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A35240 The natural history of the principality of Wales in three parts ... together with the natural and artificial rarities and wonders in the several counties of that principality / by R.B. R. B., 1632?-1725? 1695 (1695) Wing C7339; ESTC R23794 124,814 195

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Nature 2. By Grace 3. In Glory 3. The Scriptures concord compiled out of the words of Scripture by way of question and answer wherein there is the sum of the way to Salvation and spiritual things compared with spiritual 4. The Character of a true Christian 5. A brief Directory for the great necessary and advantagious duty of Self-examination whereby a serious Christian may every day examine himself 6. A short Dialogue between a Learned Divine and a Beggar 7. Beams of the Spirit or Cordial Meditations enlivening enlightning and gladding the Soul 8. The Seraphick Souls Triumph in the Love of God with short remembrances and pious thoughts 9. History improved or Christian Applications and Improvements of divers remarkable Passages in History 10. Holy Breathings in several Divine Poems upon divers Subjects and Scriptures Price one Shilling 29. YOuths Divine Pastime Containing Forty Remarkable Scripture Histories turned into common English Verse With Forty Pictures proper to each Story very delightful for the virtuous imploying the vacant hours of Young Persons and preventing vain and vitious Divertisements Together with several Scripture Hymns upon divers occasions Pr. 8 d. 30. THE Young Man's Calling or the whole Duty of Youth in a serious and compassionate Address to all young persons to remember their Creator in the days of their Youth Together with Remarks upon the Lives of several excellent young Persons of both Sexes as well Ancient as Modern who have been famous for Virtue and Piety in their Generations With twelve curious Pictures Illustrating the several histories Price 1 s. 6 d. 31. THE Vanity of the Life of Man represented in the Seven several Stages thereof With Pictures and Poems exposing the Follies of every Age. Price Eight pence 32. DIstressed Sion Relieved or the Garment of Praise for the Spirit of Heaviness A Poem Wherein are discovered the grand Causes of the Churches trouble and misery under the late dismal Dispensation With a compleat History of and Lamentation for those Renowned Worthies that fell in England by Popish rage and cruelty from the Year 1680. Humbly Dedicated to Their Present Majesties By Benjamin Keach Author of a Book called Sion in Distress or the Groans of the true Protestant Church Price one shilling 33. ANtichrist Stormed or the Church of Rome proved to be Mystery Babylon the Great Whore Rev. 17. by many and undeniable Arguments Answering all the Objections of the Papists and all others Together with the Judgment of many Ancient and Modern Divines and most Eminent Writers concerning the rise and final Ruin of the Beast and Babylon proving it will be in this present Age with an Account of many strange Predictions relating to these present Times By Benjamin Keach Price one shilling 34. THE Devout Souls Daily Exercise in Prayers Contemplations and Praises containing Devotions for Morning Noon and Night for every day in the week with Prayers before and after the Holy Communion And likewise for Persons of all conditions and upon all occasions With Graces and Thanksgivings before and after Meat By R. P. D. D. Price bound Six Pence 35. SAcramental Meditations upon divers select places of Scripture wherein Believers are assisted in preparing their hearts and exciting their affections and graces when they draw nigh to God in that most awfal and solemn Ordinance of the Lords Supper By Jo. Flavel Minister of Christ in Devon Price One Shilling 36. JACOB Wrestling with GOD and prevailing Or a Treatise concerning the Necessity and Efficacy of Faith in Prayer Wherein divers weighty Questions and Cases of Conscience about praying in Faith are stated and resolved For comforting and satisfying of weak and scrupulous Consciences The Conviction of formal Hypocrites awakening of all Saints both weak and strong great and small to this great Duty of Prayer By Tho. Taylor formerly at Edmund Hury now Pastor to a Congregation in Cambridg Price one Shilling
eight and lived fifty nine years and was murthered in the Tower of London in 1472. VII Edward the only Son of King Henry VI. by Queen Margaret Daughter to the King of Sicily was the seventh Prince of Wales of the Royal Blood of England He Married Anne the Daughter of Richard Nevil called the Great Earl of Warwick After his Father's Army was defeated by King Edward IV. at Tauton Field in Yorkshire he with his Mother were sent into France to pray aid from that King This Battel was the bloodiest that ever England saw King Henry's Army consisting in threescore thousand and King Edward's in about forty thousand men of which there fell that day thirty seven thousand seven hundred seventy six Persons no Prisoners being taken but the Earl of Devonshire Afterward the Queen returns from France with some Forces but before her coming King Edward had defeated the Earl of Warwick who with some other Lords had raised a Party for her assistance at Barnet wherein near ten thousand were slain So that when it was too late she landed at Weymouth and from thence went to Bewly Abbey in Hampshire where the Duke of Somerset the Earl of Devonshire and divers other Lords came to her resolving once more to try their Fortune in the Field The Queen was very desirous that her Son Edward Prince of Wales should