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A35240 The natural history of the principality of Wales in three parts ... together with the natural and artificial rarities and wonders in the several counties of that principality / by R.B. R. B., 1632?-1725? 1695 (1695) Wing C7339; ESTC R23794 124,814 195

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Christian King in the World and Brittain the first Kingdom that imbraced the Gospel by publick Authority After this he sent two Persons to Eleutherius Bishop of Rome to desire the form of some Laws to Govern his People by To which the Bishop replied You desire us to send you the Roman and Imperial Laws for the Reformation of the People and Guidance of the King and Kingdom of Brittain The Roman Laws we altogether mislike but the Law of God by no means By the Divine Clemency you have of late received the Law and Faith of Christ into your Kingdom You have with you the Old and New Testament out of them in Gods name by the advice of your Counsellors take you a Law and therewith by Gods permission Govern your Kingdom for you are Gods Vicar therein c. By this we may see the vast difference between the humility and piety of the Roman Church in the Primitive times and the Pride Cruelty and Usurpation of the present Synagogue of Satan This Epistle with two Preachers Fagianus and Daniranus whom the Bishop sent to King Lucius prevailed so much upon him that being Baptized into the Christian Faith he converted the Heathenish Temples of the Arch Flamins and Flamines into so many Bishops Sees whereof London York and St. David's in Wales were made the Metropolitans A Table that remains in St. Peter's Church in Cornhill London Records that King Lucius founded that Church for a Cathedral and likewise St. Peter's Westminster now the Abbey and likewise Dover Castle He reigned 12 years and lies buried at Glocester and dying without Children left the Roman Emperors his Heirs of whom Commodus succeeded in whose Reign the Roman Legions in Brittain fell into divers mutinies because the Emperor instead of Senators and Consuls who used to Command them put inferiour Persons over them but Helvius Pertinax being sent hither quieted all dissentions with the severe punishment of the Offenders and at length by his policy he obtained the Imperial Dignity Severus Reigned after him whom Albinus Lieutenant of Brittain opposed and assisted by the Brittish Youth fought a Battel with him in France where Albinus was defeated and Severus confirmed in the Empire and then coming over into Brittain endeavoured to secure the Countrey to himself by erecting several Walls and Forts in the In-land Parts and repairing those with Stone which were formerly of Turf or Earth and finding the Northern Brittains or Scots very troublesome he built a Wall or Fortification for defending the more Civilized from the Savage and Barbarous Inhabitants this Wall crossed the whole Island from Sea to Sea beginning at the Frith of Solney in Scotland and ending at Timnouth in length 132 Miles it was built with Turfs and Timber with strong Bulwarks at a convenient distance near if not upon the Foundation of the former called Adrians Wall the ruins whereof are yet visible through the Counties of Northumberland and Cumberland for which act he Sirnamed himself Brittannicus and after 18 years Reign died at York in 212. not so much of Sickness say some Authors as of Discontent and Grief Others say of a Mortal wound given him by Fulgence Captain of the Picts Bassianus Garacalla his Son succeeded him and hastning to Rome offered very easie conditions of Peace to the yet resisting Brittains who being tyred with the long Wars accepted thereof and Hostages were given for conserving the same And now the Royal Title of Kings of Brittain being annexed to the Roman Emperors they by their continual divisions for gaining the Imperial Dignity gave a long breathing time of Peace to this harassed Island so that little of action happened here till the reigns of Dioclesian and Maximin in whose time Carausius being by the Romans made Admiral of the Brittish Seas to guard them against the Pyracies of the Saxons and Belgians he by conniving at their Robberies became rich and popular so that having notice the Emperor had ordered him to be secretly kill'd he by the aid of the Picts and Northern Brittains took upon him the Title of Emperor of Rome and valiantly defended his Dignity for seven years At length Maximin Marched to the Brittish Ocean with a powerful Army but hearing of the strength of Carausius and wanting Seamen he Encamped on the French Shoar and concluding a Peace with him returned back to Rome Carausius Governed the Brittains with Justice and Peace for seven years repairing the Roman Wall and defending them from their brutish Enemies but was at length Murdered by his treacherous friend Alectus who took upon him the Imperial Purple The Romans after the Death of Carausius resolved to attempt the recovery of this Island and Constantius with a Potent Army Landed here in a great Fog without observation or hindrance at which Alectus being surprized was slain with most of his Army the rest escaping toward London designed to Plunder and Burn it but the Romans made such speed that they prevented them killing Gallus their Leader and throwing his Body into a Brook that ran through the City which was after called Gallus his Brook now Walbrook After this these two Tyrants Dioclesian and Maximin