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A61047 An epitome of Mr. John Speed's theatre of the empire of Great Britain And of his prospect of the most famous parts of the world. In this new edition are added, the despciptions of His Majesties dominions abroad, viz. New England, New York, 226 Carolina, Florida, 251 Virginia, Maryland, 212 Jamaica, 232 Barbados, 239 as also the empire of the great Mogol, with the rest of the East-Indies, 255 the empire of Russia, 266 with their respective descriptions. Speed, John, 1552?-1629. 1676 (1676) Wing S4879; ESTC R221688 361,302 665

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Colchester declareth that a Fish in all parts like a man was taken near Oxford and for six months was kept in the Castle whence after he escaped again to the Sea As strange but most true was a crop of Pease that without tillage or sowing grew in the Rocks betwixt this Oxford and Aldebrough in the year 1555 when by unseasonable weather a great dearth was in the Land there in August were gathered above one hundred Quarters and in blossoming remained as many more where never grass grew or earth ever seen but hard solid Rocks three yards deep under their roots 8 Places separated from common use and devoted to God and his service by religious Princes were at S. Edmunds Ipswich Ikleworth Blithborow Clare Ieston Burgh Castle wherein Sigebert King of the East Angles entered the profession of a Monk but was thence forced by his people to fight against the Mercians in which Battle he was slain And Dunwich where Foelix founded his Episcopal See These with many others in this County were suppressed in the fall of the Monasteries and their Revenues assumed by King Henry the Eighth 9 This Shire is principally divided into three parts which are called Celdable S. Edmunds and S. Andreys Liberties subdivided into twenty two Hundreds and them again into 575 Parish-Churches wherein are seated seven Castles and twenty eight Market-Towns NORFOLCKE NORTHFOLK CHAPTER XVII NORTHFOLK is an Island inclining to an oval form closed on the South part with the Rivers of Wavenay and the lesser Ouse which divides it from Suffolk On the East and North with the German Ocean on the West toward Cambridge-shires with some branches of the greater Ouse toward Lincolis-shire with that part of the Neve which passeth from Wisbitch into the Washes It containeth in length from Tarmouth to Wifbitch about fifty miles In breadth from The●ford to Wells about thirty The whole Circuit is about two hundred forty two miles The Name ariseth from the situation of the people who being the Norther-most of the Kingdom of East-Angles are therefore called the Northfolk as the Souther-most Southfolk The Air is sharp and piercing especially the Champion and near the Sea therefore it delayeth the Spring and Harvest the situation of the Countrey inclining thereto as being under the 53 degree of Latitude The Soil diverse about the towns commonly good as Clay Chalk or fat Earth well watered and with some Wood upward to the Heaths naked dry and barren Marsland and Flegge exceeding rich but Marsland properly for Pasture Flegge for Corn. 2 The parts from Thetford to Burneham and thence Westward as also along the Coast be counted Champion the rest as better furnished with Woods Woodland The Champion aboundeth with Corn Sheep and Conies and hesein the barren Heaths as the Providence of our Ancestors hath of old disposed them are very profitable For on them principally lie our Fould courses called of the Saxons whose institution they therefore seem to be Paldyocum that is Liberty of fold or fo●●dage These heaths by the compasture of the sheep which we call Tathe are made so rich with Corn that when they fall to be sown they commonly match the fruitfullest grounds in other Countries and laid again do long after yield a sweeter and more plentiful feed for Sheep so that each of them maintain other and are the chiefest wealth of our Countrey The Woodland fitter for grass is maintained chiefly by feeding of Cattel yet well stored with Corn and Sheep The Coast is fortunate in Fish and hath many good harbours whereof Lynn and Tarmouth be the mother-ports and of great traffique Wells and Blackeney next in estimation The whole County aboundeth with Rivers and pleasant Springs of which the Ouse is the chiefest by whose plentiful branches the Isle of Ely the Towns and Shires of Cambridge Huntington and the County of Suffolk vent and receive Commodities The next is Hi●rus or Yere passing from Norwich to ●armouth where it receiveth the Bure coming from Aylsham both of them of great service for water carriages but very notable for their plenty of fish for some one man out of an hold upon the Bnr● hath drawn up ordinarily once a year between two Nets above five or six score Bushels of Fish at one draught The Waveney and the lesser Ouse are also Navigable and of great use The residue I omit 3 The people were anciently called the ICENI as the also of Suffolk Cambridge-shire and Huntington-shire and supposed to be of them whom Caesar nameth Cenimagni Ptolomy Simeni some Tigeni Their manners were likely to be as the rest of the Britains barbarous at those times as appeareth by Caesar and Tacitus Neither can I otherwise commend their successors the Saxons for so also their own Countreyman Ethelward termeth them Since the entry of the Normans they have been counted civil and ingenious apt to good Letters adorning Religion with more Churches and Monasteries than any Shire of England and the Laws and Seats of Iustice for many ages with some excellent men from whom most of our chief Families and some of the greatest Nobility of the Kingdom have taken advancement And herein is Northfolk fortunate that as Crete boasted of an hundred Cities so may she of an hundred Families of Gentlemen never yet attainted of high Treason How the Government of this County was about Caesars time is uncertain but agreeable no doubt to the rest of the Britains under some peculiar Toparch or Regulus as Tacitus termeth him The latter Romans held it by two Garrisons one at Gariannum neer ●armouth the other at Branodunum now called Brancastre both of horse and commanded by the Comes Maritimi Tractus as Mercellinus calleth him and termed after Comes Littoris Saxonici Upon the entry of the Saxons this County with Suffolk fell in the portion of the Angles and about the year five hundred sixty one were together erected into a Kingdom by Vffa of whom the succeeding Kings were tituled Vffines But having suffered many Tempests of Fortune it was in the year 870 utterly wasted and extinct by Hungar and Hubba the Danes who overthrew the vertuous King Edmund about Thetford and after martyred him at S. Edmundsbury Yet they did not long enjoy it for King Edward shortly recovered it from them and annexed it to his other Kingdoms The Da●es notwithstanding inhabited abundantly in these parts so that many of our Towns were sounded by them a●d a great part of our people and Gentry are risen out of their bloud 4 This Kingdom of East-Angles was after allotted to an Earldom of that name by William the Conquero●r who made Radulph a Britain marrying his Kinswoman Earl thereof but gave the greatest parts of this County about Wimonham Keninghall Lenn Burnham Fulmerstone c. to W. de Albany Pincerne and W. de Warranna Forrestario who to strengthen themselves according to the use of that time with the homage and service of many Tenants divided large portions of the same amongst their friends and
the state of their bodies before they be decayed and the other for quantity gives place to no neighbouring Countrey 4 The ground to say nothing of the Sea which is exceeding full of Fish consisteth of soil very fruiful yet the husbandmans labour deserves to be thankfully remembred by whose pains and industry it doth not only supply is self but affords Corn to be carried forth to others The Land is plentifully stored with Cattle and Grain and breeds every where store of Conies Hares Partridges and Phesants pleasant for meadows pasturage and Parks so that nothing is wanting that may suffice man The middle yields plenty of pasture and forrage for Sheep whose wooll the Clothiers esteem the best next unto that of Leinster and Cotteswold If you cast your eyes towards the North it is all over garnished with Meadows Pastures and Woods If towards the South side it lieth in a manner wholly bedecked with Corn fields enclosed where at each end the Sea doth so incroach it self that it maketh almost two Islands besides namely Freshwater Isle which looketh to the West and Binbridge Isle answering it to the East 5 The Commodities of the whole chiefly consist of Cattle Sea fowl Fish and Corn whereof it hath sufficient Woods are not here very plentiful for that it is only stored with one little Forrest yet the Countrey of Hant-shire for vicinity of Site is a friendly neighhour in that behalf so as it were being tyed together in affinity they are always ready and propense to add to each others wants and defects by a mutual supply 6 The ancient Inhabitants of this Island were the Belgae spoken of in the several Provinces of Sommerset-shire Wilt-shire and Hant-shire Such as did then possess it were called Lords of the Isle of Wight till it fell into the Kings hands by Roger Son to William Fits Osburne slain in the war of Flanders that was driven into exile And Henry the first King of England gave it unto Richard Ridvers with the Fee or Inheritance of the Town of Christs-Church where as in all other places he built certain Fortresses 7 The Principal Market-Town in the Isle of Newport called in times past Medena and Novus Burgus de Meden that is The new Burgh of Meden whereof the whole Countrey is divided into East Meden and West Meden A Town well seated and much frequented unto whose Burgesses his Majesty hath lately granted the choice of a Major who with his brethren do govern accordingly It is populous with Inhabitants having an entrance into the Isle from the Haven and a Passage for Vessels of small burden unto the Key Not far from it is the Castle Caresbrook whose founder is said to have been Whitgar the Saxon and from him called VVhite-Garesburgh but now made shorter for easier pronunciation the graduation whereof for Latitude is in the degree 50 36 minutes and her Longitude in 19 4 minutes where formerly hath stood a Priory and at Quarre a Nunnery a necessary neighbour to those Penitentiaries And yet in their merry mood the Inhabitants of this Island do boast that they were happier then their neighbour Countries for that they never had Monk that ever wore hood Lawyer that cavelled nor Foxes that were craft● 8 It is reported that in the year of mans Salvation 1176. and twenty three of King Henry the second that in this Island it rained a showre of bloud which continued for the space of 2 hours together to the great wonder and amazement of the people that beheld it with fear 9 This Isle of Wight is fortified both by Art and Nature for besides the strength of Artificial Forts and Block houses wherewith it is well furnished it wants not the Assistants of natural Fences as being enriched with a continual ridge and range of craggy Cliffs and Rocks and Banks very dangerous for Saylers as the Needles so called by reason of their sharpness The Shingl●s Mixon Brambles c. 10 Vespasian was the first that brought it to the subjection of the Romans whilest he served as a private person under Claudius Caesar. And Cerdic was the first English Saxon that subdued it who granting it unto Scuffe and VVhitgar they joyntly together slew almost all the British Inhabitants being but few of them there remaining in the Town aforesaid called of his name VVhitgaresburgh VVolpher King of the Mercians reduced this Island afterwards under his obedience and at that ●ime when he became God-father to Edelwalch King of the South Saxons and answered fo●●im at his Baptisme he assigned it over unto him with the Province also of the Menuari But when Edelwalch was slain and Arvandus the petty King of the Island was made away Caedwalla King of the West-Saxons annexed it to his Dominion and in a tragical and lamentable Massacre put to the sword almost every mothers child of the in-born Inhabitants The thing that is best worthy note and observation is this That Bishop Wilfrid was the first that instructed the Inhabitants of this Island in Christian Religion and brought them from Idolatrous Superstition with the which unto that time they were obscurely blinded For Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction this Countrey belongeth to the Bishop of Winchester and for Civil government to the County of South-hampton It is fortified with the strength of six Castles traded with three Market-Towns and hath 36 Parish-Churches planted in it Dorcet Shire DORCESTER-SHIRE CHAPTER VIII DORCESTER from her ancient people DUROTRIGES is most likely to have received that name By the Britains called DWRGWEIR lieth bounded upon the North side with Sommerset and Wilt-shire upon the West with Devon-shire and some part with Sommerset upon the East altogether with Hamp-shire and her South part is wholly bounded with the British Seas 2 The form grows wider from the West and spreads her self the broadest in the midst where it extends to twenty four miles but in length is no less than forty four The whole in Circumference about is one hundred and fifty miles 3 The Air is good and of an healthful constitution the soyl is fat affording many commodities and the Countrey most pleasant in her situation for the In-land is watered with many sweet and fresh running-Springs which taking passage through the plain Vallies do lastly in a loving manner unite themselves together and of their many branches make many big bodied streams neither doth the Sea deny them entrance but helpeth rather to fill up their Banks whereby V●ssels of Burthen discharge their rich Treasures and her self with open hand distributeth her gifts all along the South of the Shore 4 Antiently it was possest by the Durotriges whom Ptolomy placeth along in this Tract who being subdued by the Romans yielded them room and unwilling subjection After them the Saxons set foot in these parts whereof Portland seemeth from that Port to take name who in this place arrived in Anno 703. and did sorely infect and annoy all the South Tract And at Bindon before him Kinegillus King of the
and large promises could not by any means obtain his desires he therefore in a place of advantage suddenly surprised and ravished her weak yet resisting body After the deed done the cruel Tyrant to stop her cries and acclamations slew her and cut off her head out of which place did suddenly arise a Spring that continueth to this day carrying from the Fountain such a forcible stream and Current as the like is not found in Christendom Over the Head of the Spring there is built a Chappel of Free-stone with Pillars curiously wrought and engraved in the Chancel whereof and Glass-Window the Picture of the Virgin is drawn together with the memorial of her Life and Death To this Fountain Pilgrims are accustomed to repair in their zealous but blind devotion and divers others resort to Bath in holding firmly that the water is of much vertue There be many red Stones in the bottom of this Well and much green Moss growing upon the sides the superstition of the People holding that those red spots in the Stones were drops of the Ladies Blood which all the Water in the Spring can never wash away and that the Moss about the Wall was her Hair which though some of it be given to every Stranger that comes yet it never wasteth But howsoever this be carried for truth by the Tradition of time the Moss it self smells exceeding sweet There is also hard by Kilken a small Village within this County a little Well of no great note that at certain times riseth and falleth after the manner of Sea-tydes 9 In the South-part of this Country divided from the rest is a place in some written Copies of Antonine called Bovium which we now term Banchor first a City and afterwards a Monastery of famous memory and the first that is read of in the World wherein as Beda saith were a great number of Monks and them divided into seven Companies every one having his several Ruler assigned None of these Companies had less than three hundred Persons devoted to Prayer and to get living by their own labour for themselves and the poor although it hath long since been utterly ruinate so as now there is scarce seen the face and outward shew of a dead City or Monastery It hath only the names of two Gates remaining one standing a mile di●tant from another and betwixt which the River Dee now runneth where are often-times found many pieces of Roman Coyn and other tokens of antiquity But of these shall be more mention made in the following History Another like Monastery but of lesser account stood in the Vale beneath Varish a little City placed by the Romans in the consines of this Shire and Denbigh-shire and upon the Bank of Elwy and Cluyd This the Britains call Llan-Elwy of the River the Englishmen Asaph of the Founder and the Historiographers Asaphensis It is more famoused for antiquity than for building or bravery for about the year 560 Kentigern Bishop of Glasco being fled hither out of Scotland placed here a Bishops See and erected a Monastery gathering together 663. in a Religious Brotherhood whereof 300 that were unlearned gave themselves to husbandry and to work within the Monastery the rest to Prayer and Meditations When he returned into Scotland he ordained Asaph a godly and upright man to be Governour over this Monastery of whom it took the name and is called Saint Asaphs Another Monastery of great account was at Basingwarke in this County near unto which began that admirable Ditch drawn thence into the Month of Severne by King Offa the Tract whereof I