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A34712 An exact abridgement of the records in the Tower of London from the reign of King Edward the Second, unto King Richard the Third, of all the Parliaments holden in each Kings reign, and the several acts in every Parliament : together with the names and titles of all the dukes, marquesses, earls, viscounts, and barons, summoned to every of the said Parliaments / collected by Sir Robert Cotton ... ; revised, rectified in sundry mistakes, and supplied with a preface, marginal notes, several ommissions, and exact tables ... by William Prynne ... England and Wales. Parliament.; Cotton, Robert, Sir, 1571-1631.; Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1657 (1657) Wing C6489; ESTC R1629 813,278 764

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Instrument from Rome and to bring them forthwith before the Council to answer thereto That the Deanry of York which is to be recovered by Judgment in the Kings Court may be bestowed upon some able man within the Realm who will maintain the same against him who holdeth the same by provision from Rome being the Common Enemy to the King and to the Realm and that the mean profits may be imployed upon the defence of the Realm To all which Petitions Answer was made in form following It is agreed by the King Earls Barons Justices and other wife men of the Realm That the Petitions aforesaid be made in sufficient form of Law According to the Petitions aforesaid certain Process made against Sir William de la Pool and Reynold at Conduite out of the Exchequer is revoked as erroneous and that they shall be charged a new to accompt for monies received for the Kings Wooll notwithstanding any Letter of Acquittance to them made The which Accord was sent to the King to know his pleasure therein The Petitions of the Clerks of the Chancery That where the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper for the time being ought to have the Cognisance of all Pleas of Trespasses done by the said Clerks or other Servants where the Chancery shall remain yet notwithstanding the Sheriffs of London had attached one Gilbert of Chrishull a Clerk of the said Chancery in London at the suit of Killingbury a Draper upon a Bill of Trespass which Gilbert brought a Supersedeas of Priviledge to the said Sheriffs which they would not allow but drew him so find Sureties The Clerks pray remedy therefore and maintenance of their liberties The Parliament doth confirm their liberties and reciting the contempt for neglecting the Process conclude that Writs be sent to the Mayor of London to attach the Sheriffs and others who were parties and maintainers of the quarrel by their bodies to appear before the King in the Chancery at a day certain to answer as well to the Contempts of the Process as to the breach of the liberty and damage of tha party At the Petition of the Commons of Nottingham it is enacted That as w●ll the Gaol of Nottingham which the King hath granted to Sir Iohn Brocas during his life as all other Gaols in the like case should be annexed to the Sheriffwick of every County according to an Act made Anno 14 Edwardi Tertii That no man within Cities or Towns or elswhere do carry Maces of Silver but only the Kings Serjeants but that they carry Maces of Copper only and of no other metal The same shall be so except of the Serjeants of the City of London who may carry their Maces of silver within the liberty of London before the Mayor in the presence of the King On the back-side of the Roll The form of the Writ of Supersedeas for staying of Exigents in this Parliament before agreed The form of Supersedes for staying to proceed further in certain new Commissions before expressed The form of Supersedes for staying of Commissions for the Assise of Weights and Measures before mentioned The form of a Commission to the Barons of the Exchequer to call such Commissioners to accompt as were appointed upon the Assise of Weights and Measures The Writ of Proclamation for the free buying of Wooll The Writ that no man shall be enforced to receive Gold the sum being under Twenty shillings A Declaration made against such persons against whom Exigents should pass Of the Oaths of Justices and of the Clerks of the Chancery expressed in the Print there is no mention made in the Record Anno Vicesimo Edwardi Tertii The Parliament holden at Westminster the Monday next after the Feast of the Nativity of our Lord in the Twentieth Year of King Edward the Third COmmandment was given the same day by Sir Lionel the Kings son Lord Keeper of England that Proclamation should be made against wearing of Armor and Games in Westminster as in the last Parliament Tit. 2. A time to all such as will exhibit any Petition Receivers of Petitions for England Ireland Wales Scotland Gascoin and other Forein Isles and Parts Tryers of the Petitions aforesaid Sir Thomas Drayton is appointed Clerk of the Parliament For that sundry of the Lords and Commons were not at this day come the Parliament was continued until Tuesday On which Tuesday for that knowledge was given that Sir Bartholmew de Burghurst Sir Iohn Darcy Lord Chamberlain Mr. Iohn Thoresby Clerk of the Privy-Seal and Mr. Iohn Charlton were arrived and come Messengers from the King at Callis and that they meant to be at the Parliament the Wednesday next the Parliament continued untill Wednesday On which day Declaration was made That since the King by his passing over the Sea and his attempt there was uncertain of his estate the Parliament was called according to the success of things there the like here might be established for the safety of the King the common peace of the whole Realm and for the avoiding of false money by which the whole Realm was damnified after which they shewed the Kings Letters Patents of credit the same being expressed by word and dated before Callice After the understanding of these Letters the same Bartholomew for and in the name of himself and of his Colleagues in the presence of the Keeper of England and of the whole estate declared the good success of the King since his arrival at Hoges in Normandie as in surprizing of many Towns and Castles of War as well at Cane as elsewhere and aso of the victory at Orestlie where the power of France was discomfited And further how the King was come before Callice from whence he meant not to depart untill by the help of God he gained the same after which he would pursue the enemies without return untill the wars were ended He further sheweth an Order between the Duke and Nobles of Normandie The Order aforesaid is particularly recited and is called The Ordinance of Normandie containing the effect following That the Duke of Normandy should passe as Chieftain with other Nobles of the same into England with forty thousand men at Arms Knights Esquires and men of good estate and forty thousand footmen An Order for bearing of their charges for keeping of the Sea and for the Duke to remain with his power in England ten weeks And it is agreed That in case the Realm of England be by the same voyage conquered that then the said conquest shall altogether be to the name and honour of the said Duke and all that which the King of England hath shall remain to the said Duke Knights and Lords And all the same which belongeth to the Nobles and secular persons of England shall be
be advised It is enacted that all religious persons for lands purchased since the twentieth of Edw. 3. and paying no Desmie therefore amongst the Clergie shall pay fifteens After this Mr. Iohn Charlton one of the Messengers aforesaid brought Letters from the Bishop of Durham from the Earls of Northampton Arundel Warwick Oxon and Suffolk and from Sir Hugh le Dispencer Lord of Glamorgan directed to the whole estate of Parliament and purporting that where the King at his arrivall at Hoges in Normandie had made his eldest son the Prince of Wales a Knight whereby he ought to have aid of the Realm as appertaineth Viz. forty shillings for every Knights Fee whereunto they all granted and took Order for the speedy levying of the same It is ordered in full Parliament at the request of the Commons that the Benefices of all Aliens should be seized into the Kings hand and he to take the profit of the same and that all Bishops should before the next Convocation certifie into the Chancery the Names of all Aliens their Benefices and values An Act as before that no Alien should send any Letters Tit. 42● Anno Vicesimo primo Edwardi Tertii The Parliament holden at Westminster the morrow after S. Hilary in the 21 year of the Reign of King Edw. 3. of England and of France the 8 th PRoclamation made the first day by the Kings Commandment That no person shall use or bear any Arms within London and the Suburbs or in any place between the said City and Pallace of Westminster nor in no other part of the Pallace by Land or by Water except such of the Kings people as he shall appoint to keep the Kings peace and the Kings Ministers according to the Statute of Northampton yet Earls and Barons may wear their swords except in the Kings presence and place of Councel Receivers of Petitions for England and Scotland Receivers of Petitions for the Clergy Triers of Petitions Because divers Lords were not come the Parliament was continued from day to day thrice Viz. until Thursday following at which time William de Thorp in presence of the King Prelates Earls Barons and Commons declared that the Parliament was called for two causes the first Concerning the War which the King had undertaken by the consent of the Lords and Commons against his enemies of France The second How the peace of England may be kept Whereupon the King willed the Commons to consult together and that within four dayes they should give answer to the King and his Councel what they think therein The fourth day the Commons declare That they are not able to Councel any thing touching the point of the war wherefore they desire in that behalf to be excused and that the King will thereof advise with his Nobles and Councel and what shall be so amongst them determined they the Commons will assent unto confirm and establish Petitions of the Commons with their Answers That the Laws of Holy Church and of the Land and that the Peace be kept for which purpose they desire That no great person do maintain no Traitors Felons Robbers Trespassers against the peace Barretors Maintainers Confederators Embracers of business Conspirators Champtors and the like by which falsities the Peace is disturbed and the Laws frustrated and that certain Ordinances be made for punishment of such Offendors That to the intent that the Laws may be duly and indifferently ministred the King will be pleased so to encrease the fees of the knight Barons Justices Ministers and Officers and that they may be sworn to take nothing Touching the first point the King will call the great persons to him and will move this Article to them and with their advice will ordain such remedy as shall be pleasing to God and man Touching the second the King will advise what other Ministers shall be fit to take the Oath and will do what shall be needfull That all these Petitions which be for the common profit may be answered in Parliament before the Commons so as they may know the Endorsment and have remedie according to the Ordinance of Parliament That whereas the Scots by Covin with Philip de Val●is in the Kings absence did enter the Realm of England with all their hoast burning and destroying the Land and feloniously committing robberies murders c. And whereas in a Battel at Durham divers of them were slain and some of their Chieftains as David de Brays William Douglas and others were by force there taken and are in the Kings power that he will be pleased so to take order with them by his Councel that he and his people be not in little danger and that they may give surety for their good behaviour The King by advice de ses Grantz will provide so as shall be best Whereas the Staple of Wooll which is holden at Bruges in Flanders hath used to be free so as all Merchants might there freely buy merchandise and carry the same from thence whither they lift by Land or Sea and now the same freedom is restrained so as none can freely buy and carry from thence according to the antient usage with them of Flanders and Brabant And they of Brabant cannot bring their Wools bought in the Staple out of the Town of Bruges without sureties that the Wools shall be uttered in the Country of Brabant or that they bring Letters from the Town of Bruges without sureties in what Town of Brabant those Wools shall be uttered whereby the price of Wooll is much abased Also the three good Towns of Flanders Gant Bruges Ipre will not suffer the small Towns which were wont to buy great quantities of Wools to make Cloth but do destroy their Instruments to the abasement likewise of the price of Wools. Also the paiment of Gold is at so high a price in those parts that a man shall lose in Exchange the third penny and more for which matters it may please the Parliament to provide remedy The King will that the Ordinance of the Staple shall be viewed and that Thomas Melchburn with whom the Patent touching that Ordinance doth remain be called to bring the same with him and that some Merchants of the Country who best understand this matter and the King by advice of his Council will provide remedy Whereas in a Council holden by Lionel the Kings son the Guardian of England it was in the 21 year of the King ordered without the Commons That for keeping the Realm and safe conduct of ships should be taken upon every sack of Wooll passing the seas two shillings upon every Tun of Wine two shillings upon every pound Desavoires brought back into the Realm six pence and this charge to continue until Michaelmas next coming which charge is yet demanded