raised a dismal Persecution in all the parts of the Roman Empire whereby 17000 Christians Men and Women were Crowned with Martyrdom within the space of one Month and in Brittain the Churches were demolished their Bibles and other Writings burnt and for 10 years together the poor People were continually tormented without intermission or any place being free from the Blood of Martyrs who were constant in the profession of the Faith Among others St. Alban was beheaded at the Town bearing his name whom Fortunatus Priscus mentions Albanum egregium faecunda Brittannia profert Brittain fruitful of all good Washt with glorious Alban's Blood His Instructor in the Christian Religion Amphiole or Brittain was afterward taken and being brought to the same place was whipped about a Stake whereto his Intrails were fastned and so wound out of his Body and was lastly stoned to death Several others suffered as Julius and Aaron at Leicester or rather Coverleon in Monmouthshire and so many at Lichfield that the place became a Golgotha or Field of Dead Corps and therefore the Seal of Arms of that City is charged with many Martyrs to this day But these two bloody Emperors enjoyed their honours a very short time for within a year after this bloody Persecution they were both of them by the hand of God saith Eusebius struck with such a mad humour that they renounced the Empire and laying aside the Imperial Robes Dioclesian retired into Dalmatia where he died raging of a terrible disease And Maximinus hanged himself at Marseilles in France Gallerius and Constantius succeeded them the last of whom was a Prince of singular Piety towards God and Clemency towards men being very kind to the Christians and rebuilding their Churches for which God so blessed him saith Eusebius that this virtuous Father left a more virtuous Son
Refuge of a Woman For that King was the mirrour of Knighthood By the Womans Refuge we may understand her Tongue and no Valiant man will revenge her words with his blews John Lewis Esquire a Justice of Peace at Glaskerrigg near Aberystwith in this County in the year 1656. by several Letters to Mr. B. a late worthy Divine deceased gives an account of several strange Apparitions in Caermarthen Pembrokeshire and this County about that time confirmed by divers Persons of good Quality and Reputation the substance whereof are as followeth A Man and his Family being all in Bed he being awake about midnight perceived a Light entring the little Room where he lay and about a dozen in the shapes of Men and two or three Women with small Children in their Arms following they seemed to Dance and the Chamber appeared much wider and lighter than formerly They seemed to Eat Bread and Cheese all about a kind of a Tick upon the Ground they offered him some and would smile upon him he heard no voice but calling once upon God to bless him he heard a Whispering Voice in Welsh bidding him hold his peace They continued there about four hours all which time he endeavoured to awake his Wife but could not Afterward they went into another room and having danced a while departed he then arose and though the room was very small yet he could neither find the Door nor the way to Bed again until crying out his Wife and Family awaked He living within two Miles of Justice Lewis he sent for him being a poor honest Husbandman and of good report and made him believe he would put him to his Oath about the truth of this Relation who was very ready to take it This Gentleman adds a second account of the strange and usual appearance of Lights called in Welsh Canhwyllan Cyrth Corps or Deadmens Candles which are so ordinary in these Counties that scarce any dye either young or old but this is seen before death and often observed to part from the very bodies of the Persons all along the way to the place of Burial and infallibly death will ensue There is that evidence for these Candles that few or none of any age but have seen them and will depose it A while since saith this Gentleman some of my Family saw two Candles one less than the other passing the Church way under my house my Wife was then big with Child and it caused much apprehension both in us and her but just a week after her self came first to me as something joyed that the danger might be over with the news that an old Man and a Child of the Neighbourhood were carried that way to be Buried Mr. John Davis a Minister in this County confirms the same Relations with the addition of the following Circumstances and Instances We call them saith he Corps Candles not that we see any thing besides the light but yet it resembles a material Candle-light as much as Eggs do Eggs only they sometimes appear and instantly disappear for if one comes near them or on the way against them unto him they vanish but presently appear behind him and hold on their course If it be a little Candle pale and blewish then follows the Corps either of an Abortive or some Infant If a big one then the Corps of some one come to age If two three or more great and little are seen together then so many and such Corps will follow together If two Candles come from divers places and be seen to meet the Corps will do the like If any of these Candles seem to turn out of the way or path that leads to the Church the following Corps will be found to turn in the same place for the avoiding of some dirty lane plash c. Now for the particulars At Lanylar late at night some of the people saw one of these Candles