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A59082 An historical and political discourse of the laws & government of England from the first times to the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth : with a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England : collected from some manuscript notes of John Selden, Esq. / by Nathaniel Bacon ..., Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. 1689 (1689) Wing S2428; ESTC R16514 502,501 422

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rest looked to the Provisors more strictly than his Predecessors had and not onely confirmed all the Statutes concerning the same already made but had also provided against Provisors of any annual Office or Profit or of Bulls of Exemption from payment of Tythes or from Obedience Regular or Ordinary and made them all punishable within the Statute And further made all Licenses and Pardons contrary thereto granted by the King void against the Incumbent and gave damages to the Incumbent in such vexations for the former Laws had saved the right to the true patron both against Pope and King. And thus the English Kings were Servants to the Church of England at the charges of Rome whilst the Popedome being now under a wasting and devouring Schism was unable to help it self and so continued until the time of Henry the Sixth at which time the Clergie of England got it self under the power and shadow of a Protector a kind of Creature made up by a Pope and a King. This was the Bishop of Winchester so great a man both for Birth parts of Nature Riches Spirit and Place as none before him ever had the like For he was both Cardinal Legate and Chancellor of England and had gotten to his aid the Bishop of Bath to be Lord Treasurer of England Now comes the matter concerning Provisors once more to be revived First More craftily by colloguing with the Nobility who now had the sway in the Kings Minority but they would none An answer is given by the King that he was too young to make alterations in matters of so high concernment yet he promised moderation The Clergie are put to silence herewith and so continue till the King was six years elder and then with Money in one hand and a Petition in the other they renew their suit but in a more subtile way For they would not pretend Rome but the English Churches Liberties they would not move against the Statutes of Praemuniri but to have them explained it was not much they complained of for it was but that one word Otherwhere which say they the Judges of the Common Law expound too largely not onely against the Jurisdiction of the Holy See but against the Jurisdiction of the English Prelacy which they never intended in the passing of those Laws Their Clonclusion therefore is a Prayer That the King will please to allow the Jurisdiction of their Ecclesiastical Courts and that Prohibitions in such Cases may be stopped But the King either perceiving that the Authority of English Prelacy was wholly dependant on the See of Rome and acted either under the shadow Legatine or at the best sought an Independent power of their own Or else the King doubting that the calling of one word of that Statute into question that had continued so long might endanger the whole Law into uncertainty declined the matter saving in the moderation of Prohibitions Thus the English Clergie are put to a retreat from their Reserve at Rome all which they now well saw yet it was hard to wean them The Cardinal of Winchester was a great man and loth to lay down his power but his own Tribe grew weary of him and his power For the greater some Church-men are unless they be better than men the inferiour and better Church-men are worse than men At length therefore the Cardinal is Vnlegated and that power conferred upon the Archbishop of Canterbury a man formerly well approved but by this very influence from Rome rendred suspected Which he perceiving protested against the exercise of the Jurisdiction Legatine without the Kings allowance and so mannerly crept into the Chair The English Kings and Clergie having thus attained the right discerning of each other begin to take up a new way of policy which was to hold nothing of the Popedom but the Form of Worship and Discipline but as touching Jurisdiction they held it a high point of wisdom either to fetch it nigh at home or to be silent in the matter having now found a main difference between the Popes Will and the Church-Law and therefore as formerly the Convocation and Parliament joyned in excluding of Foreigners from Church-livings under the notion of Intelligencers to Enemies abroad So neither now will they allow any provisions for English men and upon this ground the Dean and Chapter of York refused to admit the Bishop of Lincoln to the See of York although assigned he was thereto by Pope Martin and he the darling of Nations being by joynt consent advanced to the Triple Crown that had been formerly tripled amongst three Popes and troubled all Europe And whereas during the Tripapalty much money had been levyed here in England to serve for the recovery of the Popedom to one of English interest now by joynt consent the same is seized upon and stopped as fewel from the fire and spent by Henry the Fifth in the recovery of a Kingdom in France that should have been employed in recovery of a Popedom at Rome These things concurred to give a wound to the Popedom that was never cured to this day Nevertheless the English Clergie was no loser by all this but gained in the whole sum For as it made them more depending on the Crown so it made the Crown more fast to them from which they had received more real immunities and power than the Pope ever did or was able to give them and might expect to receive many more What personal respects these three Kings shewed them hath been already touched Henry the Sixth added one favour which made all the rest more considerable Hitherto they had used to meet in Convocation as upon the interest of Rome and little notice was taken of them now the Nation owns them and in some respects their work and it is granted That the Clerks of Convocation called by the Kings Writ and their Menial Servants shall have such priviledge in coming carrying and going as the Members of the Parliament have So as though they be not Members yet they are as Members if they assemble by the Kings Writ and not onely by the power of the Legate or Metropolitan The antiquity of this Court is great yet not so great as hath been supposed nor is it that Court of the Ordinary called the Church Gemot mentioned in the Laws of Henry the First as not onely the works thereof therein set down do sufficiently declare but also it is evident that in Henry the Second's days the Grand Councils of this Kingdom were joyntly mixed both of Clergie and Laity Nor could the Clergie shut the Laity from their Councils till about the times of Richard the First or King John. From which time forward the Laity were so far from protecting of them that till these times now in hand all their care was to keep them from violating the Liberty of the people That they were many times notwithstanding called together by the Kings Writ before these times hath
coming nigh unto the push of pike and the King ready for the spoil of both the Barons and Clergy suddenly close their files and like a stone-wall stood firm to each other till the King wearied with succesless labour was glad to give and take breath confirmed the Liberties of the people by his Charter which is now called the Magna Charta for substance and gave such collateral security for performance on his part as did let the World know the thing was as just as himself had been unjust The worst point in the case was that the people got their own by a kind of re disseisin a desperate remedy for a desperate condition wherein the Common-wealth then lay between life and death upon the rack of the will of a King that would be controuled by nothing but his own appetite and was in the end devoured by it CHAP. LVIII Of the state of the Nobility of England from the Conquest and during the Reign of these several Kings UNder the Title of the Nobility of England I shall comprehend all such as are of the greatest eminency for birth or wisdom and learning and advancement into place of Government and Honour These were in the Saxons times the flower of the people flourishing only from the honour that ascended from beneath their deportment then was full of chear and safety to the people after that Royalty sprung up the influence thereof upon them exhaled such a reciprocal interest back again as made them less regardful of their own root whereas we see the more mature flowers are the more propense to turn head and look downward to their own original This distemper was yet much worse by the coming in of the Normans whose Nobility besides their Titles of honour in their own Countrey obtained by custom such command and power amongst the meaner sort being Souldiers under them in time of the service in the field that when the Wars had breathed out their last neither of them could forget or were very careful to lay aside This was observed by Kings and advantage espyed to climb to the top of Monarchy by the help of these great men whom if they could make their own all would be theirs and therein they had prevailed much more than they did if they had been wise enough to have maintained them in unity but in that failing the Kings were necessitated to take parties and serve the Nobility to save the main and thus continued they a considerable party in the Government of this Kingdom from the Normans for the space of two hundred years well-nigh to the prejudice both of the growth of the Prerogative of Kings and Liberties of the Commons and benefit of none but the Lords who in those unquiet times were the chief Commanders in the field This errour of the Kings was soon espied but could not be avoided it is natural to man to be proud and to such to fall into contention another course therefore is taken viz. to raise up some so high as may over-top all and keep them under nor is it altogether without reason for Kings are no ubiquitaries and some must bear their power where they cannot be personally present yet it is dangerous to bestow too much upon one man for there is no man fitting to be a King but himself that is a King and where Kings are immoderate in bestowing power it many times works much woe to the people and not seldom sorrow to the Kings themselves The place of the chief Justice was in shew but one Office yet in these times was in nature of the Kings Lieutenant-general throughout the Kingdom A power and work too great for any one man in the World that can make no Deputies to manage it and yet in those times you shall meet with one man made up of an Arch-bishop a Legat and chief Justice of England or a Bishop a Lord Chancellour a Legat and chief Justice of England and a strange kind of Government must that needs be wherein the Servants Throne is above his Masters and a Subject shall have a plenitudinary power beyond that which his Lord and King had or as the times then were was capable of By these and such like pluralities the great men of England kept the Commons below and themselves above and probably rendred the temper of the Government of this Kingdom more Aristocratical than in after-Ages And if their personal authority was of such value how much rather in their joynt assembly or court of Council concerning which I must agree that as in their original in Germany they did consult and determine of the meaner matters that is to say of matters concerning Property and therefore were in their most ordinary work Meetings of Judges or Courts of Judicature and also matters of defensive War because themselves were the Commanders and lastly in matters of sudden concerment to the State not only to serve as eyes to foresee but to provide also if they can or otherwise to call in the ayd of the peoples advice so also they continued this course and it may be now and then as all Councils have done strained their endeavours beyond their reach especially since the Normans entrance and therefore I shall not deny but that they alone with the King and without the Commons have made many Laws and Constitutions some of which now are called Statutes although many of them in truth are no other than Rules for Judicature which ordinary Courts may frame or Judgments in particular cases such as are the constitutions at Clarindon in Henry the Second's time and many other Laws which are reported to be made between the King and his Lords Nor can I look upon such Laws otherwise than as upon Judgments in Courts of Justice in new points of controversie grounded upon ancient grounds which properly are not new Laws but the ancient Rule applied to new particulars and being so published to the World may bear the name of Laws Ordinances Constitutions or Judgments the word Statute being of latter times taken up and used in a more restrictive sence of which more in their due place Now that this Court was a setled Court of Judicature and so used may appear in that Fines were levied therein and Writs of Right determined as in the great Case between the two Kings of Navar and Castilè referred to the Judgment of Henry the second and tried in this Court it is said that the Tryal was by Plea and if need were by Battel The Judges in this Court were the Baronage of England for the entry of Judgment in that great Case is thus Comites Barones Regalis Curiae Angliae adjudicaverunt c. So as though doubtless many were absent some being enemies others discontented others upon other occasions yet all might claim their Votes as Barons The President over all the rest was the Chief Justice as if the King were present then himself and by him was the Sentence or Judgment