have expressed thorow this Shire and will further speak thereof in the following History 10 This Shire is divided into five Hundreds fortified with seven Castles hath only one Market-Town and twenty eight Parishes in which there is a continual celebration of Divine Service ANGLESEY and CARNARVAN ANGLESEY CHAPTER XIII ANGLESEY was in the time of the Romans called Mona by the Britains Mon and Ver-Mon that is the Land of Mon of the ancient England-Saxons Moneg And at last after the Englishmen had by their sharp and several assaults brought it under their rule and became Lords thereof it was termed Anglesey as one would say The Englishmens Island 2 For an Island it is albeit it be severed from the Continent of Britain but with a small and narrow straight of the River Menai and on all other parts beaten upon with the surging and troublous Irish Sea in which it lyeth somewhat square-wise not much different in length and breadth being where it reacheth out in length from Beau-marish Eastward to the utmost Promontory Westward which we call Holy-head twenty miles and in breadth from Llambederick Northward to the point of Menai Southward seventeen miles the whole circuit or circumference amounting towards seventy miles 3 The Air is reasonable grateful and healthful and not generally subject to Diseases excepting certain Agues at sometimes which are occasioned by the Fogs and misty Exhalations which arise from the Sea called Mare Virginium with the which this Isle is encompassed 4 The Commodities that commend or rather beautifie this Country are in Corn and Cattel wherewith it not only enricheth it self exceedingly but sendeth out great Provision thereof to others to supply their defects and although the ground may seem dry and stony or unpleasant and nothing sightly wherein for the outward quality it resembleth some other parts of Wales that are not so fruitful yet for the inward bounties of nature it is far unlike for above all the Coasts of Wales it is most plentiful of Wheat insomuch as by Giraldus Cambre●sis report they are wont to say in Welsh by way of a Proverb Mon Mam Cambry which is to say Mon is the Mother of Wales for that when other Countries Harvest fails round about or their Provision is exhaust and drawn dry this alone like a provident and full breasted Mother is able to sustain the rest Whereunto Nature most providently hath added another benefit serviceable and necessary to the former in that the Country produceth also those kind of Stones which are called Molares as of all other fittest to make Millstones or Grindstones In some places also it yieldeth an Earth of Aluminous quality out of which some not long since began to make Al●m and Copperose who like unflesht Souldiers gave over their enterprise without further hope because at first they saw it not answer their over-hasty expectations 5 The ancient Inhabitants of this Country were the Ordovines mentioned before in the precedent Provinces of Denbigh-shire Flint-shire and Carnarvon-shire And this very Island was that ancient and so much ennobled Seat of the British Dr●yds who so amated the Army of Roman Invaders as Tacitus reports and as else-where we have related in the sixth Book and seventh Chapter of our ensuing History 6 This Nation was attempted first by Paulinus Suetonius in the Reign of Nero but brought under the Roman Empire by Iulius Agricola When the
to be observed to be full with Mines of all sorts of metals Gold only excepted Their Tin was found out by an E●glish man of Cornwall in the year one thousand two hundred and forty one belike which h●d been skilled in that work in his own Country for it is said That at that time there was no Tin known elsewhere in E●rope The earth gives good Corn and their pastures breed as good Cattle There is Wood good store as there are Woods which harbour multitudes of wile Beasts Fox●s Bears Harts Bulls and others which afford them sport in the hunting and meat for the best man● Table Among the rest there is a wild Beast which they call Lomi armed by nature with a strange defence against the hounds which ●ollow her For they say she hath a kind of bladder hanging under her ●aws which in the hunting she fills with a s●lding hot water and ●asts it upon the Dogs with th●t nimbleness that they are not able to avoid or pursue her but oft times have their ve●y hair ●all off as from a drest Pig The Co●n●ry is generally 〈◊〉 in Saffron and other med●cinal drugs Wine it hath too but not so kind or pleasi●g as in other places ●nsomuch that the richer sort furnish themselves out of A●stria H●ngary and the Reg●on about which they in lieu of it supply with excellent Beer For they are held very good at the art of brewing and not behind hand at dr●nking when th●y have done It is said of the 〈◊〉 sort I 〈◊〉 that if once they set to a Ve●●el of good l●quor they will not loo●e it t●ll they 〈◊〉 ●ound it ●●pty 〈…〉 before them as oft as he was heard though in a dead sound by the enemy whom he had so often crushed while he was yet living 10 For matter of learning they have not been very famous heretofore howbeit now the better parts are not now behind with the other parts of Germany The chief of note were Iohn Huss● and Hi●rome of Prague two worthy members of the Church They were condemned for Heretiques in the Council of Constance one thousand four hundred and fourteen for attempting a reformation of such errours as they held not agreeable with the word of God But yet their sufferings could not dead the good seed which they had sown in the true hearted It lives still among them in some measure though they have been often assayed by strange Impostures in Religion such as the heart of man could not conceive without a strong and extraordinary working of that great Deceiver 11 I cannot pass the most wicked cousenage of Picardus who pos●est great multitudes of these silly people with an opinion that he could recall them to that perfect state in which Adam was created placed them in an Island for that purpose which he called Paradise caused them to walk naked and named this Sect Adamites Horrible sins were committed under that pretence promiscuous whoredome and incest at their very Divine Service It is feared that at this day there are many secret professors which live under ground meet at their solemnities have their prayers framed to their own humour and when the Priest pronounceth the words of Genesis as his custome is Crescite multipli●amini replete terram the lights are suddenly pop 't out and without any respect had to alliance or kindred or reverence to their exercise they mingle like Beasts and when they have acted their wickedness and are returned to their seats the Candles are again lighted and they fall to their pretended prayers as if there had been no harm done 12 The King is one of the seven Electors of the Emperour and in case the other six be equally divided he gives the suffrage which carrieth it It is to be thought that his power was conferred upon 〈◊〉 not without great counsel and good reason For besides that the place it self is by natur● strong the people to have a special inbred love to Germany and defence of her liberties At Coronation he is Cup-bearer and performs it himself in person if he bepresent His revenues are cast up to be three Millions of Crowns which are not gathered all within the compass here limited but part out of other Principalities which are annexed to this Kingdom For there are four Regions which make up his Title and are subject to his government 1 Bohemia it self as we have described it 2 Lusatia 3 Silesia 4 Moravia They were named in the Map of Germany as being parts of the whole Country but will admit here a more particular tract as belonging properly to this Kingdom 13 First then for Bohemia it self it contains about thirty Cities which are immediate subjects to the King as Quadus calls them besides many others which are held in possession of the chief Princes Primates Barons Counts and Nobles of the Country The Metropolis is Prague heretofore know by the names of Bubienum and Morobudum saith Maginus but rather I think by the situation it should be the same which Ptolomy calls Casurgis It was compassed with a wall by Primaslans their third King and received the name of Prague by the wise Lubussa a Limine which they say is called Prague in the Bohemian language It is indeed a very stately City seated in the middle of the Country in the River Multaria and compared by some to Florence It consists of three Cities which are called the old Town the new Town and the little Town The old Town is the chief and is adorn●d with may illustrious buildings The new Town is divided from the old by a large ditch And the little Town stands on the other side of the River Mulda but is joyned to the old Town by a stone bridg of twenty four Arches It was made an Arch-bishops See by Charles the Emperour and King of Bo●emia was once the chief University but that now is removed to Lipsia in the Province of Misnia It is the Regal seat of Bohemia and here was the King and Queen when it was taken by the Imperialists 14 The other Cities of this Region which are worth the noting are 2 Egra It stands upon the River from whence it beares the name before it was called by Ptolomy Monosgada on the West end of Sylva Gabreta that part of the Hircinia which portends toward Franconia It was a City Imperial till the right was sold by Lodovicus Bavares to Iohn King of Bohemia It is a very strong City fortified as well by Nature as Art for the most part is built upon a Rock It is in compass two miles within the walls and with the Suburbs three Not far from it there is a fountain of a kind of sharp wa●er which the Inhabitants drink Instead of Beer 3 Krens toward Austria on the North side of Da●ubius 4 Pi●sen on the West of Bohemia a City which long held out against General Tilly by the defence of the now Count Man●●ield but was at last betrayed by some of his
in time to the Normans i● became a Province under the Conquerours power who gave to his followers much Land in these parts 6 The place of most account in this Shire is Chichester by the Britains called C●ercei a City beautifull and large and very well walled about first built by Cissa the second King of the ●outh Saxons wherein his Royal Palace was kept And when King VVilliam the First had enacted that Bishops Sees should be trans●●ted out of small Towns unto places of greater resort the Re●idence of the Bishop until then held at Selsey was removed to this City where Bishop Raulfe began a most goodly Cathedral Church but before it was fu●ly finished by a sudden mischance of fire was quite consumed Yet the same Bishop with the helping liberality of King Henry the First began it again and saw it wholly finished whose beauty and greatness her fatal enemy still envying again cast down in the dayes of King Richard the First and by her raging flames consumed the buildings both of it and the Bishops Palace adjoyning which Seffrid the second Bishop of that Name re-edified and built anew And now to augment the honour of this place the City hath born the Title of an Earldome whereof they of Arundel were sometimes so styled Whose Graduation for Latitude which is removed from the Aequator unto the degree fifty five minutes and for Longitude observing the same point in the West whence Mercator hath measured are twenty degrees 7 With whom for frequency bigness and building the Town Lewes seemeth to contend where King Athelstane appointed the mintage of his Moneys and VVilliam de VVarron built a strong Castle whereunto the disloyal Barons of King Henry the Third in warlike manner resorted and fought a great Battle against their own Soveraign and his son wherein the King had his Horse flain under him Richard King of the Romans surprised and taken in a Wind-mill and Prince Edward delivered unto them upon equal conditions of peace But a greater Battel was fought at Battle when the hazard of England was tried in one days fight and Harold the King gave place to his Conquerour by losing of his life among sixty seven thousand nine hundred seventy four Englishmen besides whose bloud so spilt gave name to the place in French Sangue lac And the soyl naturally after rain becoming of a reddish colour caused William Newbery untruly to write That if there fall any small sweet showers in the place where so great a slaughter of the English-men was made presently sweateth forth very fresh bloud out of the earth as if the evidence thereof did plainly declare the voice of bloud there shed and cried still from the earth unto the Lord. 8 But places of other note in this Shire are these from Basham Earl Harold taking the Sea for his delight in a small Boat was driven upon the Coast of Normandy where by Duke William he was retained 'till he had sworn to make him King after Edward the Confessors death which oath being broken the Bastard arrived at Pensey and with his sword revenged that Perjury At VVest-VVittering also Ell● the Saxon before him had landed for the conquering of those parts and gave name to the shore from Cimen his son But with greater glory doth Gromebridge raise up her head where Charles Duke of Orleance father to Lewes the twelfth King of France taken prisoner at Agincourt was there a long time detained 9 The commodities of this Province are many and divers both in Corn Cattle VVood Iron and Glass which two last as they bring great gain to their possessors so do they impoverish the County of Woods whose want will be found in ages to come if not at this present in some sort felt 10 Great have been the devotions of religious Persons in building and consecrating many houses unto the use and only service of Christ whose Beadmen abusing the intents of their Founders hath caused those Foundations to lament their own ruins For in the tempestuous time of King Henry the Eighth eighteen of them in this County were blown down whose fruit fell into the Laps of some that never meant to restore them again to the like use This County is principally divided into six Rapes every of them containing a River a Castle and Forrest in themselves besides the several Hundreds whereunto they are parted that is the Rape of Chichester into seven of Arundel into five of Bramber into ten of Lewes into thirteen of Pevensey into seventeen and of Hastings into thirteen in all fifty six wherein are seated ten Castles eighteen Market-Towns and three hundred and twelve Parish-Churches SURREY SURREY CHAPTER V. SURREY by Beda called Sutbri lieth seperated upon the North from the counties of Buckingham and Middlesex by the great River Thamisis upon the East Kent doth inbound it upon the South is held in with Sussex and Hamp-shire and her West part is bordered upon by Hamp-shire and Bark-shire 2 The form thereof is somewhat square and lieth by North and by East whereof Redrith and Frensham are the opposites betwixt whom are extended thirty four miles The broadest part is from Awfold Southward to Thamisis by Stanes and them asunder twenty two the whole in circumference is one hundred and twelve miles 3 The heavens breathing Air in this Shire is most sweet and delectable so that for the same cause many Royal Palaces of our Princes are therein seated and the Countrey better stored with game than with grain insomuch that this County is by some men compared unto a home-spun freeze-cloth with a costly fair list for that the out-verge doth exceed the middle it self And yet it is wealthy enough both in Corn and Pasturage especially in Holmesdale and towards the River of Thamisis 4 In this shire the Regni an ancient people mentioned by Ptolomy were seated whom he brancheth further through Sussex and some part of Hamp-shire And in the wane of the Romans Government when the Land was left to the will of invaders the South-Saxons under Ella here erected their Kingdome which with the first was raised and soonest found end From them no doubt the Countrey was named Suth-rey as seated upon the South of the River and now by contraction is called Sur●ey 5 And albeit the County is barren of Cities or Towns of great estate yet is she stored with many Pri●cely Houses yea and five of his Majesties so magnificently built that of some she may well say no shire hath none such as is None such indeed And were not Richmond a fatal place of Englands best Princes it might in estem be ranked with the richest For therein died the great Conquerour of France King Edward the Third the beautiful Ann daughter to Charles the Fourth Emperour and intirely beloved wife to King Richard the Second the most wise Prince King Henry the Seventh and the rarest of her Sex the Mirrour of Princes Queen Elizabeth the worlds love and Subjects joy 6 At M●rton likewise
