wreck may belong to the Subject by Grant from the King or by Prescription Flotsam Jetsam and Lagan so long as upon the Sea do not belong to the King but occupanti conceduntur eo quod constare non possit ad quam regionem essent applicanda And Wreck as well as Estrays of an Infant Feme-Covert Executrix a Man in Prison or beyond Sea if proclaimed and none claim them within a Year and a Day are bounden by the Law Coke's Rep. lib. 5.106 108. Sir Henry Constable's Case Rex pro salute animae suae ad malas consuetudines abolendas concessit quod bona in mari periclitata non perdantur nomine Wrecci quando aliquis homo aut bestia vivus de navi evaserit Veies le Stat. W. Primer Cap. 4. And Coke's 2 Inst 167 168. The Sheriff ought to sell bona peritura within the Year And the Subject must prove his Property in them within the Year and Day But the King may claim when he will and make proof If Treasure be found in the Sea the Finder shall have it at this day But otherwise it is now of Treasure Trove upon Land See Coke's 2 Inst. 168. If Wreck be not rightfully seized but taken by wrong-doers the Party may have a Commission of Oyer and Terminer to enquire of them Wreck shall be tried before the King's Justices at Common Law Coke's 2 Inst. 168. Coke's 4. Inst 134 154. The Coroner is to enquire of Wreck Coke's 4 Inst 271. and 3 Inst Title Appeals FINIS AN ALPHABETICAL TABLE A ARchbishops and Bishops Consistory Courts Page 42 Archdeacons Court Page 44 Aulnager Page 205 Admiralty Court Page 292 638 Aldermen and Mayors Court Page 356 Anglesey Isle Page 436 Anguila Page 520 Antegoa Page 524 B. BArons Court Page 235 Band of Pensioners Page 339 Bridge Page 378 Bantam or Banda Page 491 Bombaine Page 491 Bermudas Islands Page 515 Barbudas I. Page 519 Barbadoes I. Page 527 C. Convocation Page 32 Court of Arches Page 39 Court of Audience Page 39 Court of the Faculties Page 40 Court of Peculiars Page 41 Consistory Courts of Archbishops Bishops Page 42 Court of the Archdeacon or his Commissary Page 44 Court of Delegates Page 44 Civil Government of England Page 51 Court of the High Steward Page 81 539 Chancery High Court Page 90 Court of extraordinary Jurisdiction Page 93 Court of the Star-Chamber Page 104 Court for Redness of Delays Page 108 Court of Kings Bench Page 113 Common Pleas Court Page 121 Court of Exchequer Page 127 Court of Inquiry to certifie untrue Accompts in the Exchequer Page 140 Court of Equity in the Exchequer Page 141 544 Court of Justices of Assize Nisi prius Page 144 Court of Justices of Oyer and Terminer Page 153 Court of special Justices of Oyer and Terminer Page 166 Colledges Hospitals c. for charitable and lawful Purposes and Uses Page 167 Court of Justices of Goal-delivery Page 169 Court of Justices of the Forrest Page 175 Court of Justices in Eyre Page 193 Court of Justices of Trailbaston Page 195 Court of Wards and Liveries Page 196 Court of Ancient Demesne Page 196 559 Court of Commissioners of Sewers Page 198 569 Court of Commissioners upon the Statute of Bankrupts Page 201 573 Commissioners for Examination of Witnesses Page 203 578 Court of the Sessions of the Peace Page 210 591 Court of Inquiry of the Defaults of the Justices of the Peace Page 222 Court of the Tourn Page 223 595 Court Leet or View of Frankpledge Page 224 597 County Court Page 228 615 Court of the Hundred Page 233 630 Court Baron Page 235 632 Coroners Court Page 237 635 Court of Escheators and Commissioners for finding of Offices Page 239 635 Court of the Clerk of the Market Page 241 Court of Pipowders Page 246 Court of the Dutchy-chamber of Lancaster at Westminster Page 247 Courts of the County Palatin of Chester Page 251 Court of the County Palatin of Durham Page 252 Court of the County Palat. of Pembroke Page 255 Courts of the Cinque Ports Page 256 Court of Stannaries in the County of Devon and Cornwall Page 261 Court of the Mayor of the Staple Page 263 Court of the President and Council of Wales Page 269 Court of Chivalry before the Constable and Marshal Page 279 Colledge of Heralds Page 283 Court of Admiralty Page 292 638 Court of Commission by force of the Statute 28 H. 8. Cap. 5. Page 298 Commissioners and others for Beacons Signs of the Sea Light houses c. Page 299 Court of the King of England Page 308 Civil Government of the King 's Court Page 312 Compting-House Page 314 Court of Green-Cloth Page 315 Court of the Marshalsea Page 321 Court of the Pallace Page 322 Court of the Lord Steward Treasurer and Comptroller of the King 's House concerning Felony Page 