of Quene Iane The kyng of Scottes marieth the daughter of Fraunce The coÌquest of the kyng of Portingals Indes The ChristeÌ faith planted in the kyngdome of CaÌbaia The heath of Erasmus A preuy conspiracy in Germany against the Gospell Henry the younger duke of Brunswyke The death of George duke of Saxon Popârâ abolyssed in the âânde of ãâã The ââoole ãâ¦ã gh restâââd Heding beseged taken The lady regeÌt inuadeth Picardy S. Paule beseged and destroyed Turwyne beseged ãâ¦ã Iohn Crispâ ãâ¦ã Aâ hoâââble ãâ¦ã Misfortunes happened harmes done by the meanes of the teÌpest A collection for the pore Frere Forest A cousiâltaââon holden at Rome against the Turke The Emperours âââraunââââto âicâ The entraunce of the Pope into Nice described the religious rablâ The Emperoure kisseth the Popes ãâ¦ã e. A peace concluded betwene the Emperour FrauÌce ⪠Leonora ãâ¦ã Nâ ãâ¦ã ded Barbarossa Bisana taâen The shipwrach of Barbarossa The Castell N ãâ¦ã urg ââylord Thâ Marquea of BraÌdenburg The death of y e duke of Gelders Auarice punyshed The lorde marquish of exâter â the âârd moÌtacute beheaded Barbarossa robbeth y e âe âeââaÌs Italians goodes vpoÌ y e see Barbarossa b ãâ¦ã th Câ ⪠stelâouâ The dalmacians flye to y e Turckes betrai their felowe soudiars y e Castel Barbarossa wynneth Castel nouo The spaniat des Italyans feight maÌfully TheeÌperoures wiâdieth An insurreccioÌat Gent ⪠Embassadoures out of Fraunce into Spayne The âperour coÌmeth into FlauÌderstho âou Fraunce An aÌbassage out of osteÌricke into beam Latine Wrâtislauya The Turcke carieth away lxxx thousaÌd christeÌ meÌ into turckye A blasynge sterre The laerned in Turcky acknowledg our Christen relligioÌ to be y â best The âurch headeth ⪠priestes A miracle The Emperour at paris The freÌch kyng craftily seketh y e eâperour dâât * or be rowed * or boote * stpââan * or shippe The âp rârs coÌplaint to y â âiâh of Ro. The Emperoure coÌmeth to Gent. â castel builded in Gent. FerdinaÌdus cometh to y â Emperoure in to flauÌders ãâ¦ã A coÌmunicacion at Wor Phil. MelaÌ Ioh. Ecke Wheter ther remain sines in y t saintes ChristiaÌs after baptisme Rom. viii A day at haganouwe The Emperourâ ãâ¦ã ly forbedeth good bokes to be readde But what is woÌne ââ persecutyon The marque s ãâ¦ã ââaÌdaÌ ãâ¦ã recea ãâ¦ã y â word ââ God God befenheth his flock The ãâ¦ã of y â burning mortherers ãâ¦ã clipse ãâ¦ã Wyne both ãâ¦ã good cheape Vnderstand The true king of Hungary kynge Iohn The kyng of Hungary dyed * Latine Bâda Ferdinandê° would take in the kyngdome of HuÌgary The Emperour comith to Norenberg The parliament holden at Regensburg ãâ¦ã Dâââs iââter ãâ¦ã The Pope ãâ¦ã hall One of his croked piâpes hyndereth all that thegodly had goâe about â greate while before and those meâ of greate nobilitie besydes the excelent learned The princeâ that receaue the worde of God after y e parliament holden at Regensburg Doctor Eckius vse ⪠hâhe âcuel his masters conning that is lying ⪠The beuâls ãâ¦ã âââal ãâ¦ã âowes ãâ¦ã es ãâ¦ã âââââ is proââdâââr ⪠Money is geuen to seÌd an armye against the Turke Iohn Weyda kynge of Hungary dyâââ The Turkeâ Bassa âesegeth Pest * âââ Albâ ⪠greca ⪠A notable ãâ¦ã ordi ãâ¦ã lost ãâ¦ã Hungary Willyam of Rogendorpe ãâ¦ã ⪠The Turke ⪠âeweth lxxx Christians in peeces for a pastyme The Turke breaketh hys promesse and excercyseth tyranny ãâ¦ã an ãâ¦ã l yeare The turcke âââeth ⪠âxx thousand meÌ ãâ¦ã The Turke geueth âaleÌ tyne Teâeck his reward The Turke taketh certayn Castels in ⪠The Turke assaulteth the citie of fyuechurches The Turck hathaâarmâ in Pelopoâe so The Emperour and the Pope to gether at Luke The Emperoures passage to Algier Duke Henry of Saxon dieth ãâ¦ã s ãâ¦ã r ãâ¦ã ãâã in Histrââ is taken in An armye against the Turck Pest is beseaged of our men Duke Maurice in Ieoperdy of takynge ââe of Duke Maurice Ie ãâ¦ã en ãâ¦ã eth maÌfully to delyuer his master A sicknesse in the Camp The grenousâieâ of y e sicknes in Duga ââ Warre betwene y e Duke of Saxon Brunswick The duke of Brunswyke flyeth Woluenbutel is beseged Woluenbutel is vntapled for .iii. peares The mening was y â they shuld at the length repeÌt them of their ioznep and go hom and winue no thing They fly out of the Castel ouer the walles ditches The Gospel is preached in the land of Brunswick ãâ¦ã prânces and ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã the Gospell Duke William ââ Baier ãâ¦ã th to v ãâ¦ã Grassehoppers A earthââaâe in ãâã An earthquaâe in ãâ¦ã ye ââ ãâã ãâã ââ ãâã ãâ¦ã ple The Bra ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã ll ââto the land of Gulick The kyng of Scotland dyeth A Councell kept at Nureâburg Another counsel appoynted at Spyer An army sent by them p ãâ¦ã ãâã ãâã land ãâã ãâ¦ã of ãâ¦ã The city of Tremetz taken The French king and the Duke of ãâ¦ã leâe pro ãâ¦ã their marshial affaires The Ladye Mary sendeth an army againste the Duke of Cleue The Cleueuers approche towardes ⪠the Brabanders ãâ¦ã nflict ãâ¦ã e the Câeueâers ãâ¦ã ders The victory of the Cleueners The slepe of themperour The s ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã f the ãâ¦ã e ãâ¦ã he ãâ¦ã e ãâ¦ã nd ãâ¦ã th ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã dâ ãâ¦ã de Hungary inuaded by the Turke The death of doctor ãâ¦ã A woÌderfull birth besides Basell ⪠Wonderfull visions senâ The