have returned to France there to have been secure till the success of the next Battel had been tried but the Lords especially the Duke of Somerset would not consent to it so that she was obliged to comply with them though she quickly repented it From Bewly she with the Prince and the Duke of Somerset goes to Bristol designing to mise what men they could in Glocestershire and to march into Wales and join Jasper Earl of Pembroke who was there assembling more Forces K. Edward having intelligence of their Proceedings resolves to prevent their conjunction and follows Queen Margaret so diligently with a great Army that near Tewksbury in Glocestershire he overtakes her Forces who resolutely turn to ingage him The Duke of Somerset led the Van and performed the part of a Valiant Commander but finding his Soldiers through weariness begin to faint and that the Lord Wenlock who commanded the main Battel moved not he rode up to him and upbraiding his treachery with his Pole-ax instantly knockt out his Brains but before he could bring this Party to relieve the Van they were wholly defeated the Earl of Devonshire with above three thousand of the Queens Men being slain the Queen her self John Beufort the Duke of Somerset's Brother the Prior of St. John's Sir Jervas Clifton and divers others were taken Prisoners All whom except the Queen were the next day Beheaded At which time Sir Rich. Crofts presented to King Edward King Henry's Son Edward Prince of Wales To whom King Edward at first seemed indifferent kind but demanding of him how he durst so presumptuously enter into his Realm with Arms The Prince replied though truly yet unseasonably To recover my Father's Kingdom and my Inheritance Thereupon King Edward with his hand thrust him from him or as some say struck him on the Face with his Gauntlet and then presently George Duke of Clarence Thomas Grey Marquess Dorset and the Lord Hastings standing by fell upon him in the place and murthered him Others write that Crook-back'd Richard ran him into the Heart with his Dagger His Body was Buried with other ordinary Corps that were slain in the Church of the Monastery of the Black Friars in Tewksberry VIII Edward eldest Son of King Edward IV. was the eighth Prince of Wales of the English Royal Blood Of whose short Reign and miserable Death there is an account in a Book called England's Monarchs IX Richard only Son of King Richard III. was the ninth Prince of Wales His Mother was Ann the second Daughter of Richard Nevil the Great Earl of Warwick and Widow of Prince Edward Son of King Henry VI. aforementioned who was Married to King Richard though she could not but be sensible that he had been the Author both of her Husband's and Father's Death but womens Affections are Diametrically opposite to common apprehensions and generally governed by Passion and Inconstancy This Prince was born of her at Midleham near Richmond in the County of York At four years old he was created Earl of Salisbury by his Uncle King Edward IV. At ten years old he was created Prince of Wales by his Father King Richard III. but died soon after X. Arthur eldest Son to King Henry VII was the tenth Prince of Wales of the Royal English Families He was born at Winchester in the second year of his Father's Reign When he was about fifteen years old his Father proposed a Marriage for him with the Princess Katherine Daughter to Ferdinando King of Spain which being concluded the Lady was sent by her Father with a gallant Fleet of Ships to England and arrived at Plymouth Soon after the Princess was openly espoused to Prince Arthur they were both clad in white he being fifteen and she eighteen years of age At night they were put together in one Bed where they lay as Man and Wife all that Night When morning appeared the Prince as his Servants about him reported called for Drink which was not usual with him Whereof one of his Bed-Chamber asking him the cause he merrily replied I have been this Night in the midst of Spain which is a hot Country and that makes me so dry Though some write that a grave Matron was laid in Bed between them to hinder actual Consummation The Ladie 's Dowry was two hundred thousand Duckets and her Jointure the third part of the Principality of Wales Cornwal and Chester At this Marriage was great Solemnity and Roval Justings Prince Arthur after his Marriage was sent into Wales to keep his Country in good Order having several prudent and able Counsellors to advise with but within five Months after he died at his Castle at Ludlow and with great solemnity was Buried in the Cathedral of Worcester He was a very ingenious and learned Prince for though he lived not to be sixteen years old yet he was said to have read over all or most of the Latin Fathers besides many others Some attribute the shortness of his Life to his Nativity being born in the eighth month after Conception XI Henry the second Son to King Henry VII was the eleventh Prince of Wales of the Royal English Line He was born at Greenwich in Kent After the Death of his eldest Brother Prince Arthur the Title of Prince of Wales was by his Father's Order not given to him but his own only of Duke of York till the Women could certainly discover whether the Lady Katherine were with Child or not But after six months when nothing appeared he had his Title bestowed upon him and King Henry being loth to part with her great Portion prevailed with his Son Henry though not without some
