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A65095 A pleasant and compendious history of the first inventers and instituters of the most famous arts, misteries, laws, customs and manners in the whole world together with many other rarities and remarkable things rarely known, and never before made publick : to which is added, several curious inventions, peculierly attributed to England & English-men, the whole work alphabetically digested and very helpful to the readers of history.; De rerum inventoribus. English Vergil, Polydore, 1470?-1555.; Langley, Thomas, d. 1581. 1686 (1686) Wing V598; ESTC R21854 60,337 192

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special or singular commodity or favour to the furtherance or advantage of the common Livelyhoods of others such were Builders of Citties or Ladyes excelling for their Chastity such as were puissiant in Armes were more especially honour'd for Gods as the Aegyptians had Isiis the Assyrians Neptune the Latines Faunus the Romans Quirine the Athens Pallas the Delphians Appollo the Grecians Jupiter the Assyrians Belus and many Countreys had divers other Gods and some which is a shame to speak Worshipped Brute Beasts and took them for Gods by reason whereof the Greeians had the opinion that the Gods had their beginning of men And thus when men withdrew their phantasies from Images to the Spirits invisible they were perswaded that there were many Gods and of no lesser number than mortall men not to Discourse further of the Opinions of the Phylosophers which were various and dangerous to be mentioned I shall only set down what Plato saith that there is but one God he writes that this World was Created by him and that he was called God because he is so merciful and bestoweth his Blessings so freely on men from whom they receive all things good and profitable God himself being the principal Fountain of all Goodness Men were first called Christians when Philip Converted and Baptised the Samaritans and a certain Evunuch of Candaces Queen of Aethiopia this Evunuch Converted the Queen with her Family and a great part of that Countrey to the Faith of Christ Afterwards in Antioch the Faithfull named themselves Christians Myrrh which is an humour congealed and constipated together with heat is brought out of the Eastern parts and chiefly out of Carmania Pompeius in his Triumph over the Pyrat's or Robbers of the Sea brought it first into Rome N NE-CROMANCY is said to be such a kind of Magick as is for the raising up of the Dead as in Lucan one raised from Death told the Adventures of the Battell of Pharsalia Pyromancy is one part of it which predicted things by the Fire and Lightning as Tenaquilla the Wife of Tarquinius Priscus prophesied that Servius Tullius should be King of Rome because he saw the Fire environ his Head The finding of this Pliny referreth to Amphiaraus Hieromancy that is a kind of prophecieing by the Aire as by flying feeding singing of Birds and strange Tempests of Wind and Haile Hydromancy was a prophecying by Water as Varro Write ththat a Child did see in the Water the Image of Mercury and in 150 Verses told all the success of War against Methridates King of Pontus Geomancy was a Divination by opening of the Earth Chiromancy is a conjectureing by beholding the lines and Wrinkles of the hand commonly called Palusistry The Sages or Wise Men of Persia which in their Language were named Magi being strangely addicted to the honouring of their false Gods were so extreamly foolish that they professed openly that they could not only by the observation of the Stars know things to come but also by the already mentioned pretended Arts that they could bring to pass what they would which illusions and false perswasions of theirs it becommeth all true Christians for to eschew and abhorre Naval Fights Minos made the first for Honour and Profit Merchandise being instituted to furnish Men with necessaries by way of Exchange but after Money was coined it was made use of more for private Wealth The Naval or Sea Crown which was of Gold was first set on his head which boarded his enemies Ship Nets were first said to have been invented by Arachne of Lydia she taught the way of Knitting them to take Beasts Birds Fish and Fowl she also Invented Flax and Linnen as Pliny writes Noah made the first Altar Abraham Isaac and Jacob did make their Offerings rather from their devotion then from any Priestly Authority Notaries were appointed in Rome by Julius the first of that name their Office was then to write the lives of Godly Martyrs and Confessors to Register them for a perpetual