interpretacion oâ the vision The councel of âpâre ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã With their ordinaunce The kyndnes of Switchers A counseâlour oâ Nurrenburgh taken ãâ¦ã Scotland ââuaded by ââgââthmen Bullyn beseged ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã The Palatine a fauorer of Goddes worde Popery paââ downe the Gospel preached in the palatines iurisdiction ãâ¦ã g ãâ¦ã Poles ãâã ãâ¦ã p ãâ¦ã o ãâã ãâ¦ã pro ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã d and ãâ¦ã e. Henry duke of Brunswike goeth about to recouer his land The âountâ of Deckelenbourgh inuâded for the Golpell ãâã ââll beseged Philip Landgraue of Hessen Capitaine of the Euangelicall confederation Duke Maurice of SaxoÌ Duke Maurice seketh â ⪠meanes to make a peace ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã by ãâ¦ã i ãâã ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã The Landgraue ãâ¦ã quiâeth an othe of duke Hen ãâ¦ã coÌpany The lande of Brunswike taken in againe and sworne of newe to y e confederatioÌ The Erle of ShaueÌburgh deposed Rithbergh geuen vp ãâ¦ã th of ãâ¦ã che ãâ¦ã of ãâã The Ruler of ãâ¦ã harâ ãâ¦ã ed by y e Marquis of Brandenburgh The fury o the Turke The death of the Duke of Orleans Wonderfull apparitions and visions A conuocatioÌ at Franke forth The death of Maâten Luter The buriall of doctor Martine Luter Alphonse dia si a trayterousmurther The good doctor Iohn Diasy murthered The Emp ãâ¦ã com ãâ¦ã Rai ãâ¦ã sburgh The ãâ¦ã ion beg ãâ¦ã at Rainsburgh The begynnyng of the emperours warres agaynst the Germanes Duke Maurice prepareth ãâ¦ã to ãâ¦ã A cruel murther Duke Maurice ââgmââââ to ãâ¦ã ãâ¦ã of ãâ¦ã A peace betwene Englande and Fraunce The stewes put downe in London â â Anne Askewe Iohn Lassels burned Shaxton recanted Thomas duke of Northfolke Henry his sodne attainted A plague of locustes and grashoppers A godly commaundement A prodigious grape A wonderful miracle A wonderful âision The Erle of Surrey beheaded The death of kyng Henry the eight of England ⪠c. Edward the syxt byng of England Images and beades put downe abolysshed in England A recantacioÌ of Doctor Smith Processions lâât in Englande An hoost of men sent out of Englande into ScotlaÌd Chaunteries geuen to the ââng of England The CoÌmumoÌ ordeined to be receiued in both kindes Latimer set at libertie The death of the ârenche King ãâ¦ã ⪠The Emperour retourneth out of Germany into FlauÌders The Duke of Saxon captiue Leonora retourned to themperoure The sonne of Ferdinando marieth them perours daughter The eldest sonne of the Turke ãâ¦ã keth insurrââtion agâynst his father Argiers takeÌ ãâ¦ã A ââmââocioÌââ corâââall The masse Images put downe in Englande The byshop of Winchester committed to thei our of âo ãâ¦ã The mariage of priestes graunted lawfull An insurrection at Norwiche The rebelles in Cornwal ãâã Deuonshere subdued The byshop of London deposed and coÌmitted to prison The duke of Somerset coÌmitted to the tour of LoÌdoÌ The death of the Pope A wonderful vision sene besydes Brunswyke Capitayne Gambold slayne ãâ¦ã in ãâ¦ã The duke of Somerset delyuered out of ãâ¦ã A generall p ãâ¦ã âetmene Englande â Frannce Bullayne delyuered 30 one Boocher A wonderful miracle oftor ue fallyng downe from the element A moste ââânnicall persecution A moste Tâannicall persecution
vttermost part of Italy which bendeth to Sicilia and was sometyme Grece In the tyme of Pythagoras raigned at Rome Seruius Tullius his scole was not occupied in Phisick and Astronomy as the other but in Arithmetick Geometry Musick Pythagoras liued a very solytary lyfe wyth his disciples and vsed sundry ceremonies taught many inconuenient thinges of the soules nature that mens soules remoue into beastes to be punyshed The Pythagorians taughte their doctrines priuatly amonge themselues and it was commaunded amonges them that noman shoulde publishe them lest by reason of a doctryne not accustomed the commune sort of men mighte be sturred ether to discorde or to a despisynge of good maners But such kynde of phylosophers dured not longe nother is it now necessary to speake more of the begynnyng of philosophers I would onely shewe iâ here lest any man might be ignoraunt what tyme the connyng of sciences began and encreased wee shall hereafter in hys due place speake of them whych haue before all other garnyshed and had in reuerence Philosophye whereof there is not so great nomber For very few are ther that be worthy to be called wyth so excellent a name Phylosopher and therfore shall we not rehearse so many of them Of Solon THough wee studye to be brefe here yet wyll not I passeouer Solon vnrehearsed for of hym hath the ciuyll lawe of the Romanes whych is yet in vse his oryginall begynnynge Thys Solon lyued about thys tyme and was very familyar wyth Thales But whan at Athenes were spronge great debates because that the greatest of the citye had made bonde men of theyr creditours that were not able to pay them euen of pryuate wylfulnesse the whole citye of Athenes dyd agree to Solon that he shoulde take order and correcte thys wyllynglye of the greatestmen and the other misvses of the commune wealth Solon toke thys wyllynglye vpon hym and set forth manye excellente constitutions and lawes the whych are yet manyfest Now was Draco the law geuer by the Athenians