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A64087 The general history of England, as well ecclesiastical as civil. Vol. I from the earliest accounts of time to the reign of his present Majesty King William : taken from the most antient records, manuscripts, and historians : containing the lives of the kings and memorials of the most eminent persons both in church and state : with the foundations of the noted monasteries and both the universities / by James Tyrrell. Tyrrell, James, 1642-1718. 1696 (1696) Wing T3585; ESTC R32913 882,155 746

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Britains under the Name of Hesus as also Camulus as Mr. Camden proves from a Coin of Cunobelin of which he gives us the Draught being a Man's Head with an Helmet on it and with these Letters CAMU The next God of the Britains was Apollo Worshipped by them under the Name of Beleus or Belinus as appears by a Passage of Julius Capitolinus in his Life of Maximin He is also suppos'd to have bin called Belatucadrus there being divers Altars and Inscriptions dug up of late Years out of the Earth all of them with this Title DEO BELATUCADRO which Name seems to be deriv'd from the Assyrian God Bel or Belus As for Goddesses they Worshipped Diana under the Name of Camma Another Goddess the Britains had who is call'd by Dion Andraste or Andrate and is suppos'd to have bin the Goddess of Victory she had a Temple at Camalodunum now Maldon in Essex As for their Sacrifices though they were most often Beasts at sometimes they also Sacrific'd Men as Caesar expresly tells us and Tacitus relates That it was usual for the Britains to consult the Gods by the Entrails of Men Pliny also tells us That the Misletoe growing upon an Oak being cut with many Ceremonies was made use of in all their Sacrifices and other Religious Rites and also says that Britain in his time did so Superstitiously cultivate Magick Arts and that with so many Ceremonies that they might have communicated it even to the Persians themselves These are the chief Things which antient Authors have left us concerning the British Customs and Manners relating either to their Religious Civil or private Life which if it seem tedious to you may be passed by So I now come to my main Design and give you Caesar's own Account of his first Invasion of Britain out of the Fourth and Fifth Books of his Commentaries Julius Caesar having now subdued most part of Gallia and quieted the Germans and stopped their Incursions into his Province resolv'd on an Expedition into Britain his Pretences were these That the Britains had underhand sent Supplies to the Cities of Armorica who the Year before had revolted from his Obedience and had joined with the rest of Gaul in a general and dangerous Rebellion and not only so but that they had received into their Protection the Bellovaci his Enemies who had fled to them for aid These Caesar there assigns as the Causes to justifie this Invasion But though these were the seeming Causes that moved Caesar to this sudden Expedition yet certainly a Soul so great as his could not be tempted by the mean hopes of getting the British Pearls to so dangerous a War as Suetonius in the Life of Caesar supposes though he mentions his comparing their weight and largeness by poising them in his Hand yet I will not deny but he might even propose the getting of these as a Bait to encourage his Souldiers in this Enterprize By his past as well as future Actions we may guess that besides Glory his main Design in Invading Britain was to inure his Souldiers to Hardship and to accustom them to the most uncouth and barbarous Enemies that they might not be afterwards terrified at the most dangerous Enterprizes but wholly depend upon his Fortune and Conduct Caesar therefore although Summer was almost spent and Winter coming on very early in the Northern Parts of Gaul yet resolved to pass over into Britain and if the time of the Year should not suffer him to make War yet he thought it might be to good purpose if he should but Land upon the Island and understand the Natures of the Inhabitants and come to know the chief Places Harbors and Accesses to it all which he says were as yet unknown to the Gauls for besides Merchants no Body commonly went thither and even to those scarce any thing was known besides the Sea-coast and those Countries which were opposite to Gallia Therefore though the Merchants were called together from all Parts yet could he not understand what Nations they were that inhabited it nor what sort of War they made nor what customs they used nor what Ports were fitting to receive a Fleet of great Ships Though by the way this seems very strange if it were true as they of Rhemes told Caesar that Divitiacus King of the Soissons had a little before held Britain also under his dominion besides the Belgian Colonies which he affirms to have named and Peopled many Provinces there as also what he tells us in the Sixth Book of his Commentaries that those who desired to know the Druids Discipline went thither Yearly on purpose to learn it But be this as it will he thought it necessary before he exposed his own person to send Ca. Volusenus thither with one Galley to discover these things commanding him to return as soon as this could be effected whilst he with all his Forces marched towards the Country of the Morini now the Province of Picardy Because thence was the shortest cut into Britain hither he draws together his Ships from all parts of the neighbouring Provinces as also that Fleet which he had built last Summer for the Armorican War in the mean time when his design was made known being carried over by the Merchants into Britain Ambassadours came to him from divers Princes and States of this Island who promised to give Hostages and to obey the Roman Empire All which being heard Caesar as largely promising and exhorting them to continue still in that mind sent them back and with them Comius of the Atribates now called the Country of Arras whom upon the conquest thereof he had made King and of whose Courage and Fidelity Caesar was very well assured him he enjoyns that he should go to as many of the States as he could and perswade them to come into the Roman Interest and should also inform them that he himself would speedily come over thither But Volusenus having only surveyed the Country at a distance which was all he could do since he durst not go out of his Ship nor trust himself with these Barbarians on the Fifth day return'd to Caesar and related to him whatsoever he had there observed Caesar having settled the Morini by taking Hostages of them then gathered together about Eighty Ships of burthen which he judged sufficient for the transporting of two Legions but all his Gallies he distributed to his Quaestor and Lieutenants there were also Eight Ships of burthen more which lay Wind bound at a place Eight Miles distant so that they could not reach the same Port These he appointed for the Horse the rest of the Army he committed to Q. Titus Sabinus and L. Aurunculus Cotta with orders to march into the Country of the Menapii and into those Towns of the Morini from whence Ambassadours had not yet come to him But P· Sulpicius Rufus his Lieutenant he commands to keep the Port with a sufficient Garrison All things being thus dispatched and having now got a fair
he readily granted taking along with him as an assistant not Lupus but his Scholar Severus who being ordained Bishop of Triers then preached the Gospel to the Germans as soon as it was divulg'd that Germanus was come over one Elaphius a Principal Magistrate of that Country brought a Youth a Son of his the Sinews of one of whose Legs had been long shrunk up and desired Germanus that he would restore them who granting his request immediately upon his stroaking the place with his hand his Leg was restored as the other whereupon both the Priests and the People who had followed Elaphius to the place being astonished at the Miracle were again confirm'd in the Catholick Faith which was followed by an admonition Germanus made them to amend their errours but the Authors of this apostacy being by the sentence of them all banished the Island were delivered up to the Bishops to be carry'd into the Continent that so the People might quietly enjoy the benefit of this Reformation who for the future persisted in the true Faith But after this the Britains being again pressed and over power'd by fresh invasions of the Scots and Picts King Vortigern called a Council to consider what was to be done and where they might best seek assistance to repel these frequent and cruel Invasions of the said Nations whereupon all his Councellours together with the King being as it were blinded found out such a defence as indeed proved the destruction of their Country which was that the Heathen Saxons who were then hateful both to God and Man and whom when absent they fear'd almost as bad as Death it self should be sent for to repel these Northern Nations which seems to have been ordained by Divine providence to take vengeance on so wicked a People as the event more evidently prov'd Though at present the Council seem'd very specious because the Saxons were then a Nation who were very terrible to all others this Council being thus approved of Ambassadours are immediately sent into Germany representing to the Saxons the Britains request and promising them very advantagious Conditions if they would come over to their assistance Witichindus an ancient German Writer in his History De gestis Saxonum represents these Ambassadours making a long Speech wherein they promised an absolute subjection to the Saxons but this being not at all likely nor agreeable to the British account of it I omit only this is certain that the Saxons were very well pleased with this Proposal and their Country being then overcharged with People beyond what it was able to bear immediately yeilding to this request made what haste they could to come away and being as it is said chosen out by Lot were put on board Three long Ships or Vessels called in their Language Chiules under the conduct of Two Captains Hengist and Horsa being Brothers and descended from that ancient Woden from whom almost all the Royal Families of the Saxons derive their descent These leaders together with their followers arriving in Britain at a place called afterwards Towne 's Fleet are welcomed with great joy and applause both of the Prince and People the Isle of Thanet where they landed being given them for their habitation and a League was made with them on these Conditions that the Saxons fighting for and defending the Country against Foreign Enemies should receive their Pay and Maintenance from those for whom they Fought this is said to have happen'd in the beginning of the Reign of the Emperour Martian and in the Four and Twentieth Year of Pharamond first King of the French Anno Dom. 149 as the Saxon Chronicle and almost all our Historians agree What the number was of these Saxon Auxiliaries now brought over is not related in the Saxon Annals or any other but certainly they could not be above 1500 since they all came over in Three Ships and 500 Men was as much as one of those small Vessels could well be supposed to carry But before I proceed further in this History 't is fit we should give some account of the Name Original and Manners of this Great and Warlike Nation of the Saxons whose Posterity enjoy this Kingdom to this very day Bede in the first place tells us that these People came from Three Valiant Nations of Germany viz. the Saxons Angles and Jutes from which latter were derived the Kentish Men and the Inhabitants of the Isle of Wight and of the Province lying over against the said Isle now called Hampshire and which was afterwards part of the Kingdom of the West Saxons was also Peopled by the same Nation From the Saxons that is the Country which was then called old Saxony came the East Saxons South Saxons and West Saxons and from the Angles that is that Country which is called Angulus and which lyes between the Countries of the Jutes and Saxons are derived the East Angles the Middleland Angles or Mercians together with the whole Nation of the Northumbrians that is those Northern People which live beyond the River Humber so far Bede But Ethelwerd one of our most ancient Historians in his Chronicle tells us more plainly that Old England is feared between the Saxons and the Jutes having for its Capital City that which is called in the Saxon Tongue Sleswic but by the Danes Heathaby and that Britain taking its Name from its Conquerors is now called England But as for the Bounds and Extent of Old Saxony there is a great difference between the Writers about it yet that it bordered upon Old England they all agree Arch-bishop Usher supposes Old Saxony to be that Country that beginning with the River Ellis is extended towards the North and was afterwards called Northalbingia being bounded in its lower parts by the Rivers Albis Billa and Trava and in its upper by the Rivers Eidora and Slia for Ptolemy appoints the same Southern Bounds to his Saxons placing them between the Bounds of the River Albis and Calusus or Trava which runneth by Lubec but the Northern bounds Egenhardus hath given us in his Annals in the Year of our Lord 808 where speaking of Godefrid King of Denmark he sets it out thus He resolved to fortifie the Limits of his Kingdom which looked towards Saxony with a deep Trench in such a manner as that from that Eastern Bay of the Sea which they call Ostersalt as far as the Western Ocean this Trench should defend all the Northern Banks of the River Eidor And Adam of Bremen in his Treatise concerning the Situation of Denmark and other Northern Nations divides Denmark from the Inhabitants of Saxony whom he calls North Elbings by the River Eidor of which Transelbian Saxons in another Book he reckons up three Nations The first of Dithmars lying upon the Ocean whose chief Church was Mildenthrope the second Holsteiners through which runs the River Sture whose chief Church was Scolenfield the third who were more noble are called Stormars
the Northern Coasts of Germany as far as the Cimbric 〈…〉 so that the Swedes Danes and Saxons had one and the same Scythic Original as the Learned Grotius in his said Prolegomena hath fully proved as also Mr. Sherringham in Chap. 7. of his last-cited Treatise as well from the ancient Gothic Chronicles written in that Language both in Prose and Verse as also from Jornandes de Rebus Geticis Chap. 4. that these Getae or Goths multiplying more than these Countries could well bear in the time of Filemar the 5th King after Berig great multitudes of them under his Conduct removed their Dwellings into the Asiatic Scythia called Oudin in their Language from whence in process of Time they spread themselves as far as the Palus Maeotis and the Northern Countries near the Euxine Sea even to Thracia and Maesia towards the South where they still retained the Name of Getae or Gotti thô they were also from the Countries where they lived often called Thracians or Maesians being divided into several Tribes viz. Visigoths or Western Goths and Ostrogoths or Eastern Goths the former of which invaded Spain and the latter Italy But some Ages before this as the Norwegians and Swedish Annals cited by Mr. Sherringham relate one Woden King of a Territory and City in Asia called Asgard near the River Tanais led back a great multitude of these Goths out of the Asiatic Scythia into Europe and partly by good will and partly by force seized on all those Countries afterwards called Saxony but that afterward leaving his Sons Princes of those Regions he returned into Swedeland where after many Travels he ended his Days being counted a great Magician as well as Warriour so that after his decease his Subjects and Descendants worship'd him as a God But divers Danish and Swedish Authors do very much doubt whether this Woden whom they thus worship'd were the same with him from whom the Saxon Princes drew their Pedigrees since thereby it appears that Hengist and Horsa were the Sons of Witgilfus who was the Son of Witta and he the Son of Vecta and he the Son of Woden So that these Princes were no more than three Descents removed from him which could not amount to above 200 Years and consequently was too short a time for their multiplying into such great Multitudes much less for their worshiping him for a God yet this is very probable that most of the Goths that came along with this Woden changed their Names to that of the Saxons and Peopled all those Countries already mentioned and thô there may be a great deal of Fabulous Stuff in this Story as it is related in the Old Swedish and Iselandish Histories called Eddas yet thus much is certain that there was such a Prince who brought back the Goths out of Asia into those parts since the Swedes Danes Norwegians and Saxons worship'd him as their common Deity and all agree in the same Tradition concerning him Yet since Cluverius and Verstegan have both affirmed the Saxons not to be derived from the Goths but Germans and that the former has endeavoured to prove that the ancient Getae or Gothes were not the same Nation I shall here give you the sum of those Arguments which Grotius and Mr. Sheringham have given us to prove the ancient Getae and Gothi to have been all one Nation and that the Saxons were deriv'd from them For the first they alledge the Testimony of the most ancient Latin and Greek Authours that make any mention of the Goths as Vospicus in his Life of the Emperour Probus to whom may be also added divers Christian Writers as Origen St. Hierome and St. Augustine and of the Greeks Procopius Photius the Patriarch 〈…〉 Georgius Syncellus not to mention the Gothic Writers themselves as Jornandes and Issidore in his Gothic Chronicle who all agree that the Goths were anciently called Getae and that they were one and the same Nation Secondly from the places where these ancient Getae or Scythians first inhabited that they were the same from whence the Goths afterwards came who over-ran the Roman Empire viz. from the Countries about the Palus Maeotis which are now possessed by the Chrim Tartars Lastly from their great agreement in Language and Grotius in his said Prolegomena brings divers Instances too long here to be recited to prove that the ancient Scythic or Gethic Tongue was the Mother of the German which seems to be further made out by Mr. Sherringham from the Etymology of divers Scythian Words which are found to be the same with the Gothic and Saxon Lastly Busb●quius in his Turkish Epistles mentions some remainders of the ancient Goths who dwell among the Tartars in the Cimbric Cbersonese some of whom he met and discours'd with at Constantinople and gives you not only their names of numbers but also above Forty Words which are very near the Dutch and English signifying the same things and which argue a derivation from the same Gothic Original and thô this Author there doubts whether these Goths were not some remainders of the Saxons brought thither by Charles the Great yet Grotius in his said Prolegamena fully removes that difficulty and shews from the Testimony of Josophat Barbarus a Noble Venetian who had lived among them that these People called themselves not Saxons but Goths and their Country Gothland which is also confirmed by the learned Scaliger in his Canoni Isagog where he relates that they still lived under the Precopian Tartars and have the Bible in the same Characters which were invented by Ulphilas their Bishop But the learned Dr. Hicks hath given us much greater light into this matter in his English Saxon and Maesogothick Grammar as also by reprinting the Isleland Grammar of Ranulph Jones in both which by comparing the radical Words of the English Saxon Tongue as also the Declensions of the Verbs and Pronouns any Man that will but take the pains to peruse it must needs think that not only the Old Maesogothic and Scandian Gothic were one and the same Language the latter being derived from the former but that our English Saxon comes from one and the same Original But if the Getae and Gothi were one and the same Nation and if all the Danish Swedish and Saxon Writers have it that Woden was a Goth it will also follow that all those who came into Germany along with him were also Goths and from whom that part of it was called at first Reid Gothland now Jutland in which as Grotius tells us there is a River called Guden Aa i. e. the Goths River which Country being deserted by its ancient Inhabitants the Jutes and Angles was not long after seized by the Danes who possess it to this day and who as we find by their Histories had maintained Wars upon that account with the Saxons for many Ages before I shall not here trouble the Reader with the particular Arguments and Objections that Verstegan and Cluverius have brought
in Ireland being hindred by a Storm that forced him back from Preaching the Gospel as he intended in Germany he perswaded one Wilbrode his Country man to do it who having obtain'd the Pope's License to Preach to the Heathen Nations he performed it first by preaching the Gospel in old Frizeland which then included not only those Provinces called East and West Frizeland to this day but also Holland and Zealand and divers others of the Belgic Provinces where he converted all those Nations to the Christian Faith and was afterwards at the desire of Pipin father to King Charles ordained by the Pope Arch-Bishop of the Frisons Anno Dom. 596 and upon his return to Rome Pipin being then Major of the Palace or General of France gave him for his Episcopal See that famous Castle which is called in the Old Language of that Nation Wiltaburg but in the Gallic Tongue Trajectum at this day Utrecht But not long after two Priests each of them named Henwald and for distinction Sirnamed from the colour of their Hair the Black and the White being by his Example piously affected to the Souls of their Country-men the Old Saxons at their coming into Old Saxony to convert them met with much worse Entertainment for being in the House of a Farmer who had promised to convey them as they desired to the Governour of that Country and being discovered by their daily Ceremonies to be Christian Priests and the cause of their coming also known they were by him and his Heathen Neighbours cruelly butcher'd and their Bodies flung into the Rhine but the Governour coming to the knowledge of it being enraged at such Violence offered to two Strangers sent Armed Men and slew all those wicked Inhabitants and burnt their Village About this time Sir H. Spelman in his first Volume of Councils records a Charter of Priviledge granted by King Wythred in a General Council or Synod of Kent whereby with the Consent of the Chief Men of his Kingdom he freed all the Churches thereof from all Publick Payments or Tributes whatsoever provided they yielded the King and his Successours the same Honour and Obedience as they had done his Predecessours under whom hitherto they had enjoyed all Justice and Liberty This was done in the Eighth Year of his Reign at a Place called Cylling which seems to be no more than a Confirmation of what had been done 6 Years before in the Council of Becanceld But to return to our Annals ' This Year Cenred began to Reign over the Southumbers i. e. the Mercians as has been already said Hedda the Bishop departed this Life he held the Bishoprick of Winchester 27 Years This Hedda is he of whom Bede gives the Character of an Excellent Bishop and one who Adorn'd the Episcopal See converting more by his Example than Preaching Ethelred the Son of Penda King of the Mercians became a Monk at Bardeney Abbey having reigned 29 or rather 30 Years and Cenred succeeded him who was his Cousin-German William of Malmesbury further adds That from a Monk he came to be Abbot of that Monastery wherein he died and that of Osgilde the Sister of Egfrid King of Northumberland he begat a Son called Ceolred yet for all this Ethelred passing him by he appointed Cenred the Son of his Brother Wulfher for his Successour who reigned with great Love to his Country and a singular Probity of Manners till in the Fifth Year of his Reign he went to Rome and as Bede tells us taking upon him the Habit of a Monk during the Papacy of Pope Constantine there ended his Days in Prayers Fasting and Alms. Ealfert or Alfred King of the Northumbers deceased on the 19 o Kal. Jan. at Driffeild in the 12th Year of his Reign Osred his Son succeeding in that Kingdom But Stephen Heddi in his Life of Bishop Wilfrid and who lived at that time hath given us a more accurate Account of the Death of this King and of his Successours viz. That King Alfred lying now sick upon his Death-bed repented of what he had done toward Bishop Wilfrid and promised That if ever he recovered of that Sickness he would restore the Bishop and in all Things observe the Decree of the Apostolick See but if he died he enjoyn'd who ever should succeed him to be reconciled with that Bishop for the good of both their Souls but this King dying one Eardwulf succeeded him thô but for a small time and the Bishop going to him and carrying that King's Son along with him he sent Messengers before supposing him to be his Friend but the King being perswaded by his Councellors and also prompted by his own natural Wickedness sent the Bishop word binding it with an Oath That unless he departed his Kingdom within the space of six Days whosoever he found of his Company should be put to Death Not long after which harsh Message a Plot being laid against him he was driven out of the Kingdom which he had scarce enjoyed two Months and so the Royal Youth Osred Son of the late King Alfred succeeded in the Kingdom and became Bishop Wilfrid's adopted Son In the first Year of which King the Author above-mentioned hath given us the following Account concerning the Restitution of the said Bishop viz. That Berthwald Arch-Bishop of Canterbury came about this time from the South together with all the Bishops Abbots and Chief Men of the whole Kingdom by the Precept of the Apostolical See to hold a Synod at a Place lying on the East-side of the River Nid in Northumberland where the King with his Bishops and Chief Men being met the Arch-Bishop made a Speech to them setting forth the Letters from the Pope which Bishop Wilfrid had brought directed to himself and which he desired might be read the Purport whereof was to the same effect as you have already heard Then Aelfleda the Abbess Daughter to the late King as also Berechtfrid the second Man in the Kingdom set forth the Will of the late King and therefore that it was fit to obey it as well as the Commands of the Apostolical See whereupon the King with his Great Men and all the Bishops upon mature Deliberation resolved to be reconciled to Bishop Wilfrid and that his two Monasteries of Rypon and Hagulstad together with all their Revenues should be restored to him and so a firm Reconciliation being made all the Bishops departed in Peace But yet for all this by what Richard Prior of Hagulstad hath left us of this matter it appears that Wilfrid did not carry the Cause so clearly as this Author would make it for he only was restored to the Bishoprick of Hagulstad and Bishop John above-named was from thence translated to York which Bishop Wilfrid had held before only Bishop John parted with Hagulstad for Peace-sake I have been the more exact in this Transaction because it has never been done by any body in our Language before Also
Miracles and mentioning other things only by the bye hath given us so slender an account of those times that if we had not found some assistance from the Saxon Annals as well as from other Writers the History of that Age though very short and obscure would yet have been much more imperfect without them But to proceed now with our Saxon Annals This Year K. Ethelbald took Sumerton and Acca was driven from his Bishoprick of Hagulstad I suppose by the then King of Northumberland though no Author expresly mentions it Will. of Malmesbury tells us that this Ethelbald was that great and powerful King of the Mercians to whom Boniface Bishop of Mentz being then the Pope's Legat writ a sharp Letter setting forth and reproving the then reigning Vices of this Nation and particularly of that King himself who relying on the vain Confidence of his Justice and Alms was not ashamed no more than the Noblemen of his Kingdom by his Example to commit Uncleanness even with Consecrated Nuns which wicked Actions the Bishop foretells would be the ruin of himself and Kingdom as it proved in the end But King Ethelbald after he had thus taken Somerton with an Army too powerful to be resisted by the K. of the West Saxons became to great that as H. Huntington observes he made all the rest of the Provinces of England together with their Kings subject to him as far as the River Humber This Somerton was anciently a great Town and Castle of the West-Saxon Kings and gave Name to that County which we now call Somersetshire though at present it be but an ordinary Country Village Also this Year the Sun was so much eclipsed that as the Epitome of Bede and Ethelward relate on 13 o Kal. Sept. it s whole Orb seem'd as it were covered with a black Sheild This Year also the Moon appear'd as it were stain'd with Blood and Simeon of Durham saith it lasted one whole hour and then a Blackness following it return'd to its natural Colour Also Tatwin the Archbishop deceased and Egbryht was made Bishop of York Now Bede also died But the Author of his Life in Manuscript in the Cottonian Library refers it to the Year following and the Chronicle of Mailros with greater Truth to the Year 736 for he was as his Life above-cited relates born Anno 677 and deceased in the 59th Year of his Age. But since Bede our Historian deceased about this time and that it is to him we are beholding for the greatest part of the History of this present Period it is fit we give you a short account of his Life He was born in the Province of Northumberland not far from the Monastery of Gyrwie the place is now called Yarrow near the Mouth of the River Were where he was bred up from seven Years of Age and in which being profess'd he lived a Monk all the rest of his Life spending his time in the Study of the Scriptures saying his Prayers or Writing Comments upon the Old and New Testaments as also his Ecclesiastical History so often cited by us besides divers other Books containing the Lives of Saints and other Matters of Humane as well as Divine Learning whose Titles you may find at the end of his said History 'Till at last being wasted by a long Asthma he there made an Heavenly End as may be seen in his Life above-mentioned So that Simeon of Durham very well observes that though he lay as it were hid in the utmost Corner of the World yet after his Death he became known in all Parts by his Learned Writings therefore he hath for his great Piety as well as Learning justly obtained the Title of Venerable Bede After whose decease as Will. of Malmesbury rightly observes all knowledge of Actions passed was almost lost even to his own Times since none proved an Emulator of his Studies nor a Follower of his Learning so that to a slothful Generation one more slothful still succeeding the Love of Learning for a long time grew cold in this whole Island ' This Year Bishop Egbriht received the Pall from Rome but you must here observe that by the Pope's thus sending a Pall to the Bishop of York he now became an Archbishop and consequently Metropolitan of all the Northumbrian Provinces that See having been ever since the Time of Paulinus's Flight out of Northumberland into Kent and carrying the Archiepiscopal Pall along with him no more than an ordinary Bishoprick subject to the Archbishop of Canterbury from whose Power it was from this time exempted and came now to have Supreme Jurisdiction over all the Bishops in Deira and Bernicia as far as the Pictish Kingdom ' The Arch-bishop Nothelm received his Pall from Rome This was the new Archbishop of Canterbury who succeeded Tatwine You may take notice that it was in those Times usual for the Pope to send a Pall to every new Archbishop upon his Consecration to shew his Dependance upon the See of Rome and for which every Archbishop paid a great Sum of Money to the Pope's Treasury This Nothelm when he was a Presbyter of the Church of London was he to whom Bede in the Epistle before his History owns himself beholding for divers ancient Monuments relating to the English Church as also Epistles out of the Pope's Repository This Year Forthere Bishop of Scireburn with Frithogithe Queen of the West-Saxons went to Rome Where as H. Huntington tells us they both took upon them the Monastick Habit which in those days very many of the English Nation of all Degrees and Qualities as well high as low were wont to do For now also as our Annals relate Ceolwulf King of Northumberland surrendred his Kingdom to Eadbert his Cousin who reigned Thirty one Years This Ceolwulf was he to whom Bede dedicated his History who after his professing himself a Monk in the Monastery of Lindisfarne as R. Hoveden relates brought the Monks of that place from the strict discipline of drinking only Milk or Water to drink Wine and Ale and they might very well afford it for he brought along with him good provisions to live easily as great Treasures and Revenues in Land recited at large by Simeon of Durham all which he bestowed on that Monastery no wonder then if such great Commendations be given by Monkish Writers to Kings becoming Monks The same Year also as Simeon of Durham and Mat. of Westminster relates Alwin Bishop of Lichfield dying there were two Bishops ordained in that Diocess viz. Wicca at Lichfield and Tocca the first Bishop of Leycester which Town from this time continued a Bishop's See for divers Ages Also this Year according to the Saxon Annals the Bishops Ethelwald and Acca deceased and Cynwulf was consecrated Bishop and the same Year Ethelbald King of the Mercians wasted the Contry of Northumberland And as H. Huntington adds carried away as much Spoil as he had a mind to from thence Also as Simeon of Durham
Saxons marching in an Hostile manner into Cornwal absolutely subdued it and added it to his own Kingdom many being there slain on both sides The same Year also according to Caradoc's Chronicle Run King of Dyvet and Cadhel King of Powis deceased Charles the Emperour made Peace with Nicephorus Emperour of Constantinople This Year also according to the same Caradoc Elbods Arch-Bishop of North Wales i. e. of St. Asaph deceased before whose Death was a great Eclipse of the Sun But as the Reverend Lord Bishop of Bangor in his Catalogue of the Welsh Kings which he has been pleased to communicate to me well observes That Eclipse falling out Anno 810 the Bishops Death must do so likewise and therefore in this the Chronicles must needs be mistaken Also according to Mat. Westminster Aelfwold King of Northumberland dying Earnred succeeded him and held it for 32 Years which is also confirmed by Simeon of Durham thô this can by no means agree with the Chronicle of Mailross which says That Eardulf being expelled his Kingdom it continued without any King for many Years but William of Malmesbury makes this Anarchy to have begun from the murther of King Ethered Anno 794 as hath been already observed in the last Book and that this Confusion lasted for about 33 Years during which time that Province became a Scorn to its Neighbours But it seems they still had Kings thô very obscure and but of small Account But of greater certainty is that which Mat. Westminster relates under this Year viz. That King Egbert subdued the Northern Welsh-men and made them Tributary to him But it is wholly incredible what Buchanan in his Scotish History relates in the Year following to wit That Achaius King of Scots having reigned 32 Years and had formerly aided but in what Year of his Reign he tells us not Hungus King of the Picts with 10000 Scots against one Athelstan then wasting the Pictish Borders and that Hungus by the Aid of those Scots and the Help of St. Andrew their Patron in a Vision by Night and the Appearance of a Cross by Day routed the astonished English and slew this Athelstan in Fight But who this Athelstan was I believe no Man knows Buchanan supposes him to have been some Danish Commander on whom King Alured or Alfred had bestowed Northumberland Yet of this I find no Foot-steps in our ancient Writers and if any such Thing were done in the time of Alfred it must be above 60 Years after for King Alfred began not to Reign till Anno 871. And John Fordun in his Scotish History is also as much mistaken making this Athelstan to be the Son of King Ethelwulf who then governed the Northern Provinces under his Father which also fails almost as much in point of time this Prince Athelstan here mentioned being as appears by the Saxon Annals alive and engaged in a Sea-Fight against the Danes above 40 Years after as you will find in its due place set down This Athelstan therefore and this great Overthrow seems rather to have been a meer Fancy of some idle Monk And this Year according to Mat. Westminster as King Egbert had the Year before subdued the Welsh-men so it seems upon some fresh Rebellion of theirs he again entred their Borders and laid them waste from North to South with Fire and Sword and then returned home Victorious But notwithstanding the Wars the Welsh had from abroad it seems they had also time enough for Civil Wars at home for now according to Caradoc's Chronicle Conan Prince of Wales and his Brother Howel could not agree insomuch that they tried the Matter by Battle where Howel had the Victory to which Dr. Powel hath here added this Observation That this Howel the Brother of Conan King or Prince of North Wales did claim the Isle of Mon or Anglesey for part of his Father's Inheritance which Conan refusing to give him thereupon they fell at Variance and consequently made War the one against the other And here says he I think fit to say somewhat of the old Custom and Tenure of Wales from whence this Mischief grew that is the Division of the Father's Inheritance amongst all the Sons commonly called Gauel kind Gauel is a British Term signifying a Hold because every one of the Sons did hold some portion of his Father's Lands as his lawful Son and Successour This was the Cause not only of the Overthrow of all the ancient Nobility of Wales for by that means the Inheritance being continually divided and subdivided amongst the Children and Children's Children it was at length brought to nothing but also of much Bloodshed unnatural Strife and Contention amongst Brethren as we have here an Example and many others in this History This kind of Partition is very good to plant and settle a Nation in a large Country not inhabited but in a populous Country already furnished with Inhabitants it is the utter Decay of great Families and as I said before the cause of constant Strife and Debate But some Years after Howel gave his Brother Conan another Defeat and slew a great many of his People Whereupon Conan levied an Army in the Year 817 and chased his Brother Howel out of the Isle of Anglesey compelling him to flee into that of Man and a little after died Conan chief King of the Britains or Welsh-men leaving behind him a Daughter named Esylht who was married to a Nobleman called M●rvyn Vrych the Son of Gwyriad who was afterwards King in her Right This Year also as the Manuscript Annals of the Abbey of Winchelcomb relate the Charter of this Monastery was granted by King Kenulph as appears by a Copy there inserted which shews what Orders of Men were summoned by that King to be present at the Council in which this Charter was confirmed viz. Merciorum optimates Episcopos Principes Comites Procuratores meosque i. e. Regis Propinquos which Terms having already been explained in the Introduction to this Book I need no●●ere repeat There were also present Cuthred King of Kent his 〈…〉 King of the East-Saxons with all others who should be present at those Synodal Councils Then follow the Subscriptions of K. Kenulph as also of both the said Kings and of Wilfred Arch-Bishop of Canterbury with the rest of the Bishops and Ealdermen there stiled Duces This Year according to our Annals the Emperour Charles the Great departed this Life when he had Reigned Forty Five Years also Wilfred the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and Wigbright the Bishop of the West-Saxons went to Rome But here our Annals are mistaken for this Emperour dyed not till the Year 814. Mat. Westminster also adds that these Bishops above-mentioned went to Rome about the Affairs of the English Church Arch-Bishop Wilfred having received the Benediction of Pope Leo returned again to his Bishoprick and the same Year King Egbert wasted the Western Welsh from the South to the West This seems but to have been the
