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A38369 England enslaved under popish successors being a true history of the oppressions this nation groaned under in times of popery. 1681 (1681) Wing E2932; ESTC R42018 37,306 46

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England Enslaved UNDER POPISH SUCCESSORS BEING A True HISTORY OF THE OPPRESSIONS this NATION Groaned under in Times of POPERY LONDON Printed for Jonathan Wilkins at the Star in Cheapside next Mercers Chappel MDCLXXXI ENGLAND'S Grievances in Times of POPERY SECTION 1. IT appeareth as well by the Pope's Laws delivered in Decretal Epistles which were particularly and upon sundry occasions directed to the Bishops and other Clergy-men of this Realm of England in Popish times as also by the report of our English Histories that at such time as the Bishop of Rome had his full ●way in this Realm the Authority of the King was so obscured as there was hardly left any shew of his Sword and Dignity And on the other side the Subjects destitute of succour by their Natural Prince and left to a most miserable spoil and rapine of the Pope and of such as it pleased him to give them in prey whereof these special Grievances here collected may serve for testimony besid●s a number of others which come not to my memory but may be easily supplied by any indifferent mans careful Reading GRIEVANCES 1. The first Grievance was The Exemption of the Clergy who being Exemption of the Clergy a considerable part of the Realm by reason that great numbers as well looking to Preferments that then were bestowed upon that State as also drawn by Priviledges and Immunities which they infinitely enjoyed above others sought to be of that number were wholly exempt or at least so took themselves to be from all Jurisdiction of the King and his Justices not in Ecclesiastical Causes only as then they were termed but even in Causes Civil and in Matters of Crime though the same touched the Prince and his Danger in the highest degree The Popes Laws to this purpose are to be seen in C. Clerici extr de Judici●s C. seculares de fore compet enti in 6o. and a special Constitution Provincial of this Realm made by Boniface Archb●shop of Canterbury in the time of King Henry the Third in the Council of Westminster or Lambeth Anno 1270 or 1272. vid. Prynne's Exact History of Pope's Intollerable Usurpations upon the Liberties of the King and Subjects of England and Ireland Vol. 2. lib. 4. c. 3. Johan de Aton Constitut. Guil. Lindwood Touching the Practice it is recorded in the De●retals that Pope Alexander III. in the tim● of the Reign of King Stephen wrote to the Bishop of London to take Order by his Jurisdiction in a Civil Controversie of Goods left in the Custody of a Clerk c. 1. de Deposito Likewise it doth there appear that in the time of King Henry II. Pope Lucius III. wrote to the Bishops of Ely and Norwich to compel a Clerk to save his Sureties harmless And to like purpose he wrote in another Case to the Archbishop of Canterbury King Henry III. pretending Title by his Prerogative or by the Common Law to certain Lands which the Archbishop of Canterbury claimed to be parcel of the possessions of his Church was compelled to answer the Bishop in that Cause in the Court of Rome Mat. Paris fol. 494. Adam Tarlton or d'Orl●on Bishop of Hereford in a Parliament holden at London in the year 1324 was accused of Treason against King Edward II. as having aided the Mortimers with Men and Money against that King Being brought before the King and claiming his Priviledge to be judged by the Pope he was forthwith rescued by the rest of the Clergy After a few dayes the King caused him to be brought before him and when he should have been arraigned a thing till that time never heard of that a Bishop should be arraigned the boldness of the three Archbishops of Canterbury York and Dublin was very strange for they with ten other Bishops with their Crosses erected came to the Bar before the Kings Justices and took him from thence into their own Custody In his absence he was attainted with High Treason notwithstanding and his Temporalties were seized into the King's hand until such time as the King much by his device and machination was deposed of his Kingdom But though the King took away his goods yet he was not suffered to meddle with his Body Tho. Walsingham H●st Angl. p. 98 99. SECT 2. 2. Whatsoever Laws the King in his Parliament made which in any Restraint of making Laws for Policy sort impeached the Priviledge or Liberty of the Clergy or touched their Lands or Goods were for that time holden by the Pope and his Clergy void and of no force And it helped not the King how just cause soever he pretended of any right appertaining to his Ancestors For so are the Popes Laws in precise terms save that some of the later sort reserve to the King Laws touching Services and some other rights in Church lands c. qu. Ecclesiarum de Constit c. Eccles Sanct. Alar c. Noverit c. Grav●m de Sententia Excommunicationis And some Popes were so jealous over Princes in the Point that they refused to allow Laws by them made to the benefit of the Church As where Basil Lieutenant to