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A87768 The King of Spains cabinet council divulged; or, A discovery of the prevarications of the Spaniards with all the princes and states of Europe, for obtaining the universal monarchy. 1658 (1658) Wing K574; Thomason E1659_3; ESTC R209003 57,749 166

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howbeit they had made peace and league with Charles the eighth yet by privat dispatches of letters and Agents to all parts and especially to Venice they brake it and instantly made war upon the French as Comines testifies lib. 5. belli Neapolitani p. 926. 23. An. 1614. Francisco Suarez a Spanish Jesuit set forth a scandalous Book against the State of the kingdomes of England France which was publickly burnt at Paris by order of Parliament howbeit the said Book was set forth by the approbation of Joan Alvarez Provincial of that Society CHAP. VII The Praevarications of the Spaniards against the Kings and Kingdom of England VVE have staid long enough in a continent let us now passe the Sea and see whether the King of Spain have shewn himself more faithfull to the English then to the French and others Not a whit Read what follows and you will find with me that a Wolf is every where a Wolf Attempts against Q Elizabeth and would as well take and devour the markt as unmarkt sheep And to begin with Queen Elizabeth it cannot be denied but that the Spaniard used all possible means to deprive her both of her kingdom and of her life Thuan testifies lib. 44. Anno 1569. that Mary Queen of Scots by the instigation of the Spaniards and others endeavoured to innovate things in England and to that end Rudolphus Robertus came into England to solicite the English to disloyalty and promise them great matters from the Pope and the King of Spain and he was employed by the Queen as her chief Minister and Assistant 2. That the Spanish Ministers by their Emissaries the Jesuits induced the Duke of Norfolk Anno 1572. to undertake dangerous designes against Queen Elizabeth was not doubted of by the wiser sort of those times yea and he was brought to lose his head for it Hist Belg. 3. In the year 1601. the King of Spain by the instigation of Garnet Robert a Jesuit endeavoured to trouble affairs in England but that enterprize being detected vanisht into smoak Metteranus lib. 27. 4. That the King of Spain did direct all his enterprises that by the Jesuits he might molest the affairs and innovate Religion in England so many reiterated designes but most of them being frustrated the writing made against the Jesuits in England 1602. in which among other titles they have this name that they are the King of Spains Trumpeters I cannot forbear to speak of that stupendious Fleet which was sent against England and the Queen Anno. 1588. 5. The King of Spain trecherously thinking to destroy Queen Elizabeth and to possesse himself of the English Nation provided a mighty Navy consisting of one hundred and thirty ships where of Galeasses and Galleons seventy two goodly ships like to floating Towers in which were Souldiers 19290. Mariners 8350. Gally slaves 2080. great Ordnance 2630. On the twentieth of May they weighed Anchor from the River Trigas but were by tempest so miserably disperst that it was long ere they met again But they sent before to the Prince of Parma that he with his Forces consisting of fifty thousand old Souldiers should be ready to joyn with them and with his shipping to conduct them into England and to land his Army at the Thames mouth But God so ordered that partly by distresse of weather and partly by the valour of the English they were driven back with infinite loss and disgrace 6 Fontano a Spaniard with a vast sum of money to wit 50000 Pistols corrupted Doctor Lopez to poyson Queen Elizabeth as the said Lopez himself together with Emanuel Ludovicus Tinotius Stephanus Errera freely confest Thuan. lib. 109. 7. Ibarra attempted the same plot upon the said Queen by Edmond of York Cousin german to him who perfidiously betrayed the Fort of Zutphan to the enemy as also by Richard Williams besides another youth and other complices for which he promised them 40000 Pistols 8. Anno 1601. the Spaniards were brought into Ireland by Hugh Earle of Tiron but were but scurvily entertained there Thuan. lib. 125. 9. When in the year 1603. certain Engglish were taken and executed for a conspiracy against the King Carolus Ligneus Count of Aremberg who was then Embassador there from the Archduke Albert was suspected to have conspired with them Thuan. lib. 129. 10. The King of Spain not long after the death of Mary Queen of Scots ordered the Duke of Parma then Governor of the Low Countries to promise in his name the King of Scotland both men and mony against the Queen of England thereby the more easily to revenge his mothers death And to that end the said Duke sent Robert Bruss a Scotch Gentleman into Scotland with a great deal of money Besides that the Scotch King was put in hope to marry the Infanta of Spain provided that he embrac'd the Roman Religion which was proposed by one William Crich●on who then belonged to the Popes Nuntio and had formerly been Rector sometime of the Jesuits Colledge at Lyons and he endeavoured to perswade Bruss either by force or fraud to kill John Metelan High Chancelor of Scotland and because Bruss abhorred so wicked a fact Crichton accused him to Fontano who clapt him up in prison for fourteen moneths together See Hospinian 11. How cunningly some of the Spanish Emissaries endeavoured to perswade James then King of Scotland and afterwards of England too that it was necessary for him to have a league and friendship with the King of Spain saying that it would much advantage him to have the favour of the Spaniards Thuan. lib. 83. 