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A14341 An abridgement of the notable woorke of Polidore Vergile conteignyng the deuisers and firste finders out as well of artes, ministeries, feactes & ciuill ordinaunces, as of rites, and ceremonies, commo[n]ly vsed in the churche: and the originall beginnyng of the same. Co[m]pendiously gathered by Thomas Langley; De rerum inventoribus. English. Abridgments Vergil, Polydore, 1470?-1555.; Langley, Thomas, d. 1581. aut 1546 (1546) STC 24656; ESTC S107600 129,908 356

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and beast Albeit I cā rather take it to be an imitacion of y e olde Romayne feastes whiche thrise in the yere had sacrifices for the prosperous successe of their corne one Vinalia for their wynes the other Robigalia for all their grayne least it should be mildued The third Floralia for all their fruites These vayne superstitious old bishoppes of Rome turned to a godly vse and trāsposed their feastyng into fastyng that the rather at the contemplacion of oure praiers and fasting God might prosper the increse of al the fruites to the sustentacion of his creatures The .iiii. Chapiter ¶ Watches were turned into fastes fastyng of Fridaies and Wednesdaies namyng the daies of the weke in sundry wise IT was the maner from the begynnyng of oure christen faith that for so much as it pleased our sauioure to be borne in the night priestes dyd ryse in the nighte season and song the houres canonical otherwyse named the Matyus the laye people was accustomed on those sainctes euens that were any solemne feastes to watch at the tombes of Martyr spraiyng and singyng holy psalmes Which thing the testimony of Plinie doeth well approue wher he writeth in a pistle to Traiane how that much nomber of people was slaine in whom he could neuer espye any faulte sauyng that afore daye at certayne tymes and feastes they arose and song of cōmendacion of Christ whom they called God But as tyme is corrupter of al thynges worldely in processe as deuocion beganne to abate in stead of hymnes they song dissolute balades praier was turned into wanton daliaunce The youth went about lyght amorous companye the eldest personnes practised baudry women were not ashamed to geue them selues to be corrupted in al kynd of whordome Vpō this occasion the olde fathers seyng least it myght growe to a further in conuenience turned the Vigilles into fastyng dayes Notwithstandyng the priestes vsed their ordinarye tymes of seruyse as they were wont to do and suche feastes were called by the name of Vigilles and obserued with no lesse reuerence then the faste of Lent This remedy was prouided after sainct Hieromes tyme whiche died the yere of oure Lorde cccc.xxii when Bonifacius the seconde was bishoppe of the sea of Rome The lyke custome was also obserued among the Egyptians whiche on the euens of theyr hyghe feastes fasted and after thei had slepte thei offered a cowe all suche night sacrifices and obseruances for like causes wer by a perpetuall lawe in Grece abrogated by Diagundas a Thebane The faste of wednesdaie and Fridaie was cōmaunded by the fathers bicause on the one daie Christ was crucified and on the wednesdaie Iudas purposed in his minde to betray him as Apolonius the eloquent oratoure supposed Siluester the first bishoppe of Rome abhorryng the memorial of the vain Gentile godes decreed that the daies of the weke whiche had afore the names titles of the Sonne Moone Mars Mercury Iupiter Venus and Saturne should be called the first second third fourth fifth sixte seuenth ferie in semblable maner as the Iewes coumpted their daies frō the Sabboth daie He did also call y e firste ferie Dominicus dies that we name Sonday and called Saturday Sabbatum of the olde holy daie and rest of the Hebrues al these thynges wer dooen at the sute of Constantine then Emperour Albeit the Apostles afore that tyme had consecrated the Sondaie to the Lorde bicause that daie he rose from death the Iewes Sabboth was turned into it as maie appere by the decree of Pius that ordained the Easter to bee kepte on the Sundaie and therfore I thynke Siluester did but onely renewe thesame acte of the Sundaie It was the inuencion of the Egiptians y t the daies wer firste named after the seuen planetes as Diodorus recordeth Sācte Gregory was the authour that neither fleshe nor any thyng that hath affinitee with it as chese milke butter egges should bee eaten on suche daies as were fasted Wee haue also a maner vsage of hallowyng the table and meate afore wee bee set that begonnen of the imitacion of Christ whiche vsed thesame fashiō ouer the fiue loues in the wildernesse and at Emaus also he did insemblable wise consecrate the table in the presence of his disciples so was the fourme of saiyng grace after supper taken like wise of the custome that Christe commonly kept at his suppers The maner to reade apart of the Bible at dyner tyme hath been of long continuance and did proceade of the Godly doctryne that Christe instructed his disciples in at all tymes but namely at his last supper wherein he treated of y e perfecciō of al y e misteries of our religiō And thus our fathers to kepe in memory suche an holsom instituciō did bryng in this maner of readyng the scripture at meate or meale tyme. ❧ The .v. Chapiter ¶ The originall of holy daies Paschall candelles birthe daies LYKE as the Iewes had in their law whiche was but onely a shadawe of thynges too come holy daies appoyncted for the execucion of the misteries of their religion whom thei in one generall terme named Sabboth dais of the rest and vacasiō that thei had from bodely labours semblably our fathers haue ordaigned festiuall daies in the new testament wherein Christen men all profane businesses and eiuil maters laied aparte might wholy apply and bend themselfes to Godly and spirituall meditacions As the perusyng and readyng of scriptures heryng of deuoute sermons renderyng honor to God by sacrificyng praiyng and well dooyng bee woorkes fete and conuenient for the holy daie and also reuerencyng the memoriall of sainctes on suche daies as bee assigned to that purpose is on the holy daie laudable For oblacion is onely due to God as Paule Barnabas did openly testifie at Listra For whē he had commaunded by the power of the worde of God that the man whiche was lame from his mothers wombe should arise and walke the people for wonder and maruaile of the miracle would haue dooen sacrifice to them but thei renting their clothes departed out of the prese and with sharpe woordes rebuked their enterprise as a thyng vnmete to bee dooen to any mortall man or worldly creature Firste of all the feaste of Easter was instituted by y e Apostles and prescribed by Pius the first to be solemnised on the Sondaie Afterward as it chaunsed that alteracion of that matter arose Victor that was bishop of Rome aboute the hundred nynetie and sixe yere of our lord decreed that it should altogether bee kepte and celebrated on the Sondaie frō the fourtene daie of the firste moneth that was Marche vntill y e .xxii of the same least our ordre coumpte should agree with the Iewes whiche kept it somewhat soner then that appoyntemente speaketh of albeeit many foreyne bishoppes at the firste refused that cōstitucion bicause thei thought it not out of
caurse or amisse to kepe that feaste after the precident of saincte Ihon the Apostle whiche renued euer the rite of the Iewes in the feast of Easter THE custome of hallowyng Paschall candelles on Easter euen was commaunded by Zozinus to bee frequented in euery churche THE maner of kepyng holy the birthe daie of euery manne was muche vsed in Rome albeit the Persians had that vsage afore theim for there it is the fashion that euery manne after his habilite● should with many obseruances and greate dentie feastes worship the daie of their birthe and of theim the Romaines receiued that supersticion ❧ The .vi. Chapiter ¶ Of the institucion of holy daies and canonisyng AS you haue hearde y e sanct Ihon the Apostle did celebrate the feast of Easter euē so the other Apostles as it is saied wer authores not onely of the same Easter feast but also ordained those daies wherin our sauiour had doen any mistery concernyng out saluacion or informaciō should be kept holy and to the entent thei might be more reuerenced of their posteritee thei themselfes kepte theim duryng their life very deuoutly as the Sondaies Aduent the Natiuitee Circūcision and Epiphanie of our Lorde the Purificacion of our lady called Candelmas Lente Palme Sondaie Maundy Thursdaie when Christ after supper washed his disciples feete Goodfridaie Easter the Ascension and Witsondaie As for the feaste of Pentecost was afore vsed of the Hebrues for .l. daies after that the lābe was sacrificed in Egipt y e law written by the handes of God was giuen by Moses in the Mount Oreb in the wildernes of Sinay And .l. daies after the death of Christ whiche like a lambe was offered of the Iewes for our Paschal the Apostles receiued y e lawe of the spirite The feast of transfiguracion came also of the Iewes for like as Moses his face was transposed into a perfect brightnes after he had commoned