324 Court of the Lord Steward of the King 's House or in his Absence of the Treasurer Comptroller and Steward of the Marshalsea Page 325 Court of the Queen of England Page 341 Civil Government of the Queens Court Page 342 Civil Government of Cities Page 345 Civil Government of London Page 348 Court of Hustings Page 351 Court of Conscience Page 354 Court of the Mayor and Aldermen Page 356 Court of Orphans Page 356 Court of Common Council Page 357 Court of Wardmote Inquest Page 358 Court of Halmote Page 358 Chamberlain 's Court for Apprentices Page 359 Court of the Conservators of the Water and River of Thames Page 360 Court of the Coroner in London Page 360 Court of the Escheator in London Page 360 Court of Policies and Assurances Page 361 Custom-House Page 379 Call or Creation of Serjeants Page 393 Colledge of Civilians in London Page 396 Colledge of Physicians
in London Page 400 Chartereux in London Page 404 Cambridge City Page 426 Civil Government of Villages Page 431 Carolina Page 512 Caribee Islands Page 519 St. Christophers Page 526 Court of First-fruits and Tenths c. Page 548 D. DIvine Law Page 6 Delegates Court Page 44 Durham County Palatine Court Page 252 De Conservatore Treugarum i. e. Induciarum c. Page 302 Dominica Island Page 522 E. ENgland's Government Page 22 Ecclesiastical Government of England Page 28 Executive power in Causes Ecclesiastical Page 36 Executive power in Temporal Affairs Page 80 Exchequer Court Page 127 Eyre Justices Court Page 193 Execution of Laws in each County Page 222 Escheator 's Court Page 239 Ely's Royal Franchise Page 254 Ecclesiastical Government of the King's Court Page 308 Ecclesiastical Government of the Queen's Court Page 341 Ecclesiastical Government of Cities Page 344 Ecclesiastical Government of London Page 347 Ecclesiastical Government of Villages Page 431 English Plantations in Asia Page 491 English Colonies in Africa Page 492 English Plantations in America Page 492 F. FUndamentals of the Laws Page 8 Forrest Justices Court Page 175 Franchise of Ely Page 254 Franchise of Hexam and Hexamshire Page 255 First-fruits and Tenths Ecclesiastical Page 548 G. GOvernments in General Page 1 Government of England Page 22 Government Ecclesiastical of England Page 28 Government civil of England Page 51 Gaol-Delivery Justices Court Page 169 Government of Counties in England Page 207 Great Sessions in Wales Page 270 Government Military of England Page 275 Government Ecclesiastical of the King 's Court Page 308 Government civil of the King's Court Page 312 Green-cloth Court Page 315 Government Military of the King's Court Page 338 Government of the Queen's Court Page 341 Government Ecclesiastical of the Queen 's Court Page 341 Goveonment civil of the Queens Court Page 342 Government of Cities Page 344 Government Ecclesiastical of Cities Page 344 Government civil of Cities Page 345 Government Ecclesiastical of London Page 347 Government civil of London Page 348 Government Military of London Page 363 General Post-Office Page 381 Gresham Colledge in London Page 402 Government of the two Universities Page 415 Government of Boroughts in England Page 430 Government of Villages in England Page 430 Government Ecclesiastical of Villages Page 431 Government civil of Villages Page 431 Guernsey olim Servia Page 437 Government of Scotland Page 445 Government of Ireland Page 463 Guinea Page 492 Guardian of England Page 540 H. HUmane Law what Page 7 High Commission Court Page 36 High Court of Parliament Page 51 535 High Stewards Court Page 81 539 High Court of Chancery Page 90 Hundred Court Page 233 630 Heralds Colledge Page 283 Hustings Court Page 351 Halmote Court Page 358 Hebrides Islands Page 460 I. JUstices of Assize Nisi-prius Court Page 144 Justices of Oyer Terminer Court Page 153 Justices of Gaol-delivery Court Page 169 Justices of the Forrest Court Page 175 Justices in Eyre's Court Page 193 Justices of Trailbastons Court Page 195 Inns of Chancery Page 383 Inns of Court Page 384 Inns of Court manner of keeping Christmas Page 390 Judges Page 394 Islands adjacent unto England Page 433 Jersey olim Caesarea Page 437 Insula Vectis or Vectae Page 439 Ireland Page 463 Jamaica Page 530 K. KING Page 22 King's Bench Court Page 113 King 's Swanherd Page 204 587 King's Aulnager Page 205 590 King of England's Court Page 308 Knight Marshal Page 320 King 's great Wardrobe Page 332 St. Katherine's Page 378 Keeping Christmas in the Inns of Court Page 390 L. LAws in General Page 4 Law Eternal Page 4 Law of Reason Page 5 Law Divine