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A88898 England described: or The several counties & shires thereof briefly handled. Some things also premised, to set forth the glory of this nation. / By Edward Leigh Esquire, Mr of Arts of Magdalen-Hall in Oxford. Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1659 (1659) Wing L994; Thomason E1792_2; ESTC R202677 90,436 256

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painted and the word Tain signifying a Nation the Britains used to discolour and paint their bodies that they might seem more terrible in the eyes of their enemies Camden in his Britannia p. 26 27. seems rather to incline to this Etymology Brith signifieth blew-coloured sc. with woad hence Britons The Greeks gave to this Isle the name Albion for difference sake Seeing they have in fabulous wise named Italy Hesperia of Hesperus the sonne of Atlas France Gallatia of a sonne of Polyphemus I cannot otherwise believe but in the same vein also of fabling they called this Island Albion of Albion Neptunes sonne which thing Perottus and Lilius Giraldus have put down in writing Unlesse a man would derive it rather of {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} which as Festus witnesseth in Greek signifieth white whence the Alpes also have their appellation for it is environed with white Rocks England is called Albion ab albis rupibus whereby it is specially conspicuous So was an Isle in the Indian-Sea called Leucas white Seld. on Drayt. Polyolb Song first This Etymology is disliked by Lhoyd but defended by Sir John Price in his Defence of the British History England bears a great sway in the affairs of Europe Speed in his Chronicle saith The great affairs of Europe mainly depended upon the Directions of Queen Elizabeth who sitting at the Helm of the Ship arbitrated and guided their estates both in Peace and Warre See more there to this purpose in his 9th Book chap. 24. p. 880. The English have been very helpfull to the Netherlands in their warres and atchievers of the greatest exploits amongst them Heinsius in his Oration made after the taking of the Busse saith Anglorum sanguine stat haec respublica This Commonwealth stands by the bloud of the English The first of all Provinces this Island of Britain by common consent received the Christian Faith The glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ saith Gildas Albanius surnamed the Wise the most ancient of our British Historians which first appeared to the world in the later time of Tiberius Caesar did even then spread his bright beams upon this frozen Island of Britain And it is generally received for a truth that Joseph of Arimathea laid the foundation of our faith at Glastenbury He that hath written of Honour Military and Civil lib. 4. cap. 19. saith The chief place of Honour and Precedency in Europe appertaineth to the Kings of England And one of the reasons he gives is Because the King and people of England received the Gospel and Christian Faith before France or Spain There have been more Kings and Princes of the Bloud Royal Confessors and Martyrs in England than in any one Province in Europe Fasciculus temporis See Gainsfords Glory of England Chap. 21. 27. concerning our famous Kings here and of famous Kings and Princes that came hither Claudia Rufina of the British Nation is celebrated by the Apostle Paul and also by Martial It is apparent that this Island had the first Christian King in the world and clearly in Europe If priority of time swayed it and not custome derived from a communicable attribute given by the Popes that name of Most Christian should better fit our Sovereigns than the French Vide Polyd. Verg. Angl. Hist. l. 2. p. 41. We had also the first Christian Emperour Constantine The first King that ever renounced the Popes Supremacy was King Henry the Eighth The first King that ever wrote against the Pope to prove him to be the Antichrist was King James England hath been an Asylum for the distressed Protestants of other Countreys The Armes of England are three Lions passant gold in a field gewls The Lion signifies fortitude and generosity Three Flour-delices were since that time annexed thereto by Edward the Third by reason of his claime to the Crown of France The State is Monarchical A Kingdom of a perfect and happy composition wherein the King hath his full Prerogative the Nobles all due respects and the People amongst other blessings perfect in this that they are masters of their own purposes and have a strong hand in the making of their own Laws Of all Seniories in the world that I know the Realme of England is the Countrey where the Commonwealth is best governed the People least oppressed and the fewest buildings and houses destroyed in Civil Warre and the lot of misfortune falleth upon them that be authours of the Warre Phil. de Commin Hist. l. 5. c. 18. England is not subject to Imperial and Romane Lawes as other Kingdoms are but retaineth her ancient Laws It is governed by the Municipal or Common Law a Law proper to the Nation The Commonalty of England is the best Commonalty in the world and the best Infantry or Foot-souldiers in whom the principal strength of an Army consists It was once the saying That the Husbandry and Yeomandry of England were the freest men in the world The Merchant of England surpasseth all other Nations See Gainsfords Glory of England ch. 26. England aboundeth with all sorts of Cattel except Asses Mules Camels and Elephants No Countrey yeeldeth such plenty of Beeves and Sheep A Countrey alwayes most temperate The Air is thick and so it is much subject to winds clouds and rain and therefore in regard of the thicknesse of the Air it is neither opprest with too much heat or too much cold It is somewhat cloudy Gundamore being here bid the Spanish Post when he came to Spain commend him to the Sunne for he had not seen him a great while and in Spain he should be sure to find him The Ocean which