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A81194 A compendium of the laws and government ecclesiastical, civil and military, of England, Scotland & Ireland and dominions, plantations and territories thereunto belonging, with the maritime power thereof, and jurisdiction of courts therein. Methodically digested under their proper heads. By H.C. sometime of the Inner Temple. Curson, H. (Henry) 1699 (1699) Wing C7686A; ESTC R231895 237,927 672

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Sessions continueth till a Prorogation or Dissolution And the difference between an Adjournment and Prorogation is that after an Adjornment all things stand as they did before but after a Prorogation al● former proceedings not passed the Royal assent are made null and void When a Parliament is called and doth sit and is Dissolved without any Act of Parliament passed or Judgmen● given then it is no Sessions but a Convention Co. 4 Inst 28. A Bill was preferred An. 6 Hen. 6. that none should Marry the Queen Dowager of England without license and assent of the King on pain to lose all his Goods and Lands The Bishops and Clergy assented by content so far as the same swerved not from the Law of God or of the Church and so far as the same imported no deadly Sin The Act of Parliament is holden good and absolute for that the assent of the Clergy could not be conditionally neither was it against the Law of God c. as appears by Magna Charta cap. 7. Confirmed by 32 Acts of Parliament Co. 4 Inst fo 35. Of this Court it is said Si Antiquitatatem spectes est Vetustissima si Dignitatatem est Honoratissima si Jurisdictionem est Capacissima Fortescue Huic nec metas rerum nec tempora pono Virgil. King Henry the Eighth commanded Thomas Earl of Essex to attend the Chief Justices and know Whether a Man that was forth-coming might be attainted of Treason by Parliament and never called to answer The Judges answered It was a dangerous Question and that the High Court of Parliament ought to give Examples to Inferiour Courts for proceeding according to Justice and no Inferiour Court could do the like and they thought the High Court of Parliament would never do it But being by express Commandment of the King pressed by the said Earl to give a Direct Answer they said That if he be attainted by Parliament it could not come in question afterwards whether he were called or not called to Answer which was according to Law Altho' they might have made better Answer since by Magna Charta no Man ought to be condemned without being called to answer But Facta tenent multa quafieri prohibentur By ancient Law when any one was to be charged in Parliament with any Crime Offence or Misdemeanour The King's Writ was directed to the Sheriff to summon and enjoyn the Party to appear before the King in the next Parliament or otherwise it may be directed to the party himself as appean by the Writs King Henry the Eighth being in Convocation ackowledged Supream Head of the Church of England thought it no difficult matter to have it confirmed by Parliament but was secretly desirous to have the Impugners of it incur High Treason but having little hope to effect that concerning High Treason sought to have it pass in some other Act by words closely couch'd and therefore in the Act for Recognition of his Supremacy the Title and Style thereof is annexed to the Crown Afterwards by another Act whereby many Offences are made High Treason It is amongst other things Enacted That if any person or persons by Word or Writing Practise or Attempt to deprive the King or Queen or their Heirs apparent of their Dignity Title or Name of their Royal Estates should be adjudged Traytors Whereupon many were put to death The Will of Richard the Second whereby he gives Money Treasure c. to his Successors upon condition that they observe the Ordinances and Acts made at the Parliament in the 21th year of ●is Reign is adjudged void it being in ●estraint of the Sovereign Liberty of his Successors And it is a certain Maxim That Leges posteriores priores ●ontrarias abrogant The Acts of Parliament or Petition of Right may be Inrolled in any or all ●ther Courts of Record Every Member ought to come or ●e may be Fined and the Sheriff if he ●ake not due Return of all Writs may ●e punished King Henry the Eighth projected in Parliament No King or his Kingdom could be safe without Three Abilities First To be able to Live of his own and to be able to defend his own Kingdom Secondly To assist his Confederates else they would not assist him Thirdly To reward his well deserving Servants Now the Project was That if the Parliament would give all Priories Monasteries c That for Ever in time to come He would take care the same should not be converted to private use but employ'd to enrich hi● Exchequer for the purposes aforesaid To maintain 40000. Soldiers for strengthning the Kingdom The Subjects should not be burthened with Subsidies Loans c. That for 29 Lords of Parliament Abbots and Priors he would create 〈◊〉 Number of Nobles Now the Monasteries were given to the King but 〈◊〉 Provision for the Project made by thes● Acts only Ad faciendum populum thes● Possessions were given to the King an● his Successors to do therewith at his an● their own Wills to the pleasure of Al● mighty God and the honour and pro●● of the Realm Now observe the Cat●strophe in the same Parliament of Hen●● the Eighth When the Opulent Prior● of St. John's of Jerusalem was given t● the King he demanded and had a Subsidy both of the Clergy and Laity And the like he had in the 34th of Henry the Eighth and in the 37th of Henry the Eighth And since the Dissolution of Monasteries he Exacted divers Loans and against Law received the same If the King by Writ call any Knight or Esquire to be a Lord of Parliament he may not refuse for the good of his Country The Fees of Knights of Parliament is Four shillings per diem Citizens and Burgesses Two shillings Coke's 4. Inst 46. The Parliament at Coventry Anno 6 Hen. 4. for that in the Writs it was Directed pursuant to the precedent Ordinance of the House of Lords That no Lawyer should be Elected It was called Indoctum Parliamentum and such Prohibition was Null and Void and the Ordinance afterwards Repeal'd The Sheriff of Bucks was Returned Knight for Norfolk and being afterwards served with a Subpoena pendente Parliamento had the priviledge of Parliament allowed him 1 Caroli Regis primi Judges are not to Judge of any Law Custom or Priviledge of Parliamen● they being more properly to be learne● out of the Rolls of Parliament Record● and by Presidents and continual experience than by or from any Man Penn. Parliament from Parler la Ment 〈◊〉 called because every Member ough● sincerly Parler la Ment for the good 〈◊〉 the Common-wealth is the Highest an● most Honourable Court of Justice 〈◊〉 England consisting of the King th● Lord Spiritual and Temporal and th● Commons consisting of Knights Citize● and Burgesses and in Writs and Judical Proceedings it is called Comm●● Concilium Regni Angliae It appeareth That divers Parliaments have bee● holden before and since the time of the Conquest which are in print and many more appearing in ancient Records an●
word Districtionem for Destructionem altering the sense of the Statute of Gloucester although but by one letter adjudged it was matter of substance and the Writ could not be amended Cokes 5 Rep. 45. Freeman's Case The Acts of 7 Hen. 7. and 3 Hen. 8. are perpetual Acts for the word King doth include all his Successors Cokes 6 Rep. 27. Case of Soldiers Althô the Statutes speak only of the Party yet Executors and Administrators shall take advantage of it Cokes 6 Rep. 80. Sir Edw. Phitton's Case Resolved in Englefield's Case That by tender of the Ring according to the Condition the Uses were void and the Estate vested in the Queen by force of the Attainder and of the Act 33 H. 8. Cokes 7 Rep. 15. In the case of the Prince the King's Charter having the Force of Parliament is sufficient in it self without any other Act for it is affirmed by Parliament by Stat. 9 H. 5. That it was agreed at the Parliament 11 Ed. 3. That the eldest Sons of the Kings of England were Dukes of Cornwal and that Dutchy should remain to them without being given else where Cokes 8 Rep. Case of the Prince from 25 to 29. In many cases the Common Law doth comptrol Acts of Parliament and sometimes shall adjudge them void For when an Act of Parliament is against common Right and Reason or repugnant and impossible to be performed the Common Law shall adjudge it void Cokes 8 Rep. 118. Dr. Bonham's Case and 128 129 Case of the City of London When an Act of Parliament maketh any Coveyance good against the King or other Person certain it shall not take away the Right of any other althô there be not any saving in the Act Cokes 8 Rep. Sir Francis Barington's Case 138. In case of Sentence of Deprivation of one and Presentment Institution and Induction of another after by relation of a General Pardon all are restored without Appeal or new Presentation Admission or Institution Cokes 9 Rep. Lord Sanchar's Case In an Act of Parliament misnaming of a Corporation when the express meaning appeareth shall not avoid the Act no more than in a Will Cokes 10 Rep 54 to 57. Case of the Chancellor of Oxford If an Act of Parliament were intended to Repeal a former Act it could not be by general and doubtful words Cokes 10 Rep 138. the Case of Chester Mills It cannot be intended that a Statute made by Authority of the whole Realm should do any thing against Truth Cokes 11 Rep. 14. Priddle and Napper's Case The Title of the Act is no part of the Act as the preamble is and Penal Statutes shall be taken by intendment to remedy mischiefs and suppress Crimes Cokes 11 Rep. 34. Powlter's Case Penal Statutes are to be followed chiefly in Informations strictly and in terminis according to the purview of the Act Cokes 11 Rep. 56. Dr. Forster's Case Where the Rule is Leges Posteriores priores contrarias abrogant countrarium est duplex Vide Cokes 11 Rep. 63. Dr. Foster's Case Statut ' Praerogativa Regis saith The King shall have Annum Diem Vastum which is as much as to say he shall have the Trees c. to his own disposition Cokes 11 Rep. 83. Levis Bowles's Case By Stat. 4. Ed. 3.14 A Parliament shall be holden once a year and oftner if need be By Stat. 36 Ed. 3.10 A Parliament shall be holden every year By Stat. 5 R. 2. Stat. 2.4 Every Person and Comminalty having Summons of Parliament shall come thither in pain to be amerced or otherwise punished and if the Sheriff doth not Summon them he shall be likewise amerced or otherwise punished as hath been used in times past What persons are to be Elected Knights Citizens and Burgesses to serve in Parliament the manner of their Election and Levying of their Expences and the divers Acts of Parliament for regulating their Elections you may see in the Statutes at large By Stat. 6 Hen. 8.16 No Knight Citizen Burgess or Baron of any of the Cinque-Ports shall depart from the Parliament without License of the Speaker and Commons in Parliament assembled to be entred upon Record in the Clerk of the Parliaments Book on pain to lose their Wages By Stat. 33. H. 8.21 The Kings Royal Assent by his Letters Patents under the Great Seal and Signed by his Hand and notified in his absence to the Lords and Commons assembled in the upper House is and ever was of as good strength and force as if the King were personally present and had publickly assented thereunto By Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 1. It 's declared That the Parliament begun the 3d of November 16. Car. 1. is dissolved and that the Lords and Commons now sitting are the two Houses of Parliament notwithstanding any want of the Kings Writs of Summons or any other defect Stat. 16 Car. 2 cap. 1. The sitting and holding of Parliament shall not be intermitted above three years and now a new Parliament is to be called every Three years Stat. 6 W. M. Stat. 30 Car. 2. cap. 1. No Peer shall Vote make Proxy or Sit during any Debate in the House of Peers nor any Member of the House of Commons Vote or Sit there after their Speaker Chosen till they first take the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and Subscribe and Repeat the Declaration in the Act mentioned between the hours of nine in the Morning and four in the afternoon at the Tables in the middle of the said Houses in a full House in such order as each House is called over for which Declaration and other Matters see the Statute at large But now those Oaths by late Acts are altered and others appointed in their stead Tbe Executive Power in Temporal Affairs A Brief account having been given of the Parliament in which is comprehended the Legislative power in Temporal Affairs We are next to consider the Executive power in the same and that is generally in the King he being the Fountain of Justice and Lord Chief Justice of Engla●d and because he is Caput Principium Finis Parliamenti by which the Laws are made and nothing can have the force of Law without his consent given in Parliament by Le Roy le veut therefore All the Laws of England are called the Kings Laws All the Courts of Judicature are called the Kings Courts And all the Judges of these Courts are called the Kings Judges And the High Court of Parliament being the Highest Court of Judicature all other Courts and Person in England are subject to it The Court of the High Steward of England HIs Stile is Seneschallus Angliae which word Seneschallus hath several Derivations yet as being applied to England it is properly derived from Sen that is Justice and Schale that is Governour or Officer that is Praefectus seu Officiarius Justitiae And this agreeth well with his Authority and Duty to proceed Secundum Leges Consuetudines Angliae This Office is very ancient and
fallitur inter alia suae dispensationis munera quibus nos Regnum nostrum Angliae decorari dignata est Terram Walliae cum Incolis suis prius nobis Jure Feodali Subjectam jam sui gratia in Proprietatis nostrae Dominium Obstaculis quibuscunque cessantibus Totaliter cum Intergritate convertit Corona Regni praedicti tanquam partem corporis ejusdem annexuit univit Yet this Wise and Warlike Nation was long after this not satisfied especially for that taking part with their Rightful Liege Lord King Richard the Second In Revenge thereof many severe Laws were made against them in the Reigns of H. 4. H. 5. c. And they were never in quiet till H. 7. their own Country-man as descended from Owen ap Meredith ap Theodore who Married Katharine Daughter of France and Dowager of King Henry the Fifth and was by Commission found to be Lineally descended from Cadwallader King of the Britons obtained the Crown And yet not so really Reduced in his time as in the Reign of his Son King Henry the Eighth when The Principality of Wales and Dominions thereof was by Act of Parliament 27 H. 8. Incorporated and United to the Realm of England And it is thereby Enacted That every Subject born in Wales should enjoy the Liberties Rights and Laws of this Realm and have Knights of Shires and Burgesses of Parliament c. One Knight for each Shire and One Burgess for each Burrough and the Laws of England used in Wales Vide le Stat. And this Principality consisteth of 12 Counties whereof Eight viz. Glamorgan Anglesey Carnarvan Pembroke Merioneth Flint Carmarthan and Cardigan by Statutum Walliae were Erected 12 E. 1. And the other viz. Brecknock Radnor Denby and Montgomeroy by 27 H. 8. Besides the Shire of Monmouth and other Lordships and Manors in the Marshes united to Salop Herefordshire and Gloucester The Court of the President and Council of Wales THis is a Court of Equity before the President and Council there Warranted by the Statute of 34 H. 8. cap. 36. with Reference to Presciption before in these Words There shall be and remain a President and Council in the said Dominion and Principality of Wales and the Marshes of the same with all Officers Clerks and Incidents to the same in manner as heretofore hath been used who shall have Power to hear and determine by their Wisdoms and Discretions such Causes and Matters as be or hereafter shall be assign'd to them by the King's Majesty as heretofore hath been accustomed They sit by force of the King's Commission and Instructions and proceed as in a Court of Equity by their Wisdoms and Discretions Herefordshire Worcestershire Shropshire and Gloucester are included within this Commission pretending that these Four Shires are within the Marshes of Wales This Court is now Dissolved The Great Sessions in Wales BY the Statute of 34 H. 8. It is Ordained That there shall be Sessions holden and kept Twive in every Year in every of the said Shires within the Dominion of Wales which shall be called The King 's Great Sessions in Wales The Justice of Chester should hold those Sessions in the Shires of Denbigh Flint and Montgomeroy and have nothing but his old Fee of 100 l. for the same That the Justice of North Wales shall likewise hold the Sessions for the Shires of Carnarvan Merioneth and Anglesey and shall have Fifty Pounds yearly of the King for his Fee That one Person Learned in the Laws appointed by the King shall be Justice of the Shires of Radnor Brecknock and Glamorgan and shall hold the said Sessions there and shall have Fifty Pounds yearly of the King for his Fee That one other person Learned in the Laws and appointed by the King shall be Justice for the Shires of Carmarthan Pembroke and Cardigan and shall keep the Sessions there and have the like Sum of Fifty Pounds yearly of the King for his Fee The said Justices shall have several Letters Patents and Commissions for their Offices under the Great Seal of England to be Excercised by themselves or their sufficient Deputies according to the purposes and intents in their Ordinance specified These Justices may hear and determine all Pleas of the Crown as the Chief Justice and other Justices of the King's-Bench may do in their places and elsewhere in the Realm of England and all Pleas of Assize and all other Pleas and Actions Real Personal or Mixt as the Chief Justice of the Common Place in England or other Justices of the same Place may do in the Realm of England That open Proclamation being made in the Shire-Towns Fifteen days before of the Time and Place they intend to keep the said Sessions the said Sessions shall be held and continued for Six days together according to the former Custom heretofore used in North Wales The Seals devised for each Division to be kept by the Steward and Chamberlain of each Division Four Judicial Seals to be in the Custody of the Four Justices respectively and the Teste of Process Judicial shall be in the Name of the Justice who shall pass it Fines Concords Recoveries c. taken before the said Justices within their Authority respectively without any Dedimus potestatem as before the Justice of the Common Place in England There shall be Justices of the Peace and Justices of Quorum and Custos Rotulorum Commissionated by the King in Every of the said Counties not exceeding Eight in a County and those or two of them in each County whereof one to be of the Quorum may keep their Sessions Four times in the Year or oftner if urgent occasion requires and have like Authority and Fees as Justices in England Sheriffs Escheators Coroners Constables of Hundreds and other Officers and their Courts to be had and holden as in England Vide le Statute Rodry Maure King of VVales who died Anno 877 in the time of Alured King of England and left Three Sons Mervyn Anarawd and Cadelh Divided his Kingdom into Three parts Guyneth which the English call North-VVales the Latins Venedotia he gave to Mervyn or as some say to Anarawd Powisland in Latin Powisia which some call VVest-VVales he gave to Anarawd or as some say to Cadelh and Deheobarth which the English call South-VVales and the Latins Demetia he gave to Cadelh or as some say to Mervyn The First was the best because the Quietest the Second often Invaded by the English and into the Third Incursions were often made by the English Norman and Fleming The Division of this Kingdom brought in time such Division amongst these Princes that it was never quiet till it came under one Monarch and King again For the Royal Dignity of a Monarch or King from whence all other Subordinate Dignities Tanquam Lumen de Lumine are derived without any Diminution will suffer no Division Regia dignitas est Indivisibilis quaelibet alia derivativa Dignitas est similiter indivisibilis King Edward the Third
the Archbishop of Canterbury and his Fiat obtained are admitted by the Judge of the Court on condition not to Practise one whole year after his Admittance which is in this manner Two Senior Advocates in their Scarlet Robes with the Mace before them conduct him up to the Court with Three low Reverences and Present him with a short Latin Speech and the Rescript of the Archbishop Then the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and some other prescribed by The Statute of the Arches being taken he is Admitted by the Judge and a Place or Seat in the Court assign'd him either à Dextris or Sinistris which he is always to keep when he pleads The Judges and all the Advocates in these Courts when they plead always wear their Scarlet Robes with Hoods lined with Taffata if they be of Oxford or White Miniver Furr if they be of Cambridge and all Black Round Velvet Caps and the Proctors wear or ought to wear Hoods lined with Lambskin if not Graduats But if Graduats Hoods according to the Degree There are divers other Civilians whereof some not Advocates are Chancellors to Bishops or Commissaries The Vicars Generals and Chancellors are appointed by the respective Archbishops and Bishops by Letters Patent under their Seals and Confirmed by the Dean and Chapter of the respective Cathedrals The Proctors are persons that Exhibit their Proxies for their Clyents and make themselves parties for them and draw and give in Pleas or Libels and Allegations in the behalf of their Clyents produce Witnesses prepare Causes for Sentence and attend the Advocates with their Proceedings And their Admittance is also by the Fiat of the Archbishop Introduced by the Two Senior Proctors and are allowed to Practise immediately after their Admission They wear Long Black Robes and Hoods lined with White Furr Taking the Oaths now Enjoyned by Act of Parliament All Process in the Court of Arches runs in the Name of the Judge thus Robertus Wiseman Miles LL. Dr. Almae Curiae Cant ' de Arcubus London ' Officialis Principalis and Returnable in the Comman-Hall at Doctors Commons The Title of the Judge of the Admiralty is Supremae Curiae Admiralitatis Angliae Locum tenens Judex sive Praesidens The Writs and Decrees run in the Name of The Lord High Admiral and the Court held also in the Common Hall at Doctors Commons The Title of the Judge of the Praerogative Court is Curiae Praerogativae Cant ' Magister Custos sive Commissarius And all Citations and Decrees run in the Name of the Archbishop The Judge is attended by the Register who sets down the Decrees and Acts of the Court and keeps the Records of all Original Wills and Testaments of parties Dying having Bona Notabilia in the place called the Praerogative Office where for a moderate Fee any one may Search for and have a Copy of any Testament or Administration since the Rebellion of Wat Tyler and Jack Straw Upon Appeals to the Court of Delegates the Judges are appointed by the Lord Chancellor under the Great Seal Pro illa vice which Court is also kept in the same Common-Hall the day after the Praerogative in the Afternoon The Citations and Decrees there run in the King's Name And from thence of course lies no Appeal but the King of his meer Praerogative Royal doth many times grant A Commission of Review The Colledge of Physicians in London BY Charters and Acts of Parliament of Henry the Eighth and since have certain Priviledges Whereby no Man though a Graduate in Physick in Oxford or Cambridge may without License under the said Colledge Seal Practise Physick in London or within seven Miles thereof nor in any other part of England in case he hath not taken any Degree in Oxford or Cambridge whereby they have power to punish Offenders make by-By-Laws purchase Lands search Apothecaries Shops in and about London are freed from Offices and bearing Arms may practise Physick or Chyrurgery not only in London but in any other part of England This Society had anciently a Colledge in Knight-Rider-Street the Gift o● Dr. Linacre Doctor to King Henry the Eighth afterwards had their Colledge in Amen Street Endowed by Dr. He●vey with his whole Inheritance which being consumed in the late Dreadful Fire The Fellows having purchased Ground have now Raised a Magnificent Structure in Warwick Lane And of this Colledge is A President Four Censors and Eight Elects who are all Principal Members of the Society one of which is chosen yearly to Preside The Four Censors have by their Charter Power to Survey Correct and Govern all Physicians or others that shall practise Physick in London or within seven Miles of the same and to punish Offenders as they shall see cause For all which see the Statutes mentioned in Coke's 4 Inst. fo 251. In Rot. Pat. 32 H. 6. M. 17. it 's Recorded That the King with Assent of his Council assigned certain Physicians and a Chyrurgeon to Administer in and about his person Potions and other parts of Physick and to moderate his Dyet To which they were every one commanded to be Attendant Whereby it appears No Physick ought to be given to the King without Warrant and that by Advice of his Privy Council and no other Physick than what is set down in Writing and that ●hey may use the Aid of Chyrurgeons Named in the Warrant but no Apo●hecary they being to prepare all things ●hemselves The Science of Physick by the Statute of 32 H. 8. is Declared to contain the Knowledge of Chyrurgery If one of the Mystery of a Physician take a Man in Cure and give him such Physick that he dye within three days thereof without any Felonious intent● and against his Will it is no Homicide But Britton saith If One not of the Mystery of a Physician or Chyrurgeon take upon him the Cure of a Man and he dieth of the Potion or Medicine this is Covert Felony Gresham Colledge in London BUilt by Sir Thomas Gresham and Endowed by him with the Revenue of the Royal Exchange by him Built before which he gave one Moiety to the Mayor and Commonalty of London upon Trust That the Major and Aldermen should find Four able persons to Read Divinity Geometry Astronomy and Musick there and to Allow each of them Fair Lodgings and 50 l. a year and the other Moiety to the Company of Mercers upon Trust to find Three able Persons to Read Civil Law Physick and Rhetorick and to have Lodgings and the like Allowance These several Lecturers are to Read in Term time every Day except Sundays In the Forenoon in Latin and in the Afternoon the same in English The Musick Lecture only in English There is also a Mechanick Sort of Lecture for Natural Philosophy Instituted by Sir John Cutler with a Salary of 50 l. per Annum to be Read at the time ●nd place where the Royal Society shall meet Syon-Colledge in London THis was Founded by Thomas White Doctor in Divinity for
Ratification or to the end of the next Session of Parliament By the Statute of 22 Car. 2. cap. 9. Persons to be nominated by the King under the Great Seal or so many of them as shall be appointed to be of the Quorum shall have power to Treat with Commissioners to be Authorised by the Parliament of Scotland concerning an Union of the Realms and such other Matters as they shall think fit for the Kings Honour and Good of both Kingdoms Their Proceedings to be reduced into Writings or Instruments Tripartite one part whereof to be presented to the King another to the Parliament of England and a third to that of Scotland Provided that nothing to be agreed on by them shall be of force till confirmed by Act of the Parliament of England By the Statute of 4 Jac. 1.1 He that is once Tried in Scotland shall not be called in Question again for the same Offence By the Statute of 2 Ed. 4.8 Merchandize carried into or brought out of Scotland or the Isles thereof shall be first brought to Berwick in pain to forfeit the same As the Law hath wrought four Unions 1st The Union of both Kingdoms under one Natural Liege Sovereign King being so acknowledged by the Act of Recognition 2ly The Union of Liegeance and Obedience of the Subject of both Kingdoms due by the Law of Nature to their Sovereign 3ly The Union of Protection of both Kingdoms equally belonging to the Subjects of either of them 4ly The Union of the three Lyons of England with that one of Scotland United and Quartered in one Escutcheon So the Law doth make four Seperations 1st England and Scotland remain several and distinct Kingdoms 2ly They are Governed by several Judicial or Municipal Laws 3ly They have several distinct and seperate Parliaments 4ly Each Kingdom hath several Nobilities For albeit a Postnatus in Scotland or any of his Posterity be the Heir of a Nobleman of Scotland and by his Birth Legitimated in England yet he is none of the Peers or Nobility of England for his Natural Ligeance and Obedience due by the Law of Nature maketh him a Subject and no Alien within England But that Subjection maketh him not Noble within England for that Nobility had its Original by the Kings Creation and not of Nature More of which matter you may Read at large hereafter in Ireland And that the highest and lowest Dignities as a King and that of a Knight are nevertheless universal Coke's 7 Rep. 15. Calvin's Case In ancient time part of Scotland besides Berwick was within the Power and Ligeance of the King of England yet was Governed by the Laws of Scotland The Case in 42 Ed. 3.2 Ruleth it That so many as were Born in that part of Scotland that was under the Ligeance of the King were no Aliens but inheritable to Lands in England yet was that part of Scotland in another Kingdom governed by several Laws And certainly if they were Natural Subjects in that Case when the King had but part of Scotland when the King hath all Scotland they shall be Natural Subjects and no Aliens Barwick is no part of England nor Governed by the Laws of England yet they that have been Born there under the Obedience of one King are Natural Born Subjects and no Aliens There were sometimes in England whiles the Heptarchy lasted seven several Crowned Kings of several and distinct Kingdoms but in the end the West Saxons got the Monarchy and all the other Kings melted as it were their Crowns to make one Imperial Diadem for the King of the West Saxons over all Now when the whole was made the actual and real Ligeance and Obedience of one King they were all Natural born Subjects and capable of and Inheritable unto any Lands in any of the said Kingdoms Of all which matters and things last above mentioned you may read at large in Coke's 7 Report Calvin's Case By the Statute of 4 Jac. 1. For Repeal of Hostile Laws It is Enacted That no Englishman shall be sent out of England into Scotland for any Offence done in Scotland until the Realms be made one in Laws and Government There was a Proclamation the 20 of Octob. 20 Jac. 1. concerning the Kings Stile of Great Britain wherein all Judicial and Legal Proceedings are excepted Cokes 4 Inst 345. The Lesser Islands near Scotland ARE the Orcades or Isles of Orkeny in number 32 Situate against the North Cape of Scotland The chief being Pomonia whose prime Town is Kirkwal honoured with a Bishops See and strengthened with two Castles It is stored with Tinn and Lead and called by the Inhabitants Mainland The 2d Hotlands or Oceti the Inhabitants Bibacissimi sunt tamen non inebriantur These Isles in Solinus time were not Inhabited being over-grown with Rushes Now are they Populous and Fertile were first discovered by Julius Agricola and first possessed by Normans or Norwegians who surrendred them to Alexander King of Scotland 1266. They speak the Gothish Language Schetland lies two days Sailing North of Orcades and is supposed to be the Thule of the Ancients The Hebrides because Scituate West of Scotland in number 44. The chief Ila 24 Miles long and 16 broad Plentiful in Wheat Cattle and Herds of Red Deer The Isle of Sky 40 Miles long Iona famous for Sepulture of the Kings of Scotland Mula 25 Miles bigger than the other The People both in Language and Behaviour resemble the Wild Irish and are called Redshanks A COMPENDIUM OF THE Laws and Government OF IRELAND WITH THE ISLANDS Thereunto belonging Anno Domini 1699 IRELAND FROM Erinland signifying in their Language a Western Land lies on the West of England and Wales in length from the North parts of Antrim to the South parts of Cork 285 in breadth from the East parts of Down to the West parts of Mayo 160 Miles long Anciently called Juverna Hibernia Overnia Jernia Scotia minor Bernia and Vernia now by the Natives Eryn by the Welsh Yverden by the Germans Irlandt by the Italians Irlanda and by the French Irlande The first Inhabitants came out of Britain were anciently Rude and Barbarous having little Law or Government First partly Conquered by the Saxon Monarchs of England Then by the Norwegians not long after by Henry the Second of England till by little and little it was wholly Reduced to England and still remaineth so Governed by a Vice-Roy call the Lord Lieutenant or Deputy of Ireland whose Seat is at Dublin They received the Christian Faith by St. Patrick Anno 335 and are both Protestants and Papists Their Language is a Dialect of the Old British intermixed with Norwegian Danish and English The English is also frequently used among them and in some places a Mongrel Speech between both Their chief Commodities are Cattle Hides Tallow Butter Cheese Honey Wax Furs Salt Hemp Linnen Cloath Pipe-Staves Wool Frizes c. This Country is divided into Four Great Provinces Anciently Kingdoms viz. 1. Ulster Ineol Cui-Guilly on the North
