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A13043 The chronicles of England from Brute vnto this present yeare of Christ. 1580. Collected by Iohn Stow citizen of London.; Annales Stow, John, 1525?-1605. 1580 (1580) STC 23333; ESTC S117590 888,783 1,248

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moneth of July was a preste for the Kyng made 1488 in the Citie of London of foure thousande pounde and shortly after was an other prest of two thousande pounde which were both repayde againe in the nexte yeare following These summes of money and manye more were leuied to ayde the Archeduke of Burgoigne agaynste the Duke of Brytaine Anno reg 4. Sherifes Maior William Isaac Ralph Tinley the 28. of September Robert Tate Mercer the 28. of October A taske of the tenth penny of all mens goods and landes was graunted to King Henrie to ayde the Duke of Brytaine against the French Kyng through which taxe sir Iohn Egremount and Iohn a Chamber wyth the commōs of y e North Iohn Skelton 1489 made an insurrection and slewe the Earle of Northumberlande and certaine of hys housholde seruauntes in a place called Coke-lodge by Thurske eightéene myles from Yorke on the eighte and twentith of Apryll Wherefore Iohn Achamber was hanged at Yorke vppon a Gibbet sette vppon a foure square Gallowes and the other his accomplices were hanged on the Gallowes round aboute him but sir Iohn Egremount fledde into Flaunders to the Lady Margaret Dutches of Burgondie It was ordayned by Parliament the Maior of London to Anno reg 5. haue conseruation of the riuer of Thamis from the bridge of Stanes vnto the Waters of Yendale and Medway William Capell Iohn Brooke the 28. of September Sherifes Maior William White Draper the 28. of October Roger Shaueloke a Taylour within Ludgate of London 1420 being a man of greate wealth slewe hymselfe for whose goodes was greate businesse and strife betwéene the Kings Almoner and the Sherifes of London but in the ende the Anno. reg 6 Almoner preuailed and gaue to the widowe hir goodes againe vpon condition that she shoulde marry with one of his seruauntes named William Flower Henry Coote Robert Reuell the 28. of September Sherifes Hugh Pemberton the 1. of February Iohn Mathew Mercer the 28. of October Maior 1491 The twelfth of March Sir Robert Chamberlaine knight was arraigned and adiudged at Stratforde of the Langthorne and after beheaded on the Tower hill King Henry required a beneuolence whych was granted towarde hys iourney into France The Citizens of London gaue toward this iourney 9682. l. 17. s̄ 4. d. to the whiche summe many Aldermen gaue 200. l. the péece and some of the meaner sorte 100. l. the reste the common people supplied Henry the Kings second sonne was borne at Greenwich Henry the kings son borne Anno. reg 7. Conduite in Grace-streete Dearth of corn the twoo and twentith of June The Conduite in Grace-streete was begunne to bée builded by the executours of sir Thomas Hill Grocer late Maior of London of his goodes Wheate was solde at London for twenty pence the bushel whiche was accompted a great dearth Thomas Wood William Browne the 28. of Septemb. Sherifes Maior Hugh Clopton Mercer and Bacheler the 28. of Octob. This Hugh Clopton Mayor of London and of the Staple a Gentleman borne at Clopton village halfe a mile from Stratforde vpon Auen by north continued during hys lyfe 〈…〉 Bacheler he builded the greate and sumptuous Bridge 1492 〈…〉 Stratforde vpon Auen at the Easté ende of the Towne 〈…〉 ys Bridge hathe fourtéene greate arches and a long cawsey with smaller Arches all made of stone newe walled on eche side at the west ende of the bridge he buylded a fayre large Chappell towarde the south ende of that towne and neare vnto the same a preatye house of Bricke and Tymber where he laye and ended his life He glazed the Chancell of the parishe Churche in that towne and made away of foure myles long thrée miles from Alesburie towardes London and one myle beyonde Alesburie The sixt day of Aprill the Mayor of London his brethren the Aldermen and the Craftes in their Liueries assembled in Paules Churche where Doctour Morton Chauncelour made to them an Oration declaring howe the Kyng of Spaine hadde wonne the great and riche Citie and countrey of Granade from the Turkes for ioy whereof Te Deum was sung wyth greate solempnitie In the moneth of May following was holden a greate and valiaunt iusting wythin the Kings Palaice of Shine Anno. reg 8. nowe named Richmonde the whyche endured by the space of a moneth sometime wythin the saide Palaice and sometime wythout vpon the Gréene before the Gate of the said Pallaice In whiche Justes sir Iames Parker Knight running against a Gentleman named Hugh Vaughan by casualtie was so sore hurte and brused that he dyed thereof The ninth of September King Henry tooke his voyage into Fraunce with a greate army to aide the Britons against the Frenche King where he besieged Bolloine til a truce was taken William Purchas William Welbecke the 28 of Sept Sherifes Maior Sir William Martin Skinner the 28. of October King Henry returned into Englande the seauentéenth of December Twoo Pardoners were sette on the Pillorie in Cornehill thrée market dayes for forging of false pardons wherewyth they hadde deceyued the people and gote much money and for that one of them hadde sayned hymselfe to bée a Prieste he was sente to Newgate where he dyed the other was dryuen oute of London wyth shame ynoughe The ninth of October was a ryo● made vpon the Easterling● 149● Fray against the Stiliard men Anno reg 9. or Stiliarde men by Mercers seruauntes and other of the Citie of London for the which many of them were sore punished Robert Fabian Iohn Winger the 28. of September Sherifes This Robert Fabian Sherife aforenamed and Aldermā made a Chronicle of Englande and of Fraunce beginning at the creation of the worlde and ending in the thirde yeare of the raigne of King Henrie the eight which booke is imprinted to the ende of Richarde the thirde Sir Ralph Austry Fishemonger the 28. of October Maior This sir Ralph Austry rooffed with tymber and couered with Lead the Parishe Churche of Saint Martin in the Vintrie of London and also glazed the same Churche very beautifully as partely appeareth The two and twentith of February were arraigned in the Guild hall of London foure persons Thomas Bagnall Iohn Scot Iohn Heth Iohn Kenington the whyche were Sanctuary men of Saint Martins le Grand in London and latelye before were taken out of the saide Sanctuarie for forging o● seditio●s billes to the sclaunder of the King and some his Counsell for the whiche thrée of them were iudged to dye and the fourth named Bagnall pleaded to be restored to Sanctuarie by reason wherof he was repriued to the Tower till the nexte Terme and on the sixe and twentith of February the other thrée with a Fleming and a Yeoman of the Crowne were all fiue executed at Tyborne The eyghte and twentith of Aprill Ione Boughton widowe 1494 was brent in Smithfielde for holding certaine opinions of Iohn Wicklife Wheate was solde at London
the Citie ther was a certain victualling house which one Peter Vnticaro a Spanyard had hired this Peter had bene prisoner aboue 30. yeres neuer practised any means to escape but kepte himselfe quiet vntill now that this Iohn Fox vsing much thether brake one to another their minds concerning the restreynt of their libertie so that this Iohn Fox opening vnto this Vnticaro the deuice which he minded to practise made priuie one more to their intent which thrée debated of this matter at suche time as they coulde méete togither in so much that at seauen wéekes ende they had concluded how the matter should be done who making fiue more priuie to their deuise determined in thrée nightes after to accomplish their purpose wherevpon the same Iohn Fox and Peter Vnticaro and the other sixe appoynted to met altogither in the prison the laste day of Decēber where this I. Fox certified the rest of the prisoners of their intent deliuered vnto them a sort of files whiche he had gathered for that purpose charging them to be readie discharged of their prons by eight of the clocke on the next day at nighte On the next day at night this Fox his other sixe companions came al to the house of Peter Vnticaro and when it was time to put in practise their deuice sent the sayd Peter to the Maister of the Roade in the name of one of the maisters of y e Citie who desired him to méete him there promising him that he could bring him backe againe wherevppon the kéeper agréed to go with him willing the warders not to bar the gate saying he would turne agayne with all spéede In the meane season the other seuē had prouided them of suche weapons as they could The kéeper nowe being come vnto the house and perceyuing no light nor hearing any noyse suspected the matter and returned backwarde but Fox stāding behind a corner of the house stepped forth to him who perceyuing it to be I. Fox sayde ● Fox what haue I deserued of thée that thou shouldest séeke my death thou villaine quoth Fox hast bin a succour of many Christians bloude and therewith he lift vp his sword and stroke him so mayne a blowe as therewithall he claue his heade so that he fell deade to the grounde then Peter and the rest came forth and went toward the roade wherinto they entred softly where were sixe warder● whom one of them asked who was ther quoth Fox and his company all friendes which when they were wythin fel on the sixe men and dispatched thē quickly They Fox barred the gate and planted a Canon against it and entring into the Gaylers lodge they founde the Keyes of the prison by his beds side and there they had better wepons than before In this Chamber was a Chest wherein was muche treasure all in Duckets whiche Peter and two more opening stuffed themselues so full as they coulde betwéene their shirts and theyr skinne which Fox would not touche but said he sought for his and their libertie and not for mony Now these eight being armed w t such weapons as they liked comming to the prison Fox opened the gates dores called forth all the prisoners whom he set some to ramming vp the gate some to the dressing vp of a Galley the best in the roade called the Captain of Alexandria wher into some carried mastes Sayles Ores other furniture At the prison were certaine warders whō Fox and his cōpany slew in the killing of whom there were eight Turkes which got thē to the top of the prison vnto whom Fox his company were fain to ascende by ladders where they found a hote skirmishe for some of them were slayn some woūded Peter Vnticaro the other two that had armed thē with the Duckets were slaine as not able to welde themselues being pestered with the weight of the treasure Amongst the Turkes was one thrust through who fell of from the top of y e prison wall made such a noyse y t the inhabitantes there about came and dawed him so y t they vnderstood y ● case how the prisoners were occupied wherewith they raysed bothe Alexandrîa