of some certain Commissary thereunto deputed in the Cathedral Churches they now make men come to places uncertain and being come they cannot have the Probate of Wills Sans faire raunceon meintenant ala quinte on partie des biens continues al testament The King will speak with the Archbishop and other Prelates that such wrong may be redressed Where a man hath issue a Bastard eigne and muliers and the Bastard demandeth Land as Heir Ne unque soit de son assent And he pleadeth that he is a Bastard And upon a Writ to the Court Christian he is certified a mulier that this Certificate turn none to prejudice but him that was party to the plea upon which the Certificate was made and his heirs but if the Demandant and his heirs bring any other Writ against any other Tenant and of other Land then he to be received to plead that he is a Bastard and that he have a Writ to the Bishop notwithstanding such former Certificate Let this remain among other Articles whereof new Law is required Whereas Murthers cuilleurs des gentz robberies manslaughters and other Felonies are done and committed without number and so favoured by pardons and procuring deliverance that the mis-doers and maintainers have no care of fear of Law That the King will ordain such remedy by Statute that such mis-doers and maintainers by no such means as aforesaid may be comforted and imboldned Touching pardons hereafter to be granted the King will advise with his Council so to do That no such Charter shall be granted unless it be for the honour and profit of him and his people and touching pardons granted heretofore he will advise with his Council of such allowance as shall be thereof made Whereas divers extortions and grievances are done to the people by the Collectors of the Wools and by the Taxors of other taxes and tillages and their Deputies en seque perla piere de leine perienten ascune partie 16 ou 18 l ou meins ousta le verroye poys si argent soit done per leine meins de quatre so●tz per la piere ne voillent receiver ne acquitainces faire à null ville meins que 6 ou 7c auters greevances de receits des deniers autre choses plus in autre maner que ne fust gentz They therefore pray remedy There shall be assigned gaurdeins de la pees and to enquire for false money and of the matters contained in this Article who shall do right therein That the Statute concerning Statute Merchants for payment of debts may be kept and execution thereupon done as hath been used so as Execution nor Process upon such Statutes be not done by subtilty of any person in other sort The Statute shall be kept in all points and no other process shall be made upon execution of that Statute then heretofore hath been used That where a man will sue to reverse a Judgement given before Justices in any franchise Royal as Chester or Durham and the Justices do record the pleas pleaded before them otherwise then they were pleaded the party plaintiff may be received to aver per pais the truth against the Record The Ancient Law before time used in this case shall remain That paiment be made for Victuals taken up in divers Counties by the Kings Commissions to the use of him and his children and that hereafter no such Commissions go forth without present payment to them of whom victuals shall be taken The King is pleased that payment be made savez à luy ses droictrels prices and as touching purveyances already made That the Sheriffs out of the Issues of their Bailywick shall pay such of whom such victuals were taken Whereas heretofore because divers Merchants were slain and robbed on the Sea by the Kings enemies of France It was ordained by the King Peers and Prelates and by the assent of the said Merchants That all that would pass with Wools to the Staple should pay twelve pence upon every Sack for safe Conduct and certain Merchants undertook for the same and safely to conduct the Merchants unto the Staple and yet have not nor will not perform that Conduct and yet took the said twelve pence on a Sack whereby many Merchants have lost their lives Wools and other Merchandise That they which undertake the Conduct● may be made come into this present Parliament to make gree to the Merchants who by their default have lost their goods and to answer to the King that which they took of the Merchants as abovesaid Let persons and places be assigned for hearing plaints of all which will complain of the said Merchants to the end right and reason may be fully done to the Plaintiffs Monstres le Come d' Engl. que les gentz de Samense are assessed to all Taxes and Tallages and yet their Ships are taken and many of them lost in the Kings service● Sanz nul regard as di●z gentz fair so as by long continuance of such grievances la navye esta pote destructe per nui tour la terra that the King will ordain thereof remedie The King will be advised Whereas Judgment in divers places hath long depended not given for difficulty of Law that the King will ordain That judgment may be given without longer stay The Justices before whom such Pleas are hanging shall give judgment as soon as well they may and if they cannot so do then the tenor of such Record and the process of such Pleas shall come into the Parliament and there shall be determined according to the Ordinance made in that behalf Whereas the King hath granted to certain persons the Office of gageing of Wines in the Dutch of Guyen taking for the Fee of gag●ing one penny sterling or the value thereof in other money and they which ought to use the Office of gaging these Wines refuse to gage any Tunnel of Wine and yet do wrong●ully take the said Fee of a penny for every Tunnel whereby the Tun doth not bear his right measure so as Lords and others do lose of that which they ought to have the fifth or sixt part of every Tun. That therefore the King and his Council will give such commandment to the Governors of the said Dutchy that no Tunnel of what part soever it be within Franchise or without be shipped over sea before it be gaged by the Verge according to the standard of England and the defect marked in the head of the head of the Tunnel upon pain to forfeit the said Wine to the King and also that the gager lose his Office if he do not that which thereunto appertaineth Let the Office of gager be performed per de ceo upon the pains ordained and that will work the effect through the whole business
Westminster the Monday the first day of May in the 42 year of the reign of King Edward the Third AT this day for that sundry of the Lords and Commons were not come the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury declared to the Lords and Commons then assembled in the Chamber de Pinct that the Kings pleasure was that the Parliament should be continued until the Thursday ensuing On the said Thursday the said Arch-Bishop in the presence of the King Lords and Commons declared that the King yeelded to God his most hearty thanks for giving him Victory over his Enemies for the quiet government of his Realm and for the great Loyalty of his Subjects both in Body and Goods the which Blessing and good Estate as he decreed to continue and amend so that he might the better accomplish the same he had therefore called the Parliament Receivers of Petitions for England Ireland Wales and Scotland Receivers of Petitions for Gascoyn and other forein places and Isles Tryers of Petitions for England c. as above Tryers of Petitions for Gascoyne c. as above The next day the same Arch-Bishop declared that of the long treaty between the Kings Councel and David le Bruce of Scotland this was the last offer of the said David viz. that he offered peace so as he might freely enjoy to him in Fee the whole Realm of Scotland without any subjection or any other thing which m●ght be accounted a perpetual charge Of which Peace the Lords and Commons being willed to give their advice made several Answers that they could not assent to any such peace but to the disherison of the King and of his Crown and to the great danger of themselves being sworn to the same After that the said Arch-Bishop on the Kings behalf gave to the whole Estates thanks for their Aids and Subsidies granted to the King and shewed further the great need of the same Whereupon the Lords and Commons granted to the King for two years the Subsidy of Wooll viz. of every sack of Wooll 30 s. 8 d. so much of every 2●0 Fells and of every Last of skins 4 l. over the old Custom 6 s. 8 d of every sack of Wooll and so much of twenty dozen of Fells and 13 s. 4 d. of every last of skins Petitions of the Commons with their Answers The print touching the keeping of the great Charter cap. 1. agreeth with the Record onely the print wanteth and all other Statutes The print of Pardons agreeth with the Record The print that none be put to answer without due process of Law cap. 3. agreeth with the record The print touching Commissions cap. 4. agreeth with the Record The print touching Escheators cap. 5. agreeth with the Record in effect but not in form quod nota The print touching Labourers cap. 6. agreeth with the Record The print touching Victualls in London cap. 7. agreeth with the Record Note that the Londoners required that no Forainer should retail any Wine Merchandize or Victualls in London which was not granted The print touching the restraint of English Merchants to fetch Gascoyne wine cap. 8. agreeth with the Record The print touching green wax out of the Exchequer cap. 9. agreeth with the Record The print touching such as be born at Callice cap. 10. agreeth with the Record The 21. of May the King gave thanks to the Lords and Commons for their coming and aide granted on which day all the Lords and sundry of the Commons dined with the King after which dinner Sir Iohn de Lee was brought before the King Lords and Commons next aforesaid to answer to certain Objections following and first to the complaint of William Latimer as followeth The King had granted the Wardship of Robert Latimer the Son and Heir of Sir Robert Latimer with certain Mannors during the same minority to the Bishop of Sarum whose estate the same William had and after the King granted the same to Sir Iohn Lee. The same William surmised that the said Sir Iohn being of power sent for him to London where he by duress of Imprisonment enforced the said William to surrender his Estate to him And by Recognizance therefore the same Sir Iohn excuseth himself for that the Grant was made unto him the which was not allowed for that the said VVilliam was not put out by due process of Law Another matter was objected against the said Sir Iohn for that during such time as he was Steward of the Kings House he should cause sundry men to be attached and to come before him as before the Kings Councel in places where he pleased where being out of Councel he caused men to answer as to things before the Councel That he as Steward having thereby authority onely within the Verge did notwithstanding cause sundry to be attached out of the Verge as Iohn Goddard and others making them to answer in the Marshals●y of things done out of the Verge and other-some committed to the Tower of his own Authority as Iohn Sibill Edmond Urdsales and others That he had of his own authority against the Justices commandment discharged out of Newgate Hugh Lavenham Purveyor who had appealed sundry men of Felony That he bargained with Sir Nicholas Lovayn for the keeping of the Mannor of Rainham in Kent the which the same Sir Nicholas claimed to hold during the minority of the Son and Heir of Iohn Saunton where the said Iohn of Lee knew that the said Mannor was holden of the King in chief as of the Castle of Dover Of all which points for that the same Sir Iohn could not purge himself he was commanded to the Tower of London there to remain as prisoner until he had made Fines at the Kings will And commandment given to Sir Allen of Buxhal Constable of the Tower to keep him accordingly And so the Lords and Commons departed After that the said Sir Iohn being brought to Westminster before the Kings Councel and being there demanded of the same William Lattimer made answer that as freely as the King had granted to him the Wardship aforesaid so freely did he surrender the same into the Kings hands Whereupon by the same Councel it was ordered that the Wardship aforesaid should be reseised into the Kings hands and delivered unto the said William Lattimer according to the Grant made to the said Bishop and that all Recognizances and conveyances made by the said William to the said Sir Iohn should be void saving the Kings right Anno Quadragessimo Tertio Edwardi Tertii The Parliament holden at Westminster in the Octaves of St. Trinity in the 43. Year of Edward the Third THe Bishop of Winchester Chancellor of England the same day in the Chamber de Pinct in the presence of the King Lords and Commons