And sometimes the Kings of England have called the Nobles of Ireland to come to the Parliaments of England Coke's 4 Inst 350. And by Special Words the Parliaments of England may bind the Subjects of Ireland Co. 4 Inst ibid. And seeing good Acts of Parliament made in England since the Reign of King John extended not to Ireland unless it were especially named or by General Words included a Right profitable Act was made at a Parliament holden in Ireland Anno 10 Hen. 7. before Sir Edward Poynings then Deputy or Pro-Rex in Ireland and thereupon called Poyning's Law That all Statutes late made in England concerning the publick Weal should be accepted used and executed in Ireland Co. 4 Inst. 351. In what manner a Parliament is to be holden in Ireland and how Bills offered to the Parliament there shall be first Transmitted hither under the Great Seal of that Kingdom and having received Approbation here shall be returned hither to be preferr'd to the Parliament and several Questions and Doubts Resolved concerning this matter Vide Co. 4 Inst 353. By the Statute of 3 Hen. 2. all Persons having Lands Tenements or Offices Ecclesiastical or Temporal shall Reside upon the same and those that have Castles must there reside and repair and fortifie them And if they Depart they must appoint some able to supply their room or the Governour may dispose half their Living to such Defence Co. 4 Inst 356. At a Synod holden by St. Patrick in Ireland it was unanimously agreed That Irish Priests should have Wives Co. 4 Inst 356. There is an Ancient Record concerning Ireland necessary to be Explained In these Words REX Thesaurario Hiberniae Solutem Cum Edwardus primogenitus noster terram Hiberniae habeat teneat de dono nostro cum omnibus pertinentiis suis adeo libere quiete sicut eam in manu nostra teneremus per quod charissima filia nostra Alianora Consors dicti filij nostri Aurum suum tam de finibus quam sponte Oblatis in terra Hiberniae habere Debet sicut charissima Consors nostra Alianora Regina Angliae Aurum suum habet de eisdem in Regno nostro Angliae Vobis mandamus c. quatenus praefat ' Consorti filij nostri praedicti Aurum praedictum de finibus sponte oblatis etiam de quibuscunque aliis finibus praedictis habere facias in forma praedicta Et hoc c. In cujus c. Teste Rege 29 die Februarij Anno 52 Hen. 3. By this Record first it appeareth that as the Law was taken at that Day by Gift of King Henry the Third his Eldest Son Prince Edward was Lord of the Dominion and Lordship of Ireland Secondly That albeit the Wife of Prince Edward was not Queen in Name but had the Effect of it therefore she should have a Duty called Aurum Reginae as well as the Queen of England being but Lady in Ireland For albeit the Kings of Ireland were until the Statute of 33 Hen. 8. styled by the Name of Lords of Ireland yet was he Supremus and absolutè Dominus and had Royal Dominion and Authority and that his Consort was in rei veritate Regina or else she could not have had Aurum Reginae Albeit this Royal Dominion and Land of Ireland was of ancient time permitted to be granted De facto to the King's Sons before-mentioned yet by the Law the King by his Letters Patent could not grant so Royal a Member of his Imperial style to any no more than he could do of the Kingdom of England Co. 4 Inst 357. What was the Duty of Aurum Reginae and when due Vide 4. Coke's Inst 358. At a Parliament holden in Ireland by Howel Duke of Clarence Lieutenant there Anno 40 Edw. 3. called The Statute of Kilkenny The Brehon Law which was the Irish Judges Law is no Law but a Lewd Custom crept in of later times and never was the Law of the Ancient Britains from whom they are descended Co. 4 Inst 358. The Pro-Rex there hath been sometime called Custos Warden Lieutenant Chief Justice Deputy of Ireland Coke's 4 Inst ibid. If an Archbishoprick or Bishoprick in Ireland be void then the Chapter shall Sue to the King in England to go to Election and after Election made they ought upon Certificate thereof made to the King to obtain his Royal Assent to this Election and thereupon a Writ shall be directed out of the Chancery here to the Chief Justice of Ireland or his Lieutenant rehearsing all this matter and commanding him to take Fealty of the Bishop and to restore him to his Temporalties But now the Course is in Ireland to make such Writs there in the Name of the King But the King Names the Archbishops and Bishops there as he doth in England and then the Chapter chuse him whom the King Names and thereupon Writs are made of Course Coke's 4. Institutes 359. And whereas some have Divided this Kingdom into the English Pale and Wild Irish let Oblivion bury it for now all are reduced to Obedience and civil Behaviour● So as a Man may justly say of the Old Britains Sunt in Bello fortes in Pace fideles And whereas some have said the Crown of England had the Country of Ireland by Donation from the Pope the following Record will manifest the Truth therein Altitonantis Dei largiflua Clementia qui est Rex Regum Dominus Dominantium ego Edgarus Anglorum Basileus omniumque rerum Insularum Oceani qui Britanniam circumjacent cunctarumque Nationum quae infra eam includuntur Imperator Dominus gratias ago ipsi Deo Omnipotenti Regi meo qui meum imperium sic ampliavit exaltavit super regnum patrum meorum Qui licet Monarchiam Totius Angliae adepti sunt à tempore Athelstani qui primus Regum Anglorum omnes Nationes quae Britanniam incolunt sibi armis subegit nullus tamen eorum ultra fines Imperium suum Dilatare aggressus est Mihi tamen concessit propitia Divinitas cum Anglorum imperio omnia regna Insularum Oceani cum suis ferotissimis Regibus usque Norvegiam maximamque partem Hiberniae cum sua Nobilissima Civitate de Dublina Anglorum regno Subjugare quos etiam omnes meis imperiis colla subdere Dei favente gratia Coegi Quapropter ego Christi gloriam laudem in regno meo exaltar● ejus servicium amplificare devotus deposui Et per meos fideles fautores Dunstanum viz. Archiepiscopum Ayelyolanum ac Oswaldum Archiepiscopos quos mihi patres spirituales consiliatores eligi magna ex parte disposui c. Facta sunt haec Anno Domini 964 Indictione 8. Regni vero Edgari Anglorum Regis 6 in Regia urbe quae ab incolis Ocleayeceastrie nominatur in natale Domini festivitate Sanctorum Innocentium feria 4 c. ✚ Ego Edgar Basileus Anglorum Imperator Regum gentium cum consensu principrim
Archiepiscoporum meorum hanc meam munificentiam signo meo corroboravi ✚ Ego Alfrye Regina consensi Signo Crueis confirmavi Ego Dunstan Archiepiscopus Dorobor ' Ecclesiae Christi consensi subscripsi ✚ Ege Osticel Archiepiscopus Eboracenses Ecclesiae consensi subscripsi Ego Alferic Dux Ego Buthnod Dux Ego Arigdary Dux And what Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction the Archbishop of Canterbury had in Ireland in ancient time before it was Subject to the Crown of England you may read in Cambden's Britannia p. 735 765. as namely in the Consecration and Confirmation of their Bishops by reason of his Primacy in Ireland Co. 4 Inst 360. King Henry the Second at a Parliament holden at Oxford Created his Son King John King of Ireland But succeeding Kings wrote themselves Domini Hiberniae till 33 Hen. 8 in which year he took upon himself the Style of King of Ireland being so Declared at a Parliament in Dublin Coke's 4 Inst 360. Certain it is that whilst the Liberal Sciences in Europe lay Buried in Darkness their Lustre did shine forth clearly in Ireland Thither did our English Saxons repair as to a Mart of good Literature whence of the Holy Men of those times we often read Amandatus est ad Disciplinam in Hiberniam Co. 4 Inst 360. In the Book of Magna Charta is an Ordinance for Ireland concerning divers Matters Entituled Ordinatio pro statu Terrae H●berniae By the Statute of 17 Ed. 1 cap. 1. The King's Officers in Ireland shall purchase no Land there without the King's License King's Officers in Ireland shall make no Purveyance there but by Writ out of Chancery there or in England and that in time of Necessity only and by the Advice of the Council there All kind of Merchandizes may be Exported out of Ireland except to the King's Enemies and if any Officer restrain them he shall satisfie double Damages to the party grieved and be also punished by the King The Fees for every Bill of Grace in Ireland under the Seal of the Justice there shall be Four pence for the Bill and Two pence for the Writing thereof The Marshals Fee for a Prisoner when he shall be Delivered is Four pence No Pardon of the Death of a Man or other Felony or for flying for the same shall be granted by the Justices there but only at the King's Command and under his Seals No Officers there shall receive any Original Writ which is not Sealed by the Seal of Ireland or by the Exchequer Seal there of things concerning that Court. The Justices of Ireland shall not Delay or Adjourn Assize of Novel disseisin there save only in the County where he is and while he shall remain there By the Statute of 34 Ed. 3.17 all kind of Merchandize may be Exported and Imported out of and into Ireland as well by Aliens as Denizens Persons who have Lands and Possessions in Ireland may freely Import and Export their Commodities thither and from thence without Impeachment By the Statute of 1 Hen. 6.3 all Irish Men shall avoid the Kingdom except Graduates Beneficed Men Lawyers having Inheritance in England and English Parents Religious Persons Professed Merchants Burgesses and other Inhabitants of good Fame and Persons Married in England and all they shall find Surety for their Good Behaviour No Irish Man shall Inhabit here in the Universities or elsewhere without a Testimonial under the Seal of the Lieutenant or Justices of Ireland Testifying that he is of the King's Obeysance to be Delivered to the Chancellor here in pain to be punished as a Rebel No Irishman shall be Head or Governour of any Hall or House By the Statute of 2 Hen. 6.8 Irishmen coming to live in England shall give Surety for their Good Behaviour viz. in the Universities to the Chancellors in Counties to the Justices of Peace and in Corporations and other Liberties to the Head Officers respectively By the Statute of 16 17 Car. 1.30 an Act for a speedy Contribution and Loan towards the Relief of the King 's Distressed Subjects of the Kingdom of Ireland See the Statutes at large An Act for the Speedy and Effectual reducing of the Rebels in Ireland to their due Obedience to the King and the Crown of England and certain other Additional Acts were made for the same purpose and for the Sale of Forfeited Lands there By the Statute of 32 Car. 2. cap. 2. The Act made 18 Car. 2. Entituled An Act against Importing Cattle from Ireland and other parts beyond the Seas and Fish taken by Foreigners is revived and Power given not only to Constables and Officers but to every Person whatsoever in any place whatsoever to take and seize the Cattle and Goods Imported contrary to the said Act And that such Seizer shall have the Benefit given by this Act. The other Acts concerning Ireland made in England and the divers Acts made in Ireland you may see in the Books of the Statutes of either Kingdom at large The Rule Quando duo jura concurrunt in una persona aequum est acsi in diversis holdeth not in Personal things that is when two Persons are necessarily and inevitably required by Law For no man can now say That the King of England can make War or League with the King of Scotland or King of Ireland c. there being but One Head of both and as Liegance of the Subjects of both Kingdoms is due to their Sovereign by one Law and that is the Law of Nature So there is a Union of Protection of both Kingdoms equally belonging to either of them altho' in other respects they are distinct Kingdoms For and Earl or Baron of Ireland is not a Peer or of the Nobility of this Realm as appeareth by the Book 8 R. 2. where in an Action of Debt Process of Outlawry was awarded against the Earl of Ormond in Ireland which ought not to have been if he had been Noble here But there is a diversity worthy of Observation for the highest and lowest Dignities are Universal For if a King of a Foreign Nation come into England by leave of the King as it ought to be in this case he shall Sue and be Sued by the Name of a King And a Knight shall be so named wheresoever he received that Dignity Co. 7 Rep. Calvin's Case If a King come to a Christian Kingdom by Conquest he having Vitae Necis potestatem may alter the Laws of that Kingdom at his pleasure but until such alteration the Ancient Laws of that Kingdom remain But if a a Christian King Conquer the Kingdom of an Infidel there ipso facto the Laws are abrogated and in that case until certain Laws be established the King by himself and such Judges as he shall appoint shall judge them and their Causes according to Natural Equity in such sort as Kings in ancient time did their Kingdoms before any certain Municipal Laws were given But if a King have a Kingdom by Title of
Law-Books lately Printed for J. Walthoe in the Temple Cloysters 1 COke's Reports with References to all the Ancient and Moder● Books of the Laws in 11 Vol. Fol. 2. Dalton's Countrey Justice with large Additions Fol. 3. Cases argued and decreed in the High Court of Chancery Fol. 4. A Collection of the Orders relating to the Practice of the Courts of Chancery and Exchequer 12mo 5. The Law of Common and Commoners or a Treatise shewing the Original and Nature of Common 8vo 6. The Method of Pleading by Rule and President 8vo 7. The Compleat Sheriff wherein is set forth his Office and Authority together with that of a Coroner 8vo 8. A View of the Penal Laws concerning Trades Professions and Traffick and what Offences are punishable in the Crown Office 12mo 9. The Abridgement of the Statutes of King William 8vo 10. Bridgman's Conveyances is now in the Press and will be speedily published with Additions Fol. 11. Tryals per Pais or the Laws of England concerning Juries 8vo A COMPENDIUM OF THE Laws and Government Ecclesiastical Civil and Military OF ENGLAND SCOTLAND IRELAND AND DOMINIONS Plantations and Territories Thereunto belonging WITH THE Maritime Power thereof AND Iurisdiction of Courts THEREIN Methodically Digested under their Proper Heads By H. C. sometime of the Inner-Temple LONDON Printed by the Assigns of Rich. and Edw. Atkins Esquires for I. Walthoe and are to be sold by Iohn Deeve at Bernard's-Inn-Gate in Holbourn 1699. THE PREFACE TO THE READER AT my first Entrance into the Study of the Laws of England knowing Method and Order conduce much to the enlightning of the Vnderstanding rendring things more perspicuous and comprehensive to the discerning Judgment and sitting them better for the retaining Memory I resolved to observe a Regular Course and therefore searched for such Authors and endeavoured to make use of such Means as might best correspond with my Design therein But among the several Treatises of the Laws and Government of this Kingdom and Jurisdiction of Courts heretofore written by several Eminent and Learned Men finding none were so compleat nor had that Beauty of Order and Vniformity at might be expected And the Lord Coke in the Epilogue to his Fourth Institutets concerning the Jurisdiction of Courts desiring the Wise-hearted and Expert Builders would amend both the Method and Vniformity and the Structure it self where they should find any Deficiency in the Architecture and considering that great Alterations have been made since by divers Acts of Parliament and otherwise I was enduced to compile this Methodical Compendium of the Laws and Government of England and the Dominions thereunto belonging to direct and facilitate my farther Studies But the Importunity of some having prevailed with me to promise contrary to my first Intention and Inclination to make it Publick If it prove beneficial to others it will surmount all the Ambition may be thought to be in Yours To the extent of his Power H. Curson A Table of Contents Governments in General ORiginal of Government Pag. 1 Law is General Pag. 4 Law Eternal ibid. ●aw of Reason Pag. 5 Divine Law Pag. 6 Humane Law Pag. 7 Fundamentals of the Laws of England Pag. 8 The Government of England The Government of England Pag. 22 The King ibib Privy Council ibid. Ecclesiastical Government of England Ecclesiastical Government Pag. 28 Convocation Pag. 32 Executive Power in Causes Ecclesiaical Pag. 36 High Commission Court Pag. 36 Court of Arches Pag. 39 Court of Audience ibid. Court of the Faculties Pag. 40 Prerogative Court of Canterbury ibid. Court of Peculiars 41 Consistory Courts of Archbishops Bishops 42 Court of the Archdeacon or his Commissary 44 Court of Delegates 44 Laws and Constitutions Ecclesiastical 45 Trials Ecclesiastical in Civil Causes 46 Trials Ecclesiastical in criminal Causes 46 Punishments by Ecclesiastical Courts 47 Punishments Ecclesiastical peculiar to the Clergy 49 Civil Government of England Civil Government of England 51 High Court of Parliament 51 535 Executive Power in Temporal Affairs 80 Court of the High Steward of Eng. 81 539 High Court of Chancery 90 Court of extraordinary Jurisdiction 93 Court of the Star-Chamber 104 Court for Redress of Delays of Judgment in the King 's great Courts 108 Court of Kings Bench 113 Court of Common Pleas Court 121 Court of the Exchequer 127 Court of Inquiry to certifie untrue Accompts in the Exchequer 140 Court of Equity in the Exchequer 141 544 Office of the Pleas in the Exchequer 142 Courts of Justices of Assize Nisi-prius 144 Court of Justices of a Oyer and Terminer 153 Court of special Justices of Oyer and Terminer 166 Money collected for the Houses of Correction or for the Poor 166 Colledges Hospitals or Alms-houses or for charitable and lawful Purposes and Uses 167 Court of Justices of Goal-delivery 169 Court of Justices of the Forrest 175 Court of Justices in Eyre 193 Court of Justices of Trailbaston 195 Court of Wards and Liveries 196 Court of Ancient Demesne 196 559 Court of Commissioners of Sewers 198 569 Court of Commissioners upon the Statute of Bankrupts 201 573 Commissioners for Examination of Witnesses 203 578 King's Swanherd 204 587 King's Aulnager 205 590 The Government of Counties in England 207 Court of the Sessions of the Peace 210 Court of Inquiry of the Defaults of Justices of the Peace Justices of Assize Sheriffs and Under-Sheriffs 222 The Execution of Laws in each County ibid. Court of the Tourn 223 595 Court Leet or View of Frankpledge 224 597 County Court 228 615 Court of the Hundred 233 630 Court Baron 235 632 Coroners Court 237 635 Court of Escheators and Commissioners for finding of Offices 239 635 Court of the Clerk of the Market 241 Court of Pipowders 246 Court of the Dutchy-chamber of Lancaster at Westminster 247 Courts of the County Palatin of Chester 251 Court of the County Palatin of Durham 252 Royal Franchise of Ely 254 Court of the County Palat. of Pembroke 255 Franchise of Hexam and Hexamshire 255 Courts of the Cinque-Ports 256 President and Council in the North 258 The Wardens Courts in the East West and Middle Marshes adjoyning to Scotland 260 Court of Stannaries in the Counties of Devon and Cornwall 261 Court of the Mayor of the Staple 263 The Principality of Wales The Principality of Wales 266 Court of the President and Council of Wales 269 The great Sessions in Wales 270 Military Government of England Military Government of England 275 Court of Chivalry before the Constable and Marshal 279 Colledge of Heralds 283 Maritime Power of England Maritime Power of England 287 Court of Admiralty 292 638 Navy Office 295 Court of Commission by force of the Statute 28 H. 8. Cap. 15. 298 Port Courts 298 Commissioners and others for Beacons Signs of the Sea Light-houses Sea-marks and concerning Watches 299 De Conservatore Treugarum i. e. Induciarum c. 302 Court of the King of England Court of the King of England 308 Ecclesiastical Government of the King's Court
that there need not be any Written Law had thereof And we find so many Secundary Reasons in the Laws of England that many are willing to affirms the whole Law of England to be proved by Reason which notwithstanding is by no means to be affirmed as by another Example By a certain Statute it is Ordained That he who hath abjur'd the Realm whilst he is in the publick High-way shall be in peace with our Lord the King and not in any sort molested and by the Custom of the Kingdom he is to be conducted from Town to Town by the Constables c. to the Sea-port c. Now if he Escape the Constable ought not to be charged to the King because by reason of the Statute he could not keep him in safe Custody or use any Force or Imprisonment whereby he might be kept in safe Custody and the Reason is grounded upon that Statute And some say Robbery is to be prohibited from Reason Primary even before the Law of Property for that it was not Lawful even when all things were in Common to take any thing from another by force or to throw him out of his Habitation but that such Robbery is to be punished with Death is from the Custom of the Law of England Also from the General Law of Property aforesaid by the Laws of England are excepted Birds Wild beasts and Beasts of Warren in which by the Laws of England is no Property to any One unless they be Tame yet nevertheless by the Laws of England in the Eggs of Herons and such like Building in the Woods of any is a Property And for that every Deduction of Reason in the Laws of England proceeds from the first Principles or from somewhat from those Principles derived no Man althô the most Wise can Judge justly or Argue rightly in the Laws of England if he know not these Principles The Second Fundamental of the Law of England is Lex Divina whereby to punish the Transgressors against the Divine Law The Law of England in many Courts of our Lord the King doth Inquire of Hereticks Also if any Statute be made or set forth against them as that none shall give Alms it ought to be of no force also Persons Excommunicated in the Laws of England may not Prosecute nor have Communication with others whilst the Excommunication is certified And from the same Fundamental the Law of England admits the Spiritual Jurisdiction of Tithes and other things which do of right belong to the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and receives Canonical or Ecclesiastical Laws Quae non Excedunt potestatem ferentis so that in many Cases it behoves the Kings Justices to Judge according to the Laws of the Church As if the Law of the Church be that the Sentence of Divorce is not in force till it is affirmed upon Appeal The Judges of our Lord the King shall form their Judgment according to the Laws of the Church And if A. B. and C. D. have Goods and Chattels joyntly and A. B. by his last Will give his part to E. F. the Ecclesiastical Judges are bound in this case to adjudge this Will void The Third Fundamental of the Law of England is the General Customs of the Kingdom which are divers General Customs used and approved of in Ancient time throughout the whole Kingdom of England and who attempts any thing against them Works against Law and Justice And these are properly called the Common Law and ought always to be determined by the Judges whether a General Custom or not and not by the Country and of these and other Principles or Maxims a great part of the Law of England depends and therefore the King by his Coronation Oath promiseth inter alia that he will faithfully observe all the Customs of the Kingdom and the Ancient Customs of the Kingdom is the Original and Foundation of divers Courts in the same Kingdom Whereof one is The Chancery of the Kingdom in which inter alia Writs original are obtained directed to other Courts of the King another The Kings-Bench in which are handled all Treasons Murders Homicides Felonies and other things done against the Kings Peace another Court is called The Common Bench in which Common Pleas are handled That is to say of Lands and Tenements Debts and Chattels and such like another Court is called The Kings Exchequer in which are handled divers matters touching the King alone as of Sheriffs Escheats or Receivers Bayliffs and other the Kings Officers and the like and these are called Courts of Record because those who preside as Judges ought to be assigned by the Kings Letters Patent and these Courts have many and divers other Authorities of which we shall speak more hereafter in their proper places and likewise of divers other Courts of inferiour Authority in the Kingdom of England And althô in divers Statutes and Books mention is made of the Authority of these Courts yet we have no written Law of their Institution for their Institution depends upon the Custom of the Kingdom which hath so great Authority that they may not be altered or their Names changed or altered but by Act of Parliament Also there is an Ancient Custom which is confirmed by the Statute of Marlebridge That all shall do and receive Justice in the Kings Court and another that none shall be put to Answer or be judged but according to the Law of the Land and this is confirmed by Magna Charta And there are other General Customs in the Kingdom of England which retain the force of Law as that the eldest Son shall succeed the Father in the Inheritance and many more not here to be recited From whence it appears that Customs in the Laws of England may not be proved by Reason alone for how can it be proved by Reason that the Husband shall have the Wife's Land for Term of his Life as Tenant by that Law and that the Wife shall have only the Third part scilicet that it shall be so done and not otherwise And it is certain that the Law of Property is not the Law of Reason but a Customary Law and ought to be accounted amongst the General Customs of the Kingdom and there is not any Statute or written Law of the Institutions of the Customs of the Law of England but according to the Skilful in the Law of England The Ancient Customs of the Law of England are of themselves of sufficient Authority and the Customary Law is the most firm Law provided such a Custom be not against the Law of God or the Law of Reason The Fourth Fundamental of the Law of England consists of Divers Principles which the Learned in the Law call Maxims always esteemed and held for Law of this Kingdom of England which none Learned in the Law may contradict because every one of them gives Faith or Credit to it self and whether a Maxim or not is to be tried by the Judges as before is said of General Customs of
the Kingdom and not by the Country And these Maxims are not alone taken for Law but also all other like cases and all things necessarily following upon them are to be placed in like Law and they are in the same force and strength in Law as Statutes and althô all these Maxims might conveniently be numbred amongst the aforesaid General Customs since Ancient Custom is the sole Authority as well of these as those yet because those General Customs are diffused and known they may easily and without study in the Laws be known but these Maxims are only known in the Kings Courts or by those who are Learned in the Law and now for example sake we will mention a few of them since to declare them fully great Volumes would not suffice And first there is a certain Maxim in the Laws of England that no Prescription in Lands maketh a Right also that Prescription in Rents and Profits to be taken in the Lands of another maketh a Right also that the limitation of Prescription is generally taken à tempore cujus centrarij Memoria hominum non existit c. And further there are many other Maxims as in certain Actions The Process is by Summons Attachment and Distress Infinite and in some by Capias Infinite c. and that there should be these divers Processes in divers Actions may seem expedient and reasonable but that there should be these divers Processes had in the Law of England and none other cannot be proved by Reason therefore they must necessarily have their force from the Maxims aforesaid or the Ancient Custom of the Kingdom And some Maxims seem to be founded upon Reason Secundary and therefore some may think they may be put unto the first Fundamental of other Laws of England as if any command a Trespass he is a Trespassor c. And there are other Maxims and Customs which are not so manifestly known but may be known by the Law of Reason partly by Books of the Law of England which are called Year Terms partly by Records in the Kings Treasury and remaining in the Kings Courts and by a Book called the Register and by divers Statutes in which such Customs and Maxims are often recited Vide Doctor Student The Fifth Fundamental of the Law of England consists of Divers particular Customs used in divers Countries Towns Lordships or Mannors and Cities of the Kingdom which said particular Customs because they are not against Reason nor the Law of God altho' they are contrary to the aforesaid General Customs and Maxims of Law yet they retain the force of Laws And they ought not always to be determined by the Judges whether there be such a Custom or not unless in a few particular Customs sufficiently known and approved in the Kings Courts but ought to be tryed by the Country And of these particular Customs I shall put a few for Example As there is a Custom called Gavelkind in Kent where all the Brothers shall Inherit as the Sisters do at Common Law By Burrough English in the Town of Nottingham the younger Son shall Inherit In some Countries the Wife shall have all the Inheritance of her Husband in Name of Dower so long as she continues a Widow And in some Countries the Man shall have half the Inheritance of the Wife during his Life although he hath no Issue by her In some Countries the Infant may make a Feoffment at his Age of Fifteen years And in some Countries when he can Measure an Ell of Cloth yet such Infant may not make Warranty for if he do it is void in Law neither may he in such case make a Release Thus are held many other particular Customs The Sixth Fundamental consists of Divers Statutes Ordained in Parliament when other Fundamentals of the Law of England are not sufficient for it is to be known that altho' the Law of Reason may be assigned to be the first and principal Fundamental of the Law of England yet the Law of Reason is not of so great force and efficacy in the Laws of England that it alone being known all the Law of England is known For besides the Law of Reason he who desires to know the Laws of England ought to know the Custom of the Kingdom as well General a Particular and the Maxims and Statutes of Law or otherwise altho' h● were the wisest of Men he will understand but few things of the Truth o● the Law of England From these things before contain'd it may be deduced which often fall out That in one and the same case two or three Fundamentals of Law ought to concur together before the Plaintiff may obtain his Right as by Example may appear As if any afte● Entry by him made into any Land with a strong hand make a Feoffmen● for Maintenance to defraud the Possessor of his Action then the Demandant by the Statute of 8 Hen. 6. cap. 9. shall recover his treble Damages according to what Damages shall be assessed by the Jury In which case it appeareth that such Entry is prohibited by the Law of Reason Secundary but that the Demandant shall Recover his treble Damages is by the aforesaid Statute And that the Damages shall be Assessed by the Jury is by the Custom of the Kingdom And thus Three Fundamentals of Law concur in this case And it is to be noted that there are many Customs as well General as Particular and also Divers Laws called Maxims which take not their force from strong Reason but from the Custom of the Kingdom For by Statutes they may be changed into the contrary and what can be changed can never be affirmed to be the Law of Reason Primary As for Example How doth it stand with Reason or Conscience That if one bound in an Obligation to pay Money pay part of the Money but takes no Acquittance or lose it by the Laws of England he shall be compell'd to pay that Money again because of the General Maxim That in an Action of Debt upon Bond the Defendant may not plead Nihil debet or Quod poecuniam solvit nor otherwise discharge himself unless by Acquittance or other sufficient Writing amounting to a Discharge in Law and this to avoid the great Inconvenience which would follow if every one by word alone might avoid an Obligation And thus having briefly set forth the Fundamentals of the Law of England we shall proceed to the Government and the Legislative and Executive Power of the Laws of England The Government of England THe Government of England is 〈◊〉 the first and best kind viz. Monarchical Political Government The King BEing Supream Governour in 〈◊〉 Causes and over all Persons fro● Him is derived all Authority and Jur●diction He being Quasi Intellectus Age●● Forma formarum c. And from th● King with the Advice of His Majesties Privy Council THat most Honourable Assemb●● in the Kings Court or Palace a● others receive their Motion It is calle● Concilium Secretum Privatum
