Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n homage_n king_n scotland_n 5,122 5 9.5324 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A52522 Wonderful predictions of Nostredamus, Grebner, David Pareus, and Antonius Torquatus wherein the grandeur of Their present Majesties, the happiness of England, and downfall of France and Rome, are plainly delineated : with a large preface, shewing, that the crown of England has been not obscurely foretold to Their Majesties William III and Mary, late Prince and Princess of Orange, and that the people of this ancient monarchy have duly contributed thereunto, in the present assembly of Lords and Commons, notwithstanding the objections of men and different extremes. Atwood, William, d. 1705?; Grebner, Ezekiel.; Nostradamus, 1503-1566.; Pareus, David, 1548-1622.; Torquato, Antonio, 15th cent. 1689 (1689) Wing N1401; ESTC R261 72,982 73

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

not to assume the Royal Dignity unless he firmly resolv'd to perform what he had sworn To which he answered That by God's help he would faithfully observe his Oath And Hoveden says That he was Crown'd by the Counsel and Assent of the Archbishops Bishops Earls Barons and a great number of Milites which Word was then of a large extent Wherefore I submit it to Consideration whether these are any Exceptions to the General Rule or are not at least such as confirm it 8. The Parliament 11 H. 7. declares That it is against all Laws Reason and good Conscience that Subjects should lose or forfeit for doing their true Duty and Service of Allegiance to their Prince or Sovereign Lord for the time being that is to the King de facto as appears by the Occasion of the Law to encourage the Service of H. 7. who had no Title but from his Subjects and there is a Provision That any Act or Acts or other Process of Law to the contrary shall be void Which being built upon the Supposition That according to the Fundamental Law the People's Choice gives sufficient Title perhaps is not vain and illusory as the Lord Bacon would have it but argues strongly that the Parliament then thought the Monarchy Elective at least with that Restriction to the Blood which I yield And if this be part of the Fundamental Contract for which it bids very fair then perhaps no body of any other Stock may be King within this Statute To what I have offer'd on this Head the following are all the Objections of seeming weight which have occurr'd to me The Maxim in Law That the King never dies or to use the Words of Finch The Perpetuity which the Law ascribes to him having perpetual Succession and he never dies for in Law it is called the Demise of the King. To which I answer 1. That neither that Book nor any Authority there cited is so ancient as the Settlement of the Crown above observ'd and that the Death is but a Demise or transferring the Right immediately to a Successor may be owing to the Settlement but is no Argument of any Right otherwise 2. Even where there is an Election tho' never so long after the Death of the Predecessor yet by way of Relation 't is as if there were a Demise or Translation of Interest without any Interregnum as it was resolved by all the Judges 1 Eliz. of which the Words of Lord Dyer are The King who is Heir or Successor may write and begin his Reign the same day that his Progenitor or Predecessor dies with which agrees the Lord Anderson But that to many intents a King dies in his Politick Capacity as well as Natural appears by the discontinuance of Process in Criminal Causes and such in Civil as was not return'd in the Life of the former King till kept up by Statute the determination of Commissions and the like 'T is urg'd That