St. Bartholomew's Hospital for poor maimed diseased People and Cripples c. 3. Bridewell for imploying and correcting Vagrants Harlots and Idle Persons He was a Comely Person and of a sweet Countenance especially in his Eyes which seemed to have a starry liveliness in them In the sixth year of his Reign which was the year before he died he fell sick of the Measels and being fully recovered he rode a Progress with greater magnificence than ever he had done before having in his Train no fewer than four thousand Horse The January following whether procured by sinister Practice or growing upon him by natural infirmity he fell into an indisposition which centred in a Cough of the Lungs Whereupon it was reported that a Poisoned Nosegay had been presented him for a New years Gift which brought him into this slow but mortal Consumption Others said it was done by a vene nous Clyster However it was he grew so ill that his Physicians dispaired of his Life After which a Gentlewoman though to be provided on purpose pretended to cure him but did him much hurt for with her applications his Legs swelled his Pulse failed his skin changed colour and many other symptonis of approaching death appeared An hour before he was overheard to pray thus by himself O Lord God deliver me out of this miserable and wretched Life O Lord thou knowest how happy it were for me to be with thee yet for thy Chosens sake if it be thy will send me life and health that I may truly serve thee O Lord God save thy chosen People of England and defend this Realm from Papistry and maintain thy true Religion that I and my People may praise thy name for thy Son Jesus Christ's sake Then turning his Face and seeing some by him he said I thought you had not been so nigh Yes said Dr. Owen we heard you speak to your self Then said the King I was Praying to God O I am faint Lord have mercy upon me and receive my Spirit and in so saying he gave up the Ghost July 6. 1553. in the sixteenth year of his age when he had reigned six years-five months and nine days and was solemnly buried at Westminster Abbey XIII Prince Henry eldest Son to King James I. was the thirteenth Prince of Wales of the Royal Family of England He was born at Sterling Castle in Scotland and in his Childhood gave promising signs of an Heroick and Noble Spirit no Musick being so pleasant to his Ears as the Trumpet and Drum and the roaring of Cannon and no sights so acceptable as that of Musquets Pistols and any kind of Armour and at nine years of age he learned to ride shoot at Archery leap and manage the Pike all which manly exercises he performed to admiration in such young years He was tall of stature about five foot eight inches high of an amiable yet Majestick countenance a piercing Eye a gracious smile and a terrible frown yet courteous and affable to all He was naturally modest and patient and when most offended he would by over-coming himself say nothing very merciful very just and very true to his promises very secret and reserved from his youth He was most zealous in his love to Religion and Piety and his Heart was bent if he had lived to have endeavoured to compound those differences that were among Religious men He shewed his love to good men and hatred of evil in incouraging good Preachers and slighting the vain-glorious in whom above all things he abhorr'd flattery loving and countenancing the good and never speaking of the slothful Preachers without anger and disdain He was very Consciencious of an Oath so that he was never heard to take God's name in vain or any other Oaths that may seem light much less such horrible Oaths as are now too common He never failed to sacrifice daily the first of his actions to God by Prayers and Devotions He was so resolved to continue immutable in the Protestant Religion that long before his death he solemnly protested That he would never join in Marriage with a Wife of a contrary Faith for he hated Popery with all the Adjuncts and Adherents thereof yet he would now and then use particular Papists kindly thereby shewing that he hated not their Persons but Opinions He was obedient to his Parents careful in the affairs of his Family and Revenue loving and kind to Strangers and in a word he had a certain extraordinary excellency that cannot be exprest in words In the nineteenth year of his age he was visited with a continual Head-ach and had two small Fits of an Ague which were afterward followed with very had symptoms which daily increasing Dr. Abbot then Archbishop of Canterbury went to visit him and finding the extream danger he was in discourst to him of the vanity of the World the certainty of Death and the Joys of Heaven asking his Highness whether he were well pleased to die now if it were the Will of God he replied Yes with all my Heart farther declaring That he hoped for the pardon of his sins only from the merits of Christ In his best moments he continued in a Christian frame of Spirit and Novemb. 6. 