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A17976 Iurisdiction regall, episcopall, papall Wherein is declared how the Pope hath intruded vpon the iurisdiction of temporall princes, and of the Church. The intrusion is discouered, and the peculiar and distinct iurisdiction to each properly belonging, recouered. Written by George Carleton. Carleton, George, 1559-1628. 1610 (1610) STC 4637; ESTC S107555 241,651 329

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of Christendome are to be intreated in the behalfe of God to remoue these greeuances from the Church which the insatiable couetousnesse of Popes brought in And seeing they haue remoued the Harpyes themselues why should they leaue the markes of their abhominable couetousnesse to the eternall oppression of the Church Why should these vncleane spoiles be found in the hands of godly Princes It would be the eternall honour of our Princes not to chaunge the oppressour but to remooue the oppression It was the honour of this land that when the Pope had oppressed all other Churches onely the Church of England was free Hanc consuetudinem omnes ad●…isere praeter Anglos saith Naucler It was first imposed in the yeare one thousand and foure hundred it was not vsed in England when Naucler wrote as he witnesseth that is not before the yeare one thousand fiue hundred so odious an abuse so lately bred might soone be remoued if the cup of these sweete wines wherein the Pope began had not beguiled many men 152. When Boniface the ninth had begun this oppression much money was thereby gathered from the Clergie throughout the Emperours Dominions the money being thus collected was deteined by the greedy Emperour Wenceslaus from the more greedy Popes This turned the hearts of the Popes against him therefore Gregory the ninth deposed him and set vp Rupertus Count Palatine of Rhene against him George King of Bohemia 153. AFter the death of Ladislaus King of Bohemia who died without issue two great Kingdomes of Bohemia and Hungaria with the Duchy of Austria being vacant many Princes sought the Kingdome of Bohemia Charles King of Fraunce whose daughter Ladislaus married would haue placed one of his sonnes Casimire King of Polonia hauing married a sister sought it in her right so did Guilliam Duke of Saxony who married the elder sister of Lad●…slaus Sigismund and Albert Dukes of Austria were in good hope and Frederick the Emperour would haue had the administration of the Kingdome because the homage due to the Empire had beene neglected When the day of Election came 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was chosen King and afterward confirmed by Fredericke the Emperour but Paul the second finding that this George fauored the Hussites or as Platin●… saith daily withdrew himselfe from the body of Christianity meaning from the obedience of the Pope did excommunicate and depose him setting vp Mathi●… King of Hungary against him Mathi●… gaue the Bohemians a great ouerthrow in the yeare one thousand foure hundred and 〈◊〉 and with such mortall hatred was Pope 〈◊〉 set against this King that he sent many Bishoppes to negoci●…te these warres and to raise vp the Hungarians and Germanes against him and so farre preuailed that he e●…tinguished all the posterity and discent of George and would saith 〈◊〉 vtterly haue rooted out all the name and memory of the Heretickes vnlesse the Polonians had stayed 〈◊〉 For the Polonians claimed the Kingdome of 〈◊〉 as due to them 〈◊〉 being already busied enough with the warres of the Turke thought good not to draw new trouble●… vpon himselfe by prouoking the Polonians Thus the Pope rested at that time contented with the blood of George and his children seeing the power of his malice could then proceed no further King Iohn of Nau●…rre 154. POpe Iulius the second the scourge of Christendome in his time vsed the like courtesie to Ioh●… King of Nauarre for when this Vicar of Christ 〈◊〉 raised warres against the French King Ioh●… King of Nau●…rre held as he had reason with the French King being a French-man by birth and hauing the greatest part of his pa●…imony in Fraunce 〈◊〉 King of Arragon then fauoured the Pope This 〈◊〉 prepared warre against the French King and to turne the mindes and speech of all men vpon the French warres from that purpose which secretly hee intended hee intreated Henry the ●…ighth King of England to send him an Army to helpe him in the warres of Fran●…e King Henry haui●…g maried the daughter of Ferdinand sent him sixe thousand footmen these came to the Frontiers of France and there stayed long for the army of Ferdi●…nd who for his better passage into Fraunce required of I●…hn King o●… Nauarre through whose Dominions hee was to passe that he would deli●…er vp to his hands three of the strongest Castles that he would demaund the request as vniust was denied by the King of Nauarre Ferdina●…d referreth the matter to the Pope The Pope I●…lius not regarding the iustice or iniustice of the cause pronounceth the King of Nauarre a Schismaticke and Hereticke for fauouring the French King and therefore depriueth him of his kingdome and giueth his right to Ferdinand Who thereupon sent his army of a suddaine against the King of Nauarre who fled into France Thus was the kingdom●… of Nauarre surprised and no title pretended sauing onely the Popes excommunication The state of Venice 155. IT were too long to recompt all the mischiefes and miseries that the Popes Excommunications haue brought vpon Christendome I haue collected the chiefe and most eminent and will end this discourse with the memory of that affliction and desolation which the Pope brought vpon the Venetians Iul●…s the second following the steppes of his predecessours brought an armie before Bononia besieged the towne and tooke it The familie of the Bentiuoli he vtterly ruinated killing some banishing other When thus hee had ouerthrowne the Bentiuoli Then he set himselfe in like sort to root out the Venetian name Ad venet●… 〈◊〉 excidiu●… saith 〈◊〉 The