the Hereditary Right contended for has not been interrupted by the People's Elections so oft as it should seem by the Breaches in the Succession for that many who came in before them who stood next were Testamentary Heirs of the Appointment of the Predecessor which argues an Inheritance in him that disposes And Dr. Brady thinks he produces an Example where the Election of the People was bound and limited by the Nomination of the Predecessor But if he had duely weigh'd the Presidents of this kind he might have understood that an Election without a Nomination had full effect while a bare Nomination had none and he might have learnt from Grotius that among the Germans from whom we descend Kingdoms did not use to pass by Will and that Wills were but Recommendations to People's Choice but not Dispositions I find it urg'd That as anciently as the time of E. 3. the Realm declar'd That they would not consent to any thing in Parliament to the disherison of the King and his Heirs or the Crown whereunto they were sworn If any Colour of Evidence can be produc'd that the Subjects of England so early as that swore Allegiance to the King and his Heirs this were to the purpose Indeed I find that before this 24 E. 1. a Foreign Prince the King of Scotland Feudatory to the Crown of England did Homage to the King and his Heirs but the like not being exacted of the Subjects of England till particular Acts whereby the Crown was setled it argues strongly as indeed appears from the Subject Matter that the Homage paid by a Foreign Prince was due to none but the present King and his Successor to the Kingdom whoever was next of Blood And by parity of Reason the Disherison of the King and him her or them who succeeded to the Crown was all that could be referr'd to when they urge the Obligation of their Oath to the King and his Heirs or the Crown which appears farther not only from the old Oath of Allegiance to which they must needs have reference whereby they are bound to defend the Rights of tbe Crown but even from the Matter then in question which was not of the Right of Succession but of a Flower of the Crown Bracton puts this out of dispute when he tells us That Inheritance comes not from an Heir but an Heir from Inheritance and that Inheritance is the Succession to all the Right which the Predecessor had by any sort of Acquisition With Bracton agrees the Civil Law Haeredis significatione omnis significari Successores credendum est etsi verbis non sunt expressi By Heirs we are to believe all Successors to be signified altho' not exprest in Words And again Nihil est aliud haereditas quam successio in universum jus quod defunctus habuit Inheritance is nothing else but Succession to all the Right which the Deceased had Wherefore I cannot but wonder that so Learned a Man as Sir P. P. should cite this to prove that Allegiance is due to the Heirs and Successors in a Legal Course of Descent that is as he explains or receives it out of Mr. Prynne by proximity of Succession in regard of Line Nor is this Learned Man more fortunate in mentioning the Salvo which Littleton tells us is to be taken to the Oath of Homage to a Subject Salve la Foy que jeo doy a nostre Signior le Roy where there is not a word of Heirs but he tells us that Littleton cites Glanvil where the word Heirs is whereas 't is the Lord Cook who makes the Quotation as he does of Bracton whose Sense of the word Heirs we have seen and Littleton fully confirms it by leaving out the word Heirs as a Redundancy Allegiance being due to every one that becomes King and to no other But to put the extent of Heirs to a King out of Controversie we have the Resolution of all the
