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A43536 Erōologia Anglorum. Or, An help to English history Containing a succession of all the kings of England, and the English-Saxons, the kings and princes of Wales, the kings and lords of Man, and the Isle of Wight. As also of all the arch-bishops, bishops, dukes, marquesses, and earles, within the said dominions. In three tables. By Robert Hall, Gent. Peter Heylyn, 1600-1662. 1641 (1641) Wing H1713; ESTC R216457 108,040 378

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honoured with the name of Kings of the North humbers and are marshalled thus A. Ch.     547 1 Ella and Ida.   2 Adda and Elappea   3 Theodwald   4 Frethulfe   5 Theodorick 589 6 Ethelrick 593 7 Ethel●ride 617 8 Edwine the first christned King 633 9 Osrick 634 10 S. Oswald 643 11 Oswy who having subdued Oswin● King of Deira was the first absolute King of all Northumberland 671 12 Egfride 686 13 S. Alfride 705 14 Osred 716 15 Kenred 718 16 Osrick II. 729 17 Ceolnulph 738 18 Egbert 758 19 Oswulph 759 20 Edilwald 765 21 Alured 774 22 Ethelred 778 23 Al●wald 789 24 Osred II. 794 25 Etheldred II. After whose death this Kingdome much molested by the Danes became a Province of the West-Sax●●s The Kingdome and Kings of MERCIA THe last and greatest of the seven Kingdomes of the Saxons was that of Mercia so called for that being seared in the middle of the whole Countrey it was a March or border unto all the rest which abutted on it It comprehended the Counties of Gl●●cester Hereford Worcester Warwick Leicester Rutland Northampton Lincoln Bedford Nottingham B●ckingham Oxford Darby Stafford Shropshire Cheshire and that other part of Hertfordshire which was not under the Kingdome of the East-Saxons By reason of this great extent of Empire ●hey were a long time very powerfull and over-awed their neighbour Princes till at the last the fatall period being come it fell into the Armes of the West-Saxons after it enjoyed these twenty Kings which hereafter follow A. Ch.     582 1 Cridda the first King of Mercia 593 2 Wibba 614 3 Cheorl 626 4 Penda 656 5 Peada the first christned King 659 6 Wulfher● 675 7 Ethelred 704 8 Kenred 709 9 Chelred 716 10 Ethelbald 758 11 Offa. 796 12 Egfride 797 13 Kenwolf 819 14 Kenelm 820 15 Ceolwolf 811 16 Bernulf 824 17 Ludecan 826 18 Withlafe 839 19 Berthulf 85● 20 Burdred After whose death this Kingdome having beene shrewdly shaken in a great battell fought near Burford Comit. Oxo● wherein King Ethelbal● was vanquished and his whole strength broken by Cuthbert or Cuthred King of the West-Saxons then his tributary and after no lesse shrewdly shaken by the valiant Egbert became a Province of that Empire The Monarchs of the English-SAXONS THe Saxons though they were divided into the seven Kingdomes before named were for the most part subject unto one alone who was entituled R●x Gentis Anglorum or King of the English Nation those which were stronger then the rest giving the law unto them in their severall turnes till in the end they all became incorporated into the Empire of the West-Saxons Which Monarchs who they were and of whence entituled is next in order shewne A. Ch.     455 1 Hengist King of Kent 481 2 Ella King of the South-Saxons 495 3 Cerdick King of the West-Saxons 534 4 Kenrick King of the West-Saxons 561 5 Cheuline or Celingus King of the West-Saxons 562 6 Ethelbert King of Kent 616 7 Redwald King of the East-Angles 617 8 Edwin King of Northumberland 634 9 Oswald King of Northumberland 643 10 Oswy King of Northumberland 659 11 Wulfhere King of M●rci● 675 12 Ethelred King of Mercia 704 13 Kenred King of Mercia 709 14 Chelred King of Mercia 716 15 Ethelbald King of Mercia 758 16 Offa King of Mercia 794 17 Egfride King of Mercia 796 18 Kenwolf King of Mercia 800 19 Egbert the son●e of Al●mond King of the West-Saxons the first and absolute Monarch of the whole Heptarchy who having vanquished all or most of th● Sax●n Kings and added their estates unto his owne commanded the whole Countrey to be called by the name of ENGLAND The Kings wh●reof after th● Count●●y was so named are these that follow The Kings of ENGLAND of the Saxon Race A. Ch.     800 1 Egbert the 18 King of the West-Saxons the 19 Monarch of the English and first King of England 37. 837 2 S. Ethelwolf 20. 857 3 Edelbald 858 4 Edelbert 5. 863 5 Edelfride 9. 873 6 S. Alured who totally reduced the Saxons under one Monarchy and founded the University of Oxford 23. 900 7 Edward the elder 24. 924 8 Athelstane 16. 940 9 Edmund 6. 946 10 Eadred who stiled himselfe King of Great Britaine 955 11 Edwin 4. 959 12 S. Edgar 16. 975 13 Edward the younger 3. 678 14 Ethelred 1016 15 Edmund Ironside The Danish Race 1017 16 Canutus King of Dan●mark 20. 1037 17 Harald Harfager 4. 1041 18 Hardie Cnute 4. The Saxons repossessed 1045 19 S. Edward who founded and endowed the Church of Westminster and was the first that cured the disease called the Kings-evill leaving the same hereditary to his successors 1066 20 Harald the sonne of Godwin usurped the Crowne and shortly lost both it and his life to boote to William Duke of N●rmandy The NORMAN Race 1067 21 William Duke of Normandy sirnamed the Conquerour 22. 1089 22 William Rufus 13. 1102 23 Henry Beauclerk 35. 1136 24 Stephen E. of Bloys 19. The Saxon line restored 1155 25 Henry II. descended by his Grandmother from the bloud Royall of the Saxons 34. 1189 26 Richard Coeur de Lyon 1● 1201 27 John 17. 1218 28 Henry III. 56. 1274 29 Edward I. 34. 1308 30 Edward II. 19. 1327 31 Edward III. 50. 1377 32 Richard II. The line of Lancaster 1399 33 Henry IV. 15. 1414 34 Henry V. 9. 1423 35 Henry VI. 38. The line of Yorke 1461 36 Edward IV. 23. 1483 37 Edward V. 1483 38 Richard III. 3. The families united 1486 39 Henry VII 23. 1508 40 Henry VIII 39. 1547 41 Edward VI. 6. 1553 42 Queene Mary 5. 1558 43 Queene Elizabeth 45. The union of the Kingdomes 1602 44 JAMES King of Scots reassumed the title of Great-Britaine 1625 45 CHARLES by the grace of God King of Great Britaine France and Ireland the 63. King in descent from the West-Saxon Cerdick the 64. Monarch of the English and 45. King of England in descent from Egbert whom God long preserve Kings of WALES THe Britons being outed of their Countrey by the conquering Saxons retired themselves beyond the Severn and therein fortified themselves which Countrey thereupon came to bee called Wales and the people Walsh or Welch men Not that the word Walsh signified in the Saxon language a Foreiner or Alien as it is ●conceived for how could they be called Aliens in their native Countrey but Wales and Wallish for Galles and Gallish by changing G into W according to the custome of the Saxons The Britons being descended of the Gaules kept their old name still though somewhat altered in the letter as before is said and to this day the French doe call the Prince of Wales by the name of le Prince de Galles At first their cheifes were honoured with the title of Kings of Wales a●d are these that follow A. Ch.     690 1 Idwallo 30. 720 2 Roderick 35. 755 3 Conan 63. 818 4 Mervyn 25. 843
but that now otherwise disposed of Finally what for priviledge and what for large possessions it was prized so high that Henry of Bloys he was the brother of King Stephen once Bishop here had got a faculty from the Pope to make it an Arch Bishops See seven of the Suffragans of Cante●bury being allotted thereunto And William de Edington one of the Bishops of this Church being elected unto Cante●bury re●used it saying though Canterbury had the highest rack yet Winchester had the deep●st manger The Diocese hereof contained of old the Counties of S●rrey and Sou●hampton and the Isle of Wight to which was added in Qu. Elizabeths time the Islles of Iarsey Garnsey Sack and Alderney once members of the Bishoprick of Constance in Norma●dy Of these the English Isle and Counties containe 362. Parishes of which 131. impropriate the Isle of Iarsey 121. and Garnsey with the other two as many more For government of the English part there are two Arch-Deachns the one of Winchester and the other of Surrey Iar●●y is governed by a Deane or Commissary according to the manner of the English Church and Garnsey with the Isles appendant follow the fashions of Geneva The Bishoprick was anciently valued in the Kings books 3885 li. 3. s. 3. d. ob q. now at 2793. li. 4. s. 2. d. qa. q. lesse by a thousand pounds then before it was which plainely sheweth that there hath beene a great abatement of the old revenue The tenth of the Clergy amounteth unto 846. li. 12. d. Finally this See hath yeelded to the Church seven Saints and to Rome two Cardinals to England one Lord Chiefe Justice sixe Lord Chancellours two Lord Treasurers one Lord Privie Seale one Chancellour of the University of Oxford another of the Exchequer and 21. Prelates of the Garter whose names are to be found among●t these following Bishops of Winton A. Ch.       1 Wina   2 Eleutherius 673 3 S. Headda 704 4 Daniel 744 5 Humfridus 756 6 Kinchardus   7 Hathelmardus tr to Cant.   8 Egbardus   9 Dudda   10 Kinebertus   11 Alhmundus   12 Wighthenius   13 Herefridus 834 14 Edmundus 15 Helmstanus 837 16 S. Swithinus L. Chan. 863 17 Adhferthus 871 18 Dumbertus 879 19 Denewulfus   20 S. Athelmus alias Bertulfus 905 21 S. Frithstanus 931 22 Brinstanus 946 23 Elpheus Calvus   24 Elssinus alias Alf●us 958 25 Brithelmus 963 26 S. Ethelwoldus 984 27 S. Elphegus 1006 28 Kenulphus 1008 29 S. Brithwoldus 1015 30 Elsmus 1038 31 Alwinus 1043 32 Stigandus tr to Cant. 1070 33 Walkelinus Vacat sedes Annos 10. 1107 34 Gul. Giffard 1129 35 Henricus Blesensis * Vacat sedes Annos 3. 1174 36 Richard Toclivius 1189 37 Godfr de Lucy 1204 38 Petr. de Rupibus L. Ch. Justice 1243 39 Gul. de Ralegh 1249 40 Ethelmarus Vacat sedes Annos 4. 1265 41 John Oxon. 1268 42 Nicolas Eliensis 1280 43 John de Pontisara 1304 44 Henry Woodlock 1316 45 John Sandal Chan. of the Exch. L. Chan. and L. Treas 1320 46 Reginald Asserius 1323 47 John Stratford L. Chan. L. Treas tr to Cant. 1333 48 Adam de Orlton 1345 49 Gul. de Edingdon L. Treas and the first Prelate of the Garter 1365 50 Will. de Wickham L. Chan. 1405 51 Henry Beaufort Card. L. Ch. * 1447 52 Will. de Waniflete L. Ch. 1486 53 Peter Courtney * 1493 54 Tho. Langton 1502 55 Rich. Foxe L. Privie Seale 1530 56 Tho. Wolsey Card. L. Chan. 1534 57 Stephen Gardiner displaced 1549. 1550 58 John Poynet who being removed Bishop Gardiner was restored 1553. and made L. Ch. 1556 59 John White 1560 60 Robert Horne 1580 61 John Watson 1584 62 Thomas Cowper 1595 63 Will. Wickham 1595 64 Will. Daye 1596 65 Tho. Bilson 1617 66 James Montagu Deane of the Chap. 1618 67 Lancel Andrewes Deane of the Chap. 1628 68 Rich. Neyle tr to Yorke 1632 69 Walt. Curle now Bishop of Winton Prelate of the Garter and Bishop Almoner 1641. WORCESTER and the Bishops there THe Bishoprick of Worcester Wigorniensis in the Latine was founded by Etheldred King of the Mercians Anno 679. and taken out of the Diocese of Lichfeild of which first it was The Cathedrall Church here by him also built but afterwards repaired or new built rather by severall Bishops of this See Oswald the eighteenth Bishop here did first undertake it and casting out the married Priests first brought in the Monkes Anno 96● but his foundation being ruined by the Danes the Church was brought to that perfection wherein now it standeth by Bishop Wulstan about the yeere 1030. Since when it ha●h enjoyed a flourishing and faire estate and which is very rare can hardly make complaint of any vacancie save that on the exauctoration of Bishop Heath it was assigned over in Commendam to Master Hooper then Bishop of Gloucester But it held not long This Diocese containeth in it the County of Worce●ter and part of Warwickshire and therein ●41 Parishes of which 71. impropriate for these there is but one Arch-Deacon which is called of Worcester Valued it is in the Kings bookes 1049. li. 17. s. 3. d. ob q the Clergy paying for their tenth 228. li. In point of honour it may pleade thus much that in the flourishing times of the See of Canterbury the Bishops here were the peculiar Chaplaines of the Metropolitans and by their Office to say Masse in all assemblies of the Clergy wherein he was present As also that it hath yeelded to the Church foure Saints five Chancellours to the Realme of England and one to Normandy Lord Treasurers three one Chancellour to the Queen then being one L. President of Wales and one Vice-President whom with the residue of the Bishops take here in order Bishops of Worcester A. Ch.     679 1 Boselus first Bishop of W●rcest   2 Ostforus 693 3 S. Egwinus 714 4 Wilfridus 717 5 Milredus   6 Weremundus 778 7 Tilherus 781 8 Eathoredus 799 9 Denebertus 822 10 Eadbertus 844 11 Alwinus 872 12 Werefridus 911 13 Wilfreth 915 14 Ethelhunus 922 15 Wilfreth II. 929 16 Kinewoldus   17 S. Dunstanus tr to London 950 18 S. Oswaldus 971 19 Adulfus   20 Wulfstanus   21 Leossius 1033 22 Britteagus 1038 23 Livingus 1049 24 Aldredus 1060 25 S. Wulfstanus 1097 26 Sampson 1115 27 Theolphus 1125 28 Simon Chan. to Qu. 〈◊〉   29 Aluredus   30 John Pagham   31 Rogerus 1181 32 Baldwinus tr to Cant. 1189 33 Gul. de Northale 1191 34 Robertus   35 Henricus 1196 36 John de Constantiis 1200 37 Maugerus 1212 38 Walt. Grey L. Ch. tr to Yorke 1216 39 Silvester 1218 40 Gul. de Bloys 1237 41 Walt. de Cantilupe * 1268 42 Nich. de Ely L. Chan. translated to Wint. 1269 43 Godsr Giffard L. Chan. 1302 44 Gul. de Gainsburgh 1308 45 Walt. Reynold L. Chan. and L. Treas tr to Cant. 1313 46
