Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n day_n king_n son_n 5,432 5 5.0214 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A07151 A true discourse of the whole occurrences in the Queenes voyage from her departure from Florence, vntil her arriuall at the citie of Marseilles together with the triumphs there made at her entrie: whereto is adioyned her receiuing and entrie into Lyons. Hereunto is annexed, the first Sauoyan: wherein is set forth the right of the conquest of Sauoy by the French, and the importance of holding it. All faithfully translated out of French, by E.A. Arnauld, Antoine, 1560-1619. First Savoyan. aut; Aggas, Edward. 1601 (1601) STC 17556; ESTC S119499 25,683 46

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

fruites of the same Fiftly and lastly Philip the seuenth Duke of Sauoy had two wiues The first Margaret of Burbon who brought him sixtie thousand crownes By the contract of this marriage the children that should be borne to thē should succeed each other in the whole and vnto them as in aduance is giuen the Countie of Bauge and Castelwick of Bourg in Bresse Of this marriage issued a sonne called Philibert and Loyse that was mother to King Francis the first By the second wife hee had two sonnes Philibert succeeded his Father and dyed without issue leauing his sister his heyre generall as well by course of the common law which preferreth the conioyned on both sides as by the expresse clause of the contract of marriage True it is that in those lands that preferre the male child our Lady Regent pretended no part but in al her mothers goods in that which was giuen in aduaunce and in all the moueables and goods shee was her brothers vndoubted and sole heyre In the yeere 1534. King Francis the first sent diuers times sundrie great personages to Charles the ninth Duke of Sauoy his Lady Mothers halfe brother to demaund his rights But this Duke preuented by the passions of his wife and lingring in hope of a certaine exchange most daungerous for vs not onely denied to doe him reason in these so euident and palpable rights but also resolued to debarre the Kings passage as he was on his iourney to be reuenged vpon Sforce Duke of Millan for the most villanous act that euer was committed namely the beheading of the Lord Merueilles Ambassadour of France Hereupon did the King denounce warre to the Duke of Sauoy who wrongfully detained his rights and according to law of Nations which giueth to the strongest in true and full proprietie the goods of him that hath denied him his right his Maiestie in the yeere 1536. conquered Sauoy Bresse and Piedmont which he reserued twentie three yeres And very presumptuous he had been that durst haue mooued this great King to abandon this principall rampier or bulwarke of the Gaules for the custodie whereof wee neede not to crosse the seas or trauaile through forrain Countries but may come to it by firme footing Thus are great empires cymented and established But such was the calamitie of France that in the yeere 1559. wee made a treatie whereby wee rendered 198. places where the King held his garrisons as the Marshall Monluc doth testifie who tearmeth it the vnfortunate and accursed peace saying that since the same wee haue neuer beene free from misfortunes Also that our Ciuill wars haue wasted more valiant Captaines in seuen yeeres then any forraine warres in seuentie Yet spake he not this vpon any good will that hee bare to those with whome wee were at warres for they neuer had a sorer enemie or any that dealt more rudely with them But the Flower de Luce was painted in his heart and hee most vehemently did affect any thing that might tend to the greatnesse and glorie of this crowne In this regard he could not without griefe speake of so vnprofitable a restitution whereto our mishap had forced vs with a whole sequence of all sorts of miseries in that so many warlike people as he termeth them could not otherwise employ themselues then in most furious cutting each others throates Neuerthelesse we did not at that time so farre giue way to the storme that tossed and turmoyled this Realme but that wee retayned fiue of the principall and strongest townes of Piedmont as pledges for the reason that should be done vs in our rights namely Thurin Quiers Chiuas Pinerol Villeneufue d' Ast wherein we are also to note that our treatie of peace in 1559. in expresse words imported that the King should holde Thurin Chiuas and Villeneufue d' Ast with all their confines territories commaunds iurisdictions and other appurtenances and as for Quiers and Pinerol the king should hold thē with such confines territories as he should find to be necessarie for the sustenance and defence of the fayd places Now at the same time dyed King Henry the second leauing king Frauncis