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A59088 Of the dominion or ownership of the sea two books : in the first is shew'd that the sea, by the lavv of nature or nations, is not common to all men, but capable of private dominion or proprietie, as well as the land : in the second is proved that the dominion of the British sea, or that which incompasseth the isle of Great Britain is, and ever hath been, a part or appendant of the empire of that island writen at first in Latin, and entituled, Mare clausum, seu, De dominio maris, by John Selden, Esquire ; translated into English and set forth with som additional evidences and discourses, by Marchamont Nedham.; Mare clausum. English Selden, John, 1584-1654.; Nedham, Marchamont, 1620-1678. 1652 (1652) Wing S2432; ESTC R15125 334,213 600

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that in it which may seem to import that hee call's himself King of the Ocean especially if you consider those words which wee finde somtimes among Germane Writers in the Title of Charls the fifth Emperor and King of Spain In the Preface to the constitution concerning publick Judicatories in the Empire hee is called King of the Canarie Ilands also of the Islands of the Indies and of the Continent and of the Ocean Archduke of Austria c. And in the Imperial Sanctions published in high Dutch Konig-under Jnsulen Canariae auch der Jnsulen Indiarum und Terrae firmae des Maers Oceant c. as you may meet with it at least six hundred times The word Ocean is added as if hee entitled himself King of the Ocean But this is a mistake for the same in Spanish is Rey c. de las Islas y terra firma del mar Oceano c. that is King of the Islands and of the Terra firma of the Ocean namely the Islands or Continents of or lying in the Ocean which Pope Alexander the Sixth gave to Ferdinand the Fifth King of Spain all of them lying Westward from the very first Meridian of those hee entitle's himself King not of the Ocean it self How far private Dominion over the Sea is admitted according to the Customs or opinion of the French CHAP. XVIII AS concerning Dominion of the Sea according to the Customs of the French som perhaps may seem to have met with verie ancient evidences thereof in those Officers deputed for the guard of the Sea-Coasts whom wee read of in the Statute-Books and in that Rotlandus Governor of the British that is the Aremorican shore mentioned in the life of Charle-maign by Eginhartus a Writer of that time But those dignities have relation not so much to the Sea it self as to the shore and Sea-Coast or the border of the Land confining with the Sea notwithstanding that Rotlandus is by the French-men of this and the former Age promiscuously styled Governor both of the Sea and Shore as if there were no difference But it cannot bee denied that Princes heretofore upon the Shore of Aremorica or Bretaign as the Veneti of whom wee spake before did upon the same Shore impose Custom upon Ships as for the use of the Road upon their Coasts and challenge to themselvs other Rights of the like nature called Nobilitates super navibus So it is to bee read in an ancient Record made in the time of Duke Alanus in the year MLXXXVII concerning Precedence of Place among the Nobles of Bretaigne In that Record the second place is assigned to the Viscount of S t Pol de Leon who as the very words of it are had verie many of those Customs called Nobilitates super navibus imposed on such as passed the Ocean upon the Coasts of Osismer or Leon which as it was said Budicius an antient King of Bretaign did give and grant to one of his predecessors upon Marriage in reward of the virtue fidelitie and valor of that Viscount but with the consent of the Prelates Counts Barons and Nobles of Bretaign What these Nobilitates were and whence they had their original is partly declared by Bertrandus Argentraeus somtime President of the Province of Renes where hee discourseth also of the right of giving Pass ports which they call brefs de conduicte at this time in use on that shore That saith hee whereas till then it had been a right peculiar to the Princes beeing given by way of Dowrie to the Barons of Leon of which wee have alreadie spoken out of the aforesaid Record remained an hereditarie and proper right to that Familie until Joannes Ruffus the Duke redeemed it for a vast sum of monie of Guynomarius Baron of Leon after that Peter Mauclerc of Dreux Duke of Bretaign had in vain attempted to re assume it by force of arms It had its original they say upon this occasion When our Princes and antient Kings considered the daily Shipwracks made upon that shore where there were many Rocks and but few Havens they made a Law that none should set to Sea without their leav Such as did set out paying a certain rate had passes and guides appointed them that were well acquainted with the Sea and Shores They that refused forfeited their ships with all their tackling and furniture thereof and if the Ship were cast away their goods also were confiscate They that had leav were in no danger of confiscation and if they suffered Shipwrack had libertie to recover as many of their goods as they could And these guides were paid their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Conduct-money which wee have mentioned elswhere called by them droit de salvage These Tickets or Passes are given out now as heretosore at a certain price And among other Revenues of the Exchequer they also were rented out to the Farmers of the Custom So far Bertrandus from whom Renatus Choppinus borroweth almost the very words But Petrus Berlordaeus Advocate of the Parlament of Reines tell 's us that the Custom of taking forfeiture in that manner of all shipwrack't goods was abolished there by an Edict in the year MDLXXXIII But in the mean time for so much as concern's any part of that Western Sea lying next the Shore these are manifest evidences either of Dominion or of subjection in the Sea which indeed sufficiently prove by the Customs of that people that the Sea is capable of Dominion Moreover upon occasion of these Passes there have been controversies raised somtimes between the Dukes of Bretaign and the Kings of England as may bee seen in certain memorials of the affairs of Bretaign which have relation to the times of our Richard the second and John the Fourth Duke of Bretaign But this wee know for certain that in the agreement made between our Edward the Fourth and Francis the second Duke of Bretaign in the year MCCCCLXVIII concerning mutual traffick and free passage to and fro for the subjects of each Nation during a truce of thirtie years there is an express proviso concerning Wrecks but such a one as left an equal right to both of them not altogether unlike that which for many ages hath been in use upon the English Shore No mention at all beeing made in the Articles of the Truce either of the right or use of these aforesaid Passes as beeing a thing in no wise admitted by the English But som modern Lawyers among the French do vainly affirm that their King is Lord not onely of a part of the Sea neighboring upon the Territorie of Bretaign but of the whole Sea that is adjoyning to any part of France and so of the British or English Sea also By which very Assertion of theirs they sufficiently declare their judgment that there may bee a soveraign over the Sea The King saith Charondas Caronaeus is supreme Lord of the Seas which flow about his
also his Sea-men to keep all relief of Victual from going to the Enemie by Sea Hee used the word Pirats in this place as others of that age have don not for Robbers as 't is commonly taken but for such as beeing skill'd in Sea-affairs were appointed to set upon the Enemie's Fleets and defend the Dominion by Sea Touching the derivation of the word the old Scholiast upon Sophocles his Aiax saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is Pira in the Attick Tongue signifie's craft or art and hence it is that they are called Pirats which infest the Sea But when the English-Saxons and Danes in the time of K. Alfred were ever and anon strugling for the Soveraigntie in England for Gurmundus or Guthrunus King of the Danes was at that time setled in Northumberland as a Fiduciarie Client or Vassal to Alfred and had very large Territories in the East-part of England their Fights were mostly by Sea as if they had both been of opinion that hee which could get the Dominion of the British Sea would by necessarie consequence becom Lord also of the Land or of that part of the Isle which lie's before it For this caus also it was that the Danes growing strong at Sea K. Alfred mightily augmented his Naval Forces by building ships twice as long as the Danish ships deeper nimbler and less rocking or rolling and so much more convenient for Sea-Fights Florentius the Monk saith In the same year that is to say the year of our Lord MCCCXCVII the Forces of the Pagans residing in East-England and Northumberland using Piracie upon the Sea-Coasts did grievously infest the West-Saxon's Countrie with very long and nimble ships which they had built divers years before Against whom ships were built by the Command of K. Alfred twice as long deeper nimbler and less waving or rolling by whose force hee might subdue the aforesaid ships of the Enemie It is related also in the same words by Roger Hoveden But Henrie of Huntingdon speaking expresly of the number of Oars that served for the rowing of these ships of Alfred saith King Alfred caused long ships to bee made readie to wit of 40 Oars or more against the Danish ships But there are Chronicles written in the Saxon Tongue that speak of ships of 60 Oars and larger built by him at that time out of which these Writers above-mentioned and others of the like sort have compiled theirs The words of the Chronicles are these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is to say King Alfred gave command for the building of long ships to encounter the Danish But they were twice as long as these whereof som had sixtie Oars som more They were also more nimble less rolling and deeper then the other Not built after the Frisian or Danish manner but such as hee conceived most convenient for fighting So that there is no doubt but the business of shipping was mightily advanced in his Reign among the English-Saxons in order to the defence and maintenance of their Dominion by Sea And wee very often finde that those Sea fights managed by Alfred and his son Edward with various success against the Danes and Normans were undertaken not without great numbers of Shipping But in the time of King Athelstan who was very strong at Sea upon the Irish Nation saith Huntingdon and those that dwelt in ships there fell a fatal destruction The English-Saxon words in the antient Chronicles from whence Huntingdon translated those