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A64239 The history of gavel-kind with the etymology thereof : containing also an assertion that our English laws are for the most part those that were used by the antient Brytains, notwithstanding the several conquests of the Romans Saxons, Danes and Normans : with some observations and remarks upon many especial occurrences of British and English history / by Silas Taylor ; to which is added a short history of William the Conqueror written in Latin by an anonymous author in the time of Henry the first. Taylor, Silas, 1624-1678. 1663 (1663) Wing T553; ESTC R30161 142,021 250

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whereas there is no more in it than the plain acquisition or getting of this Realm of England after his pretences from King Edward the Confessour were made known as in the following Tract appears by the constraint and force that Harald put him unto to get his Settlement by Battel with him which word of Conquest is to this day familiarly used in Scotland to signifie Land purchased and Mr. John Skene saith upon the word that Conquestus signifies Lands quhilk ony person acquiris possessis privato jure vel singulari titulo vel●ti donatione vel singulari aliquo contractu Quhilk is conform to the Civil Law ubi quae stus dicitur lucrum quod ex Emptione venditione locatione conductione vel generaliter ex opera cu jus descendit l. coiri 7. cum seq ff pro Socio and further writing of Lands so purchased concludes Conquestus dicitur ratione primi conquestoris cum transmittitur ad ejus haeredem exuit naturam conquestus induit naturam haereditatis Norman Conquest concerning which also we have so great a plenty of Writers that they almost extinguish the Truth with their Comments and Conceits all the alterations imaginable are father'd upon this revolution and summ'd up by Mr. Samuel Daniel in these words I come to write of a time meaning this Norman affair wherein the State of England received an alteration of Laws Customs Fashions manner of Living Language Writing with new forms of Fights Fortifications Buildings and generally an innovation in most things but Religion I make choice of this Paragraph of so Elegant an Author as Mr. Daniel who hath deserved very well from the Common-wealth of Learning for his ingenuous Observations to examine the particulars of this great mutation so generally imagined which enumeration will also afford us the method of our Discourse concerning that which hapned to the English at that time and first of all concerning the Alteration of our Laws which is the principal matter of our enquiry of which among many Mr. Camden himself hath thus written Victor Gulielmus in victoriae quasi Trophaeum antiquatis pro maximâ parte Anglorum legibus Normanniae consuetudines induxit causasque Gallicè disceptari jussit Yet presently adds propositis igitur legibus Anglicanis Merchenlage Danelage Westsaxenlage quasdam reprobavit quasdam autem approbans transmarinas Neustriae leges quae ad Regni pacem tuendam efficacissimae videbantur adjecit But to evince this let us have recourse as near as we can to the Authors that were of that Age and seriously weigh what they deliver unto us concerning this matter Mr. Selden our of the Litchfield Chronicle cited also by my very much Honoured friend and incourager Sir Roger Twysden introduceth these words Anno Gulielmus Regni sui Quarto apud Londonias consilio Baronum suorum fecit summoniri per universos Angliae comitatus omnes nobiles sapientes sua lege eruditos ut eorum leges consuetudines audiret Et licet idem Rex Willielmus leges Northfolktae Suffolkiae Grantbrigiae Deirae ubi quondam maxima pars Danorum Norwegiensium inhabitabant prius magis approbaverat eas per totum Regnum observari praeceperat pro eo quod omnes Antecessores ej●s fere omnes Barones Normanniae Norwegenses extitissent quod de Norwegia olim venissent Sed postea ad preces communitatis Anglorum Rex adquievit qui deprecati sunt quatenus permitteret sibi leges proprias consuetudines antiquas habere in quibus vixerant patres eorum ipsi in eis nati nutriti sunt scilicet leges Sancti Regis Edwardi ex illo die magna authoritate veneratae per universum Regnum corroboratae conservatae sunt praecaeteris Regni legibus leges Regis Edwardi Unde per praeceptum Regis Willielmi electi sunt de singulis totius Angliae Comitatibus Duodecim Viri sapientiores quibus jurejurando injunctum fuit coram Rege Willielmo ut quoad possent recto tramite neque ad Dexteram neque ad Sinistram declinantes legum suarum consuetu inum sancita patefacerent nil praetermittentes nil addentes nil praevaricando mutantes Alderedus autem Eboracensis Episcopus Hugo Londoniensis Episcopus per praeceptum Regis scripserunt propriis manibus omnia quae praedicti jurati dixerunt c. Ingulphus Crolandensis also who was Chaplain to this King William and being himself somewhat concerned in this affair and so the more to be believed as an