with GOD in the Mounte so nowe after the shadowe and vaile wer taken awaie by Christ his comyng it pleased God to shewe to his disciples his transfiguracion as a declaracion of the shadowe past and a figure or significaciō of the immortalite to come In consideracion wherof the holy fathers perceiuyng the vse of suche holy daies cōfirmed and ratified theim by a decree made in the coūsaill had at Liōs in Fraūce furthermore commaunded that suche daies as either our holy sainctes departed this life orels wrought ani miracle or did any notable deede to y e encrease of our religiō should be kept holy bycause christen people mighte haue more oportunitee too heare the woorde of God and more deuoutely serue hym in an vniforme ordre THEN were instituted the feastes of saincte Stephen Inuocentes Siluester Ihō Baptist the Apostles daies Conuersion of Paule our lady daies Laurence Michell Martyne and generally of all sainctes whiche was the constitucion of Bonifacius the fourth For he caused that the tēple whiche Marcus Agrippa did edifie in honoure of all the Romaynes Idolles as the name Pantheon doth pretende was by the license of Phocas then Emperoure turned into the churche of all Hallowes and consecrated the twelfe daie of Maie and Gregory the fourth afterward willed it too bee kepte the firste daie of Nouember THE festes of the inuencion and exaltacion of the crosse and Corpus Christi daie were dedicated by Vrbane the fourthe and denounced for holy daies Siluester at the su●e and instance of the Emperou●● Constantine assigned the daie of ad Vincula sancti Petri called commonly Lammas in memoriall of Peters paines persecucion and punishment that he suffered for the religion Felix y e first of purpose to magnifie the gloriouse commendacion of Martyres made a statute that yerely oblaciō should be had in memoriall of theim and Gregory would that Masse should bee sa●ed ouer their bodies whiche thing Vigilantius thought woorthy to bee reiected refused albeit the reporte goeth that Anacletus was of this cōstitucion the first authour The same Felix instituted firste that the daie whereon any temple was dedicated should bee hallowed of that village or toune and made also a lawe that suche churches as menne doubted of whether thei wer consecrated or no should be hallowed again And Felix the fourth did ordain that bishoppes onely should dedicate them and that the same dedicacion daie should bee kepte holy yerely afterwarde THE fashiō to deifie menne that had dooen any benefites to the common wealth is one of the moste auncient vsages that I reade of For antiquitee euen frō the beginnyng was accustomed to make goddes of their kynges whiche either by aboundāce of benefites or notable qualites and prowes had wonnen the heartes of their cōmons And specially the Romaynes did that with greate pompe of circumstaunces and many obseruaunces as I did declare afore in the thirde booke out of Herodiane Of theim our bishoppes learned as by a paterne their rite of canonisyng sanctes and the yerely sacrifices that Gregory and Felix appoyncted cōcerned nothyng els but too declare that those Martyres were sainctes and of the housholde of God Last of all Alexāder the third ordained that no suche diuine solemnitee should be giuen to any man openly without he wer canonised and admitted to bee a saincte by the bishoppe of Rome his bulle bicause no manne should chose hymself any priuate sainct or committe any peculiare Idolatry ❧ The .vii. Chapiter ¶ Institucion of yere daies or Obites and the maner of Mournyng FVNERAL exequies that be dooen ouer ded bodies were the institucion of Pelagius albeeit Isidorus ascribeth the originall of it to the Apostles and he hymself did augmente the rites that wee vse in this tyme. Ambrose supposeth that it proceaded of the custome of the Hebrues whiche lamented Iacob fourty daies and Moses the space of thirty daies for that tyme is sufficient for the wise to wepe in It was also y e vsage of auncient Romaines to mourne For Numa Pompilius assigned oblacions to the infernall goddes for the ded and did inhibite that a childe vnder the age of three yeres should bee bewayled and that the elder sorte should be mourned no mo monethes then he had lyued yeres But commonly the lōgest tyme of a widowes mournyng was but tenne monethes and if any were maryed within the space agayne it was coumpted a greate reproche wherefore NVMA ordaygned that suche as had mourned vp afore the daie limited should offer a cowe that was greate with calfe for an expiacion Neuerthelesse if that rite wer vsed now a daies and namely in Englande we should haue smal store of veales there be so many that mary within y e tyme prescribed Plutarch writeth that the womē in their mournyng laied a parte all purple gold and sumpteous apparell wer clothed bothe thei and their kinsfolk in white apparell like as thē the ded body was wrapped in white
lawe of Almesse Fleshe was not eaten before Noe. Example of fastyng True fast Lent Telesphorus didappoint it afore Easter Quinquagesima ●●uent Embryngdaies Romaynes had thre sacrifices for fruites Supersticion turned into religion Watches Vigilles wer made fastes Egyptians rite in watches Nighte sacrifices ar abholished Diagundas Wednesdaie Fridaie Daies were turned into feries Dominicus dies Sundaie Sabbatum Easter is appointed on y e Sundaie Dayes were called of the Planetes White meates is forbodē of fastyng daies Grace at meate Readyng the bible at meat Sabboth dayes of the Iewes Holy daies Workes due for y e holidaie Easter is instituted bi the Apostles Victor Easter is too bee kepte in Marche Sainct Ihon kept y e Iewes Easter Paschal candelles Birthe daies Easter Feastes instituted by y e Apostelles Pentecost Trāsfiguracion Festes instituted at the coūsaill of Liōs Alhallowday Gregori chaūged Alholow daie Crosse daies Corpus Christi daie Lāmas daie Memory of Martyres Dedication daies Reconsiliacion of Churches Deifiyng of ded menne or women Canonysyng of sainctes The Pope must alowe sainctes Diriges or exequies Mournyng Lawes of mournyng Tenne monethes was the commō tyme of weddyng Expiacion of hastye mariages Apparell in mournyng White coloures for mournyng Frenche quenes in theyr widowehode weare white clothyng Blacke garmentes of mournyng Mournyng is supersticiō Hypocrisie Washyng dedde bodies Solle Masse daie ▪ Odilo Nouemdialis Seuēth daie Thirtie daie Mariage vowes renued Buriall is an ende of all thynges Massiliens vsage at buryalles Rite of buryalles Fare well we shal come after Chalices of woode Chalices of Glasse Chalices of siluer or gold Corporaces Hallowyng of clothes of priestes Ringyng to seruice Tollyng the Aue belle Vse of belles came of the Hebrewes Baners Vowes Vowes came of y e Hebrues Goyng barefoote Bernice sister of Agrippa Supplications Letanies Letania maior Nesyng Why we say Christ helpe Yawnyng crossyng of our mouth Images Abagarus Veronica Images were cōmaunded to be honored Philip emperour is proclamed an heretike Hyrene Tythes Origenes opinion of tithes Homelia .xi. Luke .ii. Christ alloweth tythes Holy bread Fyrst fruites were offered of diuers countries Possessions are permitted 〈◊〉 the clergy Beginnyng of religions Essees Paule the hermite Hilarion Antony●s perfection Disciples of Antony Antony liued an C.v. yere Religiō hath growen to supersticion Benet Benet builded an abbay at Cassinum Thre vowes Basilius ordeyned The yere of probacion Cluniacēses ▪ Camaldimenses Shadowed valle order Monkes of Oliuere Grandimontensers Cistercians order Humiliates Celestines Gilbertines Iustinians Nunnes Hieronimians Heremites Hicronimiās Eusebius Cremonēris Chānon reguler Chanons apparel Hermites Augustines The order of Chanons or Hermites Scopettines Frisonaries Brethren of saint Gregory de Alga Charterhous monkes Carm●lites Carm●lites clothyng is chaunged Piemonstratenses Crochfriers Dominicke Fraunces Friers Dominickes Dominicke is canonised Fraunces Minorites Frauncisse is made a sainct Obseruātes Clara. Penitencers Order of the Trinite Brigidians Iesuites Newe hermytes Bonhomes Grauekepers or sepulchre knightes Magdalene systers Ramundus Knightes of the Rhodes Templer knightes Duch lordes Knightes of sainct Iames Calatrauean knightes Knightes of Iesus Christ Alcantarian knightes Knightes of sainct Mari de Mercede Mountesiās Minimes Apostolike br●thren Whyte secte Niniuites Rites of Niniuites Whippyng whēce it came Lupercalia An vsage of the Egiptiās Fraternities Assirians Egyptians Craftes of y e Egytians The Egyptians excuse Goddesse of Siria Libro .viii. de asmo aureo Antonians The token of Antonians Ceretanes Ceretanes play in somer and begge in wynter Mahometanes Mahomete Abdemonaples Sergius Mahomete preached sediciously When Mahomete died Mecha Caliphas Homar Homar wan Hierusalem ▪ Reliques Many bishopes of Rome suffered mar●tyrdome Martyres wer seuerally buried Churches of our Lady Peters churche Letanies Stacions Iubile euery hundred yere Ludiseculares Iubile at fifti yeres Iubile at .xxv yeres Pardons Pardōs wer profitable to the purse Iubylee was sente into all countrees for money Moses was first authour of the Iubilee Titles of the Bishoppes