verie young which occasion the Duke of Sauoy would not ouerslip For being still at Paris fourteene dayes after the fathers death he obtained the sonnes letters patents neuer verified as the treaty of peace was wherein the confines of these fiue townes were restrained to a Piedmont myle which was as much as to abridge vs of the fiue sixt partes at the least of all that was left vs as if it had not beene enough that we had yeelded vp so many places vnlesse wee were also so straightened in the remainder of our shipwrack All which notwithstanding I would to God things had yet so remained But in the yeare 62. during our first ciuill warres they that had alreadie found opportunitie so to shorten the territories seeing the realme in trouble and King Charles but twelue yeares old gaue the aduenture restored into this Dukes hands Thurin Quiers Chinas Villeneufue d' Ast Ten battelles would not haue wrested from vs such places which had cost Fraunce so much gold and bloud Not long before they had in fit time made away Marshall Brissac who would rather haue cast himselfe headlong from the rockes then in the kings nonage haue giuen vp townes of such importance to the crowne the value whereof hee was better acquainted withall then any man aliue His successor in this gouernment yet accounted one of the fayrest in regard of the great importance thereof forgat no remonstrance and in deed he satisfied all men but himselfe for thrice did he refuse the execution of so wonderfull hurtfull an acte vsing most vehement and liuely remonstrances and protestations crauing an assemblie of the Estates or at the least considering the Kings minoritie the verification of the Parliament of Peeres sitting at Paris Had they had any hope to obtaine this promulgation it had not beene denyed him especially considering that it would haue stoode for a discharge to all others But they knew very wel that such a parliament consisting of so many great personages practised in all sorts of affayres who also by the reading of hystories were acquainted with the truth of our rights mentioned in the beginning would neuer by their decree haue authorized an acte so preiudiciall to the estate In this regard not daring to exhibite such letters to the Parliament of Fraunce they grew to such grieuous and strange threates against this Gouernour that at the last hee gaue way howbeit with such and so violent griefe that it stucke by him to his end and brought him to his graue enforcing him sundrie times to crie out that he was accursed that he ought to haue dyed in Thurin vnlesse his master after declaration of his maioritie had of his owne absolute authoritie reuoked him also that peraduenture his Maiestie finding what a faire flower they sought to plucke from his crowne and what a griefe
and losse the same might for euer remaine both to him and his successors would haue altered his purpose and beene of another mind Thus we see how in 62. these foure places were lost onely for Sauillan and 33000. Franckes for a moneths pay for the Souldiours which was no doubt a proper change All the Artillerie was drawen to Carmaegnolle which by this meanes was as well stored as all the rest of the Realme and in this wise was the assurance and pledge of all our rights reduced to two holds Pinerall one of the fiue and Sauillan which was but little worth yet was not the Duke of Sauoy thus content for the pledge howsoeuer small did still remember vs of our rights which he labored to rase out of our minds therfore at the late kings returne whō God pardon out of Poland passing through Sauoy the same were begged in recompence of a collation and the Prince whose onely error rested in his too great goodnesse granted them whereupon the late Duke euer after acknowledged himselfe greatly bound vnto him and good reason His sonne an ambitious Prince as any bred in Europe these fiue hundred yeeres who in imagination hath swallowed the whole Monarchie of all Christendome grounded vpon the decease of his neerest allies without issue which his sorcerers and Magicians doe promise him together with the decease of his Maiestie which God in his mercie forbid seeing the late King in 88. excluded out ofhis chiefe Citie accompting him vndone and contemning the Salicke lawe immediatly perswaded himselfe that he had most apparant right to this crowne or that at the least hee would carrie away one of the best partes of the broken shippe and that the Rhosne should streame vnder his banners And to bee the first at the bootie and to beginne with those places that are allotted to the Kings eldest sonne as a pledge of his future succession in the face of the estates assembled at Bloys during a most secure peace hee inuaded the Marquizate of Saluces by the surprize of Carmagnole and the beating of Rauell Were the losse