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A02638 The chronicle of Ihon Hardyng in metre, fro[m] the first begynnyng of Engla[n]de, vnto ye reigne of Edwarde ye fourth where he made an end of his chronicle. And from yt time is added with a co[n]tinuacion of the storie in prose to this our tyme, now first emprinted, gathered out of diuerse and sondrie autours of moste certain knowelage [et] substanciall credit, yt either in latin orels in our mother toungue haue writen of ye affaires of Englande. Hardyng, John, 1378-1465?; Grafton, Richard, d. 1572? 1543 (1543) STC 12766.7; ESTC S103772 402,679 836

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¶ Symond the sōne of earle Symond Moūtfort Came oute of Fraunce for ferdnesse of that quene To kyng Henry whome he gaue great comforte He gaue hym then his man for ay to bene Of Leycester the earldome fayre and clene With the Stewarde of Englande in herytage Whiche is an offyce of greate priuelage ¶ And wed his doughter dame Elyanore To Willyam Marshall earle of Penbroke After whose deathe she auowed chastyte for euermore But he her maryed and her betoke For all her vowe as sayeth the booke To Earle Symond Mountfort to be his wyfe Notwithstandyng that she vowed chastyte her lyfe ¶ Tho dyed Lewelyn the prynce of Wales then Betwene his sonnes Gryffyth and Dauid grewe Greate discencyon and stryfe ay when and when And dame Beatryce the kynges doughter trewe To earle Symonde of Britayne wedded newe The yere of Chryste a thousand was accompted Two hundreth moo fourty and one amounted The C .xlv. Chapiter ¶ The 〈◊〉 of 〈…〉 of Lancaster and of Leicester long after in the yere of his father one and thirty and in the yere of Christ M. iiC xli THe same yere then Edmond his soōne was At Lācastre that yere of Christ thē writē A thousand whole twoo C and fourty mo bore And one therto in Flores as is wryten And in the yere next after then ouersetten The kyng his doughter Margaret then maryed To Alexaunder kyng of Scotland notified ¶ At Yorke citee wher he then did homage For Scotland whole and Isles apperteinyng Then dyed ●hemperour full sage Wherfore the lordes of Almaignie variyng Some chose Rychard kyng Henryes brother beyng And some that kyng of Castile would haue algate But erle Rychard of Menske had all the state ¶ Then rose discorde betwene the kyng Henry And certain lordes of mighty greate power Symond Mountfort vpon hym toke boldly To bee cheftein to hold the feld full clere At Lewis faught of christ then was the yere A thousand twoo hundred and sixty accompted And foure also so muche more amounted ¶ This erle Symond had then the kyng Henry And his brother Rychard themperour In his kepyng and ward wer hold strongly But prince Edward was sette in Herford toure And erle Henry of Herford that was floure Themperours soonne at Herford with hym laye A myle about disported theim euery ●aye ¶ Fro whens at last with horse thei brake awa 〈…〉 And to Wigmour castell thei came in hie To sir Roger Mortymer wher he laye That theim receiued then full gladly And so thei assembled with greate hoste manfully And held the feld the lordes fast to theim drewe And at Euesham thei stroke a battaill newe ¶ In the yere of Christ a thousand was tho Twoo hundred mo sirty also and fiue When prince Edward faught with his foo Symond Moūtfort and raught hym fro his liue The feld discomfited there anone as bliue With help of erle Gilbert then called Clare And other lordes with hym that were thare ¶ He slewe many and some awaye exiled And some he held in prisone and distres He toke out then his father as is compiled His eme Rychard holden in greate dures And all his frendes of his hie worthynes He socoured euer and with his gold supported And wher it want with his woord theim cōforted The C .xlvi. Chapiter ¶ Howe Robert Ferrers erle of Darby was dishe rite and many other of their compaignie RObert Ferrers that erle was of Darby Disherite then for his insurreccion With many other at Chesterfeld in hie Faught with Edward of their presumpcion And fled awaye with greate confusion Vnto the Isle of Axholme and fro thens Vnto Lyncolne and spoyled the citezens ¶ Fro thens to Ely thei went anone Wher prince Edward thisle proudely assailed Thei fled fro it soone to Yorkeshire gan gone In freres clothis that were full long tailed Robbyng their fooes when thei of good failed And other some to Kilyngworth then fled To Henry Hastynges who then the castell had ¶ Wher then that kyng great siege laied all about But nought auailed so strongly thei defende And for ther was in euery shire throughout So greate robbery and nothyng amende The kyng was fain for lordes then to send By whose aduise he ordeined for that case That all disherite and exiled should haue grace ¶ All disherite should buye their landes again To paye for theim gold as thei might accorde With theowners so that no man should payen More then the land were worth by greate recorde In seuen yere whole and if thei might concorde For lesse money so it exceade a yere The value of the yerly rent full clere ¶ Robet Ferrers erle of Derby then The soonnes also of erle Symond exclude That perpetuall iudgement fully then Neuer to redeme their landes but been exclude So that theowners be not with theim delude Vnto a daye that fifty thousand pound Be paide of nobles whole and round ¶ Edmond the soonne of the same kyng Henry Was weddid first vnto dame Auelyn Erle Willyam his doughter of Almarle womāly None issue had neither male ne feminine Then was he wed to Blaunche that quene full fyne Of Nauerne and so of Lancaster create With Leicestre also therle denominate The C .xlvii. Chapiter ¶ Howe Edward theldest soōne heire of kyng Henry the third and his brother erle Edmond of Lancaster and of Leicestre went to Ierusalē with greate power whiche twoo princes were coūted the semeliest of all the hoste of Christendome HIs brother Edward and he associate To Ierusalem their voiage thē auowed Two semely princes together adioynate In all the world was none theim like alowed So large faire thei were eche manne he bowed Edward aboue his menne was largely seen By his shulders more hie and made full clene ¶ Edmond next hym the comeliest prince aliue Not croke backed ne in no wyse disfugured As some menne wrote the right lyne to depryue Through great falsehed made it to bee scriptured For cause it should alwaye bee refigured And mencioned well his yssue to preuaile Vnto the croune by suche a gouernaile ¶ But prince Edward and he held fourth their waye To Ierusalem so did themperour Rychard his eme and Henry his soonne full gay To Cisile came by sea through many a shoure Edward with hym then had his wife that houre Elianour doughter of the kyng of Aragon A princesse faire at his eleccion ¶ The kyng Lewes also then thither went And in his waye dyed and expired Sainct Lewes nowe is named by all assent Of holy churche as it is well enquired Approued trewe as reason well required But Edward prince and Edmōd abode two yere With werres greate and mighty strong power ¶ For nacions all vnto prince Edward drewe And to Edmond his brother for their semelines And greate māhode whiche in theim that thei knewe Sir Charles that brother of king Lewes doubteles Kyng of Cisile of noble worthynes By the Soudan was chasid without beld Whome prince Edward socoured had the
brought to passe thei went bothe together into Kent And there beganne this young feloe to tell priuely to many that he was the erle of Warwicke and had gotte out of the tower by the helpe of this monke To the whiche when he perceiued credence geuen he declared it openly and desyred al men of helpe But or euer this sedicion beganne to goo foreward the heddes and principalles of thesame wer taken and casle into prysone Of whiche the one was condempned to death and the other condēpned to perpetuall pryson and darkenesse For at that tyme here in Englande was so muche attrybuted to prestes and al religious mē that though they had committed felonie murder yea or treason they should not haue bene therfore condempned to death Moreouer whosoeuer could reade though it wer neuer so lytle what crime soeuer he had committed saue treason should by his booke bee saued and therfore it was inuented that if the default wer so great that another manne shoulde suffer death for thesame he should onely be burnt in the hande wherfore he the had committed thefte should bee marked in the hand with this letter T. if he had committed murdre with M. and after that yf he were deprehended in lyke cryme then there should no fauour at all more then to other menne bee shewed Whiche acte was made and confyrmed by this kyng Henry in the second yere of his reigne and takē of the Frenchemen whiche are wonte if thei take any suche to cutte of one of his cares and let hym go Whiche priuiledges of bookes made thefes both bolde plentie thorowe out all the coastes and parties of this his realme of Englande But nowe to my matier again Perkyn of whom we spake muche before whyles he was in the towre corrupted many of the kepers partly with giftes and partely with fayre promyses so that they were all agreed saue the leuetenaunt whome he fully determined to kyll that he and the erle of Warwike should gooe theyr waye out of the toure and afterwarde to make the best shyfte that they could for theim selfes But this his purpose came not to full effecte For it was knowne within shorte tyme after for the whiche he and his felowes all of the same counsayle were hanged by the neckes And the earle of Warwike because he was foundegyltie in thesame defaulte was behedded whiche was dooen in the yeare of oure Lorde a thousand foure hundreth and .xcix. and in the .xiii. yeare of this kyng Henry his reigne The nexte yere after was here in Englande a a greate plague wherof menne died in many places vereye sore but especiallye and mooste of all in London For there died in that yere aboue thyrtye thousande Wherfore the kynge sayled ouer to Caleis and there taryed a greate while In his beyng there came ouer to hym Philippe Erle of Flaunders and was receaued of hym as louyngly as could bee thought and also or euer they departed the league whiche was made betwene theim two not longe before was renewed Sone after when the plague was slaked the kyng returned agayne into Englande and was no soner come thyther but there met him one Gasper Pons sente from Alexander the byshoppe of of Roome which brought with hym indulgences and perdo●es whereby he made the kyng beleue that he and his should flye streight to heauen but those could not bee graunted withoute a greate somme of money the whiche the rather that he might obteyne he promysed parte of it to the kyng hymselfe so deceauyng both the kyng and the people In this same yere was burnt a place of the kynges whiche he after buylded vp againe and named it Richemount Aboute this tyme died three bishoppes here in England Ihon Morton bishop of Cantourbury Thomas Langton bishop of Wynchester and Thomas Rotherham bishoppe of Yorke Also in this yere there were greate maryages made for kyng Henry had geuen his doughter ladye Margarete to the kyng of Scottes and his sonne prince Arthur to Ladie Katherine doughter to Ferdinande kyng of Spayne whiche mariages were made specially for this cause that he might liue in peace with those kynges in his olde age After this prynce Arthure that came to Londō purposely to bee maryed went to Wales agayne with his lady and wife to ouersee all thynges well there and to the entente he might not miscarye or go out of the waie in rulyng his domimon he had with hym many noble mē as first Richard Poole his nighe kynsman which was made chief of his priuie chaumbre and Dauid Philippe husher of his halle Also he had of his counsaill certayne knyghtes as Wyllyam Vdall Richarde Croft Peter Neuton Henrye Varnam Thomas Englefelde And other besides theim as Ihon Walestone Henry Marine Wyllyam Smyth preest chief of his coūsayle late bishop of Lincolne syr Charles Booth a lawer then byshop of Herforde A litle before this mariage Edmūd Poole erle of Suffolke sonne to ladye Elizabeth the sysler of kyng Edward was accused for killyng of a mā although the kyng pardoned hym whō he might iustely haue condē●ed for that offence yet because he was rayned at the barre whiche he thought a great main and blemishe to his honoure tooke it heuely and shortely after fled to Flaunders wtout any passeporte or licēce of the kyng to quene Margarete his aunte but he returned again so excused hymselfe before the kynge that he was founde fautles in any thyng that was obiected vnto hym Also when this mariage was kepte at London with great pompe solēnitee this Edmunde fled again to Flaunders with his brother Richard either for that he had been at great charges at thesame mariage and so farre cast in debte that he was not hable to paye either because the quene Margarete his aunte had allured hym orels for eiuill will enuie that the kyng should prosper so well Whē it was knowen that he was gooen the kyng certified there of he feared that some busynes should ryse by his meanes was sory that he had pardoned hym for his offēce lately cōmitted But sone after that the erle came from Flaunders syr Robert Cursone knight capitaine of Hāmes castel feignyng hym selfe to bee one of that conspiracye wente purposely to espye what the quene entended against kyng Henrye whyche afterwarde for his so doynge was in greate fauoure wyth hym For the kynge was so vigylaunte and circumspecte in all his matters that he dyd knowe theim namelye that either bare hym eiuill will or woorked any in theyr mynde whom he caused to bee attached and caste in holde And emong theim Wyllyam the erle of Deuonshyres sonne whiche maried ladie Catheryne daughter to kyng Edward was taken and another Wyllyam brother to Edmonde earle of Souffolke Iames Tyrell Ihon Wyndham But these two wylliams were taken rather of suspection then for any offence of gyltines Wherefore Wylliam this Earles sonne of Deuonshyre after the death of kynge Henrye was deliuered had in
stone That Wynchester is nowe a towne full mery Caire Paladoure that nowe is Shaftesbury Where an Engel spake syttyng on the wall Whyle it was in workyng ouer 〈◊〉 ¶ In whiche citees he made then temples three And flaumes also as nowe these bishoppes been To kepe the rites after their moralytee Of there goddes as in there bookes was seen Of their fals lawes as thei dyd meen When he had reigned by thyrtye yere and nyne The dulful death made hym to earth enclyne The .xxv. Chapiter ¶ Bladud kynge of Britayne had Logres and Albany He made an vniuersitee and a study at Stamforde a flaume and his temple at Bathe his citee whiche vniuersitee dured to the commyng of saynt Augustyne and the byshoppe of Roome enterdited it for heresyes that fell emong the Saxones and the Britons together mixte BLadud his sōne sone after hym did succede And reigned after then full .xx. yere Cair Bladud so that now is Bath I rede He made anone the hote bathes there infere When at Athenes he had studied clere He brought with hym .iiii. philosophiers wise Schole to holde in Brytayne and exercyse ¶ Stāforde he made that Sāforde hight this daye In whiche he made an vniuersitee His philosophiers as Merlyn doth saye Had scolers fele of greate habilitee Studyng euer alwaye in vnitee In all the seuen liberall science For to purchace wysedome and sapience ¶ In cair bla 〈…〉 m he made a temple right And sette a flamyne theirin to gouerne And afterward a* Fetherham he dight To flye with wynges as he could beest descerne Aboue the aire nothyng hym to werne He flyed on high to the temple Apolyne And ther brake his necke for al his great doctrine The .xxvi. Chapiter ¶ Kyng Leyr of Brytaine gaue away with his doughter all his lande and had it all again and dyed kyng possessid HIs soōne was kyng high sette in royaltee Of all Brytaynes by name that hight kyng Leyr Who Laiceter made after hym called to bee Cair Leyr his citee that buylded was full faire He had doughters three to been his heire The first of theim was called Gonorelle The next Ragan and the youngest Cordelle ¶ Emonges theim as Leyr satte on a daye He asked theim howe muche thei hym loued Gonorell saied more then my self ay And Ragan saied more then was after prouid For ioye of whiche the kyng was greately moued I loue you more then all this worlde so fayre He graūted theim twoo of thre partes to bee heire ¶ Cordell the yoūgest then saied full soberly Father as muche as ye been in value So muche I loue you and shall sikirly At all my might and all my herte full trewe With that he greuid at hir and chaunged hewe Senne thou me loues lesse then thy sisters twain The leest porcion shalt thou haue of Bryteine ¶ With that Maglayn duke of Albaine Gonorell weddid and had the lande all out Euin of Walis and of Cornwayle ther by That duke was of those twoo landes stoute Ragan weddid to whiche twoo dukes no doubte Kyng Leyr gaue rule and gouernaunce Of all Bryteine for age and none puissaunce The .xxvii. Chapiter ¶ Howe Leyr made a temple and a Flamyne to rule at all Laiceter A Temple that in his citee of Kaireleir A Flamyne also as he a bishop were In name of Ianus the folke into repere And then he wente Gonorell to requier Of the greate loue that she aught hym so dere That of hir promyse she failed vnkyndly Wherfore he wente vnto Ragan in hye ¶ She failed also for all hir greate promyse And to Cordell that weddid was into Fraunce Long after that he wente in greate distres To helpe to wynne hym his inheritaunce She succurred hym anon with all plesaunce Bothe with gold syluer of right greate quātitee To gette his lande again in all suertee ¶ Aganippe hir lorde was kyng of Fraunce That graunt hym menne and goud sufficient And sent his wife with hym with greate puisaūce With all aray that to hir wer apent His heire to been by their bothes assent For he was olde and might not well trauell In his persone the warres to preuaile ¶ Kyng Leyr thus wāne his lande with all might again And riegned well there after full thre yere And died so buried at Kairleir menne sayn In Ianus temple in whiche tyme for age clere The kyng of Fraunce Aganype infere Dyed wherfore Cordell his ayre was soo To rule Brytaine alone with outen moo The .xxviii. Chapiter ¶ Howe Cordell quene of Fraunce and doughter of kyng Leyr reigned after the death of hir father COrdell quene of Fraūce and doughter to kyng Leyr Quene of Englāde after hir fathers daye Fiue yeres reigned as for hir fathers heyre And gouerned well the realme all menne to paye His sister soonne then Morgan of Albanie And Condage also of Cambre and Cornewaile In battaill greate hir tooke and putte in baill ¶ For sorow then she sleugh hir selfe for tene And buried was by side hir father right In Ianus tēple whiche kyng Leyr made I went At Kairleyr so that nowe Laicester hight Thus died this quene that was of muche might Hir soule went to Ianus whome she serued And to Mynerue whose loue she had deserued The .xxix. Chapiter ¶ Morgan kyng of Albanie that cla●nyd all Briteyne but this Isle of Britayne was departed for this kyng had but Albany MOrgan that eldest soōne of Dame Gonorell Clamed Brytein as for his heritage Warred sone of Condage as I spell That kyng was of Cambre in younge age Duke of Cornewaile also for his homage But this kyng Morgan was kyng of Albany Soonne and heire of the eldest soonne varelie ¶ Cōdage was kyng of Cābre that Walis is nowe And duke of Cornewaile his patrimonye Claymed Logres as soonne and heire to Regawe The myddill sister for his mothers proprete As she that aught to haue hir partourye At Glomorgane with Morgan did he meete In bataill sleugh hym there casten vnder fete The .xxx. Chapiter ¶ Condage kyng of Logres Cambre and duke of Cornewaile gatte all Bryteine againe and made a temple with a Flamyne at Bangor COndage was kyng of all greate Britaine And in his hande he seased all Albanie For his eschete that ought to hym againe Resorte of right and returne verelye He made a Flamyne a temple also in hye Of Mars at Perch that nowe his s Iohns towne In Albany that now is Scotlande region ¶ He made another temple of Mynerue In Cambre which now is named bangour The thyrde he made in Cornwayle for to serue Of Mercury in place where he was bore For his people to serue the goddes there Wherby he reygned .xxx. yere and three In rest and peace and all tranquilitee ¶ Ryueall his sonne that was pacificall Crowned was than easye of gouernaile In whose tyme the greate tempest dyd befall That dayes thre the flyes did hym assayle Enuenoned foule vnto the death