and which agree w th these are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which fully signifie the same thing For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Scotish Nation and Scots are by the Antients often taken for the Irish. Hee also saith the same Autor led an huge Armie by Land and Sea into Northumberland and Scotland and in regard there was none appear'd to make any opposition bee marched up and down the Countrie and wasting it at pleasure returned with Triumph whereupon saith a Poët of that time Jam cubat in terris fera barbaries Aquilonis Jam jacet in campo pelago pirata relicto Illicitas torvásque minas Analavus anhelans Now is the wilde and barb'rous North brought down Now Analave the Pirat is o'rethrown Who having left the Sea on Land doth lie And spightful threats breath's out against the Skie This Analavus was King of the Irish and of many Islands who invading the Coasts of Athelstan with a Fleet of DCXV ships at the mouth of the River Humber received a great overthrow and was put to a most shameful Flight But King Edgar as saith Florentius of Worcester sailing about the North of Britain with a great Navie arrived at Chester where his eight pettie Kings met him as hee had given order who sware fealtie to him and that they would assist him both by Sea and Land Or as Huntingdon saith of the same thing they all did homage to him declaring themselvs readie at his command to serv him by Sea and Land Among these pettie Kings there was one Maccusius whom Hoveden and Florentius call a King of very many Islands and Florilegus a King of Man and very many Islands William of Malmsburie call's him an Arch Pirat Moreover the same King Edgar as if hee intended to set forth the splendor magnificence and as it were an Epitome of his whole Empire in Sea-affairs and Shipping did as say Florentius and Hoveden during his abode at Chester enter into a Boat wherein hee was rowed by those pettie Kings himself holding the Stern and steering it about the River Dee and beeing attended by all his Dukes and Peers in such another Vessel bee sailed from the Palace to the Monasterie of S. John Baptist where an Oration beeing made to him hee returned in the same pomp unto the Palace In the very Entrie whereof hee is reported to have said to his Lords that then his Successors might boast themselvs Kings of England when they should bee thus attended by so many Kings and enjoy the state and glory of such honors or as Malmsburie write's of the same thing when they should enjoy so great a Prerogative of honors So many Kings as Vassals to bee readie alwaies to assist with their Forces whensoëver they should bee required both by Sea and Land There is also a notable testimonie in the same Florentius and the Monk of Malmsburie how that this King sailed round about his Sea every year and secured it with a constant Guard and Forces Every Summer saith Malmsburie immediately after Easter bee commanded his ships upon every shore to bee brought into a Bodie sailing usually with the Eastern Fleet to the West part of the Island and then sending it back hee sail'd with the Western Fleet unto the Northern and thence with the Northern hee returned to the Eastern beeing indeed very diligent to prevent the Incursions of Pirats that is behaving himself in this manfully as say Florentius also and Hoveden for the
least allow such a Dominion VIII Som antient Testimonies of inferior note All the testimonies almost that are comprehended in this Division are indeed domestick but so publick and of so approved credit that hardly any thing can bee imagined which might give a clearer proof of possession whether Civil as they call it consisting in the act and intention of the minde or Natural which require's the presence of the Bodie As it will appear to any man that pleas to make enquirie Especially if hee add hereunto the judgment or acknowledgment of such Forein Nations whom it chiefly concerned whereof wee shall treat also by and by But of these things severally and in order That the Kings of England since the coming in of the Normans have perpetually enjoied the Dominion of the Sea flowing about them is in the first place proved from the Guard or Government thereof as of a Province or Territorie that is to say from the very Law of the English Admiraltie CHAP. XIV AS concerning the Guard or Government of this Sea there are three things therein that deserv special consideration 1. The bare mention and nature of the Guard of the Sea and of the Guardians or Admirals thereof in publick Records and Histories 2. The Tributes and Customs imposed demanded or accustomed to bee paid for and in consideration of the said custodie And lastly the tenor and varietie of Commissions belonging to this Guard and English Admiraltie or Government by Sea Since the coming in of the Normans there is frequent mention of a Guard or Government instituted for the defence and guarding of the Sea Here call to minde those observations touching this kinde of Guard which have been alreadie gathered out of that Record or Breviarie of England called Doomesday And King Henrie the first saith Florentius of Worcester gave order to his Butsecarli to guard the Sea and take care that no person from the parts of Normandie approach the English Coasts The same saith Roger Hoveden in the very same words almost save onely that the printed Copies err in putting Buzsecarlis for Butsecarlis These Butsecarli or Butescarles in the old English Language are Officers belonging to the Navie or Sea-souldiers as Hutesecarli were Domestick Servants or Officers in Court And that to guard the Sea here signified to secure the Sea it self not to defend the Sea-Coasts as somtimes though seldom it did with Land-forces plainly appear's out of Henrie of Huntingdon in whom it is clear that the persons who thus guarded the Sea were emploied by the King to make Warr by Sea against Robert Duke of Normandie who was then preparing an Expedition against England Now those publick Records are lost wherein the Roial Commissions for the delegation of this Command or Government were wont to bee registred all that space of time betwixt the coming in of the Normans and the Reign of K. John But from thence through all the succeeding ages unto this present time it is as clear as day that the Kings of England have been wont to constitute Governors or Commanders who had the charge of guarding the English Sea and were the Guardians or Governors thereof in the same manner as if it had been som Province upon Land First of all there were intrusted with the Government of the Sea or the Maritimae and Marinae the Maritime and Marine part of the Empire understanding by those words not onely som Countrie lying upon the Sea-Coasts but comprehending the British Sea it self though I confess it was not alwaies so such as were to guard and keep it under the title somtimes of Custodes Navium Guardians of the ships but more frequently Custodes Maritimae or Marinae in the sens aforesaid And in the time of Henrie the third Thomas de Moleton is styled Captain and Guardian of the Sea and hath autoritie given him to guard the Sea and the Maritim parts of the Eastern Shore In the same King's Reign also the Inhabitants of the Cinque-Ports are said to guard the Coast of England and the Sea So Hugh de Crequeur was Warden of the Cinque-ports and of the Sea in those parts Afterward the title of Guardians or Wardens very often changed into that of Admirals Edward the First saith Thomas of Walsingham for the keeping of the Sea divided his Shipping into three Fleets setting over them three Admirals namely over the Ships at Yarmouth and the road thereabout John de Botetort over those at Portsmouth William de Leyburn and over the Western and Irish Ships a certain Irish Knight Moreover also that John de Butetort is in the Records of that time styled custos Maritimae as were others also After this in the Reign of Edward the Second three Admirals of the three several Coasts of England saith Walsingham had the guarding of the Sea namely Sir John Oturvin Sir Nicolas Kyriel Sir John Felton Wee finde moreover in our publike Records that the principal end of calling a Parlament in the fourteenth year of Edward the Third was De Treter sur la gard de la pees de la terre de la Marche d'Escoce de la Meer i. e. That consultation might bee had concerning keeping the peace of the Land also of the Borders of Scotland and of the Sea The same regard they had to the defence of the Sea as of the Island or Land-Province giving us to understand that the Land and Sea together made one entire bodie of the Kingdom of England Other evidences of the same nature wee finde in the Records of Parlament of the same King's time or in the consultations of the estates of the Realm had about this matter that whilst they Treat indifferently De la saufegard de la terre concerning the safeguard or defence of the Land or Island and de la saufeguard de la Mere the safeguard of the Sea they seem sufficiently to declare beeing well inform'd by their Ancestors that the Dominion of this as well as of that did belong unto the Crown of England For the business debated by them was not onely how to provide a Navie to make resistance against their Enemies by Sea but for the guarding the Sea it self as well as the securing of the Isle and so for the maintaining the antient right of their King in both In the time of Richard the Second Hugh Calverlee was made Admiral of the Sea saith Walsingham and M r Thomas Percie joined in Commission with him to scour the Roades of the Sea for one year And in the Reign of the same King and likewise of the two succeeding Henries the Fourth and the Fifth debate was had in Parlament about the Guard of the Sea In the Reign of Henrie the Sixth the Guard of the Sea was with a numerous Navie Committed to Richard Earl of Salisburie John Earl of Shrewsburie John Earl of Worcester and James Earl of Wilts to whom was added Baron Sturton and afterward to John Duke