for the Saxons to get all their bounds being predetermined by God and thus declared to the world In all which God taming the Britons pride by the Saxons power and discovering the Saxons darkness by the Britons light made himself Lord over both people in the conclusion CHAP. V. Of Austin's coming to the Saxons in England His Entertainment and Work. DUring these troublesome times came a third party that wrought more trouble to this Isle than either Pict or Saxon for it troubled all This was the Canonical power of the Roman Bishop now called the Universal Bishop For the Roman Emperour having removed the Imperial residence to Constantinople weakned the Western part of the Empire and exposed it not only to the forrain invasions of the Goths Vandals Herules Lombards and other flotes of people that about these times by secret instinct were weary of their own dwellings but also to the rising power of the Bishop of Rome and purposely for his advancement Who by patience out-rode the storms of forrain force and took advantage of those publick calamitous times to insinuate deeper into the Consciences of distressed people that knew no other consolation in a plundred estate but from God and the Bishop who was the chief in account amongst them The power of the Bishop of Rome thus growing in the West made him to out-reach not only his own Diocess and Province but to mind a kind of Ecclesiastical Empire and a title according thereunto which at length he attained from an Emperor fitted for his turn and that was enough to make him pass for currant in the Empire But Britain was forsaken by the Roman Empire above 153 years before So as though the Emperor could prefer his Chaplains Power or Honour as far as his own which was to the French shore yet Britain was in another world under the Saxons power and not worth looking after till the plundering was over and the Saxon affairs setled so as some fat may be had Then an instrument is sought after for the work and none is found so far fit to wind the Saxon up to the Roman bent as a Monk that was a holy humble man in the opinion of all but of those that were so in the truth and knew him This is Austin sent by Pope Gregory to do a work that would not be publickly owned It was pretended to bring Religion to the Saxons in England therefore they give him the title of the Saxon Apostle but to be plain it was to bring in a Church-policy with a kind of worship that rendred the Latria to God and the Dulia to Rome The Saxons were not wholly distitute of Religion and that Gregory himself in his Letter to Brunchilda the French Queen confesseth Indicamus saith he ad nos pervenisse Ecclesiam Anglicanam velle fieri Christianam so as there was a good disposition to Religion before ever Austin came and such an one as rang loud to Rome But far more evident is it from the Saxons keeping of Easter more Asiatico which custom also continued after Austins coming fifty years sore against Austins will. The dispute between Coleman and Wilfride bears witness to that and it had been a miraculous ignorance or hardness had the Saxons a people ordained for mercy as the sequel shewed conversed with the Christian Britons and Picts above 150 years without any touch of their Religion If we then take Austin in his best colour he might be said to bring Religion to the South-Saxons after the Roman garb and his hottest disputes about Easter Tonsure the Roman supremacy and his own Legatine power and his worthy Queries to the Pope shew he regarded more the fashion than the thing and the fashion of his person more than the work he pretended for he loved state and to be somewhat like to the Legate of an Universal Bishop and therefore of a Monk he suddenly becomes a Bishop in Germany before ever he had a Diocess or saw England and after he perceived that his work was like to thrive he returned and was made Archbishop of the Saxons before any other Bishops were amongst them and after three years had the Pall with title of Supremacy over the British Bishops that never submitted to him His advantages were first his entrance upon Kent the furthest corner of all the Island from the Britains and Picts and so less prejudiced by their Church-policy and at that very time interessed in the Roman air above all the other Saxons for their King had Married a Daughter of France one that was a pupil to Rome and a devout woman she first brought Austin into acceptance with the King who also at that present held the chief power of all the Saxon Kings in this Isle which was now of great efficacy in this work for where Religion and power flow from one spring to one stream it is hard to chuse the one and refuse the other And thus Rome may thank France for the first earnest they had of all the riches of England and we for the first entrance of all our ensuing bondage and misery Austin had also a gift or trick of working miracles whether more suitable to the working of Satan or of God I cannot define It seems they walked onely in the dark for either the Britons saw through them or saw them not nor could Austin with his miracles or finess settle one footstep of his Church-poliy amongst them happily they remembring the Roman Dagon liked the worse of the Roman woman and the rather because the Carriage of their Messenger was as full of the Archbishop as it was empty of the Christian. I would not touch upon particular passages of action but that it is so remarkable that Austin himself but a Novice in comparison of the British Bishops the clearest lights that the Northern parts of the world then had and unto whom the right hand of fellowship was due by the Roman Canon should nevertheless shew no more respect to them at their first solemn entrance into his presence than to Vassals I would not but note the same as a strong argument that this whole work ab initio was but a vapour of Prelacy This the British Bishops soon espied and shaped him an answer suitable to his message the substance whereof was afterward sent him in writing by the Abbot of Bangor and of late published by Sir Henry Spelman as followeth BE it known and without doubt unto you that we all and every one of us are obedient and subject to the Church of God and to the Pope of Rome and to every godly Christian to love every one in his degree in perfect Charity and to help every one of them by word and deed to be Children of God And other obedience than this I do not know to be due to him whom you name to be Pope nor by the Father of Fathers to be claimed or demanded And this obedience we
they were in their original and what overplus they had by Laws And first concerning the Metropolitan In his original his Office was to visit the Bishops admonish and exhort them and in full Synod to correct such disorders as the Bishop could not reform and in all things to proceed according to the prescript Canon Thus witnesseth Boniface an Archbishop to an Archbishop of an Archbishop not according to the practice of the times wherein it was written but according to the ancient rule For long before Boniface his time Archbishops were swoln beyond the girt of the Canon and before that England wa● honoured with that rank of men Metropolitans were become Metrono●●ians and above all rule but that of their own will and through common custom had no regard to any other so as if England will have them it must be content to have them with their faults But the truth is the dignity or title which you will was a plant of that virulent nature that would scarce keep under-ground in the time of the hottest persecution For Steven Bishop of Rome liked the title of Universal Bishop And after a little peace it 's a wonder how it grew to that height that it had and no less wonderful that the Saxons gave entertainment to such Potentates Much of whose spirits they might have observed in the entrance of their first Archbishop Austin if God had not given them over to thraldom under the mystery of iniquity of sinful man aspiring into the place of God taught by that Courtly messenger of Rome because they would not stoop to that mystery of godliness God manifested in the flesh as it was taught in simplicity by the rural Picts and Britons But this was not all for because Archbishops were gotten above Canon which was thought scandalous therefore they gave as large a power by Canon as the former usurpation amounted unto and so stretched the Canon to the mind of the man whenas they should have rather reduced the man to the Canon The words of the Canon in our English tongue run thus It belongs to the Metropolian Bishop to rule Gods Churches to govern chuse appoint confirm and remove Abbots Abbotesses Presbyters and Deacons and herewith the King hath nothing to do And thus though the apparent power of Archbishops was great and unlimited yet what more was wrapped up in that word Churches only time must declare for it is very likely that in those daies it was not understood yet the practice doth not obscurely declare the matter for before this Law was established by Withered in a Council wherein Bertnaldus Archbishop of Canterbury was president and who was first Primate of England Theodore Archbishop of Canterbury used such power over other Bishops in ordaining or removing them as a Writer saith that his rule was no other than perturbatio and impetus animi But the Metropolitan in England as the times then were had yet a further advantage even over Kings themselves for there were divers Kingdoms in this Island and Kings had no further power than their limits afforded them But there was but one Metropolitan for a long time in all the Saxon Territories so as his power was in spirituals over many Kingdoms and so he became indeed Alterius orbis Papa And it was a remarkable testimony of Gods special providence that the spirits of these petty Popes should be so bound up under the notion of the infallibility of the Roman Chair that they had not torn the European Church into as many Popedoms as Provinces But no doubt God ordered it for a Scourge to the World that Antichrist should be but one that he might be the more absolute Tyrant and that Kings should bow down their necks under the double or rather multiple yoke of Pope and Archbishops for their Rebellion against the King of Kings CHAP. VIII Of the Saxon Bishops HAd not Bishops been somewhat sutable the Roman Clergy had not been like it self and it had been contrary to Austin's principles to have advanced to Bishopricks men better qualified than himself They first ruled the Saxon Church joyntly in the nature of a Presbytery till about Sixty years after Austin's time their pride would not endure together any longer and it may be grew somewhat untractable under the Metropolitan that resolved to be prouder than all and thereupon Theodore Archbishop of Canterbury first divided his Province into Five Diocesses and by appointment of the Kings and People placed Bishops over each every one of them being of the right Roman stamp as himself was of the right Roman shaving And it had been a wonder if Episcopacy now for the space of Three hundred years degenerated and that into such a monstrous shape as a Pope should by transplanting become regenerate into their original condition of meekness and humility But it is a much greater wonder that they should become so purely ambitious as not to endure a thought of the ways of sobriety but would be proud by Law to let all the world know that they held it no infirmity but an honour For albeit that in the first time the Bishops work was to instruct teach to see the service of God to be diligently purely administred in publick Congregations to Exhort Reprove by teaching to amend such matters as he should find in life and Doctrine contrary to Religion and accordingly they carried themselves meekly and humbly studying peace truth and medled not with Secular Affairs they are now grown up into State and must now ride on horse-back that were wont to go on foot Preaching the Word and must be respected above the rank of ordinary Presbytery none must doubt of their truth nor question their words but they must be holden Sacred as the word of a King sine juramento sit irrefragabile Their presence must be a Sanctuary against all violence all Clerks and Religious houses must stoop under their power their sentence must be definitive and thus advanced they must keep state viz. not go too far to meet Princes in their approach towards them nor to light off their Horses backs to do Princes Reverence at their meeting because they are equal to Princes and Emperours and if any Bishop shall behave himself otherwise and after the old rustical fashion for such are the words of the Canon for disgrace done to their Dignity they must be suspended So as by their own confession Bishops henceforth are Bishops of a new fashion that must incur a note of infamy for shewing any gesture of humility to Princes which if any man will see more fully let him peruse the Canon if he please But this is not sublime enough they must be not only equal but in many respects superiour to Princes for in matters that concern God Omnibus dignitatibus praesunt and more plainly Princes must obey them Ex corde cum magna humilitate and this was