before Solons lawes were not ordered with anye mercye at all for he ordeyned that all transgressions and trespasses shoulde be punished wyth the swearde and for thys cause sayde one that Dracons lawes were wrytten wyth bloude and not wyth yââk So hard and cruell constitucions were in the worlde at the begynnynge But nothyng can be durable that is to extreme and is not mitigate with the temperaunce of mercy or iustice As for Solon made a difference in these thynges or degrees and ordeined that some synnes shoulde accordynge to reason be punyshed greueously and other more mercyfullye ordeined also of geuinge trybute of weyghtes and of the seasoÌs of the whole yeare And specially is this lawe praysed in the whiche he ordeined that euery man should certyfy the higher officers once in the yeare how great his substaunce were and of what maner crafte he were where with he gat hys lyuynge and if there were any ydle fellow or vagabounde too dryue the same out of the cytie Of Cambyses CAmbyses began to raygne whan hys father Cyrus went to warre agaynst the Scythians He ioyned the kyngdome of the Egiptians to his fathers domynion But he was greatly vnlyke his father in vertues Whan Prexaspes one of hys chefe counselers had admonyshed hym somewhat boldelye and sayde that the Perses dyd alow hym greatly but that the same myslyked them that he was geuen to dronkennesse He caused the Peeres of hys realme to be called together and demaunded whether he might worthely be blamed in any thynge But they answered No but that he also surmounted hys father Cyrus in vertue for by hys actiuenesse was Egypte also ioyned to his kyngdome But Cresus to whom Cyrus had chefely commended his sonne Cambyses to be taughte nortured in honesty sayd the coÌtrary CaÌbyses quod he can not yet be compared to hys father Cyrus for he hath not left such a sonne of his begettinge as Cirus hath left Cambyses This delectable sayenge pleased Cambises at that tyme. But as the counsel departed whan none of the princes had blamed ought in him he commaunded Prexaspes to be called to him and bad him bringe his yongest sonne to him For he woulde declare howe sobre he myghte seme to be euen whan he were droncken For he woulde shute wyth a bowe at his chylde whan he was droncken and if he coulde hyt his harte with the darte than he might thynke that in drinkynge he were not besyde the capacite of his reason but if not ⪠than he might worthely be sayde to be geuen to dronkennesse But what nedeth many wordes Whan Cambyses had well dronken he shott at the chylde as at a marke and as the darte was pearced thoroughe he caused it to be rypt vp and shewed to hys father Prexaspes that the harte was shot thorough a ryght sayenge that thereby he might haue euydence that he was not dronken So barbarous cruel and tyrannicall maners bringeth dronkennesse into mens mindes though they be well taught before euen as no doute was that kynge Cambyses was from hys youth brought vp in moost honest nourture And though a dronken man can hytt a right in shoutinge yet in the meane whyle can he not vse the ryght counsels of reason and wanteth those vertues whiche communely steare men to modestye and auancement of glory Such lyke examples ought to be shewed to yonge men whiche sometyme be enclyned and geuen to dronkennesse for what ende folowed of these shall we shewe shortely hereafter He slew also hys own brother Smerdis whome he caused priuely to be put to death lest he shuld raygne at any tyme. He maryed also hys owne syster where neuerthelesse nature doth abhorre such kynde of maryage It fortuned vpon a tyme that whan kynge Cambyses sat at borde wyth the quene at y â meale tyme set he a lyons whelpe and a strong dogge together to make a game and whan the lyon had the ouerhande by reason of hys fearcenesse strength another dogge of no lesse fearcenesse brake wyth great strength the bandes y â he was bounde withal and holpe his brother the dogge and so was the lyon ouercome The kyng had great delyte at that game because of the faythfulnesse of the dogges But the quene moued wyth the same dede began to wepe very bytterly and whan the kynge toke that sorowfully and asked the cause of her weping she answered To my brother happened nothynge lesse than such faythfulnesse as I haue sene in these dogges helping eche other The kyng taking this answere wrothfully caused her strayght waye tâ be had out of hys syght and âlew her But such coâdicions can not longe prosper For God sayeth in the scryptures The bloud thyrsty and deceatfull shall not lyue oute halfe theyr dayes vpon earth Wherfore God stroke hym not longe after wyth a greueous and heauy vengeaunce For as he should come out of Egypte into Persia as he sat vpon