Odoacer King of the Lombards provided by Law in favour of the Church that no Prescription should make his Title good who had bought ought of the Church the Pope mis●iking that a Lay-m●n should deal in those Causes disannulled the Law c. Pene quid●m Distinct 96. The pract●ce of this injury is notable in the dealing of Thomas Archbishop of Canterbury with King Henry II. For whereas the King in his Parliament had made very reasonable Laws in maintainance of the Ancient Rights of the Crown against the licentious Liberties claimed by the Clergy Among which one was That Clerks in Causes of Felony and Murther should be tried by the Laws of the Realm for that it was shewed unto the Parliament that then an hundred So Nuburgensis noteth lib. 2. cap. 15. M●rthers had been committed by Church-men not duly punished whereto the said Archbishop and the rest of the Prelats gave their consents and bound themselves to the observation of them by their Oaths the Archbishop afterwards grudging at these Laws departed the Realm obtained at the Pope's hand Absolution from his Oath and forced the King to answer for those Laws in the Court of Rome where the King finding no favour that Garboil insued which after fell out betwixt the King the Pope and the Archbishop and many Murthers committed upon Clerks by the Lay-subjects who greatly stomached this Indignity offered to the King The Pope fearing two such Potentates as the Kings of England and Mat. Paris Hist Angl. fol. 1● 4 135. France determineth to labour a Reconciliation betwixt the King and the Archbishop and to make the French King a Mediator for the Archbishop This he effected and brought the two Kings together at Paris Thither also came Thomas Becket who being come into the King's presence falling down upon his knees used these words My Lord and Soveraign I do here
and Eight Tun of the strongest Wine for his Table Others presented him with handsome Palfreys rich Vessels Furrs Vestments and divers other Provisions of Meat and Drink Again the charge of the ordinary Entertainments of a Legat was a great matter for all his Charges were born by the Realm What those Expences might grow unto may be conjectured by one demand of Procurations made by the said Otho which yet was but a piece of his Allowance for in the year 1240 giving notice to the Clergy that he must tarry in the Realm some time longer than at first was assigned unto him in which space he was not to spend of his own commanded a second Levy of Procurations to be made Mat. Paris fol. 702. wherein he made shew of some favour more than was ordinary giving to understand that he meant not to receive of any Church above four Marks and where the Churches were poor he would be content that two Churches should joyn in contributing those four Marks What benefit the Realm received for all these charges upon the The use of Legats Legats the Monuments of two of the chief of these Legats Otho and Ottobon I mean their Legantine Constitutions which were the fruits of their Reformation do well shew They contain Matter of little or no moment in the World and such as every Bishop in his Diocess might have ordered well enough viz. Triffles about Citations Proxies and other small matters Moreover their long abode and lingering in Countreys cannot Danger by the stay of Legats in the Realm Nich Machiavel History of Florence but be dangerous to the States where they come because having opportunity to know the secrets of the Realm they bestow that knowledge often times unhappily being persons imployed in more Countreys than one and often where discovery of such Secrets proveth perillous to those Realms where they have served before Nicholas Machiavel that great States Man in his History of Florence noteth of his time that the most of all the Wars and Garboiles in Christendom were kindled by the Whisperings of the Popes Legats SECT 19. 19. It is also proved by the Canon Law that any Ecclesiastical Original Suits at Rome Suit may be commenced Originally at Rome This cannot be void of great charges to the Subject and is very gainful to the See of Rome and the Charge lieth not alone in the long Travel thither and tedious Attendance upon that Court but in the Cumbersomness of many intricate Questions arising upon Commissions sometimes one crossing another and sometimes doubtfully penned sometimes again controlled by colour of wrong Suggestion and a great number of ways besides whereof the Decretals are full and most of them are directed to Bishops of this Realm which betokeneth that this Plague hath touched our English People more than any other The Subjects were constrained to follow the Popes Consistory for their right and there to waste themselves in Suit in such wise that one Case of England was thirty years depending in Rome Ante litem contestatam as Speculator writeth And the case between the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Archbishop of York for the Controversie whether the Archbishop of York might have a Cross born before him within the Diocess of Canterbury a goodly Matter for Bishops to contend about did hang many years in the Court of Rome And likewise the Case between the