Rot. Parl. 8 H. 4. n. 60. Gomezius de Qualitatibus Contractuum f. 319. Hottomanni Com. de Verbis Juris usus-fructus est jus alienis rebus utendi fruendi salvâ rerum substantiâ Emphyteusis 13 E. 4. Rot. Parl. 1 H. 7. n 16. H. 7. Son to Edmund Earl of Richmond Brother by Mother's Side to H. 6. Rot. Parl. 1 H. 7. Vid. Rot. Parl. 1 H. 7. n. 16. supra Vindiciae contra Tyrânnos Ed. Amstelodami p. 110. Rot. Parl. 1 H. 7. 25 H. 8. c. 22. 26 H. 8. c. 2. 28 H. 8. c. 7. Vid. 28 H. 8. sup 35 H. 8. Hist of Succession f. 34. 1 2 P. M. c. 9. 1 Eliz. c. 3. 1 Jac. 1. c. 1. Sir Robert Filmer's Power of Kings f. 1. Vid. Pufend. de Interregn sup p. 288 289. 25 E. 3. Stat. 2. Stat. 25 E. 3. sup Vid. 1. Anderson f. 60 61. A Devise to the Wife after her Decease to the Children Vid. Wild's C. 6 Rep. In Shelley's C. 1 Rep. f. 103. A Gift to a Man semini suo or prolibus suis or liberis suis or exitibus suis or pueris suis de corpore Vid. Sir James Dalrimple's Institutions of the Laws of Scotland f. 52. Vid. Dugdale's Bar. 2. Vol. Beaumont Just Inst lib. 1. tit 9. So Bracton lib. 1. cap. 9. Greg. Tholos Syntagma juris universi f. 206. Spiegelius tit Liberi Non procedere in privilegiis quae generaliter publicae utilitati derogant Vid. Antonii Perezi Inst Imperiales p. 21. Vid. Cujac ad tit de verborum significatione p. 147. 230. That the People of England have duly exercis'd their Power in setling the Government Object Answ Hobbs his Leviathan Pufendorf de Interregnis p. 282. A Letter to a Friend advising in this exttaordinary Juncture c. Vid. Pufend de Interregnis p. 267. sup in Marg. Brady's first Edit p. 227. See this proved upon him Pref. to Jus Anglorum Prynne's Animadversions on 4 Inst f. 10. Vid. Rushw 1 vol. f. 470. 3 Car. ● Tacit. de Moribus German Coeunt nisi quid fortuitum subitum certis diebus c. V. Leges S. Ed. tit Greve In capite Kal. Maii. Jus Angl. c. 7. Vid. sup 12 Car. 2. c. 1. 3 Inst f. 7. sup in Marg. Anno 1127. Vid. Spelm. Con. 2. vol. f. 1. De modo habendi Synodos in Angliâ primaevis temporibus Vid. Jan. Ang. fac nov and Jus Angl. Flor. Wigorn. f. 663. Confluxerant quoque illuc magnae multitudines Clericorum Laicorum tam divitum quam mediocrum factus est conventus grandis inestimabilis Quaedam determinata quaedam dilata quaedam propter nimium aestuantis turbae tumultum ab audientiâ judicantium profliga●a c. Rex igitur cum inter haec Londoniae moraretur auditis concilii gestis consensum praebuit confirmavit Statuta concilii a Willielmo Cant. c. celebrati Vid. sup Hottom Illust Quaest 17. Gotofredus de Electione Magistratû inhabilis per errorem factâ p. 6. Gotofred sup p. 23. sponte transacta Conclusion Letter to B. L. Victrix causa Diis placuit sed victa Catoni Cent. 9. 49. Cent. 2. 51. Cent. 2. 53. Cent. 3. 80. last Edit 1682. Cent. 1. 52. Cent. 4. 96. Cent. 3. 16. Cent. 2. 68. Taken out of the 12th and added to the 7th Cent. 80. last Ed. par plui 82. 83. 〈◊〉 10. 66. Cent. 2. 100. Cent. 4. 16. 〈◊〉 6. 7. 〈◊〉 10. 56. Cent. 4. 89. Cent. 2. 67. Prophesies at the end 5. Cent. 6. 13. Cent. 8. 58. Cent. 10. 26. Cent. 5. 18. Cent. 5. 4. Cent. 30. 70. Cent. 4. 13. Cent. 4. 22. Cent. 4. 75. Albion Cent. 10. 68. Cent. 5. 26. Cent. 1. 13. Cent. 1. 35. Cent. 1. 33. Cent. 2. 78. Cent. 2. 38. Cent. 2. 89. Cent. 3. 63. Cent. 2. 87. Cent. 5. 99. Cent. 6. 28. Cent. 5. 24. alias 74. Cent 5. 87. Cent. 6. 41. Cent. 6. 12. Cent. 6. 43. Paris Cent. 3. 9. Cent. 5. 34. Last Ed. Blaye Cent. 9. 38. Cent. 9. 64. Cent. 10. 7. Cent. 1. 32. Cent. 1. 100. Cent. 2. 61. Vid. Cent. 5. 34. Cent. 2. 97. Vid. Cent. 6. 43. Cent. 3. 49. Cent. 5. 43. Louis le Grand Cent. 3. 83. Cent. 6. 3. Cent. 6. 4. Cent. 7. 34. Cent. 8. 98. Cent. 9. 92. Cent. 10. 22. Cent. 10. 75. Cent. 10. 86. Cent. 9. 49. France Cent. 2. 