better to effect the malice against the Venetians he drew 〈◊〉 the Emperour the French King the King of Spaine the Duke of Ferrara and the Duke of Mantua into a league when first himselfe had excommunicated and c●…sed them hee set all these vpon them at once The Pope made choice of a fit time to doe them the greatest hurt he could for a little before this the state of Venice was brought so low that a weake enemie might soone haue ●…dangered them hauing had their whole army brought vnto Internecion at Abdua after that ouerthrowen in a great battell by Lewes the French King their chiefe generals Liuianus taken prisoner Petilianus put to flight The Pope tooke the aduantage of this their weakenesse and seeing them falling labored to thrust them headlong that they might neuer be able to rise againe M●…ximilian tooke Verona Vicetia Padway Carni the French King surprised Bergamum Brixia Cremona Crema the Spaniard wan Tranum Monopolis and Barletta in Apulia The Popes share was Rauenna Ariminum all Aemilia The Duke of Ferrara got Rodigium and the Duke of Mantua Asula Thus was that noble state brought in manner to vtter ruine 156. Iulius hauing thus satisfied his malice and obtained his purpose in some measure against the Venetians being ledde by a spirit that would giue him no rest began to turne his furious wrath in like sort against 〈◊〉 contrary to his faith often promised and
Dominion of Sicily for which hee was also excommunicated by the Pope and deposed After him Conradus sonne to Frederic the second obtained the Kingdome of Sicily and Apulia for which Pope Innocent the fourth deposed him from the Empire and set vp Guillia●… Lantgraue of Thuring commanding the Princes to make choice of him Conrad being excommunicate and deposed maintained his right by strength of armes but was secretly taken away by the practise of poison This was supposed to be the practise of Mamphred 131. Mamphr●…d the bastard sonne of Frederick the second tooke and held possession of these Kingdomes after the death of 〈◊〉 T●…is man was also excommunicated by the Pope and deposed the Pope seeking alwaies to bring this Kingdome vnder the obedience of the Church of Rome Pope Ur●…an the fourth a French-man borne finding his owne power too weake to effect this Mastery ouer Sicily and Apulia gaue these Kingdomes which neuer were his to giue to Charles brother to the French King Lewes the ninth who was called S. Lewes This was the beginning of those troubles which afterward brought so great warres and bloud-shed and thereby wel-nigh the vtter ruine of Italy Charles King of Sicily and Conradinus 132. FOR Charles comming with an Army into Italy at the Popes motion ioyning battell with Mamphr●…d ouerthrew him and slew him in battell neare to Beneuentum Pope Clement the fourth succeeding Vrban the fourth vnderstanding that after the death of Mamphred Couradinus the sonne of Conradus then but yong prepared forces in Germany to reco●…er his inheritance of Sicily made Charles brother to the French King the Vicar of the Empire to giue him ●…trength against Conradinus and wrote Letters to all Christians forbidding all men to write to Conradinus as to the King of Sicily And to the Princes of Germany hee wrote likewise forbidding them vnder the terrible paine of excommunicati●… to chuse Conradinus Emperour by which meanes the 〈◊〉 was without a Soueraigne Magistrate for the space of two and twenty yeares In which time Alphonsus King of Spaine and Richard Earle of Cornewall brother to Henry the third King of England contended for the Empire These had the titles of the Emperour bestowed vpon them by their friends but the Emperour was not placed till Rodolph Count of Habspurge was chosen In the meane time Charles grew strong in Italy being made by the Pope Vicar generall of the Empire 133. When Conradinus vnderstood th●…se practises of the Pope against him perceiuing that the Popes had a resolution to roote out the seede and vtterly to extinguish the blood of Frederic he wrote a lamentable Epistle deploring his owne fortunes and the Popes iniquities Innocent the fourth saith he hath ouerthrowne me an innocent man for Conradus my father King of Sicily left me yong and tender in the custody of the Church then Pope Innoc●…ntins pretending my wealth professing himselfe a trusty Tutor inuaded the whole Kingdome and when once he had gotten the possession thereof he sought vnmercifully to extinguish my name and blood deuiding my lands and Countries and distributing the same among his owne kinsemen and Nephewes After his death Alexander succeeding inuited others into the possession of that Kingdom excluding m●… After his death Vrbanus dealt very inurban●…ly for hee drewe Mamphred in excluding my selfe the true heyre The same Pope disanulling that match with Mamphred drew Charles to vndertake th●… businesse against my selfe After his death Clement vsed all indemency against me setting vp another King and not content herewith thundreth out his Processes against me thinking it a small matter that against God and against Iustice he hath robbed me of my Kingdome vnlesse he proceede also to take the title from me Last of all he hath established Charles Vicar of the Empire to preiudice and defeat me by all meanes Thus doth he complaine by which complaint we may vnderstand somewhat of the Popes purposes Conradinus gathered an Army and came into Italy the Pope as he passed by 〈◊〉 fome doe witnesse did prophesie his death which was not 〈◊〉 for him to doe when hee had so strongly prepared the meanes thereof Conradinus therefore was ouerthrowne by Charles and so was all the bloud of Frederick And thus was that noble line of the Dukes of Sueuia vtterly extinguished 134. When Charle●… had at the Popes suggestion made this distruction in the house of Sueuia the Popes not knowing how to liue in peace and quietnesse began to turn their malice vpon Charles And first Pope N●…cholas the third onely fearing that Charles should be too great in Italy hauing no quarrell against