12. The dangerous designes of the Spaniards by the Jesuits and their Emissaries to destroy both the Queen and Kingdom of England Anno 1596. is described by Thuan and others in the English Complaint to Pope Clement the eighth 13. Divers outrages and Acts of hostility have been committed by the Spaniards against the subjects of England in their Colonies of the West Indies 14 Anno 1605. Certain English men being on the North side of Hispaniola were enticed a shore by a Priest named Father John on promise of secure trading were inhumanly and barbarously murthered by the Spaniards The Master was tied naked to a tree and most cruelly pinched and stung to death 15. An. 1608. The Richard of Plimouth trading to Virginia was assaulted by the King of Spains ships and notwithstandding the Master produced the Broad Seal of England he with all the men were condemned to the Gallies where some were with much cruelty beaten to death 16. With what tricks and juggles the Match in Spain between the late King Charles and the King of Spains daughter was treated prolonged and at last quite eluded is sufficiently known to such as were employed in that business So that Spaniards are every where Spaniards CHAP. VIII The Praevarications of the Spaniards against the King and Kingdom of Portugall WHen Sebastian King of Portugall Anno 1578. resolved to undertake that Expedition into Africa fatall
The KING of SPAINS Cabinet Councel Divulged OR A DISCOVERY of the PREVARICATIONS of the SPANIARDS With all the Princes and States of Europe for obtaining the Universal Monarchy LONDON Printed by J. H. for J. S. and are to be sold by Simon Miller at the Star in St Pauls Church-yard 1658. The Contents of the severall Chapters CHap. 1. The hatred of the Spaniards towards the Protestants and their Religion pag. 1 Chap. 2. The prevarications of the Spaniards in order to the Pope and his Elections pag. 9 Chap. 3. The prevarications and excesses of the Spaniards towards the rest of the Catholicks pag. 17 Chap. 4. Of the Spanish Inquisition pag. 24 Chap. 5. The prevarications of the Spaniards against the Empire pag. 30 Chap. 6. The prevarications of the Spaniards against the Kings and Kingdom of France pag. 40 Chap. 7. The prevarications of the Spaniards against the Kings and Kingdom of England pag. 48 Chap. 8. The prevarications of the Spaniards against the King and Kingdom of Portugal pag. 54 Chap. 9. The prevarications of the Spaniards against the Low Countries pag. 59 Chap. 10. The prevarications and excesses of the Spaniards against the Kingdom or Principate of Catalonia pag. 62 Chap. 11. The prevarications of the Spaniards against the Kingdom of Aragon pag. 69 Chap. 12. The prevarications against the Kingdom of Naples pag. 73 Chap. 13. The prevarications of the Spaniards against Italy and the Common-wealths thereof pag. 77 Chap. 14. The prevarications of the Spaniards against other Kingdoms pag. 80 Chap. 15. The Spaniards ardent desire of Monarchy and rule pag. 87 Chap. 16. The Ambition Arrogance boasting and scorn of the Spaniards pag. 94 Chap. 17. The Spaniards perfidious violation of Leagues and Promises pag. 97 Chap. 18. The Spaniards Hypocrisie and Dissimulation pag. 101 Chap. 19. The ingratitude of the Spaniards toward such as oblige them pag. 104 Chap. 20. What the Spanish succours are pag. 110 Chap. 21. The tricks of the Spaniards in contracting Marriages pag. 114 Chap. 22. The hatred of the Spaniards towards the Germans pag. 117 Chap. 23. How the Spaniards treat and keep peace pag. 120 Chap. 24. The Briberies and pecuniary Corruptions of the Spaniards pag. 123 Chap. 25. The Spaniards are Murtherers pag. 126 Chap. 26. The Cruelty and promiscuous Tyranny of the Spaniards pag. 129 Chap. 27. The Cruelties and Barbarities of the Spaniards in America pag. 132 Chap. 28. The rapacity avarice lust adultery and other vices of the Spaniards pag. 137 Chap. 29. Other Arts and Tricks of the Spaniards to work their designes pag. 145 Chap. 30. The various Apothegmes and Observations concerning the Spaniards pag. 151 The Conclusion pag. 157 Courteous Reader These Books following are printed for or sold by Simon Miller at the Star in St Pauls Church-yard In Folio THe Civil Warres of Spain in the Reign of Charls the 5th Emperor of Germany and King of that Nation wherein our late unhappy differences are paralleld in many particulars A general History of Scotland from the year 767 to the death of King James The History of this Iron Age. Dr. Lightfoot his Harmony of the N. Testam In large Quarto John Barckley his Argenis Translated by his late Majesties special command The Prose by Sir Robert le Grise The Posie by Tho. May. In Quarto The Harmonious consent and Confessions of Faith of all the Protestant Reformed Churches professed in all the Kingdoms Nations and Provinces of Europe published with Authority to prevent the spreading of Errors and Heresies Camdens Remains concerning Britain with many choice Additions by W. D. Gent. Christ tempted the devil Conquered being an Exposition on part of the fourth Chap. of St. Mathews Gospel by John Gumbledon Rector of Coyly in Glamorgan Abrahams faith or the good old Religion proving the Doctrine of the Church of England to be the only true faith of Gods Elect By J. Nicholson Minister of the Gosp The Anatomy of Mortality by George Stroad Aynsworth on the Canticles Paul Bayne his Diocesans Trial. The Supream Power of Christian States and Magistracy vindicated from the insolent pretences of Gulielmus Apolonius By E. Gralle A Treatise of Civil Pollicy being a clear decision of 43 queries concerning prerogative right and priviledge in reference to the supreme Prince and the people By Samuel Rutherford Professor of Divinity of St. Andrews in Scotland Politick and Military observations of Civil and Military Government containing the birth increase decay of Monarchies the carriage of Princes and Magistrates Mr. Pinchin his meritorious price of mans Redemption cleared Astrology Theologized shewing what nature and influence the Stars and Planets have over men and how the same may be diverted and avoided Large Octavo The Reconciler of the Bible wherein above 2000 seeming contradictions are fully