his doughter had wed And his treason perdoned had and hyd Of his brothers death when that he murthered had Whom then the kyng Somond cōmaunde bid Vpon his legeaunce whatsoeuer betid For to aunswer in his courte and amende Defautes all betwene theim might be kende ¶ At whose summons he would not then apeare But warred sore both he and his sonnes fyue For whiche the kyng theim exiled out all clere But after they landed and did aryue At Sandwiche so the kyng theim met belyue Where lordes then theim treated and accorded And afterwarde nomore they discorded The C .xx. Chapiter ¶ Howe Sywarde duke of Northumberlande slewe in battayle Maclom kyng of Scotlande and crowned Malclome kyng at Scome accordyng to saynt Edwarde the confessoures commaundement whiche Malclome did homage to saynt Edwarde as apeareth by his letters patent DVke Siwarde then was of Northūberlād In batayle slewe kyng Maclom so in dede Of Scotlande then that false was of his bād Whiche to the kyng he made who taketh hede Wherfore the kyng in Marian as I reade By his letters charged duke Siward take on hād To croune Malcolin that was of Comberland ¶ The whyche he dyd full myghtely anon At Skone abbey wher kynges were all crouned Vpon his hed he set the crowne anone And toke homage of hym vpon the grounde In Edwardes name as he of right was bounde For that ylke realme and as his elders dyd Suche fortune then to Englande was betid ¶ The kyng Gryffyn of Wales then was slayn That Herford shire spoyled had and brent His hed set vp at Gloucester full playne For his vntruthe and falshed that he ment And sone therafter his brothers hed was sent Vnto the kyng for his rebellion So wer they both foringed for treason ¶ And as kyng Edward in his palayce of pride Duke Goodwyne then sittyng at his table Sawe the butler on his one fote slyde And lyke to fall that other fote full stable As he was seruyng the kyng at his table Then held hym vp that he fell not to grounde Kyng Edward sayd to Gudwyn in that stounde ¶ As his one fote ye se helpe that other Full well and trewe I fynde it dayly nowe Had ye ne bene thus had helpe me my brother Th erle then to the kyng on side gan bowe And sayd if I wer cause I praye God nowe This breade passe not my throte but dead I bee And straungled here anone that ye maye see ¶ At his prayer anone with that he died For with that breade straungled was he that stound It might not passe his throte as men espied Wherfore the kyng then bad drawe out that hounde Vnder the boorde as he that false was founde On whome God shewed an hasty iudgement Approued well by good experiment ¶ Wher Herolde had therle Algare exiled Fro Leycestre where erle he was so then The kyng Eward agayn hym reconsiled And perdoned hym and toke hym for his man Of Couentre as Flores tell it can The lord he was and there thabbey founde And buried there is with his wyfe that stound ¶ This Algare was the sonne of erle Leofryke Whiche Leofrike was the duke Lofwynes sonne That erles had been there none afore theim like But duke Siwarde as he did wonne Syckenesse hym tooke and sore vpon hym ronne In whiche he dyd hym arme in all degree And had his axe in hand full lyke to dye ¶ He sayd vnto the lordes then hym about Thus semeth well in armes a knight to dye And not in bed to lye loure and loute Tyll death hym kyll with paynes cruelly As would God here were my moste enemye That I myght dye vpon hym nowe in right In armes thus arayed like a knight ¶ With that he died for paynes that he felt Vpon his fete standynge in that arays And shoke his axe while that his hert gan swelt And to the ground he fell in that afraye Who buried was at saynt Marie abbeye At Yorke citee with worshyp and honoure As likely was for suche a gouernoure ¶ The kyng Edward the duke of Northūberlād To Tosty gaue the sonne of duke Goodwyn Vnder the name of erle as Flores doth vnderstād After whiche tyme all haue been erles syne With landes and rentes both fayre and fyne Whiche estate suffice for princes ben both two In euery lande accompted where they go ¶ He disherited erle Waldyue his owne sonne Who erle was then create of Huntyngdon Of Northampton also as chronicles tell can A worthy prince of all this region That rule a realme coulde well then by reason Another prince was Loafrike that daye Erle of Leycestre and Couentry no naye ¶ Whiche Loefrike had a wyfe that Godiue hight That naked throughout all Couentree The tolles sore and seruage agayn right To redeme hole of her femynitee She in her heare hangyng beneth her knee Vpon a daye rode so through all the towne To bye it free by her redempcion ¶ For otherwise therle would not it free But yf that she rode naked through all the towne Vpon the daye that all men might her see Trustyng she would not for no waryson Haue doen it so by suche redempcion But thus by witte she kept her selfe vnshamed And freed the towne worthy was he blamed ¶ Kyng Edwarde sente then into Hungary For his cousyn the sonne of Emond Ironesyde Themperoure sent hym Edwarde gladly His brother sonne and folke with hym to ryde His sonne Edwarde Athelyng by his syde Margarete and eke Christine his doughter dere Whiche kyng Edward receyued with good chere ¶ He maried Margarete mighty with great riches To kyng Malcolyne of Scotland was that daye That on her gatte fiue sonnes of great noblinesse Edwarde Dunkan Edgare Alixander the gaye And Dauid also that kynges were all no naye Eche after other of Scotlande throughout Whose mother is now S. Margrete wtout doute ¶ At Dumfermlyn shryned and canonized On whom Malcolyne a doughter gate also Kyng Henryes wife the first full wel auised Quene Mawd that hight that well loued Englāde tho These crosses fayre and roiall as menne goo Through all Englande she made at hic expense And dyuerse good orders throwe his prouidence ¶ Another sustre this same saint Margarete had That Christine hight kyng Edwarde thē ꝓfessed In religion to lyue she was full glad To holy lyfe disposed and adressed An holy woman of lyfe and of god blessed Who at hir death hir soule then vncouered And to our lorde full mekely so it offred ¶ In his forest as he pursued a dere In Essex a palmer with hym met Askyng hym good whome gladly he dyd here He claue his ryng and in sonder it bette The halfe of whiche he gaue without lette To the Palmer that went awaye anone That other good to geue hym there had he none ¶ But after that full longe and many a daye Two pylgrames came vnto that noble kynge And sayde saint Iohn thappostell in pore araye Vs prayed and bad straytly aboue
yere and was slayne The quene was of all Logres lādes so fine And of all Albaine also through out incertayne Crowned quene and so reigned with mayne And seruyce tooke of Cambre for his lande Who gouerned well her tyme I vnderstande ¶ Fyftene yere and then her sonne she crowned That Maddan hyght into Cornewaile went And then she dyed with sycknesse sore confounded And to her goddes her wofull herte she sent And thus this quene in her beste entente To set amonge the goddesse euerychone Euer to complayne her wedowhed alone The .xx. Chapiter ¶ Howe Maddan kynge of Britayne reygned after Gwendolena his mother and reygned .xi. yeres MAddan her sōne was king of Britain then Hauyng Logres and also Albany That fourty yere there reygned as a man Kepyng the lande in peace from tyrannye In whose tyme was none in his monarchye Durste ought vary or any thing displease So was he dred and set the realme in ease Throughe all Britayne durste none another dysplese So wel the lawe and peace he dyd conserue That euery man was gladde other to please So dred they hym they durst no thing ouer terue Againe his lawe nor peace but theim conserue So was he dred through his great sapience Both in and oute by all intellygence ¶ He dyed so and to his father yede His sonnes two Maulyne and eke Memprise A daye then sette whiche of theim shoulde precede To the croune but then by couetyse And that ylke daye the yonger Memprise Slewe his brother Maulyne elder of age To that entent to haue the herytage Memprise thus kyng destroied his men all oute Their landes their goddes or elles their liues certayne He tooke from theim all his lande aboute Fulfylled all with pryde and great disdayne His comonnes all with taxes did distrayne So tirauntely he lefte theim nought to spende By consequent thrifteles he was at ende His wyfe he dyd refuse and foule forsake Vsynge the synne of horribilyte With beastes ofte in stede right of his make Whiche by all ryght and equytee Vengeaunce asked by fell bestialitee And so hym fell as to the wood he wente A route of wolffes hym slough and all to rent The .xxi. Chapiter ¶ Ebranke kyng of Britayne had Logres and Albany Also he had .xx. wyues .xx. sonnes and .xxx. doughters he made Yorke Bamburgh Edenburgh Dumbritayne and Alclude Also he made an archeflaume at Yorke his temple that nowe is an archebishoppe EBranke his sōne thē crowned was anone Who shippes great made on the sea to sayle Withhelde his knightes with hym so forthe to gone Vpon warre he went without fayle Then into Gaule with a full manly tayle Wher that he had riches innumerable To holde estate royall incomparable ¶ XX. wyues he had as chronicles saith And .xx. sonnes of his owne generacion And doughters fayre .xxx. that wer not laith Whiche doughters so for theyr releuacion Into Italie with great supportacion There to be wedded in Troyan bloodde maried For ladies theyr with Troyans wer alyed ¶ In Albany he made and edifyed The castell of Alclude whiche Dumbritayne And some autours by chronycle hath applied And some sayen on the pight wall certayne And the west ende it stode that nowe is playne And some menne sayen it is Yorke cytee Thus stande menne nowe in ambyguytee ¶ But sooth it is he made this Dunbrytayne A castell stronge that standeth in Albany Vpon a roche of stone hard to optayne About the whiche the sea floweth dayly And refloweth again nocturnally Twyse in his course and to the sea again In the whiche no horsse maye dunge certain ¶ He made also the mayden castell stronge That men now calleth the castell of Edenburgh That on a roche standeth full hye out of throng On mounte Agwet wher mē may see out through Full many a towne castell and boroughe In the shire aboute it is so hye in heigth Who wyll it scale he shall not fynde it light ¶ He made also vpon mounte Dolorous A castell strong that this daye Bamburgh hight That on a roche is sette full hye and noyous Full hard to gette by any mannes might The castell is so stronge and so well dight If menne therin haue stufe sufficient Or it be wonne many one muste bee shent ¶ His sonnes all he sent to Germanye To wynne thesame lande by labour and conquest Vnder the rule of their brother Analye Duke Assarake that was the eldest A worthy knight proued with best All Germanye they gatte at theyr entent And lordes wer made their as there father ment ¶ Sixty yere whole he stoode and bare the crowne Reignyng fully in all prosperytee No enemyes durst again hym vp ne downe Warre ne do in no wyse again his royaltee He made a temple in * Ebranke citee Of Dyane where an archeflame he sette To rule temples as that tyme was his dette The .xxii. Chapiter ¶ Howe after the death of Ebranke reygned Brutus greneshilde BRutus Greneshilde then by his name full ryght Both good trewe and easy of all porte His people all that came into his syght With all his might euermore he recomforte Of all there sorowe that they to hym reporte And why he hight Greneshilde to his surname Because he bare on grene ay wher he became ¶ Xii yere he stoode reignyng full well in peace And dyed so and by his father buryed In Ebranke afore Dyane no lees With Britons hole thyther accompanyed With all honours that might bee multiplyed In any wyse with all seruyse funerall As longed to the fate of death ouer all The .xxiii. Chapiter ¶ Leyle kyng of Brytayn had Logres Brytayne he made at Carlele a temple flamyne and a flaume to rule it THē Leyle his sōne was kyng of Britain so That Carleele made that tyme in Albany That now Carleile is called by frend to Whiche in Englyshe is to say fynally The cytie of Leyle for in brytayn tongue playnly Cair is to saye a citee in theyr language As yet in Wales is there commen vsage ¶ This ilke kyng Leyle made then in that citee A temple greate called a temple flaumyne In whiche he sette a flaume in propertee To gouerne it by their lawes dyuyne Of Iupiter Saturne and Appolyne That then wer of all suche in dignitee After theyr lawes as nowe our byshoppes bee ¶ When he had reigned hole .xx. yere and fyue In youth full well and kepte lawe and peace But in his age his people beganne to stryue Failyng his lawes cyties wold not warre cease Cyuill warres greately beganne to encreace And he dyed then settyng no remedy Buried at Carleyle in his citee royally The .xxiiij. Chapiter ¶ Rudhudebras kyng of Brytayne had Logres and Albany he made Caunterbury Wynchester and Shaftesbury and three temples and three flaumes of theim RVdhudebras his sonne was kyng anone Cair kent he made that now is Caūterbury Cair went also buylded of lyme
capitayn had to name By whome it was so bigged and supporte That out of Spayn wer exiled and thither came And some sayth that Hiberus of great fame There duke was than and there gouernour That of Spayne afore had been the floure ¶ This king Gurgwyn his surname was Batrꝰ Came home agayn after the voyage sore All forbeten so was he corageus That from his corps his ghoste departed thore Reigned that had .xxx. yere afore In Carlion after his high degre Was buried so with full greate royaltee The .xxxv. Chapiter ¶ Howe Guytelyn kyng of Britayne wedded Marcian to wife that Mercian lawes made by her great wisedome GVytelyn his sonne gan reigne as heyre Of all Brytayn aboute vnto the sea Who wedded was to Marcyan full fayre That was so wyse in her femynitee That lawes made of her syngularytee That called wer the lawes Marcyane In Britayne tongue of her owne witte alane ¶ This Guytelyn was good of his estate Full iuste he was in all his iudgement Wise and manly of porte erly and late Right meke and good euer in his entente Although of state he was right excellent With eche poore man that came to his presence Through whiche he waxed of moste hie sapience ¶ When he had reigned ful peacebly .x. yere He lefte the realme to his sonne and heire And to his wife to be his counceller For his sonne then was .vii. yere olde full fayre Whom at her death she sent for all repayre Of Barons all their she delyuered hym To kepe in payne of losse life and lymme ¶ Sicilius his sonne reygned .xxiiii. yere And crowned was and dyed in iuuentude That gouerned wel the realme full well and clere At Karlyon buryed after consuetude As kynges afore in all simylitude With all repayre of all his Baronage As well accorded vnto his hye parage ¶ Rymar his sonne the barons dyd crowne With honoure suche as fell to his degree Who twenty yere and one so bare the crowne And kepte lawe and all tranquilytee And peteous was euer as a king shulde be In ryghtwesnesse accordyng with his lawe Hauyng pytee and mercy where hym sawe ¶ Danius kyng his brother dyd succede Duryng .x. yere in warre and greate payne Withouten reste he was alwaye in dede The lawe vnkepte was cause there of certayne As myne authour it lyste nothyng to layne I wyll it nowe wryte and in this boke expresse That men may knowe his foly and lewdenesse The .xxxvi. Chapiter ¶ Howe Moruile kyng of Britaine was slayne by his owne immoderate Ire withoute knowledge of eny man with a fysshe bestyall of the sea MOruyle his sonne a baste goten and bore On Tangusta his specyall paramour Was crowned then after faught full sore with the kyng of Morians as a conqueroure Where he hym kylled and had the felde that houre And lefte no man on lyue and brente theim all His Ire exceded his wytte and gouernall ¶ Sone after then came fro the yrishe sea A bestyous fyshe a monstre sume dyd it call Wherof afrayde was all the comontye For it deuoured the folke both great and smalle Wherfore the kyng his yre myght not apall Ne cesse afore he foughten with it had All sodaynly alone as a man ryght mad ¶ Where both were dead or any man it knewe His yre full fell was and vntemperate His discrecyon out of his brayne flewe But he coulde not by reason ordynate Proroge his wyll ne yre inordynate By other meanes with people multytude It to haue slayne by wytte and fortytude ¶ He reigned had that tyme but seuentene yere When he thus dyed and fondly dyd expire Vnsemingly of any prynce to heare That he with suche a monstre shoulde desyre To fyghte alone so preuely of yre But sonnes he had full fayre then fyue Of manly men also substantyfe ¶ Gorbonian his eldest sonne of fyue Was after kyng and helde the maieste Ryghtwesse and trewe to euery creature In peace his realme and all tranquillyte And to his people he helde all equyte Tyllers of lande with golde he dyd comforte And soudiours all with goodes he dyd supporte ¶ Arthegall his brother signed with Diadene The kyng was then with all solempnytee By natyfe byrth nexte brother as men deme Who good men hated of his iniquyte Oppressyng them by greate subtylyte And all fals folke with ryches dyd auaunce His Barons all deposed hym for that chaunce The .xxvii. Chapiter ¶ Howe this kyng was crowned in defaute of his elder brother and after of pure pytee crowned his brother agayne CLydoure then the thirde brother generate Was kyne create by all successyon And bare the crowne with all royal estate By lordes wyll and there concessyon That ruled well withoute oppressyon When he had reigned so fully fyue yere Arthegall he founde that was his brother dere ¶ As he was gone on huntyng for his disporte In the forest and woode of collatre That sought had frendes and found had no comforte But heuy was and of full simple chere Whome Eledoure toke in his armes clere And brought hym to his cytee of Alclude That then was of great myght and fortytude ¶ In Albany then was it the greatest citee tho Besyde the woode that tyme of collatre Where his Barons and many other moo At his biddyng were come and presente there Whome syngulerly he made them for to swere Vnto Arthegall his brother to be trewe So purposed he to crowne hym all newe ¶ And then anon in haste so forth they rode To Ebranke and helde then his parlyament Where of good loue and tender brotherhod The crowne he set with very trewe entente On Arthegalles hede thought it was wel spent By hole decree and iudgement of his mouth And made hym kyng agayne by north and south ¶ Arthegall kyng crowned so all newe agayne Full well his lordes after dyd loue all perlees Forsoke all vyces and tooke to vertue playne And set his lande and people in all kyne and ease Reigning .x. yere he fell in greate disease In maladye of dyuerse great syckenesse Dead and buried at Carleyle as Igesse The .xxxvii. Chapiter ¶ Howe Eledoure was that seconde tyme crowned king of Britayne for his good rule THe Briteines all crowned Eledoure That reygned after .xiii. yere in dignytee So well theim payde to haue hym gouernoure For his goodnesse and his benignyte And for he was so full of all pytee That in all thynge mercy he dyd preserue Well better euer then men coulde it deserue ¶ Iugen with force and eke syr Peredoure His brethren two on hym rose traytorously Deposed hym oute of his hye honoure And prisoned hym full sore and wrongfullye All in the towre of Troynouaunt for thy And parted the realme betwixte theim two Together reignyng .vii. yere and no mo ¶ Paredour then had all the lande full clere And crouned was reignyng after worthely His lawe and peace kepyng full well foure yere And dyed then and to