of Rome Diuus Gregorius Seruus seruorū dei Salutem Apostolicam benedictionem Christes gretyng The Hebrues salutyng Scribes Collage of Scribes Taxes of ben●fites Penitencers Price of all wryttes Bulles sealed with leade Carolus magnus sealed first w t golde Breuiatours Solicitours Notaries Collage of secretaries Somoners Annates A general decree of Annates Simon Magus Simō profered monei for too haue power too gyue the holi ghost Symon was made a God Simō did fly in the ayre Symō brake his legge Simoniakes Menander Samaritanꝰ Nicolaians Corinthus Hebion Ihō did write his Gospell against Hebiō Basilides Marchion Valencianus Montanus Apelles Sabellius Paulus Samosatenus Schismes Nouatianus Mundi Arrius A Schisme Schisme of a later tyme. Counsailes Matthias elected by a counsaill Corneliꝰ called the firste counsaill Counsail of Cartage Counsail of Antioche Counsail of Nicea Counsail at Cōstātinople Counsail at Ephesus Counsail at Chalcedonie Counsail at Byzance Deipara Another coūsail at Bizāce No counsaill may be called without the popes cōsent Counsailes should be called euery tēth yere Senesin euery diocese Christ was a witnesse of the trueth Stephyn disputed with al the learned men of Iury. Stephyn is stoned to death Stephin first open defēder of oure faith Nero fyrst persecutour of al the heathen princes Halfe Rome was burned by Nero ▪ Persecucion done by the Emperour Dioclesiane made the greatest persecution Maxencius Constātinus first staied the christen faith Stephyn was the fyrst martyre
to these monthes Ianuary August Decēber euery of them .ii. daies And to April Iune Septēber Nouēber he gaue to eche of thē one day In this maner Iulius Caesar accōplished y e yere perfectely accordyng to the course of the sunne of the .vi. houres euery .iiii. yere amoūteth a day whiche causeth leape yere as we cal it in latine it is named bissextus because euery forth yere we coūte twyse the .vi. calend of Marche ¶ The monthes haue their name because they measure the space and course of the Moone Thus the yere hath .xii. monthes wherof April Iune Septēber and Nouēber haue .xxx. daies all y e rest hath .xxxi. dayes sauyng February whiche hath but xxviii in the yere be .lii. wekes and a day Daies there be CCC.lxv .vi. houres The calendes nones ides hath theyr appellacions of y e maner of rekenyng of the Romaynes Calēdes were named of callyng for at euery chaūge the chiefe rular of y e sacrifices called rex sacrificulus called to an assēbly in the Capitoly or place of Rome all them of the coūtree and sheweth thē theyr festiual daies and what it was lawful to do y e monthe The Nones had y e name because thei were the .ix. day frō the ides whiche ides be y e midde daies of euery mōth and had theyr appellacion of the Hetruscanes terme iduare that signifieth to deuide or seperate in y e middes This fashion of countyng the month endured to the CCCC.l. yeare of the cytie was kepte secrete among the byshops of theyr religion tyl y e tyme that C. Slauius P. Sulpitius Auerrio and P. Sempronius Sophullongus then beyng Consuls against the mynde of the Senatours disclosed al theyr solemne feates published thē in a table that eueri man might haue perseueraunce of them The Prime wherby we fynde the coniunction of the moue and all mouable feastes as Lent Easter Whytsondaye with other lyke was inuented by the great clarke sainct Barnarde ¶ The .v. Chapiter ¶ Who ordeyned the houres dyals clockes deuidyng the day and night HOVRES whiche beyng in nōber xxiiii accomplishe the space of a day night were so named of the sōne whiche in the Egyptians language is called horus They at the fyrst were appointed but twelue of this occasyon Hermes Trismegistus perceiuyng a certayne beast consecrated to theyr God Serapis to make water or pisse .xii. tymes in the day of equall distāce supposed therfore that y e day ought to be deuided into .xii. houres This nōber dyd continue long but afterwarde y t day parted in .xxiiii. houres Anaximene● a Milesian found in Lacedemony the fyrst dyal that declareth the houres by y e shadow of the Gnomon It was long afore they were vsed in Rome for as Plinie writeth in the .xii. tables there was onely rehersed the risyng goyng doune of the sunne a fewe yeares after Noone or midday was added whiche the Bedel or common crier dyd denounce This was but onely on cleare daies when they might perceyue the course altitude of the sōne The fyrst dyal was set vp on a pyller openly whiche stode behynd the cōmon pulpite or barre called rostra at y e cost of M. Valerius Messala then Consuls in the fyrst battail Punike The water dial was vsed fyrst in Rome by P. Scipio Nasica y e ix c yere of the cytie to deuide y e houres of the day night Albeit it was inuēted by C●esibius of Alexandria Afterwarde clockes made of metall were inuented by subtyl wittes and sād dials were imagined whose authours be yet vnknowen In some places the clockes strike .xxiiii. houres by order in other some as in the West partes of the worlde it smiteth twyse in the day .xii. houres in suche order that the .xii. houre is at noone and at midnight whiche is more cōmodiouse for the rekeners then the other The daies whiche be rekened in sundry wyse of diuerse nacions began in Egypt where the yere monthes were also deuised they take all the space from midnight to midnight for one day and the Romaynes vsed the same maner For as Plutarche writeth the sūne risyng is the beginnyng of all affayres functions the night is a tyme of counselyng apparaunce and they had assigned to euery houre a sōdry ministry as Martial in his Epigramme declareth The day vvas deuided in sundry vvise That euery hour had a seueral office The .ii. first serued for salutacion The third for lavvyers alteracion Tvvo next vvere spente in labours diuersly The sixt men might them selfes rest quietly The seuenth of vvorkes vvas resolution The eight vvas for vvrestlers and in conclusion The nynth vvas limitted for mennes repast And so furth the other of time vvas made no vvast ¶ The Babilonians called the space betwene the Sunne risynges a day The Atheniens named all that was betwene the goynges doune a daye The Vmbrians counte theyr day fro noone to noone but cōmonly the day is called the space from mornyng tyl night The night was diuided into iiii watches whereof euerye one as Hierom wytnesseth conteyned thre houres The .vi. Chapiter ¶ Who set furth bookes fyrst or made a library Printyng paper parchement arte of memory BOOKES whiche cōteyne the monumentes of ingeniouse wyttes and be a regestre of all valiaunt prowesse in Grece were fyrst published as Laertius thinketh by Anaxagoras as Gellius sayeth it was Pisistratus that made the fyrst booke exhibited it to be redde openly Notwithstandyng Iosephus declareth y t the Hebrues and priestes of Egypte and Chaldee set furth bookes fyrst The Atheniens seriously multiplied y e nōbre of bookes whiche Xerxes caried frō thence into Persie Seleucus kyng of Macedony caused them many yeres after to be conueighed to Athens again After that Ptolomeus kyng of Egypt gathered together vii C.M. bookes whiche were all brent in the former battaile of Alexandria Neuertheles Strabo recordeth that Aristotle dyd institute the fyrst lybrary and left it to Theophrast his disciple taught the kynges of Egypte howe they should order theyr lybrary Theophrast left it to Meleus of him Scepsis receyued it There was also a lybrarye at Pargamus verye auncient In Rome Asinius Pollio had the fyrste lybrarye whiche was occasyon that good wyttes emploied great and graue study in learnyng to the ample furtheraunce and commoditee of the common wealth of the cytie There be at this day many in Italy but the most famouse is the liberary whiche Frederike Feltrius duke of Vrbine dyd cause to be edified Truely the cōmodite of lyberaries is right profitable and necessary but in cōparison of the craft of Printyng it is nothyng both because one manne may Prynte more in one day then many men in many yeres could write And also it preserueth bothe Greke Latine auctours fro the daūger of corrupcion It was found in Germany at Magunce