the Dean 〈◊〉 the Chappel Royal and Dean of th● Chappel of St. George at Windsor Mo●●over some Deans there are without a●● Chapter yet enjoying certain Juri●dictions as the Dean of Croyden th● Dean of Battel and the Dean of Bo●●ing c. The Consistory Courts of Archbishops and Bishops THe Consistory Courts of every Archbishop and Bishop of every Dioce●● in Ecclesiastical Causes is holden befo●● his Chancellor in his Catheral Church or before his Commissary in places 〈◊〉 the Diocess too far remote for the Chancellor to call them to the Consistory From these the Appeals are to the Archbishop of either Province respectively By many Records in Hen. 3. and Edw. 1. It appears no Bishop could make a Will of his Goods or Chartels coming of his Bishoprick c. without the King's License wherefore the Bishops consented to give the King Six things That they might freely make their Wills First Their best Horse or Palfrey with Bridle and Saddle Secondly A Cloak with a Cape Thirdly A Cup with a Cover Fourthly A Bason and Ewer Fifthly One Ring of Gold Sixthly His Kennel of Hounds for which a Writ issueth out of the Exchequer after the Decease of every Bishop The King by the Verdict of Twelve recovered 10000 Marks against the Bishop of Norwich for that he prosecuted against the Abbot of St. Edmundsbury to appear before him against the King's Prohibition For which it was adjudged That his Temporalities should be seised and his Body taken If an Alien or Stranger be presented to a Benefice the Bishop ought not to admit him The Court of Archdeacon or his Commissary THis Court is to be holden whe●● and in what place the Archdeaco● either by Prescription or Compositio● hath Jurisdiction in Spiritual Cases with in his Archdeaconry and from hi● the Appeal is to the Diocesan and 〈◊〉 is called Oculus Episcopi And every Archdeacon hath 〈◊〉 Court and Jurisdiction where small●● differences arising within his Limits a●● pleaded Also the Dean and Chapter hath 〈◊〉 Court and take Cognizance of Caus● hapning in places belonging to th● Cathedral Lastly There are some peculi●● Jurisdictions the Inhabitants where●● are exempt sometimes from the Arc●deacon's Jurisdiction and sometim● from the Bishops Jurisdiction The Court of Delegates THis Court is so called because Delegated by the King's Commissio● under the Great Seal to sit upon an A●peal to the King in the Court of Cha●cery in three Causes First When 〈◊〉 Sentence is given in an Ecclesiastical Court by the Archbishop or his Official Secondly When a Sentence is given in any Ecclesiastical Cause in places exempt Thirdly When any Sentence is given in the Admirals Court by the order of the Civil Law And having spoken of Appeals in Ecclesiastical Causes that you may know the Resolution of the Judges and Learned in the Ecclesiastical Law in what Causes from what Courts and in what time Appeals are to be made Vide Lord Dyer Coke's 4 Inst Ecclesiastical Courts The Laws and Constitutions Ecclesiasticali THe Laws and Constitutions of the Ecclesiastical Government in England are First General Canons made by General Councils Arbitria Sanctorum Patrum The Opinions of Fathers the Grave Decrees of several Holy Bishops of Rome Next our own Constitutions made anciently in several Provincial Synods either by the Legates Otho and Othobone sent from Rome or by several Archbishops of Canterbury All which are by the Statute of 25 Hen. 8. in force in England so far as they are not Repugnant to the King's Prerogative or the Customs Laws or Statutes of the Realm Then the Canons made in Convocations of latter times as 1 Jac. and confirmed by his Royal Authority Also Statutes Enacted by Parliament touching Ecclesiastical Affairs And Lastly Divers Customs not written and where these fail the Civil Law takes place Tryals Ecclesiastical in Civil Causes THe manner of these Tryals are first a Citation goes out Then they proceed to Bill and Answer then by Proofs Witnesses and Presumptions the matter is argued Pro and Con and the Canon and Civil Laws Quoted And then without Jury the Definitive Sentence of the Judge passeth and after that Execution Tryals Ecclesiastical in Criminal Causes THe manner of Trying Criminal Causes is by way of Accusation Denunciation or Inquisition The first When some one takes upon him to prove the Crime The second When the Church-Wardens present and are not bound to prove because it is presumed they do it without Malice and ●hat the Crime is Notorious Lastly By Inquisition when by reason of common fame inquiry is made by the Bishop Ex officio suo by calling some of ●he Neighbourhood to their Oath or ●he party accused to his Oath Ex officio But by the prevailing part in the Long-Parliament this power was taken from the Church the want whereof is one main cause of the Libertinism and Debauchery of the Nation Punishments by Ecclesiastical Courts PUnishments inflicted by these Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Courts according to these Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Laws are first the party delinquent is admonished Next goes forth Minor Excommunicatio whereby he is Excommunicated or Excluded from the Church or at least from the Communion of the Lord's Supper disabled to be Plaintiff in any Suit c. and this commonly for Non-appearance upon Summons or not obeying the Orders of the Court This power of lesser Excommunication the Bishop may Delegate to any Grave Priest with the Chancellor Then Excommunicatio Major is not only an Exclusion from the Company of Christians in Spiritual Duties but also i● Temporal Affairs And this commonly for Heresie Schism Perjury Incest c. and for the more Terrour 〈◊〉 is done by the Bishop himself in prope● person and being so Excommunicate a Man cannot be in any Civil or Ecclesiastical Court either Plaintiff or Witness and in case any contin●● Forty days Excommunicate the King'● Writ de Excommunicato capiendo is granted out of the Chancery against him whereupon he is cast into Prison without Bail till he hath satisfied for th● Offence And then there is Anathematismus inflicted upon an obstinate Heretick whereby he is declared a publick Enemy to God Rejecte● and Accursed and delivered over t● Eternal Damnation And this is to b● done by the Bishop also in his ow● person assisted by the Dean and Chapter or Twelve other grave Priests An● Lastly There is Interdictum whereby is prohibited 〈◊〉 Divine Offices as Christian Burial 〈◊〉 Administration of Sacraments c. i● such a place or to such a people If this be against a people it followeth the● wheresoever they go but if against the place only then the people may g● to Divine Office elsewhere and besides these general Censures of the Church which respect Church-Communion there is another touching the Body of the Delinquent called Publick Penance when the Delinquent is to stand in the Church Porch on a Sunday Bare-head and Feet in a White Sheet bewailing himself and begging every one that passeth by to
dicitur diuturnam cepit dilationem ad grave dampnum ipsius A. Sicut ex querela sua accepimus Vobis praecipimus quod ad judicium inde reddend cum ea celeritate quae secundum Legem consuetudinem regni nostri procedas c. Likewise when Justices or Judges of any Court of Record or not of Record give Judgment and delayed the party of his Execution the party grieved may have a Writ De executione Judicij by which Writ the Justices or Judges are commanded Quod executioonem judicij nuper redditi c. de loquela quae fuit c. per breve nostrum c. sine dilatione Fieri fac ' and thereupon an Alias Plur ' and Attachment c. do lye By the meeting together upon Adjournment of the Cause out of the Court where the Cause dependeth c. all the Judges c. which now we call an Exchequer Chamber Cause Warranted by the Common Law and Ancient Presidents before this Statute and the frequent use of this Court of Exchequer Chamber hath been the Cause that this Court upon the Act of 14 E. 3. hath been rarely put in ure By the King 's Writ comprehending Quod si difficultas aliqua intersit that the Record should be certified into the Parliament and to Adjourn the parties to be there at a certain Day Si obscurum difficile sit Judicium ponantur judicia in respect ' usque magnam curiam An excellent Record whereof you may read in the Parliament holden at Westminster the Tuesday after the Translation of St. Thomas Becket Ann● 14 E. 3. Secondly By Acts of Parliament Nulli vèndemus nulli negabimus aut differemus justitiam vel rectum That it shall not be commanded neither by the Great Seal nor by the Little Seal nor by Letters nor any other cause to delay Right and albeit such commandment come c. that by them the Justices surcease not to do Right in no manner In divers cases the party grieved shall have an Action for unjust delay Tolle moram semper nocuit differre paratis But seeing neither the Common Law nor any of the Acts of Parliament do extend to Ecclesiastical Courts it is then demanded What if an Inferiour Ordinary will refuse or delay to admit and institute a Clerk presented by the right Patron to a Church within his Diocess or the like or delay or refuse to give Sentence in a Case depending before him It is Answered That the Archbishop of the Province may grant his Letters under his Seal to all and singular Clerks of his Province to admonish the Ordinary within Nine days to perform that which by Justice is desired or otherwise to cite him to appear before him or his Official at a day in those Letters prefixed and to cite the party that hath suffered such delay then and there likewise to appear and further to intimate to the said Ordinary that if he neither perform that which is enjoyned nor appear he himself without further delay will perform the Justice required or in the former of the said Cases the party delayed may have his Quare impedit but that is thought not to be so speedy a remedy Cokes 4 Inst cap. 6. The Kings Bench Court THis Court is so called because antiently the King sat there sometimes in Person upon a high Bench and the Judges upon a low Bench at his Feet to whom the Judicature belongs in the absence of the King And the Pleas here are betwixt the King and Subject As for Treasons Felonies Breach of the Peace Oppression Misgovernment c. And moreover it examineth and corrects all Errors in facto and in jure of all the Judges and Justices of England in their Judgments and Proceedings and this not only in Pleas of the Crown but in all Pleas Real Personal and Mixt except only in the Exchequer And in this Court are Four Judges First The Lord Chief Justice created by Writ thus Mathis Hale Militi Salutem Sciatis quod constitu●mus vos Justiciarium Nostrum capitalem ad Placita coram nobis tenenda durant● bene placito Nostro Teste me ipso ap●l Westminst Three other Judges hold their Places by Letters Patents in these word Rea Omnibus ad quos Praesentes Litterae pe●●nerint Salutem Sciatis quod Constitu●mus Dilectum Fidelem R.R. Militem un●● Justiciariorum ad placita coram nobis ●●nenda durante bene placito nostro Test● c. These Judges and all the Officers of this Court have Salaries from the King and the Chief of them Liveries out of the great Wardrobe In this Court all young Lawyers who have been called to the Bar are allowed to Plead and Practise This Court may grant Prohibition to keep other Courts both Ecclesiastical and Temporal within their Bounds and due Jurisdiction The Jurisdiction thereof is General and extendeth to all England is more uncontrolable than any other Court because the Law presumes the King always is present there in Person None may be Judge here but a Ser●eant who upon taking his Degree is obliged to wear a Lawn Coif under ●his Cap for ever after The King hath wholly left matters of Judicature according to his Laws to his Judges and albeit the Delinquent shall be Fined at the Will of the King Non Dominus Rex Camera sua nec aliter nisi per Justiciarios suos Finem imponit Errors in the Kings Bench cannot be reversed except in certain particular cases by Stat. 27 Eliz. c. 8. wherein the ●urisdiction of the Court is saved but in the High Court of Parliament A Record brought into this Court cannot as it were being in its Center be remanded back unless by Act of Parliament But Indictments of Fe●onies and Murders may be remanded ●nd sent by the Justices of that Court ●nto the several Counties The Justices of the Kings Bench may grant a Nisi prius in case of Treason Felony and other Pleas but if they perceive an Indictment to be removed into that Court by practise or for delay they may send it back again for Justice to be done In this Court the Sentence is give● by the Chief Justice the others all 〈◊〉 the most part assenting If they cannot agree it is referred to a Demurrer i● the Exchequer Chamber before all the Judges of both Benches and Chie● Baron of the Exchequer And now 〈◊〉 us speak somewhat of The Officers THe Prothonotary recordeth all Jud●ments Orders and Rules of Cour●● and all Verdicts given being not 〈◊〉 Crown matters The Secondary is his Deputy for 〈◊〉 said Cause who keeps and mak● up these Records in Books and alway● attends the Court. The Clerk of the Crown Frames 〈◊〉 Indictments of Felony Treason M●ther c. all manner of Appeals a●● is after to Record them and enter 〈◊〉 Verdict and to make and keep th● Records of these matters And hath 〈◊〉 Deputy The Clerk of the Exigents Frames 〈◊〉 Process of Exigi facias and Reco●● the Oulawry The Clerk
Judgment or Verdict is by Fieri Facias or Capias ad satisfaciend ' as in other Courts of Common Law The Defendant in some cases must put in Sureties upon Appearances to render if he be condemned and this Bail or Recognizance must be taken before a Baron in Court and not otherwise First-Fruits and Tenths were granted to the Crown by the Statute of 26 H. 8. cap. 3. But the Clergy being discharged thereof Anno 1 2 Philip and Mary they were again reunited to the Crown 1 Eliz. cap. 4. but no Court revived And being under the Governance of the Exchequer a New Office was created and an Officer viz. Remembrancer of the First-Fruits and Tenths And more concerning them and the manner of Taxation of them you may read Coke's 4th Inst cap. 14. The Court of Augmentations Within the Survey and Governance of this Court were all Lands belonging to Monasteries and Purchased Lands but Queen Mary by her Letters Patent in the First year of her Reign dissolved it and united it to the Exchequer as by the Articles thereof may appear The Surveyor General 's Court is Dissolved the Office only remaining So that in the Exchequer are Seven Courts 1. The Court of Pleas 2. The Court of Accompts 3. The Court of Receipt 4. The Court of the Exchequer Chamber being the Assembly of all the Judges in England for Matters in Law 5. The Court of Exchequer-Chamber for Errors in the Exchequer 6. The Court in the Exchequer-Chamber for Errors in the King 's Bench And 7. The Court of Equity in the Exchequer Chamber of all which see the Books and Statutes mentioned in Coke's 4 Inst c. 13. The Court of Justices of Assize and Nisi prius THese Justices take their Names from the Writ of Assize called Assiza Novae Disseisinae or Petit Brief de Novel Disseizin And the Mirror saith That for Expedition of Justice it was ordained by Ranulph de Glanvil but by 26 Ass 24. it appears to be more Ancient At the Common Law Assizes were not to be taken but either in Bank or before ●ustices in Eyre But by Magna Charta it is Enacted Quod Recognitiones de Nova Disseisina de Morte Antecessoris non capiantur nisi in suis propriis Comitatibus c. And upon that Statute of Magna Charta the Letters Patent to the Justices are framed in these Words viz. Rex c. Dilectis Fidelibus suis R. M. uni Justiciariorum suorum de Banco I.L. uni Justiciariorum suorum ad Placita coram nobis tenenda Assign ' Salutem Sciatis Quod Constituimus vos Justiciarios nostros una cum hiis quos vobis associaverimus ad Omnes Assizas Jurat ' Certificat ' coram quibuscunque Justic ' tam per diversa Brevia Domini Johannis nuper Regis Angl ' Patris nostri quam per diversa Brev ' nostra in Com' nostris South ' Wiltes ' Dorset ' Devon ' Cornub ' ac in Civitate Exon ' arranian ' capiend ' Et ideo vobis Mandamus quod ad certos dies loca quos vos ad hoc provideritis Assis Jurat ' Certificat ' illas capiatis Facturi inde quod ad Justitiam pertinet secundum Legem consuetudinem Regni nostri Angliae Salvis nobis amerciamentis inde nobis provenien ' Mandavimus enim Vicecomisibus nostris Com' Civit ' praed ' quod ad certos dies loca quos eis Scire faciatis Assis Jurat ' Certificat ' illas una cum Brevibus Originalibus omnibus aliis ea tangen ' coram vobis venire faciat ' In cujus rei Testimonium c. By this Writ the Seisin and Possession was recovered and became more frequent Quia non est aliud Breve in Cancellaria per quod Querentes habent festinum remedium quam per Assisam And after the Statute of Westminster was and thereby provided Quod assignentur duo Justiciarij jurati coram quibus non aliis Capiantur Assisae c. ad plus ter per Annum And Rot. Parl. 21 Ed. 1. Dominus Rex c. praecepit quod de caetero assignentur Octo Justiciarij Circumspecti discreti ad Assisas Jurat ' Certificat ' capiend ' per Totum Regnum Angliae and divideth the Realm into Eight parts Per Stat. de Finibus 27 Ed. 1. cap. 1. Justiciarij ad Assisas capiendas assignati deliberent Gaolas in Com' Illas tam infra Libertates quam extra de Prisonariis quibus cumque And Appeals of Murder Robbery Rape c. may be commenced before Justices of Assize And divers other Powers and Authorities are given to J●stices of Assize and Gaol-delivery for which see the Statutes and Coke's 4 Inst cap. 27. Justices of Assize shall enquire for Non Returning and False Return of Sheriffs May hear and determine of Conspirators false Informers and wicked Procurers of Dozens Inquests and Juries at the complaint of any without Writ and without Delay and of Confederacies and Champerties and Maintainers Bearers and Alliances by Bond c. Of Defaults of Sheriffs Escheators Bayliffs and other Officers Justices of Assize may enquire of Defaults c. of Punishment of Victualers c. which sell at unreasonable Prizes They have power to hear and determine riding and going Armed c. and to punish Justices of the Peace Sheriffs Bayliffs and others for not doing their Office in that case They may hear and determine Treason in Counterfeiting of Money c. They shall do Execution of the Statute of 13 H. 3. of Riots done in their presence upon pain of an Hundred pounds and by the Statute of 2 H. 5. Commissions shall be Awarded to Enquire of the Default of the Justices of Assize and of Justices of Peace in that behalf They shall enquire of hear and determine all Offices contrary to the Statute of 23 H. 6. concerning Sheriffs Under-sheriffs and their Clerks Coroners Stewards of Franchises Bayliffs and Keepers of Prisons for Extortion and for letting to Bail such as were not Bailable or for denying Bail to them that ought to be Bailed Justices of Assize shall take Bail of him that is acquitted of Murder within the Year to answer to the Appeal of the party 5 Eliz. cap. 5. of Informers 5 Eliz. cap. 4. of Labourers Justices of Assize of Gaol-delivery and of the Peace shall enquire of the default of Coroners Justices of Assize c. shall enquire of false making of Leather of Amending of High-ways of Hunters in Parks of Unlawful taking of Fishes of Forgery of False Deeds against deceipt in Linnen Cloth against Perjury of Usury and many other things Justices of Assize twice in every year ought to proclaim the Statute of 32 H. 8. and other Statutes against unlawful Maintenance Champerty Embracery and unlawful Retainers they ought to proclaim the Statute of Unlawful Games in their Circuit See the Custumary of Normandy c. 19. Coke's 4. Inst. cap. 27. The Justices of Nisi
in the 17th year of his Reign by Charter Established in Parliament created his Son Son called the Black Prince Prince of VVales in these words De Concilio Praelatorum Comitum Baronum Communiam in Generali Parliamento nostro apud Wesmonaster ' die Lunae in Quindena Paschae proximè praeterito convocato Ipsum Edwardum Pricipem Walliae fecimus creavimus Et dictum Principatum sibi dedimus concessimus per Chartam nostram confirmavimus ac ipsum de dicto Principatu ut ibidem praeficiendo praesidiat praesidendo dictas partes dirigat defendat per sertum in Capite Annulum in Digito aureum ac virgam argenteam investivimus juxta morem Habendum tenendum de nobis sibi Haeredibus suis Regibus Angliae imperpetuum c. And in the same manner is the Noble and primary County Palatine of Chester granted to him at the same time with the same words Sibi Haeredibus suis Regibus Angliae which import a limited Fee and that by his decease or attaining to the Crown these Dignities might be Extinguished in the Crown to the end the King for the time being might have the Honour and power to create his Heir apparent Prince of VVales and Earl of Chester as he himself had been by his Progenitors But otherwise it is in the Case of the Dutchy of Cornwal Vide Coke's 4 Inst cap. 48. that being without Creation and ever since 11 Ed. 3. the First begotten Son of the King is ever Duke of Cornwal And this may suffice for a Short Survey of the Principality of Wales And now proceed to The Military Government of England THe King hath the Sole Supream Goverment Command and Disposition of the Military Power of England both by Land and Sea As is at large declared in Parliament Anno 14 Car. 2. And By Land the next under the King is the Generalissimo when in being of all his Majesties Forces in his Three Kingdoms Horse and Foot in Say as well within Garison as without These Forces in the late King Charles the Seconds time consisted of 4 Regiments of Foot The King's Regiment 24 Companies and near 1700 Men The Dukes Regiment 720 Men Another Regiment 600 Men And the Earl of Craven's Regment of 960 Men And the Earl of Oxford's Regiment consisting of 8. Troops about 500 Horse besides Officers There were likewise in King Charles the Seconds time Three compleat Troops of Horse for his Life-Guard The Kings Troop 200 Horse The Queens Troop 150 Horse and the Duke of Yorks Troop 150 Horse The rest of his Majesties Forces in constant pay were disposed under several Governors in several Garisons of which there are about Thirty two and in some of them the King had 500 Men in constant pay The pay of a Colonel of Horse 12 s. per diem A Collonel of Foot 20 s. per diem and other Officers proportionably Each of the Life-Guards 4 s. per diem And each Trooper 2 s. 6 d. per diem Each Foot Soldier in London 10 d. per diem Each Foot Soldier in Garrison 8 d. per diem These Forces were afterwards much encreased but no Orders are yet setled by Act of Parliament for these Land Forces as there are for Sea Forces But now they are settled by Act of Parliament to be 7000 natural born Subjects The Officers included Besides these Forces before mentioned the Standing Militia of the Kingdom is settled in the King by Acts of Parliament Tempore Car. 2. to be Governed Ordered and Enlarged from time to time as his Majesty shall see occasion For Government of these the King by Commission Creates divers of the Peers of the Kingdom Lieutenants of the several Counties with power to Arm Array and Form into Companies Troops and Regiments and to conduct upon occasion of Rebellion or Invasion and employ there Men so Armed within their respective Counties or into any other County as the King shall direct To give Commissions to Colonels and other Commissionated Officers To present to the King the Names of Deputy Lieutenants To charge ay person with Horse Horse-Men and Arms or Foot Soldiers and Arms within the said County proportionable to their Estates with limitation that no person be charged with a Horse unless he hath 500 l. yearly or 6000 l. personal Estate or with a Foot Soldier unless he hath 50 l. yearly or 600 l. personal Estate Those that have meaner Estates are to joyn Two or Three together to find a Horse or Horseman or a Foot Soldier The said Horse or Foot to Muster once or twice a year and each Horse-Man while he serves to have 2 s. a day and each Foot Soldier 12 d. per diem They have likewise power to levy a Fourth part of the Tax of 70000 l. per Mensem for Ammunition And in case of Marching against an Enemy they have power to cause every Man so charged to allow each Soldier a Months pay which the King is after to pay before they be charged with another Months pay In 1588 Upon the Muster made by Commission from Queen Eliz. in expectation of the Spanish Invasion there were found to be Three Millions and of those fit for War about 600000 Men. In all times of danger some are set to watch at every Beacon to give notice in a few Hours to the whole Kingdom There were anciently many Castles in all parts of England But Inland Castles have been either demolished or willingly suffered to decay that Rebels or Invaders might have no Shelter or the Invaded any Refuge to Fly to whereby to occasion any Lingring And now we come to the Military Courts amongst which the chief is The Court of Chivalry before the Constable and Marshal THis Court is called Curia Militaris and the Marshal Court wherein the Lord Constable and Earl Marshal of England are Judges And is the Fountain of the Martial Law Constable Is compounded of two Saxon words Cunning per contractionem King Stable id est Columen q. Columen Regis anciently written Coningstable Marshal Likewise of two Saxon wards Mare for Equus and Stale for Curator The Jurisdiction is declared by the Statute of 13 R. 1. To the Constable it appertaineth to have Conusance of Contracts and Deeds of Arms and of War out of the Realm and also of Things that touch War within the Realm which cannot be determined or discussed by the Common Law with other Usages and Customs to the same pertaining which other Constables have duly and reasonably used in their time joyning to the same that every Plaintiff shall declare plainly his Matter in his Petition before that any Man be sent for to answer thereunto And if any will complain that any Plea be commenced before the Constable and Marshal that might be Tried by the Law of the Land the same Complainant shall have a Privy Peal of the King without difficulty directed to the said Constable and Marshal to Purcease in that Plea
The Grant of Earl Marshal of England by Letters Patents of Rich. the 2d and other Grants thereof you may see more at large Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 17. The Maritime Power of England ALL the King 's Maritime Forces are under the Command of the Lord High Admiral of England so called from Amir in Arabick and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greek that is Praefectus Marinis A compound word from the Eastern Empire introduced into England after the Wars in the Holy Land by King Richard or King Edward the first His Patent was antiently Angliae Hiberniae Acquitaniae Magnus Admirallus But now it is Angliae Hiberniae Dominiorum Insularum eorundem Villae Calesiae Marchiarum ejusdem Normandiae Gasconiae Acquitaniae Magnus Admirallus Praefectus Generalis Classis Marium dictorum Regnorum And this Office for the Great Trust and Honour is usally given to the King 's younger Son near Kinsman Or one of the Principal Nobility He hath power to Commissionate a Vice-Admiral a Rear-Admiral All Sea Captains And also Deputies for particular Coasts Coroners Commissioners and Judges for the Court of Admiralty to Imprison Release c. and sometimes to confer Knighthood on such as deserve it at Sea To him by Law and Custom belong Penalties and Amerciaments of Transgressors at Sea on the shore in Ports and from the first Bridge on Rivers towards the Sea Also the Goods of Pirates Felons or Capital Faulters condemned Outlawed or Horned All Waifs Strays Goods Wrecks of Sea Deodands a share of lawful Prizes Lagon Jetsam and Flotsam that is Goods lying in the Sea on the Ground Goods Floating on the Sea and Goods cast by the Sea on Shore not granted to Lords of Mannors adjoyning to the Sea All great Fishes as Sea-Hogs and others of Extraordinary bigness called Royal Fishes Except Whales and Sturgeons To the Crown of England belongs the Sovereignty of the Narrow-Sea round the Island of Great Britain whereof by Ancient Right it hath had Possession in all times and King Edgar stiled himself Sovereign of the Narrow-Seas In Testimony whereof the Swedes Danes Hollanders c. were wont to aske leave to pass the British-Seas and to take Licenses to Fish therein And to this day Strike Sail to all the Ships of War belonging to the King of England as oft as they pass by any of them thereby acknowledging his Sovereignty according to an Ordinance made at Hastings in Sussex by King John about 450 years ago To maintain this Right Protect Trade and Defend their Kingdoms The Kings of England have Ships of War for Strength Beauty and Sailing Surpassing all other in the World of these such as Ships then were King Edgar is said to have 3600 And the late King Charles had 7 of the First Rate 9 of the Second Rate 22 of the Fifth and 18 of the Sixth Rate besides 30 Fireships and several Small Vessels for Tenders and Victuallers The Royal Sovereign Built by King Charles the first 1637 being of the First Rate was in Length by the Keel 127 Foot in Breadth by the Beam 47 Foot in Depth 49 Foot her Draught of Water 21 Foot Burthen in all 2072 Tunns and 1492 Tunns besides Guns and Tackle hath 6 Anchors the biggest 6000 l. weight and the least 4300 l. weight 14 Cables the greatest 21 Inches compass and weighs 9000 l. weight the least 8 Inches compass weighing near 1300 l. weight 18 Masts and Yards the Main Mast 113 Foot long and 38 Inches Diameter the Main Yard 105 Foot long and 23 Inches Diameter and her Main Top 15 Foot Diameter Had 10 several sorts of Sails Her greatest called the Main Course contained with her Bonnet 1640 yards of Canvas Ipswich double The least called the Foretop Gallant Sail 130 yards of Canvas The compleat suit cost 404 l. The weight of Sea store in point of Ground Tackle and other Cordage 60 Tuns 800 and odd Pounds Shee carried a Long boat of 50 Foot a Pinnace of 30 Foot and a Skiff of 27 Foot long The weight of her Rigging 33 Tun She hath 3 Tires of Guns 44 in the Upper 34 in the Second and 22 in the Lower Tire in all 100 Guns She carried Officers Soldiers and Mariners in all 850 Men. The charge for Victuals Ammunition Wages Wear and Tear every Month at Sea costs 3500 l. The Charge of Building a First Rate Ship with Guns Tackle and Rigging doth usually amount to 62432 the lesser Rates Charge is proportionable A Second Rate carries from 56 to 80 Guns A Third Rate from 58 to 70 Guns A Fourth Rate from 40 to 60 Guns A Fifth Rate from 24 to 32 Guns A Sixth Rate from 6 to 18 Guns The Lord High Admiral may fitly be reputed Vice-Roy of the Maritime Kingdom of England Nam in Mari sunt Regna distincta idque Jure Gentium sicut in arida Terra The Vice-Admiral is an Officer to whom next under the High Admiral it belongs to see the Royal Navy kept in good Repair The Wages of Mariners and Shipwrights duly paid and the Ships provided of all things necessary The Lord High Admiral doth appoint in divers parts of the Kingdom Vice Admirals with their Judges and Marshals by Patent under the Great Seal of the Admiralty These do Exercise Jurisdiction in Maritime Affairs within their Limits and if any be aggrieved by their Sentence or Decree he may Appeal to the High Court of Admiralty and of these round the Coasts are about 22 in England and Wales The Lord High Admiral hath Courts for the Maritime Affairs whereof the Principal is at London and called The Court of Admiralty IN this Court Erected as some hold by Edward the Third The Lord Admiral hath a Lieutenant called Judge of the Admiralty who is commonly some Learned Doctor of the Civil Law Because The Proceeding is in all Civil Matters according to the Civil Law The Sea being without the Limits of the Common Law and by Libel they Proceed to the Action the Plaintiff giving caution to prosecute the Suit and to pay what shall be adjudged against him if he fail therein The Defendant also giving Security or Caution as the Judge shall think meet that he will appear in Judgment and pay that which shall be adjudged against him and that he will ratify whatever his Proctors shall do in his name Besides the Civil Law The Laws of Rhodes and Oleron are here used The former for their Excellency being Incorporated into the Volumes of the Civil Laws And Oleron being an Island in the Bay of Aquitain belonging to the Crown of England King Richard the first there Compiled such Excellent Laws for Sea Matters that in the Ocean Sea Westward they had almost as much Repute as the Rhodian Laws in the Mediterranean and these Laws were called La Rool de Oleron Many Statutes and Ordinances were made by King Edward the Third and other Princes and People as at Rome Pisa Genoa Marseilles Barcelona and