his goddes full hye He passed so and buryed full royally After their rites and their olde vsage With greate honour by all the baronage The .xxxix. Chapiter ¶ Eledour kyng of Brytein thrise crouned for his good rule and good condicions ELedour was kyng all newe made againe Thrise crouned that kepte his olde cōdicion Of whome the lordes cōmons wer full faine And sory for his wrongfull deposicion He reigned so fro losse and all perdicion Reignyng after full peacebly tenne yere Buried full faire at Alclude his citee clere ¶ Gorbonian that was Gorbonian his soonne The croune after his vncle in all thynges That ruled well fro tyme that he begonne Full well beloued with olde and also with young He reigned tenne yere of Brytein kyng And dyed then with worship whole enterred As to suche a prince of right should bee required ¶ Morgan that was the soonne of kyng Arthegall Was crowned then and held the royalte Full fourten yere he ruled the realme ouer all The lawe and peace with all tranquillite He kepte full well in all prosperite For whiche he was full greately magnified In all his realme with people landefyed ¶ Emnan his brother so was crouned kyng Seuen yere reigned in all kynd ofe tiranny For whiche he was deposed as an vnderlyng When he had reigned seuen yere fully That to god and manne was euer contrarie Till all his lordes and commons euerione Whiche wer full glad awaye that he was gonne ¶ Iuall the soonne of kyng Ingen did reigne Louyng alwaye to kepe all rightwesnese Hatyng all vices and of good menne was faine All vicious menne he helde in sore distres Helpyng poore menne fallyng in feblenes When he had reigned full well by twenty yere He dyed awaye as saieth the chronicler ¶ Rymo the soonne that of kyng Paradour Crouned was then louyng all gentilnes All vertue euer he louid and all honour And in his tyme was plenty and larges Of his people full well belouid I gese And dyed so in all felicite on hye Sixten yere whole reigned when he ganne dye ¶ Gerennes then the soonne of Eledour To reigne beganne and ruled well this daye And sone the deathe hym toke and dyd deuour If I the treuth of hym shall saye That twenty yere he reigned all menne to paye The lawe and peace full well aye conserued Of his commons the loue aye deserued Catellus his soonne then ganne succede Kepyng the lawe and peace as he had hight Oppressours all that poore menne did ouer lede He hanged euer on trees full hie to sight That ensample of theim euery manne take might Tenne yere reigned full of felicite And dyed so vnder his vnsure deite ¶ Coile his soonue after hym succede And crouned was reignyng so twenty yere In lawe and peace as to his worthihede Accordyng was for lawe and peace cōserued clere As euery manne maye se bothe farre and nere The floures been of royall dignyte In whiche he reigned twenty yere ere he did dye ¶ Porrex his soonne was crouned in his astate Esye of porte to speake with euery wight Their comonnyng to hym was delicate Who reson spake he fauoured as was right Who viceous spake or did in his sight He chasticed theim after the cause required Reignyng fiue yere of no lande had he fered ¶ Cheryn his soonne norished in dronkennes Customably to whiche folowed all kynde of vyce It exiled witte out of his brayn doubteles And reason after that made hym full vnwyse He was of all his gouernaunce so nyce And reigned so in Brytein but one yere When he dyed laied was on the bere ¶ His soonne Fulgen reigned but one yere Eldred his brother and Androge hight the thirde Kynges after hym echeone were synguler A yere reignyng whose good rules are hid For why vnto no manne was it kyde Thei dyed sone for long that might not dure In suche drōkennes full weake was their nature ¶ Vryan the soonne of kyng Androge Three yere reigned that was full lecherous A mayden young wher he did ride or goo He had euery daye he was so vicyous But yet he was gentill and bounteous All if he had maydens in suche charte Wedowes and wifes he had in greate plentie ¶ Elynde was kyng fiue yere bare the croune Full well ruled the realme in all kynd of thyng In Astronomye full redy aye and bowne Dedancius also reigned fiue yere full young Who the realme ruled in all maner thyng Full peseably frome that Elynde was dedde Bothe twoo dyed in their floreshed youthede ¶ Detonus then was kyng reignyng twoo yere Gurguncius so twoo yere bare also the croune And Meryan twoo yere by wrytyng clere Bledudo then full ready bowne Twoo yere also bare the croune Cappe and Owen and then Sicilyus Eche after other by twoo yere reigned thus ¶ Bledud Gabred reigned expert in song And in all musike instrumentes Farre passyng was all other and had been long Suche was his cunnyng and his sentementes That for a god in all folkes ententes In myrth and ioye and maner of melodye Thei honoured hym tenne yere onely ¶ Archiuall then his brother reigned so And Eldoll after his soonne succeded anone And Redon then his soonne came nexte hym thoo Redrike his soonne when his father was gonne Croune and septer receiued hath anone Samuell Pirre Peneysell and Capre Seuerally echeone reigned twoo yere The .xl. Chapiter ¶ Elynguellus kyng of Brytein had greate will to here all mēne whē thei came to hym whiche is a vertue For greate cunnyng maketh a manne wyse and to knowe muche and for mischefes to fynde remedies as my lorde Vmfrewill commended neuer a manne that putteth a mischief and canne fynde no remedie therfore ELynguellus whiche was Capre his sōne Bothe wyse and sadde and in his realme helde right He herd all menne what counsaill that thei conne For oftymes a symple manne to sight More wysedome hath in his insight And better reason canne in his braynes fynde Then canne a lorde though he maye beres bynde ¶ Who in his lande did wrong or any vnright He prisoned hym in sore and greate distresse He gaue his menne that souldyours were full wight Lyuelode to liue vpon frome all destres Sicke folke and poore caste into feblenesse He visited aye and reigned had seuen yere When that he dyed and left his realme full clere ¶ Hely his soonne in all thyng good and wise Succeded then the Isle of Hely made His palais gaye that might right well suffice He buylded ther that was bothe long and brade Wherin he dwelled muche and moost abaide The lawe and peace he kepte and conserued Which himvpheld that he was neuer ouer terued ¶ Three soonnes he gatte Lud and Cassibalain The third was called that tyme sir Nemynus When he had reigned sixty yere in certaine The death cruell to menne that is aye noyeous In his commyng that is
signe eche māne to knowe his naciō Frome enemies whiche nowe we call certain Sainct Georges armes by Nenyus enformaciō And thus this armes by Iosephes creacion Full long afore sainct George was generate Were worshipt heir of mykell elder date The .xlix. Chapiter ¶ Marius the kyng of Brytain reigned sixty yere and three howe the peightes inhabited firste in Albany that is Sotclāde nowe in these dayes in Catenes thei wer the North peightes and a parte of theim inhabited sone after bytwyxt the Scottes sea and tweid that were called South peightes MAryus his soonne was then intronizate And sette on high in trone of maiestie With croune of golde full royally coronate As worthy was vnto his royalte Who nourished was at Rome in his inuente With his mothers kynne the beest of the empire With Claudius also that was his oune graūdsir ¶ In whose tyme a peight hight Rodrike With power greate by sea came fro Sythy As proude and bryme as lyon marmerike Arreued so vp in Albanye Distroiyng whole the lande all sodainly With whome that kyng thē faught in greate battell And sleugh hym with oute any faile ¶ Wher then in signe of his high victorye He sette there vp a stone in remembraunce Of his triumph of his aduersatie Titled on it his fame for to auaunce Howe the peightes there brought to vttraunce Wher the redde crosse is nowe in Westmerlande In Stanys more as I canne vnderstande ¶ Then to the peightes left a liue he gaue catenese To dwell vpon and haue in heritage Whiche weddid wher with Irish as I gesse Of whiche after Scottes came on that linage For Scottes bee to saie their langage A collecciō of many into one Of whiche the Scottes were called so anone The .l. Chapiter ¶ Howe Scottes came of Scota kyng Pharois doughter that came after many daye into Albanye so that of peightes Irish of Pharois people collect togethers wer Scottes named For at the tauerne or at a gatheryng of people or of mony is called a scotte and so came first the name of Scottes which Scottes inhabited theim by twixt catnes the Scottishe sea BVt Mewynus the Bryton chronicler Saieth in his chronicles orther wise That Gadelus and Scota in the yere Of Christe seuenty and fiue by assise At stone inhabitte as might suffise And of hir name that countre there aboute Scotlande she called that tyme with outen doubt ¶ This Scota was as Mewyn saieth the sage Doughter and bastarde of kyng Pharao that daye Whome Gadele wedded and in his olde age Vnto a lande he went where he inhabited ay Whiche yet of his name is calle Gadelway And with the peightes he came into Albanie The yere of Christ aforsaid openlye ¶ And at hir death she left a precious stone In Albany on whiche Moses did preache And buryed there she was by hir self alone Whiche stone was holy as some menne then did teache And did miracles so was that cōmon speache In honour it was had bothe of greate and small And holden for a relique moost speciall ¶ This stone was called the regall of Scotlāde On whiche that Scottish kynges wer brechelesse set At their coronomente as I canne vnderstande For holynes of it so did thei of debte All their kynges vpon this stone was sette Vnto the tyme kyng Edward with long shankes Brought it awaye again the Scottes vnthākes ¶ At Westmonestery it offered to sainct Edward Where it is kepte and conserued To tyme that kynges of Englande afterward Should coroned bee vnder their fete obserued To this entent kept and reserued In remembraunce of kynges of Scottes alway Subiectes should bee to kynges of Englāde ay ¶ Also afore the fifte kyng Henryes daye Their siluer coigne was as it ought to bee The kynges face loked on side all waye To his soueraigne lorde of Englande as I see Whiche to been hetherwarde of egalite Vnto their lorde thei haue of newe presumed To looke euen furth whiche would nowe bee consumed ¶ Kyng Maryus kepte that realme in lawe peace Full of riches and of prosperyte And dyed so at Sarum buryed dowteles When he had reigned sixty yere and three His tribute payed full well to Roome citee Of Christes faith sumwhat he was enformid But muche more he neded to haue been reformid ¶ Coylus his soonne was kyng then crouned so Who mutryed was at Roome in greate vertue Held well his lawes egall to frende and foo And in his dooynges full iuste he was and trewe His life alwaye and rule in vertue grewe That full great name of hym was notifyed And in all landes of honoure multiplied ¶ The lordes gentiles yemen and commontee He cherished well and in no wise oppressed And to theim gaue wher was necessitee And tribute payde to Rome vndistressed And at his death with sickenesse impressed He buried was at Norwhiche then full clere When he reigned had fully .xiii. yere ¶ Somewhat in fayth of Christ he was instruct But not fully as was necessitee Like as he was in Rome with hym inducte So helde he forth in all stabilitee And as he harde in all symylitee Howe Ioseph had his graundser enformed With benyng herte and wil he hym confyrmed The .li. Chapter ¶ Lucius kyng of Britayn reigned .liiii. yere and was the seconde Christened kyng of Britayn by Faggan Dubyan that baptized all this lande and for the same cause bare the same armes after he was baptized Also he made of .iiii. archeflamynes in Britayn three archebyshoppes at London Yorke and Carlion AFter kyng Coile his sonne then Lucius So crowned was with royall diademe In all vertue folowed his father Coilus To compare hym in all that myght beseme He put his will after as his witte could deme In so farre forth that of Christentee He contynued so a Christen man to bee ¶ And in the yere of Christes incarnacion An C. foure score and tenne Eleuthery the first at supplicacion Of Lucyus sente hym twoo holy menne That called wer Faggan and Duuyen That baptized hym all his realme throughoute With hertes glad and laboure deuoute ¶ Thei taught that folke the lawe of Christ eche daye And halowed all the temples in Christes name All mawmentes and Idols caste awaye Through all Britayn of al false goddes thesame The temples flamynes the Idols for to shame They halowed eke and made bishoppes sees Twenty and .viii. at dyuers great citees ¶ Of .iii. archeflamynes thei made archbishoprikes One at London Troynouaunt that hight For all Logres with lawes full autentikes To rule the churche christentee in right Another at Carlyon a towne of might For all Cambre at Ebranke the thirde From Trent north for Albany is kyde ¶ All these workes Eugeny then confirmed The kyng then gaue to Faggan and Duuyen The ysle of Analoon and by cherter affirmed That was called otherwyse Mewtryen Also frely as Ioseph and his holy men Had it afore then forth for theyr dispence Wherof thei wer glad and
thought it sufficience ¶ But whē this kyng had reygned in cotēplaciō Fyftie and .iiii. yere in all prosperitee He departed to God desyryng his saluacion In heauen to dwell with all felycytee Where the Aungelles synge incessauntely Glory honoure and euerlastyng prayse Be to the lambe of God nowe and alwayes ¶ At Cairglowe buried after his dignitee For whom all men made great lamentacion Who bare before the baptyme of propertee His Auncestres armes and after with consolaciō He bare the armes by his baptizacion Whiche Ioseph gaue vnto Aruigarus As the Briton saith that hight Mewynus ¶ For cause he had none heire to kepe the lande Through all Britayn the barons gan discorde Vnto the tyme that Romayns toke on hande To chese a prince by there stedfaste accorde But .iiii. yere wer gone or then they could accorde In whiche tyme then Seuer the senatour Hether came to be theyr gouernoure The .lii. Chapiter ¶ Howe that ther was Britons warre .iiii. yere after the death of Lucius SEuerus thus the worthy senatour Descēded downe right heire to Androgeꝰ The eldest soonne of Lud that with the Emperoure Out of Britayn that went with Iulius Whiche Senatoure afore sayd Seuerus To Britayn came and was intromizate And with a crowne of golde was coronate ¶ He brought with hym frō Rome two legion With whom great part of Britons helde ful sore And other parte of the northren Britons With Fulgen stode was kyng of Scotlande bore Gathered great people euer more and more With whom that Pightes fugitiues .viii. esenable Destroyed the lande by warre full violable The .liij. Chapter ¶ Howe Seuer made a dike with a wall on it of turues and soddes to kepe the Pightes and the Scottes from the Britons ouertwharte the land frō the east sea vnto that west sea BVt kyng Seuer hym droue with batayl sore Farre north vnto the Scottishe sea wher thei abode dwelled forth euermore Betwene the Scottishe sea and twede no lee But some bookes sayen to Tyne in certayn And so is like for Seuer there did make A dike and wall for the Scottes Pightes sake ¶ From Tymnouth to Alclud his fayre citee With turues soddes wer theim to againstand Where the water myght not the Enemytee Kepe of warre from his trewe Britayn lande By fyfty myles accompted I vnderstande To the weste sea that was of greate Brytayn This wal with dikes pightes Scottes did refrein ¶ But kyng Fulgē of Pightes Scottes again With hoste full great sieged Ebranke citee Whiche Seuer rescowed and was slayn And Fulgen also for beten there did dye Receaued his guerdon for his tyrannye At Ebranke the kyng Seuer was buried With victorie and honours glorified ¶ Getan his sonne a Romayne generate The Romaynes then hastely did crowne And Britons bloodde together congregate By hole assente and playne eleccion Bassyan chase without collucion For borne he was of the feminytee Of Britayn bloodde and consanguitee ¶ This Bassian with Getan then did fight In great batayll wher Getan so was slayn To Bassian so discended all the right Of whiche the Brytons all were full fayn Within .iiii. wekes was all this done full playn But Bassian then his brother buried And Romayns all on hepes mortifyed Bassian then was crouned kyng of Brytayn Full well he helde the realme .vii. yere in peace To tyme Caranse confedered hym agayn With Scottes Pightes vpō hym gon encrease All fugitiues outlawes to hym came prease For long he had a robber been by the sea And richer was then any kyng myght bee By his manhode set all on roberye Of lowe bloodde came rysen by insolence To soudyours he gaue wages full greatly For to betraye the kyng by diligence He to the kyng so made by violence Whiche promyse kepte he slewe the kyng anon● In place wher as thei wer with hym alone The .liiii. Chapiter ¶ Carense kyng of Britayne reigned .iiii. yere by treason borne of lowe bloodde and rose vp of robery by the sea THrough treason of Carense Scottes the Pightes Assented so by fals cōfederaciō Through his giftes his subtyll slightes Betwene theim wrought in councell priuatly This false Carense so gatte the monarchie Of all Britayn within the sea aboute Foure yere he reigned of porte that was ful stoute ¶ The Barons were so with gold englaymed By this Carense and by his language swete Semyng like truth in maner as he proclaymed As nothyng is more redy for to mete Then coueteous and falshode as men lete So wer they all with his giftes enfecte The kynge was slayne and he was electe ¶ But whē to Rome was knowne that false disceyt Of this Caranse and his wronge intrucion The Senate sent a letter by theyr conceyte Hym to distroye by dewe execucion Who for his faute gaue hym absolucion In batell stronge slewe hym and had the felde And Scottes all and pyeghtes that with hym helde The .lv. Chapiter ¶ The wordes of the maker of this booke vnto my Lorde of yorke touchynge gouernaunce of this lande by example of this kyng Caranse through robbery refen of poore bloude to royall estate O Worthy lorde and duke of Yorke that been Consyder well this case full lamentable The righwes kig wel gouerned as it was sene Thus murdred was of him that was vnhable And set hym selfe in trone moste honourable Of all Britayne yet came he vp of nought And of lowe bloude and it were wysely sought ¶ Good lorde when ye be set well vnder crowne With treytours and misruled ryatours Dispence right so with all suche absolucyon And lette hym seke no other correctours But maynteyne theim your lawes gouernours And ouer all thyng be ye the chefe Iustyce To kepe the peace that no false you suppryse The .lvi. Chapiter ALlecto then crowned and made kyng Of all Britayne reigning fully yeres thre And well he ruled in all maner werkyng By power of the Romans greate postee That brought with him from Rome legions thre But Britayns then dyd set a parlyament And chase a kyng by theyr hole assent ¶ Asclipiade that was duke of Cornewayle Who with Brytons to troynouaunt came Whylest Romans were by theyr hole gouernalle At sacrifyce of their goddes faynte and lame Agaynste whome Alecto of greate fame Full mightly then faught tyll he was slayne But Gallus drewe all Romans in agayne And kepte the wallys for whiche Asclepiadote The seege aboute the cytee strongly layde In which meane while Britōs brake in god wote And slewe Gallus and Romains sore affrayde All out of araye and sore dismayde Besyde a broke that walbroke men nowe call That Galbroke then was called there ouer all Of Gallus name that slayne was in that place And some sayne of walshemen afterwarde Walbroke it called for a sodaine case That then byfell vpon a daye full harde Of the Brytons that with theim so miscaryed Ouer that ylke brooke full sore harde distressed By Cornyshmen slayne downe ther oppressed The
citees all and castels sufficiaunt To lette hym passe awaye without troublaunce Whiche Engist graunted because of aliaunce The .lxix. Chapiter ¶ Howe Engist caused Logres to bee called then Engestlande of whiche the commons putte gest awaye in their common speache and call● it England for shortenes of speache ENgist with his hoost had all thorient The South North in all the greate Britain In his kepyng except thoccident Whiche Brytons held of warre and muche pain By olde chronicles as I haue herd saine And then anone he called it Engestes lande Whiche after was shorted and called England ¶ Through the cōmons that thought it long to say And muche lighter in tongue to saie Englande Then with their mouth ouer long to name it aye By long producyng to call it Engistislande And thus came first in as I vnderstande As I conceiue thus came first Englandes name For short speach corrupt per sincopene ¶ But Engist then gaue all the lande about To Saxons all and kyng was so of Kent But Vortiger in Cambre sought through out To buylde vpon a castell to his entent To holde hym in fro the panymes violent Whiche in Cambre the castell of Genoren He made full strong in the lande of Hergigyen ¶ Vpon the ryuer of Ewey on Cloarte hill But of dragons and of the water vnder That Merlyn saied that castell did so spill Ne of his birth that many menne on wounder Of that werke bothe aboue and vnder That no father had ne of his prophecye I cannot wryte of suche affirmably ¶ Notwithstandyng that philophiers wise Affirme well that sprites suche there been Bitwene the moone and therth called Incubice That haue gotten chyldren of wemen vnseene As in stories diuerse I haue so seen Howe the philosophier wise Magancius Affirmeth it also and Apuleyus The .lxx. Chapiter ¶ Aurelius Ambrose kyng of Brytain the seconde soonne of Constantyne AVrelius Ambrose brother of Constaunce Into Britain with strong greate power And segid then Vortiger by ordinaunce In his castell of Genoren full clere Whiche with wild fire he brent and hym in feere And crouned was by all the baronage To reioyse Britain that was his heritage ¶ He sought Engist that panyme was full grym With hoostes thei faught but Aurele had that better The Saxons fled before that were full brime For in their quarel it might bee no better Duke Eldoll toke Engist and did hym fetter In Kent as he hym mette awaye fleyng At Conanburgh hym brought to the kyng ¶ Where he was heded with swerd and decollate And Occa then and his soonne Ebissa His cousin 's dere at Yorke came in ful late And with hym Saxons full many one moo Wher then the kyng hym segid with muche woo But Occa then and al his compaignie Came to the kyng to whome he gaue mercye ¶ The kyng then made a worthy sepulture With that stone hengles by Merlins whole aduise For all the lordes Brytons hye nature That there were slain in false and cruell wise By false Engest and his feloes vnwise In remembraunce of his forcasten treason Without cause or any els encheson ¶ But Pascencius the soonne of Vortiger With hoost of Irish Cambre he destroyed With whome the kyng faught with his power And droue hym out to Irelande sore anoyed Of his people many slain and foule acloyed But Eopa then clad in monkes clothyng With his poysonis then poysoned had the kyng ¶ But then the kyng of Irelande and Pascence In Cambre brent the kyng full sicke then laye He sent Vterpendragon for defence With hoost royall and mighty greate araye He faught with hym for whiche thei fled that daye With shame and hurt to Irelande home again Vterpendragon the felde so had full plain ¶ Then Vter sawe a starrye beame full bright And asked Merlyn what that it might meane He said it is Stella Cometa righte It sygnifieth the kyng his death to been That nowe is gonne to the blisse I ween The dragon also thy self dooeth signifye With beames twoo extendyng seuerally ¶ The beame southward to Fraūce that dooeth extende Thy soonne that thou shalt haue dooeth signifie That shall conquere all Fraunce vnto th end Almaignie also and all Germanie And so to Roome throughout al Romanie Aboue all princes in his tyme moost fained Through Christente moost dred and best named ¶ That other beame to Irelande extendyng Thy doughters eke dooeth also signifie Their children also that of theim shal be comynge The realme to haue with all the regalie Thus Merlyn to hym dooeth specifie So went he furth anone to Cairgwente Where he had woorde of his brothers enterremēt ¶ Within the Giaūtes carole that so then hight The stone hengles that nowe so named been Where prelates dukes erles lordes of might His sepulture to worship there were seen Thus this worthy kyng was buryed by dene That reigned had that tyme but thirten yere When he was dedde and laied so on beere The .lxxi. Chapiter ¶ Vter Pendragō kyng of Brytain and of his armes that he bare HIs brother Vter at Cairgwēt was croūd In trone royall thē fully was admit Twoo dragons made of gold royall that stound That one offred of his deuout wit In the mynster there as he had promit That other before hym euer in battaile bare Of gold in goulis wher so he gan to fare ¶ Tharmes also of Troye that Brutus bare Tharmes also of good kyng Lucius Whiche after baptyme his armes alwaye ware The same armes that kyng Constantynus At his batayll against Maxencius So bare alwaye that saynt George armes we call Whiche Englyshemen nowe worshippe ouer all ¶ And for he bare the dragon so in warre The people all hym called then Pendragor For his surname in landes nere and farre Whiche is to saye in Britayn region In theyr language the head of the dragon And in the north as he a castell made Pendragon hight wher he his dwellyng had ¶ But Occa sonne then of that false Engist And Oysa also the sonne of Occa with That northlande brent of which when Vter wyst He faught with theim there saued theim no grith Nor none of the people that came theim with He tooke Occa and Oysa in batayll Beside Dane hill wher they did hym assayle ¶ The Saxones also he slewe that with hym came And had the felde with all the victorie For ioye of whiche he made great ioye and game Proclaymed his feast of Pasche solemply To holde at London wher then he made his crye That euery lorde his wife with hym shuld bryng For worshippe of that feast and of the kyng The .lxxii. Chapiter ¶ Howe the kyng was an amoured of the duke of Gorloys wyfe and how he gatte on her kyng Arthure EMonges other Gorloys duke of Cornewayle His wife did bring Igrene fayre of figure Whose beautee their all others made to faile So well and hole auised was nature Her womanhede exceded euery creature That though nature her beautee