by one I. Cuthenbergus a knight he found moreouer y e Inke by his deuise that Printers vse .xvi. yere after Printyng was foūd whiche was y e yere of our lord M. CCCC.lviii one Cōradus an Almayne brought it into Rome Nicolas Iohnson a Frenchemanne dyd greatly polishe and garnishe it And now it is dispersed through y e whole world almost Before y e vse of Paper men vsed to wryte in leaues of date trees and somtymes on the barke of trees Afterwarde they wrote y e publique writynges in plates or shetes of leade their priuate matters in tables waxe for tables as Homer testifieth were afore y e siege of Troy Paper was deuised by king Alexander as Varro affyrmeth it was made of a kynd of fenne rishes that grewe in the marishe groundes of Egypte But Plinie sayeth it was vsed in the tyme of kyng Numa y t reigned CCC yeres afore Alexander his bookes whiche were found in a chest of stone in fyld by L. Pitilius a Scribe were writen in paper In processe of tyme paper that we vse nowe was inuented it is made of lynen clothe beaten together in mylles made for that vse Parchement as Varro wytnesseth was found in Pargamus albeit the writers of Hebrewe stories as Iosephus sheweth vsed parchement they wrote also in goate skynnes shepe skynnes in olde tyme as Herodotus declareth There be diuerse maner of papers as paper royal paper deinye blottyng paper matchaūtes paper The vsage of writyng by caractes is very auncient and was found by Tyrotullius freman as Eusebius supposeth and Iulius Caesar vsed it muche in secrete and preuy counsels The arts of memorye was founde by Simonides in Thassalye For what tyme he was boden to a banket at a noble mannes house called Scopa it chaunsed that he was sente for to speake with .ii. yong men at the gate and straight waye the bankettyng house fel and destroyed al the gestes Then he because he remembred in what order and place euery man sate deliuered euery man his frende to be buried By that facte bothe he perceiued the order of the art of memory and what commoditee came to the remembraunce of man by suche places and images as bee conteyned in that feate In memory e●celled Cyrus kyng of Persye whiche could call euery man in his hoost by name Cyneas the ambassadour of Pyrrhu● the day after he came to Rome saluted euery order of nobles by their proper names Mithridates could speake x●ii languages Iulius Caesar could wryte reede endite and heare a tale al at ones Adrianus the emperour could do the same The .vii. Chapiter ¶ The beginnyng of warre with other thynges concernyng the same CHIVALRY wherein is declared the manly corage of noble captaynes was deuised as Tully sayeth by Pallas as Diodorus thynketh the maner of warre was found out by Mars Albeit Iosephus telleth that Tubalcain whiche was afore the flud dyd fyrst practise feates of armes whereby it appeareth that y e vse of warres is of great antiquitie but it is vncertayne who was the fyrst warrior Afore the findyng out of weapons menne vsed to fight with theyr fistes feete and bityng And thus beganne battaile as Lucretius writeth Handes gripen fote tothe nail VVere first vveapons vsed in batail Afterwarde they beganne to fight with staues and clubbes And therfore they assigne to Hercules a staffe and a Lyons skynne For men in the beginnyng vsed staues to reuenge their iniuries and quarels couered theyr bodyes with skynnes of wylde beastes in stead of armoure Palamedes ordered and set men fyrst in aray appointed watches and wardyng to be kepte and watche woordes in the battaile of Troy At the same tyme Synon excogitated bekons and fyres Plinie saieth that the Pheniciens inuented fyrst the polycies of warre Diodorus affyrmeth that Mars forged fyrst weapons and armed souldiers with thē and therfore the findyng out of thē is attributed to him but the instrumentes of warre were foūd by diuers men at sundry tymes Helmettes swordes and speares the Lacedemonians founde yet Herodotus supposeth the tergattes and salettes to be the inuencion of the Egyptians and so to haue comen into Grece The haberion was deuised by Midius Messenius shyldes by Pretus and Acrisius as they fought together ¶ Legge harnes and cristes of salettes were inuented by the Cariens Iauelynes Etolas Dartes with thonges or strynges by Etolus sonne to Mars billes by the Thraciens iustyng speares and morespikes by Tyrrhenus they were vsed first in the siege of Capua that Fulgius Flaccus laied to it penthesilea imagined poulaxes and Piseus huntyng staues bowe and shaftes sithes Iupiters sonne inuēted although Diodorus ascribeth the inuencion of thē to Apollo Notwithstandyng Artapanus whō Eusebius reciteth saieth that the inuencion of Armour began by Moses whiche beyng very young acheued the first hardy enterprise against the Ethiopians Of all enginnes of warre the Cretians founde firste the crosse bowes the Sirians quarelles or boltes and the Phaeniciens found brakes and slinges howbeit Vegetius holdeth opinion that Baleares a people whiche dwell in the Spanishe seas ordained slinges Cranes or vernes to wynde vp great weightes were the deuise of Ctesyphon The rammar called in latyn Aries wherwith walles be ouerthrowen was made by Aepeus at Troy Thei sought a tertise called in latyn Testudo too myne walles Artemon Clazemonius instituted But of all other that euer were deuised to the destruction of man the gōnes be most deuilishe whiche was perceiued by a certaine Almaine whose name is not knowen After this sorte it chaunced that he had in a morter pouder of brimstone that he had beatē for a medicine and couered it with a stoone and as hee strooke fyre it fortuned a sparke to fal into the pouder by and by there roase a greate flame oute of the morter and lyfte vp the stoone wherewith it was couered a greate heyght And after hee had perceiued that he made a pipe of yron and tempered the pouder and so finished this deadly engyn and taught the Venetians the vse of it when they warred against the Genuates whiche was in the yere of our lord M.ccc.lxxx For this inuencion he receiued this benefit that his name was neuer knowen lest he might for thys abhomynable deuise haue bene cursed and euil spoken of whilest the worlde standeth The waye to reclayme and ryde horses after y e iudgement of Plinie Bellerophon taught fyrst whiche rodde the swyfte Pegasus into a mountain of Libie called Chimera as Diodorus suppose it was Neptune Brydels bittes horseharnes or trappers the Peletronians a nacion of Thessalie found and as some thinke the cast to breake wyld horses was lerned of thē Also the Numidians rode their horses without sadles Cartes with two horses and waggons the Phrigians vsed fyrst chariotes Richthonius diuised fyrst in Grece fightyng on horsebacke the Centaures
Dionisius But the Hebrues as Iosephus witnesseth vsed biyng and sellyng in the tyme of Noe Ioseph was sold to marchauntes caried into Egypte The Lidians were fyrst mercers cariers abrob of stuffe as factours and brokers do with vs. The .xii Chapiter ¶ Who instituted stewes diyng of heare barbours with other thinges VENVS which was begotten of the froth of the sea as Poetes fame was a common harlot and brothel of her body and had many children by sundry men as by Mars she had Harmonia by Mercury Hermaphroditus by Iupiter Cupido by Anchises Aeneas And bycause she alone wold not seme to be an hore she ordeyned in Cypres that women did prostitute thē selfes for mony to al that came And Iustine telleth that the maner of the maides of Cypres was to get their mariage good by suche fylthy baudry And to helpe furth the matter one Melāpus brought out of Egypt into Grece the rites of Bacchus sacrifices wherein men vse to company dissolutely with women in the nyght in suche wyse that it is shame for christen menne to speake of muche like oure shewes or daunces called maskes in Englande bonefyres as they be vsed in some partes of the realme But Spu. Posthumius Albinus and Q. Martius abolyshed those feastes I would all maskes and bonefyres were likewise banished from among vs christians Albeit cōmon women wer long afore Venus tyme. For it appeareth in Genesis that Iudas sōne to Iacob medled w t Thamer his doughter in law bycause he supposed she had bene an hoore by reason of her apparel But to let that passe yet it is pytie to se among christen men stewes baudrye maynteyned as though it were for a cōmon weale honorable matrimony so neglected polluted without any feare of God This is a doctrin of the deuil if there be any In Moses lawes an aduontrer was stoned to death and in Grece in Rome and in Arabia and diuerse other countries he was punished by deathe among christiēs it reigneth vnpunished God wyl strike ones for al therfore let the ministers of the law prouide a godly remedy I would wishe that women would folowe the pagane Lucretia or Hebrue Susanna and men Ioseph Medea found the diyng and coloryng of heare and our women of England haue not forgotten it and beside that make their foreheades by theyr medicines broder then God made them with other enormities wherein some of the phisicians be greatly to blame that teache suche thynkes to y e frayle creature They be ashamed of Gods creacion handy worke in thē selues or els they would nor amend it Barbours to shaue and roūd were instituted by the Abantes bycause theyr enemies in warre shoulde haue no occasion to plucke them by y ● heare P. Ticinius Mena brought them into Rome the CCC.liiii yeare of the buildyng of the cytie afore they were vnshauen Africanus was wonte to be shauen euery day There be many other thynges whose auctours for antiquitie can not be knowen some bicause of the negligence of men that wyl not write suche thinges As no man can tel who beganne clockes belles the shypmans compasse the gonnes styrops cappes or bonettes for that is but newely inuented bycause in olde tyme men wente bare heade water mylles organnes claricymbals talowcandels reclaimyng of haukes rynges with many other whiche for the auncientie or ouersight of men be in extreme obliuion ¶ The ende of the abrydgement of the third booke The fourth booke The fyrst Chapiter ¶ The beginnyng and encrease of Christes religion CHRISTES religion wherin onely resteth y e whole hoope of our saluacion beganne of the Hebrues