sentencing one to suffer death upon the Coroners record without allowing the Delinquent liberty of Traverse This Officer also was made by election of the Freeholders in their County-Court as the Sheriff was and from amongst the men of chiefest rank in the County and sworn in their presence but the Kings Writ led the work CHAP. XXIV Of the County-Court and the Sheriffs Torne THE Government of the County in times of peace consisted much in the administration of Justice which was done in the publick meetings of the Freeholders and their meetings were either in one place or in several parts of the County in each of which the Sheriff had the managing of the acts done there The meeting of the Free-men in one place was called the Folkmote by the Saxons saving the judgment of the honourable Reporter Coke Instit. 2. p. 69. and of latter times the County-Court the work wherein was partly for consultation and direction concerning the ordering of the County for the safety and peace thereof such as were redress of Grievances election of Officers prevention of dangers c. and partly it was judicial in hearing and determining the common Pleas of the County the Church-affairs and some trespasses done therein but not matters criminal for the Bishop was Judge therein together with the Sheriff and by the Canon he was not to intermeddle in matters of Blood yet neither was the Bishops nor Sheriffs work in that Court other than directory or declaratory for the Free-men were Judges of the act and the other did but edocere jura populo yet in special cases upon petition a Commission issued forth from the King to certain Judges of Oier to joyn with the others in the hearing and determining of such particular cases But in case of injustice or errour the party grieved had liberty of appeal to the Kings Justice Nor did the Common Pleas originally commence in the County-Court unless the parties dwelt in several Liberties or Hundreds in the same County and in case any mistake were in the commencing of Suits in that Court which ought not to be upon complaint the Kings Writ reduced it to its proper place and in this also the Kings own Court had no preheminence In those ancient times this County-Court was to be holden but twice a year by the constitution of King Edgar but upon urgent emergencies oftner and that either by the Kings special Writ or if the emergent occasions were sudden and important by extraordinary summons of ringing the Moot-bels Unto this Court all the Free-men of the County assembled to learn the Law to administer Justice to provide remedy for publick inconvenience and to do their fealty to the King before the Bishop and Sheriff upon Oath and in the work of administring Justice causes concerning the Church must have the precedency so as yet the Canon-Law had not gotten footing in England The other Court wherein the Sheriff had the direction was in the meeting of the Free-men in several parts of the County and this was anciently and now is called the Sheriffs Torne which simply considered is but a Hundred-Court or the Sheriffs Torne to keep the Hundred-Court It was ordered to be kept twice every year viz. at the Lady-day and Michaelmas or soon after Unto this Court all the Free-holders of the Hundred repaired and there they the Bishop and Sheriff executed the same power and work for kind that they did in the County-Court In this Court all the Suits in the Hundred-Court depending had their determination and others had their commencement and proceedings as well the Pleas of the Crown as others Some have conceived it to be a County-Court or superiour thereto but there being no ground thereof I conceive it to be no other than a Visitation of the County by parcels or in circuit CHAP. XXV Of the Division of the County into Hundreds and the Officers and Court thereto belonging COunties were too great to meet upon every occasion and every occasion too mean to put the whole County to that charge and trouble and this induced sub-divisions the first whereof is that of the Hundred now and also anciently so called but as ancient if not more is the name Pagus for the Historian tells us that the Germans in the executing of their Laws a hundred of the Free-men joyned with the chief Lord per pagos vicosque which first were called Centenarii or Hundreders from their number but used for a title of Honour like the Triarii And as a second hereunto I shall add that testimony of the Council at Berkhamsted which speaking the reduction of Suits from the Kings Court ad pagi vel loci praepositum in other places it is rendred to the Governours of the Hundred or Burrough And at this day in Germany their Country is divided into Circuits called Centen or Canton and Centengriecht and the Hundreders they call Centgraven or Hundred-chiefes whether for Government in time of peace or for command in time of War the latter whereof the word Wapentake doth not a little favour Amongst these one was per eminentiam called the Centgrave or Lord of the Hundred and thereunto elected by the Free men of that Hundred and unto whom they granted a stipend in the nature of a Rent called Hundredsettena together with the government of the same The division of the County in this manner was done by the Free-men of the County who are the sole Judges thereof if Polydores testimony may be admitted and it may seem most likely that they ruled their division at the first according to the multitude of the Inhabitants which did occasion the great inequality of the Hundreds at this day The Government of the Hundred rested at the first upon the Lord and the Hundredars but afterwards by Alfred they were found inconvenient because of the multitude and reduced to the Lord or his Bailiff and twelve of the Hundred and these twelve were to be sworn neither to condemn the Innocent nor acquit the Nocent This was the Hundred Court which by the Law was to be holden once every Month and it was a mixt Court of Common-pleas and Crown-pleas for the Saxon Laws order that in it there should be done justice to Thieves and the trial in divers cases in that Court is by Ordeale Their Common-pleas were cases of a middle nature as well concerning Ecclesiastical persons and things as secular for the greater matters were by Commission or the Kings Writ removed as I formerly observed all Free-holders were bound to present themselves hereat And no sooner did the Defendant appear but he answered the matter charged against him and judgment passed before the Court adjourned except in cases where immediate proof was not to be had albeit it was holden unreasonable in those days to hold so hasty process and therefore the Archbishop of York prefers
instigation of her Father whose Conscience told him that the Title to the Crown by inheritance was weakned by his own precedent himself coming to the same by Election of the People contrary to the Title of his Brother Robert. Nevertheless this was not the first time that the English Crown refused to be worn by practice for Henry the first being dead Steven the younger Son to a younger Sister of Henry the first put up head who being of the Royal Stem a Man and a brave Souldier by the ancient course of the Saxons had Title enough to be thought upon in a doubtful Succession Besides he was a rich man and had enough to raise up his thoughts to high undertakings had a Brother a Bishop and Legate to the Pope here in England one who was of a high spirit and vast power advantages enough to have quickned a much duller spirit than his was who was a Son of a Daughter to William the Conquerour And to make him yet more bold he had the upper ground of the Heir who was a woman disadvantaged by a whispering of wilfulness and customary Government like an Empress which was too high a sail for an English bottom wherein so precious a Treasure as the Subjects Liberties was to be shipped Thus provided Steven stepped up to the English Throne and with protestations of good Government entred and made up the match both for Crown and Scepter the People waving the Title both of Empress and Heir The pretensions of the E. of Bloys elder Brother to Steven gave way to the common Law and Liberties of the Subject to fasten root and gather strength after the violence of the Norman blasts was out of breath thus making way over Hedge and Ditch of all Oaths till the King was quietly setled in the Throne Quietly said I that I must retract for he never had quiet during his life though generally he was victorious and did as much as a King could do that had the passions of a man and Souldier to give the Subjects content The true cause whereof was an errour in the tying of the Knot wherein he neither became theirs nor they his for the Fealty that was sworn to him was but conditional and eousque and yet the King's promises were absolute and better observed than the Peoples were possibly because his Engagements were more For besides his Protestations the King pledged his Brother the Legate to the people and mortgaged himself to his Brother and to boot gave both to the Clergie and Barons liberty to build and hold Castles for their private security The issue whereof may remind that too much countersecurity from the King to the people is like so many Covenants in Marriage that make room for jealousie and are but seeds of an unquiet life And thus it befel this King's Reign His first troubles are brought in by Historians as if they dropped from Heaven yet probably came immediately from without viz. from beyond Sea where the Empress was for as the King's Engagements were in their first heat on the one side so was also the Empress's Choler on the other side and therefore might make the first assault And the King 's first success therein falling out prosperously for him gave him a conceit that he was strong enough to encounter his own Covenant although in truth he invaded but the skirts thereof I mean that collateral security of Castles for by experience he now feels that they are blocks in his way he must therefore have them into his own power But the Clergie loth to forgo their pawn till they had their full Bargain for now they were working hard for investitures of the Mitred Clergie under the patronage of a Legate that had the King in bonds acted their parts so well as they engaged the Nobility for their liberty of Castles in which Atchievement the King was taken prisoner The Empress betakes her self to the Clergie and by the Legate's means procures a kind of Election to be Queen But she sick of the Womans humour and thinking too much of the Empress and too little of the Queen and forgetting that the English Crown would not fit an Empress unless she could fit her head first to it choaked her own Title by Prerogative and so let the Crown slip through her own hands which fell upon the head of Steven again who maintained it by his Sword after by Composition and then died a King. And thus like a Vapour mounted up by the Clergie tossed by Tempests for a time and at length falling he gave way to the Crown to have its free course to the Empress's Son by Geoffery Plantagenet This was Henry the second the most accomplished for Wisdom Courage and Power of all his Predecessors and one that wanted nothing but purpose to have undone what the foregoing Princes had done in the setling of the Liberties of the People for the Subjects were tired with the unquiet former times and the Clergie in distraction through the Schism in the Popedom between Victor the fourth and Alexander the third and very unfitting all were to dispute the point of Prerogative with so mighty a Prince And it was the wisdom of God to order his affairs so as that he was not very fit to dispute with the people in that case for his Title to the Crown was not very excellent being neither Heir to the last King that Reigned nor to the last of that Title I mean to Henry the first but Son only to the Empress who was now alive and by descent was to be preferred before all other His Title therefore is clearly by compact and agreement made between the Lords King Steven and himself all being then ready to try the right by the Sword to that to which none of them had any right at all at that time but by the favour of the people Nor did the King ever after dispute the strength of this Title although before he died his Mothers death conveyed over to him what right of descent soever was consistent with the Law of the Crown nor did occasion favour him thereto for as it is never seen that any man is honoured by God with many advantages without proportionable employment for the same so it befel with this King His great Territories in France brought jealousie in the rear and thence strife and contention with France enough to turn his thoughts from waxing wanton against his own people and therefore his wisdom taught him to prefer peace at home to the chief of his Prerogative to become somewhat popular and yet to lose nothing of a King thereby His way was to keep the Church-men down that had during his predecessors time grown whether more obstinate against the King or insolent over the people is hard to judge and in this he had the people to friend and might have prevailed much more than he did but that the people feared the threats of Rome more than he and he if not guilty of Becket's death