example of constant and vertuous living Though I am of Opinion that it was the Invention and de●ice of Clement who Ordained seaven Notaries to Inroll the notable Deeds of the Martyrs And Antherius afterwards did more firmly rectifie them But this now amongst other Offices is perverted to other worldly affaires Nuns or the custome of Consecrating of Virgins to make Vows of Chastity was instituted by Pius the first who also ordained that none should be made before they were Twenty five years old and that they might be Consecrated at no time but in the Epiphany or Twelfth-day Easter Even and on the Feasts of the Apostles unless it were when any professed were in point of dying And Sotherus caused that a Decree was made that no such prosessed should touch Cope or put Incence into the Censors the year of our Lord God 175. It seemeth to have taken it's Original from the Apostles which is proved by St. Paul's words where he saith let no Widdow be chosen before she be Threescore years of age with divers of the like sayings O THE Oath called Jones Stone Which the Antients swore by and Held so Sacred was after this manner he that swore was to hold in one hand a stone and then to pronounce these Words If Knowingly I deceive Jupiter cast me from my Gods from my Countrey and from all happyness as I cast away this Stone The Orders of Chivalry most whereof continue at this day amongst Princes are as followeth The First and antientest of these Orders of Chivalry or Knighthood is the Order of the Garter Instituted in the year of our Lord 1348 in Burdeaux chief City of the Dukedome Guyne in France by Edward the Third King of England and then possessor of the Dukedome which order he consecrated and dedicated to St. George though the motive of the institution thereof proceeded from the Loss of a Garter which he supposed to have been the Countess of Salsburies And it happened in this manner As one day he was entertaining her with pleasant Discourse a Garter chanced to unloose and fall down at the Kings indeavouring to take it up the Noble-men were supprised with a suddain Laughter At which the Countess Blushed to perceive her self rendered so Rediculous and withall being displeased at some more than seemingly Familiarity that had passed she said sharply to the King and the rest Honi soit qui maly pense which in English is Evil to him that Evil thinketh The King to pacific the Countesses displeasure said that before it were long those Noble-men which had made a Jest and Laughing at the Garter sallen down should esteem themselves much honoured to wear it for a mark of Chivalry and thereupon ordained the said Order and consecrated it to St. George and made thereof Twenty-six Knights and ordained that they should wear their Cloakes of Violet-colour Velvet their Hoods of Red Velvet and under the left Knee a Blew Garter Buckled with Gold Garnished with precious Stones and about
it Wrought those words of the Countess of Salshuries to this Splendour he added a collar of Gold full of Red and White Roses with the Image of St. George hanging thereon and about those Roses were also Written the same words in the Garter There are of this order as hath been said Twenty-six Knights of which the Kings of England are Soveraigns and it is so much esteemed for its Excellency that Eight Emperours Twenty-two Forraign Kings and Dukes and divers other Noble-men have been of it About their Necks these Knights wear a Blew Ribbon at the end of which hangeth the Image of St. George upon whose day the installation of the new Knights is commonly celebrated being the Twenty-third of Aprill And although it was first ordained at Bourdeaux yet King Edward determined the place of the solemnization thereof to be at the Church of Windsor here in England where at the same time he Founded Cannons or a Cannonry for the better prosperity and greater flourishing of the Knights of the Order The second Order of Antiquity is of the mnnunciation instituted Anno Dom. 1356 by Amide the sixt of that Name Duke of Savoy Sur-named the Green Knight The Knights of this Order wear a great Collar of Gold made winding with three Laces wherein are enterlaced these words Fert Fert Fert every Letter importing its Latine word thus F. Fortitudo E. Eius R. Rhodum T. Tenuit That is his force hath Conquered Rhodes At this Collar hangeth the Image of our Lady and an Angel saluting her from whence t is called the Order of the Annunciation The Collar is Fifteen Links to shew the Fifteen Misteries of the Virgin each Link being Interwoven one with the other in form of a True-Lovers-Knot The number is Fourteen