plainly reconciled A view of the Jewish Religion with their Rites Customes and Ceremonies The History of England Illustrated with the Lively Effigies of all the Kings and Queens since the Conquest Small Octavo Ed. Waterhouse Esq his Discourse of piety and charity A view and defence of the Reformation of the Church of England very usefull in these times Mr. Peter du Moulin his Antidote against Popery published on purpose to prevent the delusions of the Priests and Jesuits who are now very busie amongst us Herberts Devotions or a Companion for a Christian containing Meditations and prayers useful upon all occasions Mr. Knowles his Rudiment of the Hebrew Tongue A Book of scheams or figures of heaven ready set for every four minuits of times and very usefull for all Astrologers Florus Anglicus or an exact History of England from the reign of William the Conqueror to the death of the late King Lingua or the Combat of the Tongue and the five Senses for Superiority a serious Comedy The Spirits Touchstone being a clear discovery how a man may certainly know whether he be truly taught by the Spirit of God or not The Poor mans Physician and Chirurgeon Duodecim Doctor Smith's Practice of Physick The Grammer Warre Poselius Apothegms Faciculus Florum Crashaw's Visions Drexelius School of Patience Helvicus Colloquies The Christian Souldier his combat with the three arch enemies of mankinde the world the flesh and the devil In 24. The New Testament The third part of the Bible FINIS The Causes of the Publick Hatred of the King of Spain and the Spanish Nation CHAP. I. The hatred of the Spaniards towards the Protestants and their Religion TO shun the suspition of fancying to write Iliads after Homer I will not now make a large Martyrologie which of it self were enough to fix a Title to this Chapter nor will I compile Histories of the Belgick or Low-Country War especially of that which was waged by the Duke of Alva for those are both sufficiently known and there is store of them to be had This I shall only say and this for their sakes who think the Spaniards will prove milder to them because they imagine to themselves that they are
with the self same right and to the self same end that the Duke of Parma in his Kings name seized upon the County of Moersen and the like aim had the Spaniards in seizing upon Rheinbergh and other Towns in the Empire 12. With no better seasons did they invade the lower Palatinat the Dutchy of Simmeren and the Bishoprick of Trevirs there they committed the former excesses and prevarications in the Empire and indeed it is but like them to keep Frankental against the express Articles and their promise made to King James of England to restore it to his daughter the King of Bohemiah's Widow But they think it a piece of policie to cheat Kings with oathes as men do children with nut● 13. Anno 1598. a Citizen of Gro●ninghen being taken Letters were found about him to Ezard Earl of East Freezland wherein he was bid by a Courtier of the Archduke Alberts to fly speedily to King Philips protection which was offered him Thuan lib. 122. 14. At the same time by the instigation of King Philips Embassadour and Mendoza a sentence was pronounced against the Citizens of Aquensis Ibid. 15. Anno 1584. when there arose a war between Gebhard Archbishop of Colein and the Colledge the Spaniards instantly thrust themselves into the business however the Emperour and Princes often admonisht the Duke of Parma to withdraw his Souldiers out of the Empire Thuan. lib. 78. 16. Ancellus the French Embassadour in his speech to the Princes of Germany Anno 1597. sayes In Italy there are few Countries which turn from the Empire under pretext of protection do not groan under the cruel yoak of the Spaniards Nor is Germany to hope better in which the Town of Berk upon the Rheine is already against all right and equity held by a forraign Garrison and the Castle of Starkenburgh in Westphalia is daily fortified with all expedition The excursions of the Spaniards as far as into Hassia these former years are notorious c. Thuan. lib. 118. Germany hath two potent enemies hanging over her head the one the Turk a plundering indefatigable terrible and insuperable Prince the other the Spaniard who craftily and by the ruine of the Princes his Ally's opens his way to the Empire It must be warily considered whether of these two is to be thought the more formidable by comparing the Alcoran with the Spanish Inquisition and whether it be better to have to do with the Eastern or Western Turks The Author of the Exequies of the Pacification of Prague printed at Roterdam 1593. writes that the Spanish Embassador at Ratisbon visited the Electors house by house only like a perpetual Dictator and dictated to their pens what his Kings pleasure was p. 32. and a while after he adds Unlesse the Electors shake off the Lethargy and the Lords of the Chapters in the principal Churches look more attentively to their businesse it will shortly come to that passe That upon the Ecclesiasticall Electors ●ill be obtruded the Albani Farnesii Leopoldi and upon the very Chapters themselves and Collegiat Churches the proud Leirae Vergosii and others of that stuff whose character is sufficiently known in the Belgick History who value as much the Nobility of Germany as Bethleem Gabor did Priscians Rules who having often made the Assembly laugh with his Latine handsomly answered Quid curaremus Priscianum Grammaticum qui non metuimus Imperatorem Romanorum Why should we care for Priscian the Grammarian when we fear not the Emperour of the Romans Idem ibidem p. 33. 17. The Spanish Embassador was wont to brag at the Dyet of Ratisbone that his King maintained three Electors there a●d fed th●m amongst his Flocks ye● and th●● his King Ferdinand ruled the then King of Kings In Exeq. Pacif. Pra● p. 66. 