whiche laye on the West side of the roade and a Castle whiche was at the Cities ende nexte the roade also one other fortresse whiche laye on the North side so y ● now they had no way to escape but one which by mans reson might séeme impossible to be a way for them But to bée short the said Galley being trimmed vp whereinto euerye man leaped they hoyste vp sayles yéelde themselues to y e mercie of God in whose hande is both wind and weather now being on flote and out of y ● safetie of y ● roade the two Castels haue ful power vpon the same but suche was the worke of God for their deliueraunce y ● no one of them was touched w e xlv shot which came thūdring about their ears thus sayling are soone out of the Canons reach the Turkes hauing no Gallyes trimmed to make after them Whē the Christians were safe out of the enemies coast Iohn Fox willed them all to be thankefull vnto almightie God for theyr deliuerie and most humblye to fall vppon their knées be●éeching him to ayde them vnto their friendes lande c. After which prayers made to God they felt to labour with the oare striuing to come to some Christian land but the winds were diuers and victuals fayled them so that eyght of them dyed by famin to the astonishment of all the rest but it fell out that vpon the xxix day after they set from Alexandrî● they fell on the Il● of Canadie and landed at Gallipoly where they were well cherished by the Abbot and Monkes there who caused them to stay while they were well refreshed and eased When they thought good hauing leaue to depart from thence they sayled along the coast till they arriued at Tanento where they sold their Galley and deuided the price ●uery man hauing a part thereof The Turkes pursued the Christians and scoured the Seas where they could imagin that they bent their course and the Christians had departed from thence on the one day in the morning whē seauen Galleis of the Turkes came thither that night as it was certified by those who f●llowed Fox and his company fearing least they shoulde haue bin met wyth And then they came a foote to Naples wher they departed asunder euery man taking him to his next way home from whence Fox toke his iourney vnto Rome where he was wel entertayned of an Englisheman who presented his worthy déed to the Pope who rewarded him liberally and gaue him letters to the King of Spaine where he was well entertayned of him who for his worthy enterprise gaue hym in fée twentie pence a daye from whence being desirous to come into his owne Countrey he came thyther at such time as he conueniently could whiche was in the yeare of our
in his life time reported that at the first being no Bridge at London but a Ferie the Feryer and his wife deceasing lefte the same Ferie to their Daughter a mayden named Mary who with the goods lefte by hir Parents 1. Leyland and the profites which came by the sayd Ferie builded a house of Sisters which is the vppermost end of Saint Maryes Church aboue the Quier where she lyeth buryed vnto the which house she gaue the ouersight and profite of the same Ferie but afterwarde the same house of Sisters was conuerted vnto a Colledge of Priestes who builded the Bridge of Timber and from time to time kepte the same in reparations but considering the great charges in repayring lastly by the great ayd of the Citizens of London others they builded y e same of stone King Iohn gaue certayne vacant places in London to build on for building and reparation of London Bridge A Mason being Mayster of the Bridge house builded from the foundation the Chappell on London Bridge of his owne proper expences Peter le Iosue William Blund the 28. of September Sherifes Maior Henry Fitz Alwyne the 28. of October The King commaunded all the Iewes both men and women Ievves ransomed to be imprisoned and gréeuously punished bycause he would haue all their money some of them gaue all they had and promised more to the ende they mighte escape so 1210 many kindes of torments amongst whome there was one which being tormented many wayes would not raunsome himselfe till the King had caused euery day one of his great téeth to be pulled out by the space of seauen dayes and then he gaue the King tenne thousand Markes of Siluer to the ende they should pull out no more In the moneth of June the King leadeth an Armie into Anno reg 12 Ireland expulseth Hugh Lacy and brought all Ireland vnder his subiection He caused the Lawes of England to bée executed there and money to be coyned according to the waight of Englishe money and made there both halfepence A mint in Ireland and farthings he returneth with great triumph in the moneth of September and then raysed a great Taxe Taxe Nic. Triuet vpon all the religious in England whome he caused to pay suche a raunsome and to spoyle theyr Churches that the summe came to an hundred thousande pounde besides fortie thousand poundes of the white Monkes Another fight betwixt the Sunne and the Clowdes was séene Matild a noble woman wife to William de Brawse and Iohn Beuer-Ral Cog shall his sonne and heire William perished miserably with famine at Windsore William hir husband changing his apparell passed ouer the Sea at Shoram and shortly after dyed at Paris Adam Whetly Stephen le Grace the 28. of September Sherifes Maior Henry Fitz Alwyne the 28. of October The Bishop of Londons Castell called Stortford is ouerthrowne Stortford Castel 1211 Army into VVales Mathew Paris and the Kings house builded at Writle The King went into Wales agaynst Lewlin his sonne in lawe that had maryed his bastard daughter with a greate force euen to Snowdon and subdued all the Princes and nobles without any gainesaying He tooke xxviij Pledges for their subiection and returned When he came at Northhampton there met him messengers from the Pope Pandolph Legates from Rome Anno reg 13. and Durand which came to make an vnitie betwixte the King and the Bishop of Canturbury with the Monckes which were banished but the King granting their returne dented to make thē any amēds for their losse which they had susteyned or to restore their goodes which he had cōfiscated so that y e Embassadors returned without any end cōcluded After this the King tooke of euery Knight which was A great Taxe not with him in Wales two Markes of siluer of euery shield Pope Innocent absolued all both Princes and other which pertayned to the Crowne of England from their fide litie and subiection to King Iohn and commanded them to eschue his company A heard of Harts comming forth of the Forest lept all Gual Couent into the Sea at the mouth of Seuerne Sherifes Iohn Fitz Peter Iohn Garland the 28. of Sep. Maior Henry Fitz Alwyn the 28. of October William King of Scotland being aged was not able to ●●ber Bernewell quiet the inner partes of his Realme troubled with sedition wherefore he fledde to the King of England and committed himselfe his Kingdome and only sonne vnto his prouision who making the yong man Knighte wente into those partes with an armie and sending forth his men into the inner partes of that Kingdome he tooke Cuthred Mac William Captayne of the sedition and hung him on a paire of Gallowes for he was of the old antient race of the Scottish Kings who assisted with the ayde of the Irish and Scottes did exercise long enmitie against the moderne Kings of Scotland as his Father Donald had done before him sometime secretely sometime openly for the moderane Kings of Scotland confesse themselues to be rather Frenchmen as in stocke or lignage so also in manners language and apparell and hauing brought the Scottes vnto extreme seruitude they admitte onely Frenchmen into familiaritie and seruice The Welchmen tooke diuers Castels of the King of Englands VVelchmen in●aded England 1212 cut off the heads of all the Souldioures burned many Townes and with a great pray returned The King gathered a great armie minding vtterly is destroy all the coastes of Wales but when he came to Notingham he caused the xxviij pledges of the Welchmen to be Pledges hanged hanged and for feare least his nobles should rebell he returned to London An Hermite in Yorkeshire named Peter prophesied openly Peerce of Pomfre● of King Iohn and sayd that vpon the Ascention day next comming he should be no King but the Crowne should be transposed to another this Peter was apprehended and put in prison The tenth of July at night a maruellous and terrible Anno reg 14. London bridge perished vvith fire Ex recordis Sāct● Mariae de Southwarke chance happened for the Citie of London vpon the South side of the Riuer of Thamis with the Church of our Lady of the Chanons in Southwarke being on fire and an excéeding great multitude of people passing the Bridge eyther to extinguish and quench or else to gaze behold suddaynely the North part by blowing of the South winde was also set on fire and the people whiche were euen now passing the Bridge perceyuing the same would haue returned but Arbor successic Gualterus Couen Wil Packington were stopped by fire and it came to passe that as they stayed or protracted time the other ende of the Bridge also namely the South ende was fired so that the people thronging themselues betwixt the two fires did nothing else exspect or looke for than death then came there to ayde them many Shippes and Uessels into the which the multitude so vndiscretly
firste he is brought to the Castell of Corfe then to Bristow where for a season he was kept shut vp close in the Castel vntil suche time as it was vnderstoode of by certaine Burgesses of the same Towne who for the deliueraunce of the said Edward conueyed themselues ouer Sea whose determination béeing knowne to his kéepers in a certaine darke night they conueyed him thence to Berkeley These tormentours forced him to ride bareheaded when he woulde sléepe they would not suffer hym neyther when he was hungry would they giue him suche meate as liked him but suche as he lothed Euerye worde he spake was contraried by them giuing out moste slaunderously that he was madde And to conclude in all matters that they coulde imagine they were contrarie to hys wyll that eyther by colde or watchyng or vnholesome meates or melancholy or other infirmitie he myght languishe and dye But contrariwise thys man being of a good disposition by nature stoute to suffer and patiente throughe Gods grace to abyde griefes hée endured all the wicked deuises of hys enymies For as touching poysons whiche were ministred to him by the benefit of nature he dispatched them away These Chāpions as I sayd bring the olde king towardes Barkeley being guarded with a rabble of Helhoundes along by the graunges belonging to the Castell of Bristow where that wicked man Gerney making a crown of Hey put it on hys heade and the souldiours that were aboute him mocked him saying Tprut auaunt sir King making a kinde of noise with theyr mouthes as though they had farted These doubting to meete some of hys friendes bent theyr iourney ouer the Marish grounds lying by the ruier of Seuerne Moreouer