yet there might very well have been before that time a publick School or Studium as it was then call'd where the Liberal Arts were taught as for the other Objection of the improbability of the old Scholars falling out with the new Professors in the very first Year of the Institution of the University that is as soon as ever they came thither this may be also answered by supposing that those Annals were written many Years after the Death of King Alfred from a Common received Tradition and so this transaction might have been dated there or Four Years later than it really happened as John Rouse in his Manuscript History of the Kings of England also places it I confess there is one Objection which I wish I could Answer and that is How Gildas and Nennius could study at Oxford when the latter was not so much as Born till about the Conclusion of this or Beginning of the following Century and much less the Former when even by the best Accounts of those Times the Pagan Saxons were then Masters of that part of England Having said thus much concerning the Antiquity of that Famous University to which I owe my Education I shall not trouble my self with enquiry into the Reality of those supposed Ancient Schools of Creeklad and Leacklade which the Monkish writers suppose to have been anciently called Greeklade and Latinelade the latter of which Derivations thô Mr. Camden justly explodes yet he seems to have more Veneration for the former since in the place from whence I have transcribed the above-cited Quotations he also tells us That the Muses were transported to Oxford from Creeklade now a small Town in Wilt-shire All the Authority for which that I know of beside uncertain Tradition depends upon the Credit of a Manuscript lately in the Liberary of Trinity Hall in Cambridge and is cited by Mr. Wheelock in his Notes upon Bede where speaking of Theodorus Arch-Bishop of Canterbury he says That he held or maintained Schools in a Village near the Water which is called Greekislake but Mr. Somner in his Learned Glossary hath given us a much more likely Derivation of this place viz. from the Old Saxon Word Creek signifying a River or Torrent running either into some River or else into the Sea and Gelad which signified an emptying for it was anciently written Crecca Gelade and not Greeklade as some would now write it This Year the Pagans passing under the Bridge of Paris and from thence by the Seine up the River Meterne now called Marne as far as Cazii now Choisy and which Florence says signified a Royal Village where and at Jona a place we know not they staid Two Years also the same Year Deceased Charles the Grosse King of the Franks but Earnwulf his Brother's Son had expell'd him out of his Kingdom six Weeks before his Death after which it was divided into five Parts over whom were set five Kings but this partition was with Earnewulf's good leave for they all promised to Govern under him because none of them was Heir on the Fathers side besides himself alone therefore Earnwulf fixed the Seat of his Kingdom in the Countries lying on the East side of the Rhine whilst Rod●lf took the middle or inward part of the Kingdom and Odo or Otto the Western Part and Beorngar and Witha called in Latine Beringarius and Wido held Lombardy and all the Countries on that side the Mountains all which Kingdoms they held with much Discord Fighting two great Battles and wasting those Countries till such time as each of them had expell'd the other from his Kingdom also the same Year Ethelelm the Ealdorman carried the Alms of King Alfred and the West Saxons to Rome This was the Benevolence called Peter Pence which is here justly termed an Alms and not a Tribute as Modern Popish Writers have termed it But to return to our own Domestick Affairs Asser above-mentioned informs us that the Kingdom being now pretty well at quiet from the Danes the King began to mind his Civil Government to repair his Cities and Castles and also to build others in the most necessary places altering the whole face of the Country into a much better form and having walled several Towers and Castles he made them defensible against the Pagans Nor was he less careful in the Political Affairs of his Kingdom for divers of his own Subjects having under the name of Danes committed great Spoils and Rapines these the King resolving to punish and restrain from these Excesses he first of all divided all the Provinces of England into Counties and those again into Hundreds and Tythings so that every Legal Subject should dwell in some Hundred or Tything whereby if any were suspected of Robbery and being thereof Condemned or absolved by his Hundred or Tything they should either undergo due punishment or else if Innocent be acquitted But the Governours of Provinces who were before called Vice Domini and in English Saxon Geriffs he divided into two Offices That is into Judges whom we now call Justices and into Sheriffs who do yet retain that name and by the Kings care and industry in a short time there was so great a Tranquility through out the whole Kingdom that if a Traveller had happen'd to have lost a Bag of Money in the High-way he might have found it again untouched the next day And Bromton's Chronicle relates That thô there were Gold Bracelets hung up at the parting of several High-ways yet Justice was so strictly executed that no Man durst presume to touch them But in the Distribution of his own Family he followed the Example of King Solomon for dividing it into Three Companies or Bands he set a Chief over each of them so that every Captain with his Band performed his Service in the King's Palace for the space of one Month and then going with his Company to his own Estate he looked after his private Affairs for Two Months and so did each of them in their Order which Rotation of Officers this King observed all the rest of his Reign And to this Year also Sir H. Spelman refers that Great Council wherein King Alfred made those Laws that go under his Name in which after a Preface wherein he first recites and confirms the Ten Commandments as also divers other Laws which are set down in Exodus and Leviticus he concludes to this effect That whatsoever he found worthy of Observation either in the time of K. Ina his Kinsman or Offa King of the Mercians or of Ethelbert the first Christened King he had gathered them all together and committed those to writing which he thought most deserving omitting others which he judged less convenient in doing of which he had taken the Advice and had the Consent of his Wise-Men and having revised the Laws of those Princes he transcribed such of them as he liked into his own and by the Consent of the said Wise-men he thereof made a Collection and
wrote but the wonder will be much abated when we consider that he had the King's Purse at his command besides those of other people who then looked upon such Works as meritorious But to return to our Annals Elfeage whose sirname was Goodwin succeeded Athelwald and was consecrated 14. Kal. Novemb. but was enthron'd at Winchester at the Feast of St. Simon and Jude R. Hoveden tells us he was first Abbot of Bathe and then Archbishop of Canterbury but at last was killed by the Danes being a man of great Sanctity of Life Also the same year Howel ap Jevaf Prince of North-Wales came into England with an Army where he was fought with and slain in Battel but the place is not mentioned This Howel having no Issue his Brother Cadwalhan succeeded him This year according to the Saxon Annals Aelfric the Ealdorman was banish'd the Land Mat. Westminster stiles him Earl of Mercia and says he was Son to Earl Alfure but neither of them inform us of the Crime for which he suffered that Punishment King Ethelred laid waste the Bishoprick of Rochester and also there was a great Mortality of Cattel in England William of Malmesbury and R. Hoveden do here add much light to our Annals That the King because of some Dissentions between him and the Bishop of Rochester besieged that City but not being able to take it went and wasted the Lands of St. Andrew i. e. those belonging to that Bishoprick but being commanded by the Archbishop to desist from his Fury and not provoke the Saint to whom that Church is dedicated the King despised his Admonition till such time as he had an Hundred Pounds sent to him and then he drew off his Forces but the Archbishop abhorring his sordid Covetousness is there said to have denounced fearful Judgments against him though they were not to be inflicted till after the Archbishop's death This year as the Welsh Chronicles relate Meredyth Son to Owen Prince of South-Wales entred North-Wales with what Forces he could raise and slew Cadwalhon ap Jevaf in a Fight together with Meyric his Brother and conquered the whole Countrey to himself Wherein we may observe how God punished the wrong which Jevaf and Jago did to their eldest Brother Meyric who being disinherited had his eyes put out for first Jevaf was imprisoned by Jago as Jago himself was by Howel the Son of Jevaf and then this Howel and his Brethren Cadwalhon and Meyric were slain and lost their Dominions This year Weedport that is Watchet in Somersetshire was destroyed by the Danes About this time as appears by the Charter in the Monast. Angl. p. 284. the Abby of Cerne in Dorsetshire was founded by Ailmer Earl of Cornwall near to a Fountain where it was said that St. Augustine had formerly baptized many Pagans And where also long after Prince Edwold Brother to St. Edmund the Martyr quitting his Countrey then over run by the Danes lived and died an Hermit But it seems from the Manuscript History of Walter of Coventry this Abby was only enlarged by this Earl Ailmer having been built some years before by one Alward his Father a Rich and Powerful Person in those Parts Goda a Thane was killed and there was a great Slaughter But the same Author last mentioned writing from some other Copy of Annals relates this Story another way That this Goda being Earl of Devonshire together with one Strenwald a valiant Knight marching out to fight the Danes they were both there killed but there being more of them destroyed than of the English the latter kept the field But to return to our Annals This year Dunstan that Holy Archbishop exchanged this Terrestrial Life for a Heavenly one and Ethelgar Bishop of Selsey succeeded him but lived not long after viz. only One Year and Three Months This is that Great Archbishop called St. Dunstan who was the Restorer of the Monkish Discipline in England and who made a Collection of Ordinances for the Benedictine Order by which he thought the Rule of that Order might be more strictly observed in all the Monasteries of England Edwin the Abbot I suppose of Peterborough deceased and Wulfgar succeeded him The same year also Bishop Syric was consecrated Archbishop in the room of Ethelgar abovementioned and afterwards he went to Rome to obtain his Pall. This man is commonly written Siricins but his Name in English Saxon was Syric or Sigeric About this time according to the Welsh Chronicle Meredyth Prince of North Wales destroyed the Town of Radnor whilst his Nephew Edwin or as some Copies call him Owen the Son of Eneon assisted by a great Army of English under Earl Adelf spoiled all the Lands of Prince Meredyth in South-Wales as Cardigan c. as far as St. Davids taking Pledges of all the Chief Men of those Countries whilst in the mean time Prince Meredyth with his Forces spoiled the Countrey of Glamorgan So that no place in those parts was free from Fire and Sword Yet at last Prince Meredyth and Edwin his Nephew coming to an agreement were made Friends But whilst Meredyth was thus taken up in South-Wales North-Wales lay open to the Danes who about this time arriving in Anglesey destroyed the whole Isle This year Gipiswic was wasted by the Danes this was Ipswich in Suffolk and shortly after Brightnoth the Ealdorman was slain at Maldune All which mischief Florence of Worcester tells us was done by the Danes whose Captains were Justin and Guthmund when the Person abovementioned fighting with them at Maldon there was a great multitude slain on both sides and the said Earl or Ealdorman was slain there so that the Danes had the Victory The same year also according to the Annals it was first decreed that Tribute should be paid to the Danes because of the great Terror which they gave the Inhabitants of the Sea-Coast The first Payment was Ten thousand Pounds and it is said Archbishop Syric first gave this Counsel To which also R. Hoveden adds That Adwald and Alfric the Ealdormen join'd with him in it but which as William of Malmesbury well observes served only to satisfy for a time the Covetousness of the Danes and being a thing of infamous example a generous Mind would never have been prevailed upon by any violence to have submitted to for when the Danes had once tasted the sweetness of this Money they never left off exacting still more so long as there was any left but they now met with a weak and unwarlike Prince most of whose Nobility were no better than himself and so as the same Author farther observes they were fain to buy off those with Silver who ought to have been repell'd with Iron This year Oswald that blessed Archbishop of York departed this life as also did Ethelwin the Ealdorman The former of them Simeon of Durham tells us had the year before consecrated the Abby Church of Ramsey which the latter had newly founded and
had given him with her Then Vthred married Siga the Daughter of Styre the Son of Vlfelme The King marched into Cumerland i. e. Cumberland and laid it almost waste but neither our Annals nor any other Author tell us wherefore he made this War nor upon whom it was made but John Fordon in his Scotch History gives us this Account of it That King Ethelred having paid great Tributes to the Danes sent to Malcolm then Prince of Cumberland under Gryme King of the Scots commanding him that he should make his Subjects of Cumberland pay part of this Tribute as well as the rest of the People of England which he denying sent the King word That neither he nor his Subjects ought to pay any Tribute but only were obliged to be ready at the King's Command to make War together with the rest of the Kingdom whenever he pleased for he said it was much better to fight manfully than only to buy Liberty with Money For this cause as well as for that the King affirmed that the Prince of Cumberland favoured the Danes King Ethelred invaded that Countrey and carried away great spoils from thence but presently after the two Princes being reconciled they entred into a firm Peace for ever after But to proceed with our Annals After the King had thus wasted Cumberland he commanded his Ships to sail round by Legceaster i. e. Chester to meet him there but they could not do it by reason of the contrary Winds so they wasted the Island Manige now called Anglesey for the Danish Fleet was turned this Summer upon the Dukedom of Normandy But the next year Their Fleet being now returned into England there arose great Troubles in this Island by reason of this Fleet which every where spoiled the Countries and burnt the Towns and landing they marched in one day as far as Aetheling gadene which is supposed to be Alton in Hampshire but there the Forces of that County marched against and fought with them and there Aethelweard the King 's High Sheriff and Leofric Gerif of Whitcircan i. e. Whitchurch in Hampshire and Leofwin the King's High-Sheriff and Wulfer the Bishop's Thane and Godwin the Gerif were all slain at Weorthige the place is now unknown as also Aelfsige the Bishop's God-son and of all sorts of men Eighty one yet many more of the Danes were slain there though indeed they kept the Field of Battel But from thence their Fleet sail'd toward the West until they came to Devonshire where met him Pallig with what Ships he could gather together He had revolted from King Ethelred divers times notwithstanding his Faith plighted to him and though the King had largely rewarded him both with Lands and Money Then they burnt Tengton i. e. Taunton and many other good Towns more than we can now name which being done there was a League clapt up with them After this they went to Exanmuthan i. e. Exmouth from whence they marched in one day to Peanhoe now Pen in Somerset-shire where Cola the King's High-Sheriff and Eadsig the King's Gerif met them with what Forces they could but they were put to flight and many of them slain and the Danes kept the Field so the next morning they burnt the Towns of Peanho and Clistune or Clifton and several other good Towns Then the Danes returned to the Isle of Wight and there one morning burnt the Town of Weltham with divers other Villages and presently after a League was made with them and they hearken'd to Terms of Peace But the Laudean and Cottonian Copies differ very much from that of Cambridge in the telling of this story for they make the Danes to have first sailed up the River Exe as far as Eaxcester and to have besieged the City but not being able to take it they raised the Siege and then marched all over the Countrey killing and destroying whatever they met with and that then a strong Army of the Devonshire and Somersetshire men fought with them at Peanho with the success above-mentioned The rest differs but little from the Printed Copy but this last relation seems most likely to be true The year following it was decreed by the King and his Wise Men That a Tribute should be paid to the Danish Fleet and Peace should be concluded with them upon condition that they would cease from doing mischief Then the King sent Leofsig the Ealdorman to the Fleet who treated with them on the behalf of the King and his Council of Wise Men proposing that they would be content with Provisions and Money which they agreed to Then not long after they paid them Four and twenty thousand Pounds In the mean time Leofsig the Ealdorman killed Aelfric the King 's High Sheriff upon which the King banished the other the Kingdom And the Lent afterwards came hither Aelgiva Daughter of Richard Duke of Normandy to be married to the King The same Summer Eadulf Archbishop of York deceased And this year also the King commanded all the Danes in England to be slain at the Feast of St. Brice because it was told the King that they endeavoured to deprive him and all his Great and Wise Men of their lives and to seize the Kingdom to themselves without any opposition Matthew of Westminster casts the Odium of this Action from the King and lays it upon one of his Evil Counsellors whom he calls Huena General of the King's Forces ●o manage the chief Affairs of the Kingdom He seeing the Insolencies of the Danes and that after the late Agreement they were grown insupportable to the Kingdom for they violated the Wives and Daughters of Persons of Quality and committed divers other Injuries not to be endured Thereupon he came in great seeming trouble to the King making most dismal Complaints of these unspeakable Outrages at which the King was so incensed that by the Counsel of the said Huena he sent private Letters into all parts of the Kingdom commanding all his Subjects without exception That upon a certain Day they should every where privily set upon the Danes and without mercy cut them off In these Letters was also signified that the Danes had a design to deprive him of his Life and Kingdom and to destroy all the Nobility in order to bring the whole Island under their subjection And thus the Danes who a little before by a League solemnly sworn on both sides had been admitted quietly to inhabit among the English were most treacherously and barbarously murthered not many of them escaping even the very Women were put to death and their Children's Brains dash'd out against the Walls particularly at London when this Bloody Decree was to be executed many of the Danes fled into a certain Church of that City but for all that it proved no Sanctuary to them for they were all there cruelly murthered even at the very Altar H. Huntington moreover adds That he himself being a Child had heard it from certain Old Men that by the King's Command
the Lord's-Prayer and Creed in English Id. p. 225. Predur a British Prince Son of Oliver Gosgard Vawr a Prince of Cumberland l. 3. p. 147. Prerogative a pretence of King Offa's unlimited Power in Ecclesiastical as well as Civil Matters l. 4. p. 239. Danegelt how by constant usage it became a Prerogative l. 6. p. 66. That of Pardoning in the King not to extend to the Prejudice of the Party injured c. Id. p. 102. To set at liberty any Captive or Prisoner when the King comes into a City c. Id. Ib. Priests that are not able to contain may marry l. 4. p. 155. To learn the Creed and Lord's-Prayer in English and to interpret the Mass and Baptism Id. p. 225. By the King's Priest must be meant either his Chaplain or Bishop l. 5. p. 295. Breach of the Peace by Priests how punishable Id. p. 297. Priscilla and other Hereticks of his Party were sentenced to Death by Maximus the Emperor l. 2. p. 96. Probus M. Aurel. Valer. succeeds Claudius Tacitus in the Empire vanquishes Bonosus who upon it Hang'd himself prevents a new Rebellion in Britain gains other Victories elsewhere and at last is slain by his own Army l. 2. p. 82. Prodigies a great fight and slaughter of Birds in the Air l. 4. p. 192. A Comet continuing Three Months carrying with it every morning a large Tail like a Pillar Id. p. 196. Another appeared in King Ethelheard's time l. 4. p. 220. A Red Cross appeared in the Heavens after Sun set Id. p. 230. The sign of the Cross appeared of it self upon men's Clothes Id. p. 235. A Light frequently seen from Heaven over the place where Alfwold was Murthered Id. p. 236. Immoderate Lightnings Meteors like fiery Dragons flying in the Air Id. p. 238. Sign of the Cross seen in the Moon 2d Nones June in the Morning and on the 3d. Kal. September a wonderful Circle seen round the Sun l. 5. p. 248. An appearance of a Cross in day-time Id. p. 250. Strange Prodigies seen in the Heavens l. 6. p. 15. A strange cloud appeared about midnight all over England in divers Colours Id. p. 18. A Column of Light streaming down from Heaven over St. Edward the Martyr's Grave Id. p. 20. Protection granted anciently by the King not only to Persons but to Places by way of Privilege the several sorts of giving it and what this Peace as it was called was to free Persons from l. 6. p. 100 101. Provision for the King's Houshold how to be made not to oppress the Subjects l. 6. p. 59. Punishments all Crimes Redeemable by Pecuniary Fines in Edward the Elder 's time and some Ages after l. 5. p. 326. Anciently consisted in Pecuniary Fines rather than in Blood Id. p. 342. In Edgar's time Fines were not Arbitrary nor set above a constant rate l. 6. p. 13. For what Crimes no Satisfaction should be made by way of Mulct Id. p. 59. Purgation in case a man be of good Repute his own should be accepted but otherwise either a Threefold one or his single Oath in Three Hundreds l. 6. p. 58 59. Pusa Abbot of the Monastery of Vocingas and whom he succeeded l. 4. p. 231. Putta Bishop of Rochester is forced to retire to the Bishop of the Mercians by his Church's being destroyed and there died This very Man is made the first Bishop of Hereford l. 4. p. 196. Q QUarrel or Deadly Feud King Alfred's Law concerning it l. 5. p. 296. King Edmund's Law about it Id. p. 347. The Indians Deadly Feud against all the Kindred of one that Murthers any of them Id. Ib. Queen upon the Account of Eadburga's ill conduct of her self both as Wife to Brihtric King of the West-Saxons whom she Poisoned and as Widow upon divers other accounts a Law was made That for the future no King's Consort should be so called l. 5. p. 264. Quenburga Daughter of Ceorle King of Mercia and Wife to King Edwin l. 4. p. 174. Quendride Sister to King Kenelm Son to Kenwulf King of Mercia makes her Brother away out of a wicked Ambition of Reigning her self and the dreadful Judgement that befel her upon it l. 5. p. 252. Is forced to make satisfaction to Archbishop Wilfrid for the Wrongs that King Kenwulf her Father had done to the Church of Canterbury afterwards professed her self a Nun and at this time was an Abbess Id. p. 253. Quendrith by her wicked Instigations Ethelbert the Son of Ethelred King of the East-Angles is slain going to Offa's Court in order to Woo his Daughter l. 4. p. 237. Quichelme Bishop of Rochester when he Governed that See l. 4. p. 201. R RAdnor the Town destroyed by Meredyth Prince of North-Wales l. 6. p. 23. Radnorshire-men supposed by Cambden to be meant by the Magaesetons l. 6. p. 46. Raven the Raven-Banner Vid. Banner Reculf a Monastery built by Basse a Priest l. 4.192 Now known by the name of Reculver in Kent Id. p. 205. Redburge Wife of King Egbert was according to the then West-Saxon Law never called Queen What Law she is said to have procured from her Husband l. 5. p. 257. Redwald called the greatest King of the East-Angles the Tenth from Woden l. 3. p. 146. l. 4. p. 171. His Death Id. p. 157. Receives Edwin who had been forced to fly the Countrey of Northumberland very kindly Id. p. 169. Slays Ethelfrid in Battel Id. p. 170. Had been Baptized in Kent by the means of Eadbald but was afterwards by his Wife and others perverted from the true Faith Id. p. 175. He was the Fourth King that Ruled over all Britain l. 5. p. 254. Succeeds Ethelred who was driven out of his Kingdom of Northumberland but soon after fighting with the Danes at Alvethelie he and Earl Alfred were slain l. 5. p. 260. Rees the Brother of Griffyn King of South-Wales was by the Command of Edward the Confessor put to death for his Insosolencies against the English and his Head sent to the King l. 6. p. 85. Reginald succeeds Eowils and Healfden as King over the Danes l. 5. p. 315. Enters into a Contract of Marriage with Aelfwinna Daughter of Aethelfleda and Heir of the Kingdom of Mercia Id. p. 320. Submits his Kingdom of Northumberland to King Edward the Elder Id. p. 323 324. He takes York Id. p. 324. Was the Son of Eardulph Id. Ibid. Eadmund receive● him at his confirmation Id. p. 3●3 Is called King of York because he had conquered that Countrey Id. p. 344. Regni those Parts we now call Surrey and Sussex l. 2. p. 69. Reiderch-hoel that is the Liberal a British King of Cumberland l. 3. p. 146 147. Religion none ought to be Compelled to receive it for the Service of Christ is to be Voluntary l. 4. p. 154. The state of it in the Western Church when Augustine came over hither Id. p. 155. The Christian Religion came not first into Britain by the Preaching of any Persons sent from Rome but it was most
bloody slaughter on both sides l. 6. p. 31. University of Paris by whose means erected Alcuinus an Englishman reading there Logick Rhetorick and Astronomy l. 4. p. 244. Of Oxford and Cambridge Vid. their particular Heads Unust King of the Picts Vid. Eadbert King of Northumberland Vortigern is chosen King by the Britains l. 3. p. 116. By the Advice of his Council he sent for the Heathen Saxons to repel the Scots and Picts Id. p. 117. Falls passionately in Love with Rowena Hengest's daughter Id. p. 125. Marries her and is divorced from his former Wife Id. p. 126. The story of his taking his own Daughter to Wife and having a Son by her is all unlikely Id. p. 127 128. Is deposed and Vortimer his Son is chosen King by the British Nobles Id. p. 128. Is restored wages War with the Saxons but by the Treachery of Hengest is taken Prisoner and for his Ransom gives up East-Sex Middlesex and Sussex Id. p. 129. Uncertain what at last became of him but was again deposed and thought to be burnt in his Castle by his Successor Aurelius Ambrosius Id. p. 131. Vortimer obtain● a great Victory over the Saxons l. 3. p. 128. Drives them into Germany for all his lif●time Id. Ib. Dies supposed by Poyson of his Mother-in-Law Rowena's Procurement Id. p. 129. Vortipore King of that part of South-Wales called Demetia l. 3. p. 139. Urbgen or Urien King of Cumberland and his Sons fight with Theodoric and his Sons and where l. 3. p. 146. Urbicus Lollius drives back the Brigantes draws another Wall beyond that of Hadrian and keeps out the Incursions of the Northern Britains l. 2. p. 68. Urgeney Bishop of St. David's is slain by the Danes l. 6. p. 27. Urych Merwin King of the Britains slain at the Battel of Ketell l. 5. p. 260. Uscfrea a Son of King Edwin's l. 4. p. 176. Usurers not to continue in the Kingdom but if any were convicted to forfeit their Goods and be look'd on as outlaw'd l. 6. p. 102. Uther Pendragon look'd on by the British Antiquaries as a mere imaginary King l. 3. p. 133. Uthred his Bravery against the Scots and the Reward he met with for it from King Ethelred casts off his Wife but gives her back her Fortune and marries another one Sig● l. 6. p. 27. Submits with all his Northumbrian Kingdom to King Sweyn the Dane and the mischiefs he his Son and their Army did both there and where ever they went Id. p. 37 38. He with Edmund Etheling plunders all places where ever they come Id. p. 41. But at last submits to Cnute and though he gave Hostages was soon after slain and some say by Cnute's Orders Id. Ib. Utrecht in the Gallick Tongue Trajectum in the old Language Wiltaburg l. 4. p. 212. Vulgar or Common People the Care the English-Saxons had of the Persons and Chastity of their meanest Subjects l. 5. p. 293 294. W WAda a Rebel in chief in Northumberland that leads out the Conspirators to Battel against King Eardwulf at Billingahoth near Whalie in Lancashire l. 4. p. 241. Wakes or Parish Feasts their Antiquity in several parts of England l. 6. p. 99. Wales anciently called Cambria by some supposed to come from the King Ina's marrying Gualla the Daughter of Cadwallader King of the Britains but it is certainly a notorious Falshood l. 4. p. 220. Their Chief Lords of any Countrey there called Kings Id. p. 241. Kings of Cardigan Divet and Powis died in one year Id. p. 243. The several Princes of Wales were perpetually weakning each other with Civil Wars which the English observing at last reduced them all under their Dominion l. 5. p. 279 280. Great Commotions there between Jevaf and Jago and their Children after them sev●ral Countries being thereby spoiled l. 6. p. 16 20 21 22. Laws concerning the Inabitants of the Mountains of this Countrey Id. p. 44. A great Revolution happen'd there from the fickleness of the Nation Id. p. 64. The last Civil War or Rebellion there that happen'd in Edward the Confessor's Reign Id. p. 85. Is called Brytland and subdued by E. Harold and E. Tostige Id. p. 89. Wall That which Severus built from Sea to Sea 132 miles in length which procured him the stile of Britannicus l. 2. p. 76. Is repaired and fortified with Castles c. by Carausius Id. p. 84. Built cross the Island between the two Seas or Streights called then Glotta and Bodotria now the Friths of Edinburgh and Dunbritton with Turf instead of Stone Id. p. 99 100. A Description of the other Wall of Stone Id. p. 100. Wall-brook whence it had its name l. 2. p. 85. Waltham-Abbey the Foundation of it and the story of the Crucifix brought thither and the Miracles said to be effected by it l. 6. p. 89. King Harold is buried in the Abbey-Church there Id. p. 144. Wall-Town near the Picts-Wall anciently called Admurum l. 4. p. 184. Wanating now Wantige in Berkshire l. 5. p. 261. l. 6. p. 43. Warewell now Harwood Forest l. 6. p. 10. Warham in Dorfetshire formerly Werham a strong Castle of the West-Saxons is taken and destroyed by the Danes together with the Nunnery there l. 5. p. 278. Warwick anciently called Caer-Gaurvie supposed to be built by Gurgwint l. 1. p. 13. And Weringwic l. 5. p. 316. l. 6. p. 41. Watchet in Somersetshire anciently called Weced l. 5. p. 319. And Weedport destroyed by the Danes l. 6. p. 22 26. Wax-Tapers hated by King Ethelred because of his Mother 's unmercifully beating him with one and for what reason l. 6. p. 19. Wectij or Wiccij now Worcester l. 4. p. 160 197.230 The same Shire also anciently called Wiccon l. 4. p. 242. l. 5. p. 247. Vid. the City and County of Worcester Wedesbury in Staffordshire anciently supposed to be called Wearbyrig l. 5. p. 316. Weland River in Northamptonshire on the side of Rutland anciently called Weolade l. 5. p. 322. Welsh the Chronicle called Triades l. 3. p. 140. Manuscript of Britain the Credit of it arraign'd by a late Romish Writer l. 4. p. 162. Are forced to quit all the plain Countrey b●tween Severne and Wye and to retire to the Mountains l. 4. p. 231. Western-Welsh that is Cornish-men where a great Fleet of Danes landed l. 5. p. 257. The Welsh beaten by Igmond the Dane Id. p. 303. Are forbid to come into England or the English to enter Wales l. 6. p. 44. Raise some Insurrections in Harold's time and upon what account Id. p. 65. A Law that no Welshman should pass over Offa's Ditch on pain of death Id. Ib. And on the Penalty of losing his Right Hand Id. p. 115. Vid. Britains Build a Castle in Herefordshire upon the Lands of Earl Sweyn and what ensued thereupon Id. p. 77. Wenbury in Devonshire by the Saxons called Wicganbeorch a place where Earl Ceorle with his Forces fights the Pagan Danes and gets the Victory l. 5. p. 261. Werfriht Bishop of Worcester one
Sir Robert Cotton's and Bennet College Libraries have long since convinced all Learned Men that we really had such Monuments in our Archives which have been also farther confirmed as to the Truth of it from two other Manuscript Copies given by Arch-bishop Laud to the Bodleian Library at Oxford and lately published together with those abovementioned by the aforesaid Mr. Edmund Gibson most of which Copies belonged to several antient Monasteries and I doubt not but many more of them were lost at their Dissolation in Henry the Eighth's Time or carried over Seas for we find Lazius in his Book de Migratione Gentium quotes several of them And it 's evident that our Annals sometimes follow not Tradition only but also old written Histories and perhaps Latin Writers as may appear by the Actions of Athelstane and Eadmund An. 938 and 942. But for the support of their Authority I refer the Reader to this Author 's own Country-man John Fordun where he tells us in his Prologue to his Scotish History He had heard it was very well ordered in England that every Monastery of Royal Foundation should have its particular Writer who was Chronologically to set down all the Memorable things which happened in each King's Reign either in their own or Neighbouring Kingdoms and that at the next Great Council after the Death of every respective King each of those Chronographers met there and produced whatsoever they had so remarked and that some of the most discreet Persons in the said Council who were best skilled in such Matters being chosen for that purpose should examine those Memorials and by comparing them together should extract a brief Chronicle from them all which was to be preserved in the Libraries of those Monasteries as Authentick Annals to be relied on by Posterity that so the remembrance of those publick Affairs of the Kingdom might not be lost or devoured by the Rust of Time WHICH Passage had Sir Thomas Craig but carefully considered he would have had no reason to doubt whether we had had any Chronicles of those times remaining in our Archives and whether William of Malmesbury and all the rest of our Historians have blindly followed Florence of Worcester into an Error as Cattel do their Leader that break over a Ditch BVT if our Saxon Annals were not a good Foundation for succeeding Historians to build upon I desire to know what Credit the Antient Greek and Roman Authors can claim with Men of that scrupulous Temper since they had nothing but such short Annals or Chronicles preserved in their Archives besides Traditions and the common Fame of their Ancestors from whence to compose the particular Histories of those Common-Wealths they treat of such as were the Libri Lintei preserved in the Capitol from whence Livy drew the most antient Memorials for the writing his Roman History AND tho there is some difference to be found between the several Copies of these Annals as to the Calculation of Years and some particular Matters that are sometimes inserted in one and omitted in another yet the Ingenious Author of the Preface before it has given the World a satisfactory Answer as to this Matter which is That as to the general Affairs of the whole Kingdom they all agree well enough tho indeed as to foreign Transactions or some few Passages relating to their own private Monasteries there may be some Additions that are not to be met with in the rest as may be observ'd from those called the Canterbury and Laudean Copies in the Bodleian Library SO I shall leave it upon the whole Matter to the Reader to consider whether the Author has made good his Challenge viz. That the English were not able to produce one approved Writer of their own Countrey who composed any Story or History from the Death of Bede to the Time of Henry the Second tho I suppose he meant the First however it is unluckily printed twice the Second in one Page BVT to come to this Author's second Objection against our English Historians the substance of which is That the Writers as well before as after the Conquest were Monks who being dead to the World have no right of giving a Legal Evidence it being expresly forbid by the Canon Law to concern themselves in secular Matters and also that by reason of their solitary Lives they ought very seldom to be entrusted in publick Affairs seeing they are no competent Judges concerning them for it was not very probable that either the Secrets of Princes or things belonging to the State were ever communicated to them otherwise than by common Report seeing they were kept at the greatest distance from all manner of Action and do oftentimes embrace things doubtful as certain and Fictions for Matter of Fact and that therefore this feigned Homage must of necessity fall to the Ground for which there is no better Evidence than that of a Monk for it will not be admitted as a good Conclusion that because a Monk says so therefore it is true THIS Argument may as easily be retorted upon him thus That as a thing is not true because a Monk writes it so neither is it false for that reason alone for tho Monks are by the Canon Law forbid medling with Secular Affairs and may not perhaps be admitted for good Witnesses in Civil Causes yet is this but a meer Cavil as to the Point in Question since that was not the intent of the Canon to forbid them the writing either of Civil or Ecclesiastical Histories and Bede himself whose Credit this Author says he will not impair was a Monk as were also Marianus Scotus whom he alloweth and would have to be taken for his own Countrey-Man Sigebertus Hermannus Contractus and almost all the Famous Chronographers of those Times who flourished in our Neighbouring Nations as well as our own and that they were not of such retired Lives as not to have Memorials sent them of publick Actions appears by the aforesaid Citation out of Fordun concerning the manner of writing our English Annals in the Monasteries which as he tells us were supervised afterwards by some appointed of the Great Council of the Kingdom And that some of the Monks after the Conquest were in great Reputation for their faithful Accounts appears by the great Credit given to Florence of Worcester and William of Malmesbury in those times the last of whom dedicated his History to Robert Earl of Gloucester Natural Son to King Henry the First and Matthew Paris was of so great Esteem that we learn from himself that King Henry the Third gave him particular Directions for inserting into his History several considerable Passages relating to his own Reign so far were the Princes of that Age from being of this Author's Opinion that Monks were no wise fit to write History nor to be credited when they had done BVT if no Credit must be given to the Memorials of Monks I desire to know what will become of the so much
Officers called ab Actis who were Publick Notaries that wrote Testaments Contracts and other Instruments which were signed before by the Judg or President and attested by him that so after the Death of the Party they might remain Authentick then other Clerks or Secretaries de Curâ or de Curâ Epistolarum who wrote and sent the Letters and Dispatches of the Governours of Provinces to the Emperor or to each other BESIDES whom the Vicarius himself and I suppose also each of the Presidents had his Adjutorem i. e. his Coadjutor in case of Sickness or necessary Absence as likewise Subadjuvas Under-Assistants or Assistants to the Adjutor and in short certain other Officers called Singulares from the particular Civil Imployments they had who seem'd to have been Prosecutors Informers or Serjeants not to mention others of more inferiour Rank as Apparitors Summoners or Messengers This was the Civil Court of the Vicarius or Deputy of Britain under the Praefectus Praetorii of Gaul who had the Power to reverse his Judgments and Decrees THE Ensigns of his Government were a Draught of those Five Parts of Britain before-mentioned expressed in the Forms of several Buildings with the Superscription of their Names placed on the Triangular Form of the Island as if they had comp●ehended the whole Island the Book of their Instructions covered with Green and the Commission in a gilt Cover with several Letters inscribed on the Book the Signification of which is unnecessary to be here inserted but you will find this as also a Draught of these Insignia themselves in the above-cited Pancirollus BESIDES these general Presidents there were likewise Courts in all the great Cities Municipia or Colonies of each Province which had their several Officers and Magistrates according to the Model of Rome it self who heard Causes and administred Justice to the particular Districts belonging to them much after the same manner as the Parliaments in France do at this day HAVING thus concluded their Civil Administration we now come to the Military which was executed by Three Chief Officers under the Magister Militum of the West and they were these viz. the Comes Britanniarum Comes Littoris Saxonici and the Dux Britanniarum whose several Charges and the Tracts subjected to each of their Commands may be best discerned by the Names of those Towns where their Under-Officers and Forces are said to have had their Head-quarters The first of these viz. the Count of Britain is thought to have had his Command over the Inward or Middle Part of the Island because the two others are known to have had theirs over the Northern or Maritime Parts thereof but the Notitia assigns not any Forces to the former nor mentions any Places under his Command because as Pancirollus writes the whole Island was then almost over-run by Barbarians BUT as for the Comes Littoris Saxonici so called in the Declension of the Roman Empire from the charge or Care he had to suppress the Saxon Pirates who often landing on the Eastern Parts of Britain lying over against Germany committed great Ravages there he had eight Praepositi and one Tribune under him that were Leaders of divers Cohorts consisting of Gauls Germans and other Foreign Nations who quartered in several Towns all along the Coasts from Sussex as far as the remotest part of Norfolk for the Names of whom with the Places where they lay I shall refer you to the Notitia Imperii Occidentalis or if you had rather have them in English to Mr. Selden's Titles of Honour and Dr. Howell's second Part and third Chapter of his General History THE like I may also say of the Forces under the Dux Britanniarum or General of Britain whose Army had it then been really in being was sufficient to have suppressed both the Picts and Scots for they consisted of no less than fourteen Praefects or Praepositi of Horse and Foot whose Names and Places where they quartered extending from Lincolnshire through all the Northern Counties as far as the Pictish Borders and so round about by Lancashire into North-Wales you may find in the Authors abovementioned BUT as for the several Ensigns of these three chief Military Officers they being much what the same with those of the Vicarius Britanniae viz. The Figures of certain Towns with their Names set over them together with their Commissions contained in Books of different coloured Covers with the Emperor's Images set by them on Pillars I will leave it to those who take more Pleasure than I do in such Curiosities ALL these Comites and Duces were equal in Power and only subordinate to the Vicarius Britanniae the Forces under their Command were not only dispersed through the Municipia or Free Colonies which the Romans planted here and were governed by their own Civil Magistrates in Imitation of Rome their Mother-City but were also garison'd in divers Towns Castles and Forts all along the Roman Limits thereby to discover the Motions of the Neighbouring Nations several of which being intended only at first for their Military Camps by degrees grew up into Cities and are known at this day by the Name of Chesters such as are West-Chester on the River Dee Portchester in Hampshire now destroyed Chester in the Street in Northumberland with several others of less note near the Picts Wall as also in the Inland Parts of England ending in the word Cester as Leicester Cirencester c. all which owe their Original to the Latin Name Castra HAVING now dispatched the British and Roman Polity I come to the main part of Design which is to give a brief Account of the Civil Government that the English Saxons established in this part of our Island which they called England who consisting of several Tribes or Nations inhabiting different Countries yet all speaking the same Language came over hither at several Times under their particular Leaders and as soon as they had expelled the Britains they did within the space of about a hundred Years erect seven distinct Kingdoms though not of equal Extent the Names of which notwithstanding they are set down in the History it self yet having not given you the particular Catalogue of the several Counties they contained because their Dominions were not then divided into those Districts as they were afterwards I have reserved to this place THE first Kingdom being that of Kent consisted only of that County and Surrey THE second viz. that of the South-Saxons contained Sussex and Surrey or at least great part of it THE third was the Kingdom of the West-Saxons and contained Devonshire Dorsetshire Somersetshire Wiltshire Hampshire and Berkshire But as for that Countrey called Cornwall I shall not reckon it here because it was for a long Time after governed by its own Princes and not brought under the West-Saxon Dominion till long after THE fourth was that of the East-Saxons which contained Essex Middlesex and part of Hertfordshire THE fifth was that