cases and of the Writ de cautione admittenda Persons cited and making default may be interdicted and the King's Officer shall compel him to obey If the King's Officer make default he shall be amerced and then the party interdicted may be excommunicated So as the Process in the Spiritual Courts was to be regulated according to Law. Nor did it lie in the power of such Courts to order their own way or scatter the censure of Excommunication according to their own liking This together with all those that forego the Arch-bishop upon his repentance absolutely withstood although he had twice consented and once subscribed to them having also received some kind of allowance thereof even from Rome it self Clergy-men holding per Baroniam shall do such services as to their Tenure belong and shall assist in the King's Court till judgement of Life or Member Two things are hereby manifest First that notwithstanding the Conquerour's Law formerly mentioned Bishops still sate as Judges in the King's Courts as they had done in the Saxon times but it was upon causes that merely concerned the Laity so as the Law of the Conquerour extended onely to separate the Laity out of the Spiritual-Courts and not the Clergie out of the Lay-Courts Secondly that the Clergie especially those of the greater sort questioned their services due by Tenure as if they intended neither Lord nor King but the Pope onely Doubtless the use of Tenures in those times was of infinite consequence to the peace of the Kingdom and government of these Kings whenas by these principally not onely all degrees were united and made dependant from the Lord paramount to the Tenant peravale but especially the Clergie with the Laity upon the Crown without which a strange metamorphosis in Government must needs have ensued beyond the shape of any reasonable conceit the one half almost of the people in England being absolutely put under the Dominion of a foreign power Sanctuary shall not protect forfeited Goods nor Clerks convicted or confessed This was Law but violence did both now and afterwards much obliterate it Churches holden of the King shall not be aliened without License It was an ancient Law of the Saxons that no Tenements holden by service could be aliened without License or consent of the Lord because of the Allegiance between Lord and Tenant Now there was no question but that Churches might lie in Tenure as well as other Tenements but the strife was by the Church-men to hold their Tenements free from all humane service which the King withstood Sons of the Laity shall not be admitted into a Monastery without the Lord's consent Upon the same ground with the former for the Lord had not onely right in his Tenant which could not be aliened without his consent but also a right in his Tenant's Children in regard they in time might by descent become his Tenants and so lie under the same ground of Law For although this be no alienation by legal purchase yet it is in nature of the same relation for he that is in a Monastery is dead to all worldly affairs These then are the rights that the King claimed and the Clergy disclaimed at the first although upon more sober consideration they generally consented unto the five last But their Captain-Archbishop Becket withstood the rest which cost him his life in the conclusion with this honourable testimony that his death Sampson-like effected more than his life For the main thing of all the rest the Pope gained to be friends for the loss of so great a stickler in the Church-affairs as Becket was In this Tragedy the Pope observing how the English Bishops had forsaken their Archbishops espied a muse through which all the game of the Popedom might soon escape and the Pope be left to sit upon Thorns in regard of his Authority here in England For let the Metropolitan of all England be a sworn servant to the Metropolitan of the Christian World and the rest of the English Bishops not concur it will make the Tripple Crown at the best but double Alexander the Pope therefore meaned not to trust their fair natures any longer but puts an Oath upon every English Bishop to take before their consecration whereby he became bound 1. To absolute allegiance to the Pope and Romish Church 2. Not to further by deed or consent any prejudice to them 3. To conceal their Counsels 4. To aid the Roman Papacy against all persons 5. To assist the Roman Legat. 6. To come to Synods upon Summons 7. To visit Rome once every three years 8. Not to sell any part of their Bishoprick without consent of the Pope And thus the English Bishops that formerly did but regard Rome now give their Estates Bodies and Souls unto her service that which remains the King of England may keep And well it was that it was not worse considering that the King had vowed perpetual enmity against the Pope But he wisely perceiving that the King's spirit would up again having thus gotten the main battle durst not adventure upon the King's rear lest he might turn head and so he let the King come off with the loss of Appeals and an order to annul the customs that by him were brought in against the Church which in truth were none This was too much for so brave a King as Henry the second to lose the scare-crow-power of Rome yet it befel him as many great spirits that favour prevails more with them than fear or power For being towards his last times worn with grief at his unnatural Sons a shadow of the kindness of the Pope's Legat unto him won that which the Clergy could never formerly wrest from him in these particulars granted by him that No Clerk shall answer in the Lay-courts but onely for the Forest and their Lay-fee This savoured more of courtesie than Justice and therefore we find not that the same did thrive nor did continue long in force as a Law although the claim thereof lasted Vacancies shall not be holden in the King's hand above one year unless upon case of necessity This seemeth to pass somewhat from the Crown but lost it nothing for if the Clergy accepted of this grant they thereby allow the Crown a right to make it and a liberty to determine its own right or continuing the same by being sole Judge of the necessity Killers of Clerks convicted shall be punished in the Bishops presence by the King's Justice In the licentious times of King Steven wherein the Clergy played Rex they grew so unruly that in a short time they had committed above a Hundred murthers To prevent this evil the King loth to enter the List with the Clergy about too many matters let loose the Law of feud for the friends of the party slain to take revenge and this cost the bloud of many Clerks The Laity haply being more industrious therein than otherwise they would have been
and nothing shall hinder it but the special reservation of the donor and yet he saith that such gift or grant taketh not away the right of the Lord Paramount in his Tenure albeit the gift be in free Alms. Nevertheless it seemeth to be such restraint that the Templars and Hospitallers were fain to find out a new way which was to protect mens Tenements from execution of Law by levying crosses thereon albeit the right of the Lords was not barred and therefore Edw. 1. provided a Law to make this also in nature of a Mortmain within the Statute made in the seventh year of his Reign called the Statute de Religiosis by which it was enacted that in case of such alienations in Mortmain the Lord should have liberty to enter if he failed then the Lord Paramount or if he failed the King should enter and dispose of the same and that no license of Mortmain should be sued out but by the mean Lord's assent and where part of the premises remain still in the Donor and the original Writ mentioneth all the particulars And thus at length was this issue for the present stayed which hitherto wasted the strength of the Kingdom and by continual current emptying it into the mare mortuum of the Clergie consumed the maintenance of Knight service by converting the same to Clerk-service No Judge shall compel a Free-man to make Oath without the Kings command So is the sence of the Law rendred by an ancient Authour and I hope I shall not wrong the Text if I affirm that the Ecclesiastical Judge was included within the equity though properly he be not Balivus for the Law intends to shew that it is a liberty that the Subject hath not to be compelled to take Oath without the Kings especial command and by consequence it sheweth also that the King at that time and until then had the directory of Oaths for it was an ancient Liberty given in the Kings Charters unto such as they pleased viz. to impose Oaths and to punish for breach of Oath and this passed under the word Athae or Athas and so Edmund the Saxon King gave to the Abbey of Glastenbury amongst other Athas Ordulas and the Church-men that first procured vacations from Suits of Law during holy times procured a Law also to be setled by Edward the Saxon King and Gunthurne the Dane that Ordeal and Oaths should be forbidden upon the holy Feasts and lawful Fasts And a wonder it is how it escaped the gripe of the Clergie so long who catched at any thing that had but a glance of Gods worship in it And if this were the Subjects Liberty not to be compelled to Swear surely much more not to be compelled to accuse himself unless by the Law he be especially bound for it is Glanvil's rule Ob infamiam non solet juxta legem terrae aliquis per legem apparentem se purgare nisi prius convictus fuerit vel confessus in curia But the power of the Clergie now was grown strong and they begin to remember themselves and that Oaths are of a holy regard and they men for holiness best able to judge when and to whom they shall be ministred and therefore now they begin to enter their claim and to make a sure Title they get a grant from Pope Innocent to Steven Langton Arch-Bishop of Canterbury of a faculty of licensing administration of Oaths during the time of Lent and he accordingly enjoyed it during the mad time of Henry the Third But Edward the first quarrelled it and left it questionable to Edward the Second who being in his condition as a lost man had less care of such smaller matters and therefore allowed that his Judges of Assizes should be licensed by the Arch-bishop to administer Oaths in their Circuits in the sacred times of Advent and Septuagessima and this course continued till Henry the Eighth's time The Clergie having thus gotten the bridle gallop amain they now call whom they will and put them to their Oaths to accuse other men or themselves or else they are Excommunicated Henry the Third withstood this course if the Clergie-mens complaints in the times of that King Artic. 9. be true and notwithstanding the same the Law holds its course and in pursuance thereof we find an attachment upon a prohibition in this form ensuing Put the Bishop of N. to his pledges that he be before our Justices to shew cause why he made to be summoned and by Ecclesiastical censures constrained Lay-persons men or women to appear before him to swear unwillingly at the Bishops pleasure to the great prejudice of our Crown and Dignity and contrary to the custom of the Kingdom of England And thus both King and Clergie were at contest for this power over the peoples Consciences to which neither had the right otherwise than by rules of Law. Bigamists shall not be allowed their Clergie whether they become such before the Council of Lyons or since and that Constitution there made shall be so construed Whatsoever therefore their Synods in those times pretended against the married Clergie it seemeth by this Law that they had Clergie that were married once and again and yet before and after the Council were admitted as Clerks in the judgment of the Law. But the general Council interposes their authority and deprives them that are the second time married of all their priviledges of Clergie It was it seemeth twenty years and more after that Council before the Church-men in England were throughly reformed for either some were still Bigami at the making of this Law or as touching that point it was vain nor is it easie to conceive what occasion should after so long a time move such exposition the words of the Constitution being Bigamos omni privilegio clericali declaramus esse nudatos Now whether this slow Reformation arose from the defect in Law or in obedience thereto may be gathered from some particulars ensuing First it is apparent that the Canons of general Councils eo nomine had formerly of ancient times gotten a kind of preheminence in this Nation but by what means is not so clear In the Saxon times they were of no further force than the great Council of this Kingdom allowed by express act For the Nicene Faith and the first five general Councils were received by Synodical confirmations of this Kingdom made in the joynt meeting both of the Laity and Clergie and during such joynt consulting the summons to the general Councils was sent to the King to send Bishops Abbots c. but after that the Laity were excluded by the Clergie from their meetings and the King himself also served in the same manner the Summons to the general Council issued forth to the Bishops immediately and in particular to each of them and to the Abbots and Priors in general by vertue whereof they went inconsulto Rege and sometimes Rege