whiche were so named of Heber and liued very deuoutly afore there was any law written onely by a natural inclinacion highe corage excited to ensue trueth and iustice The fyrst that called on the name of God was Enos then Enoche Noe And afther him Abraham Isaac and Iacob whiche bycause he had sene God was named Israel and of him the Hebrues were surnamed Israelites Of the issue and linage of his .xii. sonnes there came .xii. tribes or generations of Iewes euery tribe bering the name of one of thē Iob also was a perfecte godly man albeit an heathen and Ioseph was a myrroure of chastitee To these men the wyl promises and reuelacions of God were shewed fyrst Notwithstandyng thei dyd not long perseuer in that perfect innocencye of liuyng but partly for theyr corruptible poysoned nature prone to vice and partly by reason of the acquayntaunce that they had w t the Egyptians a kind of people very supersticiouse geuen to muche Idolatry fel from the puritie into suche extreme blindnes of hart ignoraūcie of God idolatry that they differed in nothyng from the Gentiles heathen But God as he is al mercyful and long sufferyng after CC.v. yeares that Israel came into Egypt and cccc xxx yeares after Abrahams goyng thither by the valiaunt captayn Moses deliuered thē out of the thral dome and bōdage that they were in brought them through the red sea wyldernes into the land of promise the fruitful land of Canaan And yet they vnkyndly forgat all those benefites and returned to their old wretchednes and sinful abhominacions Last of all God cōsideryng y t neither lawe of nature nor lawe written nor his great benefytes nor preachyng of sundry prophetes whom thei most truelly muthered could turne them from theyr stefnecked and stubburne obstinacy To shewe al kyndnes possible sente his onely begotten sonne equal to him in essencial power to be incarnate of a pure mayde that at the laste they might by his example and prechyng haue an obedient heart towarde their creatour whiche was borne the yere of the world .v. thousande C.xcix and the .xli. yere of the reigne of Augustus Caesar of the virgyn Mari to be oure sauiour and intercessour for vs afore the iudgement seate of the father as his name Iesus doth pretend vnto vs. He by his example teachyng and miracles shewed the pathe of saluacion but they enuiousely dyd persecute him to the vile death of y e crosse neuerthelesse by his diuine power he roase the third day in the .xviii. yere of Tiberius the emperour his reigne and after .xl. daies he ascended to the right hande of God leauyng power and auctoritie with his Apostles to establishe the cōmon welth religion of christians and the .x. day after his ascencion he sent the holy ghost into their heartes to strēgthen and teache thē al trueth This was .xxxiii. yeres thre monthes after his incarnaciō Thus oure religion had it oryginall and the Apostles by their preachyng amplified enlarged it very muche For Peter fyrst preachyng to the Iewes in Hierusalem of the cruel murther that they had cōmitted against Christ Iesus conuerted and baptised in
one day thre M. men and women And by the myracle of healyng the lame mā at the beautyful gate of the temple he stayed and confirmed them strongly in the fayth albeit he suffered persecucion greatly for the same And Stephyn for his faythful testimony was stoned to death Philip conuerted and baptised the Samaritanes and a certaine eunuche of Candaces quene of Ethiopia the eunuch turned the quene with her famylye and a great parte of that countree to the fayth of Christ After in Antioche the faythfull named them selues Christians Thomas preached to the Parthians Mathew in Ethiopia Bartholomew in Ynde Andrew in Scytia Iohn in Asia Peter in Galatia Pontus Capadocia Peter was borne in Bethsaida a cytie of Galile brother to Andrew He was by shyppe of Anthioche .vii. yeares and conuerted many people of Asia and after went to Rome in the tyme of Claudius there shewed the Gospel with great encrease at the same tyme Mari the virgine and mother of oure sauioure Iesus Christ dyd chaunge her lyfe and was Assumpted into the nombre of blessed spirites whiche was the yere of our saluacion .xlvii. Not long after Paule beyng conuerted from his phantasticall tradicions to a preacher of Christes Gospel was brought to Rome where he preached boldly the Gospel notwithstandyng the great persecutions that he suffered for it and afterwarde suffered death by the way of headyng at the cōmaūdement of Nero the same day that Peter was crucified on a crosse Thus dayly the cōgregacion of christians encreased more and more as the Actes of the Apostles and other histories doth declare at ful Albeit there was great trouble and persecucion in euerye place yet God by his power contrary to theyr expectacion turned theyr cruelnes to the furtheraunce of his worde confirmacion of the faythfull and confusion of them that vsed tyranny The .ii. Chapiter ¶ The institucion of circumcision and baptisme GOD whiche hadde made promyse to Abraham y t he should be father of many nations and that al the world should be blessed in his seede that Christ willyng to stay his farth in y e same promise appointed the couenāt of circumcision betwene him Abraham saiyng euery male shalbe circūcised and the fleshe of his fore skinne shalbe cut round about for a signe of the leage confederacy that I make with the. Vpon this cōmaundement Abraham then beyng .xcix. yeares of age dyd cut his fore skyn his sōne Ismales beyng then .xii. yeares olde whom he begatte by Agar his bondmayde and al his men seruauntes For this cause as s Cyprian saieth that he might haue the fyrste fruites of the blod whiche should afterward shede his holy blod for the redemption of manye yea of all that beleue in him The fashion of it was to cut the fore skynne of a mānes yarde with a knyfe of stone as God commaunded Iosue that he should make knyues of stone to circumcise all the Israelites the second tyme and Moses dyd circumcise his children with a sharpe stone Chrisostome calleth circumcision the fyrst and most auncient commaundement for there is no nacion that gaue any preceptes or rules to lyue by afore Abraham or Moses therfore it is to be supposed that other countries toke example at the Hebrues to circumcise their chyldrē as the Pheniciens and Arabiens the Sarrocenes the Ethiopians the Egyptiens and the Colchians This circumcision of y e fleshe was a fygure to vs of the circumcision of the heart and cuttyng away of al superfluouse luste carnal desyres and importeth a moderacion and mortifiyng of the affectes concupicences of the olde Adam I meane the sinnefull body he that had not this signe was banished out of the nōber of the people of God had no par● in the promyses made to Abraham Baptisme wherein is lefte to vs a significacion bothe of the mortificacion of y e fleshe and diyng to the world that we may walke in a newe lyfe and also of the washyng away of our sinnes by Christes blod and is the token that we be of the body of the cōgregacion of the faythful was instituted by s Iohn sonne of zacharye the .xv. yere of the Emperoure Tyberius reigne in the wyldernes besyde the famoose riuer of Iordane wher he baptised muche people This baptisme and washyng was in the water to signifye the washyng away of our sinnes that shuld be by Christ whiche baptised in the holy ghost fyre There was signes of baptisme in the olde lawe as the cloud the red sea y e riuer of Iordain The fyrste that was christened of the heathen was Cornelius of Cesaria and the eunuchus of quene Cādaces Christenyng of enfantes was institute among vs as cyrcumcision of chyldren was of the Iewes celebrated the eight day Iginius bishop of Rome ordeyned fyrste that chyldren whiche should be Christened should haue a godfather and a godmother for to be wytnesse of the sacrament y t it was receiued And Victor bishop there dyd institute that one might be christened either by a lay man or woman in tyme of necessitie bycause enfantes were often in daunger There be thre maner of baptismes as Cyprian diuideth it One in water wherof Iohn was auctour another in the holy gost fyre wherof Christ was institutour the third is in blod wherein the children y t Herod slewe were Christened It was also the maner in old tyme that they whiche were growen in age should be baptised in white apparel and that was wont to be at Easter or Whitsonday only necessitie cōstrayned otherwise In the meane tyme tyll those daies came they were taught the misteries of the religion of Christ whiche they should professe Of that custome I suppose the sondaye after Easter is called the white sonday The .iii. Chapiter ¶ Of the priesthod of the Hebrues and degrees of the same LYKE as in y e christen cōmon welth there be two sortes of men one called the laytie to whō apperteyneth the ministracion of the publike wele and all temporl affayres the other is the Clergie to whō belongeth the cure charge of ministryng y e word of God sacramentes other decent ceremonies so in the olde lawe of y e Hebrues there were two iurisdictions one of thē was capitaynes gouernours of the cōmons the other was the priesthod that did offre vp the sacrifices other oblacions Of this degree of priestes Aaron and his sonnes were the fyrst ordeyned and cōsecrated by Moses at the cōmaūdement of God The maner and fashion of halowing of thē and their vestures is declared at large in the booke of Exodus As for Noe whiche made the fyrst alter Melchisedech Abraham Isaac and Iacob dyd make their offeryng rather of a naturall deuocion then any priestly auctorytee After that the Leuites whom we vse to cal deacons were