viridem Aeneas frondenti ex ilice Metam Constituit signum Nautis pater unde reverti Sciverit longos ubi circumflectere Cursus At the Common Law none could Erect any of these Three but the King It being done ever by the King's Commission under the Great Seal But of later times by Letters Patents to the Lord Admiral he hath power to Erect the same By the Act of 8 Eliz. the Master Wardens and Assistants of Trinity-House of Deptford Stroud a Company of the chiefest and most expert Masters and Governours of Ships shall and may lawfully from time to time at their will and pleasure and at their costs Make Erect and Set up such and so many Beacons Marks and Signs for the Sea in the Sea-shoars and Upland places near the Sea-coasts or Forelands of the Sea only for Sea Marks as to them shall seem most meet whereby the Dangers may be avoided and Ships the better come to their Ports And all such beacons Marks and Signs so by them to be Erected shall be continued renewed and maintained from time to time at the Costs and Charges of the said Master Wardens and Assistants If any cut down c. any Beacon c. by the Statute of 8 Eliz. 13. he shall incur the Penalty therein mentioned which if he be not able to pay he shall be ipso facto convict of Utlawry Vide Coke's 4. Inst. cap. 25. The Transcript of a Manuscript Ordination which hath been observ'd for Watch to be kept in the County of Norfolk from Lyme to Yarmouth and it is very probable the like hath been done by like Authority in other Maritime Counties Vide Stat. 5 H. 4. cap. 3. Watches to be made in the Sea Coasts in places of Danger through the Realm by the Number of People and in manner they were wont to be made in times past De Conservatore Treugarum i. e. Induciarum Salvorum Regis Conductuum BY 2 H. 5. Conservatorum Induciarum salvorum Regis conductuum was Praised and Appointed in every Port of the Sea by Letters Patents His Office was to Inquire of all Offences done against the King's Truces and fafe Conducts upon the Main Sea out of the Counties and out of the Liberties of the Cinque-Ports as Admirals of Custom were wont It concerns the Jurisdiction of divers Courts especially the Court before-mentioned upon the Statute of 28 H. 8. and of the Court of Admiralty to know the Rights of Leagues and Ambassadors as far as the Laws of England Extend unto All Leagues or Safe Conducts are or ought to be of Record Inrolled in Chancery that the Subject may know who may be in Amity with the King and who not who be Enemies and can have no Action here and who in League and may have Actions Persona● here In all Treaties the Power of the one and the other ought to be Equal A League may be broken by Levying of War or by Ambassador or Herald Bryan 19 E. 4. held if all the Subjects in England would make War with a King in League with the King of England without the Assent of the King of England yet such a War was no breach of the League See 2 H. 5. cap. 6. in the Preamble But in the Duke of Norfolk's Case 14 Eliz. the Question was Whether the Lord Herise and other Subjects of the King of Scots who without his Consent had wasted and burnt divers Towns in England and Proclaimed Enemies were Enemies in Law within the Statute of 25 E. 3. the League being between the King and Scotland and Resolved they were Enemies And in the Bishop of Rosse's Case Anno 13 Eliz. The Question being An Legatus qui Rebellionem contra Principem ad quem Legatus concitat Legati Privilegiis gaudeat non ut Hostiis Poenas subjaceat and Resolv'd he had lost the Priviledge of an Ambassador and was subject to Punishment Ambassadors were called Orators afterwards Legati à legando Nuntij à n●nciando and afterwards Ambassiatores or Embassatories and sometimes Agents For Omnis Legatus est Agens sed Omnis Agens non est Legatus In Sam. Palach's Case 12 Jac. 1. affirming himself to be Ambassador of Mula Sedan King of Morocco mentioned Coke's 4 Inst. cap. 26. It was Resolv'd there could be no Ambassador without Letters of Credence from his Sovereign to another who had Sovereign Authority and although in his Letters of Credence he be termed an Agent or Nuntius yet in such Case he is Ambassador or Legate And it was likewise Resolv'd That Ambassadors ought to be Free and Safe in every place by the Law of all Nations yea although they be Ambassadors of our Enemies or a Banish'd Man be sent to the place from whence he is banish'd And in the Case of Cardinal Poole fled to Rome from Henry the Eighth the Pope sent him Ambassador to the French King the King of England Demandeth him as a Traytor from the King notwithstanding he was sent Ambassador sed non praevaluit But if a Sovereign Ambassador being Prorex committeth here any Crime which is contra jus G●ntium as Treason Murder Adultery c. he may be punished as another private Alien and not remanded to his Sovereign but of Courtesie And so of Contracts that be good Jure Gentium he must answer here but if any thing be Malum prohibitum by an Act of Parliament Private Law or Custom of this Realm which is not Malum in se Jure Gentium nor contra Jus Gentium an Ambassador residing here shall not be bound by them but otherwise it is of the Subjects of either Kingdom Vide Information upon the Statute of 19 H. 7. cap. 1. Coke's 4 Inst. cap. 26. concerning Prohibited Goods brought hither See more in Palach's Case Where one may not be Indicted of Piracy for taking the Goods of the Subjects of an Enemy Prince solo Amici and where The Court of Admiralty shall have the Jurisdiction and where not And now a word or two concerning Leagues of which are four kinds I. Foedus Pacis and that a Christian Prince may have with an Infidel Si fieri possit quod ex vobis est cum omnibus hominibus Pacem habeatis 2. Foedus Congratulationis sive Consolationis And this a Christian Prince may make with an Infidel as David did with Hanon I Chron. 19.2 3. Foedus Commercij sive Commutationis Mercium And this also may be made with an Infidel as King Solomon did with Hiram and Joshua did with the Gibeonites 4. Foedus Mutu● Auxilij And this cannot be done with an Idolater Jehosaphat King of Judah made Foedus mutui auxilij with Ahab King of Israel an Idolater For Ahab said to Jehosaphat Veni mecum in Ramoth Gilead cui ille respondet Ut ego tu sicut populus tuus sic populus meus tecum erimus in Bello In which War Ahab was slain and Jehosaphat in extream danger But seeing Foedus Pacis and Foedus
Corporals 150 l. each The King hath many other Inferiour Officers which over-passing we come now to The Government of the Queen's Court IS suitable to the Consort of so Great a King Splendid and Magnificent And hath all Officers and a Houshold apart from the King For Maintenance whereof there is usually setled 40000 l. per Annum and is as followeth The Ecclesiastical Government of the Queens Court. THe Lord or Grand Almoner He hath Superintendency over all the Ecclesiasticks belonging to the Queen One Confessor to the Queen and Four Almoners One Treasurer of the Chappel Two Preachers Four Clerks of the Chappel and Four Boys Sixteen Chaplains Divers belonging to the Musick and Two Vergers or Porters The Civil Government of the Queen's Court. THere is a Counsel consisting of Persons of Great Worth and Dignity A Steward of the Revenue A Keeper of Her Majesties Great Seal A Chamberlain Master of the Horse A Vice-Chamberlain A Principal Secretary and Master of Requeste A Treasurer and Receiver General Attorney General Solicitor General A Surveyor General Six Gentlemen Ushers of the Privy Chamber Two Cup-bearers Two Carvers Two Sewers Five Gentlemen Ushers daily Waiters Ten Grooms ef the Privy Chamber Seven Gentlemen Ushers Quarter Waiters Six Pages attending at the Back-Stairs Four Pages of the Presence Officers of the Robes A Surveyor Proveditor Clerk Yeoman Groom Page Tayler and Brusher Twelve Grooms of the Great Chamber One Porter of the Back Stairs A Master of the Queens Barge and Twenty Four Watermen The Grooms of the Stole Lady of the Robes and of the Privy Purse Seven Ladies of the Bed-chamber One Keeper of the Sweet Coffers Six Maids of Honour and A Governess or Mother of the Maids Six Chamberers or Dressers A Laundress A Sempstress A Starcher A Necessary Woman These are all paid by Her Majesty out of her own Revenue There are besides Divers other Officers Below Stairs belonging to the Queens Table and Stable paid by the King for which is allowed 20000 l. more The Prince of Wales and other the King's Children have likewise their Courts or Housholds apart But these being not certain no certain Allowance or Settlement is of them but are rather at pleasure And therefore I shall not particularize them but refer to Chamberlain's Present State of England The Government of Cities ALthough every City is within some of the Counties herein before mentioned yet each of them are like a little Common-wealth Governed by Laws and Customs Ecclesiastical Civil and Military within themselves And this by Charter or Priviledges granted and cofirmed to them by several Kings of this Realm And there is for The Ecclesiastical Government of Cities A Bishop every City being or having been a Bishops See and hath a Cathedral to which belong a Dean A Chapter A Treasurer and Prebendaries who have Lands and Revenues belonging to them for their Maintenance and though the Bishoprick be dissolved the City remains as Westminster and Cambridge which was antiently reputed a City And for The Ecclesiastical Government of Parishes there is a Rector or Vicar for every Parish who is to have the Cure of the Souls of his Parishioners every one of which hath a Parsonage or Vicaridge-House and a Competent allowance of Tithes for their Maintenance And there is for The Civil Government of Cities A Mayor who is the King's Lieuetenant chosen by the Citizens and approved by the King and is for one year as a Judge to determine all Matters within his Jurisdiction and to Mitigate the Rigour of the Law And next in Government of Cities are the Two Sheriffs who are Judges in Civil Causes within the City and to see all Execution done whether Penal or Capital To Execute the Kings Mandates within the City c. And might rather be called State Reeves or Port-Reeves i. e. Urbis vel Portus Praefecti The Mayor Sheriffs and Aldermen of every City may make Laws called By-Laws for the Government of the City provided they are not Repugnant to the Laws of the Kingdom And these have several Courts which have Jurisdiction in all Civil and Criminal Causes only with Restraint that all Civil Causes may be removed from their Courts to the Higher Courts at Westminster But of all these we shall speak more at large when we come to treat of the City of London and other Cities in particular which may serve for an Example or Pattern of all the rest And therefore we shall begin with The City of London LOndon so called as some conjecture from the British word Longdin signifying in the Saxon Tongue Shipton or Town of Ships But others derive it otherwise And therefore not to insist thereon Nam utere tuo Judicio nihil impedio It was Built as some Write 1108 years before the Incarnation of our Saviour In the time of Samuel the Prophet Is in length about 7 Miles and half and about 2 Miles and half in breadth Hath above 500 Streets and Alleys and 15000 Houses within the Walls which may not be accompted above a Sixth part of the whole City The Cathedral Church of St. Paul was Built or begun by Ethelbert King of Kent about Anno Christi 610 and is the only Cathedral of that Name in Europe Besides this there are 130 Parish Churches besides Chappels which is double the number to be found in any other City in Christendom The Ecclesiastical Government OF London is as before mentioned of Cities in General By a Bishop and was in the time of the Britains by an Archbishop but by the Saxons the Archiepiscopal See was removed to Canterbury for the sake of St. Austin who first Preached the Gospel there to the Heathen Saxons and was there buried since which there have been 100 Bishops to the present Bishop there To this Cathedral belongs a Dean a Chapter and 30 Prebendaries maintained in like manner before mentioned in the General Government of Cities The Ecclesiastical Government of Parishes is as before mentioned by a Parson Rector or Vicar To have cure of Souls in every Parish who have a Parsonage or Vicaridge-House and a competent Allowance in Tithes which was anciently besides the Tithes of Tradesmen's gains and mortuaries c. 3 s. 5 d. in the pound Rent which they paid by a Half every Sunday and Holiday Afterwards by 25 Hen. 8. It was ordained and afterwards confirmed by 27 Hen. 8. and 37 Hen. 8. That 2 s. 9 d. in the pound should be paid for the Rent of all Houses Shops c. to the Parson with power to the Lord Major to Imprison any Person should refuse to pay the same The Civil Government OF London is by a chief Magistrate anciently called The Prefect of London In the Saxons time Portegreeve by the Norman's Bailiff or Bailiffs till King Rich. the First Anno 1189 changed the name of Bailiff to Mayor which is now The Lord Mayor and is a Citizen yearly chosen by the Citizens and approved by the King unless sometimes for Disloyalty their
Dutchy Concerning the Judicature and Customs of these Isles it appeareth by Records in the Tower Quod Rex Johannes constituit 12 Coronatores Juratos ad Placita Jura ad Coronam spectantia custodienda Et concessit pro securitate Insularum Quod Ballivus de caetero per visum Coronatorum poterat placitare sine Breve de Nov. Disseisinae facta infra Annum De Morte Antecessorum infra Annum De Dote similiter infra Annum And now they have a Governour appointed by the King of England and Twelve Assistants selected out of every several Parish And for the most part they proceed according to the Customs of Normandy Altho' the King's Writ runneth not into these Isles yet his Commission under the Great Seal doth But the Commissioners must judge according to the Laws and Customs of the Isles Insula Vectis or Vecta THe Isle of Wight is esteemed part of Hampshire from which it is severed by a dangerous Streight of the Sea It contains 20 Miles in Length Twelve in Breadth and is Governed by the Laws of England as the other Shires have been the Soyl is answerable to the Husbandman's Expectation The Sheep bear fine Wool and the Trees store of Fruit. Here are One Forest Two Parks and 36 Towns and Villages the Chief being Newport Yarmouth and Brading The Island is strongly scituated being Inaccessible towards France but because the North-shoar is Level it is fortified on that side with Three Castles viz. Yarmouth Cows and Sand-head Castle and in the Midst of the Island is Carisbrooke Castle wherein hath sometimes been Armor for 50000 Men and in every Village a Great Piece of Ordnance This Isle was taken from the Britains by Wolphur King of Mercia and hereof King Henry the Sixth Crowned Henry Beauchamp Earl of Warwick King and he was after named Primus Comes totius Angliae sed cum illo Novus hic insolitus Titulus omnino evanuit The Sorlings CAlled by the English and Belgians Scilly Islands by Antonine in his Itinerary Sigdoles by Solinus Silyres by some Greek Writers Hesperides and Casterides are scituate against the Western Cape of Cornwal from which they are distant 24 Miles They are in Number 145 of which 10 only are of Estimation viz. 1. Armath 2. Agnes 3. Sampson 4. Scilly 5. Bresar 6. Ruso● 7. St. Helens 8. St. Martins 9. Arthur 10. St. Maries Chief of all the rest being 8 Miles in compass sufficiently Fruitful and strengthned with a Castle called Stella Maria by Queen Elizabeth These Islands are stored with Grass Grain and Lead which last was once carried hence into Greece Hither the Roman Emperors Banished Condemned Men to Work in the Mines These were subdued to the English Crown by Athelstane The Island Lindisfarne Or LEndisfarne scituate near the River Lied called also Holyfarne or Holy Island on the confines of Northumberland Hath one Castle one Church one Parish and a safe Haven defended by a Blockhouse It was in ancient time a Bishops Seat after Translated to Duresme and is Governed by the Laws of England It was called Holy Island for that many Religious Men in times past retired thither being a Solitary place There are divers other Islands as Denny Londay and Chaldey in the Severn Sea Thanet and Sheppey near Kent Farne Isle near Lindisfarne and Cockat Islands near Northumberland and many others of small account A COMPENDIUM OF THE Laws and Government OF SCOTLAND WITH THE ISLANDS Thereunto belonging Anno Domini 1699 SCOTLAND IS so called from Scotti Scitti or Scythi a People of Germany over whose Northern Bounds the Name Scythia did once extend These seized on a part of Spain next to Ireland and Anno 424. on the West part of this Country It is the rest of the Isle of Albion or Great Britain in Length from Dungesby-Head to the South parts of Gallway 250 Miles in Breadth from Aberdeen to the Isle of Mule 150 Miles hath no place distant from the Sea 62 Miles and ends like the sharp point of a Wedge It was anciently called Calidonia and sometimes Albania now by the French l'Escosse by the Italians la Scotia by the Spaniards la Escocia and by the Germans Schotlandt and is separated from England by the Rivers Tweed and Solway and the Cheviot Hills in the midst between which were The Borders sometimes extended to Edinburgh and Sterling in Scotland and at other times were enlarged and took in Cumberland Northumberland and Westmorland in England and were Secured or Defended by three Officers in each Kingdom called Lord Wardens of the Marshes But now by the Marriage and Union of the two Kingdoms The Officers and Warres which were the cause of them are extinct Scotland was for many Ages Governed by its own Kings but with divers considerable Alterations till the year 1602 it was to our great satisfaction united to England for ever and does still remain under it Governed by a Vice-Roy called Lord Commissioner Here were formerly two Populous Nations the Scots before described and the Picts who were indeed very Britains who Fled into the Northern parts which are still almost Free when the Romans entred the Scuth parts of Britain These using the ancient Customs of Painting their Bodies after the rest were more Civilized were by the Romans called Picts They Swayed here a long while alone till the year 424 when the Scots set footing in Britain with whom they contracted a League against the Britains but after Warring among themselves Kenneth King of Scots vanquished Dunsken King of the Picts and thereby extinguished both their Kingdom and Name Anno 839. After James the 6th being the 36th King united the Crown of England and Scotland Their chief Commodities Cattle Course Cloaths Frizes Fish Lead Oar Iron Saltpetre Linnen Cloath Train Oyl some Hides and Tallow The Country is divided into the High-lands and Low-lands The first Rude The other of like Ingenious Disposition and Language almost with the English these being the Off-spring of the Saxons and the High-landers The true Scots who speak the Irish Tongue and call both the Low-landers and English Saxons The Gospel was first Preached here by Palladius Anno 431. They are now Protestants and those chiefly Presbyterians Their Language in the South parts a corrupt English and on the North and West parts a Dialect of the Irish The Division is into two Parts viz. 1. High-land or North Scotland somewhat the larger of the Two the Seat of the old Scots 170 Miles long and 130 broad divided into 13 Counties viz. 1. Cathness Chief Towns-Wick and Catness 2. Strathnavern Chief Town Strathy 3. Sootherland Chief Town Dornock 4. Rosse Chief Town Tayne 5. Murray Chief Town Elgen 6. Loquabrea Chief Town Innerlochy 7. Broad-Alben Chief Town _____ 8. Athol Chief Town Blaire 9. Buquihan Chief Town Stanes 10. Marr Chief Town Aberdeen 11. Mernis Chief Town Bervy 12. Anguis Chief Towns Dundee and Brechin 13. Perth Chief Town Perth the Chief Town of the whole Aberdeen 2.
Lowland or South Scotland bordering on England The Seat of the old Picts 156 Miles long and 110 broad divided into 22 Counties viz. 1. Lorn chief Town Dunstafag 2. Cantire chief Town Kiltan 3. Argile chief Town Innerera 4. Lennox chief Town Dunbarton 5. Menteith chief Town Dunblain 6. Strathern chief Town Abernethy 7. Fife chief Town St. Andrews 8. Sterlin chief Town Sterlin 9. Lothien chief Town Edinburgh 10. March chief Town Coldingham 11. Tivedale chief Town Jedburg 12. Twedesdale chief Town Pebles 13. Cledesdale chief Town Glascow 14. Cunningham chief Town Irwing 15. Kile chief Town Aire 16. Carrick chief Town Bargenny 17. Galloway chief Town Kircowbrig 18. Niddesdale chief Town Dumfrees 19. Annandale chief Town Annand 20. Eskedale 21. Eusdale and 22. Isle of Arran Edinburgh is the Chief of the Kingdom and Seat of the former Kings These Provinces are divided into Sheriff-doms which are Hereditary and into 13 Diocesses for Ecclesiastical Government by Malcolm 3d Anno 1072. And into the two Arch-bishopricks of St. Andrew and Glasco Ann. 1478. St. Andrew having 8 Bishops under him and Glasco 3. The Archbishop of York before that time being Metropolitan of Scotland And Palladius Anno 411 was sent by Celestinus Bishop of Rome to be their first Bishop The chief Rivers are two viz. 1. Spey and 2 Tey The chief Hills are those of Cheviot and Albany The chief Lakes 1 Lomond 2 Nessa and 3 Tay. The miraculous things 1. The Lake of Mirton part of whose Waters Congeal only 2. The Lake of Lennox 24 Miles round in which are 30 Islands one of them driven with every Tempest and 3. the Deaf-stone 12 foot high and 33 Cubits thick The Archbishopricks two Bishopricks 12 and Universities 4. The Arms Sol a Lyon Rampant Mars with a double Tressure Counterflowry added upon making the perpetual League with France Barbarons were the Feides here and the Custom changed into Mercheta Mulieris by Malcolm Conmer at Request of his Wife Sister to Edgar Atheling Scotland was an Heptarchy but now a Monarchy King James the first endeavoured in Parliament to make a Union of both Kingdoms But the Judges Resolved That Anglia had Laws and Scotia had Laws But the new Erected Kingdom of Britannia should have no Laws and therefore till there was a Union of the Laws there could be no Union of the Kingdoms The mighty and ancient Kingdoms of England and Scotland were anciently but one and as their Religion and Language was one so there was one kind of Government and one Law which Ruled both with many Unanimous Agreements between them which evidently appeareth by many Proofs First That the Laws of Scotland are divided as the Laws of England into the Common Laws Acts of Parliament and Customs their Common Laws being principally contained in two Books One called Regiam Majestatem because it beginneth as doth Justinian's Institutes with those words And agreeth in substance with our Glanvil and most commonly de Verbo in Verbum and many times our Glanvil is cited therein The second Book is called Quoniam Attachiamenta it beginning with those Words Secondly The Descent of the Crown of Scotland and of Lands to Subjects is the same with England Thirdly They have the like High Court of Parliament consisting of Lords Spirituals Lords Temporal and Commons But of latter times the Lords Spiritual chuse eight Temporal Lords and the Lords Temporal eight Spiritual Lords These Sixteen make choice of eight for Counties and eight of Cities and Burroughs in all 32 But whatsoever is agreed upon by them the King or his High Commissioner doth allow or disallow by moving of the Scepter c. Fourthly They have the same Degrees of Nobility as Dukes Marquisses Earls Viscounts and Barons Fifthly The same great Officers as Chancellor Treasurer Lord Privy Seal Secretary c. Sixthly The same Ministers of Justice as Sheriffs Coroners c. Seventhly The same Laws for the most part appropriated unto England viz. Tenant by the Curtesy because they had Laws as England had Eighthly The like Writs as De Recto Assisa de Novel Disseisin Mort de Ancestor de Gard de Ideot ' inquirend ' Replegiar ' Attachm ' c. Ninthly They agree with Magna Gharta concerning Ward-ships Tenthly With Charta de Foresta for it is lawful for Bishops Earls and Barons coming or returning through the Kings Forests at the Kings Command to kill own or two Beasts in the sight of the Forester Or otherwise in his Absence to blow his Horn that he appear not to take it Thievishly Eleventhly The Lord of whom the Land is holden per Antiquius Feoffamentum shall have the Wardship of the Body Twelfthly The Sheriffs should cause the Acts of Parliament to be proclaimed as heretofore in England Thirteenthly The Sheriffs there have Inheritance in their Office as sometimes in England and still in Cumberland they have Fourteenthly The same Vocables of Art are used in both Kingdoms But by reason of their Acts of Parliment which in many Points have altered diminished and abrogated many of the old and made new Laws and other Proceedings the distinct Kingdoms as they now stand have many different Laws Coke's 4 Inst. 345 346. By the Statute of 1 Jac. 1.2 An Authority is given to certain Commissioners of both Houses of Parliament to Treat with certain Commissioners of Scotland concerning the Settlement of an Union and Peace between the Kingdoms of England and Scotland By the Statute of 4 Jac. 1. Laws of Hostility and the dependences thereof between the two Nations of Scotland and England are Repealed Felonies Committed by English Men in Scotland shall be Tried in Cumberland Westmorland or Northumberland before Commissioners and Jurors of England for which see more in the Statute By the Statute of 7 Jac. 1.1 If an English Man shall commit Felony in Scotland and then fly into England the Justices of Assize or one of them the Justices of Gaol Delivery in their Gaol Delivery or four of them or the Justices of Peace in Sessions or four of them may send the Offender into Scotland to be Tried By the Statute of 19 Car. 2. cap. 13. Twelve persons to be nominated by the King shall be Commissioners for this Kingdom who or five or more of them after the 10th of January 1667 and before the 25th of March 1688 and so from time to time may meet at such place in England as the King shall appoint with Commissioners for the Realm of Scotland and Treat and Determine concerning the Liberty of Trade between the two Kingdoms by suspending Impositions c. charged since the 25 of March in 12 year of the Kings Reign upon Commodities of the Growth or Manufacture of either Kingdom or of any of the English Plantations or other Commodities Exported out of England into Scotland their Determinations to be reduced into Writing under the Hands and Seals of the Commissioners and being Ratified by the King shall be in force for a year from the Date of such
the Seat of the old Robogni Darnij Volentij Venicnij and Erdini 116 Miles long and 100 broad It contains Ten Counties viz. 1. Antrim divided into Nine Baronies the chief Towns Carrick-fergus Belfalst and Antrim 2. London-Derry or Colerain divided into Five Baronies chief Towns London-Derry and Colerain 3. Dunnagal or Tir-Conel divided into 5 Baronies chief Town Dunnagal and Balishannon 4. Tyrone divided into Four Baronies chief Towns Dungannon 5. Fermanagh divided into Eight Baronies chief Town Enniskilling 6. Cavan divided into Seven Baronies chief Town Cavan 7. Monaghan divided into Five Baronies chief Town Monaghan 8. Armagh divided into Five Baronies chief Towns Charlemont and Armagh 9 Down divided into Eight Baronies chief Town Down and Newry And 10 Louth often reckoned in Lemster divided into Four Baronies chief Towns Drogheda Dundalk and Louth the chief Town of the whole is London-Derry 2. Connaught Incol Connauhty on the South-west of Ulster bordering on the Western Ocean The Seat of the old Gangani Auteri and Nagnatae 130 Miles long and 84 broad It contains Six Counties viz. 1. Letrim divided into Five Baronies chief Towns Letrim and James Town 2. Slego divided into Six Baronies chief Town Slego 3. Mayo or Majo divided into Nine Baronies chief Towns Mayo or Moy and Killalore 4. Roscommon divided into Six Baronies chief Towns Athlone Roscommon and Boyle 5. Galway divided into Seventeen Baronies chief Towns Galway Tuam and Clonefart And 6 Thomond or Clare oft reckoned in Munster divided into Eight Baronies chief Towns Clare and Killalow The chief Town of the whole is Gallway 3. Leinster Incol Leighnigh on the East of Connaught and South of Ulster The Seat of the old Briguntes Menapij Cauci and Blani 112 Miles long and 70 broad It contains 11 Counties viz. 1. Longford divided into Six Baronies chief Town Longford 2. VVest Meath divided into Eleven Baronies chief Town Molingar 3. East Meath divided into Eleven Baronies chief Towns Trim and Athboy these three made the Province of Meath 4. Dublin divided into Six Baronies chief City Dublin the Metropolis of all Ireland Seated on the Liffie Built by Harfager the first King of Norway and after the English Conquest was Peopled by a Colony of Men from Bristol 5. VVicklow divided into Six Baronies the chief Town VVicklow and Arcklow 6. Kildare divided into Eight Baronies chief Town Kildare 7. Kings County divided into Eleven Baronies chief Town Phillips Town 8. Queens County divided into Seven Baronies chief Town Martborow or Queens Town 9. Kilkenney divided into Eleven Baronies chief Towns Kilkenny and Thomas Town 10. Catherlagh divided into 5 Baronies chief Town Catherlagh And 11. Wexford divided into Eight Baronies the chief Towns VVexford and Ross The chief Town of the whole is Dublin 4. Muuster or Mounster Incol Mown on the South of Leinster and Connaught The Seat of the old Ulterni Coriandi Luceni Velibori and Vodij 135 Miles long and 120 broad It contains Five Counties viz. 1. Tipperary divided into Fourteen Baronies the chief Towns Clonmel Cashel and Tipperary 2. VVaterford divided into Six Baronies chief Town VVaterford and Dungarvan 3. Limerick divided into Nine Baronies chief Towns Limerick and Kilmalock 4. Kerry divided into Eight Baronies chief Towns Dingle and Ardfeart And 5 Cork divided into Thirteen Baronies chief Towns Cork King-sale and Youghil In this lies the County of Desmond divided into Two Baronies chief Town Bantry chief Town of the whole is Limerick but many reckon Cork The Rivers 1. Shannon 2. Barro 3. Shure and Black-water The Soil is Fertile if improved by Industry Amongst other Prerogatives no Venemous Serpent breeds here according to the Verses Illa ego sum c. The chief Loughs are 1. Lough-Earne 2. Lough-Neagh and Lough Corrib the last 26 Miles long and in breadth 4 Miles hath 20. Ilets abounding in Pine Trees The Mountains 1. Knock Patrick 2. Sliew-Bloemy 3. Curlew Hills The Archbishops here are 4. Bishops 19. Universities The Arms Azure an Irish Harp Or Stringed Argent King James the first First Marshalling them with the Arms of England as the first Absolute King thereof altho' Henry the eighth was declared King in Dublin by an Irish Parliament In each of the Counties is a Sheriff and Justices of the Peace and they are Governed by the Laws of England and Statutes Enacted at our English Parliaments But the Deputy hath now Power to Asemble the States here and make what Laws the necessity of the time requireth King John in the 12th year of his Reign went into Ireland and there by advice of Grave and Learned Men whom he carried with him by Parliament de comuni omnium de Hibernia consensu Ordained that Ireland should be Governed by the Laws of England which of many of the Irishmen according to their own Desire was joyfully accepted and obeyed and by many the same was soon after absolutely refused preferring their Brehon Law before the Just and Honourable Laws of England Co. 1 Inst. 14.1 By Poyning's Law made by Authority of Parliament in Ireland Anno 10 H. 7. all the Laws and Statutes of this Realm of England before that time made do extend to Ireland so as now Magna Charta doth extend to Ireland Co. 2. Inst 2. Resolved by all the Judges in England That for a Treason done in Ireland the Offender may be Tryed by the Statute of 35 Hen. 8. in England because the Words of the Statute be All Treasons committed out of the Realm of England and Ireland is out of the Realm of England Coke's 3 Inst 11. Albeit Ireland be a distinct Kingdom and out of the Realm of England to some purposes as Protections and Fines levied c. yet to other intents is as a Member of or belonging to the Crown of England And therefore a Writ of Error is maintainable here in the King's Bench of a Judgment given in the King's Bench in Ireland so as the Judges did construe that part of the Statute of 25 Ed. 3. Making it High Treason to bring in false Money into this Realm Counterfeit to the Money of England not to extend to Money brought out of Ireland Coke's 3 Instit 18. The Irish being Descended from the Ancient Britains now have the same Laws with us in England therefore I shall not write of the Jurisdiction or particular Courts of Justice there they being the same in England But take Notice That King John and also Henry the Second the Father of King John did Command at the Request of the Irish That such Laws as he had in England should be of Force in Ireland and hereby Ireland being a distinct Kingdom was to have Parliaments holden there as in England And thereupon in the Reign of King John a Parliament was holden there as by Record appeareth Co. 4 Inst. 349. King Henry the Second when he had Conquered Ireland sent thither that Treatise fairly Written in Parchment Intituled Modus tenendi Parliamentum for better holding of Parliaments there Coke's 4 Inst 349.