Agent writes a little more plainly than the last did thus Attuli saith he eadem vice mecum Lundoniis in meum Monasterium leges aequissimi Regis Ewardi quas Dominus meus inclytus Rex Willielmus autenticas esse perpetuas per totum Regnum Angliae inviolabilitérque tenendas sub poenis gravissimis proclamarat suis justiciariis commendârat eodem idiomate quo editae sunt ne per ignorantiam contingat nos vel nostros aliquando in nostrum grave periculum contraire offendere ausu temerario Regiam Majestatem ac in ejus censuras rigidissimas improvidum pedem ferre contentas saepius in eisdem hoc modo and the Title of those Laws is this Ces sont les leis les Custumes que li Reis William grantut à tut le peuple de Engleterre apres le Conquest de la Terre Iceles meismes que le Reis Edward sun Cosin tint devant lui which is in English these are the Laws and Customs which King William granted to all the people of England after the Conquest of the Land and are the same which King Edward his Cousin did hold before him And the like account given by the Litchfield Chronicle is found in the Laws of King Edward which though from him receiving the Denomination yet probably were Transcripts of a Date since the Norman Conquest for that in them is found an express of the Norman Settlement of them in which is also an account of the difference of the Rate of Mulc●s betwixt the Saxons and Danis or Norwegians and because of the ●●ar relation the Normans had to the Danes it is said that King William made choice of those Laws and would have had them put in Execution as the Law of England Quippe cum aliarum legibus Nationum Brytonum scilicet Anglorum Pictorum Scotorum praeponderassent he praised and liked of this Dane-laege best onely this observe if it be worth taking notice of that not onely the British Laws come into the account but also they are set in the first place But King Williams desigment had this Effect and Issue for taking that resolution it is said Quo audito mox universi compatriotae regni qui leges edixerant tristes effecti unanimiter deprecati sunt quatenus permitteret sibi leges proprias consuetudines antiquas habere in quibus vix runt patres eorum ipsi in eis nati nutriti sunt
Britains Fol. 14 Repulsed by the Britains ibid. He Conquered not Britain ibid. Calumniare in Law what Fol. 65 Camolodunum Fol. 34 Cambria Camber Cwmrt Cwmraeg Fol. 86 Cantref what Fol. 96 Canutus his Laws of Partition Fol. 141 142 143 Caractacus Prince of the Silures Fol. 34 He asserts the British Liberty ibid. His Protestation before Battel ibid. Castles on Borders of Scotland c. Fol. 79 Cattel of more Valew than Land Fol. 28 Cattel dischaged Fines Amerciaments Fol. 29 Cerdiford in Hampshire out of Domesdey Fol. 65 Cennedl what Fol. 132 Characters of Saxon Fol. 76 Charters of Saxon signed by the Norman Kings Fol. 76 Changes from Villenage to Gavelkind Fol. 157 158 Chief Justice Fol. 69 Chiefs in Urchenfield Fol. 110 Chedder in Somersetshire Fol. 117 Children no Kindred to the Parents Fol. 131 Churle what Fol. 168 Cities their Original Fol. 7 Claudius his Temple Fol. 34 Claim and Recovery of Lands against Normans Fol. 65 Clergy-men Gentlemen by the Welsh Laws Fol. 173 Clown or Colonus what Fol. 168 177 Cohabitancia what Fol. 7 Conan Tindaethwy Fol. 26 Conquest and Conqueror what Fol. 56 Coverfeu Fol. 74 Constantine the Great Fol. 87 Common Laws Fol. 69 145 Counties not antiently in Wales Fol. 94 Competition betwixt Kent and Urchenfield Fol. 106 Cornish understand base British and Welsh Fol. 146 Cottagers and Cottages what Fol. 169 Cuntune in Hampshire Fol. 66 Customs that are antient Fol. 70 150 Customs of the Welsh Fol. 71 132 Cwmmwd what Fol. 96 Custom and Common right Fol. 152 D. D. DAvies his Welsh Dictionary Fol. 98 Danelaege what Fol. 54 57 58 Danish impression on our Laws Fol. 54 55 Daniel Samuel examined Fol. 57 Deeds for Gavelkind Fol. 124 125 126 Deeds explained produced by Mr. S. ibid. Discourses Polemical much irregular Fol. 3 Divisions intestine facilitate Conquests Fol. 16 Division of Wales Fol. 96 Domboc what Fol. 53 54 Domesman what Fol. 110 111 Donald the 5th lost Scotland to the Saxons c. Fol. 163 164 Ð●pihinge what Fol. 70 Druids Fol. 16 The British Judges Fol. 17 Their Learning ibid. Their judicial employments ibid. Their determinations of right ibid. Caus'd execution of penal Laws ibid Britain their Gymnasium Fol. 17 They cease Fol. 19 Dubritius Prince and Bishop Fol. 90 Dûn what it signifies Fol. 116 Dun a paix in Scotland Fol. 165 166 Dutch Landscheuten what Fol. 136 137 E. EDgar King his Laws what Fol. 54 55 Confirmed by the Conqueror Fol. 58 Edgar Etheling Fol. 60 Edlin expounded Fol. 49 Edward King his Laws Fol. 55 Confirmed by the Conqueror Fol. 58 59 Edward King his Laws concerning the Welsh Fol. 51 52 Edwin and Morchar Earls Fol. 6● Edric Silvaticus or Salvage Fol. 7● Eldest Son among the Britain Fol. 49 English recover Lands agains● the Normans Fol. 65 66 English Normaniz'd