1612. quietly yielded up his Spirit to his blessed Saviour and Redeemer being attended with as many Prayers Tears and strong Cries as ever any Soul was XIV After his death Charles his Younger Brother succeeded being the fourteenth Prince of Wales and afterward King of England by the Title of King Charles I. XV. Charles the eldest Son of Charles I. was the fifteenth and last Prince of Wales of the Royal Family of England and after King of England by the Title of King Charles II. I have been very brief in relating the Actions of several of the Princes of Wales having already given an account of them in some other Books which I have formerly published As for instance In a Book called Admirable Curiosities Rarities and Wonders in every County in England in the Remarks upon the County of Glocester you may find all the particulars of the Murther of King Edward the second In another called Historical Remarks upon the Cities of London and Westminster there is a full Relation of the deposition and miserable death of King Richard II. In another intituled The young Man's Calling or the whole Duty of Youth the Lives of King Edward VI. and Prince Henry Son to King James I. are related at large In another called England's Monarchs is an account of the Lives and Actions of all the Kings of England from William the Conqueror to this time and among them of those Princes of Wales who were after Kings of England and are mentioned in the preceeding Remarks In another called The Wars of England c. There is a full account of the Life of King Charles I. with his Trial and Death In another called The History the two late Kings is a Relation of the Life and Death of King Charles II. To
all or any of which Books I refer the Reader for farther satisfaction being unwilling to repeat or that any should pay twice for the same matter Remarkable Observations upon the most Memorable Persons and Places in Wales And an account of several considerable Transactions and Passages that have happened for many hundred years past Together with the Natural and Artificial Rarities and Wonders in the several Counties of that Principality PART III. GReat Britain comprehends the Kingdoms of England and Scotland and is an Island in the Ocean divided by Antiquity into three Parts the first and greatest called Loegria is contained within the French Seas the River Severne Dee and Humber to the German Ocean now called England The second containeth all the Land Northward from Humber to the Deucalidonian Seas now called Scotland The third lyes between the Irish Seas and the Rivers Severne and Dee and was called Cambria now Wales Some Authors add a fourth division called Cornubia now Cornwall the Inhabitants of all four differing in Language humor and Customs among themselves My design at present is to give an account of Wales having already treated of England in a Book called Admirable Curiosities Rarities and Wonders in every County thereof And I intend to proceed in the same method in this Principality Wales is situated on the West and Northwest part of England over against the Kingdom of Ireland and appears like a Promontory o● Foreland being surrounded by the Sea almost on every side except on the South-East part where it is divided from England by the River Severn and by a Ditch drawn from the Mouth of the River Dee to the mouth of the River Wye being an hundred Miles from East to West and an hundred and twenty Miles from North to South The forenamed Ditch is called Claudh Offa because made by Offa King Mercia of a great depth and breadth thereby to confine the Welsh into narrower limits who enacted That if any Welshman were found on the East side of this Ditch he should forfeit his right hand but that Law is long since repealed and the Loyal and Valiant Welsh have for several ages past enjoyed the same Liberties and Privileges with the other Subjects of the Crown of England It was divided into three parts that is North-Wales South-Wales and Powis-Land by Roderick the Great in 877. as you have heard which proved the confusion of Wales their Princes being commonly at War with the English or among themselves to inlarge and defend their several Dominions Of these three North-Wales was the chief being left to Amarawd the eldest Son of Roderick the Princes whereof by way of eminency were stiled Princes of Wales and sometimes Kings of Aberfrow their Chief Residence and paid to the King of London as well as the Princes of South-Wales and Powis-Land sixty three pounds yearly as a Tribute Yet South-Wales called by the Inhabitants Dehenbarth or the right side as being nearer the Sun was the largest most fruitful and rich but more subject to the Invasions and Depredations of the English and Flemings and therefore North-Wales being secured by its Hills and Mountains was prefer'd before it and retaineth more of the purity of the Welsh Tongue However this makes the soil lean and hungry but that is supplied by the large quantity thereof which occasioned this pleasant passage An English Gentleman in discourse with a worshipful Knight of Wales boasting that that he had in England so much ground worth 40 s. an Acre the Welsh Gentleman replied You have ten yards of Velvet and I have two hundred yards of Frize I will not exchange with you There are likewise in Wales very pleasant Meadows Watered by fine Rivers and as the sweetest Flesh is said to be near the Bones so the most delicious Valleys are interposed betwixt these Mountains The Natives are generally healthy strong swift and witty which is imputed to the clear and wholesome Air of the Mountains the cleanly and moderate Diet of the People and the hardship to which they are inured from their Childhood The Ancient Britains painted their naked Bodies with Pictures of living Creatures Flowers Sun Moon and Stars thereby as they imagined to appear terrible to their Enemies yet some more civil were clothed and as a great Ornament wore Chains of Iron about their Wasts and Neck and Rings on their middle Fingers They wore the Hair of their Head long which was naturally curled in many All other parts they shaved only wore long Whiskers on their upper Lip They had ten or twelve Wives a piece who lived in common among their Parents and Brethren yet the Children were only accounted his who first married the Mother while she was a Maid They were brought up in common among them They were moderate in their Diet as