18. Anno 154● The Spaniards who marcht under the conduct of Charles 5. ass●ulting partly by force and partly by cunning the Citie of Constance had already seized upon the Suburbs where after they had committed many outrages being repulst by the inhabitants they fired it and retreated Sleid. lib. 21. Com sui 16. The States of the Empire assembled at Norimbergh 1640 amongst other things earnestly petitioned the Emperour that he would command the Spaniards as disaffected to the Empire to depart from his Councel and assembly of Princes as very well understanding that that Nation uses to fish in other mens Pools the better to obtain their own ends 19. The Princes of Germany did not without ground suspect Charles the fifth as if under pretext of Religion and establishing the Empire he lookt upon his own private advantage and the translation of the Empire by right of inheritance upon his own family Thuan. lib. 107. 20. The Spanish faction highly threatned Matthias K. of Hungary to deter him for giving free exercise of Religion to the Austrians Hungarians whereby it clearly enough appears how much the Spaniards esteem the house of Austria with the rest of the Catholicks and how much they hate them of the Reformed Religion By the same way they over-ruled the Emperour Rodolph for granting liberty of Religion to the Bohemians and Silesians Metteranus lib. 30. Anno 1608 1609. 21. Thomas Campanella a Spanish Fryer in his Discourse of the Spanish Monarchy c. 5. speaks thus of adding the Empire to the Spanish Kingdomes The Pope must make it his business to excommunicate the three Protestant Electors threatning them that unlesse they return to the Roman Church he will deprive them of their Electoral dignity And then it were better if the King of Spain would get himself chosen Emperour and so invade Germany with a great Host and subdue it but he must do it under pretext of going into Hungary CHAP. VI. The Praevarications of the Spaniards against the Kings and Kingdoms of France AS France is neerest to the Empire in limits so is it also neerest to the plots and tricks which are framed against it by the Spanish Nation For in regard that no kingdom is a greater Remora to the Spanish Monarchy then France therfore do the Spaniards bend all their forces and studies to the conquest thereof insomuch as I could discover the whole Magazine of their plots designs and prevarications against it were I not hindred by other reasons but amongst many it may suffice for the present to bring some few I will silence the warres between Charles Francis because they were publick as also other Martiall differences and will onely touch upon some clancular attempts and such as were exercised secretly and under colour if not of true friendship yet certainly with no shew of open hostility 1. In the first place we meet with the League of the Henotickes who affected to be called Zelots in which action not onely and singly of the Spaniards but a manifold prevarication might be observed of which conspiracy or Holy League as they would needs have it styled the Noble Historian Thuan sayes thus lib. 90. Never was there Portent in France to be compared
Extraordinary Revenews of the Dutchy of Milan and for that cause a proclamation was made by the said Fontano's authority in King Philips name which was smartly answered and opposed by the Family of the Malaspines and had almost given an Alarm amongst the said Princes had not most of the Embassador● in King Philips Court interceded with him and at length obtained that the prosecution of the businesse might be protracted and suffered to vanish Thuan lib. 134. 5. Anno 1606. there arose a controversie between Pope Paul the fifth and the State of Venice about certain Priviledges vvhich when it was almost brought to a friendly composition by the endeavour of Henry the fourth of France the Spanish faction the chief vvhereof were Cardinall Pompeio Arrigovio Paulo Sfondrato and Ferdinando Pacero Duke of Ascalonia by the pravalency of King Philips Embassador with the Pope the businesse was not onely frustrated but also brought to open war and the Pope excommunicated the Venetians and Philip forthwith by lettters artificiously pen'd offered his service to the Pope to that end Fontano listed Souldiers apace and yet nevertheless he sent Francisco de Castro as Extraordinary to Venice with intention that if the matter inclined to a peace which he having kindled the war at first began already to suspect he might praecept the honor of the pacification from the King of France or at least have a great share in it by his intervention But the common report in the Court of Rome was that Philip according to the Rule of his Ancestors was glad to hear of such Disputes amongst other Princes concerning the Popes Supremacy as in relation to Civil Government yea and to have them agitated up and down in Spain it self by connivencie as conceiving them not to belong to him at all he being very potent and using to quash the Popes attempts in all his dominions with a word well knowing that his Holinesse dares not so much as hiss against him which was sufficiently demonstrated afterwards in the businesse of Sicily yea and the Spaniards boyling with the heat of ambition convert such wars and feditions as spring from thence to their own privat advantage as lying in ambush in the mean while to see if any of the weaker Princes be prescribed that so they have an occasion to invade their Dominions as it hapned in the seizure of the kingdom of Navarre even in our parents dayes Thuan. lib. 137. 7. When Ferdinand King of Spain and Arragon Anno 1501. attempted the Kingdom of Naples and took the Citie of Tarento with Ferdinand son to Frederick King of Naples in it he swore to him by Gonsalvo before the Altar that he would leave him the liberty of a King but yet he slighted his oath sent him prisoner into Spain and reserved the kingdom for himself 8. By the exhortation of Ferdinand called the Catholick Henry the eighth King of England sent 6000 English into Spain to joyn with the Spaniards in the invasion of the Dutchy of Chira but Ferdinand who had a quite other designe sent them against John Albert King of Navarre by the right of Catherine de la Fosse who being wholly unprovided for Ferdinand carried his business with high dissimulation towards him fled into France and so Ferdinand seized the kingdom of Navarre without any cost or pains Speculum Tragicum Anno 1612. 