Bishop of Worcester and the Abbot of Evesham for the Vale of Evesham The Decretals are full of English Cases decreed even as the parties found favour in the Court of Rome And the poor Cause of Matrimony of Cetwood did hang in Rome and was reserved there by Act of Parliament and never was decided And that very point was the occasion that King Henry VIII did look into the Usurpation of Rome because the Pope would needs Excommunicate the King for not answering in his own Case at Rome as is notably discovered by Bellay in his Memoires who was the Ambassador for the French Bellay in Memoires King in England and was sent of purpose to Rome to stay the Excommunication and could not get six days respite and yet within these six days the Messenger came with Instructions to have appeased the Matter SECT 20. What infinite Treasure was there carried out of the Realm by the Great sums carried out of the Realm for Dispensations Pope's Collectors and by Bankers for Bulls and Dispensations no man can tell Therefore the French King hath many times made Edicts against the Carrying out of Money for Bulls out of France as of a thing that spoiled the Realm of their Treasure using the Term Epuiser les Treasors du Royaume as a man doth draw the water of a Well to dry up the Water The Sums that were yearly made of Dispensations and Absolutions in Cases reserved were infinite as also of Pardons and Indulgences and other Faculties It appeareth by the Book of Taxes made for Dispensations in the Reign of Henry VIII that there were found Two hundred and sixteen Letters of Dispensations given by the Pope and that the Taxe of some of them were Two hundred Marks of others an Hundred Pounds c. Thomas Walsingham writeth That in the time of King Richard the Tho. Walsingham fol. 257. Second one Pileus the Pope's Legate made such a Market with Sale of Faculties that his Officers that were about him in that Service grew weary of taking Silver and did not stick to say That they had Silver enough and therefore would not afterwards be paid for their Wares in any Coin but in Gold Robert Grosted Bishop of Lincoln being suspended his Bishoprick for opposing the Pope's Provisions and trampling them under his Matth. Paris fol. 1145. Anno 1252. feet caused his Clerks to take a view of all the Spiritual Livings of Aliens in this Realm and to make a diligent Inquiry to what an Annual Sum they amounted unto who found them to exceed above Seventy thousand Marks And it may be easily collected what the Pope's Share was in those Gifts What the ordinary Payments were that were yearly made to the See of Rome he that shall make the strictest Inquisition shall hardly understand SECT 21. The Kingdom of England being daily oppressed with many intollerable Grievances and divers new Devices to extort Moneys more than before in the dayes of King Henry the Third he summoneth a Parliament at London by reason of the Complaints of the English against those Grievances which they could no longer tollerate without the brand of sluggishness and their own imminent ruin Great was the Indignation of the Pope against the miserable English for that they durst complain against their daily injuries and oppressions in the Council which he so multiplied that the English were more vile in his eyes and the Court of Rome than any other even of the remotest Nations Insolently saying It is expedient for us to compound with the Emperour Frederick that we may trample the
with sundry Archbishops and Bishops were taken by the Emperors Galleys going to a Council upon the Summons of Pope Gregory IX Gualo a Presbiter Cardinal of St. Martin crowned King Henry III causing him to do homage to the Church of Rome and Pope Innocent for England and Ireland and to swear faithfully to pay the Annual Rent for them which his Father King John had granted so long as he injoyed those Realms He deprived Simon Langton Archdeacon of Canterbury and Gervase de Habruge who obstinately adhered to Lewis and the Barons and celebrated Divine Service to them and the Londoners after their Excommunication of their Benefices for which they were compelled to go to Rome He sent Inquisitors through all Provinces of England suspending and depriving Clerks of their Benefices for very small faults and adhering to the Barons bestowing their Livings on his own Creatures Clerks inriched with others Spoils He received a thousand Marks from Hugh Bishop of Lincoln and vast sums from other Religious Persons Canons exhausting their Purses and reaping where he did not sow He bare sway in the Councils of King Henry III who sealed some Writs and Patents with his Seal before his own Seal was made and usurped on his Crown during his Minority without Opposition Bernardus de Nympha came Armed into England with the Bulls of Pope Innocent IV to collect Money from the Cruce signati for Richard Earl of Cornwall the Kings Brother Divers Blank Bulls of the Popes were found in his Chest after his Death containing manifold Machinations of the Romans to debase and oppress England John de Diva an English Frier was armed with many Papal Bulls to extort Moneys from the English for Pope Innocent IV under dreadful Penalties