to are onely these Earles of Anglesey ●624 1 Ch●●stop Villiers brother of Geo. D. of Buck. created F. of Angles Sept. 24. ●630 2 Charles Villiers now living 1641. ARundell is the name of an ancient towne and Castle in the County of Sussex pleasantly seated neare the river of Arun whence it was called Arundale or A●untina va●●●● in some Latine Authors The Castle of great fame and strength but farre more famous for the Lords and Earles therof then the strength or beauty A place in this farre different from the rest of England the title of the Earle of Arundell being annexed unto the Castle honour and signeurie of Arundell and going along with the possession of the same as was adjudged in that great controversie between Sir Iohn Fitz-Alan being in possession of the Castle against Iohn-Mowbray● of Norfolke being the right heire in the nearest degree The Earles here of in regard that by ancient Charter they had had the ●ertium denarium or the second penny of the Plees of Sussex and that they sometimes had their residence and abode in Chichester as the chiefe City of that County are in some old Charters ●alled Earles of Sussex and in some others Earles of Chichester That which was theirs most properly hath stayed longest by them and is of late increased by the addition of th● titles and dignities of the Baronies of Fitz-Alan Clun Oswaldstree and Mal●raver● with divers other lands tenements and here ditaments annexed unto the title name an● dignity o● Earle of Arundell by speciall Act 〈◊〉 Parliam An. 3. Car. R. the noble personage which have borne this title are these that fol●low Earles of Arundell 1067 1 Rog. Montgomery 1091 2 Hugh de Montgomery 1098 3 Rob. de Montgomery devested of this honour An. 1102.     ✚ ✚ ✚ ✚   4 William de Albeney 1189 5 Will. de Albeney 1196 6 Will. de Albeney 1199 7 Will. de Albeney 1224 8 Hugh de Albeney died 1243.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1289 9 Rich. Fitz-Alan descended of the Lady Isabell sister of Hugh de Albeney 1301 10 Edm. Fitz-Alan 1326 11 Rich. Fitz-Alan * 1375 12 Rich. Fitz-Alan L. Tr. L. Adm. 1397 13 Tho. Fitz-Alan L. Tr. died 1416. * 1434 14 John Fitz-Alan L. Mal●ravers * 1439 15 Will. Fitz-Alan * 1487 16 Tho. Fitz-Alan 1524 17 Will. Fitz-Alan * 1543 18 Henry Fitz-Alan Ch. of Oxford *     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1579 19 Philip Howard son of Tho. D. of Norfolk the La. Mary Fitz-Alan 1604 20 Tho. Howard now E. of Arund and Surry and E. Marshall of Engl. Anno 1641. AVmerle or A●bemarle is the name of a small town and territory in the Dukedome of Normandy It belonged heretofore to Stephen the sonne of Odo des●●nded from the Earles of Champagne whom William the Conquerer made Earle of Albema●le as being the sonne of his halfe sister by the mothers side and gave unto him for the further maintenance of his estate the territory of Holder●●sse in Yorkeshire This title hee enjoyed and left the same to his posterity who enjoyed it also And when his issue failed the Kings of England honoured others with it though they had long since lost their estate in Normandy the Dukes and Earles whereof take thus in order Dukes and Earles of Aumerle 1095 1 Stephen sonne of Odo Earle of Bloys 1128 2 Will. le Gros.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1182 3 Will. de Magnaville E. of Essex Hawys daught of Will le Gros.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1191 4 Will. de Fortibus 1196 5 Will. de Fortibus 1244 6 Will. de Fortibus 1258 7 Tho. de Fortibus     ✚ ✚ ✚   8 Tho. of Woodstock D. of Gloc. *     ✚ ✚ ✚   ✚ ✚ ✚ 1378 9 Edw. Plantagenet D. L. Adm. *     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1412 10 Tho. D. of Clarence E. *     ✚ ✚ ✚   11 Rich. Beauchamp E. of Warwick created Earle of Aumerle by King Henry 6. BAnbury is a towne in Oxfordshire the second both for wealth and beauty in all that County Most famous in our common Chronicles for the great battell there-by fought betweene the two great houses of Lancaster and Yorke in which the victory fell to the Eare of Warwick then chie●e of the Lancastrian party who forthwith tooke King Edward prisoner of that name the fourth now forlorne and hopelesse It was not long since much wasted by a devouring fire but very well repaired and beautified and still is as it hath beene anciently cas●o conficiendo notissimum as Camden notes it a towne much famed for the best and most delicate sort of Cheeses It never had but one Earle and he 1626 1 William L. Knollys Visc. Wallingford created E of Banbury Aug. 18. and died Anno 1631. BAthe is the fairest and the principall City in all Somersetshire seated in a very low Plaine and round about environed with hils very high and steepe from whence come many rivulets and fresh-water springs to the great commodity of the people But that which brings most wealth unto the place are not the waters from without but those waters which are within sending up from them much thinne vapours and a strong sent withall which springs are very medicinable unto many maladies Three of these springs there are in all the waters of the which being received in large and fitting receptacles for the publick use they call the Kings Bath the crosse Bath and the hot Bath From bathing in these waters it was called the Bath and thence Batho●ia in the Latine unlesse perhaps you rather thinke that bathing tooke its hint from hence and that this place tooke name from Badon or mons Bado●icus not far off as certainely Caer Badon the old Britain● called it The Greeks and Latines gave it names according to the nature and condition of the waters or the Baths there being it being called by Ptolomee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hot waters by An●oninus ●quae solis the waters of the Sunne on ●he selfe same reason Of the ●aire Church here we have spoke already in our description of the Bishoprick which being ruined amongst other Monasteries in the time of K. H. 8. hath of late times beene as it were reedified but certainely repaired and beautified and made 〈◊〉 for use by the great costs of Bishop Montague a late Bishop there Earle it had none untill the time of H. 7. since it hath had divers whose names and times we now present you Earles of Bathe 1486 1 Philibert de Chandew     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1536 2 John Bourchier Lord Fitz-Wa●in created E. of Bathe by H. 8. July 10. 1539 3 John Bourchier 1561 4 William Bourchier   5 Edward Bourchier 1638 6 Henry Bourchier now E. of Bathe Anno 1641. BEdford is one of those three Counties which anciently were possessed by the Cattieuc●lani the Countrey indifferently well provided of all necessaries both for foode and fewell It taketh denomination from the chiefe town thereof called Bedford or
good for corne and grazing and lieth al along on the banke of the Thames confronting Bark-shire It conteines in it 185 Parishes eleven of the which are market townes and amongst them the chiefe in name is Buckingham the head town of the County A town of no great note when it was at the best but more considerable heretofore than at the present being once fortified with a Castle now hardly to bee found in the very ruines as also with a rampire and certaine sconces built for defence thereof against the Danes now more invisible than the Castle The greatest honour it can chalenge is that it hath given titles of the highest honour to many a brave and worthy personage as well of the bloud Royall as of other families who by the Kings of England have been hence denominated Dukes Marq. and Earles of Buckingham   1 Walter Giffard E.   2 Walter Giffard     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1164 3 Richard Strongbow Earle of Pembroke     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1377 4 Thom. of Woodstock D. of Glouc. L Constab●e * 1397 5 Humfrey Plantagene● died 1400.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1444 6 Humfrey Stafford D.L. Constable descended from a daughter of Thom of Woodstock * 1460 7 Henry Stafford D.L. Consta. * 1468 8 Edw. Stafford D.L. Consta. *     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1616 9 George visc Villiers or Earle of Buck. 14 Iac. Ian. 5. Marq. Buck. Iac. 17. Ian. 10. and finally D. of Buck. 21. Iac. May 1623. Lord Admirall and Ch. Camb. * 162● 10 Geo. Villiers now Duke 1641. BVLLINGBROKE BVlling broke is an antient town in Lincolnshire heretofore belonging to the Lacies E. of Lincolne and by the marriage with Alice daughter and heire of Hen. Lacy E. of Lincolne to Thomas E. of Lancaster this with the residue of the lands of Lincolne became united and incorporated with those of Lancaster The greatest fame thereof was for a Castle built there by William of Romara E. of Lincoln but much more famous in succeeding times in that it was the birth place of K. H. 4. surnamed according to the fashion of that age of Bullingbroke It hath beene almost eversince his time one of the honours as we call it of the crown of England but never made an honorarie title unto any family untill K Iames conferred it on Sr. Oliver S. Iohns who possibly might affect to bee thence denominated as fetching his descent from the Lad●e Margaret Beauchamp grand-mother to King Henry the 7. the heire of the Lancastrian Family Earle of Bullingbroke 1624 1 Oliver L. S. Iohn of Bletho created E. of Bullingbroke Iac. 22. Dec. 28. Nowliving 1641. CAMBRIDGE CAmbridge-shire was once part of the pos●essions of the old Iceni and takes that name from Cambridge the chiefe town thereof and that derived either from the old town called Camb●ritum which Antoninus mentions in this tract or else as other have conceived from a bridge built on the river cam on whose banks it ●tandeth A town that hath beene long since dedicated unto learning here being a publique Schoole erected An. 630 or thereabouts by Sebert King of the East Angles and that ad morem Cantuariorum as it is in Beda But Schooles and studies being overthrown by the Danish fury it lay long forlorne and discontinued till it beganne to flourish under the calmer times of the Normans government that is to say about the middle of the reign of K. H. the first the 3 K of the Norman Kings Nor was it long before that of a famous Schoole or Schola illustris as we phrase it now it did become as famous an Vniversity Robert de Remington affirming that in the reigne of Edward the 1 it was made an Vniversity such as Oxford is by the Court of Rome There are now 16 Colleges and Hals endowed replenished with such store of students that unlesse it be in her sister Oxford the like are not found in all Europe But we must leave this speculation of it as an Academy and look upon it next as a title of honour in which consideration we shall find it no lesse fortunate than we did before in these Earles of Cambridge   1 William de Meschines son to Randolph E of Chester     ✚ ✚ ✚ ✚ 1342 2 Iohn de ✚ Hainal● uncle to Qu. Philip wife of Edw. 3.     ✚ ✚ ✚ ✚ 1349 3 William Marq of Iuliers     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1362 4 Edm. of Langley D. of York * 1401 5 Edw. Plantagenet D. of York * 1414 6 Rich. de Conisburgh 2 son of Edm. of Langley     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1619 7 Iames marq. Hamilton cr Earle of Cambridge 17. Iac. Iun. 15. Lord Steward * 1625 8 Iames Marq. Hamilton Master of the horse and now E. of Cambridge 1641 * CARLILE CArlile is the principall City in the County of Cumb●rland situate in the furthest part of the Kingdome toward Scotland on the Westerne marches fortified with a Citadel and sundry Bulwarks for a defence against the Scots as standing in a place of most advantage for the securing of that border It flourishedheretofore in the time of the Romans and was by them called Lugu-vallum as standing on the Trench or Vallum Picticum the Picts wall as our stories call it made by the Romans to defend their Province from the Picts and Scots So that it seemes of old to have been the boundary betweene the nations though the Northumbers after in the Saxon times enlarged their Empire to the banks of Dunb●itton Fryth From whence or when it fi●st was called Carl●le our Authors say not but by that name and in the Latin by Ca●l●olum it h●th long been known The Danes consumed it into ashes and it lay unrepaired in rubbish til the time of Willi●m Rufus who rebuilt it Since which by the accession of the Episcopall See erected there by H. the first who succeeded Rufus it came to be of wealth and cre●it and hath given the title of an Earldome to two severall Families wh●ch being of a different quality have in as different times beene Earles of Carlile Earles of Carlile 1321 1 Andrew de Harcla     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1622 2 Iames Hay Visc. Doncaster created E. of Carlile 18. Iac. Sept. 17 1636 3 Iames Hay now E. of Carl●le 1641. CARNARVON CArnarvon is a shire of North-wales butting upon the Irish seas and pa●ted f●om the Isle of Anglesey by a streit or Fretum A mountainous and rocky Countrey but the defects thereof are plentifully supplyed by the Isle adjoyning It tooke name from Carnarvon the chiefe town there of heretofore very strongly wailed and for●ified with a faire Castle Edward the 2. K. of England was here borne and hence according to the custome of those times entituled Edward of CARNARVON For the occasion of it I refer you to the common Chronicles The Princes of Wales had in this place their Chancery and Exchequet for all North-Wales which was no small improvement to it Earle it had never any till the present Age in
which our Soveraigne Lord now reigning conferred that title on 1628 1 Rob. L. Dormer of Wing created E. of Carnarvon 4. Car. Aug. 2. now living Anno 164● CHESTER CHester is the principall City of Cheshire antiently part of the Cornavii The Country not so plentifull in corne as in fish and cattell but fruitfull in no one thing more than the production of ancient Gentry of which it can still shew more antient Families than any one County in the Kingdome The City built in form of a quadrant fouresquare is enclosed with a wall that taketh up more than 2 miles in compasse and hath 11 Parishes the houses being very faire and well built and having all along in the chief streets before the doors a kind of galleri● through which a man may walk dry from one end to the other Seated it is upon the river of Dee on which to shew his splendor and magnificen●e K. Edgar was once rowed by 7 petie ●ings of the Scots and Britans to the great joy of the beholders The Earles hereof were anciently accounted Palatines William the Conquerour giving this Earldome to Hugh Lupus a noble Norman to be holden as fre●ly by his sword as the King himselfe held England by his own And though it be now and hath long beene incorporated into the Patrimony regall yet it still holds the rights and privileges of a County Palatine and hath for the administration thereof a Chamberlaine a Iustice for the Common● plees of the Crown two Barons of the Exchequer a Sheriffe an Eschetour and other Officers to the great case of all the countryin expedition of their businesse The Palatines hereof before it came into the Crown are these here following Earles of CHESTER 1067 1 Hugh sirnamed Lupus 1103 2 Richard son of Hugh     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1120 3 Randolph de Meschines 1129 4 Randolph de Gernoniis 1153 5 Hugh Kivilioc son of Randolph 1181 6 Randol Blondeville son of Hugh     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1233 7 Iohn le Scot sonne to the Lady Maud eldest sister of Randolph     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1245 8 Edw. eldest son of K H. 3.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1255 9 Simon de Montford Earle of Leicester after whose death Chesler was laid unto the Crowne and hath beene since united to the Principality of Wales so that who list to see the residue of the Earles of Chester shall find them in the former Catalogue of the Princes of Wales which have beene of the Royall bloud of England CHESTERFEILD CHesterfield is a town of Darbysh commonly called Chester●eild in Scardale A towne which by the ruines of it doth seem to be of good antiquity and therefore likely to have had some more ancient name which seemes to be now buried in those ruines or by continuance of time quite worne out and lost It glorieth much of being made a free Burrough in the time of K. Iohn and for the battaile fought hard by between K. Henry the 3 and his rebellious Barons in which Rob. de Ferrers Earle of Darby being taken prisoner lost his Estate and Dignity though not his life But that in which it hath most cause to glory is that from an ordinary Market Town it is become the seate of an Earldome the stile and title of Earle of Chesterfeild being conferred by our dread Soveraigne now being upon 1628 1. Philip Lord Stanhop of Shelford or Earle of Chesterfeild 4 Car. Aug. 4 and is now living Anno 1640. CLARE CLARENCE CLare is an ancient Town on the edge of Suffolk where it joyneth to Essex seated not far off from the banks of the river Stoure by which the Counties are divided A Town that hath not any thing whereof to boast the Castle and the Collegiall Church being both in rubbish but that it gave both name and title unto that noble Family si●named De Clare who in their times were Earles of Hartford Clare and Gloucester But the male issue of these Clares being failed Lio●el the 3 sonne of K. Edw. the 3. having married the sole daughter and heire of William de Burgh E. of Vlster in Ireland begotten on the body of Elizabeth one of the sisters and coheires of Gilbert de Clare who died Anno 1291 the last E. of Clare and Glocester of that name was made Duke of Clarence the termination of the title being only changed not the place denominating And from the change thus made which I note only by the way the second king of Armes is surnamed Clarentieux as apperteining formerly to the Dukes of Clarence whom with the Earles preceding and succeeding take in order thus Dukes and Earles of Clarence 1139 1 Gilbert E. of Clare 1152 2 Roger de Clare 1174 3 Richard de Clare after whose death this title lay long drowned in that of Gloucester     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1362 4 Lionel D. of Clarence 2 son to K. Edw. the 3.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1411 5 Tho. D. of Clarence 2 son to K. H. the 4. L. Admirall     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1461 6 Geo. D. of Clarence brother to K. Edw. the 4 L Constable     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1624 7 Iohn Hollys Lord Houghton cr E. of Clare Com. Suffolk 22. Iac. Nov. 2. 1638 8 Iohn Hollys now Earle of Clare 1641. CLEVELAND CLeveland is a wapon-take or hundred in the northriding of York-shire taking that name as Camden tels us of the steepe banks which we call Clyffes which run all along the side thereof and at the foot of which the Countrey spreadeth into a plaine ful of fertile fields It seemeth to be a place of a faire extent as being one of those 3 Arch-deaconries into which the whole County is divided and doth give the title of an Earle to 1625 1 Thomas L. Wentworth created E. of Cleveland 1 Car. Feb. 7. who doth still enjoy it An. 1641. CORNWALL COrnwall is the most western part of England and takes denomination from the shape and fashion of it being like an horne which the old Britans called Kern as now the Welch call the countrey Kernaw The people of it are a remainder generally of the antient Britans whose language for much of it they do still retaine although by intermixture of the Saxons not easie to be understood by the Welch themselves The Countrey very mountainous as Wales is also and therefore of the lesse accesse to the Conquering Saxons but the sea-costs well beautified with goodly townes able to set to Sea a good Fleet of shippes And for the mountaines they doe recompence their defects without by their abundant wealth within as being very full of mines of tinne which yeelds great profit to the Countrey and furnisheth most parts of Christendome with that commodity The Earles of Cornwall heretofore gave great immunities and liberties to those that laboured in these mines and when this Earldome fell again unto the Crown Edw. the 3 erected a L. Warden of the Stannaries to have the government thereof And at that time of its reverting to the Crown
England since the first entrance of the ROMANS As Also of the Kings and Princes of Wales the Kings and Lord of Man and the Isle of Wight together with the Princes and Lords of Powys Printed at London 1641. THE PREFACE TO THE CATALOGVE Of the KINGS of ENGLAND THe Realme of England is th●t Southerne and more flourishing part of the Isle of Britaine that which was civi●ized by the Romans and made a Province of their Empire when as the Northe●ne parts thereof were ●ither neglected or not conquered When it was under the command of the Roma● Emperours it wanted not its proper and peculiar Kings over the chiefest and most principall of their Tribes and Nations it being the custome of that Empire as Tacitus hath truely noted habere servitutis instrumenta etiam Reges Of these inferiour tributary Kings those which were in their severall times of more power then others may probably be thought to have assum'd unto themselves the stile and title of Kings of the Britons even as in after times during the heptarchy of the Saxons those which gave law unto the rest did call themselves and were accounted the Kings or Monarchs of the English But those inferiour petite Kings being in tract of time worne out and almost all the South reduced under the immediate command of the Roman Empire either the Emperours themselves or such of their Lieutenants as did here usurpe the regall state were stiled Kings of Britaine till Constantine the Great united it inseparably to the Roman Diadem And in him ended the first line of the Kings of Britaine according to the British story The second line of Kings beares da●e from the departure of the Romans who being called from hence to looke unto their Empire in the Continent le●t their possessions here unto the ●ury of the Scots and Picts who dwelling in the Northerne and unconquered parts attempted to subdue the Southerne For the repressing of whose rage the Britons chose themselves a King out of Armo●ica now called Bretag●e being extracted from the old British bloud which had not long before beene planted in that Region by the Roman Emperours Whose li4e continued here not long till they were dispossessed both of Crowne and Countrey by the Saxons a German people called in by Vortiger to oppose