Knights the Solemnity is held annually on our Lady Day in the Castle of St. Peter in Turin This Duke ordained this Order in Memory of Amide the great Duke of Savoy who succoured the Knights of St. John when they took the Isle of Rodes from the Turks in the year of our Lord 1310. The third in Antiquity is the Order of the Golden Fleece Founded upon the Table of the Golden Fleece that Iason with the other Argonant's went to seek in the Isle of Colchos which is as if we should say that he went to the Mine of Gold or else in Analogie to Gideons Fleece as some will have it This Order was first instituted by Philip the Second Sirnamed the good Duke of Burgundy in the year 1430 the compleat number of which Order were at the first Twenty-five Knights but raised afterwards by the said Philip to Thirty-one and now there are as many as the King of Spaine shall be pleased to invest with it They wear a Collar of Gold Interlaced with Iron seeming to strike Fire out of a Flint the word 's ex ferro flamman at the end hangs the Fleece or Toisond'or Their Cloaks and Hoods are of Scarlet garded with Embroidery like flames of Fire Philip appointed for the celebrating of that Order on St. Andrews day being the Thirtyeth of November But the Emperour Charles the Fifth Heir of the House of Burgundy and chief of that Order changed their Apparrel and ordained that their Cloaks should be of crimson Velvet and their Hoods of Violet coloured Velvet and that underneath they should wear a Cassock of cloath of Silver The fourth in Antiquity is the Order of St. Michael the Arch Angel instituted by Lewis the Eleventh of France the first day of August in the year 1469 and ordained that of that Order there should be Thirty-six Knights which afterwards were augmented to Three-hundred Gentlemen of Name and Arms of whom he himself was chief and Soveraign and after him his successors Kings of France the Brothers and Companions of this Order were bound at receiving of them to forsake and leave all other orders if they were of any either of a Prince or any Company only excepting Emperours Kings and Dukes which besides this Order might wear that Order whereof they were chief with the agreement and consent of the King and Brotherhood of the said Order of other Emperours Kings and Dukes And for the cognissance of this Order and the Knights thereof he gave to every one of them a Collar of Gold wrought with Cockle-shells Interlacing one another with a double pointing Ribbon of Silk with Golden Taggs the word Imensi Arenor Oceani which King Francis the First because of his Name changed into a White-Friers or Franciscans Girdle made af a Twisted cord and caused to be hanged on that collar a Tablet of St. Michael upon a Rock conquering the Devil Of the institution of this Order is a Book made containing Ninty-eight Articles wherein are set down the things whereunto the Knights of the Order are subject The fifth Order is that of the Holy Ghost institutéd by Henry the Third King of France on Newyears-day in the year 1579. It was called by the name of the Holy Ghost because this Henry was on a Whitsonday chosen King of Poland Of this Order is written a Book containing the Articles whereunto the Knights thereof were bound Among which I have principally noted one that is to defend and sustain the Clergy For that the King doth give to every one of them the Rent of certain Abbies Religious Houses or other Spiritual Lands whereof they shall allow a certain Stipend to the entertaining of such a number of Religious persons in every Religious house under him and for that benefit are sworn at the entring into the said Order always to defend the Spirituality and to maintaine the Clergy in their priveledges but how they keep their Oath it is easily to be discerned in every place of their spiritual possessions with which I have been often times very much dissatisfied in for having oftentimes tryed the courteous demeanour that commonly Religious Men use to Strangers that come to visit their houses I have divers times been sufficiently enformed by the Religious how the King hath given the rents and Possessions of their Houses to the Knights of his Order with the conditions already rehearsed which Knights allow them such bare exhibition that by reason it is not sufficient to entertain the fourth part of the number of them appointed many of them are constrained to forsake their houses and beg or else they must starve The Pope considering what dismembring of Church Lands arriseth from this Order in the Realm of France would not grant the Confirmation thereof but notwithstanding the Popes mislike thereof t' is still maintained The Collar of this Order is of Flowers de Lys and Flames of Gold with a Cross and a Dove on it Pendant representing the Holy Ghost Wrought in Orange tawny Velvet garnished about with Silver Beams which the Knights of that Order wear upon their Cloaks before their heart Their Robe is a black Velvet Mantle poudred with Lillies and Flames of Gold and Silver None are admitted to this Order