51. Anno 1666. St. Paul ' s. Other Churches Cent. 2. 53. The Plague not to cease till the Fire Cent. 3. 80. Ed. 1672. 82. Monmouth Cent. 1. 52. J. 2. born under Scorpio Q. the Nativity of his Brother of France Cent. 4. 96. The D. of Cambridge born 15 years after the Princess of Orange England counted the Ballance of Europe Cent. 3. 16. The Prince of Orange English by his Mother Sister to J. 2. Cent. 2. 68. Viz. The Liberties of the Kingdom Added to the Twelfth Cent. Stan. 80. From a Prince becomes a King. Ibid. 82. The second Landing in the West He being a Romanist calls it so Ibid. 83. A lively Description of the State of our Court. Cent. 10. 66. The Commentator renders this a Reign of Confusion Cent. 2. 100. All join in the Association Cent. 4. 16. The King seeing the Numbers encrease would repent too late Cent. 6. 7. The United Provinces vex Denmark England or the Governour there of the Romish Religion and French Blood by his Mother Cent. 10. 56. J. 2. of the Order of the Jesuits Another Realm or Government rescues England Vid. Usher 's Antiqu. Brit. f. 〈◊〉 citing Merlin Gallica quem gignet qui gazis regna replebit Oh dolor oh gemitus fratris ab ense cadet Cent. 4. 89. Luy mort desgouteront distillabunt shall occasion his Death drop by drop Blonde is most commonly render'd Fair but may be taken for any Complexion departing from Black. Cent. 2. 67. Prophecies at the end 5. Who in danger of drinking the Juyce of Orange Cent. 6. 13. Doubtful what Title to take The King can't justifie the Babe Cent. 8. 58. The Babe sent to France Cent. 10. 26. The Occasion of taking the Crown of England Cent. 5. 18. V. Cent. 2. 63. speaking of France and Germany Qui le Grand mur c. J. 2. of Scotland the Seventh Cent. 3. 70. The Mastiff an Emblem of England Cent. 3 70. The Landing of Forces may answer this Ausonium Ausburg Cent. 4. 13. Cent. 4. 42. The Officers disbanded after the routing of Monmouth Cent. 4. 75. Albion England Cent. 10. 68. Viz. Their Liberties Forces sent to Holland Cent. 5. 26. Aux Monts Cent. 1. 13. Cent. 1. 35. English and Begick Lion. Cent. 1. 33 Cent. 2. 78. The King of England shall find his Designs fatal to himself Cent 2. 38. England and France Cent. 2. 89. England and France As its State new The King of France Cent. 3. 63. Rome and France Cent. 2. 87. The Prince of Orange is of German Extraction The Whore of Babylon Cent. 5. 99. Germans English Dutch. Cent. 6. 28. Belgick The Pope The French. Cent. 5. 24. alias 74. The English reputed of Trojan blood and London has been called Troinovant Cent. 5. 87. Vid. Partridge de Anno 1688. The Sun now deprest by Saturn Cent. 6. 41. Prince George the Dutch and English Cent. 6. 12. Cent. 6. 43. Paris Cent. 3. 9. A Sea-fight English and Flemings victorious over the French. Cent. 5. 34. It must needs be thought that this relates to the Princes landing and stay in the West Cent. 9. 38. Vid. Pref. Cent. 9. 64. The Jesuit Cent. 10. 7. * France Cent. 1. 32. Cent. 10. 100. Cent. 2. 61. Vid. Cent. 5. 34. The English Forces fatal to the French. Cent. 2. 97. Seems to relate to Paris vid. Cent. 6. yet may agree with London Cent. 3. 49. Cent. 3. 53. * Holland Cent. 3. 83. Part of France Is it a doubt who has been Agent for the French. Cent. 6. 3. The Rhine First the Administration then the Crown Cent. 6. 4. Cologne Vid. Partridge of the Conjunctions An. 1688. Cent. 7. 34. Cent. 8. 98. Cent. 9. 92. The Prince Nephew to the K. as well as Son-in-law Cent. 10. 22. Aministrator first Cent. 10. 75. The Ausburg League Cent. 10. 86. Nota Abdicated Cited in the Northern Star f. 25. Nota Ireland has no Crown Dedicated to Matthias King of Hungary Anno 1480. Edit Anno 1552. Pag. 7. 6. The Emperor and King of Spain of the same House