the Scots and other Nations of the North. Who having by degrees subdued all that which formerly had beene conquered by the Romans the Countrey beyond Severne excepted onely divided it amongst themselves into seven Kingdomes which finally being all brought under by the West-Saxon Kings did at last settle and continues in the name of England A Kingdome though of small extent compared unto the greater Countries of France Spaine and Germany yet of so high esteeme abroad that it may challenge an equality with either of them and in some kinde hath had preced●ncie before them For to the honour of this Realme as well before as since it had the name of England we may say thus much It was the first Kingdome which received the faith of Christ which was here planted as it is affirmed by Gildas upon certaine knowledge toward the latter end of Tiberius Empire Tempore ut scimus summo Tiberii Cae●aris as his owne words are which by computing of the times will fall to be five yeares before Saint Peter came to Rome and but five yeares after the death of our Redeemer It shewed unto the world the first Christia● King whose name was Lucius and gave unto the Church her first Christian Emperour even the famous Constantine here borne by whose example and incouragement the saith was generally received over all the Empire and all the Temples of the Idols either demolished or forsaken It also was the first Christian Kingdome out of which the Jewes those bitter and most obstinate enemies of the Crosse of Christ were universally expulsed and our of which the insolent and usurped Supremacie of the Popes of Rome was first ejected after they had a long time domineered in the Church of Christ. The one of these performed by King Edward the first the other by King Henry the eighth Not to say any thing in this place of their warres and victories in France Spaine Scotland the Netherlands the Isle of Cyprus and the Holy land In these regards the Kings of England as they are a● absolute so they are as sacred as of any Countrey whatsoever What ever things are proper unto Supreme Majesty Scepters and Crownes ●he Purple Ro●e the Glo●e or golden Ball and Vnction have beene as long theirs as any others The foure first are by Leland a ●●●ous Antiquarie ascribed unto King A●thur who did begin his reigne Anno 506. which was as soon● as they were ordinarily in use with the Roman Emperours And thi● doth Leland justifie out of an ancient Seale of the said King Arthurs kept in his time as an especiall monument in the Abbie of Westminster As for their Vnction or Annointing it appeares by the old Roman Pr●vinciall and the ancient practise that of all the Kings of Christendome there were none anciently annointed but the two Emperours of the East and West the Kings of France England Sicilie and Hier●salem By reason of which Vnction or annointing besides what is united or annexed to the Crowne Imp●riall of this Realme it was declared Term. Hilarii 33. Edward 3. that the Kings of England were capaces jurisdictionis spiritualis capable of Spirituall or Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction As after in the reigne of King Henry the eighth it was declared rather then enacted that the Kings highnesse was the Supreme head of the Church of England and that he had authority to reforme all errours heresies and abuses in the same 26. Henry 8. cap. 1. Which title or Supreme head though used by King Edward 6. in a●l his ●eigne and by Queene Mary for awhile was changed by Queene Elizabeth into that of Supreme Governour and it is now reckoned as a part of the stile of the Kings of England that they are Supreme Governo●rs in all their Dominions and Countries over all persons in all causes as well Ecclesiasticall as Temporall Now as the Kings of England are absolute at home so are they no lesse honoured and esteemed abroad the Emperour being accounted filius major Ecclesiae the eldest sonne of the Church the King of France filius minor or the second sonne and the King of England filius tertius adop●ivus the third and the adopted sonne In generall Councels the King of France took place at the Emperours right hand the King of England on his left and the King of Scots having precedencie next before Castile And whereas since the time of Charles the fifth the Kings of Spaine have challenged the precedencie of all Christian Princes yet in the time of King Henry 7. Pope Iulius gave it to the English before the Spaniard Nay lest the Kings of England might fall short in any thing wherein their neighbour Princes glory they also have an adjunct or
Chapter unto the Bishop in which the Prior of Coventry should be the principall man And so it stood till that the Priory of Coventry being dissolved by King Henry 8. the stile or title of the Bishop continuing as before it did there passed an Act of Parliament 33. H. 8. c. 29 to make the Deane and Chapter of Lichfeild the sole Chapter for the Bishop The Cathedrall Church here first built by Oswy King of the Mercians about the yeere 556. who gave unto the Bishops many faire possessions But that old Church being taken downe by Roger de Clinton the 36. Bishop of this Diocese that which now standeth was built by him in place thereof Anno 1148. and dedicated to the Virgin Mary and Saint Chad. In following times and almost in the infancie thereof the revenues of it were so faire that Lichfeild was thought fit to be the See of an Arch-Bishop And one it had no more his name Adulfus Anno 783. the Bishops of Winton Hereford Sidnacester Dorchester which two now make Lincoln and those of Elmham and of Dunwich both which now make Norwich being appointed to him for his Suffragans But with him and King Offa who procured it this great title died And now it is content to be a Bishoprick the Diocese whereof containeth the whole Counties of Darby and Stafford together with a good part of Warwickshire and Shropshire In these are comprehended 557. Parishes of which 250. are impropriate for better government whereof it hath foure Arch-Deaconries viz. of Stafford Darby Coventry and Shrewsbury It is valued in the Kings bookes 559. li. 18. s. 2. d. ob q. and for the Clergies tenth it commeth unto 590. li. 16. s. 11. d. q. and finally hath yeelded to the Church three S. to the Realme one Chancellour and three Lord Treasurers to Wales three Presidents one Chancellour to the University of Cambridge and to the Court one Master of the Wardrobe Arch-Bishops and Bishops of Lichfeild A. Ch.     656 1 Dwina   2 Cellach   3 Trumher   4 Jarumanus 669 5 Saint Chad or Cedda tr to York 672 6 Winfridus 672 7 S. Sexulfus 692 8 Headda alias Eatheadus 721 9 Aldwinus 733 10 Witta   11 Hemel 764 12 Cuthfridus   13 Berthunnus 785 14 Higbertus 793 15 Aldulphus the Arch-Bishop●   16 Humbertus   17 Merewinus   18 Higbertus II.   19 Ethelwaldus 857 20 Humbertus II. 864 21 Kinebertus 872 22 S. Cymbertus●   23 Tunbright   24 Ella 928 25 Alfgar 26 Kinsey   27 Winsey   28 Elphegus   29 Godwinus   30 Leofgarus   31 Brithmarus 1039 32 Wolfius L. Chancell 1054 33 Leofwine 1067 34 Petrus who removed the See to Chester Bishops of Coventry and Lichfeild 1088 35 Robert de Limesey removed the See to Coventry 1117 36 Robert Peccham 1119 37 Roger de Clinton * 1149 38 Walter Durdent 1161 39 Richard Peche 1182 40 Gerardus la pucelle 1186 41 Hugo Novant 1191 42 Galfridus de Muschamp 1210 43 Walter Grey translated to Worcester 1215 44 William de Cornhull 1220 45 Alexander de Savensby 1240 46 Hugh de Pateshul Lord Treasurer 1245 47 Roger de We●●ham 1257 48 Roger de Longespee 1295 49 Walter de Langton Lord Treasurer 1322 50 Roger de 〈…〉 Master of the Wardrope and Lord Treasurer 1360 51 Robert Stretton 1385 52 Walter Skirlaw transl to Welles 1396 53 Richard Scrope tr to Yorke * 1399 54 John Burghill 1415 55 John Ketterich 1419 56 Jacobus Carie. 1420 57 Gul. Heyworth 1447 58 Gul. Boothe 1452 59 Nicolas Close Chancellour of Cambridge 1453 60 Reginald Butler 1459 61 John Hales 1492 62 Gul. Smith tr to Lincoln 1496 63 John Arundel tr to Exeter 1503 64 Geofry Blythe L. Pre● of Wales 1524 65 Roland Lee L. Pres. of Wales 1543 66 Richard Sampson L. President of Wales 1555 67 Radulph Bayne 1559 68 Thomas Bentham 1578 69 Gul. Overton 1609 70 George Abbot tr to London 1610 71 Richard Neile tr to Lincoln 1614 72 John Overall tr to Norwich 1618 73 Thomas Morton tr to Durham 1632 74 Robert Wright now Bishop of Coventry and Lichfeild 1641. SAINT DAVIDS the Arch-Bishops and Bishops of it SAint Davids now the seate of a Suffragan Bishop was once a Metropolitans S●e in the Brit●sh Church and long time the supreme Ordinary of the Wel●h In the first planting of the Gospel in King Lucius time wee shewed that there were three Arch-Bishops seates appointed viz. at London York and of Caer-Leon upon Vsk. That of Caer-Leon upon Vsk was in the time of Arthur King of the Britons translat●d further off from the Saxons furie to a place called Men●w Menevia is the Latine name but since in memory of David the Arch-Bishop who so translated it by us called Saint Davids From the first name it is these Bishops use to stile themselves Menevenses When Austin the Monk first entred England the Metropolitan of Saint Davids had th●n remaining under his jurisdiction seven Suffragan Bishops all which gave meeting to the said Austin and his Associates for the composing of some differences which were between the old and the new-come Christians viz. the Bishop of Worces●er Wicctor●m Llandaff Bang●r Hereford Llan-Elwy or Saint As●p● Llan-Badern called in Latin Paternensis a place in Card●gan shire the last is called in Latin Morganensis which possibly might have his seate in Margan of Glamorgan shire a place still so called Of these Llan Badern and this Morganensis are quite extinct and have long so beene Hereford and Worcester a long time reckoned as English Bishopricks and so none left unto the Metropolitan of S. Davids but Llandaff Bangor S. Asaphs Now for these Bishops of Saint Davids we finde that 26. of them retained the title of Arch-Bishops The last whereof was Sampson who in a time of pestilence transferd the Archiepiscopall Pall with the same the Archiepiscopall dignity to Dole in Bretagne yet his successours though they lost the name reserved the power of an Arch-Bishop nor did the residue of the Welch Bishops receive their consecration from any other hand then his till in the time of H. 1. Bernard the 46. Bishop of this See was forced to submit himselfe to the Church of Canterbury For the Cathedrall here it had beene oft spoyled and ruined by the Danes Norwegians and other Pirats as standing neare the Sea in the extreme corner of Pembroke shire That which we now see is the worke of Bishop Peter he was the 48. Bishop of this Diocese and by him dedicated by the name of Saint Andrew and Saint David though now Saint Andrew be left out and David onely beares the name This See hath had the greatest number of Bishops of any in England 91. in all and amongst them the Church hath had one Saint the Realme of England three Lo●d Treasurers one Lord Privie Seale the Un●versity of Oxford one Chancellour and the Queene another The Dioce●e containeth the whole Counties of