hovering up and down along the Rivers bank which they continued to view till they were weary and at last left it so and went to Bed A few weeks after came a proper young Woman from Montgomeryshire to see her Friends who dwelt on the other side of that River Istwyth and thought to ford the River at that very place where the Light was seen but being dissuaded by some standers by who probably had seen the Light not to venture on the Water which was high by a sudden Flood she walkt up and down the Rivers Bank as the Light had done waiting for the falling of the Water which at last she went into but too soon for her for she was therein drowned Of late saith the same Author my Sexton's Wife an aged understanding Woman saw from her Bed a little blewish Candle upon her Table 's end two or three days after comes in a Fellow inquiring for her Husband and taking something from under his Cloak claps it down directly upon the Table 's end where she had seen the Candle and what was it but a dead born Child Another time the same Woman saw such another Candle upon the other end of that very Table within few days after a weak Child by my self newly Christened was brought into the Sexton's House where it presently died And when the Sexton's Wife who was then abroad came home she found the Woman shrouding of the Child on that other end of the Table where she had seen the Candle On a time my self and a Kinsman coming from our School in England and being three or four hours benighted e're we could reach home we met with such a Candle which coming from an house we well knew held its course the highway to the Church shortly after the eldest Son in that House deceased and was brought the same way My Self and Wife in an Evening saw such a Candle coming to the Church from her Midwife's house and within a Month she her self did follow Mrs. Catherine Wyat an eminent Woman in the Town of Tenby being in an Evening in her Bed-Chamber saw two little Lights just upon her Belly which she endeavoured to strike off but could not within a while they vanished of themselves Not long after she was delivered of two Still-born Children A Neighbour's Wife of mine being great with Child and coming in at her own door met two Candles a little and a big one and within a while after falling in labour she and her Child both died Some years ago one Jane Wyat my Wive's Sister being Nurse to Baronet Rudds three eldest Children and his Lady being dead his House-keeper going late into a Chamber where the Maid Servants lay saw five of these Lights together a while after that Chamber being newly plaistred a great Grate of Coal Fire was kindled therein to hasten the drying of it At night five of the Maid Servants went there to Bed as they were wont and in the morning were all found dead and suffocated with the steem of the new tempered Lime and Coal This was at Llangathen in
St. Bartholomew's Hospital for poor maimed diseased People and Cripples c. 3. Bridewell for imploying and correcting Vagrants Harlots and Idle Persons He was a Comely Person and of a sweet Countenance especially in his Eyes which seemed to have a starry liveliness in them In the sixth year of his Reign which was the year before he died he fell sick of the Measels and being fully recovered he rode a Progress with greater magnificence than ever he had done before having in his Train no fewer than four thousand Horse The January following whether procured by sinister Practice or growing upon him by natural infirmity he fell into an indisposition which centred in a Cough of the Lungs Whereupon it was reported that a Poisoned Nosegay had been presented him for a New years Gift which brought him into this slow but mortal Consumption Others said it was done by a vene nous Clyster However it was he grew so ill that his Physicians dispaired of his Life After which a Gentlewoman though to be provided on purpose pretended to cure him but did him much hurt for with her applications his Legs swelled his Pulse failed his skin changed colour and many other symptonis of approaching death appeared An hour before he was overheard to pray thus by himself O Lord God deliver me out of this miserable and wretched Life O Lord thou knowest how happy it were for me to be with thee yet for thy Chosens sake if it be thy will send me life and health that I may truly serve thee O Lord God save thy chosen People of England and defend this Realm from Papistry and maintain thy true Religion that I and my People may praise thy name for thy Son Jesus Christ's sake Then turning his Face and seeing some by him he said I thought you had not been so nigh Yes said Dr. Owen we heard you speak to your self Then said the King I was Praying to God O I am faint Lord have mercy upon me and receive my Spirit and in so saying he gave up the Ghost July 6. 