renitente and appeared either personally or by proxie Others came as parties to give and receive direction or hear Sentence in matters tending to spiritual regards And for this cause issued Summons even to Kings as at the Council of Lyons aforesaid it is said that the Pope had cited Regis terrae alios mundi principes dictum principem meaning Henry the third the matter was for assistance to the holy War and to determine the matter between Henry the third and his Clergie men And as in that case so in others of that kind Kings would send their Embassadors or Proctors and give them power in their Princes name interessendi tranctandi communicandi concludendi First of such matters quae ad reformationem Ecclesiae universalis in capite membris then of such as concern fidei orthodoxae fulciamentum Regumque ac principum pacificationem or any other particular cause which occasionally might be inserted So long then as Kings had their votes in the general Councils they were engaged in the maintenance of their decrees and by this means entred the Canon-law into Kingdoms Nor was the vote of Kings difficult to be obtained especially in matters that trenched not upon the Crown for the Pope knowing well that Kings were too wise to adventure their own persons into foraign parts where the general Councils were holden and that it was thrift for them to send such Proctors that might not altogether spend upon the King's purse allowed Bishops and Clergy-men to be Proctors for their Princes that in the Negative they might be pii inimici and less active but in the Affirmative zealous and so make the way wider by the Temporal and Spiritual vote joyned in one Neither did Kings onely save their purse but they also made their own further advantage hereby for by the engagement and respect which these their Proctors had in Councils they being for the most part such as were had in best esteem obtained better respect to the cause that they handled and speedier dispatch Nevertheless the case sometimes was such as could not expect favour and then as the King's temper was they would sometimes ride it out with full sail and to that end would either joyn with their Ecclesiastcal Proctors some of the Barons and great men of their Realm to add to the cry and make their affairs ring louder in the ears of fame although the Pope had the greater vote or otherwise would send an inhibition unto their Proctors and their assistants or an injunction to look to the rights of the Crown as Henry the Third did at the Council at Lyons and this sounded in nature of a Protest and within the Realm of England had the force of a Proviso or Saving But if the worst of all come to pass viz. that the Council passed the cause against Kings without any Inhibition or Injunction yet could it not bind the Law of the Land or Kings just Prerogatives no not in these times of Rome's hour and of the power of darkness For at a Synod holden by Arch-bishop Peckham An. 1280. the Acts of the Council of Lyons were ratified and amongst others a Canon against non-residency and pluralities and yet neither Council nor Synod could prevail for in Edward the Second's time an Abbot presenting to a Church vacant as was supposed by the Canon of pluralities the King whose Chaplain was disturbed enjoyned the Abbot to revoke his presentation upon this ground Cum igitur c. in English thus Whereas therefore that Decree bindeth not our Clerks in our service in regard that the Kings and Princes of England from time to time have enjoyed that liberty and prerogative that their Clerks whilst they attend upon their service shall not be constrained to undertake holy things or to be personally resident on their Benefices c. And if this present Law be considered whereof we now treat which took leave to enact a sence upon a former Canon so long since made and which is all one to mak● a general Council will or nill it to tread in the steps of an English Parliament or which is more mean to speak after the sence of an English Declaration that had not yet attained the full growth of a Statute as was then conceived it will evidently appear that the power of a council made up of a mixture of a few votes out of several Nations or the major part of them being unacquainted with the Laws and Customs of Nations other than their own was too mean to set a Law upon any particuler Nation contrary to its own original and fundamental Law. And as the Voters sent to the grand Councils from England were but few so neither were the Proctors as may appear from this that Pope Innocent out of his moderation if we may believe it and to avoid much expence as he saith did order that the number of Proctors in such cases should be few But in truth the times then were no times for moderation amongst Popes and their Officers and therefore it was another thing that pinched for multitude of Proctors if their number had not been moderated might perhaps if not prevail yet so blemish the contrary party that what the Pope should get must cost him loss of spirits if not bloud And although the Bishops being fast Friends to the Pope by vertue of their Oath did prevail in power and the Pope had the controul of the Council yet the exceeding number of the Proctors on the contrary might render their conclusions somewhat questionable in point of honesty as being made against the mindes of the greater number of persons present though their votes were fewer To avoid this difficulty therefore for more surety-sake the Popes enlarged the number of Voters for whereas it seemeth to be an ancient rule that onely four Bishops should go out of England to the general Council in after-ages not one Bishop could be spared unless in cases of great and emergent consequence as may appear by the Pope's Letter to Henry Third and the case required it for the oppressions of the Pope began to ring so loud as the holy Chair began to shake Neither did Kings confine themselves to any certain number of Proctors notwithstanding the Pope's moderation but as the case required sent more or less as unto the Council at Pisa for the composing and quieting that great Schism in the Popedom Henry the Fourth sent solemn Embassadors and with them nigh eighty in all But unto the Council at Basil Henry the Sixth sent not above twelve or thirteen as Mr. Selden more particularly relateth And unto the Council at Lyons formerly mentioned the Parliament sent but six or seven to remonstrate their complaints of the extortions of the Court at Rome their Legates and Emissaries The sum of all will be that the Acts of general Councils were but Counsels which being offered to the sence of the Parliament of England might grow up
Richard the First were made by the consent of Archbishops Bishops Abbots Earls Barons and Knights of the whole Kingdom for what the great men gained they gained for themselves and their Tenants And the truth is that in those times although publick damage concerned all yet it was ordinary for Kings to make a shew of summoning Parliaments whenas properly they were but Parliamentary meetings of some such Lords Clergy and others as the King saw most convenient to drive on his own design And therefore we find that Henry the Third about the latter part of his Reign when his Government grew towards the dregs he having in the Kingdom Two hundred and fifty Baronies he summoned unto one of these Parliamentary meetings but Five and twenty Barons and One hundred and fifty of his Clergy Nevertheless the Law of King John was still the same and we cannot rightly read the Law in such Precedents as are rather the birth of will than reason Fourthly that no aids were then granted but such as passed under the title Escuage or according thereunto for the words are No Escuage shall be demanded or granted or taken but for redeeming the King's person Knighting of his Son or Marriage of his Daughter Nor is the way of assessing in these times different saving that instead of all the Knights two onely are now chosen in every County the Tenure as it seemeth first giving the Title of that Order and both Tenure and Order now changed into that Title taken up for the time and occasion Fifthly that it was then the ancient custom and so used in the time of Henry the First that the advice of those then present was the advice of the whole and that their advice passed for a Law without contradiction notwithstanding the King 's Negative voice for the words are The matter at that day shall proceed according to the counsel of those that shall be present although all do not come and therefore that clause in the King's Oath quas vulgus eligerit may well be understood in the future and not in the preter tense Last of all though not gathered from the Text of this Law whereof we treat yet being co-incident with the matter it is observable that though the Clergie were now in their ruffle and felt themselves in their full strength yet there befel a posture of state that discovered to the world that the English held not the interest of the Clergie to be of such publick concernment or necessary concurrence in the Government of the Kingdom as was pretended For the Clergie finding Assessments of the Laity so heavy and that occasions of publick charge were like to multiply daily they therefore to save the main stock procured an Inhibition from Rome against all such impositions from the Laity and against such payments by the Clergie and in the strength of this they absolutely refuse to submit to aid Edward the First by any such way although all the Parliament had thereunto consented And thus having divided themselves from the Parliament they were by them divided from it and not onely outed of all priviledge of Parliament but of all the priviledge of Subjects into the state of praemunire and thus set up for a monument to future times for them also to act without the consent of those men as occasion should offer But Henry the Third not satisfied with this ancient and ordinary way of Assessment upon ordinary occasions took up that extraordinary course of Assessment upon all the Freemen of the Kingdom which was formerly taken up onely in that extraordinary occasion of redeeming of the King 's or Lord's person out of captivity and common defence of the Land from piracy and under the Title of Dane-gelt which was now absolutely dead and hanged up in chains as a monument of oppression Nevertheless it cannot be denied but that in former times the Freemen were as deeply taxed if not oppressed with payments to their Lords at such times as they were charged over to the King in the cases aforesaid as by the latter words of the Law aforesaid of King John doth appear and whereby it is probable that the inferiour Lords were gainers The conclusion of the Charter of Henry the Third the same suiting also with the third observation foregoing doth not a little favour the same for it is expresly set down that in lieu of the King's confirmation of the Charter of Liberties aforesaid not onely the Archbishops Bishops Abbots Priors Earls Barons and Knights but also the Freemen and all the Kingdom gave a fifteenth of all their moveables And thus have I summed up and compared both the Copies of the Grand Charters of Englands Liberties saving two particulars inserted into the Forest-Laws of Henry the Third wherein if any thing had been new and unreasonable King John might have colour to except against them as extorted by force and Henry the Third might as he was advised plead nonage and so they might have been choaked in their birth but being all Consuetudines as in the conclusion they are called and Kings ashamed to depend upon such frivolous exceptions it may be wondred what might move them to adventure so much blood-shed and themselves into so many troubles to avoid their own acts unless the writing of them were an obligation acknowledged before the world and they resolving secretly to be under none were loth to publish the same to all men It is a strange vanity in great men to pretend love to Justice and yet not endure to be bound thereto whenas we see that God himself loves to be bound by his word and to have it pleaded because he delights as much to be acknowledged true in performing as good in promising But neither was King John or Henry the Third of this spirit fain they would undo but could not It is true it was at the first but a King's Charter of Confirmation and had Kings been patient therewith it might have grown no bigger but by opposition it rooted deeper and grew up unto the stature of a Statute and setled so fast as it can never be avoided but by surrender from the whole body Having thus summed up the Liberties of the Subjects and Free-men of England under this Charter I shall make some Appendix hereunto by annexing a few additionals in these times established and although they come not within the letter of the Grand Charter yet are they subservient thereunto And first concerning the King and this either as he is King or as he is Lord. As King he had these Prerogatives above all Lords The King shall have the custody of Fools and Ideots Lands for their maintenance and shall render the same to their Heirs And concerning Mad-men and Lunaticks the King shall provide a Bailiff for their maintenance rendering account to them when they are sober or to their Administrators It is no less liberty or priviledge of the People that Fools and Mad persons