Milk Roots and Barks of Trees and a little thing no bigger than a Bean which for a great while took away both Hunger and Thirst Neither would they eat Hens Hares Geese nor Fish yet would often Dine upon Venison and Fruits Their usual Drink was made of Barly They are reported by Plutarch to have lived very long many to an hundred and twenty years They were Idolatrous Heathens as to their Religion using Man's Flesh in their Sacrifices and adoring a multitude of Idols Their Priests were called Druids who managed their Sacrifices and likewise acted as Temporal Judges in all Civil Matters and it was highly criminal not abide by their Judgment They were excused from the Wars and all contributions They had a Primate who commanded over them in chief Their Divinity was That the Soul is immortal and passeth from one Body to another which Doctrine they taught not out of Books but by word of Mouth Their Buildings were low mean Cottages like those of the Gauls or Boors of France yet they fortified several thick Woods with Rampires and Ditches which they called Towns Brass and Iron Rings were the Coin they used which were of a certain weight but afterward they grew more civil by Traffick and had both Gold and Silver Money Their chief Trade was in Chains Wreaths Ivory Boxes Bitts and Bridles with some Toys of Amber and Glass Neither was their Shipping more considerable their cheif Vessels being made of light wood covered over with Leather Their usual way of Fighting was in Military Chariots neither did they engage in great bodies but had still fresh men to succeed those who retired or were weary Their weapons were Shields and short Spears at the lower end whereof was fastned a round Bell of Brass with which they terrified their Enemies Many times they fought under the Conduct of Valiant Women who were extraordinary couragious They managed their Chariots so dexterously that running downa steep Hill with all speed they could stop them in the middle of their course The Principality of Wales produceth Mines and among others Royal Mines of Silver in Cardiganshire in the Mountains of Cosmelock Tallabant Gadarren Bromfloid Geginnon and Cummerrum The
were instantly defeated slain and put to flight and the Romans became Masters both of the Field of Battel and the whole Island also yet were they not wholly subdued till the Reign of Julius Agricola When the Roman Empire in Britain began to decline several Irish came secretly over and setled here and certain sinall Hills and Mounts are yet to be seen intrenched about which are called the Irish-men's Cottages and another place named of the Irish-men Hiercy Gwidil because it is said they here put the Britains to flight under the conduct of Sivigus Afterward the Normans ost infested this Isle but in the year 1000 King Etheldred set out a Fleet which scoured the Seas round about it and wasted the Countrey in a more hostile manner than either the Irish or Norwegians Then Hugh Earl of Chester and Hugh Earl of Shrewsbury both Normans did grievously afflict Anglesey at which very time Magnus the Norwegian arriving here shot Hugh Earl of Shrewsbury through with an Arrow and after he had plundred the Island departed Next the English continually vext the Inhabitants making several descents upon them even to the time of King Edward I. when they were totally subjected to that Crown The chief Town Beumaris formerly called Bonover built by this King Edward I. together with a strong Castle is governed by a Mayor two Bailiffs two Sergeants at Mace and a Town Clerk At Llanvais not far from hence was formerly a Monastery of Friars Minors richly endowed by the Kings of England where a Daughter of King John and the Son of a Danish King with several other persons of Dignity were Buried that were slain in the Wars between the English and Welsh Guido de Mona or of Anglesey was Bishop of St. David's and Lord Treasurer of England to King Henry IV. though the Parliament moved that no Welshman should be a State Officer in England He died 1407. Arthur Bulkley Bishop of Bangor though bred Doctor of the Laws either never read or else he had forgot the Chapter against Sacrilege for he spoiled the Bishoprick and sold the five Bells of the Cathedral being so over officious that he would go down to the Sea to see them shipt away He was suddenly deprived of his sight and died 1555. William Glyn D. D. bred in and Master of Queen's College was made Bishop of Bangor in the second year of Queen Mary an excellent Schollar being constant to his own and not cruel to the Professors of the Protestant Religion there being no Persecution in his Diocess He died the first year of Queen Elizabeth whose Brother Jeffery Dr. of Laws Built and Endowed a Free School at Bangor Madoc Son to Owen Gwineth Brother to David Prince of North-Wales was born probably at Aberfrow in this County then the principal Palace of their Royal Residence who upon the Civil Dissentions in his own Countrey in 1170 adventured to Sea and leaving Ireland on the North came to a Land unknown where he saw many wonderful things this by Dr. Howel and Mr. Humfry Lloyd is judged to be the main Continent of America being confirmed therein as well by the saying of Montezuma Emperor of Mexico who declared his Progenitors were strangers as well as the rest of the Mexicans as by the use of divers Welsh words among them as Cape de Breton Norwinberg Penguin a name they give to a bird with a White Head The story adds that Madock left several of his People there and coming home returned back with ten Sail full of Welshmen who continued there and Peopled the Country Which