weakened and tossed wyth troublous commocions howbeit in the meane season be they so kept by Godes prouidence that they do not wholy perysh Lewis the thyrd left no soââ after hym and therefore stroue the Frankes and Sacons together to make Otho duke of Saxony Emperour but the good prince withstode the same not wylling that to the moost noble stocke of Charles shulde happen suche a reproch Therefore counselled he to make Conradus duke of the Frankes Emperoure Of thys wyse succeded Conradus in the empyre but Otho was in more greater authority whyle Conradus lyued he dispatched more busynesses also yet in the meane time shewed he great loyalty and honestye toward Conradus the Emperoure But in the meane tyme vsurped Berengarius duke of Foroiulium the name of the Emperoure in Italy and enticed the Hungarians that they shuld spoyle Germany agayn but Conradus ouer came those by the ayde of Otho But whan Otho was deade Conradus the Emperour fearyng happely lest the son of Otho Henry the Fouler shoulde growe ouermuche in power therefore wythdrue he parte of those thynges whyche before he had graunted hys father Otho And whan Henry toke it greueouslye the Empetoure endeuoured to slaye him by an intrap and to bryng thys to passe was y e byshop of Mentz made out But the intrap was disclosed Than was Henry very greuously moued ⪠went home and toke from the byshop of Mentz all that was hys dominion in the land of Turyngen and Hesse But hereof rose a greate warre betwene the Frankes and Saxons But whan Conradus was a dyenge callyng to him his brother Eberardus he commaunded hym to brynge the Emperyall croune to Henry duke of Saxony for him he iudged best worthy to gouern the Empyre He admonyshed prince Eberarde also with al diligence to make an ende of the warr that he had taken in hande wyth Henry duke of Saxonye lest the Frankes that were yet alyue shuld vtterly he roated out and perysh For he marked wel that God prospered Henryes affayres To thys counsell dyd duke Eberardus agre willyngly and bringyng the crowne to Henry and makyng peace on both sydes he was afterward loyall to Henry And by thys occasyon came it to passe that the empyre was remoued from the successors of Charles the greate to the Saxons The genealogye of Charles the greate Charles the great Emperoure Lewis te Gentle whose sonnes were these thre Lewis the German he had Almany subdued y â Bohemes his sonnes wer Lewis charles y â grosse which toke y â empyre froÌ Charles the bald and Carolomanus the sonne of Carolomanê° was Arnolphus who raygned after Charles the Grosse Lotharius y â Emperoure He had Loraine Italy his sonn was Lewis the seconde the .iiij. Germane Emperoure He droue y â Saracens out of Italy After him woulde the bishop of Rome transferre the empyre to the Frenchmen vpon Charles y â balde but the sonnes of Lewis y â Germane restored the empyre agayn to y e Germanes ⪠Charles the balde kynge of Gallia or Fraunce his sonne was Lewis the stammerer kynge of Fraunce The sonnes of Arnolfus were Lewis the .iij. Emperoure Conradus and hys sonnes were Eberardus whose successors are the princes of y e Frankes Conradus the last emperoure of this linage Not longe after was the kyngdome of Fraunce also translated from the posteritye of Charles the greate So lytle doeth anye thynge remayne euer sted fast in his estate among men so that the generacions of great prynces do now florish in the height now agayne layde in the duste to be weakened and discouraged Anastasius the .iij. the .cxxiiij. byshop of Rome succeded Sergius Lando was made the .xxv. byshop after Anastasius Ioannes the .xi. succeded Lando Henry the .i. surnamed the Fouler the ix Emperoure of Germany THe yeare of Christ .ix. C. xx was Henry the fyrste surnamed the Fouler duke of Saxon made Emperoure he raygned seuenten yeares He was not crouned of the bishop of Rome nether went into Italy though twayne toke vpon them the name of the Emperoure and by vproure raysynge battayll fought now and than a great felde For Henry had busynesse more than ynough in Germany which the good prince apeaced wyth greate diligence accordinge to hys syngular policye and endeuored to make it more excellent Surely the kyngdome of Germany dyd neuer in a maner want vprourish commotions ther was almost neuer an Emperour chosen wythout the sedition of some princes which went aboute to take vpon them the name of the Emperoure Yet was God alway wyth those Emperours that were duâlly called detended the authoritye of the lawfull empyre and the sedicious were punished Arnolde duke of Bayerlande set him selfe wyth hurtfull enterpryse agaynst Henry who recountred y e Baiers wyth appointed armyes but behauynge himselfe not as an enemy he requyred to speake wyth duke Arnolde familiarly He reasoned wyth hym earnestly admonyshed hym that the maiesty of the empyre is geuen of God yf it were so that he wer chosen Emperoure by the consente of other prynces than wolde he frely geue place and be ready y â fyrst that shuld submitte themselues Duke Arnold shewed these thynges to his counsel which answered That it were euident that Salomons sayenge of wysedome were most true which is By me do kynges rule And for asmuch as it appeareth euidently ynough that Henry is endued with wisedome and gentlenesse it is no dout but God doth assiste him he shuld therfore thenceforth leaue of from his enterpryse nether to go about any thing against Henry Wherefore duke Arnolde ceased obeied frely without y e slaughter of any of his men Who I pray you wold not saye y â these Germane princes were no Barbaryans and that they excelled in pryncely wisedome high gentlenesse This is also wrytteÌ that S. Vdalryck had a visty on of the duke of Baierland which he obserued For it was shewed him by God that the duke had a swearde wythout hyltes or handel wherby was signified that the duke shulde not vse the sweard that is that he shuld not retayn the empyre