diuising by all meanes to disfigure him that hée mighte not be knowen they determined to shaue as well the heare off hys heade as also off his bearde wherefore comming by a little Water whiche ranne in a ditche they commaunded him to alighte from his horsse to be shauen to whome being set on a Molehill a Barbour came with a Bason of colde Water taken out of the ditch to whō Edwarde sayd shall I haue no warme water the Barber answered this wyll serue quoth Edward will ye or nil yée I will haue warme water and that he might kéepe his promise he beganne to wéepe and to shed teares plentifullye as it was reported by William Byshop to sir Thomas de la More knight At length they came to Berkeley Castel where Edward was shutte vppe close like an Ancher Isabel his wife taking it grieuously that hir husbāds life was thus prolonged made complaint to Adam Bishop of Hereforde fayning that she had certayne dreames the interpretation whereof she misliked In like sorte the Bishop being in hys conscience guiltie of treason stoode in feare the like feare also stoke the heartes of other for the same offence whom the Diuer had gathered together to that effect Wherfore it séemed good to many of great dignity bloud as wel spiritual as temporal y t al such fear should be taken away by y e death of Edwarde whervppon letters were sent to hys kéepers blaming them for suffering him to enioy so much libertie nourishing him so delicately Moreouer there is a priuie motion made to them that Sophistical letter procuring the murder of the olde king the death of Edwarde woulde not be misliked vnto them and in this pointe the great deceyte of Sophisters stoode in force set downe by the Bishoppe of Hereforde who wrote thus Edwardum occidere nolite timere bonum est Kyl Edward do not feare it is a good thing or thus To seeke to shed king Edwards bloud Refuse to feare I counte it good Thys saying is to be resolued into two propositions whereof the first consisting of thrée wordes to witte Edwardum occidere nolite and the seconde of other thrée that is Timere bonum est do séeme to perswade very subtilly but the receyuers of the letters not being ignorant of the Sophistical writing chaunged the meaning thereof to thys sense Edwardum occidere nolite timere and afterwarde ioyned these wordes bonum est Nowe when the olde king was broughte to the Castell aforesayde he was very curteouslye receiued by Thomas Lorde Barkeley but after the tormentors had receyued letters concerning the gouernemente of the Castell Thomas Lord of Berkley is commaunded to departe from thence wherefore taking his leaue with sighes he goeth to his other dwelling places After this the olde king was shutte vp in a close Chamber where with the stincke of the deade carkasses layde in a celler vnder him he was miserablye tormented manye dayes in suche sorte that he was well nyghe suffocated therewith and that the paine was almost intollorable it appeared by the complainte he made on a certayne daye at the Chamber windowe certayne Carpenters then working on the righte side thereof hearing the same But these tyraunts perceyuing that this woulde not force hys death one night being the xxij of September they came rushing in vppon him as he laye in his bedde with greate heauye The old king murdered ●eatherbeddes as muche in weyghte as xv menne coulde beare wherwyth they oppressed and smoothered hym into whom also they thrust a plummers yron being made redde hotte vp into his bowels throughe a certaine instrumente like to the end of a Trumpet or glister pipe put in at hys fundiment burning thereby his inward partes prouiding thereby least any wound being founde in the kings bodye they might be caused to aunsweare it In this sort was this stoute King oppressed crying with a lowde voyce so that many as well within the Castell as without heard it perceyuing it was the cry of one that suffered violente deathe which caused many of Berkeley as they affirmed to take cōpassion thereof and to pray for the soule of him that was then departing Isabel and the Bishop that their tyrannye mighte be hid outlawed and banished Thomas Gournay The murderers fledde and Iohn Maltrauers Thomas fléeing into Marcels thrée yeares after being known was taken and brought towards Englande and was beheaded on the Sea least he shoulde accuse the chiefe doer Iohn Maltrauers repenting himselfe lay long hid in Germanie This yeare died Charles king of Fraunce the thirde brother whiche was brother to the Lady Isabel Quéene of Englande K. Edvvards title to Fraunce mother to King Edward the thirde by whose deathe the succession of the Kingdome of Fraunce came to the said Edwarde but it was vsurped and possessed by Phillip de Valoys vncle to the sayde Charles who dyd intrude himself by force King Edward married Phillip the Earles daughter of Edvvard the third married Heynalde at Yorke the fiue and twentith of Februarie shée was sisters daughter to Phillippe de Valoys aforesayde Henrie Darcy Iohn Hauten the 28. of September Sherifes Maior Hamond Chikwel Grocer the 28. of October A Parliament was holden at Northampton in whiche ● Anno reg 2. Parliament at
and therefore shalt thon dye for he vnderstoode not his spéech neyther had he anye skill to take gentlemen prisoners to kéepe them for their raunsome wherfore the residue of those Gennowayes after they had set the towne a fire and brent it vp quite fledde to their Galleyes and in theyr fléeing certaine of them were drowned After this the inhabitantes of the towne compassed it about with a strong and great Wal. The King still mayntayning his warres in Fraunce on the euen of the Annuntiation of our Lady ●j galleyes approching to the towne of Harwich they cast fire therein the force whereof by a contrarie winde was stayd so that no gret harme was done thereby Furthermore in the same yeare about the feaste of Pentecost certaine Pirates of Normandie and Geno● shipped in Gallenes and Pinaces made a shew on the sea about Southampton as they woulde haue come alande and threatned sore to spoyle the towne againe but perceyuing the townesmen ready to resist them they returned to the I le of Wight but entred not being put backe by the inhabitauntes wherevppon they sayled about the sea coastes séeking to lande in places lesse defended and after came to Hastings where they brente fishers cotages with theyr boates and slewe many men Also they made greate shewes many times against the I le of Thanet Douer and Fulkestone but in those places they did little harme excepte to poore fishermen thence they sayled about to the hauens of Cornewall and Deuonshire doing in all places much harme to the fisher men and suche shippes as they founde vnmāned they fiered At length they entred Plimouth Hauen where they brent certain great shippes and a great parte of the towne these were met by Hugh Curtney Earle of D●●onshire a knight of foure scoure yeares olde being accompanyed with manye souldiours of his Countrey who hauing lost at the firste fronte a fewe of his men whiche were slaine by the quarrels of the French ioyned to fighte wyth them hande to hande and slaying many of the Pyrates vpon drye lande chased the residue which fled to take their Galleys and being not able to come nigh them by wading they ●●ere drowned in the ●ea to the nūber of fiue hundred New●s being brought to the King lying in Brabant that diuers Parts of Englande were spoyled with the Pirates hée declared to his friends to wit the Marques of Iult●cence and a cer●●●●e Cardinall what great causes he had to reuenge himself vpon them and in the end was aunswered by the Cardinal as followeth The kingdome of Fr●●●● sayde he is compassed about with ● thr●ed of ●●lke whiche can not be broken by all the strength of the kingdome of Englande wherefore my Lorde king you must stay for the comming of the Dutchmen and other your friendes and confederates the greater part wherof you now ●a●l●● The King raking great disdaine hereat staying nothing at al● said that he woulde ride into the land of Fraunce with Banner displayed and y ● ther he wold l●ke for that mightie power of the French men and that hée woulde eyther winne the same against any man that should with 〈…〉 〈…〉 or else ●●nestly dye in the fielde 〈…〉 Po●●●●et Hugh M●betel the 28. of Septem Sherifes Maior Hence Dar●● the ●8 of October King Edward wintere● at Antwerp where Quéene Philip was deliuered of hir thirde son Lionel after Erle of Vl●●er The king toke vppon him to be lieuetenauute of the King Edvvarde made vicegerē● of the Empire Empire from the D●●● of Bauare who helde himselfe as Emperour A sodaine inundation of Water at Newcastle vpon Tine Richard South Nevvcastel drovvned 1339 bare downe a péece of the Towne Wall a sixe pearches in length neare to a place called Walkenew where ●20 men women were drowned In the U●g●●●● Saint Matthy king Edwarde beganne to ryde with Banner displayed and twelue thousand men of armes against the Frenche King burnyng Townes and Castels wheresoeuer he came In the first night being verye darke Geffrey Lord Scrope one of the Kings Justices led one of the Cardinals to wit Bertrand de Mount Fa●●ntyne of the title of our Ladie vp into an high Tower shewing hym the whole lande about towarde Fraunce for the compasse of fiftéene leagues to be in euery place on ●re saying these wordes sir doth not this si●●en threed wherwith Fraunce is compassed seme to you to be broken the Cardinall aunswering nothing fel downe as deade for sorowe and feare In thys sort king Edward made ●ourneyes into France dayly continuing the space of fiue wéekes and caused ●y● armye to trauell in such sort that they destroyed the whole Countrey of Cambray Tourney Vermode● and Landenewe excepting those Cities which wer sword to him w t churches and Castels The inhabitauntes of the Countrey fledde neyther was there anye man that durst resist his enterpryses althoughe the Frenche King had gathered greate armies within the Walled Cities himself lying in the strōg Towne of Saint Quintines what time the Brabanders had determined to returne home againe and were entred into theyr iourney being forced there vnto partlye by wante of victuals and partlye by the coldnesse of Winter whyche grew on fast The French king vnderstanding thereof beganne to moue himselfe with hys armye towarde the campe of the king of England who gladly loking for his comming called back again the Brabanders hauing receyued letters frō the Frenche King that he woulde ioyne battayle against hym he sent him worde back againe that he woulde stay for him thrée dayes wherefore on the fourth daye the Kyng loking for the Frenche Kings comming whiche woulde come no nearer them than two miles off breaking bridges and felling of trées that the King of Englande mighte not followe hym he fled to Paris wherevpon king Edwarde returned by Hanonia in Brabrant where he continued almost the whole Winter William Thorney Roger Frosham the. 28. of Septe● Sherifes Maior Andrewe Awbery Grocer the. 28. of October In this Winter time king Edwarde grewe into greate friendshippe with the Flemmings who prepared themselues at all times to shewe their selues as good subiectes vnto him swearing to doe homage and fealtie vppon condition that he would call himselfe King of Fraunce and in token thereof would from thence forth giue armes with Flouredeluces for otherwise they durste not obey him for feare of the Popes curse which was to be layde vppon them if at any time they rebelled against the King of Fraunce Wherefore by the co●●●●ll of his friends the Flemmings and consent of his noble men he agréed there vnto and tooke vppon him both the name and armes of the King of France He also toke Flaunders vnder his gouernement the people wherof long after in all matters were to him obedient as vnto the King of Fraunce Conquerer As touching the title and and armes aforesayde the Frenche king sayde to certayne Englishmen sent vnto him our cousin quoth he doth wrongfully beare quartered armes of England