clothes The white coloure was thought fittest for the dedde bicause it is clere pure and syncer and leaste defiled and when the tyme of their wepyng was expired thei put on their other vestures Of this ceremonie as I take it the Frenche quenes toke occasion after the death of their housebandes the kynges too weare onely white clothyng and if there bee any suche widdowe she is commonly called the white quene The Iewes ended their mournyng after .xxx. daies and Englishe men kepe the same rite The mournyng garmentes for the moste parte bee altogether of blacke colour and thei vse to weare theim a whole yere continually onlesse it bee bicause of a generall triumphe or reioysyng or newe magistrate chosyng orels when thei bee toward mariage But the custome of mournyng is no other thyng then mere supersticion specially if womē or men haue a ●ouryng loke and a laughyng herte For all suche lamētaciō helpeth nothyng the dedde corps or solle of the deceased and disquieteth sore the liuyng THE maner of washyng ded bodies and specially of noble men and anoyntyng thē was receiued of our auncetrie whiche vsed to washe the bodies of the dedde and it was the office of theim that wer nerest of his kyndred to dooe it Solle Masse daie that is the second daie of Nouember was begon by Odilo that was Prouoste or Prouinciall of the Monkes of Cluniacenses order vpon the occasion that he heard about Aetna the moūtain of Sicilie oftentymes great wepyng lamentacion criyng whiche he supposed to bee the yellyng of eiuill spirites that bewailed bicause the solles of dedde menne wer taken from theim by the peticions and sacrifices of wel disposed christen people therfore he perswaded his couēte in the tyme of Ihon bishop of Rome to make a generall obite of all solles the daie next after the feast of al sainctes Aboute the yere of our lorde M and twoo our fathers receiued it as a godly instituciō full of pitiful charitee thus by processe of this Monkes supposicion sprong muche vain supersticion ❧ The .viii. Chapiter ¶ Of the seuenth daie thirty daie old maner of buriall hallowyng chalices priestes garmentes with other thynges HORATIVS the Poete and Seruius write that the Romaynes vsed customably y e nynth daie after the buriall to renewe the sacryfices and solemne rites of the funerall whiche thei named in latyne Nouemdialis of this we in our religiō haue gathered the fashion of kepyng the seuēth daie with exequies and other ordinary oblacions And in England the custome is to kepe the thirty daie or moneth mynde with like Obites as were dooen on the buriall daies Or els it mighte seme that this kepyng of the seuēth daie was brought vp after thesame sort emong vs as in mariages thei vsed in old tyme to renewe their vowes the seuenth daie For like as that daie was the solēne beginnyng of encreasyng the issue of mankynde so thesame daie of burial is or should be the complet finishyng and ende of euery thyng The Massiliens in Fraunce passed and spente the daies of their burialles with priuate oblacions and feastyng of their kinsefolke without any maner lamētacion or sorowe whiche thyng the Englishe at this daie vse commonly to dooe In burials the old rite was that the ●ded corps was borne afore and the people folowed after as one should saie we shall dye and folowe after hym as their laste woordes to the coarse did pretende For thei vsed too saie when it was buried on this wise fare well wee come after thee and of the folowyng of y e multitude thei were called exequies Albeeit thei vsed at kynges and noble mennes funeralles to goo afore with tapers ▪ whiche custome we kepe still CHALICES wherin the bloud of Christe is consecrated were at the first of woode and that was the instituciō of the Apostles whiche would preuent all occasiō of auarise in priestes but Zepherinus afterward commaunded that thei should consecrate in a vessel of glasse Notwithstādyng in processe that custome was broken And Gratianus decreed y t thei should saie Masse and consecrate with chalices of siluer or golde orels if those mighte not bee gotten in chalices of tynne albeit some referre this to Vrbane the firste Sextus the firste commaunded that the corporaces should bee of linen clothe onely and that of the finest and purest and he forbade that any laye manne should handle the hallowed vessels and namely womē wer inhibited The hallowyng of priestes vestures and altare clothes with other ornamētes of the churche and the diuersitee of vestures of sundry orders was taken out of the Hebrues priesthod vsed in our churche fyrst by Steuen bishop of Rome fyrst of that name For at the beginnyng priestes in their massyng vsed rather inwarde vertues of solle then outward apparel of the body whiche is rather a gloriouse gase then any godly edifiyng Sabinianus decreed fyrst that the people should be assembled together to heare seruice at certayne houres of the day by ringyng of belles And Iohn the .xxii. ordeined that belles should be tolled euerye daye thrise in y e euenyng that then euery mā should say thrise the Aue maria The vse of belles came fyrst of the Hebrues wher y e high priest or bishop had in the skyrtes of his vppermoost vestures litle belles to ryng when he was in the holy place within y e vaile And euen the vayle hangynges candelsteckes with other vessels that we vse in the churche came also of theyr ceremonies The baners that be hanged abroad in the easter tyme may be vsed to declare the triumph of Christ ouer death the deuil and hel were taken of the heathen whiche in their victories did beare baners to declare signifye y e cōquest of their enemies The .ix. Chapiter ¶ Of vowes goyng barefoote Letanies praiyng for them that neese crossyng the mouth when men yawne WHen we be brought into any extreme calamytie or daūgerouse aduēture y t can by no mans power or prouision bee releued the vrgent necessytie cōstrainyng vs we fal to praiers and vowes makyng as when we promise to set vp cādels Images of waxe or siluer w t other lyke supposyng therby to obteine remedy of our grief This custome was borowed of the Hebrues whiche vsed to make suche vowes to God diuerse other coūtries of the Gētiles vsed y e ryte to their false gods In like maner goyng barefoote was taken vp of the Iewes fashion whiche in their sickenes other misfortunes were wōt to pray cōtinually .xxx. dayes forbeare wyne shaue their heare and after go barefoote to the temple make oblacion This maner of vowe was so ernestly vsed in the tyme of y e emperour Nero when Florus was president of Iurye y e Bernice sister to kyng Agrippa went her selfe barefote to the tēpte of Hierusalem to obteine some
gētlenes for her coūtremen at Florus his hādes but al in vaine for his auarice was so vnsaciable y t no lowlines could pacifie it Euen so we in any of our afflictions sickenes or other heuines make vowes to God his sainctes performe thē goyng to y e place barefoote in sēblable maner as y e Iewes did Supplicacions were ordeyned in a great yearth quake by Mamercus bishop of Vienne in the tyme of Leo the fyrst These be called of y e Greke worde Letanyes are cōmonly named processions because the people procede furth a long in array .ii. ii together and go frō place to place praiyng loud They be called the lesse Letanyes And Agapetus as it is reported ▪ fyrst appointed thē to be song euery sōday in or about the churche although it seme by Tertulians word●s y t they haue be vsed frō the beginnyng of y e churche therfore it maye be supposed that Mamercus did only renew y e custome Afterward Gregory ordeined the great Letanies called septiformis letania y e same time that muche people in R. perished through a great plage of swellyng of the preuy mēbres whiche came of a corrupt ayre that was poisoned with adders and snakes that were cast out of Tyber at a merueilous high tyde There was another plage wherby many as they neesed dyed sodeynly wherof it grewe into a custome that they that were present when any mā neesed should say God helpe you A like deadly plage was sometyme in yawnyng wherfore menne vsed to fence them selues with the signe of y t crosse bothe whiche customes we reteyne styl at this day In al other extreme affayres that we go about we vse to signe our selfes with the tokē of the crosse And this hath bene the vsage frō the beginnyng of y e church ❧ The .x. Chapiter ¶ Of Images tithes and who permitted the Clergye to haue possessions AT the fyrst there was no Imagery nor pictures in the churches but all occasions of Idolatry were withdrawen accordyng to the cōmaūdement of the olde lawe Notwithstandyng it crepte in among christans by lytle and lytle and men made Images of Christ on the crosse after the example of Moses whiche set vp y