Wherefore he admonyshed the duke to do nothyng vnaduisedly After that dyd Henry take Brandenburge and the Vandales beyng subdued they receaued the Christen fayth vntyl the see He besieged the city Praga and brought the Bohemes to the Empyre After that vanquyshed he fourty thousand Hungaryans by Mersburge whereby he gatte hym a great renowme and drede by the straunge nacions and gat tranquillitye to al Germanye He restored the contry of Lothring or Lorayn to the kingdom of Germany and gatt the speare that Christe was pearsed through of Rudolphe kyng of Burgundy the same was Constantinus wont to haue Henry the Fowler beynge now neare to his death made his sonn Othe succeder in y e empyre after him lest any stryfe shuld happen in the empyre after hys death concernyng the possession of it Leo the .vi. succeded
in derogatyng and takyng away the aucthoritie of Emperours at his pleasure Wherfore they made congregacions also and reiectyng the byshop of Rome excommunicacion excommunicated hym lykewyse Now went the Emperoure into Italy to treate and finish this controuersy In the meane season was Rudolfus duke of Schwaben chosen Emperour of y â contrary party in the town Phorcen whych was about the yere of oure lorde M. lxxvii The byshop of Rome sente Rudolfus a crowne wherein was wrytten thys verse Petra dedit Petro Petrus dyadema Rudolfo That is Chryst the Stone gaue the crowne to Peter Peter geueth to Rudolfe both crowne and septer Whereby he wolde sygnyfye that Christe gaue the Empyre to the byshoppe of Rome and that he lykewyse geueth it to princes Therfore came Henry haystely agayn into Germany droue Rudolfus out of Schwaben into Saxonye and foughte some battayls wyth hym by the ryuer Vnstrote in the which were slayne the byshops of Worms and Magdeburg The yeare M. lxxx was foughten the laste felde agaynste Rudolfe by Mersburge and in the same battayll was Rudolphus ryghte hande stryken of Whan euerye man nowe fled into the cytye Marsburge the hande was brought to the new Emperoure lyenge in hys bedde where the byshops stoode aboute The whyche as he sawe he sayde Lomy Lordes ye byshops thys ys the hande wherewyth I haue promysed my lord Henrye sayeth and loyaltye iudge ye your selues now howe godly ye haue counseled me to decyner from him Thys is a very myserable complaynte whyche declareth the troubled mind of the prince to haue iudged it self gilty of vprour Of this wise dyed Rudolfus about the .iiij. year of his election Whome I praye you would it not moue wythout he be of yron this so dredefull example to obey hys magistrate to beware of vproure Yet were not the byshops in the meane tyme in reste and set the sonne also against the father Hiltebrand the byshop boasted to haue sene a vision in his slepe that an vnlawfull Emperoure should dye that same yeare But thys was Caiphas prophecye for the punishment fell not vpon Henry but on the byshop of Romes adherentes After this victory came Henry to Rome and takyng in the citie by force he toke Hiltebrand the byshop and put hym from his office and in his steade was chosen the byshop of Rauenna called ClemeÌs and of hym was Henry the fourth crowned As for Hiltebrand died not longe after in exile Sigebertus the history writer doth not greatly prayse Hiltebrande and doth reprehende the manâ dedes that he did disquiet the peaceable state of the churche and empyre without greate cause and writeth also that Hiltebrande when he was dyeng should hymselfe haue complayned it and should haue required of Henry by embassage forgeuenesse of hys trespasse Hiltebrande forbade the priestes of Germany to mary and many that were maryed caused he to be diuorced The yeare of Christe M. ciij. when Henry had vaÌquished the Saxons the erle of Misen Erbert was slayne whome the byshops made to truste to be Emperoure after Rudolfus Besides that when al maters of Germany and Italy were set at a stay was Henry the fyft chosen Emperoure by Henry the fourth hys father Wherefore dyd the byshoppes procure by this Henry that he shoulde ryse against his father and driue hym out of the empyre But this greued the good prince greatly Wherefore Henry the sonne makyng a leage the yeare M C. v. dyd fyrst besyege his father at Mentz but the princes refusyng to assault it Henry the sonne was fayne to departe and leauyng Mentz went with the hoost to Norinberg and gat and spoyled it in the space of two monethes The father persued the sonne and on both sydes were they a while in their campes by Regensburg but they came neuer to playne felde by reason the princes went alwaye betwene But the sonne warned the father to beware of hys owne seruauntes wherefore he fled priuely to Ludich and dyed there that same yeare But when he had lyen vnburied fyue yeares by reason of the excommunicacion or course of the Romyshe byshop he optayned absolucion and was buried at Spire There are yet wrytynges at thys houre that were sent to the kynge of Fraunce by Henry the father treatyng of the iniury of the sonne and their malice which set the sonne against the father Reade more of this tragedy in the life of HiltebraÌd prynted seuerally in Englyshe Of the takyng in and possessyng the citie Hierusalem IN the tyme of this Henry the fourth began the settyng forth to warre into Iewry against the Saracens and Turkes The fyrst capitayne