Pembroke Cardigan Carmarthen Radnor Brecknocke and some small parts of Monmouth Hereford Mountgomery and Glamorganshires In which great quantity of ground there are no more then 308. Parishes whereof 120. are impropriate For the more easie government of which here are foure Arch-Deacons viz. of Cardigan Carmarthen Brecknock and Saint Davids Finally it is valued in the Kings bookes at 457. li. 1. s. 10. d. ob q. the Clergies tenth amounting unto 336. li. 14. s. 10. d. Arch-Bishops of S. Davids A. Ch.     519 1 S. Davids   2 Eliud   3 Theliaus   4 Ke●ea   5 Morvael   6 Harnurier   7 Elvaeth   8 Gurnell   9 Llendiwith   10 Gornwi●t   11 Gorgan   12 Eynean   13 Cledanc   14 Eludgeth   15 Eldunen   16 Elvaoth   17 Maels●with   18 Madeve   19 Catulus   20 Silvay   21 Nanus   22 Sathveny   23 Doythwell   24 Asser. 906 25 Athvael   26 Sampson the last Arch-Bishop of the Welch Bishops of S. Davids with Archiepiscopall power   27 Ruclinns   28 Lyworch   29 Nergu   30 Sulhyder 942 31 Eneuris 944 32 Morgeneu   33 Rhoderick 961 34 Nathan   35 Jevan   36 Argustell   37 Morgenveth 998 38 Ervyn 1038 39 Caermeryn 1055 40 Joseph   41 Blethud 1070 42 Su'gheym 1076 43 Abraham 1088 44 Rithmark   45 Wilfridus alias Griffry 1115 46 Bernardus Chancellour to Qu. Adeliza who first submitted himselfe and Church to the See of Cant. Bishops of S. Davids Suffragans to the See of Cant. 1148 47 David Fitz-Gerald 1176 48 Petrus   49 Galfridus 1198 50 Silvester Giraldus 1215 51 Jorwerth Vacat sedes per An. 9. 1228 52 Alselmus 1247 53 Thomas Wallensis 1255 54 Thomas Carren 1280 55 Tho. Beck L. Treas 1293 56 David de S. Edmundo 1320 57 David Martyn 1328 58 Henry Gower 1347 59 John Thursby tr to Worc. 1349 60 Reginald Brian tr to Werc 1353 61 Thomas Fastolf 1361 62 Adam Hough●on Chanc. of Ox. 1369 63 John Gilbert L. Treas Vacat sedes An. 4. 1401 64 Guido de Mona L. Treas 1409 65 Henry Chicheley tr to Cant. 1414 66 John Ketterich tr to Lichf 1415 67 Stephen Patrington tr to Chich. 1417 68 Benedict Nicols 1424 69 Thomas Rodburne 1435 70 Gul. Lindwood L. Pr. Seale 1446 71 John Lang●on Chanc. of Cambr. 1447 72 John Delabere   73 Robert Tully 1482 74 Richard Martin 1483 75 Thomas Langton tr to Sarum 1485 76 Hugh Pavy 1503 77 John Morgan alias Young 1504 78 Roger Sherborne tr to Chich. 1509 79 Edward Vaughan 1523 80 Richard Rawlins 1536 81 William Barlow tr to Welles 1549 82 Robert Farrar 1554 83 Henry Morgan 1559 84 Thomas Young tr to Yorke 1561 85 Richard Davies 1567 86 Marmaduke Midleton Vacat sedes Annos 4. 1594 87 Anthony Rudd 1615 88 Richard Milborne tr to Carlile 16●1 89 William Laud tr to Welles 1627 90 Theoph. Feild tr to Hereford 1635 91 Roger Mainwaring now Bishop of S. Davids 1641. ELY and the Bishops of it THe Church of Ely anciently was a Monastery first built by Ethelreda wife to Egfride King of the Northumbers and by her planted with religious Virgins whereof she made her selfe the Abbesse But her plantation being supplanted by the Danes and the Church quite ruined Ethelwold Bishop of Winchester did againe rebuild it and furnished it with Monkes good store to whom King Edg●r and the succeeding Kings gave such ample priviledges and faire possessions that it did seeme to equall any Church in England Richard the eleventh Abbat having a minde to quit himselfe of the Bishop of Lincoln within whose Diocese it stood dealt with King Henry the first both with purse and Tater noster to turne the Abby into a Cath●drall And though the King assented to it and that the businesse was transacted with the Bishop of Lincoln who had three Manors of this Abby viz. Spaldwick Biggleswad and Bockden in exchange for his jurisdiction yet Richard lived not to possesse it leaving the benefit of his industry and ambition to be enjoyed by another man which was one Hervey Bishop of Bang●r As for the Church now standing it is the worke of severall Bishops the west parts being with great charge repaired by Bishop Rid●ll or new built rather as were the Quire and Lanterne by Bishop Norwold which afterwards were fully finished by Bishop Fordham The whole Church dedicated to S. Ethelred Ely thus made a Bishoprick however fortified with great priviledges for in the Isle of Ely the Bishops had all rights of a County Palatine and that it was endowed with so great possessions as hardly any better in the Realme of England hath yet beene subject to those changes which time hath wrought For many of the Palatine rights were taken off or much restrained by the Act of Parliament touching restoring to the crowne the antient 〈◊〉 27. H. 8. c. 25. in the which Act it was enacted that instead thereof the Bishop of Ely and his temporall Steward for the Isle of Ely should from thence forth be Iustices of the peace in the said Iland However Ely may be still reputed amongst the first Bishopricks of the second ranke and may rejoyce it selfe in this that it yeelded to this Realme its many great officers as any other in the Kingdome For it hath given the 〈◊〉 no lesse then 〈◊〉 Lord Chancellours seven Lord Treasurers one Lord Privie Seale one Chancellour o● the University of Oxford one of the Exchequer two Masters of the Rolls subesides two Saints unto the Church two Cardinals to the Church of Rome and to the English Court three Almoners The Dioce●e hereof containeth onely Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely in which there are 141. Parishes whereof 75 impropriate It hath but one Arch-Deacon which is he of Ely is valued in the Kings bookes 2134. li. 18. s. 5. d. ob q. the Clergies tenth amounting to the summe of 384. li. 14. s. 9. d. q. Bishops of Ely A. Ch.     1109 1 Hervey Bishop of Bangor 1133 2 Nigellus Lord Treasurer 1174 3 Galfridus Rydall 1189 4 Gul. Longchamp L. Chan. 1198 5 Eustachius L. Chan. 1219 6 S. John de Fontibus L. Treas 1225 7 Galfredus de Burgo 1229 8 Hugh Norwold 1255 9 Gul. de Kilkenny L. Chan. 1257 10 S. Hugh Balsam 1286 11 Joh. de Kirby L. Treas 1290 12 Gul. de Luda 1299 13 Radul●e Walpoole 1302 14 Rob. Orford 1310 15 Joh. de Keeton 1316 16 Joh. Hotham Ch. of the Exch. L. Chan. and ● Treas 1336 17 Simon Montacute * 1344 18 Tho. Lyde 1361 19 Sim. Langham L. Chan. and tr to Cant. 1366 20 Joh. Barnet L. Tr. 1375 21 Tho. Arundel L. Chan. transl to Yorke * 1388 22 Joh. Fordham 1425 23 Phil. Morgan L. Pr. Seale 1435 24 Lewis of Luxembourg Card. * 1443 25 Tho. Bourchier Card. translated to Cant. * 1454 26 Wil. Grey L. Treas * 1478 27 Joh. Morton Master of the
Walt. Maydestone 1317 47 Thomas Cobbam 1327 48 Adam de Orlton tr to Wint. 1333 49 Simon de Montacute * 1337 50 Tho. Hennyhall 1342 51 Wulstan de Brandford 1349 52 Joh. Thursby L. Ch. tr to Yorke 1352 53 Reginald Brian 1362 54 Joh Barnet L. Treas tr to Welles 1363 55 Gul. Wittlesey tr to Cant. 1368 56 Gul. de Lynne 1375 57 Henry de Wakefeild L. Treas 1395 58 Tideman de Winchcomb 1401 59 Rich. Clifford tr to London 1407 60 Tho. Peve●ell 1419 61 Phil. Morgan Chan. of Normandy tr to Ely 1426 62 Tho. Polton 1435 63 Tho. Bourchier tr to Ely * 1443 64 John Carpenter 1476 65 John Alcock L. Chan. tr to Ely 1487 66 Robert Morton 1497 67 John Gigles 14●9 68 Silvester Gigles 1521 69 Juliu● de Medices after Pope Cle●ent the 8. * 1522 70 Hieron de Nugutiis an Italian 1535 71 Hugh La●●mer 1539 72 John Bell. 1543 73 Nico● Heath displaced by King Edward 6. and the See put over in 〈◊〉 to Master Hooper Bishop of Glocester but restored after by Queene Mary 〈…〉 L. pres of Wales tr to Yorke 1554 74 Richard Pates 1599 75 Nich. Bullingham 1576 76 John Whi●gift Vice-President of Wales for Sir H. Sidney transl to Canterbu●y 1584 77 Edm. Freake 1593 78 Rich. Fletcher tr to London 1596 79 Tho. Bilson tr to Winton 1597 80 Gervase Babington 1610 81 Henry Parry 1617 82 John Thornborough now Bishop of Worcester 1641. THE SECOND PART OF THE CATALOGVE OF BISHOPS CONTAINING THE SVCCESSION of the Arch-Bishops and Bishops of the Province of YORKE Printed at London 1641. YORKE and the Arch-Bishops there YORKE is the ancientest Metropolitan See at this time in England so made at the first generall admittance of the Gospel in the time of Luctus the first Arch-Bishop by him here established named Sampson and he who held out last in the Britons time being called Tadiacus We have a constat onely of two more viz Taurinus and Pyrannus of all the rest no name or memory to be found amongst our writers On the conversion of the Saxons this See was by Pope Gregory designed to its former honour which not long after took e●●ect when as Paulinus was made Arch-Bishop of Yo●ke Anno 622. In which designment of the said Pope Gregory the Metropolitan of Yorke was to have as many Suffragan Bishops as he of London for there the See was to be placed by Pope Gregories order to either of them twelve apeece which if they ever were erected in this Northerne Province were certainly of meane estate not able to support the honour and consequently swallowed up by the greater Churches of Yorke and Durham which two were onely left here a long time together untill Carlile first was made a Bishopricke by K. Henry the first as Chester afterwards by K. Henry 8. But that which was the greatest addition to the Province of Yorke was the direct and Metropolitan jurisdiction which it claimed and had over all the Bishops of Scotland who did from hence receive their con●ecration and swore Canonicall obedience unto this See In this regard and that it was conceived that by Pope Gregories institution he of the two Arch-Bishops which was first confirmed should have precedencie over the other there grew a great contention there abouts betweene them and much recourse was made to the Court of Rome At last it was determined in favour of the See of Canterbury yet so that still it might he lawfull to the Arch-Bishop of Yorke to write himselfe Prim●te of England as the other taking to himselfe the stile of Primate of all England as it still continueth The next misfortune which besell the See and Metropolitan of Yorke was that the Bishops of Scotland did in fine withdraw themselves from his obedience and had Arch-Bishops of their owne This hapned whilest George Nevill was Arch-Bishop here who was advanced unto this See An. 1466. not above ninescore yeeres agoe and then upon pretence that in consideration of the many and most deadly warres betweene both Realmes the Metropolitan of Yorke could beare no fatherly affection to his sonnes of Scotland However the Archbishop still retaines his●wonted place having precedencie before all Dukes not being of the royall bloud as also before all the great Officers of state except the Lord Chancellour For the Cathedrall Church of Yorke it was first built or begun rather by King Edwyn King of the North-Humbers Anno 627. but finished by King Oswald who succeeded him and dedicated to Saint Peter But this of their foundation being destroyed by fire and by the fury of the Danes at the first entrance of the Normans that which now standeth was erected in the place thereof by Arch-Bishop Thomas the 25. of this See and after by degrees adorned and beautified by his successors The Diocese hereto belonging containeth in it the two Counties of Yorke and Nottingham and in them both 581 Parishes of which 336. are impropriations For government whereof it hath foure Arch-Deacons viz. of Yorke Cleveland East-riding and Nottingham This Bishoprick was at the first rated in the Kings bookes 2035. li. 14. s. 6. d. but now since the great diminution made by King Henry 8. 1609. li. 19. s. 2. d. And for the Clergy of the same their tenth amounteth unto 1113. li. 17. s. 9. d. ob q. To draw unto an end this See hath yeelded to the Church eight Saints to the Church of Rome three Ca●dinals unto the Realme of England twelve LL. Chancellours and two LL. Treasurers and to the North of England two Lord Presidents The Bishops write themselves in Latine Eboraunses of Eborum and are these that follow Arch-Bishops of Yorke A. Ch.     622 1 S. Paulinus died 644. Vacat Annos 20. 666 2 Cedda   3 Wilfridus   4 S. Bosa 687 5 S. John of Beverley 718 6 S. Wilfridus II. 731 7 S. Egber●us 767 8 Adelbertus 781 9 Eanbaldus 797 10 Eanbaldus II.   11 Wolsius 832 12 Wimundus 854 13 Wil●erus 897 14 Ethelbaldus   15 Lodewardus   16 Wulf●tanus 955 17 Oskitellus 972 18 Athelwaldus 972 19 S. Oswaldus 993 20 Aldulphus 1003 21 Wulfstanus II. 1023 22 Alfricus 1050 23 Kinsius 1061 24 Aldredus 1070 25 Thomas I. 1101 26 Girardus 1109 27 Thomas II. 1119 28 Thurstan 1141 29 Henry Murdac 1153 30 S. Gulielmus 1154 31 Rogerus Vacat sedes Annos 10. 1191 32 Geofr Plantagenet L. C●an * Vacat sedes Annos 4. 1217 33 Walter Grey L. Chan. 1256 34 S. S●wa●u● 1258 35 ●od●●ey ●e Kinton 1265 36 Walter ●iffard L. Chan. 1279 37 Gul. Wickwane 1285 38 John Romanus 1288 39 Henry de Newark 1299 40 Tho. Corbridge 1305 41 Gul. de Greenfeild L. Chan. 1317 42 Gul. de Melton L. Ch. L. Treas 1342 43 Gul. Zouche L. Treas * 1352 44 John Thursby L. Chan. 1373 45 Alexander Nevill 1388 46 Tho Arundel L. Chan. tr to Cant. * 1396 47 Robert Waldby 1397 48 Richard Scrope * 1406 49