of such fortresses the sole remainder of the French name beyond the Mounts verie great yet was the losse of the Artillerie no whit inferior thereto for there were laide vp the Canons which vnder the banners of the Flower de Luce had made the proudest rauelins of warlicke Italie to stoop At the beginning of this vsurpation he sought sundrie pretences and sent his Ambassadors expressely to the King to assure him of restitution of the whole into his hands But immediately he disgraced his Maiesties officers of his Ducall authority established others he pulled down brake the Flower de Luces raysed the armes of Sauoy he furnished his towns with part of our Artillery at the same instant to acquaint al the world with the trophees of his victorie he forgeth a proud coyne whereupon he stampeth a Centaure treading vnder his feete a crowne reuersed with this deuise Opportune All such as are acquainted with Histories can testifie that since the establishment of this great Monarchie the most auncient in the world it neuer brooked such an outrage for if iniuries are much the more aggrauated by the consideration of his weaknesse from whom they doe proceede what greater shame what greater reproach to the chiefe Crowne in Christendome to the most sacred King in the world the Prince ouer a Nationa euen borne to Mars his occupation the subduers of Asia and Affrica at the report of whose name euen the fiercest Nations that euer had dominion vpon the earth haue trembled then to see his forts and store-house beyond the mounts carryed away by a pettie Duke of Sauoy Surely no true Frenchman can speake of this insolent brauado without griefe and extreme anguish All words are too base for such an indignitie to say that this great mightie kingdome should beare this reproach and blemish in her forehead for the space of a dozen yeres and that it hath rested onely vpon this vnthankfull person that hee neuer felt the punishment for such an outrage done to the maiestie and glorie of the French name But it was not Gods will who hath hardened his heart that he might receiue the reward of such treason accompanied with the most notable ingratitude that was euer heard of and with a thousand cruelties that haue insued the same For not content with this inuasion he hath since practised all the cruelties that hee could deuise against all such sorts of Frenchmen as hee hath found resolute in the defence of the liberties of their Countries with the price of their bloud or that preferred death before bondage Prouence Dauphine which he assumed to revnite to the Crowne of Sauoy as his predecessors haue done Piedmont Ast Nice Villefranche and many other places to vs appertainiug doe yet groane vnder the anguish of such wounds as his cruell tyrannie hath inflicted vpon them yea such so great and intolerable that euen they that had opened him the gates were forced to driue him out again wheresoeuer their strength would serue Afterward seeing this Realme quiet vnder one of the mightest and most excellent Princes that euer swayed this glorious Scepter a Prince growne vp among the allarmes the nurse-child of legions and in all poynts requisit in a most perfect Captaine most accomplished and withall a mightie King he was not so slender witted but that he well perceiued how very difficult it was for him any long time to hold this Marquizate by force especially considering that by the treatie euerie man was to reenter into like estate as hee enioyed before the warres at the least within one yeere besides that his Holynes had sufficiently giuen to vnderstand that before all things it was requisite fully to restore him that in the time of peace had perforce beene robbed Finding himselfe therefore in these perplexities with the Kings permission whom he had assured euery way to content he came to Paris where he was receiued with al cheerefulnesse and honour that himselfe could desire after long and often treaties hee finally in the month of February promised within the first of lune to yeeld vp the Marquizate in like state as he tooke it or the exchange thereof agreed vpon betweene his Maiestie and him and this was solemnely signed as well by the one as by the other Afterward being returned into Piedmont hee was so farre from certifying the King that his mind was changed that contrariwise from day to day hee entertained him with goodly promises of faithfull performance of all that he had promised So that as ordinarily such men as had rather incurre a thousand deaths then break their word do imagine al others to be like themselues especially where they haue to doe with Princes whose greatnesse and honour shining as well during their liues as after their decease consisteth in the exact obseruation of their fayth the Queene of men the sunshine of this world and the ornament