by Succession and Right of Inheritance the Earld●m of Chester annexed to his most happy Stiles Upon whose Person I pray that the Angels of Iacobs God may ever attend to his great glory and Great Britains happiness 9 If I should urge credit unto the report of certain Trees floating in Bagmere only against the deaths of the Heirs of the Breretons thereby seated and after to sink until the next like occasion or inforce for truth the Prophesie which Leyland in a Poetical fury forespake of Beeston-Castle highly mounted upon a steep Hill I should forget my self and wonted opinion that can hardly believe any such vain Predictions though they be told from the mouths of Credit as Bagmere-Trees are or learned Leyland for Beesson who thus writeth The day will come when it again shall mount his head aloft If I a Prophet may be heard from Seers that say so oft With eight other Castles this Shire hath been strengthened which were Ould-Castle Shocloch Sho●witch Chester Pouldford Dunham Frodesham and Haulten and by the Prayers as then was taught of eight Religious Houses therein seated preserved which by King Henry the Eight were suppressed ●●amely Stanlow Ilbree Maxfeld Norton Bunbery Combermere Rud-neath and Vale-Royal besides the VVhite and black Fri●rs and the Nunnery in Chester This Counties division is into seven Hundreds wherein are seated thirteen Market-Towns eighty five Parish-Churches and thirty-eight Chappels of Ease Lancaster LANCA-SHIRE CHAPTER XXXVII THE County Palatine of Lancaster famous for the four Henries the fourth fifth sixth and seventh Kings of England derived from Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster is upon the South confined and parted by the River Mersey from the County Palatine of Chester the fair County of Darby-shire bordering upon the East the large County of York-shire together with Westmerland and Cumberland being her kind neighbours upon the North and the Sea called Mare Hibernicum embracing her upon the West 2 The form thereof is long for it is so inclosed between York-shire on the East side and the Irish-Sea on the West that where it boundeth upon Cheshire on the South-side it is broader and by little and little more Northward it goeth confining upon Westmerland the more narrow it groweth It containeth in length from Brathey Northward to Halwood Southward fifty seven miles from Denton in the East to Formby by Altmouth in the West thirty one and the whole circumference in compass one hundred threescore and ten miles 3 The Air is subtile and piercing not troubled with gross vapours or foggy mists by reason whereof the People of that Country live long and healthfully and are not subject to strange and unknown diseases 4 The Soil for the generality is not very fruitful yet it produceth such numbers of Cattel of such large proportion and such goodly heads and horns as the whole Kingdom of Spain doth scarce the like It is a Country replenished with all necessaries for the use of Man yielding without any great labour the commodity of Corn Flax Grass Coals and such like The Sea also addeth her blessing to the Land that the People of that Province want nothing that serveth either for the sustenance of Nature or the satiety of appetite They are plentifully furnished with all sorts of Fish Flesh and Fowls Their principal Fuell is Coal and Turff which they have in great abundance the Gentlemen reserving their Woods very carefully as a beauty and principal ornament to their Mannors and Houses And though it be far from ●ondon the Capital City of this Kingdom yet doth it every year furnish her and many other parts of the Land besides with many thousands of Cattel bred in this Country giving thereby and other ways a firm testimony to the World of the blessed abundance that it hath pleased God to enrich this noble Dukedom withall 5 This Counties ancient Inhabitants were the Brigantes of whom there is more mention in the description of York-shire who by Claudius the Emperour were brought under the Roman subjection that so held aud made it their Seat secured by their Garrisons as hath been gathered as well by many Inscriptions found in Walls and ancient Monuments fixed in Stones as by certain Altars erected in favour of their Emperours After the Romans the Saxons brought it under their protection and held it for a part of their Northumbrian Kingdom till it was first made subjugate to the Invasion of the Danes and then conquered by the victorious Normans whose Posterities from thence are branched further into England 6 Places of antiquity or memorable note are these the Town of Manchester so famous as well for the Market-Place Church and Colledge as for the resort unto it for Clothing was called Man●unium by Antonine the Emperour and was made a Fort and Station of the Romans Riblechester which taketh the name from R●ibell a little River near Clith●r● though it be a small Town yet by Tradition hath been called the richest Town in Christendom and reported to have been the Seat of the Romans which the many Monuments of their Antiquities Statues Pieces of Coin and other several Inscriptions digg'd up from time to time by the Inhabitants may give us sufficient perswasion to believe But the Shire Town is Lancaster more pleasant in situation than rich of Inhabitants built on the South of the River Lon and is the same Longovicum where as we find in the Noti●e Provinces a company of the Longovicarians under the Lieutenant General of Britain lay The beauty of this Town is in the Church Castle and Bridge her Streets many and stretched fair in length Unto this Town King Edward the Third granted a Mayor and two Bailiffs which to this day are elected out of twelve Brethren assisted by twenty four Burgesses by whom it is yearly governed with the supply of two Chamberlains a Recorder Town-Clerk and two Sergeants at Mace The elevation of whose Pole is in the degree of Latitude 54 and 58 scruples and her Longitude removed from the West point unto the degree 17 and 40 scruples 7 This Country in divers places suffereth the force of many flowing Tides of the Sea by which after a sort it doth violently rent asunder one part of the Shire from the other as in Fourness where the Ocean being displeased that the shore should from thence shoot a main way into the West hath not obstinately ceased from time to time to slash and mangle it and with his Fell irruptions and boysterous Tides to devour it Another thing there is not unworthy to be recommended to memory that in this Shire not far from Fo●rness-Felles the greatest standing water in all England called Winander Mere lieth stretched out for the space of ten miles of wonderful depth and all paved with stone in the bottom and along the Sea-side in many places may be seen heaps of sand upon which the People pour water until it recover a saltish humour which they afterwards boil with Turffs till it become white Salt 8 This
his right hand cut off by the Kings Officers The fourth place for account is Raihader Gowy who besides the great fall of Wye with a continual noyse hath her Markets there kept upon the Sabbath which I there observed and here note for an offence 7 Many Rivers arise and run thorow this Shire which were it not that the Hills so cluster together might make the Soyl both fertile and fat Such are Teme Lug Ithon Clowdok Dulas Comatton Somegill Guithel Arro Machaway Edway Hawye Eland Clarwen and Wye besides other Lo●ghs that stand betwixt the Hills This Shire is divided into six Hundreds wherein are seated three Forrests four Market-Towns si● Castles and fifty two Parish-Churches BRECKNOCK-SHIRE CHAPTER IV. BRECKNOCK-SHIRE in the British language Brethin●a● so called as the Welshmen relate of a Prince named Brecha●ius the Father of an holy off-spring whose twenty four Daughters were all of them Saints is a County neither very large nor greatly to be praised or disliked of whose bounds upon the North is parted from Radn●r with the Rivers Clarwen and Wye the West lyeth butted upon by Cardigan and Caermarden-shires the South is confined by Glamorgan and the East with Monmouth and Radnor-shires is wholly bound 2 The length of this Shire from North to South betwixt L●anuthel and I●tradgunles are twenty eight English miles and her breadth from East to West extended betwixt Frentisso and Elywell are twenty miles the whole circumference about one hundred and two miles 3 This County is full of Hills and uneven for travel which on the South part mount in such height that as Giraldus hath written They make the Air much colder and defend the Country from the excessive heat of the Sun where by a certain natural wholsomness of Air maketh it most temperate and on the East side the Mountains of Tolgar and Ewias do as it were fore fence the same Among which there arise and run so many fruitful Springs that their Vallies are thereby made most fertile yielding in plenty both Corn and Grass 4 The ancient Inhabitants and possessors of this Shire with the rest in this South Tract were the Silures much spoken of and great opposers to the Romans whose Countries were first made subject by Iulius Frontinus who besides the valour of the enemy had to struggle with the Mountains and Straits as Tacitus tells us neither any more hard we may well say than them of this Shire whereof one in the South and three miles from Brecknock is of such height and operation as is uncredible and were it not that I have witness to affirm what I shall speak I should blush to let the report thereof pass from my Pen In my Perambulation in these parts remaining in Br●cknock to observe the site of that Town the Aldermen or chief Seniors thereof regarding my pains with friendly and courteous entertainments at my departure no less than eight of them that had been Bailiffs of the Town came to visite me where they reported upon their Credit and Trials that from the top of that Hill in the Welsh called Mounch-denny or Cadier Arthur they had oftentimes cast from them and down the North-East Rock their Cloaks Hats and Staves which notwithstanding would never fall but were with the Air and Wind still returned back and blown up neither said they will any thing descend from that Cliffe being so cast unless it be stone or some Metalline substance affirming the cause to be the Clouds which are seen to rack much lower than the top of that Hill As strange Tales are told of the Mear Llynsavathan two miles by East from Brecknock which at the breaking of her frozen Ice maketh a fearful sound like unto Thunder In which place as is reported sometimes stood a fair City which was swallowed up in an Earthquake and resigned her Stone-Walls unto this deep and broad Water whither unto this day leadeth all the waies in this Shire which as learned Camd●n conjectureth might be that Loventrium which Ptolomy in this Tract placeth and the more confirmed by the Rivers name adjoyning being also called Lovenny which River also passeth thorow this Mear without any mixture of her waters as by the colour thereof is well perceived which glideth through it with the same stream and no greater than wherewith she first entred in 5 The Towns for Commerce are Hay Bealt and Brecknock two of them unfortunate of their former greatness whom Wars and sedition have defaced and cast down Hay upon Wye and Dulas pleasant for situation in the Rebellion of Owen Glendowerdy was diswalled depopulated and burnt in whose foundations for new repairs many Roman Coyns have been found and thereby thought to be the Seat of their Legions and Buelth now Bealt though of good frequency yet not so great as when Ptolomy observed her position for graduation who calleth it Buleum Silurum neither when it with the Country was possessed by Aurelius Ambrosius by whose permission Pascentius the Son of Vortiger ruled all as Ninius writeth nor yet as of later times when Leolin the last Prince of the Britains was therein betrayed and slain 6 Brecknock the Shire-Town for Buildings and Beauty retaineth a better regard whose Walls in Oval-wise are both strong and of good repair having three Gates for Entrance with ten Towers for defence and is in circuit six hundred and forty paces about upon whose West part a most sumptuous and stately Castle is seated the like whereof is not commonly seen whose decayes approaching do increase her ruins daily and in the end is feared will be her fall This Town is seated upon the meeting of two Rivers Houthy and Vske whose yearly Government is committed to two Bailiffs fifteen Aldermen two Chamberlains two Constables a Town-Clerk and two Sergeants their Attendants having the Poles Elevation in 52 21 minutes of Latitude and for Longitude is placed in the 16 and 32 minutes as the Mathematicians do measure them 7 This Shire is strengthened with nine Castles divided into six Hundreds wherein are seated three Market-Towns and sixty one Parish-Churches CARDIGAN-SHIRE CHAPTER V. CARDIGAN-SHIRE in the Welsh called Sire Aber-Tivi is parted on the North from Merioneth-shire with the River Dovi by the Plinillimon Hills from Montgomery-shire in part of her East and the rest from Brecknock shire with the water Towy and with Tyvy altogether on the South from Caermarden-shire The West is wholly washed with the Irish-Sea 2 The Form thereof is Horn-like bowing compass long and narrow and growing wider stll towards the North so that from Cardigan the Shire-Town and uttermost point in the South unto the River Dovi her farthest North-bounder are thirty two miles and from the head of Clarwan in the East to Abersthwyth on her West the broadest part in the Shire are only fifteen the whole in circumference is one hundred and three miles 3 The Air is open and somewhat piercing The Soil is hilly and Wales like uneven yet more plain and champion towards the Sea than
not a little glory of their Merlin who as they say was therein born the Son of a bad Angel or of an Incubus Spirit the Britains great Apollo whom Geffery ap Arthur would rank with the South-saying Seer or rather with the true Prophets themselves being none other than a meer Seducer and Phantastical Wizard which howsoever Alani de Insulis in his Commentaries hath laboured to unlock those dark and hidden Similies wherewith his Book is pestred and full yet was it not without cause forbid the reading by the Council of Trent as vain and not worthy of Countenance or Credit At the entrance of the Normans this Town was brought under their obedience and for a long time was distressed with the Calamities of War yet afterwards was made by the English Princes the Chancery and Exchequer of all South●Wales And at this day is yearly governed by a Maior who ever after is an Alderman and Iustice of the Peace two Sheriffs elected out of sixteen Burgesses all of them in Scarlet a Sword-Bearer a Town-Clerk and two Sergeants with Maces from whence the Pole is raised 52 degrees 15 minutes in Latitude and for Longitude is in the degree 15 and 30 minutes from the first point in the West according to Mercator 7 East from this place are the ruines of Carreg-Castle which stood mounted on a high Hill under the which many Vaults and spacious Caves far into the ground are seen wherein is thought the People unable to ●ight were therein secured in time of their Wars Where also is a Well take the report from Giraldus who writeth it that in this place twice in four and twenty hours ●bbing and twice flowing resembleth the unstable motions of the main Sea 8 This Shire is watred with twenty eight Rivers and Rivelets of name strengthned with ten Castles traded in six Market-Towns divided into six Hundreds wherein are seated fourscore and seven Parish-Churches GLAMORGAN Shire GLAMORGAN-SHIRE CHAPTER VII GLAMORGAN-SHIRE as some think named from Prince Morgan the possessor thereof or according to others is taken from Morgan an Abbey founded by William Earl of Glocester upon the Sea-shoar in the South of this Shire lyeth bounded upon that part altogether with the British-Sea the West by Logor is parted from Caermarden-shire the North butteth upon the County of Brecknock and the East by Remney is divided from Monmouth 2 The form of this Shire groweth still wider from her West-point spreading her broadest touch in the East betwixt which extreams I find by measure to be well-near forty English miles and from North to South not altogether twenty miles the whole in circumference about one hundred and twelve miles 3 The Air is temperate and gives more content to the mind than the Soil doth fruit or ease unto Travellers The Hills being high and very many which from the North notwithstanding are lessened as it were by degrees and towards the Sea-coasts the Countrey becometh somewhat plain which part is the best both for plenty of Grain and populous of Inhabitants The rest all Mountain is replenished with Cattel which is the best means unto wealth that this Shire doth afford upon whose Hills you may behold whole Heards of them feeding and from whose Rocks most clear springing waters thorow the Vallies trickling which sportingly do pass with a most pleasant sound and did not a little revive my wearied spirits among those vast Mountains imployed in their search whose infancy at first admitted an easie step over but grown unto strength more boldly forbad me such passage and with a more stern countenance held on their Iourney unto the British-Seas and Ta●e among these is accounted for a chief 4 Upon whose fall and East-bank the fairest Town of all South-Wales is seated the Britains Caerdid the English Caerdiffe which Fitz-Haimon fortified with a Wall and Castle in the Reign of King Rufus when he and his Norman-Knights had overcome Rhese the Prince of these parts and thrust out Iustine from his lawful possession This Town he made his own Seat and Court of Iustice enjoyning his Consorts to give Aid to this honour and to hold their Portions in Vassallage of him Strong was the Castle as by the trust therein reposed may well appear where the youngest brother Bea●clark kept Captive the eldest Curthose both of them Sons to the Conquerour the space of twenty six years This Castle is large and in good repair whence the Town-Wall went both South and East to the Rivers side thorow which four Gates enter into the four Winds and contain in compass nine hundred and twenty paces and along the River a sure defence upon her West-side three hundred more so that the Town containeth in circuit twelve hundred and fourscore paces But as the Tave is a friend to the Town in making a Key for arrivage of shipping so is she a foe to S. Maries Church in the South with undermining her Foundations and threatning her fall The Town is governed by a Mayor yearly elected out of twelve Aldermen assisted with other twelve Burgesses a Town-Clerk four Constables and two Sergeants with Maces whose site is observed from the North-Star to lie in the degree of Latitude 51 and 49 scruples and from the ●irst point in the West 16 and 53 scruples 5 In the same graduation almost is sited the City Landaf wherein is a Castle and Cathedral Church dedicated to S. Telean Bishop of the same without any other memorable matter worthy the speaking of 6 But things of strange Note are these by the report of Giraldus who affirmeth that in a Rock or Cliffe upon the Sea-side and Island Barry lying near the South-East point of this County is heard out of a litttle chink let him take heed what he faith the noise as it it were of Smiths at their work one whiles ●he blowing of Bellows to increase the heat then the str●aks of the Hammer and sound of the Anvil sometim●s the noise of the Grind stone in grinding of Iron Tools then the hissing Sparks of Steel●gads as they flie from their ●eating with the puffing noise of Flames in a Furnace And whether this is the place whereof Clemens Alexandrinus speaketh I de●ermine not where in his Writings he hath these words They that have recorded Histories saith he do say that in the Isle of Britain there is a certain Hole or Cave under th● bottom of an Hill and on the top thereof a gaping Chink into the which when the Wind is gathered and tossed to and fro in the Womb or concavity thereof there is heard above a sound of Cymbals for the Wind being driven back from his hole is forced to make a loud sound as her vent 7 More Westward from hence upon the River Ogmore and neer unto Newton in a sandy plain about an hundred paces from Severne there springeth a Well though not of the clearest water where at the flowing and fulness of the Sea can hardly any water be gotten but at the Ebb and Fall o●