of the couenants Embassadoures are sente to the Sea of Rome from eyther Realme On the King of Englands Anno reg 28. behalfe went the Bishop of Norwich the Duke of Lancaster the Earle of Arundell and other knightes who going to Auinion there came to them the Archbishop of Rohan the Duke of Burgoigne Geffrey Charney and other of the French Kings Counsell all these were receyued in great honor many Cardinalles and Bishops met the Duke of Lancaster who brought him for the space of two miles vnto Auinion and to the Popes Pallace at length in the Consistorie of the Pope he with the Cardinalles and Embassadoures being present the causes of their message was declared and the Embassadoures of England requested to haue the couenants cōfirmed which had bin concluded at Caleis to whom the Frenchmē answered that gladly they would haue peace but touching Aquitaine and the foresaid Countreys as they sayde the French King could not nor they might giue their assents that the same shoulde be alienated from the entire body of the Kingdome to the which as well the King as they had taken an oth to maynteyne but yet they could be contented that the profitable dominion of the sayd Duchy and Countreys should be deliuered and come to the King of England as his auncesters had Aquitayne but so yet as the regalitie of the Crowne of France should euer be reserued The Englishmen requested that these sayd dominions should 1354 be absolutely and without any condition restored to the King answere also was made to the reason of the Frenchmen touching the oth of their King and themselues whereby they were bound to conserue the integritie of the honour of their Kingdome to wéete that the Pope for the benefite of peace might assoyle them from the saide othe and this as to certayne articles premitted it shoulde be very well done but yet nothing was done that might be offorce to the furthering of the peace And so the Embassadoures without effect returned home the Bishop of Norwich excepted that deceassed and was buried there to whome succéeded Thomas Percy The King of Nauarre through a brawle raysed slewe Charles de Spayne Marshall of France wherevpon to auoyd the displeasure and punishment of the French King he fled into his owne Countrey sending his Unckle vnto the Duke of Lancaster with Letters humbly besieching him that he woulde come into Normandie to his ayde and defence and to receyue an oth of fidelitie and amitie of hym against all men The Duke therefore getting licence of the King assembled togither a great Nauie at Southampton where when the Duke was readie to haue made Sayle Knightes that he had sente into Normandie came backe to view the truth of this businesse by whome it was notifyed to the Duke that the sayde King of Nauarre hys Cousin was reconciled to the King and so the Dukes voyage was stayde The Friers Augustines Church in London was reedified by Humfrey Bohun Earle of Hereford and Estsex whose Frier Augustines Church in London Ro de Auesberie Dissention at Oxford ●isto Auria body was buryed in the Quire of the same Church A great dissention fell in Oxford betwéene a Scholler and a Uintner for a quart of Wine so that the Scholler poured the Wine on the Uintners head brake his head with the potte by reason whereof a great conflict was made betwixt the Schollers of the Uniuersitie and the Lay men of the Towne in the which many Lay men were woūded and about twentie slaine These troubles continued the space of two dayes and then the Religious men of the Towne labouring to make peace the Lay men pursued a Scholler and wounded him to death yet that day the tumult was appeased but on the morrow the people of the Uillages about Oxford being cōfederate with the Lay men of the Towne came with great force and erected a blacke Banner whervpon the Schollers fled to their Colledges but the Lay mē breaking vp the dores slew many of them and threw them into their priuies they cut and rent their Bookes and bare away what they listed By this meanes the Uniuersitie was dissolued the Schollers sauing of Marton Colledge went to their friends so continued more than a yeare Many both Schollers and Lay men were endited Citizens of Oxford endited by y ● Kings Justices amōgst y ● which four burgesses y ● had bin Maiors of Oxford were sente to the Tower of London William Totingham Richard Smelt the 28. of Septem Sherifes Maior Thomas Leggy Skinner the 28. of October About the xx of Nouember K. Edward held a Parliamēt Ro. Auesbery at Westminster in the which was granted towards the recouerie of his title in France fiftie Shillings of euery sacke of wooll to be transported ouer the Seas for the space of sixe yeares then next following by meanes whereof the King might dayly dispend during the said sixe yeares more than 1000. markes sterling for by the cōmon opinion ther were more thā an 100000. sackes of wooll yearely into foraigne lands transported so that during those sixe yeares the sayd grant extended to fiftéene hūdred thousand pounds sterling King Edward helde a great Justing at Wodstoke for honour Anno reg 29 Iusting at VVodstock of the Quéene who was then purifyed of hir sonne Thomas After Gaster in a Parliament at Westminster the King 1355 tooke the quarell of Oxford into his hands and sauing euery mans right he forgaue the Schollers all the whole trespasse Ro. de Auesburie so that in the Sommer following the Uniuersitie beganne Vniuersitie of Oxford restored agayne to flourish and the King gaue to the Chancellour of Oxford the only view of the assise of Bread Ale and Wine and all other victualles excluding the Maior vtterly from that office The communaltie of the Towne gaue to the Uniuersitie 250. poundes for amends sauing vnto them neuerthelesse the actions which they had vnto euery singular person of the Towne In this Parliament the processe of the iudgement made against Roger Mortimer Earle of March was reuoked so Ex Recordis that the yong Roger Mortimer sonne to Edmond Mortimer was restored to the title and possessions of the Earledome of March as Cousin and heire to his Grandfather King Edward being about Sandwich on his iourney towardes King Edvvard● sayled into France France and the Prince of Wales at Sutton in Deuonshire on hys voyage towardes Aquitayne looking for a prosperous winde by the space of fortie dayes or more all things else being readie the French King had his armie● deuided in sundrie places about in the Hauens of Normandie and other partes to empeach the landing of the King and Prince and so long they lay there that the Frenchmen with their hired Souldioures did fowly wast their owne Countrey and consumed so many thousands of Crownes out of the French Kings coffers vaynely that in the ende he being néedie payde not his people and so
theyr horsse féete but these performed not that whiche was commaunded them as it appeared by the sequele thereof The armies being set in a readinesse on both sides for to fighte early on Sonday in the morning which was notable fayre beholde there came the Cardinall of Petragoren and charged the prince in the name of God who was crucified that it mighte please him to deferre the warre for a tyme both for ecclesiasticall peace and also for the sparing of Christian bloud and to the ende there might be a treatie had of peace the whiche he promised shoulde be performed wyth great honour on both sides The Prince neyther feared nor refused peace but modestly agréed to the request of this Father All this day nowe being appointed for the obtaynyng of peace the army of the French men encreased by the number of a thousande men of armes and also of other On the morrowe after the Cardinall came againe from the Frenche king in his behalfe to request a truce which should endure for one whole yeare the whiche the Prince denyed yet at the importunate sute of that Cardinal he graunted a truce to continue till Christmasse next comming Therefore the Cardinall returning to the Frenche King requested him of pledges for the truce but the Marshall Dawdenam Geffrey de Charney Douglas the Scot perswaded him that by common reason it coulde not come to passe that the English men shoulde at that time preuayle and especially bycause they were but fewe and in a straunge Countrey wearyed out miserably with their toyle in trauel therefore not ableto indure so great a number of the French men of Fraunce who stood in defence of theyr own lande The Prince of Wales being certified that the Captaines of the French wold haue no kind of peace but such as they could get by force of armes calling his men togither he made to them an Oration first in generall and then to his Archers as followeth your māhoode saith he hath bin alwayes known to me in great dāgers which sheweth y t you are not degenerate frō true sons of English men but to be descended from the bloude of them which heretofore were vnder my fathers dukedome his predecessors kings of Englande vnto whome no labour was paineful no place inuincible no ground vnpassable no Hil wer it neuer so high inaccessible no tower vnscaleable no army inpenitrable no armed souldiour or whole hostes of men was formidable Their liuely couragiousnesse tamed the French men the Ciprians the Siracusians the Galabrians the Plestinis and brought vnder the stiffe necked Scottes and vnruely Irish men yea and the Walsh men also which could wel indure all labour Occasion time and daungers maketh of feareful verye strong and stoute and doeth manye times of dull witted men make wittie honour also and loue of the Countrey and the desire of the rich spoyle of the French men doth stirre you vp to follow your fathers steps Wherefore follow your auntients and wholy be intentiue to follow the commaundement of your Captaines as well in minde as in body that if victorie come with life we may still continue in firme friendship togither hauing alwayes one will and one minde but if enuious Fortune whych God forbidde shoulde let vs at this presente to runne