summons travel or grief That all Customers and Comptrollers of England m●y yearly be removed The King by advice herein will do his pleasure That execution may be done upon such of the County of Chester and other Counties Palatine as are outlawed for trespasses or felonies done in their Counties The King will provide remedy therefore saving the right of himself and of other men That such English as are remaining in prison in Scotland for things done since the Truce may be delivered without ransom as the Scots in like of custom be The Wardens of such parts be appointed for the like cases a day of meeting the last of Iune at what time good order may be taken That Sheriffs of all Shi●●s where the King for to certain his debts hath appointed to certain men sundry sums of those Sheriffs receipts may upon their Accompts be discharged thereof The King will be advised by his Council That Theeves and Robbe●s may speedily come to their deliverance Of all Statutes made therefore the Council shall appoint the best to be executed and the Justices to make deliverance as oft as need shall require That remedy may be had forasmuch as by the inter comoveage with Scots the most of the Woolls of the Shires of York Du●esm Westmerland Cumberland and Northumberland are transported into Scotland without any Custom The King by his Council will provide That the King will appoint certain Vessels for the keeping of Stradborough the men of which Town with●n two years before paid 1000 l. ransom and for the defence of the North-coasts This matter is committed to the Earl of Northumberland the Mayor of London and to certain Merchants of the North of them to be considered In a Schedule annexed to the Roll is contained the Order of the parties aforesaid for the defence of the North-sea coasts and confirmed by those Estates of the Parliament That those Sea-coasts shall be defended with two Ships and two Barges and two Bullinge●s armed and appointed for the Wars at the charges hereafter ensuing viz. That every Ship Boat or other Vessel whatsoever passing those Sea-coasts shall pay for every Tun of his burthen six pence except all Vessels laden with Wines or other Merchandises from Flanders to be discharged at London and Ships or other Vessels laden with Staple-ware and to be discharged at Cali●e The which excepted Ships shall not be safe-conducted by the Admiral of the Sea without consideration Certain named are appointed keepers of the Sea coasts and to levie the Subsidy aforesaid both by Sea and by Land Certain Merchants are appointed to be Receivers and Comptrollers of the aforesaid Subsidie The Commons of Cumberland require that it would please the King to repair the City and Castle of Carlile in manner ruined and at his charges to appoint a worthy Guardian The King is not to repair the same Citie but he will give in charge that it be done about the Castle he is repairing touching the Warden the King by his Councel will do his pleasure That provision may be found that the money carried forth of the Realm may be brought in again and not clipped within the Realm ●e carried forth again The King upon conference with the Minters and Merchants will provide the best remedie That all religious persons may according to the last Parliament depart the Realm and namely the Prior of Halenge If any man will specially complain he may be heard for the Prior of Halenge hath found surety It is enacted that no Sheriff of any County shall be Justice of Peace in the same County That the King will pay the loans of E. 3. borrowed of the Subjects in the 43. year of his raign The King will so do so soon as conveniently he may The like motion and answer that is made in the last Parliament Tit. 57. That half pence and farthings may be coyned and commandment given to sell according to the same Upon having of Bullion the King will do so That Declaration may be made of Sylva cedua As it hath been heretofore used The Print touching the Statute made at Glocester touching Riots cap. 2. doth not agree with the Record for the Record doth generally revoke the said Statute made at Glocester which note They require that the Constable and Marshal of England do surcease to hold before themselves Pleas of Treason or Felony and that the same may only be determined before the Kings Justices according to the great Charter The Lords dare not disclose the same as well for that the Heirs who claim the same Office are within age and in the Kings keeping as for that the Parliament draweth to an end But as touching the appeal of Treason made in Cornwal and depending before the said Constable and Marshal the King will take the same into his own hands as shall please him for determining the same according to the Laws saving to every one his rights That there be a certain number of Justices learned in the Law which may in every Shire be appointed and chosen by the Lords and Commons that none be by them associated their Sessions to be holden four times yearly and there to have Fees at the Sheriffs hands The King will appointable Justices no Association shall be made no remotion without consent of the Councel two or three of such of them as shall hold the Sessions shall have the sixt part of the profit of the same untill the next Parliament A Statute made that such as demand land against the King and evidence therefore by Writ shewn in the Treasury that in such case who sueth for the King shall after the return of four Writs every Writ having ●orty dayes respit answer It is willed to be executed notwithstanding any commandment of the Great or Privy Seal That the Owners of the ships taken up for the Kings service for their losses in the same may be considered and that Mariners may have the like wages as Archers have It shall be as it hath been used That none of the Commons House be appointed to be Collector Cessor or Comptroller of any aids granted now The King granteth so as before their departure they in writing declare who are most able the●efore That the King will grant Pardons to all such as will for the only Fee of the Great Seal of all points of E●re of desperate debts of any of his Ancestors and of all points of the Forrest until the Feast of Pentecost now present The King will be advised That the Treasurer for the Wars may be discharged and that all which is or shall be granted may be received by the Treasurer of England It liketh the King It is enacted to endure untill the
the Commons the King granted that one Bennet William who was imprisoned to answer before the Constable and Marshall of England should be tryed according to the Common Laws of the Realm notwithstanding any Commission to the contrary and thereupon a Writ was accordingly directed to the J●stices of the Kings Bench as may appear 40. Roger Deynecourte the son and heir of Iohn Deynecourte Knight complaineth of an erronious judgement given against him in the Kings Bench for Ralph de Alderlie touching the Mannour of Austie in the County of Warwick the which Errors are there particularly rehearsed whereupon a Scire facias was granted to the said Roger returnable in the next Parliament and Sir William Gascoyne Chief Justice for shortness of time examined a Copy of the Process and Record word by word and gave a Copy thereof under his hand to the Clarke of the Parliament 41. It was agreed between the Prince on the one part and Iohn Cornewall and the Countess of Huntington his wife on the other part That the said Iohn and Countess should surrender into the Princes hands all such Mannours and Hereditaments as were parcell of the Dutchy of Cornewall after which surrender an entry should be made in the Premises on the behalf of the Prince and that after the said entry the Prince by Deed and Letters of Attorny to deliver seisure should grant the premises to the said Iohn and Countess and for that the Prince was within age he should promise before the Lords to performe the same at his full age and the promise to be made for the Prince his Brother all which Acts should be done by Parliament 42. Whereupon the twentieth of March as well the said Prince as the said Iohn and Countess came in proper persons before the King and Lords where the said Countess confessed that she had during her life certain Mannors parcell of the said Dutchy upon which confession the King and Lords gave judgement that the said Prince should be restored to the said Mannours aforesaid and that after seizure had the Prince should make estate over as is aforesaid 43. The grant of the Prince to the said Iohn and Elizabeth Countess of Huntington during her life of the Castle and Mannour of Trematon the Mannour of Calestocke the Mannour of Ashburgh the Castle and Parke of Easternell the Mannour of Perin of Penknith the Burrows and Towns of Lostwithiell and Camelford the whole fishing of the Mannour of Fowley the Mannour of Tewinton the Mannour of Moreske the Mannour of Tintagell 44. This Deed being read in full Parliament the Prince the Lords Thomas Iohn and Humfrey made promise as aforesaid Livery and seizin was delivered to the said Iohn and Countess and the King promised to confirme the same 45. At the Petition of Ioane Queen of England the King granted that she the said Queen should enjoy during her life Lands and Tenements to the full summe of ten thousand marks by the year for and in the name of her Dower according as other Queens of England had done 46. At the like Petition of Sir Iohn Cornwall and Elizabeth Lancaster Countess of Huntington his wife the King granted that she the said Elizabeth should be a person able at the Common Law to sue and recover her Dower of all the Hereditaments late of Iohn de Holland Earl of Huntington her late husband as well against the King as against all other persons notwithstanding any Judgement against the said Earl and notwithstanding the said Countess be not thereof dowable 47. The like Petition answer and grant is made to Constance late the wife of Thomas le Despencer for the recovery of her Dower of the Lands of the said Thomas as is aforesaid 48. Upon the Petition of Edward Duke of York touching 1000 l. by the year granted by Richard the second to Edward the Father and to the heirs males in the 13 R. 2. the King granteth to Edward now Duke 4000 l. out of the Customs of Kingstone upon Hull and 289 l. 6 s. 8 d. out of the Customs of London as parcell of the said 1000 l. and to the heirs males of his body lawfully begotten 49. Iohn Earl of Somerset Captain of Callice and of the Marches thereof decla●eth that where by Indenture between the King and him he stood bound to keep the town and Castle aforesaid taking therefore for himself and his Souldiers in time of truce and peace 6301 l. 11 s. 8 d. and in the time of 10509 l. 6 s. 8 d. whereof he was behind unpayed 12423 l. 12 s. 4 d. he therefore for want of payment p●ayeth due payment from thenceforth the which the King granteth 50. Upon the Petition of Ioane late wife of Thomas Earl of Kent to have 1000 l. yearly during her life of the Hereditaments of the said Thomas the Kings by the assent of Edmond Earl of K●nt Brother of the said Thomas granteth to the said Ioane during life certaine Mannours and Hereditaments there named to the value of 300. marks over and above her joynture for the which the said Ioane releaseth to the said Edmond all her Dower 51 The Wardens of the Goldsmiths of London by their Petitions shew how they ought to have the Survey and sight of the Cutters of London touching the working of Gold and Silver 52. The Wardens of the Cutlers of London maketh the like complaint 53. The King thereupon sendeth those Bills and two Writ to the Mayor of London willing him to examine the whole matter and to certifie the same 54. The Mayor upon due examination certifieth that the Cutlers ought to work Gold and Silver in their works but that the Goldsmiths ought to have the assay of Gold and Silver by Cutlers wrought 55. The King thereupon by assent of the Lords confirmeth to the said Goldsmiths their Charter granted 1 E. 3. with the clause of Licet and granteth to them other Liberties 56. Sir Bartholmew Verdon Knight Iames White Christopher White and Stephen Garnon Esquires being outlawed for sundry Robberies and Fellonies done in Ireland whereby all their Hereditaments were siezed into the Kings hands and granted away by the Lord Thomas the Kings son Lieutenant there the persons aforesaid having their pardons for their lives require to be restored to their bloud and to all their Hereditaments the King restoreth them to all their Hereditaments during their lives onely notwithstanding any grant to any person whatsoever 57. Upon the Petition of Iohn son and heir of Iohn de Burley Knight Cosen and heir to Simon de Burley Knight containing the effect expressed in 2 H. 4.
Talbot de Furnivall Johanni Clifford No Lord Warden in this Roll. Anno decimo tertio Henrici Quarti The Parliament holden at Westminster the day after All Saints in the thirteenth year of King Henry the fourth ON Wednesday being the next day after All Saints and the third day of November the Commons were called in the presence of the Steward of the Kings House according to the Order After which Thomas Beauford the Kings Brother and Chancellor of England by the Kings Letters Patents there read and enrolled began prorogued and continued the same Parliament until the Wednesday following On the said Wednesday the said Chancellor by the Kings commandment in his presence and in the presence of all the Lords and Commons declared how that the Parliament was called for three causes namely for the good governance of the Realm due execution of Laws and defence of the Realm with the keeping of the Seas He then sheweth to the good governance of the Realm belonged trusty Councel without affection and due obeysance without grudging To due execution of Laws did appertain sincere keeping of the same and speedy redress for fear of abusion To the defence of the Realm they needed hearty and willing releiving of the King in his distresse and discreet and speedy provision for all which causes they were assembled He further pronounceth how the Kings pleasure was that the Church all persons and Corporations should enjoy their Liberties and for better expedition herein he willeth the Commons by going together to chuse their Speaker and the next day to present him to the King in full Parliament Receivers of petitions for England Ireland Wales and Scotland Receivers of petitions for Gascoin and other places beyond the Seas and of the Isles Tryers of petitions for England c. as above Tryers of petitions for Gascoin c. as above On Tuesday the fifth of November the Commons presented before the King and Lords Thomas Chaucer to be their Speaker who having no allowance of his excuse prayed that he might speak under Protestation whereunto they granted that he should speak as others before had done so as the King would therein have no Novelty and yet would also enjoy his Prerogative The Speaker desired respite to answer by Saturday following in Writing which was granted with such protestations as others before had and that whatsoever he should speak to the Kings displeasure might be imputed to his ignorance only the which the King granted The Commons by the assent of the Bishops and Lords granted to the King for one year the like Subsidy of Tunnage and Poundage as in the last Parliament tit 45. so always as the same should be confessed to proceed of their own good will and not of duty They also grant that every person having twenty pound land above all charges all pay six shillings eight pence that any person hath except lands purchased in Mor●main before the twentieth year of E. 1. and of all lands purchased in Frank-Almoin since the said twentieth year On Monday the last day of November the Speaker in the name of the Commons prayed the King to give thanks to the Prince and others appointed to be of the Kings Councel in the last Parliament the which the King did and namely for well imploying the treasure in the same Parliament granted William Lord Roos of Hamalake complaineth against Robert Thirwit one of the Justices of the Kings Bench for with-holding from him and his Tenants of his Mannor of Melton le Roos in Lincolnshire certain Common of pasture and of Turbary or Turf in Warbie in the County of Lincoln aforesaid and for lying in wait with the number of five hundred men for the Lord Roos Sir Robert Thirwit before the King confessed his fault and craveth pardon