and Bell-house The Bell-house may denote the Hall which was the place of ordinary Diet and Entertainment in the Houses of Lords It may well so signify if the Saxons used the like Reason in imposing the Name on the Lord's Hall as some say the Italian Spanish and French have done in calling it Tinello Tinello and Tinel which in our Laws also is retained in Tinel le Roy for the King's Hall They would have it therefore so named because the Tin or tinkling of a Bell at the Times of Dinner and Supper were signified by it BUT Sundernota mentioned in the Latin Copy of this Law seems to denote the distinct Office which he was to hold in the King's Court to make him equal to a Thane And it is also observable that by the same Laws of King Athelstane abovementioned such a Ceorlsman so advanced and having five Hides of Land ad Vtwarum Regis that is as Mr. Selden in the same place interprets held by Knights Service Si occidatur reddentur 2 Millia Thrymsarum so that his Wiregyld shews him to have been every way equal to a Thane BUT the most considerable Observation that may be made from this Law is that V. Hides of Land were at that time reckoned a sufficient Estate to constitute a Thane But as to the Quantity of Land that then went to make a Hide it was sometimes more and sometimes less according to the Goodness or Quality of the Soil but was certainly no more than what one Plow could well manure together with Pasture Meadow and Wood competent for the Maintenance of that Plow and the Servants of the Family So that the Estate of such a Thane could not be much more than what an ordinary Gentleman has at this day NOR can I here pretermit what follows in the same Law above recited where after having shewn us by what means an Under Theyn might come to be a Chief Thane and from thence attain to the Dignity of an Earl it thus proceeds And if a Merchant so thrived that he had passed thrice over the wide or broad Sea by his own Cunning or Craft as it is in the Saxon he was thenceforth a Thane's Right-worthy i. e. was every way equal to him Where you may observe that Wealth and Industry conferred Nobility in the Saxon Times as well as at this Day I come now to the lowest Rank of Men viz. that of Slaves who were called in Latin Servi and in Saxon Freortorlings and there were two sorts of them viz. such as were Personal possessing no Estates but all that they earn'd was their Lords by whom therefore they were maintained The others were Praedial such as were of Servile Condition and Original but possessed their small Holdings and Goods at the Will of their Lord doing all those Servile Countrey Works that were set them and from thence in the more modern Norman Dialect were called Villains from those Villages where they lived and wrought But before as well as after the Conquest that the Latin word Villanus did not signify a Villain or Servant I could prove from many Instances both out of Records and Histories if I thought it would not be too tedious in this Place AS for the Original of these Slaves among the Saxons there is some doubt about them some supposing them to have been derived from the remainder of those meaner sort of Britains who were either taken Prisoners or else never forsook the Land and so their Lives being saved they were made servile by their Conquerors or else such as were descended from those who came over in the nature of Slaves to the English Saxons that first landed here but it is not much material how they began since they might proceed from both or either of these Originals nor had their Lords Power of Life or Death over them for if they killed any of them they were to pay the Value of their Heads to the King THESE Slaves if they were set free at any time by their Masters were what the Romans called Liberti and in Saxon Freolaetan but being then resolved into the Body of Ceorles or Countrey-men they did not as among the Romans constitute any new Order of Men. HAVING now gone through all the Sorts and Degrees of Men who either lived in or were maintained out of the Countrey I shall in the next Place say somewhat of another distinct Body of Men called in Saxon Burh-witan or Burh-wara that is Citizens or Townsmen who had Privileges peculiar to themselves and living in Cities or great Towns were governed by their own particular Magistrates called Ealdormen or Portgerefan i. e. Port-Reeves assisted by the Chief Men of the Place called in Saxon Yldist-Burh-wara who were much the same with what we now call Aldermen or Common-Council Men for as for the Title of Mayor it came not in use here till long after the Conquest BUT as for these Magistrates and Members of Cities and Towns I shall speak more by and by when I come to treat of the constituent Parts of the Great Council of the Kingdom FROM the different Orders of Men we shall now descend to speak of the different Courts where these Persons abovementioned all except the Villains were bound to appear and there either to do or receive Justice for which it will be necessary to look back to the Reign of King Alfred who after the first Invasion of the Danes when he began to resettle the Kingdom found his Subjects so far corrupted by a long and hazardous War that all Places being full of Robberies and Murders there was an absolute necessity for the making of more severe Laws to restrain them so that omitting the Division of Counties or Shires which I shall speak to hereafter he Canton'd his Kingdom 1 st into Trihings or Lathes as they are still called in Kent and other Places consisting of three or four Hundreds in which the Freeholders being Judges such Causes were brought as could not be determined in the Hundred Court concerning the Proceedings in which Court of the Trihing or Lathes you may see divers Precedents in Sir William Dugdale's Origines Juridiciales NEXT to which there was also the Hundred-Court in Saxon Hundred-Gemot and in Latin Centuriata Because it originally consisted of an hundred Hides of Land as an Hide usually of an hundred Acres or else because super decem Decanos centum Friburgos judicabat that is it had Jurisdiction over ten Decennaries or an hundred Friboroughs THIS Court before the Conquest was held twelve times a Year and afterwards was increased by Henry I. to once a Fortnight and then by Henry the Third reduced to once in three Weeks IN this Court antiently Vnus de melioribus qui vocatur Aldermannus one of the principal Inhabitants called the Alderman together with the Barons of the Hundred id est the Freeholders was Judg as may seem by the Register of Ely which saith that Aegelwynnu●
and Orders of Men were to be found in every one of those Kingdoms To begin with Sweden and Denmark and then go on to the Kingdom of Germany now called the Empire and so into France and from thence into Spain among all the petty Kingdoms that then composed that Monarchy taking Portugal if you please into the Account you will find that the Estates of all those Kingdoms as representing the whole Body of the same consisted of the Clergy Nobility and Deputies of Cities and great Towns which is briefly comprized by this single Verse of Gonterus an old German Poet concerning the Estate of the Empire in his Time Praelati Proceres missisque potentibus Vrbes SECONDLY How it happened that in all the Kingdoms of the English-Saxon Heptarchy the first Founders of which came out of Frizeland Westphalia Holstein and Jutland the like Great Councils consisting of the King the Clergy and Nobility came to be instituted in each of them For as to the Representatives of Cities and Towns in England since the Framers of the abovementioned Hypothesis deny their appearance here I shall say nothing as yet THIRDLY Whether it be probable that without a General Agreement of Laws and Manners with those People of Germany from whence these English-Saxons came they should by a sort of Natural and Unaccountable Sympathy fall of themselves into the very same Political Form and Constitution FOVRTHLY Whether Princes were above a thousand Years ago so much more Ignorant of the Arts of Government and so little Ambitious of Riches and Power that they should all agree within a Century of Years to set up one uniform Model of Government and admit the People into a share of their Power especially into that Grand Prerogative of laying Taxes which most Princes now do all they can to perform by their own absolute Will FOR as to that of understanding their Subjects Grievances they might either not take notice of them at all or else if they would might have found out a more easy Method to come to the Knowledg of them than by Summoning the Clergy Nobility and People of a whole Kingdom at once to acquaint them therewith FIFTHLY How it came to pass that in all those Countries so long as they continued Elective the States exercised the same Power of Deposing their Kings for Tyranny or Male-Administration Does this look like a precarious and dependent Power And LASTLY Whence happen'd it that in France and England and I believe I could shew the same in other Countries too the Estates of the Kingdom met twice in the Year according to Custom at a certain Time and Place without any Summons from the King NOW when the Gentlemen who maintain the Hypothesis above-mentioned shall return a fair and satisfactory Answer to these Queries I shall not only willingly submit to their Judgments but give them my Thanks for their better Information but till then I think it is much more agreeable to good Sense as well as Matter of Fact to maintain that those Orders and Degrees of Men that did constitute the Great Councils were more Antient than Kingly Government nay Christianity it self among them as appears by those Testimonies I have produced out of Bede and other Authors from all whom it plainly appears that the first Princes in all those Governments were originally Elected of which I hope I have given undeniable Instances out of our own as well as Foreign Histories and certainly that which gives Being to a Thing must be prior in Nature to that which is produced from it HAVING now done with the Original I shall next proceed to the Constituent Parts of this Mycel-Synoth or Wittena-Gemot the last of which words is derived from the Saxon word Wites or Witen i.e. Sapientes or Wise-Men and tho Dr. Brady in his Glossary will have this word mostly to signify Noblemen or Great Lawyers yet I do not find he brings any good Authority for his so doing For granting it is true Wite signifies a Wise-Man however it no ways proves that all Wisemen must be Lawyers much less that those Lawyers were Noblemen and since he himself does not extend this Wisdom only to Knowledg in the Laws I need not say any more to it AS for the rest of his Authorities in this Page whereby he would prove that divers things were done by the Decrees of these Wisemen or Lawyers they sufficiently answer themselves since it appears even by his own shewing that these Sapientes were the Bishops Abbots Aldermen and Thanes and when he makes it out that every one of these Orders of Men were Noblemen or Lawyers I shall come over to his Opinion AS for what he says in the next Page where he gives us the Interpretation of those words of Bede Principibus Consiliariis by Ealdormannum and Witum they are yet less to the purpose since a Man might be a very good Counsellor and yet at the same Time no great Lawyer BUT the Author's seeming stabbing Proof is out of Asser in his Life of King Alfred Who admiring the Ignorance of his Earls and Praefects commanded them either forthwith to lay down their Places of Judicature or else to apply themselves SAPIENTIAE Studiis to the Study of Knowledg or of the Law Here we see again says he who had the Title of SAPIENTES namely the Judges that is the COMITES PRAEPOSITI MINISTRI or Thegnes for these last were the Seminary of Nobility or Great Officers Civil Military and Ecclesiastick amongst the Saxons NOW I desire the Reader to observe that admitting we should take the word Studia SAPIENTIAE here for the Knowledg of the Law does it therefore follow that all that studied it must be Lawyers by Profession when it is very certain that the Study of the Law was not then nor long after a Trade as it is now since all the Freeholders or Thegnes afterwards called Barons were as well as Ealdormen required to have a competent Knowledg of the Laws of their Country or else how could they either plead their own or try each others Causes in the Hundred and County-Courts as they are in the Laws of K. Henry 1. recited to have done before the Profession of Counsellors came up Or how could they sit and judg Causes in the County-Court or Folc-mote when every Thegne or Gentleman in the County was capable of being chosen Sheriff and of sitting Judg in those Courts many Ages before the Office of an Vnder-Sheriff was heard of AND as for the Auctuary to the 35 th Law of Edward the Confessor wherein the HERETOCHS are called BARONES NOBILES insignes SAPIENTES there can be nothing urged less to purpose for then according to the Doctor they must have had all great Titles and have been chosen Generals in War and Leaders of Armies and Pray why because they were SAPIENTES i. e. Great Lawyers But the Doctor had the good luck to find once in his Life that Studia Sapientiae
great Easiness and Remissness in Discipline and thereupon by the Appointment and Assent of his Barons he caused him to retire to the Cure of his former Church of Dorchester By which it is evident that this Author living in the Reign of Henry the Third was very well satisfied that the Temporal as well as the Spiritual Barons were concerned in this Deprivation I was likewise from the Authority of the Saxon Annals as also of William of Malmesbury about to have here also added the Deprivation of one Siward who is reported by the Annals An. 1043. to have been privately Consecrated to the See of Canterbury with the King 's good liking by Arch-bishop Eadsige and who then laid down that Charge and of which Siward William of Malmesbury farther tells us that he was afterwards deprived for his Ingratitude to Arch-Bishop Eadsige in denying him necessary Maintenance but since there is no such Person as this S●●ard in the Catalogues of the Arch-bishops of Canterbury and that upon a more nice Examination I find in the Learned Mr. Wharton's Treatise De Successione Archiepis Cantuar. that this Siward who was also Abbot of Abingdon was never Consecrated Arch-Bishop but only Chorepiscopus or Substitute to Arch-bishop Eadsige who was then unable to perform his Function by reason of his Infirmities which upon a review of this Passage in William of Malmesbury I find also confirmed by him in calling him no more than Successor Designatus and who being put by for his Ingratitude was preferred no higher than to be Bishop of Rochester but this is denied by the abovecited Mr. Wharton who says expresly that this Siward Abbot of Abingdon and Substitute to the Arch-bishop was never Bishop of that See but died at Abingdon of a long Sickness before Arch-Bishop Eadsige So much I thought fit to let the Reader know because in this History under Anno 1043 being deceived by the express words of the Annals I have there made this Siward to have been Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and deprived for his Ingratitude to his Predecessor which I am upon better Consideration now convinced to have been a Mistake I shall conclude with our Saxon Annals which under the Year 1052. relate that Earl Godwin having in a Great Council held at London purged himself and his Sons of the Crimes laid to their Charge and being thereupon restored Arch-Bishop Robert the Norman his Enemy having just before fled away into his own Country was not only by a Decree of this Council banis●ed but also deprived of his Arch-bishoprick and Stigand then was advanced to that See in his stead which certainly was done by the same Authority as deprived the former and if so then I think none can deny but that Power might also have deprived any other inferior Bishop and yet we do no where find there was any Schism in England among the Clergy at that Time because these two Primates of the Church had been deprived without their own Consent by the Lay as well as Spiritual part of the Great Council HAVING now finished all I had to say concerning the Power of the King and the Witena-Gemote in Ecclesiastical Matters I would not be thought to assert that they have the like Authorities in Matters of meer Spiritual Cognizance since I am very well satisfied of the Primitive Institution of the Episcopal Order from the first Preaching of Christianity in the Time of the Romans to the Restoration of it in this Island upon the Conversion of the Saxons which is not liable to be abrogated by any Temporal Power and which has been continued among the Britains or Welsh without any Interruption from thence even to our own Times BUT as for the Ecclesiastical Power it was at first settled under the two Arch-bishops of Canterbury and York who had then no Jurisdiction or Preheminence the one over the other the former being Primate of the Southern as the latter was of the Northern parts of England only I cannot but observe that the Church of St. Martin's without the City of Canterbury was till after the Conquest the See of a Bishop called in Latin Core Episcopus who always remaining in the Countrey supplied the Absence of the Metropolitan that for the most part followed the Court and that as well in governing the Monks as in performing the Solemnities of the Church and in exercising the Authority of an Arch-Deacon AND no doubt had also the Episcopal Powers of Ordination and Confirmation or else he could have been no Bishop I observe this to let you see that the English were not then so strictly tied up as not to allow of more than one Bishop in one City BUT since I have chiefly designed to speak of Civil Affairs I shall not here meddle with the Ecclesiastical Authority of the Bishops or their Courts or the Officers belonging to them but will leave them to those to whose Province it does more peculiarly appertain HAVING thus dispatched what I had to say concerning the Synods and Great Councils of the Kingdom in the Saxon Times I shall in the next Place treat of the English Laws before the Conquest and they were of two kinds viz. either the particular Customs or Laws of the several divisions of the Kingdom in which those Customs were in use or else such Additions to or Emendations of them as were made from time to time by the Great Council of the whole Kingdom concerning the Punishment of Crimes the manner of holding Men to their good Behaviour or relating to the Alteration of Property either in Lands or Goods with divers other particulars for which I refer you to the Laws themselves as I have extracted them from Sir Henry Spelman and Mr. Lambard their Learned Collections and some concerning each of these particulars I have given you in the following Work BUT to shew you in the first place the Original of the Saxon Customary Laws they were certainly derived from each of the Great Nations that settled themselves in this Island before the Heptarchy was reduced into one Kingdom but indeed after the Danes had settled themselves here in England we find they were divided into these three sorts of Laws in the beginning of Edward the Confessor's Reign according to the several parts of the Kingdom wherein they prevailed as 1. MERCHEN-LAGE or the Mercian Law which took place in the Counties of Glocester Worcester Hereford Warwick Oxon Chester Salop and Stafford 2. WEST-Saxon-Lage or the Law of the West-Saxons which was in use in the Counties of Kent Sussex Surrey Berks Southampton Somerset Dorset Devon and Cornwal I mean that part of it which spoke English the rest being governed by their own i. e. the British Laws 3. DANE-Lage or the Laws which the Danes introduced here into those Counties where they chiefly fixed viz. in those of York Derby Nottingham Leicester Lincoln Northampton Bucks Hertford Essex Middlesex Suffolk and Cambridg BUT as for Cumberland Northumberland and
Westmoreland I suppose they are omitted in this Catalogue because in the Times not long before the Conquest the first was under the Power of the Scots and consequently under their Laws as the two latter were under that of their own Earls who ruled those Counties as Feudatary Princes under the Kings of England tho thus much is certain that the Danish Laws took Place there as well as in Yorkshire BUT after King Edward the Confessor came to the Crown he reduced the whole Kingdom under one General for thus says Ranulph Higden as he is cited by Sir Henry Spelman in his Glossary Tit. Lex Ex tribus his Legibus Sanctus Edwardus unam Legem Communem edidit quas Leges Sancti Edwardi usque hodie vocant Brompton says the like Iste Supradictus Rex Sanct. Ed. Conf. dictus est Edwardus Tertius qui Leges Communes Anglorum Genti tempore suo ordinavit quia proantè Leges nimìs partiales editae fuerant But Roger Hoveden carries them up higher in his History of Henry the Second for he says Quod istae Leges primùm inventae institutae erant tempore Edgari Avi sui sed postquam Edwardus venit ad Regnum Consilio Baronum Angliae Legem per 48. Annos sopit●m excitavit excitatam reparavit reparatam decoravit decoratam confirmavit confirmata verò vocata est Lex Edwardi Regis non quià ipse invenisset eam prius sed cum praetermissa fuerat Oblivioni penitùs data è Diebus Avi sui Edgari qui primus Inventor ejus fuisse dicitur usque ad sua tempora quià justa honesta erant è profundo Abysso extraxit eam revocavit ut suam observandam tradidit But the true Reason why it is called the Common Law is because it is the Common or Municipal Law of this Kingdom so that Lex Communis or Jus Patriae is all one with Lex Patriae or Jus Patrium and it is also called the Common Law in other Countries as Lex Communis Norica Burgundica Lombardica c. And from this latter they were so called by William the First in his Confirmation of them HAVING now given you the Original of our Laws in General we will next proceed to shew you what they were in particular as far as they concern those two great Branches of all Municipal Laws viz. the Civil or the Criminal The former o● which concerns Lands and Goods and the latter the Nature and Punishments of Criminal Offences TO begin with the former as far as it concerns Lands I shall satisfy my self with what Dr. Brady hath with great Industry and Exactness extracted in the first part of his Compleat History of England out of those Learned Authors you will find there cited in the Margin which is as follows Mr. Somner says there were but two sorts of Tenures here in the Saxon times before the Conquest Bocland and Folkland to which two all other sorts of Land might be reduced Bocland as Lambard says was Free and Hereditary and was a Possession by Writing the other without That by Writing was possessed by the Free or Nobler sort that without called Folkland was holden by paying Annual Rent or performance of Services and was possessed by the Rural People Rusticks Colons or Clowns in those Times these Writings were called in Latin Libelli Terrarum Landboc's and Telligraphia and Livery and Seizin was then made and given by delivery of a Turf taken from the Land with the Writings This was called Terra Testamentalis hereditaria Land Inheritable and devisable by Will unless the first Purchaser or Acquirer by Writing or Witness had prohibited it and then it could not be sold or disposed of from the nearest Kindred This Bocland was of the same Nature with Allodium in Doomsday holden without any Paiments nor chargeable with Services to any Lord or Seignory and though the Name was almost quite lost yet the thing remained under the Name of Allodium and the Lands possessed by the Allodiarii frequently mentioned in Doomsday I have been the more exact in putting down this Passage because it plainly proves from the learned Doctor 's own shewing that if the greatest part of the Lands before the Conquest held by Men of any Quality were Bocland and that this Bocland was the same as he grants with Lands held in Allodio and I have already proved that such Lands were held without any Paiments or Services other than such publick Taxes as were imposed by the Great Council of the Kingdom that is Danegelt with such other Duties as all Lands whatsoever were liable to then is it also as evident that these Lands which were far the greatest part of the Lands in the Kingdom were not held by Knight's Service and consequently their Owners could not be Tenants in Capite as this Author is pleased in other Places to suppose and therefore these Tenants in Allodio could never be so represented by such Military Persons as that they alone could either make Laws for them or lay Taxes on their Estates without their Consents either by themselves or Representatives in the Great Councils or Parliaments of those Times and therefore such free Tenants must have either appeared for themselves in Person or have chosen others to represent them AND if any Man doubt whether these Lands held in Allodio were before the Conquest the greatest part of the Lands of the Kingdom I must refer them for their Satisfaction to Mr. Somners and Mr. Taylor 's Treatises upon Gavelkind as also to Mr. Lambard's Discourse of the Customs of Kent at the end of his Perambulation of that County who there fully prove that the Antient Bocland descending to all the Male Issue alike was not meer Socage Tenure but Allodial 2 dly That this was the general Tenure of all Lands not held by Knights Service before the Conquest as well Gavelkind as others and that not only at the Common Law but confirmed by divers Saxon Kings as by that Law of King Edmund Si quis intestatus obierit Liberi ejus haereditatem aequalitèr dividant So likewise by the 68 th and 75 th Laws of King Cnute as also by those of Edward the Confessor confirmed by William the Conqueror Cap. 36. And therefore Mr. Somner in his said Treatise of Gavelkind farther proves that this was a Liberty left to the Kentish Men by William the Conqueror when all the rest of England changed its Antient Tenure and Mr. Taylor in his History of Gavelkind Chap. 6 7 8. hath proved this to have been a general Custom not only in Kent but in Wales and several parts of England I shall not any further pursue what the Doctor has said of Lands holden by Military Service before the Conquest or of the Herriots or Reliefs that were due upon them which were payable out of the Feudal Lands of the Ealdormen middle and less Thanes but shall refer
Council at York ordained divers things relating to the Publick Affairs of the Kingdom among which he divided the Earldom of Oswulph Earl of Northumberland late deceased into two for the King was not willing to bestow so great a Part of the Kingdom on any as an Inheritance lest the Northumbers should again aspire to their antient Liberty wherefore he bestowed that Part of Northumberland lying between the Humber and the Theys upon Earl Oslac girding him with the Sword of that Earldom But from Theys to Mireferth being the Sea-coast of Deira he bestowed upon Earl Eadulf sirnamed Ethelwald and thus the two Kingdoms became two Earldoms and so continued all the times of the English-Saxon Kings under their Gift and Jurisdiction whilst Lothian lying open to the Incursions of the Scots was of no great concern to our Kings BUT Keneth K. of Scotland receiving a high Character of the Generosity of K. Edgar from the two Earls above-mentioned desired the King 's safe Conduct to come to London to visit him which being granted the said two Earls conducted him thither where he was honourably received by K. Edgar who often conversing friendly and familiarly with Keneth he then represented to K. Edgar that Lothian appertained to him as his Right having been long possessed by the Kings of Scotland as their Inheritance but the King not being willing to do any thing that he might afterwards repent of referred the Determination of this Affair to his great Council where the chief Men of the Kingdom would not assent to part with it unless under a Homage to be yielded by the K. of Scotland to the K. of England and that too only because all Access to that Country was very difficult and its Government of little or no Profit Whereupon K. Keneth assented to this Demand and so received it under that Condition did Homage for it accordingly promising likewise many other things as that the People should still remain under the English Name and Language which continues to this day and so the old Quarrel about Lothian was now happily determined tho some new ones were often started Thus the King of Scots became Feudatary to King Edgar on this occasion whence you may observe how the Scotish Nation became Masters of Lothian where Edinburgh the Capital City of the Kingdom is seated and which City continued in the Hands of the English as Mr. Camden well observes from an antient Manuscript he there cites till the Reign of K. Indulf viz. till about Anno Dom. 960. You may add this to the Laws of King Edgar at the end of his Reign p. 14. This King is also related by William of Malmesbury to have made a Law to restrain excessive drinking of great Draughts by which Law it was ordained that no Man under a great Penalty should drink at one Draught below certain Pins that were ordered to be fixt within the sides of the Cups or Goblets for that purpose Pag. 72. I confess I was so far misled by the Authority of the Saxon Annals and Matth. Westminster as to believe that Siward mentioned under Anno 1043. had been consecrated Arch-bishop of Canterbury but being now satisfied of the contrary and having given good Reasons against it in the Introduction p. 115 116. that Relation of William of Malmesbury from these words l. 20. of which Author may be thus altered That tho he was designed Successor to this Arch-bishop and to that end was consecrated his Corepiscopus i. e. his Coadjutor yet that notwithstanding he was soon after deposed for his Ingratitude in defrauding the weak old Man of his necessary Maintenance But that this also was a mistake in this Author see the Introduction p. 115 116. Thus much I thought fit to advertise the Reader since I had rather confess my own involuntary Mistakes than put another to the trouble of shewing them to the World but however since I do not pretend to be infallible if any Person of greater Skill in our English Histories will take the pains to shew the World any other Errors or Omissions I have been guilty of in this Work I shall be ●o far from taking it ill that for the publick Satisfaction they shall be mended 〈◊〉 the next Edition THE General History OF BRITAIN NOW CALLED ENGLAND As well Ecclesiastical as Civil BOOK I. From the Earliest Accounts of TIME to the First Coming of JULIUS CAESAR SINCE I design with God's Permission to write and digest the most Remarkable Things and Transactions that have occurred in this Kingdom from the earliest Accounts of Time I shall follow Venerable Bede as well as other Historians in first giving a brief Description of this Island Britain the largest of all the Europaean Islands and one of the biggest in this Habitable Globe is scituate between 50 Degrees 16 Minutes and 59 Degrees 30 Minutes North Latitude the whole Isle lying in length from Dunsby-Head the most Northerly Promontory of Scotland to Dover the space of near Six hundred Miles yet is the Climate more mild and temperate than could be expected in so Northerly a Scituation the Winds from the Seas encompassing it on all sides so tempering the Air that it is neither so cold in Winter nor yet so hot in Summer as the opposite Continents of France Germany and the Low-Countries and also by the Indulgence of Heaven as well as the Fertility of its Native Soil it is plentifully furnished with all Things necessary for Human Life It was anciently called by the Greeks Albion but whether from a Giant of that Name feigned to be the Son of Neptune after the Fabulous Humour of those Times in giving Names to Countries from Giants and Heroes or else from the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which according to Festus signifies White since this Island is on many sides of it encompassed with Rocks of that Colour or else from the Phoenician word Alp which signifies High or from Alben which in the Hebrew Tongue signifies White is uncertain and therefore needless to be insisted on too much As for the Name of Britain which Nennius and divers other British Writers derive from Brutus whom they likewise call Brito but others of them from the British words Pryd Cain i. e. Forma candida a white Form it seems too far fetch'd and besides we do not find that the Natives of this Isle ever called it Britain Mr. Camden derives it from the Welsh word Brith which signifies Painted for the ancient Britains used to paint themselves of a pale blewish Colour with Glastum or Woad and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in Greek signifies a Region or Country But this Etymology has this Inconvenience in it that it is derived from too far different Languages and besides it seems very improbable that such an Accidental Custom as that of painting their Bodies should give a Name to the whole Island as well as its Inhabitants Nor does this word Brith signifie in the Welsh Tongue Painted but rather
Spotted with divers Colours whereas the ancient Britains as some write did not paint themselves with various Colours but only stained their Bodies with one simple Colour viz. Blue We must therefore endeavour to derive it from some other Language if it was not the Britains themselves but other Nations as is most probable that first called this Island Britain Now it is certain that there is no Word in the Greek Tongue from whence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 can well be derived which Name only the more modern Greek Historians have given this Island for thô Strabo in his Geography calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet since this word is an Adjective it is plain that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Insula an Island is to be understood So that it seems the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be more ancient than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore Mr. Camden's derivation of it will scarcely hold good Yet Ptolomy never calls this Island 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for when he speaks of all the Islands lying together in these Seas towards the North he calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Insulae Britannicae the British Islands And Pliny in his Natural History speaking of all these Islands says Albion ipsi nomen fuit cum Britannicae vocarentur omnes i. e. The particular Name was Albion but the Islands together were called British But Monsieur Bochart in his most Learned Work Entituled Chanaan where he Treats of the Colonies and Language of the Phoenicians hath given us a more probable derivation of the Name of Britain which he supposes to be derived from the Phoenicians who in their Language called this Island as well as some others near it Barat Anac or more contractedly Bratanac i. e. in the Land or Country of Tin or Lead which being thus given it by the Phoenician Mariners that first sailed thither and discovered those Islands might afterwards by the Greeks be mollified into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now that the Phoenicians were the first that discovered those Isles which the Graecians called Cassiterides and which are proved by Mr. Camden to be no other than our Scilly Islands and from whence as Strabo tells us in his Geography The Phoenicians first brought Tin which thô they vended to the Greeks yet kept the Trade as well as the Place private to themselves may be believed upon these Authorities Pliny tells us That Midocritus was the first who brought Lead from the Cassiterides But Monsieur Bochart there shews us That it ought to be read Melichartus who was the Phoenician Hercules of Sanchoniathon and to whom the Phoen●cians attributed their first Western Discoveries Yet notwithstanding the Care of the Phoenicians to conceal these Islands the Greeks did at last discover them thô we cannot tell the certain time when giving them the Name of Cassiterides which signifies in the Greek Tongue the same that Barat-Anac does in the Phoenician viz. The Land or Country of Tin which Name thô given only to these Islands at first was at last also communicated to the adjoyning Countries now called Cornwal and Devonshire from whence also the Phoenicians might bring this Commodity and so by degrees this Name came to be given to all those Islands thus lying together since in those Times as well as now it is probable there might be Mines of this Metal in Britain itself as well as in those smaller Islands above-mentioned In some of which Mr. Camden tells us there are found Veins of this Metal even unto this Day and there might be far greater Mines of it in former Ages thô long since worn out But it is Objected That Mr. Camden in his Introduction to his Britannia hath positively asserted that Britain was not known to the Greeks and therefore its Name could not be derived from them or the Phoenicians and for Proof of this he cites a Place out of the Third Book of Polybius's History which we shall here render into English thus As for Asia and Lybia where they joyn to each other about Ethiopia none can say positively to this Day whether it be a Continent running to the South or whether it be encompassed by the Sea So likewise what lies between Tanais and Narbon stretching Northward is unknown to us at this present unless hereafter by diligent Enquiry we may learn something of it they that speak or write any thing of these Matters are to be thought to know nothing and to lay down meer Fables By which Words Polybius only means That as it was doubtful whether the Sea encompassed the South Parts of Africa so it was unknown whether the North Parts of Europe about Narbon were likewise so encompassed whereas Mr. Camden understands the Words as if they were spoken in general when indeed they related only to that particular Question Whether the Northern Tracts of Europe were invironed with the Sea or not which notwithstanding the great Improvement of Navigation stands unresolv'd even unto this Day But that Polybius writ not in this sense appears further in that he himself describes the Fountains of Rhodanus and Ligeris with many other Places of Gaul which lie all above Narbon But to put this past all Dispute in this very Third Book he promises particularly to write of the further or Western Sea as also of the Britanick Islands for so he calls them and of their manner of making Tin Which Promise of his required more than a Cursory Knowledge to perform Since he says That the Trade into those Seas was then very great now that he also performed this Promise appears from Strabo where Polybius is cited as comparing the Opinions of Pytheas Dicaearchus and Eratosthenes concerning the Magnitude of Britain but that these Islands were discovered by the Greeks long before Polybius's time appears also from Herodotus who confesses he does not know the Islands Cassiterides from whence Tin is brought that is he did not know them any otherwise than by Report and if these smaller Islands were then discovered can any one believe that so great an Island as Britain which lay so near them could remain undiscovered But I have spoke enough if not too much of the Etymologies of the Names of this Island since of all that may be counted Learning nothing is more uncertain than this nor is it often of any great use when known I shall therefore now proceed to somewhat more Solid and Useful and try if we can discover who were the first Inhabitants of this Island but since the Scriptures as well as Prophane Histories are silent in this Point it is impossible to tell the Name of the Man who brought the first Colony hither Only thus much seems probable That Europe was Peopled by the Posterity of Jophet either from one Alanus whom Nenniu● supposes to have been his Grandson or else from Gomer his Son from whom