especially such as the King was most devoted unto to put more confidence in the Pope's Amen than in all the prayers of his Commons with his own Soit fait to boot The sum then will be that the Prize was now well begun concerning the Pope's power in England Edward the Third made a fair blow and drew bloud Richard the Second seconded him but both retired The former left the Pope to lick himself whole the later gave him a salve and yet it proved a Gangrene in the conclusion The second means used to bring down the power of the Pope in this Nation was to abate the power or height of the English Clergie For though the times were not so clear as to espy the root of a Pope in Prelacy yet experience had taught them that they were so nigh engaged that they would not part And therefore first they let these men know that Prelacy was no essential Member to the Government of the Kingdom but as there was a Government established before that rank was known so there may be the like when it is gone For Edward the Third being troubled with a quarrel between the two Archbishops of Canterbury and York concerning Superiority in bearing the Cross and the important affairs of Scotland so urging summoned a Parliament at York which was fain to be delayed and adjourned for want of appearance and more effectual Summons issued forth But at the day of adjournment none of the Clergy of the Province of Canterbury would be there and upon this occasion the Parliament was not onely interrupted in their proceedings but an ill Precedent was made for men to be bold with the King's Summons in such Cases as liked not them and thereupon a Statute was made to enforce Obedience upon Citizens and Burgesses and such Ecclesiasticks as held per Baroniam Nevertheless when the matters concerning provisors began to come upon the Stage which was within two years after that Law was made the Clergy found that matter too warm for them and either did not obey the Summons or come to the Parliament or if they came kept aloof or if not so would not Vote or if that yet order their Tongues so as nothing was certainly to be gathered but their doubtful or rather double mind These Prelates thus discovered the Parliament depended no more upon them further than they saw meet At six or seven Parliaments determined matters without their Advice and such matters as crossed the principles of these men and therefore in a rational way might require their Sence above all the rest had they not been prepossessed with prejudice and been parties in the matter Nor did Edward the Third ever after hold their presence at so high Repute at such Meetings and therefore summoned them or so many of them as he thought meet for the occasion sometimes more sometimes fewer and at a Parliament in his forty and seventh year he summoned only four Bishops and five Abbots And thus the matter in fact passed in these times albeit the Clergie still made their claim of Vote and desired the same to be entred upon Record And thus the Parliament of England tells all the world that they hold themselves compleat without the Clergie and to all intents and purposes sufficient to conclude matters concerning the Church without their Concurrence Thus began the Mewing time of Prelacy and the principal Feather of their wings to fall away having now flourished in England nigh eight hundred years And had future Ages pursued the flight as it was begun these Lordings might have beaten the air without making any speedy way or great work saving the noise A third step yet was made further in order to the reducing of the power of the Popedom in England but which stumbled most immediately upon the greatness of the Prelates For it was the condition of the Spiritual powers besides their height of Calling to be set in high places so as their Title was from Heaven but their Possessions were from Men whereby they gained Lordship Authority and power by way of Appendix to their Spiritual Dignities This addition however it might please them yet for a long time before now it had been occasion of such murmure and grudge in the Commons against the Clergie as though it advanced the Clergie for the present yet it treasured up a back-reckoning for these men and made them liable to the displeasure of the Laity by seizure of their great places whenas otherwise their Ecclesiastical Dignities had been beyond their reach And of this these times begin now to speak louder than ever not only by complaints made in Parliament by the people but also by the Lords and Commons in Parliament to the King That the Kingdom had been now long and too long governed by the Clergie to the disherison of the Crown and therefore prayed that the principal Offices of the Kingdom might henceforth be executed by the Laity And thus the stir arose between the Lords Temporal and Spiritual each prevailing or losing ground as they had occasion to lay the way open for them The Duke of Lancaster being still upon the upper ground that as little regarded the Popes Curse as the Clergie loved him But the worst or rather the best is yet behind outward power and Honourable places are but under-setters or props to this Gourd of Prelacy that might prove no less prejudicial by creeping upon the ground than by perking upward For so long as Errour abideth in the Commons Truth can have little security amongst Princes although it cannot be denyed but it is a good sign of a clear morning when the Sun-rising gloryeth upon the top of the Mountains God gives Commission therefore to a Worm to smite this Gourd in the Root and so at once both Prelate and Pope do wither by undermining This was Wickliff that had the double honour of Learning in Humane and Divine Mysteries The latter of which had for many years passed obscurely as it were in a twilight amongst the meaner sort who had no Endowments to hold it forth amongst the throng of Learned or great men of the world And though the news thereof did sound much of Holiness and Devotion Themes unmeet to be propounded to an Age scarce civilized yet because divers of them were more immediately reflecting upon the policy of the Church wherein all the greater sort of the Church-men were much concerned but the Pope above all the rest the access of all the matter was made thereby more easie to the consideration of the great Lords and Princes in the Kingdom who out of principles of State were more deeply engaged against the Pope than others of their Rank formerly had been Duke John of Gant led the way in this Act and had a party amongst the Nobility that had never read the Canon-Law These held forth Wickliff and his Learning to the world and Edward the Third himself favoured it well enough but in his old Age desiting his
eat their own word However for the present the House of Lancaster hath the Crown entailed and the Inheritance is left in the Clouds to be revealed in due time For though this was the first precedent of this kind yet was it not the last wherein the Parliament exercised a Power by Grant or Confirmation to direct the Law and Course of the Crown as they pleased The due consideration hereof will make the things that follow less strange For the Parliament according to occasion as the Supream Power of this Kingdom exercised Supream Jurisdiction in order to the safety of the Kingdom as if no King had been to be found in issuing forth Writs under the Great Seal concluding of matters without the Royal Assent treating of Peace with Foreign Nations and of other matters and determining their Resolves before discovery made to the King of their Counsels making Ordinances and ruling by them 3 H. 6. n. 29. 2 H. 6. n. 27. 8 H. 6. n. 12. referring matters determinable in Parliament to be determined according to their directions Authoritate Parliamenti confirming Peace made by the King protesting against Peace made without or against their consent making Embassadours with power to engage for the Kingdom making Generals of the Army Admirals at Sea Chancellors Barons and Privy Counsellors and giving them instructions 8 H. 4. n. 73. and 76. and 31. 5 H. 4. n. 57. 31 H. 6. n. 21. and binding them to observance upon Oath 11 H. 4. n. 19 39. ordering the person of the King denying his power of Judicature in Parliament and ordering his Houshold and Revenue besides many other particulars Now if such as these things were thus done not by one Parliament which possibly might be overswayed by Factions but by the course of a Series of Parliaments that mightily laboured against Faction and unworthy ends and aims that man who shall determine the same to be unjust or indiscreet should himself first be determined to be very just and exceeding wise Nor was the Parliament partial in all this but being in a way of Reformation it set upon the work of reforming it self Some that are very zealous in the point of Arbitrary and Absolute Government of Kings in this Nation and in all other amongst other grounds rest upon this one That an English King hath power to call Parliaments and dissolve them to make and unmake Members as he shall please I do easily grant that Kings have many Occasions and Opportunities to beguile their People yet can they do nothing as Kings but what of right they ought to do They may call Parliaments but neither as often or seldom as they please if the Statue-Laws of this Realm might take place Nor if they could is that power necessarily and absolutely arising from Supremacy seeing it is well known that such power is betrusted by the Superiour States in other Nations to the Inferiour who dayly attend on publick Affairs and therefore can discern when the general Conventions are most necessary As touching the dissolving of Parliaments against the wills of the Houses it is true that sad precedents have been of later times in that kind and so for want of due attendance Parliaments have been enforced to adjourn to prevent a worse inconvenience but these are infirmities better buried in silence than produced as Arguments of power seeing it is evident that Kings themselves were no greater gainers thereby than an angry man is by his passions It is true al●o that Kings may make Lords and Corporations that may send their Burgesses to the Parliament and thus the King may make as many as he will as the Pope did with the Bishops in the Council of Trent yet cannot he unmake them when he pleases nor take the Members from the Parliament without attainder and forfeiture according to the known Law. Neither can all these Instances prove that the Kings of England have the sole and supreme power over the Parliament Nor did the Parliament in these times allow of any such Authority and therefore proceeded for the reforming of themselves by themselves in many particulars as the Statutes do hold forth And first in the point of Elections for an errour in that is like an errour in the first Concoction that spoils the whole Nutriment they ordained that the Election of Knights shall be at the next County-Court after the Writ delivered to the Sheriff That in full Court between the hours of eight and nine in the morning Proclamation shall be made of the day and place of the Parliament That the Suters duly summoned and others there present shall then proceed to the Elections notwithstanding any Prayer or Commandment to the contrary That the names of the persons elected whether present or absent they be shall be returned by Indenture between the Sheriff and the Elizors and that a Clause to that end shall be added to the Writ of Summons This was enough to make the Sheriff understand but not to obey till a penalty of one hundred pound is by other Laws imposed upon him and a years imprisonment without Baibor Mainprise besides damages for false return in such cases and the party so unduly returned fined and deprived of all the Wages for his service Thus the manner of Election is reduced but the persons are more considerable for hitherto any man of English bloud promiscuously had right to give or receive a Vote although his Residency were over the wide World. But the Parliament in the time of Henry the Fifth reduced these also whether they were such as did chuse or were chosen unto their proper Counties or else rendred them uncapable to vote or serve for any County And the like Order was made for the Burroughs That no person must serve for any City or Burrough nor give vote in Electing such as shall serve for that Town unless they be both free and resiants within that City or Burrough A Law no less wholsom than seasonable For the times of Henry the Fourth had taught men to know by experience That a King that hath Souldiers scattered over the Kingdom can easily sway the County-courts and make Parliaments for their own Tooth Yet this was not enough for all Elizors though of the meanest sort yet are still able to do as much hurt with their Vote as those of the best sort both for wisdom and publick mind can do good by theirs This made Elections much subject to parties and confusions and rendred the Parliament much less considerable A remedy hereunto is provided in the minority of Henry the Sixth viz. That no man should give his Vote in Elections in the County unless he hath forty shillings yearly in free Lands or Tenements and this is to be testified upon Oath of the party And more plainly it is orderded within two years after that each Elizor shall have Frank-Tenement of that value within the same County