who cannot prove their Nobility by three Descents at least The Sixth Order is of the Bath brought first into England 1399 by Henry the Fourth they are Created at the Coronation of Kings and Queens and at the Installation of the Princes of Wales Their Duty is to Defend true Religion Widdows Maids Orphans and to maintain the Kings Rights Obelisci or Pyramids which may be called long broches or Spires were great and huge stones in Aegypt made by Masons from the bottom smaller and smaller of a large length they were consecrated to the Sun because they were long much like to the beams of the Sun The First of them was instituted by Mitres who reigned in Heliopolis being commanded by avision to make it and so it was recouded and written on the same King Bochis set up four that were every one of them 48 Cubits long Ramesis in whose time Troy was destroyed reared up one Forty cubits in length and another of 819 Foot and every side was four cubits broad Ptolomeus Philadelphus made one at Alexandria of four cubits And Pheron set up two in the Temple of the Sun of a hundred cubits length a piece and four cubits broad on this occasion it fortuned that this King for a great crime that he had commited was stricken blind and continued so ten years and after by Revelation at the City Bucis it was told him that he should receive his sight if he washed his Eyes with the water of a Woman that was never defiled with any strange Man but was alwayes content with her Husband First he tryed his own Wife and afterwards many others till at last he received his sight and Married her by whose Urine he was healed and was recovered and all the other with his first Wife he caused to be burnt Afterwards for a remembrance he made his Oblation with the two aforesaid Pyramids in the Temple of the Sun Augustus Caesar brought two of these Broches or Spires to Rome and set one in the great Tiltyard or Lists called Circus The other he set up in the field called Campus Martius Ointments Pliny is of opinion that they were used long before the Battel of Troy for Jacob sent to his Son Joseph in Aegypt Ointments and Moses that was three hundred and fifty years before the Siege of Troy maketh mention of Ointments concerning the Sanctification of the Tabernacle and the Priests of the Old Testament Pliny and Solinus report that Alexander when he conquered the Army of Darius found amongst other Jewels spoiles and things of value a Casket of Ointments that he highly esteemed of But Herodotus affirms that they were frequently used long before Darius time For Cambyses Son to Cyrus sent Ambassadors to Aethiopus King of the Macrobians with great presents whereof a Box of Ointments was one It is not certain when they first were used in Rome but I find in Pliny that the five hundred sixty fifth year of the City Antiochus being Vanquished P. Licinus Crassus and Julius Cesar then Censors commanded that no Forraign or Strange confection of Ointments should be sold in the City The Original of the Heathen Gods as the Scripture hath it Ephes 6. was When the Spirits of the air the Rulers of this World began to give Prophetical answers out of Images made to resemble mortal men and by their wicked Subtlety did pretend themselves sometimes to be of the Number of good Spirits sometimes Coelestial Gods sometimes the Souls of Valiant Lords they brought Men into such error and perplexity that in a short space they did alienate their hearts from the Religion and Reverence of the true God and so deluded them as to make them to repare to them for help and to inquire their Oracles and Answers which of purpose had doubtful understandings least their Ignorance should be perceived By these deceitful means they were by divers Nations Deified and sundry people after divers manners chose them for Gods and with great reverence Worshiped them These spirits of the Air that gave such doubtful answers to them that euquired any question of them were at the comming of our Saviour Christ all destroyed For when he was carried into Aegypt which was a Countrey full of Superstition and Idolatry all the Idols of that Nation were overthrown and Fell to the ground at his comming And in the time of Adrian