Empire of the Romans in Britain began to decline and go downward some out of Ireland entred into this Isle by stealth and ●estled themselves there as may be gathered by certain mounts of earth entrenched about and yet to be seen which they call the Irish-mens Cottages as also by a place named of the Irish-men y● Hiericy G●idid who did there as is recorded put the Britains to flight under the leading of Sirigus The Norwegians also were often infestuous to this Island but King Ethelreds Fleet having in the year 1000 scoured the Seas round about this Isle far exceeded all both Irish and Norwegian depopulations for they was●ed the Country in all hostile manner 7 After this two Hughs both Normans did greatly afflict this Island The one being Earl of Chester the other of Shrewsbury at which very time Magnus the Norwegian arriving there shot Hugh Earl of Shrewsbury through with an Arrow and departed af●er he had ransacked the Island It was afterwards grievousl● infested by the Englishmen who never gave over from time to time to invade it until in the Reign o● King Edward ●●e first it was whol●y bro●ght under his subjection 8 The principal Town in this Isle is Beaumarish which the said King Edward the First built in the East-side thereof and for the f●●r situation th●u●h in a Moo●ish-place gave it the name which it now beareth whereas in times past it was called Bonover which ●e also fortified with a goodly Ca●tle 9 The Mayor is the chiefest Magistrate of the Town who is yearly chosen and hath the assistance and help of two Bailiffs two Sergeants at M●ce and one Town-Clerk by whose careful diligence the affairs of this Town are orderly managed and commanded whose Latitude is 54 and Longitude 15 45 minutes 10 Not far from hence is Lhaanvais in times past a fair Religious House of the Friers Minors which although it be now in a manner rased out of memory yet antiquity maketh mention that it hath been of great regard among the Kings of England who h●ve sh●wed themselves very bountiful Patrons unto that Covent both in respect of the sanctimonious life of such as conversed there as also because there the Bodies of very eminent persons as the Daughter of King Iohn the Son of a King of the Danes as likewise of many great Lords Knights and Squires were enterred that were slain in the Wars again●t the Welsh in the time of many illustrious Kings of England 11 This Isle is reckoned to have had anciently many Villag●s in it even to the number of three hundred threescore and three and the same even at this day is very well peopled The division of this Isle for disposition of affairs that belong either to the state of the Crown or to the condition of the Country is into six Hundreds in which are seated two Market-Towns and seventy four Parish-Churches for Gods Divine Honour and Worship CAERNARVON-SHIRE CHAPTER XIV CAERNARVON-SHIRE in Welsh Sire Caer-ar-v●n so called because it is just over against Anglesey which the Britains call Mon and in composition was termed also Snowden-Forrest before Wales was laid into Shires the North-side whereof and the West butteth upon the Irish-Sea the South-side is inclosed with Merioneth and the East with Denbigh shires from which it is severed by the River Conwey 2 The form thereof is much like a wedge long and narrow towards the South and growing still wider towards the North so that from Pev●nkel-point Southward to Orms-head-point Northward are forty miles from the River Conwey Eastward to the River Ll●noy Westward miles twenty and the whole circumference one hundred and ten miles 3 The Air is sharp and piercing by reason that the Country hath not natural Provision to ensconce her self against the extremity of Winds and Weather but especially as may be thought through the continuance of the Snow on the Hills which also exclude the Suns aspect and warmth 4 The Soil cannot be much commended for the fertility except those parts of the Sea-coasts which lie on the West towards Ireland but for the heart of this Shire it is altogether mountainous as if nature had a purpose here by rearing up these craggy Hills so thick together strongly to compact the joynts of this our Island and to frame the Inland part thereof for a fit place of refuge to the Britains against those times of adversity which afterward did fall upon them for no Army though never so strongly or scarce any Travellers though never so lightly appointed can find passage among those so many rough and hard Rocks so many Vales and Pools here and there crossing all the ways as ready obstacles to repel any Inroads of forrain assailants These Mountains may not unfitly be termed the British Alps as being the most vast of all Britain and for their steepness and cragginess not unlike to those of Italy all of them towring up into the Air and round encompassing one far higher than all the rest peculiarly called Snowdon Hills though the other likewise in the sa●●e sense are by the Welsh termed Craig Eriry as much as Snowy Mountains taking their name as doth by Plinies testimony Niphates in Armenia and Imaus in Scythia For all the year long these lie mantelled over with Snow hard crusted together though otherwise for their height they are open and liable both to the Sun to dissolve them and the Winds to over-sweep them 5 The ancient Inhabitants of this Country were the O●●ovices of whom we have sufficiently spoken in the description of the former Provinces neither need I insist either upon the pleasures or profits that this Country yieldeth by reason of the great affinity it hath both of Climate and Commodities with Denbigh-shire and Flint-shire before mentioned But this beyond the other in some places breeds certain Shel-fishes which being conceived by an heavenly dew bring forth Pearls in ancient times more reckoned of than now they are 6 Touching places of note that City is very ancient which the Emperour Antonine call●●h Segontium taking name of a River running by which at this day is called S●●ent some Reliques of the Walls whereof do yet appear neer unto a little Church consecrated to the honour of Saint Publicius This City Ninius calleth Caer Custenith which some interpret the City of Constantine Indeed Matthew Westminster saith how true I know not that Anno 1283. here was found the body of Constantius Father to Great Constantine which King Edward th● first caused to be sumptuously bestowed in the Church of the new City which he raised out of the ruins of the old and is now called Caernarvon which giveth name to this whole Shire The Town it self yieldeth a most excellent prospect towards the Sea and is incompassed in a manner round with the Walls of the Castle so as we may say it is a City within a Castle which taketh up the whole West-side of it and great pity it is that so famous a work should not be perpetuous
or ever become the ruin of time which is much feared for the merciless underminings of the Sea that with her daily and forcible irruptions never ceaseth to wash away the Foundations of the Key The People of this Town are well approved for courtesie and also Civil Government which is administred by the Constable of the Castle who is ever Mayor by Patent having the assistance of one Alderman two Bailiffs two Sergeants at Mace and one Town-Cle●k The Townsmen do not a little glory that King Edward the Second was born there in a Tower of the Castle called Eagle-Tower and surnamed of Caer-nar-von he being the first Prince of Wales of the English Line The site of this Town according to Mathematical observation is in the degree of Longitude 15 and 50 scruples from the first West point and the Pole elevated in Latitude 53 and 50. Bangor the Bishops See though it be now but a small Town yet it was in time past so large that for the greatness thereof it was called Banchor-Vaur that is Great-Banchor which Hugh Earl of Chester fortified with a Castle But it hath been long since utterly ruinated and laid level with the ground insomuch as there is not any footing to be found or o●her monuments left thereof although they have been sought with all diligent enquiry This Bishops See hath been the Diocess of ninety six Parishes But the ancient Church which was consecrated unto Daniel sometime Bishop thereof was defaced and set on fire by that notorious Rebel Owen Glendowerdwy who had a purpose also to destroy all the Cities of Wales for that they stood for the King of England And though the same Church was since repaired about the time of King Henry the seventh yet hath it scarce recovered the resemblance of her former dignity The River Conwey which limiteth this Shire on the East-side is in Ptolomy by corruption or ignorance of Transcribers called Toissonius instead of Cononius whence Canonium a Town mentioned by Antonine took name and albeit both it and its name be now utterly extinct yet is there a covert remembrance thereof in the new name of a poor Village standing among the rubbish thereof called Caer-hean that is the ancient City Out of the Spoil whereof King Edward the first built a new Town at the Rivers mouth termed thereupon Aber-Conwey that is the mouth of Conwey which being formerly fortified by Hugh of Chester and strongly situate and senced both with Walls and a fair Castle by the Rivers side deserves rather the name of a City than a Town if it were more populous and traffiqued with Inhabitants Neither must I here forget Nowin though but a small Market-Town for that it pleased the English Nobles Anno 1284 to honour it and the memory of King Arthur with triumphant celebrity after they had subdued the rebellious Ringleaders of Wales 7 Other matters of memorable note this Country affordeth not much unless perhaps this That just over-against the River Conwey where it issueth into the Sea there sometimes stood an ancient City named Diganwey which many years ago was consumed by Lightning and so made utterly desolate as many other Monuments have been of ancient and worthy memory As likewise that in the Pool Lin-Peris there is a kind of Fish called there T●rcoth having a red Belly no where else seen For touching these two other miracles famoused by Gira●dus and Gervasius that on those his high Hills there are two Pools called the Mears the one of which produceth great store of Fish but all having only one Eye and the other there is a moveable Island which as soon as a man treadeth thereon it forthwith floateth a great way off whereby the Welsh are said to have often scaped and deluded their Enemies assailing them these matters are out of my Creed and yet I think the Reader had rather believe them than to go to see whether it be so or no. It is traded with five Market-Towns fit for bargaining buying and selling fortified with four Castles and hath sixty eight Parish-Churches in it where the Inhabitants concur and meet together for the celebration of Divine-Service THE KINGDOME OF SCOTLAND SCOTLANDS General Description CHAPTER I. SCOTLAND the second Kingdom of Great-Britain and the North part of the Island hath on the East the German-Ocean on the North the Orkneys and Deucalidon-Sea the West affronted with Ireland and the South hath the River Tweed the Cheviot-Hills and the adjacent Tract reaching to the Sulway-Sands whereby it is separated from England 2 This Kingdom is fair and spacious and from these South borders spreadeth it self wide into the East and West till again it contracts it self narrower unto the Northern Promontories furnished with all things befitting a famous Kingdom both for Air and Soil Rivers Woods Mountains Fish Fowl and Cattel and Corn so plenteous that it supplyeth therewith other Countries in their want The People thereof are of good feature strong of body and of couragious mind and in Wars so venturous that scarce any service of note hath been performed but that they were with the first and last in the Field Their Nobility and Gentry are very studious of learning and all civil knowledge for which end they not only frequent the three Universities of their own Kingdom S. Andrews Glasco and Edo●borough the Nurseries of Piety and Mansions of the sacred Muses but also much addict themselves to travel into forain Countries The South ꝑ t of Scotlād wherin are contayned Edinbrough St. Andrew and Glasco Archbisho● 4 Yet in the mean while lest I should seem too defective in my intendments let me without offence in this third though short Book give only a general view of that Kingdom upon observations from others which to accomplish by mine own survey if others should hap to fail and my crazy-aged body will give leave is my chief desire knowing the Island furnished with many worthy remembrances appertaining both unto them and us whom God now hath set under one Crown and the rather for that their more Southern People are from the same Original with us the English being both alike the Saxo● branches as also that the Picts anciently inhabiting part of that Kingdom were the inborn Britains and such as thither fled to avoid the Romans servitude whose names began first to be distinguished under Dioclesian the Emperor when they were termed Picts for painting their Bodies like the Britains as saith Flavius Vigetius which is more strengthned for that the Northern Britains converted by Saint Columb are called Britain-Picts 5 But the Highland-men the natural Scot indeed are supposed to descend from the Scythians who with the Getes infesting Ireland left both their issue there and their manners apparent in the Wild-Irish even to this day And from Scytha as is thought the name of Scot grew for so the Netherlanders by Scutten express indifferently the Scythian or Scot so Gildas called the Irish-Britains Scythians so King Elfred in translating the History of Orosius
such as think their censures worthy to pass for currant and credible yet let us suppose that haply they be possessed with the disease and malady that the Physicians call Lycanthropy which begetteth and endange●eth such like phantasies through the malicious humours of Melancholly and so oftentimes men imagine themselves to be turned and transformed into forms which they are not Some again embrace another ridiculous opinion and perswade themselves that he who in the barbarous acclamation and out-cry of the Souldiers which they use with great forcing and straining of their voices when they joyn battel doth not showre and make a noise as ●he rest do is suddenly caught from the ground and carryed as it were fl●ing in the Air out of any Country of Ireland into some desert vallies where he feedeth upon grass drinketh water hath some use of reason but not of speech is ignorant of the present condition he stands in whether good or bad yet at length shall be brought to his own home being c●ught with the help of Hounds and Hunters Great pity that the foul fi●nd and father of darkness should so grievously seduce this people with misbelief and that these errours be not chased away with the truth of Christian Religion whereby as they carry much grace in their countenances they may also not be void of the inward grace of their souls and understanding 9 This Province hath been sore wasted in the rebellions of Desmond to whose aid Pope Gregory the thirteenth and Philip King of Spain sent c●rtain companies of Italians and Spaniards who arrived not far from Dingle fortified themselves and gave it the name of Fort de Ore sounding loud threats against the whole Country But Arthur Baron Grey Lord Deputy of Ireland at the first onset decided their quarrel by sheathing his Sword in their bowels and Desmond fearfully flying into the woods was by a Souldier cut shorter by the head And again when the Kingdom of Ireland lay bleeding and put almost to the hazard of the last cast Don Iohn D'Aquila with eight thousand Spaniards upon confidence of the excommunications of Piu● the fift Gregory the thirteenth and Clemen● the eight Popes all of them discharging their curses like unto thunderbolts against Queen Elizabeth of blessed memory landed near unto Kinsale presuming that the rebellions of Tyrone had turned the hearts of the Irish for Rome Sir Charles Blunt Lord Mountjoy in the depth of Winter and with his tired Souldiers so daunted their Spanish hearts that with one victory he repressed their bragging ●oldness and recovered the Irish that were ready to revolt 10 God hath oftentimes shewed his tender love and affection to this people in laying his fatherly chastisements and afflictions upon them sometimes by winds sometimes by famine and dearth