9. It is no newes for the Spaniards to sow sedition in divers kingdoms at one and the same time as they did Anno 158● in France and England Thuan. lib. 179. 10. Anno 1581. The Spaniards sowed discord amongst the Knights of Maltha by setting Matuirno Scuto Romaegassio against John Bishop of Casserio Avernio chief of that Order and casting him in prison from whence he was cited to Rome to his triall whither he came and stoutly acquitted himself howbeit he dyed during his abode there Thuan. lib. 74. 12. The Spaniards raised seditions in Scotland and sollicited with vain promises some Noblemen to a revolt some of whom were beheaded for it The States to the Letters of Ernestus Anno 1594. Thuan. lib. 109. 13. Antonio de Laeva a Spaniard and Governor of Lumbardy for Charles the fifth being besieged at Milan thought fit to spare neither things Humane nor Divine for the maintenance of his own honor and Caesars dignity and in stead of pay granted every Citie and every Citizen thereof to be most inhumanly plundred by the Souldiers that by the ejection of the Duke of Milan Sforsa might enjoy the command of so great a Principate Paulus Jovius lib. 6. Elogiorum 14. Hugo de Moncada governed Sicily after such a fashion that he left many monuments of avarice and cruelty behind him for he put many Sicilian Gentlemen to death and amongst the rest the Lord of Camerata for that he lived somewhat seditiously according to the ancient loosness of that Nation Paul Jov. lib. 6. Elog. 15. How cruelly did they use the Hussites in Bohemia as beating them dragging them cutting children in two and throwing them to their mothers saying Jam habes sub utraque Now thou hast it under both alluding to the ceremony of the Hussites who took the Sacrament under both species 16. Thomas Campanella in his Discourse of the Spanish Monarchy Chap. 26. faith That the King of Spain must take care that none but a Catholick king be elected to the Crown of Poland And therefore wise noble Embassadors must be sent to C●achoven to give weight and authority to the Spanish union amongst the Electors and prevail to have one of the King of Spains younger sons chosen King of Poland And the people of Scandinaven and Dantzick must also be moved to set forth a Fleet to sea against the English c. CHAP. XV. The Spaniards ardent desire of Monarchy and Rule IF that old saying Semper imperare superiorem esse aliis Alwayes to command and be superior to others be innate to any Nation it is certainly so more to the Spaniards then to any other since all their actions cogitations and consultations tend to that end and therefore they may most clearly consent and say with Caesar Si violandum est jus regnandi causa violandum If right must be wrong'd it must be wrong'd for Powers sake For this reason they are not afraid by publick writings to admonish and exhort their king yea and to shew him the wayes and means how he may arrive to the universall Monarchy amongst whom Thomas Campanella is the Ring-leader Nor did Charles the fifth seem to have laid slight foundations for this Monarchy when besides those kingdoms which he possest by right of succession in the West and elsewere he was also made Emperour of the Romans to which were yet added other titles afterwards and it hath been hitherto the onely business of the Spaniards to be alwayes in warres that so they may be ready upon all occasions to produce that Monarchy of the whole Christian world which they have long since
conceived For to this end were there so many matches proposed for the Infanta Isabel and the Crown of France so impudently as it were put to sale to this end were the seditions raysed in Scotland c. The same craft was used in the Bishop of Strasburghs cause and in the Dutchy of Cleve Gulick and the Imperial Citie of Aquisgrane Ordines ad Ernesti Lit. anno 1594. apud Thuan. lib. 109. 5. The Spaniards hold this as a Delphick Oracle and most infallible prophesie That the last Monarchy shall be fixt in Spain and that for this reason that in regard it came in order from the East to the West out of Asia into Greece and returned for a few years into Asia again under Alexander and his successors at length out of Greece to Rome therefore it necessarily followes that it must be establisht in Spain as being the most Westward of all other Countreys Thuan. lib. 133. 6. The Spaniards for the setling of their Monarchy by warres fraud and other plots destroy as many as are able to oppose them as Anno 1584. when Andino according to most mens opinions was poysoned whereof he being dead the Prince of Orange was also forthwith killed by one hired of the Duke of Parma and the Queen of England aimd at by the same Arts at the same time lib. 79. 7. That the kings of Spain labour for nothing more then by subduing all other Kings and Princes to make themselves Monarchs of the whole Christian world Ancellus teaches in his speech to the Princes of Germany Anno 1597. apud Thuan. lib. 118. 8. At the election of Charles the fifth Anno 1519. one of the Episcopall Electors said That the Spaniards having once gotten the Empire would hardly restore it again to its liberty Sleidanus 9. The Spaniards for the better security of their Monarchy do not only permit but allow and perswade even incestuous marriages lest by the division of kingdoms forsooth their Monarchy should suffer an eclipse Thuan. lib. 107. 10. Moreover for the greater assurance of their said Monarchy they labour to destroy the Noblemen of their Provinces to streighten their priviledges liberties to impose new taxes and to reduce the inhabitants from their old plenty and riches to poverty and misery Ordines Belgici in responsione Schwartzenburgio Legato Caesario data anno 1575. Thuan. lib. 60. 