are no certain or Authentick Histories remaining of any transactions before that time for Gildas who liv'd not long after the Saxons were first call'd into Britain freely owns that as for the Antient monuments of his Country whatever they were being either burnt by Enemies or carried beyond Sea by his banish'd Country men they were not then to be found therefore I shall wholly omit that fabulous Succession of Celtick Kings who are feigned to be derived from Samothes one of the Sons of Japhet whom they suppose to have planted Colonies first on the Continent of Celtica or Gaul and next in this Island and thence to have named it Samothea since they never had any existence but in the brain of Amnius de Viterbo and by him vented in his counterfeit Berosus which is long since exploded by all that are any thing versed in Antiquity But now I could heartily wish that we had any certain monuments of the History of this Kingdom which might justly supply their room but having no Authentick accounts left us of the British Kings that reigned in this Island till Julius Caesar's first Expedition hither I could willingly have excused my self from the drudgery of writing things so uncertain nay in diverse particulars utterly false were it not that most Authors who have already writ our History either in English or Latin have thought those long Successions of Kings not unworthy a particular Recital as supposing it scarce possible that a descent of above Sixty Kings together with so many transactions attended with such particular Circumstances as the making of War and Peace building of Cities and enacting Laws should be wholly Fabulous and Romantick or that the names of so many successive Princes should never have been derived from any real Persons For though it is true that Geoffrey of Monmouth is look'd upon as the chief if not only Author of the Story of Brutus and his Successours yet it is certain that he pretends in the Proem to his History which he dedicated to no less a Man than Robert Earle of Gloucester natural Son to K. Hen. the I. that he received an antient British History from Walter Arch-Deacon of Oxon which as he says he faithfully translated out of the British Tongue into Latin though William Neobrigensis who lived some time after this Geoffrey in the very beginning of his History writes thus of him In thes● our days says he a certain Writer is risen who hath devised many foolish Fictions of the Britains he is named Geoffrey And a little after thus with ho● little shame and with what great Confidence doth he frame his Lyes So that you may see his History began to be cryed out against almost as soon as it was published And yet for all this it is certain that Geoffrey was not the first Author of this Story of Brutus for Nennius who lived in the 8th Century and is also Intituled Gildas in some Copies in his History makes the Isle of Britain to be first inhabited by one Brito the Son of Hisicion the Son of Japhet or else from one Brutus it seems he did not know which whose Pedegree he derives from Aeneas by his Son Ascanius and who as he supposes reigned in Britain in the time that Eli Judged Israel and under whose Conduct the Britains in the third Age of the World first came into this Island which Calculation falls out right enough with our at present received Chronology But as for Sigebertus Gemblacensis a French Monk who lived about Twenty Years before Geoffrey tho' in some Editions he speaks of Bru●e with his Trojans arrival in Gaul and of his passage from thence into Britain yet it is certain they are none of that Author's words there being no such thing to be found in the truest Edition of his Chronicle published by Mirraes An. 1608. as the above cited Lord Bishop of Coventry and Litchfield in his learned Preface to his Historical account of Church Government in great Britain and Ireland hath fully proved But after him Henry Arch-Deacon of Huntington an Author of Credit who lived at the same time with Geoffrey ascribes the first habitation of this Island to Brutus the Son of Sylvius Grandson to Aeneas whom together with his certain Trojans he supposes to have come into Britain in the third Age of the World as the Scots did in the fourth into Ireland which he seems to have taken out of Nennius or some other ancient Author But this must still be confest that the whole relation of the Actions of Brutus and the Succession of all the Princes that followed him do all depend upon the Credit of Geoffrey and the truth of his trāsaction and so was looked upon in the Age in which he published his History But to make this Brute to be a Trojan and to give him a Genealogy which is plainly contradicted by all the Roman Authors is that for which his History ought to be condemned Yet thus much may be said in Excuse of him and of all those Authors who have ascribed the Origine of the Britains to Brute that they have imitated the Vanity of the ancient Greeks and Romans who derived their Kings from some God or Heroe And have been followed in it not only by the Britains but the French and almost all other Nations of Europe since they began to write Histories of their Originals But since it is fit that we should give you some account though as short as possible of this Brute and his Successors I shall contract their History from Geoffrey of Monmouth into as narrow a Compass as I can Brutus who is suppos'd to have first Peopled Britain with Inhabitants of the Trojan Race is said to have been the Great Grandson of Aeneas by his Son Ascanius who killing his Father Sylvius King of Alba accidently with an Arrow was forced to fly his Country and going into Greece joyned himself with the remainder of those scattered Trojans he ●ound there and becoming their Leader made War upon Pandrasus the King of that Country to whom he sent this Message viz. That the Trojans holding it unworthy their Ancestors to serve in a Foreign Kingdom had retreated to the Woods choosing rather a Savage than a slavish Life if that displeased him then with his leave they might depart to some other Soile The particulars of which being tedious and fabulous are here needless further to be inserted But at last that King being by them made a Prisoner was forced to accept of terms of Peace the Articles of which were That Brute should Marry Inogena the King's Daughter and in Consideration of her Dower should have a Fleet given him with Liberty to transport all such as would be willing to follow his Fortunes The Marriage being thereupon solemnized Brute and his Trojans with a great Fleet betook themselves to Sea and within a short time landed on a deserted Island where they found a ruin'd City in which was a Temple and an Image of Diana
their shallows and whose Countries use had taught them to Swim govern their Horses and Fight all at once which was executed so on the sudden that the Britains who expected Fleets and thought without Shipping nothing could attack them were now surprized and daunted since they believed nothing was difficult or invincible to Men so resolutely prepared for War whereupon they desired Peace and delivered up the Island This sudden Success gained Agricola a great Reputation especially since he employed even his first Entrance into his Province in labour and War which by other Governours was spent in Ceremonies or bestowing of Commands nor did he make use of his Prosperity for Ostentation or call this Expedition a Conquest but only that he had reduced those to Obedience who had been before subdued neither did he so much as adorn his Letters to Rome with Laurels as the custom was Yet even by this slighting of Fame and Reputation he at the same time encreased it all Men admiring that having such great presumptions of future success he could thus conceal such noble Actions Having thus overcome the Britains the next thing he set himself about was to understand the Minds and Inclinations of the People having learned by long experience that little good was to be done by force whilst open injuries and oppressions were permitted therefore he resolved to cut up this War by the very Roots so beginning with his Domesticks he first of all reformed his own Family which is not less difficult to some than to Govern a Province he acted nothing of publick concern by his Freedmen or Servants nor did he nominate his Officers by his own private inclinations nor on the bare recommendations or intreaties of others but still chose the most Vertuous and Faithful he would both know and do all things himself as for small faults he pardoned them but punished great ones nor was he always satisfied with punishment but more often with Repentance putting into Offices and Commands rather such who would not offend at all than punish them when they had He also rendered the payment of Corn and other Tributes more easie by the equality of the Taxation cutting off those exactions which were invented for private gain and which were often more grievous than the Taxes themselves for the People had been compelled to attend at the publick Granaries which were on purpose kept locked against them and when opened the Publicans obliged them to take greater quantities of Corn than their necessities required and that an at extravagant rate and which they were often constrained to sell again at a lower price to make Money for other necessaries or the payment of their Tribute the Purveyors also commanding them when they pleased to carry it not to the nearest but remotest Markets compounding with such as would be excused thus causing a scarcity where there was none indeed they made a particular gain to themselves the reforming these abuses in the very First Year of his Government brought Peace into Reputation which either by the carelesness or connivances of his Predecessors had hitherto been not less dreadful than War Geoffrey of Monmouth and those that follow him do about this time make Arviragus a British King 〈◊〉 to have reigned in some part of this Island and then dying that he was succeeded by one Marius whom some will have to be the same with Gogidun●● all which being as uncertain as whether there was ever any such a Man or not I shall not trouble my self to dispute since this Arviragus whom they suppose to have been his Father lived in the Reign of Domitian as I shall prove when I come to it About this time dyed the Emperor Vespasian and was succeeded by his Son Titus who rather exceeded than equal'd his Father in Valour and Worth He continued Agricola in the Government of Britain who when Summer was once come drew together his Army praising the good Discipline of his Souldiers whilst they keept close to their Ensigns and punishing the Straglers he himself always chusing the places whereon to Encamp and before hand searched the Woods and Sounded the Fords they were to pass by which means he not only hindred the Enemy from taking any rest but so continually allarmed them with fresh Excursions that be prevented the pillaging of the Roman Territories Having thus sufficiently terrified them he then began by sparing them to show them some allurements to Peace by which means many Cities that before stood upon Terms now laid down their Arms gave Hostages and received Garrisons which were all placed with such care and foresight and in such places of advantage that never any of them were attempted whereas before no new fortified place in all Britain escaped unattacked The following Winter was wholly spent in a wise and profitable design for to the end that the Britains who then lived rude and scattered and so apter to make War might be accustomed to pleasure and living at ease he privately encouraged and publickly promoted the building of Temples Houses and Places for Publick Assemblies commending the Readiness of some and quickening the Slowness of others whilst Emulation of Honour wrought more than Compulsion among them He also caused the Noble-Men's Sons to be instructed in the Liberal Sciences And by commending the Wits of Britain before these of Gaul he brought them who before hated the Roman Language to grow in love with the Latin Eloquence And now came the Roman Garb to be in fashion and the Gown no Stranger among them Thus came in by degrees all the Allurements of Vice and Voluptuous Living as Porticoes Baths with the Luxury of Banquets which was by the Ignorant called Good Breeding and Civility when indeed it was but a Badge of their own Slavery In the Third Year's Expedition Agricola discover'd new Nations wasting the Countries as far as the Frith called the Taus Thus by the Terrour of his Marches he so aw'd the Enemy that though his Army was much harass'd by bad Weather yet durst they not attack him so that he had time enough to build Forts And those that were skilful took notice that no other General did more prudently chuse Places fit to be fortified So that no Castle of Agricola's was ever taken by Force or deserted But from these being well provided with Provisions for a Years Siege his Men made frequent Sallies So that the Enemy who before used in Winter to re-gain what in Summer they had lost were now alike in both Seasons straitned and kept short Neither did Agricola as too covetous of Honour attribute to himself things done by others since every Officer or Centurion had him for an impartial Witness as well as Judge of his Actions And though he were taxed by some as too bitter in his Reproofs yet must it be granted that as he was gentle to the Good so he was morose to the bad but his Anger did not last long Nor needed one to
they constrain'd to do his Duty Having thus escaped and none knowing what was become of them and having no Pilates they were carried at random as the Tides and Winds drove them to and fro Thus compassing the Island they practis'd Piracy where they landed and often fighting with the Britains who defended their Goods were sometimes Victors and sometimes worsted till at last they were driven to that great Extremity for want of Provision that first they devour'd the weakest of their own Men and then drew Lots who of them should be eaten afterwards Thus having floated round Britain and lost their Ships for want of Skill to steer them getting on Shore they were taken and sold as Pirates first by the Suevians and afterwards by the Frisians till at last they were sold into Britain where the strangeness of the Accident render'd this Discovery of the Island more famous But Agricola having in the beginning of this Summer lost a young Son made use of War as a Remedy to vent his Grief therefore he sent his Fleet before which by spoiling many Places on the Coast struck a greater Terror into the Enemy He himself with a flying Army consisting chiefly of Britains whose Courage and Faith he had long experienced following it marched as far as the Grampian Hills upon which the Enemy had Posted themselves for the Britains nothing daunted with the ill Success of the last Fight and expecting nothing but Revenge or Slavery from their new Leagues and Confederacies were got together Thirty Thousand strong more being daily expected nay the aged themselves would not be exempted from this Days Service but as they had been brave Men in their time so every one of them bore some Badge or Mark of his youthful Atchievements Among these was Galgacus chief in Authority and Birth who when the Army cry'd out for the Signal of Battel is brought in by Tacitus making a long yet noble Oration which thô it is likely he never spoke and that it is contrary to my Design to stuff these Annals with long Speeches yet since there is a great deal of good Sense and sharp Satyr expressed in it against his own Nation I shall contract some part of it and render the rest word for word In the first place having set forth the Occasion of making War upon the Romans from the Necessity of avoiding Slavery as being the last People of Britain that were yet unconquer'd and that beyond them there was no more Earth nor Liberty left That now the utmost Bounds of Britain were discovered and no other Nations but them left to employ the Roman Armies whose Pride they might seek to please in vain by Services and Submissions those Robbers of the World who having left no Land unplunder'd ransack even the Ocean it self If the Enemy be Rich they are greedy of his Wealth if Poor they covet Glory whom neither the East nor West could ever satisfie the only Men in the World who pursue both the Rich and the Needy with equal Appetite To Kill and Plunder they call Governing and when they have brought Desolation on a Country they term it Peace That Nature by nearest ties had link'd their Children and Relations to them yet even these were taken away and pressed into their Service That their Wives and Sisters if they escap'd their Violence yet could not avoid Dishonour since when they came as Guests into their Houses they were sure to Debauch them Their Goods and Fortunes they made their Tributes their Corn their Provisions to supply their Gran●ries and wore out their Bodies in cutting down Woods and draining Fens and paving Marishes nay and all this amidst a Thousand Stripes and Indignities That Slaves who are born to Bondage were sold but once and afterwards kept at their Masters Charges but Britain daily bought its own Bondage and maintain'd it too He then proceeds to exhort them to be tenacious of their Liberty lest like the last Slave in a private Family who is the Sport and Scorn of his Fellows when conquer'd they should be flouted by those who had been used as Drudges long before advising them to take Courage and Example from the Brigantes who under the Conduct of a Woman had almost quite destroyed the Romans and might have driven them out of Britain had they not failed in the Attempt by their too great Security and Success Then magnifying the Valour and Strength of his own Nation and lessening that of the Romans as made up of divers Nations who unwillingly served them and as soon as they durst would turn against them he concluded with shewing what Advantages they had above the Romans to make them hope for Victory and the miserable Slavery they were like to undergo if they were vanquished and therefore going now to Battel advised them to remember the Freedom of their Ancestors as well as the Danger of Slavery to themselves and their Posterity The Britains received this Speech with great Testimonies of Joy such as Songs and confus'd Clamours after the Custom of their Country all which shew'd their Approbation and now their Arms began to glitter and every one to put himself in Array when Agricola scarce able to repress the Heat of his Soldiers yet thinking it convenient to say something to them made a Speech to this Effect for being somewhat long I shall make bold to Contract it First he told his Soldiers That this was the Eighth Year that their Valour protected by the Fortune of the Roman Empire had subdu'd the Britains in so many Battels and that as he had exceeded his Predecessors in Success so they had all former Armies That Britain was now no longer known only by Fame and Report and that as they have had the Honor to discover so likewise might they to subdue it That he had often heard them ask When they should meet the Enemy but now they had their Desires now was the time to shew their Valour and that as every thing would happen as they could wish if they Conquer'd so all things made against them if they were overcome That if it was Great and Noble to have Marched so much Ground to have past so many Woods and both the Friths yet if they fled the very same things would be their Hindrance and Destruction That as for his part he had been long since satisfied that to run away was neither safe for the Soldier nor General and that a Commendable Death was to be preferr'd before the Reproaches of an Ignominious Life that Safety and Honour were now inseparably conjoyned And let the worst happen yet how glorious would it be to die in the utmost Bounds of the World and Nature Then putting them in mind of their late Victories and representing these Britains they were now to fight with as the Meanest and most Rascally of all the Nations they had Conquer'd so he doubts not but they will afford them an occasion of a memorable Victory Then
faithful Historian had given us as exact an account of the Actions of these other Lieutenants that were sent into Britain during the Reign of this Emperour and his Successours then we might have had a compleat History of those times But we are now at so great an uncertainty that we cannot tell who it was to whom Agricola resigned his Command only we read in Suetonius of one Salustius Lucullus to have been Legate of Britain in the days of this Emperour but nothing can be found of any others or of him more than that he was slain by Domitian for giving his own name to a ●ort of Spears which he had invented But this seems more certain that not long after Agricola's departure the Britains recovering fresh Strength and Courage under the Conduct of Arviragus rebelled against the Romans as some gather from that Speech which Frabricius Veiento is supposed by Juvenal to speak in flattery of Domitian Omen habes inquit magni clarique triumphi Regem aliquem capies aut de temone Britanno Excidet Arviragus See the Mighty Omen see He cries of some Illustrious Victory Some Captive King thee his new Lord shall own Or from his British Chariot headlong thrown The proud Arviragus come tumbling down Dion also mentions C. N. Trebellius to have governed Britain though in what time is uncertain but Tacitus in his Proem to his First Book of Histories speaks of Britain as though formerly Conquer'd but as then lost which though it might be true yet that it was again recovered is also as certain since during the Reigns of the succeeding Emperours we find Britain as far as the Friths of Dunbritton and Edinburgh entirely reduced into the form of a Roman Province which was not governed by any particular Praetor or Proconsul but was esteemed Praesidialis that is under the immediate protection and Eye of the Emperour and held by his Garisons and thus it continued as long as Britain remained a Member of the Roman Empire But about the end of Domitians Reign Arviragus is supposed by Geoffrey to have deceased and that his Son Marius called by the British Historians Meurig succeeded him I have no more to observe during the Reign of Domitian than that in his time Claudia Rufina a British Lady was the Wife of Pudens a Senator and she is famous in that Elegant Epigram of Martial for her Beauty Wit and Learning but more excellent was she for her profession of Christianity if she were the same Woman St. Paul mentions in his Second Epistle to Timothy as some of our English Historians have though without any great certainty asserted for it is certain that St. Paul wrote this Epistle to Timothy in the Reign of Nero and therefore it is not likely that this Claudia should be found for her Beauty in the latter end of the Reign of Domitian or else of Trajan above Twenty Years after since by that time she must certainly have been a Woman of more Years than Beauty The short Reign of the Emperour Nerva affords us nothing of certainty concerning the Affairs of Britain only that in his Reign as also in that of Trajan his Successour There were great Commotions in this Island which may be also gathered out of Spartianus's History But in the Reign of this Emperour the Britains are said by him to have Revolted yet were soon reduced again to Obedience To his Reign we may also refer that War which Geoffrey of Monmouth mentions to have been made by Roderick King of the Picts who aiding the Caledonians was overcome and Slain by this King Marius above mentioned which Victory although it be only related by this Historian Yet Arch-bishop Usher in his above cited Work does not think it unlikely since William of Malmesbury before ever Geoffrey had published his History makes mention of this Marius in these words There is in the City of Luguballia now called Carlisle a Room Arch'd with Stone which can neither by Weather or Fire be destroyed the Country is called Cumberland and the Inhabitants Cumbri and in the Front of this Room there is to be Read this Inscription Marii Victoriae but though Mr. Cambden speaking of this place says he has found it written Marti Victori in some Copies yet those could not be true as being quite contrary to Malmesbury's meaning who presently after adds What this should mean I much doubt unless perhaps some part of the Cymbrians planted themselves in these parts after they had been driven out of Italy by Marius But Ranulph of Chester in his Polychronicon doth thus rectifie this mistake of Malmesbury As who not having seen the British History attributed this Inscription to Marius the Roman when it indeed belonged to Marius the British King This Battel is supposed to have been fought in the great Moore now called Stanmore in Westmoreland as a Monk of Malmesbury in the Book called Eulogium hath written We have nothing to Remark in the Reign of Trajan unless it is what Geoffrey of Monmouth relates to have been performed in Britain in his time Which I shall here give you The publick ways saith he Trajan repaired by Pa●ing them with Stone or raising Causeways even such places as were wet and boggy or by grubbing and clearing such as were rough and over grown with Bushes and Woods making Bridges over Rivers where the way was too long where by r●ason of some steep Hill the way was difficult he turned it aside through more level places or if it ran through Forrests Wastes and Deserts by drawing it from thence through places inhabited Aelius Hadrian succeeded his Unkle Trajan in the Empire he was also a Spaniard and these two were the First Emperours who were not by birth Romans he differed from Trajan in his policy of extending the Empire and rather to imitate Augustus his Rule in restraining its limits to render it stronger and more united in so much that he excluded on the East all Armenia Media Persia and Mesopotamia being the Conquests of Trajan yet excepted Britain alone from this retrenchment which Province he by no means would part with although he somewhat streightned it as shall be shewn by and by Under him Julius Severus was Lieutenant an excellent Soldier and upon that account called away to suppress the Jews then in Rebellion After his departure the Britains till then kept in had entirely revolted had not Hadrian made a Journey hither in the Second Year of his Empire being then thrice Consul where he reformed many things and seems by Force of Arms to have reduced the Britains to Obedience as Mr. Camden well observeth from a piece of Money of his Coyning where there is the Figure of that Emperor with Three Soldiers on the Reverse whom he judges to represent the Three Legions of which the Roman Army in Britain then consisted and under them this Inscription EXER BRITANNICUS and another of the same Prince with this Motto RESTITUTOR
whilst by others it was turned into a C which if added to the following Figures viz. XXXII make CXXXII but with an L. before them they make only LXXXII Miles as they are indeed no more But to conclude this Subject on which I doubt we have dwelt too long already if Buchanan had not desired to have been singular and to have differed not only from our English Authors but from his own Country-men John Fordun and Major who in their Histories of Scotland are both of our side he had never fallen into this Mistake Whilst this Peace with the Northern Britains lasted it may well be supposed that remarkable Meeting between the Empress Julia the Wife of Severus and the Wife of Argentocoxus a British King might have happened wherein the Empress upbraiding the British Ladies that they lay with so many Men promiscuously according to their Custom of one Woman's having several Husbands as hath been already related The British Lady made her this quick Return We British Women do much better satisfie the Desires of Nature than you Roman Ladies for we have to do only with the best Men and that openly whilst you commit Adulteries with every mean Fellow in a corner A sharp Reproof though no good Excuse for her Country-women But no sooner was Severus returned into the Roman Province but the Caledonians and Maeatae again took Arms which so incensed the old Emperor that calling his Soldiers together he commanded them repeating a Verse of Homer That they should enter the Country and kill all they met both Men Women and Children but being now worn out with Years and Infirmities he could not go himself but sent Bassianus his Son against them yet whether he did any thing considerable is uncertain since Severus died not long after Whose End whether it was hastened by his Son 's wicked Practices or whether he died of meet Age or Sickness is not truly known since Historians differ much about it but before he died he is said to have spoke thus to his two Sons Bassianus and Geta See that you agree between your selves and pay your Soldiers and then you need care for no body else A notable Maxim which hath been observed not only by them but by all who are or desire to be absolute Monarchs He is likewise said by Spartianus to have rejoyced before his Death that he left the Empire to his Sons according to the Example of Antoninus Pius who left the two Antonini his Sons by Adoption his Heirs whereas he had left two Sons gotten by himself Rulers of the Roman Commonwealth But he was deceived in his Expectation for the one by the Parricide of his Brother the other by his own evil Manners were soon destroyed and to expect otherwise shew'd him not to have been so Prudent in that as in his other Actions Upon which the Author last cited in his Life of this Prince makes this shrewd Observation That scarce any great Men had left behind them a Son good for any thing but either they have had no Children or else such that it had been better for Mankind if they had died without any at all This Author also makes him to have further spoke these as his last Words I received the Commonwealth every where disturbed but leave it even as far as Britain in Peace a firm and stable Empire to my Antonines if they prove Virtuous but if otherwise a weak one Dion tells us That his Corps being carried out in great Pomp and laid upon the Funeral Pile without the Walls of York at a place called to this day Sever's Hoe or Sever's Hill the Souldiers rid round it on Horse-back full speed whilst it was burning his own Sons having first kindled the Fire Herodian gives us a long Description of his Funeral Pile and of the manner of burning the Body of a Roman Emperour which being too tedious to be here recited those who are desirous of reading the Description of this Spectacle may find it at large in this Author His Bones being put in an Urn of Porphiry were carried by his Sons to Rome and placed in the Sepulchre of the Antonines It is also said by Dion That Severus a little before his Death commanded this Urn to be brought to him and holding it in his hand to have spoke thus Must thou hold him whom the whole World could not contain Severus is described by this Author to have been in his old age Corpulent but of a strong Constitution thô much afflicted with the Gout of a sharp and excellent Wit a Lover of good Letters in which thô he was a sufficient Master yet was more able to express it by Writing than Words grateful towards his Friends most cruel to his Enemies diligent in Affairs but careless of what Men said of him greedy of Money which he gathered by all means yet for that cause alone he never put any Man to Death He was magnificent in his publick Expences and built many new Edifices and repaired the old ones so that thô he spent vastly yet he left a great Treasure behind him But to add somewhat farther from others he was a great Enemy to Incontinence and Adultery and made strict Laws against it and had certainly as great a mixture of good and evil Qualities as ever were found in any one Man That he was both Perfidious and Cruel appears by his Dealing with Albinus as also with the Wife and Children of Niger whom thô innocent he caused to be put to Death whilst his own Son who had attempted upon his Life and Empire he easily Pardoned which whether he did out of Love to him or weariness of Life as sated with Honour and Power may be doubted and if he had been then a young Man perhaps he would have acted otherwise I have insisted the longer upon the Character of this Prince as being one of the greatest and most fortunate of all the Roman Emperours But having given you an account of the last Words and Actions of Severus in Britain I cannot but here take notice of a notorious Falshood in Geoffery of Monmouth in this part of his History and whereby you may judge of his Skill in the Roman History and I shall give it you in the Words of a Learned Bishop Geoffery having found that Severus the Emperour died in Britain thought it most for the Honour of our Country to kill him fairly in Battle and therefore by power of Fancy he creates one Fulgentius to be General against him who being overpowered here at home went and fetched in the Picts out of Scythia and with their Aid fought Severus and killed him and was killed together for Company All which was Geoffery's own proper Invention And then having found that Severus left a Son Bassianus that was his Successor in the Roman Empire he makes his Britains set up this Bassianus to be their King on his Mother's account who must be the Sister of Fulgenius
Geoffery for it Though indeed Archbishop Usher proves it not to have been he but one of as little Credit viz. the Author of the Acts of King Lucius However this is the only Authority for this Legend thô the Bones of these Virgins are pretended to be shown at Cologne to this day After the Death of Maximus Valentinian II. was again restor'd to the Empire of the West by Theodosius though he held it not long Eugenius being set up against him by Arbogastes his chief Comes or General and by whom this Young unfortunate Emperor was afterwards strangled at Vienne in Gallia but Eugenius was soon overcome by Theodosius and put to Death as he deserv'd and Arbogastes made himself away upon which Theodosius took the whole Empire to himself both of East and West thô after this we find little mention made of the Affairs of Britain more than that during this Emperour's Reign this Isle having been so lately bereft of its choicest Men by Maximus had for some time lain open to the Incursions of the Picts and Scots who took this opportunity to invade it so that Chrysanthius the Son of Marcian a Novation Bishop is supposed to have been sent over about this time by Theodosius as his Lieutenant to suppress them and governing with great reputation he did very much settle and restore this Island but not long after this Emperour dyed unexpectedly in the prime of his Years leaving the Eastern Empire to his Eldest Son Arcadius and the Western to his Second Son Honorius during whose Minority Stilico was appointed for his Governour a Man of great Reputation having been an intimate Councellour to his Father and after his Death defended Britain and is supposed by some to have sent a Legion over hither under the command of Victorinus to repress the incursions of the Scots and Picts in the beginning of Honor●ius's Reign as appears from Claudian the Poet's Panegyrick upon Stilico's first Consulship where he introduceth Britain thus speaking in his praise Me quoque vicinis pereuntem gentibus inquit Munivit Stilico totam quum Scotus Iernem Movit infesto spumavit remige Tethys Illius effectum curis ne bella timerem Scotica ne Pictum tremerem nec littore toto Prospiscerem dubiis venientem Saxona ventis Me to ill Neighbours long a Prey exposed With safety now hath Stilico inclosed Whil'st the fierce Scots the Irish shoar Alarms And with these Vermin all the Ocean swarms 'T is through his Care no longer Wars I fear The Scots and Picts alike now dreadless are No longer on the Coasts I quivering stand Nor fear a Fleet of Saxons on the Strand From which words totam quum Scotus Iernem movit c. divers of our English Antiquaries have inferr'd that the Scots were not at this time planted in Britain since tota Ierne here mentioned seems too large a place for one single Province viz. Strathern in Scotland which the Scotish writers will have to be understood by the word Ierne nor is that Province or the River that gives name to it called Ierne in any Ancient Author But this is a Controversie which I shall not take upon me to decide being beyond the bounds of our History However this seems much more certain That about this time according to the most Ancient Scotish Historians now extant the Scots returned again into Britain For the Scots says Fordun in his Scotichron now made a strict Alliance with the Picts in order to the recovering their Country since as they relate Maximus had made use of the Picts to drive the Scots out of Britain and had put also Garisons among the Picts to keep them under so that upon this agreement Anno Dom. 403 in the Sixth Year of Arcadius and Honorius Fergus the Son of Erk the Son of Ethodius Brother of that Eugenius who was driven out by Maximus came with his Two Brothers Loarnus and Cenegus in all probability Loarn and Aengus being the names the Irish Annals give to the Brothers of this Fergus bringing great supplies of the Scots from Ireland and Norway whither they had been driven by the Romans and then the Picts to prevent all suspicion of Treachery surrender'd up many of their Forts and strong places to Fergus Who thus became King of that part of Scotland called anciently Albany North-west of the Mountains of Braid-Albain though the same Author confesseth it doth not appear whither he obtained these places by the Sword or by any other right since none of his Predecessours had any power there before but the Picts and Scots being thus united their first work was to drive out the Romans and Britains from their Country and then to Invade the Roman Province which was at that time left destitute of any defence And so by their incursions they either killed the Common People or made them Slaves From which supposed return of Fergus with his Scots Jo. Fordun begins to date the certain Years of their Kings Reigns for before that time he confesses he had not found them any where set down so that it seems he either had not so good Intelligence or else not so good an Invention as Hector Boethius who hath given us the Succession of Forty Five Scotish Kings Reigning in Britain before this Fergus together with the Years of their Reigns and the exact time when they began and this he says he had from the writings of Uteremundus a Spanish Priest who is reported by him to have writ the History of Scotland as also from one Cornelius Hybernicus Authours whom none but himself have seen as I can yet hear of But in a certain old Latin Manuscript cited in Camden's Britannia in Scotland this Action of Fergus is thus related Fergus the Son of Eric was the first of the Seed of Chonare that enter'd upon the Kingdom of Albany from Brun Albin or Drum Albin that is the Ridge of Scotland to the Irish Sea and Inch-Gal and that after him the Kings of the Race of Fergus Reigned in Brun Albin or Brunhere unto Alpinus the Son of Eochal So that according to this Author the Antient Scotish Kingdom of Albany reach'd from the farthest ridge of Mountains called Braid Albain all along those Countries of Argile and Loghquhaber c. now called the Western Highlands And from whence the Genuine Scots still call all Scotland Albin p●rhaps from the Ancient Name of Albion once given to the whole Island But to return to our History from whence we have made too long a digression it must be confessed that the History of this Island is very obscure and uncertain especially in point of time when things were done from the Death of Maximus to the coming in of the Saxons for Gildas and Nennius either being wholly ignorant of the Emperours that Rul'd here from that time to the Reign of Vortigern suppose the Britains to have from that very time cast off all Subjection to the Roman Empire which is
whose Metropolis is Hamburgh so that this Country was the farthest part of Old Saxony Herewith agreeth the Anonymus Geographer of Ravenna writing thus of the Saxons The Saxons came into Britain under their Prince by Name Ansehis i. e. Hengist And then in another place having spoke of the Frisians After them saith he are the Saxons and on the back of them certain Islands then followeth the Country of the Nortmanni which is also called Dania Those Islands Ptolemy calls Insulae Saxonum And therefore it was not Westphalia as Theodorit Engelhus Wernerius Lairius Albert Kanez and others of the Moderns have supposed yet the Archbishop does not deny but that in following Times that Country as well as Frizeland might be also possest by the Posterity of the ancient Saxons but was then rather that which is now the Dutchy of Holstein comprehending Dithmars Stormar and Wagria in breadth from Sleswick to the City of Hamburgh seated in the further part of Old Saxony and in length is extended from the West of the Eastern Sea or from the German Ocean to the Baltick Gulph having Old France next adjoyning to it then lying between the Mouths of the Elb and Rhine for as Ammianus Marcellinus teacheth us the Franks then reached as far as the River Rhine yet so that they had the Saxons next Neighbours to them and Julian in his Oration in Praise of the Emperour Constantius calls both these Nations the most Warlike of all those that inhabit beyond the Rhine and Western Ocean Here give me leave to add what the Learned Dr. Stillingfleet now Lord Bishop of Worcester in his Antiquity of the British Churches has given us on this Subject Chap. 5. where he tells us that Mr. Camden is of another Opinion who in the Introduction to his Britannia saith That the Saxons originally came from the Cimbrick Chersonese in the time of Dioclesian and after passing the Elb they partly went into those Parts of the Suevi which is since called Saxony and partly into Frisia and Batavia from whence he saith All the Inhabitants of the German Shore who used Piracy at Sea were called Saxons by whom he understands the People from Jutland to Holland for which he produces the Testimony of Fabius Ethelwerd's Chronicle one of the Saxon Blood-Royal who saith That the Saxons lived upon the Sea-Coast from the Rhine as far as Denmark But Ammianus Marcellinus makes them in his time to border upon the Parts of Gaul which is much behither the Bounds of Jutland Holstein or Sleswick And the same Author farther says That the Chamavi whom he makes a part of the Saxons had the Command of the Rhine that Jutland made Peace with them because without their leave Corn could not be brought out of Britain as also Eunapius Sardianus saith That the Saxons in Julian's time had the Command of the Rhine Nor was this only a sudden Incursion since in Valentinian's time when Ammianus wrote they still bordered upon Gaul Ubbo Emmius a Learned and German Historian gives this Account of the Saxons and their Neighbouring Nations who inhabited on the North Parts of Germany That the Fristi dwelt from the middle Stream of the Rhine about Utrecht to the River Amasus or Eemas from thence to the Elb lived the Chauci divided into the Greater and Lesser by the Weser a great part of these leaving their Native Soil joyned with the Sicambri on the Rhine who from their affecting Liberty were called Franks beyond the Elb were the Saxons and the Cimbri the Saxons being pressed by the more Northern People or for their own Conveniency came Southwards and took possession first of those Places where the Chauci dwelt and by degrees prevailing over all the other People who joyned with or submitted to the Saxons they were called by their Name and among the rest the Fristi from whose Coasts he supposes the two Brothers Hengist and Horsa to have gone into Britain and returning thither carried over a far greater Number with them not so much to fight as to inhabit there therefore he thinks it most probable that Hengist and Horsa by their descent were originally Saxons but that the greatest part of the People who went over with them were rather Frisians than Saxons which he proves not only from the greater facility of Passage from the Coast of Friseland and the Testimony of their own Annals but from the greater Agreement of the English Language with theirs than with the Saxon or any other German Dialect and also because Bede reckons the Frisians among those from whom the English Saxons are derived and Wilfrid Wickbert and Willibrod all preached to the Frisians in their own Tongue as Marcellinus in his Life of Suidebert relates But this Author saith further That the Affinity of their Language continues still so great that from thence he concludes many more to have gone out of Friseland into Britain than either of the Saxons Jutes or Angles But to all this our Learned Primate answers That Hengist and Horsa might be truly called Frisians there being a Frisia in the Southern Parts of Jutland which Saxo Grammatieus calls the Lesser Frisia and is parted by the Eidore from the Country of the Angli on the East and the Saxons on the South yet even Ubbo Emmius quits the Point upon Bede's Genealogy and grants they were really Saxons as being derived from Woden from whom the Race of Kings of many of those Northern Parts are descended But yet for all this it may probably be that thô these Princes were not Native Frisians themselves yet some of those Nations that followed them and were in a large acceptation called Saxons might come from Friseland and the rest of the Sea-Coast as far as Old Saxony properly so called I omit what other German Authors have said upon this Subject because I would not be tedious but whoever desires farther Satisfaction herein may consult the Reverend Doctor above-mentioned to whom I must own my self beholding for what I have now said concerning the Countries from whence the English Saxons originally came But as for the Original of these Saxons that now came into Britain there is a much greater Dispute Cluverius in his ancient Germany as also our Country-man Verstegan in his Treatise called A Restitution of decayed Intelligence Chap. 2. would needs have them to be derived from the Germans which is denied by the Learned Grotius in his Prolegomena to the Gothic History as also by Mr. Sherringham in his Treatise De Anglorum Gentis Origine where he undertakes to prove that they were a Branch of the ancient Getae who were the Posterity of Japhet and coming out of Scythia into Europe first fixed themselves under the Conduct of one Eric their King in the ancient Scandinavia or Gothland which is now called Sweden and Norway and from thence some Ages after under the Conduct of Berig another of their Kings sent out Colonies into all the Isles of the Baltic Sea and