the race of all fleshe and that we ende both life and labour togither be you sure that your names shall not want eternall fame and heauenly ioy and we also with these gentlemen our companions wyll drinke of the same cuppe that you shal doe vnto whom it shal be an eternal glorie and name to haue wonne the nobilitie of Fraunce but to ouercome as God forbid is not to be ascribed vnto the daunger of time but to the courage of the men Hauing spoken these words he perceyued that there was a Hill harde by whiche was planted on the toppe with hedges and ditches the inside whereof was very playne and a pasture fielde on the one side thereof with manye roughe bushes and on the other side it was all planted with vines and the residue was playne in the top wherof he did imagine the armye of the French to lye betwixt our men and the Hil. There was gret and lowe vallyes and a péece of marish ground One company of the Prince finding out a narrowe passage entred the valley and toke the Hyll where among the bushes they hidde themselues taking the aduantage of the place The fielde wherein our men laye to witte the vawarde and middle warde was deuided from the playne where the Frenche armye laye with a long hedge and ditche the one ende whereof dyd reache downe to the Marishe aforesayde that of the Hyll nexte the Marishe the Earle of Warwicke kept Captaine of the vawarde In the vpper part of the hedge toward the hanging of the Hil there was a gret gap from the whiche a stones cast stoode our rereward ouer the whiche the Earle of Salisburie was Captayne Oure enymies perceyuyng oure Princes auntiente to bée displayed and ofttymes to bée remoued from place to place and by reason of the Hill to be some time quite out of sighte they iudged that the Prince fledde yet Douglas the Scotte and Marshal de Clarimount sayde that it was not so but Marshal Dawdenam being deceiued in his owne opinion thought otherwise crying out still to followe and chase the Prince now fléeing and with him also Douglas to the intēt to get preferment and a worthy name of his new warfare but Clarimount to washe awaye the euill opinion whiche was conceyued of him touching his fidelitie was the more vehement to perswade them forwarde for vnto them the charge of the vawarde was deputed before these went out as the fashion was certaine to chase and to iuste againste whom certain that wer vnder the Hill of our vaward came to méete Marshal Dawdenam who staying to sée the end of the iusting kept himselfe from encountring In the meane time Clearimount thinking to come out by the gap in the hedge and so to come at the backe of our vawarde and to compasse them in met with the Earle of Salisburie who perceyuing his comming and purpose suspected his whole intent and so they whiche gouerned our rereward making haste to take the gap and kéepe the enimie from passing that way sustayned the first charge of the battayle Then began a terrible méeting betwixte the armed menne who laide on loade with swordes and speares neyther dyd the Archers slacke theyr duetie but lying in safe trenches start vp aboue the ditche and shot ouer the hedge preuayling more with their arrowes than they did that fought in armes thus our rerewarde slaying the enimies who came stragling to the gap and the vawarde which lay on the hanging of the Hil towarde the Marish being gouerned by the Earle of Warwicke were alwayes readye and met with the French men beating them downe The Archers of the vawarde were placed in the Marishe out of daunger from
emptied their quiuers in vain being armed only with swords and Targets are fayn to encounter with them that were laden with armour Then bestirreth hymselfe the worthye Prince of Wales cutting and hewing the French men with a sharp sword In the mean time Captain de la Buch marcheth a compasse about vnder the hangyng of the Hil which he with the Prince a little before forsoke and priuily compassing about the fielde at the length commeth close vnder the place where the Frenche Campe laye from thence he ascended to the toppe of the Hill that waye whiche the French men had beaten with theyr trauayle and so sodainely breaking forth vnloked for and shewing by the ensigne of Saint George that he was our friend the Prince with great courage giueth a freshe charge on the French armye being desirous to breake their ranckes before the captaine aforesayde shoulde set on the side of the battayle The Prince lustilye encountring with his enimies goeth into the middle of the throng and where he séeth most companye there hée layeth aboute hym on euerye side In the meane time on the other side his friends which serued with Captaine de la Buche were at the backes of the enimies beating down and killing without pittie and the Archers also placed for the purpose shot so thick wounding the backes and sides of the French men in suche sorte that the forme of the battayle was quite spoyled neyther could they put themselues in order or array any more This was the courage of the Prince who at the lenghth thrusteth thorough the throngs of them that guarded the Frenche Kyng then shoulde you sée an auntient beginne to nod and stumble the bearers of them to fall downe the bloud of flaues and Princes ran mingled togither into the waters whiche were nigh In like sort the Bore of Cornwal rageth who séeketh to haue none other way to the French Kings standard thā by bloud only but when they came there they met w t a ●ōpany of stout men to withstand them the English mē fight the Frenche men also lay on but at length Fortune making hast to turne hir whéele the Prince preaceth forewarde on his enimies and like a fierce Lion beating down the proud he came to yéelding vp of the French Kyng The French men being scattered abroade in the fieldes of Poycers perceyuing that the standard with the flouerdeluce was beaten down fledde with all spéede towards the Towne which was not farre off the Englishe menne perceyuing them to be fléeing though themselues were eyther sore wounded or wearied followed them in chase euen to the gates of Poyters wher in a great skirmishe and verie daungerous they slewe a great number of French men At the last our mē being called back by retreate with y e sound of trumpet assembling togither there were diuerse Pauilians and tentes set vp in the fieldes and the whole company being throughlye comforted wyth this victorie gaue theyr whole endeauour to prouide for them that were wounded for the quiet rest of them that wer wearied for safe kéeping of them that wer taken prisoners and for the refreshing of them that were almoste famished vntill they had ful vnderstanding who and how many were wanting among them which were founde halfe dead was founde the Lord Iames Dawdeley by reason of his broade bucklet and being caried in the armes of his souldiours was brought to the Princes lodging and the Prince hymselfe rise from his supper and came to him and caused him to be stripped and layd in a soft bedde and being somewhat better come to his remembraunce the Prince comforted him swearing vnto him that he had the Frenche King yéelded vnto him whiche newes when the languishing Noble man hearde he streight wayes reuiued The Prince returning to the French King willed him not to deny that to bée an vnworthy déede of his that rose from his supper to comfort him that was almost deade who spared not hys owne bloude to purchase victorie After that they hauing had some talke concerning the warres whiche Iames Dawdeley made the Frenche king sayde that amongst all other stoute Champions which valiauntly that day behaued themselues he did gretly wonder at the noble déeds of that knight and he spake not muche more in all his supper but what he spake to the Prince who comforted his noble praye Such like wordes it is sayde that the French king spake Although it be our chaunce to fall into an euerlasting sorrowe yet for all that we thoughte it good to refrayne from the same by a kinde of measure for though we be vnder subiection by law and righte of war vnder our noble cousin yet are we not as rascals or faint harted runne-awayes or taken lying hidde close in a corner but after the maner of the fielde by the end and successe of warre where we were as readie to dye as liue for iustice sake And in the same fielde were many richmen taken whose liues were reserued for raunsome the fainte harted and lewde chased away but the worthyest and stoutest were spoyled of theyr liues This battayle of Poyters was fought on the ninetéenth day of September The nexte day after the battayle al the prisoners were numbred to wit the French king also Phillip his sonne the Archbishop of Senon the Erle of Pontue the Erle of Longuile the Earle of Ewe the Erle of Tankeruile the Earle Daunter the Earle of Vendadour the Earle of Slauncer the Earle of Wademount the Earle of Vandome the Erle of Iuyny the Erle Don Martin the Earle of Selabruse the Earle of Sasso Vicount Nerbon the Lord Daubeny Marshal Dawdenam the Lord Guinc●arde de Angle Seneshal de Seintong the Lord Mores Mawnimet the Lord Leonard de Guilhoy the Seneshal of Poyters the Lord great Maister the chiefe maister of the Hospitall of Spaigne the Lorde of Saint Tigre the Lorde Damboyd Seneshal of Annar the Lorde Tower the Lord Dars the Lorde Durual the Lorde of the Towne of Ernell the Lorde Maugeler the Lorde Planke the Vicount de Belimount and the Lorde of Suly there were also the bodyes founde of many that were slayne as the Duke of Burbon the Duke Dasines the Conestable of Fraunce Marshal de Garimount the Lorde Geffrey de Charney the Lorde Pounce y ● Bishop of Chaloner the Lord of Laundas y t Lord Ripemoūt the Lord Chaneny the Lorde Io●e the Lord Nele the Lord Aunger the Lord de Mount Iohn the Lord Dargenton the Lorde Groose the Lorde Ruas the Lord Rochechicheward the Lord de Vilem The Prince bought all the prisoners Captiues of them that kept them and carryed them wyth him to Burdeaux there to remain in safe custodie during his abode there Richard Notingham Thomas Dossel the. 28. of Septem Sherifes Maior ●● 1●57 Anno reg 21 Henrie Picarde Vintener the. 28. of October Edward Prince of Wales returning into Englande wyth Iohn the French King Phillip his son and many other prysoners arriued at Plymouth on the