11. Another earnest endeavour of the Spaniards is to take off all free Elections which was done Anno 1570. in the kingdom of Portugal and at present in the election of the Emperours and in the kingdomes of Bohemia and Hungary yea and by the exclusion of the right heirs to advance their own Kings to kingdoms as in the said kingdom of Portugal Thuan. lib. 69. 13. When Philip the second had married his daughter Isabel to the Archduke Albert and had assigned him the seventeen provinces for a portion his son Philip was troubled at it as if he had not had kingdomes enough even without those Provinces which when the Father observed he comforted him saying Quidvis promittas quid enim promittere laedit That he had indeed promised those Provinces but that there were many by-wayes and tricks to be found out to shun the performance Speculum Hisp Tyran in Belgio p. 108. 14. The Duke of Larma heretofore made a speech to an Assembly of the States of Spain in Arragon wherein he told them in most eloquent words That the King of Spain had free power either by right or wrong to get and occupate other kingdomes that so he might come to the long hop'd for Monarchy For it was f●r that since there was but one Head namely the Pope in spiritual affairs so there should be also but one namely the King of Spain in temporal and that he was therefore called Catholick because he ought to be the universal Monarch of the world Now the wiser sort do justly conceive these are the words of Ancellus to the Princes of Germany Anno 1597. That the inexpleble covetousnesse of the king of Spain was not to be contained within the limits of the Rhine and that they were reputed his enemies by him whosoever should endeavour to stop or hinder his designe to fix the Monarchy of the whole world in his family Thuan. lib. 118. 15. The Spaniards are so much inflamed with desire of Power that they never fail in all their kings dominions to change their Native Officers and Ministers of the said dominions with all kinds of calumnies and lies to the King till they work him to deprive them of their employments and offices and substitute Castillians in their places which more disgusted the Catalonians then any thing else as may be seen up and down in their complaint anno 1640. where they beseech the king to be more circumspect in this point and especially chap. 34.35 16. Antonio de Leva charged Francisco Sfortia with various grievous calumnies to the Emperour and used all means possible to get him thrown out of the government of the Dutchy of Milan and himself put in his place Paul Jovius lib. 6. Elog. 17. Charles the fifth was excessively earnest with his brother Ferdinand to abdicate the Roman Empire and transfer it upon his son Philip or at least to make him his Deputy of Italy and the Low Countreys But Ferdinand answered him That he was called Augustus or the enlarger of the Empire and therefore he could not grant ought thereof to any other Zniegrefius part 1. Apotheg p. 112. 18. It being asked why the king of Spain had an ambition to be preferred even before the Emperour and answer being made That Europ was like a mans Body and that Spain represented the Head And for this reason the King of Spain would go before the Emperour Livius Fink Graecensis replied If so then Germany wins the day for she is like the Belly and it is clear that the Belly rules all and all obey the Belly Znicgrefius p. 1. Apotheg p. 309. CHAP. XVI The Ambition Arrogance Boasting and Scorn of the Spaniards AS it happened to C. Caesar and Cn. Pompeius that the one could not endure a Superior and the other an Equall so is it also with the Spanish Nation For conceiving themselves only to be Eagles and to fly above the clouds they look upon all others as Dolopes or creepers as they frequently testifie both by their words and deeds When Anno 1579. the difference arose about the Successor to the Crown of Portugall the Spaniards to terrifie the Portuguezes boasted thus That there was no power equall to that of the Spaniards who as often as they had had warres had vanquisht France led the Princes of Germany in triumph put the Turk to flight and freed Maltha from the Barbarians Thuan. lib. 97. 2. King Philip the second after the seizure of Portugall whether justly or unjustly I say not caused money to be coyned with this Inscription Non sufficit orbis Luckius in Nummis p. 279. 3. When the
the second king of Spain caused his lawfull wife Isabel the king of Frances sister to be kild that so he might marry his own sisters daughter Thuan. lib. 71. 4. Amongst the Austrians and Spaniards it is no news for brothers to marry their sisters daughters so Ferdinand of Austria son to Ferdinand the Emperour married Anna Catharina the Duke of Mantua's daughter by his own sister Elianor anno 1580. as before him Philip a Prince of the Family did Anne his sister Maries daughter by the Emperour his cousin german Thua lib. 71. 5. When Anno 1581. the match was treated between Andino and Queen Elizabeth of England king Philip by his Embassador expostulated with the king of France and afterwards laboured to sow seditions in France Thuan lib. 73. 6. What detriment the Spanish matches and friendships have brought upon France is taught by Evagrius de Origine Gestis Francorum lib. 1. fol. 40. lib. 2. fol. 66. lib. eod fol. 86. 7. What good did the English get by the marriage of king Philip to Queen Mary And what the Portuguezes but that by this pretension that kingdome fell into the hands and under the yoak of the Castillians 8. The Spaniards assign their daughters great portions but they keep not their words 9. Thomas Campanella cap. 30. sayes that it imports that the kings of Spain never marry any woman of the House of Austria unless he grow thereby to be heir of some new Countrey CHAP. XXII The hatred of the Spaniards towards the Germans IT is no new thing for the Spaniards to envy the felicity of the Germans ●or they did it many years ago About he year of Christ 1419. the King of Spain forbad the German Merchants to sail in the Spanish Seas and punished such of them as he took in disobedience to that Order he took 40 ships and killed all the Merchants Albert. Cratzius in Sax. suo l. 11. c. 3. 