hi●… tooke from hi●… the o●…fice of Deputy of Hetruria pretending that R●…dolph Emperour was therewith so much offended that vnlesse Charles would deliuer vp into his handes that regiment he would not vndertake the iourney to the holy land se●…ing that place belonged to the Emperour by right But when the Pope had gotten this both from the Emperor from Charles together with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Exarch of Rauenna he kept all saith Platina in his owne custody and thither he sent his Nephew Thus must all the world be troubled that principalities may bee procured to the Popes bastards This ●…ope saith 〈◊〉 had a desire to create two Kings in Italy of the Vrsini one of Hetruri●… against the French forces now placed in Sicily and Naples the other to be King of Lumbards against the Germanes and imperiall forces But first for the more speedy ouerthrow of Charle●… whom the former Popes had drawen into Italy as into a trap he conspired against him labouring by all his power to throw him out and therefore gaue his Kingdomes to Peter King of Arragon The great offence between Pope 〈◊〉 and Charles grew saith 〈◊〉 q●…ia 〈◊〉 a●…entiri noluit vt su●…s consanguineus contraheret cum 〈◊〉 Pontificis Charles would not agree that his kinred should match with the Popes kinred P●…ter King of Aragon 135. PEter King of Aragon being thus drawne in to the quarrell of Sicily by Pope Nicholas the third For saith Naucler the Pope perswaded Peter to take the Kingdom of Sicily in the right of his wife Constance who was the daughter of Mamphred and Niece to Conradinus brought an Army into Sicily and inuaded the Kingdome But Martin the fourth who succeeded Pope Nicholas excommunicated Peter deposed him depriuing him also of the Kingdome of Aragon Thus were these Princes first drawne into bloudy wars by the Popes who sometimes inuited them and laughed vpon them as louing friends sometimes plunged them in bloud as taking a delite in their destruction Let the Princes of Christendom once awake and consider the sauage nature of this wilde beast that is not onely drunk with the bloud of Saints but fed also fat with the bloud of Princes Thus the Popes filled all Christendome full of bloud with their excommunications Are these Christs Vicars are these the censures of Christes Church Martin then excommunicated Peter gaue
is called Aarons God but Aaron is not called Moses his God but his mouth Which thing though it bee so euident as that it seemeth to be the vndertaking of an idle and vn-necessary discourse to proue it yet because many bookes are of late filled with this conceit that Moses was a Priest which thing is taken as an especiall ground to build vp the Popes temporall Monarchie Let vs in a few wordes refute this fancy Franciscus Bozius who vndertaketh to proue this taketh a foundation so rui●…ous and fallacious that it is no maruell if his whole building be answerable for he concludeth that Moses was a Priest properly so called because Psal. 99. it is written Moses and Aaron among his Priests and Samuel among such as call vppon his name The answere is easie and vulgarly knowne for Cohanim which word is there vsed signifieth both Priests and Ciuill gouernors It is vsed for Ciuill gouernors which stand in some honourable place 2. Sam. 8. 18 where the sonn●…s of Dauid are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which cannot be translated Priests as the Latin vulgar hath it Though this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 somtimes be takē for a Priest yet it is certaine that Dauids sonnes were not Priests but chiefe rulers about the King as it is expounded 1. Chron. 18. 17. Then we answere that no proofe can bee drawne from this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to proue Moses a Priest because the word is ambiguous applyed both to Priests and to Ciuill gouernours And therefore the word is fitly applied to Moses and Aaron comprising both their Offices in one short word But that Moses was no Pri●…st we prooue thus If he were a Priest it must be either before that Aaron and his successors were assumed to that Office or after Before the law assumed Aaron and his sonnes to be Priests Moses could not bee Priest because the Priesthood was annexed to the birth-right But Moses was not the first borne of Amram but Aaron was the eldest for we read Num. 33. Aaron was one hundred twentie three yeares old when he died But Moses out liuing Aaron was but one hundred twenty yeares old when he dyed Deut. 34. Theresore Aaron was questionlesse the elder brother If any obiect that the birth-right was sometimes taken from the eldest by an especiall appointment of God as appeareth in Sem and Iacob I answere this cannot help in this point for Aaron was so farre from loosing this priuiledge of his birth-right by any appointment of God that he had the Priesthood famously confirmed to him and to his posterity So that neither by the law of nature nor by any precept of God can Aaron be said to loofe any priuiledge that belonged to the Priesthood Then before the institution of the Leuiticall Priesthood Moses could not be Priest After the institution thereof the Priesthood was so appropriated to Aarons house that none could be Priests but Aaron and his sonnes onely Therefore it was not possible that Moses could be a Priest at all either before the consecration of Aaron or after 22 Another reason may be drawn from those places which declare that Iosua was appointed by God to succeede Moses and to gouerne as he did In all which places it appeareth that Iosua succeeded Moses in his place and function and was that in Israel in his time which Moses was before him But it is certaine that Iosua was no Priest therfore as certaine that Moses was no Priest For Iosua was the full and entire successour of Moses The same appeareth by the whole course of Moses his gouernment Who commandeth as a Prince is obeyed as a Prince both by the Priests and people By which command in matters temporall and