before been made Commander of the Fleets And hee was the first for ought wee know that was created in this manner But in the next Form of Commission the name of Picardie was left out So indeed in the fourth year of Henrie the Sixth or Anno Dom. MCDXXVI John Duke of Bedford was by Commission made Admiral of England Ireland and Aquitain That Form continued about 88. years or throughout the Reigns of Henrie VI Edward IV Richard III Henrie VII and the three first years of Henrie VIII And about that time ten others were in like manner made Admirals for the most part perpetual of England Ireland and Aquitain the last of which was John Earl of Oxon who was Commissionated in that Form in the first year of Henrie the Eight But there followed another alteration or addition of Titles in the fourth year of that King Anno Dom. MDXIII At that time Sir Edward Howard Knight son of Thomas Earl of Su●●ie afterwards Duke of Norfolk was made Admiral of England Wales Ireland Normandie Gascoign and Aquaitain To which words Calais and the Marches thereof are added in the Commission of William Fitzwilliams who also was Earl of Southampton beeing appointed Admiral in the twentie eight year of King Henrie the Eight This Form of Commissions held in use afterward through the whole Reign of that Henry adding according to antient Custom the clauses touching Jurisdiction But in the beginning of Edward the Sixt Thomas Baron Seymour of Sudeley brother to Edward Duke of Somerset was made Admiral almost in the same words as that William Earl of Southampton inserting after the name of Calais Boloign and the Marches of the same After him followed John Earl of Warwick who was created by Edward the Sixt in the third year of his Reign our Admiral of England Ireland Wales Calais and Boloign and our Marches of the same of Normandie Gascoign and Aquitain as also Governor general over all our Fleets and Seas And in the same Commission hee is styled afterwards Great Admiral of England and Governor of our Fleets and Seas But after a while the name of Boloign being omitted the next high Admiral of England was created in the very same Form of words as is mentioned before in the beginning of the Chapter For in the same Form was William Baron Howard of Effingham Son of Thomas Duke of Norfolk made Admiral in the beginning of Queen Marie or Anno Dom. MDLIII And the Command or Government of those Seas as the principal charge of that Office or Dignitie is more notably expressed there as you may see than in the Commission of the Earl of Warwick From that time forwards the very same Form was kept alwaies as in the Commission of the high Admiralship granted to Edward Baron Clinton afterwards Earl of Lincoln in the Reign of Philip and Marie also in the Commission of Charls Baron of Effingham afterwards Earl of Nottingham in the time of Q. Elizabeth and of Charls Duke of York in the time of King James besides George Duke of Buckingham who enjoied the same Office or Command in the same words in the Reigns of James and Charls So that for above eightie years or thereabout that is from the beginning of Q. Marie the whole form as it is set down in the beginning of this Chapter was ever expressly reteined in the Commissions of the high Admiralship of England so far as they denote either the Countries or the Seas or the Dominion of the same But therein the Admiral is styled Governor General over all our Fleets and Seas just as John Earl of Warwick was likewise expressly appointed in general tearms under Edward the sixt or over our Seas aforesaid But what were those Seas or the Seas aforesaid They are in the fore-going words expressly called the Seas of our said Kingdoms of England and Ireland our Dominions and Islands of the same That is in plain tearms Mer d' Engleterre d' Ireland Gales or the Sea of England Ireland and Wales after which manner the Seas belonging to the Dominion of England are sometimes also described in our Laws which are called likewise now and then by our Lawyers Les quatre Miers d'Engleterre or the four Seas of England divided according to the four Quarters of the World So that in the most received form of this Commission after the beginning of Queen Marie's Reign out of which also the sens and meaning of former Commissions is to bee collected wee have a continual possession or Dominion of the King of England by Sea pointed out in express words for very many years And what wee have alreadie spoken by way of Collection out of these that followed the beginning of Marie touching the sens or meaning of former Commissions wherein a positive Command of the Sea is not expressed is truly to omit the thing it self which sufficiently intimate's as much of its own nature not a little confirmed upon this ground that hee also who before any express mention of our Seas took place in the form of the Commission of the high Admiralship was next preferr'd to the same dignitie was immediately after his Creâtion according to the whole Title of his Office as beeing the same title which indeed alwaies belonged to the Admirals of England styled Great Admiral of England and Governor General of the Navie and our Seas So verily Thomas Baron Seymour whom I mentioned before is styled Admiral of England in the Patent Roll granted to him by Edward the sixt It is proved by words plain enough in the form of the Commissions for the Government or command of the high Admiral of England from antient to the present time that the Sea for whose guard or defence hee was appointed by the King of England as Lord and Soveraign was ever bounded towards the South by the shore of Aquitain Normandie and Picardie CHAP. XVII BUT in the Form alreadie shewn which hath continued in use for so many years you see mention is made onely of the Seas of our Kingdoms of England and Ireland our Dominions and Islands belonging to the same as the Province for whose guard or defence the Admiral was appointed that is as wee have told you the English Irish and Welch Sea all which is conteined under the name of the British as it hath been observéd at the beginning of this Book Yet the names of Normandie Gascoign and Aquitain besides Calais are added which are Provinces seated upon the shore over against us As to what concern's them in this place they are either to bee considered in the same manner as if they had been alwaies held in subjection by the English from the time of the first mention of them in the Commission or as they have alreadie for som Ages past been out of their Jurisdiction But suppose in the first place that they had alwaies remained in the Jurisdiction and Possession of the English Questionless
our Isles of Gernesey Jersey Serk and Aureney in the Sea between Easter and Michaelmas is according to the Custom of those places acknowledged to belong unto Us at a reasonable rate to bee paid therefore and that the said Fishermen are bound to carrie all the Fish by them taken between the Times aforesaid unto certain places in those Isles appointed that the Officers under our Governor of the aforesaid Isles may take thence for our use at what price they shall think fit and reasonable Nor is that to bee slighted which wee finde in the Chronicles of the Abbie or Monasterie of Teuxburie concerning Henrie Beauchamp Duke of Warwick who was invested by Henrie the sixt with the Title and Dignitie of King not onely of the Isle of Wight but also of Gernesey and Jersey whereunto the other Isles in this Tract do in a civil sens belong The same thing is recorded of the Isle of Wight by that Learned man William Camden and that out of the same Book The Book it self speak's after this manner But the noble Lord Henrie Duke of Warwick and first Earl of England Lord Le Dispenser and de Abergeveney King of the Isles of Wight and Gardsey and Jardsey Lord also of the Castle of Bristol with the appurtenances thereunto belonging died 3 Idus Junii Anno Dom. 1446. in the twentie second year of his Age at the Castle of Hanley and was buried in the middle of the Quire at Teuxburie And a little before it is said of the same man that hee was Crowned King of Wight by the King 's own hand no express mention beeing made in that place of the other islands but they reckoned in the same condition with this as they were part of the patrimonie of the Kings of England But it is not to bee believed that those Isles which lie before the shore of Normandie had been so turned into a Kingdom though subject to the Crown of England unless even they also who made them a Kingdom had conceived that they possessed them before by a Title superior to that of the Dutchie that is to say by a Kingly Title As King Richard the second when hee had determined that Robert Earl of Oxford who also was Marquiss of Dublin and Duke of Ireland should bee creâted King of Ireland questionless did not doubt but that hee himself in the mean time possessed that Island by no less a Title and Dignitie than of King although the name of Lord was wholly used there at that time in stead of King as also until the latter end of the Reign of Henrie the eight So it is conceived upon good ground that those Isles and the Sea lying about them did though they used different Customs constitute one entire Bodie of Empire with the Kingdom of England Whereunto also that special privilege of theirs doth relate whereby through the favor of the Kings of England they enjoie the benefit of freedom from hostilitie by Sea though there bee a Warr on foot between the Neighbor-Nations round about but of this more hereafter And in their Court-Records which contain the Acts or Decrees of the aforesaid Justices Itinerant wee very often finde Pleas of the Crown which phrase is an Evidence of the English Government Also in their Trials those Forms In contempt of our Lord the King his Crown and Dignitie and Our Lord the King was seised of the aforescid Advousen in time of Peace as of his Fee and in Right of his Crown and others not a few of that kinde wee meet with which savor not of any Right of the Dutchie Add moreover that the King of England so held the Right heretofore not onely of the Isles over against the shore of Normandie but of those also which are opposite to Aquitain as a pledg or concomitant of his possession of that Sea so far as it belong'd to the patrimonie of the Kingdom of England that though our Henrie the third renounced his claim to no small part of Aquitain yet that Isle lying before it called Oleron no less famous in the West for Naval Laws than Rhodes was of old hee granted to his eldest son Edward to bee held in time to com as a perpetual Appendant of the English Crown For this Claus was added to the Grant so that the said Isle may alwaies remain to the Crown of England and never bee alienated from the same Also in his Letters granted to the Inhabitants of Oleron hee saith Wee will not in any wise sever you from the Crown of England Som years before also hee in like manner made a Grant of Gascoign or those parts which lie upon the shore of Aquitain near the Sea to Prince Edward upon condition it should remain entirely and for ever to the Crown of England So without doubt his intent was that both the Sea-Coasts and this Isle should in a special manner bee possest by the said Prince but by no means bee disjoined from the English Empire any more than the Sea its self which washt their shores And although after a while both this and som other neighboring Isles did many Ages since for divers reasons follow the fate of those French shores which lie next to them yet in the mean time the Dominion of the Sea remained entire as it did before to the Kings of England as it sufficiently appear's by those other passages which wee have shewn The Dominion and possession of the Sea asserted on the behalf of the Kings of England from that leav of praeter-Navigation or passage which hath been usually either granted by them to Foreiners or desired from them CHAP. XX. THose things which wee have hitherto alleged concerning this possession and dominion are confirmed by several Passports that have been obteined from the Kings of England for leav to pass through this Sea whereof wee have clear Testimonies in Records that is to say granted at the intreatie of Foreiners Our Henrie the fourth granted leav to Ferrando Urtis de Sarachione a Spaniard to fail freely from the Port of London through our Kingdoms Dominions and Jurisdiction to the Town of Rochel It is manifest that in this place our Dominions and Jurisdiction do relate to the Sea flowing between And when Charls the sixt King of France sent Ambassadors to Robert the third King of Scots to treat about the making of a League they upon request made to the same Henrie obteined Passports for their safe passage par touz noz povoirs destrois Seigniories par Mer par Terre that is through all places under our Power Territories and Dominions as well by Sea as by Land There are innumerable other Letters of Passport called safe Conducts in the Records especially of Henrie the fift and sixt whereby safe Port and Passage was usually granted as well by Sea as by Land and Rivers that is to say throughout the whole Dominion of him that made the Grant And it is