Descent for that by the Laws of that Kingdom he doth Inherit he cannot change those Laws of himself without Consent of Parliament Also if a King have a Christian Kingdom by Conquest as King Henry the Second had Ireland after King John had given to them being under his Obedience and Subjection the Laws of England for the Government of that Country no succeeding King could alter the same without Parliament And in this case whilst the Realm of England and that of Ireland were Governed by several Laws any Born in Ireland was no Alien to the Realm of England And in case of a Conquest of a Christian Kingdom as well those that served in the Wars at the Conquest as those that remained at home for the Safety and Peace of their Country and other the King's Subjects as well Antenati as Postnati are capable of Lands in the Kingdom or Country Conquered and may maintain any Real Action and have the like Priviledges there as they may have in England Co. 7 Rep. 17 Calvin ' Case Ireland came to the King 's of England by Conquest but who was the first Conquerour hath been a Question The Lord Coke saith he had seen a Charter made by King Edgar in these Words Ego Edgarus Anglorum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omniumque Insularum Oceani quae Britanniam cirumjacent Imperator Dominus gratias ago ipsi Deo Omnipotenti Regi meo qui meum Imperium sic ampliavit exaltavit super Regnum Patrum meorum c. mihi concessit propitia Divinitas cum Anglorum Imperio omnia Regia Insularum Oceani c. cum suis ferocissimis Regibus usque Norvegiam maximamque partem Hiberniae cum sua Nobilissima Civitate de Dublina Anglorum Regno subjugare quapropter ego Christi gloriam laudem in Regno meo exaltare ejus servitium amplificare devotus disposut c. Yet for that it was wholly Conquered in the Reign of King Henry the Second the Honour of the Conquest of Ireland is attributed to him and his Style was Rex Angliae Dominus Hiberniae Dux Normanniae Dux Aquitaniae Comes Andegaviae It is evident by our Books that Ireland is a Dominion separate and divided from England And 2 R. 3.12 Hibernia habet Parliamentum faciunt Leges nostra Statuta non ligant eos quia non mittunt Milites ad Parliamentam which is to be understood unless they be especially named sed Personae eorum sunt Subjecti Regis sicut Inhabitantes in Calesia Gasconia Guyan Concerning their Laws Ex Rotulis Patentium de Anno 11 Regis H. 3. there is a Charter which that King made beginning in these Words Rex c. Baronibus Militibus omnibus libere Tenentibus Salutem Satis ut credimus vestra audivit discretio Quod quando bonae memoriae Johannes quondam Rex Angliae Pater noster venit in Hiberniam ipse duxit secum Viros discretos legis peritos quorum Communi consilio ad instantiam Hibernensium Statuit praecepit Leges Anglicanas in Hibernia ita quod Leges easdem in scripturas redactas reliquit sub Sigillo suo ad Scaccarium Dublin ' So as now the Laws of England became the proper Laws of Ireland But because they have Parliaments holden there whereat they have made divers particular Laws and for that they retain unto this day divers of their Ancient Customs The Book 20 H. 6.8 holdeth That Ireland is governed by Laws and Customs separate and diverse from the Laws of England A Voyage Royal may be made into Ireland which proveth it a distinct Dominion In the Statute of 4 H. 7. cap. 24. Of Fines Provision is made for those that be out of this Land and it is holden in Plowden's Commentaries in Stowel's Case 375. That he that is in Ireland is out of the Land and consequently within that Proviso Co. 7 Rep. Calvin's Case But he is no Alien that is Born within the King's Obedience And no Man can be Alien to the Subject that is no Alien to the King Non potest esse Aliegena Corpori qui non est Capiti Non gregi qui non est Regi If an Irish Man dwelling in Ireland hath Lands in England he shall be chargable for the same to all intents as if an English Man were Owner thereof and dwelt in Ireland But if Irish Men or Men of the Isles of Man Jersey Guernsey c. have Lands within England and dwell here they shall be subject to all Services and publick Charges within this Realm as an English Man shall be Co. 7 Rep. 26. Calvin's Case A COMPENDIOUS DESCRIPTION OF THE English Plantations IN ASIA AFRICA AND AMERICA Anno Domini 1699 English Plantations IN ASIA BAntan or Banda Scituate near the Molucco's in the East-Indies abounding more in Nutmegs than any other Island of India and for that cause much frequented but this Trade is now taken from us by the Dutch The chief Town is Nera Here the Christian Faith hath taken deep Root according to the Church of Rome The English have a Colony at Surrat and Fort called the Fort of St. George c. which are not for our purpose more to describe Bombain Is also under the English Government but being of no great account we shall no further describe it The English Colonies in Africa GUinea in Terra Nigritarum doth acknowledge the English Government It extendeth from Sierra Leona in the 10th Degree of Longitude to Benin in the 30th Here is neither Town or Castle except Mina Built by the Portugals This is a Country very Fruitful having Mines of Gold The Juice of a Tree as Strong as Wine and much abounding in Rice Barley Ivory and Guinea Pepper Tanger Did here formerly belong to the English but the Mole and Castle is now Demolished The English Plantations in America THis Immense Country may be properly called a New VVorld being discovered by Christopher Columbus Anno 1492. The ancient Fathers Philosophers and Poets being of Opinion That the places near the North and South Pole were not Inhabitable by reason of the Extremity of Cold and the Middle part because of Excessive heat and thought it a great Solecism to believe the Earth was round For holding which Opinion 'T is said Pope Zacheus was so Zealous against Bishop Virgil That he Sentenced him to be cast out of the Temple and Church of God and to be deprived of his Bishoprick for this perverse Doctrin That there were Antipodes or People whose Feet are placed against ours although this discovery of America hath fully confirmed these Opinions and the yearly compassing the World evidenceth the necessity and certainty of Inhabitants living on all Parts of the Earthly Globe But the particular Discoveries and Voyages into the several parts of America being not for our present purpose I shall proceed to give some Relation of the Discovery Plantation and Government of those Countries and Islands in the VVest-Indies which
expresly forbid the same as heretofore hath sometimes been done It is free for any Man of the Parliament or not of the Parliament to get a Bill drawn by some Lawyer and give the same to the Speaker or Clerk of the Parliament to be presented at a time convenient and this Bill may be put first either in the Lords House or the Commons House Whatever is proposed for a Law is fir●t put in Writing and called a Bill which being read commonly after Nine of the Clock in a full Assembly it is either unanimously Rejected at first or else allowed to be Debated and then it is committed to a certain Number of the House presently nominated and called a Committee After it hath been amended and twice read two several Days in the House then it is Ingrossed that is written fair in Parchment and read the third time another Day and then if it be in the Lords House the Lord Chancellor in the Commons House the Speaker demandeth if they will have it put to the Question Whether a Law or no Law If the Major Part be for it there is written on the Bill by the Clerk Soit Baille aux Communes or Soit Baille aux Seigneurs retaining still in this and some other things about making Laws the Custom of our Ancestors who were generally skilled in the French Tongue Note That when the Speaker finds divers Bills prepared to be put to the Question he gives notice the Day before That on the Morrow he intends to put such Bills to the Passing or third Reading and desires the special Attendance of all the Members Note also That if a Bill be Rejected it cannot be any more proposed during that Session A Bill sent by the Commons up to the Lords is usual to shew their Respect attended with Thirty or Forty of the Members of the House As they come up to the Lords Bar the Member that hath the Bill making three profound Reverences delivereth it to the Lord Chancellor who for that purpose comes down to the Bar. A Bill sent by the Lords to the Commons is usually sent by some of the Masters of the Chancery or other Person whose Place is on the Wooll-sacks and by none of the Members of that House and they coming up to the Speaker and bowing thrice deliver to him the Bill after one of them hath read the Title and desired it may be there taken into Consideration if aftewards it pass that House then is written on the Bill Les Communes o●t assentez When any one in the Commons House will speak to a Bill he stands up uncovered and directs his Speech only to the Speaker then if what he delivers be confuted by another yet it is not allowed to answer again the same Day lest the whole time should be spent in Debate Also if a Bill be debating in the House no Man may speak to it in one day above once If any one speak words of Offence to the King's Majesty or to the House he is called to the Bar and sometimes sent to the Tower The Speaker is not allowed to perswade or disswade in passing of a Bill but only to make a short and plain Narrative nor to Vote except the House be equally divided After Dinner the Parliament ordinarily assemble not though many times they continue sitting long in the Afternoon Committees sit after Dinner where it is allowed to speak and reply as oft as they please Note By Death or Demise of the King the Parliament is ipso facto dissolved Anciently after every Session of Parliament the King commanded every Sheriff to proclaim the several Acts and to cause them to be duly observed yet without that Proclamation the Law intending that every one hath Notice by his Representative of what is transacted in Parliament of later times since Printing became common that Custom hath been laid aside See before in High Court of Parliament Page 51. To the Court of the High Steward of England BUT now by Stat 7 W. 3. Upon the Trial of any Peer or Peeress either for Treason or Misprision all the Peers who have Right to sit and Vote in Parliament shall be duly summoned Twenty days at least before every such Trial to appear at every such Trial and every Peer so summoned and appearing at such Trial shall Vote in the Trial of such Peer or Peeress so to be tried every such Peer first taking the Oaths mentioned in the Act of Parliament made 1 W. M. Intituled An Act for Abrogating the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and Appointing other Oaths And subscribing and audibly repeating the Declaration mentioned in the Act made Anno 30 Car. 2. Regis For disabling Papists to sit in either House of Parliament Provided that neither the Act nor any thing therein contained be construed to extend to any Impeachment or other Proceedings in Parliament in any kind whatsoever Provided also That the Act nor any thing therein contained shall any ways extend to any Indictment of High Treason nor to any Proceedings thereupon for Counterfeiting the King's Coyn his Great Seal or Privy Seal his Sign Manual or Privy Signet See before in The Court of the High Steward of England Page 81. Of the Power and Authority of the Protector and Defender of the Realm and Church of England during the King's tender Age. And Guardian c. of England in the King's Absence FOR his Authority Place and Precedency See Rot. Parl. Anno 1 Hen. 6. Nu. 26 27. 2 Hen. 6. Nu. 16. 6 Hen. 6. Nu. 22 23 24. 8 Hen. 6. Nu. 13. 11 Hen. 6. Nu. 19. 32 Hen. 6. Nu. 71. The Lord Coke in his 4th Inst. Cap. 3. saith The surest way is to have him made by Authority of the Great Council in Parliament Richard Duke of Gloucester Uncle to King Edward the 5th and afterwards King by the Name of Richard the 3d. was by the Council then Assembled made Protector of King Edward the 5th and his Realm during his Minority Holinshead's Chron. fol. 1363. And for the Government of the Realm and Surety of the Person of King Edward the 6th his Uncle Edward Earl of Hertford was by Order of the Council and the Assent of his Majesty appointed Governour of his Royal Person and Protector of his Realms Dominions and Subjects and so proclaimed the 1 st of February Anno 1547. by an Herauld at Arms and Sound of Trumpet through the City of London in the usual places thereof And on the 6th of Feb. Anno 1547. the said Earl of Hertford Lord Protector Adorned King Edward with the Order of Knighthood remaining then in the Tower and therewith the King standing up called for Henry Hubblethorn Lord Mayor of the City of London who coming before his Presence the King took the Sword of the Lord Protector and Dubbed the said Hubblethorn Knight Holinshead Chron. fo 1614. The King when he intends to go or is in remotis out of the Realm appoints a Guardian c.
in London Page 400 Chartereux in London Page 404 Cambridge City Page 426 Civil Government of Villages Page 431 Carolina Page 512 Caribee Islands Page 519 St. Christophers Page 526 Court of First-fruits and Tenths c. Page 548 D. DIvine Law Page 6 Delegates Court Page 44 Durham County Palatine Court Page 252 De Conservatore Treugarum i. e. Induciarum c. Page 302 Dominica Island Page 522 E. ENgland's Government Page 22 Ecclesiastical Government of England Page 28 Executive power in Causes Ecclesiastical Page 36 Executive power in Temporal Affairs Page 80 Exchequer Court Page 127 Eyre Justices Court Page 193 Execution of Laws in each County Page 222 Escheator 's Court Page 239 Ely's Royal Franchise Page 254 Ecclesiastical Government of the King's Court Page 308 Ecclesiastical Government of the Queen's Court Page 341 Ecclesiastical Government of Cities Page 344 Ecclesiastical Government of London Page 347 Ecclesiastical Government of Villages Page 431 English Plantations in Asia Page 491 English Colonies in Africa Page 492 English Plantations in America Page 492 F. FUndamentals of the Laws Page 8 Forrest Justices Court Page 175 Franchise of Ely Page 254 Franchise of Hexam and Hexamshire Page 255 First-fruits and Tenths Ecclesiastical Page 548 G. GOvernments in General Page 1 Government of England Page 22 Government Ecclesiastical of England Page 28 Government civil of England Page 51 Gaol-Delivery Justices Court Page 169 Government of Counties in England Page 207 Great Sessions in Wales Page 270 Government Military of England Page 275 Government Ecclesiastical of the King 's Court Page 308 Government civil of the King's Court Page 312 Green-cloth Court Page 315 Government Military of the King's Court Page 338 Government of the Queen's Court Page 341 Government Ecclesiastical of the Queen 's Court Page 341 Goveonment civil of the Queens Court Page 342 Government of Cities Page 344 Government Ecclesiastical of Cities Page 344 Government civil of Cities Page 345 Government Ecclesiastical of London Page 347 Government civil of London Page 348 Government Military of London Page 363 General Post-Office Page 381 Gresham Colledge in London Page 402 Government of the two Universities Page 415 Government of Boroughts in England Page 430 Government of Villages in England Page 430 Government Ecclesiastical of Villages Page 431 Government civil of Villages Page 431 Guernsey olim Servia Page 437 Government of Scotland Page 445 Government of Ireland Page 463 Guinea Page 492 Guardian of England Page 540 H. HUmane Law what Page 7 High Commission Court Page 36 High Court of Parliament Page 51 535 High Stewards Court Page 81 539 High Court of Chancery Page 90 Hundred Court Page 233 630 Heralds Colledge Page 283 Hustings Court Page 351 Halmote Court Page 358 Hebrides Islands Page 460 I. JUstices of Assize Nisi-prius Court Page 144 Justices of Oyer Terminer Court Page 153 Justices of Gaol-delivery Court Page 169 Justices of the Forrest Court Page 175 Justices in Eyre's Court Page 193 Justices of Trailbastons Court Page 195 Inns of Chancery Page 383 Inns of Court Page 384 Inns of Court manner of keeping Christmas Page 390 Judges Page 394 Islands adjacent unto England Page 433 Jersey olim Caesarea Page 437 Insula Vectis or Vectae Page 439 Ireland Page 463 Jamaica Page 530 K. KING Page 22 King's Bench Court Page 113 King 's Swanherd Page 204 587 King's Aulnager Page 205 590 King of England's Court Page 308 Knight Marshal Page 320 King 's great Wardrobe Page 332 St. Katherine's Page 378 Keeping Christmas in the Inns of Court Page 390 L. LAws in General Page 4 Law Eternal Page 4 Law of Reason Page 5 Law Divine Page 6 Law Humane Page 7 Law fundamentals Page 8 Laws and Constitutions Ecclesiastical Page 45 Leet Court Page 224 Law study Page 383 London Page 346 Lindisfarne Page 441 M. MOney collected for Houses of Correction or for the Poor Page 166 Mayor of the Staple's Court Page 263 Military Government of England Page 275 Maritime Power of England Page 287 Marshalsea Court Page 321 Military Government of the King's Court Page 338 Mayor and Aldermens Court Page 356 Military Government in London Page 363 Mootings in the Inns of Court Page 388 Mootings in the Inns of Chancery Page 390 Manner of holding Parliaments in the Inns of Court Page 392 Man Isle Page 433 Mariland Page 507 Montserrat Page 521 Mevis or Nevis Page 524 N. NAvy Office Page 295 Norwich City Page 411 Newfoundland Page 494 New England Page 496 New York Page 500 New Jersey Page 504 Nevis or Mevis Page 524 O. OFfice of Pleas in the Exchequer Page 142 Office of Tents Page 335 Office of the Robes to the King Page 335 Officers of the Robes to the Queen Page 342 Orphans Court Page 356 Office of the Ordnance Page 368 Office of the Warden of the Mint Page 373 Office of Records in the Tower Page 375 Oxford Page 415 Orcades Page 459 P. PRivy Council Page 22 Prerogative Court of Canterbury Page 40 Punishments by Ecclesiastical Courts Page 47 Punishments Ecclesiastical peculiar to the Clergy Page 49 Parliament High Court Page 51 535 Pipowders Court Page 246 Pembroke Palatine's Cuort Page 255 President and Council in the North Page 258 Principality of Wales Page 266 President and Council of Wales Court ibid. Port Courts Page 298 Parliament-holding in the Inns of Court Page 322 The Palace ibid. Post-Office General Page 381 Physicians Colledge in London Page 400 Plantations in Asia Page 491 Plantations in Africa Page 492 Plantations in America ibid. Pensylvania Page 505 Protector of England Page 540 Q. QUeen of England's Court Page 341 R. ROyal Franchise of Ely Page 254 River of Thames Conservator's Court Page 360 S. STar-chamber Court Page 104 Swanherd Page 204 587 Sessions of the Peace Court Page 210 Stannaries Court in the County of Devon and Cornwall Page 261 Lord Steward 's Court Page 324 325 Sheriffs Court in London Page 352 Serjeants Inns Page 392 Serjeants Call or Creation Page 393 Sion Colledge Page 403 Schools in London Page 405 Southwark ibid. Sorlings Page 440 Scotland Page 445 Scottish Isles or the Lesser-Islands near Scotland Page 459 Schetland I. ibid. T. TRyals Ecclesiastical in civil Causes Page 46 Tryals Ecclesiastical in criminal Causes ibid. The Tourn Page 223 Tower of London Page 365 Tangier Page 492 V. UNiversities Page 415 Virginia Page 510 St. Vincent Page 523 260 W. WItnesses Examination by Commissioners Page 203 Wardens Courts c. Page 260 Wales 266 Wardrobe of the King 332 Wardmote Inquest 358 Westminster City 406 Wight Island 439 Y. YEomen of the Guard 340 FINIS ERRATA PAge 14. line 11. read Escheators p. 17. l. 31. r. the. p. 21. l ult for of the Laws of England r. of the Jame p 25. l. 11. the Comma at without Warrant p. 57. l. 4. r. Roy. p. 69. l. 4. r. Martial p. 74. l. 23. r. The Stat of p. 78. l. 1. r. Sess 2. cap. 4. p. 102. l. 20. r. by a Deputy p 114. l. 12. r. Westminster p. 133. l. 4. r. Auditeth p. 136. l. 13. r. 2d p. 141. l ult r. 4. Instit p. 171. l. 10. r. plevisable p. 182. l. 7. r. circa l. 3. for nolucrint r. v●l●●rint p. 185. l. 22. r belong p. 190. l. 15. r. nor p. 193. l. 19. r. of a Commission p. 201. l. 24. r. Banque p. 307. l. 15. dele in p. 209. l. 18. dele and. p. 225. l. 27. r. Easter p. 243. l. 10. r. Drachme l. 17. r. Avoir p. 275. l. 15. r. Pay p. 276. l. 21. r. were heretofore p. 279. l. 13. r. scale p. 280. l. 5. r. seale l. 7. r. surcease l. 13. surcease 281. l. 4. r. fact ' l. 16. r. Foy p. 291. l. 3. r. 62432. pounds p. 298. l. 19. r. 4 Instit 147. p. 301. r. Lynne p. 302. l. 6. r. Raised p. 303. l. 24. the Comma at concitat p. 304. l. 27. r. Foreign p. 306. l. 23. r. to that Sin p. 307. the Comma at Tacitus p. 327. l. 26. r. stick p. 350. l. 21. r. Camera Regis Reipublicae Cor totius Angliae Epitome p. 353. l. 6. dele and if they be not Inrolled p. 407. l. 13 r. secular p. 411. l. 17. for ortam r. ortum p. 463. l. ult r. called p. 464. l. 24. r. Belfast p. 468. l. 8. r. Universities one p. 476. l. 27. r. Ego p. 486. l. 6. r. Alienigena l. 19. r. 25. p. 510. l. 27. r. as p. 564 r. Plea p. 565. l. 4. r. F. N. B. 27 28 l. 7. r. 100. p. 570. l. 29. r. new framed p 579. l. 15. r. Testmoignes l. ult r. Bokland p. 607. l. 25. r. Letae
308 Civil Government of the King's Court 312 Compting-House 314 Court of Green-Cloth 315 The Knight Marshal 320 Court of the Marshalsea 321 Court of the Palace 322 Court of the Lord Steward Treasurer and Comptroller of the King's Houshlod concerning Felony c. 324 Court of the Lord Steward of the King 's House or in his Absence of the Treasurer Comptroller and Steward of the Marshalsea 325 King 's great Wardrobe 332 The Office of the Tents 335 The Office of the Robes ibid. Military Government in the King's Court 338 The Band of Pensioners 339 The Yeomen of the Guard 340 Court of the Queen of England Government of the Queen's Court 341 Ecclesiastical Government of the Queen's Court 341 Civil Government of the Queens Court 342 Officers of the Robes ibid. Government of Cities Government f Cities 34● Ecclesiastical Government of Cities 344 Civil Government of Cities 345 City of London 34● The Ecclesiastical Government of London 347 The Civil Government of London 34● Court of Hustings 351 Sheriffs Court in London 352 Court of Conscience 354 Court of the Mayor and Aldermen 356 Court of Orphans 356 Court of Common Council 357 Court of Wardmote Inquest 358 Court of Halmote ibid. Chamberlain 's Court for Apprentices 359 Court of the Conservators of the Water and River of Thames 360 Court of the Coroner in London ibid. Court of the Escheator in London ibid. Court of Policies and Assurances 361 Military Government of London 363 Tower of London 365 Office of the Ordnance 368 Office of the Warden of the Mint 373 Office of Records in the Tower 375 St. Katherine's 378 Bridge ibid. Custom House 379 General Post-Office 381 Law Study 383 Inns of Chancery ibid. Inns of Court 384 Mootings in the Inns of Court 388 Mootings in the Inns of Chancery 390 Keeping Christmas in the Inns of Court ibid. Manner of holding Parliaments in the Inns of Court 392 Serjeants Inns ibid. Call or Creation of Serjeants 393 The Judges 394 Colledge of Civilians in London 396 Colledge of Physicians in London 400 Gresham Colledge in London 402 Sion Colledge in London 40● Chartreux in London 40● Schools in London 40● Southwark ibid City of Westminster 40● City of Norwich 41● Government of the Two Universitie● The two Universities in England 41● Oxford ibid Cambridge 42● Government of Boroughs Government of Boroughs is England 43● Government of Villages Government of Villages in England 43● Ecclesiastical Government of Villages 43● Civil Government of Villages ibid Islands adjacent to England Islands adjacent unto England 43● Isle of Man ibid Anglesey 43● Jersey olim Caesarea 437 Guernsey olim Servia ibid Insula Vectis or Vecta 43● Sorlings 44● Island Lindisfarne 44● The Government of Scotland Scotland 445 The Islands near Scotland The Lesser Islands near Scotland 459 Orcades ibid. Schetland ibid. Hebrides 460 The Government of Ireland Ireland 463 English Plantations in Asia English Plantations in Asia 491 Bantan ibid. Bombaine ibid. English Colonies in Africa English Colonies in Africa 492 Guinea ibid. Tangier ibid. English Plantations in America 492 Newfoundland 494 New England 496 New York 500 New Jersey 504 Pensylvania 505 Mariland 507 Virginia 510 Carolina 512 Bermudas 515 Caribee Islands 519 Barbuda ibid. Anguilla 520 Montserrat 521 Dominica 522 St. Vincent 523 Antegoa 524 Mevis or Nevis ibid. St. Christophers 526 Barbadoes 527 Jamaica 530 See the Alphabetical Table at the End of the Book Finis Tabulae OF GOVERNMENTS c. The Original of Governments OF GOVERNMENTS there can be but Three kinds viz. One or More or All must have the Sovereign Power of a Nation If one then it is a Monarchy If more as an Assembly of Choice Persons then it is Aristocracy if All that is a General Assembly of the People then it is a Democracy And now in course we are first to speak of The Monarchical Government which as most resembling the Divinity and approaching nearest to Perfection being esteemed the most Excellent is of two sorts Regal and Political The first sort Monarchy Regal was begun by Nimrod who after the World began to increase got unto himself a Dominion over others and yet in Scripture he is not called a King but a Mighty Hunter before the Lord So Belus did subdue the Assyrians and Ninus the most part of Asia and so did the Romans usurp the Empire of the World And thus having set forth the beginning of the Regal Government of Kingdoms which Law Regal was no other thing but the Pleasure of the Prince as in the First of Kings you may read more at large We will now as being more for our purpose declare how Kingdoms of Political Government were first begun which we may term Monarchy Political St. Augustine in the 19th Book De Civitate Dei saith A● People is a Multitude of Men associated by the Consent of Law and Communion of Wealth And yet such a People without a Head is not worthy to be called 〈◊〉 Body as in Natural things the Head cut off is not called a Body but a Trunk Wherefore Aristotle in his Civil Philosophy saith Whensoever One is made of Many among the same One shall be the Ruler and the other shall be the Rule● And this Ruler thus raised and appointed in Kingdoms is called a King from the Saxon word Koning intimating Power and Knowledge wherewith every Sovereign ought especially to be Invested And thus of a Multitude of People ariseth a Kingdom which is a Body Mystical And in this Body Mystical or Political the Intent of the People like Blood in the Natural Body is the first lively thing that is Politick provision for the Utility and Wealth of the same People which is imparted to the Head and members of the same Body whereby it is Nourished and Maintained and by the Law which cometh from Ligando of Binding this Mystical Body is knit and preserv'd together and the Members and Parts thereof as the Natural Body by Sinews do every one retain their proper Functions And as the Head of a Natural Body cannot change his Sinews nor withhold from his Inferiour Members their peculiar Powers of Nourishments no more can a King which is the Head of the Body Politick change the Laws of that Body or withdraw from the said People their proper Substance against their Wills And therefore it now follows that we speak somewhat of the Fundamentals of laws in General and then descend to the particular Fundamentals of the Laws of England and afterwards briefly declare the Executive Powers of the same And first of Laws in General WHich are Four that more properly belong to this our Business viz. The Law Enternal The Law of Nations Divine Law and Human Law The Law Eternal LEx Aeterna is the Reason of the Divine Will whereby God will ●ave all things of him Created to be moved and directed to a good End and it is called The first Law and all other Laws are derived from it And this Law Eternal none may be able to