2. The Spaniards do all they can to obscure and lessen the fame of the German Nation which Avila did in his Pamphlet whereof Albert Marquess of Brandenburgh Anno 1522. complained Thuan. lib. 9. 3. How unjustly and rigidly they treated the Citizens of Mentz men of their own Religion upon whom the Bishop put two thousand for a Garrison at that time when Gustavus Adolphus king of Sweden i. e. anno 1631. made warre in Germany is demonstrated by the Histories of that warre and especially by Cornelius Danckhard in his History of the Swedish affairs 4. Anno 1582. when the Spaniards and French fought at the Tercera Island Santa Cruz the Spanish Generall left the German Souldiers to Hieronymo Ladron to punish them as he pleased Thuan. lib. 75. 5. Ancellus in his speech to the Princes of Germany Anno 1597. sayes That the King of Spain was not so well affected towards Germany in regard he plainly neglected the imminent danger of his common countrey from the Turk and assisted the Emperour and his Countrey-men with so small succours And moreover that he sought his own advancement by the overthrow of the house of Austria Thuan. lib. 118. 6. How rigidly and contrary to the Electoral dignity Charles the fifth treated John Frederick Duke of Saxony and Philip Landgrave of Hessia is amply described by Sleydan as also of the cruelties and outrages of the Spaniards in the Dutchy of Wirtenbergh 7. The Spaniards used to commit such Towns as are either far off or ill fortified to the trust and government of the Germans to the end that if they be lost the dishonour and infamy thereof may redound to the Germans and not to themselves which besides other appeared in the rendition of Lingen and Groll which were governed by Herman and Frederick two brothers of the house of Bergh Thuan. lib. 119. Anno 1597. 8. An. 1590. The Generall of the Spanish Army hanged sixty German Souldiers at once because they demanded their pay and afterwards made an example of an hundred and fifty more by cutting off the right hands of some and the three fore-fingers of others 9. The Spaniards in Charles the fifths time being distributed up and down in Garrisons in Germany exercised no less enormities upon the said Emperours party then upon the other Sleidanus 10. In the distress of the Palatine when the Spaniards seized upon the lower Palatinate it happened that a poor Taylor having let fall some passio●ate words was taken and carried ●efore the Captain who asking him ●o great a sum of money as he was neither able to pay it nor to provide any body to be bound for it he forthwith caused the man to be hanged without compassion of his wife and seven children who begged for him Relationes 11. If the king of Spain sayes Campanella would seize upon Germany he must first be made Emperour and then under colour of going against the Turk march into Hungary and so surprise the Protestants suddenly at unawares together with the Imperial Cities before they are able to oppose him as Charles the fifth cunningly did and make new Colonies and new laws with Italian Ministers because that Climate endures not the Spaniards c. c. 23. Disc de monarch Hisp CHAP. XXIII How the Spaniards treat and keep Peace That the Spaniards shew bread in one hand and hide a stone in the other treat peace and prepare for war shall be proved in this Chapter 1. In that treaty of the Emperour Maximilian the Spaniards basely and deceitfully guld the Princes by taking the Towns of Boure Leerdam Schoonhof Owdtwateren Bommel and Zirzea 2. The Pacification and Union of Gant 1576. was sworn to and approved of by king Philip but not kept 3. The conference at Colein was pretended to be liked of but in the Interim the people of Hennault Arras and Mastricht were sollicited to disloyalty 4. The Conference being begun in Flanders Queen Elizabeths Deputies were also invited to it and in the mean while that formidable Fleet anno 1588. was prepared and sent to surprize England Thuan. lib. 119. where the States at large express the fraudulent Arts of the Spaniards 5. That the Spaniards peace is not to be trusted to is taught by the Lords of the United Provinces in their answer to the Emperour Rodolph Anno 1591. and there was many stampt by them at that time with this Emblem A Holland virgin fits sweetly sleeping under a quick-set hedge with this adscription Pax patet insidiis and upon a sudden her enemies break through the hedge assault and surprize her Then she sits again under another hedge waking with a Sword and a Guard by her with these words Tuta salus bello est and the breach being stopt the enemies designes are frustrated Luckius in Numismatis p. 328. 6. When the Truce was made between Spain and Holland the Spaniards said That the King made a step backwards thereby to leap the further forwards upon occasion 7. That the conditions of the truce were not candidly and sincerely kept by the Spaniards may