what an extraordinarie plentiful and gainful Herring-Fishing the Hollanders and Zelanders use to have in the neighboring Sea having first obteined leav from this Castle according to the antient Custom For the English have ever granted them leav to fish reserving alwaies the honor and privilege to themselves but through a kinde of negligence resigning the profit to Strangers For it is almost incredible what a vast sum of m●nie the Hollanders make by this Fishing upon our Coast. So he There is another man also of very great skill and knowledg in Sea-affairs who in the time of Q. Elisabeth presented a Book to the Parlament written in the English Tongue about the Commoditie of Fishing wherein hee write's that the Hollanders and Zelanders every year toward the later end of Summer send forth four or five hundred Vessels called Buffes to fish for Herrings in this Eastern Sea Where before they fish they ask leave of Scarborough which are his very words Care was taken also by Proclamation in the time of K. James that no Foreiner should Fish in the English or Irish Sea or that which belong's to the other Isles of the Realm of England without leav first obteined and every year at least rene●ed from the Commissioners appointed for this purpose at London And touching the libertie of fishing granted at other times also to Foreiners by the Kings of England there are many Testimonies in other Writers But the caus why wee do not often meet with the Forms of those Licences granted either for passage or fishing in the English Sea was plainly this becaus by the Leagues that were made with the neighbor Princes a Licence or freedom of that kinde as also of Ports Shores Passage and other things was so often allowed by both Parties that as long as the League was in force the Sea served as if it were a common Field as well for the Foreiner that was in amitie as for the King of England himself who was Lord and Owner But yet in this kinde of Leagues somtimes the Fishing was restrained to certain Limits which is a thing chiefly to bee consider'd The limits related both to place and time So that according to agreement the Foreiner in amitie might not fish beyond these Limits the K. of England reteining a Dominion over the whole adjoining Sea Touching this there is a notable Example in the time of our Henrie the Fourth An agreement was made betwixt the Kings of England and France that the Subjects of both might freely use Fishing throughout that part of the Sea which is bounded on this side by the Ports of Scarborough Southampton and on the other side by the Coast of Flanders and the mouth of the River Seine The time also was limited betwixt Autumn the Kalends of Januarie following And that the French might securely enjoy the benefit of this agreement our King directed Letters to that end unto all his Sea-Captains and Commanders Here you see plainly those Limits wholly excluded the French from that part of the Sea which lie's toward the West and South-west and also from that which lie's North east of them as beeing so limited by our Henrie at his own pleasure as its Lord and Soveraign Nor was there so much as the least shadow of right or Prerogative whereby the French King might seem to have any interest as a Lord or Owner in the setting of these Limits seeing that part of the Sea which was secluded did not touch upon any Shore of his in the North nor had hee any Countrie lying before the Sea in the South except Normandie or in the West the rest beeing held either by the Duke of Bretaign or by the King of England as wee have alreadie observed From hence truly it was a Custom for the Kings of England to give protection to Fisher-men that were Strangers somtimes by Proclamation and somtimes with a Fleet of men of War when they went to Fish either by agreement made upon treatie or by leav obteined qualifications beeing added according to the English King's pleasure There is among the Records of the time of Edward the First an Inscription Pro hominibus Hollandiae c. For the men of Holland and Zeland and Friesland to have leav to fish near Jernemuth The King's Letter for their protection follow 's thus The KING to his Beloved and Trustie John de Buteturte Warden of his Port de Jernemuth Greeting For as much as Wee have been certified that many men out of the parts of Holland Zeland and Friesland also who are in amitie with us intend now to com and fish in Our Sea near Jernemuth Wee command you that you caus publick Proclamation to bee made once or twice everie week that no persons whatsoëver imploied abroad in our service presume to caus any injurie trouble dammage hindrance or grievance to bee don unto them but rather when they stand in need that yee give them advice and assistance in such manner that they may fish and persue their own advantage without any let or impediment In Testimonie whereof Wee have caused these our Letters to bee made Patents to continue in force till after the Feast of St Martin next ensuing Witness the King at Wengham the XXVIII day of September Which was in the XXIII year of his Reign and of our Lord MCCXCV The same day also in favor of the ●arl of Holland and his Subjects hee set forth three men of War toward the farther Coast of the Sea for the safeguard as hee saith in another Letter of those Uessels belonging to your and our own Countrie that are in these daies emploied about the Herring Fishing c. and to guard your Coasts near the Sea Here hee grant's a Protection to fish And in both the Letters hee limits it within the space of two Months Hee alone also protected the Fisher-men upon the Ge●man Coasts which by reason of its nearness hee call's here your Coast near the Sea in his Letter to the Ea●l of Holland as well as upon the English Nor might the Fisher-men use any other kinde of Vessels but that which was prescribed by our Kings Upon which account all kindes of Fishing were somtimes prohibited and somtimes admitted this restriction onely beeing added that they should fish in such Vessels onely as were under thirtie Tuns burthen This appear's by those Letters of King Edward the Third concerning the Laws of Fishing which were directed unto his several Governors of Yarmouth Scarborough Whitby and Donwich Towns seated upon the Eastern Shore The words are these Forasmuch as wee have given Licence to the Fishermen of the aforesaid Town and to others who shall bee willing to com unto the said Town for the benefit of Fishing that they may fish and make their own advantage with Ships and Boats under thirtie Tuns burthen any prohibition or Commands of ours whatsoever to the contrarie notwithstanding wee command you to permit the Fisher-men of the aforesaid
his Council The like Commission was at the same time and by the same time and by the same Autoritie given to John de Norwich Admiral of the Northen part In the preferring of a certain Bill also in Parlament which was the voice of the Estates of the Realm in the reign of the same Edward wee finde that hee was usually accounted and styled King or Soveraign of the Sea by all Nations The words are qe XX ans passez toutdiz adevant la Navie de dit roialme estoit en touz portz bones villes sur mier sur riviers si noble si plentinouse qe touz les pais t●no●ent appelloyen● nostre avantdit Seignieur LE ROY DE LA MIER tout son pays dotoyent le pluis per mier per terre per cause de la dite Navie c. Which beeing translated out of the old Norman speak's to this effect That the English were ever in the Ages past renowned for Sea affairs in all Countries near the Sea and they had also so numerous a Navie that the people of all Countries esteemed and called our King the King or Soveraign of the Sea There is likewise a notable Testimonie touching this business in the Parlament-Records of Henrie the Fifth where the tenor of the Bill ran as was usual after this manner Item priont les Commens que per lou nostre tressoverain seigneur LE ROY ET SES NOBLES PROGENITORS DE TOUT TEMPS ON T ESTE SEIGNEURS DEL MEER ore par l● grace de Dieu est venuz que nostre dit seigneur le Roy est seigneur des costes d' ambeparties del meer d' ordeigner sur touts estrangers passants per my le dit meer tiel imposition al oeps nostre dit seigneur le Roy à prendre que à luy semblera resonable pur la sauvegarde del dite meer That is to s●● Item the Commons do pray that seeing our Soveraign Lord the King and his illustrious Progenitors have ever been Lords of the Sea and now that through Gods gtace it is so com to pass that our said Lord the King is Lord of the Shores on both sides of the Sea such a tribute may bee imposed upon all Strangers passing through the said Sea for the benefit and advantage of our said Lord the King as may seem agreeable to reason for the safeguard of the said Sea The Answer subscribed to this Bill was Soit avise par le Roy that is let the King himself bee advised of it For the King resided in France at that time beeing Lord of that Countrie by Inheritance and Conquest and Humphrey Duke of Glocester was President of the Parlament beeing then Keeper or Lieutenant of England by whom as the King's Deputie this kinde of Answer was usually given to Bills as often as an assent to them was delaied but when the King was present in person le Roy s' advisera the K. will advise served in stead