1553. in the sixteenth year of his age when he had reigned six years-five months and nine days and was solemnly buried at Westminster Abbey XIII Prince Henry eldest Son to King James I. was the thirteenth Prince of Wales of the Royal Family of England He was born at Sterling Castle in Scotland and in his Childhood gave promising signs of an Heroick and Noble Spirit no Musick being so pleasant to his Ears as the Trumpet and Drum and the roaring of Cannon and no sights so acceptable as that of Musquets Pistols and any kind of Armour and at nine years of age he learned to ride shoot at Archery leap and manage the Pike all which manly exercises he performed to admiration in such young years He was tall of stature about five foot eight inches high of an amiable yet Majestick countenance a piercing Eye a gracious smile and a terrible frown yet courteous and affable to all He was naturally modest and patient and when most offended he would by over-coming himself say nothing very merciful very just and very true to his promises very secret and reserved from his youth He was most zealous in his love to Religion and Piety and his Heart was bent if he had lived to have endeavoured to compound those differences that were among Religious men He shewed his love to good men and hatred of evil in incouraging good Preachers and slighting the vain-glorious in whom above all things he abhorr'd flattery loving and countenancing the good and never speaking of the slothful Preachers without anger and disdain He was very Consciencious of an Oath so that he was never heard to take God's name in vain or any other Oaths that may seem light much less such horrible Oaths as are now too common He never failed to sacrifice daily the first of his actions to God by Prayers and Devotions He was so resolved to continue immutable in the Protestant Religion that long before his death he solemnly protested That he would never join in Marriage with a Wife of a contrary Faith for he hated Popery with all the Adjuncts and Adherents thereof yet he would now and then use particular Papists kindly thereby shewing that he hated not their Persons but Opinions He was obedient to his Parents careful in the affairs of his Family and Revenue loving and kind to Strangers and in a word he had a certain extraordinary excellency that cannot be exprest in words In the nineteenth year of his age he was visited with a continual Head-ach and had two small Fits of an Ague which were afterward followed with very had symptoms which daily increasing Dr. Abbot then Archbishop of Canterbury went to visit him and finding the extream danger he was in discourst to him of the vanity of the World the certainty of Death and the Joys of Heaven asking his Highness whether he were well pleased to die now if it were the Will of God he replied Yes with all my Heart farther declaring That he hoped for the pardon of his sins only from the merits of Christ In his best moments he continued in a Christian frame of Spirit and Novemb. 6. 1612. quietly yielded up his Spirit to his blessed Saviour and Redeemer being attended with as many Prayers Tears and strong Cries as ever any Soul was XIV After his death Charles his Younger Brother succeeded being the fourteenth Prince of Wales and afterward King of England by the Title of King Charles I. XV. Charles the eldest Son of Charles I. was the fifteenth and last Prince of Wales of the Royal Family of England and after King of England by the Title of King Charles II. I have been very brief in relating the Actions of several of the Princes of Wales having already given an account of them in some other Books which I have formerly published As for instance In a Book called Admirable Curiosities Rarities and Wonders in every County in England in the Remarks upon the County of Glocester you may find all the particulars of the Murther of King Edward the second In another called Historical Remarks upon the Cities of London and Westminster there is a full Relation of the deposition and miserable death of King Richard II. In another intituled The young Man's Calling or the whole Duty of Youth the Lives of King Edward VI. and Prince Henry Son to King James I. are related at large In another called England's Monarchs is an account of the Lives and Actions of all the Kings of England from William the Conqueror to this time and among them of those Princes of Wales who were after Kings of England and are mentioned in the preceeding Remarks In another called The Wars of England c. There is a full account of the Life of King Charles I. with his Trial and Death In another called The History the two late Kings is a Relation of the Life and Death of King Charles II. To
all or any of which Books I refer the Reader for farther satisfaction being unwilling to repeat or that any should pay twice for the same matter Remarkable Observations upon the most Memorable Persons and Places in Wales And an account of several considerable Transactions and Passages that have happened for many hundred years past Together with the Natural and Artificial Rarities and Wonders in the several Counties of that Principality PART III. GReat Britain comprehends the Kingdoms of England and Scotland and is an Island in the Ocean divided by Antiquity into three Parts the first and greatest called Loegria is contained within the French Seas the River Severne Dee and Humber to the German Ocean now called England The second containeth all the Land Northward from Humber to the Deucalidonian Seas now called Scotland The third lyes between the Irish Seas and the Rivers Severne and Dee and was called Cambria now Wales Some Authors add a fourth division called Cornubia now Cornwall the Inhabitants of all four differing in Language humor and Customs among themselves My design at present is to give an account of Wales having already treated of England in a Book called Admirable Curiosities Rarities and Wonders in every County thereof And I intend to proceed in the same method in this Principality Wales is situated on the West and Northwest part of England over against the Kingdom of Ireland and