beateth upon the Coast of this Island aboundeth with all manner of Fish There are no where in all the world either more dainty Oisters or greater store The soil is fruitfull in Mines of Lead Iron Tin and other Minerals especially it abounds in Coal a necessary and rich Commodity It is replenished also with all sorts of Grain with Medows and Pastures in which innumerable flocks of Cattel feed Cardan exhorted Edward the Sixth to plant Olives and was fully perswaded they would prosper in this Island Many places in Glocestershire and elsewhere in England are called Vineyards seeing it hath afforded Wine and surely it may seem to proceed rather from the Inhabitants idlenesse than any distemperature and indisposition of the Aire that it yeeldeth none at this day Camd. Brit. in Glocestershire In Hantshire he saith We had Vines in Britain since Probus the Emperours time rather for shade than fruit The People are tall of stature well-favoured and fair countenanced for the most part gray-eyed The women most fair and beautifull do go very decently and comely attired We feed mostwhat on flesh The drink which we use and do make of malt is in deed very good wholsome and pleasant There are more Parks Forests Chases in England than are found in all Christendom
ENGLAND DESCRIBED Or the several COUNTIES SHIRES thereof briefly handled Some things also premised to set forth the Glory of this NATION By Edward Leigh Esquire Mr of Arts of Magdalen-Hall in Oxford LONDON Printed by A. M. for Henry Marsh at the Signe of the Princes-Arms in Chancery-lane near Fleetstreet 1659. TO THE Right Worshipfull AND HIS Honoured Friend Sr ROBERT PYE SIR IT is blamed in our Englishmen that they are apt too much to admire Foreigne Countreys and Commodities and exotick Fashions also because they are either ignorant of or do not sufficiently prize the Excellencies of their own native Soil and herein the old Proverb of the English is verified They never know when they are well VVe have little cause I thinke to envy any other Countrey if we rightly understand our own happy condition I have in my Prolegomena written encomiastically of this Nation and in the Book have spoken snccinctly of each County Were the Subject well handled I suppose it would be a pleasing Argument to you who have seen a great part of England However you will I hope excuse my boldnesse in prefixing your Name to this worke since I was willing to testifie herein how much I am beholding to you for your many great Civilities and Courtesies to me and mine I have heard you often say Though you had a great Office many yeers and was Executor also to three eminent Persons of the Nobility yet you scarce ever had any complaint against you for Miscarriages in your Place or a Suit at Law with any one excepted in your whole life These with a plentifull Estate and a healthfull Constitution of Body are mercies and lay a stronger Obligation upon you to be carefull to please and honour that God who hath been so propitious to you Your exciting of others and your own munificence also to so good a VVork as to the edifying of a specious Chappel for the solemn worship of God and setling also a competent Maintenance for a Minister is laudable Your prudent avoiding Suretiship though you were solicited by two Royal Persons to be bound for them is consonant to Scripture-Rules But Sir in your declining Age it will be your wisdome now and comfort hereafter to lay up your treasures in Heaven to mortifie all inordinate affections and to secure your interest in Christ Nusquam tuta foelicitas ubi periclitatur aeternitas A man is never safe till his everlasting condition be well provided for I shall not enlarge herein but subscribe my self Sir Your obliged and thankfull Friend and Servant Edward Leigh TO THE CANDID READER Reader I Did intend the publishing of this first Book of the Kingdome or Several Counties of England together with another of The Kings of England But the Bookseller desired to put forth this first alone I have made much use of Camden and if I could have added to his Chorography some new and memorable things of each County which he had not observed I should have thought it might have been usefull for a native Englishman and Foraigner Perhaps I have not been able to make additions to him in every County but I hope I have inserted some special things in the whole over and above what he travelling over most part of the Land for that purpose hath published I have perused Andre du Chesne his Histoire generale de Angleterre d'Escosse d' Irlande Councellor and Geographer to the King of France and also Draytons Polyolbion with M. Seldens Illustrations Those that have written of any Counties or Cities of England as Burton of Leicestershire Dugdale of Warwickshire King of Cheshire Nordens Speculum Britanniae his brief Description of Middlesex and Harfordshire Lambert and another of Kent Crews Surveigh of Cornwall Stows Description of London Somners of Canterbury and Nevils of Norwich we having onely as yet the Description of those three Cities I made use also of Lelands Itinerary a Manuscript written to Henry the Eighth and his Comment in Cygneam Cantionem M. Burtons Notes on Antoninus his Itinerary I have confined my self to England not medling with Wales Ireland or Scotland I have in the Prolegomena related some things which may make the Nation illustrious and also acquaint Strangers with the Politia or Government thereof I have lately received from M. Du-gard a learned Minister in Warwickshire and Rector of Barford a memorable observation concerning the Family of the Fairfaxes there the like whereto is scarce to be found in any sacred or prophane Writer which coming too late to insert in Warwickshire I thought good to mention here The matchlesse Family of the Fairfaxes in Barford two miles from Warwick wherein there are four Generations and three of them double viz. 1. Samuel Fairfax a child of almost twelve years of age 