of an Answer from antient down to the present time in such Bills as were not passed into Acts. That is to say in those Bills to which the Lords and Commons had given their assent before that is the Estates of the Parlament of England which is here especially to bee considered For most certain it is that according to Custom no Answer is given either by the King or in the King's name to any Parlamentarie Bills before that the Bill whether it bee brought in first by the Lords or by the Commons hath passed both Houses as it is known to all that are verst in the Affairs and Records of Parlament And when the name of either of them is left out in the draught of the Bill as the Lords are in that before alleged it was wont to bee supplied as it is also at this day by the brief form of Assent which is added by that Hous to whom the Bill is sent and transmitted For that Hous which first prefer's it transmit's it to the other who either give 's an assent or reject's it And when both Houses have so given their assent then after a while either the King give 's his assent whereby it becom's an Act or Law or els hee laie's it aside and as I have alreadie shewn take's time to advise Neither of which is ever don by the King according to the cours of Parlament till both Lords and Commons have first given their assent But the whole form of the afore-mentioned Bill which is full of all kinde of storie concerning things transacted in Parlament is taken out of the very Schedules annexed to the Bill wherein the Forms of this kinde of assent were wont expressly to bee added and register'd according to antient Custom among the Records of Parlament in the very same words wherein it was at first exhibited no express mention beeing made of the assent both of Lords and Commons which is annexed to the Body of the Form for the assent of both sufficiently appear's in that according to the cours of Parlament it was so presented to the King and the Kings assent onely or intent of deliberation beeing added by way of subscription as I have shewn But most of those Schedules annexed to that kinde of Bills which relate to the more antient times are lost whereas notwithstanding the Records wherein they were wont to bee register'd have been carefully preserved in the Tower for above CCC years All which wee thought meet to mention here to the end that in the Bill before alleged out of the Parlamentarie Records of Henrie the fift these three things may bee observed which make very much to the point in hand First that the Estates in Parlament according to the Custom of their Ancestors that is to say both Houses of Lords and Commons beeing well-informed of the matter perhaps by som antient Testimonies whereof wee are bereft by the injurie of time did with one consent affirm it as a thing unquestionable that the King of England is Lord of the Sea As it appear's also in that former Record which relate's to the Reign of Edward the third for both the Bills are placed alike in the aforesaid Records Secondly that the Sea whereof they speak is the whole that flow's between France and England For they say in express terms that King Henry beeing Lord of the Sea was at that time Lord des costes d amb●parties del meer that is of the Coasts or Shores on both sides of the Sea or those that include the Sea on both sides which cannot bee understood of any other or greater Sea than of that which was mentioned there immediately before And so it is in plain terms to bee taken of that whole Sea Thirdly that those Estates did not question but that Tributes might bee imposed by autoritie of Parlament upon all strangers whatsoëver wheresoëver they pass through this Sea as well as Customs in Port And that they did not at all conceiv that a Bill ought
to the Royal Patrimonie of England to the end that no man might question whether the Sea belong'd to his King by the Right of the Kingdom of England or of the Dutchie of Normandie or of any other Province in France Another also who wrote in the time of Henrie the Eighth saith it hath been received by antient custom that it is a dutie lying upon the King of England as Lord of the British Sea to scour the Sea of Pirates and to render the use thereof as of a publick Road or Thorow-fare whose soil is within his Patrimonie safe for Shipping For hee expresseth himself in English thus The King of the ould Custome of the Realme as the Lord of the narrow Sea is bound as it is said to scoure the Sea of the Pirates and petit robbers of the Sea So much also as to what concern's Dominion is without controversie admitted by our Lawyers of later time And it appear's by publick Records conteining divers main points touching which the Judges were to bee consulted for the good of the Common-weal in the time of King Edward the Third that the King's Sea-Dominion which they called the antient superioritie of the Sea was a matter out of question among our Lawyers of that Age. But consultation was had for the more convenient guarding of it For the whole Bench of Judges were advised with to the end so wee read it in the Records and that is especially to bee observed which wee finde here about the first beginning of the Naval Laws of the Isle of Oleron seated in the Creek of Aquitain at the mouth of the River Charente that the form of proceeding heretofore ordained and begun by Edward the first grandfather of our Lord the King and his Council at the prosecution of his Subjects may bee resumed and continued for the reteining and conserving of the antient superioritie of the Sea of England and the Autoritie of the Office of Admiraltie in the same as to the correcting expounding declaring and conserving the Laws and Statutes long since made by his Predecessors Kings of England for the mainteining of Peace and Justice among all people of what Nation soëver passing through the Sea of England and to take cognisance of all attempt to the contrarie in the same and to punish Offenders and award satisfaction to such as suffer wrong and damage Which Laws and Statutes were by the Lord Richard heretofore King of England at his return from the holy Land interpreted declared and published in the Isle of Oleron and named in French le ley Olyroun Here you have it declared as a thing most received and certain that the King of England hath by antient right been Lord of the Sea of the same name or that which flow's about it But that whereof the Bench of Judges were to consult was onely about the orderly maintenance of this right Nor is it truly a small sign of this Dominion that Richard the First King of England beeing in the Isle of Oleron which hee possessed as seated in his own Sea not so much for that hee was Duke of Aquitain as King of England whereof wee have alreadie spoken did as sole Ruler and Moderator of Sea-affairs first publish those Naval or Sea-Laws in that his Island which hold in force to this day and from that time gave them so large and perpetual an Autoritie by that name that as the Rhodian Naval Laws as the case stand's do prove that the Rhodians in antient time were Lords of the Grecian Sea so the Laws of Oleron having obteined such a kinde of Autoritie by Sea from their first Institution must ever declare the King of England as the Autor to bee Lord of the neighboring Sea round about But som printed Copies of these Laws make them about sixtie years later than the Reign of that Richard by what autoritie I cannot tell For they relate them to have been made in the year MCCLXVI which is the fiftieth year of our Henrie the third Also in the Law of the Land it is reckoned among the Privileges of such as are absent that they who shall bee out of the Realm of England at the levying of a Fine of any Land and making Proclamations thereupon are not so bound either by a yearly prescription as heretofore or by a five years prescription as is usual of later time but that their Right remain's entire to them upon their return home if they make their claim within the like spaces of time But intra regnum within the Kingdom is by the same Law taken and that in the usual phrase for that which is intra or as it is wont to bee barbarously render'd infra Quatuor Maria within the four Seas to wit the Southern Western Eastern and that Northen Sea which washeth both the sides of that neck of Land whereby Scotland is united to England That is to say within the outmost bounds of the English Empire in those four Seas or within the opposite Shores of the Eastern and Southern Sea or Ports belonging to other Princes and within the bounds of the Northern and Western Sea which indeed are to bee bounded after another manner but yet to bee bounded that is accordirng to the extent of possession West-ward beyond the Western Shores of Ireland and by the first beginning of that Sea which is of the Scotish name and jurisdiction But that which is opposed to this Particle intra quatuor maria within the four seas is that extra quatuor Maria without the four seas or to bee in the parts so beyond the Seas that they bee beyond the bounds of the Sea-Dominion of the King of England from whence wee are to determine of the bounds or exterior limit of the Seas And although the Land of England bee somtimes used for that which is the whole Realm or English Empire as signifying the same a more ordinarie and indeed more brief expression beeing applied as is usual in stead of a more large yet it certainly appear's that extra quatuor maria without the four seas and extra Regnum without the Realm do in our Law-Books signifie the very same thing that is to say so far as the extent and latitude of the whole English Empire is comprehended in the name of Realm not as the Realm of England is now and then distinguished in our Law from Ireland which also is a distinct Dominion of the same Empire or from the other Islands which are reckoned in the Roial patrimonie of the Kings of England For it is usual in the Language of the Law so to describe him who in that sens shall bee out of the Realm And whereas in the Reign of Richard the second to an objection made against one that would avoid the yearly prescription as not bound by it for that hee was not in England it was excepted that hee was in Scotland and so within the four Seas It was thereupon answer'd and rul'd