woulde haue amēde Hir cōnyng might therto in no wise extēde ¶ Of whiche beautee and of her goodlyhede The kyng with loue so greatly was oppressed It chaunged all his corage and manhede In kalendes of eschaunge he was so impressed For whiche the duke with hir then home adressed Perceauynge well the kynges fykelnesse Was set for loue on her womanlynesse ¶ In Tyntagell his castel strong he her set Hymselfe then laye in castell Dymyoke Wher then the kyng hym sieged her to get But Merlyne then from it hym did reuoke And by his councell subtelly dyd prouoke Knowyng his loue he had to dame Igrene By coniurisons made in haste full yerne ¶ He made the kyng vnto duke Gorloys like Hymselfe like to Brethel in all semblaunce That then was the dukes preuy myke And Vlfyn lyke by all kyns gouernaunce Vnto Iordan in all maner conysaunce That moste knewe of the dukes preuytee By whiche he brought to Igrene all three ¶ Thus laye the kyng hir by euer whē he would She trustyng then that he had been hir lorde But euer his siege he made sadly to been holde His people assautyng the castell by one accorde But Gerloys men then pleynly did recorde Theyr lorde was slayn and Vter had the felde Of which she merueyled then fast hym behelde ¶ There gatte he then on hir a sonne full fayre And fro hir went vnto his hooste agayn The duke was slayne with all his moste repayre Of whiche the kyng glad is not to layne To Tyntagell with all his hoste full fayne He came anone and had it at his wyll He comforted hir and bad her holde it styll ¶ But then betwene theim two he did discure The priuetee in all as it was wrought And sette his daye to wed hir and to cure Of heuynes that she was then in brought Her lordes death so muche was in hir thought For hir so slayne hir wyfehode also defouled Afore that tyme that euer was kept vnfouled ¶ And at the daye he wedded hir and cround And she ferforth with childe was then begonne To comforte her he sette the table rounde At Wynchester of worthiest knightes alone Approued best in knighthode of their foone Whiche table rounde Ioseph of Arimathie For brether made of the seynt Grall onely ¶ In whiche he made the seege pereleous Where none shulde sytte without great mischiefe But one that shuld be moste religious Of knightes all of the rounde table chiefe The saynt Graal that shuld recouer and acheue By aduenture of his fortunitee And at his death a virgyne shulde bee ¶ But at hir tyme the quene had borne a soonne That Arthure hight and was of statur fayre More large of lymme and wysest vnder sunne Of his age then to bee his fathers heyre Of all his lymmes right comly stronge fayre But Occa then and Oysa that afore Stale home were come warred in Britayn sore ¶ The kyng sent forth syr Loth of Lowthian A worthy prince hardy and bounteous His doughter had wedded that hight thē dame Anne A manly manne and right cheualrous The first knight that was electe right fortunous Of the table round that ofte with theim did fight That ofte preuayled and sometyme put to flight ¶ For whiche the kyng ordeyned a horse litter To beare hym so then vnto the verolame Wher Occa laye and Oysa also in feer That saynt Albones nowe hight of noble fame Bet downe the walles but to hym forth they came Wher in battayll Occa and Oysa were slayne The felde he had and therof was full fayne ¶ There was a well whiche his enemyes espied That he vsed the water ofte to alaye His drynkes all his sores to be medifyed Whiche they venomyd with poyson on a daye Of whiche he dyed and went to blisse for aye In the carole besyde his brother dere As to suche a prynce it dyd ryght well affere ¶ He reygned had then ix and thyrtye yere And in the yere of Chrystes natiuyte Fyue hundreth and syxtene then was full clere The realme he lefte in good felicyte Arthure his sonne to haue the royalte To reygne and rule the realme that then was able That of his age was none so cōmendable The .lxxiii. Chapiter ¶ Arthure kyng of Britayne reygned .xxvi. yere Howe the kynge bare syxe banners in his warre and howe he renewed and increased the table rounde and helde vp royally the rule of it and howe he conquered Irelande and Denmarks with all the ysles of theim ARthure his sōne vp growen then peerlesse Throughout that world approued of his age Of wyt and strength beawte and largesse Of persone hye aboue his Baronage And other all of Brytons vasselage By his shoulders exceded in longitude Of all membres full fayre in latytude ¶ At Circestre then of .xv. yere of age When Dubryk archbishoppe of Carilyon With all estates within his herytage Assembled there Duke earle lorde and baron And commentye of all the regyon Vpon his hedde did sett the dyademe In royall wyse as wele hym dyd beseme ¶ The yere of Christes byrth .v. C. and syxtene Was whan he was crowned all with golde Where than he made a vowe for to sustene The chrysten fayth the churche also to vpholde The peace and lawes mawgre who so other wold The Saxons also to warre and destroye That of longe tyme had done vs greate anoy ¶ King Arthure sought that Saxons in Scotland His chiefe baner of goules was to see An ymage of our Lady of golde enthronde Crowned of golde as freshe as it myght be His other banner was of the Trynite Of golde and goulis of saynt george was that third The .iiii. was Brutus armes knowen and kyd ¶ The fyfte baner of goulis .iii. crownes of gold The syxte of Goulis a dragon of golde fyne With hoost full great of Britons that were holde On Douglas water the Saxons he did vntwine Colgrim that was their capitayne fled fro thyne To Yorke anon and it with people helde His men then slayne the kyng had so the felde ▪ ¶ Cheldrik Baldoffe two dukes of Germanie With hostes great then landed in Britayne To Colgrym came and brent that lande in hye But to Arthure kyng Howell came full fayne With hoost great his systers sonne certayne Of lesse Britayne that with his vncle went Against Colgrym to fyght in his entent ¶ Cador the duke that tyme of Cornewayle The kynges brother of his mothers syde Came to the kyng with people that might auayle So dyd all other of all Britayne full wyde With their enemies then met of mikell pryde And vaynqueshed theim at Lyncolne then seging For whiche they fled full faste that syege leauing ¶ To Calidon wood nere vnto the sea Where the kynges two theim seged sore about That for famishment fought they swore to be The kynges men and their lande throughoute For to voide their people of all the land out out Colgrym Baldolffe and also duke Cheldryk That chieftayns were
Without mercy cracked vpon the croune The kyng came home with honour and victorye As Flores saieth right in his memorye ¶ And in the yere eyght hundred fourty and one The Danes watched thest sea cost throughout With diuers hostes for which that king made great mone All helples thē the Danes that were so stout In many places with many dyuerse rout All harmles went without hurt or pain By dyuers tyme that yere home again ¶ In the yere eyght hundred foure and fourtye At Carham then the kyng full sore did fight With Danes fell and had the victorye And at Alnewik he faught again furth right With Danes also wher kyng Redwolf that hight Of Northumberlāde and erle Alffride was slain And full greate parte of their hoost certain ¶ Kyng Athilwolf came to the South contree Wher Danes then in battaile with hym faught In Somersetshire wher he made many dye And gate the feld and sleugh all that he caught Wher great people that daye the death hath raught Tharchbishop with his full wise clergie Bysyde Sandwiche of Danes had victorye ¶ And in the yere eyght hundred fifty and one The Danishe hoost in Thamis did arriue Kent and Southray Sussex and Hāshire anone Distroyed sore and throughe that South gan dryue Wher muche folke thei sleugh bothe māne wife Whiche host the kyng with battaile slewe doune sore That home again retourned thei no more ¶ And in the yere eyght hundred fifty and three The kyng Edmond of Estangle began To reigne after Albert of greate beautee That holy was as his legend tell can But Athilwolf the kyng buryed then The kyng of Mers that had his doughter wed All Wales wan theim thought thei had well sped ¶ This Athilwolf to Roome toke his waye In pilgremage with hym his soonne Alurede Cardinall was of Wynchester that daye Wher then he had the bishoprike in deede A perfecte clerke he was as saieth sainct Bede A philosophier wise and well approued And by the bishop of Rome cōmēdid well loued ¶ And there thei were abydyng ful twoo yere And home thei came vnto the kyng of Fraunce And his doughter Indith ther weddid clere By assent of hym and all his hole puysaunce And so with worship and noble gouernaunce Fro thens he came sone into England With hir and with his soonne as I vnderstand ¶ And in the yere eyght hundred fifty and three The death his soule gan frome his body dryue Vnto the blisse eternall there to bee In heuen aboue wher is euerlastyng life To Peter and Pole he graunted infenitife The Roome pence then of all Englande As Flores saieth as I can vnderstande ¶ He was then buryed at Winchester in royall wise As to suche a prince of reason should affere And with his wife as did full well suffice Foure soonnes he had worthy without pere Sir Athilwold Ethelbert Elfride the dere And Alrude the youngest of echone Afore theim all one bast had Athelston ¶ Athelbold was kyng after hym and heire And protector with all the prerogatif His stepdame wed menne saied it was not faire The churche him gan punishe and chastiue For cause he wed hir so vnto his wife Again the lawe and christen conciense Vnaccordant with his magnificence ¶ That reigned whole twoo yere and no more In greate sikenes and pain inmorderate Greately vexed and punisshed was right sore Menne saied it was for sinne inordinate With his stepdame that was so consociate But then he had as God would repentaunce For his trespas and misgouernaunce ¶ Afore he dyed he did full sore repent And for his synne stode to correccion Of holy churche for his amendement Submitted whole without obieccion And for to liue in clene perfeccion Departed were by lawe and deuorced Afore his soule was passed and vncorced The C .vi. Chapiter ¶ Ethelbert kyng of Westsex protector of Englande that reigned fiue yere SIr Ethelbert his brother gan succede In whose dayes the Danes destroied sore The east parties of England then in deed And home againe they went harmeles therfore Destroyed the people and the lande right sore But sone ther after kyng Ethelbert them mette And sleugh theim downe in bataile sore and bet ¶ An other hoost then newe spoyled all Kent And by treaty wyntred within the Isle Of Tenet then by Kentishe mennes assent But at last thei with a subtell wyle Despoyled all Kent and falsely did beguyle And to their shipis went without delaye Into Denmarke with muche riche araye ¶ This Ethelbert reigned whole fiue yere And dyed the yere of verey Christ his date Eyght hundred whole and therto sixty clere As Flores saieth and hath it approbate But with sykenesse he was so alterate He dyed then and at Shirborne buryed With greate worship and honour laudified The C .vii. Chapiter ¶ Elfride kyng of Westsex protector of Englande reigned sixe yere and dyed in the yere of Christ eyght hundred lxvi ELfride was kyng after his brother then That reigned so with all the dignitee In Westsex whole and mightely began Protector was as was necessitee For Danes then of greate iniquite His lande foule brent wasted and destroyed That all Englande was combred and anoyed ¶ In the east cost of Englande specially In Estangle wher Edmond then was kyng Ther did greate hurte full cruelly In Northumberlande full felly warryng The people destroiyng and the lande brennyng Wher Danes then sleugh the kyng of that lande Byside Yorke so as Flores dooeth vnderstande ¶ Also thei sleugh in Northfolke all about The people doune and in Suffolke also The kyng Edmond thei sleugh without doubt Of Estangland with arowes sharpe tho Was shot to death with muche other woo That is a sainct honored this daye in blisse At Edmondes bury canonyzed I wisse ¶ Hungar and Vbba sleugh hyw full cruelly And brent abbeis throut all England that tyme By North and South and prestes full cursedly All holy folke fled out of that realme Thei sleugh all people that had take bapteme At Colyngham sainct Ebbe that was abbesse Their nonnes putte from theim in sore distresse ¶ For dred of the tyrauntes twoo full cruell And their people cursed and full of malice That rauished nōnes euer wher their herd tell In hir chaptre ordeined again their enemies Should not deffoule their clene virginitees She cut hir nose of and hir ouer lippe To make hir lothe that she might from hym slipe ¶ And counseled all hir susters to dooe the same To make their fooes to hoge so with the sight And so thei did afore thenimies came Echon their nose and ouer lipe full right Cut of anone whiche was an hogly sight For whiche tho fooes thabbey and nonnes brent For thei theim self disfigured had shent ¶ Frō Twede to Thamys abbais then thei brēt And churches hole and people sleugh right doune Wiues maydens widdowes and nonnes shent Through all the lande and the est region People sleyng in euery borough and towne The women euer thei diuiciate In
greate meyne hym mette greate honour As if he had been of Roome themperour ¶ At his commyng again into England He gaue Norway vnto his soonne sir Swayne And to Herold his soonne as I vnderstand England he gaue of whiche he was full fain And to Harknowt Denmarke he gaue certain And so dyed in Christen whole creaunce At Shaftisbury buryed by his ordynaunce ¶ The yere of Christ a thousand so was than And thirty foure also truly written When he had reigned fro the tyme that he began Eightene yere whole as well it was wrytten With the darte of death whē that he was smitten In whose dayes the land was inquiet Full of riches and of welfare whole replete The C .xviij. Chapiter ¶ Herold kyng of England the soonne of kyng Kno wt reigned fiue yere and dyed in the yere a thousand and .xxxix. HErolde his soonne was crouned then in deede By Loofrike that duke of Leiscestre By Londoners in Flores as I reede By Danyshyr also as saieth the letter That strong werre then and of power greater Then other lordes of Englishe nacion At London made was this coronacion ¶ Alurede the soonne of kyng Ethelrede With fifty sailes landed at Southampton Wher kynge Herold with hoste hym met in deede Redy to fight with hym for the croune But certain lordes of Englondes region Betwene theim treated that Alurede went again To Normandy to duke Robert full plain ¶ But afterward as Alurede so rode Fro his mother vnto the kyng Herold The duke Goodwyn on Gyldismore hym bode With people greate of nombre manyfold And slewe his menne downe there as he would And led hym furth to Ely and hym slewe As traitour false that euer had bee vntrewe ¶ Some chronicle saieth he putte out bothe his eyen Fro whiche he dyed sone for pain and woo Some other sayin he slette his wombe full keen The lengest gut to a stacke he nayled tho Led hym about the stack ther with muche wo Till all came out that was his wombe within Thus sleugh thei hym with sobteltie and gyn ¶ His mother quene Eme Edward then sent To Normandy to duke Wyllyam anone That hir cousyn was to kepe he were not shent By kyng Herold of his cruelty alone Warnyng hym of the treasō that Herold had dooen For whiche cause Herold hir exild Out of England and Edward also hir child ¶ To Flaundres she fled then full sore amoued To erle Badwyn hir cousyn nie of bloodde Declaryng to hym howe Herold had distroyed Hir soonne Alurede that heyre of England stood And exiled hir without socour or good And Edward also hir soonne heire of England His brother children also awaye in vncouth land ¶ Wherfore therle to kyng Hardknowt then wrote All hir compleynt and of his socour prayed And he should help with all his might God wote It were amendid of that she was affrayed He came anone in warre full well aryed Into Flaundres his mother for to please Hir for to socour and sette hir hert in ease ¶ In whiche meane while the kyng Herold dyed At Westminster and buried was full feire After he had reigned as it is notified Fiue yere reigned without any heire Of his body gotten after hym to repeire England to gouerne wherfore the lordes by assēt To kyng Hardknowte then into Flaundres sente ¶ To bee their kyng sith Herold was a gone To please hym with and his mother to comfort Who came to England furth with anone And crouned was with all the whole disport That lordes conde as Flores dooeth report Thus kyng Hardknowt was kyng of Englande than Who worthily that tyme to reigne tho began ¶ This kyng began his brothers death to venge On erle Gowyn that erle was then of Kent That peased was for he should not reuenge With riche giftes whiche that he on hym spent With meekenesse lowe swore that he was sent To dooe that thyng on pein of high treson By kyng Herold charged without reason ¶ Through good and giftes mighty hie riches And of his kyn that meekely hym obeyed And by acquaintaūce that thei made then expresse Vpon the holy euangelis sworne vndelayed The kyng graūted hym his grace was well payed To make hym of his coūsell of gouernaūce Without more wrath or any discordaunce ¶ He maried then his sister Gunylde to Henry Themperour that falsly was accused Of synne and cryme vsed in auoutry With a young manne the whiche hir excused After the lawe of the land that was there vsed By battaill of his hand that then their flewe His accusour approuyng hym vntrewe ¶ For the whiche she would nomore come in his bed But lyued sole euer after so hir life For good ne gold for aught that he hir beed For loue ne threte for betyng ne for strife With hym dwellyng forthwarde as his wife In all thynges els euer at his gouernaunce Bothe daye and night in womanly pleasaunce ¶ Kyng Hardknowt then his doughter maryed Vnto a duke of the Danishrie At Lambirgh dyed at his feast magnified Emong his lordes and all his prelacie And putte hym whole in God his high mercye And charged theim his brother Edward to croūe To reioyse the land of Englandes region ¶ This was the yere of Christ then inscriued A thousand whole fourty also and one When that he had reigned as was subscribed The twoo yere whole whē he was thus wyse gone For whom was made that tyme full muche mone At Wynchester byside his father buryed With lordes all thither full well accompaignied The C .xix. Chapiter ¶ Kyng Edwarde the confessour kyng of Englād reigned twenty and foure yeres that began the yere of Christ a thousand fourty and one and dyed the yere a thousand sixty and fiue EDward his brother sōne of kīg Ethelrede was crowned then kyng of Englande The yere of Christ a M. then in dede Fourtye one as Flores could vnderstande To whom the kyng Swayn of Denmarke lande The tribute whiche he had fully relesed And warres all betwene theim ceassed ¶ To sende hym then the hole Englyshe nauy Agayn Magnus that kynge was of Norwaye That helde it so by wrong and tirannie Whiche Edwarde sente anone in great araye With lordes knightes and squiers freshe gaye With archers many by whiche he gate his lande Of Norwaye hole and seazed it in his hande ¶ Erle Eustace of Boleyn that had wed Edwardes suster on his mother syde To Edwarde came at Douer sore bested Where then his men a burges slewe that tyde Wherfore therle Goodwyn set full of pryde Asked the kyng to haue delyueraunce Of therls men to byde his ordynaunce ¶ Notwithstandyng that Burges slewe his knight For that same cause wherfore he it denyed But made peace then as he therle had hight Of Boleyne so his brother in lawe alied For whiche therle Goodwyn sore replied And warred sore vpon the kyng eche daye With his sonnes fyue in full great araye ¶ Not cōsideryng that kyng