t brasen serpent and Abagarus duke of Edissemans a nacion beyond the riuer Euphrates sente a Painter to drawe the Image of our sauiour Iesus but for somuche as he could not beholde the brightnes of his face Chryst layde a napkyn on his face wherin he by his diuine power prynted the resēblaūce of his visage and sent it by the painter to the duke A lytle napkyn was geuen by him as it is sayd to a woman that had the blody flixe whose name newe writers say was Veronica and Luke the Euangelist had the Image of Mari the virgyn in a table painted And in the sixt coūsel had at Constantinople by the cōmaundemēt of Cōstantine Iustiniane the second his sonne it was decreed that Images should be receyued into the churches and worshypped with great reuerence as a thing wherby the laitie might be instructed as in steade of scripture and that encense might be burned and tapers lighted afore thē This was about the yere of our lord vi C.xxxii or as some take it aboute the .vii. C.iii. yere of our lorde what tyme Agathus was bishop of Rome Afterward Constantine bishop there confirmed that decree and caused Images in the churche of sainct Peter and pronounced Philippe the emperour an heretike bycause he had shauen scraped away y ● Imagery that was in sainct Sophies temple Not long after they were ratified established in the counsel of Nice where were assembled by the procurement of Hyrene mother of Constantine the sixt CCC.l. byshoppes The great prophet of God Moses and his successour Iosue diuided the land of Canaan among y e Israelites assignyng no parte therof to the tribe of Leuye because they were the lordes por●ion sauyng that he gaue thē habitacions in euery tribe and a lytle pasture for their nee●e shepe and other cattel Therefore because they m●nistred in the tabernacle of the lord and executed suche ceremonies as apperteined to theyr religion he appointed for them the fyrst fruites and tenthes to liue on And after this sorte begāne the paiyng of tithes by the instituciō of Moses And Origene on the boke of Numery affyrmeth that this commaundement is to be obserued of vs after the letter without any allegory or mistical interpretacion And it appeareth by Christes wordes that he alloweth the litterall sense of the olde lawe wher he sayth in y e gospel wo be vnto you Scribes and Pharises ye that tythe Mynte and Rue and al maner of Herbes passe ouer iudgemēt y e law of God these ought to haue bene done not to leaue the other vndone where you maye perceyue howe that as he commaundeth one so he would not haue the other omitted that be signified there litterally Eutichianus bicause in the olde testament the fyrst fruites were offered to the lorde ordeyned that corne should be consecrated on the alter as Oyle and encense was burned in the Hebrues Synagoge and that decree remayneth styl in effect in some places But so the priestes vertue is so olde and mennes deuocion waxeth so colde that in stead of the fyrst fruites nowe a daies the people vse to bryng on the sondaies a fewe loaues of bread in some places two or thre as they bee disposed and those the priest consecrateth and parteth by peeces among the people that where as in time past they vsed to receyue the sacrament on those dayes now they eate this bread halowed in memorial of it And this they do after the paterne of Christ whiche was euer wōt to halowe bread afore he either eat it or gaue it to his disciples Other naciōs also vsed to offer their fyrst fruites tithes as the Romaynes offered to Hercules and Bacchus offered to Iupiter Mars gaue to Iupiter the tenth of his pray of Lydia Vrbanus a man of godly liuyng and singular learnyng aboute the yere of our lord CC.xxii decred that it was lawfull for priestes to receyue suche rentes or landes as were geuen thē Albeit there was nothyng priuate to any man but cōmon to all And thus by lytle lytle the spiritual possessions were enlarged and bishoppes of Rome were greatly enriched Lucina an holy mayd of Rome made Marcellus byshyp there her heyre and executour and afterward Constantine dyd largely endowe the same bishop ❧ Here endeth the abrydgement of the syxt booke The seuenth booke The fyrst Chapiter ¶ The beginnyng of the solytary lyfe of religiouse persons THE MATTER hath bene long in controuersy who fyrst begāne to enhabite wildernes for some as s Hierome witnesseth that haue ransaked y e vttermost say that Helias and Iohn Baptist were auctours of the life solytary but as
oure lord M.ccc.lxviii they were no priestes nor consecrated persons but wer men of the laye sort geuen addicted to praiers had the name of Iesuites bycause the name of Iesus should be often in their mouth they be muche like to our bedemen in England The secte of new Hermites began in Vrbine a cytie in Italy in the coūtre of Vmbria where Polidor Vergile was borne and was the deuise of one Petrus an Hetruriane and they had in the same cytie a goodly hospital or guylde hal The Bonhomes were instituted in England by Edmunde sonne of Rychard erle of Cornewel whiche was brother to Henry the .iii. and was elected kyng of the Romanes heyre apparant to the Empyre by the princes electours aboute the yere of oure Lorde M.CC.lvii The special head place of that religion was Astrige wher the noble kyng Henry the .viii. hath nowe a goodly Palace This Edmund brought the blood of our sauiour as it was sayd into the realme The .v. Chapiter ¶ The original of sacred knightes and white secte WHILEST the cytie of Ierusalem afore our christenmen had cōquered it in y e yere of our lord M.xcix. was in subieccion to the Saracēs the Latine christians that liued ther tributaries purchased a lycence to buylde nere vnto the holye sepulchre dwellyng houses and among other they made an hospital of our lady to receyue the straunge pilgrimes and appoincted a prouost to entertain thē This was in Siluester the fyrst hys tyme the yere of our Lorde .ccc.xiiii. and renewed the yere of Chrst M.ccc xcvii in the tyme of Celestine the .iii. bishop of Rome After the paterne of this house was deuised a like house of virgyns in me mortal of Mari Magdalen to receiue the women that resorted thether It beganne in the .ii. Vrbanes daies the yere of our Lorde M. lxxxxix Notwithstandyng because the multitude of latine pilgrimes waxed very great they builded thre hospitals of s Ihō Baptiste as some saye albeit some thynke it was of Iohn Eleemosinarius that was the patriarke of Alexandria in the reigne of the emperour Phoca This secte one Gerardus adourned with a white crosse in a black vesture grand captain of these knightes was Ramundus when Clement the .v. had the sea of Rome about the yere of our Lorde M.ccc.x yet some affirme that the beginnyng of them was in the .iii. Alexanders dayes the yere of Christ M.c.lxxix and they be called of y e order of s Iohn or knightes of the Rhodes because thei wāne the Rhodes from the Turkes which afterwarde they lost againe in Ianuary in the yere of oure saluacion M. CCCCC.xxiii albeit they dyd long defend it manfully The templers order was begon in Gelacius the .ii. his daies in the yere of Christes incarnacion M.C.xxviii by Hugo Paganus and Gaufradus de sancto Alexandro they were named templers bycause they kept in a parte of the buyldynges neare to the temple they kepte Barnardus rule in their liuyng But Clement the .v. deposed thē partly for that they renoūced the faith conspired w t the Turkes partly forother notable crimes The order of Tentonickes or dutch Lordes beganne in Hierusalem by a Dutche manne whose name is not knowen Their office was to fight against the enemies of Christes crosse it began in the dayes of Clement the third the yere of Christes incarnacion M.C.xc. Petrus Fardinandus a Spaniarde began the order of sainct Iames knightes that lyued after s Austens rule vnder Alexander y e .iii. and in the yere of our lord M. c.lx.iii the same bishoppes daies ¶ Sāctius a kyng ordeyned the factions of Calatrauean knightes which professed the rule of y e Cisterciences Of the same profession be they of the order of Iesus Christes knightes whiche were instituted by Iohn the xxii bishop of that name in Portingale to resist the Saracens Alexandrians brotherhod of knightes in the realme of Castel y t begonne in Gregories tyme the .ix. aboute the yere of oure saluacion M.CC.xl. but who was auctor of thē is vncertaine Iames kyng of Aragonia dyd foūd ii sectes of knightes one named of s Mari de Mercede of those the office was to raunsom suche as were taken prisoners in warres against the Turkes The other sect is called Montasian knightes and they were a redde crosse both these orders Gregory the xi did alowe the yere of our lord M. The order of Minimes or lest brethren were founded by one Franciscus Paula a Silician after the example of Frauncisse his Mmorites The Apostolike brethren begāne in the yere of our lord M.cclx by the institucion of Gerardus Sagarelus in the toune named Perma in Lōbardie in the tyme of Alexander the fourth The whyt sect sprong vp in the Alpes descended into Italye hauyng apriest for their captayn But Bonifacius perceiuyng they should do no good to his honourable estate if they continued caused their