Fol. 76 England Fol. 87 English setled in Scotland Fol. 162 Engin or Urchinfield their Kings Fol. 44 45 Errors once received and taken for granted Fol. 2 Erdisley in Herefordshire Fol. 79 Escuage antiently Fol. 171 Ethelbert King his Translation of the Welsh Laws Fol. 53 Ethelred King his Laws of Tryal Fol. 64 Eubages British Philosophers Fol. 20 Exchequer when erected Fol. 74 F. FAshions Saxon and Norman Fol. 74 75 Fealty or Allegiance very antient Fol. 55 Fee feudum or feodum what Fol. 170 171. Fee-tayl its original Fol. 170 Feminine conduct amongst the Britains Fol. 33 Feofamentum vetus novum Fol. 140 Fighting forms chang'd by the English Fol. 77 For-gavel Fol. 118 Fortifications of Romans Saxons and Normans Fol. 77 78 79 Forfeiture of Lands upon what Grounds to King William Fol. 67 68 Fortalices Fol. 79 Fortified houses antient ib. Foster-children in Wales divided with Foster-brethren Fol. 28 Free-men or liberi homines what Fol. 108 French do use partition Fol. 11 French tenure of partition Fol. 12 French how used in our Laws Fol. 69 G. GAbles Gablum Gabulum what Fol. 113 114 115 Gabelle among the French Fol. 114 Gablum signifies rent Fol. 116 117 158 159 Gablatores Fol. 117 Gabella Fol. 123 Galfridus Monumethensis defended against Polydore virgil Fol. 83 Gallick customes Fol. 11 Gallick colonyes Fol. 12 Gavel as Mr. S. expounds it what Fol. 112 Gavel-Gyldam Fol. 119 Gavel-man Fol. 120 Gavelate a Writ Fol. 121 122 123 Gavel in denominations Fol. 89 90 In the British Dictionary Fol. 92 What it signifies Fol. 92 93 Not imposed by the Normans Fol. 95 Used in VVelsh subdivisions of Lands Fol. 96 Several sorts of Gavels Fol. 102 103 VVelsh Laws for Gavel-kynd Fol. 103 104 105 106 Gavel-kynd a mark of the Antient Britons Fol. 152 153 The hinge of the British Laws Fol. 155 156 Gavelkind in Scotland Fol. 159 Gavelkind Throughout the Kingdome of England Fol. 4 In all first Plantations Fol. 5 Antiquity of it Fol. 18 137 Among the Princes of VVales Fol. 24 The signification of it Fol. 26 The evill and mischief of it Fol. 27 81. The best use of it Fol. 27 That it is extra Cantium Fol. 89 151 Gavelkind in the Term owes it self to partition Fol. 149 Gavelkind in the Statute of VVales Fol. 98 Practised in Urchenfield Fol. 100 Held rent free Fol. 123 124 Gavel-kind Lands in the King Fol. 128 Granted to Hospitals how Fol. 124 128 129 Granted to Religious Societies Fol. 129 Not to be forfeited for Felony Fol. 106 107 Garrison of Normans in Hereford before VVilliam the first Fol. 78 Gentlemen by the British Laws Fol. 172 173 German Customes antiently Fol. 7 German partition in Principalities Fol. 9. 137 German partition in private Estates Fol. 9 German partition evicted by a jest Fol. 9 10 German Landscheutan what Fol. 136 137 Give-all-kynne Fol. 130 131 Gildas Camberius translated Molmutius Laws into Latine Fol. 154 Glamorganshire Conquered Fol. 94 Gothick work used by the Saxons Fol. 80 Guorongus Vice-Roy of Kent Fol. 41 Gueily-gord what Fol. 105 Gymnasium of the Druids was in Britain Fol. 17 H. HAcana and Westanheconi what Fol. 44 45 Hecanae VVulfhardus Episcopus Fol. 44 Hengist and Horsus Fol. 37 Hengists reception of Kent examined Fol. 37 c. How Hengist had Kent Fol. 45 He altered not the Kentish Laws Fol. 49 Heutland Fol. 90 Henry the first commands the observation of King Edwards Laws Fol. 61 His Laws of partition Fol. 144 Hereditary succession amongst the Britains Fol. 18 Heriot Fol. 108 Herring-gable Fol. 116 Highlanders in Scotland antiently Britains Fol. 160 Hony-gavel Fol. 118 Howeldha Fol. 25 He made not the VVelsh Laws Fol. 153 154 When those Laws ascribed to him were compiled Fol. 97 Hugo de port against Picot Fol. 66 67 I. I Arsey Isle Fol. 11. 95 No venemous Creatures therein ibid Ina King his Laws concerning the VVelsh Fol. 50 51. 64 Joseph of Arimathea Fol. 32 Irish Rhein-taloon or partition Fol. 99 Irish and VVelsh one Language originally Fol. 145 Irish and British Laws agree Fol. 153 Irish understand the Manc and Highland Languages Fol. 146 Ireland
admit But to run over some more of his Gables That which he discourses of in his 30th page is a For-gavel which is rightly rendred foris Gabulum and is defined to be quasi extra vel praeter Gabulum quod Domino capitali debetur and this corresponds with what before I have said that it was a Rent or a Duty besides over and above or beyond the Original contract or bargain The like is in Mete-gavel which is Cibi Gablum a Rent of meat or food Swine-gavel which is porcorum Gablum a Rent of Swine Werke-gavel and Werke-gabulum which is operis Gablum Hunig-gavel which is Gabulum mellis * For before that Sagar was from the Indies brought among us the use of Honey was frequent instead thereof So that I have observ'd in some very antient Rentals as great a proportion of Honey as there would be required of Sugar to se●ve such a Family and much reserved to the King in most Counties as appears by Dom●sdey Rent Honey of which