ladyes many were drowned as was sene And then the kyng wed Hadelyse the quene The duke Godfrey daughter that was of Loreyne Of his mournyng to comforte him agayne ¶ And in the yere a thousande fully accompte And an C. twenty and also fyue Themperour Henry the death surmounte And passed to God fro Maude that was his wife Who to her father king Henry came belyfe Abode with hym in Englande then ▪ two yere Maude Empryce was called then full clere ¶ And in the yere of Chrystes incarnacyon A thousande was an C. twenty and seuen When kyng Henry in greate prosperacyon His doughter Maude thempryce to neuen The earle Geffrey Plantagenet euen Earle of Angeou the sone of Fowke Tailboys So maryed had of fame that had the voyce ¶ On whome he gate a sonne that Henry hyght By surname called Henry fitz Empryce Then dyed his eme Alexaunder forth ryghte The kyng of Scottes a prīce of great enterpryce That homage dyd for Scotlande as suffyce So dyed then to whome Dauyd succede His brother was saint Margarete sonne in dede ¶ That to kyng Henry made his homage And then to Maude the foresayde Empryce By hole assent of all his Baronage By letter wryten and sealed as maye suffyce which Iohn Hardīg in Scotland brought of p̄ce with many mo for foure C. marke and fyftye At biddīg cōmaundement of the with king Henry ¶ Cadwalan prynce of Wales at Wadeyet In batayle faught where kyng Henry him slewe And greate people of Wales that there forset Were slayne that daye to hym that were vntrewe Of whiche batayl Wales maye alway rewe The yere a thousande an C. and thyrtye And there tyll two as made is memorye ¶ Then went the kyng to Normandye agayne And there abode and kepte all Normandy To tyme he dyed of whome that lande was fayne But Englande then of it was full heuy When he had reygned so full worthy He dyed in the syxe and thyrtye yere At Boys Leon of his reygne then full clere ¶ Of Chrystes date was then a thousande yere An hundreth also and. ix and thyrtye moo Buryed at Redynge as well it doth appere In the abbaye whiche there he founded so Of monkes blake where euer they ryde or goo That pray for hym for quene Maude his wyfe Who eyther other loued withouten stryfe The C .xxvii. Chapiter ¶ Stephan of Bloys kynge of Englande reygned .xix. yere beganne the yere of Chryst a thousande C. and. xxxix and dyed in the yere a thousande C .lviii. STephā of Blois his sister sōne was croūd A manly mā was thē of great power And king was made of England that stound Withoute stryfe or any maner warre To Normandy he went and seazed all there and gaue it to his sonne syr Eustace And made hym duke therof with great solace ¶ Thus Eustace then duke of Normandy To Parys went to kyng lewys of Fraunce His homage made for his lande so in hye And put oute then with greate contraryaunce The offycers that dyd to Maude pleasaunce And wed the suster of kyng Lewes to wife For supowaill of it without strife ¶ The kyng Stephā to Englād thē home came And tidynges had howe kyng Dauid had distroied The North parties dooen full muche harme Wherfore he brent Edenburgh then and noyed And the countree aboute he sore accloyed For wiche Dauid his soonne to Henry then sent To bee his manne thens furth at his entent ¶ To whome kyng Stephan therldō of Hūtyngton Then gaue and erle therof hym so create Who then for it by verey due reason His homage did as it was ordinate Whiche Hēry dyed and neuer had kynges estate For whiche the Scottes seyn thei owe no seruice To Englishe kynges but onely of this wise ¶ Kyng Stephan then bet the castell doune In England so that stode hym to defence His menne thei gaue to their enheritesoun And all foon for cause of their offence He disherite with might violence Diuers erles and lordes he disherite And many other of his frendes enherite ¶ The yere of Christ a thousand was then gone An hundred thirty and eight also Kyng Stephan brake all his othes a none That he had made vnto the barons tho For whiche thei rose full sore again hym so And warred hym felly on euery side And he on them also with mikyl pryde ¶ The yere a thousande an C. thyrty and nyne Maude Empryce in England claymed her right With earle Robert of Gloucestre her brother fine And earle Randolf of Chester with all his might Syr Bygot earle of Northfolke then hyght Awbrey Ver then earle of Oxenforde And Willyam Bawne that then was earle of Herforde ¶ Willyam Legroos earle of Almarle tho Robert Louell Willyam lorde Percy Kyng Dauyd her eine and many other mo Of earls and barons that were full hardy The castell then Lyncolne gate on hye The cytee helde of Lyncolne with also With hoste full greate lyggyng with them so ¶ Where then the kyng y● castell seged longe Tyll he it had by treaty and conuencyon And bode therin with power greate and stronge Tyll Maude and he as made is mencyon With stronge batayles and great discencyon Besyde Lyncolne where then she had the felde And Stephā taken hurt sore through his sheld To Brystowe then earle Roberte Clare hym led And in the towre there kepte in stronge pryson The Empryce Mawde with power that she had To Wynchester then she rode segyng the towne Where the quene Maude as made is mencyon Kyng Stephā his wyfe it rescowed with batayl sore And toke the earle Clare his eme thore The C .xxviij. Chapiter ¶ Thenterchaunge of kyng Stephan and of tht duke Robert Clare duke of Glocester FOr which cause thē to haue hir eme again Themperesse and quene Maude accordid To enterchaunge that kyng so then full fain For erle Robert without more concordid This enterchaunge thus made and recordid The kyng hir sued vnto Oxenford Fro whens she went by night to Walyngford ¶ Vpon the frost in the wynter season In her smocke alone with hir vncle dere That none hir knewe of theim without the towne So like hir smocke and the snowe was in feer The kyng knewe not in what place that she wer For Oxenford he gate and Awbray slewe Of Oxenford that was an erle full trewe ¶ The kyng Stephan a castell then began At Wilton where kyng Dauid with power And erle Robert of Glocester that was then Hym droue awaye out of that place full clere And bet it downe to the ground full nere To Walyngford the kyng with power went Themperesse to sech was his entent ¶ Hir partie then droue hym then awaye With greate slaughter of menne and occ●sion And euery lorde on other made greate affraye And spoyled other through al this region By greate impression and cruell sore raunson The kyng treated with erle Randolf full trewe But false then was his treaty as menne knewe ¶ For when
he came vnto his presence Anone he putte hym in sore prisone To tyme he had by his magnificence The castell of Lyncolne vnto his croune And putte hym then to fyne and greate raunsom So variaunt he was alwaye of hight Fro euē to morowe that no man trust hym might The fiftene yere of the same kyng Stephen Th erle Geffrey of Angeou decessid A noble prince as all menne did beleuen Henry his soonne of persone well encressed Of childishe wit also full relesed And of age he was then fiftene yere To Scotland came kyng Dauid to require ¶ Of his socour and of his supportacion England to gette that was his heritage Who made hym then full greate consolacion And with hym came without fee or wage With full assent of all his baronage Vnder baners kyng Dauid made hym knight Vpon the felde again kyng Stephen to fight ¶ But suche treaty was made and good accorde That kyng Stephen to Henry shoulde retourne As very heire without more discorde At his decesse to Henry whole retourne The croune of England without more soiourne Who died then after in his .xix. yere At Feuersham buried he was full clere ¶ Of Christes date was then a thousande yere And an hundreth fyftye and eyght also His wyfe and he there buried both in feer The whiche he found whyles he was lyuyng so And reigned here in muche trouble and wo And had this realme without any ryght For themprise Maude that fayre lady bright The C .xxix. Chapiter ¶ Henry fitz Emprice kyng of Englande and erle of Angeou duke of Normandye and Guyen by .xxxvi. yere and beganne to reygne the yere of oure Lorde a thousande a hundreth .lviii. and dyed the yere a thousande an hundreth and .xciiii. HEnry therle of Angeou was tho In this meane tyme had bē in Normādy And set his rule therin for frende or foo And crouned was at London worthely With all the lordes of his hye monarchie And made hym then theyr feautee and homage The prince of Wales also for his heritage ¶ He wedded then a lady fayre and bright Dame Alianor the dukes doughter of Guyen And heyre therof and lady by all right Possession had with all the profytes then And welbeloued was she with her men Deuorced fro the kyng Lewes of Fraunce That hyr had wed to wyfe of his puysaunce ¶ And on her gatte two doughters fayre gente But for sibrede and consanguinitee They were departed by papall iudgement On whome kyng Henry by Christes decree Gatte sonnes foure of great humanitee Henry Richarde Geffrey and Iohn also Elianor and Ihone his doughters two The C .xxx. Chapiter ¶ Howe Malcolyne the seconde kyng of Scottes made homage for Scotlande for therldome of huntyngdon IN this meane whyle kyng Dauid then so dyed To whō Malcolyn Hēryes sōne was heire Whiche Henry was erle notified Of Huntyngdon without any dispayre Of that erldome bothe good and fayre And sonne was to this noble kyng Dauy That wedded had erle Waldens doughter onely ¶ To enioye therldome by her enheritaunce That gat on her this Malcolyne that was kyng Of Scotlande nowe of mighty hye puysaunce That homage made for his enherityng Vnto Henry that then was of Englande kyng For all Scotlande and also for Huntyngdon Whiche seruices both were due vnto the croune The C .xxxi. Chapiter ¶ This kyng Henrye exiled Thomas becket byshop of Cauntorburye HE maried then his sonne the young Henry To the doughter of the kyng of Fraunce He exiled then Thomas of Cauntorbury Out of Englande and many of his aliaunce For cause of his rebellious gouernaunce And as he came fro Rome by Fraunce awaye With language fel he prayed the kyng that daye ¶ The poyntes to mende and so to Englād went For which the kyng was with hym sore displeased That then he sayd had I had men that ment Myne honeste I were not thus diseased With suche a clerke thus greued and vneased Therfore three knightes Raynold le Fitz Vrsy Hughe Moruyle hym slewe with Robert Tracy ¶ But kyng Malcolyne died that was full true Of his homage at Westchester ensealed To kyng Henry dooen so as it was due For it should not be gaynsayd ne counselled Nor afterwarde of Scottes be repeled To whiche Malcolyne Willyā his sonne heyre Was crouned kyng of Scotlande then full fayre The C .xxxii. Chapiter ¶ Howe kynge Wyllyam of Scotlande wente in to Normandye with kyng Henry of Englande the seconde as his liegeman THis kyng Wyllyam then rode with hoste full stronge The Northrē lād he brent sore distroyed By east and west of both Merches of Englande The lorde Vesty with it was anoyed The lorde Vnfreuyle with syckenesse so accloyed With power great at Alnwike with hym faught Wher he was takē in batayll sore and caught ¶ Whō to the kyng to Londō then thei brought Vnto kyng Henry with great honoure Then had the kyng tydynges he liked nought His sonne Henry by kyng Lewys socoure Besieged Roan with hoste great and rygoure For when the kyng to Normandy then went The kyng Wyllyam with hym his labour spent ¶ And Dauid also his brother with al his might That erle was then create of Huntyngdon And Robert ferers erle of Leycester so hight And Roger clare with theim of great renoume Of Gloucester that erle was in possession With other lordes and the siege sone remeued And his cytee of Roan full well rescued ¶ The siege and saute perdoned and forgeuen At the prayer of kyng Lewys of Fraunce Within fewe yeres in peace and rest to liuen He crowned his sonne without distaunce Kyng of Englande and gaue hym gouernaunce And at the feast of his coronacion He sewed afore hym for his consolacion The C .xxxiii. Chapiter ¶ This yonger Henry reigned but .iiii. yeres and died before his father wherfore he is not accompted as kynge because his father outlyued hym and reigned after his death ANd to hī said sōne thinke I do you honour A kynge to serue you thus nowe at youre meate He aunswered hym full vnthankefully that houre And sayd it was no reproue ne forfete An erls sonne to serue the kynges sonne at meate For whiche the father Henry to Irelande went Tyll young Henry the kyng was dead and spent Then came Henry and had the gouernement The father and kyng was then admytte agayn And reigned then and had the regiment And but .iiii. yere his sonne reygned soth to sayen Wherfore he is among kynges certeyne Not accoumpted by no chronicler For his father was kynge afore and after clere The C .xxxiiii. Chapiter ¶ Howe kyng Wyllyam of Scotlande made his homage to kyng Henry the seconde THe kyng Wyllyam at his daye assigned To Yorke came to do there his homage That made it then nothyng it repugned But for his due dette then for his heritage Of Scotlande whole by veraye due knowlage Of his barons and by his euydence Agayne it founde he then no
trewe defense ¶ The kynge Henry then cōquered all Irelande By papall dome there of his royaltee The profytes and reuenues of the lande The dominacion and the souerayntee For errour whiche agayn the spiritualtee They helde full longe would not been correcte Of heresyes with which they were infecte ¶ He founded then the priory of Newstede Within Shirwod and Waltham founded newe Afore were secular without hede Whiche regular he made in order due And other two houses of order trewe He founded there for his soule to praye Where was holy seruyce kepte euery daye ¶ Geffreye his sonne the thyrde gotten and bore That duke of Britayne was hole create By his wyues right to enioye for euermore Whiche was a prince of royall great estate At Parys dyed that Arthure create To sonne and heyre and Isabell the fayre His doughter was without any dispayre ¶ In the yere of Christ a thousande clere An hundreth and sixty also and one Baudewyn the thyrde died taken priesoner By the Sarysens that were his mortall foone Of his body that yssue then had none To whome his brother Almarike did succede To Ierusalem and there was kyng in dede ¶ By treason of therle Triples then The Christen hoste that had foule betrayed When Bawdewyn was so taken through that false man That great people of Christē had thē reised And on the felde nothyng to be praysed To the Sarysyns went with all his power And discomfyt the chrysten hoost full clere The C .xxxv. Chapiter ¶ Howe Geffrey Plantagenet otherwyse called Plantageneth Earle of Angeou elder brother of Bawdewyne and Almaryk shoulde haue ben king of Ierusalem afore and so by consequens thys kynge Henrye shoulde haue be kynge of it BVt yf ryght had lynally procede Geffray Plantagenet Earle of Angeou The elder brother of Bawdwyn so in dede And of Almaryk with mykell blysse and ioye Whiche Geffray so Earle of Angeou Shulde haue be kyng afore of all that realme Both of Surry and also Ierusalem ¶ When duke Robert Ierusalem forsoke For couetyse to haue and ioyse Englande Godfray Boleyne the realme of Surry toke And of Ierusalem eke I vnderstande And erowned was to be kynge of that lande That duke had bene afore of all Loueyne A noble prynce and a worthy Chyefteyne ¶ A thousande was an hundreth sixty syxtene Withoute yssue of his body cōmynge Dyed to whome his brother as was sene Bawdwin succeded and of that realme was king That ruled the lande as was full well semyng Full worthy accompted amonge all estates That chrysten fayth susteyned without debates To whom his sonne king Bawdewin did succede The seconde was that had so borne that name A noble Prynce of all marcyall dede And in that lande greate honoure had and fame Whiche on his wyfe gate without blame A doughter then had vnto his heyre That lande to haue enheryte and repayre Whom then earle Fowke of Angeou wed to wife And kyng was of that lande then by her ryght On whome he gate thre sonnes in his lyfe Worthy knyghtes and men of greate myght The eldest Geffray Plantagenet hyght That gate this same Henry fytz Empryse Kyng of Englande of noble and hye enterpryse The .ii. sonne of Fowke was Bawdewin that thirde Dyed prysoner as it is expressed afore Without yssue of his body betyd The third sonne then of Fowke laste was bore Hyght Almaryk whiche two were kynges thore Where erle Geffrey their elder brother had ryght That suffred them to ioye that lande by myght ¶ Which Almaryk dyed kyng so of that realme After whome then reygned his sonne Bawdwyn That fourth was of that name of Yerlam That impotent was without medecyn To mayntayne warre he myght no more enclyne Who called was Bawdewyn Paraliticus For with the palsye stryken was he full hydeous The C .xxxvi. Chapiter ¶ Howe that kyng Henry the seconde was very heyre of Ierusalem and by consequens Rycharde of Yorke shoulde be the same Wherfore he sent to kynge Henry his crowne His banner also of his armes full fayre Of Ierusalem that were of great renowne As to hym that was then the very heyre Of earle Geffray eldest sonne full fayre Was to kyng Fowke and to his wyfe the quene Doughter and heyre to Baudewin the .ii. clene ¶ This fourth Bawdewyn called Paraliticus This message sent the yere of Christe a thousand An hundreth ful foure score and thre ryght thus When Henry was requyred to haue that lande Whiche he proroged and sent agayne his sounde He shulde be there yf that the kyng of Fraunce And he myght well accorde of gouernaunce ¶ He went so forth anon to Normandye With hoost full great with kyng Philyp to treat Of that voyage and warre accorded on hye But then the death hym felly ganne reherte Wherfore anon he satte vp in his seate And to his sonne Rycharde greate sōme he gaue Thether to go that holy lande to saue ¶ And then he dyed at Pount Euerard buryed The sorowe of herte and great contricyon A prynce chrysten fully notifyed Withouten pere in all comparyson Of worthy knygthode and manly renowne A thousande yere an C lxxx and fourtene And of his reygne was syxe thirty clene The C .xxxvii. Chapiter ¶ Howe Richard king of England duke of Normādy earle of Angeou reygned .x. yere and beganne the yere of Chryst a. M. an C lxxxxiiii dyed the yere M CC. and .iiii. RYchard his sōne to kīg thē was crowned By Bawdewyn archbyshop primate Of Cauntorbury of England that stound That ruled the churche then by lawe ordynate His brother Geffray of baste so procreate Archbyshop was of Yorke then newe electe The Northren churche vnder him to be protecte ¶ The lorde Lueye that Godfray Lucye hight Afore hym bare a royall pyllyon And Iohn Marshal his spores of gold ful bright Willyam Maundeuile his mighty hye crowne That earle was then of Almarle vp and downe Of his wyues ryght willyam Marshal bolde Earle of Strigeyll the scepter bare of golde ¶ Willyam Patryk that was then Longspee That Earle was then create of Salysbury A staffe of golde for constable then was he Of Englande hole to haue the regeny By ryght of his offyce of constablery For yf the lande were voyde none heire knowe To kepe the realme by his offyce hym owe. ¶ This ylke Willyam was earle also create Of Gloucestre by whiche that offyce grewe To hym of ryght for he was generate Of Roberte Clare earle of Gloucestre trewe Foure Barons bare by theyr seruyce full dewe Aboue his hed then in processyon A cloth of golde by good direccyon ¶ Earle Dauyd then that tyme of Huntyngdon Brother of the kyng Willyam of Scotlande And Iohn the earle of Morten of renowne Kyng Rychardes brother as I vnderstone Ryght worthy lordes that tyme of this lande And Robert Ferrers earle of Leycester tho Thre swordes bare afore the kyng there so Syxe Earls then and Barons of estate A cheker