know as in himself but the Blessed alone But God of his Goodness revealeth it to all in as much as is necessary for them otherwise he should bind his Creatures to impossible things which to be in God is most wicked to think And God reveals this Law Eternal or the Divine Will to the Rational Creature Three manner of ways that is First by the Light of Natural Understanding and then it is called The Law of Reason Secondly by Divine Revelation and then it is called The Divine Law Thirdly by Reason in the Prince or any other Secondary Pe son Governing who hath power to Impose a Law upon this Subjects and then it is called Humane Law altho' it be Originally instituted from God And because whatsoever the Second Cause doth the First doth also by a more Noble manner therefore the aforesaid Three Laws are called in God One Law Eternal and this is that Law of which it is written Prov. 8. Per●me Reges regnant Et legum conditores justa discernunt The Law of Reason LEx Rationis which amongst Doctors is also called The Law of Nature or Jus Gentium The Law of Nations may be doubly considered that is either as it respects all Creatures even Irrationals for all Irrational Creatures not hindred do live and subsist under certain Rules to them set by Nature they also conserve their kind and by Instinct of Nature nourish their Young and things by Nature contrary to them they fear and especially when alone it respects the Rational Humane Creature created to the Image of God And it is called The Law of Nations for that it ought to be kept by all Nations as well among the Jews and Gentiles as Christians And thus The Law of Reason is a participation of The Law Enternal From whence it is said in the Psalms Signatum est super nos Lumen vultus tui Domine scilicet Lumen Veritatis Divine Law LEx Divina is a true Sign reveal'd to the Rational Creature of the Divine Reason Willing the Rational Creature to be held or bound to do something or not do it for obtaining Eternal Felicity as are the Laws of the Old Testament which are called Morals and the Evangelical Law and sometimes it is called Law instituted by Man but improperly nevertheless when the Law is for obtaining Eternal Felicity Moreover besides The Law of Reason and Humane Law it was necessary for the Direction of Humane Life to have the Divine Law for Four Reasons First Whereas Man was created to enjoy Eternal Beatitude it was necessary that besides the Law of Reason and Humane Law he should be Directed to his End by a Law Divinely instituted Secondly For the incertainty of Humane Judgment that he should be directed by a Law given by Divine Inspiration from which it appeared that he might by no means deviate Thirdly Because the Judgment of Man may not be of Interior Acts therefore it was necessary to have a Law Divine which should rectifie the Interiors as well as the Exteriors of Men Fourthly Because Human Law cannot punish every evil Act it was necessary to have a Divine Law which should let no Evil go unpunished and these four Reasons are touched in this Verse Lex Domini immaculata convertens animas Testimonium Domini Fidelis sapientiam praestants Parvulis Humane Law LEx Humana sive Positiva is a Law Deduced by Reason from the Law of Reason and the Divine Law and therefore in every Positive Law well Instituted there is somewhat of the Law of Reason and the Divine Law And Humane Law is a true sign by Humane Tradition and Authority immediately Constituted And that Human Law be Just Two things are required That is Prudence and Authority because it is called Lex à ligando but every Sentence of a Prudent Man doth not bind the Community or any of them if he do not preside over them And in the Law of Men these Proprieties are required viz. That they be Honest Just Possible according to the Custom of the Country and convenient to the place and time Necessary Profitable Manifest also that they be Ordained for no Private end but for the Common good and Humane Laws not contrary to the Divine Law ought to be kept also in Conscience Et qui eas spernit Deo resistit From what hath been said it appears That the Divine Law respects the Spiritual end The Law of Reason the Natural end and that Human Law may direct to both And the Law of Reason takes of Nature of the thing for a Foundation but Human Law the publick Expedience or Good Now of these Four Laws all Laws in general consist and be sounded if they are good And that we may shew particularly and more especially from whence arise The Fundamentals of the Law of England WE must know that the Law of England or Humane Law in England takes its Fundamentals from Six chief Principles First The Law of Reason Secondly Divine Law Thirdly Divers Customs of the Kingdom Fourthly Divers Principles called Maxims Fifthly Particular Customs in certain places Sixthly From divers Statutes of the Common Council of the Kingdom in Parliament of which we shall speak something in order And first The Law of Reason is held in this as in all other Kingdoms and the Learned in the Laws of England make two Degrees of the Law of Reason scilicet Lex Rationis Primariae Lex Rationis secundariae Ex Primaria From the first are forbidden Murder Manslaughter Oppression of the Innocent Perjuries Deceits and many such like But the manner of punishing these sorts of Offences is according to divers Principles and Maxims or Statutes to this end especially ordained and it is called the Law of Reason primary For that those things which are Commanded or Forbidden by that Law are grounded upon Reason also without any other Law joyned or opposed to it The Law of Reason secundary is likewise divided in two parts That is General and Particular The Law of Reason secundary General is derived from that Law of Propriety General which is held throughout the World From this are prohibited Thefts Disseisins and many other And it is called the Law of Reason Secundary for that it is founded not upon Reason alone but from the Law of Propriety and the Reason derived from that Law for because the Law of property saith Such a thing is the proper Goods of such a Man Therefore saith Reason grounded upon that Law that thing is not to be taken from him unjustly against his Will And the Law of Reason Secundary Particular is that which is Founded upon divers General and Particular Customs and divers Maxims and Statutes only had and ordained in the Kingdom of England As if a Distress dye it shall not be imputed to him who distrained but to him who hath the Propriety because the Defect is to be assigned in him for that he did not pay the Rent And Reason is founded upon the Custom aforesaid so
Manuscripts There have been in that time and since the Conquest till the Lord Coke● time 280 Sessions of Parliament and at every Sessions divers Acts made n●● small number whereof are not in Print Cokes 1 Inst 110. a. The Jurisdiction of this Court is s● Transcendent That it Maketh In●largeth Diminisheth Abrogateth Repealeth and Reviveth Laws Statutes Acts and Ordinances concerning Matters Ecclesiastical Capital Criminal Common Civil Marshal Maritime c. And none can begin continue or dissolve the Parliament but by the King's Authority Cokes 1 Inst 110. None can be sent out of the Realm no not into Ireland against his will albeit by Order of Parliament Cokes 2 Inst. 47 48. Trial by Peers of Peers of Parliament was very ancient and in the time of the Conqueror both for Men and Women and anciently those that were not Lords of Parliament were Judged in case of Treason or Felony by the Peers of the Realm By Authority of Parliament it was declared That Urban the 12th was duly elected Pope Cokes 2 Inst 274. Few or none of the Acts made in Ed. 1. time have been Repealed Cokes 2 Inst 280. Where Communitatem Angliae and many such Words are taken for the Parliament and as there was a legal word Guidagium being an Office for guiding Travellers through dangerous passages so the Laws of the Realm are ●o guide the Judges in all Causes Cokes 2 Inst. 526. Cardinal Woolsey endeavouring to bring in the Civil Law was the occasion that but one Parliament was held from the 7th to 21th year of Hen. 8. Cokes 2 Inst. 626. George Nobles a Priest Attainted by Verdict for Clipping the Kings Coi● was Adjudged and Executed at Tybur● as a common person and Merx 〈◊〉 shop of Carlisle for Treason again●● Hen. 4. had Judgment as in case 〈◊〉 High Treason But Cor Regis in manu D●mini he was pardoned Cokes 2 Inst 63● The Parliament at Oxford 42 Hen. 〈◊〉 was called Insanum Parliamentum 12 Ed. 2. The Parliament of Whiteband 5 Ed. 3. Parliamentum bonum 10 R. 〈◊〉 Parliamentum quod fecit Mirabilia 21 R. 〈◊〉 Magnum Parlimentum 6 H. 4. Parl●●mentum indoctum 4 Hen. 6. Parliam●●tum Fustium 14 H. 8. The Black Parl●●ment 1 E. 6. Parliament ' pium 1 Ma●● Parliament ' propitium Parliaments of Q. Pia Justa Provida 21 Jac. 1. Foelix Pa●●●amentum And the Parliament in the 〈◊〉 year of King Ch. 1. Benedictum Parl●●mentum The Reasons of most of the Appellations appear upon Record C●● 3 Inst 2. It is Lex Consuetudo Parliamen●● That wheresoever the Parliament S●● Proclamation should be made forb●ing wearing of Armour and all Plays and Games of Men Women or Children Cokes 3 Inst 160. The Britons loved the Laws of England and petitioned to have the Laws of England in all cases of the Crown used in Wales And now seeing there are Sheriffs in Wales the Writs for Election of Knights Citizens and Burgesses are directed to them returnable in Chancery Cokes 4 Inst. 241. Every Lord of Parliament ought to have a Writ of Summons sent to him out of the Chancery at least 40 Days before the Parliament begin and the Writ of Summons to the Barons is Quod intersitis cum Praelatis Magnatibus Proceribus super dictis Negotijs tractaturi vestrumque Consilium Impensuri but the Writ to the Assistants as all the Judges Barons of the Exchequer of the Coif the Kings Learned Councel and the Civilians Masters of the Chancery are different from the other as thus Quod intersitis Nobiscum cum caeteris de Concilio nostro and sometimes Nobiscum only super Praemissis tractaturi vestrumque Consilium Impensuri and the Writs of Summons to the Bishops c. you may see in Cokes 4 Inst 4 5 6 9 10 14 47 48 50. And at the Return of these Writs the Parliament cannot begin but by the Royal Presence of the King either in Person or by Representation Cokes 4. Inst. 6. The Writs of Summons are to be found in the Close Rolls and the Forms of them you may see in Cokes 4 Inst 9 10. Which Forms as also the Forms of all other original Writs are not to be altered but by Act of Parliament and where they Issued out of the Chancery and were Returnable in the Court of Parliament the Return thereof could not be altered and Returnable into the Chancery But by Act of Parliament 7 H. 4. cap. 15. They be now returned into the Chancery and kept in the Office of the Clerk of the Crown there see the Statute of 4 H. 7. cap. 15. and Cokes 4 Inst. 9 10. Who shall be Electors and the Sheriffs duty in Electing you may see in the several Statutes whereof some are mentioned in Cokes 4 Inst. 48. If Erroneous Judgment be given in the Kings-Bench it shall upon petition of Right be brought into Parliament to be reversed or affirmed and the proceedings thereupon you may read in Cokes 4 Inst 21. None of the Judges of Kings-Bench Common-Pleas or Exchequer are Eligible because Assistants in the House of Lords nor any of the Clergy because of the Convocation but those who have Judicial places in other Courts are Eligible Cokes 4 Inst 47. Thorpe could not be Speaker unless he were Knight of the Shire Cokes 4. Inst 47. in the margent Tenants in ancient Demesne not contributary to the expences of Members in Parliament nor Chaplains who are Masters in Chancery to Proctors in Parliament F. N. B. 507. Cokes 1 Rep. 25 160. A saving in an Act of Parliament Repugnant to the Body of the Act is void Cokes 1 Rep. 47. Alton Woods's Case He who taketh a Gift by Act of Parliament shall not have other Estate than is given by the Act Cokes 1 Rep. 47 48. Alton Woods Case An Act of Parliament or the Common Law may make an Estate void as to one and good as to another which a Man by his breath or words cannot do Cokes 1 Rep. 87. Corbet's Case The Statute of 27 Hen. 8. Extirpating and Extinguishing all the Estate of the Feoffees Non possunt agere seu permittere aliquid in prejudice of Cestuy que use Cokes 1 Rep. 132. Chudley's Case An Act of Parliament may make Division of Estates and therefore not like to Cases at Common Law Cokes 1 Rep. 137. Chudleigh's Case An Act of Parliament is the Highest Conveyance and a latter doth take away a former Act Cokes 2 Rep. 46. Parliamentum Testamentum Arbitramentum to be construed according to the intent of the makers Cokes 3 Rep. 27. Butler and Baker's Case Of Statutes which concern the King the Judges ought to take notice Cokes 4 Rep. 13. Lord Cromwell's Case The like of general Acts Cokes 4 Rep. 76. Holland's Case The of Stat 13 18 Eliz. concerning Leases by Deans and Chapters are general Statutes whereof the Court ought to take notice although they be not found by the Jurors Cokes 4 Rep. 120. Davenport's Case Mistaking the
Communibus tenendis The Proceedings of this Court remain in Filacijs in the Office of the Petty Bagg Divers Acts of Parliament give Authority to the Lord Chancellor to determine divers Offences and Causes in the Court of Chancery which is ever intended in this Court proceeding in Latin secundum Legem Consu●tudinem Angliae and the Defendant shall not be Sworn to his Answer nor Examined upon Interrogatories but upon Issue joyned it shall be tried in the Kings Bench ut in similibus Casibus solet And thus having spoken somewhat of the Ordinary Jurisdiction of this Court we now come to treat of The Court of Extraordinary Jurisdiction PRoceeding according to the Rule of Equity Secundum Aequum Bonum But before we set forth the Jurisdiction and manner of proceeding therein it may not be thought improper to set forth and describe what this Equity is and that it may the better be understood let us consider what leadeth thereunto which is first Synderesis That is a Natural power of the Soul fixed in the higher part thereof moving to good and abhorring evil and the Divine Wisdom joyneth the beginning of Secondary things to the latter end of the first things as an Angel is Intellectual by Nature and not made rational by Discourse and to this nature Man by Synderesis approacheth and is joyned Secondly Reason For when Man was Created he received from God a double Eye the exteriour of the Flesh whereby he might see the visible things and the Interiour of Reason whereby he might know the invisible to the end that by that of the Flesh he might behold know and avoid his visible Enemies and by that of Reason be enabled to overcome his Spiritual Enemies who war against his Soul And moreover Reason according to the Learned is that power of the Rational Soul which discerneth between good and evil the better by compa●●ng the one with the other which also chooseth virtue and loveth God And Reason is divided into two parts the Superiour and the Inferiour for the superiour part of Reason tendeth only to Divine Eternal things and endeavoureth and reasoneth that this is to be done or not to be done because God hath commanded or prohibited it The inferiour part of Reason is declined or bent to the Government of temporal things and endeavoureth or reasoneth to prove by Humane Laws that this is to be done o● not to be done or that it is honest o● dishonest or that it is expedient o● not expedient for the Common-wealth And in the next place we come to consider and speak of Conscience Which is a word compounded of Cum Scientia and is as much as to say Knowledge of one thing with another and is thus said to consi●● in two things Knowledg by himself and Knowledge with another In the first Conscience importeth a certain natural Act not of knowing only but moving also and also inclineth the Soul to prosecute good and to avoid evil and in this manner it is accompted the same as above in Reason and is also conjoyned to the superiour light of Reason which is called Synderesis Therefore St. Jerom and others call Conscience it self Synderesis and then Conscience it self is always right In the second place Conscience importeth more properly Knowledg with another thing still with some particular Act and thus Conscience properly speaking is no other thing than the applying of a certain Knowledg to some particular Act from whence it may be deduced that from the most perfect knowledg of some Law or Science and the right application of that knowledg to some particular Act followeth the most pure perfect and best Conscience and if there be a defect in knowledg of the truth of that Law or in the application of the same to some Act there followeth thereof an Error or defect of Conscience And as Synderesis delivereth a universal Maxim or Principle in which it cannot Err scilicet That an unlawful thing is not to be done now it may be assumed that an Oath is unlawful it being said Math. 5. Ego autem di●●vobis non jurare omnino But if any wi●● hold from these words that an Oath is lawful in no case he erreth in Conscience because he hath not full knowledg of the truth of the said Gospel nor doth confer that place of Scripture with others in which an Oath is allowed to be lawful And the reason why Conscience may Err in the aforesaid Assumption and the like is because Conscience is formed from the Assumption of some particular Proposition or Question under universa● Rules of things to be done and as the light of a Candle is put in a House that they may see what things are i● the House so God hath placed Conscience in the middle of the Rational Soul as a Light whereby it may discern what is to be done or not to be done and now let us proceed to describe Equity Which is Justice weighing all circumstances tempered with the sweetness of Mercy which ought to be kept in every Law and this he well understood who said Ipsae eteni● Leges cupiunt ut Jure regantur and the Wiseman saith Noli esse justus multu●● otherwise Summa justitia summa inj●stitia fit But that we may more clearly declare what Equity is It is to be known that because it is impossible to institute any General Rule of Law which will in no case be defective therefore Legislators attend to that which happeneth in many things and not to particular cases nor indeed can they since to observe the Sentence of Law in some Cases is both against the Equality of Justice and Common Good so that in some Cases it is good yea absolutely necessary praetermitting the words of the Law to follow that which reason of Justice requireth And to this end Equity is ordained which is also called Epicaya scilicet to moderate the Rigour of the Law and it taketh not away the very Right but that which seemeth to be Right by general determination of Law And cases may happen in which the Law of God and the Law of Reason would be violated by the observance of them as in the Law of England there is a general Prohibition that it shall not be lawful for any Man to enter into the Ground of another without Authority of the Owner or of the Law yet it is excepted That if Beasts by the High-way escape into another Man's Corn he that driveth them may justifie the Entry to fetch them out and many other such like And thus it appears That Equity rather attends the intention than the words of Law And thus having briefly set forth what Equity is we are next to know that this Court of Extraordinary Jurisdiction grounded thereupon relieveth none but such who are without remedy in other Courts For nunquam decurriter ad extraordinarium sed ubi defecit Ordinarium This Court is Superiour to the other Tribunals that so the rigour of the Law in them
of the Papers keeps all Rolls Script Pleadings and other things which are not of Record The Custos Brevium Files all Writs Original and Judicial after their Return by the Sheriffs and is chargable for the same if imbezled The Custos Sigìlli Seals all Judicial Writs Patents and Licenses issuing out of the Court and taketh the Fee and thereof makes Accompt The Attorneys which are for Plaintiffs and Defendants in every Cause Frame and make Pleadings The Marshal of the Court who either by himself or his Deputy or Servants attends the Court to receive Prisoners committed to their Custody The Clerk of the Declaration keeps and Files Declarations after they are Ingrossed and continued on the Back from the Term you Declare till Issue Joyned The Clerk of the Rules makes all Rules and Enters them and gives Copies and also Files all Affidavits c. The Phillizers one for each County to make all mean Process after Original in proceeding to the Utlary The Clerk of the Errors allows 〈◊〉 Writs of Error and makes the Supersedeas thereupon and Transcribes the Records into the Exchequer Chamber The Cryers always attend the Court to call Non-suits give Oaths to Wi●nesses Jury Men at Tryals and d● such other Business as the Court sha●● direct and at the end of every Term do attend the Court. The Porter of the Court who bring● all Records into Court when they a●● to be used This Court may Bail any person fo● any Offence whatsoever and if a Free man in any City Burrough or Tow● Corporate be Disfranchised unjustly albeit he hath not priviledge in th●● Court yet this Court may relieve the party as appears in Coke's 11 Rep. Jam●● Bagg's Case Et sic in similibus H. P. Captus per querimoniam Merca●●rum Flandriae imprisonatus offert Domino Regi Hus Haut in plegio ad st●●dum recto ad respondendum praedi●●● Mercatoribus omnibus alijs qui v●●sus eum loqui voluerint c. The French word Hus signifying an Elder-Tree and Haut the Staff of a Halbert a●● thought then to be Common Ba● changed now to Doo and Roo and th●● then putting in Bail at one Man's Suit was in Custodia Mareschalli to answer all others that should Sue him by Bill and this continueth to this Day A Scire facias to Repeal a Patent of the King may be brought in this Court In Ancient time when Pleas were holden in Parliament when the Parties descended to Issue the Record was Adjourned into the Kings-Bench By Stat. 18 Ed. 3. The Oath to be given to Justices when they take their place is to this effect viz. To serve the King in their Offices To warn them of any Damage do Justice take no Bribe give no Council where he is a Party maintain no Suit nor deny Right though by command from the King To procure the Kings profit and to be answerable to the King in Body Lands and Goods if found in default By Stat. 10. H. 6. not in Print The Justices Serjeants and the King's Attorney shall be paid their Wages by the Treasurer of England at Easter and Michaelmas without any other Suit By Stat. 28 Hen. 8. All Attaints shall be taken in the Kings-Bench and Common-Pleas and not elsewhere Stat. 5 Ed. 3.12 If Outlary happen before Justices of Oyer and Terminer and the Justices be risen before the Party yield himself he shall do it in the Kings-Bench The Justices in this Court are the Sovereign Justices of Oyer and Terminer Gaol Delivery Conservators of the Peace c. in the Realm and Sovereign Coroners of the Land And therefore where the Sheriff and Coroners may receive Appeals by Bill à Fortiori the Justices of this Court may do it Out of this Court are other Courts derived in respect of the multiplicity of causes which have increased Jurisdictio istius Curiae est Original●● seu ordinaria non delegata And the Justices of this Court were called Anciently Justiciae Justiciarij Locum tenentes Domini Regis c. And the Stile of this Court is Anglia in the Margent and the Chief Justice was called Justicia Angliae Justicia prima Justiciarius Angliae capitalis Justiciarius noster capitalis ad placita coram nobis terminand● and in divers Acts of Parliament he is called Chief Justice of England The Kings Bench hath Authority for Great Misprisions and Offences to Adjudge and Inflict corporal Punishments as Pillory Papers and the like Coke's 4 Inst cap. 7. The Court of Common Pleas. THis Court is so called because there are debated the usual Pleas between Subject and Subject althô not in respect of Persons but in respect of the Pleas being Communia placita And some say this Court as well as others was at first held in the King's House wheresoever he resided But by Magna Charta it is ordained This Court should not be Ambulatory but held at a certain place and that hath ever since been in Westminster-Hall And this Court is the Lock and Key of the Common Law in Common Pleas for here all Real Actions whereupon Fines Recoveries and Common Assurances of the Realms do pass and all Real Actions by Original Writs are to be determined and all Common Pleas mixt or personal in divers whereof this Court and the Kings Bench have a concurrent Authority This Court Regularly holds no Plea but by Original Writ out of the Chancery and returnable into this Court But in certain cases it holds Plea by Bill without such Writ as for or against persons priviledged in this Court Also without Original Writ this Court may upon suggestion grant Prohibitions to keep Ecclesiastical Courts within their Limits and Jurisdiction This Court but no inferiour Court may write to the Bishop to certifie Bastardy or Legal Matrimony so likewise upon ancient Demesne pleaded The Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas or Common Bench holds his place Durante bene-placito by Letters Patent in this form Rex c. Sciatis quod constituimus dilectum fidelem E C. Militem Capitalem Justiciarium de Communi Banco habendum quamdiu nobis placu●●it cum Vadijs Feodis ab antiquo debitis consuetis In cujus rei Testimonium has Literas nostras fieri fecimus Patentes Teste c. And the three other Judges have Letters Patent Sciatis quod constituimus dilect ' Fidelem P. W. Militem unum Justiciariorum nostrorum de Communi Banco c. The Jurisdiction of this Court is general and extendeth throughout all England And for the Antiquity of this Court Vide 6 E. 3. where a Fine was levyed in this Court 6 R. 1. And none of the Judges of this Court may take Fee of any but the King and they ought to observe and likewise all other Officers the Rule in Law Nemo Duobus utatur Officijs And now we come to The Officers THe Custos Brevium who is the Chief Officer of the Court. The Three Prothonotaries in whose Offices
in pleno comitatu per Sacramentum proborum legalium hominum de c. inquiras inde appellatur Breve inquisitionis utrum A. captus detentus in Prisona c. pro morte W. unde rettatus i. e. accusatus existit sit odio atia c. nisi indictatus vel appellatus fucrit coram Justitiariis nostris ultimo itincrantibus in partibus illis pro hoc captus Imprisonatus For by the Common Law in omnibus autem placitis de felonia solet accusatus per plegios dimitti praeterquam de placito de homicidio ubi ad terrorem aliter statutum est But this Writ was taken away by a late Statute viz. in 28 E. 3. because as some pretended it became unnecessary for that Justices of Assize Justices of Oyer and Terminer and Justices of Gaol-delivery came at the least into every County twice every year but within Twelve years after this Statute it was Enacted That all Statutes made against Magna Charta should be void whereby the Writs of Odio and Atia and De ponendo in Ballium are revived and so in like cases upon all the Branches of Magna Charta And therefore the Justices of Assize Justices of Oyer and Terminer and of Gaol-delivery have not suffered the prisoner to be long detained but at their next coming have given the prisoner full and speedy Justice by due Tryal without detaining him long in prison Coke's 2 Inst 42 43. A person examined may require a Copy of his Examination take time to answer and put his answer in writing and keep a Copy of it Coke's 2 Inst 51. All causes ought to be heard and determined before the Judges openly in the Kings Courts the King having distributed his Judicial power to several Courts of Justice Coke's 2 Institutes 103. If a prisoner be mute by act of God The Judges who are to be of Council with the prisoner ex officio ought to enquire if he be the same person and of all other pleas which he might have pleaded But if it be by his own Act he is to be forthwith put to his pennance Coke's 2 Inst 178. If the Prisoner Demur and it be Over-ruled he shall be hanged but not have pain fort dure ibidem Justices may punish any act done in deceit of the Court 2 Inst 215. Judicis officium est Opus diei in die ipso perficere according to the Statute of W. 1. cap. 47. and not defer it or prefer others upon any request or importunity Coke's 2 Inst 256. Sapientis Judicis est cogitare tantum sibi esse permissum quantum commissum creditum Coke 's 4 Inst 163. By Stat. 4 Jac. 1. cap. 1. It is provided that whereas in regard of some difference and inequality of the Laws Tryals and Proceedings in case of Life between the Justice of the Realm of England and that of the Realm of Scotland It appeareth to be most convenient for the contentment and satisfaction of all his Majesties Subjects to proceed with all possible severity against such Offenders in their own Country according to the Laws of the same whereunto they are Born and Inheritable and by and before the Natural Born Subjects of the same Realm if they be there apprehended And by the next Clause is provided that Felonies committed by English Men in Scotland shall be inquired of heard and determined before Justices of Assize or Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol-delivery being Natural born Subjects within the Realm of England and no other And the like in another Clause with an addition of Justices of the Peace to be Natural born Subjects within England Coke's 3 Inst 226. Justices of the Kings-Bench Oyer and Terminer Gaol-delivery and of the Peace may enquire of hear and determine all Murders and Felonies within the Verge because their Jurisdiction and Authority are generally through the whole County Coke's 4 Rep. 46 47. Case of Appeals The Justices of Assiz● have one Commission of Oyer and Terminer directed to them and divers other Inhabitants of the Shires whereunto their Circuits extend whereof each of the Justices of Assize are of the Quorum for offences hapning in their Circuits which without this Commission they cannot do Terms del Ley Cok's 4 Inst En le Table The Statute of 2 Ed. 3. requireth that no Commission of Oyer and Terminer be granted but before Justices of one Bench or the other or Justices Itinerant and that for horrible Trespasses Where the Commission of Oyer and Terminer lies in case of Extortions by Under-sheriffs Escheators Clerks of Markets Hunters in Parks taking of Goods not Wreck'd in vacancy of Bishopricks for Hunting in Parks for Robbing Piscaries and in many other cases the Forms of Writs and Associations and si non omnes to them Vide F. N. B. 243 to 251. If the Trespass be not Enormis seu horribilis a Writ of Supersedeas lieth or Rev● ation Coke's 2 Inst 419. Upon an Indictment found by the Commissioners before the Term a Special Commission of Oyer and Terminer may be granted for them to proceed altho' the Court of Kings Bench be sitting in the same County But it is best for the Commission to bear Teste after the beginning of the Term But General Commissions of Oyer and Terminer are suspended during the term or time the Kings Bench sits in the same County or if the Kings Bench be adjourned the General Commission may proceed Coke's 3 Inst 27. Coke's 4 Inst 163. The Kings Bench is more than Eyre Therefore in Term time no Commissions of Oyer and Terminer or Gaol-Delivery by the Common Law may sit in the County where the Kings Bench sitteth for praesentia majoris cessat potestas minoris and therewith agreeth 27 Ass p. 1. But Carlisle and Erwing were Indicted and Arrained in London where the Murder was Committed before Justices of Oyer and Terminer in the Term time because in another County than where the Kings Bench sit Coke's 9 Rep. 118. Lord Sanchar's Case For Tryal of Treasons Committed out of the Realm c. by Commissions appointed by the King c. See the Statute of 26 Hen. 8. 33 Hen. 8. 35 Hen. 8. 5 and 6. of Ed. 6 c. If a Commission of Oyer and Terminer be discontinued or expired c. the Indictments and Records shall be removed into the Kings Bench as to their proper Center Coke's 2 Institutes 419. The Courts of Special Justices of Oyer and Terminer THese Courts are Four in number Raised by several Acts of Parliament Two of which viz. That concerning Purveyors and that concerning Misdemeanors of Villains being obsolete We shall only give a Brief account of the Style and Nature of the other Two referring their Jurisdiction and Proceedings therein to the Acts of Parliament themselves And first of that concerning Money collected for Houses of Correction or for the Poor THis Court is Raised by the Statute of 39 Eliz. cap. 4. wherein is to be observed