ecclesiasticall if they suppose that a Priesthood is proued by the same reason all the Kings of Israel may as well be concluded to haue been Priests For they commaunded in all such thinges as Moses did Some obiect that Moses sacrificed Exod. 24. But this obiection is friuolous For the words of the Scripture are against it It is expresly said that Moses sent young men to sacrifice these were the first borne of the 12 Tribes For this was before the institution of the Leuiticall Priesthood If any obiect that Moses did something which might seeme to belong to the office of a Priest I answer so did the Kings of Israell some things which might seeme to belong to the office of a Priest For Iosias when all the people were gathered together read in their eares all the words of the booke of the couenant Which thing might seeme to belong to the Priests office So true is that principle of our common Law founded vpon the profound principles of diuinitie and good gouernment Rex est persona mixta because he hath both temporall and ecclesiasticall iurisdiction 23 And thus haue wee declared the Kings right vnder the Law from the precept of the Law practise of godly Kings Thus did Ezekiah thus did Iosiah and others and in so doing they vsurped no vnlawfull power but stood faithfull in the execution of that lawfull right which GOD committed to them From this commission they may not turne either to the right hand or to the left For as it was a great sinne in Vzziah on the one side to vsurpe the Priests office so should it be a great sinne on the other side for a King to neglect any part of a Kings office From all which wee collect the power of a Prince in matters ecclesiasticall to stand in these things He is to establish all ecclesiasticall Lawes for which no power is sufficient without his Neither is it reason that they should establish Lawes in whom there is no power to defend and maintaine the Maiestie of those Lawes so made He is to punish all transgressours of those Lawes hee is to appoint ecclesiasticall Ministers their places to be Iudges in matters of ecclesiasticall Lawes and if they offend to punish them hee may place and displace according to their merits So Salomon displaced Abiathar made Zadock high Priest in his roome But because of late suborned Mat. Tortus speaking of this example saith that Salomon did displace the high Priest as he was a Prophet not as hee was a King let vs by the way open the vanity of this shift The fault that Abiathar had committed was worthy of death as Salomon saith Thou art worthy of death But yet hee shewed him mercy because hee had borne the Arke of the Lord before his Father Dauid and had suffered in all things wherein Dauid was afflicted So that the thing which Salomon did to Abiathar he did as iudge of life and death To be a Iudge of life death was not the osfice of a Prophet but of the King therefore Salomon did it not as a Prophet but as a King Againe the Prophets office was extraordinary but this thing is so far from an
an end of the institution of these orders to make some chaunge in that ancient religion which before stood in the Church of Rome in some tollerable measure and to vexe and persecute the professors thereof and especially to bring in a new Iurisdiction of the Pope it will better appeare if wee consider what hath bene in the beginning of their institution and since obserued of their innouations libertie luxuriousnesse and what desolation they haue brought into the Church That these men may better be knowen I will note what Iohn Wiclife and some others haue obserued Friars taught saith Wiclife that the King of England is not Lord of the Clargie but that the Pope is their Lord. Friars so streitched the priuiledges of the Clargie that though an Abbot and all his couent ben open traitours conspiring vnto death of the King and Queene and other Lords and inforce them to destroy all the Realme the King may not take fro them an half-penny ne farthing worth When Parish-churches ben appropred to men of singular religion that is to Friars such appropriation is made by false suggestion that such religious men han not ynough for lifelode and healing but in truth they han ou●…rmuch Let me obserue this by the way as being now better instructed in the opinion of Iohn Wi●…life concerning tithes Whereas he seemeth to be against tithes it is to be vnderstood as he doth in diuers places open himselfe against tithes as then they were abused by Fryars For Fryers then had power from the Pope to appropriate tithes to their Couents by which meanes tithes came into their possession This thing Wiclife thought vnlawfull and would haue had tithes reduced to their ancient vse againe now let vs returne to his obseruations Fryers sayen that their religion founden on sinfull men is more perfit then that religion or order which Christ himselfe made They sayen also that begging is lawfull the which is damned of God both in the old Testament and in the new Fryers after they had procured impropriations and left a poore Curat in place drewe also from Curats their office and Sacraments they got the confession of Lords and Ladies They pursuen true Priests and letten them to preach the Gospell Christ chargeth all his Priests to preach the Gospell truely and they pursuen them for this deed yea to the fire they will slea Priests for they doe Gods bidding When the King by his officers prisons a man that is commonly done for great and open trespasse and that is good warning to other misdoers some profit comes of the Kings Ministers but when Friars prisonen their brethren the paine is not knowen to men though the sinne were neuer so open and slaunderous and that does harme to other Liegemen Friars sayen that they han more power then the Curat and thus they make dissention and discord among Ch istian men Friars labour to roote out true Priests that preach Christs Gospel themselues han their chamber and seruice like Lords or Kings and senden out idiots full of couetise to preach not the Gospell but