Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n edward_n king_n warwick_n 2,481 5 11.8552 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A37160 A discourse upon grants and resumptions showing how our ancestors have proceeded with such ministers as have procured to themselves grants of the crown-revenue, and that the forfeited estates ought to be applied towards the payment of the publick debts / by the author of the Essay on ways and means. Davenant, Charles, 1656-1714. 1700 (1700) Wing D304; ESTC R9684 179,543 453

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

before theym proved not to be made reared or assigned upon true Grounde or Cause of Duetee in likewyse to be voide and the Kyng therof quyte and discharged for evermore Then follow Sixteen Exceptions or Savings as to private Interests which the House of Commons make and they are much of the same Nature as those in the other Acts. Resp As touchyng this Bill of Resumption and the other Acte above specified concernynge Assignations made by the Kynge and the Fourme of Paymentes of his Dettes and all thynges comprised in either of the seid Billes and Acte and the other Matiers and Articules above specified the Kyngs Highnesse hath well conceyved and understond the same and by thadvyse and assent of the Lordes Spirituells and Lordes Temporells and the Comons beyng in this present Parlement and by the Auctorite of the same theym hath accepted and agreed So also that such Provisions and Exceptions as by his Highness be or shall be made and agreed and duryng the tyme of this present Parlement in Writyng to or upon the Premisses be good and effectuel the seide Bille or Acte or eny other the Premisses notwithstondyng for the Equyte and Right wis reward that the Kyng intendeth to do to every of his Subgietts for his Merites which shall be to the Pleaser of God and Honour of his Highnesse and the Wee l of all the Lond and People Then follow a great Number of Exceptions brought in by the King but they do not seem of that Nature as if it were design'd they should defeat the Intentions of the House of Commons as the Savin●s in the first Act of Resumption pass'd in this Reign plainly did So that at last both King and People appear to be in Earnest in this Matter But all the Acts of Resumption hitherto pass'd were not thought sufficient so that tho' we cannot find Richard the Third who succeeded Edward was any great Giver yet the Parliament in the Reign of Hen. 7. who was Successor to Richard believ'd another Resumption necessary Rot. Parl. 1 Hen. 7. p. 2. Anno 1. Hen. 7. Prayen the Commons in this present Parliament assembled That where the most noble and blessed Prince of most holy Memory King Henry the 6th your Uncle whom God rest and other your noble Progenitours have kept as worshipfull noble and honorable Estate of their Household in this Lond of the Revenues thereof as have done eny King or Prince in Englond christenned to the Ease and Rest of the People of the same without agrudging or lack of Payment therfore such as caused all other Londs to have this your said Lond in as worshipfull Renown and as great Dread as any other Lond christenned and for that the Revenu● of your said Lond to your Highnesse now belonging mowe not ●uffice to keep and susteine your honourable Household nor your other ordinarie Charges which must be kept and born worshipfully and honorably as it accordeth to the Honour of your Estate and your said Realm by which your Adversaries and Enemies shall fall into the dread wherin heretofore they have byn That it would please your Highnesse by thadvyse and assent of the Lords Spirituall and Temporall in this present Parliament assembled and by Auctoritie of the same for the Conservation and Suportation of your said Estate which first to Gods Pleasure secondarie for your own Suertie Honour and Weal and for the third to the universal Weal Ease Rest and Suertie of this Land the which you owe to preferre afore the Favour of any Persone or any Place or other Thing earthly to take seise have reteyne and resume into your Hands and Possession from the 21st Day of August last passed all such Castles Lordshipps Honours Manours Londs Tenements Rents Services Feefermes Knights Fees Advowsons Annuitees Yefts of Offices to yeve at your Pleasure Grantes of keeping Ideots Faires Markets Hundred Turnes Views of Frankplegge Leets Yssues Fines Amerciaments Libertees Fraunchises Prorogatives Escheates Custumes Reversions Remainders and all other Hereditaments with their Appurtenances whatsoever they be in England Wales Ireland of Caleys or the Merches thereof as the said most christen and blessed Prince King Henry the 6th your Unkle had of Estate of Enheritance or any other to his Use had the 2d Day of October the 34th Year of his Reigne or any tyme sith as parcell or in the Right and Title of the Crown of England of the Duchie of Lancastre the Duchie of Cornwall the Principalitie of Wales and the