and his Cardinalles 14●5 after long laboure coulde make no peace betwixte King Henry of England and France and Charles also named King of Fraunce they at length made a peace betwixte the said Charles and Philip Duke of Burgoigne whereby the said Duke of Burgoigne became vtter enimy to the King of England and soone after the said Duke beganne his order of the Lillie and the Golden fléece and ordayned certaine Knightes of that order and made thervnto many Statuts wherof some of them were like vnto the Statutes of the Garter On the fourtéenth daye of September at Roan in Normandy dyed the noble Prince Iohn Duke of Bedforde and Regent of Fraunce and was after with great solemnitie ●●ryed within the Churche of No●ir Dame of the same ●itie Anno reg 14 Sherifes Maior Thomas Catworth Robert Clopton the. 28. of Septemb. Henry Frowike Mercer the 28. of October King Charles of Fraunce recouered the Citie of Paris and at Newyeares tide wanne the Towne of Harflewe and 1436 Sainct Denis and manye other Townes and holdes expellyng and murdering the Englishe people in greate number The nintéenth daye of Julye the Duke of Burgoigne wyth a great multitude of Burgonians and Flemmings appeared Caleis besieged before Caleis and there pight his pauilions and tentes at which season was Lieutenaunt of Caleis Sir Iohn Ratclife Knight and of the Castell was Lieutenant the Baron of Dudley this siege endured about thrée wéekes in whiche season many knightlye actes were done exercised on both partes On the second day of August the Duke of Glocester protectour Robert Fub●●● of Englande with 500. sayles as some write landed at Caleis and entended vppon the thirde day following to haue issued out of the Towne and to haue gyuen battel to the Flemmings but as testifyeth our Englishe writers so soone as the Duke of Burgoigne was ware of the great power of the Lorde Protector he toke with him of his ordinaunce that he might lightly carrye and the other that were cumberous he left behind When the Duke with his host was thus fledde the Lorde Protectour with his people followed hym into the Countrey by the space of eleauen dayes in whiche season he brente the two Townes of Popering and Bell and returned to Caleis and so into England This yeare was the Castel or Towne of Rokesborough in Scotlande besieged by the Kyng of Scottes but when hée Anno. reg ●● hearde that Syr Ralph Graye Knyghte was commyng thyther with a competente number to remoue the siege anone he departed leauyng some parte of hys Ordinaunce behynde hym to hys greate shame and dishonour Thomas Norstede William Gregory the. 28. of Sep. Sherifes Maior Iohn Michel Fishmonger the. 28. of October The second of Januarie Quéene Katherin late wife to Henrie the fifth and mother to King Henrie the sixth dyed at Bermondsey and was buried at Westminster but being takē Part of London bridge fel. vp againe in the raigne of Henrie the seauenth when he layde the foundation of his new Chappel there she was neuer buried since but lyeth still aboue ground in a Coffin of bordes behinde the East end of the Friers The. xiiij of Januarie at noone of the day the gate on Lōdon bridge wyth the Tower vpon it nexte to Southwarke fell down and two of the furdest Arches of the same bridge and no man perished Ralph Lord Cromwel erected the Colledge of Ta●eshall 1437 Ta●eshall Colledge in Lincolneshire King Henrie put downe the Maior of Norwich sente the Aldermen some to Linne some to Canterburie toke their frāchises into his hande and appointed Iohn Wels Alderman sometime Maior of London to be Warden of Norwich who so continued eight moneths as I haue red on his Monument in Saint Antholines Churche in London whiche Monument is nowe amongest manye other by lewde persons defaced The ninth of July Quéene Iane wife to King Henrie the fourth dyed at Hauering a Boure and was buried at Canterburie All the Lyons in the Tower of London dyed Anno reg 18 Sherifes Maior William Hales William Chapman the. 28. of Septemb. William Eastfielde Mercer the. 28. of October This William Eastfield Maior of his own costes caused to be builded the Water Conduite in Fleetestreete of London On Easter daye Iohn Gardener was taken conuaying 1438 Gardene●brent the Sacrament from his mouth with a soule cloth after he had receyued the same at the Priests hande in Saint Marie at the Axe Churche of London for the whiche he was brent in Smithfielde the xiiij of May. Owen Tewther ●ouly hurting hys kéeper brake out of Newgate but was againe taken afterwarde thys Owen had priuilye as it was sayde maryed Quéene Katherin late wife to Henrie the fifth and had foure children by hir whiche was not knowen tyll she was dead and buried On the Uigil of Mary Magdalen the town of Nantwich in the Countie of Chester was pitifully consumed with fire A great dearth of corne for wheate was in some places Dearth of corne Anno reg 17 Sherifes Maior solde for two shillings sixe pence the Bushell Hugh Diker Nicholas Yoo the. 28. of September Stephen Browne Grocer the. 28. of October The fiue and twentith of Nouember a great winde dyd Great vv●n●es muche harme in manye places In London it bare muche leade of the Gray Friers Churche and almost blewe downe the one side of the stréete called the Olde Change so that the same was faine to be vnderset with Timber On New yeres day a stacke of woodde fell downe at Baynardes Castell and killed thrée men manye moe were sore hurte By fall of a Staire at Bedforde where the shire daye was kepte eightéene persons were slayne and manye moe hurte Richard Beauchampe Earle of Warwicke dyed at Roane in Normādie the last of May and the fourth of October next folowing his corpse was honourably conueyed as well by water as by land from Roane vnto Warwicke and there worshipfully buried in the Colledge of our Lady Church founded by his noble auncestours Wheate was sold at London for thrée shillings y e bushel Malt at thirtéen shillings y ● quarter Otes at eight pence the bushel which caused men to eate beans pease and barley more than in a hundred yeares before Anno reg 18 Strūpets vvare Raye hoodes Manye Stumpets were sette on the Pyllerye and banyshed the Cytye excepte they ware theyr Raye hoodes Phillip Malpas Robert Marshal the 28. of September Sherifes ●●ior Robert Large Mercer the. 28. of October In a Parliament at Reading it was ordayned that all Marchaunt straungers shoulde goe to host with Englishmen and to make sale of theyr Merchaundises and buy again what they woulde wythin the space of sixe monethes geuing theyr hoste for euerye twentye shillings worth two pence except the Esterlings And that euery housholder that Order for straungers was alien should pay to the King xuj. pence the yeare and euery seruant
worshippe of hys holy name and for the encrease of vertue the dilation of cunning and establishmente of Christian Fayth whereof the one in Cambridge to bée called hys Colledge royall of oure Ladye and Saint Nicholas And the other at Eaton beside Windsor to bée called hys Colledge of oure blessed Ladye And for the performaunce of thys hys deuoute purpose hee enfeffed certayne Byshoppes wyth other Noble and worshipfull personages by hys letters patents wyth lands and possessions parcel of his enheritance of the Dutchie of Lācaster to the cleare value of wel neare xxxiiij hundred pound by yere whych letters patents he after confirmed by his Acte of Parliament declaring also by his wil vnto his sayde feoffées his intent and meaning howe the same should be imployed vpon the edifications of his saide two Colledges wherof in my iudgemente the deuice is so excellent and the buildings so princely and apt for that purpose as I can not omitte to set forth vnto you the very plat of the whole Colledge in Cambridge euen as I finde mentioned almost Verbatim in his said wil supposing that if the rest of the house had procéeded according to the Chappel alreadie finished as his full intent meaning was the lyke Colledge coulde skant haue bin found againe in any Christian land The words of the Will are thus As touching The Chappel the dimensions of the Church of my sayde Colledge of our Lady and Saint Nicholas of Cambridge I haue deuised appointed that the same Church shal containe in length 288. foote of assise without any Iles all of the widenesse of xl foote And the length of the same Church from y e West end vnto the Alters at the Quire dore shal contayne 120. foote And from the Prouostes stall vnto the gréece called Gradus Chori 90 foote for 36. stals on either side of the same Quyre aunscoering to lxx fellowes and ten Priests conduits whiche must be de prima forma And from the sayd stalles vnto y e East end of the sayde Church lxij foote of assise Also a Reredosse bearing the Roodelofte departing the Quire and the bodye of the Churche contayning in length xl foote and in breadth xiiij foote The walles of the same Church to be in height 90. foote imbattelled vawted and Charerooffed sufficiently butteraced and euery Butterace fined with finials And in the East end of the same Church shal be a Window of nine dayes and betwixt euerye Buttrace a Windowe of fiue dayes And betwixt euery of the same Buttraces in the Bodye of the Churche on both sides of the same Church a Closet with an Alter therein contayning in length twenty foote and in bredth ten foote vawted and finished vnder the soyle of the I le windowes And the pauement of y e Church to be enhansed 4. foote aboue y e groūd without And y e height of the pauement of the Quire one foote and a halfe aboue the pauement of the Churche And the pauemente of the Alter thrée foote aboue that And on the North side of the Quier a The Vestry Uestry contayning in length fiftie foote and in breadth 22. foote departed into two houses beneath and two houses aboue which shal containe in hight 22. foote in al with an entrey from the Quire vauted And at the West ende of the The Cloister Church a Cloyster square the East pane contayning in length 175. foote and the West pane as muche The North pane two hundered foote and the South pane as muche of the whiche the Deambulatoriē thirtéene foote wide and in heyght twentie foote to the Corbill Table wyth cleare stories and Butteraces wyth finalles vawted and embattelled And the grounde thereof foure foote lower then the The Steeple Churche grounde And in the middle of the West pane of the Cloyster a strong Tower square contayning foure and twentith foote wythin the Walles And in height one hundred and twentie foote to the Corbill table And foure small Turrets ouer that fined wyth Pynacles And a dore into the sayde Cloyster inwarde but outwarde noone And as touching the dimensions of the housing of the saide The base Cour● Colledge I haue deuised and appointed in the South-side of the sayde Churche a Quadraunte closing to bothe endes of the same Churche the East pane wherof shal contayne 230. foote in length and in bréedth within the Wals The East pane two and twentith foote In the same panes myddle a Tower for a Gatehouse containing in length thirtie foote and in bredth two and twentith foote and in height lx foote with The great Gate in thrée Chābers ouer y e Gate euery one ouer y e other And on either side of the same gate foure Chambers euerye one contayning in length fiue and twentie foote and in breadth two and twentie féete And ouer euery of these Chambers two Chambers aboue of the same measure or more with two Towers outwarde and two Towers inwarde The Southe pane shall containe in length 238. foote and The south pane in breadth two and twentie foote wythin in which shall bée seuen Chambers euery one cōtayning in length nine and twentie foote and in breadth 22. with a Chamber percell of the prouosts lodging contayning in length 35. foote wyth a Chamber in the East corner of the same pane contayning in length 25. foote and in breadth xxij foote And ouer euery of all these Chambers two Chambers and with fiue Towers outward and thrée towers inward The West pane The vvest pane shal contain in length 230. foote and in breadth within 24. foote in whiche at the ende towarde the Church shall bée a The Librarie Librarie contayning in length 110. foote and in bread the The disputation house 24. foote And a large house for reading and disputations cōtayning in length xl foote And two Chambers vnder the same Librarie eache contayning 29. foote in length and in breadth foure and twentie foote And ouer the sayde Lybrary a house of the same largenesse for diuerse stuffe of the The vvardrobe sayd Colledge In the other ende of the same pane a Hall The Hall containing in length 100. foote vpō a vaute of 12. foote high ordained for the Cellor and Buttrie and the breadth of the Hall sixe and thyrtie foote On euerye side thereof a Baye Windowe And in the neather ende of the same Hall towarde the middle of the same pane a Pantrey and Buttrie The Pantrie and Buttrie euerye of them in length twentie foote and in breadth seauentéene foote and ouer that two Chambers for Officers And at the neather end of the Hal toward the West a goodlye The Colledge Kitchin Kitchin And euerye corner of the same pane shall haue inwarde two Towers ordayned for the wayes into the Hall and Librarie And in euerye corner of the sayde Quadraunt shall be two corner towers one inwarde and one outwarde moe than the Towers aboue rehearsed The