the Emperour both their wicked Sacrifices were abolished and also the Oracles of Appollo at Delphos of Jupiter Hammon in Aegypt with the like vanities were subverted The Opinions of the Philosophers concerning the birth of Man Were divers Diodorus recordeth that they spake of two sundry manners of birth and first stock of Mankind for they which contend that the World was not generate and without any danger of Corruption say also that Man hath been in a certain Perpetuity without Beginning Of this Opinion were Pythagoras Xenocrates and Aristotle with other Peripateticks affirming that all things in the Eternal World which have been or shall hereafte come to pass are by Generation endless and without Beginning and have only a circuit or course of Generations wherein both the Birth and natural resolution of things may be perceived Others suppose this World had both an Original cause of Being and shall also end by Putrefaction they hold Opinion that Man had a time of his Generation P PHYSICK some referr the invention of it to Appollo because the moderate heat of the Sun seems to be the repeller of all Sickness Others attribute the finding of it to the Aegyptians but the enlarging of it to Aesculapius who besides other more rare Experiments found out the way of drawing of Teeth In Rome Archagathus of Peloponesus was the first Physitian In Aegypt and Babylon they used no Physitians but brought the Sick Persons into the Streets Publick places that so the Passengers might tell them what manner of Medicine or Dyet was good for them neither was it Lawful for any Man to pass by till that he had spoke with the Patient Afterwards the Aegyptians did so distribute the Art of Physick that every Disease had a distinct Physition to look after it one for the Head another for the Eyes others for other parts according as they excelled Of Medicines made by Herbs we have already in another place in part discoursed Chiron the Son of Saturn as he was reported to have been so knowing in the virtue of Herbs may be Accounted to have been one of the first inventers of Salves for Wounds and Sores he found out the Herb called Centaurie wherewith he cured the Wound that he had received from Hercules's Arrows falling on his Feet as he was handling of his Quiver Mercury found out the use of Moly and Achilles the virtue of Yarrow Medicines made with Honey were from Sol the Son of Oceanus several Herbs also very necessary for Medicines were discerned from those cures Beasts out of an instinct of Nature made on themselves Dittany by the Hare which being Wounded
press the Wine out of the Grape as Saturn did in Italy Some would have it to be Icarins the Father of Penelope that found the virtue of the Grape in Athens who is reported to have been slain by the Husbandmen when they were Drunk Atheneus in one place writeth that Orestus Son to Dencalion first discovered the Vine about Mount Aetna in Sicily In another place he sayes that it was found in the City Plinthina in Aegypt Aruntes a Tirrhen banished out of his Countrey by Lucinon whom he brought up of a Child carried the first Wine into France But before all these Noah was the first that either Tilled the Land or Planted the Vineyard and when that he had tasted too much of the Fruit of the Grape he was Drunk Wine Taverns were set up first by the Lydians a people of Asia which also found out and invented divers Games Staphylus as Pliny saith was the first that allayed Wine But for all these generally entertained Opinions the Poets will have Bacchus to be the first deviser and God of it and that he taught those Countries how to make Ale of Barley which had no Grapes growing into this Drink the Germans afterwards put Hops and called it Beer The Winds were first observed by Aeolus as 't is reported from the prognostication of the Inhabitants of the Islands about Sicily who by the smoak of the said Isles three dayes before were said to know what Winds they should have Aeolus for his great insight into the Nature of them hath by the general consent of Poets the Dominion over them attributed to him The Winds as some divide them are said to be four according to the four principal Regions of the Aire those that are more curious in their search and inquiry of their Natures will have them to be no less then eight And especially one Andronicus Corestes who Builded a Terret in Athens and set on every side of it the Images of the Winds graven against the Rigion whence the Winds came they were placed on Pillars of Marble and in the middle he set a Brazen Image of Triton which he had made so that it would turn with a Gust and