Earldome of Chester Saving to every of your liege People such Right Title and Interesse as they or any of them should have or might have had in or of the Premisses or any Parcel thereof other than by means of Lettres Patentes of any King of this your Realm or by Act of Parliament made after the said 2d Day And over this be it enacted ordeyned and stablished by the same Anctoritie that all Yefts Graunts Leases Releases Confirmations and Discharges of any Castels Honours Lordshipps Manours Lands Tenements Rents Services Reversions Annuites Feefermes Offices Liberties Fraunchises or other Hereditaments and all Appropriations Corporations Collations Assignments and Graunts of any Debt or Summes of mony by Letters Patentes or Tailles as to any Payment only whereof the Days of Payment have or shall grow after the 21st Day of August last passed made by Richard the 3d late in dede and not of right King of Englond any tyme during his usurped Reigne under his great Seale of the Countie Palatine of Chester or by Tailles to any persone or Persons or Body corporate and also all Yefts and Grauntes by Authoritie of Parliament or otherwyse made by Edward the 4th late King of England or by Edward his Son late called King Edward the 5th to any persone or persones be fro the said 21st Day of August adnulled void and of no force ne effecte And all Graunts made by the said Edward the 4th late King of or touching the Earldome of Devonshire or any Parcell thereof be from the same 21st Day also void and of no Force ne Effecte Then comes A Saving for some special Grants made by Edward the 4th and King Richard as to Lands of the County Palatine of Lancaster Chester or of the Earldome of March A Saving to Abbots Abbesses Priories in England or Wales as to the Restitution of any of their Temporalities A Saving for License to incorporate or found any Chantery c. Then follows And over this be it inacted ordeyned and stablished by the sayd Auctority that all Graunts and Letters Patentes of any Office made by our sayd Sovereign Lord afore the 20th Day of January the 1st Year of our Reign to any persone or persons be from hence forth void ne of no effecte A Saving for the great Officers and Others as to their Employments and Wages A Saving for the Patents of the Peers and their Creation-Money And to Corporations c. Then follow Ten Exceptions or Savings made by the House of Commons to
seem tedious but curious Persons may perhaps receive Satisfaction to see the Sence of their Fore-fathers upon this Point And we take it that the Wisdom and Gravity with which these Acts are penn'd and the Exactness and Care which the House of Commons from time to time show'd in this whole Transaction will prove no unpleasant peice of History He has done impartially and taken notice of what may make against as well as for his present Argument that the Reader may have the whole before him And in this Transcript he has follow'd the best Copies of Records he could procure such as have been sign'd and examin'd at the Tower in which he believes there is no material Error and that they are according to the Original Records except in Orthography or spelling Words wherein all Transcribers of Records mistake and differ with one another But as to the French Records both in this and the following Section the Author has examin'd them all at the Tower by the Rolls As to what was done upon Resumptions before the Reign of Edward the Second he has therein follow'd the best Ancient Writers of our English History whose Authority may be rely'd upon because most of such as he has cited wrote of Things done near or in their own Times But for their Ease who do not care to read much and to help the Memory of others he will recapitulate in a few Words the several Resumptions afterwards he will make some few Observations upon the Whole and examine what Effect these Acts of Resumption produc'd as to enlarging the Crown-Revenue and then conclude this long Section 1 st A Resumption was made by William Rufus 2 dly A Resumption by Henry the First 3 dly A Resumption agreed to by King Stephen 4 thly A Resumption actually made by Henry the Second 5 thly A Resumption by Richard the First 6 thly A Resumption by Edward the Second 7 thly Resumptions made by Richard the Second 8 thly Resumptions made by Henry the Fourth particularly of the Lands belonging to Windsor-Castle 9 thly Three Resumptions made in the Reign of Henry the Sixth 10 thly Four Resumptions made in the Reign of Edward the Fourth 11 thly One general Act and other particular Acts of Resumption in the Reign of Henry the Seventh 12 thly An Act of Resumption of ●ivers Offices Annuities and other Things in the Reign of Henry the Eighth Upon the whole Matter these Observations may be made 1 st From the forecited Records it appears that the People of England have in no Age thought it reasonable that the Crown-Revenue should be alienated 2 dly That not only under the Reigns of weak and unfortunate