Forest yeelding speciall opportunity and delight for Hunters the chiefe Town of it had the name of Hunter downe we now call it Huntingod● with very little variation The Towne commodiously seated upon the northern bank of the River Ouse rising unto the No●th on the ascent of an hill adorned with foure parish Churches and had a little A●bey once founded by Maud the Emper. and Eustace Lovelos● the ruines of the which and of a far●e more ancient Castle built by King Edward the older Anno 917 are yet to be seene This County con●●ineth in it five other market Townes besides the shire-Towne and 79 Parishes in the whole and did become an Earldome presently on the Norman Conquest as it hath ever since continued in these Earles of Huntingdon ●068 1 Waltheof     ✚ ✚ ✚ ✚ 1075 2 Simon de Senlys married Maud the daughter of Waltheof     ✚ ✚ ✚ ✚   3 David Pr. of Scotland 2 husband of Maud. 1138 4 Henry sonne of David King of Scots     ✚ ✚ ✚   5 Simon de S. Lyz.     ✚ ✚ 1152 6 Malcolm King of Scots sonne of Hen.   7 Wil. after K. of Scots 1174 8 Simon de S. Lys E. 1190 9 David 3 son of Henry 1219 10 Iohn le Scot son of David     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1337 11 Wil. de Clinton     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1377 12 Guiscard d●Angolesme ✚     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1388 13 Iohn Holland L. high Chamb. 1400. 1416 14 Iohn Holland D. of Exet. ✚ 1447 15 Hen. Hol. D of Exon.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1474 16 Tho. Grey Marq. Dorset     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1479 17 Wil. Herb.     ✚ ✚ ✚ ✚ 1529 18 George Lord Hastings created Earle of Huntingdon by King H. the 8. 1544 19 Fr. Hastings ✚ 1560 20 Hen. Hastings ✚ 1595 21 Geo. Hastings   22 Henry Hastings now Earle 1639. KENDALL KEndall is the name of a Town in Westm●rland called also Cand●le and Kirk by Candals as being seated in a dale neere the river Can. The Town built in the manner of a Crosse two long and broad streets crossing one another a Town of great resort trade especially for woollen cloaths which they make there in great abundance and thence vent through all parts of England This Town hath been an antient Barony descending from the Talboyses to the Breoses or Bruces by them unto the Rosses of Wark some of whose line a●tained the title of ● Rosse of Kendal so to distinguish them from the Lord Roos of Hamlake and so at last unto the Parres to one of which it gave the title of Baron of Kendall as it hath done before of E. to others of more note and eminency which are these that follow   1 Iohn D. of Bedford 3 son unot K. H. 4 Regent of France and E. of Kendall ✚     ✚ ✚ ✚ ✚   2 Iohn D. of ●omerset E. of Kend. ✚     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1446 3 Iohn de Foix cr E. of Kend. by K. H. 6 since which those of that Family do write themselves ●●rles of Longueville and Kendall   ✚ ✚ ✚ 1539 4 William Parre Knight created Lord Parre of Kendall 30 Henry the 8. March 9 created after Earle of Ex. by King Henry the 8. and Marques●e of Northampton by King Edward the 6 the rights and interests of which house are now devolved unto the He●berts Earles of Pem●roke descending from the Lady Anne sister and heire of the said Lord Parre KENT KEnt in Latine Ca●●um so called as being seated in the Canton or Corner of the kingdome is a very rich and pleasant Countrey lying between the T●ames and the narrow Seas A Contrey very good for corne and fit for pasturage according to the severall plots and parts thereof and wondrous full of fruitfull and well-ordered Orchards from whence the City of London is supplied with most sort of fruit The Villages and Towns stand exceeding thick bei●g in all 398 Parishes besid●s lesser Hamlets which make up the two Diocesses of Canterbury and Rochester It hath also divers safe Roades and sure Harbours for ships and those exceeding well defended with Forts and Castles Caesar when he arrived in k●nt found here 4 kings for so they cal'd the Chiefes of the principall Families and gives this testimony of the people that they were the most courteous and civill of all the Britan● In the declining of whose Empire Vor●iger gave this Countrey unto the Saxons who being Heathens when the rest of the I●●e were Christians gave an occasion to the Proverb of Kent and Christ●ndome At that time it was made a Kingdome as in the entrance of the Normans it was made an Earldom and so it hath continued in the p●rsons of these Earles of Kent 1067 1 Odo B of B●ieux halfe brother to the Conq. L. Ch. Iust. L. Tr.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1141 2 Wil. of Ypre●     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1227 3 Hub de Burgh L. Ch Iust.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1321 4 Edm. of Wood stock son to K. E. 1. 1330 5 Edm. Plantag 1333 6 Iohn Plantag     ✚ ✚ ✚   7 Tho Hol. married the La. Ioane of Kent daugh of Edm. of Wood. ✚ 1360 8 Tho. Holland 1397 9 Tho. Hol. D. of Surrey ✚ 1400 10 Edm. Hol. L. Adm.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1461 11 Wil. Nevill L. Falconbridge     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1464 12 Edm. Grey L Rut●yn L. Tr. cr E. of Kent by K. Edw. 4.   13 Geo. Grey 1506 14 Rich. Grey died 1523. 1571 15 Reginald Grey 1572 16 Henry Grey 1613 17 Charles Grey   18 Hen. Gr●y 1639 19 Anthony Grey Clerk Parson of ●urbage in the County of Leicester grand-child of Anthony 3 son of George Grey E. of Kent now living an●o 1641. KINGSTON KIngston is the name of a well known and eminent Town in the East Riding of York-shire which standing on the mouth of the river Hull where it doth fall into the Humber is better known amongst us by the name of Hull A town indeed of no antiquity being first built by Edward the ● who liking the situation of the place compounded for it with the Abbot of Meaux to whom it formerly belonged and there built the town and caused it to be called Kingston It rose up in a little time to great reputation so that for faire and sumptuous buildi●gs strong blockhouses well furnished ships wealth of trade it is become the most remarkable town for merchandise in these parts of Eng. Michael de la Pole the first E. of Suffolk of that Family being son of Wil. d● la Pole a rich merchant here obtained great priviledges for the place whi●h his successors as they grew in favour did i●crease and multiply and in the dayes of H. 6 ●il E. Marq. and D of Suffolk procured it to bee made a County incorporate as our Lawyers phrase it Of late dayes of a County it became the Earldome of 1628 1 Rob. Pierrepont Visc. Newark cr
E. of Kingston upon Hull 4. Car. Iuly 25 who is now living Ann● 1641. LANCASTER LAncashi●e or the County Palatine of Lancaster was heretofore a part of the Brigants and lieth upon the Irish●ea ●ea to the North of Ch●shire The ground accounted not so fert●le as in other places fitter for oates and such leane corne than wheate or barley And yet it is observed with all that in t●ose parts thereof in which the husbandman is not wanting to it in cost and labour that there it yeldeth corne in a very good measure The ayre ther●of may seem to be very healthfull and one would easily co●jecture so by the complexion of the people which ar● faire and beautifull And yet the Country is not much inhabited as in the n●ighbouring shires about them there being in so large a quantity of ground as this shire con●aines not above 36 Parishes though indeed many Chappel● of Ease equall to P●rishes elsewhere for multitudes of people It takes name from the Town of Lancas●e● or more truly L●ncaster seated upon the banks of the river L●nc whence it had the name the Saxons adding Ceaster as in other places for the ●ermination The Town not very well peopled nor much frequented and yet of that authority and credit that it gives name to all the County and hath obteined this priviledge from K. Edw. the 3 that the Sessions and Assises should be held in no other place What Lords and Governours it had in the former times we regard not here The first time it became an Earldome was when K. H. 3 conferred that title on his 2 son Edm. and it was destin●te to greatnesse in the first foundation there being layed unto it at the ve●y first besides this County the whole con●iscated estates of the E●rles of Leices●er and Darby and the B●rony of Monmouth And into this by marriages accrewed in time the great estates of Wil. de Fortibus E. of A●merl● and Lord of Holdernesse 〈◊〉 and other goodly lands in Frances the Earldome of Lincoln and good part of that of Salisbury the Lorships of Ogmore and Kidwelly in Wales which were once the Chaworths Iohn of Ga●nt a d●d hereunto the Castles and Honours of Hertford and Thickhill and his son B●lling broke a moyetie of the lands of ●ohun being ● of Here●ord Essex and Northampton so that it was the greatest patrimony as I verily thinke of any subject Prince in Christendome Lancaster finally was made a County Palatine by K Edward the 3 and hath been hounoured with the●e Dukes and Earles of Lancaster 1267 1 Edm. ●lantagenet 2 son of K Hen. the 3 E. of Lanc. 1295 2 Tho. Plantagenet 1324 3 Hen. Planta 1345 4 Hen. Planta first D of L.   ✚ ✚ ✚ 1361 5 Iohn of Gaunt son of K. Edw. the 3 married the La. Blanch daughter of H. D. of Lanch ●399 ● Hen. of Bullingbroke son of Iohn of Gaunt after K. of Eng. by whom this County Palatine and all the lands and honors belonging and incorporate into the Dutchy of Lancaster were brought unto the Crown of Eng. though governed as an Estate apart then by its proper Officers as it continued til the time of K. Edw. the 4 who did appropriate it to the Crown and dissolved the former government thereof to which it was restored again by K. H. 7 and so still remaineth under the guidance of the Chancellor and other Officers of the same LEICESTER LEicester-shire is a part of the Coritani and ●ooke that name from Leicester the chiefe town thereof a town indifferent large and of a reasonable handsom building and as wel●raded as most inland towns that want as this the benefit of a navigable river It had once a very faire Collegiate Church within it a faire Abbey close unto 〈◊〉 and a strong Castle therewithall but all these the iniquity and inju●y ●f time hath ruined Only the Hospitall of all the antient edifices stands still undefaced As for the Countrey hence denominated it beares corne good pl●nty but is bare of woods the want of which is well supplyed with pit-coale with which the North part of the Country doth store al the rest It cō●eineth in the whole 200 Parishes and of them 12 are market Towns the biggest as in bulke being Leicester so in title too as that which hath beene honored even before the ●onquest with the stile and reputation of an Earldome and hath continued it till now in the names and families of these Earles of Leicester 1057 1 Algar the Saxon.   2 Edwyn died 1071.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1103 3 Rob. de Bellomont 1118 4 Rob. de Bellomont 1167 5 Rob. de Beaumont L. S●ew 1190 6 Rob. de Beaum. L. high Stew.     ✚ ✚ ✚   7 Simon de Montf married Amicia sister and coheire to the last E. Ro. E. of Lei. and L high Stew. 1239 8 Simon de Mont. L. high St●w     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1267 9 Edm. E. of Lanc. L. high Stew. 1295 10 ●ho E. of Lanc. L. high St●w 1324 11 Hen. ● of Lanc. L. high Stew. 1345 12 Hen. D. of Lanc. L. high Stew. ✚     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1360 13 Wil of Bavaria E. of Heinalt married the La. Maud of Lanc.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1361 14 Io. of Gaunt D. of Lan. L. Stew. ✚ 1399 15 Hen. D. of Lanc. L. high Stew. ✚     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1564 16 Rob. Dudley L. Denbigh L. S. and of the house to Q. E. died 1588. ✚ 1618 17 Rob Sidney Vise Li●le descended of a sister of the last Rob. E. of Leicest was by K. Iames cr E. of Leic. Aug. 2.   18 Robert Sidney now Earle of Leices Ambassadour extraordinary with the K of France Anno 1641. LINCOLN LIncoln-shire antiently belonged to the Core●ani A very large and spacious Countrey extending almost 60 miles in length and some 30 in breadth within which compasse are included 630 Parish Churches and of them 30 market Towns It is accounted very kindly ground for the yeeld of corn and feeding of cattell and furnished in the lower part thereof with good store of fowle which from hence are conveied to London in great abundance It takes name from the principall City by Ptolomy and Antonin● called Lindum and after by the Saxons Lind●colline either because it stands on so high an hill from the Latine Collis or that it had been formerly some Roman Colony A Town of great renown and strength in the times of the Britans and in the Normans time as saith William of Malmesbury it was one of the best peopled Cities of England a place of merchandise and traffick for al commers both by sea and land insomuch that 〈◊〉 then Bishop of Dorc●s●er thought fitting to translate hither his Episcopall see From this opinion it then had first began the Proverb that Lincoln was London is c. The Bishops of Lincoln what and how they were we have seen already We will now look a while on the Ea●les of Lincoln ●140