and sometimes again by opening his hand of plenty into their laps to convert them to himself and to divert their hearts from superstitions In the year 1330 about the feast of Saint Iohn Baptist there began such a dearth of Corn in this Country by the abundance of rain and the inundation of waters which continued until Michaelmas following that a Cranoc of Wheat was sold for twenty shillings a Cranoc of Oats for eight shillings a Cranoc of Pease Beans and Barley for as much The winds the same year were so mighty that many were hurt and many slain out-right by the fall of houses that was forced by the violence of the same The like whereof were never seen in Ireland In the year 1317 there was such a dearth of Corn and other Victuals that a Cranoc of Wheat was sold for twenty three shillings And many Housholders that before time had sustained and relieved a great number were this year driven to beg and many famished In the time of which famine the mercy of God so disposed that upon the 27 th day of Iune in the year 1331 there came to land such a mighty multitude of great Sea-fishes that is Thursheds such as in many ages p●st had never been seen that the people were much comforted in this distress and received great relief and sustenance by the same 11 Places of Religion in this Country were the two Abbies at Toghall calleth the North-●bbey and South-Abbey The two Abbeys at Limerick S. Francis Abbey and S. Dominick Abbey The two Abbeys at Cork the Abbey of the Isle and S. Frances Abbey and the famous Abbey in times past for the holy Cross which hath had many priviledges and liberties granted unto it in honour of a piece of Christs Cross that was as they say sometimes preserved there Thus were Christians perswaded in ancient times And it is a wonder in what Troops and Assemblies people do even yet con●low thither upon devotion as unto a place of holiness and sanctity so firmly are they setled in the Religion of their Fore-fathers which hath been increased beyond all measure by the negligent care of their Teachers who should instruct their ignorance and labour to reduce them from the errors they persevere in This Province is governed by a Lord President who hath one assistant twelve learned Lawyers and a Secretary to keep it in duty and obedience It was in times past divided into many parts as Towoun that is North Mounster Deswoun that is South Mounster Hierwoun that is West Mounster Mean woun that is Middle Mounster and Vrwoun that is the Front of Mounster But at this day it is distinguished into these Counties Kerry Desmond Limerick Tiperary Holycross Waterford and Cork which County in times past had been a Kingdom containing with it Desmond also for so in the Grant given by King Henry the second unto Robert Fitz-Stephen and to Miles de Cogan it is called in these words Know ye that I have granted the whole Kingdom of Cork excepting the City and Cantred of the Oustmans to hold for them and their heirs of me and Iohn my son by the service of sixty Knights The County of Waterford King Henry the sixth gave unto Iohn Talbot Earl of Shrewsbury with the name stile and the title of Earl of Waterford which was afterward again assumed to the Crown Touching the County of Holy Cross as the opinion of that much frequented Abbey is much lessened so that County is swallowed up altogether in the County Tipperary It is fortified with five strong Castles traded with six Market-Towns and divided as followeth MOVNSTER Limerick Kerry Cork Waterford Des●ond Holy-Cross in Tipperary LINSTER LEINSTER CHAPTER III. THis Country the Natives call Leighnigh the Britains Lein in Latine Lagenia in the ancient lives of the Saints Lagen and in English Leinster It lieth Eastward along Hibernicum Sea on Connaught side Westward it is bounded with the River Shaenon the North with the Territory of Louth and the South with part of the Province of Mounster This Country butteth upon England as Mounster and Conn●ught do upon Spain 2 The form thereof is triangle and sides not much unequal from her South East unto the
them they suddenly perish Thus we see how God gives a property to each place that may make up her defects lest it should be left as well by beasts as men Their Land is full of sandy deserts w●ich ●e open to the winds and storms and ofttimes are thrown up into Billows like waves of the Sea and indeed are no less dangerous Straho writes that Cambyses his Army was thus hazarded in Ae●hiopia And Herodotus that the Psilli an ancient but foolish Nation it seem● in Africa as they marched toward the South to revenge themselves upon the winds for drying up their Rivers were over-whelmed with sand and so died in their graves Besides these annoyances it is so full of a venomous kind of Serpent that in some places they dare not dress their Land unless they first sence their legs with Boots against the sting Other wild creatures there are which range about and possess to themselves a great portion of this Country and make a Wilderness of Lions Leopards Elephants and in some places Crocodiles Hyenaes Basilisks and indeed Monsters without either number or name Afr●ca now every year produceth some strange creature before not heard of peradventure not extant For so Pl●ny thi●ks that for want of water creatures of all kinds at some times of the year gather to those few Rivers that are to quench their thirst And then the Males promiscuously enforcing the Females of every Species which comes next him produceth this variety of forms and would be a grace to Af●ica were it not so full of danger to the Inhabitants which as Salus●t reports die more by Beasts than by diseases And those Tracts about Barbary are every tenth year 15 or 25 visited with a great plague and continually infected with the French disease in such violence that few recover unless by change of Air into Numidia or the Land of Negro●s whose very temper is said to be a proper Antid●te against those diseases 8 But among all these inconveniences commodities are found of good worth and the very evils yield at last their benefit both to their own Country and other Parts of the world The Elephant a docible creature and exceeding useful for Battel The Camel which affords much riches to the Arabian The Bar●ary Horse which we our selves commend the Ram that besides his flesh gives twenty pound of wool from his very tail The Bull painful and able to do best service in their tillage And so most of their worst alive or dead yield us their medicinal parts which the World could not well want 9 In her division we will follow our later Masters in this Art whom time at least and experience if no other worth have made more authentick and those divide it into seven parts 1 Barbary or Mauritania 2 Numidia 3 Lybia or Africa p●opria 4 Nigritarum Terra 5 Aethiopia superior 6 Aethiopia inferior 7 Aegypt and to these we add the 8 Islands belonging to Africa 10 Barbary is the first The bounds of it are Northward the Mediterraneum Westward the Atlantick On the South the Mountain Atlas and on the East Aegypt It is estee●ed the most noble part of all Africa and hath its name from an Arabick word Barbara that signifies a kind of rude sound for such the Arabians took their language to be and thence the Grecians call them Barbarians that speak a ha●sher language than themselves Aft●r the Latines and now we esteem the people of our own Nation barbarous if they ever so little differ from the rudeness either of our Tongue or Mann●rs The Inhabitants are noted to be faithful in their course but yet crafty in promising and per forming too for they are covetous ambitious jealous of their Wives beyond measure Their Country yields Oranges Dates Olives ●igs and a certain kind of Goat whose hair makes a Stuff as fir● as S●●k It contains in it the Kingdoms of ●unnis Algeires ●esse and Morocho 1 Tunnis is famous for several places mentioned of old Here was Dona where Augustine was B●shop and Hippo his birth-place And Tunnis a City five miles in compass and old Carthage built by Virgils Dido Romes am●la for wealth valour and ambition of the universal Empire It was twenty two miles in c●rcuit And Vtica memorable for Cato's death 2 Algeires contains in it a strange harbour for the Turkish Pirats and is of note for the resistance it made Charls the Fifth who received before the chief Towns in this Region an innumerable loss of Ships Horses O●dnance and Men. 3 Eesse hath a City in it with seven hundred Churches and one of them a m●le and half in coni●ass Stafford And in this Country was our English Stukely slain 4 Morocho where the chief Town of the same name hath a Church larger than that of ●ess● and hath a Tower so high that you may discern from the top of the hills of Azasi at an hundred and thiry miles distance Here is likewise a Castle of great same for their Globes of pure gold that stand upon the top of it and weighing 130000 Barbary Duckets 11 Numidia was the second part in our division of Africa and hath on the West the Atlantick on the East Egypt on the North Atlas and the Deserts of Lybia on the South It is called likewise Regio Dactylifera from the abundance of Dates for they feed upon them only and people Idolaters Ideots Thieves Murderers except some few Arabians that are mingled among them of ingenious disposition and addicted much to Poetry They seldome stay longer in one place than the eating down of the grass and this wandering course makes but few Cities and those in some places three hundred miles distant 12 Lybia the third is limited on the East with Nilus Westward with the Atlantick on the No●th with Numidia and the South with Terra Nigritarum It was called Sarra as much as Desert For so it is and a dry one too such as can afford no water to a Traveller sometimes in seven days Iourney The Inhabitants are much like to the Numidians live without any Law almost of Nature Yet in this place were two of the Sibyls which prophesied of Christ and Arrius the Heretick About Lybia were the Garamantes and the Psilli mentioned before for their simple attempts against the South-wind 13 Terra Nigritarum the Land of Negroes is the fourth and hath on the West the Atlantick on the East Aethiopia superior on the North Lybia on the South Kingdom of Manilong● in the inferi●r Aethiopia It hath the Name either from the colour of the people which are black or from the River Niger famous as Nilus almost for her over-flowing insomuch that they pass at some times in Boats through the whole Country It is full of Gold and Silver and other Commodities but the Inhabitants most barbarous They draw their Original form Ch●s and have er●ertained all Religions that came in their way First their own then the Iews the Mahometans and some of them the Christian.
it is likewise named Forbishers Straights from another of our worthy Country-men that were interested before in the same service This Region is held to be the first discovered of the New world The North of it is still unknown It yields plenty of gold but is exteam cold The people ingenious and good Artificers in most kinds they are cloathed with Beasts Hides and are skilled to make themselves Boats of Sea Calves skins which they venture into the main Sea without danger 22 Peninsula Peruviana is the South tract of America from the Isthmus to the Magellanick Straights The same Seas are the bounds upon the East and West which were of the other Mexicana by which she is divided from Africa on the East and on the West at a large distance from the most Southren Islands of Asia The compass of it is 17000 miles From North to South there runs a continued course of high Mountains whose tops the very Fowls of the air cannot reach by flight And from thence descend many admirable Rivers among which Maragno and Argenteus are most famous The one for his extent and the other for his plenty of silver The Country is exceeding rich but the people differ not much from the worst of Beasts They devour mans flesh filthy worms and what else comes in their way The chief Provinces are numbred thus 1 Castella Aurea 2 Guiana 3 Peru. 4 Brasil 5 Chile 23 Castella Auren is the first named from her plenty of gold She lieth part in the Isthmus The ●est is the Northern tract of Peru 1 Castella del oro in the very Isthmus which is by some measured to be seventeen miles in breadth by others twelve the Merchandise sent from Spain is unladen at Nombre de Dios and conveyed cross the Isthmus by land to Panamais from thence shipped again for the North-west of Peru Near these parts was an admirable atchievement performed by our valiant Country-man Iohn Oxenham who by the direction of Moors skilled in the Country went to the Land of Pearls and took from the Spaniards an incredible weight of gold and Silver 2 Nova Andalusia South-ward from Castella del oro The chief Towns are Tocoio and Sancta Espritia 3 Nova Granata a rich Region with Mines of gold and silver part of it lyeth under the Aequinoctial And this is S. Foy one of the Arch-Bishops Sees 4 Carthagena a fruitful Country which yielded when time was to out still renowned Sir Francis Drake store of prize and 240 pieces of Ordnace 24 Guiana is the second Province of the Peninsula Peru Maria situated just under the Aequinoctial On the North it hath the main River Oronoque or Raliana from Sir Walter Raleigh who went further than any before him into the Country This River is navigable by report above 1000 miles On the South it hath likewise another great River of the Peninsula called Maragnon which exceeds the former and is navigable 600 miles in length In this province stands the largest City of America called el Dorodo or the guilded City For indeed there is plenty of gold The length as it is spoken by some Travellers will exceed belief The second memorable Town is S. Thome not so much for her own worth as the disastrous fortunes of Sir Walter Raleigh who there first lost his eldest son and after returned home with that ill success as it cost him his own life 25 Peru the third in rank yet by name it seems to be the chiefest Province of this Southern Tract It is contained almost betwixt the Aequator and the Tropick of Capricorn On the North it hath Castella del oro on the South Chila on the West mare del Zur and on the East the Mountains of Peru. It is a very rich Country aboundeth with gold and silver little esteemed among the Inhabitants For by report the Spaniard ordinarily shooed their Horses with gold Another great Commodity is Tobacco a toy to play withall but yields a great Revenue to the King of Spain In this Province stands Lima the Arch-Bishops See and place of residency for the Vicer●y Cusco where the Native Kings of Peru had wont to keep their Court The Inhabitants are strange Idolaters and worship a black Sheep Serpents and other ugly creatures 26 Brasile on the North hath the great River Maragnon and on the South and West Argenteus on the East Mare del North. The ●ongitude from North to South is accounted 150 the breadth 500 the compass about 3000. The Inhabitants are rude live for the most part in the Bodies of trees They swim excellently and are able to keep under the water for a long space Their chief Commodities are Sugar and Brazile wood The people are covered with natural hair cruel lascivious false and what not In this Region is an herb called Viva which if you touch it will shut up as a Dasie in the night and will not open till the party that injured it be out of sight Here are few Towns of note St. Anna Equitum Ascensio Pernanbuco 27 Chile is the last of the Peninsula and on the North hath Peru on the West the Mare del Zur on the South the Magellanick Straits on the East the Virginian Ocean She hath her name from her extream cold temper in so much that many are frozen to death and hardned like marble It is a rich Country as well for Gold as other Commodities of worth The Rivers are fed with Snow that falls from the tops of high Mountains The people are of large stature and very valiant The chief City is St. Iames where a Colony of Spaniards keep hold And thus we are travelled from the Basis to the very Pyris at the South America The utmost poynt of it is called Caput victoriae from Magellanus ship The rest must be performed by Sea Our best Cour●e will be from the East Atlantick Ocean round by the Magellanick Straits into the Pacifick Sea For within this compass lyeth all the Islands that belong to this new world and those were my second part in the general division of the whole Hemisphere 28 The Islands of America in the Atlantick Ocean are 1 Margarita not far from Castella delor● It is very barren in provision for victuals but exceeds in plenty of precious stones of the greatest value And so doth her neighbour 2 Aubagna 3 Trinidado stored with Tobacco 4 Bacala●● over against Terra Laboratoris 5 Boriqu●n North-ward from Guiana Her principal Cities are S. Iolas and Port Rico ruined by our Earl of Cumberland 1597. 6 Iamaica spoiled by the Spaniards cruelty of most of her Natives Insomuch that the mothers strangled their babes in their womb to prevent their servitude under so hard a Master as the Spanish Governour 7 Laba a rich Isle In this there is a Bishops See called Ingo 8 Lucaiae insulae in number a 130. and is best commended for the beauty of her women 9 Barmudae many in number discovered by Sir Thomas Summers and thence