Princes but when there has been upon the Throne martial and active Kings this Nation has all along insisted upon Resumptions 3 dly It appears from the said Records that very few of the said Resumptions did look farther backward than the Reign of the present Prince 4 thly That the People have been most provoked when the Crown-Lands have been given away to Foreigners 5 thly That the House of Commons in their Bills of Resumption made very few Savings as to the Interests of Private Men. 6 thly That it appears from the said Records that very small Things were look'd into and that in the Three R●sumptions made by Henry the Sixth it does not appear there were Savings for any large Grant 7 thly That in some of their Bills the House of Commons insisted upon Penalties to be inflicted upon such as should procure Grants of the Crown-Revenue 8 thly That by the Profusion of some Princes the Crown-Revenue was reduc'd from Fifty Six Thousand Nine Hundred Sixty Six Pounds to Five Thousand Pounds per Annum 9 thly That Edward the Fourth invited his Parliament in his Speech from the Throne Anno 7. to make an Act of Resumption 10 thly That in the many Acts made to this Purpose every following Act was penn'd with stricter Clauses and to reach more than the former did 11 thly That the Act made the 28 H. 6. provides that the Lands so resumed should be for the Expences of the King's Houshold 12 thly That some of these Resumptions as that of 3 and 4 of Edw. 4. extended not only to the Crown-Revenue but also to what was the King's own Patrimonially namely to his Dutchy of York and Earldom of March. And that Anno 7 all was resumed which belong'd to Richard Duke of York the King's Father the 30 th of December Anno 39. Hen. 6. The ●ame 13 Edw. 4. 13 thly That in these Acts of Resumption the Sallaries and Wages are taken away of all superfluous Offices which requir'd no Attendance and Execution and which were newly erected 14 thly That some of these Acts establish that the Lands so resumed should continue in the Crown 15 thly That it will appear to any who will look into the volumenous Savings and Exceptions which were brought in by the King to the said Acts that many of the Grants in those Ages made for Lands or Pensions were only for Term of Life or Term of Years and to return to the Crown 16 thly That in many of the Savings as to the Interest of private Men where there is something left there is something resumed 17 thly That most of these Acts not only resume the Crown-Lands but revoke all unnecessary Pensions 18 thly That the 33 Henry 6. resumes the Land pass'd away from the Crown even by Authority of Parliament 19 thly That in all these Acts except 28 Henry 6. the Lands in Ireland are comprehended 20 thly As every subsequent Act was more strictly penn'd than that which went before so the Exceptions and Savings brought in by Edward the Fourth Henry the Sixth were at last few and frugal became every Time more moderate than the other so that in the End both Prince and Parliament agreed that a Resumption was necessary and would be greatly beneficial to the Kingdom But now as to the Effects which these Acts of Resumption produc'd it appears manifestly that they were put in Execution and that the Savings and Exceptions were not such as to defeat the Designs of the Parliament which some People pretend to suggest and 't is likewise evident that the Crown-Revenue was thereby very much increased For the Records plainly show that the whole Income of the Crowne Annis 28 and 29. Hen. 6. was reduc'd to Five Thousand Pounds per Annum Edward the Fourth who succeeded was an expensive Prince Richard the Third his Brother a frugal Man indeed but his Reign was too short to make any great Improvements in his Revenue and yet we find Henry the Seventh his Successor Master of more ready Money than ever any King of England was either before or since his Time This Prince had not many Aids from his People * Answer to the Reasons for Foreign Wars ● 51 Sir Robert Cotton enumerates them But one Aid upon Land viz. Anno 19. Out of their Goods and Lands
voie sy avaut come vous le poez destourber et sy vous ne poez destourber vous le ferez savoir clerement et expressement au Roy ensemblablement ove vostre loyal avis et Conseil et qe vous ferez et purchasarez le profit le Roy par tout ou vous le purrez faire resonablement Si dieu vous eide et les Seints Evangieles Prient qe ce lu et bien entendu et considerez les Circonstances de son dit responce sy bien Cest assavoir de ce qe nad pas dedit qe il ne receut du don le Roy puis qil estoit fait Conte estant en l office de Chanceller diverses Terres et Tenements come contenu est en le Empechement come qil ad conus ouvertement qil recent du Roy autres Terres et Tenements qe sont certeins et seures a la value de qatre Cents Marcs per an en Exchange de qatre Cents Marcs annuels qeux il avoit sur la Custume de Kyng ston sur Hull qe sont casuels et nemy sy seures nient enformant