to prove that Sweden Denmark Nor●ay and Saxony were Peopled from Germany and not vice versa since it is not the part of an Historian to dwell too long on Arguments pro and Con so having given you I hope 〈…〉 for this Opinion I refer you for the more particular Answers to their Objections to Grotius's forecited Prolegomena and to Mr. Sherringham's said Treatise But farther the very Name of Jutes the ancient Inhabitants of Juteland may be used as another Argument to prove their descent from the Getae or Goths since they are called by no Names other in our ancient Saxon Historians then Giotas or Jutes and in King Alfred's Saxon Translation of Bede's History they are called Geatuin i. e. Getes As for the Angles who afterward gave their name to all the rest of the Saxon Nations of this Island they are supposed to be derived from the ancient Cimbri and to have passed by that Name in Julius Caesar's Time or else they might then make a part of the Swevi whom he in his Commentaries calls the most warlike of all the Germans and whom Tacitus and Ptolemy subdivided into divers Nations the latter making them three distinct People viz. the Swevi Langobardi the Swevi Semnones and Swevi Angili whom Tacitus and other Latin Authours call'd Angli and who Saffridus in his Treatise De Origine Frisiorum tells us had as many denominations with the Name of Angli added to them as there were Countries into which they were dispersed and there reckons up a great many and though this Nation was not at first the same with that of the Saxons nor dwelt in the same Inland Country in which they are placed by Ptolemy yet they might according to the ancient custom of the Germans change their seats after Ptolemies Time as Strabo observes they often did and so removing their dwellings from the Banks of the Elbi into Holstein they might be there conquered by the Saxons and after make up one Nation or Common-wealth with them though still retaining their ancient Name as the ancient Britains or Welsh do among us at this day so that I confess it remains a great doubt why they were at first called Angles for thô most Writers think it sufficient to derive their Name from the Latin Word Angulus a corner because forsooth they lived in a corner of Germany yet this seems very forced since Tacitus and Ptolemy mention them by that Name as then well known and given them a long time before they came to be so called by the Romans so that I still believe that this Name may be derived from some Gothic Original though what it was is now hard to determine As for the name of Saxons in general there is a great dispute about it amongst learned Men Goropius Becanus and Mr. Camden from him suppose them to have been first called Sacaesons i. e. the Sons or Posterity of the Sacae from whom he imagins them to be derived but this Etymology is proved by Mr. Sherringham in his said Discertation not only to be forced but also false in matter of Fact for first the name of these People was never written or pronounced Sacasons in the Plural but Sacen or Saxons nor can we find in Strabo Ptolemy or any other ancient Authour that ever the Sacae sent any Colonies out of Asia where they were planted near the Caspian Sea not far from Bactria but Strabo tells us to the contrary that this whole Nation being set upon by the Persians at unawares were totally destroyed Isidore hath found out another derivation of this Name from the Latin Word Saxum a Stone or Rock because they were a strong and hardy Race of Men excelling all others in piracy which were not improper if this Name could be proved to have been first given them by the Romans whereas this Nation was so called by their Neighbours thô not by themselves many Ages before the 〈◊〉 had any knowledge of them so that the most likely Etymology of this Name seems to be that which Verstegan hath given us in his said Treatise from the Opinion of the learned Lipsius that it was first given them by their Neighbours from their wearing a sort of long Daggers or short crooked Swords like Cymeters called in their Tongue Saexen and whence from their particular use of it they were called Saxons and in the Dutch Welsh and Irish Tongues the English are called Sacen to this day and from whence probably the Arms of Saxony are two such crooked Daggers placed Saltire-wise as Pontanus hath very well observed But whencesoever this name is derived it is certain they are first mentioned by Ptolemy by the Name of Saxons and he places them at the back of the Cimbrians thô they were not commonly known to the Romans by this Name till the Fourth Century after Christ when they grew terrible by reason of their many Piracies Ammianus Marcellinus and Claudian the Poet whose Verses concerning them I have given you in the former Book being the first Roman Authours who make mention of them and the latter says that the Saxons are formidable above all other Enemies After him Orosius says The Saxons were terrible by reason of their Valour but in the Time of the Emperour Theodosius I. they were grown so formidable that there were Ships and Watch-houses appointed on purpose in the Coast of Britain to hinder their depredations and the Commander over them was called Comes littoris Saxonici in which times they became more known to the Romans As for the ancient Saxons Religion it is likewise another great argument of their Gothic Original since the Danes Swedes and Norweigans who all derive themselves from the Goths worship'd the same Gods in Common with the Saxons viz. Thor the God of Thunder who answer'd the Roman Jupiter though he was not the same Woden who was their God of War together with his Wife Friga or Frea who was their Goddess of Love and Pleasure So that whoever will but consider their Names of the Days of the Week from which ours are derived at this Day will easily perceive the chief Gods they worship'd and from whom those Names are deriv'd to have been all the same only I desire the Reader to take notice That whereas Verstegan to prove the Saxons to come from the Germans would make our Tuesday to be derived from Twisto the God of the Germans Mr. Sherringham proves that Opinion not to be at all likely since the Germans whose peculiar God this Twisto is supposed to be do not call it Twesday but Dinsday or Zinstag and the Swedes and Danes Trisdag and Drisdag and therefore Angrimus Jonas in his History of Iseland rather derives it from Tyr the Son of Woden from whom the Islanders call it to this day Tysdag or Tyrsdag in their Language but Ol. Wormus in his learned Work De monumentis Danicis would rather derive this Name from a Gothic Goddess called Dysa or Thisa
fought near the Mouth of the River which is called Glein or Gleni which is supposed by some to have been in Devonshire but by others and that more likely to have been Glein in Lincolnshire the Second Third Fourth and Fifth Battels were near another River called Dugl●s which is in the Country of Linvis or Linnis by some supposed to be the River Dug or Due in Linc●lnshire but others place it in Lancashire where there is a River called Dugles near Wigan the Sixth Battel was by a River called Bassas which is supposed to run by Boston in Lincoln-shire the Eighth Battel was near the Castle of Gunion or Guinion in which Arthur carried the Picture of Christ's Cross and of the Virgin Mary upon his back or as Mat. Westminster has it painted on his Target and the Pagans were that day put to flight and many of them slain so that they received a very great overthrow the Ninth Battel was fought near the City of Legions that is in the British Tongue Kaer-Leon now Chester the Tenth was near a River called Ribroit or Arderic the Eleventh was upon the Mountain which is called Ag●ed Cath Reginian which is some place in Somerset-shire but by Humphrey Lloyd it is supposed to have been Edinburgh H. Huntington confesses these places to be unknown in his time and therefore can be only guessed at in ours As for the Twelfth Battel since the certain time of it is fixed we shall speak of that by and by but the learned Dr. Gale to whom we are beholding for this last Edition of Gildas and Nennius printed at Oxon as also for the various readings and Notes at the end of him supposes that all the Battels here reckoned up were performed in the space of Forty Years aforegoing and althô they may be here attributed to King Arthur yet might be fought under Vortigern Ambrosius and others but that some of these Battles were really fought by King Arthur against the Saxons is acknowledged by all our English Writers and Ranulph Higden in his Polychronicon expresly relates that it is found in some ancient Chronicles that K. Cerdic fighting often with Arthur thô he were overcome yet still came on again more fiercely until Arthur being quite wearied out after the Six and Twentieth Year of Cerdic's coming over gave him up Hampshire and Somersetshire which Countries he then called West-Sexe And Thomas Rudburne in his greater Chronicle about this time we now treat of relates That Cerdic fought oftentimes with King Arthur who being at last weary of War made a League with Cerdic who thereupon granted to the Cornish-men to enjoy the Christian Religion under a Yearly Tribute which is likely enough to be true supposing as we have already said that he was only King of Cornwal and which shews this Prince not to have been such a mighty Monarch as Geoffery of Monmouth would make him Which is likewise confessed by the Welsh Historian Caradoc of Lancarvan in his Life of Gildas where he relates That Glastenbury was in Gildas his time besieged by King Arthur with a great Army out of Cornwal and Devonshire because Queen Gueniver his Wife had been ravish'd from him by Melvas who then Reigned in Somersetshire and that she was there kept by him because of the Strength of that Place whereupon King Arthur raising a great Army out of Cornwal and Devonshire marched to take the Town when the Abbot of Glastenbury accompanied with Gildas went between the two Armies and perswaded Melvas his King to restore the ravish'd Wife which being done both Kings were reconciled Which plainly shews this Arthur to have been but of small Power as well as Reputation who could thus tamely swallow such an Affront But to return to the Saxon Annals which relate That Stufe and Withgar Nephews to King Cerdic arrived in Britain with three Ships at the Port called Cerdics-Ora and fighting against the Britains put them to flight H. Huntington makes a long Description of this Battel which since it is not much to the purpose I omit only he tells us That the British Army was drawn up on a Hill side as also in the Valley which at first put the Saxons in much fear till recovering themselves they put them all to the Rout. Under this Year also Ranulph Higden in Polychron places the Death of Aesc the Son of Hengist to whom succeeded Otta his Son who Reigned 22 Years without any thing related of him either in the Saxon Annals or any other History About this time also thô without assigning the Year the same Author places the Death of Aella King of the South-Saxons who had all the Kings and chief Men in Britain under his Command to whom succeeded his Son Cyssa but in a short time his Posterity whose Names are no where mentioned grew weaker and weaker till they became subject to other Kings This Year Cerdic and Cynric took upon them the Title of Kings of the West-Saxons and the same Year fought against the Britains at a place called Cerdice's-Ford now Charford in Hampshire from which time the Royal Race of the Saxon Kings have reigned there and the same Year the Emperour Justin the Elder began to reign It seems King Cerdic was hitherto very modest for tho he had now been a Conquerour for 24 Years yet did he never take upon him the Title of King till now when he had gained a very large Territory and his Affairs were well established by this great Victory at Cerdice's-Ford but the Time when this Kingdom began is the more observable because at last it conquered all the other six Saxon Kingdoms and so obtained the sole Command of all England so that says H. Huntingdon the Times of all other Kingdoms being applied to these Kings may be by them the better distinguished In this Year as all the best British Manuscripts as well as printed Chronicles relate was fought the great Battel of Badon-Hill which is supposed to be the same with Banesdown near Bathe where the British Writers suppose King Arthur to have Commanded in Person thô divers of our Authors make him to have been only General to Aurelius Ambrosius which is not at all likely since according to the best British Accounts Aurelius died above 20 Years before this Battel This Nennius makes to be the twelfth Battel he had fought with the Saxons yet since Mr. Milton as well as others have been pleased to question whether there was ever any such King who Reigned in Britain it were not amiss if we did a little clear and establish that Point before we proceed any further since so great and remarkable a part of the History of the British Kings depends upon it The Objections that are made against Arthur's being a King in Britain are these First That Gildas makes no mention of him Secondly That he is not so much as mentioned by any ancient British Historian except Nennius who lived near 300 Years after and whom all
i●tent upon all Occasions not to feed the Flock but to pamper and well line thems●lves making use of their Churches only for Lucre's sake teaching the People sound Doctrine but they themselves shewing evil Example rarely Officiating at the Altar and then scarce ever standing there with pure Hearts not correcting the People for their Sins as guilty of the same themselves despising the Precepts of Christ and fulfilling their own Lusts usurping the Chair of Peter but through the blindness of their own worldly Lusts stumbling upon the Seat of Judas deadly haters of Truth and lovers of Lies looking upon the poor Christians with Eyes of Pride and Contempt but fawning upon the wickedest rich Men without Shame great Promoters of other Men's Alms with set Exhortations but themselves ever contributing least concealing or slightly touching the reigning Sins of the Age but highly aggravating their own Injuries as done to Christ himself seeking Preferments and D●grees in the Church more than Heaven and having so gained them make it more their study how to keep than to illustrate them by their good Examples dull and stupid to the Reproofs of holy Men if ever they hear them at all but shew themselves very attentive to the trivial Discourses of the Laity ready to act any unlawful Things carrying their heads a loft but having their affections nothwithstanding the checks of their own Consciences as low as Hell sad at the loss of a penny but joyed if they can get one in Apostolical Censures either through their own Ignorance or the greatness of the Sins Dull and Mute but very skillful in the cheating Tricks of Worldly business from which wicked sort of Conversation many run into Priests Orders which they buy for Money taking the Priesthood without observing its Rules and Institution or knowing what belongs to matters of Faith or Manners And then proceeding in a tedious invective against Simony he at last thus addresses himself to the Laity What can ye expect O unhappy People from these Beasts all Bellies Shall these amend thee who as the Prophet says weary themselves in commiting Iniquity Shalt thou s●e with their Eyes which regard only those ways that lead to Hell leave them rather as bids our Saviour least ye fall both blindfold into the same Perdition But are all thus Perhaps not all or not so grosly But what did it avail Eli to be himself blameless whil'st he connived at his Sons that were wicked Who of these hath been envied for his better Life Who of them have hated to cons●rt with such or withstood their entring into the Ministry or zealously endeavoured their casting out This is the Sense of what he there says it being not only tedious but impossible to Translate Verbatim so barbarous and obscure a Writer thô otherwise he seems to have been a Man of great Wit and ardent Piety above what that Age would admit of But hence we may learn what the State of the Government and Religion among the Britains was in that long Calm of Peace which the Victory at Badon Hill had produced Also at the end of his History he gives a farther account of the sad state of Affairs and great corruption of Manners in those Times And complains That the Cities of his Country were not then inhabited as before but lay ruined and deserted for though Foreign Wars were ceased for a time yet so were not the Civil so that there did still remain upon the face of the Island evident marks of so miserable a destruction but that also as long as the memory of that unlooked for assistance lasted their Kings as well as their Bishops and Priests did pretty well observe due Orders but those deceasing as the next Generation succeeded which had not seen the former Calamities and were only sensible of the present Prosperity all the Principles of Truth and Justice were totally shaken and subverted So that scarce any footsteps remained of them in all the Orders and Degrees of Men above mentioned except some and those but few very few in respect of those who go to Hell so that although they are the only true Sons of our Mother the Church yet by reason of the smallness of their number she can scarce take any notice of them albeit they lye in her very Bosome This much may suffice to give an account as well of this Epistle of Gildas as of his History which Caradoc of Lancarvon in his Legendary Life of this Author supposes to have been writ whil'st he lived at Glastenbury But these passages I thought good to Transcribe from him as not unuseful to be inserted in these Annals not out of any desire to rip up or expose the faults of the ancient British Clergy or Nation much less to insult over their Calamities but rather to serve as a warning to us who live in this loose and corrupt Age that we may avoid the like Sins lest we provoke God to send the like Judgments upon us But to return to the Saxon Chronicle This Year began the Northumbrian Kingdom or in the Words of our Annals Ida began to Reign from whom is derived the Royal Family of the Northumbrian Kings the Saxon Annals here give us a long pedegree of this Ida who reigned Twelve Years and built Bebbanburgh now Bamborough Castle in Northumberland which was at first encompassed only with a Trench and afterwards with a Wall H. Huntington says This Prince was always in War and Will of Malmesbury and Mat. Westminster make him to have had Twelve Sons partly by Wives and partly by Concubines And the latter also tells us that he together with his Sons came into Britain and landed at Plensburgh with Forty Ships But though Ida was the first that took upon him the Title of King yet there were Princes of the Saxons in that Country many Years before for the same Authors tell us That Hengist had long before sent his Brother Ottha and his Son Ebusa Men of great Experience in War to Conquer the North Parts of Britain who pursuing his directions met with a success answerable to their endeavours for fighting often times with the Natives of the Country and conquering all those who indeavoured to resist them they received the rest into their Protection and so enjoyed the fruits of Peace But though they had by their own industry as well as the consent of their Subjects gained some Power in those Parts yet did they never till now take upon them the Title of Kings the same moderation descending also to their Posterity So that for near an Hundred Years the Princes Earls or Dukes of Northumberland lived like Vassals under the Protection of the Kings of Kent But this Nation being naturally haughty in the Year above recited that is Sixty Years after the Death of Hengist this Principality was changed into a Kingdom Ida first reigning there who without doubt was a very gallant Man being then in the prime of his Youth but whether he
Lindisfarn where he was with his Clergy and there he was Abbot with his Monks who all belong to the Care of the Bishop where he was also succeeded by divers other Bishops till that Church being destroyed by the Danes the Bishop's See was removed to Durham I need say no more upon this Subject but shall refer the Reader to the said Learned Bishop's Dissertation to prove that no other Church-Government but Episcopal was ever setled amongst the Scots Picts or Saxons upon their Conversion to Christianity But that we may return again to our Saxon Annals Adda King of Bernicia dying this Year as Florence of Worcester and M●tthew of Westminster relate one Glappa reigned in his stead two Years but who he was or how descended these Authors do not tell us The same Year died Maelgwn Guineth King of the Britains after five Years Reign over all that part of Britain that was left them This is according to the account of that Learned Antiquary Mr. Robert Vaughan thô Mat. of Westminster Dr. Powell and Sir John Price make him to have began his Reign long after viz. the former of these in 581 and the latter in 590 both which Opinions the said Mr. Vaughan Learnedly confutes in a Manuscript I have now in my possession but who succeeded Maelgwn Guineth as King of all the Britains since the Welsh Annals are silent I shall be so too for as to those Successors which Geoffery hath given him I have already said sufficient to destroy his Credit in this matter and Will of Newberie's Censure of him is not less sharp than true That concerning the Successors of Arthur he does not lie with less Impudence when he gives them the Monarchy of all Britain even to the 7th Generation The next year Ceawlin and Cutha his Brother beginning a Civil War fought with King Ethelbert and drove him back into Kent and killed two of his Commanders Oslac and Cnebba at Wibbendon now Wimbledon in Surrey This King Ethelbert as Will. of Malmesbury observes was in the beginning of his Reign a Scorn to the Neighbouring Princes for being beaten in one or two Battels he could scarce defend his own Territories But when in his riper Years he learned more Experience in War in a short time he brought under his Subjection all the Nations of the English-Saxons except the Northumbrians and that he might also gain the Friendship of Foreigners he became allied to the King of the Franks by the Marriage of Bertha his Daughter But of this King we hear no more for many years till his Conversion to the Christian Faith Glappa King of Bernicia dying Theodwulf succeeded him for one year But then he also deceasing Fr●othwulf reigned after him for seven or eight years more We are beholding for the Succession of these two Kings to Florence of Worcester and Rog. Hoveden being omitted by all other Authors they are also more exact in distinguishing this Kingdom from that of Deira most of the rest confounding them together Cuthwulf the Brother of Ceawlin as it is in H. Huntington fought against the Britains at Bedicanford now Bedford and took four Towns viz. Lugeanburh now Loughborough in Leicestershire or else Leighton in Bedfordshire and Eglesburh now Ailesbury in Bucks with Bennington and Egonesham now called Bensington and Enisham in Oxfordshire About this time as is supposed for the Year is not set down in the Saxon Annals nor any other Historian began the Kingdom of the East-Angles under Vffa the Eighth from Woden tho it seems there were before him divers other petty Saxon Princes who had invaded and fixed themselves in the Countries we now call Norfolk and Suffolk for in one Copy of Matth. of Westminster which Mr. Twine had seen tho it be not found in our printed ones he saith That Anno 527. the Pagans came out of Germany and took possession of the Countrey of the East-Angles and tormented the Christians with all sorts of Cruelty but it seems this Vffa in Strength and Policy overpowering the rest of those Petty Princes got himself made sole King and governed with that Glory that H. Huntingdon tells us the Kings descended from him were called Vffings though how long he reigned is uncertain only that dying he left the Crown to Titul or Titillus his Son of whom likewise nothing is recorded and therefore Will. of Malmesbury takes no notice of these two Princes The first he speaks of is Redwald the Tenth from Woden whom he calls the greatest King of the East-Angles but since his Reign began after this Period I shall reserve the speaking further of him to the next Book To return to the Saxon Annals This year Ceawlin and Cuthwin his Son fought with and slew three British Kings viz. Commail Candidan and Farinmaile at a place which is called Deorham now Durham in Gloucestershire and then took three Cities Glewancester now Glocester Cirencester and Bathoncester now Bathe Who these three Kings were is very doubtful some suppose the first and second of them to be Cuniglasus and Aurelius Conan both mentioned by Gildas but for the third I cannot tell what to make of him there being no such King mentioned in any of the old British Chronicles so all that we can guess is that he was some Petty Prince whose Name is wholly omitted in the Welsh Annals or else mistaken in ours From the time of this Battel the Britains or Welshmen as the English call them being driven into that rough and mountainous Countrey we now call Wales lying beyond the Rivers of Dee and Severn made fewer Invasions into what we call England This year as the Welsh Chronicle called Triades relates being an Ancient Manuscript written near 1000 years ago the Battel of Arderydd was fought on the Borders of Scotland between Aeddan Vradog i. e. the Treacherous and Guendelew Son of Keidiaw British Princes of the North Parts of Britain on the one side and Reiderch-hoel i. e. the Liberal a British King of Cumberland on the other side and that upon a very slight occasion a Lark's-Nest and two Dogs In which Battel Guendelew was slain though his men fought and skirmish'd with the other Britains for Six Weeks to revenge his Death After which Fight Aedan being there overcome fled into the Isle of Man The like Story is related by Hector Boethius concerning the Battel between Aedan King of the Scots and the Picts upon the like occasion so that either the Scots borrowed it from the British History or else this had it from them though the former be the most likely But how this can agree with our Saxon Annals who make Adda King of Bernicia to have died Ten Years before I know not one of them must certainly be mistaken since there was but one King of Northumberland who was called Adda This year or the next King Freothwulf dying Theodoric the Son of Ida according to Florence of Worcester and Matth. Westminster
Gift do confirm it with Christ's Cross before the Arch-Bishop Deus Dedit Then follow the Subscriptions of the Kings and others of the Blood Royal viz. Oswi King of Northumberland King Sygar King Sibbi Ethelred the King's Brother together with his Sisters above named as also of Deus Dedit Arch-Bishop of Canterbury after whom follow the Subscriptions of the rest of the Bishops together with some Presbyters and Saxulf the Abbot as also of divers Eoldermen or Governours of Countries who with divers others of the King 's great Men did likewise confirm it This Charter was made in the Year after our Lord's Nativity 664 being the Seventh Year of King Wulfer's Reign they did then also denounce the Curse of God and all his Saints against all that should violate any thing that was there done to which they all answered Amen As soon as this was over the King sent to Rome to Pope Vitalian desiring him to confirm all that he had granted by his Letters or Bull which the Pope immediately performed being to the same effect with the King's Charter already mentioned in this manner was the Monastery of Medeshamsted Founded which was afterwards called Burgh now Peterburgh But to return again to Civil Affairs having dwelt I doubt too long upon Ecclesiastical This Year Kenwalk King of the West-Saxons fought against the Welsh at a place called Peonnum and pursued them as far as Pedridan Of which Fight H. Huntington gives us this further Account That at the first Onset the Britains were too hard for the English but they abhoring flight as bad as Death it self persisted in fighting with them till the Britains growing tired and disheartened fled and were pursued as hath been already said so that they received a very great blow This Year according to Florence of Worcester Hilda the Abbess Founded a Monastery at a place called Streanshale wherein she lived and dyed Abbess The same Year also according to the same Author Inumin Eaba and Eadbert Eoldermen of Mercia rebelled against King Oswi and proclaimed for their King Wulfer the Son of Penda whom they had hitherto kept concealed Also Aedelbert or Ag●●bert the Bishop left King Cenwalch and took the Bishoprick of Paris and Wina held the Bishoprick of Winchester of both which Bede hath already given us a particular account The same Year also according to Florence of Worcester Cuthred the Son of Cuichelm a Cousin to King Cenwalch as also Kenbryht the Eolderman great Grandson to King Ceawlin and Father of King Cadwalla dyed This Year according to the Saxon Annals King Cenwalch fought about the time of Easter with King Wulfher at Posentesbyrig supposed to be Pontesbury in Shropshire and Wulfher the Son of Penda wasted the Country as far as Aescesdune now Aston near Wallingford and Cuthred the Son of Culthelm as also King Kenbryht dyed The same Year according to Bede Wulfher took the Isle of Wight with the Country of the Meanvari and gave them to Athelwald King of the South Saxons because he had been that King's Godfather at his Baptism and Eoppa the Priest at the Command of Bishop Wilfrid and King Wulfher first of all offered Baptism to the Inhabitants of that Island whether they accepted it or not is very uncertain But I cannot but here observe the uncertainty of the History of these Times for Ethelwerd in his Chronicle under this Year and at this very place above mentioned relates that Cenwalk had the Victory and carried away Wulfher Prisoner These Meanvari here mentioned by Bede are supposed by Mr. Camden in his Britannia to have been the People of that part of Hampshire lying over against the Isle of Wight This Year also Sigebert King of the East-Saxons thô standing firm in the Christian Faith was as Bede tells us wickedly Murder'd by the Conspiracy of two Brethren in places near about him who being asked what moved them to do so wicked a Deeed gave no other than this Barbarous Answer That they were angry with him for being so gentle to his Enemies as to forgive them their Injuries when ever they besought him But the occasion of his death is much more remarkable for one of those Earls who slew him living in unlawful Wedlock stood thereof excommunicated by the Bishop so that no man might presume to enter into his House much less to Eat with him the King not regarding this Church-Censure went to a Feast at his House upon an Invitation whom the Bishop meeting in his return thô penitent for what he had done and fallen at his Feet yet gently touched with the Rod in his Hand and being provoked thus foretold Because thou hast neglected to abstain from the House of this Excommunicate in that House thou shalt dye and so it fell out not long after perhaps from that Prediction God then bearing witness to his Minister in the due power of Church Discipline when Spiritually executed on the Contemner thereof Yet Bede is so Charitable as to believe that the unfortunate Death of this Religious Prince did not only attone for his fault but might also increase his merit To Sigebert Swidhelm the Son of Sexbald succeeded in that Kingdom who was Baptized by Bishop Cedda in the Province of the East-Angles in the Royal Village called Rendlesham Edelwald King of that Country who was the Brother of King Anna being his Godfather The Sun was now eclipsed V o Non Maij and Ercenbryht King of Kent departed this Life and Ecgbryht his Son succeeded him in that Kingdom As for King Ercombert Will. Malmesbury gives him a very good Character being famous for his Religion to God and his Love to his Country but he had no Right to the Crown save only by Election having an Elder Brother called Ermenred who was alive at the beginning of his Reign and left two Sons behind him Coleman also with his Companions then departed to his own Nation the same Year there was a great Plague over all the Isle of Britain in which perished Tuda the Bishop and was buried at Wagele which Bede calls Pegnaleth also Ceadda and Wilverth were now Consecrated Bishops and the same Year too the Archbishop Deus Dedit dyed after whom the See remained void for Four Years But of the occasion of this departure of Coleman Bede hath given us a long and particular account viz. That a Synod being called at Strean-shall now Whitby in York-shire by the procurement of Hilda the Abbess of that place thô by the Authority of King Oswi who was there present concerning the old Difference about the observation of Easter Wilfred the Abbot and Romanus a Priest were very earnest for the observation of it according to the Order of the Church of Rome and Coleman Bishop of Lindisfarne was as zealous on the other side but after many Arguments pro and con which you may find at large in Bede the Synod at last determining in favour of the Romish Easter it so far displeased
Coleman that he was resolved to quit his Bishoprick and depart into Scotland to the Isle of Hye from whence he cam● rather than to comply with it from whence he also departed into Ireland here called Scotland where he built a Monastery in that Country and lived all the rest of his days and in which only English Men were admitted at the time when Bede wrote his History But after the departure of Coleman one Tuda who had been ordained Bishop among the Southern Scots was made Bishop of Lindisfarne but he enjoyed that Bishoprick but a very little while But after the Death of Bishop Tuda according to the Life of Bishop Wilfrid King Oswi held a great Council with the Wise Men of his Nation whom they should chuse in the vacant See as most fit for that holy Function when they all with one Consent nominated and chose Abbot Wilfrid as the fittest and worthiest Person to succeed him but being to be Consecrated he refused it from any Bishop at home because he look'd upon them all as Uncanonical being all ordained by Scotish Bishops who differed from the Roman Church about this Point of keeping Easter so that he would needs go over into France for Ordination where staying too long the King put Ceadda who had lately come out of Ireland into his Place which Wilfred upon his return much resenting retired to his Monastery at Ripon and there resided as also sometimes with Wulfher King of Mercia or else with Ecghert King of Kent till he was restored to his See Bede tells us that the above-mentioned Eclipse was followed by a sudden Pestilence the same Year which first depopulating the Southern Parts of Britain then proceeded to the Northern wherein Bishop Tuda deceased it also invaded Ireland and there took off many Religious as well as Secular Persons The same Year also according to Florence Ercombert King of Kent dying left that Kingdom to Egbert his Son Also Ethelwald King of the East Angles dying this Year Aldulf succeeded him About this time according to Bede Siger and Sebba succeeding Swidhelm in the Kingdom of the East Saxons being unsteady in the Faith and supposing the late great Pestilence to have fell upon them for renouncing their old Superstition relapsed again to Idolatry and rebuilt the Idol-Temples hoping by that means to be defended from the present Mortality but as soon as Wulfher King of the Mercians to whom this Kingdom was then subject heard of it he sent Bishop Jaruman to them who together with their Fellow-Labourers by their sound Doctrine and gentle Dealing soon reclaimed them from their Apostacy This Mortality is also partly confirmed by Mat. Westminster who the next Year relates so great a Mortality to have raged in England that many Men going in Troops to the Sea-side cast themselves in headlong preferring a speedy Death before the Torments of a long and painful Sickness thô this seems to be no other than the great Pestilence which raged the Year before unless we suppose it to have lasted for 2 Years successively The same Year also according to the Account of an ancient British Chronicle lately in the Possession of Mr. Robert Vaughan Cadwallader last King of the Britains having been forced by a great Famine and Mortality to quit his Native Country and to sojourn with Alan King of Armorica finding no hopes of ever recovering his Kingdom from thence went to Rome where professing himself a Monk he died about 8 Years after Now thô the British History of Caradoc Translated by Humphrey Lloyd and Published by Dr. Powel places Cadwallader's going to Rome Anno 680 which Mr. Vaughan in the Manuscript I have by me and which is already cited in the former Book proves can neither agree with the Account of the said old Chronicle nor yet with the Time of the great Mortality above-mentioned for Caradoc and Geoffery of Monmouth do both place Cadwallader's going to Rome in the Year of the great Pestilence which as Bede and Mat. Westminster testifie fell out in the Year 664 or 665 and therefore that learned Antiquary very well observes That as for their Calculation who prolong Cadwallader's Life to the Year 688 or 689 and place his going to Rome in Pope Sergius's time he thinks they had no better Warrant for it than their mistaking Ceadwalla King of the West Saxons who then indeed went to Rome and there died for this Cadwallader who lived near 20 Years before whereby they have confounded this History and brought it into a great deal of uncertainty whereas that ancient Appendix annex'd to the Manuscript Nennius in the Cottonian Library whose Author lived above 300 Years before either Geoffery or Caradoc doth clearly shew that this Monastery above-mentioned and consequently Cadwallader's going to Rome happened in the Reign of Oswi King of Northumberland who according to the Saxon Annals began to Reign Anno 642 and died Anno 670 and therefore no other Mortality ought to be assigned for Cadwallader's going to Rome than this in King Oswi's Reign Anno 665 for the Words of the said old Author are these Oswi the Son of Ethelfred reigned 28 Years and 6 Months and whilst he reigned there happened a great Mortality of Men Catwalater so he spells it then reigning over the Britains after his Father and therein perished Now the Case is clear if these Words in the Latin Et in ea periit have relation to Cadwallader as most likely they have considering Oswi lived 5 Years after the Year 665 wherein this Mortality raged then Cadwallader never went to Rome at all but died of this Plague but of this I dare not positively determine since the greater part of the Welsh Chronicles are so positive in Cadwallader's dying at Rome But to return to our Annals This Year Oswi King of Northumberland and Ecgbrith King of Kent with the Consent of the whole English Church as Bede relates sent Wigheard the Presbyter to Rome to be there made Arch-Bishop of Canterbury but he died almost as soon as he arrived So that Theodorus being the next Year consecrated Arch-Bishop was sent into Britain Of which Transaction Bede gives us this particular Account About this time also as Bede relates Wina Bishop of Winchester being driven from his See by King Kenwalch went and bought the See of London of King Wulfher This is the first Example of Simony in the English Church The See of Canterbury had been now vacant for above 3 Years for the Pope was resolved himself to Ordain an Arch-Bishop and at last at the Recommendation of one Adrian a Greek Monk who might have been Arch-Bishop himself but refused it the Pope chose this Theodorus then a Monk and a Native of Tharsus in Cilicia who being an excellent Scholar brought the knowledge of the Greek Tongue as also Arithmetick Musick and Astronomy in use among the English Saxons This Arch-Bishop immediately upon his coming into England made a thorough Visitation of