1 Wil. de Romara E. of Lincoln     ✚ ✚ ✚   2 Gilb. de Gaunt 1216 3 Gilb. de Gaunt     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1218 4 Randal de Meschines E. of Che. whose grand-father halfe brother unto Wil. de Romara by the mothers side     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1232 5 Iohn ●acy descended by his mother from E. Randall 1251 6 Henry de Lacy whose daughter Alice was married unto Tho. E. of Lancaster and settled all her lands upon that Family     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1354 7 Hen. D. of Lanc * ●361 8 Iohn of Gaunt D. of Lanc. * 1399 9 Hen. of Bullingbroke D. of Lanc. after K. of Eng.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1467 10 ●ohn de la Pole son and heire of Iohn D. of Suffolke     ✚ ✚ ✚ ●525 11 Henry Brandon son and heire of Charl●s D. of Suffolk   ✚ ✚ ✚ 1572 12 Edward Fenys Lord Clinton Lord Admirall created Earle of Lincolne by Queen Elizabeth 1585 13 Hen. Fenys 1616 14 Tho. Fenys 1618 15 Theophilus Fenys now Earle of Lincoln 1641. LINDSEY LIndsey is one of the 3 parts of Lincolnshire the other 2 being Holland which we spake of lately and Kesteven not yet become an honourary title as the others are It conteineth all the Northerne parts thereof from the river Witham unto Humber and from the Ocean to the Trent Happy above the rest not in bignesse only but that in this part stands the City of Lincoln the chiefe denominator of the County which being the antienly called Lindum as before I said gave to this part the name of Lindsey for by that name of Lindsey it is now the Earldome of 1626 1 Robert Bertu Lord Willoughby of Eresby and Lord great Chamberlaine of England created E. of Lindsey 2 Car. Novemb. 29 now living 1641 MANCHESTER MAnchester is a good Town of Lancashire situate on the hithermost part thereof where it joyneth to the County of Darby A Town of very great antiquity known to the Emperour Antonine by the name of Manc●nium part of which name it still retaines And still it carrieth a good accompt and far excels the Towns lying round about it both for the beautifull shew it carrieth and the resort unto it of the neighboring people and which allures them thither the great trade of Cloathing Manchester Co●tons being famous in all drapers shops It is remarkable also in those parts for the large Market place for a faire Church and for the Colledge which last being founded first by the Lord De la Ware was afterwards refounded or confirmed by Qu. Eliz. consisting fo a Warden and certaine fellows which notwithstanding it is y●t more famous in being made the honorary title of 1625 1 Henry Montague Vise Mandevi cr E. of Manch ● Car. F●● 7 b●ing then L President of the Councel now L. Privy Seale Anno 1641. MARCH March is a name of different nature from the rest before as being neither Towne nor County Vnder that name of March or of Marches rather our Ancestors did comprehend those ba●able grounds between Wales and Eng. for governance whereof and the repressing of the insolencies of either side there were certaine Lords and Potent men whose lands lay nearest to these parts which were called Lords Marchers who had great power and jurisdiction in their severall quarters Amongst these were the Mortimers of Wigmore men of great authority who after were advanced above the rest and made Earles of March. And it continued in that Family untill it fell by marriage to the house of York and so by Edw. the 4 to the Crown of Eng. Nor was it long before the authority of the Lords Marchers was extinguished quite by the uniting of Wales to E● either making new shires of the said March ground such as are Monmouth Brecknoch Radnor Denbigh and Montgomcry or laying it unto the old for which consult the Act of Parliament 27 H. 8. cap. 26. However the title of E. of March is revived again only translated from the house of Mortimer to that of Stewart out of which houses have been successively these Earles of March 1327 1 Rog. L. Mortimer of Wigmore * 1354 2 Roger Morti. 1359 3 Edm. Morti. 1381 4 Rog. Morti. 1399 5 Edm. Morti.     ✚ ✚ ✚   6 Edw. Plantagenet son of Rich. D. of York and after K. of Eng. of that name the 4.   7 Edw. eldest son of K. Edw. 4. ●     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1619 8 Esme Steward L. Aubigny created E. of March 17 Iac. Iun 7. after D. of Lennox * 1624 9 Iames D. of Lennox and Earle of March Anno 1641. * MARLEBVRGH MArleburgh is a Town in the North-east part of Wilt-shire seated not far off from the head of the river Kenet which runneth thence to Hung●rford and Newbury and so by Reading into the Thames The Towne called antiently Cunetio in Antonino's Itinerarium as the river was but by the Normans in whose time this Town revived out of the ruines of the old it was called Marleburgh as being seated in a chaulky soyle which in some places still we call by the name of Marle A Town stretched out from East to West upon the pendant of an hill and had a Castle once belonging unto Iohn sirnamed Sans t●rre who afterwards was K. of England which is still famous in our Law books for a Parliament there held 52. H. 3 in which were made the ●tatutes from hence called of Marleburgh right necessary for the peace and tranquility of the people as is affirmed in the preamble unto the same Our Soveraigne at his Coronation made it yet more notable in making it th● honour as it was the neighbour of 1625 1 Iames L. Ley L. Tr. cr E. of Marleburgh 1 Car. Feb 7. 1628 2 Henry Ley.   3 Iames Ley now E. of Marleburgh Anno 1641. MARSHALL THe title of E. Ma●shall is different from the rest of England all of the which the title of Earle Rivers excepted only are locall or denominated from some place this only personall the residue being only honorary this honorary and officiary both together Antiently they that had this office were only Marshals of the Kings house according as the same is now discharged by the Knights Marshall But in succeeding times it grew to be a place of great power and honour as it still continueth At first they had the title of L. Marshall only Rich. the 2 was the first who by letters Pa●ents advanced them to the dignity of Earles Marshals and with all gave them power to beare a staf●e of gold enammeled black at both ends with the Kings Armes on the upper end and their own Armes on the lower whereas before that time the Marsh●ls had no other than a wooden staffe as other the Great Officers have at Court Before this time they were L. Ma●shals only as before I said For howsoever the title of E. Marshall and Comes Marescallus doth many times occurre in our antient histories Yet I conceive that
it be true the Gentry of Norfolk have had better fortune than the Dukes and Earles 1070 1 Ralph de Ware E. of Norf.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1137 2 Hugh Bigot 1177 3 Rog. Bigot   4 Hugh Bigot 1125 5 Rog. Bigot 1270 6 Rog. Bigot     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1312 7 Tho. de Brotherton first son of K. Edw. 1 E of Norf. 1398 8 Marga. daugh of Tho. of Brotherton Duch. of Norf.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1398 9 Tho. L. Mowbray son of the Lad. Marg. D. of Norf. * 1427 10 Iohn Mowb. * 1434 11 Iohn Mowbray * 14●1 12 Iohn Mowbray *     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1475 13 Rich. D. of York Norf. *     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1483 14 Iohn L. How descended from the Lad. Margaret daugh of Tho. 1 D. of Norf. died 1486. * 1512 15 Tho. How L. Tr. and Adm. * 1524 16 Tho. How L. Tr. * 1554 17 Tho. How last D. of Norf. died 1572. NORTHAMPTON THe County of Northampton is situate almost in the very mid●le and heart of Eng. A Champion Countrey for the most part exceeding populous and ●o replenished with Townes and Churches being in all 326 whereof 10 are markets that in some places there are 20 or 30 steeples to be seen at once The soyle exceeding fertile both for tillage and pasture maintaining numerous flocks of sheep and herds of cattell but somewhat destitute of woods It takes name from North●●pton the chiefe towne thereof seated upon the river Nen which antiently called A●fona but corruptly Antona bestowed this name upon the town being indeed built on the Northern bank A town which for the beauty and circuit of it may be well ranked with many Cities of the Kingdome and heretofore so safe and sure by reason of the strong wals from whence there is a goodly prospect into all the County a strong Castle now demolished that once the students of Cambridge had a purpose to remove their Vniversity unto it This strength however made it obnoxious to some disadvantage as being a place much aimed at in our Civill wars and many a battaile fought about it Yet never were the times so turbulent or the place so dangerous but that there were some persons of superior ranke who did affect the name and enjoy the title of Earles and Marq. of Northampton   1 Walt. E. of Huntingdon     ✚ ✚ ✚   2 Simon de Senlis married Maud daugh of Waltheof 1153 3 Simon de Senlis   4 Sim d● Senlis     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1337 5 Wil. de Bohun 1360 6 Humf. de Boh. who being after E. of Hereford added this title 10 that house from whom it came unto the Staff D. of Buck.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1547 7 Wil. L. Parre Marq.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1693 ● Hen. How brother of Tho. la●t D. of Norf. L. Pr. Seale     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1618 9 Wil. L. Compton cr E. of Northa 16 Iac. Aug. 2. L. Pres of Wa. 1630 10 Spencer Compton now E. 1641 NOrthumberland is a more contracted name now than in former times Heretofore it included all the Countries on the North of Humber possessed of old by the B●igan●●s and the Ottadini now only the extreame a●d most northerne part betwixt the rivers of Tine and Twede all which the Oltadini once inhabited The aire exceeding sharp and piercing as being often visited with boystrous winds hard frosts and tedious snows to remedy which it yeelds abundance of sea-coale for fuell and at very cheap rates The soyle in generall neither fertile for corn or pasturage as being for the most part exceeding rough and very hard to be manured only in some parts towards the sea by the late industry of the ploughman and benefit of sea-weed wherewith they do improve their ground it is become indifferent fruitfull The Countrey meanly populous and but ill inhabited partly by reason of the barrennesse of the Country as before is said and partly for the bad neighbourhood of the Scots as commonly it is in March-lands or frontier countreyes In this regard it had almost as many Castles for defence of themselves as is Parish Churches for the service of God there being 26 of the one and but 46 of the other but then withall the P●●●shes were and are exceeding large and have many Chappels of ease perteining to thē which inconvenienc● of the soyle seat may possibly have beene the reason why the possession of it held not long in any Family although the title and possession of it had been given to many untill the Percyes who not without some interruption too have continued long By reason of which intermixture of severall Families it hath given to those Families the severall titles of Duke and Earles of Northumberland 1065 1 Morcar E. of Northumb.