and Fulminations He exacts six thousand Marks out of Lincoln Diocess His Exaction at St. Albans was appealed against who demanded 300 Marks notwithstanding the Appeal to be paid within Eight days under pain of Excommunication and Interdict which the Pope upon an Appeal caused them to pay He had a Bull from the Pope to inquire of all Lands alienated from Churches and Monasteries Vexation● by Proviso's all Simoniacal Contracts for Livings to seize them to the Popes use and Excommunicate Interdict all Opposers without Appeal John Russin was sent with the power though not the title of a Legat into Ireland to collect Moneys there He extorted six thousand Marks from the Clergy there notwithstanding the Kings Prohibition Otto I. Pope Honorius his Nuncio was sent to King Henry III. He demandeth two Marks by way of Procuration from all Conventual Churches of England he demandeth two Dignities and two Monks portions in all Cathedrals and Monasteries Otho Cardinal Deacon of St. Nicholas in Careere T●llian● Legat Pryn's Hist of Popes Usurpations to Pope Gregory IX was received into England with Processions and ringing of Bells He disposed of vacant Benefices to all that came with him whether worthy or unworthy the King almost did nothing without him and adored his foot-steps He was present in the Parliament at York to mediate a peace between the Kings of England and Scotland The Charter of Peace was sworn to and ratified in his Presence He desireth leave of the King of Scot● to enter as a Legat into Scotland to regulate Ecclesiastical Affairs there as in England who answered That neither in his Fathers time nor of any his Ancestors any Legat had Entrance into Scotland neither would he permit it whilst he was in his righe senses But if he entered at his own peril he must expect violence from his rude Subjects from which he was unable to protect him yet he knighted and bestowed some Lands on his Nephew A great Fray was occasioned at Oxford by his Porter● Insolence and he was assaulted by the Scholars at Osney-Abbey stiled an Usurer a Simoniack a Ravisher of Mens Rents a Thirster after Money a ●erverter of the King and Subverter of the Kingdom is forced to fly secretly from thence Both the King and he proceeded severely against the Scholars for it by Ecclesiastical Censures Excommunications Penances Imprisonments almost to the ruin of the University He was denied Entrance into Scotland by the King thereof the second time He gave a Writing under his Hand and Seal to the King of Scots that his Admission into Scotland should not be drawn into Consequence who took it away with him upon his private recess He there collected the fifteenth part of the Goods of all Prelats and Beneficed Clerks and sent it to the Pope The English Nobles send Letters of Complaint to the Pope against his confering of Benefices by Provisions upon Aliens and other Grievances Frederick the Emperor was incensed against King Henry III for this Legats collecting of Moneys in England imployed in Wars against him demanding his Expulsion out of England as the Emperors and the Kingdoms Enemy He demandeth Procurations for himself from the Clergy not exceeding the sum of four Marks for any Procuration The King sent a Prohibition to him to exact the fifth or any other part of the Benefices of his Clerks attending on his Service which he could by no means endure He joyneth with Peter Rubee in exacting a great Tax from the Prelats and Abbots to shed Christian Blood and to conquer the Emperor The Bishops and Canons except against his intollerable Demands He laboured to raise a Schism and Division among the Clergy to obtain his Exactions He demanded Procurations from the Cistercians who manfully denied them as contrary to their Priviledges which the Pope dispensed with by his Non obstante The King upon his Departure out of England by the Popes Summons feasted placed him in his own Royal Throne and at Dinner to the admiration of many Knighted his Nephew and bestowed an Annuity of Thirty pounds per Annum upon him which he presently sold He conferred above Three hundred rich Prebendaries and Benefices at his own and the Popes pleasure on their Creatures He spoiled the Church of Sarum and many other Cathedrals leaving them destitute of Consolation He is accompanied by the King and Nobles in great state to the Sea-side at his departure out of England He left not so much Money in Mat. Paris fol. 735. England behind him when he left it as he drained out of it Church-plate and Ornaments excepted He stayed three years in England great were the rewards demanded by and given unto Legats Pope Innocentius sent one Martin into England for his Legat who was Rewards given to Legats not ashamed to demand Plate Geldings and other Rewards without measure And if those things where with he was presented liked him not he would proudly send them back to their Owners Mat. Paris f. 870. and threaten them with Excommunications except they brought him better And other Examples in the same Authors there were divers Rich Presents were sent unto the Legats The Bishop of Winton presented Otho with Fifty fat Oxen One hundred Quarters of the best Wheat