Abbess deceased at Streanshale now Whitby in York-shire which she her self had Founded she was Grand Niece to King Edwin and having been converted by Paulinus had been almost ever since her Conversion a professed Nun first in the Monastery of Cale in France and was afterwards Abbess of divers Nunneries in England being esteemed a Lady of great Sanctity and Knowledge At this Monastery of Strean-shale which was then for Men as well as Women lived Caedmon the English Saxon Poet who is supposed by Bede to have been once Divinely inspired in his sleep to make Verses in his own Tongue upon the Creation of the World and ever after kept that faculty upon other Divine Subjects there are divers of his Paraphrases in Saxon Verse still extant upon several Stories in Genesis and Exodus but very hard to be understood by reason of the Obsoleteness of the Saxon Dialect They have been Printed at Oxford by the Learned Junius About this time also according to Florence the Kingdom of the Mercians became divided into five Diocesses and Tulfride a learned Monk of the Abbess Hilda's Monastery was elected first Bishop of Worcester but dyed before his Ordination But the ancient Chronicle of the Church of Worcester now in the Cottonian Library relates the Church of Worcester to have been first founded by Athe●red King of the Mercians and Theodore Bishop of Canterbury one Bosel being made the first Bishop of that See and sate therein Eleven Years There was then also founded a Colledge of secular Canons which so continued as the Chapter of this Church till Anno Dom. 991 when Bishop Oswald turned them out and put in Benedictine Monks in their Rooms About the same time also one Oswald Nephew to King Ethelred founded a College for Secular Canons at Pershore in Worcestershire which continued till King Edgar and Bishop Oswald Anno 984. brought in Benedictine Monks in their Places I may also add under this Year that pretended Bull of Pope Agatho's Privileges together with the Charter of this K. Ethelred which is reci●●d in the Peterb●rgh Copy of the Saxon Annals under Anno. 675 and is there related to have been about the same time confirmed in the Council at Heathfield above-mentioned whereby were gr●nted to the Monastery of M●desha●is●e ad divers gre●t Imm●nities which Bull does not only confirm a●d those Privileges formerly granted by Pope Vitalian but there is also further added this that the Abbot should be the Pope's Legat over the whole Isle of Britain and that whatsoever Abbot was elected by the Monks should be immediately consecrated by the Archbishop of C●nterbury with divers other Things too tedious here to relate Which 〈◊〉 being recited in the Council above-mentioned was by th●m est●blished and confirmed which being done the King is said to have made a Speech reciting all the Lands he had given to the said Monastery and then having subscribed the Charter the Queen Adrian the Pope's Legat and all the Bishops and Abbots whose Names are there mentioned did so likewise under dr●●dful Curses upon those that should violate the Privileges above-mentioned But notwithstanding the so exact Recital and supposed Confirmation of this Charter in the Council above-mentioned we have very great Reason to suspect this Bull as also the Charter it self to have been forged long after by the Monks of Peterburgh for in the first place the Privileges granted to this Abbey do not only exceed any that had been granted by the Pope to any Monastery in England but also were such as we do not find it ever enjoy'd as particularly that of their Abbot's being the Pope's ordinary Legate all over this Island which had been such a Diminution of the Rights of the Archbishop of Canterbury as he would nover have so easily pa●s'd over And besides all which the Names of the Bishops who are put to this Charter do not at all agree with the Circumstances of Time for first it is certain that Wilfred is here styled Archbishop of York which Title he never took upon him being then no more but a Bishop under the Jurisdiction of Archbishop Theodore and by whom he at this Time stood deprived and was not present at this Council nor did return this Year from Rome as this Copy of the Annals makes him to have done but was indeed returned from thence near three Years before being at this Time converting the South-Saxons ●s hath been already related Neither was Putta Bishop of Rochester or Waldhere Bishop of London at the time when this Council was held though their Names are also put to this Charter for the former had been dead eleven Years before and one Quiehelme was then Bishop of that See as appears by the Catalogue of the Bishops in Sir H. Spelman's Fas●● at the end of the Volume of English Writers after Bede nor was the latter then Bishop of London but Erkenwald who was elected to that See above fifteen Years before and continued in it 'till after the Reign of King Ina who began not to reign 'till Anno 688 so that upon the whole matter I take this Charter to be a notorious piece of Forgery This Year Trumbrith was consecrated Bishop of Hagulstad and Trumwin Bishop of the Picts This was the Bishoprick of Wyterne called in Latin Candida Casa which at that time as Bede testifies belonged to the Kingdom of Northumberland and also Centwin King of the West-Saxons put the Britains to flight as far as the Sea H. Huntington says That he also wasted all their Country with Fire and Sword but the Welsh Chronicle of Caradoc translated by H. Lloyd relates That this Year Kentwin King of the West-Saxons gathered a great Company of his Nation together and came against the Britains who seem'd ready to receive the Battle but yet when both Armies appeared in sight of each other they were not all desirous to fight for they fell to a friendly composition and agreement viz. That Ivor should take Ethelburga to Wife who was Cousin to K●ntwin and quietly enjoy all that he had got during the Reign of Ivor but of this our English Histories are silent This Year the Nunnery of St. Peter in Glocester was founded by Osri● then a petty Prince or Governour under Ethelred King of the Mercians but was afterwards King of the Northumbers This Monastery thô it had the honour of having Three Queens successively Abbesses of it was destroyed by the Danes but afterwards was re-edified for Benedictine Monks by Aldred Bishop of Worcester Anno 1058. This Year also according to Bede Egfrid King of Northumberland sent a great Army into Ireland under one Bert or Bryt his General who miserably wasted that innocent Nation which had been always friendly to the English which Character perhaps might have been due to them in Bede's time and did not so much as spare the Churches or Monasteries but the Islanders as far as they were able repel'd Force with Force and invoked the Divine
time resigned his Kingdom was become a Monk and so used his Interest with King Cenered whom he had appointed King in his stead that he promised to obey the Pope's Decrees not long after which the Bishop likewise sent an Abbot with a Priest to King Alfred desiring his leave to return home and to deliver him the Pope's Letters and the Decrees which had been made on his behalf which Messengers thô the King civily received yet he plainly told them That he would do them any other Favour but that it was in vain to trouble him any further in this matter because whatever the Kings his Predecessours together with his Councellours as also the late Arch-Bishop Theodore had already judged and what he himself together with the present Arch-Bishop and all the Bishops of the British Nation had lately Decreed That he was resolved never to alter for any Letters sent as they said from the Apostolick See so the Messengers returning without any success the Bishop continued where he was for some Years but the King it seems repented at last of this harsh Resolution and would have altered it as you will hereafter find I have been the more exact in this transaction of Bishop Wilfrid's because it has never been as yet published in English before and it also gives us a great light into the Affairs of the Church at this time and lets us know that the Kings of Northumberland did not then think themselves bound to observe the Pope's Decrees thô made upon Appeals to Rome if they were contrary to a General Synod or Council of the whole Nation About this time thô it be not mentioned in Bede nor in the Saxon Chronicle Ina King of the West-Saxons summoned a great Council or Synod of all the Bishops with the Great and Wise Men of his Kingdom which because it is the first Authentick great Council whose Laws are come to us entire I shall set down the Title of it as it is recited in the First Volume of Sir H. Spelman's British Councils it begins thus Ina by the Grace of God King of the West-Saxons by the Council and Advice of Cenred my Father and Hedde and Erkenwald my Bishops with all my Ealdermen and sage Ancients of my People as also in an Assembly of the Servants of God have Religiously endeavoured both for the health of our Soul and the common preservation of our Kingdom that right Laws and true Judgments be Founded and ●stablished throughout our whole Dominions and that it shall not be Lawful for the time to come for any Ealderman or other Subject whatever to transgress these our Constitutions I have also given you an Extract of the chief of those Laws as far as they relate to any thing remarkable either in Church or State referring you for the rest to the Laws themselves 1. If a Servant do any Work on a Sunday by Command of his Master he shall be free and the Master shall be amerced Thirty Shillings but if he went about the Work without his Master's privity he shall be beaten or redeem the penalty but a Freeman if he work on that Day without the Command of his Master shall loose his Freedom or pay 60 Sihillings if he be a Priest his penalty shall be double 2. The portion or dues of the Church shall be brought in by the Feast of St. Martyn he that payeth them not by that time shall be amerced Forty Shillings and besides pay twelve times their value 3. If any guilty of a capital Crime shall take refuge in a Church he shall save his Life and yet make recompence according to Justice and Equity if one deserving Stripes run to a Church the Stripes shall be forgiven him 4. If any one Fight within the King's House or Palace he shall forfeit all his Goods and it shall be at the pleasure of the King whether he shall have his Life or not he that Fights in a Church shall pay 120 s. in the House of an Alderman or other sage Nobleman 60 s. whosoever shall Fight in a Villager's House paying Scot shall be punished 30 s. and shall give the Villager 6 s. and if any one Fight in the open Field he shall pay 120 s. 5. He that on his own private account shall revenge an injury done to him before he hath demanded publick Justice shall restore what he took away and besides forfeit 30 Shillings 6. If a Robber be taken he shall lose his Life or redeem it according to the estimation of his Head we call Robbers to the Number of Seven or Eight Men from that number to Thirty Five a band all above an Army 7. If a Country Boor having been often accused of Theft if he be at last taken he shall have his Hand or Foot cut off 8. If any one Kill another's Godfather or God-Son the satisfaction shall be according to his Quality and Circumstances let the compensation due to the Relations and that due to the Lord for the loss of his Man be both alike and let the one encrease according to the Circumstances of the Person just as the other doth but if he were the King's Godson let him make satisfaction to the King as well as the Relations but if his Life was taken away by a Relation then let the Money due to the Godfather be diminished as it useth to be when Money is paid to the Master for the Death of his Servant If a Bishop's Son be killed let the penalty be half so much From which Laws we may observe that our Saxon Ancestors were strict observers of the Lord's day and would not permit any servile Work to be done thereon Secondly that the superstition of Sanctuaries was very ancient in England as well as elsewhere Thirdly That Theft Murder and all sorts of Crimes were then redeemable by pecuniary Mulcts either to the King or to the Friends of the party slain or wrong'd or else by loss of Limbs but there is one Law behind that is very remarkable That if any English Man who hath lost his Freedom do afterwards Steal he shall be hang'd on the Gallows and no Recompence made to his Lord if any one Kill such a Man he shall make no recompence on that account to his Friends unless they redeem him within a Twelve Month. Where it appears that no English Freeman could then be hang'd for any fault but Treason thô that is not express'd in these Laws but as for the last clause in these Laws That if the Son of a Bishop be killed the penalty should be half whereby some would prove that Bishops were then Married it is a mistake for by those words are only meant a Bishop's Spiritual Son or Godson and not his Natural or Conjugal Son This Year the Kentishmen made a League with King Ina and gave him Thirty Thousand Pounds to obtain his Friendship because they had before burnt Moll his Brother Also Withred began to Reign over the Kingdom of Kent and
them reaching the Shore were presently slain at the Mouth of the same River But Simeon of Durham imputes this to a Judgment inflicted on them by St. Cuthbert for thus spoiling his Monastery The Moon was Eclipsed 5 o Kal. Aprilis from the Cock crowing till the Morning Eardwulf also began to reign over Northumberland 1 o Idus Maii and was afterwards Consecrated and placed on the Throne 7 o Kal. Junii at York by Eanbald the Arch-Bishop and by the Bishops Ethelbert Higbald and Badewulf This Eardwulf as Florence of Worcester informs us was he who 5 Years before had so strangely escaped Death at Ripun after he had been carried out to be buried but the Chronicle of Mailross does here give great Light of the Saxon Annals for it tells us that now the Northumbers murthered their King Ethelred the Son of Moll Simeon places it a Year after but says The Murther was committed on the 14th of the Kalends of May at a Place called Cobene but they both agree that immediately after his Death one Osbald a Nobleman of that Country was made King but reigned only 27 Days and that then being forsaken by the Chief Men of his Kingdom he was driven into the Isle of Lindisfarne with a few Followers from whence he fled by Sea to the King of the Picts where he became a Monk And this Eardwulf reigned of his stead William of Malmesbury further adds that Alcuin writing to King Offa tells him That King Charles so soon as he heard of this Murther of King Ethelred above-mentioned and of the Perfidiousness of the Northumbrian Nation not only stopt the Gifts he was then sending but falling into a Passion against them called them a perverse and perfidious Nation and worse than Pagans so that if Alcuin had not interceded for them he would have done them all the Mischief he could About this time also the Welsh Chronicles relate there was a great Battle fought at Ruthlan between the Saxons and the Britains where Caradoc ap Gwin King of North Wales was slain But as Dr. Powel observed in his Notes upon Caradoc's Chronicle in those Times there was no settled Government in Wales therefore such as were Chief Lords of any Country there are in this History called Kings This Year died Eanbald Arch-bishop of York the 4th of the Ides of August whose Body was there buried also the same Year Bishop Ceolwulf died and another Eanbald was Consecrated in his stead This Year likewise Cenwulf King of the Mercians destroyed Kent to the Borders of Mercia and took Eadbert or Ethelbert Sirnamed Praen and carryed him Prisoner into Mercia and there caused his Eyes to be put out and his Hands to be cut off Also Ethelheard Arch-bishop of Canterbury called a Synod which by the Command of Pope Leo established and confirmed all those things relating to God's Church which had been before constituted in the Reign of King Withgar and then the Arch-bishop said thus I Ethelheard Arch-bishop of Canterbury with the Unanimous Consent of the whole Synod and of the whole Body of all the Monasteries to whom Exemption hath been granted of Old Times by Believers in the Name of GOD and by his fearful Judgments and as I have received Command from Pope Leo do Decree That for the future none shall presume to Elect themselves Cov●rnours amongst Lay-men over GOD's Heritage but as it is contained in the Charter or Bulls which the Pope hath granted or Holy Men to wit our Kings and Ancestors have ordained concerning the Holy Monasteries so let them remain inviolate without any gain-saying and if there be any one who shall refuse to obey this Command from GOD the Pope and Us but shall despise it and count it as nothing let him know that he shall give an Account of it before the Tribunal of GOD. And I Aethelheard the Archbishop with Twelve Bishops and Three and Twenty Abbots do hereby establish and confirm this Decree with the Sign of the Cross. This Council thô the Annals do not expresly mention it under that Title is that great Council of Becanceld placed in Sir H. Spelman's Collection under Anno 798 being held under Cenwulf King of the Mercians Aethelheard Arch-bishop of Canterbury with 17 Bishops more who all subscribed to this Decree thô the Annals mention no more than 12 Bishops to have been there This Year the Romans took Pope Leo and cut out his Tongue and put cut his Eyes and deposed him but presently after if it may be believed he could both see and speak by the help of GOD as well as he could before and was also restored to the Papacy by the Emperour Charles Also Eanbald the Arch-bishop of York received the Pall and Ethelbert Bishop of Hagulstad deceased 3 o Kal. Nov. This Year was a bloody Battle in the Province of Northumberland in Lent-time at Wealaege now called Whalie in Lancashire where was slain Alric the Son of Heardbert and many others with him The occasion of which Civil War Simeon of Durham hath thus given us ●iz That besides Alric there were divers others in Northumberland who had formerly conspired against King Ethelred and now raising a Rebellion against Eardwulf under Wad● their Captain after much slaughter on both sides at Billangahoth near Whalie in Lancashire the Conspirators being at last put to flight King Eardwulf returned home Victorious The same Year London according to the same Author with a great multitude of its Inhabitants by a sudden Fire was Consumed And now according both to Simeon of Durham and Roger Hoveden was held the Second Council of Pinchinhale in the Kingdom of Northumberland under Eanbald Arch-bishop of York and divers other Principal and Ecclesiastical Men where many things were ordained for the Profit of GOD's Church and of the Northumbrian Nation as concerning the keeping Easter and other Matters not particularly mentioned The same Year also according to Monasticon Anglicanum Kenwulf King of the Mercians founded a stately Abbey at Winchelcomb in Glocestershire for 300 Benedictine Monks and when it was Dedicated in the Presence of Wilfrid Arch-bishop of Canterbury and 13 other Bishops he then set free before the High Altar Eadbert King of Kent who was then his Prisoner of War But having before most cruelly put out his Eyes and cut off his Hands and disposed of his Kingdom to another I doubt that Liberty proved but a small Satisfaction to his poor injured Prince But such was the Superstitious Zeal of that Age the Foundation of a Monastery was counted a sufficient Atonement to GOD for whatsoever Cruelties or Injustice Princes hath then committed This Year Eth●lheard the Arclt-bishop and Cynebriht Bishop of the West Saxons went to Rome the latter to take the Habit of a Monk and Bishop Alfwin deceased at Southburg now Sutbury in Suffolk and was buried at Domuc now Dunwich in the same County being then the Seat of that Bishoprick and Tidfrith was chosen in his Room
Arch-Bishop for in the next Year it is thus corrected viz. This Year Ceolnoth was Elected and Consecrated Arch-Bishop and Feologild the Abbot deceased ' And the Year following Ceolnoth the Arch-BP received his Pall from Rome This Year certain Heathens or Pagans wasted Sceapige now the Isle of Sheppey in Kent But since this is the first time that these Heathens are mentioned in the Saxon Annals it is fit we should tell you a little more exactly who they were and from whence they came for they were indeed no other than that Nation which was before in our Saxon Annals called Northmanna and sometimes Deanscan i. e. Danes the Etymology of which Name since I find writers are so divided about I will not take upon me to determine not that all these People came out of that Country which is at this day called Denmark for it is impossible that so narrow a Region thô you should likewise include whatsoever that Kingdom did then or does now enjoy upon the Continent of Swedeland and Jutland could ever send out such vast Shoales of People as for near Two Thousand Years before the Norman Conquest over-ran and destroyed France the Low Countries and also this Island but you may from what has been already said observe that H. Huntington in the Prologue to his Book above cited does besides the Danes add also the Norwegians together with the Goths Swedes and Vandals to have been those Nations which for so many Years wasted England and that he did not deliver this without Book but had sufficient Authority for what he wrote I shall further make out from the Testimony of those Writers who lived in that very Age when these Nations first infested those parts of Europe For Eginhart who was Son-in-Law and Chancellour to Charles the Great thus writes in his History of that Prince which I shall here faithfully Translate In like manner the Danes and Sweones with those whom we call Normans do possess the Northern Shore of Scandinavia together with all the Islands adjoyning to it whil'st the Sclavi with divers other Nations inhabit the Southern Coasts but the Norwegans or rather Northern Men for so they are called by the Swedes because they lye more Northerly than the greater part of that Nation and indeed all those that inhabit Scanzia are by those People of Europe that lye more remote with very good reason called in the German Tongue i.e. Northland Men. Next to Eginhart Adam of Bremen who lived about Two Hundred Years after does not only insert these very words of the aforesaid Authour but also adds this further that the Danes and Swedes with the other Nations beyond the River Danabius are by the French Historians all called Normans so likewise Albertus Abbot of Stade who wrote about the Year 1250 says likewise that the Danes and other Nations who lived beyond Denmark are all called Normans from which Authorities the learned Grotius in his Prolegomena to his Gothic History lays it down as an undeniable Truth that whatever we find among any writers of that Age concerning the Normans does rightly belong to the Swedes who were then one of the greatest and most powerful of those Northern Nations that were all then called by one general Name of Normans But as for their Religion I need say no more of it since I have already told you in the beginning of the Third Book that all those Nations had the same common Deities viz. Woden and Thor c. whose Names I have there already set down to which last Deities as Ubbo Emmius relates they before any great exepedition sacrificed a Captive by knocking out his Brains and smearing their Faces in his Blood immediately marched against their Enemies but that they were extreamly given to Witchcraft and Inchantments all their own Authours relate which would be too tedious here to repeat since you will meer with some Instances of it in the following History But to return again to our Annals This Year is very remarkable for King Egbert encountred Thirty Five Ships of Danish Pyrates at Carrum now called Charmouth in Dorsetshire where there was a great slaughter but the Danes kept the Field whereby we may guess that they had the advantage yet it seems before this time even in this very Year the Danes had been vanquished and put to flight at Dunmouth now called Tinmouth from whence having now spoiled the Isle of Sheppey they Sail'd to Charmouth above-mentioned This shews us as Will. of Malmesbury well observes the Instability of all Worldly grandeur for now King Egbert being arrived at the height of Empire met with this unlooked for Enemy who harrassed him and his Posterity for divers Generations And thô in this Sea Fight last mentioned he had the better for the greater part of the Day yet towards Night he lost the Victory thô by the help of it he retreated and so saved the disgrace of an entire defeat this was the only time that Fortune ceased to favour King Egbert's Undertakings This Year also according to our Annals Herefrith Bishop of Winchester and Wigen or Sighelm Bishop of Scirborne and also Two Ealdormen Dudda and Osmund deceased The same Year was held that General Council of the whole Kingdom at London at the Feast of St. Augustin the English Apostle Egbert King of West Saxony and Withlaf King of the Mercians with both the Arch-Bishops and all the other Bishops and Chief Men of England being present at which besides a Consultation how to restrain the Invasion of the Danes the Privileges and Concess●ons of the said King Withlaf to the Monastery of Croyland were also confirmed by the said Council and were subscribed to by King Withlaf and both the Arch-Bishops and most of 〈◊〉 Bishops of England The next Year a great Fleet of Danes landed amongst the Western Welsh i. e. Cornishmen who being joyned with them in a League against King Egbert offered him Battle which he accepting of streight ways marched against them with his whole Army and at Hengestdune now Hengston in Cornwal put both the Britains and Danes to flight and as Mat. Westminster adds freed his Kingdom at this time from the Invasion of those barbarous Enemies King Egbryht departed this Life having Reigned Thirty Seven Years and Seven Months but the Annals must needs be mistaken either in the time of his Reign or else in the Year of his Death for if he began to Reign Anno Dom. 800 and Reigned Thirty Seven Years and an half it is evident he must have dyed Anno Dom. 838 the Printed Copy of Will of Malmesbury places his Death Anno Dom. 837 and another reading in the Margin in 838 but Florence of Worcester places it according to the Annals in 836. This King as the same Authour relates governed his Subjects with great Clemency and was as terrible to his Enemies and for Nine Years Reigned Supream King over all Britain Before his Death he is
leaving Hreoptun became divided into two and Halfden their Commander marched with one part of it into the Kingdom of Northumberland and there took up his Winter-Quarters near the River Tine where they conquered the whole Country and also spoiled the Country between the Picts and the Straecled Welsh-men who then inhabited part of Galloway in Scotland whilst another part of them under the Command of Godrun Oskytel and Amwynd three of their Kings marched to Grantbridge and there Wintered And the same Summer King Aelfred fought at Sea against seven of their Ships and took one of them the rest escaping This Year as Asser and the Saxon Annals relate Rollo the Dan● or Norman wasted Neustria afterwards called Normandy and in some time after made an entire Conquest of it Asser also says that this Rollo having had a Dream of a Swarm of Bees flying towards the South he chose to leave England and go over into France though as other Authours affirm it was because he was so warmly received by King Alfred that he did not like to stay here but rather chose to pass into another Country of easier Conquest as Normandy indeed proved for he reigned there fifty Years The same Year according to the Chronicle of Mailrosse and Simeon of Durham Ricsig King of Northumberland dying another Egbert succeeded him but we have no account of his Actions more than that he reigned beyond Tyne as a Tributary to the Danes who possessed all the rest of the Country as you will find by the Saxon Annals The same Year accordingly the Danes stealing away by Night from Grantbridge where they had long encamped marched to Werham now Warham in Dorsetshire being then a strong Castle of the West-Saxons this place they took and destroyed together with the Nunnery there then passing higher as into a secure Harbour they drew up all their Ships so that now King Alfred was reduced to such great streights that he was forced to make Peace with him and they gave the King for Pledges some of the Noblest Persons in their Army and took an Oath upon a sacred Bracelet they had which Oath they would never take to any Nation before that they would presently depart the Kingdom but in the mean while that part of the Army which had Horses stole away to Exanceaster now Exeter whereupon the King put all their Hostages to Death The same Year in the Month of August Healfden the Danish King divided the Kingdom of the Northumbers among his People who now settling there ploughed and sowed from whence the Danes date their Reign over that Kingdom But the Year following The Danes having left Werham and come to Exeter as you have already heard their Fleet in the mean time fetching a compass sailing towards the West I suppose to Exmouth there arose so violent a Storm as that 120 of their Ships were cast away near Swandwic now Swanwick in Hampshire then King Aelfred followed that part of the Army as far as Exeter thô he could not overtake them till they had got into the Castle which proved so strong that no body could come at them but he streightning them there they gave him what Hostages he required and took fresh Oaths and for a small time observed the league they had made yet nevertheless in the Month of August following the same Danish Army marched into the Province of the Mercians where dividing part of it between themselves they left the rest to Ceolwulf above mentioned About this time also according to Caradoc's Chronicle the English having entred Wales the Year before fought a Bloody Battel with the Welshmen though this Authour neither tells who were the Commanders nor who had the Victory and the Year following there was another Battel between them wherein Rodorick Sirnamed The Great King or Prince of Wales and Guyriad his Brother or as some say his Son were slain This Rodorick had by his Wife Engharaud the Daughter of Prince Meyric several Sons as Anarawd his Eldest to whom he gave Aberffraw with North Wales Cadelh the second to whom he left Dynevowr with South-Wales who also took by force Marthraval and Powysland after the Death of Mervyn the third Son to whom their Father Rodorick had given the same To which Dr. Powel likewise adds That this Rodorick is esteemed by all Writers to be sole King of all Wales North-Wales descending to him from his Mother Esylcht the Daughter and sole Heir of Conan Tindaethwy but South-Wales he had in Right of his Wife the Daughter and Heir of Meyric ap Dyfnwal King of Cardigan Powis he had by Nest the Sister and Heir of Congen ap Cadhel King of Powis his Father's Mother These three Dominions he appointed under their Meeres and Bounds with a Princely House in each of them These he had named Ytair Talaeth and left them unto three of his Sons Anarawd Cadhel and Mervyn who were called Ytrit Twysoc Talaethioc that is the three Crown'd Princes because each of them did wear upon his Bonnet or Helmet a Coronet of Gold being a broad Lace or Head-band indented upwards set and wrought with precious Stones which in the British or Welsh Speech is called Talaeth and to which Mr. Vaughan in his Additional Notes to Caradoc's History hath added out of an ancient Welsh Manuscript That this Rodorick is said to have corrected some of the old British Laws and to have appointed new ones He also ordained that his Eldest Son should have the Crown or Coronet of Aberffraw with the Fifteen Cantreds thereunto belonging This Aberffraw is now a small Village in the Isle of Anglesey and was anciently the chief Seat of the Princes of Guyneth or North-Wales He left to his second the Crown or Coronet of Dinevowr or Cardigan with its fifteen Cantreds extending from the Mouth of the River Devi to the Mouth of Severne and also that his Son should have the Crown or Coronet of Mathraval with the Fifteen Cantreds of Powis from the mouth of the River Dee to the bridge over Severne at Gloucester He ordained also That his Eldest Son and his successours should continue the payment of the ancient tribute to the King of London i. e. King of England and that the other two their Heirs and Successours should acknowledge his Sovereignty and pay the like tribute to him and his Successours and that upon the Invasions of Strangers they should all send him aid and be also ready to protect them when there should be need Moreover he ordained That when any difference should arise between the Princes of Aberffraw and Cardigan the Three Princes should meet at Bwlchy Pawl and after hearing of Council on both sides the Prince of Powis should be Umpire between them And if the difference were between the Kings of Aberffraw and Powis that they should likewise all Three meet at Dolhrianedd perchance Morvarhianed on the Bank of the River Dee where the King of Cardigan was to end the Controversie And if
resolved to sit down before it supposing that the English would quickly surrender for want of Provisions which they being also sensible of were endeavouring to prevent and resolving either to obtain the Victory or dye they sallyed out early one Morning upon the Enemy who lay Encamp'd without any good Guards so falling upon them at unawares slew Hubba their Leader with his whole Army except a few who were forced to flee to their Ships And this Hubba being here buried under a heap of Stones gave name to the place being called Hubblestones to this day but the English having stripped the dead bodies they there found among the spoils that famous Banner called Reafan that is the Raven being the Picture of a Raven embroidered by the Three Sisters of Hinguar and Hubba in one forenoon on purpose for this Expedition and which being Enchanted by their Magic Arts they put so great a confidence in it that they believed if they were to meet with good success this figure would clap its Wings as if it were alive but if otherwise would let them fall but be this Story true or false it seems they now lost their Oracle before they had time to consult it and the loss of it was certainly a great discouragement to them King Aelfred being now much encouraged with the news of this good success of the Devon-shire-men began to consider how he might perform some worthy action against the Enemy therefore this Year as the Saxon Annals relate having first fortified with his slender Forces a small Castle or Fort at Aetheling-gaige now called Athelney in Somersetshire where he had resided hitherto he marched from thence the Seventh Week after and with his Subjects and Vassals there to fight against the Pagans and it is also about this time that we may place that memorable action of this King which is thus related by Ingulph and Will of Malmesbury which if true shews not only his great Courage but Conduct too for knowing the Enemy to exceed him in numbers as well as other advantages and that if he should set upon them with open Force he would be able to do them little or no prejudice nor could he hope for any better success unless he knew in what condition the Enemie's Army was and not having any one whose Sagacity or Fidelity he could well trust he was resolved to go himself to spy out the Enemie's Camp so taking upon him the Habit of a Country Minstrel or Fidler he went with only one Companion into the Danish Camp where he became so acceptable as well for his Singing as Playing that at last he was introduced to the King's Tent and when he had there as well as in the rest of the Danish Camp learnt as much as he had a mind to know he again returned to his Castle at Athelne where having called together all his chief followers he related to them the careless condition of the Enemies Camp and with what ease they might be destroyed whereat they being extraordinarily surprised he then resolved to muster up what Forces he could So the Seventh Week after Easter he march'd to Ecgbyrth-stan now supposed to be Brixstan in Somerset-shire lying on the East side of Selwood Forest where met him all the Wilt-shire Somerset-shire and Hamptshire Men who were mightily pleased to behold their King after so many hazards but staying there only one night he marched away to Iglay where the place was is not very well known and there encamped another night in which as Asser relates St. Neot who had been formerly his Kinsman and Friend appeared to him in a Dream and bid him not be afraid of the great Army of the Pagans because God would now have mercy upon him and his People and that what had happen'd to him was for his too great Arrogance in his Youth and that God would Fight for him and his People The King you may be sure was much rejoyced at this Dream and failed not to encourage his Men with it so the next Morning removing his Camp from thence he came in one Day more to Ethandune but where it is we cannot tell where the Danes lay encamped and marching against them in very close order he fought their whole Army and though they did for a long time stoutly resist the frequent charges the King's Men made upon them yet at last they gave ground and beginning to flee he obtained a notable Victory making a great sl●ughter of the Pagans as they retreated to a certain Castle not far off and at which they lay encamped where the King besieged them for Fourteen Days till being overcome by hunger they were reduced to that necessity as to desire Peace on these Conditions That the King should receive from them what Hostages He should name but He not to return any to them so they made such a Peace with him as they had never done with any King before for they swore that they would depart his Kingdom and that Gythram or Gutrum their King should become a Christian all which was performed for about Three Weeks after the said King with about Thirty more of his Chief Noblemen came to the King being then at Alrey the place is now unknown only that it lay near Athelney above-mentioned where King Alfred receiving him from the Font at his Baptism became his Go●father and took him for his adopted Son But he did not receive the Chrisme till Eight Days after at a Town of the Kings called Wedmore where he staid with him for the space of Twelve Days who presented him and all those that accompanied him not only with Money but Houses and Lands being now resolved to fix here So this next Year the Danes according to their promise removed from Cippenham i. e. Chippenham in Wiltshire to Cirenceaster and there staid one Year But now another Army of Pagans arriving from beyond the Sea sailed up the River Thames to whom notwithstanding their former Oaths the Army that was here before also join'd and took up their Winter Quarters at Fullanham now Fulham not far from London and the same Year according to the Annals the Sun was Eclipsed for one whole hour also now part of the Pagans who had quartered at Cirencester as say the Annals and Asser marched from thence under the Conduct of King Gythrum into the Kingdom of the East-Angles and dividing the Country among them began to inhabit it which having been in their possession ever since the Death of King Edmund King Alfred now yielded up to their King Gythram but those Danes who had before staid at Fulham now sailed into Frankland and quartered at Ghent for one whole Year from whence you may observe that what we now call Flanders was then accounted part of France or Frankland And to this time we may also refer that League or Agreement made between King Alfred and King Guthram which sets out the Territories of each of these Princes The First
Article is That it is agreed that the Limits of K. Alfred's Land are first upon the Thames then proceed they to the River Lee as far as his Fountain then straight to Beaford and then along the River Ouse as far as Watling-street which I suppose is thus to be understood that K. Alfred did hereby grant him East-England and Essex so that the bounds of these Kings Dominions were first the Thames then the River Lee as far as Harford whereabouts it arises Then from Harford to Bedford all along Watling-street and then from Bedford all along the Ouse to the Sea The Second Article appoints the value of a Man slain whether English or Dane to be four Marks of pure Gold and the Redemption of each Four hundred Shillings But if the King's Servant or Thane was accused of Man-slaughter the Third Article proceeds That he then should be tried by Twelve other of the King's Servants or in ease he was not the King's Servant but belonged to some inferiour Lord he should be tried by eleven of his Equals and by one of the King's Servants The same Order was taken in all Suits which exceeded four Marks but in case he refused to undergo this Trial his Fine was to be encreased threefold The Fourth appoints Vouchers for the Sale of Men Horses or Oxen. The Fifth and Last Ordains That none from either Army should pass to the other without Leave and in case it be by way of Traffick such shall find Sureties for their good Behaviour that the Peace may not be broken This was the League it self with some other Articles needless to be here recited the Preface to which declares That it was made betwixt the two Kings Aelfred and Gythrum so the Saxon Original by Consent of all the Wise Men of the English and of all those that inhabited East England and that not only in behalf of themselves but of their Posterity This sufficiently shews that the Eastern Parts of England then belonged to the Danes yet Polydore Virgil calling this King by the Name of Gormon vehemently contends that he had not that Country bestowed upon him Krantzius also denies that this Gormon was converted to the Faith yet confesses that about this time one Froto was converted But whatever they write this League sufficiently evinceth the Distinction of their Territories and the Testimoy of Asser is uncontrollable as to his Baptism who lived himself at this very time not to mention that the Saxon Annals also affirm the same thing After which follow the Ecclesiastical Laws said in their Title to be made between King Alfred and King Gythrum as they are to be found in Abbot Brompton's Chronicle The First of which is That the Danes and English should Love and Serve the true GOD alone and Renounce Paganism And in the next place That if any should Renounce his Christianity and Relapse to Paganism then he should pay his Weare Wite and Lashlite according to what he had done The Third Law is That if any in Holy Orders shall either Fight Perjure himself or commit Fornication let him likewise make Amends by the like Penalties above-mentioned and likewise make Satisfaction to GOD according to the Canons of the Church and also give a Pledge or Security to do so no more Note That the Weare Wite and Lashlite above-mentioned were all of them Fines or Mulcts which the Danes and English were to pay according to the value of their Heads as hath been already shewn but as for the last of these Words Mr. Somner in his Glossary supposes it to be purely Danish and signified no more than the two former Words but was so called in relation to the Danes alone who were to undergo it after which follow several Constitutions against the Offences of Clergy-men against committing Incest and with-holding of Tythes and Romescot or Peter-pence in all which Offences a Dane was to pay the like Weare and Wite with an English-man as also against Buying Selling and Working on the Lord's Day in which Cases if a Freeman wrought upon Holy-days he was to lose his Liberty or pay his Wite but if he were a Servant or Villain he was to satisfie it with his Skin i. e. by Whipping or pay his Head-Gild but if a Master compelled his Servant to work upon Holy-days he was to pay his Lashlite as the Danes and his Wite as the English did that is according as he was a Dane or an English-man which sufficiently justifies Mr. Somner's Sense of that Word The rest of these Laws being against divers other Offences as against violating the Fasts of the Church against making Ordeal or taking an Oath on Sundays or Fast-days Not that this Ordeal or Trial by a hot Iron or boyling Water in case the Person was accused of a Crime was to be used unless there was no direct Proof against him The rest of the Laws are against putting any Man to Death upon a Sunday as also against Witches Perjured Persons and Common Whores all which Persons were to be banished the Country But the last Law saving one is a sort of Cruel Mercy for thereby if a Man had lost any of his Members for any Crime and survived the same four Nights it was afterwards lawful with the License of the Bishop for any one to give him Help and Assistance which it seems before that time it was not lawful to do But the Reader may further from the Title of these Laws observe the Subjection or Dependence which King Gytrum then had upon K. Alfred at that time for King Gytrum and his Danes gave their Consent to them in a Common-Council of the Kingdom in the same manner as the Kings of Mercia and of the East Angles were wont to do in the General Council of the West Saxon Kingdom in acknowledgment of its Superiority over them as may be proved by divers Examples and if this King Gytrum could have made Laws by his own Authority he might have called a Council of his own to do so which we do not find he ever did having received his Kingdom wholly from the Bounty of King Alfred Also about the Year last mentioned King Alfred new built the Town of Shaftsbury as appears by an old Inscription cited by Mr. Camden out of an old Manuscript Copy of William of Malmesbury then belonging to the Lord Burghley which Inscription was in that Author's time to be seen in the Chapter-house of that Nunnery which was built at this place by this King some Years after The Pagans entred further into France where the French fought with them and as it is supposed were routed for here the Danes found Horses enough to mount the greatest part of their Men. This Year the Danes sailed up the Maese now the Meuse into Frankland and there stayed another Year The same Year also King Aelfred sailing out with his Fleet fought against four Danish Pirat Ships and took two of their Men and the other two the