offering further to stand to the Order of two Lords of the kindred of the said Lord Roos such as he should chuse whereto the King agreed the Lord Roos chose the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Lord Grey The said Archbishop and Lord Grey Chamberlain to the King make a long award leaving the right of the Common aforesaid to the determination of William Gascoin Chief Justice and further it was enjoyned to the said Sir Robert that at a day certain he should prepare at Melton Roos aforesaid two Tuns of Gascoin Wine two fat Oxen and twelve fat sheep and other preparation fit therefore and that he should bring thither all such Knights Esquires and Yeomen as were of his aforesaid crew where they all should confess their faults to the said Lord Roos and crave pardon and further offer to the said Lord Roos five hundred marks in recompence And that the said Lord Roos should refuse the same five hundred marks pardon them and take only the dinner aforesaid Thomas Archbishop of Canterbury by a long Instrument in Latine sheweth that how in the time of R. 2. the University of Oxford had purchased a Bull to be cleerly exempt from the Visitation of the said Archbishop to the end they might the better support Hereticks and Lollards and how that the said King Richard took order that they should be subject to the said Archbishops Visitation notwithstanding the said Bull. He further sheweth how in this Kings time he was disturbed of the Visitation aforesaid by Richard Courtney the Chancellor by Bennet Bret and Iohn Birch then Procurators of the said University and how that by their submission to the Kings order it was by him in the Chancery decreed that the said whole University and all Orders Persons and Faculties in the same should be fu●ly subject to the Visitation of the said Archbishop and his Successors and to his and their Officers And that as often as the said Archbishop or his Successors or his or their Officers were thereof by the said Chancellor interrupted their said Liberties should be seised into the Kings hands until the said Archbishop were thereto restored And further that for every time of such interruption the said Chancellor or other Officer should be bound to pay to the King One thousand pounds All which Articles and Orders at the request of the said Archbishop were confirmed by whole assent of Parliament By this it most manifestly appeareth that even in these days the Princes prerogatives were nothing subject to the Popes primacie for then would not this Archbishop the Popes fosterer and adopted son have so neglected the Popes Bulls which he as by this may appear took to be meer bulls and bubbles The erection of the Colledge of our blessed Lady S. Mary and of All Saints in Fotheringhay in the County of York with all the lands and liberties wherewith the same was endowed by the Kings Letters-Patents there at large is confirmed by whole assent of Parliament Iohn de Lumley knight is restored to his blood and to be son and heir
And so alledging Bella faciamus ut pacem habeamus quia finis belli pax est He sheweth that the King meant to use their Counsell and therefore called the Commons to choose and to present their Speaker Receivers of petitions for England Ireland Wales and Scotland Receivers of petitions for Gascoyne and other places beyond the seas and of the Isles Tryers of petitions for England c. as above Tryers of petitions for Gascoyne c. as above On Wednesday the third day of the Parliament the Commons coming before the King and Lords presented Roger Flower to be their Speaker who made the common protestation and the same allowed The Commons by the assent of the Bishops and Lords granted to the King two whole Desmes and two fifteens to be levied of the Laity It is enacted that all such persons as shall before lend mony to the King shall freely have Letters Patents to be payed of the first mony coming of the subsidie aforesaid All which to perform if an end should come to the King the Dukes of Clarence Bedford and Gloucester for every of their selves faithfully promised to accomplish The names of certain Bishops and other Lords who subscribed to the Articles aforesaid A generall pardon granted by the King nothing touching life or losse of member On Wednesday the eighteenth of November being the last day of the Parliament the King sitting in his Royall Estate in full Parliament created Thomas Beauford Earl of Dorset to be Earl of Exeter after which the King commandeth him to sit in Parliament according to his estate A League and Alliance between the King his heirs and succesors Kings of England and Sigismond King of the Romans his heirs and successors Kings of the Romans are confirmed by whole assent of Parliament Note the Instrument of Alliance for the same is long and very effectuall Robert Whittington Esq and Ony his son complaining shew how that certain of the servants of Richard Old-castle Esq and the borderers of Wales by durance of imprisonment enforced the said Robert to release to the said Richard and Walter Hakelnyt Esq all manner of Actions for all which they prayen remedy The Kings Councell shall have power to call the parties before them and to end the same Iohn de Holland son of Iohn de Holland Earl of Huntington prayeth to be restored in bloud 2. H. 4. son of E. his wife to the said Iohn his father and to Richard his eldest brother who died without issue and to all the entailed lands of Iohn the Father as well of the Dutchy of Cornwall as otherwise except certain Mannors by name parcell of the said Dutchy so as he may freely enter into them The King enableth him in bloud according to his Petition and to all the intailed lands so as he first prove the same in the Chancery except as before and except all other lands parcell of the said Dutchy saving the fee simple lands to the King so as he do sue a Scire facias against the said Tenants for such whereof he should be in suit Iohn Allen and others Merchants of Coventry prayen restitution of 600 marks of old coin put into the hands of Richard Garmer late Master of the Mint within the Tower of London to be newly coined for that all the goods of the said Richard were seised to the Kings use by the Earl of Arundell Treasurer of England Upon proof hereof before the Councell they shall see the same payed so farr as the goods will extend William Clifford Constable of Bourdeaux complaining sheweth how that he had gotten the Town and Castle Rewle in Guyenne wherein he was besieged and could not keep the same without some succours the which he prayeth The King will accomplish the same with opportunity A motion is made that the suit hanging in the Court of Rome and in the Councell of Constance between Roger Frank and Iohn de Rippon touching the Abbey of Founteynes being very tedious may be ended The King will addresse his Letters to the Ambassadors at Constance to sollicite the end David Howell of Pembrook prayeth a pardon for all Treasons Felonies and Trespasses The King will be advised The print touching Irish Bishops c. cap. 6. agreeth with the record in effect but not in form Petitions of the Commons with their Answers THe print touching the great Charter c. cap. 1. agreeth with record The print touching allowance of Sheriffs cap. 2. having these words is of extracts therein swarveth from the record quod nota The print touching Patent-makers cap. 3. agreeth with the record The King releaseth to Iohn Tutburie the Customes of certain Wines The print touching servants wages cap. 4. agreeth with the record The like motion and answer as in the last Parliament tit 31. That none of the Kings Subjects be barred of their due debts● or suits for the same by colour of protection granted to any Prior Alien but during such time as they shall serve the King beyond the seas The Prerogative and Common lawes shall be maintained The print touching Merchants Aliens cap. 5. agreeth with the record The print touching the free pardon c. 8. agreeth with the record The print touching Peace-breakers and Letters of Mart cap. 7. agreeth with the Record Anno Quinto Henrici Quinti Rex c. Charissimo Avunculo suo Thomae Duci Exon. salt c. apud Westm. decimo sexto die Novembris Teste Iohanne Duce Bedford Custode Angliae apud VVestm quinto die Octobris CHariss Consang suo Hen. de Percie Com. Northumberland Radulpho Nevill Com. Westmerland Edwardo de Courtney Com. Devon Magistro Tho. de la Warr. Willielmo de Ferrariis de Grobie Hugoni Burnell Johanni de Welles Radulpho Baroni de Graystock Reginaldo Gray de Ruthine Johanni Latimer Ricardo Strange Roberto Poynings Gilberto Talbot Edwardo Cherleton de Powis Tho. Camois Willielmo Botreaux Tho. de Dacre de Gilsland The Parliament holden at Westminster the sixteenth day of November in the fifth year of King Henry the Fifth ON the sixteenth day of November in the presence of the puissant Prince Iohn Duke of Bedford Brother and Lieutenant to the King and Warden of England sitting in the Chamber de pinct in the Palace of Westminster the Bishop of Durham the Chancellor of England by his commandement in the presence of him the Lords and Commons declared that the Kings will was that the Church and all Estates should enjoy their liberties He then took for his Theam Confortamini viriliter agite et gloriosi eritis Upon which words he shewed what great comfort ought to have been considering that the King in the life of his
Flower Esquire to be their Speaker who with the Common protestation was allowed All Writs Commissions and Dependants of the same made by the assembly of the Council touching this Parliament are confirmed by authority of the same Thomas Bishop of Durham Chancellor of England to the late King H. 5. in the presence of the Duke of Gloucester and other Lords in the Castle of Windsor delivered and left with the King the great Golden Seal of the realm of England whereof he willed them to be witnesses and that the same may be enrolled The Bishop of London late Chancellor of the Dutchie of Normandy delivered the same Seal of that Dutchy at Rome to the Duke of Bedford who had the governance of the same and also in the presence as is aforesaid at Windsor the great Seal of England which King H. 5. gave to him to keep and prayeth to be discharged of the same by Act of Parliament and so was It is enacted that the Kings stile shall be changed and that accordingly there might be graven upon all his Seals as followeth Henricus Rex Franciae Angliae Dominus Hiberniae To satisfie the Commons request the Duke of Gloucester declared to them that the King had appointed the Bishop of Durham to be his Chancellor William Rindroffe to be Treasurer of England and Iohn Stafford to be keeper of the Privy Seal of all which offices their Patents are made and confirmed by Parliament It is enacted that all Estates shall have their Liberties confirmed being not revoked without these words Concedimus to be in any of the said affirmations Where King H. 5. made Henry Lord Fitz-hugh Walter Hunger●ord Walter Beauchampe Lewis Robsart William Porter Robert Babthorpe Iohn Woodhowse and Iohn Leventhorpe Esquires the Executors of his VVill and Testament the King granteth to them 40000 l. Marks for the performance of the same VVill 19 Marks was due to the Executors of H. 4. by oversight of the overseers of the same VVill of the Duke of Gloucester and others Lords there named The schedule thereto annexed conteineth the Kings Letters Patents in form aforesaid The Commons by the assent of the Bishops and Lords grant to the King the like Subsidie of Staple-ware Tonnage and Poundage as formerly for two yeares ensuing It is enacted that all such as were imprisoned in any of the Kings Gaoles for Heresie or Lollardie should be delivered to the Ordinary of the same place to be punished It is enacted that all such Petitions as are not ended in this Parliament shall be committed to the Council to be determined according to their discretion The King by authority of Parliament granteth to the Duke of Gloucester the office of Chamberlain of England with all the profits at the Kings pleasure In like form the King granteth to the said Duke the office of Constable of England The King by his Letters Patents confirmed by Parliament appointeth Iohn Duke of Bedford Protector and Defender of the Realm and Church of England and Chief Counsellor of the King so long as the said Duke then being beyond the Seas should remain in England and in his absence only the Duke of Gloucester to supply the said office the which Duke of Gloucester in full Parliament took upon him the burthen aforesaid with protestation that the same should not redound to the prejudice of the Duke of Bedford It is enacted upon the Kings Letters Patents that the Protectors aforesaid shall during the Kings minority dispose of all the offices of the Forests Keepers of Parkes and VVarrens and all Benefices of the Kings gift being above the value of 20 Marks to continue during their lives Certain Bishops Lords and others are named to be Counsellors assisting to the Governance aforesaid The which Counsellors took upon them in form following● viz. That all Justices of Peace Sheriffs Escheators Customers Comptrollers Weighers Searchers and such other Officers may be made be their advice and denomination That these Counsellors may make the most of all manner of VVards Marriages Farmes and other Casualties of the Crown That nothing be enacted by Council but by six or more at the least and in all great causes by all or the most and wherein the King is to be conferred withall that nothing be therein done without the assents of the Dukes of Bedford and Gloucester That the Treasurer of England and the two Chamberlains of the Exchequer may for every of them have a key to the Kings Receipt so as they be sworn before the Councell to make none privy thereto other than the Councell That the Clarks of the Councell may be sworn duely to keep the names of the Councell who do sit and truly to enact all things done by them The which Articles with the proviso ensuing were enacted by assent provided alwayes that such officers as have the same for life or otherwise may appoint Deputies any of the Articles notwithstanding Anne Countesse of Stafford daughter and heir of Ellinor one of the daughters and heirs of Humphry de Bohun late Earl of Hereford Essex and Northampton and Constable of England reciteth a partition made between King H. 5. and her of the inheritance of the said Earl in the ninth of his reign at what time certain Knights fees in grosse were not parted whereof she now prayeth remedy and concerning certain members of the Castle of Brecknock in Wales The Kings Councell shall have power by authority of Parliament to take order herein Bartholomew Goldbeator Master of the Mint within the Tower requireth larger Commission touching the Coynage and Exchange of mony in the said Tower albeit the King meaneth that no Minter should hold the Exchange yet to the next Parliament liketh that the said Bartholomew should keep the Exchange so he taketh not above three half pence for the Exchange of a Noble The print cap. 4. c. agreeth with 2. H. 6. tit 11. The print touching the wages of Captains cap. 5. agreeth with the record The like Act is made touching Exchangers to Rome as in 9. H. 6. tit 24. It is enacted that Thomas Chawcer Chief Butler to the King shall enjoy the said office during his life according to the Letters Patents thereof made to him by Hing H. 4. In consideration that the Prior and Covent of ●nychester otherwise called Prior Ecclesiae Herodosiae surrendred unto the King for ever the Common of pasture for forty oxen and kine and twenty hoggs with the increase within the Kings Parkes of Clarindon and Wilts and the right of one called a Stickler who was to cut wood daily for them within the said Park the King granteth to them by the