THERE IS NO MEMORIAL TO THE CONTRARY HAVE BEEN IN PEACEABLE POSSESSION OF THE SOVERAIGN LORDSHIP OF THE SEA OF ENGLAND AND OF THE ISLES WITHIN THE SAME with power of making and establishing Laws Statutes and Prohibitions of people as well of other Domin●●ns as their 〈◊〉 passing through the said Seas and the Saveraign Guard thereof And also 〈…〉 all manner of Cognisance in Causes and of doing right a●d Iustice to high and low according to the said Laws Sta●u●es Ordinances and Prohibitions and all other things which may appertein to the exercises of Soveraign Iurisdiction in the places aforesaid And whereas A. de B. deputed Admiral of the said Sea by the King of England and all other Admirals appointed by the said king of England and his Ancestors heretofore kings of England of a●●●al and complaint made of them to their Soveraigns the kings of England in default of Iustice or for evil Iud●●●n● a●d especially of making Prohibitions doing Iustice and taking surety of the peace of all manner of people using arms in the said Sea or carrying S●●ps otherwise furnished and ●et forth th●● Merchant-men use to bee a●d in all other points where a man may have reasonable caus to suspect them of Robbery or other ●…uors And whereas the Masters of the Ships of the said kingdom of England in the absence of the said Admiral have been in peaceable possession of taking cognisance and judging of all A●●ions don in the said Sea between all manner of people according to the Laws Statutes Prohibitions and Customs And whereas in the first Article of the League lately made between the said Kings in the Treatie upon the last peace at Paris there are comprised the words here following in a Schedule annexed to these Presents But that which follow 's is not written in a Schedule annexed but in the same Parchment from whence it may perhaps bee conjectured that these are not so much the very Libels themselvs which were exhibited to the Commissioners or Auditors as antient Copies taken from the Original as also from this that the name of the Admiral is set down A. de B. which two first Letters do not agree with the name of any one that wee can finde in Record to have been Admiral of England at that time First it is concluded and accorded between Us and the Agents and Procurators aforesaid in the names of the said Kings that the said Kings shall from this time forward becom to each other good true and faithful friends and bee aiding to one another against all men saving the Church of Rome in such manner that if any one or more whosoever they bee shall intend to disturb hinder or molest the said Kings in the Franchises Liberties Privileges Rights and Customs of them and their Kingdoms They shall bee good and faithful friends to each other and aiding against all men living and readie to die to defend keep and maintein the Franchises Liberties Privileges Rights and Customs aforesaid Except on the behalf of the said King of England John Duke of Brabant in Brabant and his heirs descending from him and the daughter of the King of England and except on the behalf of our Lord the said king of France the excellent Prince Monsieur Albert king of Almaign and his heirs kings of Almaign and Monsieur John Earl of Henault in Henault and that the one shall not bee of Counsel nor aiding where the other may lose life member estate or honor Monsieur Reyner Grimbald Master of the Navie of the said king of France who call's himself Admiral of the said Sea beeing deputed by his aforesaid Lord in his war against the Flemings did after the said League made and confirmed against the tenor and obligation of the said League and the intent of them that made it wrongfully assume and exercise the office of Admiraltie in the said Sea of England above the space of a year by Commission of the said king of France taking the people and Merchants of the kingdom of England and of other places passing through the said Sea with their Goods and committed them so taken to the prison of his said Lord the king of France and delivered their Goods and Merchandises to the Receivers of the said king of France by him deputed in the Ports of his said kingdom as forfeited and due unto him to remain at his Judgment and award And the taking and deteining of the said people with their said goods as also his said Judgment award for the forfeiture acquest of them he hath iustified before you Lords Auditors in writing by virtue of the autoritie of his said Commission of Admiraltie aforesaid by him usurped after this manner and during a Prohibition or Restraint generally made and proclaimed by the king of England in right of his Dominion according to the tenor of the third Article of the League aforesaid which contain's the words above-written requiring that hee may thereupon bee acquitted and discharged of the same to the great damage and prejudice of the said king of England and of the Prelates Nobles others above-mentioned Wherefore the said Procurators in the names of their said Lords do pray your Lordships Auditors that you would caus due and speedie deliverance of the said people with their Goods and Merchandises so taken and deteined to bee made to the Admiral of the said king of England to whom the cognisance of the same of right apperteineth as is before expressed So that without disturbance from you or any other hee may take cognisance thereof and do what belong's to his office aforesaid And the said Monsieur Reyner bee condemned and constrained to make satisfaction for all the said damages so far forth as hee shall bee able and in his default his said Lord the king of France by whom hee was deputed to the said office and that after satisfaction given for the said damages the said Monsieur Reyner may bee so duly punished for the violation of the said League that his punishment may be an example to others in time to com So far the Libel of so many Nations manifestly acknowledging the Soveraigntie and Dominion of our Kings over the Sea and thereupon demanding protection for themselvs And whereas no mention is made of this thing in the Histories either of the French English or others it is no wonder since the proceedings of Courts of Judi●a●ure are very seldom set down in Histori●● But wee understand by the French Historie that this Gri●bald was Gov●●●or of the French Navie at the very same time Paulus AEmiliu● writing of Philip the Fair saith Hee hired sixteen Gallies from Genoa ●ver which Reyner Grimbald was Governor or Commander Hee sailing about by Sea infested the Sea-Coast of Flanders Regimerus Regin●rus or Reynerus Grimbaldus is one and the same man and among the Genoêses there is an eminent Family of that name But becaus hee was a Foreiner and Mercenarie therefore it seem's Joannes Feronius left
been by them deliver'd Just in the same manner as if a man should so discours upon Aristotle's Astronomie or the opinion of Thales touching the Earth's floating like a Dish in the Sea and that of the Sto●cks of its encompassing the Earth like a Girdle with that of the Antients concerning an extreme heat under the Equinoctial and other opinions of that kinde which are rejected and condemned by the observation and experience of Posteritie that hee might seem not so much to search into the thing it self as to represent the person of the Autor thereby to trace out his meaning onely for the discovering of his opinion But as the root beeing cut the Tree fall's so the Autoritie of those antient Lawyers beeing removed out of the way all the determinations of the modern which are supported by it must bee extremely weakned Now therefore as to what hath been formerly alleged out of Fernandus Vosquius it is grounded upon such Arguments as are either manifestly fals or impertinent For what is this to the purpose That the Sea from the beginning of the world to this present day is and ever hath been in common without the least alteration as 't is generally known Whereas the quite contrarie is most certainly known to those who have had any insight into the received Laws and Customs of Ages and Nations That is to say that by most approved Law and Custom som Seas have passed into the Dominion and partrimonie both of Princes and private persons as is clearly made manifest out of what hath been alreadie shewn you Moreover also hee would have prescription to ceas betwixt Foreigners in relation to each other and not to take place in the Law of Nations but in the Civil onely so that by his Opinion prescription should bee of no force between those as between two supreme states or Princes who are not indifferently subject to the Civil Law which admit's prescription then which not any thing can bee said or imagined more absurd Almost all the principal points of the Intervenient Law of Nations beeing established by long consent of persons using them do depend upon prescription or antient Custom To say nothing of those Princes whose Territories were subject heretofore to the Roman Empire and who afterwards became absolute within themselvs not onely by Arms but also by prescription which is every where admitted among the Laws of Nations whence is it that Prisoners of war are not now made slaves among Christians unless it bee becaus that Custom began to grow out of date som Ages since upon a ground of Christian brotherhood and by prescription ratified betwixt Nations Whence is it that the ransoms of prisoners are to bee paid som to the Princes and som to the Persons that take them As for instance when the ransom is not above ten thousand Crowns it goe's to him that took the Prisoner when it exceed's it is to bee paid to the Prince Becaus saith Nicolaus Boërius if it exceed as when any one hath taken a Duke a Count a Baron or any other great man then it belong's to the Prince and so it is observed in the Kingdoms of France England and Spain It hath by prescription of time been observed among Princes and so it became Law And truly to deny a Title of prescription wholly among Princes is plainly to abrogate the very intervenient Laws of Nations As for those other things mentioned by Vasquius concerning Charitie and the inexhaustible abundance of the Sea whereby hee make's a difference betwixt Rivers and Seas and other things of the like nature they have no relation at all to the point of Dominion as you have been sufficiently told alreadie In the next place wee com to the other to wit Hugo Grotius a man of great learning and extraordinarie knowledg in things both Divine and Humane whose name is very frequent in the mouths of men every where to maintein a natural and perpetual Communitie of the Sea Hee hath handled that point in two Books in his Mare Liberum and in that excellent work De Jure Belli pacis As to what concern's Mare Liberum a Book that was written against the Portugals about trading into the Indies through the vast Atlantick and Southern Ocean it contein's indeed such things as have been delivered by antient Lawyers touching communiti● of the Sea Yea and disputing for the Profits and Interests of his Countrie hee draw's them into his own partie and so endeavor's to prove that the Sea is not capable of private Dominion But hee hath so warily couched this subject with other things that whether in this hee did hit or miss the rest howsoëver might serv to assert the point which hee was to handle Moreover hee discourseth about the Title of Discoverie and