relation if true redounds much to the Glory of Madoc who discovered this vast Region near three hundred years before the renowned Columbus first Sailed thither This Isle had antiently three hundred sixty three Villages therein and is still well Peopled having two Market Towns seventy four Parish Churches and is divided into six Hundreds It gives the Title of Earl to James L. Annesly BRECKNOCK-SHIRE so called say the Welsh from Brechanius the Father of an Holy off-spring whose twenty four Daughters were Saints It hath Radnorshire on the North Caermarthen West Glamorgan South and Hereford and Monmouthshire East in breadth twenty eight and in length twenty Miles It is full of Hills and difficult in Travelling The Mountains of Talgar and Ewias on the East seem to defend it from the excessive heat of the Sun which makes an wholesome and temperate Air from whence likewise rise many curious Springs that render the Valleys fruitful both in Corn and Grass and thereby make amends for their own barrenness The Silures were the antient Inhabitants of this County who valiantly opposed the Roman servitude and were first subdued by Julius Frontinus who found it more difficult to encounter with the Hills Streights and Mountains than with the People whereof one Mountain in the South is of such an height and occult quality that faith Mr. Speed I should blush to relate it had I not the Aldermen and Bayliffs of the Town of Brecknock for my Vouchers who assured me that from this Hill called Mounch-denny they had oft-times cast down their Hats Cloaks and Staves which yet would never fall to the bottom but were with the Air and Wind still returned back and blown up again neither will any thing but a stone or hard Mettal fall from thence and the Clouds are oft seen lower than the top of it There is likewise Cadier Arthur or Arthur's Chair a Hill so called on the South side of this Country the top thereof somewhat resembling the form of a Chair proportionate to the dimensions which the Welsh imagine that great and mighty Person to be of Upon the top thereof riseth a Spring as deep as a Well four square having no streams issuing from it and yet there are plenty of Trouts to be found therein They also told him that when the Meer Lynsavathan two Miles from Brecknock hath its frozen Ice first broken it yieldeth a dreadful Noise like Thunder And it is reported that where this Meer now spreadeth its Waters there formerly stood a fair City which was swallowed up by an Earthquake and it seems probable both because all the Highways of this County lead thither And likewise the Learned Camden judgeth it might be the City Loventrium which Ptolomy placeth in these parts and Mr. Camden could not discover and therefore likely to be Drowned in this Pool which the River Levenny running hard by farther confirms the Waters whereof run through this Meer without mixing with them as appears by the colour and breadth of the Stream which is the same through the whole length of the Pool This Shire had formerly two Towns called Hay and Bealt pleasantly scituated both which in the Rebellion of Owen Glendour were unwalled depopulated and burnt under whose ruins many Roman Coins are found and therefore thought to be two of their Garrisons Bealt was formerly possest by Aurelius Ambrosius and Vortigern and afterward Leoline the last Prince of the
Inheritance and would not meddle with the King or the Crown That most Traiterously he had taken arms against his Soveraign Lord imprisoned him and then most barbarously caused him to be murthered That ever since the death of K. Richard II. he had unjustly kept the Crown from his Kinsman Edmund Mortimer Earl of March to whom of right it belonged That upon no occasion he had imposed divers large Taxes upon the People That by his Letters he procured Burgesses and Knights of Parliament to be chosen For which Causes and many others they defied him and vowed his destruction and the restoring the Earl of March to his Right K. Henry could not but know that much of this was true yet since it did not hinder him from seeking to get the Crown when he had it not it could less hinder him from seeking to keep it now he had it and if he were able being a private man to get it from a King he was likely to be more able now to keep it from a private man And for any objections that Conscience could make he had enough to answer them all For if his Title were good against K. Richard II. by his Resignation it was good against Mortimer by his swearing Allegiance Upon these grounds he satisfied himself and raised an Army against these Lords whom he prevented from joining with the Welsh and near Shrewsbury ingaged them where though Henry Hot-spur shewed sufficient Courage yet he was slain and the K. obtained the Victory taking several Prisoners of note and among others the Earl of Worcester whom he caused to be Beheaded and many of the rest to be Hanged and Quartered and their Heads to be set upon London Bridg. There fell 6000 of the Rebels that day whereof K. Henry kill'd 36 with his own hands And the young P. afterward Henry V. though wounded in the Face with an Arrow yet was not wounded in his Courage but continued fighting till the end of the Battel After this the K. sent his Son Henry P. of Wales with his whole Army into that Country but before his coming Owen Glendour was forsaken by all his Company and lurking about the Woods was there famished to death for want of sustenance Such was the miserable end of this aspiring ambitious Britain After this Rebellion was supprest K. Henry enacted several rigorous Laws for preventing the