sort in Domesdey you may find much and in the 60. Law of King Ina we find a bere-gafol which is a Rent of Beer or rather Barley as Mr. Lambard expoundeth it For in some Countries of England and in Scotland they to this day call Barley Beer There is also in the 66. of King Ina's Laws 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 speaking of a yard of Land which Mr. Lambard renders to signifie Mercede conductam that is hired for Rent or Wages So is it in the Covenants betwixt King Alured and Guthrun the Dane In the second Article where it is said bu tan ðaem c●o●le de on gafollande rit which Mr. Lambard renders thus Siquidem is Rusticus censum annuum impendens non fuerit which I think in English is provided that that Country-man doth not sit on Rented Land for But in the old English as well as to this day in the present Scotch signifies without or wanting c. There I find gafollande is turned into Census which is as much as I have need to make use of or take notice of In the Laws of King Aethelstan it is thus ƿealisc monnes c. ꝧ He ðam cyng gafol-gyldan maeg which is thus Translated Wallus si in eas opes creverit c. ut annuum Regi censum pendat which is if a Welsh-man increaseth so in Riches c. that he can or might yield a yearly Rent to the King Such a one perhaps as we call a Subsidy man or a Man in the King's Books So in the sixth of King Ina's Laws 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is if any one Fights in the House of one that payes Rent and in the 22. of the same King that so often recited Law ƿealH gafolgylda Hund tƿ lftig ●cill which is turned into Latin thus Mr. S. pag. 33. Wallus censum pendens annuum c. in the same sense is the word Gavel-man cited by * Many there are that with Mr. Selden account gafol to signifie several things as tributum c. but not in the least with reference to the Tenure he cites the A●●ales Anglosaxoas In Bibliotheca Cottoniana Anno 1012. Ða ꝧ gafol gelaest sae frið aþas asporene ƿaeson þa to ferde se Here ƿide sƿa He aer gegaderode ƿas Ða bugon to þam cynge of þam Here fif feoƿertig scypa Him beHeton ꝧ Hi ƿoldon þysne eard Healoan He Hi fedan sceolde scƿydon id est Tributo soluto amicitiae juramentis praestitis excrcitus ut ante erat congregatus late dispergitur Maneb vit vero cum Rege ex ipso exercitu quadraginta quinque naves ipsique side datâ promiserunt se Terram hanc d●fensuros modo eos aleret vestiret Rex Danorum Rex tunc Swanus crat quorum ita pepigit Ethelredus Utrumque autem praestationis quam diximus genus Danegeld Danegeldum seu Danageldum id est Tributum Danicum dicebatur Seld. Mar. claus l. 2. c. 11. Here we may observe that geld is most properly Tribute though in the former part of this Saxon citation Mr. Selden renders gafol by Tributum and properly it doth signifie a payment Mr. S. which hath no more in signification than one that payes a Rent and relates not at all to the Tenure and I believe if seriously looked into that many of these compounds who have this similitude of sounds do not hold under or by the Tenure of partition which if so here were nomen sine re and this last may be a Term as significant for any one that payes a rent in Cumberland as in Kent In this recited page it is that Mr. S. hath rightly fixed his Gavel for saith he one thing more I have to note before I leave Gable Gavel c. that with Mala it fignifies Rents Services or Customs and in his 35th page he addeth by this time the Reader is satisfied I hope saith he touching the true construction of Gavel Gafol Gable or how ever else he shall chance to find it written in each importing Cens i. e. a Rent either in Money Provision or Works To conclude I am of the same opinion with Mr. S. that these intermixtures and compounds do all hold a reference to gafol Gablum or Gabulum that all of them have one and the same exposition yet that none of them have any relation to the Tenure of partition or to any other Tenure besides the Renting or paying of a Rent for Land c. There is only one thing more left to be considered which may seem to have in it some strength and that is in the 31. page of Mr. S. where he cites this postea per quandam consuetudinem quae vocatur Gavelate usitatam in Comitatu isto viz. Kanc de terris tenementis de Gavelkynde pro redditibus servitiis quae à retro fuerint de eisdem per plures annos devenerunt eaedem terrae in manus cujusdam Abbatis c. Now this consuetudo de Gavelate used in the Lands and Tenements held in Gavelkind seems the one to have relation to the other for Mr. S. in the beginning of that Paragraph tells us that this Gavelate was not a Reut or a Service but betokeneth a Rent or a Service with-held denied or detained causing the Forfeiture of the Tenement to the Lord and whereas that Record saith it was used in that County upon Lands and Tenements held in Gavelkind Sir Edward Coke as Mr. S. himself cites him saith Gaveletum is as much as to say as to cease or let to pay the Rent Breve de Gavelleto in London est Breve de cessavit in Biennium c. pro redditu ibidem quia Tenementa fuerunt indistringibilia So that this Brief lay in London as well as Kent and Minshew in his Dictionary upon the word Gavelet exemplifies it by a Case That if any Tenant in Gavelkind with-hold his Rent and his Services of the Tenement which he holdeth of