2. John and Elizabeth his Father and Mother 3. John and Eleonor his Grand-father and Grandmother 4. Richard and Alice his great Grandfather and great Grandmother Not one of these three pairs hath been twice married and every pair of them is an honour to marriage They all for divers yeares most lovingly dwelt together in one house and ate together at one Table At last they are divided in habitations but not in affections The youngest pair with their children live at Wibtaft in the furthest part of the County nigh unto High-crosse the other two pair in Barford The great Grandfather is above fourscore yeares of age a very proper and lusty man an honest and loving neighbour and one that hath born the Office of High-Constable The most remarkable of these particulars have been put into this Latine Epigramme by the present Rector of Barford Mirabilis Fairfaxiorum Familia quae est Barfordiae secundo lapide à Polemopoli sive Warwico Quartus in aetheream Fairfaxius editur * auram Patris Avi Proavi gaudia magna sui Hos tegit una domus cum terna uxore maritos Unáque alit lautis mensa benigna cibis Non magis unanimes nôrunt haec secula mentes Est bis corporibus mens velut una tribus Tótque ex conjugibus bis vincla jugalia nemo Nexuit nemo nexa soluta cupit More columbarum laetatur conjuge conjux Deseruit rugas nec juvenilis amor Hisce tribus Paribus Barfordia jure superbit Nampar his Paribus quis locus alter habet Tho. Dugard Art Mag. Rector Barf The same in English Fairfax the Fourth is born * a gallant Boy Fathers Grandfathers great Grand-fathers great joy Under one roof these dwell with their three Wives And at one Table eat what Heaven gives Our times a sweeter Harmony have not known They are six Persons yet their hearts but one And of these six as none hath hitherto Known Marriage twice so none desires to do Mate is to mate what dearest Dove to Dove Even grandest wrinkles are top-full of love In these three Pairs Barford may justly glory What other place can parallel this Story Th. Dugard Some parts of
beside At this day there are 9285. Parishes in the Kingdom There is in no place of the world greater and larger Dogs nor better Hounds That the British Hounds and Mastives excell those of other Nations See Burtons Comment on Antoninus Itin. pag. 219 220. Of all the Doggs in Europe ours bear the name They were in most request both for those baitings in the Amphitheaters and also in all other publick huntings among the Romanes Magnaque taurorum fracturi colla Britanni Claudian The Cock is a bold and stout Bird and will fight valiantly with his adversaries and presently crows when he obtains victory See Pliny lib. 29. cap. 4. The Cocks also there give not over the fight till death parts them There are three principal Rivers in England Thames in the South-East Severn in the South-West Trent a Northern River Isis the principal and Prince of all the English Rivers afterward entertaineth Tame and by a compound word is called Tamesis His ita compositis hinc Plantageneta regressus Fluctibus aequoreis trajectis venit in arcem Urbis Londini quam praeterlabitur amnis Piscosus Thamesis famae celeberrimus inter Albionis rivos Oclandi Anglorum Praelia The Thames swelleth with the accesse of the flowing tide of the Sea about Lx Italian miles by water from his mouth Neither to my knowledge is there any other River in all Europe that for so many miles within Land feeleth the violence of the Ocean forcing and rushing in upon it and so driving back and with-holding his waters to the exceeding great commodity of the Inhabitants bordering thereupon The second River of England is Severn the head of it is the Hill Plinlimon in Montgomery-shire He slowly wandereth through this Shire Shropshire Worcestershire and last of all Glocestershire infusing a certain vital moisture into the soil every where as he passeth untill at length he mildely dischargeth himself into the Severn-sea Trent by his due right challengeth to himself the third place among all the Rivers of England It runneth out of two Fountains being neer neighbours together in the North part of Staffordshire among the Moors Certain unskilfull and idle headed have dreamed that it was so named of Trente a French word which signifieth Thirty and thereupon also have feigned that thirty Rivers runne into it and as many kinds of fishes live therein We have more glorious Universities Colledges Schools and Churches than any Nation of the world There are two famous Universities in England Oxford and Cambridge Five great Schools in England Westminster Eaton Winchester Pauls and Merchant-Taylors School For Churches Doctor Heylin in his Geography shews which are the best It is famous beyond Seas also for its fine Wooll which is our golden Fleece The most considerable Ports on the East-side of the Island are New-castle Hull Lynne Yarmouth Harwich Colchester Sandwich on the South-side lies Plymouth on the West Chester Our Language consists partly of French Danish Saxon and Pictish Language The English-Saxon Tongue came in by the English-Saxons out of Germany who valiantly and wisely performed here all the three things which imply a full conquest viz. the alteration of Lawes Language and Attire Camd. Remains He saith also there that our Tongue is as copious pithy and significative as any other Tongue in Europe There is in English as true strains of Eloquence as strong and fine expressions as elaborate and solid pieces of fancy as in any Language whatsoever Howels Instruct for Travel Sect. 12. George commonly called St. George was the Patron both of our Nation and of the most honourable Order of Knighthood in the world The first and last Heresie that ever troubled this Island was inbred by Pelagius but that was amongst the Britons and was suppressed by the zeal of the Saxons who liked nothing of the British breed and for whose sake it suffered more happly then for the foulnesse of the opinion The sweating sicknesse call'd