Tongues Felony p. 433. Pulling out Eyes ibid. Feme-covert surrender by her and her husband of Lands held of the Dutchy of Cornwal entred in Parliament and her confession to binde her and the Lands conveyed back to her by the Duke under age for life p 430. Grants of Goods and Lands by the King to the only use of a wise being covert and she enabled to sue and to be sued by Parliament p 670. Feoffments and Feoffees in trust by the King and others ratified and the breach of trust complained of and redressed in Parliament p 200 414 559 560 579 584 604 612 615 622 630 653 667 668 696. Feoffment absolute by Deed without Condition by the King can have no Condition annexed to it afterwards by Parol p 169. Sir Ralph Ferrer's arrest and trial in Parliament upon suspition of Treason p 189 190 199. Fescamp-Abby p 440. Filicers how to be punished for untrue dealing p 475. An Act concerning them p 627. Fines for Contempts and offences by Justices of Oyer and Terminer p 38 75. For not arraying men p 48 60 101. In Leets p 40. Of Commissioners p 44● In common gross p 40 127. for Riots● p 134. For false imprisonment p 296● Several p 40.134 For Insurrection and Trespass p 396.426 Pardoned p 40 4●6 By the Clerk of the Market p 134. For not receiving Gold p 49. On Labourers p 74. For withholding Lands without Title p 363. For arresting Knights Burgesses against their priviledges p 433. For suing in Court Christian p 476. Of Masters for giving excessive wages p 471. For marrying without License p 619. For sorcible Entry p 201. Fines and Amerciaments of Cambridge granted to the University p 200. Fine and Ransom for offences and misdemeanors p●3 ●3 296● 455 471 59● In Parliament p 295. For a false Return of a Knight p 429. Fine by Duress complained of p 81. After pardon p 664. Fines excessive in Leets complained of p 42 82 93. Fines for restitution p 9. For Liberties confirmed p 293. For Exemplifications p 202. For Writs p 15. see Writs Fines levied of Lands by Duress complained of and restitution granted for money p 8 9. Averment against it by a stranger not by a Feme-covert party to it p 30. Non-claim of Fines not to Bar p 40. Justices to take Recognisances of Fines in their Circuits beyond Trent p 88. Fees for ingrossing them p 118 161 162. Fine by an Infant not reversible after his full age though prayed p 131. An Act touching the Foot of Fines p 434 444. A Petition to reverse a Fine for falshood p 444. First-fruits of Benefices levied by the Popes Officers complained of and prohibited as a grievance p 74 110 130 151 160 192 285 467. To be paid to the King as they were to the Pope p 313. Fish● An Ordinance for its sa●● at Blackney p 97. An Act and Commissions against destroying the Fry of Fish in the Thames p 124 305. In Havens and Cre●ks p 148. An Act for retailing of p●85 ●85 That all may freely go to Island to Fish p 547. Fishmongers of London under the rule of the Mayor and Aldermen p 86 294 295. Flanders debates concerning it in Parl. p 23. Prohibit Merchant-strangers to buy Staple-wares complained of p 70. taken by the French King p 287. In enmity against p●91 ●91 Voyage into it p●●2 ●●2 Flattery of the Scots prisoners taxed by the King p 417. Fleet an Act touching prisoners in it p 164. see p 620. Flemings silver according to the Sterling to be currant among Merchants p 37. Liberties granted them p 40. Enemies to England p 303. Flight Forfeiture of Goods for it p 126. of Felons into secret places p 595. Forcible Entries p 201. Forfeitures of all Lands and Goods for Treason p 53 59 323 325 333 338 345 369 377 378 379 380 399 4●0 401 407 459 662 663 670 671 672 699. For Felony p 57 127 136 305 325 467. By Outlawry● p 590. Forfeiture to the Lord lost by Treason p 52 59. Of Goods and all for deserting Garrison-Frontier-Towns in times of war p 20. Of a Jurats goods in Iersey for revolting to the Enemy p 21. For not paying Customs p●9 ●9 By flight p 57. For negligence and fraud of Officers● p 59 63 125 127. Of Widows-dowagers for marrying p 87. Not of an whole ship for a trisle uncustomed p 101. For Vert and Vemson p 125. Without Attainder p 134. Of Yarn transported p 137. Of other Manufactures exported p 1●7 Of Goldsmiths not setting their Marks to Plate p 172. Of Corn transported p 285. For customing strangers goods in Denizens names p●39 ●39 For shipping goods in strangers bottoms p 346. For holding plea in the Marshalsey of matters at Common Law p 432. For Usury or Exchange● p 433. For not customing wares p 57● Copper L●ce and Imbroide●y instead of Gold forfeited p 571. Or Staple Ware p 605. Forestallers Acts against them 76 79 97 2●5 Punishment of them in Cambridge by the Vice Cha●cellor p 21● Foreign County against trials in it p 66 70 630. Forreign Inquest and Iuries in cases of Corporations p 93 3●0 331. complained against in Forresters p●9 ●9 Forreign pleas an Act concerning them p 632. Forging Deeds an Act against it● p 536 A Writ for it and exigent in it● p 558 600. The Venire in it ibid. A Formedon stayed p 609. Forts and Fortresses all the Kings to be surveyed p 1●9 The Petition that every man might freely make them denied p 113. Accusations Impeachments for losse of forreign Forts p 122 292 293. The Barbicans of the Realm and to be well defended p 175. Very chargable aid prayed to keep them p 337. Welshmen to have none and all there ●tored with English Souldiers p 423 424. Captains beyond the Seas to repair their Forts p 453. Fountain Abby A suit hanging long in the Court of Rome and Council of Constance concerning it p 551. An Act concerning it p 660. France Treaties of peace Truces Marriage with it and proceedings in them p 9 10 12 78 79 85 88 90 10● 329 337 341 35● 353 361 545 550 614 629 630 641 64● 64● English King thereof and his stile p 23 78 108 314 538 545. Wars with it● proce●dings successes victories expences in them and relations of them p 31 37 5● 63 69 78 82 90 105 108 110 111 116 145 182 188 193● 287 291 298 303 309 314 3●9 34● 342 352 404 405 415 425 43● 451 464 470 538 539 544 550 5●3 567 577 607 614 615 638 64● 666 682 683● Frenchmens Treachery p 108 111 145 303 425 470 567 614. Prisone●s of them taken and exchanged or ransomed p 550 570 612. See Prisoners of War The French here how to be used p 114 119 129 131 See Aliens Duke of Suffolks treachery in selling France under pretext of Peace c. p 641 642 643● Franchises their mischief and restraint desired p 54. No royal Franchises to be grant●d or
Acts against them p. 284 655. Of a Ward p. 311. Rainham Mannor in Kent holden of the King in chief as of Dover Castle p. 107. Rebels and Rebellion A Commission of Array to punish them p. 25. In Ireland and Gascoign A Parliament called how to suppres them p. 182. how to punish the horrible tumults and Rebellion at home against the King p. p. 195 437 602. Ringleaders in Insurrections Rebellions excepted out of general Pardons p. 201 203 282 284 412. Such as resisted slew executed them without due processe at Law in time of rebellion pardoned p. 197. Liberties of Cambridge seised into the Kings hand for their tumult rebellion p. 199 200. Let into London p. 286. The Kings great pains and expence in suppressing them p. 404. Power given by Parliament to the Duke of Yorke declared right heir to the Crown to ride through all the Realm and suppress all Rebellions Insurrections p. 667 The Parliament adjourned because the King was enforced to goe in person to suppresse Conspiracies and Rebellions against him p. 675 Rebels by proclamation to come in and submit themselves and deliver up their Castles by a day else to be attainted of Treason p. 671 672. See Treason Iack Cade Welshmen Receit of a feme Covert in Reversion p. 30. Of the remainder in tayl in default or fraud of tenant for life p. 91 334. No tenant to be received to counterplead his own conusance p. 149. An Act for receipt of him in reversion p. 334.572 Recognisance a Scire facias to issue on it p. 56 606. Of an Infant nulled p. 103. By duresse cancelled p. 107. For the Peace pag. 605 606 611. For good behaviour p. 300 652 653. An Act touching Recognizances p. 334. To others uses to remain to their uses p. 355. To appear at a day plea in barre against it p. 558. Before the Mayor of the Staple at Calice p. 604. Error in Parliament upon Judgement given therein in the K. B. p. 606. upon Bayl taken by Justices of Peace for appearance p. 682. Recompence to parties and their Executors in Parl. p. 123. Records searched for Ireland p. 10. Averment against a Record where the Plea is mis●entred in County-Palatins prayed p. 62. Chancellor to view the Record of the Popes Treaty with E. 3. about Provisors p. 161. Old Records concerning Prohibitions and Consultations in cases of Pensions to be searched by the Justices and to doe thereafter p. 165. Cancelling and razing sundry Records an Article against King R. 2. p. 388. Records imbezelled touching the Earl of Arundels inheritance to be searched for and restored page 395. Justices of Assise by Act to deliver all their Records into the Treasury p. 475. Kings Records to be searched for presidents for Knights wages● when nothing was done in Parliament p. 536. Intail to be proved in Chancery by matter of Record before Restitution thereto upon an Attainder p. 540. All Records of the K. B. and C. B. in the time of Ed. 3. 3. R. 2. H. 4. and 5. brought into the Treasury at Westminster prayed to be brought back into the Benches again p. 625. Record of a recovery in Right of Ward imbezelled but the Copy enrolled ordered to be exemplified and taken for the record pag. 690. Attornies to have free search in Court of the Rolls thereof which the Clerks are to bring in p. 306. Re-entry of the King for non-payment of Rent except of Corporations Fee-farms p. 407. Regrators remedy prayed against them page 97. To bee attached by the Chancellor and Scholars of Cambridge p. 304. Relation a recovery in Debt and Trespasse prayed to extend to land the day of the Writ purchased as to execution which could not be but by a new Law p. 53. Releases by Duresse avoyded p. 8. 199 200 551. Subsidy released by the King p. 168. Of an heir restored by Parliament upon request to the Kings Feoffees p. 373. Released of K. R. 2. not under the great Seal made void p. 397. A Release ordered to be pleaded in barre p. 417. Release of one Coparcenor binds the other and no Account lies for it p. 419. Release of Dower p. 431. Of the King by his Letters Patents to a tenant for life and his heires of Lands p. 540 541. Of Customs of certain Wines by the King p. 552. Religious Houses violations of their privileges p. 32. Remembrancer of the Exchequer his office by Act p. 204. Rent-charges remedy against them prayed when granted by Feoffees in trust against the will of the Feoffers p. 424. Reprisals and Letters of Mart Merchants of Brabant arrested by English Merchants for wools taken up for the Duke of Brabant who are to abide the Councils order therein p. 11. Remedy and restitution prayed by English Merchants against Spanish Gallies who boarded and took their ships and goods after the truce wherein the King promiseth to doe his best p. 132. Merchants of Bristol and other places arrested for the Debts and Trespasses of other English with whom they have no acquaintance or dealing at Calice pray redresse p. 136. Merchants of York whose wools were arrested by the Lord of Arde in Holland for a debt pretended due to him for service from the King of England refusing to deliver them upon the Kings Letters or other means pray license to stay this Lords ships at Calice or in England til they be paid or answered the value which the grand Council are to remedy according to reason p. 137. The Goods of Strangers attached in England prayed to be replevied to such Englishmen as had their goods spoyled on the Sea during the Truce which is granted except they be Leiges p. 160. English Merchants to be answered of Scots goods remaining in England for their goods taken in Scotland p. 185. Englishmen whose goods are arrested in Wales without cause and not restored within 7. dayes after means made for restitution may take Welshmens goods in England of such place or Liberty p. 411. Letters of Mart prayed and granted to an Englishman against such Frenchm●n as have not the Kings safe conduct for his goods taken by the French i● they refuse to do him right p. 476. The Next Cosins of Welsh Rebels and Rioters prayed to be arrested until the Malefactors render themselves pag. 483. The London Merchants pray in Parliament a confirmation of Letters of Mart and Reprisal granted them by the King against the Merchants of Iean which is granted with provision for the safe keeping and well ordering of the goods p. 541 542. An Act touching Letters of Mart 552. That such Merchants as are robbed by the Britains during the Truce may have Letters of Mart● prayed and committed to the Council p. 581. An act touching restitution of goods taken by the king of Denmarke and Petition that all persons who have their goods taken by the Merchants of Hauns may have their remedy against those of that Company remaining in London p. 604. That such Scots and Britains as shall sue in