from the report of 〈…〉 and other ancient Writers But the reason I hold not good for ●owso●ver it might be true in 〈◊〉 times of some and the most part perhaps of 〈◊〉 as it was then 〈◊〉 that it w●s 〈…〉 yet now she hath changed her 〈…〉 6 By her first Geographers she was 〈…〉 tongue and Empire exercised over the Region of Prussia South-ward she reacheth beyond Danubius to the very Alpes which border upon Italy North● ward she hath ever kept her own but hath been curb'd indeed from seeking new Kingdoms in that tract by the main Ocean which divides her in part from Swevia Norway c. And to these limits we apply our Description No marvel● if it give her more honour than she had in former times For her compass now is reckoned to be 2600 English miles Her ground fertile enough of it self and yet besides enjoyes the benefit of many Navigable Rivers which enrich her with traffique from other Kingdoms 7 Those of greatest fame are 1 Danubius the largest of Europe called by Pliny and others Ister It takes in sixty Navigable Rivers and is at last discharged by many passages into the Pontus Euxinus 2 Rhene which hath its rising from the Alpes and runs into the German Ocean From thence have we our best Rhen●sh Wines and upon his banks s●ands the City Strasburge 3 Ama●us Fms which glides by W●stphalia into the German Sea 4 Maemu Megu whose head is in the Mountains of Bo●emia and from thence passeth by Francfort into the German sea 5 Albis Elve which riseth from the eleven Fountains meeting into one about the Sylva Hircinian 6 Odeca which hath not his passage immediately into the Sea but in●o the River Albis The middle mark of this Country is the Kingdom of ●ohemia encompassed with the Sylva Hircinia 8 The chief commodities of Germany are Corn Wine Salt Metals of all sorts Fruits good store Safron c. The Aire wholsome her Bathes healthful her Gardens pleasurable her Cities fair her Castles strong and her Villages very many and well peopled 9 The Inhabitants have put off their ancient rudeness as the Country her barrenness They are as goodly of person as ever as stout as ever and far more civill than in the time of the Romans It seems they were then esteemed but an ignorant and simple people more able to fight than to m●nage a battle They were ever hardy enough but wanted Commanders of their own of skill and ●udgement Since they had commerce with other Nations and have suffered the upbraid asit were of their Predecessors dulness they have been in a manner shamed out of it and are now become rather by industry than wit a most ingenious people and skilful in the Latine Greek and Hebrew learning famous beyond any others in Europe unless Belgia for the invention of many notable and ●seful Engines The Gun and Gun-powder was first brought to light by one Bertholdus Swart a Franciscan which hath almost put by the use of any other warlike Instrument in those parts of the world where the practice is perfectly understood Generally the poorer sort are excellent Mechanicks and the rest for the most part Scholars 10 It bred Albert●s M●gnus Appean Ge●ner Munster Luther Vrsin Zuinglius Scultetus Iunius Keckerman and many others in their several kinds and Religions some Papists some Lutherans some Calvinists and among the rest many Iews 11 The Government of this Germany is Imperial as once that of Rome was though it flourish not in so full glory The right descends not by succession nor is the election continued by the like suffrage as in old Rome The power of choice was conferred by Pope Gregory the tenth upon seven German Princes three Spiritual and four Temporal These are the Arch-bishop of Ment● Chancellour of the Empire through Germany Archbishop of Cullen Chancellour of the Empire through Italy Arch-bishop of Triers Chancellour of the Empire through France The Temporal are the King of Bohemea who hath the casting voice only in case of equality among the other six his office is to be chief Cup● bearer at the great solemnity Next him the Count Palatine of the Rhene Arch-sewer to the Emperour Duke of Saxony Lord Marshal and Marquess of Brandenburge chief Chamberlain Each of these perform his own Office in person upon the day of Inauguration The Duke of Saxo●y bears the sword The Count Palatine placeth his meat on the Table The King of Bohemia bears his Cup and delivers it him to drink Marquess of Brandenb●rg serveth him water to wash And the three Bishops bless his meat He receiveth three Crowns before he is fully setled into the Majesty of the Empire The first is of Silver for Germa●y The second of Iron for Lombardy And the third of Gold for the Empire the last is set on at Rome For to this day it pretends to the name of the Roman Empire and gives the title o● Caesar or Ro●ani imperii Imperator 12 The first which enjoyed the institution of Pope Gregory was Radulphus Nabs Purgensis 1273. after twelve years interregnum The last before him was our Richard Earl o●● Cornwall and brother to Henry the third King of England Since it hath continued firm in this course of Election howsoever not with that liberty as was intended For commonly the Emperour in being while he hath his power about him and can at least intreat if not command the subjects of the Empire promise a choice of the Rex Ro●a●orum who is no other than a Successour designed to rule after his death or resignation And by this means it hath a long time continued in the house of Austria without any intermission 13 Thus we ●●e much plotting great state many ceremonies to the making up of an Emperour and yet when it is well weighed it is little better then a bare title For howsoever these outward ob●ervances of the G●rman Princes make show of an humble subjection to the Emperour yet when it comes to tr●all it hath very little to do in their Governments But each of them takes upon ●im as a ●ree and absolute Commander in his own Country permitteth or suppresseth the Beligion which he ●ither likes or disl●kes makes and abrogates Laws at pleasure stamps Coyn raiseth souldiers and sometimes against their great Master as the Duke of Saxony against Charles the fi●th and at this day divers others in defence of the Princ● P●latine For of this q●ality and power there are many Dukes Marquesses Counts c. besides 64 Franc Cities which make only some slight acknowledgment to the Emperour appear perhaps at his ●arliaments and they say are bound to ●urnish him at need with 3842 horse amonge them and 16200 foot 14 The chei●est Regions of Germany best known to us and noted by our Geographers with a more eminent Character than the rest are these 1 East Frizeland 2 Westphalia 3 Cullen 4 Munster 5 Triers 6 Cleve 7 Gulick 8 Hassis 9 Alsatia 10 Helvetia 11 Turingia
note are Troys and Brye and Auxerre and Sans an Arch-Bishops See c. 6 Burgundia both the Dutchy and Country The Dutchy or Burgundia suferiour and Western lieth on the South of higher Germany Her principal places are Digion Saint Bernards birth-Town Antun Bealne Sologue and Aliza once the famous City of Alexia The County of Burgundy or Burgundia Ihperior yields not to the choicest Garden in France for fertility of soil nor to the most renowned for stoutness of Inhabitants They acknowledge not as yet the French command no more than Savoy and Lorain They were under divers Generals and are called Walloons corruptly for Galle●s a trick of the Dutch Her principal Cities are Besanson the Metropolis of both Burgundies Salives Arboys Gray and Dola 7 Lugdunense Territorium Lione an illustrious City The center of Europe I mean where Merchants meet for Traffique from all quarters All these Provinces belong either wholly or at least in part to Gallia Lugdunensis For indeed some lie divided and stretch into their neighbours Territories as Campania into Belgica and this last Lugdunense is in part under the Government of Savoy 14 Narbonensis Gallia on the West hath the Comitatus Armenaici and Comminges East●ward part of the Alps North-ward the Mountain Cemenus and South-ward the French Seas It is generally a fruitful Country not inferior in the esteem of Pliny to Italy it self it comprehends the Provinces 1 of Languedo supposed from Languegotia language of the Goths it reacheth from the bounds of Armenia and Comminges to the Mediterraneam Her chief Cities are Narbon from whence this whole Region receives her appellation and is reckon'd the first Roman Province in Europe and Mons pessulame Mont-Pellein an University most famous for the study of Physick Nimes where there is at this day many reliques of Antiquity and Pons Sancti Spiritus c. 2 Provence provincia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 divided from Languedoc by the River Rhodanus Rhoan It belongs part to the Crown of France part to the Pope and a third to the Prince of Orange In the Kings portion are Air a Parliamentary City ●rles and Ma●silia the last built in the time of the Roman Tarquin To the Bishop of Rome belongs ●●enian a City and Arch-bishops See with the whole Comitatus Venissimus To the Prince of Orange the chief City Aurangia or Orange on the River Meine Estang Boys de S Poll c. 3 D●●lphine on the North of Provence regio Allobrogum and is divided in Delphinatum superiorem and inferiorem The first contains in it Embrum where Agaric and Manna is plentifully gathered and Valentia c. The latter Grinnoble Vienna Daulphin Romans 4 Savoy Sabadia on the East of Daulphin a Dukedome without whose limits stands the well known City Geneva which entertains people from all Countries of any Religion But yet enforceth a Law upon fugitives not common elsewhere For whatsoever malefactor is there apprehended for mischief done in his own Countrey suffers as if he had been there condemned The principal Cities besides are Tarantise Bele Moustire Maurience c. To this Dukedom belong Cambrey on the West side of the Alps and the Countrey of Bresse whose heir is intituled Prince of Piemont a part of Italy at the very East foot of the Mountains which ●ever her from this Countrey 15 Gallia Belgica the last is the Eastern tract toward Germany and as much as belongs to this Kingdom contains only Picardy which is divided into the higher and lower The first portends towards the British Seas and here stands Calice distant but thirty miles from Dover It is that which Caesar called Portus I●cius won from the French by our Edward the third lost by Q. Mary Upon her Confines toward England is the Country of Bononia and Guinnes which contain sundry Towns and Villages The chief ●●lloin conquered by our Henry the Eighth but delivered back in the reign of Edward the Sixth In this Picardy stands Terwin besieged by King Henry in person where the Emperour Maximilian served under his Coulours and received pay as his Souldier In the lower Picardy stands Ambianum Amiens the Metropols Here are the Dutchy of Terache whose chief City is Guisa which gave name to the family of the Guises and the Country of Vermindois where Saint Quintin stands Retelois and Retel her Metropolis Artelois and La●erre her 's Ponthein and Aberille 16 The Islands which are reckoned properly French are only those which lye neer in the Atlantick Ocean They are but few and of no great account The principal Dame de Bovin L'ille de Dieu Marmotier Insula regis A NEW MAPE OF Y E XVII PROVINCES OF LOW GERMANIE P. Kaerius Caelavit The Description of BELGIA IN this we continue still the Description of Belgia begun in the Map of France For the title is common as well to those Territories as indeed to all the North-East Tracts of the old Gallia The portion hereditary to the French King was marked out among the rest of his Dominions The residue since it hath been by length of time chance of war or at least chance of Fortune dispersed into the power of several Princes is better known to us by the familiar names of the Low-Countries than Netherlands Flandars c. 2 In the search of her Original we may have reference to our precedent Discourse For questionless it was possest by the Gauls as the other parts were aud if trust may be given to those Antique Stories whose truth is almost worn out with age she reacheth her pedegree as high as any and likely enough did partake in the Spoils of Rome when the Capitol was ransaked by the Gauls under the conduct of our two ●nglish Brothers For her chief Captain ●elgius whose memory she preserves to this day in her name is mentioned by Q●adus andother as companion to Brennius in his expedition toward Macedonia after they were intreated from Rome 3 In the first times they were a stout people and practised to continual wars by the bordering Germans which made them as well expert as hardy It seems Caesar found them so in his tryal ●or he gives them in his Commentaries the honour of a val●ant Nation above any other part of Gallia Yet at last he brought them under and in time they were expulsed by the Germans who for their neerest speech and customs are s●pposed and justly too the Predecessors to the now Inhabitants 4 For her first name I find no other likely account given than from a City built by their ●elgius in the Province of Hannonia where now stands Bavaria The r●st Germania in●erior the Low Countries and Netherlands require no long search for without doubt they have little other ground than her low situation upon the Seas and indeed it is such as hath oft times endangered her by inundations and sunk many hundreds of their Towns and Villages which to this day in some places shew their tops above water at a dead low ebb Lastly Flanders
was forced by Evander the Arcadian a man of that admirable eloquence that he was called the son of Mercury but had by chance slain his Father and was therefore expulsed his inheritance and advised into Italy by his Mother a great Prophetess of those times He removed the Aborigines from their seat and planted his companions in the same plot of ground where after Rome was built and in the Mons Palatinus founded a little Town which he called Pal●auteum in memory of his great grand●father And this was about the year 2710. 6 About 60 years after Aeneas arrived in this Countrey from the siege of Troy was entertained as an amorous suitor by Lavinia with consent of her Father Latinus and after the death of his corrival Turnus King of the Rutilians was setled heir to the Latin Monarchy after his Father 7 From Aeneas to Numitor the succession went on not without some rubs but suffered no great breach for almost four hundred years When the title should have fallen to him being the elder and true heir he was spoiled of the Kingdom by his younger Amulius Sylvius nor could it be recovered till time had given growth and strength to Romulus and Remus his grand-children by his daughter Rhea 8 The birth and breeding of these two brothers is well known we need not enlarge their story farther than thus They were the sons of Rhea a Virgin which was cloystered up into the Temple of Vesta by her Uncle Amulius Sylvus that she might not bring forth an heir to endanger his Title Notwithstanding means was found so that she conceived at once two children by Mars and was delivered among her Sister V●stals For this her self as the censure was upon such delinquents was buried alive her boys exposed to be destroyed but were preserved by Faustulus the Kings Shepherd and nursed by his wife Laurentia or L●pa for her bad life 9 When years and their supposed father had taught them their pedegree and the base tyranny of their Uncle they began with revenge upon him for their mothers quick burial for their own intended murder and their Grandsires injury To be brief they slew their great Uncle Am●lius Sylvius and turned the Kingdom to the rightful 〈◊〉 10 Thus when they had once dealt in disposing of Empires they could not easily return to the Shepherds hook but bethought them of the like fortune for their own advancement and stirred not far to make good their purpose but in the very Mons Palatinus the place where they suckt their nurse they drew together a monstrous head of debaucht Shepherds and built the City which is now called Rome from Romulus who in strife for the name or as some say for a disdainful skip over the new walls slew his brother Rhemus and was left the sole Founder and Commander of this rascal crew for so indeed it was and held in that contempt by their borderers that they could not by intreaty get wives from them to continue their succession till by a guile they had enticed the Sabines to their Pastimes ravisht their women and afterward by degrees either made their peace or wan it with the sword from the people round about them 11 Thus began the Empire of Rome and was governed at first by 7 Kings in a direct succession to Tarquinius Superbus who lost both himself and Kingdom by his own pride and his Son Sextus rape upon Lucretia It was next taken up by Consuls two annually chosen out of the Patritii or principal Citizens The third rank were of Decemviri but they again were dispossest for the like rape of Appius upon Virginia and Tribunes were constituted of Consulary authority Then Consuls again in another course and for a while Dictators which when Caesar had once clapsed he soon made to himself a power Imperial and though after five years it cost him his life which he enchanged with Brutus and Cassius for 23 wounds in the Senate-house yet the liberty of Rome was never so fully recovered but that soon after the Government fell upon Angustus by the death of Anthony and deposing of Lepidus who for a while were joyned with him into the Triumviratus 12 Th●s hold was scarce ever lost clearly to this day though by the changing of the seat Imperial from Rome to Bizantium in the reign of their forty third Constantinus by the division into the Eastern and Western in the time of Theodotius by the many invasions of the Goths Huns Vandals Alani Burgundians and Lombards it comes now far short of that full glory in which it once shined 13 Yet is Italy still as before a happy soyl pleasant and fertile at all times moderate weather and healthful air full of variety as well of living creatures as Plants Corn Wine Oyl Linnen Herbs c. And can afford into other Countries Rice Silks Velvets Sattins Taffataes Grogram Rash Fustians Gold-wire Armour Allom Glasses c. The rich are very rich for wealth will come with much labour in great abundance but the poor are extream poor for they are most of them very idle 14 Her chief Rivers are Padus or Poe Athesis Rubica Tyberis Arnus c. And her chief Mountains are the Alps and Mons Appennius The first are in height 5 dayes journey covered with snow and from thence have their name à nivibus albis They have two passages from Germany into the Countrey and three out of France From Germany by the Valtoline and by Trent Out of France through Provence and Liguria through the hills Genura to Lombardy and through the Countrey of Turaign The Appennine Mountains run at length with Italy like the ridge of a mans back and is called indeed Spina The measure of Italy is from North-west to South-East about 1020 miles and from the two Seas cross in some places 410. 15 The Inhabitants are of a sad temper solid judgement witty Politick and frugal yet they are as deeply engaged to their peculiar vices hot letchers and those seldome stand quit from that horrible torture of jealousie over their Wives for it measures others actions by its own rule Both in them are incredible and makes treachery and murder seem no fault in their eye if they be provoked by suspition Little friendship with them but for advantage and a man must beware that he venter not farther upon those terms than he may well step back lest he be betrayed perhaps forced to a love worse than their hate for they are most unnatural in their lust The Women when they have their free liberty differ not much but their close keeping either hinders or at least hides their faults so as they appear modest lovely and witty for as much as they dare speak 16 For war and learning it bred in times past the mirrour of both Camillus Fabius Maximus Scipio Pompey Caesar Cicero Livie Tacitus Virgil Ovid and many hundreds which yet prompt our tongues and pens with examples of goodness in several kinds Nor hath it lost that