be said that the whole lump thereof did belong to the King because much thereof was not so ancient but De novo raised by the Pope's extortion and therefore the true and real profits are by particular Acts of Parliaments ensuing in special words devolved upon him The nature of this power is laid down in this Statute under a threefold expression First It is a visitatory or a reforming power which is executed by enquiry of Offences against Laws established and by executing such Laws Secondly It is an ordinary Jurisdiction for it is such as by any Spiritual Authority may be acted against Irregularities And thus the Title of Supream Ordinary is confirmed Thirdly It is such a power as must be regulated by Law and in such manner as by any Spiritual Authority may lawfully be reformed It is not therefore any absolute Arbitrary Power for that belongs onely to the Supream Head in Heaven Nor is it any Legislative Power for so the Law should be the birth of this power and his power could not then be regulated by the Law nor could every Ordinary execute such a power nor did Henry the Eighth ever make claim to any such power though he loved to be much trusted Lastly This Power was such a Power as was gained formerly from the King by Forein Usurpation which must be intended De rebus licitis and once in possession of the Crown or in right thereto belonging according to the Law. For the King hath no power thereby to confer Church-livings by Provisorship or to carry the Keys and turn the infallible Chair into an infallible Throne In brief this power was such as the King hath in the Commonwealth Neither Legislative nor Absolute in the executive but in order to the Unity and Peace of the Kingdom This was the Right of the Crown which was ever claimed but not enjoyed further than the English Scepter was able to match the Romish Keys And now the same being restored by Act of Parliament is also confirmed by an Oath enjoyned to be taken by the people binding them to acknowledge the King under God supream head on earth of the Church of England Ireland and the Kings Dominions in opposition to all forein Jurisdiction And lastly by a Law which bound all the people to maintain the Kings Title of Defender of the Faith and of the Church of England and Ireland in Earth the supream Head under the peril of Treason in every one that shall attempt to deprive the Crown of that Title We must descend to particulars for by this it will appear that these general Laws concerning the Kings refined Title contained little more than matters of Notion otherwise than a general bar to the Popes future interests And therefore the Wisdom of the State as if nothing had been already done did by degrees parcel out by several Acts of Parliament the particular interests of the Popes usurped Authority in such manner as to them seemed best And first concerning the Legislative Power in Church-Government It cannot be denied but the Pope De facto had the power of a Negative vote in all Councils and unto that had also a binding power in making Laws Decrees and Decretals out of his own breast but this was gotten by plunder he never had any right to headship of the Church nor to any such Power in right of such preferment nor was this given to the King as Head of the Church but with such limitation and qualifications that it is evident it never was in the Crown or rightly belonging thereto First Nigh three years after this Recognition by the Clergy in their Convocation it is urged upon them and they pass their promise In verbo Sacerdotii And lastly It is confirmed by Act of Parliament That they shall never make publish or execute any new Canon or Constitution Provincial or other unless the Kings Assent and License be first had thereto and the offences against this Law made punishable by Fine and Imprisonment So as the Clergy are now holden under a double Bond one the honour of their Priesthood which binds their Wills and Consciences the other the Act of Parliament which binds their powers so as they now neither will nor can start Nevertheless there is nothing in this Law nor in the future practice of this King that doth either give or assert any power to the King and Convocation to bind or conclude the Clergy or the People without an Act of Parliament concurring and inforcing the same And yet what is already done is more than any of the Kings Predecessors ever had in their possession A second Prerogative was a definite power in point of Doctrine and Worship For it is enacted that all Determinations Declarations Decrees Definitions Resolutions and Ordinations according to Gods Word and Christs Gospel by the Kings Advice and Confirmation by Letters-patent under the Great Seal at any time hereafter made and published by the Archbishops Bishops and Doctors now appointed by the King or the whole Clergie of England in matters of the Christian Faith and lawful Rites and Ceremonies of the Same shall be by the People fully believed and obeyed under penalties therein comprised Provided that nothing be done contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm A Law of a new birth and not an old Law newly revived or restored This the present occasion and the natural constitution of the Law do fully manifest The occasion was the present perplexity of the people for instead of the Statute Ex officio which was now taken away the Six Articles commonly called the Six-Stringed Whip were gotten into power by a more legal and effectual Original The Parliament had heard the cries of the People concerning this and having two things to eye at once one to provide for the Peoples Liberty and further security against Foreign pretensions the other which was more difficult for the liberties of the Consciences of multitudes of men of several Opinions which could not agree in one judgement and by discord might make way for the Romish party to recover its first ground And finding it impossible for them to hunt both games at once partly because themselves were divided in opinion and the bone once cast amongst them might put their own co-existence to the question and partly because the work would be long require much debate and retard all other affairs of the Commonwealth which were now both many and weighty In this troubled wave they therefore wisely determine to hold on their course in that work which was most properly theirs and lay before them And as touching this matter concerning Doctrine they agreed in that wherein they could agree viz. To refer the matter to the King and persons of skill in that mystery of Religion to settle the same for the present till the Parliament had better leisure the people more light and the minds of the people more perswaded of the way Thus the Estates and Consciences of
in their Original Bishops were meerly Donatives from the Crown being invested by delivery of the Ring and Pastoral Staff and until King John's time the Canonical way of Election was disallowed yet King John by his Charter De communi consensu Baronum granted that they should be eligible which also was confirmed by divers publick Acts of Parliament in after-times and now by this Law last recited and with this way the King was contented for the space of Six years for the Reformation intended by the King was not done at once but by degrees and therefore though this course of Conge d'eslire was brought into use yet the Parliament being of Six years continuance a necessary thing in times of so great change of Policy began this course of Election by giving the King power to nominate and allowing of the Pope power to grant to such his Bulls or Pall at his own will otherwise they should be Consecrated by Commission without his consent And thus at the first the Pope's Concurrence was not excluded though his Negative was In this posture of affairs comes Cranmer to be consecrated Archbishop And being nominated thereunto by the King the wily Pope knowing the Kings aim meaned not to withstand lest he should lose all but granted the Pall as readily as it was desired so as Cranmer is thus far Archbishop of Canterbury without all exception yet he must go one step farther and take the old Oath to the Pope which the King allowed him to do Pro more and which he did renitente Conscientia say some and with a Salvo say others and all affirm it was done Perfunctorie like some worn Ceremonie or civil Complement Nevertheless it was not so soon turned over the Archbishop loved not the Office the King loved not Partnership in this matter and it was evident to all that no man could serve these two Masters any longer an agreement is soon concluded in Parliament to exclude the Popes Power quite out of this game and all is left to be done by the King and his Commissioners by the Law formerly propounded In all this the Pope is loser the English Clergie the savers for the Pall cost Cranmer Nine hundred Marks And the Crown is the great gainer for hereby the King got the men sure to him not onely by their own acknowledgement and submission but also by a Statute-Law And lastly by Oath which to make sure was treble twined once upon their first submission in the Kings Twentie second year when they had been under Praemuniri Secondly Soon after the decease of Queen Katherine Dowager in the Twentie sixth year which Oath was more compleat than the former containing First A Renunciation of all Fealty to the Pope or any Foreign Power Secondly An Obligation to adhere to the Cause of the King and his Successors Thirdly A Disavowing of the Pope otherwise than as another Bishop or fellow hrother Fourthly An Engagement to observe all Laws already established against the Pope's power Fifthly A Disavowing of all appeals to Rome Sixthly An Engagement to inform the King of all Messages or Bulls sent from Rome into England Seventhly An Engagement not to send or be privy to the sending of any Message to Rome for any such purpose The third Oath was that of Fealty which anciently was due to Kings and now revived to be taken by all Bishops upon their admission And thus the English Prelacie having been sworn Slaves to the Papacie ever since Becket's time are now preferred to a more Royal Service and the pursuit by Kings after their right being laid aside by the space of 300 Years is now renewed and the prey seized upon by the Lion who found it upon a better Title and in better condition by much than when at the first it was lost For it was upon some semblance of Reason that the Archbishop and Clergie gained it but being afterwards dispossessed thereof by the Pope and yet without any other shadow of Title but the power of his own gripe for the present he is the Occupant and becomes Proprietor by prescription till now the Felon being apprehended the stolen Goods are the Kings in Right and by Remitter whereunto the Parliament by the Statute adding their Conveyance establishes the same by an unquestionable Title Nevertheless their service is no less servile to this Crown than it had been to the Romish Miter formerly they asserted the Pope's Infallibility now the King's Supremacy They are now called by the King made by the King sent by the King maintained by the King whatsoever they are whatsoever they have all is the King 's He makes Bishops he makes new Bishopricks and divides or compounds the old as he pleaseth by a power given to Henry the Eighth by Parliament Which Oath was never in any Prince before or after him that I can find so as the Crown had it not but the man and it died with him The King thus loaden with Power and Honour above all his Predecessors if without proportionable Maintenance to support the one and act the other must needs consume himself as one in a Tympanie by growing great For though he was left rich by his Father's Treasure yet his Zeal to Rome in its now poor captivated condition under the Imperial power stirring up in him great undertakings abroad besides his own Pleasures and Gallantry at home exhausted that and doubtless had starved these his grand designs had he not found the hidden Treasures of the Cells and Monasteries the sight whereof so rouzed up his Spirits that he adventured upon the purchase though he knew difficulties enough to have stopped his undertakings if he had not resolved both against fear and flattery It was not done without deliberation for the thing was felt as a grievance before the Norman times and complained of in Parliament above a hundred and forty years ago and divers times since but Kings either understood not or believed not or durst not give remedy or had much else to do But now the King is beyond all his Predecessors he knows much dares do more and is at leisure He will go as far as Emperour or French King and beyond them also but would not try masteries with either for they were all Cocks of the game The first occasion that discovered the work feasible was a president made by Cardinal Wolsey whose power was enough to dissolve some petty Cells and no opposition made The King might well expect the work would be as lawful for him and not much more difficult or if any Storms ensued the people that had so long complained and felt the burthen of these excrescences of the Clergie would soon find out a way to calm them the King need do no more than speak and the people will do This opened the door but that which brought the King in was the hold the Pope had in this Kingdom by these Cloistered people who were persons dead in Law and dead to all Law but the