for the propriety by which it seized on the English Nation chiefly Sudor Anglicus It followed onely Englishmen in forrain Countreys no other people infected therewith There is a good course taken to secure this Land from forreigne Invasion by burning of Beacons Beacon of the old word Beacnian that is to shew by a signe for these many hundred years they have been in great request and much used among us in some places by heaping up a deal of wood in others by barrels full of pitch fastened to the top of a Mast or Pole in the highest places of the Countrey at which by night some do alwayes watch that by burning the pitch the enemies coming may be shewed to all the neighbour inhabitants This Realme was first divided into Circuits by King Henry the Second who appointed twice in the year that two of the most grave and learned Judges of the Land should in each Circuit administer Justice in the chief or head Towns of every Countrey Of these Judges one sitteth on matters criminal concerning the life and death of malefactours the other in actions personal concerning Title of Lands Debts or the like between party and party The first Circuit heretofore did comprehend the Counties of Wilts Somerset Devon and Southampton The second contained the Counties of Oxford Berks Glocester Munmouth Hereford Worcester Salop and Stafford The third had in it the Counties of Surrey Kent Essex and Hartford The fourth consisted of the Shires of Buckingham Bedford Huntingdon Cambridge Norfolk and Suffolk The fifth of the Shires of Northampton Rutland Lincoln Nottingham Darby Leicester and Warwick The sixth and last of the Shires of York Durham Northumberland Cumberland Westmerland and Lancaster So that in these six Circuits are numbered thirty eight Shires The two remaining are Middlesex and Cheshire whereof the first is exempted because of its vicinity to London and the second as being a County Palatine and having peculiar Judges and Counsellors to it self The seven Kingdoms Kent South-Saxia West-Saxie East-Saxia Northumberland Mercia and East-Anglia were governed by so many several Kings Ethelbert was King of Kent Sebert of East-Saxon Erpenwald of the East-Angle Edwine of Northumberland Kingill of West-Saxon Peada of Mercia Ethelwolf of the South-Saxon King Alfred ordained the Division of Shires Hundre●… and * Tithings that every Englishman living legally might be of a certain Hundred or Tithing out of which he was not to remove without security There are one and fourty Shires in England every Shire consisting of so many Hundreds and every Hundred of a number of Boroughs Villages or Tithings England was divided into seven Kingdomes by the Saxons after into Provinces Shires or Shares and Countreys by Alured In these Shires there is appointed in troublesome times a Deputy under the King to see that the Commonwealth sustain no hurt Now every year some one of the Gentlemen Inhabitants is made Ruler of the County wherein he
once was a City of Truth a holy Mountain in regard of the Doctrine of truth and holinesse preached therein then certainly London may Insomuch that Foraigners Hungarians Germans Batavians others learn our Language and come over to this City that they may hear our Preachers and read our English Divines London-Bridge is an admirable Workmanship of stone hewen out of the Quarry upon nineteen Arches besides the Draw-bridge and is furnished on both sides with passing fair houses joyning one to another in manner of a street that for bignesse and beauty it may worthily carry away the prize from all the Bridges in Europe The whole City is divided into six and twenty Wards and the Councel of the City consisted of as many ancient men named of their age in our tongue Aldermen as one would say Senatours who each one have the over-seeing and rule of his several Ward The chief Magistrate is the Lord Maior and two Sheriffs whereof the one is called the Kings the other the Cities Sheriff In Henry the Sixths Reign Godfrey Bolein was Lord Maior of London being the Ancestor of two renowned and virtuous Queens of England Anne second wife to King Henry the Eighth and Elizabeth their Daughter through whose great vigilancy and providence the City stood so well guarded that the Kings peace was dutifully kept notwithstanding the great Lords of both the Factions Yorkists and Lancastrians were with so great Troops of followers lodged within and about the same In Edward the Thirds Reign Henry Picard Maior of London in one day sumptuously feasted four Kings Edward the Third King of England John King of France the King of Cyprus then arrived in England David King of Scots See the courage and piety of a Lord Maior in King James his time in Wilsons History of Great-Britain p. 106. The Merchants meeting place standing upon Pillars which the common people call the Burse and Queen Elizabeth with a solemn Ceremony named The Royal Exchange was set up by Sir Thomas Gresham Citizen and Knight a magnificent work whether you respect the Model of the building the resort of Merchants from all Nations thither or the store of wares there Which Sir Thomas Gresham being withall an exceeding great lover of Learning consecrated a most spacious house his own habitation to the furtherance of Learning and instituted the Professours of Divinity Law Physick Astronomy Geometry and Musick with liberal Salaries and Stipends to the end that London might be a place not only furnished with all kind of Traffick but also with the Liberal Arts and Sciences There is also a fair and goodly Library in Sion-Colledge containing an hundred twenty and one foot in length and above five and twenty foot in breadth In the Reign of King James Robert Earl of Salisbury caused to be erected a stately building in the Strand which upon Tuesday the tenth of April in the yeer 1609. was begun to be richly furnished with Wares and the next day after the King the Queen and Prince with many great Lords and Ladies came to see and