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1071 2 Gospatrick     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1072 3 Waltheof E. of Huntingd.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1076 4 Walcher Bish of Durham     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1086 5 Rob. de Mowb. devested 1095.     ✚ ✚ ✚   6 Hen Pr. of Scotl.   7 William K of Scots     ✚ ✚ ✚   8 Hugh Pudsey B. of Durham     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1377 9 Hen. Per. L. Const. 1414 10 Hen Percy 1455 11 Hen. Percy 1461 12 Hen. Percy     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1465 13 Iohn Nevill L. Monta. cr E. of Northumb. by K Edw. 4 who after 6 yeares resigned it to the said Hen. Percy     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1489 14 Hen. Percy 15 Hen. Percy died 1537.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1551 16 Iohn Dudley E. of Warwick and L. Adm. D. of Northumb.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1557 17 Tho. Percy E. of Northumb. 1574 18 Hen. Percy 1585 19 Hen. Percy 1633 20 Algernon Percy now E. of Nort. and L. Adm. 1641. NORWICH NOrwich is the chiefe City of Norfolk and took that name as did the County from the Northern situation of it It standeth upon the river of Yare which runs thence to Yarmouth lying out in length a mile and an half not above halfe so much in breadth and in that space conteineth about 30 Parishes well walled about with many a turret and 12 gates for entrance A City which for faire buildings and resort of people the painefull industry of the common ●ort the great humanity of the richer and the firme loyalty of all in seditious times may justly be accounted the 3 of England Amongst the buildings those of speciall note next unto their Churches are the 2 Palaces of the D. of Norfolk and earles of Surrey And for the wealth and opulence which it now enjoyeth it standeth much indebted to the Net●erlanders who flying from the D. of Alva and the Inquisition brought with them the making of baies and sayes and other manufactures whereby the poore are set on work and the rich grow pursie A place that hath been honored long with a see Episcopall but neve● made a title of Civill honour till 1626 Edw. L. Denny of Walthan was
fertile It contei●eth in it 304 Parish is traded in 19 market towns the chiefe and fairest are Salisbury and Marlborough which before we spake of Wilton was formerly the principall here●ofore a Bishops see honored with the residence of 9 severall Bishops But by translating of the see of Salisbury and carrying thi●her therewithal the throughfare into the West countrey which before was here it fel by little and little to decay and is now hardly worth the reputation of a poor market town yet still it gives denomination to the Country as that the stile and honor to these Earles of Wiltshire 1397 1 Wil. L. Scrope L. Tr. ✚     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1458 2 Iam. Butler E. of Ormod L. T. ✚     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1470 3 Iohn Stafford 2. son on Humf. D of Buck. ✚ 1473 4 Edw. Staff died 1499. 1510 5 Hen Staff 2 son of Hen. D. of Buck.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1529 6 Tho. Bollen Visc. Rochf father of the La. Anne Bollen     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1550 7 Wil. Pawlet cr after Mar. of Winchester Anno 5. Edw. 6. 1571 8 Iohn Paw 1576 9 Wil. Paw 1598 10 Wil. Paw 1628 11 Iohn Paw now Marq. of Winche and E. of Wiltsh Anno 164● WINCHELSEY WInchelsey is a sea Town in the East part of Sussex where it adjoyneth upon Kent accounted by a general error to be open of the Cinq Ports whereas indeed it is no Cinq port but a member of them as ●hi● and Feversham and others are A Towne in former times of great strength and beauty inclosed with strong wals and a well placed Rampier for the defence thereof against forreign force but the sea-shrinking from it by little and litle brought the town by the like degrees into great decay though still it beare the shew of a handsome town and hath a Blockhouse for defence raised by H. ● But what it lost i● wealth it hath got in honour being advanced unto the reputation of an Earld in the names and persons of 1628 1 Eliz. Finch Visc. Maidstone cr C. of Winchel 4. Car. Iuly 11. 1634 2 Hen. Finch son of the said Eliz. 1639 3 Henneage Finch E. of Winchelsey now living 1641. WINCHESTER WInch is the chief City of H●●psh heretofore the seat Royal of the West-Saxon K. By Antonine and P●olomy called Venta Belgarum and then accounted the prime City of all the Belgae out of which Venta adding ceaster to it according to their wonted manner the Saxons hammered their Vent-ceaster and we our Winchester In these our dayes it is indifferently wel peopled and frequented commodiou●ly seated in a Valley betweene high steep hils by which it is de●ended from cold and wind It lyeth daintily on the banks of a pleasant river str●tching somewhat in length from East to West and conteineth about a mile and a halfe within the wals besides the suburbs but much within the wals is desolate and altogether unbuilt Many things certainly thereare which may conduce unto the reputation of it especially a beautifull and large Cathedrall a goodly and capacious Palace for the Bishops dwelling which they call Wolvescy house a strong and gallant Castle bravely mounted upon an hill with brave command on all the Countrey a pretty neat Colledge neare the wals built and endowed by Wil. of Wickham for a seminary to his other in Oxford and not far off a very faire Hospitall which they call Sain● Crosses And yet lest all this might not raise it high enough our English Monarchs have thought fit to dignifie these following persons with the stile and title of Marq. and Earles of Winchester 1207 1 Sa●r de Quincy E. 1220 2 Rog. de Qum died 1264.     ✚ ✚ ✚ ✚ 1322 3 Hugh Despencer 1326.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1472 4 Lewys de Bruges     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1551 5 Wil. Pawler E. of Wiltsh and L. Tr. cr Marq. of Winch. by K. Edw. 6. 1571 6 Iohn Paw 1576 7 Wil. Paw 1598 8 Wil. Paw 1528 9 Iohn Paw now Marq. of Winchest and E. of Wiltsh Anno 1641. WOrcestersh is a part of the Cornavii once a great nation in these parts A Coun. of an aire so temperate and a soyle so fortunate that it gives place to none about her for health and plenty Abundant certeinly it is in all kinds of fruits and of peares especially wherewith besides the use they have of them for the table they make a bastard kind of wine which they here call Pirry which they both sell and drink in great abundance Salt-pits it also hath in some parts thereof and about Powyck and many places else good store of Cherries and every where well watred with delicious rivers which afford great variety of fish A Country of no great extent for length and compasse as not conteining above 152 Parish Churches and amongst them 10 market towns Of these the principall is Worcester and gives denomination to the whole A City delectably seated on the banks of Severne which runneth quite through the County from North to South ever which it hath a faire bridg with a tower upon it and thence arising with a gentle ascent affordeth to the upper parts a very goodly prospect in the vale beneath A City every way considerable whether you looke upon it in the situation or in the number of its Churches or the faire neat houses or finally on the inhabitants which are both numerous and wealthy by reason of their trade of cloathing which doth there flourish very much Of the Cathed here we have spoke before and of the Castle we shall now say nothing as having nothing left of it but the name and ruines All we shall adde is a briefe Nomenclature of The Earles of Worcester 1144 1 Wal●ran de Beaumont     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1397 2 Tho. Percy L. Adm.     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1420 3 Rich. Bea●champ     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1450 4 Iohn Tiptoft L. Tr. and L. Con. 1471 5 Edw. Tiptoft     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1514 6 Char. Somer L. Ch. cr E. of Worcester by K. H. 8. ✚ 1526 7 Hen. Som. L. Herb.   8 Wil. Somerset 1589 9 Edw. Som. Master of the House L. Privy S●ale ✚ 1627 10 Hen. Som. now living Anno 1641. YORK YOrk-shire is past all peradventure the greatest County in England conteining 70 miles in length from North to South and 80 miles in bredth from West to East the circuit being above 300. In this great quantity of ground are not above 563 Parish Churches w●ich is no great number but then withall there are great plenty of Chappels of Ease equall for bignesse and resort of people to any Parish elsewhere The soyle is generally fruitfull in a very good measure If that one part therof by stony and barren ground another is as fertile and as richly adorned with corne and pasturage If here you find it naked and destitute of woods in other places you shal find it shadowed with most spacious forrests If it be somwhere moorish mirie and unpleasant elsewhere it is as beauteous and delightsome as the eye can wish It is divided ordinarily into 3 parts which according to the quarters of the world are called East-Riding West-Riding and North-Riding Richmondsh ●omming in to make up the 4 which is a part of York-sh as before was said The whole was antiently possessed by the Brigantes who were diffused all over those Northerne parts beyond the Trent and for their capitall City had Eboracum seated upon the river Vre which we now call Ouse in the Westriding of this County and by a later Saxon name is now called York This is the 2 City of all Eng. both for fame and greatnesse A pleasant large and stately place well fortified beautifully adorned as well with private as publike edifices and rich and populous withall Seated as e●st was said on the river Ouse which cutteth it as it were in twaine both parts being joyned together with a faire stone bridge consisting of high and mighty Arches A City of great fame in the Roman times and of as eminent reputation in all Ages since and in the severall turnes and changes which have befallen this Kingdome under the Saxons Danes and Normans hath still preserved i●s antient lustre Adorned it was with an Archiepiscopall see in the times of the Britans nor stooped it lower when the Saxons●eceived ●eceived the Faith Rich. 2. laying unto it a little territory on the Westside therof made it a County of it selfe in which the Archbishops of York enjoy the rights of Palatines And for a further lustre to it H. ● ap pointed here a Councell for the governance of the Northern parts consisting of a L. Pre. certaine Councellors a Secretary and other Officers And yet in none of these hath York been more fortunate than that it adorned so many Princes of the Imperiall line of Germany and bloud Royall of England with the stile and attribute of Dukes and Earls of York 1190 1 Otho of Baveria E. of York     ✚ ✚ ✚ 1385 2 Edm. of Langley 5 son of K. Edw. 3 E. of Camb and D. of York ✚ 1401 3 Edw. Planta son of Edm. of Lang. E. of Rutl. and D. of York ✚ 1426 4 Rich. Planta nephew of Edm. of Lang. by his son Rich. E. of Cam. D. of York ✚ 1474 5 Rich. of Shrews 2 son of K. Edw. 4. D. of York ✚ 1495 6 Hen. 2 son of K. H. 7. after K. of E● 1604 7 Char. 2 son of K. Iames now the 2 Monarch of Gr. Brit. ✚ 1633 8 Iames 2 son of K. Charles declared D. of York by his Royall Father and so instituted but not yet created FINIS