le Roy clerement de son damage celle partie et coment qil ad dit qil receut parties desdites Terres et Tenements issint pris en change devant qil estoit Chanceller les Communes dient qil estoit lors du Prive Conseil du Roy et a ce jurez et puis en la Creation del Office de Chanceller astrict de Nouel per serement et il en cel Office Agreant as Exchanges par luy devant suppliez prist et receust du Roy le remenant desdites Terres et Tenements en plein perfourmessement des Exchanges susdits et demandent Judgement du Parlement surtout son responce des susdits So that for the Insufficiency of his Answer the following Judgment was given Rot. ibid. Num. 13. Et purce qe le dit Conte ne allegea point ●n son Responce qil observe le effecte de son ferement en ce qil jurrast qe il ne saveroit ni ne suffreroit le damage ne la desheritison du Roy ne qe les droitures de la Corone fussent destruits par uulle voie sy evant come il les poiast destourber et si il ne les poet destourber il le feroit savoir derement expressement au Roy ensemblablement ove son loyal avise Counseil qil feroit purchasseroit le Profit le Roy per tout ou il le pourroit fair resonablement Et il tant come il estoit ainsy principal Officer du Roy Sachant le Estat necessite du Roy du Royalme prist du Roy tiels Terres Tenements come est suppose par le Empechment a luy en le dit premier Article surmis coment qil alleged en son responce qe les dons a luy issint faits furent confirmez par plein Parlement il ny a nul tiel record en Roulle de Parlement Purquoy Agardez est qe tous les Manoirs Terres Tenements Rents Services Feos Avoesons Reversions Profites ove lour Appurtenances per luy issint receus du Roy soient Reseisez reprises en les Mains du Roy a avoir tenir a nostre dit seigneur le Roy et ses Hoirs sy pleinement enheritablement come il les avoit tenoit devant le don eint fait al dit Conte et qe toutz les Issues et Profits ent receus ou leves al Oeps du dit Conte en le mesme temps soient levez al Oeps nostre Seignour le Roy des Terres et Chastelx du dit Conte illoques et aillours Mes ne est pas le Intention du Roy ne des Seignours qe celle Jugement sestende de luy faire perdre le nom et le Title de Conte ne les vingt livres Annuelx quex le Roy luy grana prendre des issues du Conte de Suffolk pur le Nom et Title avantdits Et outre purceqe le dit Conte nadpas dedit qil nestoit du prive Conseil du Roy et a luy jure quand il demanda primes du Roy la dit Exchange estre faite et ad conu qe devant les dites Exchanges perfourmes il fut fait Chanceller en qel Office il fust astrict per son serement faite en la forme avant dite So that it appears plainly from this Record That King Lords and Commons took it to be a Crime in the Lord Chancellor and against his Oath to take Lands in Gift or in Exchange from the King for upon the Chancellors Oath the Judgment was grounded it being in those Days thought and understood that he who was sworn to purchase the King's Profit should not inrich himself with the Revenues of the Crown and as the Record says that he chiefly ought not to do so who was le Principal Officer and who knew the State and Necessities both of King and Kingdom And it was a very odd Circumstance of those times that the Legislature should be necessitated to relieve the King against Frauds committed by the Principal Judge in Equity and by the Keeper of his Conscience Anno 11. Rich. II. The Legislative Authority was not satisfied with what had been done the Year before against this Chancellor but it was thought fit to proceed farther against Him and other bad Ministers who had attempted to overthrow the Constitution of this Kingdom The Duke of Glocester Uncle to the King and Constable of England the Earl of Darby the Earl of Arundel the Earl of Warwick and Thomas Earl Marshal accus'd Michael de la Pool and others of High Treason the Term then us'd was they Appeal'd 'em of Treason * Rot. Parl. 11 Rich. 2. p. 2. m. 7. Thomas Duc de Glocester Conestable d Engleterre Henry Conte de Derby Richard Conte de Arundel de Surry Thomas Conte de Warwick Thomas Conte Mareschal Appellons Alesandre Ercevesque Deverwik Robert de Verr Duc d Irland Michael de la Pool Conte de Suffolk Robert Treselian faux Justice Nicholas Brembre faux Chivalier de Londres de Hautes Trahisons par eux faits enc●ntre nostre Seignour le Roy son Royalme Come Traitours Ennemies du Royalme Qeux Appel Trahison sont declarez Appointex Specesiez pleinement sy come est contenu en diverses Articles desous Escripts Et Priont qe les dits Appelles soient demandez et qe droit et Justice ent soit fait en cest present Parlement Then these Lords exhibited against Michael de la Pool and the rest 39 Articles of High Treason In the 5th 6th and 7th Articles they are accus'd for having procur'd to themselves and others and to their Kindred Grants of the Crown-Lands in England and Ireland besides Gifts of Mony to the Value of above One Hundred Thousand Marks by which the