Chronicles Fables and leesings to please the people to rob them And yet for sending of those couetous fooles that ben limitors goes much Symonie enuy much foule Marchandise And who can best rob the poore people by false begging and other deceits that shall haue this Iudas office and so a nest of Antichrists Clarkes is maintained They shew not to the people their great sinnes and namely to mighty men of the world but pursuen other true preachers for they will not glose mighty men and comfort them in their sins Thus mighty men hire by great costs a false traitour to lead them to hell Friars deceiuen the people in faith and robben them of Temporall goods make the people trust more in dead parchment sealed with leesings and in vaine prayers of hypocrites that in case ben damned deuils then in the holy helpe of God and their owne good liuing Friars peruert the right faith of the Sacrament of the Auter bringing in a new heresie saying there is an accident withouten subiect which heresie neuer came into the Church till the foule fende Satan was vnbounden after a thousand yeeres Friars vndoe Parish Churches by building other needlesse meaning Abbeyes and Priories c. They destroy the obedience of Gods law magnifien singular obedience made to sinfull men and in case to diuels this is blind obedience brought in by them which obedience Christ insampled neuer ne in himselfe ne in his Apostles Friars being made Bishops robben men by extorsion as in punishing of sin for money and suffren men to lie in sinne they beare out the gold of our land to Aliens and sometimes to our enemies to get of Antichrist false exemptions They teach Lords and Ladies that if they die in Francis habite they shall neuer come to hell They are neither ruled by Gods law ne lawes of the Church ne lawes of the King They ben the cause and procuratours of all warres They say apertly that if the King and Lords and other standen thus against their false begging c. they will goe out of the land and come againe with bright heads and looke whether this be treason or none They teach and maintaine that holy writ is false and so they putten falsnesse vpon our Lord Iesus Christ and vpon the holy Ghost and vpon the blessed Trinitie Friars teach that it is not lawfull to a Priest or any other man to keepe the Gospell in his bounds and cleannesse without errour of sinnefull men but if he haue leaue thereto of Antichrist Friars by hypocrisie binden them to impossible things that they may not doe for they binden them ouer the commaundements of God as they say themselues hence are works of supererogation They burne Priests and the Gospell of Christ written in English to most honour of our Nation They call the curse of God the lesse curse and the curse of sinfull men the more curse They distroyen this Article of Christian mens faith I beleeue a common or generall Church For they teachen that tho men that shall be damned be members of holy Church and thus they wedden Christ and the diuell together They waste the treasures of the land for dispensations and vaine Pardons They ben most subtill and priuy procurators of Symonie and most priuily make Lords to maintaine the Pope and his robbing our land of treasure by his Pardons Priuiledges first fruits of Benefices in our land and Dis●…es and Subsidies 23. By this wee may in part see those innouations which Friars brought into the Church raysing a new Iurisdiction to the Pope defrauding and robbing the King of his auncient Iurisdiction these are they who first taught and practised obedience to another Soueraigne then the King conspiracy against the life of Princes
flatterie in his seruants then to resume these old condemned priuiledges and therewithall to patch yp a Iurisdiction standing so directly against the iudgement and practise of the ancient godly Fathers 92. And yet was Anselme as resolute in this as Augustine was in the contrarie But heerein a great difference appeared which might much sway the iudgement of indifferent readers if there were no other meanes to informe them that Saint Augustine standing against appellations to Rome had heerein the full consent of all his fellow Bishoppes not one dissenting But Anselme standing for appellations to Rome stood alone without the consent of so much as one Bishoppe which thing I report for the honour of the Church of England and of all the Bishoppes of England at this time who heerein resisted their Archbishoppe standing for the ancient liberties of the Church William Malmsburie witnesseth thus much In his exequendis saith he omnes Episcopi Angliae Primati suo suffragium negarunt That is In the execution of these things all the Bishops of England denied their consent to their Primate This sheweth that Archbishoppes were made the Popes seruants before Bishoppes were the reason was because the Archbishoppes vsed to purchase a Pall from the Pope which Pall Anselme had not yet at this time of his variance with the King obtained for Malmsbury saith he first asked leaue to goe to Rome for the Pall. Now the Pope in graunting the Pall conueyed an Oath of Alleageance with it as before we haue obserued which was the reason that moued our Archbishopps to stirre such rebellious tumults against the Kings of this land Such was this faction which Anselme maintained for the Pope against the King wherein he was condemned by all the Bishops of England in the question of Appellation as Thomas Becket was after this time condemned by all the Bishoppes in like sort in the question of Inuestitures 93. And therefore Henry the second had iust cause to publish that law which Roger Houeden calleth graue edictum execrabile against the Pope beginning Si quis inuentus fuerit literas vel mandatū ferens Domini Papae c. capiatur de eo sicut de regis traditore regui siue dilatione fiat iusticia That is If any be found bringing in the Popes Letters or Mandat c. let him be apprehended and let iustice be executed without delay vpon him as vpon a traytor to the King and Kingdome In the same law it is