captain to be headed at Viterbium as attainted of some heresie the yere of our lord M. cccc They wer a great nomber dyd no other thyng but lamēt the state of mākynd bewayle the sinnes of the people Theren as of this fashion both men women were called the whit sect because they weare whyte clothyng The .vi. Chapiter ¶ The Niniuites Assirians Antonians and Ceretanes NO lesse supersticion is in the fraternite of the Niniuites although they auaunce thē selues to haue receyued their maner of liuyng of y e Apostles for the end of their doynges is to worke their owne saluacion by dedes satisfactory to God wher in dede they derogate the effecte and power of Christes blod The rites be specified with outward holines as often assēblyng to praier hiryng of chauntry priestes supportyng pouertie be clothed in sackcloth and scourge one another w t whippes Of this painted penaunce they call them selues Niniuites as though they appeaced Gods wrathe in the same wyse as they of Niniuie dyd where in deede they had heartie cōtricion for their offēces these haue but pretenced holines and penitence they beganne vnder Clement the .iiii. the yere of our lorde a thousand two hundreth threscore and fiue The maner of theyr whyppyng came of the Romayne sacrifices and Lupercalia whereof I spake afore for thei vsed the same custome of a supersticious opinion Or if a manne wold be curious in boultyng out the original of their beatyng it may appeare to haue proceded of an obseruaūce of the Egyptiens For y e vsage was there that whilest they offered a cow with many ceremonies to their gret Idole as Herodotus witnesseth during y e burnyng therof they shuld one beate another miserably with wandes or roddes The title of their fraternitie came of the Romaynes whiche had diuers felowshyppes as Sodales Titii and Fratres Aruales that sacrificed to Ceres Goddesse of corne Another sort there is not onely idle but also
Camillus lv Cancer xxxii Candelles lix Candelmas day C. Canis lii Canonisyng of saīctes c.xxv. Cappes xcvii Cardinalles xcii Carpēters arte lxxviii Cartagens were fyrst marchauntes lxxx Castyng lottes xxxv Castyng mony abrode C.ii. Cecrops viii xii Centaurie was found by Chiron xxxii Ceres xxxvii Ceres Image lxiii Ceremonies why they were so named C.xiii. Chaldees xxi xxvi Chalices of wood C.xxviii Chalices of siluer and golde Idem Chamberleines xciii Chariotes l. Charmes xxxiii Chaunces lii Chaunters lxxxviii Chery trees lxvii Chese makyng lxvi Chesse li. Chippe are lxxviii Chiromancie xxxiiii Chiron auctour of salues xxxi Chitteryng of byrdes xxxv Chius lii Chrisippus ii Chrisme c.iii. Christ authour of our priesthod lxxxviii Christal lxi Christmas lordes c.ii. Christenyng of infantes lxxxvi Churches and churche yardes xcii c Cicero xxi Circenses lii Circumsion lxxxv Ciuil croune lvi Ciuil law ▪ xxxvii Cleanthes ii Cleophantus inuented colours lxiiii Clergie lxxxvii Clockes xliiii Cocke boate lxxx Coynyng lix Collage of secretaries c.xlix Comedies xviii Cōmēdacions to dead bodies lxxiiii Cōmon welth xxxviii Cōmon women lxxxi Communion c.xiii Compasse lxxviii Confession c.xv. Confirmacion c.iiii. Coniurers lxxxviii Constantine forbadde putting to death of the crosse c.vii. Constantyne borne in England fyrst christen emperour c lvi Consuls of Rome xl Corax gaue rules of Rhethorike xxi Corne sowyng lxv Corona triumphalis lvi Corporaces c.xxviii Corpus Christi daye c.xxiiii Couering of scaffoldes lxxvii Counsailes c.lii. Countyng by nayles xxix Cranes or vernes xlix Cratus taught grammer in Rome xv Cries liii Crosse bowes xlix Crosse daies c.xxiiii Crosse forboden to be made c.vii. Crounes of brasen plate lvi Crounes of diuers sortes lvii Cuppes were crouned lvii D DAies of euerye moneth xliii Dayes turned into feries c.xxi Daies named of y e planetes Ibidem Dayly communion c.xiiii Daphis foūd the shepherdes earolles xvii Dardanus Crezenius xxiiii Dartes xlviii Dauid song in metre xxiii Daunsyng li. c.ii Decking of churches c Declamator xxi Decrees xl Dead bodies lxxiiii and .c.xxv. Dedalus slewe his neuewe lxxix Dedicaciō daies c.xxv. Dedicatyng of Churches c.viii Degrees of kynred inhibited to mary C.vi Deifiyng of the Emperour lxxiiii Deleyng of wines lxvi Demaratus taught the Hetruriās letters xiiii Demaratus lxiiii Democratia begāne in Rome xli Democracie xxxviii Democritus vi Demosthenes xxi Denoūcyng the Dictator xl Deseases xxxi De●any xxxii Deuisiō of naciōs vii Deuorcement x. Diagoras ii Dialles xliiii Dialoges xxvi Debutades lxiiii Dyce li. Dictatoures fyrste in Rome xl Dictatours office Ibi. Diyng of wolle lxix Diyng of heare lxxxii Diocesses xcii Dioclesian a great persecutour C.lv. Diodorus xii Dionisius lxv Dirceus captaine of y e Lacedemonians xxiiii Diriges or Exequies C.xxvi Disguisyng C.iii. Diuerse deuisions of the yere xlii Diuerse deuisions of the day xlv Diuerse kyndes of meter xvii Diuerse maners of paper xlvii Diuersitee of speches vii Diuisions of the night xlv Dreames xxxvi Drinkyng on maundy thursday C.i. Druides xxv Drumslades in warre xxiiii Dulcymers xxiiii Dungyng land lxv E EAster C.xix Easter appointed to be kept on the Sonday C.xxi. Easter instituted by the Apostles C.xxii. Easter is to be kepte in Marche C.xxii. Earyng of fleshe lxvii Eclipse of the Sunne and moone xxvii Egges lxviii Egiptiās ii xxvi.lxxii Egyptians are superstitious lxxxiii Egyptians letters xii Egiptians foūd Geometry ●xviii Egyptians founde the yere xlii Election of the bishop of Rome xciiii Electoures of the Emperour Ibidem Eliazer driueth out spirites xxxiiii Elymnete lx Embryng daies C.xix Embroderyng lxvii Ennius called the Poetes holy xvi Empedocles vi xxi Endimion perceiued y e course of the Moone xxvii Enos xii lxxiii Epicarmus xiii Epicurus ii Epicurus taught grāmer fyrst xv Epulones C. Ethiopians xii Ethiopians opiniō of man vi Euander broughte letters into Ital. xiiii Euen and odde lii Eumolphus xiii E●comunicacion x●vi Exequies or Diriges C.xxvi Exercises l. Extreme vnction c.iiii. F FAmous Phisicians xxxi Fanes xx●viii Fastyng C.xviii Faunus i. Feastes instituted by y e Apostles C.xxiii Feastes instituted at y e counsail of Lyons C.x iiii Februarie xliii Fac●ales Sacerdotes xcix Fedyng of birdes xxxv Fery boates l●xx Fetters xli F. was taken of y e Ay●lians xiiii F. for .v. cōsonant xiiii Fidlers pipers xxiiii Fightyng on horsebacke l. Figures of Arithemetike xxix Fyre iiii lviii.c.viii Fyre and water gyuen in token of chastitee x. Fyrst masse of priestes c.i. Fyrst churche of y e christians c.vi Fyrst churche in Rome c.vii. Fishyng lxviii Fleshe was not eaten before Noe. c xviii Fliyng of birdes xxxv Fyue partes of Philosophi xxvi Foreheades lxxxii Frederike Feltrius liberary xlvi Fullers crafte lxix Funeralles lxxiiii Funeral plaies li. G GAley lxxx Games li Garlandes lv lvi Gates of marble lxxi Geomancie xxxiiii Gymnosophistes xxv Glasses to loke in lix Glasse lx Glewe lxxviii God his nature iii. God made made vi God what he is iiii God was the authour of lawes xxxvii God is made manne lxxxiiii Gods mercy Ibidem Goddesses of fauoure xxiii God father and Godmother lxxxvii Godbrother and godsister c.vi Golde lvii lix Gonnes when they were fyrst made xlix Good angelles i. Goshauke lxxvi Grace at meate c.xxi Grāmer .ii. partes xv Grauers in marble lxxi Grecians lerned in Egypt xxvii Gregory stablished the single lyfe of priestes c.v. Greke stories xx Grindyng lxv HAberion xlviii Allowing of priestes vestures Cxxviii Hampers lxxviii Hangynges lxix Harneis xlviii Harpe lviii Harpe who found it xxiii Hebrue letters xiii Hebrues were authores of Poetry xvi Hebrues were authores of philosophi xxv Hebrues after Iosephus founde Geometrye xxix Hebrues ordaygned Democracie xxxviii Hechwall xxxi Helene founde the crosse Cvii Helmettes xlviii Herbe called balī xxxi Herbes were created for manne Ibidem Hercules basilicꝰ lii Hercules lxi Heretickes Cli. Heroicall verse xvii Hiperbius lxvii Hippocrates xxx Histories xix Hoye lxxx Holy breade Cxxxii. Holy daies Cviii. and Cxxii Holy water Cix Hony lxvii Horsses xlix Hostanes wrote bokes of magike xxxiii Houres xliii liii Houses lxx Huntyng lxviii Huntyng staues xlix Housbandry lxv I IAcob made a league liiii Ianuarie xliii Ianus xii Ianꝰ coines of bras lix Iauelyns xlviii Icarius lxvi Idei dactili lviii Ides xliii Idolatry xi Iehosuah liiii Iginius made firste orders xc Ihon Baptist Cx. Ihon Cuthenbergus found printyng xlvi Images lxi cxxxi Images of kynges xi Images of waxe C. Institucion of wedlocke viii Instrumentes of husbandry lxv Instrumentes of phisicke xxx Iob. xvi Ioseph lxxxii Iron lviii Isaac digged pittes lxxii Isis i. Iubile C.xlvii Iulius Cesar made the yere perfect xliii Iupiter ii Iustes ī Rome lxxii Iustyng speares xlix K KEele lxxx Epyng y e secramēt in churches cxiiii Kyngdome beganne in Egipt xxxviii Kynges how thei behaued thēselfes Ibi. Kīges of Rome xxxix Kynges and Quenes of Englande xcviii Kynges and priestes wer anoynted C.iii. Kynred inhibited too mary C.vi Kissyng the bishop of Romes feete xcvii Knightes weare rynges for difference lx Knightes of the Rhodes C.xli. Knightes of saincte Iames C.xlii. Knightes of Iesus Christe Ibidem