Appeal Nisi prius Jurors Kings Bench. Answ. Old Law Fraudulent Conveyances Answ. Indictment Attorneys Inquest returned Exchequer Attaint Old Law Answ. Parliament adjourned because sundry Lords not come Chief Justice Causes of the Parliament Churches Reformation Peace Scotland Wools Petitions Peace and War by the Parliaments adv●ce Lords Scotland War advised Lords advice Merchants C●llis Commons advice respi●ed Conference with Merchants Magna Charta and Statutes Purveyors Penalty for negligences Omission out of the printed Statute Kings Carriages Wines ingrossed Inquests forreign Answ. Imprisonment without due Process Answ. Mainpri●e Fines Answ. Wools Weights Priests wages Offendors Parliament annually Subsidy of Wools pardoned Gold and silver Answ. Peace Justices of Peace Fees Answ. Debt Exchequer Answ. Petitions answered Answ. Pardon Waste Escheators Labourers Fines Petitions answered Subsidy granted Lionel created Duke of Clarence in Parliament Duke of Lancaster Earl of Cambridge Iohn created Duke of Lancaster● Charter Edmond Earl of Cambridge created in Parliament Charter Pleading● in English Staple Conusance Chief Justice Parliament adjourned because sundry Lords and Commons not yet come Chancellor Causes of the Parliament Subjects grieveances Churches liberties infringed Petitions Petitions M●rchants-aliens Transportation of Woollen cloaths Cheese Sheep Malt Beer inhibited Commons thanks to the King Clergy to pray for the peace and good g●vernment o● the Land c. Kings good will to the Commons Answ. Statutes confirmed Ordinances Customs of Woolls Answ. Silver coin Gold Answ. Exchange Answ. Money Poor Coiners Half pence and Farthings Answ. Merchants hostlers Regrators Forestallers Ordinance Fish Merchants Corn Meal and Victuals not to be transported Proclam●tion Answ. Weers Nusances Answ. Nisi prius King party King● Attorney● Venire facias Answ. Commons House Justices of Peace nominated by the Commons Answ. Identitate nominis Variance Poultry prices Exchequer Grocers Artificers Apparel Pestilence Alienation without licence Answ. Wines Price of W●nes Testimonial Justices of Assize Answ. Villenage Sugges●●ons Parliament prorogued Chancellor Appar●el Ordinan●e Statute Am●ndment Kings thanks Parliament dissolved Silver vessels Hawks Statutes printed not in the Record Parliament adjourned Proclamation Painted Chamber Chancellour Causes of Parliament Justice Kings good will to his Subjects Kings thanks Common Peace Good Laws Amendment of faulty Laws Petitions Kings Declaration Popes citations and Usurpations Kings Courts Provisors Ancient Laws Prerogative Treasure exported Ecclesiastical livings Divine Service Alms Hospitality Parliament Liberties Provisors Variance in the Record Transportation of Victuals and Corn prohibited Scotland Protection Scots Answ. Fines of the Chancery Answ. Peoples case Staple Impositions to cease Answ. Ships forfeited Customs cancelled Wines Suggestions Jurors Embracers Maintainers Staple Melcomb Lewes Customes Customers Lynne Royall assent Kings thanks Parliament dismissed Chancellor Painted Chamber Causes of Parliament Prince Gascoign Ireland Government of England Petitions Chancellor Causes of Parliament Popes claim of Tribute King Iohns Homage to Rome for England and Ireland Popes citation of the King to Rome Advice required Bishops Lords Commons Kings cannot subject the Kingdom to the Pope or any other but by common assent of Parliament Kings Oath● Popes usurpation unanimously resisted Universities Oxford Cambridge Fryers Complaint in Parliament Parliament Universities Degrees Bulls Rome King and his Council Chancellor Kings son in Law to be created an Earl Lords assent Chief Baron Parliament Aestate probanda Livery ouster le maine Age. Inspection in Parliament Reseisure Infa●ra Charters Recognisances Statutes Writings vacated Kings thanks Parliament dism●ssed Writs of Summons Parliament adjourned because sundry Lords and Commons not yet come Arch-Bishop Painted Chamber Arch-Bishop Victory over enemies Subjects loyalty Causes of Parliament Petitions Treaty King of Scots Peace Scotland Lords and Commons several advise and Answers Disinherison of the King and Crown Oath of Allegiance Thanks for Aids and Subsidies granted Subsidy granted Old Customs and new Great Charter Statutes Pardons Process of Law Commissions Escheators Labourers Victuals London Forainers Retail Merchants Wines Green wax Exchequer Aliens Callice Kings thanks for aids Lords and Commons dine with the King Sir Iohn de Lee. Robert Latimers Case Wardship Imprisonment Duress Due process of Law Kings Steward Kings Councel Unjust oppression Attachment Verge Marshalsey Jurisdiction Imprisonment Authority abused Purveyors Defrauding the King Mannor of Raynham Dover Castle Imprisonment in the Tower Constable of the Tower Kings Councel Wardship resigned to the King Recognisances vacated Lord Chancellor Causes of Parliament Parliaments counsel and assent used in all weighty affairs Peace with the French upon conditions Gascoyne Stile of French King relinquished The French breach of conditions Parliaments advise required Petitions Lords and Commons answer Stile of France Stile of France assumed by the King New Great Seal Patents Charters Writs Seals altered Subsidy granted Old Customs Forts surveyed and repaired Aliens Armour Horse-coursers Answ. No man punished contrary to Law Commissions repealed Prescription Answ. Silva cedua Tythes Answ. Pardon Forrest Sheriffs Answ. Indictment Nisi prius against the King Treason Cha●cellor Answ. Sea-mark Times of W●r Answ. Executors refusal Aquita●ned Repeal of Statutes Variance from the Record Staple King's thanks to the Lords and Commons Booty in War Conquest Charters Priors Aliens seised Clergies Array Parliament dissolved Painted Chamber Chancellor Causes of Parliament Kings necessity Kings Army The French Kings power by Land and Sea Englands invasion Advice of Parliament required Petitions Subsidy granted Contribution Staple Melcomb Chancellor Easter Petitions Kings thanks Parliament dismissed Great C●uncel summoned Chancellor Subsidy mistaken Parish●s Subsidy supplied Parish Church Chester Mo●tmain Commission for the Subsidy Collectors Commissioners Knights of Counties Petitions read and answered before the Lords and Commons Parliament dismissed Great Charter Church-men removed Crowns disinherison Officers Laymen prefe●r'd Kings election and prerogative over his Officers Kings Councel Answ. Petitions considered Lords Lands in Capite leased Answ. Mills Fines for Writs Answ. Purveyance Measure Answ. Eyre Treilbaston Corn Victuals Wooll Green wax Extracts Certainty Parliament Answ. Sheriff● Trial Birth Answ. Old Law Mayors Bayliffs Sergeant Victuall●rs Taverners Answ. Easterlings Merchants Answ. Merchants Wool Free Trade Answ. Merchants restrained Wines Repeal of Statutes Corporations Liberties Answ. Navies decay Ships arrested● Mariners Merchants restrained Masters of Ships Imposition Answ. Answ. Goods uncustomed Pardon Answ. Fortresses Answ. Assiises Justices Parents Answ. Commissioners charges Sessions Answ. Villenage Visne Answ. Possession Inquest of Office Escheator Trial. Scire facias Answ. Sheriff Escheators Answ. French Varlets Answ. Justice not to be delaid No man to answer without due process of Law Answ. Impositions Woolls Commons House Subsidy Answ. Sea-coast guarded Protections Commons loss Answ. Seals counterfeited Forgery Imprisonment perpetual Scottish money Answ. Priests Clergies assent Writs of Summons Parliament adjourned Painted Chamber Chancellor Causes of the Parliament Peace broken by the French Kings right to France Armies King of Castile Aragon Royal Navy Publick charges Aid required Nobles Realms defence Season of War Speedy answer Committee of Lords and C●mmons Conference Aids granted Wars
Lord Scroop Restitution Tayl. Petition Lord Fitz-Hugh Escheators of York Office returned Office by Commissioners Duke of Gloucester Monyes lent by the King Security for it taken by the Councell Petitions Merchants Staple Custome Goods perished and lost Resp. Councel Merchants Staple Sarploss Weights Resp. Parsons Vicars Service and Sacraments Chappels of ease Resp. Parsons Vicars Non-residence Forfeiture Resp. Arch bishops Impeachment Accusation Good fame Sanctuaries Sureties Resp. Northumberland Sheriffs extortions Head pence Resp. Kings Councell Merchants robbed Letters of Mart. Resp. Victuals Souldiers quartering Resp. Masons River of Ley. Sheep transported Imprisonment Treason Felony Lollardy Speedy tryall Resp. Treasurers Accounts Exchequer Due debts Tallye Resp. Butter and Cheese Justices of Peace Sewers Resp. Concealment of Customes Feoffees Tayl. Resp. Writs of Summons Writs of Summons King Chancellor Liberties of all Estates to be enjoyed Faith of the Church Hereticks Lollards Counsell Subsedy Glory to God Honour to the King Sound Counsell Peace Speaker elected Presented Petitions Commissioners to prorogue and dissolve the Parliament Sr. Richard Vernon Speaker Protestation Commons Decree Dissention between the Nobles Dissention to be ended Breach of Peace Lords sworn by order from the Commons Message to the Commons Proclamation Annuity and office from the King Appearance King and Councell Duke of Gloucester Bishop of VVinchester Dissention comprimised by the Lords Bishop excused from Treason suggested Princes death Kings Deposing Award Submission Reconciliation Discharge from the Great Seal Treasurer discharged Privy Seal Great Seal Bishop of Bath Chancellor Bishop of Durham Kings last Will and Codicell Lords of Privy Councel Keeper of the Privy Seal Lords of the Councell King bound by them to satisfy Creditors Petition Earl of Vandesme Ransom released Keeper of Barwick Castle Fee Deputy Kings pleasure Kings feoffees Homage Fealty Kings Councell Bills ended by them out of Parliament Tonnage Poundage Condition Lord Chancellor Commission Parliament prorogued Subsedy Tonnage Poundage granted Prior of St. Trinity Denizens Pardon for sheep-stealing Merchants Hauns Liberties Alderman of London Iudge Petitions Merchants Subsedies Customes Wools lost Councell Presentation Benefices Alien Praemunire Resp. Patron Presentation Non-residence Resp. Bishops Bribery Sheriffs Aliens banished Queen Resp. Chancellor License Alienation Kings widows Marriage Ancient Custome Resp. Clarks misprision Knights of Parli●ment● Victuals transportation Assize Protections Writs of Summons Writs of Summons King Painted Chamber Chancellor Causes of the Parliament Kings duty Subjects duty Forein Invasion Peace kept Justice indifferently administred Princes relief Defence Obedience Submission to Laws Liberties enjoyed Expedition Speakers choice and presentation Petitions Iohn Tirrill Speaker presented Excuse Protestation Chancellor Patent Parliament Prorogued Kings Council Tonnage Poundage granted Subsidy Archbishop of Cant. Letters Patents confirmed Chauntry Prior Alien Patents Lord Roos Special Livery Patents Release Kings Jewels gaged Account Executors Chancellor Commons Pope Rome Archbish. purgation Patents Annuity Nuns of Sion Petition Kings debts paid Kings Executors Pardon of Debts to H. 5. his servants Petition Wales Denizen Protection Protectors power Protector refuseth to sit in Parliament Council and Lords answer Protector Protectors power and duty Realms defence against Enemies and Rebels Tutors Leiutenants Governors Regents Principal Counsellor Protectors place in Parliament Abbesse and Nuns of Sion Corporation Pope Martin Canons Mariage Contract with any Queen of England prohibited without the Kings special License Forfeiture Bishops conditional assent to a Bill Law of God Petitions Exigents Mayor of the Staple Pleas. Law of Merchants Common Law Resp. Array Assize Variance Merchants Fine and Ransom Resp. Resp. Chancellor Licenses License of Alienations Wales Tryals Resp. Lords Merchers Justices of Peace Capias Exigent Liveries Mayor of London Resp. Sewers Thames Resp. Labourers Statutes continued Outlary Lancaster Resp. Election of Knights Pardon River of Ley. Bayliffs Justices Fees Resp. Staple Licences Drags Floats Severn Resp. Sewers Shipping Merchants Lords of Cauncel Petitions ended by them Justices advice Bills and Petitions answered out of Parliament Starchamber King Painted Chamber Chancellour Causes of Parliament Faith Fear Justice Peace Infidelity Errors Heresie Obstinacy Oppression Bohemia Fear of God Carnall fear Oppression translates Kingdoms True Faith Due Fear Upright Justice Kings duty Subjects Duty Aids to the King Speakers choice and presentation Petitions Committee of Commons William Allington Speaker His presentation respited Speaker presented Excuse Protestation Desme and Quindesm granted King and Council Duke of Burbon his ransom Kings Coronation Kings Protection of the Realm The Name and Power of the Protector and Defender abrogated Kings principal Counsellour Duke of Bedford releaseth his Title of Protector Bishop of Winchester made a Cardinal Disme and Quindisme granted The Cardinals Title Tonnage and Poundage granted Chancellour Parliament prorogued No Cardinal to be of the Kings Council but at his pleasure Cardinal requested to be of the Kings Council Cardinals Protestation Pope See of Rome Lord Talbots ransom Prisoners of War Impeachment Service of the King without wages Duke of Orleans Prisoner of War Safe custody Duke of Burbon Prisoner of war Bishop of Carlisle Election Lord and Tenants variances Cardigan Abbot of Stanford Councell Assurances to pay debts Callice Staple Treasurer Souldiers wages Reparations Subsidy of Wol● granted Disms Quindisms payment shortned Articles touching the Kings Council established Officers Old Servants of the King preferred The Councils promise to perform the Articles Petitions Revocation Burdeaux Imposition Riots Forest of Deane Windsor Chapel Corporation Dean of the Free-Chapel of Winsor Convocation Privilege Denmark Sewers Liveries Weights Burning of Houses Treason Out of the Realm Appeals Trial. Constable Marshall Laws of the Realm Resp. Election of Knights Sheriffs Processe Exchequer Resp. Kings Council Burgesses Writs for Wages Sheriffs Resp. Justices of Peace Piracies Resp. Breakers of Truces Scotland Resp. Soldiers Victualls Free-quarter Resp. Contribution Knights wages Burgesses Resp. Labourers Lambs wool Subsidy Poundage Resp. Forcible entries Variance Processe Indictments Appeals Apprentices London Errors assigned Protections Felons Fugitive Amendment of Records Escheators Privilege of Parl. A Burgesses servant delivered out of execution Commos House Chancellor Commission Re-execu●●on No Arrest but for Treason Felony Peace Shipping Staple Staple Prices Mint Callice Merchandise Callice Newcastle Barwick-Calli●e Wools. Deceit Thrumms Gold Merchants Aliens Assize Franchises Mayor of the Staple Petitions committed to the Councils determination Ireland Error in the Parliament in Ireland corrected in the Kings B. Parl. here Printed Acts not in the record Writs of Summons Humfry Duke of Gloucester Keeper of England Painted Chamber Chancellor Sicknesses Dr. William Linwood Causes of Parliament King and Kingdom established Unity Peace Justice Peace Justice Obedience of Magistrates Counsel Relief of the poor Due liberties enjoyed Speaker chosen and presented Petitions Commons reported their Speaker Iohn Tirrel Speaker presented Excuse Protestation Safe Conduct granteth Iohn Okilith Ireland Ambassadors Safe-Conduct Dism Quindism granted Tonnage Poundage granted Merchants strangers Subsidy upon lands 20 s. on every 20 l. Lands Knights