said Item generaliter interdictum est ne quis appellet ad Dominum Papam That is It is simply by law prohibited that no man appeale to the Pope This was not a new law now inuented by Henry the second but an auncient law now renued and vpon a iust occasion put in execution for William Rufus as before we haue declared vrged this law against Anselme proouing it to be one of his Fathers lawes and auerring that such appeales did stand against the auncient lawes and customes of his Kingdome so that the Kings Iurisdiction in such matters was maintained by the auncient lawes of this land 94. But because the antiquity of the lawes of our land is questioned by our aduersaries though this thing belong not to my profession yet let me in a few wordes declare what I haue met with in Stories concerning this point that it may appeare that the lawes of this land are much more auncient then that Religion which now is called the Religion of the Church of Rome King William Rufus the Conquerours sonne declareth as Malmsbury witnesseth that it was a custome of this kingdome confirmed by his father that without the Kings licence no man might appeale to the Pope Now these lawes and customes which William the Conquerour did publish and confirme were the auncient lawes and customes of the Saxons before him not first inuented by the Conquerour though enacted and established by him For Roger Houeden writing of these lawes which the Conquerour enacted saith that the King being once in minde to establish the lawes of the Danes was after much and earnest intreaty of the Barons perswaded to yeelde that the lawes of King Edward the Confessour should be retained still The Barons saith Houeden vrged the King Pro anima regis Eduardi qui et post diem suum concesserat coronam regnum cuius erant Leges Unde Concilio habito praecatui Baronum tandem acquieuit ex illa ergo die visa authoritate veneratae per vniuersam Angliam corroboratae confirmatae sunt prae caeteris patriae legibus leges Eduardiregis quae prius inuentae Constitutae erant in tempore Adgari aui sui For King Edwards soule who bequeathed him his Crowne and Kingdome after his death and whose lawes they were whereupon holding a Parliament he yeelded at last to the Barons request from that day forward the lawes of King Edward were by his authority honoured established and confirmed through all England which lawes were before found out and enacted in the time of Edgar Grandfather to King Edward After this Houeden entreth into a large discourse to proue that the lawes which the Conquerour established were King Edwards lawes which lawes saith he were called King Edwards lawes not because hee inuented them first but because after they had beene buried in some neglect lying vnregarded and not put in due execution for the space of three score and eight yeares after Edgars death for so many yeares are betweene King Edgars death and S. Edwards Coronation he reuiued them And thus much he confirmeth that the lawes established by the Conquerour were S. Edwards lawes and the same which were in vse here in the daies of that peaceable King Edgar And it is not without good reason collected that the same lawes proceeded from King Alphred for he like another Iustinian is reported to haue compiled certaine volumes of lawes not onely from the lawes of the Britaines Saxons and Danes but also of the ancient Grecians and other Besides that he translated into the Saxon tongue those lawes which were called the Molmucin lawes and also the Martia●… lawes the one of Dunwallo Molmucius an auncient Brittish King the other so named of Martia Proba an auncient Brittish Queene And that William the Conquerour established the Saxon lawes it is likewise testified by Henry Huntingdon who saith thus Saxones pro viribus paulatim terram bello capessentes captam obtiuebant obtentam aedificabant aedificatam legibus regebant Nee non Normanici cito breuiter terram subdentes sibi victis vitam libertatem legesque antiquas regni iure concesserunt The Saxons by a strong hand ouercame the land in time by war built as they ouer came and as they built gouerned it by lawes The Normans also quickly subduing the land vnder them yet graunted by the right of the Kingdome lise and libertie and the auncient lawes to them whom they subdued 95. Then whereas William Rufus
they whom he had banished from Parma were returned thither by the Popes practise and taking the Towne by force had giuen a great ouerthrow to the other Citizens fearing least this example might draw other Cities to the like reuolt he gaue ouer the iourney to Lions and wrote Letters to the French King and all Prelates refuting the Popes friuolous obiections declaring the iustice of his cause and his innocency Innocentius regarding neither iustice nor innocency pursued him by violence malice open warres secret conspiracies seeking all meanes that his vnholy head could inuent to take away the life of Fredericke As he was taking his recreation in hauking at Grossetum by the Sea shore neare to Sien the Pope drew his owne seruants to a conspiracy the conspiracy was detected and the traytors had the reward of their treason Innocentius who could not rest till he had done some Pontificall exploit against the life of this Prince stirred vp the Princes of Germany to thrust downe Fredericke and to set vp another first was set vp Henry Lantgraue of Thuringia this man besieging V●…mes was wounded by the shot of an Arrow and shortly after resigned both his life and the Empire After this was William Earle of Holland set vp this man was slaine in the warres which he had gaged against the Frisians neither of these saith Naucler were numbred among the Emperours At last after so many secret traps laid for the life of this Prince behold the end of the Popes malice where strength faileth the Emperour was destroyed by poison King Iohn of England 124. THe King of England sped no better then others for by this vnbridled power of vsurped Iurisdiction King Iohn with the whole Kingdome was