then the King gave it the name of Britains Burse Westminster was called in times past Thorney of Thorns now Westminster of the West situation and the Monastery A City of it self having its peculiar Magistrates and Priviledges It is renowned for the Abbey Church the Hall of Justice and the Kings Palace This Church is famous especially by reason of the Inauguration and Sepulture of the Kings of England William the Conquerour and Matilda his wife were first crowned at Westminster and since them all other Kings and Queens of this Realm have been there crowned Stows Surveigh of London It is a Church of very fair Workmanship supported with sundry rows of Marble Pillars a peece of work that cost fifty yeers labour in building It was founded by King Edward the Confessour King Henry the Seventh for the Burial of himself and his children adjoyned thereto in the East end a Chappel of admirable elegancy Leland calleth it The wonder of the world all the curious and exquisite work that can be devised is there compacted It is reported That the Chappel cost ten thousand pound or as others say fourteen thousand pound There is a Collegiate Church and famous School Forty Scholars in their due time are preferred to the Universities Here are buried the Prince of English Poets Geffrey Chaucer as also he that for pregnant wit and an excellent gift in Poetry of all English Poets came neerest unto him Edmund Spenser Isaac Casaubone William Camden Clarenceux King of Arms Westminster-Hall is the greatest Hall in England and the very Praetorium or Hall of Justice In this are the Judicial Courts the Upper-Bench the Common-Pleas and the Chancery and in places neer thereabout the Starre-Chamber the Exchequer Court of Wards and Court of the Dutchy of Lancaster In which at certain set times we call them Terms Causes are yeerly heard and tried This Judgement Hall King Richard the Second built out of the ground as appeareth by his Arms engraven in the stone-work and many arched beams There are a hundred twenty and one Churches more than Rome it self can shew Redcliff so called of the Red cliff a pretty fine Town and dwelling place of Sailers Enfield-Chase a place much renowned for hunting In this County without the City of London are reckoned Parishes much about seventy three with the City Liberties and Suburbs an hundred twenty and one Monmouthshire IT is enclosed on the North-side with the River Munow that separateth it from Herefordshire on the East-side with Wye running between it and Glocestershire on the West with the River Remmey which severeth it from Glamorganshire and on the South with the Severn The East part is full of Grasse and Woods the West is somewhat hilly and stony yet not unthankfull to the Husbandman Monmouth the chief Town of the Shire Munow and Wye at their confluence do compasse it almost round about and give it the name On the North-side where it is not defended with the Rivers it was fortified with a wall and ditch In the midst of the Town hard by the Mercat place standeth a Castle which as it is thought John Baron of Monmouth built It was the Birth place of Henry the Fifth that triumpher over France and the second Ornament of the English Nation It glorieth also that Geffrey Ap Arthur or of Munmouth Compiler of the British History was born and bred there a man well skilled in Antiquities but as it seemeth not of antique credit so many toyes and tales he every where enterlaceth out of his owne brain as he was charged while he lived Chepstow a famous Town and of good resort situate upon the side of an Hill rising from the very River fortified round about with a Wall of a large circuit which includes within it both Fields and Orchards It hath a very spacious Castle situate over the River Strighall Castle it belongs to the
this Nation subsist upon Mines and Cole others upon Manefacture Some upon Corn others upon the Profits of Cattle London and the Sea-Ports upon Exportation and Importation M. Wrens Monarchy asserted chap. 8. Wileboord an Englishman was the first Bishop of Utrect he is called the Apostle of Zeland for having there preacht and planted the Christian Faith as also in the Provinces next adjoyning Verstegans Etymologies of our Saxon Proper Names Willebrodus Britannus fuit Frisiosque primus Christianae Religionis initiis imbuit Bertius in Tab. Geog. Contract I shall detain thee no longer but subscribe my self Thy hearty Well-willer Edward Leigh PROLEGOMENA EUrope the least of the four parts of the World yet the most populous and eminent for Arts and Armes is divided into several Nations and Countreys Albion or Great-Britain Spain France Germany Rhetia Vindelicia Italy Sardinia Sicily Sarmatia Dacia Maesia and Greece Britain or Britanny which also is Albion the most famous Island without comparison of the whole world It is seated as well for air as soil in a right fruitfull and most milde place The air so kinde and temperate that not only the Summers be not excessive hot by reason of continual gentle windes that abate their heat which as they refresh the fruits of the earth so they yeeld a most wholsom and pleasing contentment both to man and beast but the Winters also are passing milde for therein falling often with still showers to say nothing of the Air it self somewhat thick and grosse dissolveth the rigour of the cold so and withall the Sea which compasseth it with moderate warmth doth comfort the Land in such wise as that the cold with us is much more remisse than in some parts of France and Italy It is now called England in Latine Anglia in French Angle-terre Of the several Etymologies of which word see Histoire d' Angle-terre Par Du Chesne l. 6. p. 195. And Munsters Universal Gosmography l. 2. Britanniam lasciviae Culparier justè negas Tamen fateri cogeris Quòd insula est non continens Hugenii Epig. l. 6. Great Britain consisting of England and Scotland contains one thousand eight hundred thirty six miles in compasse This Island as Camden Twine Verstegan imagine was broken off from the Continent of France See Twine De Rebus Britannicis The Bodies of the Inhabitants are of an excellent Constitution their Demeanour right courteous their Natures gentle and their Courage most hardy and valiant whose Manhood by exploits atchieved both at home and abroad is famously renowned thorow the whole world King Edward the third and his Sonne did bear their victorious Arms thoroughout all France King Henry the Sixth was crowned King of France at Paris Our famous Kings Henry the Fifth Edw. 3. and K. Henry the Eight were the most worthiest Warriers that our Nation ever had Sir Roger Williams his brief Discourse of Warre pag. 37. See pag. 8 9. 