notwithstanding which insuccess he ventured again having under his command several Land Soldiers in the company of Captain Harly who was fitted out by Sr. Ferdinando Gorges then Governour of Plymouth Afterwards in the year 1615 there went Sr. Richard Hawkins then Captain Rocroft after him Captain Dormer And in the year 1623 Captain Robert Gorges By all which Voyages however though this Plantation was not brought to any settlement by reason of the many misfortunes and disappointments that attended them yet so many of them as were made and following so thick upon the neck of each other could not but add much light to the discoveries that were first produced and at least make way for future improvements but that which chiefly conduced to the full peopling and that flourishing estate which this Colony at present injoys was that general aversion at that time grown to a great height against the Church Government of this Nation which caused multitudes of people greedily to take hold on this occasion that they might betake themselves to a place where they might securely indulge to that liberty of Conscience they so much desired and for which many of them had fled before into Holland especially when at length upon consideration of the little loss but rather benefit the absence of persons so disaffected and unconformable would be to the Kingdom and of the advantage that would accrue to the Colony from the supplement of so great a number of people free liberty was granted for their transportation So that in the year 1630 there landed of them a very considerable number at Plymouth Plantation and that without any opposition from any of the Natives one great reason whereof might probably be the great Mortality that hapned at that time among the Narragansetts Niantics Tarantines Wippanaps Peoods those of Agissawang Pockaneki and Abargini and other chief Tribes of the Indians of these parts From this time forward what with the industry of the people and the continual supplies that were sent from time to time for some years they soon increased to a great height and are become at present one of the most powerful and thriving of the English Plantations in America At the●r first arrival they divided themselves into four sub-Colonies the Massachusets Plymouth Canectico and New-haven which commonly met toge●her in Counsel upon all important occasions either of Peace or War As some little Wars they had at first chiefly with the Pequods whom nevertheless they quickly subdued having first concluded a Peace with Cannonicus the supream Sachem of the Narragansits This County lying in the midst of the temperate Zone between the 41 and 45 degrees of Northern Latitude and aequidistant between the Artic circle and Tropic of Cancer in the same Parellel with France and some part of Italy is bounded to the North-East with Norumbigua to the South-West with Novum Belgium or New-Netherlands now New-York The temperature of the Air and fertility of the Soil differs not remarkably as may well be imagined from the rest of the Virginian tract and consequently affords the like plenty and variety of all sorts of Commodittes yet there are reckoned as chiefly appropriated to this part of the Country divers kinds of Plants and Trees among which the Cedar the Sprewse sassafras and Dyers Sumach and also some peculiar Beasts Birds and Fishes Of Beasts the Musquash less than a Beaver but much resembling it in shape the Musky Scent whereof proceeds from the stones of the male and whose skins in regard of their sweet Scent are brought over as rich Presents The Moose as big an Ox slow of foot yet in shape somewhat like a red Dear and headed like a Buck yielding flesh good for meat hides for cloathing This Beast in regard of its fruitfulness for the female brings forth three at a time and its hardiness for it will live in winter without fodder may be with good advantage kept tame and accustomed to the Yoke The Rackoon tailed like a Fox otherwise like a Badger but with a deep furr This beast sleeps by day in a hollow tree in moonshiny nights at low tide it feeds on Clams by the Sea-side Of Birds the Loon a most ill-favoured bird not much unlike the Cormorant and very unweildy for it cannot fly and scarce go it makes a noise like a Sow-gelders horn The Humility or rather Simplicity in regard it so simply exposeth it self to the shot of the fowler the bigger sort is about the bigness of a green Plover the other no bigger than that sort of bird we call here a Knot but the Humbird is no less curious and remarkable than any other bird whatsoever whether in New-England or any other part of the World if we consider the rarity of its bulk it being no bigger then a Horne● yet having the perfect shape and proportion of a bird it seems to take its name from the humming noise it makes Of Fishes the most peculiar are the Seal or Sea-calf chiefly prised for its Skin next for its Oyl of which it yields a large quantity the chief use whereof is to burn in lamps for its flesh wholly useless as not fit to be eaten The Shark sometimes as big as a horse having three rows of teeth with which they have many times snapt off the hands and feet of men as they swam With the flesh of this fish being good for nothing else they oft manure Land The Hollibut a fish in shape somewhat resembling a Pleace but of a far larger size that is to say two yards long one wide and a foot thick the best of this for the table is accounted the head and fins especially baked or stew'd The Basse a fish of all others in these parts accounted the greatest delicacy to eat exceeding Ling or Haberdine when salted up for winter as usually the bodies of them are the heads being eaten fresh the common size is two or three foot long The Clam or Clamp a shell-fish having some resemblance of a Cockle with a round hole by which it takes in and spouts out water continually the biggest of them which are as big as a large apple are among the Natives a great dainty and by the English not altogether despised The Alewife a sort of fish most like a Herring coming up once a year namely in April in vast shoales into Rivers and fresh waters to spawn from whence till they have spawned not the most violent disturbance that can be devised can force them to return Of Noxious Creatures the chief is the Rattle Snake being generally a yard and a half long thick in the middle yellow bellied spotted on the back with various colours its thin neck stretching into a wide swallow wide mouthed with teeth as sharp as needles wherewith such as are bitten cannot be cured but by chawing the root of snake-weed and applying the chawed root to the wound which root chawed by any that are not thus bitten is of it self poyson Of Insects the most peculiar
of his Counsel which are in stead of our House of Peers and the Burgesses elected by the Free-men two out of each Parish For the execution of Iustice here are held five Sessions yearly The present Governor is the Right Honourable William Lord Willoughby of Parham The Description of Florida FLorida a pleasant and spacious Countrey was so called by the Spaniards whereas the ancient name was Irquassa because to Iuan Ponce de Leon the first of that Nation that steered his course toward this Coast it gave landing in 1512 on Palm-Sunday which they call Pascha de Flores or Florida Pascha though it had been formerly discovered viz. Ann. 1497. by S●bastion Cabot by the encouragement of K. Henry the 7th of England Ponce by reason of the resistance of the Natives being soon forc'd to quit the place and dying not long after of a wound he received in one of his encounters not many years after Lucas Vasques de Aylon arriving with two Ships was courteously entertained by a King of the Countrey and well he requited him for at his departure he treacherously hoisted Sail with divers of the Indians whom he carried with him captives to work in the Mines at Hispaniola but it thrived with him accordingly when having obtained the Government of Florida he was beaten out with the loss of one Ship and about 200 of his men this notwithstanding discouraged not Pamphilus Nervaes from making another attempt who after many strange adventures losses and hazards at length lost himself it being never known what became of him and of 80 that accompanied him but 4 escap'd to return home alive Much more remarkable and puissant and more destructive to the poor Indians of whom many thousands were slaughtered was the expedition of Ferdinando Soto Ann. 1534. who nevertheless after many losses died therein and his successor Ludovico de Alvarado was forc'd to an hasty retreat in which he lost half his Army upon hopes therefore of better success in the two following expeditions of the Spaniards Religion was thought fit to be joyned with political interest and first with Pietro Albumada were sent five Dominicans who from the jealous Indians not understanding they were design'd Converts to the Christian Faith meeting only with such usage as made them pass for Mar●yrs three Iesuits next Petrus Martinius Ioannes Rogerus and Franciscus Villaregius went with Pietro Menendez whom such a storm encountred in the very landing that the Ship being driven to Cuba those that were left on Shore perish'd with hunger However of so many landings as had at several times been made by the Spaniards some footing notwithstanding all misfortunes could not but be made in the place Enough it seems to disturb the following approaches of the French of whom Iean Ri●ald and Rene Laudoniere being the first that discovered those Coasts had at several efforts their men totally cut off by the Spaniards yet at last they were met with by Dominic de Gourgues a Gascoigner who in the year 1567 in revenge of his Countrey-men of whom divers were hang'd and especially of the death of Ribaut who is said to have been flead alive ventur'd of his own accord to make thither with three Ships well mann'd with Souldiers and Sea-men and with the help of divers Casicks of the Countrey ingaged to his Party by Pierre du Bre the only French-man that escaping the Massacre of the Spaniards in Laudonieres attempt was left alive in the place took from them Fort Carolina and two other Forts hanged divers Spaniards on the same trees whereon they had hung the French and return'd with honour though not without sufficient trouble to clear himself of the boldness of such an uncommissioned exploit After this we hear not of any other adventures of the French in this part of America however there fell not long after a terrible storm upon the Spaniards here from the English under Captain Drake who An. 1585. returning from the sacking of Domingo and Carthagena and as he sail'd along that Coast having intelligence of the state of the Spaniards and firing his great Guns against the Fort St. Iohn forc'd them to quit both that and the City St. Augustine which finding totally deserted he entred and seizing on a Chest of 2000 l. and 14 Brass-Guns he return'd to his Ships and contented with his prize hoisted Sail. Since which they have met with little or no disturbance but remained quiet in those Colonies they possess besides which there hath been found space enough of the Countrey for the parcelling out into a peculiar Province which hath been done of late years by his present Majesty and granted by Patent to several Noble and Honourable persons of his Subjects by the name of Carolina as is mentioned more at large in the peculiar description thereof This Countrey of Florida lying South-west of of Virginia extends from the 30 some say the 25 to the 50 degree of Northern Latitude if we consider the extent as it was before 〈◊〉 was taken out of it and is bounded South and South-west with the Gulph of M●xico and M●● Virginium full West with part of New Gallicia and other Countreys not yet thoroughly discovered North-East with Virginia or rather with Carolina which being now separated 〈◊〉 a Province by it self lies between Florida and Virginia The temperature of the Air of this Countrey is such that Carolina which having been accounted a part of it cannot be thought to differ much in constitution of Climate is generally reputed not only one of the best Colonies the English possess but for health pleasure and profit comparable to if not transcending any part of America beside The richness of the 〈◊〉 meeting with such a temperature of Air as hath been observ'd must needs produce very delicious fruits as well of those kinds that are frequent with us as Apples Pears Plums Cherri●s Apricocks Peaches Grapes c. as those peculiar to the Countrey of which I find the 〈◊〉 most especially taken notice of The ancient Inhabitants of Florida are of an Olive colour of a full stature and well proportioned with long black hair reaching down below their wasts which are tied about with the skins of hunted Beasts adorn'd with divers coloured feathers hanging down to their knees else naked only having their bare arms back brest and legs exquisitely painted their women most especially are esteemed very handsome and of an excellent shape which by their going so naked appears to the greater advantage They are crafty ingen●ous exquisite dissemblers revengeful and frequent in warlike consultations held in the Kings Palace where he himself sits Arbiter and directer Their warlike Arms are chiefly Bow and Arrows which pointed with fish-bones they carry in quivers by their side They have a gross belief of the souls immortality but the Ceremonies of their Religion are bruitishly barbarous and bloody their victories horrid cruelty to prisoners and burial of their dead attended with many strange and extravagant fancies and conceits There