brought into great trouble and perplexity these troubles grew vpon a quarrell of Election betweene the Monkes of Canterbury and the Suffraganes in the seuenth yeare of King Iohn for after the death of Hubert Archbishoppe of Canterbury the Monkes without the knowledge of the King or respect of the Suffraganes chose Reynold the Subpriour of the house to be Archbishoppe who secretly went to Rome to haue this his election confirmed by the Pope but stay was made at Rome because he shewed not Letters commendatory from the King The Monkes perceiuing that without those letters commendatory they could not proceede made request to the King that they might chuse another whom the King might commend this the King liked well and commended Iohn Gray the Bishoppe of Norwich being his Chaplaine and President of his Counsell as Hollinshed saith but Mat. Paris whom he cyteth hath not so much The Monkes gladly obeyed the Kings request and mad●… choise of this man but the Pope refusing both thrust vpon them Stephen Langton commanding and compelling so many of those Monkes of that Couent as were then at Rome to chuse him the King was herewith much moued because Stephen Langton was brought vp vnder the French King and bound to him betweene whom and King Iohn there was at that time much warre and dissention wherefore the King banished the Monkes that had chosen Stephen and wrote to the Pope that he had no reason to admit Stephen to such a place in his Kingdome a man promoted by the French King and at his commaund This contention continuing the Pope sent to the Bishoppes of England commaunding them to put the King and his land vnder the sentence of interdiction denouncing him and his land accursed The Bishoppes to whom the Pope wrote being by this time become the Popes subiects and s●…ruants and not the Kings which is the end which the Pope seeketh by his Iurisdiction denounced the interdiction and then fledde to Rome King Iohn seeing many fall from his obedience to the obedience of the Pope drewe his people to an Oath of Alleageance After this came Pa●…dulph Legat from the Pope who after that he had beene here a while was commaunded by the Pope to repaire to the French King there with Stephen Langton to take Councell and to stirre vp the French to make warres vpon King Iohn Thus King Iohn was depriu●…d of his Gouernement his subiects absolued from their Alleageance by which practise many reuolted from him so that he was left weake and when the Pop●… had thus weakned him then he set vp the French King in armes against him The issue was this The King circumuented by these practises of the Pope and oppressed being also bereaued of all helpe was forced to deliuer his Crowne to Pandulph and receiued it from him againe as from the Popes hands And thus was Stephen Langton made Archbishoppe this was done in the fifteenth yeare of King Iohn An. Dom. 1213. The Earle of Tholous 125. WHen Frederick the second liued so persecuted by the Pope as we haue declared a new and strange generation rose vp of a suddaine neuer seene in the world before starting vp like those armed Souldiers which the Poets faine to haue sprung vp suddenly of the Serpents teeth being sowed by Cadmus Such a serpentine generation of Friars were newly hatched at this time the first founders of them were Francis and Do●…inick For the Popes hauing a purpose to raise themselues aboue the Church and aboue Kings and Emperours as both by their profession and claime in the Canon Law and by their practise was apparant and for this purpose thundring out their excommunications vpon euery occasion practising this power in deposing Princes found themselues much crossed in these courses by Bishops and especially by the Bishops of Germany who stood out for a long time faithfull in the Church and couragious against the Popes tyranny Auenti●…us giueth many testimonies of the courage of the German Bishops as else-where also we haue obserued of the English Bishops for he writing of the times of Frederick the second the Bishops then saith he were not as now they are addict to the seruice of the Pope giuen to idlenesse and pleasure but learned industrious louing Christ and declaring their loue by feeding their flockes diligently These were not for the Popes purpose For in diuers Synodes they censured the Popes folly and ambition freely and withstood his tyrannie Then was the Church so gouerned by Bishops all matters so iudged and determined that the Pope might aduise but hee could not by authority attempt any thing in the Prouince of any Bishop thinges being guided by truth law the iudgement of the wisest and best learned in the Prouince and by the Councel and common consent of the Clergy of that Prouince Who had reason to know the estate of their Church and Prouince better then the Pope or any stranger could doe This godly order in the Church the Pope had a purpose to confound to opp●…esse the Bishops authority and to draw all power to himselfe Hoc i●…stitutum to vse the words of Aue●…tinus tollere antiquare Episcoporum autoruatem Labefactare ad vnius cu●…cta potestatem redigere complacitum est 126. This being the purpose of Popes