equal Portions but according to Right to this I answer I have shewed before several sorts of partible Tenures and none of them opposite in Condition or Nature but that they may all come under the Genus of Gavel-kynd and all those Partitions although not by equal Portions yet are all according to the right of Gavel-kynd which I think is sufficient to make them appear Members of this Tenure But let us examine under what consideration the Saxon Kings had this Tenure as it was diffusive over England in their Laws And first of all those Laws of King Canutus wherewith Mr. S. is so ill satisfied He after he had very piously taken care for what concerned the Worship of God by the counsel and advice of the Wise-men of his Kingdome on ðaem Halga● midƿintres tid on ƿintanceastre in the holy Mid-winter-tide at Winchester which Mr. Lambard expounds to be Christmas enacted several Laws with this Proaemium before them Ðis is ðonne seo ƿorldcunde gerednes ðeic ƿille mid minan ƿitenan raede ꝧ man Heald ofer eal Englaland that is This is then the worldly behest that by the counsel of my Wise men that men hold over all England by which we may perceive his Laws had an Universal extent over the whole Kingdome and them we find to be Built upon the Basis of Partition So in his 68th Law which is thus rendred Sive quis incuria sive morte repentina fuerit intestatò mortuus Dominus tamen nullam rerum suarum partem praeter eam quae jure debetur Hereoti nomine sibi assumito verum eas judicio suo uxori liberis cognatione proximis justè pro suo cuique jure distribuito which in the Original is Ac beo be His diHte seo aeHte gescyft sƿiþe siHte þife cildan neh magon aelcum be ðaer maeþe de Him togebyrige which is as I conceive thus And by his judgment let the Estate be shifted or rather divided according to right Wife and Children and next of Kinn to each one according to that proportion that belongeth to them this Shifting if the word signifies so or Division must be according to Right Where by the way note that the Saxon word to them known was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that they made no use of the word Gavel-kynd But this was a general Law and as I said before several places had their several manners and proportions of this Tenure of Partition yet all those Custom were to be parted and descend according to Right We find somewhat to the same purpose in the 70th Law of King Canutus Porrò autem quam maritus sine lite controversia sedem incoluerit eam conjux proles sine controversia possidento Sin quae in illum lis fuerit illata viventem eam heredes ad se perinde atque is vivus accipiunto and in the 75th Law it is provided that if any in the Army before or in the presence of his Lord Dye fighting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let his Heriot be forgiven and let his Heirs succeed him in his Goods and his paternal Lands and let it be Shifted or Divided according to Right Which Law seems to be word for word found among the Laws of Edward the Confessour where I find qui in bello ante Dominum suum ceciderit sit hoc interra sit alibi sint ei relevationes condonatae habeant haeredes ejus pecuniam terram ejus sine aliqua diminutione rectè dividant inter se Which Laws did also take place among those that William the Conquerour confirm'd as in the 36th Law that passeth under his name Si quis intestatus obierit liberi ejus haereditatem aequaliter dividant Now the collection from hence lyes naturally thus that that Law which generally reacheth to the behoof of his Children or the Descendants of such as Dye Intestate is the most genuine Law for this Law provides that upon some emergent accidents as dying Intestate or in Battel or some such suddain Chance that these notwithstanding the Land shall run in its proper Chanel of Partition so that these occasions should not attain the power of altering the course thereof which not meeting with such an Obstruction would have without any scruple had its natural course of Partition The like was not only in the Knight-service-land spoken of to be in King Alfred's time but also in all their Bocland and other Lands that had the force put upon them by Testaments or Deeds This partition came yet a little nearer to us for in the 70th Law of Hen. 1. upon the account of Partition or Dividing Provision is made that Si mulier absque liberis moriatur parentes ejus cum marito suo partem suam dividant by which I understand a Division of parts upon a part before received And he that wrote the Glossary to the Saxon Laws upon the word Terra ex scripto saith Haereditatem vero temporibus illis non quemadmodum