mikell of Yorkshire discomfited that archebishop of Yorke his clergy at Milton on swale THe kyng Edward began to siege Berwyk like And wonne it had but false tales it let And tidinges newe that nought the kyng did For Robert Bruys the kyng of Scotlande mette With the bishop of Yorke and hym ouersette Wherfore he loste the siege and went awaye But Bruys had stroyed England in fell araye ¶ To Borough brydge by east and west he brent And home agayne with many a prysoner Without harme or lette of his entent With mykell good but in Myton medowe nere To Swale water laye then with great power Walter Wareyn among the hay kockes bushed Vpon the byshop sodenly with Scottes yssued ¶ And .xv. hundreth Englyshe there he slewe And home he went with kyng Edward full glad With prysoners many mo then men knewe The byshop fled fro the felde full woo bestad With his clerkes that then were full mad For whiche therle Thomas of Lancastre there And kyng Edward depatted halfe in werre The C .lxxiiii. Chapiter ¶ Howe at the nexte parliamente after Thomas of Lancaster and Leycester erle and certayne lordes exiled the twoo Spencers out of the land but then that Spencers made great persecucion with the kyng agayn the lordes and slewe the erle of Lancaster and the other lordes AT the parliamēt thē at westminster next hold Erle Thomas that then was called ful trewe Th erle Vmfrey of Herford that was bold Th erle of Marche full manly as men knewe The Monbrey also Percy and Clyfford drewe All armed came and two Spencers exiled Out fro Englande neuer to be reconsyled ¶ But sone the Spencers came to that kyng again Syr Hugh the lorde and syr Hugh his sonne And put therle of Marche in great disdayn Roger his sonne that with hym did wonne Appeched hym then of hye treason Agaynst the kyng wherfore the kyng hym sent Into the toure tabyde the parliament ¶ Then went the kyng and Spencers both two With hostes full great to Burton vpon Trent Where the lordes laye and sparled theim then so That north they went then wayes by one assente To rayse mo men they trust in theyr entent The Spencers two fully for to destroye Who all the realme full cruelly did noye ¶ At Borinbrig syr Andrewe Hertlaw met With erle Vmfrey of Herford and hym slewe And toke the erle Thomas without let And to the kyng that then to Pountfret drewe Where then were sette vpon hym iudges newe Th erle Edmound of Arondell for iustice And syr Robert Mapilthorpe his enemyes ¶ There he was headed anone vpon the hyll And buryed was there in a chapell fayre Henry his brother stode at the kynges wyll Whom the kyng graunted to bee his heyre That wedded then Alyce without despayre The doughter and heyre of therle Henry Lacy Of Lyncolne so graunted by the kynges mercy ¶ Wyllyā fitz Wareyn many another knight In diuers shyres some hanged and some head That hold with hym or with his compeers right Syr Bartholomewe Badelismore without rede Drawen and hanged and put to foul dead Roger Clyfford and Iohn Monbraye barons Headed then were for theyr rebellions ¶ Th erle of Marche syr Roger Mortymer His sonne Roger foriuged were for treason And by the kyng of death pardoned were And put were then in perpetuall pryson Into the towre for that same encheson Fro that tyme forth the Spencers other excede The quene was but an hand mayden in dede ¶ To tyme the kyng to her brother hir sent And also his sonne Edwarde to dooen homage For Guyen so to haue at his entente And for they dwelled so long in that viage The kyng theim had suspecte of theyr message By councell of the Spencers theim exiled As in chronicle pleynly is compiled ¶ The kyng then made and playnly did create Andrewe Hertlawe erle then of Carlele Whiche tyme the kyng Robert full fortunate Rode all the east Marche full proudly and well The byshopryke and Yorkeshire euery dele Andrewe Hertlawe erle of Carlele absent To Lancastre hym drewe in false entente ¶ The kyng Robert was passed home agayn With prayes greate and many prysoners Fro Humber north the people downe were slayn Of whiche the kyng and all his councelers Blamed therle Andrewe and his compeers For he had men enough with hym arayed The Scottes all that might haue slayn frayed ¶ He hight the kyng haue brought to hym great powers Into yorkshyre held nothing his hight Therfore the kyng by counsell of the Spencers Gaue charge to take hym either by daye or night Or kyl hym downe wher they mete with hym might To all shryues was sent this commaundement Fro Trent northwarde by writtes maundemēt The C .lxxv. Chapiter ¶ Howe syr Roger Mortymer the younger wente oute of the toure of London went into Fraunce to the quene of Englande and to the prince Edwarde hir soonne and also howe the lorde Lucye tooke syr Andrewe Hertlawe erle of carlele and headed hym at Carlele for treason THen ●r Roger the yongest Mortimer Made his kepers dronke and went away Out of the toure by night other in feer And into Fraunce anone he toke his waye Vnto the quene Isabell in poore araye And bode with her at hyr gouernaunce All tyme that she was soiournyng in Fraunce ¶ And then Antony Lucye lorde of Cokirmouth Syr Robert Lowther with other many in feere At Carlele toune as knowe was full couth Toke syr Andrewe Hertlawe with mekill stee● They put on hym he toke royall power In truce takyng with therle of Murrey Withouten power in trayterous araye ¶ In wrongyng of the kynges hye estate And of his right full great derogacion And howe he toke greate golde immoderate Of kyng Edwarde through cauelacion To bryng hym power for his supportaciō Agayn the kyng Robert that then destroyed His lande full foule and had hym self anoyed ¶ And howe he had the people hole withdrawe With hym Westwarde by false confederacie Betwene hym and therle of Marrowe Couened fully before cast traytorie Wherfore they drewe hym first all openly And hanged after and to London sent Vnto the kynge his head for great present The C .lxxvi. Chapiter ¶ Howe the quene Isabell treated mariage of one of the doughters of therle of Henaulde for hir sonne Edwarde to haue to wife by thauice of her brother kyng Charles came to Englande with great power and toke that kyng and slewe his counsell for treason THere by aduise and good consyderacion Of the kyng of Fraunce her brother dere Quene Isabell accorded for supportacion Hir sonne should wed one of the doughters clere Of therle of Henauld that fyue then were Through whose succour she hir sonne Edward Toke then the sea to Englande warde ¶ Erle Edmond of Kent then with her came Kyng Edwardes brother syr Aymer valence Erle of Penbroke whiche came with hir fro hame And Mortymer the yonger in hir presence Henauldes and Frenche with great
then therle of Huntyngdon And Somerset the earle his wyues sonne The CC .xx. Chapiter Howe on Easter euen the duke of Clarence smote that batell of Bawgy in the yere of Christe a thousand .iiii. hundreth twenty and in the nynth yere of kyng Henry for that yere the feaste of the Annuncyacyon of oure Lady fell on Ester twysdaye and the date chaunged after that batayle in the Easter weke ANd nere at Bawge came Gylberte Vmfreuyle Marshal of Fraunce with .v. horse no mo And of good wyt counsayled hym that whyle To kepe the churche and goddes seruyce tho And after the feaste to seke vpon his foo And he aunswered hym yf thou be aferd Go home thy waye and kepe the churche yerde ¶ For thou haste bene with the kyng to longe To make me lese my worshyp and my name Thou haste ay gote the worshyp euer amonge And I haue none thus wolde thou lose my fame With suche wordes chidyng he dyd hym blame To whome he sayde yf that thou be afrayde And kepe the churche as thou me nowe hast saide ¶ With that he saide my lorde ye haue no menne With the enemyes thus hastely to fyght Youre men wot not of this ne howe ne whenne To semble to you of power ne of myght For trewly nowe my cousen Graye nowe right And I haue here but ten men and no mo But yet ye shall neuer saye we leaue you so ¶ So rode they furth ay chidyng by the waye Tyll they to Bawgy ouer the bridge were gone Where the enemyes were batayled in araye Where then they light faught with them anon The duke was slayne that day there with his foone With hym were slayne then therle Vmfreuyle And syr Iohn Graye the Earle of Tankeruyle The lorde Roos and syr Iohn Lumley With many other were with hym slayne that daye Whose names I can not wryte nor saye The Earles two of Huntingdon no naye Of Somerset also were taken there I saye For prysoners and put to greate raunson And laye full longe in Fraunce then in pryson ¶ Thenglishe power came when all was done And rescowed then the deed men where they laye And brought that lordes home fro thens thē ful sone That were there vpon the felde that daye And buryed them in Englande in good araye Echeone in his owne abbaye or colage Afore founded within his herytage ¶ At Cauntorbury the duke was of Clarence Besyde his father kynge Henry buryed With suche honoure costage and expence As the duches his wyfe coulde haue signifyed Whiche neded not to bene modifyed She was so well within her selfe auysed Of greate sadnesse and womanhede preuised The CC .xxi. Chapiter Howe the quene wente agayne to Fraunce lefte the quene in Englande with chylde and wanne dyuerse cytees townes and castelles in somer in the nyngth yere of his reigne THe kyng then let the quene in Englande byde In somer then the. ix yere of his date And into Fraunce agayne he went that tyde With heuy harte to Parys went algate The castell of Perfount soone he gate A royall place of all that men haue sene The greate cytee of Compyne also I wene ¶ The cytees also of Cassons Bray and Crayle Of Owsare also with many cytees moo And to Parys agayne without fayle In his castell of Lowre abidynge tho Tidynges then came to him full glad and mo That of a prynce delyuered was the quene Of whiche all men reioysed as was sene Saynt Dionis then and castell Boys Vynccent Corbell Pount Melanke and full great parte of Fraunce Burgoyne Artoys and Pycardy to hym sent To bene his men without contraryaunce And eche cytee to hym sworne in substaunce Walled townes and castelles euerychone As hye regent of Fraunce by hym one ¶ Then rode he furth to Bawgy and Orleaunce Wynnyng the tounes and citees in his waye And castelles all that were of greate defence Crepy Lawnesse and Milly with greate affraye Nongentle Roy he gatte with greate araye Pount Caranton with many other obeyed To his highnesse and were his menne conueghed ¶ The duke of Brytain then was his manne For fee belaste without rebellion The counte sainct Paule his manne was then The duke of Burgoyn without suspicion With many other his menne without collucion Were sworne thē whole the coūtrees in y● same wise Castelles and tounes eke as he couth deuise ¶ In August so of his reigne the tenth yere He toke sickenes and laye at Boy Vincent In pain strong as then it did appere Full like to passe wherfore in his entent The duke of Bedford he made h●e regent Of Fraunce and of his other landes all Beyond the sea as chief in generall ¶ And of his soonne Henry he made custode Thomas Beauford his vncle dere and trewe Duke of Excester full of all worthy hode To tyme his soonne to perfecte age grewe He to kepe hym chaungyng for no n 〈…〉 With helpe of his other eme then fu 〈…〉 The bishop of Wynchester of good a 〈…〉 ¶ Th erle then of Salisbury manly That Mountague then hight by surname He sette to kepe then all Normandie Vnder the regent as knight of full greate fame With other lordes full sage and worthy of name Th erle of Oxenford and of Suffolke also Of his counsaill to been with many mo The CC .xxii. Chapiter ¶ Howe the kyng dyed the last daye of August the yere of Christ a thousand foure hundred two and twenty and of his reigne the tenth yere for all his rightwisnes and iustice that he did he had no consciēce of vsurpement of the croune THe last daye of August then full clere Of Christ his date a thousand signified Foure hundred and twoo and twenty yere When that this prince of princes so dyed At Boys Vincent with death then victoried That neuer prince in earth might thē haue dooen But he alone that ruleth sonne and moonne ¶ With whose bones the quene came to Englād The kyng of Scottes Iames with hir also The duke of Excester as I can vnderstand Th erle of Marche Edmond Mortimer tho Rychard Beauchampe then erle of Warwike so Humfrey then erle of Stafford young of age And erle Edmond of Morten wise and sage ¶ O good lord God that art omnipotent Why streched not thy power and thy might To kepe this prince that sette was and consent With themperour to conuert Surrey right And with Christen inhabite it had hight Why fauoured so thyne high omnipotence Miscreaunce more then his beneuolence ¶ Aboue all thyng he keped the lawe and peace Through all England that none insurreccion Ne no riotes were then withouten lese Nor neighbour werre in faute of correccion But peasebly vnder his proteccion Compleyntes all of wronges in generall Refourmed were well vnder his yerd egall The CC .xxiii. Chapiter ¶ Howe through 〈…〉 we and peace conserued was the encreaso of his conquest and els had he been of no power to haue conquered in out landes WHen he in Fraunce was dayly
traitours to be bestowed gyuen abrode also the banished menne that fled as rebelles and false to their countree to bee brought in that if any grudge or eiuill will wer betwixt any one or other of the nobilite that ther it should bee forgottē turned to loue lastly that certain mony should bee payed to the kyng towardes that greate charges of his werre When he had thus studied determined to liue quietly set his realme in good ordre Charles the duke of Burgoin sēt for aide to hym against Lewes the Frēche kyng so that he could neuer bee at rest but one thyng or other shuld disquiet hym for he could not deny hym helpe consideryng the benefites that he had receiued of hym at diuerse sūdry tymes before that that he nowe fought against his dedly enemie whiche aided the erle of Warwike bothe with menne mony to come against hym Wherfore he assēblyng his coūsaill together shewyng theim the matter sent woord to the duke that he would kepe one piece or parte of a battail agaīst the kyng For in deede at that same tyme there was mortall battaill betwixt the duke Lewes that kyng because that the same Lewes was a very harde manne churlishe also hurtefull aswell to his frēdes as to his foes many Frēchmen abhorryng his cōdicions did consent to hold with that duke And emong many other one Lewes of Lucēburge did apoinct with the duke to dooe mischief to hym one waye or other so that the kyng was bothe in daūger of his owne coūtree menne also of the duke beyng a straūger The duke shewed this to kyng Edward that he might the soner allu●e entise hym to battaill And vpō this kyng Edward toke his voiage to Fraūce takyng besides his tribute that he had certain mony of the lordes commons of the realme which thei of their owne gētlenes gaue vn to hym to the sustenaūce maintenyng of his armie And for that the kyng called that tribute leuiyng of mony beneuolēce whiche neuerthelesse was giuen with an eiuill will of many one But he vsyng suche gētle fassions towardes theim praiyng theim so hartely of their assistaunce that thei could none other wise dooe but geue it hym Whiche whē he had he gathered his armie whiche was .xx. M. went to Caleys the .iiii. daye of July Whō Charles that duke did mett reioysyng gretely at his victory did instantly desire hym that he would sticke stoutely to this battaill that he might haue of that Frenche kyng that he had lost by hym But when Lewes that kyng hard that Edward came with his armie he encreased the nombre of his people as muche as he could the more nigher the daunger that he was the sooner hastely he came vpon theim And with this armie he sent foorthe Robert of Stoteuill a noble capitain to the coostes Atrebatium to resyst the power of the Englishe menne And the kyng hym self taried at Siluanect castyng with hymself what waye he might make a league of peace betwixt that duke that kyng of England hym Heryng therfore that that king was gone to Atrebates he sēt ambassodours to hym for peace whose myndes when that kyng had knowē although he had foūd but litle frēdship at his hādes in tymes past yet consideryng that all his substaūce treasure was wasted in ciuile battail that he was not hable to maintein a newe hoost if nede shuld be nor yet vnneth sustein theim whom he had vnder his bāner thought best euē for pure necessite to leaue to peace growe to atonemēt with Lewes that kyng The whiche thyng he might dooe also sauing his honour cōsideryng that bothe the duke Robert of Lucēburge aforenamed had not dooē accordyng to their promise So that at the desire of the ambassadours he went to speake with the kyng at Pinquinake a toune in Ambiā shire wher noble mēne dooe assēble together there found y● kyng Thē bothe that kynges after due salutaciō either to other had long communicaciō at the last a peace was cōfirmed stablished for many yeres for the a●●emēt wherof the Frēche kyng gaue vnto Edward toward his charge cost lxcv M. crounes from thēs forth yerely l. M. crounes After that truce made mony paid kyng Edward wēt to Caleis from thēs to Englād In this battaill none was slain sauyng onely that duke of Exceter the whiche māne was in sētuary before cōmaunded to folowe y● kyng was put to death cōtrary to that promise made This was the yere of our lord M CCCC .lxxv. frome that tyme foorth Lewes that kyng payed duely his raunsome to Edward vnto the laste yere before he dyed at what tyme he denyed the paymente as though he knewe before his laste dayes But the duke of Burgoyne and Roberte of Lucenburgh after they had knowen that Edwarde had made a league wyth Lewes the kynge they freted sore with hym and wrote sharpe letters of thretenyng and tauntyng hym saiyng that he was the cause that they reuenged not theimselfes of the kyng Whose fyrye and thundryng wordes the kyng no more passed vpon then of the turnyng of his hāde And as for Lucenburgh he was taken prysoner and for his proude and malicious writyng behedded at Lutece Thus kyng Edward beyng in quietnes both in his countre and abrode also although he mighte wel thynke hymself to lyue so perpetually for that he had been so great a conquerour yet consideryng that the erle of Richemōde was of nigh affinitee to Hēry the .vi. he was not out of feare daunger Therfore he thought ones to attempte the duke of Britayn agayn with giftes promyses faire wordes that he might haue y● erle whō he thought to rule as he would after that his auncestrie was geuen The ambassadours came to the duke with a great substaunce of mony that their request might bee the honestier they shewed the duke that they came to desire the erle of hym that he mighte marye the kynges doughter so that by affinite al euil wyll grudge might be forgotten and sedicion vtterlye reiected although they entended not so to cause al suche thynges to bee forgotten but by the death kyllyng of hym The duke after longe and muche deniyng theim at the laste thorowe muche entreatyng and also great rewardes that was brought gaue the earle to theim sendynge a letter to the kynge in prayse and commendation of hym not thynkynge that he commytted the lambe to the woulfe but the soonne to the father The ambassadours was verye glad that they had got hym and sayled into Englande in all the haste they coulde But the earle knowynge well that he wēt to hys death for sorowe and care that he conceaued in hys mynde was caste in an agewe When he was goone one Ihon Chenlet suche a man as could not bee found agayne in al the countre in great fauour with the duke hearing of
that dede being very sore moued therwith wēt to the dukes place coming before his grace stode lyke a man strykē with some sodeyn dysease very pale holding his head downe the duke maruayling at hym enquyred what the matter was To whom he sayde O moost noble duke my time is at hande thys palenes betokeneth death without remidy That I would God yt had come before this day then it should not haue greued me so much And thys all cometh to me through a deed that you haue done of late which wil ether cause me to lose my life or els to lyue in moost miserie wretchednes as one wery of thys present lyfe The noble actes that you haue doone moost noble prynce haue enhaunsed your fame glory to the fardest part of the world but this one thing me thynke I praye you pardōme what I saye is a great blemyshe to your dygnitee that forgetting the promyse that you made so faythfully haue geuen the innocēt erle of Richmounte to be destroyed pitefully killed emonge wretched knau es hangmen Wherfore they that loue you of whom I am one cannot but lamente ●o see you dyshonored by this great fault of periury Whē he had sayd the duke answered hold thy peace man I praye the ther is no such harme shal chaunce to him Edwarde the kinge woulde haue him to mary his daughter Then sayd Iohn Beleue me mooste excellente and redoubted prynce this Henry is nowe almoste famyshed and loste yf he once goo out of your countree he is but cast awaye and paste all recouerye At these wordes the duke was persuaded through the whych he commaūded one Peter Lādoson hys receauer to take the same Henry frō the ambassadours The sayd receauer pursued the Englyshe ambassadours to Maclonium and there holdyng theim wyth long cōmunication made him to be conueyed into a sētuary whych was then almost ded through that feuer and thought whych he was caste in And so after that he was emended broughte hym to the duke The ambassadours then beyng spoiled and deceaued both of theyr pread and mony that they brought desyred that same receauer that they might not goo home in that wyse whyche receauer promised that he woulde eyther kepe hym in sentuary or eles cause hym to be imprisoned at the duke his place so that they should neuer neede to feare hym In all thys tyme Edwarde beynge desyreous to knowe what became of the Earle was enfourmed that he was taken prysoner but after that escaped they re handes where at the kinge was verye angrye but when he knewe that he should bee kepte in holde was well pleased then dyd take no thought And liued after that most welthy sparing no expēses nor cost in kepyng his house neuertheles he dyd fall into one great offence in this time For sodēly he cōmaunded his brother the duke of Clarence to be killed drowned in an hogshhed of malmesey And the cause of hys death was as men report through a certaine prophecie which sayd the after kyng Edwarde one shuld reigne whose name begā wyth a. G. which prophecye some sayde was completed fulfilled when the duke of Glouceter the after hym had the kingdome dyd reigne Some holdeth another opinion of this his death saiyng that at what time the olde malice dyd breke out bewixt thē both the duke through his sisters councel woulde haue maried lady Mary that duke of Burgoyn his only daughter which mariage the kyng did infringe stoppe as one enuiyng of his brothers felicitee or good chaunce After that they both beryng in theyr mindes mortall hatred one of the sayde duke hys seruauntes was accused of wichcraft charming for which offence he was put to death The duke 〈…〉 g that could not but speake resist againste the 〈…〉 g his cōmaundement and therfore was com 〈…〉 ted to prison ther beyng was killed and procla 〈…〉 d after as a traytour to the kyng for whose 〈…〉 that the king was verye sory and whan any 〈…〉 kneled to hym and asked pardon 〈…〉 der he would saye O infortunate bro 〈…〉 that noman would aske thy pardon And this duke had .ii. children one lady Margarete that was after maried to Richard Pole an other Edward whome the kyng made earle of Warwyke but this childe folowyng the fate and destenie of his father was after putte in prisone there priuely put to death And these thinges were doone in the yere of oure Lorde a thousand foure hundreth and foure score and the .xix. yere of the reigne of kyng Edward And two yeres then after folowing the kyng died before the whiche yeres he beganne to bee very harde and couetouse in getting monye and also very diligent in marking attaching his lordes that did offend In this time the kyng of Scottes willed his soōne Iamy to be maried to the kynges doughter lady Cicile which was the yonger that should haue been maried to Charles the kyng his soonne of Fraunce But it chaunced not thorow Lewes the kyng that brake his promise bothe in geuing his seruice and payeng his raunsome the laste yere of his reigne Likewise the kyng of Scottes seing that Lewes the kyng was false of his promise he thoughte he might bee so bolde too and so breaking league of amite sette vpon the Englishe men At the which Edward was sore vexed and entended batayl against hym yet after that he knewe the it was not by his wyll but thorowe the councell and euell disposed mindes of his lordes woulde haue borne it in good worthe had not kyng Iames owne brother streight vpon that prouoked hym to fighte Furthermore suche was the nature of the Scottishe kyng that when he had sette his minde vpon a thing no manne coulde turne hym and because that no manne mighte reproue hym in any thing he promoted laye people menne of basse bloude to his counsell putting to deathe or banishyng euermore the nobilitee Emong whom this duke of Albanie his brother consydering the condicyons of the king fled to the kyng of Englād at what time he was sent into Fraūce ther counsailed the kyng to fight against hym The king willing to reuēge his olde iniuries vpon many consideraciōs gathered entēded no lesse by the helpe of the saied duke of Albany then to kepe open warre So that he did send the duke of Gloucestre the erle of Northumberlād syr Thomas Stanley this duke of Albany with a great power of men against the Scottes The king knowing of their cōming went to Barwyke with his army to kepe theim from the borders but perceiuing that he was not hable so resist their great power fled backe in the night to Edinbrough ther taryed for his enemies And the duke of Gloucestre folowing burned and spoyled all the way when he was somewhat nighe his enemies perceiuing also that none of the Scottishe lordes came to the duke of Albanye mistrusted that some deceyte or crafte was