was Godfre of Bilion prince of Lothringe or Lorain Hym accompanied the best princes and lordes of Gallia The yere M. xcix Godfre wan the citie IerusaleÌ and was straight waye made kyng But he refused to be crowned with a golden crowne there where Christes was crowned with a crown brayded of thornes This happened foure hundreth thre score and eight yeres before that Hierusalem was taken out of the Perses power by Heraclius But not muche aboue thirtene yeres after became the Saracens lordes of Hierusalem Many yeares after were the Saracens dryuen out of Hierusalem by the Turkes About this tyme gat the ChristiaÌs Ierusalem again and subdued many cities contreis there about They had the realme of Ierusalem lxxxviij yeares vntyll the yere of Christ a thousand one hundreth foure score seuen The Souldane wanne Ierusalem againe in the tyme of Frederick Barbarossa The chaunge of many duchyes in Germany HOw many miseries the inwarde warre of Germany whiche was sturred by the byshop of Rome wylenesse hath brought with it may easely be gathered thereby that when the princes and great men were slayne the lord shyppes and dominions were chaunged Henry the fourth gaue to the Catuly Lordes of Schwaben the lande of Baier After Rudolphus death gaue Henry the fourth the duchy of Schwaben to Frederick of Stauffen hys sonne in lawe that had maried hys daughter The auncetry or kynred of the Frankes dyed in a very shorte space Ecbertus erle of Misnia was slayne Gebhardus the father of that Lotharius whiche became afterward Emperoure was slayne also in a battaill and to conclude the power of Germane is wholy made feble and turned vpsyde downe by this debate of the princes Whan Hiltebrande was deade a byshop called Victor the third of that name was chosen out of the citie of Rome by his companions in spete of Clement But when Victor was deade a litle after by them was Vrbanus the ij chosen byshop of Rome The same returned to Ro. by their ayde that were ⪠now appointed to go to Ierusalem Being restored in the see he droue out Clemens Paschalis the ij succeded Vrbanus the .ij. Thissame was first taken by Henry the fyft Afterward did he constrayne hym to crowne hym Emperoure Henry the fyft the xvij Germane Emperoure THe yeare of Christe M.
Maximilian d ãâ¦ã th Maximilian warreth against the Venecians Lewis kyng of Fraunce Iulius the by shop of Rom. was discomfited in a battaill by the citie Rauennas vpon Easter daye What Electors chose Charles that now is Emperoure Martine Luther ⪠Charles y â Frances the French king taken The commotion of vplanâyâh mân Schapler Twelue articles of the sedicious rustikes Thomas Mynter Iohn Ocalâpadius Huldrich Zwinglius renew the doctrine of Berengarius ândreas âarolestadius Rome taken by Burbon With what an ââost Sol ãâ¦ã yd be ãâ¦ã ge âieÌnâ Charles is crowned Emperour at Bonony by the bysh of Ro. The parliament of âusborow An ouerflowyng at Ro. Clemens the vij is taken Ferdinande kyng of Hungary A Comete sene The Switzer warre within themselues The parliament holden at RegeÌspurg Prophecies of recouering Constantinople and of roting the Turkes out of Europa Laurentius Miniatensis an Astronomer A Comete sene Writers of Histories Cronicles What the mutacions of kyngdomes de signifye Agathias Ctesias The conuocation or counsaill holden at Ramsburgh The duke of Saxon agreeth not to the election of y e kyng of the Romaines The seconde breakyng in of Soliman into Germany Guns assaulted of the Turke by the space of .xij. daies The wall of ãâã falleth ãâ¦ã e by it âelfe Anthony de Leua Andrewe de Aurea The citie of Corona takeÌ The Emperourre turned into Italy to the Pope The Pope meteth themperour at Bononia Battell moued in England against the Scottes The death of Iohn duke of Saxon. Iohn Frederick duke of Saxon. A Comete or blasing starre ââââ A great inâââcion of watââ in HollaÌd Seeland c. Christerne kânâ of Dââ ãâ¦ã ke after hââ returââta ãâ¦ã oure ãâ¦ã e ãâ¦ã l. A moÌstruous Calfe borne by y e sea coste aboute Lindowe The Emperour Charles retourneth from Genua into Spaine Newe Indes or Ilandes plentyfull of golde and siluer founde out by the SpaÌyardes A soleÌpne coÌmunycacyon holdeÌ at Massilia betwene y e Pope the French kinge The duke of Orleans marieth the Popes cosyn The Euangelycal boÌd is opened by y e french kyng Another Comete or blasing starre apeared Shiltagh burned downe to y e ground A great Pestilence in Germany A great earthquake tempest of wind Kynge henry the .viii was dâuorsed froÌ hys fyrste wyfe maried to an other 1534. The Anabaptystes tâke the Cytye of Mynster in Westphale The Anabaptystes make them a kyng Knypperdullynge c. kregh tynge Philip Landgraue of Hessen The Citie of Minster besieged by y â biâhop Scarcitye of victualles in Mynster The Anabaptistes eate lether couerynges of bookes Philip landgraue of Hessen goeth about to set his vncle into his owne land agayn Philip y â palatine put to flyght and wounded Hulderike duke of wiâteÌberg restored to his oâââ d ãâ¦ã oÌ A peace grauÌted vnto y â âanâgâa âe on them perours behalf The laÌdgraue retourneth into his owne lande A coÌmeÌdatioÌ of liberalyty boldenes in y e landgraue a coÌmeÌdatioÌ of pacience mekenes in theÌperour y e kyng of Hungary The death of Frederike kyng of DeÌmarke A straunge thing or tokeÌ happened about y â dead