appears like a Promontory o● Foreland being surrounded by the Sea almost on every side except on the South-East part where it is divided from England by the River Severn and by a Ditch drawn from the Mouth of the River Dee to the mouth of the River Wye being an hundred Miles from East to West and an hundred and twenty Miles from North to South The forenamed Ditch is called Claudh Offa because made by Offa King Mercia of a great depth and breadth thereby to confine the Welsh into narrower limits who enacted That if any Welshman were found on the East side of this Ditch he should forfeit his right hand but that Law is long since repealed and the Loyal and Valiant Welsh have for several ages past enjoyed the same Liberties and Privileges with the other Subjects of the Crown of England It was divided into three parts that is North-Wales South-Wales and Powis-Land by Roderick the Great in 877. as you have heard which proved the confusion of Wales their Princes being commonly at War with the English or among themselves to inlarge and defend their several Dominions Of these three North-Wales was the chief being left to Amarawd the eldest Son of Roderick the Princes whereof by way of eminency were stiled Princes of Wales and sometimes Kings of Aberfrow their Chief Residence and paid to the King of London as well as the Princes of South-Wales and Powis-Land sixty three pounds yearly as a Tribute Yet South-Wales called by the Inhabitants Dehenbarth or the right side as being nearer the Sun was the largest most fruitful and rich but more subject to the Invasions and Depredations of the English and Flemings and therefore North-Wales being secured by its Hills and Mountains was prefer'd before it and retaineth more of the purity of the Welsh Tongue However this makes the soil lean and hungry but that is supplied by the large quantity thereof which occasioned this pleasant passage An English Gentleman in discourse with a worshipful Knight of Wales boasting that that he had in England so much ground worth 40 s. an Acre the Welsh Gentleman replied You have ten yards of Velvet and I have two hundred yards of Frize I will not exchange with you There are likewise in Wales very pleasant Meadows Watered by fine Rivers and as the sweetest Flesh is said to be near the Bones so the most delicious Valleys are interposed betwixt these Mountains The Natives are generally healthy strong swift and witty which is imputed to the clear and wholesome Air of the Mountains the cleanly and moderate Diet of the People and the hardship to which they are inured from their Childhood The Ancient Britains painted their naked Bodies with Pictures of living Creatures Flowers Sun Moon and Stars thereby as they imagined to appear terrible to their Enemies yet some more civil were clothed and as a great Ornament wore Chains of Iron about their Wasts and Neck and Rings on their middle Fingers They wore the Hair of their Head long which was naturally curled in many All other parts they shaved only wore long Whiskers on their upper Lip They had ten or twelve Wives a piece who lived in common among their Parents and Brethren yet the Children were only accounted his who first married the Mother while she was a Maid They were brought up in common among them They were moderate in their Diet as Milk Roots and Barks of Trees and a little thing no bigger than a Bean which for a great while took away both Hunger and Thirst Neither would they eat Hens Hares Geese nor Fish yet would often Dine upon Venison and Fruits Their usual Drink was made of Barly They are reported by Plutarch to have lived very long many to an hundred and twenty years They were Idolatrous Heathens as to their Religion using Man's Flesh in their Sacrifices and adoring a multitude of Idols Their Priests were called Druids who managed their Sacrifices and likewise acted as Temporal Judges in all Civil Matters and it was highly criminal not abide by their Judgment They were excused from the Wars and all contributions They had a Primate who commanded over them in chief Their Divinity was That the Soul is immortal and passeth from one Body to another which Doctrine they taught not out of Books but by word of Mouth Their Buildings were low mean Cottages like those of the Gauls or Boors of France yet they fortified several thick Woods with Rampires and Ditches which they called Towns Brass and Iron Rings were the Coin they used which were of a certain weight but afterward they grew more civil by Traffick and had both Gold and Silver Money Their chief Trade was in Chains Wreaths Ivory Boxes Bitts and Bridles with some Toys of Amber and Glass Neither was their Shipping more considerable their cheif Vessels being made of light wood covered over with Leather Their usual way of Fighting was in Military Chariots neither did they engage in great bodies but had still fresh men to succeed those who retired or were weary Their weapons were Shields and short Spears at the lower end whereof was fastned a round Bell of Brass with which they terrified their Enemies Many times they fought under the Conduct of Valiant Women who were extraordinary couragious They managed their Chariots so dexterously that running downa steep Hill with all speed they could stop them in the middle of their course The Principality of Wales produceth Mines and among others Royal Mines of Silver in Cardiganshire in the Mountains of Cosmelock Tallabant Gadarren Bromfloid Geginnon and Cummerrum The