apud nos solus aetate Maximus adibat verum ad filios omnes aequaliter fundus lege veniebat quod illi viz. Saxones Lande fcyftan dixerunt Cantii hac nostra memoria eodem vocabulo to shift Land id est herciscere fundum partiri appellant By which it seems the proper Kentish word is Shifting-land as by this Glossators judgment who I understand is a Kentishman which if so let them be content with their Saxon Land-shifting and let us alone with our Gavel unless they will be pleased to own their true * The Britons Patrons The Laws I confess that I have lately cited do rather glance upon the Custom of Partition because it is supposed and taken for granted that that Custom was so Paramount that there was little need of expressing thereof which lies so Couched there as it doth amongst the Welsh Laws And are like our common Laws known to all yet not expressed generally received yet not written In the 78th page of Mr. S. we are still upon the Tenure in question is cited Davies his Reports of the Irish custom de Gavel-kind which Book I have seen and to it I say if the Irish know the word by which Davies denominates the Custom among them it further confirms me in my opinion of the British Etymology thereof * Seld. Mare Claus lib. 2. cap. 1. Scotland and Ireland were antiently reputed Britain Hiberma 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicta est Ptolomaeo Mahumedes Acharranides Arabs Mathematicus egregius qui ante annos 900. floruit Terrae latitudinem inquit observantes à loco lineae aequalitatis Aequinoctialis versus Septentrionalem partem insula Tile quae est in Britannia ubi est majoris diei longitudo 20. herarum eam determinari deprehenderunt Eriam alii Thulen pro ipsa Britannia usurpacunt seu Anglia Albategnius de Oceano quà ab Hispanis respicitur verba faciens In co inquit à Septentrionali parte sunt
Brytains there they drove out the Picts totally and seated themselves in their places upon which account it was that they not having any persons with whom they might co-inhabit and so participate of their Customes were upon their settlement constrained to create new Customes or else to revive their own for their best security I think them much in an errour who affirm that the Identity of Language betwixt us and Scotland was occasioned from the multitude of the Profugi or such as for the security of their persons fled under the protection of Malcolm Canmoir King of Scotland in the time of William the Conqueror certainly considering the old animosities betwixt the two Nations it would have ill become the curtesie at least the policy of the Scotc● King to have received so many English guests a by their number or multitude might have been able to plant their Language among his people so different from their own I must confess that notwithstanding this national enmity some he did receive out of whom he chose his wife Margaret Sister to Edgar Etheling and bestowed Lands upon divers of them A Catalogue of several of them the Bishop of Rosse hath given to us by their Surnames of whom he reckons the families of Calder Lokert Gordon Seaton Lauder Waun Meldron Shaw Lermount Libertoun Straquhin Rettraye Dundas Cockeburne Myrtom Inglis Leslye Cargill Cuilra Mar Menzeis Abercrumy Lindsay Vaus Ramsay Loval Torris Preston Sandelandis Bissat Foullis Wardlou Maxuell c. These are the most and principallest in that account from whom it cannot be rationally expected that that Kingdome should receive a mutation of their * Mr. S●ene under the Title of Scotia saith That King David 〈◊〉 first in the third zier of his Reight Ann Dom. 1126. Be his Charter maid Omnibus Scottis Anglis tam in Scotia quam in Lodoneio constitutis gave to St. Cuthbert and his Mo●ks in Durh●m the Laods of Coldingham c. Language and therefore I shall fix it upon a greater-probability Speed saith that Hengist sent for Octa and Ebissa two principal Captains among the Saxons in Germany who being embarked in forty Pinaces sailed about the Picts Coasts wasting the Isles of Orcades and got many Countreys beyond the Trith Yet this was not a settlement for that it is not probable they fixed here at this time again they had much War with the Saxons when the Kingdome of Northumberland was planted in their neighbourhood which may possibly afford some small Knowledge of the Language one to the other but not enough to confine the Scottish tongue within the Mountains and Highlands of Scotland What I find in the Scottish History written by John Lesley Bishop of Rosse a person of great repute being Embassadour for Mary Queen of Scots in the Court of Queen Elizabeth in England whose book was Printed at Rome in the year of our Lord 1578. is that out of which I shall collect this ensuing Discourse Kenneth the 69th King of Scots who flourished about the year of Christ 840. defeated the Picts near Storling and improving his Victory into Northumberland prosecuted them with Fire and Sword so closely that you shall have it in his