corps of the kynge The erle of OldeÌboroughe â y â Lubekes inuade y â dukedom of hâlsaâes The death of George weuer markes mayer A peace concluded betwene the towne of Lubeke and the dukedom of ho sure The captaynes of Lubeke desyrous to inuade deÌmarcke A newe war ââ A woÌderfull apparitioÌ in DeÌmarke Henry king of Ingland excoÌmunicated by the pope The Pope hath ââ authority ouer Ingland king HeÌnry forsaketh y t Pope A bokt sett furth vp kinge henry againste the primacpe of y e Pope King Henry ioined in coÌfederatinÌ with y t Princes mayntainers of â gospel Ireland rebeââeth against their prince Pope Clement dyeth Paule y â ⪠iii. chosen to be Pope Sophi pâinââ of y â Persians âââââbeth y â Turk Imbrai bassa Imbray bassa with hys host slayne The Turke cometh againste y â sayde Sophy The turke coÌpassed aboute of the Periyans The Turke escapeth âa roâeââ with a lewe Barbarossa inuabeth the kyngdome of Tunyse Barbarossa suodueth Affryca the lesse Kynge Altzachenus expelled from Tunyse The ãâã of Breda burned Great tempestes of wind Waters ryuers excedingly increassed ââ y â âande of Pole The duke of MillaÌ marieth y â doughââr ãâ¦ã y â kyng Denmarke Themperour prepareth an armada towardes Affrica The kingdoÌ of Tunise recâââred bâ the peâour Barbarossa exââlled froÌ Tunise Kyng Altzachenus restored to hys kyngdome of Tunise The castell of Golleta reserued for themperour Themperour returneth froÌ Affrica Barbarossa inuadeth the Ile of Minorca The Affricanes attempte rebellion Andrewe âe Aurea apointed to kepe y e Affricanes in awe The sect of the Anabaptistes in creasâeth The Anabaptistes ââkemâââw ãâ¦ã â go naked The Anabaptistes within ãâ¦ã e âppââlled The madnes of the Anabaptistes The Anabaptistes beleued that Minster was new Ierusalem A woman would conterfet Iudith The kynge ãâ¦ã ing and knipperdulling taken The kyng of the ââbaptistes with his coÌsellers put to death Christian duke of Holston chosen to be kyng in Denmarke The count of Hoya and the Erle of Teckelborough slayne Louedayes kept in Hungary The kyng of Poles maried the daughter of âerdââanto kyng of Bohemy The death of the Duke of Mylan The duke of âaâer marieth the daughter of Denmarke âir Thomas more Chauncelour of England and y â byshop of Rochester beheaded The monkes of the charter house A wonderful tempest Neuer suche a teÌpest sene Quene Katherine dowâger dieth Quene Anne Bullyn be headed Que. Iane Semour maried to the kyng of Enland The citie of Geneue besieged Preachers of the Gospel ordeyned ââ Saâââ Iulius Lesar builded Clausa Rodani The French kyng claymeth the succession of Milaâe It is the condicion of an apâ to countrâfaite all y â is done in his ââght Apraiââ of the author The Emporoures complaynt to the Pope agaiÌst the Frenche kyng The Empeperoures request The Popes aunswere The Emperoures retourne from Rome A trapâone put to death at âpoâs The Count of Nassowe Perone besyeged The Euangelical bond The Synode or conuocatioÌ of Wittenborough Swinglius coÌsenteth not with Luter in the opinion of the SacrameÌt A new peace concluded betwene the sea townes of Eastlande Denmarke The citie of Copenhage beseged by y â kyng Dâgâes and ãâ¦ã Coppenhagh yelded vp toâ kyng Warborough taken Markes mayer taken and quartered Agââly eââple for all kynges and conquerours The practise of papistes All the byshoys of DeÌmarck deposed Iohn Bugen hagh Thepreachig of the gospell instituted in Denmarke xxiiij thousaÌd parishes in Denmarch Norway furnyshed with preachers The coronation of Lhristiane siyng of Denmarck The vntuersitie of Luppenhaghe furnyshed with meÌlearned in y â scripturs Liuinges appointed for preachers ââdââs in DeÌ ãâ¦ã Thimbassadours of England at Wittenbourgh Doctour âânââ An olde prophecy of Enland The Lorde Darcy with other Edwarde the syât borne The death
it confirmed with letters geuen there vpon The yeare M. CC. xxxviij Whan Fridericke went agayn into Italy they of Milan rose agaynst him and many other strong cityes To Milan dyd Friderick great harme for the which cause the city es makynge an aliance wyth the byshop of Ro. con spired against Friderick the Emperour whome for this cause Gregorius the Romysh byshop doth excommunicate the third time and condemneth him for an heretike stearing also the Venecians to war vpon him Friderick with opeÌ writynges dyd complain of the iniury done to hym and in the meane tyme dyd he also humbly require absolution of the byshop of Ro. Ther were many of the Cardynals whiche alowed not the bysh of Romes counsels But whan Frederick could by no meanes optayne pardon of Gregorius necessitye compelled Frederyck to defende hymselfe he had also his faction or diuision For at that tyme was Italy diuyded in Guelphies and Gibelines the Gibelini were for the Emperoure and the Guelphi were wyth the Byshop of Ro. Ether name beynge brought vp in Germany was translated and brought ouer into Italy For the kynred of the Guelphi had continuall hatred agaynst Fredericks bloude Whereof also they were called Guelphi as alwaye hatefull enemyes of Fredericke As for the spring of Fredericks kynred was of the Weiblings whereof they are called Guiblings which the Italians chaunginge the name do call Gibelini The bysh of Ro. constrayned by great necessitie dyd proclayme the crosse and pardon agaynst Friderick the Emperoure