and provide for the Indians there is nothing more sure then that God will most grievously punish if not quite overthrow Spain Thus writes thinks and foretels a Spaniard of the Spaniards And his authority ought to be so much the greater in regard he was an eye and not an eare witnesse thereof 9. Thomas Campanella in the last Chapter of his Discourse of the Spanish Monarchy copiously complains of the tyranny avarice and cruelty of the Spaniards in both the Indies CHAP. XXVIII The rapacity avarice lust adultery and other vices of the Spaniards POpe Julius the second was wont to call the Spaniards Volucres coeli Birds of Heaven alluding to their pride and ambition to outstrip and soar above all others But since he was pleased to call them Birds why did he not rather name them Stymphalidas or Harpyes since the rapacity theevishnesse and greedinesse of that Nation is so well known by extruding lawful heirs from their kingdoms and unjustly and violently invading seizing and impoverishing them By contaminating all things sacred profane private and publick and hooking them into their clutches Witnesse the Kingdomes of Naples Navarre and Portugal besides their rapacities and thefts in the Low-Countries where it is reported by some Historians worthy of credit that the Duke of Alva drew yearly fourscore tuns of gold out of the confiscated Estates besides the ordinary tributes insomuch as that in six years time he extorted 52 millions of gold from those provinces 2. The exaction of the tenth penny upon all vendible commodities sufficiently shewes their greedinesse of gold for when the States so earnestly beseeched the said Duke to forbear that Tax he answered That he would not remit it though all the Low-Countreys were sunk thereby and though Heaven and Earth came together And this was not the last and least cause why the States took Arms and renounced their obedience to the Spaniard Many other examples there are as of the plunder of Antwerp and Mecklin their proceedings in Portugal and the Tercera Islands the new Taxes against the priviledges of the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily and the like which are not necessary to be repeated here in regard they have been cited before in various chapters of this book But amongst other causes of the publick hatred of the Spanish Nation their lusts and promiscuous adulteries are not to be omitted though yet because they may seem to be excused by some by the common example of military exorbitances and in regard also that there be too many of them to be comprized in this short Discourse it shall suffice to remit the Reader to these Authors Thuanus Metteranus Everardus à Raid and others however it will not be tedious to recite some few of those which were committed by them in the Low-Countries 1. Anno 1598. When Don Francisco de Mendoza devasted the Dutchies of Gulick Cleve and Mounts the Spaniards amongst other things plundered the Monastery of Schlehenhorst stript the Nuns crowded them together and ravisht them Thuan. lib. 121. 2. At the same time they bound the Judge of Dussimont in a Cellar and seven Spaniards lay with his wife before his face 8. In the village of Giffick they endeavoured to ravish a Woman with child who when she had long resisted them they thrust a sword into her womb and kild both her and her fruit 4. At Bulcholz they attempted to force the Burgomasters daughter and her father coming to help her they kild him and then tied her to his dead body and ravisht her Ibidem 5. The same Author lib. 66. recounts a generous revenge taken by the daughter of John Milet a Countrey man upon a Spanish Captain who had violated her chastity and instantly after he brings another how a Lawyers daughter revenged her self upon a Spaniard who vitiated her by stabbing him with his own dagger and how at his death he left her his heir 6. How libidinously they carried themseves in the Indies with all sorts of persons yea even with Queens themselves Barth de la Casa shewes at large in Spec. Tyran Hisp The Spaniards are also naturally in respect of other Nations great lovers and cryers up of themselves and contemners of others 1. Thus Pedro Roycio Mauraeo a famous Spanish Poet at that time to wit 1548 being once with Langius a German and king Ferdinands Embassador and hearing his servants waiting at table speak Dutch with a hard and affected kind of tone and pronunciation jeeringly said The Germans do not speak but thunder and turning towards the Embassador I believe quoth he that God out of his indignation made use of this Thunder-bolt when he threw our Forefathers out of Paradise To whom Langius answered And I think it very likely on the other side that the Serpent used this smooth and flattering Spanish tongue when he cheated Eve Mordamus in vita Langii 2. The presentation of the Golden Fleece was studiously and craftily invented by the King of Spain to feed mens vanitie Illicium Thus the Emperour in king Philips name presented Sigismund Bathorius with the Golden Fleece at Prague anno 1567. 3. So great is the insolency of the Spaniards that even in extream necessity they cannot shew their want which the Count of Mont-major in Sicily found with sad experience Anno 1604. For when he was speaking to the vice-king in the behalf of the Sicilians to moderate the exportation of Corn thereby to prevent a scarcity or dearth which he well foresaw was suddenly like to follow the said vice-king took him scornfully up as if he had spoken too sawcily to him and caused him to be killed by his Guards before his face Thuan. lib. 3. an 1604. Many other vices of the Spaniards we have already demonstrated in other chapters of this Book and therefore forbeare to recapitulate them here however it be not amiss to reiterate some few examples of their falshood and juggling in regard that this is the main hinge upon which their most important designs depend 1. It is the Spanish fashion easily to complain of others when themselves are onely guilty as Don Juan de Austria did Anno 1577. when by his Embassador he accused the States of Holland to the Emperour the Electors and the Queen of England that they had not kept the peace when himself had broken it before Thuan lib. 94. 2. Barth de la Casa against Sepuluenda sayes That it is not true that the Spaniards as they write in the Indies converted every year so many thousand men from Gentilism to Christianism But this sayes he is true indeed that the Spaniards since their coming to the Indies have butchered and sacrificed more Indians for avarice and rapacities sake then the Indians had done to their Idols in a hundred years together And that the Spaniards did falsly accuse the poor innocent and simple Indians to the King of such crimes as whereof the most wicked in the world could not be guilty 3. The king of Spain promised Saladin Count of