Honoured his Son J. Duke of Lancaster therewith for Term of his Life It is called Comitatus Palatinus a County Palatine à Comitatu Palatio Regis because the Owner be he Duke or Earl c. Hath in that County Jura Regalia as fully as the King had in his Palace And he may have his Chancery and Writs under his Seal for the Office of the Chancellor to Depute Justices as well touching Pleas of the Crown as all other Pleas and Execution of Writs and making Officers and Servants and all other as by the Letters Patents above mentioned granted in Parliament appears And the King may Erect a County Palatine without Parliament by his Letters Patents But now by the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 24. several of those Jura Regalia are taken from them and recontinued and annexed to the Crown And all Writs are now to be made in the King's Name but the Teste in Name of him who hath the County Palatine And they shall have Forfeiture of Lands and Goods for High-Treason which Forfeiture accreweth by the Common Law But Forfeitures given after the Erection of the County Palatine by an Act of Parliament they shall not have Justices of Assize of Gaol-Delivery and of the Peace are and ever since the Erection have been Assigned by Commission under the Seal of the County Palatine of Lancaster Fines were levied with 3 Proclamations c. before the Justices of Assize there or one of them and all Recoveries to be had of Lands there are to be had in the Court of the County Palatine at Lancaster and not at Westminster All Lands c. Parcel of this Dutchy given to the King by the Statute of Monasteries Chantries c. are still within the Survey of the Dutchy Lands within the County Palatine should pass by the Dukes Charter without Livery of Seisin or Attornment But of Lands parcel of a Manor annexed to the Dutchy without the County Palatine there ought to be Livery of Seisin and Attornment of Tenants and in the same Degree is it in the King's Case The Proceedings in this Court of the Dutchy Chamber at Westminster is as in a Court of Chancery for Lands and other Matters within the Jurisdiction of the Court by English Bill c. and Decree But this Chancery is not a mixt Court as the Chancery of England is partly of the Common Law and partly of Equity but admitting only some small mixture of the Common Law in some Cases And in some Cases they are led by their proper Customs and Prescriptions respectively The Process of this Court is by Privy Seal Attachment and Commission of Rebellion as in the Chancery The Officers of this Court be the Chancellor The Attorney The Receiver General Clerk of the Court The Auditors Surveyors The Messenger There is an Attorney of the Dutchy in Chancery and another in the Exchequer And there are Four Learned in the Law Assistants and of Councel with the Court. The Seal of the Dutchy of Lancaster remains with the Chancellor at Westminster And the Seal of the County Palatine remains in a Chest in the County Palatine under the safe Custody of the Keeper thereof All Grants and Leases of Lands Offices c. in the County Palatine of Lancaster shall pass under that Seal and no other And all those out of the County Palatine and within the Survey of the Dutchy under the Seal of the Dutchy See the Statute of 27 Hen. 8. cap. 24. For the great Royalties Priviledges c. the Duke of Lancaster had for him his Men and Tenants which are necessary to be known by all concerned in those Possessions and other matters concerning the same See Coke's 4 Institutes 36. and Books and Records their recited And the Statute of 16 and 17 Car. 1. c. 10. For dissolving the Court of Star-Chamber and annulling and making void the like Jurisdiction excercised in the Court called the Court of the Dutchy of Lancaster held before the Chancellor and Councel of that Court c. The Courts of the County Palatine of Chester THis is the most Ancicent and most Honourable County Palatine remaining at this Day with which Dignity the King 's Eldest Son hath been of long time honoured And this is a County Palatine by Prescription Within this County Palatine and the County of the City of Chester there is and aciently hath been a principal Officer called the Chamberlain of Chester who time out of mind hath had the Jurisdiction of a Chancellor and the Court of Exchequer at Chester is and hath time out of mind been the Chancery Court for the said County Palatine whereof the Chamberlain of Chester is Judge in Equity He is also Judge of Matters at the Common Law within the said County as in the Court of Chancery at Westminster for the Court of Chancery is a mixt Court There is also a Vice-Chamberlain which is the Deputy of the Chamberlain And also the Justice called the Justice of Chester who hath Jurisdiction to hear and determine Matters of the Crown and of Common-Pleas Of Fines and Recoveries levied and suffered as well within the County Palatine as of the City of Chester For which and much more concerning the same See Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 37. and the Statute of 16 17 Car. 1. c. 10. For disabling the Court of Star Chamber and Annulling and making void the like Jurisdiction exercised in the Court of Exchequer in the County Palatine of Chester held before the Chamberlain and Council of that Court. The Courts of the County Palatine of Durham THis is also a County Palatine by Prescription parcel of the Bishoprick of Durham and raised soon after the time of the Conqueror Here is a Court of Chancery which is a mixt Court both of Law and Equity as in the Chancery at Westminster But herein it differeth from the rest that if any Erroneous Judgment be given either in the Chancery upon a Judgment there according to the Common Law or before the Justices of the Bishop a Writ of Error shall be brought before the Bishop himself and if he give Erroneous Judgment thereupon a Writ of Error shall be sued Returnable in the King 's Bench. If the Bishop do wrong within his County Palatine for that he cannot be Judge in his own Cause Justices shall be Assigned to hear and determine the Cause as was done in the case when Richardus de Hoton Prior Dunelm ' queritur de Anthonio Episcopo Dunelm ' alledging several Plaints against the Bishop whereupon Issue was Joyned and Verdict given against the Bishop And by that Record which was Termino Paschae 30 E. 1. it appears the Bishop had within the County of Duresme Regalitatem suam And more concerning the same you may Read in Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 38. The Royal Franchise of Ely KIng Henry the first of the Rich Monastery of Ely made a Cathedral Church and of the Abbey made a Bishoprick and for his Diocess Assigned him the
Messina yet that Fragment of the Rhodian Law still extant holds the Preeminence in Maritime Affairs The Customs and former Decrees of the English Court of Admiralty are there of Force for deciding Controtroversies And under this Court there is also A Court of Equity for determining Differences between Merchant and Merchant In Criminal Affairs which is most commonly about Piracy The Proceeding in this Court was by Accusation and Information by a Man 's own Confession or by Eye witnesses he was found Guilty before he could be Condemned But that being found inconvenient there were two Statutes made by King Henry the Eighth that Criminal Affairs should be Tried by Witnesses and Jury and that by Special Commission from the King to the Lord High Admiral wherein some of the Judges of the Realm are ever Commissioners and the Tryal according to the Laws of England directed by those Statutes as is herein after mentioned Between the Common Law of England and the Civil Law there seems to be Divisum Imperium For in the Sea so far as the Low Water mark is counted Infra Corpus Comitatus adjacentis and Causes there arising determinable by the Common Law yet when the Sea is full the Admiral hath Jurisdiction there also so long as the Sea Flows over Matters done between the Low Water mark and the Land as appears in Hen. Constables Case Coke's 5 Rep. fol. 107. But for these Limitations and Jurisdictions of the Court of Admiralty see the Statutes above mentioned And the Statute of 13 R. 2. 15 R. 2. 27 Eliz. cap. 11. Coke's 4 Inst cap. 22. And for regulating his Majesties Navies Ships of War and Forces by Sea Vide le Statute of 13 Car. 2. cap. 9. And now as pertinent hereunto we shall say somewhat of The Navy Office THe Treasurer is to Receive out of the Exchequer by Warrant from the Lord High Treasurer of England and pay all charges of the Navy by Warrant from the principal Officers of the Navy his Salary is 220 l. 13 s. 4 d. besides 3 d. in the pound of all Moneys paid by him The Comptroller of the Navy who is to Attend and Comptrol all Payment of Wages To know the Market Rates of all Stores belonging to Shipping To Examine and Audit all Treasurers Victuallers and Store-keepers Accompts c. his Salary 500 l. per Annum The Surveyor of the Navy whose Office is generally to know the State of all Stores and see the wants supplied to find Hulls Masts and Yards and Estimate the value of Repairs by Indenture to charge all Boat-swains and Carpenters of his Majesties Navy with what Stores they receive and at the end of each Voyage to State and Audit their Accompts his Salary 490 l. The Clerk of the Acts is to Record all Orders Contracts Bills Warrants and other Transactions by the Principal Officers and Commissioners of the Navy The Commissioners of the Navy whose Office is as above specified and Salary to each is 500 l. yearly Two other Commissioners to be at Portsmouth and Chatham always in readiness to give Orders for better Management of his Majesties Affairs in his Yards and Store-houses Salary to each 350 l. Each of these Officers above-named have Two Clerks and some more all paid by the Treasurer of the Navy All hold their Places by Patent from the King and most of them during pleasure The King hath for his Navy Royal and Stores Four Great Yards or Store-Houses viz. at Chatham Deptford Woolwich and Portsmouth where his Ships are built Repaired and Laid up after their Voyage In which Yards are employed Divers Officers of which Six are principal The Clerk of the Check Salary about 180 l. per Annum Store-Keepers Salary 286 l. per Annum Master Attendants Two at Chatham 100 l. per Annum Master Shipwright Salary about 113 l. per Annum Clerk of the Comptooll 100 l. per Annum Clerk of the Survey 140 l. per Annum The Charges of their Clerks and Instruments are included in their Salaries His Majesty hath Divers Rope-Yards as at Chatham Deptford VVoolwich and Portsmouth where are made the Cable and Cordage for his Navy In time of War the King hath a Yard at Harwich where out of War is continued An Officer at 100 l. yearly This whole Navy Office is govern'd by The Lord Admiral whose Lieutenant Admiral hath Salary 20 s. per diem and 10 l. per Mensem for each Servant whereof he is allowed 16. The Lord Admiral 's Secretary hath a Salary from the King of 500 l. per Annum All the Under Officers as well those in Yards as those belong to Ships hold their Places by Warrant from The Lord High Admiral of England The Ordinary Charge of the King's Navy in time of Peace is scarce 70000 l. per Annum besides the Building of Ships Setting out Fleets c. which some years even in Peaceable Times amounts to 12 or 1300000 l. more as may easily be computed The Court of Commission by force of the Statute of 28 H. 8. cap. 15. THis Court must be held coram Admirallo Angliae seu ejus Locum tenente and Three or Four such other substantial Persons as shall be Named by the the Lord Chancellor Their Jurisdiction is to hear and determine all Treasons Felonies Robberies Murders and Confederacies committed or done upon the Sea c. These Offences shall be heard and determined according to the Common Law and therefore some of the Judges of the Realm are ever in Commission The Mischief before making this Statute you may see Co. 3 Inst cap. Piracy Vide Co. 4 Inst The Port Courts A Port-Mote is a Court kept in Haven Towns or Ports and thereof taketh his Name Curia Portus Portus à portando Est locus in quo Exportantur Importantur Merces and they are Portae Regni The Gates of the Realm Hitha and Heda often in Doomsday is taken for a Haven or Port anciently written Hafne and now Haven and hereof cometh Queen-Hith in London and Lambhith Every Haven is within the Body of the County whereof see more in Coke's 4th Institutes Court of Admiralty and the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 15. Commissioners and others for Beacons Signs of the Sea Light-Houses Sea-Marks and concerning Watches BEacon is from the Saxon Bechan which is Signum dare and we use the word to Becken at this day Before Edward the Third they set Stacks of Wood in High Places but in his time Pitch Boxes as now they be were set up and this is properly called a Beacon Light-Houses Ignes Speculatorij seu Lumen Maritimum are properly to direct Sea-faring Men in the Night when they cannot see Marks and these also Signa speculatoria sui Pharus unde Versus Lumina Noctivagae tollit Pharus aemula Lunae Sea-Marks as Steeples Churches Castles Trees and such like for direction of Seafaring Men in the Day time are called signa Marina or Speculatoria or signa Nautis whereof Virg. 5 Aeneis Hic
And the late King Charles the Second was made Free of the Grocers There are near LX other Companies or Corporations All enjoying large Priviledges by the Charters of several Kings and have Fair Halls to meet in The Military Government in London HIs Late Majesty King Charles the Second after his Restoration sent a Commission of Lieutenancy appointing several Persons His Lieutenants giving them the same Power in London the Lord Lieutenants have in their respective Counties And in pursuance of that Commission the Regiments then in being were New setled in this manner viz. Six Regiments of Trained Bands Commanded by six Citizens Knights and their Lieutenant Colonels all Knights and six Regiments of Auxiliaries In these Twelve Regiments were 20000 Men Then there were Listed Two Regiments of Horse each consisting of five Troops in all 800 Horse But in case of need in London and within the Liberties may in a Few days be Raised 40000 Men. There is in Southwark One Regiment of Trained Bands Fifteen Hundred Men. In the Hamlets of the Tower Two Regiments in all Three thousand Men Then Holbourn Regiment and Westminster Regiment Two thousand each and in case of Necessity they can Raise 20000 more The Artillery Company is as a Nursery of Souldiers and hath been so for above 60 years the late King Charles when Prince of Wales Listed himself therein and the Duke of York did the like at the same time who after the Restoration took upon himself the Command thereof and under him was a Leader who Exercised them every Tuesday Fortnight and the other Tuesday the Exercise was performed by the several Members of the Company who are there Trained up to Command Of this Society are many of the Nobility also the Lord Mayor and most of the Aldermen All the Commanders of the Trained Bands and Auxiliaries here Exercise Arms. This Company consists of 600 Men. Their Officers are A Leader Two Lieutenants Two Ensigns Two Serjeants A Provost Martial Four Gentlemen of Arms c. They have also a Court Martial consisting of A President A Vice-President a Treasurer and Twenty four Members of the Company On the Second Tuesday in February at a General Rendezvous every Year the Officers are Elected For the Security and Defence of this Famous City and River there hath been anciently divers Fortresses But the most Eminent and Chief is that called The Tower of London WHich is not only a Fort or Cittadel to command and defend both City and River but also A Royal Palace where our Kings with their Courts have sometimes Lodged A Royal Arsenal where are Arms and Ammunition for 60000 Men The Treasury for the Jewels and Ornaments of the Crown The only Mint for coyning Gold and Silver The Great Archive where are conserved All the Records of the Courts at Westminster The Chief Prison for the safe Custody of Great Persons that are Criminals and if the great Extent thereof within the Walls be considered and its Authority over the several Hamlets without and the many high Priviledges and Liberties belonging thereunto it may rather be Reputed a City than a Cittadel The Governour of this Important Fortress is the Constable or Lieutenant of the Tower Who is High Steward of a Court there held by Prescription of Debt Trespass and other Actions of any Sum Greater or Lesser and hath a Deputy Before the late Act might refuse a Habeas Corpus may give Protection to all Debtors belonging to the Tower within the Realm of England hath Priviledge to take Unam Lagenam of all Wine-Ships that come Is Virtute Officij to be in Commission of the Peace for the Counties of Kent Surrey and Middlesex and as some hold to be Custos Rotulorum of the County of Middlesex His Salary is 200 l. per Annum His usual Fee for every Prisoner is 20 l. at Entrance and 3 l. a Week for an Esquire For a Knight 5 l. a Week For a Baron or above 50 l. at Entrance to whom the King allows 10 l. Weekly whereof Two part goes to the Prisoner the other Third part to the Lieutenant for Lodgings and Dyet and 50 l. to the Lieutenant upon the Prisoners discharge The Gentleman Porter of the Tower holds his Place by Patent and at the Entrance of a Prisoner hath for his Fee Vestimenta Superiora or a Composition for it The Gentleman Gaoler is put in by the Lieutenant of the Tower his Fee is 41 s. of a Gentleman 5 l. of a Knight Forty Warders of the Tower accounted the King's Domestick Servants and Sworn by the Lord Chamberlain of His Majesties Houshold or by the Clerk of the Cheque The Tower is not within any County or Parish only a small part some account to be in Middlesex but is a Liberty of it self exempt from all Taxes to the King Church or Poor It hath A Parochial Church exempt from all Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of the Archbishop and is a Donative bestowed by the King without Institution or Induction And there are Thirteen Hamlets of large Extent belonging to the Tower whose Train-Bands are all bound to Assist the Constable or Lieutenant of the Tower which are called The King's Company and are to Wait on the King's Person in time of Need and to go no further than the King And within the Tower is kept The Office of the Ordnance BEing the grand and standing Magazine of the principal Preparatives Habiliaments Utensils and Instruments of War as well by Sea as Land for the Defence and Safety of the Kingdom and consequently hath Influence in the Navies Forts Castles and Armies thereof having the Superintendence Ordering and Disposing as well of the Grand Magazine lodged in the Tower as at the Minories Woolwich Chatham Windsor Portsmouth Plimouth Hull and elsewhere And is under the Government of The Master of the Ordnance under whom The Administration and Management of the said Office is committed to the Principal Officers following viz. The Lieutenant of the Ordnance who in the absence of the Master of the Ordnance is to Impart all Orders and Warrants directed to the Office and to see them duly Executed and to give Order for Discharging the Great Ordnance when required upon Coronation Days Days Festival Triumphs c. As also to see the Train of Artillery fitted with all its Equipage for Motion upon any occasion The Surveyor is to Survey all the Ordnance Stores and Provisions of War in the custody of the Store-keeper which he is to see so distinguished and placed as shall be best for their Preservation and Safety for a decent View and a ready Account to allow all Bills of Debt and to keep Check upon all Labourers and Artificers Works and to see that all Provisions received be good and serviceable and duly proved with the Assistance of the rest of the Officers and the Proof Masters and marked with the King's Mark if they ought so to be The Clerk of the Ordnance is to Record all Orders and Instructions given for
the Government of the Office as likewise all Patents and Grants and the Names of all Officers Clerks Artificers Attendants Gunners Labourers and others who enjoy the said Grants or any other Fees from the King for the same To draw all Estimates for Provisions and Supplies to be made and all Letters Instructions Commissions Deputations and Contracts for His Majesty's Service To make all Bills of Imprest and Debentures for the payment and satisfaction of the respective Artificers and Creditors of the Office for Work done or Provisions received and Quarter-Books for the Salaries Allowances and Wages of all Officers Clerks and other Ministers belonging to the said Office and also to keep Journals and Liegers of the Receipts and Returns of His Majesty's Stores that nothing be Bought Borrowed Given Received Lent or Employed without due Record thereof to serve as a Cheque between the Two Accomptants of the Office the one for Money the other for Stores The Storekeeper is to take into his Custody all His Majesty's Ordnance Munitions and Stores thereunto belonging and to Indent and put in Legal Security for the safe keeping thereof and to make Just and True Accompt from time to time to Receive no Provisions whatsoever that are manifestly inserviceable or before they have been Reviewed by the Surveyor nor to Issue any proportion of Ordnance c. but what is agreed upon and signed by the Officers according to the appointment of the Master of the Ordnance grounded upon the Order of the King or six of the Privy Council or the Lord Admiral for Matters concerning the Navy Nor to Receive back any Stores issued till they have been Reviewed by the Surveyor and Registred by the Clerk of the Ordnance in the Book of Remains To look that all His Majesties Store-Houses be well Repaired and well Accommodated and the Stores kept in such order and lustre as is fit for the Service and Honour of the King The Clerk of the Deliveries is to Draw all Proportions for Delivery of any Stores and Provisions and to be present at the Delivery and by Indenture to Charge the particular Receiver of the King's Munitions whether Captain Gunner or other and to Register as well the Copies of all Warrants for Deliveries as the Proportions delivered whereby to discharge the Store-keeper The Treasurer and Paymaster of the Office was formerly an Appendix to that of Lieutenant of the Ordnance But the late King Charles Erected it into a particular and distinct Office and granted the same as all the other before-mentioned are by Letters Patent And there are other Subordinate Officers which likewise hold by Patent as The Master Gunner of England who is to teach all such as desire to Learn the Art of Gunnery and to oblige every Scholar by Oath not to serve any Foreign Prince or State without leave nor to Teach any other the said Art but such as have taken the said Oath and to certifie the Master of the Ordnance the Sufficiency of any person Recommended to be one of the King's Gunners and his Ability to discharge the said Duty The Keeper of the Small Guns who hath the charge and custody of the King 's Small Guns as Musquets Harquebusses Carabines Pistols c. with their Furniture There are many other Inferiour Officers and Ministers Attendants and Artificers as Clerks Proof-Masters Messengers Master Smith Master Carpenter Master Wheelwright Master Gunnsmith Furbusher c. which for Brevity are here omitted as likewise the King 's principal Engineer The Master of the Ordnance hath a Superintendency and Jurisdiction over all the King's Engineers Employed in the several Fortifications of the Kingdom most of whom have their Salaries and Allowances payable in the said Office to which they are accountable and from whence they receiev their particular Orders and Instructions according to the Directions and Commands given by the King and signified by The Master of the Ordnance Nota The several sorts of Cannon seem to be denominated from the Rapacious kind of Creatures whose Names they bear as Faulcons Faulconets Sakers Culverins from the Latin Coluber Basilisks Griffons Dragons c. The Office of the Warden of the Mint WHere is minted all the Bullion that is Minted in England although the King may set up a Mint in any other Place of the Kingdom In this are divers Persons of Quality and Worth whereof the principal is The Warden of the Mint who is to Receive the Silver and Gold brought in by Merchants or Goldsmiths or others to pay them for it and to Oversee all the rest his Fee is 100 l. per Annum And next is The Master Worker who Receives the Bullion from the Warden causes it to be Melted delivers it to the Moneyers and receives it from them again when Minted and hath an Allowance by the Pound weight but no set Fee And next is The Comptroller who sees all the Money be made according to the Just Assize to oversee the Officers and Comptrol them if the Money be not as it ought to be his Fee is 100 Marks and these three last above hold by Patent of the King The next is The Assay-Master who weighs the Bullion and sees it be according to the Standard his Fee is 200 Marks The Auditor to take the Accounts and make them up The Surveyor of the Melting who is to see the Bullion cast out and not to be alter'd after it is delivered to the Melter which is after the Assay-Master hath made Tryal thereof There are moreover A Clerk of the Irons A Graver A Weigher A Teller Melters Blanchers Moneyers and other Officers belonging to the Mint The Office of Records in the Tower IS of Venerable Antiquity and the Keeper and Deputy dignified with Special Trust The Keeper hath a Salary of 500 l. per Annum and is properly in the Gift of the Master of the Rolls and afterwards His Majesty hath usually by Letters Patents Confirmed it As the Chappel of the Rolls and Petty-Bag Office fill the Records are sent hither by a Writ formed for that purpose and these Records amongst other things contain the Foundations of Abbeys and Religious Houses as The Chappel of the Rolls contain those of their Dissolution and the Donation of the Lands of which many Families are now possessed The Leagues and Treaties with Foreign Princes The Atchievements of this Nation in France and Foreign parts The Original of All Laws that have been Enacted or Recorded until Richard the Third The Homage and Dependency of Scotland upon England The Establishment of Ireland in Laws and Dominions The Dominion of the Brittish Seas totally excluding French and Dutch to Fish therein without License from England proved by Records before the Conquest The Interest of the Isles of Man and of Jersey Guernsey Sarke and Alderney the Four last being the Remaining part of the Norman Possessions The Title of our Kings to the Realm of France and how obtained And all that our Kings and Princes have till that time Done