58. Phil. de Commines Hist. l. 6. c. 2 3. Sir Francis and Sir Horatio Vere Sir Thomas Morgan Sir John Norris by their singular knowledge in military affairs and exploits most valiantly and fortunately atchieved in the Low-Countreys have added exceeding much honour and glory to themselves See Dr. Dillinghams Veres Commentaries Sir Roger Williams also was a famous Commander John Lord Talbot Earl of Shrewsbury marched four and twenty years together with victorious arms over a great part of France Camden cals him Englands Achilles See Froissarts Chron. c. 130. of the victory of the English at the great battel of Cressy The Duke of Bedford was Regent of France and being slain in a battel on Land before Veronil was buried in Roan and together with him all the English mens good fortune in France Whose Monument when Charles the Eighth King of France came to see and a Nobleman standing by advised him to rase it Nay answered he let him rest in peace now being dead of whom in warre whiles he lived all France had dread Marshal Biron said He liked not the English March being beaten by the Drumme it was so slow Sir Roger Williams answer'd him That yet it had gone through all France See the Discourse of the National Excellencies of England Part 1. Chap. 1. Of the Warres of the Britains and their Courage Chap. 3. Of the Danish Invasion Chap. 4. Of the Norman Conquest Chap. 5. Of Warres with Spain Chap. 6. Of Warres with France Chap. 7. Of Warres with the seventeen Provinces Chap. 8 9. Of Warres with Scotland Part 2. Chap. 2. Of the English Courage Our wooden Walls the Ships are a great safety to this Nation The English Navy is the strongest in the world What service did our Ships do us in 88 Sir Francis Drake and after him Thomas Candish Esquire within the space of three yeers and three moneths travelled about the Globe of the whole Earth This Isle hath prescribed in all ages for the Dominion * of the Seas that incompasse it Vide Seldeni Mare clausum lib. 2. c. 12 13 14 15 20 21 22 23 24 30 31 32. Sir Richard Grenvile in a Ship of Queen Elizabeths fought against a great Navy of Spaniards This single vessel was fought with in turns by fifteen other great Ships whereof the great St. Philip of 1500 Tuns Prince of the twelve Sea-Apostles was one It sunk two of their best Ships and killed a thousand men It was sunk at last having first to the full answered its name Without vanity our Nation may assume to it self the praise considering the narrow limits of the Island to have produced as many Scholars admirable in all degrees of knowledge as any Countrey on this side the Alpes Beda Bradwardine Scotus Wicliffe Ockam Baconthorp Joannes de sacro Bosco Cuthbert Tunstall Pool Colet Lilie Linacer Pacaeus Fisher More Stapleton Leland Camden Juel Whitaker Rainolds Sir Philip Sidney a man of excellent parts learned and valiant Our English mens pronunciation of the Latine tongue is condemned much by Outlandishmen A Herald brought a Letter of Defiance from the King of England in very good language and so excellently well penned that I am perswaded it was never of English mans doing Phil. de Comin in his History lib. 4. ch. 5. They write good Latine though Car hath written an Oration De Scriptorum Britannicorum paucitate In Edward the Thirds time there was a Letter directed to the Pope in justification of making it Treason to bring in Papal provisions which was so excellently penn'd as did not only move admiration but astonishment Cito post Rex direxit Papae illam famosam Epistolam pro libertate Ecclesiae contuenda quam praesentibus duximus inserendam Walsing. Hist. Angl. Edw. 3. p. 161. There are sundry opinions whence this word Britain had the original derivation Camden dislikes that from Brutus Some say It is most probably derived from Brit which in the ancient British signifies
a Prince most accomplished with Martial Prowesse in the yeer of Christ 1336. Duke of Cornwall by a Wreath on his Head a Ring upon his Finger and a silver Verge Since which time the King of Englands eldest Sonne is reputed Duke of Cornwall by birth Launston the chief Town The Promontory named the Lands end the most Western point of the Kingdom It containeth nine Hundreds two and twenty Market Towns an hundred sixty and one Parishes Cumberland IT took the name of the Inhabitauts who were the true and natural Britans and called themselves in their own language Kumbri This Countrey although it be somewhat with the coldest as lying farre North and seemeth as rough by reason of Hils yet for the variety thereof it smileth upon the beholders and giveth contentment to as many as travel it Of all the Shires we have it is accounted the best furnished with the Roman Antiquities Burtons Comment on Antoninus his Itin. p. 13. At Newlands there are copper or brasse Mines Skiddaw-Hill is very high Skiddaw Lauvellin and Casticand Are the highest hils in all England Solway Frith so called of Solway a Town in Scotland standing upon it Under this Burgh within the very Frith where the salt water ebbeth and floweth the Englishmen and Scotish by report of the Inhabitants fought with their Fleets at full Sea and also with their Horsemen and Footmen at the ebbe Hard by the Riveret Dacor standeth Dacre-Castle of