the King intended to bring him vp to his coronation accompanied with suche power of their friends that it should be harde for him to bring his purpose to passe without the gathering a greate assemble of people and in manner of open warre whereof the ende he wiste was doubtfull and in whiche the King being on their side his part should haue the face and name of a rebellion he secretly therfore by diners meanes caused the Quéene to be perswaded and broughte in the minde that it neyther were néede and also shoulde be ieopardous the King to come vppe strong For whereas nowe euerye Lorde loued other and none other thing studyed vppon but aboute the Coronation and honor of the King if the Lordes of hir kyndred shoulde assemble in the Kings name muche people they shoulde giue the Lordes at wixte whom and them hadde bin sometime debate to feare and suspect leaste they shoulde gather this people not for the Kings safegarde whome no man impugned but for their destruction hauing more regarde to theyr olde variaunce than their newe attonement for which cause they should assemble on the other partie much people againe for theyr defence whose power she wiste wel farre stretched And thus shoulde all the Realme fall on a ●ore And of all the hurte that thereof shoulde ensue which was likely not to be little and the moste harme there lyke to fall where she leaste woulde all the worlde woulde put hyr and hyr kyndred in the wight and saye that they hadde vnwisely and vntruely also broken the amitie peace that the Kyng hyr ●usbande so prudentlye made betwéene his kinne and hyrs in his death bed and which the other partie faithfully obserued The Quéene being in this wise perswaded suche worde sente vnto hir sonne and vnto hir brother béeing aboute the Kyng and ouer that the Duke of Glocester hymselfe and other Lordes the chiefe of his bende wrote vnto the King so reuerentlye and to the Quéenes friendes there so louingly that they nothing earthly mistrusting brought the King vp in greate haste not in good spéede with a sober companye Now was the King in hys waye to London gone from Northampton when the Dukes of Glocester and Buckingham came thither where remained behinde the Lord Riuers the Kings vncle intending on the morrowe to followe the King and be with him at Stonie Stratforde xij myles thence earelye or he departed So was there made that nighte muche friendlye cheare betwéene these two Dukes and the Lord Riuers a great whyle But incontinent after that they were openlye with greate curtesie departed and the Lorde Riuers lodged the Dukes secretely with a fewe of theyr moste priuie friendes set them down in counsaile wherein they spent a great parte of the nighte And at theyr rising in the dawning of the day they sente out priuilye to theyr seruantes in theyr Innes and lodgings about giuing thē commaundement to make thēselues shortly readie for their Lordes were to horssebackewarde Uppon whyche messages manye of theyr folke were attendaunt when manye of the Lord Riuers seruauntes were vnreadye Nowe had these Dukes taken also into theyr custody the Keyes of the Inne that none shoulde passe forth without their licēce And ouer thys in the highe waye towarde Stonie Stratforde where the King laye they hadde bestowed certaine of theyr folke that shoulde sende backe againe and compell to returne anye man that were gotten out of Northampton towarde Stonie Stratforde tyll they shoulde giue other licence For as much as the Dukes thēselues intēded for the shew of theyr diligence to be the firste that shoulde that daye attende vpon the Kings highnesse out of that Towne thus bare they folke in hande But when the Lord Riuers vnderstoode the Gates closed and the wayes on euery side beset neyther his seruauntes nor himselfe suffered to goe out perceiuing wel so great a thing without his knowledge not begun for naughte comparing thys manner present wyth hys last nights chéere in so fewe houres so great a change maruellously misliked Howbeit sith he coulde not gette awaye and kéepe himselfe close he would not least he should séeme to hyde himself for some secrete fear of his own fault wherof he saw no such cause in hymself He determined vpon the suretie of his own conscience to go boldelie to them and inquire what this matter mighte meane whome as s●one as they sawe they beganne to quarrel with him and saye that he intended to set distaunce betwéene the Kyng and them and to bring them to confusion but it should not lye in hys power And when he beganne as he was a very wel spoken man in goodly wise to excuse himselfe they tarryed not the ende of his aunsweare but shortly tooke hym The L. Riuers put in vvarde and put him in warde and that done forthwyth wente to horssebacke and tooke the waye to Stonie Stratforde where they founde the King wyth hys companye readie to leape on Horssebacke and depart forwarde to leaue that lodging for them bycause it was to straighte for both companyes And as soone as they came in hys presēce they light adown with all their companye about them To whom the Duke of Buckingham sayd go afore Gentlemen and yeomen kéepe your roomes And thus in goodly aray they came to the King and on theyr knées in verye humble wyse salued his grace whiche receyued them in very ioyous and amiable maner nothing earthlye knowing nor mistrusting as yet But euen by and by in his presence they piked a quarrell to the Lorde Rycharde The Lord Grey Gray the Kings other brother by his mother saying that he with the Lorde Marques his brother and the Lorde Riuers his Uncle had compassed to rule the King and the Realme and to set variance among the states and to subdue and destroye the noble bloude of the Realme Toward the accomplishing whereof they sayd that the Lorde Marques had entred into the Tower of London and thence taken out the Kyngs Treasure and sente menne to the Sea All which things these Dukes wist well were done for good purposes and necessarie by the whole counsaile at London sauing that somewhat they must say Unto which words the King aunswered What my brother Marques hath done I cannot saye But in good faith I dare well aunsweare for mine vncle Riuers and my brother here that they be innocent of any suche matter Yea my liege quoth the Duke of Buckingham they haue kept theyr dealing in these matters farre fro the knowledge of your good grace And forthwyth they arested the Lord Richard and sir Th. Vaughā Knight in the Kings presence and brought the king and al back vnto Northampton where they tooke againe further Counsell And there they sent away frō the King whō it pleased thē and set new seruaunts about him such as liked better thē than him At which dealing he wept and was nothing content but it booted not And at dinner the Duke of Glocester sente a dishe from his
happe to heare more hereafter and I neuer in my life so mery nor neuer in so great suretie O good God the blindnesse of our mortall nature when he most feared he was in good suretie when he reckened himself surest he lost his life that within two hours after Thus ended thys honourable man a good Knight and a The description of the Lord Hastings gentle of greate aucthoritie with hys Prince of lyuing somewhat dissolute playne and open to hys enimie and secrete to his friend easie to beguile as he that of good hearte and courage forestudied no perilles a louing man and passing wel beloued very faithful and trustie ynough trusting too much Now flew the fame of this Lords death swiftlye through the Citie and so forth further about like a winde in euery mans eare But the Protector immediately after dinner intending to sette some colour vpon the matter sent in all hast for many substantial men out of the Citie into the Tower And at theyr comming himselfe with the Duke of Buckingham stoode harnessed in olde yll faring Briganders such as no man shoulde wéene that they would vouchsafe to haue put vpon their backes except that some sodain necessitie had constrained them And then the Protectour shewed them that the Lorde Chamberlaine and other of his conspiracie had contriued to haue sodainely destroyed hym and the Duke there the same daye in the Counsel And what they intended further was as yet not well knowne Of whiche their Treason hée neuer had knowledge before tenne of the clocke the same forenoone which sodain feare droue them to put on for their defence suche harneys as came next to hande And so hadde God holpen them that the mischief turned vpon them that woulde haue done it And thys he requyred them to report Euery man aunswered him fayre as though no manne mistrusted the matter which of trothe no manne beléeued Yet for the further appeasing of the peoples minde he sent immediately after dinner in al hast an Herault of armes wyth a Proclamation to be made throughe the Citie in the The Protectors proclamation Kyngs name conteyning that the Lord Hastings with diuerse other of his trayterous purpose had before conspired the same daye to haue slaine the Lorde Protectour and the Duke of Buckingham sitting in the Counsell and after to haue taken vpon them to rule the King and the realme at theyr pleasure and thereby to pill and spoyle whome they list vncontrolled And much matter there was in that proclamation deuised to the slaunder of the Lorde Chamberlayne as that he was an euil Counsayler to the Kings father inticing him to manye