stand with its Face towards the Wind that blew being so devised as to point with a Rod to the Image of the said Wind which hath been since imitated and used in most Countries for 't is an usual custome to set up Weather-cocks or Fans to show out of what Quarter the Wind bloweth The seven Wise Men of Greece who lived as one saith when there was a scarcity of Wisedom were as followeth Bias he was born in the Haven Town of Prieane in the Countrey of Jonia Solon was of the Island of Salamine Chilo was of Lacedemonia Cleobolus had his birth at Lindus in the Isle of Rhodes Pittacus was of Mitylene in the Isle of Lesbes Thales received his first breath at Miletum in Greece the last of them was Periander King of Corinth The wonders of the World were reputed seven of the same number of the Wise men of Greece The first were of the Walls of Babylon built by Semeramis of stone joyned together with a strange kind of slimy and gluish Morter which grew in the Mines of those Countryes and especially in the Lake where stood in time past Sodome and Gomorrah now called Asfatilda These walls according to the Town were built in a quadrangle and contained in circuit as saith Pliny in the 26th chapter of his sixt Book 60 miles so that every square was fifteen miles long they were 200 foot high and 15 foot thick To build these walls were hired by Semiramis out of divers Countryes for a long space 300000 men The Second was the Pillar of the Sun offered by the Gentiles unto Jupiter This Pillar stood in the Isle of Rhodes and was made of Iron in the form of a man of incredible greatness insomuch that a man could scarce Fadom the great finger thereof After it had stood 56 years it fell down by reason of an Earthquake and so lay till the Island was won by the Souldan of Aegypt who carried as much mettall away as loaded 900 Camels The Third were the Obelisci or the Piramids of Aegypt of which we have already discoursed The Fourth was the Mansoleum of Mansolus King of Caria Husband to Artimesia this woman for the great love she had to his Memory burnt his body drunk his ashes beaten to a powder thinging no Sepulcher so worthy of him as her own body the remainder of the powder which she found it impossible for her to drink she buried in his Famous Tomb. This Monument was of a most excellent kind of Marble it was 411 feet in circute and 25 cubits high it was invironed with 36 Pillars most curiously carved The Fifth was the Temple of Diana at Ephesus of which in ' its proper place we have also discoursed more at large The Sixt was the Image of Jupiter Olympus in Achia all of Porphyry an infinite number of little pieces being wonderfully joyned together this Statue or Image besides the excellency of the work was more especially admired for the greatness thereof and was the more Famous by reason that the Games called the Olympiades were there kept The Seventh was the Tower Pharos nigh to Alexandria in Aegypt built by Ptolomeus Philadelphus King of Aegypt to direct the Passengers which way to approach the Haven thereabouts by burning of pitch or other light materials This Tower was of a marvelous height and of singular Workmanship the building whereof cost according to our Money 4800000 Crowns some Authors set down for the Eight Wonders the Gardens and Orchards upon the walls of Babylon AN APPENDIX Rare Inventions peculiarly attributed to England and English-men MASONS Carving in Stone and erecting statly Piles with the like Materials The Art of curious Painting and Glazing with Glass now in use were First shewed to the English by one Joanes A Benedictine in the year of Christ 728. and since by Improvement brought to the perfection they are at present found to be in The Famous Invention of Printing being found out in Germany was First brought into England by William Caxton a Mercer who in the Reign of King Edward the Fourth kept a Printing-House in Westminster Abby by the Permission of Simon Islip Abbot of that Place and the First Book there Printed was Tullies Offices Coaches were Invented by Monsieur Pedarus a French-man and brought into England in the year 1559. though Charriots are of a longer standing Watches were the Invention of a German and the Invention brought into England Anno 1580. The Famous Inventers and Improvers were Cornelius Van Dreble and Janus Torrianellus the first Clocks were brought into England much about the same time The Pendulum was Invented by Mr. Hook Fellow of the Royal Society Famous in the Mathematicks and Mechanical Improvement All sorts of Optiek-Glasses and Tubes as the Telescope the Invention of the Famous Galileo the Microscope