primarie occupation pretended to by the Portugals and that also which is by Donation from the Pope And hee seem's in a manner either somtimes to quit that natural and perpetual Communitie which many Civil Lawyers are eager to maintein and hee himself in order to his design endeavored to confirm or els to confess that it can hardly bee defended For concerning those Seas that were inclosed by the antient Romans the nature of the Sea saith hee differ's from the Shore in this that the Sea unless it bee in som small part of it self is not easily capable of Building or Inclosure And put case it were yet even this could hardly bee without the hindrance of common use Nevertheless if any small part of it may bee thus possessed it fall's to him that enter's upon it first by occupation Now the difference of a lesser and a grea●er part cannot take place I suppose in the determining of private Dominion But in express words hee except's even a Bay or Creek of the Sea And a little after saith hee Wee do not speak here of an I●-land Sea which in som places being streightned with Land on every side exceed's not the breadth even of a River yet 't is clear that this was it the Roman Lawyers spake of when they set forth those notable determinations against private Avarice But the Question is concerning the Ocean which Antiquitie called immense Infinit the Parent or Original of things confining with the Aër And afterwards hee saith The Controversie is not about a streight or Creek in this Ocean nor of so much as is within view when one stand's upon the shore A little farther also speaking of Prescription hee saith It is to bee added that their Autoritie who are of the contrarie opinion cannot bee applied to this Question For they speak of the Mediterranean Sea wee of the Ocean They of a Creek or Bay wee of the broad and wide Sea which differ very much in the point of Occupation And certainly there is no man but must conceiv it a very difficult thing to possess the whole Ocean Though if it could bee held by occupation like a narrow Sea or a Creek or as
of Excester And in those daies it was usual to procure King's Letters commonly called in the language of the Law Protections whereby Privilege and exemption from all suits was granted to those that were emploied in this kinde of Guard or Defence of the Sea or that spent their time super salvâ custodiâ defensione Maris For the safeguarding and defence of the Sea as the form of the words hath it which wee frequently finde in the Archives Moreover in the Acts of Parlament of the same King's Reign mention is made of the safeguarding of the Sea or de la saufegard de la mier as of a thing commonly known and for which it was the Custom of the English to make as diligent provision as for the Government of any Province or Countrie And in the twentieth year of the same King the Commons preferr'd a Bill that a strong and well accomplished Navie might bee provided for the defence of the Sea becaus It is thought fit be all the Commens of this Land that it is necessarie the See be kept Verie many other passages there are to the same purpose Geoffrie Chaucer who lived in the time of Richard the Second and was a man verie knowing in the affairs of his Countrie among other most elegant and lively characters of several sorts of men written in the English Tongue describe's the humor of an English Merchant of that time how that his desire above all things is that the Sea bee well guarded never left destitute of such protection as may keep it safe and quiet Which hee speak's to set out the whole generation of Merchants in that age whose custom it was to bee sollicitous for traffick above all things and consequently about the Sea it self which would not afford them safe Voyages did not the Kings of England as Sovereigns thereof according to their Right and Custom provide for the securitie of this as a Province under their Protection The words of Chaucer are these His reasons spake hee full solemnely Shewing alway the encreas of his winning Hee would the See were kept for any thing Betwixe Middleborough and Orewel Orewel is an Haven upon the Coasts in Suffolk Middleborough is in Zealand The whole Sea that floweth between Britain and Zealand the English Merchants would have secured this they were wont solemnly and unanimously to pray for knowing that the Sea was part of the Kingdom and the Protection of them part of the dutie of the Kings of England For as concerning any Protection herein by any forrein Princes any farther then in their own Harbors or at the most within the winding Creeks between those Islands which they possessed upon the Coasts of Germanie or Gallia Belgica there is nothing as far as wee can finde to bee gathered from any Testimonies of former Ages In the succeeding Ages likewise there is frequent mention of this kinde of Guard Defence and Government of the same Sea as will hereafter more fully appear when wee com to speak of Tributes and of the tenor and varietie of the Commissions given to our Admirals But now it is to bee observed that both the name and nature of this Guard is very well known not onely by the use of the word both in the Imperial and Canon Law wherein it denotes that the Guardian ought to take a diligent care of that thing whereof hee is owner who doth either lend it or commit it to his over-sight but also by the common and obvious use which the English make of the same word in other Offices or Governments For in those daies of old when the title of Guardians or Wardens of the Sea was more usual there were appointed Wardens of the Ports even as at this day there are Wardens of the Counties who are those Commanders of Counties called Sheriffs and in the usual form and tenor of their Writ have custodiam comitatûs the Guard or Defence of the Countie committed to their charge Wardens or Keepers of the Marches or Borders Keepers of Towers or Castles Parks Houses and the like Yea and the Lord Lievtenant of Ireland was especially in the time of King John and Henrie the Third styled usually Warden or Keeper of Ireland and his Office or dignitie commonly called the Keepership of Ireland after the same manner as John Duke of Bedford and Humphrey Duke of Glocester whom Henry the fift during the time of his absence in France deputed to govern the Kingdom of England by turns were called Custodes Angliae Keepers of England as wee very often finde both in Histories and Records So Arthur Prince of Wales was made Keeper of England while Henry the seventh was beyond the Seas So Piers Gaveston was keeper of England while Edward the second remained in France So were others also in like manner The Governors also of the Islands of Jarsey and Garnesey and the rest that are situated in this Sea who now are styled Governors Keepers or Captains were in antient times called onely by the name of Guardians or Keepers This then beeing so what reason have wee to think that our Ancestors did not use the same Notion of Guardian or Keeper and of guarding or keeping in the name of the Guardian and the Guard of the Sea which they were wont to use in the Guard and keeping of the Island and in the other dignities or offices before mentioned Doubtless in all these the peculiar Dominion and Soveraigntie of him that conferr'd the Dignities is so clearly signified and included that his Dominion or Ownership of the thing to bee kept and guarded as well as Autoritie over the person dignified is plainly implied in this Title Nor is it to bee omitted that in antient times before the autoritie of the high Admirals of England was sufficiently established by our Kings and setled so distinct that the Command and Government of the Sea did belong onely to them the Governors or Keepers of the Provinces whom wee call Sheriffs of the Counties by virtue of their Office had also som Custodie or Command of part of that Sea which adjoined to their respective Provinces as of a part of the Kingdom of England Which truly to let pass other proofs is sufficiently evident by this that many times in those daies they who by the Common Law of the Land were wont as at this day to put in execution the Commands of the King in those places onely that were committed severally to their charge and custodie did do the same also in the Sea it self as well as in any Land-Province belonging to him from whom they received their autoritie For by virtue of their ordinarie power derived from the King and such as was founded upon the very same right by which they held the Government of the Countie or Province they did oftentimes remove the King's Ships and Fleets from one Port to another by Sea as through the Territorie of the Province that was committed to their
brought Merchandise out of Flanders to London or that carried Wooll and Skins from any other place within the Jurisdiction of that Admiraltie to Calais If a Vessel were imploied to fish for Herrings it paid the rate of six pence a week upon every Ton. If for other kindes of Fish so much was to bee paid every three weeks as they who brought Coles hither from New-Castle paid it every three months But if a Vessel were bound for Prussia Norwaie Scone or any of the neighboring Countries it paid a particular Custom according to the weight and proportion of the Freight And if any were unwilling it was lawful to compel them to pay That is to say there were certain Officers that had autoritie to exact it having the Command of six ships Men of War for this kinde of Guard or Protection But the whole matter I here faithfully set down out of the Original in the same language it was written that is the Norman Language of that time C'est l'Ordinance Granté per l'aduis des Marchaunds de Londres des autres Marchaunds vers la North per ●ossent de touz les Communes de Parlement par devant le Comte de Northomberland le meaire de Londres p●r la garde tuicion du mier costers del Admiralté de North ove deux Niefs deux Bargis deux Ballingers armez arraiez pur guerre sur les coustagis que s'ensuient Primerement pur prendre de Chescun Nief Craier de quele portage q'il soit que passe per la mier dedeinz le dicte Admiralté alant returnant pur la voiage de chescun tonnetight VI d horspris Niefs chargez ove vins Niefs chargez ove marchandises en Flandres qe serront frettez dischargez à Londres Niefs chargez ove leynes peues à Londres ou ailleurs dedeinz la dicte Admiralté que serront dischargez à Caleis les quieux Niefs les Gardeins de la dicte mier ne serront tenuz de les conduire sans estre allovez Item de prendre de chescun vesseau pessoner qe pessent sur la mier du dit Admiralté entour harang de quelle portage q'il soit en un semain de chescun tonnetight VI d Item de prendre des autres Niefs vesseauz pessoners que pessont entour autres pessons sur la mier dedeinz la dicte Admiralté de quele portage q'il soit en