wrought so laboured to haue peace whiche gotten he went backe to the castell of Barwike that sir Thomas Stanley had wonne a lytell before And the duke of Albany the authoure of this warre for that he had but lytle thankes of England for his so dooing fled into Fraunce there was kylled running at the tylte in Parys After this businesse Edward assembled his counsell together willed theim to prepare batayle againste the Frenche kyng for that he had neyther payde nor woulde paye his raunsome nor yet geue his soonne in mariage to his doughter as he promised to the setting forth of the which batayl certaine mony was exacted of the prestes religiouse men to be payde At the which time the kyng was sodēly sickened shortly after died at Westminster the .ix. day of April then being .l. yeres of age reigning xxiii after the date of oure Lorde a. M .iiii. C .lxxx. and thre whose corps was after conueyghed and had with great pompe and solempnitee to Winde sore and there buried in saint George his chapell Whiche kyng had by his wyfe the quene ten children of theim lefte aliue behinde hym Edward prince of Wales and Richard duke of yorke and one bastarde called Arthure and fyue doughters Elisabeth Cicilie Anne Catherine and Brigyde whiche after were maryed all sauyng that ladye Brigide was a nonne This Edward was a goodly man of personage of stature hyghe of countenaunce and beautee comely of sight quicke brode brested and well sette in euery other parte conformable to his bodye of a pregnant wytte stomake stoute haulte courage of perfect memori of such thinges as he conceaued in his braine diligent in his affaires weighti busines in auentures bold and hardy againe his aduersaries fearce terryble to his frendes liberal bounteous hauing in all his warres most prosperous lucky successe escheuing all pleasure sensualitee to the which he was by nature most proue vnto for the which cause and for the lowlines and humanite that is in hym in gendred by nature most plētifully he bare him self honestly amōg his priuate persons otherwise thē the degre or dignite of his maieste required wherfore the fame ranne that he was poysened A lytell before his death it was saied that he gaue hym selfe to auarice whiche before as you see vsed greate liberalytee Yet the realme whiche thorowe ciuile sedicyon was greatly impoueryshed he made ryche and plenteouse at his death daye Also he gaue spiritual promocions to the moste excellent and famous clerkes and made theim of his councell other of the laye sorte whome he loued he did not enriche with possessions but with monye and other lyke goodes the whiche many prynces hauyng no respecte of the honoure dooe not alwayes obserue By the whiche suche giftes rewardes he had so farre wonne the hartes of the people that after his deathe many menne dyd lamente the losse of his grace ¶ Edward the fyfth WHEN ALMIGHTIE GOD had called to his mercye the noble prince kyng Edwarde the fourth of that name Edward his eldest sonne prynce of Wales began his reygne the .ix. daye of Aprill in that yere of oure Lorde a. M CCCC .lxxxiij. and in the .xxij. yere of Lewes the .xi. then Frenche kyng Whiche younge prince reigned a smal space and lytle season ouer this realme other in pleasure or libertee for his vncle Richard duke of Gloceter within .iij. monethes depriued hym not only of his croune and regalytie but also vnnaturally bereft hym his naturall life and for the declaracion by what craftie engine he first attempted his vngracious purpose by what false colourable vntrue allegaciōs he set forth openly his pretensed enterprise fynally by what shamefull cruell and detestable acte he perfourmed the same Ye muste fyrst consyder of whom he and his brother descended there natures condicions inclynacions and thē you shall easely perceaue that there could not be a more crueller tyraunt appoynted to acheue a more abomynable enterpryse There father was Richard Plantagenet duke of Yorke whiche began not by warre but by lawe to chalenge the croune of Englande puttyng his clayme in the parliamēt holden that .xxx. yere of kyng Henry the .vi. where ether for right or for fauoure his cause was so set forthe and auaunced that the bloodde of the sayd kyng Henry although he had a goodly sonne was clerely abiected and that croune of the realme by autorytee of parliamente entayled to the duke of Yorke and his heyres after the discease of the sayd kyng Henrye the .vi. But the duke not entendyng so long to tary but myndyng vnder the preterte of discencion growen and arysen within the realme and of couenauntes made in the parliament not kepte but broken to preuēte the tyme and to take vpon hym the gouernaunce in kyng Henryes life was by to muche hardynes slayne at the battayle of Wakefylde leuynge behynde hym three sonnes Edwarde George Richard Al these three as they wer greate estates of byrth so were they greate and statelye of stomake gredy of autoritee and impaciēt parteners of rule and autoritee This Edward reuēged his fathers death and deposed kyng Henry the .vi. and atteyned the croune and sceptre of this realme George duke of Clarence was a goodlye and well feautured prince in all thynges fortunate yf ether his owne ambiciō had not set him against his brother or thenuie of his enemies had not set his brother agaynst hym for were it by the quene or the nobles of her bloode which highly maligned the kynges kynred as women cōmenlye not of malyce but of nature hate suche as theyr husbandes loue or wer it aproude appetite of the duke hym selfe entendyng to bee kyng at the leaste wise heynous treason was layde to his charge and finally were he in faute or were he fautelesse attaynted was he by parliament and iudged to deathe and thereupon hastely drouned in a butte of malmesey within the towre of Londō Whose death kyng Edward although he commaunded it when he wyste it was done pyteouslye he bewayled and sorowfullye he repented it Richard duke of Gloucestre the .iij. sonne of whiche I muste mooste entreate was in witte and courage eguall with the other but in beautee and lyniamentes of nature farre vnderneth both for he was lytle of stature euill feautered of lymmes croke backed the lift shulder much higher then the right harde fauoured of vysage suche as in estates is called a warlike vysage and amonge commen persons a crabbed face He was malycious wrothfull and enuyous and as it is reported his mother the duches had much a dooe in her trauayle that she could not be delyuered of hym vncutte and that he came into the worlde the fete forwarde as men be borne outwarde and as the fame ranne not vntothed whether that men of hatred reported aboue the truthe or that nature chaunged his course in his begynnyng which in his life many thynges vnnaturally cōmytted
this I leue to Goddes iudgemēt He was none euell capitayn in warre as to whiche his disposicion was more enclyned to then to peace Sōdry victories he had some ouerthrowes but neuer for defaute in his owne person either for lacke of hardynes or polytike order Fre he was of his dispences somwhat aboue his power lyberall with large giftes he gatte hym vnstedfast frēdship for whiche cause he was fayn to borowe pil extorte in other places which gat hym stedfast hatred He was close secrete a depe dyssymuler lowly of coūtenaūce arrogāte of herte outwardly famylyer where he inwardly hated not lettyng to kysse whome he thought to kyll dispiteous and cruell not alwaye for eiuyll wyll but after for ambycion and to serue his purpose frende fooe wer all indifferent where his auaūtage grewe he spared no mānes death whose lyfe withstode his purpose He slewe in the towre kyng Henry the .vi. saiyng nowe is there no heyre male of kyng Edward the thyrde but we of the house of Yorke whiche murder was done without kynge Edwardes assent whiche would haue appoynted that bocherlye office to some other rather then to his owne brother Some wise mē also wene that hys drift lacked not in helpyng forth his owne brother of Clarence to his death whiche thyng in all apparaunce he resisted although he inwardly mynded it And the cause thereof was as men notynge his doynges and procedynges did marke because that he longe in kyng Edwardes tyme thought to opteyne the croune in case that the kyng his brother whose life he loked that euyl dyet would sone shorten should happē to disease as he did in dede his chyldrē beyng yoūg And then that if duke of Clarence had lyued his pretensed purpose had been farre hyndered For yf the duke of Clarence had kept hym self true to his nephewe the yong kyng or would haue takē vpō him to be kyng euery one of these castes had been a troumpe in the duke of Gloucesters waye but when he was sure that hys brother of Clarence was dead then he knewe that he might woorke without ieopardye But of these poyntes there is certentie and whosoeuer deuyneth or cōiectureth maye as well shote to ferre as to shorte but this cōiecture afterward toke place as fewe dooe as you shall ꝑceaue here after But afore I declare to you howe this Rychard duke of Gloucestre began his mischeuous imagened pretenced enterprise as apꝑantly shal be opened I must a litle putte you in remēbraūce of a louyng and charitable acte no lesse profitable thē amiable to that whole cōmynaltie if it had been so inwardely thought as it was outwardly dissimuled whiche kyng Edward did liyng on his deathe bedde not long before he dyed for in his life althoughe that the deuision emongest his frendes somewhat greued yrked hym yet in his helth he lesse regarded tooke hede to it by reason that he thought that he was hable in all thynges to rule bothe ꝑties were thei neuer so obstinate But in his last sickenesse whiche cōtinued longer then false fantasticall tales haue vntruly falsely surmised as I my self that wrote this pamphlet truly knew whē he perceiued his natural strēgth was gone hoped litle of recouery by the artes of al his phicysyans whiche he perceaued onely to prolong his life Thē he began to consider the youth of his children howe be it he nothyng lesse mistrusted then that that happened yet he wisely forseyng and consideryng that many harmes might ensue by that debate of his nobles while the youth of his children should lacke discrecion and good counsaill of their frendes for he knew well that euery part would woorke for their owne cōmoditee and rather by plesaunt aduise to wynne theim selfes fauour thē by ꝓfitable aduertismēt to do that childrē good wherfore liyng on his death bed at Westminster he called to hym suche lordes as thē wer aboute hym whō he knewe to be at variaunce in especiall the lord marques Dorset soonne to the quene the lord Hastynges against whō the quene especially grudged for that fauor that the kyng bare hym also she thought him familier with the kyng in wāton cōpaignie hir kynne bare hym sore aswel for that the kyng made hym capitain of Caleys which office the lord Riuers brother to the quene claimed of that kynges former promise as of diuerse other giftes whiche he receaued that thei loked for when these lordes with diuerse other of both parties were come vnto that kynges presens he caused hymself to be raised vp with pillous as I cā gesse saied thus or muche like in sētēce to theim My lordes my dere kynsmē alies in what plight I nowe lye you se I ꝑfectly fele by that whiche I looke that lesse while to liue with you therfore that more depely I am moued to care in what case I leue you for suche as I leue you suche are my children like to fynd you whiche if thei shuld fynd at variaūce as god forbid thei theim felfes might hap to fall at werre or their discresiō wuld serue to set you at peace you s● their youth of whiche I rekē the onely suerty to rest in your concord For it suffiseth not all you to loue theim if eche of you hate other if thei wer mē your feithfullnes might hap to suffice but childhod must be mainteined by mēnes autorite slipꝑ youth vnderprōpted with elder coūsaill whiche thei can neuer haue except you geue it nor you geue it except you agre for wher eche laboureth to breake that other maketh for hatred eche impugneth others coūsail ther must nedes be a lōg tract or any good cōclusiō can forward And ferther while eche ꝑtie laboreth to be chief flaterer adulaciō shall thē haue more place thē plain feithful aduise of whiche must nedes ensue that euill bringyng vp of y● prīce whose mynd ī tēder youth infecte shall redily fall to mischief riot drawe doune this noble realme to ruyne But if grace turne hym to wisdome whiche god sēd hym thē thei which by eiuill meanes pleased hym best shall after fal farthest out of fauour so that at the lēgth euell driftes driue to naught good plain wayes ꝓsper florishe Great variaūce hath euer beē betwene you not alwais for great causes Some tyme a thyng right wel entēdid miscōstrued hath been turned to that woorse or a smal displeasure dooē to you ether by your owne affeciō ether by instigaciō of eiuill toōges hath been sore agrauate But this I wot well you had neuer so great cause of hatred as you haue of loue because we be men that we be all christē mē This I will leaue to prechers to tell you yet I wot not whether any p̄chers wordes ought more to moue you thē that his gooyng by by to y● place that thei all preche of But this shal I desire you to remēbre that the one part
no faile And rayned bloodde the same .iii. dayes also Greate people dyed the lande to mykell woo ¶ Gurgustyus his sonne so reygned then In mykill ioye and worldly celynesse Kepyng his landes from enemyes as a manne But drunken he was echedaye expresse Vnaccordynge to a prince of worthynesse Out of drunkennesse succedeth euery vice Whiche all men shuld eschewe if thei wer wise ¶ Scicilius his sonne then did succede In whose tyme echeman did other oppresse The lawe and peace was exiled so in dede That ciuill warres and slaughter of men expresse Was in euery parte of the lande without redresse And murderers foule through all his lande dayly Without redres or any other remedy ¶ Iago succeded and kyng was of this lande As eiuill as was the kyng of Scicilus The same vices as I vnderstand Orels wourse and more malicious Wherfore our lorde toke vengeaūce of hym thus He smote theim bothe in suche aletargie That sone thei dyed for marrid with frenesie ¶ Kymar his soonne had then the diademe And kyng then was with all kyndes of royalte Kepyng his lande as well did so hym seme In lawe and peace with greate felicite The common weale and their vtilite He did prefer euer in vniuersall Whiche to a prince is a vertu principall ¶ First if he kepe not lawe nor peace certein His people will nothyng dred ne doubt Than stande he moost in parell to bee slaine Orels putte doune right by his vnderlout No better is he bee he neuer so stout Then is his subiect or another wight That with rebell vnlawfull kill hym might ¶ Gorbonyan that was his soonne and heire Was kyng who had that tyme but soonnes twoo The eldre hight Ferrex that was full faire The younger hight Porrex whiche discordid so That either of theim was alwaye others foo For that the father sent Ferrex into Fraunce To kyng Syward that was of greate puisaunce ¶ But after long when he had reigned .xi. yeres Dyed awaye frome all royalte Leuyng his lande by his good rule inclere In sufficiente and all prosperite Ferrex heryng of his mortalite With power strong came to this lande againe And with Porrex faught sore wher he was slaine ¶ For sorow of whiche ther mother that Iudō hight To Ferrex came with hir maydens all in ire Slepyng in bed slew hym vpon the night And smote hym all on peces sette a fyre Loo this cruell mother sett on fyre With suche rancor that she could not ceas Whiche for passyng ire was mercyles The .xxxi. Chapiter ¶ Clotane Pynner Ruddan Stater reigned with barōs warres .xl. yere howe this Isle of Brytaine was departed in foure parties stood departed .xl. yere in barōs warres CLotane that then was duke of Cornwaile Next heire then was by all succession But Pinner thē had Logres ī gouernaile And kyng ther of was by wrong ingression Ruddan had Cambre in his possession And Stater was then kyng of Albany Thus was this Isle then lede by tirannye ¶ Thus Brytain was to foure kynges deuided Echeon of theim warryng on other The barons also on warre were so prouided That all the people to wast father and mother Thei spared none all wer thei sister or brother And eche citee on other bothe towne and tour And eche tyranne was a conquerour ¶ And lordes faine subiectes then to been The poore menne that afore that warre wer desolate Of all honour and worship that was seen Through their manhode with people congregate Lordeship conquered and roose to high astate Laddes and boyes the ladeis tho did wedde Their kynne afore nether lande ne hous hadde ¶ Fourty wynter thus duryng barons warre This Isle so stoode in sorowe and in strife In faute of might the weaker had the wer And suffered wrong that was then their life For who that might aught gette with spere or knife He helde it furth as for his heritage And waxid a lorde that a fore was a page ¶ Defaute of peace lawe sette theim on hight To ouer runne lordes and bee victorious As worthy was for of their wrongfull might The lordes were cause that thei were rygurous That would not so their wronges malicious At first with stande and punishe trespassoures But suffer theim endure in their erroures The .xxx. Chapiter ¶ The conseipt of the maker of this booke touchyng barrons warres in defaute of peace and lawe DEfaut of lawe was cause of this mischief Wronges susteined by mastry by might And peace laied downe that should haue been the chief Through whiche debates folowed all vnright Wherfore vnto a prince accordeth right The peace and lawe euen with equite Within his realme to saue his dignite ¶ What is a kyng without lawe and peace Within his realme sufficiently conserued The porest of his maye so encrease By iniury and force of menne preserued Till he his kyng so with strēgth haue ouerthrowed And sette hym self in royall maieste As tratour Cade made suche an iuoperte ¶ O ye my lorde of Yorke and veraie heire Of Englande so this matter well impresse Deipe in your breste lette it synke softe and feire And suche defautes sette you aye to represse At the begynnyng lette your high noblenes The trespassoures to chastes and to restreine And lette theim not lawe ne peace disobeine ¶ O ye lordes that been in high estate Kepe well the lawe with peace and gouernaunce Lest your hurtes you hurte and depreciate Whiche been as able with wrongfull ordynaunce To reigne as ye and haue also greate puisaunce For lawe and iustices in lordes vnpreserued Causeth many of theim to bee ouerthrowed The .xxxi. Chapiter ¶ Dunwallo Moluncyus kyng of Cornewayle conquerid Logers Lambry and Albanie as right heire of Brytayne he gaue fraunchises to the temple plough merkettes feyres and hie wayes so that none should disturbe by lawe nor by wrong he made sixe temples in Logers Cambre Albanie and also many Flāynes to rule theim of estate as bishoppes nowe dooen KYng Clotein died that reigned in Cornewaile Wherfore his soōne Dūwallo Molūcius Was kyng of all his realme without faile A mannly prince in armes full cuorageous Assembled his hoost and came full vigorous Of kyng Pynner in Logres intrusour And sleugh hym ther as wrongfull gouernour ¶ Kyng Ruddan and kyng Stater Of Albanie with hoostes strong and wyght Gaue hym battaill with mighty power Where Ruddan Stater wer slain downe right With all their hoostes and their greate might And Dunwallo had the victory With muche ioye and manhod mightely ¶ Dunwallo so called Moluncius At Troynouaunt with royall diademe Of gold crouned moost riche and precious Vpon his hede as did hym well besene The first he was as chronicles expreme That in this Isle of Brytein had croune of golde For all afore copre and gilt was to beholde ¶ He graunted pardon vnto all trespasoures Of whiche thei were full glad and ioyus Amendyng all their faultes and errours With all their hertes full beneuolous