had done commaunded Letters to bee fixed vpon the Church doors filled with threatnings and curses against Lodouicke if within three daies he did not make satisfaction to God and the Church by the Church vnderstanding himself vtterly desist frō administration of the Empire When three daies were expired hee pronounced him contumacious and thundred out his excommunication The Emperour sent his Ambassadours c●…auing pardon promising satisfaction for any thing he had done amisse to the vtmost of his power wherevpon the Pope prescribed him a forme of reconciliation hard shamefull dishonourable that he shall confesse against himselfe all heresies and errours that hee shall relinquish the Empire and commit himselfe his children all his goods to the Popes mercy This the Embassadours sealed and confirmed But when this forme of reconciliation prescribed by the Pope came to the Emperours fight he sent copies thereof abroad to all the Princes and presently called a Diet at Franckfort the Princes iudged the presumption and pride of the Pope to be intollerable and therefore reiected this prescribed forme of his as being deuised to the bane and ruine of the Empire and promised the Emperour assured and faithfull aide if he would maintaine the liberties of the Empire as hee had done The Pope like a Tyger disappointed of his prey en●…red into a deeper con●…piracy against 〈◊〉 purposing an vtter extirpation of him and his posterity as the Popes his predecessours had done before to the house of Sueuia exter●…ninating all the feed and posterity of the Frederickes 149. And therefore this Clement at Masse curseth Frederi●…k againe renueth all the processes of Iohn the two and twentieth against him declareth him to be hereticall and schismaticall deposeth him from the Empire and commaundeth the Princes to proceede to a new Election To effect his purpose the better he remoueth Henry de Wirtenberg from the Archbishopricke of Mentz this man was deposed because he fauoured Lod●…uick and in his place he set Gerlac his Chaplaine Gerlac the newe Archbishoppe calleth the Princes to Rhenes and to goe thorough with his businesse which the Pope had giuen him in charge corrupted the Archbishoppe of Colon and the Duke of Saxony with great summes of money to confent to the Election of Charles sonne to the King of Bohemia They did so and Charles was elected ●…t Rhenes and afterward crowned at Bouna But after this when Lodouicke●…oned ●…oned the Princes of Germany to Spire there was not one found in all the Cities of Rhene Sueuia Franconia that regarded the election of Charles or the Popes processe The administration of Mentz was by Lodoui●… committed to another After that Lod●… had thus with great moderation and courage maintained his estate against the Pope and Charles so that his aduersaries had no hope to preu●…ile against him by force the next newes was Lodo●…icke was of a sudden f●…d dead This is the singular luke of those Princes that falling into the offence of the Pope will not be ouercome by force Some write that he was poysoned as he was to goe on hunting that by the agitation of his body the poyson might worke more effectually Charles the fourth 150. AFter the death of Lodouicke Charles the fourth whom the Pope aduanced to the vtter ruine not of Lodouicke only but of that Empire did by the instinct of his Ghostly father lay the Empire in the dust so lowe that it neuer rose vp to any such height as before him it held At his Coronation the Pope bound him with an Oath neuer to come to Rome nor to make longer abode in Italy then the Pope himselfe thought good Now to make Charles to waste and consume the reuennues of the Empire this cunning was vsed diuers competitours of the Empire were set vp against him to 〈◊〉 one competitor hee gaue two and twenty thousand Markes and two imperiall Towns in Thuringia to Fredericke Marquesse of Misna tenne thousand Markes There were at Millain at this time they who were called Vicounts who grew great and practised their tyranny oppressing the Cities of the Empire The Pope desired that they should be repressed but so that himselfe might be aduanced and therfore by the helpe of Charles he got many Cities out of their handes Charles being thus drawne to dilapidate the reuennues of the Empire dealt also secretly with these Vicounts to whom for a great summe of money he sold Millain and confirmed them in a perpetuall Office to be Vicars of the Empire after which time these Vicounts rose to a great Dominion in Italy The Kingdome of Arles which O●… the first had conferred vpon the Empire hee deliuered to the French King for a great dinner at a Towne ●…eere to Auinion Sixteene Cities of Sueuia part of the Empire he sold to the neighbour Princes Bopardia and Wesali a imperiall Cities he morgaged to Cuno Archbishoppe of Triers Lusatia hee confirmed to the Kingdome of Bohemia for euer corrupting the Archbishoppe of Magdeburg for a great summe of money to sell the right of his Church for the Archbishop before that time held Lusatia of the Empire That Wenceslaus his sonne a man giuen to idlenesse ryot and pleasure might be chosen Emperour after him he practised a newe example promising to euery Electour an hundreth thousand Crownes and wanting money to performe this promise to some he morgaged the reuennues of the Empire to the Palatine of Rhene he morgaged Caesarea Luthrea Oppenheim Odenheim Ingolheim for an hundreth thousand crowns By this meanes the Maiesty of the Empire was throwne so flatte on ground that since it could neuer holde vp the head This the Pope long sought and at last by meanes of his vnblessed sonne Charles effected Wenceslaus 151. AT this time began a schisme in the Church of Rome betweene Vrban the sixt and Cl●…ent the seuenth This was the greatest schisme the most terrible and longest that euer was in that Church it held fiftie yeares and could s●…arce be appeased by two generall Councels of Pisa and Constance In this schisme Wencestaus fauoured Urban in whose behalfe he sent his Ambassadours to Clement whom Clement vsed without all clemency for in a sauage manner he tortured them with exquisit tortures After this Boniface the ninth deuised a new practise to robbe the Churches of Christendome imposing the vse of Annates vpon all Benefices that whosoeuer obtained a Benefice should pay one halfe years profite to the Pope some say that Iohn the two and twentieth first deuised this robbery Whosoeuer inuented it the Popes like vnsatiable Harpyes deuising all meanes to bring confusion and misery vpon the Church to satisfie the Horse-leach that will neuer be filled increasing in couetousnesse increased these Annates in times and brought them to first fruites raking one whole yeares profite away from the Incumbents Wherein of these Harpyes we may say as the Poet saith of those other Harpyes Vestigia fada relinqu●…t But the godly Princes