are by some named several Provinces into which this Countrey hath been formerly divided viz. Panuca bordering upon New Spain Aranaris Albardaosia whose Natives are peculiarly noted for their sub●ilty Irquasia inhabited by a people exceeding all others in swiftness of foot and Alpachia Authia and Someria remarkable for expert swimmers even to the very women who make nothing to cross over wide Rivers with children in their arms it is said to abound also with Hermophradites who are made use of as drudges to follow the Camp and carry the luggage of the Army Colas bordering upon Cape Florida Tegista or Florida properly so called which stretcheth our North and South 100 leagues in length into a long Peninsula toward the Isle Cuba by the Cape Los Martyres Acuera Vitacu●●us c. But the more common division of the Floridans is into their several Tribes as the Quitones the Susolas the Maticones the Avavares the Camoni the Canagadi the Marianes and the Quevenes of each of which the supreme Head or Prince is called the Paraousti This Countrey of Florida is well watered with many large and convenient Rivers of which the only mentioned in any noted Writer of these parts are these 1 Rio Grande 2 Rio Secco 3 Rio de Nieves 4 Rio de Spiritu Santo 5 Serravahi 6 Garuna 7 Ligeri● 8 Sequana 9 Axona 10 Charente all which fall into the great Lake of Mexico 11 Maio so called by Ribault from the Month in which he discovered it if it be not one of those already mentioned under another name The principal Towns of Florida whereof some built by the Spaniards and one by the French others by the ancient Inhabitants are 1 St. Helens situate on or near a Promontory or point so called on the utmost Frontier of the Country toward Virginia 2 Arx Carolina or Fort Charles built by Laudonier on the banks of the River Majo and by him so called in honour of King Charles the 9th of France in whose time the Conquest of Florida was undertaken by the French but this place was not long after taken from them by the Spaniard and very much ruinated 3 Port Royal a place inhabited for the sake of the Haven only which for the commodiousness of it is very much frequented 4 St. Matthews one of the principal sortifications of the Spaniards lying on the Eastern Coast of Tergesta of Florida properly so called 5 St. Augustines another of their ancient sortified places on the same Shore only somewhat more Southernly This Town as above mentioned was in the year 1585 taken and sack'd by Sir Francis Drake 6 Vitacuche once the chief Seat of the Province or petty Kingdom of Vitacuche though n● better indeed than an indifferent Village consisting but of 200 houses or rather cottages however thought worthy to be taken by the Natives from the Spaniards As also 7 Ocalis the Metropolitan Village of Acuera of so much the more note by how much the larger than the other 8 Osachite another Provincial Town of the Floridans 9 Apatache an ancient Native-built Town probably once of some note and resort at least taken by the Spaniards for such which made them the more eager to take it under the conduct of Pamphilus Narvaes in hopes of finding there great riches Doubtless it was then a place much larger and more considerable than to consist but of 40 or 50 houses or cottages as hath been by some delivered since it was capable of making so smart a resistance as it did when it was attack'd and of repelling them after the departure of Nervaes 10 Ante another ancient Town or Village of the Floridans chiefly remarkable for a sharp Ingagement between them and the Spaniards whom at this place though said to be nine days march from Apatache they overtook and forc'd to retreat not without the loss of very many of their men some of note 11 St. Philip. 12 St Iago both heretofore fortified by the Spaniards if not still possessed by them CAROLINA The Description of Carolina CAROLINA having been formerly accounted a part of Florida though of late separated into a peculiar Province little or nothing is to be said more of the discovery situation climate temperature soil commodities nature and customs of the natives than what hath been already mentioned in Florida it self of which we have been the more particular in regard this part of it which is called Carolina from his present Majesty King Charles the Second and which makes up a considerable Province belongs now to the English it being not so proper to attribute those things to a part only which are applicable to the whole it remains only therefore to speak of the present interest and propriety when upon what occasion and to whom the Patent was granted and if there be any thing else peculiar to this Province above the rest of Florida It was by the care charge and industrious endeavours of divers noble persons as Edward Earl of Clarendon ●ord Chancellor of England George Duke of Albemarl William Earl of Craven Iohn Lord Berkly Anthony Lord Ashly now Earl of Shaftsbury Sir George Carteret Vice-Chamberlain of his Majesties Houshold Sir William Berkly Knight and Baronet Sir Iohn Colleton Knight and Baronet that this Province of Carolin● as the best part of all Florida was impropriated into the interest and possession of the English to whom indeed of right the whole Countrey may be accounted properly to belong both in regard it was discovered by Sir Sebastian Cabott by the encouragement and for the use of King Henry the seventh of England and for its neighbouring situation to our other Plantations besides several other conveniences by setling therein two considerable Plantations the one at Albemarl-Point which lying to the North borders upon Virginia and whither very many Families have transplanted themselves from New-England and other of our American Plantations the other at Charles-Town or Ashly River almost in the center of the Countrey which being the better Plantation of the two may in all likelihood invite a far greater as well from New-England and other parts that way as from Barbadoes and Bermudas many have already removed their effects hither The most apparent boundary between Carolina and Virginia appears plainly by Mr. Ledderers Map who hath written a very exact description of his travels into these parts to be the R●ver Rorenock alias Shawan that is to say the main River for above half the way and afterwards a smaller branch running on Northward towards the Hills as far as Sapon in the Countrey of the Nabissans the rest of the main stream running farther into the heart of the Countrey which from this boundary stretcheth a long way North-west This Sapon is the first Town within the limits of Carolina and situate as it were upon the utmost point of the said branch of the River Rorenock whereby though it stand dry upon an high ground yet it is environed with a fruitful and productive Soil Nor far from it is a place
takes up the largest part thereof it being all that part which lies beyond the River Indus now S●●do and bounded Eastward with part of China and the Indian Ocean Southward wholly with the Indian or Oriental Ocean Westward with Persia and Northward with that part of Mount Taurus which divides it from Tartary This Countrey as it was by the Ancients so is still primarily distinguished into India intra Gangem and India extra Gangem the first is vulgarly term'd Indostan the other Mangi under which some doubt not to comprehend China it self already described It extends from the nequator to the 44th degree of Northern latitude which makes the longest day 15 hours and ½ as in terrestrial length it reacheth from the Fountains of the River In●us to the utmost Promontory of the Golden Chersonese six hundred German miles So that the temperature of the Air must needs be very diverse under so large an extent lying partly under the torrid partly under the temperate Zone Many vast and barren Desarts there are but generally the Soil is fruitful and the Countrey abounding with things convenient for life and in some parts are produc'd most delicious fruits especially the Palm of which the people of those parts make Wine more frequently than of the Grape and for Gums Spices and all sorts of rich Drugs it surpasseth all other Countreys but that which is the chief glory of the East-Indies is that the rest of the World receives lustre from the Diamonds Rubies and other precious Gems that are brought from thence So that it so far out-shineth the opposite or Occidental Indies by how much these Gems exceed in value Gold it self besides the great Trade that is driven in many places in Silks and other curious Stuffs and rich Commodities whereupon they are much frequented and resorted to by Strangers from all parts of the World The Indian people are generally of a complexion somewhat tawny tall of stature and strong of constitution healthful and for the most part long-liv'd even many times to the age of 130 years notwithstanding their addiction above all other people in the World to luxury and venereal exercises It is permitted them to marry every man as many Wives as he can maintain whereof nevertheless one of them hath a more peculiar respect and observance and a predominance over the rest for which she pays dear enough if she survive her Husband for at his death she is obliged to throw her self into the same Funeral Pyre with him They are simple-hearted and vold of all fraud and deceit in their bargains and contracts and not given to any quirks or cavils in the Law and scarcely is there any such thing as the every known among them so that their houses have little or no need of the guards of locks and bolts so usual and necessary among us The lowermost rank of people go very ill-habited or rather almost stark naked except their head feet and what decency requires to have hid but those of Quality Birth or Estate go richly clad in Silks fine Linnen or other the most costly attire and spare for no adornments of Pearl and the most precious of Gems and they stand very much upon the honour of their Birth and Family observing a suitable grandure in their garb and retinue admitting not of any mixture of affinity with those of mean degree The strength of the Indian Militia consists in their Nairi who are a select number of the Nobility and better sort of Citizens who from seven years of age are train'd up in all manner of bodily exercises by which and by a continual inunction and suppling of their nerves joynts and bones with oil of Sesamum they attain in time to an incredible dexterity and agility of body The chief Ministers and Dispencers of the Rites and Ceremonies of their Religion or rather Idolatry are said to be of the stock of those ancient Brachmanes who doubtless were the same with the Gymnosophists so term'd by the Greeks among whom they had a very great fame being mentioned for their Learning and Philosophy by divers both Greek and Latin Writers and reckoned in the same rank of honour and esteem as the Magi among the Persians and the Druids among the Gauls and Britains The great Mountain Taurus which for extent is doubtless the biggest in the World stretcheth in a continued ridge through the whole length of Asia only under several names as Imaus Emodus Caucasus Parapomisus c. This Mountain Taurus is judged to be the same with that Mount Ararat mentioned in holy Scripture upon which the Ark of Noah rested after the Flood Of the Rivers of India Oriental Indus and Ganges are the chiefest and most famous and of the number of the most principal and largest of all Asia Indus which gives denomination to the Countrey and is now vulgarly called Hiind Duil Inder Caercede and by some Pengah taking its rise in Parapomisus or Naugrocot a branch of the Mountain Taurus falls after 900 miles course Northward with seven mouths into the Indian Ocean having taken in by the way 19 navigable Rivers the chief whereof are Hydaspes and Hypasis which terminated Alexander the Great 's expedition This River where broadest is accounted 50 furlongs broad where deepest 15 paces deep Ganges now Guencam from her uncertain original some say the Mountain Ima●s falls into the Ocean having according to the testimony of Pliny taken in by the way 30 Navigable Rivers This River where narrowest is accounted two German miles broad where shallowest 100 foot deep It is moreover famous for the 460 Channels cut like so many wounds out of its sides by Cyrus King of Persia in revenge for the drowning of an Horse upon which he set a very great value The Empire of the Great Mogul is so promiscuously spread throughout that part of India which lies within Ganges that there are reckoned up no less than 37 Provinces or Kingdoms under his Dominion But because his Dominion doth not exactly comprehend all Indostan or Interior India others have chosen rather to divide it into those several Regions which have been adjudged the proper contents or comprehensions of it In most of which however the Mogul hath the greatest share if not the intire Iurisdiction of them namely these 14 following 1 Dulcinda in which the chief Cities and places of note are Caximir Roree Sestan and Multan 2 Pengah supposed the ancient Kingdom of Porus conquered by Alexander the Great The first Ci●y of this Province is La●or once the Royal Seat of the Mogul Other places of note are Sultan-Puare Athe● and if we reckon as some do the Kingdoms of Haiacan and Buchor under this division Buchor and Suchor 3 Mandao the warlike temper of whose women-Inhabitants hath made them pass for a race of the Amazons The Head-City of this Province is of the same name remarkable both for its 30 miles circuit and for the great Battel between Baldurius King of Cambay and Mirumudius or
foreign Countries to that Countries great benefit and Englands great praise 9 The Trade thereof with other provisions for the whole are vented through eighteen Market-Towns in this Shire whereof Winchester the Britains Caer Gwent the Romans Venta Belgarum in chief ancient enough by our British Historians as built by King Budhudthras nine hundred years before the Nativity of Christ and famous in the Romans times for the weavings and embroderies therein wrought to the peculiar uses of their Emperours own persons In the Saxons time after two Calamities of consuming fire her walls was raised and the City made the Royal Seat of their West Saxons Kings and the Metropolitan of their Bishops See wherein Egbert and Elfred their most famous Monarchs were Crowned and Henry the third the Normans longest Reigner first took breath And here King Aethelstane erected six Houses for his Mint but the Danish desolation over running all this City felt their fury in the days of King Ethelbright and in the Normans time twice was defaced by the mis-fortune of fire which they again repaired and graced with the trust of keeping the publick Records of the Realm In the civil wars of Maud and Stephen this City was sore sacked but again received breath was by King Edward the third appointed the place for Mart of Wool and Cloth The Caehedral Church built by Kenwolf King of the West-Saxons that had been Amphibalus S. Peters Swethins and now holy Trinitie is the Sanctuary for the ashes of many English Kings for herein great Egbert anno 836. with his son King Ethelwolf 857. Here Elfred Oxfords founder 901. with his Queen Elswith 904. Here the first Edmund before the Conquest 924. with his sons Elfred and Elsward Here Edred 955. and Edwy 956. both Kings of England Here Emme 1052. with her Danish Lord Canute 1035. and his son Hardicanute 1042. And here lastly the Normaus Richard and Rufus 1100. were interred their bones by Bishop Fox were gathered and shrined in little gilt coffers fixed upon a wall in the Quire where still they remain carefully preserved This Cities situation is fruitful and pleasant in a valley under hills having her River on the East and Castle on the West the circuit of whose walls are well near two English miles containing one thousand eight hundred and eighty paces through which openeth six gates for entrance and therein are seven Churches for divine Service besides the Minister and those decayed such as Callender Ruell Chappell S. Maries Abbey and the Friers without the Suburbs and Sooke in the East is S. Pete●s and in the North Hyde Church and Monastery whose ruins remaining shew the beau●y that formerly it bare The graduation of this City by the Mathematicks is placed for Latitude in the Degree 51 10 minutes and for Longitude 19 3 minutes 10 More South is South-hampton a Town populous rich and beautiful from whom the whole Shire deriveth her name most strongly walled about with square stone containing in circuit one thousand and two hundred paces having seven Gates for entrance and twenty nine Towers for defence two very stately Keys for Ships arrivage and five fair Churches for Gods divine Service besides an Hospital called Gods-house wherein the unfortunate Richard Earle of Cambridge beheaded for treason lieth interred On the West of this Town is mounted a most beautifull Castle in form Circular and wall within wall the foundation upon a hill so topped that it cannot be ascended but by stairs carrying a goodly prospect both by Land and Sea and in the East without the walls a goodly Church sometimes stood called S. Maries which was pulled down for that it gave the French direction of course who with fire had greatly endangered the Town instead thereof is newly erected a small and unfinished Chappel In this place saith learned Cambden stood the ancient Clausentium or Fort of the Romans whose circuit on that side extended it self to the Sea this suffered many depredations by the Saxon Pirates and in Anno 980. was by the Danes almost quite overthrown In King Edward the thirds time it was fired by the French under the Conduct of the King of Sicils son whom a Countrey man encountred and struck down with his Club he crying Rancon that is Ransome but he neither understandiog his language nor the Law that Arms doth allow laid on more soundly saying I know thee a Frankon and therefore shalt thou die And in Richard the seconds time it was somewhat removed and built in the place where now it standeth In this Clausentium Canute to evict his flatterers made trial of his Deity commanding the Seas to keep back from his seat But being not obeyed he acknowledged God to be the onely supreme Governour and in a religious devotion gave up his Crown to the Rood at Winchester More ancient was Silcester built by Constantius great Constantines son whose Monument they say was seen in in that City and where another Constantine put on the purple robe against Honorius ' as both Ninius and Gervase of Canterbury do withess Herein by our Historians record the warlike Arthur was Crowned Whose greatness for circuit contained no less than fourscore Acres of ground and the walls of great height yet standing two miles in compass about This City by the Danish Rovers suffered such wrack that her mounted tops were never since seen and her Hulke the walls immured to the middle of the earth which the rubbish of her own desolations hath filled 11 Chief Religious houses within this County erected and again suppressed were these Christ's-Church Beaulieu Wh●rwall Rumsey Redbridge Winchester Hyde South-hampton and Tichfield The honour of this Shire is dignified with the high Titles of Marquess and them Earls of VVinchester and South-hampton whose Arms of Families are as thou seest and her division into thirty seven Hundreds and those again into two Hundred fifty three Parishes WIGHT ISLAND VVIGHT ILAND CHAPTER VII WIGHT ILAND was in times past named by the Romans Vecta Vectis and Vect●sis by the Britains Guyth and in these days usually called by us The Lsle of Wight it belongeth to the County of South-hampton and lieth out in length over against the midst of it South-ward It is encompassed round with the British Seas and severed from the Main-land that it may seem to have been conjoyned to it and thereof it is thought the British name Guyth hath been given unto it which betokeneth separation even as Sicily being broken off and cut from Italy got the name from Secando which signifieth cutting 2 The form of this Isle is long and at the midst far more wide than at either end From Binbridge Isle in the East to Hurst Castle in the West it stretcheth out in length 20 miles and in breadth from Newport haven Northward to Chale-bay Southward 12 miles The whole in circumference is about sixty miles 3 The Air is commended both for health and delight whereof the first is witnessed by the long continuance of the Inhabitants in