¶ He gaue to thambassatours royall giftes and sent his letters with his ambassatis to passe to Roome with theim in cōpaignie he with his hoost folowed sone after theim THe kyng then gaue vnto that hie ambassate Full riche giftes golde enough to spend And bad theim giue their lordes in whole senate His letters so whiche he then to hym send And bad theim saie that soner then he wend He should hym se before the daye assigned In trust of whiche theim with his seale assigned ¶ This noble kyng Arthure his princes prayed And barons all and knightes honorable To passe with hym at wagis to bee payed With their power and their retenue able For to directe his right full resonable Marciall actes thempire to obtein To whome thei all consented whole and clene ¶ And with the kyng thei passed forth anone Into Brytain wher Howell then was kyng Wher then he hard y● countre make greate mone For a Gyaunt horrible in all thyng That rauished had by his cruell werkyng Kyng Howell sister Elein without pere Bytwene his armes was slain and layed on bere ¶ For whiche that kyng to mount Michell thē wēt With that Gyaunt that faught a bataile sore With Caliborne his sweord or that he stint He sleugh hym there to death for euermore And charged Kay for his victorie thore To smyte his hedde of then for memorye In worship of his worthy victorye ¶ In whiche mount kyng Howell hir tōbe made A chapell faire theron edefied Sith that tyme hether vpon that place abade Wher that Gyaunt and she were homycied But all his hoost and people hym magnified And all the landes about wholy enioyed Of that Gyauntes death so felly anoyed ¶ The kynges all of Portyngale and Spain Of Nauerne also and eke of Catheloyne Vnto hym came and dukes of Almaigne The dukes of Sauoy and of Burgoyne Douze peres of Fraunce and the duke of Lorain The kynges also of Denmarke and Irelande Of Norwey Iselande and of Gotelande ¶ Through Fraūce Burgoyn Sauoye Lumbardie Into Italy and so through all Tuskayn Fro Tuskayn then so into Romany To Awbe ryuer kyng Arthure came so than And loged on that water as manne Wher with Lucius he faught in battaile strong Either other proued with strokes sore emong ¶ But kyng Arthure and the princes all His knightes also there of the round table So manfully theim bare that daye ouer all That neuer their better were seen nor more able So were Romaynes that daye full cōmendable Ne none might dooe better in any wise So worthely thei faught without feyntise ¶ And at the last the Brytons bare the bell And had the felde and all the victorye Wher Arthure sleugh as chronicles dooeth tell Themperour Lucius Hibery And toke his feloe contributorye But Lucyus hedde to Roome for his truage He sent his corps also for their arerage The .lxxxii. Chapiter ¶ Howe the senate and the citee of Roome mette hym in seuen processions and crouned hym and there wintred hym by all the whole winter THe senate sent vnto the kyng Arthure And prayed hym thempire to admit Whiche became hym semed hym of nature As Constantyne did in the honour sitte And al truage forthward thei would remitte Of greate Brytain neuer to aske it more But make it free as it was euer before ¶ To whiche prayer kyng Arthure did consent And came to Roome in royall high astate Wher the citee by good and whole assent Full richely hym mette and the senate With greatest laude that might been estimate And euery gate his triumphe and his glorie Full curyously was wrought in greate storie ¶ The seuen orders in procession Full solemplye at Peters churche hym mette The wifes whole by good discrecion The wydowes after full deuoutly sette In order came then nexte as was there dette The virgyns then of pure virgynitee And then thynnocentes of tender iuuentee ¶ Thorders all of good religion The preastes and clerkes seculer The byshop and cardinalles in vnyon With the sacrement and lightes clere And Belles ryngyng therewith in fere Euery order with laude and reuerence Reioysed greatly of his magnificence ¶ At the Capytole in the sea imperiall They crowned hym with crownes thre of golde As Emperoure moste principall And conquerour that daye moste worthy holde Wher then he fested the citee manyfolde Of Rome the byshop and all his cardinals The senatours with other estates al 's The .lxxxiii. Chapiter ¶ Howe that tydynges came to the kynge at Roome that Mordred had wedded his wyfe and vsurped the crowne of Englande for the whiche he came home agayne and gaue Mordred batayll at Douer where Arthure preuayled and after again at Wynchester wher the round table began and fell for euer ALl that wynter at Rome he did soiourne In palays of Mayns palacium The somer cā that home he might retourne At whiche somer so when it was come Tydynges came to Arthure hole and some That duke Mordred was kyng of all Britayn And wedded Gwaynour to his wyfe certayn ¶ For whiche at Rome he made his ordenaunce To rule that lande and all the hole Empire And home in hast with full great purueyaunce To Britayne came to venge hym on that sire That trayterously agayn hym did conspire To rauyshe his wife by stronge and mighty hāde And also for vsurpyng the crowne of his lande ¶ At porte Rupyn whiche nowe Douer hight He landed then where duke Mordred hym met And fought full sore by all a daye to night Wher syr Gawen Anguzell were sore bet And slayne both two so sore they were ouer set But Arthure had the felde and Mordred fled To Wynchester that night full fast hym sped ¶ The kyng folowed fast vpon the chace And there he fought agayn with hym full sore Where many princes and lordes in that case Were slayn on bothe sydes for euermore Of the round table that longe had been afore Many worthy knightes there were spended For Arthures loue that might not been amended ¶ The rounde table at Wynchester beganne And there it ended and there it hangeth yet For there were slayn at this ylke battayl than The knightes all that euer did at it sitte Of Britayne borne saue Launcelot yode quyte And with the kyng folowed on the chase When Mordred fled to Cornwayle for that case The .lxxxiiii. Chapiter ¶ The battayll of Camblayn where Arthure preuayled and s●ewe Mordred and Arthure had his deathes wounde and howe Arthure died and was buried in the Blacke chapel of Glastenbury WHer on the water that called was Camblayne Mordred abode with mightie hoste stronge With Arthur fought that day of hie disdayne Full oft alone euer as they met amonge But Arthure slewe Mordred with his knyfe long That Calibourne was called of suche vertue That whomsoeuer he smote therwith he slewe ¶ But this Mordred gaue Arthure deaths woūd For whiche he yode his woundes to medifie Into thysle of Aualon that stound And gaue Britayne that was
full solitarie To Constantyne duke Cader sonne on hye His neuewe was for Cader was his brother As well was knowen they had but one mother ¶ Kyng Arthure then in Aualon so died Wher he was buried in a chapell fayre Whiche nowe is made and fully edified The mynster churche this daye of great repayre Of Glastenbury where nowe he hath his leyre But then it was called the blacke chapell Of our Lady as chronycles can tell ¶ Wher Geryn erle of Charters then abode Besyde his toumbe for whole deuocion Whether Launcelot delake came as he rode Vpon the chace with trompette and clarion And Geryn tolde hym ther all vp and downe Howe Arthure was there layde in sepulture For whiche with hym to byde he hight full sure ¶ And so they abode together in contemplacion And preastes were aboute his toumbe alwaye In prayers greate and holy meditacion With heare the fleshe repressyng night and daye Three dayes eche weke at breade and water aye They fasted lyued in great sorowe and penaūce To soules helth and Goddes hye pleasaunce ¶ But whē the quene Gwaynour had perceyued Howe Mordred was fled awaye then thryse Frō Yorke then yode lest she were deceyued On fote by night with a mayden full wise To Carlion to lyue in Goddes seruice In the mynster of saynt Iuly with Nonnes In prayers whole and greate deuocions ¶ This kyng Arthure to whō none was cōdigne Through all the world so was he then perelesse His life and soule to God he dyd resigne The yere of Christ as chronicles expresse Fyue hudreth and two in sothefastnesse And fourtye also accompted hole and clere At his endyng without any were The .lxxxv. Chapiter ¶ The commendacion of Arthure after the conceipte of the maker of this booke in fewe woordes and also the compleynte and lamentacion of the sayde maker for the death of Arthure REigned he had then sixe and twenty yere Moste redoubted in erth moste famous The worthiest and wysest without pere The hardyest man and moste coragious In actes marciall moste victorious In hym was neuer a drope of cowardise Nor in his herte a poynte of couetyse ¶ There was neuer prince of giftes more liberal Of landes geuyng ne of meate so plenteous Agayn his fooen was moste imperiall And with his owne subiectes moste bounteous As a Lyon in felde was moste douteous In house a lambe of mercy euer replete And in iudgement euer eguall was and discrete ¶ O good lorde God suche treason vnrightes Why suffred thy deuyne omnipotente That of theim had precience and forsightes That myght haue lette that cursed violence Of Mordredes pryde and all his insolence That noble kyng forpassyng conqueroure So to destroye by treason and erroure ¶ Fortune false executryse of weerdes That euermore so with thy subtilitee To all debates thou strongly so enherdes That where men euer would lyue in charitee Thou doest perturbe with mutabilitee Why stretchest thou so thy whele vpon Mordred Agayne his eme to do so cruel dede ¶ Wherthrough that high noble conqueroure Without cause shuld algates peryshed bee With so many kynges and princes of honour In all the worlde might none there better bee O fals Fallas of Mordredes propertee Howe might thou so in Gwynoure haue such might That she the death caused of so many knightes ¶ O false beautie of Gwaynour predestinate What vnhappe made the false to thy lorde So good a prince and so fortunate Was neuer yet seen as all men can recorde The whiche betwene you made so greate discorde That he and all his princes wer there slayne Thy chaungeable hert to venge he was so fayne ¶ But O Mordred tofore so good a knight In greate manhode proudly aye approued In whom thyne eme the noblest prince of might Put all his trust so greately he the loued What vnhappe thy manly ghost hath moued Vnto so foule and cruell hardynesse So many to be slayn through thyn vnhappynes ¶ The highnesse of thyne honoure had a fall When thou began to do that iniurie That great falshode thy prowesse did appall As soone as in the entred periurie By consequens treason and traitourie Thy lorde and eme and also thy kyng souerayn So to betraye thy felowes eke certayne The .lxxxvi. Chapter ¶ Constantyne kynge of Britayne sonne of duke Cador of Cornewayle reygned foure yere COnstantine his brother sōne was crowned Duke Cador sōne of Cornwaile boūteous Afore had been one of the table rounde In Arthures tyme a knight was ful auenturous In trone royall was set full precyous With Diademe on his hed sygnifyed At Troynouaunt where no wight it replyed ¶ Who then anone with Saxons sore did fight And also with Mordred sonnes two Their capitaynes were put theim to the flyght That one fled to wynchester and hyd hym so That other to London with mykyll woo Where Constātyne theim bothe in churches slew At the autres where they were hyd in mewe ¶ This constantyne set all his lande in peace And reygned well foure yere in greate noblesse And dyed then buryed at Caroll no lesse Besyde Vterpendragon full expresse Arthures father of greate worthynesse Whiche called is the stone Hengles certayne Besyde Salysbury vpon the playne ¶ Aurelius Conan his cosyn fayre The sea royall then helde and ganne succede To hym as nexte then of bloude and heyre His vncle and his sonnes two in dede In prysone slewe to crowne hym selfe I rede That should haue been kynges of all Britayne Afore hym so yf they had not be slayne ¶ He maynteyned aye ciuyle warre and debate Bytwene Cytees Castelles and countees Through al his realme with mysruled mē associate Whiche was greatly agaynst his royaltees And but thre yere he reygned in dignitees As God so wolde of his hye ordynaunce For wronge lawes maketh shorte gouernaunce ¶ Then Vortyper succeded after hym Crowned was then with all the royalte Agaynste whome the Saxons stronge grym Made full greate warre destroyed the comente But in batayle by greate humanyte He them ouercame and set his lande in peace Vnto the tyme that death made him decease ¶ Seuen yere he reigned and his people pleased And tender was he of his comynalte Aboue all thyng he sawe that they were eased The publyke cause afore the syngulerte Preserued also as it of ryght should be For cōmons fyrst for prynces supportacion Were set and nought been waste by dominacion ¶ Malgo nexte hym to the crowne attayned Feyrest of other that euer was in his daye All tyranny fully he restreyned And conquered holy thryse of Orkenay Irelonde Denmarke Iselonde and eke Norway And Gotlande also obeyed his royalte He was so wyse full of fortunyte Within his realme was none so large ne strong Ne none that was in feacte of warre so wise With swerde or axe to fyght in the thronge Nor with his speare that had suche exercyse For to assayle hys fooes and them suppryse And defence also he had great keenyng As any
great fauour wyth the kinges sonne Henrye the eyght but shortly after whan he beganne to exercyse hym selfe agayne in marciall feates of warre he sickened of a dysease called Plureses and died therewith whyche because it was straunge and vnknowen to the phisiciās it was incurable He lefte one sonne behynde hym alyue to vphold the name of that auncetree The other Wyllyam brother to Edmunde the earle of Suffolke had also greater fauoure showed hym in pryson then he had before And as for Iames Terel and Ihō Wyndham because they were traytours and manifestly accused of the same wer put to death and behedded But when the earle of Suffolke heard of thys he was in great despayre wyth hym selfe that he should neuer frame hys matters wel and so wente all aboute Germanye and Fraunce for ayde and socour prouyng yf he coulde fynde any helpe at their handes whom when he perceaued to showe no token of loue towardes him in that behalfe he made hym subiect to that prynce of Flaūders but hys brother Rychard beyng an experte man dyd so wysely order and behaue hym selfe in that businesse that he was not greatlye founde gyltie in any poynt of that matter The kyng not yet beyng out of all feare of his enemyes perceauyng that many sanctuary men loked for a fayre daye desired of Alexander byshop of Roome that all traytours and banished men should not be saued by any sanctuary and that such as were ther in holde should take theim herafter as no refuge and socoure to them yf thei once gooe out whych thyng after the byshoppe had graunted it was to the ease and quietnes of al the realme When the kynge had all hys busines so well ended and broughte in a good staye Prynce Arthure dyed halfe a yeare or lesse after that he had maried ladie Katheryn for whose death ther was great lamentynge It is reported also that ladye Katherine feared suche lyke chaunce euermore for because that after she had taken her leaue of her parentes and sayled towardes England she was tossed lōg in the sea wyth the violence of the water the wynd ere the shyppe coulde haue any lādyng Not longe after the quene was broughte ni bedde with a doughter and died vppon the same which daughter also taried but for a season after her mother Ther departed also within short space after Reynalde Bray a man for iustice so commēdable that yf any thyng had bene done agaynste good lawe or ryght he would streyghte reproue the kyng for it Of the same vertue was Ihon Mortō bishoppe would do in al thinges as he did in reprouing the kinge for the reformation of thinges amisse which bishop died .ii. yeres before About the tyme also dyed Henry bishop of Cāterbury whose roome Williā Warrā bishop of Lōdon supplied and in the byshop of Londons place was elected William Barons after whose deathe succeded Rychrde Fiziames byshop of Chichester In this yere which was the .xvi. of hys reygne and of our lorde M ccccc and .ii. yeres the kynge dyd kept his parliament wherin manye thynges were dereed and made for the publike commodytee and emong other thynges it was determyned that theues and murderers duly conuicted by the lawe to dye should be burned in that hand and quit yf thei could read on the booke any one worde Furdermore it was decreed that the people should paye certain mony to the kyng and that the goodes of theim that were banished and fled should be disparsed and set to sale Also the preestes were commaunded to pay mony for the maintenaunce and sustentacion of the common weale And now the kyng drawyng nigh to age and consideryng the great battayles that he had in tymes past which as it was thought came of ouer muche welthines prouided a remedy ryght shortly for it And to the entent that menne shoulde not thynck that he would oppresse them or do thē wrong for of all people he hated oppressours therfore he deuised with hym selfe by what honeste meane he might do it thus deuising called to minde that English mē dyd litle passe vpō the obseruaciō of any lawes that were made in so much the yf such a thynge should be called to accompte he thoughte manye men as well lordes as other of the lay fee would bee founde fautie And so searchyng ouer the statutes that he had made punished them a lytle by the pursse that had transgressed theim After that he appoynted two commyssioners to receaue the forfeictes the one Richarde Hempson and the other Edmunde Dudley booth lawers of the temporaltee whiche personnes for the desire to please their king had no respect how thei got the monye so thei myght haue it ether by ryght or wrong Albeit the kyng hauyng pitee of his people after that he perceaued they were sore punyshed and polled vnknowyng to hym restored to them their mony of whom it was exacted vniustlye and depryued thē of their offyce that had so vniustly executed it In this yere dyed quene Elisabeth of Castell wyfe to Ferdinand kyng of Aragone without any yssue of mā chyld so that the heritage dyd fall to lady Iohan her eldest daughter by Ferdinand whiche after was maried to the Earle of Flaunders thē made by this mariage also chiefe gouernoure ouer all that countree Shortly after about the .xiii. day of Ianuary which was the yere of our lord M ccccc and fyue thys Earle hauyng a nauye prepared sayled out of Flaunders with his wyfe to Spayne but he had not set forth longe ere the wether beganne to chaunge and tempestes to ryse so that at the last fearsenes of the wynde dyd dryue them to the coastes and borders of Englande wher he landed at an hauē or porte called Wynmouth sore againste the mynd and consent of all his companie which knewe well that the same landyng should bee the occasion of long tariyng there When it was kno●n that he was thus landed there came agreate nomber of harnissed men to proue yf he were the kynges frende or no whiche when thei perseaued hym to bee his frende and entended nothing but loue and frendeshippe Thomas Trencharde the chiefe of that compaignie went to the kyng desyring hym yf it would witesalfe hym to take a lodging at his house whiche was euen nigh at hand trusting therby to haue thāke of the kynges master whom he certifyed in al the haste of his commyng Also Iohn Caroe desired hym that he woulde not gooe vntyll suche tyme that he had spoken with the kyng his louing and feithfull frende consideringe that he was within two or thre dayes iourney of hym So that at length although he layde many excuses to haue been gooen and departed at their instance taried there with theim And when the kyng was enfourmed of his cōminge he reioyced highly and sente certaine of his nobilitee to bring hym where he was Wherfore this Erle seing no remedy but that he must nedes tary he went streight to Windesore where the kyng