things highly redounding to the minishing of his honour and to the vniuersall hurte of his Realme by his euill companye sinister procuring and vngracious ensample as wel in manye other things as in the dicious liuing and inordinate abusion of hys bodie both wyth manye other and also speciallye wyth Shores wise whiche was one also of hys moste secret counsaile of thys heynons treason with whom he laye nightlye and namely the night last past nexte before his death so that it was the lesse maruayle if vngratious liuing broughte him to an vnhappy ending whiche he was nowe putte vnto by the moste dread commaundemente of the Kings highnesse and of his honorable and faythfull counsayle bothe for hys demerites being so openly taken in hys falslye conceyued treason and also leaste the delaying of his execution might haue encouraged other mischieuous persons partners of his conspiracie to gather and assemble themselues togither in making some greate commotion for hys delyueraunce whose hope being nowe by his well deserued death politikely repressed al y e realm should by gods grace rest in good quiet and peace Now was this proclamation made wythin two houres after that he was beheaded and it was so curiously indited and so faire written in parchment in so well a sette hand and therewith of it selfe so long a processe that euery childe might well perceyue that it was prepared before For all y e time betwéene his death and the proclayming coulde skant haue sufficed vnto the bare writing alone all had it béene but in Paper and scribled forth in haste at aduenture So that vpon the proclayming thereof one that was scholemaster of Paules of chaunce standing by and comparing the shortnesse of the time with the length of the matter sayd vnto them that stoode about him here is a gay goodly cast foule cast away for haste and a Merchaunt aunsweared him that it was written by prophecie Nowe then by by as it were for anger not for couetise the Protectour sent into the house of Shores wife for hir husbande dwelled not with hyr and spoyled hir of all that euer she had aboue the value of two or thrée thousande marke and sent hyr body to prison And when he had a while layde vnto hyr for the manner sake that she wente aboute to bewitch him and that she was of counsaile with the Lord Chāberlaine to destroy him in cōclusion when that no colour coulde fasten vppon these matters then he layde heynously to hir charge y ● thing that hir selfe could not denye that all the world wist was true and that naythelesse euery manne laughed at to heare it then so sodainely so highly taken that she was nought of hir body And for this cause as a good continent Prince cleane and faultlesse of himselfe sente out of heauen into this vicious world for the amendment of mens manners he caused the Bishop of London to put hyr to open penaunce going before the Crosse in Procession vpon a Sonday with a Taper in hir hande In whiche she went in countenance and pace demure so womanly and albeit she were out of al array saue hir kyrtle onlye yet wente she so faire and louely namely while the wondering of the people caste a comely rudde in hir chéekes of which she before had most misse y t hir great shame wanne hir much prayse among those that wer more amorous of hir bodie than curious of hir soule And manye good folke also that hated hir liuing and glad were to sée sin corrected yet pitied they more hir penaunce ethan reioyced therein when they considered that the Protector procured it more of a corrupt intent than any vertuous affection This woman was borne in London worshipfullye friended The description of Shores vvife honestly brought vp and very wel maried sauing somwhat too soone hir husband an honest Citizen yong godly and of good substāce But for as much as they were coupled ere she were wel ripe she not very feruently loued for whō she neuer longed which was happily the thing that y e more easily made hir incline vnto the Kings appetite when hée required hir Howbeit the respect of his royaltie the hope of gay apparell ease pleasure and other wanton wealth was able soone to pierce a soft tender hearte But when the king had abused hir anone hir
Frenchmen who by their wisedomes so well ordered the matter that they agréed vpon a peace which was concluded in thirtéene Articles the Frenchmen to depart to the great quietnesse and safetie both of England and Scotland and therevpon hir Maiestie reuoked hir army after the fortes there were rased without any seysure or holding of any péece within Scotland The fifth of July through shooting of a gunne whiche brake in the house of one Adrian Arten a Dutchman in Crooked Lane and setting fire on a Firken and Barell of Gunpowder four houses were blowne vp and diuers other Houses blovvn vp sore scattered nine men and women slayne and diuers other sore brused On Michaelmas euen before noone was published by The third fall of the base money Proclamation that the Testone coyned for twelue pence and in the reigne of King Edward the sixt called downe to sixe pence should now forthwith of the best sort marked with the Portculeys be taken for four pence halfepeny the seconde marked with the Greyhound for two pence farthing the thirde and worst sorte not market as afore not to be taken for any value the grote should be taken for two pence the two peny péece for a peny c. And shortly after Nevv coyne offine siluer hir grace restored to hir subiects fine sterling money for their corrupt and base coyne calling the same to hir Maiesties mintes according to the rate before mentioned Christopher Draper Thomas Rowe the 28. of Septemb. Sherifes Maior Anno reg 3. Sir William Chester Draper the 28. of October The Quéenes Maiestie made great preparation of armour niunition and powder to be in a readinesse to defend hir Realme if néede should happen The xxj of March a notable Grammer Schoole was founded by the Mayster Wardens and assistāts of the worshipfull The merchant Taylors free Schoole company of the Merchant Taylors of London in the parish of Saint Laurence Pountney in the same Citie the worshipfull Emanuell Lucar Robert Rose William Mericke Iohn Sparke and Robert Duckington then béeing Mayster and Wardens of that company The tenth of Aprill was one William Gefferey whipped 1561 from the Marshal sea in Southwarke to Bethlem without Bishopsgate of London for that he professed one Iohn Moore to be Christ our sauiour on his head was set a paper wherein was written as followeth William Gefferey a most blasphemous Heretike denving Christ our fauiour in Heauen VVilliam Geffrey vvhipped The sayd Gefferey being stayd at Bethlem gate Iohn Moore was brought forth before whome William Gefferey was whipped till he confessed Christ to be in Heauen Then the sayde Iohn Moore being examined and answering ouerthwartly A false Christ vvhipt was commanded to put off his coate dublet and shirte which he séemed to do very willingly and after béeing tied to the Cart was whipped an arrowes shoote from Bedlem where at the last he also confessed Christ to bée in Heauen and himselfe to be a sinfull man then was Iohn Moore sente agayne vnto Bedlem and William Gefferey to the Marshalsea where they had layne prisoners nigh a a yeare and a halfe the one for professing himselfe to be Christ the other a Disciple of the same Christ On Wednesday the fourth of June betwéene foure Panles Steeple on fire and fyue of the clocke in the after noone the Stéeple of Paules in London béeing fired by lightning brast foorth as it séemed to the beholders two or thrée yards beneath the foote of the Crosse and from thence brent down the Sphere to the stoneworke and belles so terribly that within the space of foure houres the same Stéeple with the roofes of the Church so much as was timber or otherwayes combustible were consumed which was a lamentable sighte and pitifull remembraunce to the beholders thereof The length of Paules Church in London is 2690. foote The breadth thereof is 1●0 foote The heigth of the Stéeple was 520 foote whereof the stone worke is 260. foote And the Spere which now is burnt was likewise 260. foote Alexander Auenon Humfrey Baskeruild the 28. of Sep. Sherifes Maior Sir William Harper merchant Taylor the 28. of October This Sir William Harper founded a frée Schoole in the Towne of Bedford where he was borne and lyeth buryed Free Schoole at Bedford and hath giuen a competent liuing for a Schoolemayster there to teach and instruct children in vertue and learning vnto the worldes end The fiftéenth of Nouember the Quéenes Maiestie published Nevv coynes a Proclamation wherin she restored to the Realme dyuers small péeces of Siluer money as the péece of sixe pence foure pence thrée pence two pence and a pennie thrée halfe pence and thrée farthings And also forbadde all forreyne Coynes to bée currant within the same Realme as well Gold as Siluer calling them into hir maiesties Mintes except two sortes of Crownes of Golde the one the French Crowne the other the Flemish Crowne The xxvj of December Sir Ambrose Sutton alias Dudley Knight called Lord Ambrose Dudley was created Baron Lisle and afterward the same day Earle of Warwike at Westminster This yeare in Englande were many monstrous birthes In March a Mare brought forth a foale with one body and Anno reg 4. two heads and as it were a long tayle growing out betwéene the two heads Also a Sow farowed a Pigge Monstrous birthes with foure legges like to the armes of a man childe with hands and fingers c. In Aprill a Sow farrowed a Pigge with two bodyes eight féete and but one head many Calues and Lambes were monstrous some with collers of skinne growing about their neckes like to the double ruffes of shirtes and nekercheffes then vsed The xxiiij of May a man child was borne at Chichester in Sussex the hea● armes and legges whereof were lyke a Notamy the brest and belly monstrous bigge from the nauell as it were a long string hanging about the necke a great coller of flesh and skinne growing like to the ruffe of a shirt or nekerchefe comming vp aboue the eares pleyting and folding c. The Quéenes Maiestie in September addressed a band of hir Subiects to the Towne of Newhauen in Normandy Going to Nevvhauen who were embarked at Portesmouth bycause that Hauen is most apt for transportation to that place vpon whose arriuall the Townesmen and inhabitants ioyfully surrendred themselues and their Towne into the possession of the Quéenes maiestie which was kept by Englishmen from September 1562. to the 29. of July then next following which was in the yeare 1563. The gouernour of which band was the right honourable the Earle of Warwicke who with the Captayne 's seruing there which were of great experience and Souldyers trayned by them to knowledge of seruice togither with part of the old approued garrison of Barwike did at that time both manfully defende the péece and valiantly encountred by sundrie skirmishes and conflictes with the Countie Reingraue and his band the most