Shiping in Two Hundred and Fifty Vessels together with their Horses they arrived in the Mouth of the River Limene which then lay from the Eastern Part of Kent as far as the East End of that great Wood which is called Andred which Wood or Forest is in length from East to West at least an Hundred and Twenty Miles and in breadth Thirty containing all that which we call the Weald of Kent to this Day as also the Woodland part of Sussex as far as Hamptshire but up this River Limene they drew their Ships as far as the said Wood or Forest viz. Four Miles from the furthest part where the Sea flows up and there they made a Fort in that Fen which was raised by a few of their Ceorls or Villains And not long after arrived Haestein the Dane who entring the Mouth of Thames with Eighty Vessels Built a Fort at Middletune in Kent whil'st another part of the Army did the same at Apuldre or Apultre now called Apledore in the same County where as Ethelward relates They took and destroyed an Old Castle being defended only by a few Country People he also makes Haestein to have Fortified Middleton after Apuldere and his Army to have Winter'd in both places ' This Year also Wulfhere Arch-Bishop of the Northumbers decased But to look a little upon the Affairs of Wales The same Year Anarawd Prince of North-Wales came with a great number of English Men whom he had got to join with him and made War upon his Brother Cadelh Prince of Southwales and spoiled the Countries of Cardigan and Ystradgwy What the Danes did immediately after their Landing our Annals mention not but we may with great probability hither refer that Action touched upon in our Annals which are very confused and obscure in the Relation of this War viz. That it is most likely the Kings Army besieged Haestein either at Middleton or Beamfleot where not long after his Landing he had built a strong Fort on the opposite Shore and being reduced by the King to great Extremities he was forced to surrender himself with his Wife and his Two Sons to the King's Mercy upon Condition that they should be Christened which being done the King and Aethered Ealdorman of Mercia being their Godfather Haesten gave the King Hostages and solemnly swore to depart the Kingdom but as soon he got loose he broke all those Agreements and retiring into Beamfleot there fortified himself a fresh And the Spring after Aethelward assures us That passing along the great Forest of Andredeswood they then wasted the adjacent Countries of Hamptshire and Berkshire but the Saxon Annals affirm that about a Year after the Danes had raised that Fort I suppose of Middleton above-mentioned in the East part of the Kingdom K. Alfred the better to secure himself caused the Danes of Northumberland and East England to take an Oath to be true to him and the King also compell'd the East Angles to give him Hostages yet nevertheless they broke this Peace for when the Danes in Kent went out of their Ships in Troops to Plunder they also went with them or else the Danes carried the Prey into their Territories wherefore King Alfred gathering together his Army and marching forward Encamp'd between Two Parties of these Danish Robbers where by reason of Woods as also of Water on both sides he had a very convenient place for that purpose insomuch that he could set upon either Party whenever they marched into the Country to Plunder but they Robb'd in Troops as well on Horse-back as on Foot in all Parts where the King's Army was not yet were repulsed almost every Day as well by the King's Forces as by the Neighbouring Towns For the King had now divided his Forces into two Bodies so that one half of them remained always at home whilest the other marched out except those whose business it was to defend the Towns but the Danes oftener sallied out of their Camp than the King's Men For the 〈◊〉 in one Body sallied not out of their Camp but twice Once when they first Landed and another time when they were about to Decamp and then having taken a great Booty they endeavoured to carry it over the Thames into Essex toward their Ships But the King's Forces prevented them and fought them near Fernham and put them to flight and rescued the Prey from whence they fled beyond the Thames and thence by the River Colne into a certain Island called by Mr. Speed Brecklesey where the King's Army besieged them as long as their own Provisions lasted for they had only Victuals for a small time Then the King marched thither with the Forces of that Province whil'st the former returned home but the Danes in the mean time remained there because they could not carry away their King being then wounded along with them but those Danes that Inhabited Northumberland and East England got together an Hundred Ships with which they sailed about the South Parts whil'st with Forty others they did the like in the North with the former they besieged a certain strong place lying on the Northern Coast of Devonshire and then fetching a Compass towards the South besieged Exancester now Exceter which when the King heard he turned all his Forces toward that place but the Danes as Florence relates affrighted at the News of his approach got again to their Ships carrying their Prey to Cisseancester now Chichester in Sussex where they were repulsed by the Citizens and great part of their Army killed but in the mean time while one Party of the King's Army remained behind the other marched on to London and then proceeded Eastward with the Citizens of that place and other Auxiliaries that came from the West as far as Beamfleot now South Bemfleet in Essex whither Haestein was come with the Forces which had been before quartered at Middleton to which also were joined those that first arrived at Apuldre in the Mouth of the River Limene for Haesten had built a strong Fort at Beamfleot and was from thence marched out to Plunder whil'st great part of his Army remained at home but when the King's Forces came thither they soon put his Army to flight and demolished the Fort taking all that was within it together with their Goods Wives and Children carrying them to London and as for their Ships part of them they broke to pieces but carried the best of them to Rochester and London and burnt the rest but the Wife of Haesten and his Two Sons being brought to the King he not long after sent them back to him at his request because one of the Boys had been the King's and the other Earl Aethered's Godson as hath been already said H. Huntington places the Siege of Exester after the taking of Bemfleet whereas the Annals suppose it to be done about the same time but be it as it will they all agree that whilest the King was detained in the West at that Siege
England called Wales where we find in the Chronicle of Caradoc That this Year Anarawd chief King of Wales died leaving behind him two Sons Edwal Ugel i. e. the Bald who Reigned after him and Elise and as some say a third Son named Meyric This Edwal is he whom our Historians stile Idwal Rex omnium Wallensium i. e. Supreme King of all Wales And I shall here likewise subjoyn what Mr. Vaughan in his Notes upon this Chronicle hath also added concerning the Welsh Affairs during the Reign of this Prince thô happening somewhat before this time viz. That after the Death of Roderic the Great the Northern Britains of Straetclwyd and Cumberland were as Hector Boetius and Buchanan relate much infested and weakened with the daily Incursions of the Danes Saxons and Scots which made many of them that is all that would not submit their Necks to that Yoke to quit their Country and seek out more quiet Habitations so that under the Conduct of one Hobert they came to Gwyneth i. e. North Wales in the beginning of Anarawd's Reign who commiserating their distressed Condition gave them the Country from Chester to the River Conwey to inhabit if they could beat out the Saxons who had lately possessed themselves thereof These Britains having returned Thanks to Prince Anarawd as was meet fell upon the Saxons and Necessiry giving edge to their Valour they soon drove them out thence being yet scarce warm in their Seats and Edred or Ethered Earl of Mercia made great Preparations for the regaining of the said Country But the Northern Britains who had settled themselves there having Intelligence thereof for the better securing of their Cattle and Goods removed them over the River Conwey In the mean time Anarawd was not idle but gathering together all the Strength he could make his Army encamped near the Town of Conwey at a place called Cymryt where his Men making a gallant Resistance against the Assaults of the Saxon Forces at length after a bloody Fight obtained a compleat Victory over them This Battle was called Gwaeth Cymryt Conwey because it was fought in the Township of Cymryt hard by Conwey but Anarawd called it Dial Rodri because he had there revenged the Death of his Father Rodri. In this Battle Tudwal the Son of Rodri Mawr received a Hurt in the Knee which made him be called Tudwall Gloff or The Lame ever after His Brethren to reward his Valour and Service gave him the Lands of Unchellogoed Gwynned and then the Britains pursuing their Victory chased the Saxons quite out of Wales into Mercia where having burnt and destroyed the Borders they returned home laden with rich Spoils And Anarawd to express his Thankfulness to GOD for this great Victory gave Lands and Possessions to the Church of Bangor as the Records of that See do testifie and likewise to the Collegiate Church of Clynnoc in Arvon as we read in the Extent of North Wales After this the Northern Britains came back from beyond the River Conwey and possessed again the Lands assigned to them between Conwey and Chester which for a long time after they peaceably enjoyed Some English Writers as Mat. Westminster c. not considering that the Britains had Lands in Loegria and Albania after King Cadwalader's time mistake those of Cumberland and Straetclwyd for the Britains of Wales but Asser Menev. who lived about the year 875 saith That Halden the Dane marched into Northumberland which he subdued having before conquered the Picts and Britains of Straetclwyd in Northumberland I have given you this Relation at length because it is not found in any of our Historians and it ●ets us see that the English as well as the W●lsh have been very sparing to record their own Defeats But to return again to our History About this time according to the Copy of a Charter of King Edward extant in an old Manuscript belonging to Clare Hall in Cambridge He by the Command of Pope John and Arch-Bishop Plegmund and by the Advice of all the Bishops and Chief Men of his Kingdom confirmed to the Doctors and Scholars of Cambridge as also to their Servants all Priviledges which had been granted by himself or his Predecessours for ever to endure by a perpetual Right This Charter bears Date at Grantecester i. e. Cambridge in the Year 915 and is directed to Frithestan then Chancellor and Doctor But if Sir John Spelman thought he had Reason to suspect the Truth of that Passage we have cited out of Asser's History of the Life of King Alfred concerning the Studium or School at Oxford before King Alfred's time our Antiquaries may have as much if not more Reason to question the Truth of this Charter since the Original of it is not to be found but only this Transcript in the Book above cited for they say it looks very improbable that Cambridge should have continued an University during all the time of the Danish Wars and under the Possession of those three Danish Kings the last of whom enjoyned it till the latter end of this King's Reign as appears by our present History And besides all this the barbarous and pedantic Latine at the Conclusion of this Charter where the King is made to confirm it in these Words Stabili jure grata rata decerno durare quamdiu vertigo Poli circa terras atque Aequora Aethera Syderum justo moderamine volvet Which seems to betray the ignorant Monk's Pen that counterfeited it but John Rouse in his Manuscript History De Regibus Angliae cited by Bale relates from an ancient Table and Chronicle of the Abbey of Hyde near Winchester which himself by the Favour of the Abbot had perused the Restoration of the University of Cambridge by King Edward as follows Therefore for the Augmenration of Clerk-like Learning as his Father had done to Oxford so he again raised up Cambridge to her first Glory which for a long time with other general Schools had lain desolate and destroyed as also like a most loving Nourisher of Scholars he commanded that Halls for Students Chairs and Seats of Doctors and Masters should there be erected and built at his own proper Charges for he sent from Oxford University which his Noble Father the King had founded Masters of those Arts which we call Liberal together with Doctors in Divinity and invited them there formally to Read and Teach But since the Author here cited is but of modern Times in comparison to this famous University and also that Passage he hath cited out of the Annals of Hyde is not now to be found in the Copies we have of them I shall give the Reader a much more ancient Testimony out of Tho. Rudborn's larger History of the Church of Winchester where he cites an Epistle of one Bonagratia de Villa Dei to the Black Monks of England wherein there is this Passage which I shall here Translate viz. That whilst he was banished from his Country into
action from his Election as it is also in the Author last cited and in H. Huntington who therein follow our Annals and say expresly That he was Elected But it seems before his Election one Alfred with some factious men of his Party endeavour'd to hinder King Athelstan's coming to the Crown because he was begot on a Concubine which says William of Malmesbury if it were true as he seems there to doubt yet had he nothing else ignoble in him for he surpassed all his Predecessors as well in his Devotion as his Victories So much better is it as he well observes to excel in good Qualities than in his Ancestors the former only being truly a man 's own Hither we may also refer what the same Author tells us concerning this Alfred above-mentioned out of the Preface to King Athelstan's Charter whereby he confers the Lands once belonging to this Alfred upon the Church of Malmesbury for the Souls of his Cousins Ethelred Edwin and Ethelwin there buried And to testify to the world that he gave what was his own he there at large relates the whole Conspiracy which Alfred had laid together with his Complices to seize him in the City of Winchester and to put out his Eyes but the Plot being happily discovered and Alfred denying it he was sent to Rome there to purge himself before Pope John where coming to take his Oath at the Altar of St. Peter he fell down and being carried by his Servants into the English School there died the third night after but it seems the Pope would not dispose of his Body till he had sent to ask King Athelstan's Judgment what should be done with it when by the Advice and at the Request of the Chief Men the King assented that it should though unworthy of that Honour be laid among the Bodies of other Christians but his whole Estate was adjudged confiscated for so black a Treason But one of the first things this King performed after his coming to the Crown as we find in Florence of Worcester was his bestowing his Sister Edgitha in Marriage to Sihtric the Danish King of Northumberland who desired the Alliance of King Athelstan And as Matthew Westminster relates this Prince professing himself a Christian was a little before his Marriage baptized but did not long continue so for he relapsed again to his former Paganism And the next year According to Florence and Simeon of Durham he deceased after whose death the Lady above-mentioned retiring to her Brother King Athelstan became a Nun at Pollesworth Nor can I here omit the Falshood of the Scotish Historians who out of spight to King Athelstan's Memory make Sihtric to have been poyson'd by this Lady whom they call Beatrix and that at the Instigation of her Brother King Athelstan whereas her Name was not Beatrix but Edgitha or Orgiva and was a Woman of as great Reputation for her Sanctity as the King her Brother was for his Valour and other Noble Virtues which render'd him above the putting his Sister upon so base an Action But before I dismiss this Relation I cannot omit what John of Wallingford adds concerning this King Sihtric whom he calls Sictric viz. That upon this Marriage with King Athelstan's Sister he advanced him to the Title of King that his Sister might not stoop so low as to that of Countess and that Sictric then had for his Kingdom all the Countrey from the River Theys as far as Edinburgh from which time the Danes began to settle in those parts who before rambled about over all England to which Settlement as also to a fresh accession of more the Northerly Situation of that Countrey lying over-against Denmark contributed very much as this Author well observes This year according to Florence of Worcester and Simeon of Durham Sihtric King of the Northumbers departed this life so that it seems that this King survived his Marriage but a small time Also the same year according to Florence Hugh the Son of Robert King of the French married King Athelstan's Sister and after the death of King Sihtric Guthfrith his Son succeeded him though but for a little while for the year following our Annals tell us That King Aethelstan expelled the said Guthfryth King of Northumberland and added his Dominions to his own And the same year Wulfhelm the Archbishop went to Rome From which Conquest of the Kingdom of Northumberland we may observe That as King Edward had before conquered the Danes of East-England and had also added Mercia to his own Kingdom so King Athelstan by the Expulsion of King Guthfrith who was also of the Danish Race became the first King that ruled all England without any King under him Of this Prince also John of Wallingford relates That being a Young Man he was stirred up to this Rebellion by the suggestion of the Northumbers who told him that their Countrey had always enjoyed a King of their own without being Tributary to the Southern English And indeed from the first arrival of the English Saxons they had been never subject to any of the West-Saxon Kings except King Athelstan Therefore this Guithfrith or Gutred moved by these instigations took upon him the Name of King without King Athelstan's consent and casting out the Garisons seized all the Forts and Castles of that Country and flatly denied to pay the Tribute imposed upon his Father with which K. Athelstan being much provoked he not only raised great Forces of his own Subjects but also sent for Aid to his Friends in Neighbouring Kingdoms and so in few days gathering together a great Army totally expell'd him his Kingdom And therefore Alfred of Beverly an Ancient Author still in Manuscript very well observes of this Prince That by subduing the Scots Welsh and all the Kings of Britain he justly deserved the Title of the first Monarch though his Modesty was so great that he never gave himself that Title but left it to his Brother Edred to take as shall be shewn in his Reign This year William Son to Rollo succeeded to the Dukedom of Normandy and held it fifteen years Byrnstan was consecrated Bishop of Winchester and held that Bishoprick two years and an half The year following ' Frithelstan the Bishop deceased Florence of Worcester and Simeon of Durham as also the Chronicle of Mailrosse do all agree that this Bishop Frithelstan did before his death ordain Bishop Byrnstan in his room and if so he resigned the Bishoprick of Winchester to him and lived only one year after it Also the same year according to our Annals Edwin Aetheling was drowned This Edwin here mentioned in our Annals was Brother to King Athelstan whose Death being the greatest Blot of this King's Reign divers Authors have concealed it but notwithstanding it is thus given us by William of Malmesbury and the Chronicle called Abbot Bromton's Alfred above-mentioned having conspired against King Athelstan as you have already heard had several
Edmund But it seems R. Hoveden and Mat. Westminster make this latter Anlaf a quite different person from the former who is supposed to have reigned in Ireland whereas this was the Son of Sihtric late King of Northumberland and whom we shall meet with again more than once in the following History But John of Walingford's Chronicle makes this King whom he calls Olaf a Norwegian whom the Northumbers had called in and bestowed upon him the Title of King and under him rebelled against K. Edmund As for this Reginald her mentioned in our Annals I suppose he is the same whom H. Huntington calls King of York because he had conquered the Countrey But tho the History of these Transactions are very short and obscure yet that which has been already related from these Authors will serve to explain what would have been otherwise in the dark viz. how the Cities and Towns above-mentioned now came to be recovered from the Danes as having been taken by their King Anlaf aforesaid This year Queen Aelgiva was brought to Bed of Prince Edgar afterwards King as Florence relates Yet she lived not long after but died the year following according to Ethelward's Chronicle King Edmund reduced all the Countrey of Northumberland under his own Dominion expelling thence the two Kings Anlaf the Son of Sihtric and Reginald the Son of Guthferth But Ethelwerd relates this action to have been done by this King's Lieutenants viz. Bishop Wulstan and the Ealdorman of Mercia whose Name he does not give us only that these two expelled certain Deserters viz. Reginald and Anlaf out of the City of York and reduced it wholly under this King's Power John of Wallingford also makes this Anlaf to be the King's Nephew and different from Anlaf the Norwegian King Eadmund subdued the whole Countrey of Cumberland and gave it to Malcolme King of Scots upon condition that he should assist him in his Wars both by Sea and Land For the Reader is to observe that hitherto the Britains though much disturbed by their Neighbours the Picts Scots and English had ever since the coming in of the Saxons still there continued a distinct Principality and after several of them had been wearied out they retired into North Wales and there erected the Colony of Straetcluyd as we formerly said though the History and Succession of these Kings are wholly lost unless it be such scattered Remains as we have given you in the former Book But Mat. Westminster though under the next year adds that which is very unlikely to be true that King Edmund conquered this Countrey by the Assistance of Lewellyn Prince of Wales and put out the Eyes of the two Sons of Dunmaile King of that Province though what he adds further appears somewhat more probable That he granted it to the King of Scots upon this condition viz. To defend the North-parts of England from the Invasion of Enemies both by Sea and Land To which Bromton's Chronicle adds likewise That he was also to attend the King of England at several Great Feasts in the year when he held his Common Council and that the King of Scots had for that end several Houses assigned him to lye at by the way Also this year Mat. Westminster relates that King Edmund gave one of his Royal Towns then called Beadricesworth with divers other Lands to build a Church and Monastery in Memory of St. Edmund the Martyr whose Body was there enshrin'd This year likewise as Florence relates King Edmund sent Ambassadors to Prince Hugh of France for the Restitution of King Lewis whereupon the said Prince held a Solemn Council with all the Chief Men of the Kingdom concerning it But not long after King Edmund deceased at the Feast of St. Augustin having held the Kingdom Six Years and an half But the Laudean or Peterburgh Copy of these Annals as also Ethelwerd's Chronicle place the Death of this King Anno Dom. 948 which without doubt is the truest Account So that he died in the very Flower of his Age being not yet Five and twenty years old But we shall give you the manner of his Death from William of Malmesbury as well as from other Authors since he met with such an End the like to which I have not read of any other Prince taking all the Circumstances together And thus we find it He having made a Great Entertainment at a place called Pucklekirk upon the Holiday of St. Augustin Archbishop of Canterbury for all his Nobility and Chief Men and there spying towards the end of Dinner a certain Notorious Thief called Leof sitting at the Table whom he had before banished commanded Leon his Sewer to lay hold on him But the Thief not only resisted him but was also like to have killed the Sewer Whereupon the King leaping from the Table and going to rescue him out of the Villain 's hands and having now laid hold on him and thrown him on the ground he twisted his hands in his hair upon which the Thief pulling out a Dagger stabbed the King who lay upon him into the Breast so that he immediately expired but the King's Servants presently coming in soon cut the Villain to pieces though some of them were first wounded by him The King's Body was thereupon carried to Glastenbury and there buried and the Town wherein he was killed was bestowed on the same Monastery to sing Masses for his Soul To this Place the Prince as well as his Brother was a great Benefactor as appears by his recited Charter in William of Malmesbury whereby he confers divers large Privileges upon that Abby of which St. Dunstan was then the Abbot And it is also to be observed that He there stiles himself in the beginning of his Charter Edmund King of the English and Governor and Ruler of the other Nations round about and says That with the Advice and by the Consent of his Chief Men and for the Remission of his Sins He made that Grant to the Church of St. Mary at Glastenbury This Charter bore date Anno 944. in Letters of Gold and was written at the end of a Book of Gospels which he had given to the same Church most curiously bound So that it is no wonder if he had the good words of the Monks though he might also very well deserve them yet this last Action speaks him to have been extremely transported with Passion thus to debase the Majesty of a King in going about to seize a common Malefactor with his own hands and indeed he paid too dear for thus acting below his Character This King made divers good Laws which since the Title does not recite in what year they were made I have referred to this place some of which I shall here give you translated from the Latin Copies in Abbot Bromton's Chronicle as well as from Mr. Lambard's Collection In the Preface of which we are told That at the solemn Feast of Easter the King had held a Great
Friends not only to marry her but also to fulfil the Covenants made between them and shall also engage to maintain her After that the Bridegroom is to declare what he will give his Bride besides that which she formerly made choice of with his good liking if she survive him In case they so agree it provides that after his Decease she shall have the one half of all his Estate and if they have a Child betwixt them the whole till such time as ●he marry again Then when they have agreed on all things the Kindred of the Bride shall contract her to him and engage for her Honesty and at the same time they shall give Caution for the Celebration of the Marriage The rest being not very material I omit and have only set down these to let the Reader see the Antiquity of Covenants before Marriage and of Bonds for the performance of them as also of Jointures the Thirds of the Estate not being then settled by Law as Dower by what I can find Having now finished the Reign of King Edmund I have no more to observe but that though he left two Sons by the Queen his Wife viz. Edwi and Edgar yet notwithstanding his Brother Edred succeeded to him as Next Heir for so Ethelwerd as well as Florence of Worcester stiles him King EDRED THIS year according to our Annals Eadred Aetheling after his Brother's Decease was made King and presently reduced all Northumberland under his Obedience Upon which the Scots also swore to perform whatever he would require of them But the Manuscript Life of St Dunstan written by a Monk of those times and which is now in the Cottonian Library is much more particular concerning this King's Succession saying That King Edmund being slain Eadred took the Kingdom succeeding to his Brother as his Heir Which is also confirmed by Florence of Worcester who says That Edred being Next Heir to his Brother succeeded him And Ethelwerd gives us the reason of it more fully That he succeeded him quippe ejus Haeres because he was Next Heir And Simeon of Durham further adds That this King was Crowned at Kingston by Odo Archbishop of Canterbury H. Huntington and Mat. Westminster give us the Particulars of this War against the Northumbers and Scots more at large viz. That he subdued the Northumbrians with a powerful Army they refusing to submit to his Dominion and that the Scots thereupon being afraid submitted themselves to him without any War at all and that the King of the Scots swore Fidelity to him It seems here by Ingulph that this Submission of the Northumbers was wrought by the means of Turketule Chancellor to King Edred and afterwards Abbot of Croyland who was now sent Ambassador to the Northumbers to reduce them to their Duty which he upon his Arrival at York performed with that Prudence and Diligence that he brought back the Archbishop and all the People of that City to their former Allegiance But R. Hoveden places the Oath taken by the Northumbrians under this year and that Wulstan Archbishop of York and all the Northumbrian Lords swore Fealty to King Edred in a Town called Tadencliff though they did not long observe it Under this year most of the Welsh Chronicles place the death of that Worthy Prince Howel Dha and say That he left his four Sons Owen Run Roderic and Edwin his Heirs of all his Territories in South-Wales But as for North Wales it returned to the two Sons of Edwal Voel called Jevaf and Jago because Meyric their Elder Brother was not thought fit to govern These as being of the Elder House would have had the Supreme Government of all Wales which being denied them by the Sons of Howel caused great and long Wars between them Yet nothwithstanding other of the Welsh Chronicles place the death of Howel Dha much later for they make him Contemporary with our King Edgar as shall be shewn when we come to the History of his Reign in the next Book Also the same year according to R. Hoveden King Edred being much provoked by the Treachery of the Northumbers laid all Northumberland waste in which devastation the Monastery of Ripun which had been built by Bishop Wilfrid was burnt But our Annals defer this Rebellion of the Northumbers to the year following When Anlaf again returned into the Countrey of the Northumbers This is also confirmed by Florence of Worcester and H. Huntington viz. That King Edred being returned into the Southern parts of the Kingdom Anlaf who had been formerly expell'd the Kingdom of Northumberland re●urned thither with a great Navy and being received with joy by the people was again restored to his Kingdom About this time Jago and Jevaf Princes of North-Wales entred South-Wales with a great and powerful Army against whom came over the Eldest Son of Howel with his Brethren and fought a Battel at the Hills of Carne where Jevaf and Jago obtained the Victory And the year following the same Princes twice invaded South-Wales and spoiled Dyvet and slew Dunwallon Lord thereof And to place these Welsh Wars together in the year 952. the said Sons of Howel Dha gathered their Forces together against Jevaf and Jago and entred their Countrey as far as the River Co●●y where they fought a cruel bloody Battel at a place called Gwrhustu or Llanrwst Multitudes being slain on both sides as Edwin the Son of Howel Dha with other Welsh Princes and the Sons of Howel being vanquish'd Jevaf and Jago pursued them as far as Curdigan destroying their Countrey with Fire and Sword This year according to the Annals Aelfeag Bishop of Winchester deceased at the Feast of St. Gregory The Northumbers again expelled King Anlaf and set up Eric the Son of Harold for their King This is the same with Eric mentioned by Hoveden who yet did not immediately enter upon the Throne as that Author supposes till Anlaf had been expell'd but Florence of Worcester and the Chronicle of Mailrosse place the expulsion of Anlaf and the setting up of Eric two years sooner and perhaps with better reason For the same year according to Hoveden King Edred made Wulstan Archbishop of York close Prisoner at Witharbirig because he had been often accused to him upon divers accounts Yet Will. Malmesbury tells us expresly it was for favouring or conniving at his Countreymen in their late Rebellion But after he had kept him a long time in Prison he thought fit to pardon him out of reverence to his Function And the year following the Chronicle of Mailrosse relates that Archbishop Wulstan being set free was restored to his Episcopal Function at Doncacester But this is certain King Edred could not have done this till after Eric had been driven out as this Author more truly reckons tho our Annals do it the next year saying That The Northumbers drove out King Eric and King Eadred again possessed himself of that Kingdom With which also H.
him to govern as a Conqueror From which also you may observe the flourishing Trade and Wealth of that City in those days since it could even at that time pay above a Seventh of this excessive Taxation Then also a great part of the Danish Army return'd into Denmark and only forty Ships remain'd with King Cnute the Danes and English were likewise now reconciled and united at Oxnaford Bromton says it was done at a Great Council or Parliament at Oxford where King Cnute ordained the Laws of King Edgar i. e. of England to be observed The same year also Aethelsige Abbot of Abbandune deceased and Aethelwin succeeded him This year King Cnute returned into Denmark and there stayed all the Winter Bromton's Chronicle says he went over to subdue the Vandals who then made War against him and carried along with him an Army both of English and Danes the former being commanded by Earl Godwin set upon the Enemies by surprize and put them to flight after which the King had the English in as much as esteem as his own Danish Subjects But the year following He returned into England and then held a Mycel Gemot or Great Council at Cyrencester where Ethelward the Earldorman was outlaw'd The same year also King Cnute went to Assandune the place where he had before fought the great Battel with King Edmund and there caused a Church to be built of Lime and Stone for the souls of those men that had been slain there Which being as R. Hoveden relates consecrated in the King's presence by Wulstan Archbishop of York and divers other Bishops was committed to the care of his Chaplain whose Name was Stigand Also Archbishop Living deceased and Ethelnoth a Monk and Dean of Canterbury was consecrated Bishop by Wulstan Archbishop of York But before we proceed farther I will give you some account of the Affairs of Wales in these times Where after the death of Kynan or Conan the Usurping Prince of South-Wales above-mentioned Lewelyn Prince of North-Wales had according to Caradoc's Chronicle possessed himself of South-Wales and had for some years governed both those Countries with great Peace and Prosperity so that from the North to the South Sea there was not a Beggar in the whole Countrey but every man had sufficient to live of his own insomuch that the Countrey grew daily more and more populous But this year produced a notable Impostor for a certain Scot of mean Birth came now into South-Wales and called him self Run or Reyn as the Manuscript Copies have it the Son of Meredyth ap Owen late Prince of Wales as you have already heard Upon which the Nobility of that Countrey who loved not Lewelyn set up this Run or Reyn to be their Prince But Lewelyn hearing of it assembled all the Forces of North-Wales and marched against this Run who had now also got all the strength of South-Wales together and going as far as Abergwily i. e. the mouth of the River Gwily there waited the coming of Lewelyn but when he arrived and both Armies were ready to join Battel Run full of outward confidence encouraged his men to fight yet no sooner was the Battel begun but this Impostor soon discovered what he was by withdrawing himself p●●●ly out of the fight whereas on the contrary Lewelyn like a Couragious Prince standing in the Head of his Army called out aloud for this base Scot Run who durst so belye the Blood of the British Princes Both Armies then meeting fought for a while with great Courage and Malice to each other but it seems the South-Wales men being not so resolute in the Quarrel of this Impostor as those of North-Wales were to defend the Right of their Lawful Prince the latter being also encouraged by the Speeches and Prowess of their Prince put the former to the Rout and pursued this Run so closely that he had much ado to escape Prince Lewelyn having got thus a great deal of Spoil return'd home and for a short time govern'd these Countries in Peace But to return to our Annals This year about Martinmass King Cnute outlaw'd i. e. banished Earl Thurkyl But they tell us not the Crime Yet William of Malmesbury makes it a Judgment for being the principal Promoter of the Murther of Archbishop Aelfeage and that as soon as he return'd into Denmark he was killed by some Noblemen of that Nation This year also according to an Old Manuscript belonging to St. Edmundsbury and cited by the Lord Chief Justice Coke in the Preface to the 9 th Book of his Reports King Cnute held a Parliament at Winchester wherein were present the two Archbishops and all the other Bishops as also many Ealdormen and Earls with divers Abbots together with a great many Knights and a vast multitude of People and there in pursuance of the King's desires it was decreed That the Monastery of St. Edmund the King should be free and for ever exempt from all Jurisdiction of the Bishops and Earls of that Country But Sir H. Spelman here very well observes that this Manuscript could be no Ancienter than the Reign of Henry the Third because the word Parliament was not in use before that time Though thus much is certain That King Cnute the year before founded this Monastery afterwards called St. Edmundsbury but then known to the Saxons by the name of Beadrichesworth where there had been a Church built before and King Edward the Elder in the year 942 had also given several Lands to it and upon which Foundation King Cnute had lately built and endowed the said Abby which was one of the Largest and Richest in all England Lewelyn ap Sitsylt Prince of Wales but a short time enjoyed the fruits of his late Victory for this year the Welsh Chronicles tell us he was slain by Howel and Meredyth the Sons of Prince Edwin or Owen above-mentioned who yet did not succeed in the Principality for J●go Son to Edwal late Prince of Wales was now advanced to the Throne as Lawful Heir having been long debarr'd of his Right But it seems he could not do the like in South-Wales which one Rytheric ap Justin seiz'd upon and held by force This year King Cnute sail'd with his Fleet to the Isle of Wight but upon what account our Annals do not shew us Also Archbishop Aethelnoth went to Rome and was there received by Pope Benedict with great Honour who put on his Pall with his own hands and being so habited celebrated Mass as the Pope commanded him and then after he had dined with him return'd home with his Benediction Also Leofwin the Abbot who had been unjustly expell'd from the Monastery of Elig was his Companion and there cleared himself of those Crimes of which he had been accused before the Pope the Archbishop and all the Company that were there present testifying on his behalf Wulstan Archbishop of York deceased and Aelfric succeeded Edelnoth the Archbishop consecrating him at Canterbury Also this