Great Hall where those are kept Built by King William Rufus or by Richard the Second as some hold being for all Dimensions not to be equalled by any Hall in Christendom Radulphus de Ingham Chief Justice of England a very poor Man being Fined before him at 13 s. 4 d. in another Term moved with Pity caused the Record to be rased and made 6 s. 8 d. For which he for his Fine made the Clock to be heard into Westminster Hall and the Clock-house which cost 800 Marks Tempore Ed. 1. and continueth to this Day Anno 37 Hen. 8. The King's Mannor of Westminster was made an Honour The City of Norwich THis is an Ancient City For in Ancient Manuscripts it appears That In tempore Steph. Regis de nova Fundata ut Villa populata Communitas fact● And it is highly commended for many things Quod suis Opibus Frequentia Aedificiorum Elegantia Templorum Pulchritudine Numero Paraecias enim plus minus 30 complectitur Civum sedulitate in Principem fide in Exteros Humanitate inter Celebrrimas Britanniae Urbes merito connumeranda c. Moenibus Validis in quibus crebrae dispositae Turres Undecim Portae undique Obsepta nisi ad ortam qua Flumen cum sinuoso flexu 4 Pontibus pervium Septentrionalem urbis partem interluerit profundo alveo praecipitibus Rupis defendit It is preferred before all the Cities in England except London hath above 30 Parishes and is as large within the Walls as London it had within it and the Liberties Six Religious Houses and One Hospital Anno 27 Hen. 8. The Bishoprick of Norwich becoming void by the Death of Richard Nick commonly called the Blind Bishop The King nominated the Abbot of the Monastery of St. Bennets de Hulmo in the County of Norwich to be Bishop of Norwich And afterwards 4 Feb. 27 Hen. 8. It was Enacted by Authority of Parliament That such Person as should be Elected and Consecrated Bishop of Norwich should have and enjoy united to the said Bishoprick the Monastery of St. Bennets And all Manors c. belonging to the same And should be Abbot of the said Monastery of St. Bennets and have the Dignity of the said Abbacy United Incorporated and Knit to the said Bishoprick For the Courts of Justice in this City we have Treated of the like in London and therefore shall only mention an Act of Parliament concerning the Jurisdiction thereof 2 R. 2. N. 39. Not in Print Whereby it is Enacted for the Citizens of Norwich That if their Customs and Usages heretofore used or hereafter to be used be Difficult or Defective in part or in all Or that the same need any due amendments for any matter arising whereof Remedy was not aforetime had That then the Bailiffs and Twenty four Citizens of the same City so therefore yearly to be Chosen or the greater part of them shall from henceforth have Power to Ordain such Remedies as are most agreeable to Faith and Reason and for the most Profit the Good and Peaceable Government of the same Town and of Strangers thereto repairing as to them shall seem best So as such Ordinance be profitable for the King and his People By the Statute of 14 Hen. 4. The Merchants and Artificers of Worsteds in Norfolk may sell their single Worsteds to any Place or Persons in Amity with the King notwithstanding any Inhibition or Liberty to the contrary In the time of King Edward the Confessor there were 1300 Citizens within this City and they paid 20 l. to the King and 10 l. to the Earl And besides these 20 s. and Four Prebendaries and Six Sextaries of Honey a Bear and Six Dogs to Bait him Now it pays 70 l. to the King and 100 l. to the Queen and a Palfrey and 20 l. of White Rent to the Earl It is a County of it self and hath Two Sheriffs and large Liberties without the Walls See the Statute of 33 He● 8. How many Attorneys should be at Norfolk See Rot. Parl. 18 Ed. 1. f. 5. Concerning the ancient Liberties of this City Burgi Civitat ' Fundat ' Aedificat ' sunt ad Tuitionem Gentium Populorum Regni idcirco obsi●vdri debent cum omni Libertate Integ●itate Ratione The Beautiful Cathedral was begun by Herbert Bishop of Norwich Anno 9 Willielmi Rufi The Strong Castle called ●●anch Flower Environed with the City but no part thereof but of the County of Norwich was not Built by Bigott Earl of Norwich for we find a Charter of King Stephen Rex c. Sciatis me Dedisse in Feode Hereditate Willielmo Commiti Warren Filio meo Castellum Norwici cum Toto Burgo c. And Reef de W●et Earl of Norwich Defended this Castel against William the Conquerour who was driven out of England and Travelled with his Wife to Jerusalem Vide Coke's 4 Inst cap. 52. The Two Vniversities in England THese are the Two Eyes or Luminaries of the Kingdom and are now Stiled Universities A Professione Universalium Scientiarum Artium Liberalium A University being properly an Incorporation under one Government of many publick Schools ordained especially for the Study and Profession of Divinity civil-Civil-Law and Physick as also Philosophy and other Liberal Arts and Sciences And of these Universities the first and most ancient is thought to be Oxford QUasi Ousford Isidis Uadum From the name of the Chief River Isis whereon it is Seated It lies in 51 Degrees 42 Minutes Latitude and above 22 Degrees Longitude almost the same Climate with the Famous University of Athens and was a place for publick Studies above 900 years ago and much Augmented by the Learned Saxon King Alured And is an ancient City consisting of Two sorts of Inhabitants viz. Students and Citizens living one amongst another yet wholly Separate for Government Laws and Manners The University next under the King being Governed by The Chancellor who is commonly some of the prime Nobility Elected by the Students in Convocation to continue Durante Vita And is to take care of the Government of the whole University To maintain the Liberties and Priviledges thereof To call Assemblies To hear and determine Controversies Call Courts Punish Delinquents c. And next to him in Dignity is The High Steward nominated by the Chancellor and approved by the University and is also Durante Vita and to Assist the Chancellor the Vice Chancellor and Proctors upon their Requests in the Execution of their Places Also to hear and determine capital Causes according to the Laws of the Land and Priviledges of the University so oft as the Chancellor shall require him And the Third Officer is The Vice Chancellor who is commonly the Head of some Colledge nominated yearly by the Chancellor And in the Chancellors Absence may do almost whatever the Chancellor might do if present Moreover he takes care that Sermons Lectures Disputations and other Exercises be performed That Heretiques Fanatiques Nonconformists Panders
To take care of the Church and Church Assemblies The Overseers of the Poor To take care of the Poor Sick Aged Orphans and other Objects of Charity And Lastly The Clerk to wait on him at Divine Service And for The Civil Government of Villages THe Lord of the Manor or Soil who from the Crown immediately holds or mediately holds Dominium Soli Is said to have in him The Royalty as if he were a little King and hath a kind of Jurisdiction and a Court Baron incident to the Manor and sometimes a Court Leet by Grant from the King to which the Inhabitants owe Suit and Service and where smaller Matters as Escheats upon Felonies or other Accidents common Nusances c. Admitting of Tenants passing of Estates Reliefs Herriots Hunting Hawking Fishing c. or other matters Of which you may see more at large in the Description of the Jurisdiction of these two several Courts may be heard and determined And under the Lord is The Constable or Headborough Chosen yearly by the Lord or Steward in the Leet to keep the Peace in case of Quarrels to search any House for Robbers Murderers and others who have broken the Peace to raise Hue and Cry after Robbers to seize Offenders and keep them in the Stocks or other Prison till they can bring them before some Justice of Peace to whom the Constables are subservient upon all occasions either to bring Criminals before them or to carry them by their Command to the Common Prison Thus having in a Brief and Methodical manner described the Constitution of the English Government For the Excellency thereof we may wel● conclude with the Poet O Fortunatos nimium bona si sua Norint Angligenas THE ISLANDS Adjacent to ENGLAND CAlled by Heylin The Sporades not as he saith that they are so named in any Author but being many he thought fit to include them under that general Name The Chief of which are The Isle of Man INsula Euboniae modo Manniae hath been an ancient Kingdom as appears by Walsingham pag. 287. and Coke's Reports Lib. 7. fol. 21. Calvin's Case And yet we find it not Granted or Conveyed by the Name of a Kingdom Sed per Nomen Insulae c. cum Patronatu Episcopatus The Patronage of the Bishoprick of Sodor being a Visible Mark of a Kingdom Est nempe Jus ipsius Insulae ut quisquis illius sit Dominus Rex vocetur cui etiam fas est Corona Aurca Coronari Walsingh 17 R. 2. This Island was taken from the Britains by the Scots and from them regained by Edwin King of Northumberland Afterwards the Norwegians seised it from whom Alexander the Third wrested it and about the Year 1340. William Montacute Earl of Salisbury descended from the Norwegian Kings of Man won it from the Scots and afterwards sold it to W. Lord Scroope who forfeiting the same for Treason to King H. 4 he granted it to H. Percy Earl of Northumberland who being 5 H. 4. Attainted of Treason In 7 H. 4. it was by Parliament Enacted the King should have the Forfeiture of all his Lands and Tenements And afterwards 7 H. 4. the King granted the Isle cum Patronatu Episcopatus unto Sir John Stanley first for Life and afterwards to him and his Heirs Sir John had Issue Sir John Stanley Knight who had Issue Sir Henry Stanly Lord Chamberlain to King Henry the Sixth who Created him Lord Stanley He had Issue Thomas whom King Henry the Seventh Created Earl of Derby to him and the Heirs Male of his Body c. Vide Co. 4 Inst cap. 69. The Laws and Jurisdiction of this Isle differs from other places For they call their Judges Deemsters which they chuse out of themselves And they determine all Controversies without Process Pleading Writing or any Expence at all If any Cases be ambiguous or of greater weight it is referred to Twelve which they call Claves Insulae They have Coroners quos Annuos vocant who supply the Office of Sheriff But altho' the King's Writ runneth not into this Island yet his Commission extendeth thither for Redress of Injustice and Wrong The Bishop was Instituted by Pope Gregory the Fourth is under the Archbishop of York being annexed to that Archbishoprick by King Henry the Eighth but hath neither Place nor Voice in the Parliament of England In hac Insula Judex Ecclesiasticus citat definit infra Octo dies parent aut carcere intruduntur The People are a Religious Industrious and True People They have peculiar Laws or Customs For if a Man steal a Horse or an Ox it is no Felony because he cannot hide them but if he steal a Capon or Pigg he shall be hanged c. In this little Kingdom are Two Castles Seventeen Farishes Four Market Towns and many Villages It is scituate against the South part of Cumberland from which it is distant 21 Miles Is in Length 30 Miles in Breadth 15 but in some part only 8 Miles The Soil is abundant in Flax Hemp Oats Barley Wheat and Bishop Merrick writing to Cambden when he was composing his Britannia saith Our Island for Cattle Fish and Corn hath not only sufficient for it self but sendeth store into other Countries The chief Towns are Balacurri and Russin or Castle-Town the Seat of the Bishop On the Hill Sceaful may be seen England Scotland and Ireland Here are also bred the Soland Geese The People speak a Mixture of the Norwegian and Irish Tongues Anglesey IS accounted a Shire of Wales bordereth on Carnarvanshire is in Length 20 in Breadth 17 Miles containing in former times 360 Towns and Villages the chief whereof are 1. Beaumaris towards Wales 2. Newburg 3. Aberfraw on the South-side This Island for its abundant Fertility is called Mam Cymri i. e. Mother of Wales It was once the Seat of the Druids first Conquered by Suet onius Paulinus and united to the English Crown by the Valour of Edward the First Jersey olim Caesarea IS in Compass 20 Miles and sufficiently strong by reason of the dangerous Seas It containeth 12 Towns or Villages the Chief being St. Hillary and St. Malo and four Castles The Ground is plentiful in Grain and Sheep most of them having four Horns of whose Wool our Jersey Stockings are made Gernsey olim Servia IS distant 20 Miles from Jersey to whom it is much Inferiour in respect of Fertility and Largness but more commodious by reason of the safe Harbours It containeth 10 Parishes the Chief being St. Peters the Port or Haven and Market Town These Islands of Jersey and Gernsey lye both nigh unto Normandy and Bretaign and did in ancient time belong to the Dutchy of Normandy But Henry the First Overthrowing his Elder Brother Robert united the Dutchy of Normandy with these Isles to the Kingdom of England And altho' King John lost Normandy and Henry the Third took Money for it yet these Isles continued Faithful to England the possession thereof being a good Seisin of the whole
are in the Possession of the English at this day and intending to begin from the North and proceed South towards the Equinoctial Line The farthest as being North is Newfoundland CAlled also by some Estotiland Scituate between 46 and 53 Degrees North Latitude Hath South Terra Corterialis North the Streights called Fretum Davisij from John Davis an Englishman who endeavoured by the North of America to find a more quick passage to Cathai and China Sebastian Cabot first attempting it Anno 1527. Who is said to be the first discoverer of this Country not then known to be an Island and Sir Martin Frobisher seconded him in 1576 who made three Voyages and called a great Promontory there Queen Elizabeth's Foreland and the Sea runing by it Frobisher's Streights on the other side of these Streights lieth Groenland and not far distant Friesland This Island is Esteemed as big as England The North part being more Inhabited than the South tho' that be fitter for Habitation within 50 Leagues of the Shore is a Bank or Ridge of Ground many Hundred Leagues long in breadth where broadest only 24 About it are certain Islands which Calvert called Baccaloes for the great number of Codfish of which one Man may catch One hundred in an hour the Sea Coasts abounding likewise with Salmons Herring Thornbacks Oysters Muscles with Pearls and the Island with Bears and Foxes After the first discovery the business of Trading thither was laid aside for many years in the mean time the Normans Portugals and Britains of France resorted to it and changed the Names which had been given by the English to the Bays and Promontories but the English not willing to Relinquish their Pretensions in 1583. Sir Humphrey Gilbert took Possession thereof in the Name and by the Commission of Queen Elizabeth forbidding all other Nations to use Fishing and intended to have setled an English Colony there but being Wreckt in his Return the setling of the Colony was discontinued till 1608 when John Guy a Merchant of Bristol in 23 days Sailed from thence to Conception Bay in Newfoundland By Jus Gentium or the Law of Nations whatever wast Country is discovered at the charge of any Prince It is the right of that Prince who was at the charge of the discovery now this Country being among others in that part of America which hath been discovered at the charge of the Kings of England King James the first by Letters Patents Anno Dom. 1623. Granted unto Sir George Calvert afterwards Lord Baltimore part of Newfoundland which was Erected into the Province of Avalon where he setled a Plantation and erected a stately House and Fort at Ferriland where he dwelt sometime which since his Death is descended to the present Lord Baltimore New England WAs first discovered by Sebastian Cabot in 1497 and in 1584 Mr. Philip Amadas and Mr. Arthur Barlow were the first who took Possession of it for Queen Elizabeth The next year Sir Richard Greenvil conveyed an English Colony thither under the Government of Mr. Ralph Lane who continued there till the next year and then returned with Sir Francis Drake into England who is by some accounted the first discoverer thereof It hath New France North and Virginia South North East Norumbegia and South West Novum Belgium on other parts it hath Woods and the Sea-coast Situate between 40 and 41 Degree of North Latitude In the midst of the Temperate Zone yet is the Clime more uncertain as to Heat and Cold than those European Kingdoms which are in the same Latitude The Air is Clear Healthful and agreeable to the English well watered with Rivers having variety of Beasts Tame and Wild with several sorts of Trees and excellent Fruits The Commodities it Yieldeth are Rich Furs Flax Linnen Amber Iron Pitch Tar Cables Masts and Timber to Build Ships with several sorts of Grain wherewith they drive a considerable Trade to Barbadoes and other English Plantations in America supplying them with Flower Bisket Salt Flesh and Fish and in return bring Sugars and other Goods To England they Trade for Stuffs Silks Cloath Iron Brass and other Utensils for their Houses The Weights and Measures are the same with England Though the Planting of this Country by the English was designed by divers yet it lay much neglected till a small Company of Planters under the Command of George Popham and Captain Gilbert were sent over at the charge of Sir John Popham in 1606. to begin a Colony in the Northerly part of this Country but that design in Two years expiring with its Founder soon after some Honourable persons of the West of England commonly called the Council of Plymouth being well informed of several Navigable Rivers and Commodious Havens with other places fit for Traffick and Planting obtained of King James the first a Patent under the Great Seal of all that part of North America called new-New-England from Forty to Forty eight Degrees of North Latitude In 1612 It was Canton'd and Divided by Grants into many lesser parcels according as Adventurers presented But afterwards for want of good Conduct they were by degrees in a manner destitute of Laws and Government In 1610 One Mr. Robinson a Presbyterian or Independent Preacher and several English then at Leyden in Holland Intreated King James to grant them Liberty under his Royal Authority to place themselves in some part of New-England and obtaining a Patent or Grant they Sailed from Plymouth in England to the Southern parts of New-England there laying a Foundation for a new Colony naming their Town New Plymouth after which things were very prosperously and succesfully carried on in new-New-England till An. 1636. The Indians committed many Outrages upon the English and Dutch whereupon all the Colonies unamimously falling upon them suppressed them in 1637. The English possess many potent Colonies being since very numerous and powerful and are Governed by Laws of their own making having several Courts of Judicature where they meet once a Month so they be not Repugnant to the Laws of England Every Town sends two Burgesses to their Great and Solemn General Court The Government both Ecclesiastical and Civil is in the Hands of the Independents or Presbyterians The Military part of their Government is by one Major General and three Serjeant Majors to whom belong the 4 Counties of Suffolk Middlesex Essex and Norfolk They have several Towns whereof Boston is the Metropolis likewise Dorchester Cambridge Beautified with two Colleges and many well Built Houses Reading Salem Berwick Fraintree Bristol and many others having most of them Names of some Town in Old England New York FOrmerly named New Netherland being part of that New England which the Dutch once possess'd It was first Discovered by Mr. Hudson and sold presently by him to the Dutch without Authority from his Sovereign the King of England in 1608. The Hollanders in 1614 began to plant it there and called it New Netherlands but Sir Samuel Argall Governour of Virginia routed them after
the Second in Propriety unto the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Clarendon George Duke of Albemarle William Earl of Craven John Lord Berkley Anthony Lord Ashley after Earl of Shaftsbury Sir George Carteret after Lord Carteret Sir John Coleton Knight and Baronet and Sir William Berkley Knight By which Letters Patent the Laws of England are to be in force in Carolina But the Lords Proprietors have power with the Consent of the Inhabitants to make By Laws for the better Government of the said Province so that no Money can be Raised or Law made without the Consent of the Inhabitants or their Representatives They have also power to appoint and impower Governours and other Magistrates to grant Liberty of Conscience make Constitutions c. with many other great Priviledges as by the said Letters Patent will more largely appear And the said Lords Proprietors have there settled a Constitution of Government whereby is Granted Liberty of Conscience and wherein all possible Care is taken for the equal Administration of Justice and for the lasting Security of the Inhabitants both in their Persons and Estates by the Care and Endeavours of the said Lords Proprietors and at their very great Charge Two Colonies have been settled in this Province the one at Albemarle in the most Northerly part the other at Ashley River which is in the Latitude 32 Degrees odd Minutes Care is taken by the Lords Proprietors That no Injustice be done the Natives who are here in perfect Friendship with the English in order to which is established a particular Court of Judicature to Determine all Differences The Lords Proprietors do at present Grant to all Persons that come to Inhabit there several reasonable Advantages to all Conditions of Men and sell their Land to any after the Rate of 50 Pounds for 1000 Acres The manner of Purchasing is The Party seeks out a place to his mind not possessed by any other then applies to the Governovr and Proprietors Deputies who thereupon Issue out their Warrant to the Surveyor General to measure him out a Plantation who making Certificate That he hath Measured out so much Land appointed a Deed is prepar'd of course which is Signed by the Governour and the Lords Proprietors Deputies and the Proprietors Seal affixed to it and Registred which is a good Conveyance in Law of the Land therein mentioned to the Party and his Heirs for ever Thus having Travelled the Main Land of America we must Cross the Seas and take a View of the Islands belonging to the Crown of England in the West Indies The first being Bermudas OR Summers Islands which are a Multitude of Broken Isles some write no less than 400 scituate directly East from Virginia from which they are distant 500 English Miles and 3300 Miles from the City of London so named from John Bermudaz a Spaniard after Summers Islands from the Shipwreck of Sir George Summers there The Island of more Fame and Greatness than all the rest and to which the Name of Bermudaz is most properly ascribed is scituated in the Latitude of 32 Degrees and 30 Min. North. The Air is sound and healthy very agreeable to the English Bodies the Soil as fertile as any well Watered plentiful in Maize of which they have Two Harvests yearly that which is sowed in March being cut in July and what is sowed in August is mowed in December No Venemous Creature is to be found in this Isle nor will Live if brought thither and besides these Advantages it it so fenced about with Rocks and Islets that without knowledge of the Passages a Boat of Ten Tun cannot be brought into the Haven yet with such knowledge there is Entrance for the Greatest Ships The English have since added to these Natural Strengths such Artificial Helps by Block Houses Forts and Bulwarks in convenient places as may give it the Title of Impregnable It was first Discovered rather Accidentally than upon Design by John Bermudas a Spaniard about 1522 and thereupon a Proposition made in the Council of Spain for settling a Plantation therein as a place very convenient for the Spanish Fleet in their Return from the Bay of Mexico by the Streights of Bahama yet was it neglected and without any Inhabitants till the like Accidental coming of Sir George Summers sent to Virginia with some Companies of the English by the Lord De la Ware in 1609 who being Shipwreck'd on this Coast had the Opportunity to survey the Island which he so well liked that he Endeavoured to settle a Plantation in it at his Return in 1612. The first Colony was sent over under Richard More who in Three years Erected 8 or 9 Forts in convenient places which he planted with Ordnance In 1616 a New Supply was sent over under Captain Tucker who apply'd themselves to sowing of Corn setting of Trees brought thither from other parts of America and Planting that gainful Weed Tobacco In 1619. the Business was taken more to Heart and made a Publick Matter many Great Lords and Persons of Honour being interested in● it Captain Butler was sent thither with 500 Men. The Isle was divided into Tribes or Counties a Burrough belonging to each Tribe and the whole reduced to a settled Government both in Church and State according to the Laws of England After this all succeeded so well that in 1623 there were said to be 3000 English and Ten Forts whereon were planted Fifty Pieces of Ordnance their Numbers since increasing daily both by Children born within the Island and Supplies from England All the Isles together represent an Half-Moon and Inclose very good Ports as the Great Sound Harrington Inlet Southampton and Paget's Bay with Dover and Warwick Forts having their Names from the Noble Men who were Undertakers therein The greatest Isle is called St. George five or six Leagues long and almost throughout not above a quarter or half a League broad The Air is almost constantly Clear Except when it Thunders and Lightens is extream Temperate and Healthful few dying of any Disease but Age so that many remove from England hither only to enjoy a long and healthful Life and after having continued there are fearful of Removing out of so pure an Air. The very Spiders here are not Venemous but of divers curious Colours and make their Web so strong that oftentimes small Birds are entangled and caught therein Their Cedar Trees are different from all others and the Wood very sweet In 1685. the Governour hereof was Sir Henry Heydon The Caribee Islands NExt present themselves so called in General because Inhabited by Canibals or Man-eating People at the first Discovery as the word Caribee imports They ly extended from the Coast of Paria to the Isle Porto Rico many in number 27 of them known by proper Names In Nine whereof the English are concerned viz. Barbuda Anguilla Montserrat Dominica St. Vincent Antegoa Mevis or Nevis St. Christophers and Barbadoes And first in Barbuda SCituate in 17 Degrees of North Latitude
his Deed confirm his Estate in the Land then the Conusee shall retain and have the Land notwithstanding the Fine be avoided Coke's 10 Rep. 50. Lampet's Case In a Praecipe if one plead That the Manor of D. is Ancient Demesne and the Land in Demand is parcel of the Manor and so Ancient Demesne The Demandant cannot say That the Land in Demand is not Ancient Demesne for the same is the conclusion upon the precedent proposition viz. The first That the Manor is Ancient Demesne The second That the Land in Demand is parcel of the Manor for Sequitur Conclusio super Praem●ssis and therefore cannot be denied Coke's 11 Rep. 10. Priddle and Napper's Case The like in Case of Tithes ibid. Neither the Lord of Ancient Demesne Nor of a Court Baron Nor the Sheriff in the County Court when the Plea is holden by Writ of Right Justicies Admeasurement c. are Judges but the Suitors who by the Common Law are the Judges of the Court Coke's 6 Rep. 12. Jentleman's Case The Writ of Droit Close is directed unto the Lord of Ancient Demesne and lieth for these Tenants who hold their Lands by Charter in Fee-simple Fee-Tail for Life or in Dower if any of them be Ousted or Disseized he or his Heir may Sue this Writ F.N.B. 23 c. If any Land in Ancient Demesne be in variance between the Tenants then the Tenant so grieved shall have against the other a Writ of Right Close after the Custom of the Manor and that shall be always brought in the Lords Court and thereupon he shall Declare in the Nature of what Writ he will and this Writ shall not be removed but for a great Cause or Non power of the Court Terms del Ley. If the Lord in Ancient Demesne confirm the Estate of the Tenant to hold by certain Service at the Common Law altho' the Estate of the Tenant be not changed nor any Transmutation of the Possession yet the quality of his Estate is changed for the Tenant shall not be afterwards Impleaded by Petit Writ of Droit And the Land by the Confirmation is discharged from the Customs of the Manor Coke's 9 Rep. 140. Beaumont's Case Monstraverunt is a Writ that lieth for Tenants in Ancient Demesne who hold by Free Charter but not those Tenants who hold by Copy of Court Roll Or by the Rod according to the Custom of the Manor at the Will of the Lord. And it is directed to the Lord commanding him not to Distrein his Tenant to do other Service And if the Tenants cannot be in quiet they may have an Attachment against the Lord to appear before the Justices and all the names of the Tenants shall be put in the Writ although but one of them be grieved F.N.B. 31 32 33 c. The Lord shall not be put to Answer to the Writ of Attachment upon the Monstraverunt before the Court be certified by the Treasurer and Chamberlains of the Exchequer whether the Manor be Ancient Demesne And it therefore behoveth the Plaintiff to Sue forth a Writ directed to the Treasurer and Chamberlain for that purpose Fitz. Herb. N. B. fo 31. to 35. If a Lord in another place out of Ancient Demesne Distrein his Tenant to do other Service than he ought He shall have a Writ of Right called Ne injuste Vexes and it is a Writ of Right Patent which shall be Tryed by Battail or Grand Assize Terms del Ley. See before in Court of Ancient Demesne Page 196. To the Court of Commissioners of Sewers SEwers seems to be a Word compounded of two French Words Seoir to Sit and Eau Water for that the Sewers are Commissioners that Sit by Virtue of their Commission and Authority Grounded upon divers Statutes to Enquire of all Nusances and Offences committed by the Stopping of Rivers Erecting of Mills not Repairing of Banks and Bridges c. and to Tax and Rate all whom it may concern for the amending of all defaults which tend to the hindrance of the free passage of the Water through the old and ancient Courses See the Statute of 6 H. 6. cap. 5. and 23 H. 8. cap. 5. for the form of their Commission Commission is as much in the Common Law as Delegate in the Civil and is taken for the Warrant or Letters Patent which all Men using Jurisdiction either Ordinary or Extraordinary have for their Power to hear and determin any Matter or Action Yet this word sometimes extends more largely than to matters of Judgment as the Commission of Purveyors c. And all Commissions are grounded upon the Words in Magna Charta Terrae Legem And have this Clause Facturi quod ad Justitiam pertinet secundum Legem Consuetudinem Angliae And no new Commission can be raised but by Statute Coke's 2 Inst 51 54 57. The King may send his Commission to Repair a Bridge F. N B. 281. Legal Commissions have their due Forms as well as Original Writs and therefore cannot be newr famed without Act of Parliament The like of Oaths Coke's 2 Inst. 478 479. Rumney Marsh in Com. Kanc. containing 24000 Acres Is at this day and long time hath been governed by certain Ancient and equal Laws of Sewers made by a Venerable Justice Henry de Bathe in the Reign of Hen. the 3d from which Laws not only other parts in Kent but all England receive Light and Direction For Example The General Act of 23 Hen. 8. cap. 5. in the Clause which giveth power to the Commissioners to make Statutes Ordinances and Provisions c. necessary and behoveful after the Laws and Customs of Rumney Marsh in the County of Kent or otherwise by any means or ways c. Both the Town and Marsh of Rumney took their name of one Robert Rumney which Robert as it appeareth by the Book of Doomes-day held this Town of Odo Bishop of Baieux wherein he had 13 Burgesses who for their Service at Sea were discharged of all Actions and Customs of Charge except Felony Breach of the Peace and Forestalling The Lord Mayor hath Jurisdiction for the time being for the Conservation and Rule of the Water and River of Thames and the Issues Breaches and Lands over-flowed c. from the Bridge of Stanes unto the Water of Yendal and Medway And in all Commissions touching the Water of Ley The Mayor of London shall be one By Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 14. Sewers that fall into the Thames shall be Subject to the Commission of Sewers Coke's 4 Inst. cap. 62. The Commissioners ought to Tax all who are in danger to be endamaged for the not repairing equally and not he who hath the Land next adjoyning to the River only And Walmesley Justice held and it was not denied by any That if the Owner of the Land were bound by Prescription to Repair the River Bank that yet upon such Commission Awarded the Commissioners ought not to charge him only but ought to Tax all who had Land in danger And to this