as though he were manyfestly vngodly and destroyer of the religion Friderick toke that very euell he besyeged Rome but drue back agayne wythout takyng it and toke the citye Rauennas The yeare of Christ M. CC. xlv Innocentius the iiij holding a councel at Lyons in Fraunce deposed Friderick of the empyre vsynge therto the Frenchmens ayde and by letters he shewed the princes Electors to choyse another Emperoure But they made Emperoure Henry the Landtgraue of Thuringen The same was slayne before the citye Vlme wyth an instrument of warre Friderick buylded a new citye in Italy whiche was called Victoria Whan he wanted syluer he caused to make a coyne of lether y â he mighte haue where wyth to pay his men of warre but so soone as he had gotten syluer he shulde geue them good and lawful mony for the lether coyne which thing he dyd liberally But now whaÌ he could loke for no more ayde out of Germany and that besydes thys hys sonne Encius was taken who also dyed in the preson he was sore distressed and went into Apulia were he also dyed the yeare M. CC. l. Some wryt that he was poisonned Yee surely the moost holy fathers coulde not rest without they sawe the good prince clene rydde out of the waye The kingdome of Naples left he to hys sonne heyre Cunradus As for Italy remayned alwaye after diuyded For one part helde wyth the empyre another wyth the byshop of Rome vntyl the powers of the Venecians and of them of Mylane beganne after to growe and increase Honorius the .iij. succeded Innocentius the .iij. of whome Friderick the .ii. was crouned and after warde excommunicated Gregorius y â .ix. was after Honorius of whome was Friderick lykewyse accursed After Gregorius was Celestinus the .iiij. bysh of Rome After Celestinus was Innocentius the .iiij. Thesame deposed Friderick from the empyre and accursed hys sonne Cunradus Cunradus the .iiij. the xxv Germane Emperour THe yeare of Christ M. CC. l. raigned Conradus the sonne of Fridericke after hys fathers deceasse but he was excommunicated by Inocentius the .iiij. Henry the Landtgraue of Thuryngen ouercame hym by Francoforde whyle hys father Frederick was yet alyue Some wryte that thys warre was after hys fathers death by Wyllyam the Landtgraue But whan Conradus perceaued that he was destitute of the Germane princes ayde he gat him into his hereditary kyngdome Naples and there he dyed the yeare M. CC. liij The ende of the dukes of Schwaben CVnradus of whome we haue now spoken had a wyfe of the Baiers bloude of the whiche he had a sonne Conradinus who was nouryshed and brought vp in hys hereditary duchy of Schwaben and after hys fathers deceasse wolde go to Naples hys heredytary kyngdome But Clemens the bishop of Rome called Charles the Frenche kynges brother into the realme of Naples agaynst hym Conradynus for so muche as he was duke of Schwaben had a greate bende and hooste of Germanes about hym and at the begynnynge had he greate vyctoryes But at the laste were Conradinus the sonne of Conradus and Fryderyck duke of Eastenriche taken by a trayne Besydes thys were they entreated more vnsemelye than was pertaynynge and put to shame At the laste were they beheaded throughe the counsell of the Romyshe byshop O notable crueltye He must be euen as harde as a stone verely whome the examples of so great cruelty dyd not moue namelye so noble a kynge borne ofso many Emperoures to be so shamefullye put to death by Clemens the Romysh byshop without any ryghte or reason Ther are yet euen at thys houre writinges which were written at that time in the which the good prince complayneth of the iniury and rehearseth at length the whole matter orderly so that it is no doute the bishoppes of Rome haue vsed playne tiranny against Conradinus Wiliam the xxvi Germane Emperour THe yeare of Christ M. C. C. liiij was chosen Emperoure Wylyam counte of Holland It is sayde he was an honest manered prince and of notable innocency of life but he was slayn by the Friselanders the yerre 1256. Vacation of the Empyre WHan thys Wiliam was dead the empire stode with out a certayne emperoure seuentene yeares and that not wythout great destruction of the Germane nacion Thys mischaunge grewe by the cyuyl warres that were raysed in the empyre by the bysh of Ro. Now whan the debate was rysen amonge the Electors for the choyse some chose Alfonsus kyng of Spayne Emperoure because he was a very wyse man and endued with notable vertues As for thys Alfonsus is he who not only had hys pleasure in the science of Astronomye but also augmented and ameÌded the study thereof with many bokes wrytten Thoughe Alfonsus was admonyshed by the byshop of Rome to take vpon hym the Emperyall maiestye yet refused he it earnestly because of the vncertayn faythfulnesse and vnstable concord of the Romysh Byshops wyth the Emperours The other parte of the Electors chose Richard the king of Englandes brother and brought hym vntyll Basyll but he was not accepted of the Empyre Alexander the .iiij. succeded after Innocentius At thys time lyued Albertus the greate and Thomas Aquinas Vrbanus the .iiij. was after Alexander Clemens the .iiij. succeded Vrbanus Thyssame caused Conradynus Conradus sonne to be beheaded Whan Clemens was deade was the see voyde two yeares through the dissension of choysynge a Byshop at the last was Gregorius the .x. chosen