own words omnes incolas promiscuè nulla sexus habita ratione obtruncat Picticum nomen propè extinxit Qui autem evasere in Daniam Norvegiamvè alii in Northumbriam se abdiderant and presently after concludes Sic Pictorum Gens post Centesimum supra Millesimum ex quo in Albionem venerat annum tantum non deleta est here we find the Pictish Nation in Scotland almost expired who had very long before this been intruders into this part of the Island and during this Kings life those Lands upon which they had lived were re-occupied by the old Irish or Brittish inhabitants of the Hills who were constrained to live in those mountains and fastnesses during the time the Picts kept possession of the Low-lands and at that time the Scots changed the names of those Regions given unto them by the Picts and their Princes into other different appellations But Kenneth dying in the twentieth year of his Reign and in the 855. year of Christ to him succeeded Donald the fifth who is said to be Germanus Kennethi for Buchanan observes that the Custome of Scotland then was If the Sons of the deceased King were * Minoris aetatis under age they elected the most aged and greatest experienced of that Kings line to be their Prince so that this Donald was chosen into the Marble-Chair which Kenneth his Predecesser had brought from Argile and placed in Scone the same that at this present remaineth as a Relique and a Trophy in the Abbey of Westminster Donald proved very offeminate and vicious and puft up with his felicity so over-flowed with vices that he by them gave the opportunity and occasion of the ruine of that which Kenneth by his valour had atchieved the Picts who all this while lay close in Northumberland understanding his carelessness and loosness istam suae libertatis asserendae occasionem arripientes saith the Bishop cum Auxiliaribus Saxonum Britannorum in Scotiam irrumpunt Donaldus collecto exercitu hostibus prope Jedburgum occurrit initoque prelio illos in fugam compulit Rex nostrique milites victoria infolentes ●cctem sequentem sine excubiis supi●t sine ordine sparsi sine disciplina negligentes sine timore stulti in luxu compotationibus consumunt Hostis de hac re certio● factus ad omnem occasionem intentus illos media nocte somno vinoque sepul●os opprimit interfectisque circiter viginti millibus ipsum Donaldum cum nobilibus domum captivum ducit Denaldus ut se in libertatem assererel omnem regionem inter Strivelingum Cludam amnem inte jectam BRITANNIS SAXONIBUS dedidit annuaeque pecuniae tributi nomine pendendae conditione sese astring it Here I observe that this los● that Donald received gave opportunity to the Britains and Saxons their planting themselves in the Low-lands the Scots being reforced into the Highlands But concerning the limits and bounds betwixt these and the Scots he gives us a particular account and shews in what parts the one inhabited and in what part the others and informs us that these Angli-Saxones in hujus pugnae memoriam Strivelingi Arcem prius dirutam iterum extruxerunt Fortheam quoque ponte munierunt quopostea in loco crucem tanquam victoriae signum sustulerunt cui ii versus aetatem illam satis redolentes affabrè insculpti sunt Ang los à Stotis separat crux ista remot is Arma hic stant Brutti stant Scoti sub hac cruce tuti Interea Picti qui Scoticae cladis Auctores fuerant tota Albione à Saxonibus praecipites ejiciuntur and to this Buchanan adds that durae conditiones praepositae quas tamen praesens rerum status tolerabiles faciebat vidert ut omni agro qui inter vallum Severi esset Scoti cederent
Board or Table and Cotarii were Cottagers such as dwelt in a Cottage * Anno 4. Ed. 1. Stat. 1. that is to say a House without Land belonging to it and comes from the Saxon word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the same with Tugurium and Tectum in Latin a ●egendo so as this is in signification a Cover or Shelter because those small Habitations were only made to cover them from the Sun and Weather I am not ignorant of that great mistake the whole Current of Writers have run into those whose Works have been published within these last 300 years where they generally endeavour to load all the indignities of Tenures of Servility and Vassalage upon this Norman change I deny not but that some were at that time introduced especially many Jocular Tenures which were the effects of private contracts betwixt the Lord and his Tenants and not of any general concernment but hence I cannot yield to conclude that all Tenures of Servility were of their introduction Mr. S. continues in his opinion in the 104th page where he writes That Fee-simple Fee-tayl Fee-farm Grand petit Serjeanty Escuage Burgage Villenage c. being all of the Norman plantation and we by them saith he at least since their Conquest of us brought acquainted with them c. perhaps those compounds might be the effect of the consultations of some of the Kings of the Norman race but for the word Fee Minshew