like in time to come as 1. That no Welshman should purchase Lands or be chosen into office in any City Town or Burrough or wear arms within any City 2. That if a Welshman should sue an Englishman the cause should be tryed by an English Jury 3. That all English Burgesses who married Welshwomen should forfeit their Liberties 4. No meeting nor Council to be permitted to the Welsh but in the presence of the Officers of the L. of the Mannor 5. No Victuals to be carried into Wales without License of K. or Council 6. No VVelshman should possess any Castle or Fortified House 7. No VVelshman to be capable of any Office of State or in any Court of Judicature 8. No Englishman marrying a Welshwoman should enjoy any office in Wales Thomas ap VVilliam ap Thomas ap Richard ap Howel ap Vaughan Esquire was born of an antient Family at Moston in this County This Gentleman being called at a Pannel of a Jury by all these names was advised by the Judge in the reign of K. Henry VII to contract them whereupon he nominated himself Moston A leading case to the Gentry in VVales who leaving their Pedigrees at home carry one Sirname only abroad with them Flint though the Shire Town is no Market Town no nor St. Asaph though a City and Bishop's See till made so very lately But it is near VVest-Chester the Market General of these parts and besides every Village hath a Market in it self as affording all necessary commodities This County was part of the County Palatine of Chester paying 2000 Marks called a Mize at the change of every Earl of Chester till the year 1568 for then upon occasion of one Thomas Radford committed to Prison by the Chamberlain of Chester this County disjoined it self from that Earldom and united to the Principality of VVales It is divided into five Hundreds had seven Castles hath only one Market Town Calerwis and 28 Parish Churches Near Kelkin a small Village in this County is a little Well whose Water riseth and falleth according to the motion of the Sea Tydes GLAMORGAN SHIRE so called as is thought from P. Morgan the Possessor thereof or from Morgan Abby founded by VVill. E. of Glocester upon the Sea-shore on the South of this County is bounded on the East by Monmouth-shire on the North by Breck-neck on the West by Carmarthen-shire on the South by the Severn Sea in length 40. in breadth 20. and in circumference 112 Miles The North part of this Shire is Mountainous the South Plain and very fruitful being called the Garden of VVales abounding with Cattel pleasant Springs and Fruits Tare is the chief River upon the Eastern Shoar of which Cardiffe the fairest Town of all South-wales is situated which Fitz Hannon fortified with a Wall and Castle in the reign of VVilliam Rufus when he and his Norman Knights had conquered Rhese or Rice Prince of these Parts and deprived Jestine of his legal Inheritance After which he made it his own Court of Justice ordaining his Followers to whom he disposed of the Lands to hold them in Vassalage of him The Castle was strong in which K. Henry I. Sirnamed Beuclark kept his Elder Brother Robert called Courthose twenty six years Prisoner they being both Sons of K. VVilliam the Conqueror The City and Bishoprick of Landaff is seated in this County being one of the most antient Bishops Sees either in England or Wales and claimeth a direct succession from the Archbishops of Caerleon upon Vsk The first Bishop we read of was St. Dubritius confearated by Lupus and Germanus when they came hither out of France for extirpating the Pelagian Heresie The Cathedral is dedicated to St. Telian successor to Dubritius founded upon the River Tassi or Tare and thence called Landaff Llan in VVelsh being a Church This Church was formerly well endowed so that it might have been reckoned one of the richest in Christendom but now enjoys not the Tenth of the former revenue the ruin thereof coming in the time of Bishop Dunstan alias Kitchin This Diocess contains most part of Glamorgan and Monmouth-shire wherein are 177 Parish Churches Giraldus Cambrensis reports that in the Island of Barrey in this County there is a chink in a Rock to which if you lay your Ear you will hear a noise like that of Smiths at work one while blowing the Bellows then striking with the Hammer on the Anvile sometimes the noise of a Grindstone grinding Tools afterward the hissing of Iron quenched and the puffing sound of Flames under a Furnace Clemens Alexandrinus writes of a place in Britain which
the Title of Baron to Henry Lord Herbert PEMBROKE-SHIRE is bounded by Carnarthen on the East and Cardigan shire on the North-East On all sides else it is surrounded by the Sea In length 26. in breadth 20. and in circumference 93 Miles It was antiently Peopled by the Dimetree as well as Cardigan and Carmarthen-shires part of this County was after inhabited by the Flemmings sent thither by King Henry I. who lost their Country by the breaking in of the Sea whereby a great part of Flanders was drowned and whose Posterity continue there to this day and speak so good English that their Division is called Little England beyond Wales The Commodities of this shire are Corn Cattel Sea-fish and Fowl and in the days of Giraldus Cambrensis they had Wines for sale the Havens being so commodious for Traffick particularly Tenby and Milford the last of which is so large a Port that sixteen Creeks five Bays and thirteen Roads distinguisht by particular names are all contained within it Pembroke is the Shire Town which appears more antient than it is it was formerly Walled and had three Gates with a large Castle and a Causey leading over to the decayed Priory