but for that time agreed to prepare an Army of men and a Navy of Ships whereunto they lent the King great sums of money the which Navy and Army he had prepared and thereby remained to them and to divers good Cities and Towns in debt He therefore willed the Lords by themselves and the Commons by themselves to weigh the necessi●ies and to provide therefore and not to muse at the sudden calling of this Parliament considering the same was for the Kings honour and safety of the Realm He further sheweth how for the charges of the Wars born and to be born the Treasurers of the same were and shou'd be ready to make them privy Receivers of Petitions for England Ireland Wales and Scotland Receivers of Petitions for Gascoyne and other places beyond the Seas and for the forein Isles Tryers of Petitions for England c. as above Tryers of Petitions for Gascoyne c. as above Sundry Nobles are named to examine the Revenues arising of the Subsidy of Wooll and to examine all the Revenues of the Realm viz. the old Maletolt of Woolls the revenues of Priors Aliens and all other receits of the King whatsoever To examine what Fees the Nobles and Officers received in the beginning of E. 3. what Annuities were granted by E. 3. or the black Prince his Son to survey all the Kings Moveables and enquire of the same to view the expences of the Kings Houshold of Callice and other forelets and apparrelments of War the Revenues of Burdeaux the Subsidy of Cloth the possessions of Cardinals Rebells upon debts upon receits of wages for the Wars and of Rome-pence or Peter-pence and the arrerages due for many years So as the King release and ease them of the Subsidy on Staple ware granted in the last Parliament tit 29. and the 6d. of every 20. in Merchandize then granted tit 30. The Lords and Commons do there grant to the King the Subsidies of Woolls there granted in the said last Parliament tit 29. to endure for one year longer and a certain sum of money of every estate of the Realm from the highest to the lowest Only I note every Justice of the two Benches with the chief Baron to be 5 l. whereas no Earl was above 4 l. The Mayor of London paid 4 l. as an Earl every Alderman 40 s. as a Baron Every Advocate 40 s. as an Advocate at Law The King being in Parliament the 27 day of May released the demand aforesaid tit 23. thenceforth to cease William de Montacute Earl of Salisbury sheweth the whole Circumstances and process contained in the last Parliament tit 31 32 33. The Scire fac granted the last Parliament to warn Edmond Earl of March is rehearsed at large Upon the same Scire facias awarded to the Sheriff of Shropshire Iohn de Ludlow Sheriff of the same returned the said Edmond Earl of March to be warned Whereupon the said Earl of Salisbury by Sir Iohn de Monteacute one of his general Attorneys by Pattent the same Earl being beyond the Seas in the Kings service as also the said Edmond Earl of March came into this present Parliament and hearing the return of the said Writs and Process of the said Earl of Salisbury by his said Attorney proffered to assign the errors contained in the said Record The Earl of March being there present alledged that the Writ of Scire fac is not sufficiently served for that the Writ willeth the Sheriff to warn Edmond Mortimer Earl of March Son and Heir of Roger Mortimer late Earl of March the Son of Edmond de Mortimer and the Sheriffs return is that he hath warned Edmond Mortimer Earl of March Son and Heir of Roger de Mortimer Son of Edmond de Mortimer late Earl of March which cannot be intended the same person for that Edmond the Father of Roger de Mortimer was never Earl of March The Earl of Salisbury affirmeth the Return to be good and prayeth that upon assigning of examination of the Errors the Judgment may be reversed But for that the Parliament grew towards an end and weighty affairs were to be done for the King besides the difficulty of the matter the King gave day to either of the said parties to the next Parliament with all advantages and the matter to stand as it now doth King E. 3. of certain purchased Fee-simple lands infeoffed the Duke of Lancaster and others in fee by Deed and caused Livery and Se●sin to be delivered thereupon without condition by writing or word Long after the same King prayed the said Feoffees by mouth that therewith they should provide for the sustenance of the Friars of Langley and for the Nuns of Dertford and to provide perpetual Obit for the Countess of Huntington and another for the soul of the Countess-Marshal and for other charges Whereupon all the Justices and Serjeants to the King there named were straitly charged in full Parliament to say their knowledge whether the Charge thus made to the Feoffees after the Feoffment aforesaid should by Law be adjudged a Condition so as the said gift were made conditionally All who agreed that sithence there was nothing spoken before the gift upon the gift nor yet upon the livery that the Kings request after they were thus in possession could not make any condition whereby the Kings right is now thereby saved And note that this motion was made at the suit of the Executors of King E. 3. who were infeoffed as is aforesaid and receiving of the profits were forbidden the same Petitions of the Commons with their Answers The print touching the Confirmation of the liberties of the Church cap. 1. swerveth from the Record for the Record hath saving the Kings regality which is not in the print Besides the print is more large then the Record in other points otherwise the print touching the Great Charter and the Charter of the Forrest agreeth with the Record That Answer reasonable may be given to all their Petitions now or hereafter to be moved and that Statutes be thereupon made before the departure of every Parliament Such Bills as remedy cannot otherwise be had but in Parliament reasonable answer shall be thereto made before such departure That the perambulations of the Forrest may be newly rode according to the Walks of King E. 1. That the Indictments of Vert or Venison may express the places of the trespasses or else to be void That any impeachment out of the bound of the Forrest may trebly therefore recover The Statutes or Charter of the Forrest shal be according to the Law and who will complain shall be heard It is enacted That in Loans which the King shall require of his Subjects upon Let●ers of Privy seal that such as have reasonable excuse of not lending may thereto be received without further
enrolled of Record That for resisting of Welch Rebells the Prince might abide in Wales and have power given him by Commission as of record might appear That no Hereditaments conquered from the Welch be given for one quarter of a year after Whereto was answered that the King would not grant any without advise That the time for the avoidance of the French and Britains out of the Realm be appointed It was answered it shall with all convenient speed That it would please the King to hold the Commons excused for that report was made that they had talked of the Kings person otherwise then them beseemed which was untrue and so the King by answer took the same The names of certain of the Commons appointed to treat with the Lords touching the safeguard of the Seas The Order touching the safeguard of the Seas First That the Merchants Marriners and Owners of English ships shall provide and finde sufficient and able ships for 2000 able fighting men and 1000 Marriners for a year and a half For which their charges they shall have upon account 12 d. of every pound of Merchandize 3 s. of every Tun of Wine and the fourth part of the Subsidy of Wools Wooll-fells and skins granted in the last Parliament The Merchants for the levying of the aforesaid sums shall have privy Seals as oft as they shall need The Merchants shall enjoy all such prizes as they shall take having due consideration of the Kings Chieftains if he shall any appoint The Merchants require 4000 l. in prest whereunto was answered That the King had it not If the Royal Navy of the enemy shall happen to be on the Sea and the King to make out against them the Merchants aforesaid shall then have one moneths warning to provide● The Merchants aforesaid shall have reasonable warning of any Peace or Truce taken after which they shall have due consideration of all their charges The Merchants aforesaid shall name two persons the one for the South the other for the North who by commission shall have the like power as other Admirals have had touching the same On the same third day of April the King for certain weighty affairs adjourned the same Parliament from the said third day unto the Quinden of Easter then ensuing to be holden at the same place of Westminster aforesaid and licensed the Lords and Commons for that time to depart The Re-assembly of the Parliament ON Monday the Quindena of Easter being the 25. day of April for certain great causes the Parliament was from day to day adjourned unto the Friday ensuing on which day the Archbishop of York with sundry Bishops the Duke of York with sundry Lords came and treated of matters concerning the Parliament On Saturday the 8. of May it was enacted by the whole assent that certain strangers by name who seemed to be Officers about the Queen should by a day depart the Realm and all others the like whereupon a Writ to proclaim the same was sent by assent of Parliament to the Sheriffs of London and that they should bring in all Patents of Lands or Annuities granted to them by the King or Queen On Saturday the 15. of May the Commons came before the King where the Speaker prayed that he might under protection have viz. as large Speech as any Speaker before that time had and that Richard Cliderow one of the Admirals appointed for the Sea might go there unto the which the King granted At the request of the Commons the King appointed certain by name to be of the Council and that by authority of Parliament On Monday the 24 of May the Speaker required to know whether the Lords of the Kings● Council appointed would take up the same The Arch-Bishop of Canterbury for himself and the rest of the Council answered yea so there were sufficient treasure otherwise not The same day the Speaker required provision for the great dearth at Callice remembring sundry great charges of the Commons and that same notwithstanding the whole Land of Guienne and Irela●d stood in hazard of losing as well for which as for the Sea and others he requireth politick provision The King answered that he would appoint the Council so to do He also requireth that all Captains beyond the Seas might repair speedily to their ●orts and Peirs as the Earl of Somerset was to Callice bent And that he might be pardoned if he had spoken any thing displeasant to the King or Lords the which the King granted On Tuesday the 25. of May the Lord Lovel and William Doyley before the King and Lords swore to abide the arbitrement of six persons the●e named of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and York as Umpiers therein touching the Mannor of Hinton near Brackley in the County of Northampton with the Appurtenances On Friday the fourth of Iune it was enacted that the Commission for the arraying and mustering of men made 5. H. 4. should not concern the Clergy It was the same day enacted that certain there named should have power to determine all controversies between the Merchants of Haunce and Pence and the English merchants according to a Commission thereof made On Monday the seventh of Iune the Speaker required that he might freely resort to his former protestation which was granted The Crown of England with all the Hereditaments and Rights whatsoever was by authority of Parliament with large conveyance entailed to the King and to the Heirs males of his body lawfu●ly begotten in like sort to the Prince and for default to the Lords Thomas and Humphrey successively but the conveyance is crossed and on the Margent is written a Vacat the which conveyance was exemplified under the Great Seal The same Speaker on the said day requireth that the Prince may be sent into Wales with all speed considering the rebellion of the Earl of Northumberland and others He also remembreth the King to provide remedy against the deceit of the Customers and Searchers the charge of Ireland and the little safety of the same the great charges of the Kings House in all which he wisheth provision The 19. day of Iune the Commons came before the King where the Speaker requireth that he may return to his former protestation and that good Government might be by the Council and they to be reasonably rewarded therefore He also requireth that the Queen may be endowed with Ten thousand Marks of Lands as other Queens before had been He also remembreth to the King certain persons by name and he desireth that they may be considered for their service Certain are appointed Auditors to take the accounts of the Lord Furnival and Sir Iohn Pelham for that they were Treasurers of the Wars as appeareth 6 H.