signal note because it hath given surname to the honourable Family of the Barons Dacre Carlile This ancient City is fortified with strong walls of stone with a Castle and Citadel as they terme it Here begun Picts-wall or simply by way of excellency The Wall the limit of the Roman Province continued through this Countrey and Northumberland and ending in Walls-end Here are nine Market Towns and fifty eight Parishes Darbyshire IT is a plentifull Countrey there are many Minerals and several kinds of Stones Darby is the chief Town of all this Shire a Town of good trade There be five Churches in it Of which the greatest named All-Hallows dedicated to the memory of All-Saints hath a Tower-steeple that for height and singular fine Workmanship excelleth They had a famous Minister there one Chappel which was brother to him that was of Cambridge and went afterward into Ireland He did much good in Darby When King James came thither a witty Butcher in the Town said thus to him Jemmy for a Chappel and a Steeple We may compare with any people The Assizes are there kept for the whole Shire and the best nappy Ale is brewed there in two places especially It is the ancient and peculiar drink of the Englishmen and Britains and very wholsome Henry of Aurenches the Norman Arch-Poet to King Henry the Third merrily jested on it in these Verses Nescio quid Stygiae monstrum conforme paludi Cervisiam plerique vocant nil spissius illa Dum bibitur nil clarius est dum mingitur unde Constat quod multas faeces in ventre relinquit Of this strange drink so like to Stygean lake Most terme it Ale I wot not what to make Folk drink it thick and pisse it passing thin Much dregs therfore must needs remain within The wealth of this Town consisteth much of buying of Corn and selling it again to the mountains for all the Inhabitants are a kind of Badgers Thomas Linaker the famous Scholar was born here and so was Mr. Cotton the famous Minister of Boston and Dr. Wilmot neer it Chesterfield a Market Town The Peak which signifieth to appear aloft is severed from Staffordshire by the Dove a most swift and clear River It is plentifull of Lead also Stibium or Antimony Mill-stones likewise are here hewed out as also Grinde-stones and Whet-stones to give an edge unto iron tools Under the old Castle called the Castle in the Peak there is a Cave or Hole within the ground called the Devils Arse Devils Arse in Peak that gapeth with a wide mouth and hath in it many turnings and retiring rooms This Hole is reckoned one of the wonders of England There are several other wonders in the Peak Ashburn in the Peak There is a place called Elden-Hole which lies two miles distant from Castleton a Town in the high Peak it is within the Peak Forest it descendeth directly down into the earth it is about thirty yards long and fifteen yards broad at the top of it but is much straighter when it cometh fourty yards deep You may see into it about sixty yards being as farre as the light which cometh in at the mouth of the Hole will give light to see it is fearfull to look into being a face of rock on each side About sixty years since one Mr. Henry Cavendish eldest brother to Sir Charles Cavendish who had spent all his dayes in travel had been at Jerusalem and several other parts of the world and hearing of this place came to it and caused Engines to be made or to let a man into the Hole which being done one George Bradley of the Peak Forest was let down in a rope fourscore yards And then another Engine was made to let him go further and from thence he was let down fourscore yards further and at the end thereof a third Engine was made whereby he was let down almost fourscore yards further at the top of the rope was fastened a Bell which he was to ring if he could go no further or would return back when he was let down almost the third fourscore yards he rung the Bell and being drawn up he was much affrighted remained speechlesse for a time and was struck with lamenesse but after he recovered his speech he declared that as he descended down were bones of Deer Sheep and other Cattel and also of men and that he was affrighted but how or in what manner he could not tel he lived several years but never was in perfect memory nor sound of his limbs Within the Town of Buxton there is a Bath called Buxton-Well which cureth very many Diseases There are two springs of water the one within a hand breadth of the other the one is very hot the other cold as ice There are eight Market Towns six Hundreds and an hundred and six Parishes in this County Denshire OR Devonshire A Countrey harborous on either side with commodious Havens enriched with Tin-mines especially Westward garnished with pleasant medows sightly with great store of woods and passing well replenished with Towns and buildings There is not any place almost in all England where the ground requireth greater charges For in most parts thereof it groweth in manner barren if it be not over-strewed and mingled with a certain sand from the Sea which is of great efficacy to procure fertility by quickening as it were and giving life unto the Glebe and therefore in places far from the shore it is bought at a dear rate On