the Opponents Instances which King called a Council stiled Commune Concilium tam Cleri quam Populi and in the conclusion of the same a Law is made upon the like occasion Si Rex Populum Convocaverit c. In both which it is evident that in those times there were Councils holden by the People as well as by the Magnates or Optimates His next instance is in the year 694 which is of a Council holden by the Great men but no mention of the Commons and this he will have to be a Parliament albeit that he might have found both Abbatesses or Women and Presbyters to be Members of that Assembly and for default of better attested the Conclusions of the same notwithstanding the Canon Nemo militans Deo c. But I must also mind him that the same Author reciteth a Council holden by King Ina Suasu omnium Aldermannorum Seniorum Sapientum Regni and it is very probable that all the Wise men of the Kingdom were not included within the Lordly Dignity The third instance can have no better success unless he will have the Pope to be allowed power to call a Parliament or allow the Archbishop power to do that service by the Pope's command for by that Authority this whatever it be was called if we give credit to the Relations of Sir Henry Spelman who also reciteth another Council within three leaves foregoing this called by Withered at Barkhamstead unto which the Clergie were summoned Qui cum viris utique militaribus communi omnium assensu has leges decrevere So as it seemeth in those times Souldiers or Knights were in the Common Councils as well as other Great Men. In the next place he bringeth in a Council holden in the year 747 which if the Archbishop were then therein President as it is said in the presence of the King was no Parliament but a Church-mote and all the Conclusions in the same do testifie no less they being every one concerning Ecclesiastical matters And furthermore before this time the Author out of whom he citeth this Council mentioneth another Council holden by Ina the Saxon-King in the presence of the Bishops Princes Lords Earls and all the wise old men and People of the Kingdom all of them concluding of the intermarriage between the Brittons Picts and Saxons which formerly as it seemeth was not allowed And the same King by his Charter mentioned by the same Penman noteth that his endowment of the Monastery of Glastenbury was made not onely in the presence of the Great Men but Cumpraesentia populationis and he saith that Omnes confirmaverunt which I do not mention as a work necessary to be done by the Parliament yet such an one as was holden expedient as the case then stood Forty years after he meeteth with another Council which he supposeth to be a Parliament also but was none unless he will allow the Pope's Legate power to summon a Parliament It was holden in the year 787 and had he duly considered the return made by the Pope's Legate of the Acts of that Council which is also published by the same Author he might have found that the Legate saith That they were propounded in publick Council before the King Archbishop and all the Bishops and Abbots of the Kingdom Senators Dukes or Captains and People of the Land and they all consented to keep the same Then he brings in a Council holden in the year 792. which he would never have set down in the List of Parliaments if he had considered how improper it is to construe Provinciale tenuit Concilium for a Parliament and therefore I shall need no further to trouble the Reader therewith The two next are supposed to be but one and the same and it is said to be holden Anno 974 before nine Kings fifteen Bishops twenty Dukes c. which for ought appears may comprehend all England and Scotland and is no Parliament of one Nation but a Party of some Nations for some great matter no doubt yet nothing in particular mentioned but the solemn laying the Foundation of the Monastery of Saint Albans What manner of Council the next was appeareth not and therefore nothing can be concluded therefrom but that it was holden in the year 797. That Council which is next produced and in the year 800 and is called in great Letters Concilium Provinciale which he cannot Grammatically construe to be a Parliament yet in the Preface it is said that there were Viri cujuscunque dignitatis and the King in his Letters to the Pope saith concerning it Visum est cunctis gentis Nostrae sapientibus so as it seemeth by this and other Examples of this nature that though the Church-motes invented the particular conclusions yet it was left to the Wittagenmote to judge and conclude them There can be no question but the next three Precedents brought by the Opponent were all of them Church-mates For the first of them which is said to be holden in the year 816 is called a Synod and both Priests and Deacons were there present which are no Members of Parliament consisting onely of the House of Lords and they all of them did Pariter tractare de necessariis utilitatibus Ecclesiarum The second of them is called a Synodal Council holden Anno 822 and yet there were then present Omnium dignitatum Optimates which cannot be understood onely of those of the House of Lords because they ought all to be personally present and therefore there is no Optimacy amongst them The last of these three is called Synodale Conciliabulum a petty Synod in great Letters and besides there were with the Bishops and Abbots many wise men and in all these respects it cannot be a Parliament onely of the great Lords The next Council said to be holden in the year 823 cannot also be called properly a Parliament but onely a Consultation between two Kings and their Council to prevent the invasion of the Danes and the attests of the Kings Chaplain and his Scribe do shew also that they were not all Members of the House of Lords The Council cited by the Opponent in the next place was holden Anno 838 being onely in nature of a Council for Law or Judicature to determine the validity of the King 's Grant made to the Church of Canterbury which is no proper work for a Parliament unless it befal during the sitting of the same The next is but a bare title of a Council supposed to be holden Anno 850 and not worth its room for it neither sheweth whether any thing was concluded nor what the Conclusions were The work of the next Council alleadged to be holden Anno 851 was to confirm the Charter of the Monastery of Croyland and to determine concerning affairs belonging to the Mercians and if it had been a Parliament for that people it might be worthy of enquiry how regularly the Archbishop of Canterbury and the
Bishop of London and the Embassadors from the West-Saxons could sit amongst them and attest the Conclusions therein made as well as the proper Members of that Nation He cometh in the next place to a Council holden in the year 855 which is more likely to be a Parliament than most of them formerly mentioned if the Tithes of all England were therein given to the Church but hereof I have set down my opinion in the former part of the Discourse And though it be true that no Knights and Burgesses are therein mentioned as the Opponent observeth out of the Title yet if the body of the Laws be duly considered towards the Conclusion thereof it will appear that there was present Fidelium infinita multitudo qui omnes regium Chirographum laudaverunt Dignitates verò sua nomina subscripserunt And yet the Wittagenmotes in these times began to be rare being continually interrupted by the invasions of the Danes The three next Councils alleadged to be in the years 930 944 948. were doubtless of inferiour value as the matters therein concluded were of inferiour regard being such as concern the passing of the Kings Grants Infeodations and Confirmations The Council mentioned to be in the year 965 is supposed to be one and the same with the next foregoing by Sir Henry Spelman which calls it self a General Council not by reason of the general confluence of the Lords and Laity but because all the Bishops of England did then meet The Primi and Primates were there who these were is not mentioned but it is evident that the King of Scots was there and that both he and divers that are called Ministri Regis attested the Conclusions It will be difficult to make out how these should be Members of the House of Lords and more difficult to shew a reason why in the attesting of the Acts of these Councils which the Opponent calls Parliaments we find so few of the Laity that scarce Twelve are mentioned in any one of them and those to descend so low as the Ministri Regis to make up the number Five more of these instances remain before the coming of the Normans The first of which was in the year 975 and in a time when no Parliament according to the Opponents principles could sit for it was an Inter-Regnum The two next were onely Synods to determine the difference between the Regulars and the Seculars in the King's absence by reason that he was under age and they are said to be in the year 977 and 1009. But it is not within the compass of my matter to debate their dates The last two were Meetings or Courts for Judicature to determine the Crime of Treason which every one knows is determinable by inferiour Courts before the high Steward of Judges and therefore not so peculiar to a Parliament as to be made an Argument of its existence And thus are we at an end of all the instances brought by the Opponent to prove that Parliaments before the Norman times consisted of those whom we now call the House of Lords All which I shall shut up with two other Notes taken out of the Book of Councils published by Sir Henry Spelman The first of which concerneth a Grant made by Canutus of an exemption to the Abbey of Bury Saint Edmunds in a Council wherein were present Archbishops Bishops Abbots Dukes Earls Cum quamplurimis gregariis militibus cum populi multitudine copiosa votis regi●s unanimiter consentientes The other taken out of the Confessor's Laws which tell us that Tythes were granted to the Church A Rege Baronibus Populo And thus I shall leave these Testimonies to debate with one another whilst the Reader may judge as seemeth most equal to himself Being thus come to the Norman times and those ensuing I shall more summarily proceed with the particulars concerning them because they were times of Force and can give little or no evidence against the Customs rightly setled in the Saxon times which I have more particularly insisted upon that the Original Constitution of this Government may the better appear Now for the more speedy manifesting of the truth in the particulars following I shall pre-advise the Reader in three particulars First that the Church-motes grew more in Power and Honour by the aid of the Normans Law refusing the concurrence and personal presence of Kings whom at length they excluded from their Councils with all his Nobles and therefore it is the less wonder if we hear but little of the Commons joyning with them Secondly That the Norman way of Government grew more Aristocratical than the Saxon making the Lords the chief Instruments of keeping Kings above and People underneath and thus we meet with much noise of meetings between the King and Lords and little concerning the grand meetings of the Kings and the Representative of the People although some foot-steps we find even of them also For the Kings were mistaken in the Lords who meaned nothing less than to serve them with the Peoples Liberties together with their own which they saw wrapped up in the gross Thirdly By this means the Councils of the King and Lords grew potent not onely for advice in particular occasions but in matters of Judicature and declaring of Law ordering of Process in Courts of Pleas which in the first framing were the works of the Wise and Learned men but being once setled become part of the Liberties of every Freeman And it is not to be doubted but these Councils of Lords did outreach into things too great for them to manage and kept the Commons out of possession of their right during the present heat of their ruffling condition yet all this while could not take absolute possession of their Legislative power I now come to the remainder of the particular instances produced by the Opponent which I shall reduce into several Categories for the more clear satisfaction to the Reader with less tediousness First It cannot be denied but the Council of Lords gave advice to Kings in cases of particular emergency nor is it incongruous to the course of Government even to this day nor is it meet that the Parliament should be troubled with every such occasion and therefore the giving of advice to William the Conquerour what course he should take to settle the Laws of England according to the instances in Councils holden An. 1060 and 1007. and to gain favour of the great men according to that in Anno 1106. and in the manner of endowment of the Abbey of Battel as in pag. 25 of the Opponents Discourse and what to do upon the reading of the Pope's Letter according to that in Anno 1114. And whether the Pope's Legate should be admitted as in pag. 18. And how King Stephen and Henry shall come to an Agreement as Anno 1153. And how to execute Laws by Judges and Justices Itinerant as Anno 1176. And touching the manner of ingaging for a Voyage