Page 6 Law Humane Page 7 Law fundamentals Page 8 Laws and Constitutions Ecclesiastical Page 45 Leet Court Page 224 Law study Page 383 London Page 346 Lindisfarne Page 441 M. MOney collected for Houses of Correction or for the Poor Page 166 Mayor of the Staple's Court Page 263 Military Government of England Page 275 Maritime Power of England Page 287 Marshalsea Court Page 321 Military Government of the King's Court Page 338 Mayor and Aldermens Court Page 356 Military Government in London Page 363 Mootings in the Inns of Court Page 388 Mootings in the Inns of Chancery Page 390 Manner of holding Parliaments in the Inns of Court Page 392 Man Isle Page 433 Mariland Page 507 Montserrat Page 521 Mevis or Nevis Page 524 N. NAvy Office Page 295 Norwich City Page 411 Newfoundland Page 494 New England Page 496 New York Page 500 New Jersey Page 504 Nevis or Mevis Page 524 O. OFfice of Pleas in the Exchequer Page 142 Office of Tents Page 335 Office of the Robes to the King Page 335 Officers of the Robes to the Queen Page 342 Orphans Court Page 356 Office of the Ordnance Page 368 Office of the Warden of the Mint Page 373 Office of Records in the Tower Page 375 Oxford Page 415 Orcades Page 459 P. PRivy Council Page 22 Prerogative Court of Canterbury Page 40 Punishments by Ecclesiastical Courts Page 47 Punishments Ecclesiastical peculiar to the Clergy Page 49 Parliament High Court Page 51 535 Pipowders Court Page 246 Pembroke Palatine's Cuort Page 255 President and Council in the North Page 258 Principality of Wales Page 266 President and Council of Wales Court ibid. Port Courts Page 298 Parliament-holding in the Inns of Court Page 322 The Palace ibid. Post-Office General Page 381 Physicians Colledge in London Page 400 Plantations in Asia Page 491 Plantations in Africa Page 492 Plantations in America ibid. Pensylvania Page 505 Protector of England Page 540 Q. QUeen of England's Court Page 341 R. ROyal Franchise of Ely Page 254 River of Thames Conservator's Court Page 360 S. STar-chamber Court Page 104 Swanherd Page 204 587 Sessions of the Peace Court Page 210 Stannaries Court in the County of Devon and Cornwall Page 261 Lord Steward 's Court Page 324 325 Sheriffs Court in London Page 352 Serjeants Inns Page 392 Serjeants Call or Creation Page 393 Sion Colledge Page 403 Schools in London Page 405 Southwark ibid. Sorlings Page 440 Scotland Page 445 Scottish Isles or the Lesser-Islands near Scotland Page 459 Schetland I. ibid. T. TRyals Ecclesiastical in civil Causes Page 46 Tryals Ecclesiastical in criminal Causes ibid. The Tourn Page 223 Tower of London Page 365 Tangier Page 492 V. UNiversities Page 415 Virginia Page 510 St. Vincent Page 523 260 W. WItnesses Examination by Commissioners Page 203 Wardens Courts c. Page 260 Wales 266 Wardrobe of the King 332 Wardmote Inquest 358 Westminster City 406 Wight Island 439 Y. YEomen of the Guard 340 FINIS ERRATA PAge 14. line 11. read Escheators p. 17. l. 31. r. the. p. 21. l ult for of the Laws of England r. of the Jame p 25. l. 11. the Comma at without Warrant p. 57. l. 4. r. Roy. p. 69. l. 4. r. Martial p. 74. l. 23. r. The Stat of p. 78. l. 1. r. Sess 2. cap. 4. p. 102. l. 20. r. by a Deputy p 114. l. 12. r. Westminster p. 133. l. 4. r. Auditeth p. 136. l. 13. r. 2d p. 141. l ult r. 4. Instit p. 171. l. 10. r. plevisable p. 182. l. 7. r. circa l. 3. for nolucrint r. v●l●●rint p. 185. l. 22. r belong p. 190. l. 15. r. nor p. 193. l. 19. r. of a Commission p. 201. l. 24. r. Banque p. 307. l. 15. dele in p. 209. l. 18. dele and. p. 225. l. 27. r. Easter p. 243. l. 10. r. Drachme l. 17. r. Avoir p. 275. l. 15. r. Pay p. 276. l. 21. r. were heretofore p. 279. l. 13. r. scale p. 280. l. 5. r. seale l. 7. r. surcease l. 13. surcease 281. l. 4. r. fact ' l. 16. r. Foy p. 291. l. 3. r. 62432. pounds p. 298. l. 19. r. 4 Instit 147. p. 301. r. Lynne p. 302. l. 6. r. Raised p. 303. l. 24. the Comma at concitat p. 304. l. 27. r. Foreign p. 306. l. 23. r. to that Sin p. 307. the Comma at Tacitus p. 327. l. 26. r. stick p. 350. l. 21. r. Camera Regis Reipublicae Cor totius Angliae Epitome p. 353. l. 6. dele and if they be not Inrolled p. 407. l. 13 r. secular p. 411. l. 17. for ortam r. ortum p. 463. l. ult r. called p. 464. l. 24. r. Belfast p. 468. l. 8. r. Universities one p. 476. l. 27. r. Ego p. 486. l. 6. r. Alienigena l. 19. r. 25. p. 510. l. 27. r. as p. 564 r. Plea p. 565. l. 4. r. F. N. B. 27 28 l. 7. r. 100. p. 570. l. 29. r. new framed p 579. l. 15. r. Testmoignes l. ult r. Bokland p. 607. l. 25. r. Letae