since this Story transacted not many years before the Conquest is told so many several ways This year according to our Annals Aelgiva the Widow of King Cnute and Mother of King Hardecnute and King Edward was banished but going over to Baldwin Earl of Flanders he assign'd her Bricge i. e. Bruges for her Retirement where he protected her and provided for her as long as she staid there But the Reader is to take notice that this Queen who is here called Aelgiva in the English-Saxon is the same with Emma in the Norman-French Dialect and who was now banished England by King Harold as all Writers agree But the reason why this Queen did not retire into Normandy her own Countrey was that her Father and Brother were both dead and though William her Nephew then succeeded in the Dukedom yet he was but an Infant under the Tutelage of the King of France This year also produced a great Revolution in Wales for Griffyth ap Lewelyn ap Sitsylt sometimes Prince of Wales raised a great Army against Prince Jago who now enjoyed the Principality of North-Wales as you have already heard and Jago also provided for himself as well as he could but the greater part and the better Soldiers were of Griffyth's side for the love they bore to his Father as plainly appeared when it came to a trial for after the Battel was joined Jago his Soldiers deserting him was soon overthrown and slain and then Griffyth reigned in his stead From whence we may observe the strange fickleness of the Welsh Nation in those times who notwithstanding their seeming Affection to this Prince the Right Heir yet left him as soon as ever they met with one of the same Race whom they liked better From which evil custom these Countries were never long without Civil Wars till the total Conquest of them by the English But Griffyth ap Lewelyn after he had thus slain Prince Jago governed North-Wales very well following his Father's steps and in the very first year of his Government he fought with the Englishmen and Danes at Crosford upon Severne and from thence he led his Army to Lhanpadarn vawr in Caerdiganshire and destroyed that place and thence passing into South-Wales totally subdued it Howel ap Edwin at that time Prince thereof being forced to fly his Countrey and when he had thus reduced South-Wales he returned home again with Honour But the next year Howel Prince of South-Wales as the English as well as Welsh Chronicles relate having now procured Edwin the Brother of Leofric Earl of Mercia to assist him marched with a great Army of English and Danes against Prince Griffyth who meeting them in the field overcame them and slew Edwin at Pencadair and pursued Howel so closely that though he escaped himself yet his Wife was taken Prisoner whom Griffyth like so well that he kept her for his Mistress But though Howel after this made several Attempts to regain his Countrey yet he could never succeed for that Prince Griffyth held it all his time But the Cottonian Chronicle relates that fighting afterwards with Griffyth at a place called Paldiwach he obtained the Victory and again made himself Prince of South-Wales But this I leave to the Reader 's Judgment To return again to our Annals Ethelnoth Archbishop of Canterbury deceased and a little after Ethelric Bishop of the South-Saxons and also a little before Christmas Bryteh Bishop of Worcester and a little after Aelfric Bishop of the East Angles Then Aeadsige was made Archbishop and Grymkytel Bishop of the South-Saxons and Living succeeded in the Bishopricks of Worcester and Gloucester This year King Harold deceased at Oxnaford 16. Kal. April and was buried at Westminster He governed England Four Years and Sixteen Weeks But there is certainly an Error in this Copy of the Annals for either he deceased not till the next year as the Cambridge Copy and Mat. Westminster place it or else he could reign but Three Years and perhaps so many odd Weeks as these Annals mention In his time was again paid a great Tax for the setting out Sixteen Sail to wit Eight Marks to every Rower which shews it consisted of only Gallies and not Ships and as Florence also adds Twelve Marks more to every Master which he order'd to be rais'd through all England as was before done in the Reign of King Cnute But it seems every Port was bound to pay such a proportion to set out these Sixteen Sail as H. Huntington relates whereby nevertheless he so much incensed the minds of the English against him that the Welsh perceiving it or else for some other reason began to be very unruly insomuch that some Insurrections happened thereupon wherein many of the English Nobility were slain as Edwin Brother to Earl Leofric Turketil and Algeat the Sons of Effi both of them Great Persons and several others And to this time I suppose we may refer what Caradoc in his Welsh Chronicle relates That Griffyth ap Lewelyn Prince of North-Wales in the first year of his Reign fought with the English and Danes at Crossford upon Severne and put them to flight and from thence he led his Army to Lhanpadan vawr in Caerdiganshire and destroyed the place utterly and from thence passed all over South-Wales receiving the people into his subjection for Howel ap Edwin their King fled before him and forsook the Land As for the Character of this King Harold and the reason why he was called Harefoot they are very uncertain H. Knighton in his Chronicle writes very oddly That he had a Body like a Hare sure he means hairy like that Creature and from thence was called Harefoot which is very improbable But others with more appearance of truth derive it from his Swiftness of Foot Bromton gives him this Character That in all respects he degenerated from the Worth of his Father King Cnute insomuch that divers suspected him not to have been his Son for he was altogether careless both as to matters of War and Peace only he would pursue his own Will and Pleasure and what was very unbecoming his Royal Estate chusing rather to go on foot than ride whence for the lightness and swiftness of his Feet he seems to have been called Harefoot As for his Laws we have only this one mentioned by Mr. Selden in his Janus Anglorum which was That whatever Welshman coming into England without leave was taken on this side Offa's Ditch should have his Right Hand cut off by the King's Officers King HARDECNUTE KING Harold dying thus suddenly the Chief Men of England with whom also the Londoners now joined sent Messengers to Hardecnute who was then at Bruges with his Mother intreating him to come and receive the Crown whereupon he hasted into Denmark there to settle his Affairs which when he had done with Forty or as some say Sixty Ships well mann'd with Danish Soldiers according to our Annals he arrived at Sandwich seven days before
Makes War upon his Brother Cadelh Prince of South-Wales and destroys his Countries Id. p. 299. Submits himself and all his Subjects to King Alfred's Dominion Id. p. 306 307. His Decease and Issue Id. p. 316. Pitying the distressed condition of the Northern Britains gave them great part of Cheshire to dwell in if they could beat out the Saxons thence Id. p. 317. After a bloody Fight with the Saxons obtains a compleat Victory over them Ibid. Andate the Goddess of Victory among the Britains l. 2. p. 48. Andover a Town not far from Winchester in Hampshire l. 6. p. 10. Anciently called Andefer Id. p. 25. Andragatius Maximus his General kills the Emperor Gratian near the Bridge of Singidunum and establishes his Master in his usurped Empire l. 2. p. 95. And hearing of the ill news of Maximus casts hims●lf headlong out of a Ship being then at Sea and so drowns himself Id. p. 96. Andredswood in Kent and Sussex is in length from East to West at least One hundred and twenty Miles and in breadth Thirty containing all that which is called the Wilde of Kent l. 5. p. 299. St. Andrew's Church at Rochester built by Ethelbert King of Kent l. 4. p. 160. Angild the Forfeiture of the whole value of a man's Head and that Hand which stole was to be cut off unless redeemed l. 5. p. 297. Angles supposed to be derived from the Ancient Cimbri l. 3. p. 123. Anglesey anciently called Mona l. 2. p. 46. and Manige l. 6. p. 28. The whole Isle subdued by Godfred the Son of Harold the Dane Id. p. 7 20. Destroyed by the Danes Id. p. 23. And by King Ethelred's Fleet Id. p. 28. They cast off Meredyth and receive Edwal ap Meyric for their Prince Id. p. 24. Anglia Sacra publish'd by the Learned Mr. Wharton l. 4. p. 166. Anlaff Son of Syhtric King of Northumberland flies into Ireland l. 5. p. 332. Supposed the Son of Syhtric His getting into Athelstan's Camp in the disguise of a Musician and the Observations he made there Id. p. 335. His ravaging and wasting the Countries where-ever he came the Battel he had with King Edmund and the Agreement between them both at last His marrying Alditha the Daughter of Earl Orme Id. p. 343. Called Olaf a Dane and Norwegian by Extract who had been expelled in the time of King Athelstan the Kingdom of Northumberland but being some time after recalled by those Rebels he was again expelled by King Edmund who added that Countrey to his own Dominions Id. p. 343 344. Returns again in King Edred's time and with joy is restored to his Kingdom by the People three years after they expel him a third time and set up Eric for their King Id. p. 350. Another of this Name Son to the King of Dublin comes with a great Fleet into Yorkshire or Lincolnshire and lands but he is miserably beaten by King Athelstan Id. p. 334 335. Anlaff or Unlaff King of Norway the Ravages he commits and where l. 6. p. 24 25. Is brought with great honour to King Ethelred After Baptism he returned into his own Countrey Id. p. 25. Anna King of the East-Angles enriches Cnobsbury Monastery with Noble Buildings and Revenues l. 4. p. 180. Is slain in fight by King Penda together with his whole Army Id. p. 185. His youngest Son Erkenwald w●s made Bishop of London Id. p. 196. Annals Saxon first collected and written in divers Monasteries of England l. 4. p. 151. The Cottonian Copy of them in the Form we now have them was wrote after the Conquest l. 6. p. 56. Antenor with his Trojans joining Brute their Expedition and the Accidents that befel them l. 1. p. 9. Anwulf Son of Baldwin Earl of Flanders sent Ambassador from Hugh King of the French to King Athelstan to demand his Sister in Marriage l. 5. p. 339. Aper kills Numerianus and is killed by Dioclesian l. 2. p. 83. Appeals none to the King in Suits unless Justice can't otherwise be had l. 6. p. 13. Appledore anciently called Apuldre or Apultre in Kent l. 5. p. 299 300. Arbogastes General to Eugenius sets him up in the Empire of the West against Valentinian the Second but his Master being overcome by Theodosius and put to death he soon after made himself away l. 2. p. 97. Arcadius Emperor of the East Eldest Son to Theodosius Id. ib. Archbishop its Title not known here in the time of Lucius l. 2. p. 69. His ancient Power as Governor of the Church of England l. 2. p. 210. None but Monks made Archbishops of Canterbury l. 5. p. 333. Brythelme resigns at the Command of the King and whole Nation l. 6. p. 2. When the Churches of Wales first owned the Archbishop of Canterbury's Superiority l. 6. p. 21. Archenfield in Herefordshire anciently called Yrcingafield l. 5. p. 319. Archigallo for his Tyranny is deposed by his Nobles but restored to it by the kind Artifice of his Brother l. 1. p. 14. Arch-pyrate anciently did not signify a Robber but one skill'd in Sea-Affairs or a Seaman derived from Pyra which in the Attick Tongue was as much as Craft or Art l. 6. p. 9. Arderydd a Battel fought there on the Borders of Scotland l. 3. p. 146. Areans removed by Theodosius from their stations but who these were is unknown l. 2. p. 93. Ariminum the Council called there by Constantius l. 2. p. 89. Our Bishops sent to it and what was done there Id. p. 90. Arles in Gallia the Council there when held and what British Bishops were sent to it l. 2. p. 88. Is made the Imperial Seat of Constantine and called Constantia it was besieged by Gerontius but he was hinder'd from taking it l. 2. p. 103. Armorica now Britain in France l. 1. p. 13. l. 5. p. 287. A Fleet prepared for the Armorican War l. 2. p. 25. The people there refuse to accept Charles King of the Almans for their King l. 5. p. 287. Armour whence arose the Custom of hanging up the Armour of Great Men in Churches as Offerings made to God for the Honour they had gained to themselves or Benefit to their Countrey through his Assistance and Blessing l. 6. p. 57. Army a Lawful one raised by the King for the Defence of the Nation called anciently by the name of Fyrd l. 6. p. 60. Arnulf the Emperor with the Assistance of the French Saxon and Bavarian Horse put the Danish Foot to flight l. 5. p. 298. Arnwy Abbot of Burgh resigns his Dignity by reason of his ill state of health and with the King's License and the Consent of the Monks confers it upon another Monk of that Abbey l. 6. p. 84. Arrian Heresy when it first infested Britain l. 2. p. 106. Arthur what he was King of who was his Father and the many considerable Victories he gained over the Saxons and when he carried the Picture of Christ's Cross and of the Virgin Mary on his back l. 3. p. 134 135. He besieges
of the Lands and Privileges of Croyland Monastery in a Great Council Id. p. 254. Of King Berthwulf to the Abbey of Croyland confirmed under the Rule of St. Benedict in a Great Council of the Kingdom at Kingsbury Id. p. 261. Of King Edgar about his subduing the greatest part of Ireland with the City of Dublin and to be Lord of all the Isles as far as Norway doubtless fictitious l. 6. p. 12. By an Extract from King Cnute's Charter preserved in the Evidences of that Church the Port of Sandwich is given to Christ-Church in Canterbury with all the Issues c. Id. p. 54. Of King Cnute's to the Monastery of St. Edmundsbury grants and confirms all its Lands and Privileges The Beginning of it somewhat remarkable Ibid. Of the Foundation of the Monastery of Coventry ratified by the Charter of King Edward and a Bull of Pope Alexander Id. p. 72. Of Edward the Confessor to confirm the Foundation of Waltham-Abbey Id. p. 89. The Curia or Great Council of the Kingdom confirm his Charter of Endowment of the Monastery of Westminster part of which is there set down Id. p. 94. Charters and other Writings when they began to be made after the French way Id. p. 98. Chastity Queen Etheldrith though twice married yet would not suffer either of her Husbands to know her l. 4. p. 198 199. An Heroick Example of it in the Abbess of Coldingham Nunnery in Yorkshire l. 5. p. 269. King Edgar perhaps loved it in others though he did not muc● practise it himself l. 6. p. 11. Edward the Confessor highly extols his Wife for her Chastity Id. p. 96. Cherbury in Shropshire anciently called Cyricbyrig l. 5. p. 316. Chertsey in Surrey anciently called Ceortesige l. 6. p. 6. Chester anciently called Legions l. 4. p. 164. Legacester l. 5. p. 301. l. 6. p. 8. Concacestre l. 5. p. 286. Called also Caerlegion l. 5. p. 315. And Cunaeceaster l. 6. p. 26. The Place where the Danes took up their Quarters against King Alfred's Forces which made them suffer great extremities l. 5. p. 301. Repaired by the Command of Earl Ethelred and his Wife Ethelfleda Id. p. 315. The Heads of Leofred a Dane and Gryffyth ap Madoc set up on the top of the Tower there Id. p. 321. The Province much spoiled and ruined by the Norwegian Pyrates l. 6. p. 20. Chichester the Bishop's See was formerly at Selsey l. 4. p. 198. Anciently Cisseancester in Sussex where the Danes carried their Prey from Alfred l. 5. p. 300. The Bishoprick was called that of the South-Saxons l. 6. p. 88. Chiltern the Woody Countrey of Bucks and Oxfordshire anciently called Clytern l. 6. p. 34. Chipnam Vid. Cippenham Choisy anciently Cazii signifies a Royal Village it is in France l. 5. p. 290. Christianity first preached in this Island when and by whom l. 2. p. 51 52. When and by whom first preach'd in Germany l. 4. p. 211. Christ-Church in Canterbury had the Port in Sandwich given to it by King Cnute with all the Issues and Profits c. l. 6. p. 54. Chrysanthius the Son of Marcian a Novatian Bishop supposed to be sent into Britain by Theodosius as his Lieutenant l. 2. p. 97. Church Pope Gregory's Determination concerning the Customs of the Church l. 4. p. 156. When their Dues ought to be brought in and the Punishment for Non-Payment of them A Sanctuary to those that fly to it who are guilty of a Capital Crime The Punishment those are to undergo that fight in a Church Id. p. 208. Withred's great care of the Churches in Kent Id. p. 210 211. Are freed from all Publick Payments and Tributes whatsoever Id. p. 212. With how bright a Lustre Religion shined in the Primitive Church l. 5. p. 24● Alfred's Law entituled The Immunity of the Church Id. p. 292 296 297. The Forfeiture for stealing any thing from thence Id. p. 297. How necessary it was in ancient times for Princes themselves to be blindly obedient to the Discipline of it l. 6. p. 3. Edgar's Law concerning the Immunities of the Church l. 6. p. 13. When Churches in Wales began to acknowledge the Superiority of the Archbishops of Canterbury Id. p. 21. The Original of Coat-Armour its being hung up in Churches from whence supposed Id. p. 57. In all Courts of Civil Pleas Causes concerning Holy Church were to be first determined Id. p. 99. Those that hold of the Church not to be compelled to plead out of the Ecclesiastical Courts unless Justice be wanting there Ibid. The Law concerning those who violate the Peace of it Ibid. When the Church was not excused from paying of Danegelt Id. p. 100. In what cases the Church was to have one Moiety of Treasure-trove Id. p. 101. Cimbric Chersonese now called Jutland l. 3. p. 121. Cimerii and Cimbri derived from Gomer by whom the Ancient Gallia wa● first inhabited l. 1. p. 4. Cippenham now Chipnam in Wiltshire l. 5. p. 262 283. Cirencester the City besieged taken and burnt and by whom l. 3. p. 148. Civilis sent for by Theodosius to govern Britain as Vice-Praefect l. 2. p. 93. Civil War between Cartismandua and Venutius l. 2. p. 45 46. Between Otho and Vitellius Id. p. 53. Claudia Rufina Wife of Pudens a Senator of Rome l. 2. p. 66. Vid. Rufina Claudian his Verses in De Bello Getico supposed to be designed for the second Departure of the Roman Legions l. 2. p. 101. Claudius the Emperor as he was coming to invade the Britains had twice like to have been cast away by Foul Weather but at last obtains a Victory over them and at his Return to Rome the Senate decree him a Triumph and Annual Games with two Triumphal Arches l. 2. p. 39 40. Lived about three years after his sending Aulus Didius into Britain His Death supposed of Poyson given him by his Wife Agrippina Id. p. 45. A Temple dedicated to him looked on as a Badge of their Eternal Slavery Id. p. 47. Claudius Marc. Aurel. Flav. elected Emperor Gallienus being slain performed several great Actions and dies suddenly l. 2. p. 82. Clergy the British Gildas his Character and Reproof of them l. 3. p. 140. May marry if out of Holy Orders and that they cannot otherwise contain Great care was to be had of their Stipends to make them more diligent in Service And of their Hospitality l. 4. p. 155. To receive no Reward for baptizing or for the other Sacraments Id. p. 225. Several Constitutions made against their committing Offences l. 5. p. 284 285. Their Goods and Possessions established to them by Edward the Confessor's Laws l. 6. p. 99. Chlodius Balbinus Vid. Balbinus Chlorus Constantius adopted Caesar by Maximinian is sent by him against Carausius l. 2. p. 83. Fires his own Ships that so his Soldiers might have no hopes left them of Safety but in Victory Id. p. 84. Chuses the Empire of the Western Provinces whereof Britain was one and puts a stop to the Persecution here raised
whereby he converted many of the Britains then Subject to the West-Saxons Id. p. 213. Naitan King of the Picts concerns himself about the Celebration of Easter and it is appointed to be kept on the First Sunday after the First Full Moon that follows the Vernal Equinox l. 4. p. 216. Decreed to be kept after the Custom of Rome in a General Synod of the British Nation Id. p. 229. Ordinances touching the Keeping of Easter made at the Second Council of Pinchinhale Id. p. 242 East-Saxons the beginning of this Kingdom 〈◊〉 Erchenwin the Son of Offa according to H. Huntington l. 3. p. 13● It had London the Chief City of England under its Dominion Ibid. This Kingdom was divided from that of Kent by the River Thames c. l. 4. p. 159. Upon the Death of Sebert his Three Sons whom he left Heirs to the Kingdom all relapse to Paganism and great part of the Nation with them Id. p. 168. But between Thirty and Forty years after at the Instance of King Oswy they again receive the Christian Faith Id. p. 184. Eatta Bishop of the Province of Bernicia had his Episcopal See at Hagulstad l. 4. p. 197. Reckoned to be a very Holy Man Id. p. 215. Ebba a Queen is Converted and Baptized in the Province of the Wectij but what Queen Bede says not l. 4. p. 197. Ebba Abbess of Coldingham-Nunnery in Yorkshire an Heroine Example of Chastity in her and all her Sisters l. 5. p. 269. Eborius Bishop of the City of Eboracum is sent with others to the Council of Arles in Gallia as one of the Deputies for the rest of the Bishops of Britain l. 2. p. 88. Eclipses of the Sun one from early in the Morning till Nine a Clock another where the Stars shewed themselves for near half an hour after Nine in the Morning l. 3. p. 138. Of the Sun which was so great that it 's whole Orb seemed as it were covered with a black Shield Another of the Moon appearing first as stained with Blood which lasted a whole hour and then a Blackness following it returned to its own Colour l. 4. p. 222. One of the Moon From the Cock Crowing till the morning Id. p. 240. One of the Moon In the Second hour of the night 17. Kal. Feb. Id. p. 242. One of the Moon On the 13th Kal. of January l. 5. p. 248. One of the Moon And on the Kal. of September l. 5. p. 248. Of the Sun on the 7th Kal. of August about the fifth hour of the day Id. p. 249. Of the Moon on Christmas-day at night Id. p. 254. Of the Sun About the sixth hour of the day on the Kal. of October Id. p. 260. Of the Sun For one whole hour Id. p. 283. One of the Moon appeared Id. p. 313. Eddobeccus is dispatched away by Constans to the Germans with an Account of Gerontius his Revolt l. 2. p. 103. Edelwalch King of the West-Saxons when he was baptized l. 4. p. 195. Gives Wilfrid Commission to convert and baptize in his Province Id. p. 197. Edgar Son of Edmund and Elgiva afterwards King his Birth l. 5. p. 344. Is elected by the Mercians and Northumbrians their King and confirmed so by the Common Council of the Kingdom Id. p. 354. On the death of his Brother Edwi is elected by the Clergy and Laity King of the West-Saxons and though he was not the first yet he was the best that deserved the Title of First Monarch of all England l. 6. p. 1. And so he stiles himself in his Charter to the Abbey of Glastenbury Id. p. 9. His great Charity and the Nation 's happiness under him Id. p. 2 11. Seven years Penance is imposed upon him by Archbishop Dunstan part of which was That he should not wear his Crown all that time and that for taking a Nun out of a Cloyster and then debauching her Id. p. 3. Harasses North-Wales with War till he forces a Peace upon this Condition That the Tribute in Money should be turned into that of so many Wolves-Heads yearly Id. p. 3 4 11. Grants a New Charter of Confirmation with divers additional Endowments of Lands and Privileges to the Monastery of Medeshamsted Id. p. 5. Marries Ethelfreda or Elfreda Daughter of Ordgar Earl of Devonshire and his Issue by her Id. p. 5 6. Hath an Elder Son by Elfleda sirnamed The ●air Daughter of Earl Eodmar who is called afterwards Edward the Martyr but doubtful whether he was married to her or not Id. p. 6. Places Nuns in the Monastery of Rumsey in Hampshire commands all the Countrey of Thanet to be laid waste and for what reason Ibid. Causes the Chanons to be driven out of all the great●r Monasteries in Mercia and Monks to be put in their places Id. p. 7. Is crowned King in the ancient City of Ackmanceaster called Bathan by the Inhabitants with Remarks about his Coronation then for he was crowned before And founds a new Church at Bangor dedicating it to the Virgin Mary Id. p. 7 8. Six Kings make League with him promising upon Oath their Assistance both by Sea and Land An Account who they were and of his Fleet at West-Chester where they all met him He is the first that was truly Lord of our Seas Id. p. 8. His Death and Burial at Glastenbury and Character The great Kindnesses he shewed to Ethelfreda's first Husband's Son Id. p. 9 10 11. A mighty Lover of the Fair Sex Id. p. 3 5 6 9 10 11. A Famous Instance of his great Courage and Strength though but little of Stature Id. p. 11. His Charter about having subdued all Ireland c. much suspected to be fictitious With this King fell all the Glory of the English Nation Id. p. 12. The Laws he made with the Council by the Consent of his Wise-Men Id. p. 12 13 14. Great Dissention amongst the Nobility after his Death about the Election of a New King Id. p. 15. Edgar sirnamed Aetheling the Son of Prince Edward by Agatha Id. p. 49. Edgar Aetheling how he was put by from the Throne though the only surviving Male of the Ancient Royal Family l. 6. p. 105 106. Is proposed to be made King upon Harold's Death but his Party were not prevalent enough to carry it Id. p. 115 116. Edgitha Daughter of King Egbert is first bred up under an Irish Abbess and then made Abbess her self of the Nunnery of Polesworth l. 5. p. 257. Another of this Name King Athelstan's Sister her Marriage with Sihtric the Danish King of Northumberland and being afterwards a Widow she became a Nun at Polesworth Her Character and the False Story of the Scots upon her Id. p. 330. Edgitha or Editha Daughter of Earl Godwin married to Edward the Confessor a Lady not only Beautiful and Pious but Learned above her Sex in that Age l. 6. p. 72 73 96. An improbable Story of her causing Gospatrick to be murthered upon the Account of her Brother Tostige l. 6. p. 90.
Goths by Honorius l. 2. p. 105. Gemote or Hundred-Court every one ought to be present at it l. 6. p. 13 14. General if his heart fails the Army flies A Cowardly General often makes Cowardly Soldiers l. 6. p. 30 87. Gentlemen of ordinary Estates had in King Alfred's time Villages and Townships of their own as well as the King and the Great Men and they received the Penalties due for Breach of the Peace l. 5. p. 295. Geoffrey of Monmouth is the chief if not the only Author of Brutus and his Successors and his History cried out against almost as soon as published l. 1. p. 6. His story of the British War in Claudius the Emperor's time different frrom the Roman Accounts and wherein l. 2. p. 39 40. A notorious Falshood in him about Severus his Death Id. p. 78. His story of Constantine's being elected King by the Britains proved false l. 3. p. 116. His story as to its truth enquired into of Augustine's persuading King Ethelbert to incite Ethelfrid King of Northumberland to make War on the Britains l. 4. p. 164 165. His Account of Cadwallo's being buried at London and his Body put into a Brazen Statue of a Man on Horseback and set over Ludgate for a Terror to the Saxons all false Id. p. 177. Gerent King of the Britains fights with King Ina and Nun his Kinsman l. 4. p. 215. Is supposed to have been King of Cornwall and why Id. p. 216. Germanus and Lupus sent from France to confirm Britain in the Catholick Faith l. 2. p. 107. His second Voyage to Britain upon the renewed Addresses of the Britains to defend God's Cause against Pelagianism l. 3. p. 117. The Miracle he wrought upon a Magistrate's Son the Sinews of whose Legs had been long shrunk up which by his stroking he restored whole as the other Id. Ibid. Gerontius General to Constans brings all Spain under his Obedience l. 2. p. 103. But being turned out of his Command revolts and sets up Maximus one of his Creatures for Emperor His cruel End Id. Ib. Gessoriacum Portus Iccius in Caesar's time afterwards Bononia and now Buloigne l. 2. p. 31 40. Geta Severus the Emperor's Younger Son Governor of the Southern part of this Island l. 2. p. 75. Is killed by the Treachery of his Brother Bassianus in his Mother's Arms Id. p. 77. And Bassianus had taken the Sirname of Antonini Ib. 79. His Name commanded to be razed out of all Monuments by this his wicked Brother which was done accordingly Id. p. 79. Gethic the ancient Scythic or Gethic Tongue the Mother of the German l. 3. p. 122. Gewisses the Nation of the West-Saxons anciently so called received the Christian Faith in the Reign of Cynegils by the preaching of Byrinus an Italian who came hither by the order of Pope Honorius l. 4. p. 179. Gildas designed not any exact History of the Affairs of his Countrey but only to give a short Account of the Causes of the Ruin of it by the Scots Picts and Saxons l. 3. p. 137. His sharp Invective against the British Kings accusing Five of them of very heinous Enormities Id. p. 139. His severe Character of the British Clergy Id. p. 140 141. That he could not Study at Oxford as is supposed by some for the Pagan-Saxons were then Masters of that part of England l. 5. p. 290. Girwy now Yarrow near the mouth of the River Tyne where a Monastery was built in Honour of St. Paul l. 4. p. 194 205 222. Gisa succeeds Duduc in the Bishoprick of Somersetshire i. e. Wells l. 6. p. 88. Glan-Morgan in Wales had its Name from one Morgan who was driven thither by his Brother Cunedage and there slain l. 1. p. 11. Glappa King of Bernicia Reigned for Two years but who he was or how Descended the Authors are silent in l. 3. p. 144. His Death Id. p. 145. Osgat Glappa the Danish Earl when he was Expelled England l. 6. p. 73. Glass when the Art of making it was first taught the English Nation l. 4. p. 194. Glastenbury Besieged by King Arthur in Gildas his time with a great Army out of Cornwal and Devonshire because Queen Gueniver his Wife had been Ravished from him by Melvas who then Reigned in Somersetshire l. 3. p. 135. The Ancient Registers of this Monastery are not to be wholly slighted as false since King Arthur was there Buried and his Tomb discovered about the end of the Reign of King Henry the Second Id. p. 137. This Ancient Monastery was new built by King Ina with large Endowments and Exemptions from Episcopal Jurisdictions c. l. 4. p. 218 219. King Edmund's Body was brought from a place called Pucklekirk where he was killed hither and here buried l. 5. p. 345. And so likewise King Edgar's with great Solemnity for he had been a very liberal Benefactor to this Monastery l. 6. p. 9. As was Edmund Sirnamed Ironside his Grandson's This was by all the Saxons called Glaestingabyrig Id. p. 48. Gleni a River but where is not by our Authors mentioned l. 4. p. 174. Glewancester now called Gloucester l. 3. p. 145. Glotta and Bodotria two Streights now the F●iths of Edinburgh and Dunbritton in Scotland l. 2. p. 99. God in Bede's time was served in Five several Langu●ges l. 1. p. 5. Goda Earl of Devonshire marching out with one Strenwald a Valiant Knight to fight the Danes they were both killed l. 6. p. 22. Godfathers answerable for those Children for whom they stand till they come to years capable of Learning the Creed and the Lord's Prayer l. 4. p. 233. Godfred Son of Harold the Dane subdues the whole Isle of Anglesey and spoils all the Land of Dywet with the Church of St. David's c. l. 6. p. 7.20 Godiva a Foundress with her Husband Leofrick Earl of the Mercians of the Monastery of Coventry and how she freed the said Town from the Grievous Taxes imposed on it l. 6. p. 71. Godmundingham the place where an Idol-Temple stood in King Edwin's time not far from York Eastward near the River Darwent l. 4. p. 174. Godwin Earl Governor or Lord Lieutenant of West-Saxony l. 6. p. 61. His Treachery to Alfred one of King Ethelred's Sons whom by a Forged Letter in the Name of Queen Emma his Mother he enticed over into England then made him Prisoner at Guilford and sent him up to Harold and what afterwards became of him and his Six hundred followers his Eyes put out and he not long survived their loss and most of them suffered various kinds of cruel Deaths Id. p. 62 63. Is accused of the Villany by Aelfrick Archbishop of York and how he purchased his Reconciliation to King Hardecnute Id. p. 67. By his Interest gets Edward the Confessor the Brother of the abovementioned Alfred to be Elected and afterwards Crowned King at Westminster Id. p. 69 70. His own and his Son 's great Power in being able to withstand the King and all the Nobility that
sirnamed Scotus and Erigena and Grimbald assisted King Alfred in founding the University of Oxford He translates Dionysius his Hierarchia out of Greek into Latin l. 5. p. 306. Jointures the Antiquity of them she●● from a Law of King Edmund l. 5. p. 348. Joseph of Arimathea his coming to pr●ach the Gospel here l. 2. p. 52 53. Jovian chosen Emperor by the Army who refusing to command Heathens they cried out They were all Christians and then he accepts the Empire He dies Seven Months after by the Damp of a new plaister'd Chamber where he lay at Dadustana on the Borders of Galatia l. 2. p. 91. Ipswich in Suffolk anciently Gipiswic is wasted by the Danes l. 6. p. 23. Ireland exceeds all the Islands of the Mediterranean Sea and therefore it was thought worth Agricola's Conquest l. 2. p. 57 58. Called Scotland by Columba l. 3. p. 143. The Letters directed by Archb●shop Laurentius to the Irish Bishops about the better observing of Easter are superscribed to them per Universam Scotiam that is throughout Ireland l. 4. p. 166. Coleman Bishop of Lindisfarne his departure into Ireland is there called Scotland Id. p. 189. Is miserably wasted by King Egfrid's Army which he sent under one Bert or Bryt his General Id. p. 201. Island 't is absolutely necessary to maintain a powerful Fleet if ever any Island means to be safe l. 6. p. 35. Ithamar a Kentish man succeeds Paulinus in the Bishoprick of Rochester l. 4. p. 181. Consecrates Deus-Dedit in the Archbishoprick of Canterbury Id. p. 186. Ithancester upon the Bank of the River Pent was anciently a City l. 4. p. 184. Ivor Son to Allan or Asser Duke of Armorica or Little-Bretaigne conquers the Countries of Cornwal Devonshire and Somersetshire and re-peoples them with Britains and by Agreement marries Ethelburga Cousin to Kentwyn l. 3. p. 145. l. 4. p. 201 220. Is by the Welsh Chronicles recorded to have reigned in Wales l. 4. p. 220. Judges when they were first appointed by King Alfred l. 5. p. 291. None should presume to take upon them this Office without due Qualifications How many Alfred hang'd in one year for their false Judgments Id. p. 308. Obliged to execute Justice according to the evidence of those that were summoned Id. p. 325. How often they were to hold the Gemot or Assembly for the Administration of Justice Id. p. 326. King Edgar's Law of fining a Judge that passes an unjust Sentence unless he will take his Oath he did it not out of malice but from unskilfulness and mistake of Judgment l. 6. p. 13 58. How Justice was to be administred between the English and the Welsh Id. p. 44. Equally to be distributed as well to poor as rich Id. p. 13.58 Julia the Empress Wife of Severus the remarkable meeting between her and the Wife of Argentocoxus a British King l. 2. p. 77. Julian the Emperor commands the Villain Paulus to be burnt alive and why l. 2. p. 89. Sends Lupicinus to compose the Troubles in Britain Id. p. 90. Marches against Constantius is called the Apostate and killed by an Arrow in a Battel against the Persians Id. p. 91. Julianus Didius buys the Empire for so much Money to be given to each Soldier but within two months after is slain by Severus l. 2. p. 72. Jury Trial by Twelve men appointed in the League made between King Alfred and Guthrun the Dane l. 5. p. 283 284. A way to prevent the too great Partiality of Juries Id. p. 296. Vid. Grand-Jury and Inquest and Introduct p. 123. Justin the Elder the Emperor when he began to reign l. 3. p. 136. Justice Vid. Judges Justus ordained Bishop in Kent of a certain little City then called Roscaester now Rochester l. 4. p. 159 165. His Departure into France with Mellitus and upon what account Id. p. 168 169. Succeeds Mellitus in the Archbishoprick of Canterbury and consecrates Paulinus a Roman Bishop of the Northumbers Id. p. 171. Jutes from them were derived the Kentish-men the Inhabitants of the Isle of Wight and of that Province now called Hampshire l. 3. p. 118. Descended from the Getae or Gothes Id. p. 123. Wholly inhabit the Countrey of Kent with the leave and consent of King Vortigern Id. p. 126. Commanded by King Egbert's Law to be ever after called Englishmen l. 5. p. 255 292. K KEawlin Vid. Ceawlin Kemsford in Gloucestershire anciently called Cynesmeresford l. 4. p. 242. l. 5. p. 247. Kenbryht the Ealdorman the Annals call him King his Death l. 4. p. 188. Kened first King of Scotland makes a total Conquest of the Picts but not so far as their Historians pretend to l. 5. p. 259. Kened King of the Scots had the whole Countrey of Lothian given him by King Edgar and upon what terms l. 6. p. 11. Begs Pardon of King Edgar for what he had spoken in his Cups of him Id. p. 11 12. Kenelm Son to King Kenwulf succeeds his Father under the Tutelage of his Sister Quendride who makes him away out of an Ambition of reigning her self l. 5. p. 251 252. Keneswith the Daughter of Penda marries Offa Son to Sigher King of the East-Saxons l. 4. p. 214. Kenet in Wiltshire anciently called Cynet where a Battel was fought between the English and the Danes but the latter got the Victory and a great Booty l. 6. p. 32. Kenred King of the West-Saxons goes to Rome and tarries there till he died l. 4. p. 214. Is called King of Mercia in the Charter pr●tended to be made to Evesham Abbey Id. p. 217. Kent the County wholly planted by the Jutes with Vortigern's leave l. 3. p. 126. Kentigern the famous Bishop of Ellwye in North-Wales l. 3. p. 150. Kentish-men the Inhabitants of the Isle of Wight and of the Province lying over-against it now called Hampshire derived from the Jutes l. 3. p. 118. Make a League with King Ina and what they give for it l. 4. p. 209. Kentwyn King of the West-Saxons marries his Niece to Ivor l. 3. p. 145. Is the Son of Cynegils and he the Son of Ceolwulf l. 4. p. 196. Puts the Britains to flight as far as the Sea wasting all their Countrey with Fire and Sword but at last they fall into a friendly Composition and Agreement Id. p. 201. His Death Id. p. 202. Kenulf is chosen Abbot of Medeshamstead and afterwards made Bishop of Winchester l. 6. p. 5. His Decease Id. p. 31. Kenwal Vid. Cenwalch Kenwulf King of the West-Saxons fights with Offa King of the Mercians at the Siege of Bensington-Castle but was worsted l. 4. p. 236. Vid. Cenwulph Kings What sort of Kings were anointed by the Britains such as shew'd their Office in Gildas his time to have been a very dangerous Employment And there were divers of them ruling at once l. 3. p. 116. All of them inveighed against very sharply by Gildas Id. p. 139. How to be Elected and Ordained and by whom They were not to be Begot of Adultery
by it for it was only a Voluntary Annual Alms or Benevolence Id. p. 239. Alfred call'd it his Alms and how he sent it to Rome l. 5. p. 281 286 291 298. Justly called Alms and not a Tribute as the Modern Popish Writers term it Id. p. 291. When it was to be paid and the Penalty for not performing it accordingly l. 6. p. 13. Edward the Confessor's Law to reinforce the Payment of it Id. p. 100. Vid. Romescot Petroc a Learned British Preacher in Cornwall l. 3. p. 149. Philip upon the death of Henry is made King of France l. 6. p. 88. Visited by Duke William who solicited his Assistance in his designed War against Harold but he would not hearken to the Proposals made him and for what reason Id. p. 109. Philippus Marcus Julius an Arabian succeeded Gordianus in the Empire but his Army soon made away with him l. 2. p. 81. Philippus Nonnius a Lieutenant in Britain under the Emperor Gordianus Id. Ib. Phoenicians the first Discoverers of this Island l. 1. p. 2 3. Picts came out of Scythia and landed first in the North of Ireland l. 1. p. 4. Are totally subdued by the Scots Their Language is unknown Id. p. 5. Confederate with Carausius against Constantius Chlorus l. 2. p. 83. Surrender up many of their Forts and strong Places to Fergus Id. p. 98. And Scots their landing first in Britain passing over that part of the Irish Sea which is called the Scythic Vale l. 3. p. 114. And Saxons privately make a Peace Id. p. 126. The Picts cut off King Egfrid and his whole Army and recover their Countrey the English had taken away l. 4. p. 202. Slay Bert the Ealdorman Id p. 211. Fight against Beorfrith the Ealdorman Id. p. 215. Keep their League with the English and rejoice to be partakers of the Catholick Peace and Truth Id. p. 221. A great fight between them and the Britains that is those of Cumberland Id. p. 225. These and the Scots conquer Galloway and Lothian and the Low-lands of Scotland as far as the Friths of Dunbritton and Edinburgh l. 5. p. 249. Rout the English and slay King Athelstan in fight a story Id. p. 250. The total Conquest of the Picts by Kened the first King of Scotland Id. p. 259. Pightwin or Pechtwin is consecrated Bishop of Witherne called in Latin Candida Casa at Aelfet l. 4. p. 228. His Decease Id. p. 231. Pinchenhale or Finkenhale now Finkney in the Bishoprick of Durham and Kingdom of Northumberland where a General Synod assembled l. 4. p. 236. The second Synod or Council held here under Eanbald Archbishop of York c. Id. p. 242. Pius Antoninus succeeds Hadrian and at his first coming to the Throne hath a Law made That all the Subjects of the Roman Empire should be Free Citizens of Rome l. 2. p. 67. Plague a very sore one in Britain when l. 3. p. 117. A great one over all the Isle of Britain and then it went into Ireland l. 4. p. 190. A great Mortality both of Men and Beasts l. 5. p. 269. Another great one upon Men and Murrain of Cattle Id. p. 302. A great Mortality of Men and a very malignant Feaver in London l. 6. p. 4. A great Mortality of Cattle in England Id. p. 21. A great number of Cattle died and by the Intemperance of the Season the Fruits of the Earth were destroyed Id. p. 70. So great a Murrain of all sorts of Cattle in England that none could ever remember the like Id. p. 85. Plautius Praetor in Gaul invades Britain and his Success l. 2. p. 38 39. Has an Ovation allowed him by Claudius Id. p. 41. Pledge Alfred's Law about keeping the Peace and the Punishment in breaking it l. 5. p. 292 295. Those who violate the Peace of Holy Church and despise the Bishop's Sentence shall give Pledges to reconcile themselves to God the King and Church or to be outlaw'd l. 6. p. 99 100. Vid. Security Plegmund elected by God and all his Holy Men to be Archbishop of Canterbury l. 5. p. 298. Sent for by King Alfred out of Mercia to help him in his Learning Id. p. 306. Presides at the Great Council held by King Edward the Elder where five new Bishopricks were ●rected at once by the Authority of the King and Council with the Pope's Confirmation of this Decree Id. p. 313 314. His Decease Id. p. 324. Pl●nty a wonderful one of all sorts of Pr●vision in Britain l. 3. p. 115. Polidore Virgil an Historian of no ●xtraordinary Credit though he had the Perusal of a great many curious Manuscripts l. 5. p. 323. Polycle●us one of Nero ●s Free'd Men sent to ●nspect the State of Britain l. 2. p. 50. Pope who called the Emperor Mauritius his Lord and dated his Letters by the Year of his Reign l. 4. p. 153 158. Sends more Preachers of the Word into England upon Augustine's notice of the want of them Id. p. 157. Sends Letters to King Edwin exhorting him to cas● off his Idols and to receiv● Chris● Id. p. 17● The Kings of Northumberland tho●ght themselves not bound to observe the Pope's De●rees on Appeals if contrary to a General Synod or Council of the whole Nation Id. p. 206 207 208. Always encouraging Appeals to Rome Id. p. 215. Usually sent his Pall to every new Archbishop on his Consecration as a token of his Dependance on the See of Rome Id. p. 223. The Church of England thought his Authority alone not sufficient to annul what had been solemnly decreed in a great Council of the Kingdom l. 5. p. 248. Anoint● Alfred King in his Father's Life-time in way of Prophecy of his future Royal Gr●atness Id. p. 262. Aethelwulf orders by his last Last Will Three hundred Mancuses to be sent to Rome every year for such and such uses and One h●ndred of them to be for the Pope himself Id. p. 264 265. Port now called Portland in Dorsetshire where the Danes were put to flight l. 5. p. 258. The Isle spoiled by the Danish Pyrates that landed in Dorsetshire l. 6. p. 21. The whole Island and other Possessions given to the Church of Winchester by Edward the Confessor and upon what account l. 6. p. 79. Portlock-bay in Somersetshire anciently called Portlocan l. 5. p. 319. Portsmouth so called from one Port● who with his two Sons obtained a great Victory over the Britains l. 3. p. 133. Portus Ictius where it was and whether it be yet in being l. 2. p. 30 31. Posentesbyrig supposed Pontesbury in Shropshire l. 4. p. 188. Prae●idialis a Province that is so is not governed by any particular Praetor or Proconsul but is under the immediate Protectio● and Eye of the Emperor l. 2. p. 65. Prasutagus King of the Icenians deceived in leaving Caesar Co-heir with his two Daughters and how the Romans used them l. 2. p. 47. Prayer to be made for Kings by Withred King of Kent's Law l. 4. p. 211. Priests to learn