of Monton The Town consists principally of one long street on a long narrow Point of a Rock and hath within the Walls thereof two Churches St. David's is a Barren old City having neither Trees to defend it nor is it pleasant with Fields or Meadows but lyes exposed to Winds and Storms It is now the seat of a Bishop but was once an Archbishoprick in the British Church At the first planting of the Gospel in the reign of King Lucius there were three Archbishops Seats appointed London York and Caerleon The last in the Reign of Arthur King of the Britains was translated from thence to St David's as being farther off from the Saxon's fury Twenty seven of them retained the Title of Archbishops the last whereof was Samson who removed the Archi-episcopal Dignity to D●le in Bretaign a Province in France Yet his Suceessors though they lost the name retained the power of the Archbishop the Welsh Bishops being consecrated by him till the Reign of King Henry I. when Bernard the 47th Bishop of this See was forced to submit himself to the Church of Canterbury The Cathedral here hath been often ruined by the Danes Norwegians and other Pirates as standing near the Sea in an extream Corner of this County that which we now see was built by Bishop Peter and by him dedicated to St. David In the middle of whose Quire Edmund Earl of Richmond Father to King Henry VII lies buried whose Monument secured the Church from being defaced in the Reign of King Henry VIII The roof of this Church is higher than any in England Calphurnius a British Priest who Married Concha Sister to St Martin and had St. Patrick the Apostle of Ireland to their Son was born at St. David's Likewise Justinian a Noble Britain with his own Inheritance built a Monastery in the Island of of Ramsey in this County where many Monks dwelt happily under his Jurisdiction until three of them Murdered him out of envy and emulation for his Plous Life His Body was brought to 〈◊〉 or St. David's and there interred and his Tomb afterward much famed for many supposed Miracles Giraldus Cambrensis whose Sirname was Barry some write Fitz Girald the Welsh Historian was born at Tenby in this County being Son to William Barry an Englishman by his Wife Angareth daughter of Nesta Daughter of Rhese or Rice Prince of South-Wales He was Nephew to David the second Bishop of St David's by whom he was made Arch-Deacon of Brecknock He was wont to complain That the English did not love him because his Mother was a Welshwoman and the Welsh hated him because his Father was an Englishman Though by his excellent Writings he deserved of England well of Wales better and of Ireland best of all making an exact description of all three and acting in the last as Secrety to King John with great industry and expence Having Travelled to Jerusalem he writ a Book of the Wonders of the Holy Land He had no great success at Court and therefore attained to no considerable Dignity till at length he was offered a very mean Bishoprick in Ireland and his highest Preferment was to this of St. David's of which he gives the true reason That he was looked upon with a Jealous Eye because being a Welshman by the Mother the furer side he was thought to have a natural antipathy against the English since it was believed no good Subject could come out of Walee Being now Bishop of St. David's he went to Rome and there was very importunate for an exemption of that Diocess from the Authority of Canterbury whereby he highly offended Hubert the Archbishop thereof Whereupon being rather overborn with bribes than overcome in his Cause he returned without effecting it and dying was buried in his own Cathedral about 1215. When King Henry II. was at St. David's in this County and from thence in a clear day discovered the Coast of Ireland in an huffing bravado he said I with my Ships am able to make a Bridge thither if it be no farther Which Speach of his being related to Murchard King of Lemster in Ireland he asked whether he did not say He would do it with the help of God and being told no he chearfully answered Then I fear him the less since he trusted more to himself than to the help of God The same King Henry coming back from Ireland arrived at St. David's where being told that there is an old Prophecy of Merlin's That the Conqueror of Ireland returning that way should dye upon a stone called Lechlaver near the Church-yard He thereupon before a multitude of People passed over it unhurt and reproving the Welshmen said Now who will hereafter credit that Lyar Merlin The County of Pembroke hath been fortified with sixteen Castles besides two Block-houses or Forts Commanding the Mouth of Milford Haven and hath five Market Towns is divided into seven Hundreds wherein are forty five Parish 〈◊〉 It gives the Title of Earl to Thomas Lord Herbert who is also Earl of Montgomery RADNOR-SHIRE hath Monmouth on the North Hereford and Shropshire on the East Brecknock on the South and Cardiganshire on the West In length twenty four in breadth twenty two and in circuit ninety miles The Air is sharp and cold as generally it is through all Wales whereby the Snow lies long unmelted under those vast Mountains Hills and Rocks that overshadow the Valleys yet the East and South parts are somewhat fruitful indifferently stored with Woods and watered with Rivers and Mears The riches of the North and West consist chiefly in the Cattel which they produce The antient Inhabitants were the Silures who by their own courage and the assistance of their inaccessible Mountains preserved their freedom very long against all the attempts of the Romans These Rocks