trois semaignes de chescun tonnetight VI d Item de prendre de touz autres Niefs vesseaux passanz par mier dedeinz la dicte Admiralté chargez ove Charbons ou Novel Chastiele seur Tyne de quele portage q'il soit en le quarter de un an de chescun tonnetight VI d Item de prendre de touz autres Niefs Craiers vesseaux passanz per mier dedeinz la dicte Admiralté chargez ove biens des Marchanz queconques en Espreux ou en Northway ou en Scone ou en ascune lieu en mesme les parties de pardela pur le voyage alant retornant de chescun last Squar viz. lastas graves VI d This is the Ordinance and Grant by the advice of the Merchants of London and other Merchants towards the North by the Assent of all the Commons in Parlament before the Earl of Northumberland and the Mayor of London for the Guard and tuition of the Sea and the Coasts of the Admiraltie of the North with two Ships two Barges and two Ballingers armed and fitted for Warr at these rates following First To take of every Ship and Bark of what burthen soever it bee which passeth through the Sea within the said Admiraltie going returning for the Uoiage upon every Tun VI d Except Ships laden with Wines and Ships laden with Merchandises in Flanders which shall bee unladen and discharged at London and ships laden with wools skins at London or elswhere within the said Admiraltie which shall bee discharged at Calais which ships the Guardians of the said Sea shall not bee bound to convoy without allowance Item To take of every Fisher-boat that fisheth upon the Sea of the said Admiraltie for Herrmgs of what burthen soëver it bee for each week of every Tun VI d Item To take of other Ships and Fisher-boats that Fish for other kindes of Fish upon the sea within the said Admiraltie of what burthen soëver they bee for three weeks of every Tun VId. Item To take of all other ships and Uessels passing by Sea within the said Admiraltie laden with Coles from New-Castle upon Tyne of what burthen soever they bee for a Quarter of a year of every Tun VId. Item To take of all other ships Barks and Uessels passing by sea within the said Admiraltie laden with Goods of any Merchants whatsoever for Prussia or for Norway or for Scone or for any other place in those Parts beyond the sea for the Uoiage going and returning of every Last VId. So run the Records of Parlament which in that Age were almost all written in this kinde of Language Not such as arrived at shore were charged here as in most other places with Customs as upon the Account onely of the shore but those that passed or sailed by or used Fishing as well Strangers as Natives And this was upon the request also of the Estates in Parlament under Henrie the fift in the preferring of a certain Bill which I have taken out of the Records and set down at large hereafter That is to say they desired it as beeing very well instructed in the antient Law and Custom touching that particular and of the Kings Dominion Nor can any thing bee said more expressly for asserting the Dominion of the King of England over the Sea it self For it is clearly the interest of him who is Lord or Owner of the place to impose paiments and services within a Territorie Moreover in the time of Henrie VI William de la Poole Duke of Suffolk beeing accused in Parlament the principal head of the Charge was that hee had converted the Subsidie monie to other uses which had been imposed and levied for the Guard of the Sea The words in the English are For the Defence and tuycion and saufe keeping of the Sea as wee reade it in the Records A demand was made also in Parlament in the two and thirtieth year of the same King of fourtie thousand pounds For the defence and saufegard of the Sea as wee reade likewise in the Records But why do I cite them here In those Acts of Parlament which are published abroad in Print wee very often finde it as a thing asserted by the Estates of the Realm in Parlament that the Kings of England have time out of minde by autoritie of Parlament taken large sums of monie by way of Subsidie or Custom upon Merchandise either imported or exported For the defence of the Realm and the keeping and
somtimes slight mention is made not onely in the proêms of som Charters of later times but also in several antient Petitions of the Isl●nders that those Islands belong'd heretofore to the Dutchie of Normandie and upon that account were held by the Kings of England But yet wee know as well that those Provinces which in Antient time were derived by Inheritance to our Kings in France of which kinde truly these Islands are to bee reckon'd if they were held as parts of Normandie were alwaies permitted so to use their own Customs and antient Forms of Jurisdiction that they were not at all subject to the ordinarie Jurisdiction of the Courts of England The same privilege was ever allowed likewise to the people of Aquitain Anjou Normandie and others Yea and som Ages since the Kings of England were pleased to order that such Controversies as hapned there should not bee decided in any other place out of the Islands but in their own Courts of Judicature whereas notwithstanding it is most certain that in the Reigns of Edward the Second and Third times which without doubt made good search into that Right whereby those Islands were annexed to the Patrimonie of the Kings of England there were Justices Itinerant that is Officers created of old who were often by ordinarie right to take cognisance especially of the more heinous crimes through all the Counties of England also of such Rights and Privileges of the Crown as were usurp't and arrogated by any and of other matters for the most part that are usually brought into Courts of Justice who beeing sometimes also called Justitiae errantes Justices errant were wont to bee sent forth into those Islands as well as into the Counties of England though the Inhabitants did indeed exclaim and somtimes preferr'd their Petitions against this kinde of Jurisdiction But yet it is most certain that the opinion of those very Officers who were themselvs learned in the Law then was that those Commissions whereby they were so inabled to administer Justice in those Islands were not onely grounded upon Law which was the opinion also of those who ruled at that time in this Nation but also that the very Provinces of the Islands were so incorporated one with another as they are all with England throughout the extent of that Sea which lie's between after the manner of our English Custom in the Provinces or Countries that a Caus beeing somtimes inlarged they might appoint daies of Appearance to any Inhabitants of those Islands in the King's Bench in England as well as to the Inhabitants of any one of the Isles in the other after the same manner as is used within England it self Which appear's by the Commission of John de Scardeburgh and his Fellow-Justices in the time of Edward the Third and others of that Age. But it was never heard I suppose that upon such an inlargement a time of Appearance might by our Common Law bee appointed in any other place but that which is of the same Jurisdiction as conteined within the Patrimonie of the Crown whereto also that place belong's out of which any one is so adjourned Nor do I remember that any such thing was ever so much as attempted in those Provinces which were not reckoned in the Patrimonie of the English Empire yet possessed upon another Title by the King of England as the Dutchies of Anjou Normandie Aquitain and the like Moreover also in the more antient Charters of som of our Kings in confirmation of the Privileges of Islanders they are noted more than once for such Privileges as they or their Ancestors or Predecessors have enjoied under the obedience of any of our Progenitors beeing Kings of England Surely if it had been then believed that those Islands were a part of the Dutchie of Normandie it is not to bee doubted but they had added also or Dukes of Normandie which wee finde truly in som Charters of later time yet so that in these also those Isles are said in express terms and that upon verie good ground to bee retained in sealtie and obedience to our Crown of England But in the time of Edward the Third the Islanders petitioning the King in Parlament for their Privileges and Custom 's which had been established time out of minde annexed the Customs of som of the Islands among which are these Item that no man ought to bee questioned about his Freehold after hee hath quietly enjoied it a year and a day unless it bee by Writ taken out of the Chancerie of our Lord the King making special mention both of the Tenement it self and of the Tenant Item That they shall not bee put to Answer before the King's Justices of Assise until they first give them Copies of their Commissions of Assise under their Seals Item that the King's Justices assigned by Commission for the bolding of Assise ought not to hold Pleas here longer than the space of three weeks Truly these antient Customs seem so to re●●sh as if those Islands had been subject to our Kings their ordinarie Jurisdiction by the right of English Empire not by the Norman although the Islanders insinuate also in the same Petitions that they were a part of the Neighboring Province of Normandie Add hereto also that the ●sle of Serk was granted by Queen Elisabeth to Herelie de Carteret to bee held in Capite by him and his heirs that is to say as a Feud belonging to the patrimonie of the Crown of England notwithstanding that it bee unawares or els carelesly admitted in the Charter of this Grant to bee within the Dutchie of Normandie But in the Treatie held at Chartres when Edward the third renounced his claim to Normandie and som other Countries of France that border'd upon the Sea it was added that no controversie should remain touching the Islands but that hee should hold all Islands whatsoëver which hee possessed at that time whether they lay before those Countries that ●ee held or others For reason required this to maintain the Dominion by Sea Yea both Jersey and Gernsey as also the Isles of Wight and Man are said in divers Treaties held betwixt the Kings of England and other Princes to belong unto the Kingdom of England and to lie near the Kingdom of England These Isles also were granted heretofore by King Henrie the fift to his brother John Duke of Bedford without any recognition to bee made unto Us or Our Heirs notwithstanding any Prerogative of the Crown for any other Tenure held of Us out of the said Islands which may in any wise belong unto the said Islands Castles or Dominions Which words seem not in the least measure to admit any Right of the Dutchie Perhaps also that antient custom was as a token or pledg of the Sea's Dominion beeing conjoin'd with that of the Isles whereby all the Fish as it is in the Records of Edward the third taken by the Fishermen of