famous no doubt in the Romans time The Archbishop of Canterbury was called Totius Angliae Primas the Archbishop of York Angliae Primas without any further addition Anselme for recompence of the service he had done in oppugning the marriage of Priests and resisting the King for the investiture of Clerks was by Pope Urbane endowed with this accession of honour that he and his Successours should from thenceforth have place in all General Councels at the Popes right foot who then said withall Includemus hunc in orbe nostro tanquam alterius orbis Papam Canterbury is one of the famousest Cities in England It hath had a rare Cathedral though now much ruinated by reason of these later times The Cathedral is in the midst of the City a fair Church the body of which is within a little as large as Pauls in London between the body and the Quire a very high Steeple where hangeth a Bell called by the name of Bell-Harry being one of them which King Henry brought out of France There is also in this Steeple four Spires much like to Sepulchres in London There is on each side of the great West-gate two other Steeples the one called Dunston-steeple the other Arnold-steeple in each of which are a very pleasant ring of Bels In the same Cathedral there was the famousest Window that ever was known in England for which there was offered as some say by the Spanish Embassadour 10000lb being the whole History of Christ from his Nativity to his Sufferings but is now battered to pieces In the Quire of this Cathedral is buried Prince Edward called the Black Prince whose Monument is there of brasse The Dean and Prebends had very fair Houses within the bounds of the said Cathedral which was like a little City and so much power formerly that the Maiors Sword was not suffered to be held up within the Gates of the Deanry There is underneath this Cathedral a great Congregation of French living in the City and the Dutch also have a Church in that place which was called the Bishops Palace Within the bounds of the said Deanry there is a free School called The Kings School wherein are two Masters and many Scholars formerly wearing Gowns that are there brought up and many from thence sent to the University There was one Schoolmaster * some years before he died affirmed he had had thirty seven Masters of Arts of his bringing up There are many Churches in the City and Suburbs There are two Markets a week The Maior and Aldermen are cloathed in Scarlet and they keep the Sessions in the same City The City is walled and hath a Mote about it the Wall being so broad that two or three men may go a-brest with gallant Watch houses called Citadels all built with flint-stone There was an old Castle but it hath been for many years demolished and some of the Works or Forts are yet standing that were when the Danes came in one or two of which were made use of when the last rising was there There are two Hospitals in the City one for Ancient people and the other for Children The Isle of Thanet it is eight miles long and four broad a right fertile soil Goodwin-Sands a sandy dangerous place In the Reign of William the Second certain Lands in Kent which did once belong to Godwin Earl of Kent were overflowed and covered with sand which to this day do bear the name of Godwins Sands See Kilburns Survey of Kent pag. 262 263. How Tenterden Steeple was said to be the cause of Goodwins Sands Sandwich one of the Cinque Ports Dover The Town is seated between high Cliffs more famous for the commodiousnesse of the Haven such as it is and for ready passage into France then for any elegance or great trade There is a most stately Castle like unto a pretty City fortified strongly with Bulwarks and many a Tower It is the strongest hold of all England and most commodious for the French Sandgate-Castle and Satlwood a Castle Hith it signifies an Haven or Harbour one of the Cinque Ports Rumney-marsh a fruitfull soil it feedeth a number of Herds of Cattel sent hither from the furthest parts of Wales and England to be fatted There is at Bilsington a Priory built by John Maunsel Weaver in his Funeral Monuments saith He saw a Pedigree of the Maunsels from Philip de Maunsel who came in with the Conquerour untill these our times Wie Here was born John Kemp Archbishop of Canterbury and one of the great Benefactors to the University of Oxford He was Bishop of Rochester Chichester and London Archbishop of York first and afterward of Canterbury twice made Cardinal Bis primas ter Praeses bis Cardine functus This Province hath three hundred ninety eight Parishes and sixty four Hundreds Lancashire IT is a large populous and well wooded Countrey The County Palatine of Lancaster famous for the four Henries the Fourth Fifth Sixth and Seventh Kings of England derived from John Gaunt Duke of Lancaster is upon the South confined and parted by the River Mersey from the County Palatine of Chester the County of Darbyshire bordering upon the East the large Countrey of Yorkshire together with Westmerland and Cumberland being her kind neighbours upon the North and the Sea called Mare Hibernicum imbracing her upon the West Their Kine and Oxen have goodly Heads and fair spread Hornes and are in body well proportionate withall Warringdon Rochdale a Mercate Town well frequented Manchester a Town of great antiquity from Main a British word which signifieth a Stone It is seated upon a stony hill and beneath the Town there are most famous quarries of stone It farre excelleth the Towns lying round about it for the beautifull shew it carrieth for resort unto it and for cloathing in regard also of the Mercate place the fair Church and Colledge John Bradford the famous Martyr was born here Letherpool or Lirpool so named of the water spreading it self in manner of a Pool whence there is a convenient passage over into Ireland and much frequented and in that respect more notorious than for any antiquity Ocmeskirk a Mercate Town well known by reason of the Sepulture there of the Stanleys Earls of Derby whose chief seat Latham is hard by a stately house Wiggin a Corporation with a Maior and Burgesses Bolton upon the River Irwell Preston a great fair Town and well inhabited Hornby a fair Castle Lancaster the chief Town of this Region There are thirty six Parishes in this Shire but those very populous and spacious six Hundreds and fifteen Market Towns Leicestershire IT hath bordering upon it on the East-side both Rutlandshire and Lincolnshire on the North Notingham and Derbyshire and Warwickshire on the West and on the South-side lieth Northampton The whole Shire yeeldeth great abundance of Peas and Beans more than any other Country insomuch that there is an old by-word of the same commonly known to all