discourseth very well upon it for saith he our antient Lawyers either not observed from whence the word grew or at least not sufficiently expressed their knowledge what it signified among them from whom they took it Feudum whence the word Fief or Fee commeth signifieth in the German Language * In like manner doth Mr. S. labour to deduce it from a Saxon original p. 107. Beneficium cujus nomine opera quaedam gratiae testificandae causa debentur and our of Hotoman saith that by this name go all Lands and Tenements that are held by any acknowledgment of any superiority to any higher Lord so is all the Land in England except the Crown land held that is of Feudum or Fee for he that can say most for his Estute sayeth but this Seisitus inde in Dominico meo ut de seudo which is I am seised of this or that Land or Tenement in my demain as of Fee which is no more than if he should say It is my Demain or proper Land after a sort because it is to me and my Heirs for ever yet not simply mine because I hold it in the nature of a benefit from another and Fee-tayl as distinguished was not an introduction of the Normans for that Minshew observes it to have its Original from the Statute of Westm. 2. c. 1. which was made Anno 13. Edw. 1. The word Feud is used familiarly to this day in the Higher and lower Germanyes For what concerus grand petit Serjeanty I believe the words to be French and so introduced by the Normans to express those Services that were due to the Kings of England before the Conquest such Services being reserved by the Saxon Kings The service of Escuage was before the Norman Conquest though not known by that name the like was of Burgage which is no more than a yearly Rent whereby men of Cities and Burrows held their Lands or Tenements of the King or any other Lord which was in use before the Conquest Concerning Villenage Mr. S. doth cite out of Mr. Lambards Perambulation of Kent in Mepham under the Term of Agenes-land this as a very antient passage which had been enough to have convinced me that there had been Villains before the Norman Conquest and it is this Et si Villanus ita crevisset sua probitate quod pleniter haberet quinque hidas de suo proprio alledio c. and in his 114. page citeth an old Version of the 19. and 21. of King Ina's Laws of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is made thereby to signifie Villanus or Colonus and it is convicted by Domesdey Book Survey in Sudsexe thus Radulfus tenet de Willielmo viz. de Warene BRISTELMESTUNE Brictric tenuit de dono Godwini Comitis T. R. E. modo se defendit pro V. hid dim Trā est III car In dnīo est dimid car XVIII villī IX Bordarii cum III car uno servo De gablo IV milia alletium In eadem villa tenet VVidardus de Willo VI. hid unam Vs. pro●tanto se defendit Tres Aloarn tenuerunt de Rege Edwardo potuerunt ire quolibet Unus ex eis habuit Aulam Villani tenuerunt partes aliorum Duorum Here is an express of a Servus and also of the Villani who held this Land in the time of Edward the Confessour Besides this I could allege many more but Sir Edward Coke upon Littleton saith that Villani in Domesday are not there taken for Bond-men but had their name de Villis because they had Ferms and there did works of Husbandry for the Lord and they were ever before named Bordarii which is contrary to Mr. S. in what I cited before of him concerning Bordmanni which I believe is one and the same thing with Bordarii and such as are Bond-men are called Servi Thus Sir Edward Coke But I believe the Normans found these Villains here even by their name by which I believe they were of a very antient standing for that I find them known by the Britains by that Title as they are often mentioned in the Laws of Howel-dha in a Law which before in this 〈◊〉 I mentioned is notice taken of a King's Villain and of a Nobleman's Villain and then another that gives a right to the Foster-children of dividing Land with the Children of the Villein but a little more plainly to bring the proof in those Laws it is Demonstrated how that Tres homines promoveri possunt u●a die that is to say as I guess it they are made Gentlemen in one day here you must take the Latine as I found it Captivus si movetus in Swyd de XXIV officialibus Swyd is dignitas dignity so that the sense of it is this if the Prince bestows upon a Caprive the dignity of being one of the twenty four Chief officers of his Court it is an advancement peculiar or he becomes by it a Gentleman Secundus filius villani si sit clericus our common Law doth differ from the Civil Law which saith Partus sequitur ventrem where as the Common Law hath it partus sequitur Patrem but here provision is made that the Son of a villain being a Clergy man should become a Gentleman which is somewhat explained by the next Tertius Homo ex captiva villa si villa habeat à Domino patrie licentiam Ecclesiam aedificare in Cimiterio ejus corpora sepeliri tunc villa si● omnes homines de ea postea sunt liberi that