Father utterly depressed the rebellious dispositions of the Welsh How also he had resisted the Conspiracies had against Christian faith and destructions of his own and other persons How further for his great Victories obtained against the French at Harfleet and Agincourt And lastly for that sundry Towns in Normandy had rendred themselves unto him He further sheweth that the chief cause of the same Assembly was for three causes The first for keeping of the Peace and observation of the Laws The second how to continue the Kings Voyage Thirdly for keeping of the Marches of Scotland wherein they ought viriliter agere which if they did he then assured them of honour and glory considering that Remuneratio virtutum est honor And so willed the Commons to choose their Speaker and to present him the next day to the said Warden Receivers of Petitions for England Ireland Wales and Scotland Receivers of Petitions for Gascoyne and other places beyond the feas and of the Isles Tryers of Petitions for England c. as above Tryers of Petitions for Gascoyne c. as above The third day of the Parliament the Commons presented before the said Warden and Lords Roger Flower Esq to be their Speaker who with his Common protestations were allowed The Commons by the assent of the Bishops and Lords grant to the King one Desme and one Fifteen Iohn Martine William Babington William Poole William Wesburie Iohn Fame and Thomas Ralfe Apprentices at the Law and Serjeants appointed had refused the same where upon the charge of the Warden of England they took the same upon them On Tuesday the eighteenth of December and the twenty ninth day of this Parliament Sir Iohn Oldcastle of Cowling in the County of Kent Knight being outlawed upon Treason in the Kings Bench and excommunicated before the Archbishop of Canterbury for Heresies was brought before the Lords and having heard his said Conviction answered not thereto in excuse upon which Record and processe it was adjudged that he should be taken as a Traitor to the King and Realm that he should be carried to the Tower of London and from thence drawn through London to the new Gallows in St. Gyles without Temple-barr and there to be hanged and burned hanging The Record out of the Kings Bench is at large the effect whereof is That the said Sir Iohn Oldcastle and others to the number of 20. men called Lollards at St. Gyles aforesaid did conspire to subvert the state of the Clergy and to kill the King his Brother and other Nobles The Archbishop of Canterburies Instrument for his excommunication is there also at large Iohn de Holland Earl of Huntington was stayd of his Livery at the sute of the Countesse Marshall his Sister and by the Abbot of our Lord of Grace next the Tower of London for that the said Earl did not sue a Scire facias against them being Tenants of part of his Inheritance according to the last Parliament Tit. 16. Robert Penny being in execution in the Fleet upon out-law of a condemnation was let to Mainprize by the Guardian of England A motion is made that the Lord de Powis might be thanked and rewarded according to the Proclamation made for the apprehension of Sir Iohn Oldcastle Knight the Heretick Quid vultis mihi dare the brother of Iudas craveth his reward for betraying the Innocent wherein it is not to be doubted but that his lighter reward in this world was heavily revenged of God The Letters Patents made by the Bishop of Winchester for 21. Marks to be levied of Customs of all Staple Wares passing out of Southampton the which summ the said Bishop before had lent the King towards the warrs are confirmed by Parliament At the request of Thomas Duke of Exeter who at his Creation had 40 l. given him yearly out of Devon It is enacted that the said Duke shall first be payed before any other Petitions of the Commons with their Answers IT is enacted that the Church and all Estates shall enjoy their liberties which are not repealable by the Common Law A hainous complaint against Insurrections in the end they suspect that they were Lollards and Traytors A Request that Commissions at all times be granted to enquire of them The Statutes therefore made shall be executed The Clergie at this their own Parliament cease not to rage and roar after Christian bloud tanquam Leones rugientes and whosoever did the fault they put Iohn Porter in the stocks and cried Crucifie Christ and deliver us Barrabas for now all horrible mischiefs whatsoever were imputed to the poor Lollards A long complaint and prayer of redresse of Stankes Stakes Kiddles Milnes c. levied upon rivers to great annoyances The Statutes therefore made shall be observed That such Merchants as by their resiance contribute to all taxes may have their goods free in Port Towns It shall be as heretofore it hath been That Merchants of the Staple having their goods Customed and their Cocquets therefore be not sunderly in other places therefore impeached or slandered The Lieutenant will send to know the Kings pleasure therein The print touching making of Attornies cap. 1. agreeth with the record A motion that no Collector for the Clergie be appointed out of his Deanarie The Clergie shall appoint their Collectors Anno Septimo Henrici Quinti Rex c. Consanguineo suo Henrico Percie Com. Northum apud VVestm die Lunae post Festum Sancti Andreae Teste Rege apud Westm. Vicesimo primo die Octobris RAdulpho Nevil Com. Westmerland Hugoni Courtney Com. Devon Magistro Tho. de la Warr. Willielmo de Ferrariis de Grobie Hugoni Burnell Johanni de Welles Johanni Baroni de Graystock Reginaldo Gray de Ruthine Johanni de Latimer Ricardo Strange Roberto Poynings Edwardo Cherleton de Powis Tho. Camois VVillielmo Botreaux Tho. Dacre de Gilsland Summon Parliamenti Rex c. Henrico Percie Com. Northumb. apud Westm. decimo sexto die Octobris Teste apud Westm. Vicesimo quarto die Augusti RAdulpho Nevil Com. VVestmerland Edwardo Courtney Com. Devon Magistro Tho. de la VVarr VVillielmo de Ferrariis de Grobie Hugoni Burnell Johanni de Welles Johanni Baroni de Graystock Reginaldo Gray de Ruthine Johanni de Latimer Ricardo Strange Roberto Poynings Edwardo Cherleton de Powis VVillielmo Botreaux Tho. Dacre de Gilsland The Parliament holden at Westminster the sixteenth day of October in the seventh year of King Henry the Fifth ON the said sixteenth day the Bishop of Duresm Chancellor of England before the Duke of Bedford VVarden of England sitting in the Chamber de pinct in the Palace of Westminster and before the Lords
Whereas divers Murders Emblers de gentz Robberies Manslaughters Ravishment of Women Felonies and other misdeeds are committed and maintained within the Realm without number and so favoured by Charters of Pardon and procuring of deliverance that the misdoers and maintainers care not for the Law nor stand in fear to the great destruction of the people That remedy may be ordained by Statute that such misdoers and maintainers may not be comforted nor imboldened by any the means aforesaid Touching Pardons to be hereafter granted the King will advise with his Council so to do that no such Charter shall pass but to the honor and profit of him and his people And for Charters before this time granted he will advise with his Council what allowance thereof shall be made Whereas in the Parliament holden lau dis septisme of the King it was ordained That no Alien should by Provision from Rome take any Benefice and thereupon the King by his Letters wrote to the Pope concerning that matter and the assent of Parliament and justified the same les Grantz Comons wrote also another Letter under the Seals des diiz Grantz and of the Commons of Cities and Boroughs And certain appointed through England de Pendre the Proctors of Cardinals other Aliens Subdelegates and their Notaries And also Cries defence was made throughout England that no person upon pain of forfeiture should bring into the Realm Bulls or Process concerning such Provisoes and if any should that they should be taken and brought before the Council to answer such their contempt and afterwards in the next Parliament it was assented by the King and his said Commonalty That if any person of any condition whatsoever Provisor Procurator Notary Promoter or other whatsoever should pursue in the Court at Rome or elswhere in Court Christian to reverse Judgment given in the Kings Courts that he should be taken by his body and brought to answer it and if he were attaint that he should forejure the Realm or be committed to perpe●ual prison That if he could not be found then to be by due Process outlawed which then was ordained by a Statute perpetually to endure as by a Bill of that Parliament appeareth Yet nevertheless Cardinals and other Aliens have and do daily accept Benefices within this Realm by provision by their Procurators being Englishmen and do take as well Benefices meerly appurtenant to the Demesn of the King and of other Lay-Patrons as of Religious persons in despight of the King A des ditz Grantz de tout le Commune And thereupon they and others do pursue and follow divers Process in the Court of Rome and other Courts Christian there to annull and reverse Judgments given in the Kings Court to the prejudice and disherison of the King and Commonalty and contrary to the cryes defence surditz Whereupon the Commons pray the King to have regard of the said Letters so sent to the Court of Rome and to the relief and maintenance of holy Church and of Divine service here in England and of the damage destauction and disherison of the Church and his Crown des Gentz Comminaltie And by the Sages Justices Serjeants and others to ordain such punishment as well against Provisors Aliens their Executors Notaries and others their Procurators as against the Impugnors of the Judgment aforesaid as before hath been And that the same be reduced into a Statute perpetually to endure as often hath been desired And that such and so many Writs as should be needful be thereupon granted of course so as that which shall be herein ordained by Parliament be kept undisturbed for any singular profit It seemeth to the Council good to be done if it please the King by assent de Grantz to command the Commons being then before him in Parliament to advise him what they think best to be done in this case Wherein the Commons did declare their advice to the King and Grantz by a Bill in form following viz. De avisera sur sa lot les plusors Aliens il semble que bon est que nostre Sieur le Roy maunde ses Lettres au seint piere la Pape monstrant movant que il doit voler ordeiner tiels ministres beneficers en seint Egleise faire que poient levez profit faire quant al amendement salvation des almes des lour parocheines subgitz des queux ils out les cures mais les provenders aliens ne connisent n'entendant le putoys ne le lange d'engleterre ne la com d'engleterre loure pur quoy ils ne poient ne savant valer ne aider ne counceller les subgits per predications confessions ne autre maner entendable quiles defaults poient estre causes universeles de perte damnation des almes des Christians ausint er la ou benificers de seints Eglises curetes doient de commune ley faire residence despender les biens de seint Eglise enter lour poure parochiens les provisers aliens tout le profit emportent saunz residency amendemen● ou profit faire a loure benifices queux mischiefs deffauts suesdits le dit seint piere que est Soveraigne governeur de seint Eglise en terre aver doit aver le regard sil please nostre dit Sieur le Roy cestes mischiefs autres queux les Sages luy informerent au dit St. Piere maunder et monstrer per ses lettres come avaunt ses heures ad fait effectualment oue diligence pursuer per Sages que luy purrent enformer des novels accrochments contra son droit Royal est assaye de amendement saunz peril de alme ou conscience pleasance a la commune per protestation sil semble a nostre dit treshonor seiur le Roy son Councel que ore ne soit derogatorie ne prejudicial a sa Royal dignite ne a droit sa corone autrement nemy Iohn Matravers sheweth That in a Parliament holden whilst he was in the Kings service by information of his Adversaries in his absence a Judgment passed against him not indicted nor attainted nor called to answer In which Judgment he alleadgeth to be divers Errors dangerous a● touts les gentz d'Engleterre in time to come Also that he by the Kings commandment did shew the Errors before his great Councel at Westminster which Erors of the said Judgement were pronounced the Petitioner being present by the Kings protection Now he prayeth That the Judgment that was so given against him may in full Parliament be viewed and examined before the King the Peers and the Errors therein shewed by the Councel of the petitioner and that if the Judgement be erroneous it may be reversed and he restored to the Law and after the Judgment reversed the Petitioner will be ready to answer all men according to the
Laws of the Realm also he will acquit himself by his Oath with one hundred Knights That he was not guilty of that for which he was banished and if his Oath be not due He will that the Archbishop Bishops and all the Priests of England do excommunicate him And yet if any man will say it against him he will defend himself by his body against all men except the Kings blood that it may please the King to end the same matters Forasmuch as Petition hath been made to the King that where villianage is alledged against the Demandant or Plaintiff the same should be tryed by the County where the partie alledging the exception doth lay the birth of the Defendant or Plaintiff to have been● which Petition is against the law and usage to the great mischief of the Commons as appeareth by the pleading at the Assizes and other pleadings which are to be pleaded and determined in the Counties where the demand is or trespasses done que duissent purtant estre trop delayes a disheritance de la dit come and that which worse is If the Petition should be granted every man would alledge this exception against his adversary and would chuse a County at his pleasure whereby any freeman might by such means be made servile For by such exception alledged by un grant de la terre against a mean person the same should be tryed in a forreign County where his greatne●s is and where the mean man nor his Ancestors never came therefore the King will have regard to these and other mischiefs if the Petition should proceed and to the good laws and customs of the land and them to maintain without regard to the Petition of any single person against the Law of the land Whereas Lionel the Kings son and Elizabeth his wife do hold the County of Hulnester in Ireland in right and heritage of the said Elizabeth and forasmuch as if the said Elizabeth should dye without Issue the said County is to descend unto divers Persons whereof some are enemies to the King which Parceners would enter into the said heritage and would move war against the King as well in Ireland as elsewhere that against this evill and danger the King in this Parliament will provide remedy by the advice of the Prelates Counts and Barons and others of his Councel Iohn Wettenham and Walter de Cheriton Merchants desire that whereas the Commons have complained against them by divers Bills in Parliament● Viz. that they have done divers extortions grievances and prejudices to the King and Commons Forasmuch as they have imployed their pains and diligence to serve the King and have therein suffered many mischiefs that the King will command the said Merchants to come before the Councel to answer whatsoever shall be objected and to declare their estate so as other Merchants hereafter may not doubt to deal with the King in Cheevances nor no other businesses as occasion shall require That none may chase or kill the Kings game when the same do scape out of the Forrests but only the Lords of the Woods and of the Soil where such game are found and that some certain punishments be ordered for them which shall do otherwise Whereas the Commons are charged to advise the King how the Peace of the land may be better kept To which was answered that in every County six persons of whom two to be des pluis grantz and two Knights and two men of Law and so more or lesse as need shall be and they to have power and Commission out of the Chancery to hear and determine the keeping of the Peace Et que counts traylebastoneries ne courgent as heretofore was assented by Parliament for they were the destruction of the people to small or no amendment of the Law or Peace nor punishment of Felons or Trespassers Wherefore because the Commons have so long continued together to their great costs and mischief they desire answer of this Bill lour deliverance Anno Vicesimo secundo Edwardi Tertii Rex c. Henrico Com. Lanc. c. apud Westm. die Lunae post mediam Dominicam Quadragesimae Teste Rege apud Westmonast 14 die Februarii Consimiles Literae subscriptae WIllielmo Bohun Comiti Northampton Henrico Bohun Com. Hereff. Essex Humfrido de Courtney Com. Devon Willielmo de Clinton Com. Huntington Ricardo Com. Arundel Thomae de Bello campo Com. Warr. Johanni de Vere Com. Oxoniae Gilberto de Humfravil Com. de Anegos Roberto de Ufford Com. Suff. Laurentio de Hastings Com. Pembroke Johanni de Mowbray Henrico Fitzhugh Barthol de Burghurst seniori Henrico Piercie Rado Baroni de Stafford Ricardo Talbot de Morley Waltero de Mamcy Thomae de Berkeley Johanni de Seagrave Thomae de Lucie Johanni Harrington Petro de malo lacu le Quint. Rado Bulmer Reginaldo de Cobham Reginaldo de Grey Rogero de Grey Rogero de Chandos Johanni de Charleton Johanni de Willoughby Henrico Hussey Willielmo la Zouch de Harringworth Johanni Bardolfe Nicolao de Cantilupo Johanni de Fauconbridge Thomae Wake de Ridall de Bradston Thomae de Bugworth Anno Vicesimo secundo Edwardi Tertii The Parliament holden at Westminster the Monday next after the week in the midst of Lent Anno 22. Edwardi Tertii FOR that sundry of the Lords were not at this day come the Parliament was continned untill Tuesday and from thence Wednesday at the which day Sir William de Thorpe the Lord Chief Justice in the presence of the King and Lords by the Kings commandment declared That the Parliament was called for Two Causes The first How according to the Truce taken at Callice the King had accordingly sent Messengers to the Pope and looked for return of Answer before the last Parliament which now was not come for that also as sundry points of the Truce touching the King and his Allies were not performed And further For that sundry of the French prepared a puissant Army to invade this Realm The second cause was For the preservation of the Peace wherefore the whole Estates were willed to consult in what wise it might be releived for the attaining of his attempt The Lords and Commons took great advice from day to day and in the end answered in effect following They first shew the great charges laid upon the Commons as the reasonable aid being pardoned in 14. E. 3. whereof every Fine was forty shillings the setting forth of men the taking of victuals not paid for for the keeping of the Seas The Subsidy of Wooll amounting to Threescore thousand pounds yearly and yet without Law the lending of twenty sacks of Wooll the restraint of passing over of Wooll Notwithstanding they Grant to the King three Fifteens in three years so as the Subsidy of Wooll might cease so as David le Bruce William Douglas and other Chieftains