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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A77390 A breif account of the Popes pretences of a civil right to the Crown of England, and the answer thereunto 1679 (1679) Wing B4513; ESTC R232458 3,727 1

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breif account of the Popes pretences of a Civil Right to the Crown of England and the Answer thereunto 1 IOHANNES COMES WARENN 2 THOMAS COMES LANCASTR●● 3 RAD̄● DE MONTE COMES G●LOC 4 HUMFRIDVS DE ●OHVN COMES H●REF 5 ROGERVS BIGOT COMES NORFOLK 6 GVIDO COMES WARUVICI 7 RICARDVS COMES 〈◊〉 8 ADOMA●VS DE VALENCIA 9 HENRICVS DE LANCAST●IA 10 IOHANNES DE HASTING 11 HENRICVS DE PERCY 12 EDMUNDVS MORT●OMARI 13 ROBERTVS 〈◊〉 WALT●●● 14 WILLM̄S DN̄S DE MOL●NS 15 IOHANNES DN̄S DE HANACRE 16 HVGO DE VER 17 WILLM̄S DE ●REWOSE 18 ROBERTVS DE MONTEALT● 19 ROBERTVS DE TATESHALE 20 REGINALDVS 〈◊〉 DE 〈…〉 N 21 HENRICVS 〈◊〉 DE CO●HN●R 22 HVGO BARDOLE 23 ROBERTVS DE TONEY 24 WILLM̄S DE ROOS 25 ROBERTVS DE CLIFFORD 26 PETRVS DE MALOL●C● 27 PHILIPPVS DN̄S DE 〈◊〉 28 ROBERTVS ●●●●IVS ROGE●● 29 IOHANNES DE MOHVN 30 ALMARICVS DE SC̄O AMANDO 31 WILLM̄S DE FERRAR●IA 32 ALANVS ●A ZUCHE 33 THEOBALDVS DE VERDOVN 34 THOMAS DE ●URNYVA● 35 THOMAS DE MULTŌN 36 WILLM̄S LE LATIMER 37 THOMAS DN̄S DE BERK●●E 38 ●●●●O 〈◊〉 WARINI 39 IOHANNES DN̄S DE 〈◊〉 40 EDMUN DN̄S DE EYNCOVRT 41 PETRVS COBBE 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 42 WILLM̄S DE CANTE ●●PO 43 IOHANNES DE BELLOCAMPO 44 ROGERVS DE MORTUOMA●●● 45 IOHANNES F●●●VS REGINALD 46 RANULPHVS DE NEVLL● 47 ●●IANVS ●●●VS ALANI 48 WILLM̄S MARESCALLVS 49 WALTERVS DN̄S DE HUNTERCOMBE 50 WILLM̄S MARTIN 51 HENRICVS LE TYEIS 52 ROGERVS L● WARRE 53 IOHANNES DE ●●PA●●● 54 IOHANNES DE LANCASTRE 55 ROBERTVS E●●VS PAGANI 56 HENRICVS TREGOT● 57 RADVS PYPARD 58 WALTERVS DOMINVS DE EA●●●IM●●● 59 ROGERVS LE ESTRANGE 60 IOHANNES LE ESTRANGE 61 THOMAS DE CHAURTE 62 WALTERVS DE ●●LLO CAMPO 63 RICVS TALE●OT 64 IOHANNES BUTTECOVRT 65 IOHANNES ENGAYN 66 HVGO POYN● 67 ADAM DN̄S DE WELL 68 SIMON DN̄S DE MONTE AC●TO 69 IOHANNES DN̄S DE SULLEE 70 IOHANNES DE MOELES 71 EDMUNDVS BARO STAFFORD 72 IOHANNES LOVEL 73 EDMUNDVS DE HASTING 74 RADV̄S ●●●IVS WILLM̄ 75 ROBERTVS DE CALANIS 76 WILLM̄S TOUCHBT 77 IOHANNES ABA●AM 78 IOHANNES DE HAUERING●● 79 ROBERTVS LA WARDE 80 NICHOLAVS DE SEGRAVE 81 WALTERVS DE TEYE 82 IOHANNES DE INSULA 83 EUSTACHIVS DN̄S DE ●ACCHE 84 GILBERTVS PECCHE 85 WILLM̄S PAYNELL 86 BOGO DE KNOVILL 87 FVLCO LE ESTRANGE 88 ●●●●ICVS DE PINKENEY 89 IOHANNES DE HUDLESTON 90 ROGERVS DE HUNTINGF●ELD 91 HUGO FILIVS HENRICI 92 IOHANNES LE BRETON 95 THOMAS DN̄S DE LA ROCHE 93 NICHVS DE CARRAV 95 WALTERVS DE MUNCY 96 IOHANNES E●LIVS MARMAD●●CI 97 IOHANNES DN̄S DE KYNGESTON 98 ROBERTVS HASTANG 99 RADV̄S DN̄S DE GRANDON 100 WILLM̄S DN̄S DE LEYBORN 101 IOHANNES DE GRASTOCK 102 MATHEVS ●ILIVS 103 NICHVS DE M●YNILL 104 IOHANNES PAYNEL Argent Sable Gules Vert. Azure Or. Purpure Tenne Sanguine Mich. Burgh sculp THat the Pope of Rome hath for some Ages last past pretended ●a Soveraign Right over Christian Kings and Princes cannot be unknown to any who are acquainted with the writings of their most approved Authors the Decrees of their councils or the Instances of such u●ped authority recorded in Histo● for these Five Hundred years The judgment of their Licenced Au●ors their Councils and their Laws 〈◊〉 this Case is excellently published by the Learned Pen of the Right Re●rend Bishop of Lincoln and that the 〈◊〉 me Doctrine hath been by them generally received I can bring no greater proofs than their common practise recorded in History How many Em●rours Kings and Soveraign Prin● have been de Facto deposed by them ●w many great Maslacres and private Murders have been Encouraged and Defended how many Tortures and unheard of Cruelties how ●ny Treasons and Damnable Con●acies to the subversion of whole kingdoms have been contrived and ●me executed by Jesuits and other ●issaries of Rome would require a large Volumn to relate I shall refer the Reader to a few Authors for his abundant satisfaction herein Thuanus Bodinus and the Exact Collections of Mr. Fowlis Nor was there any place felt the weight of 〈◊〉 Popes Iron Rod more grievous ●n the Kingdom of England hence 〈◊〉 he wont to exact vast summes of ●ney which were as readily paid 〈◊〉 of what esteem it was with him 〈◊〉 may gather from the Character he gives when he calls it Puteus inexhaustus And from the time it hath pleased God to set us at liberty from their yoak and burden which neither we nor our Fathers were able to bear what Damning Censures and Violent Excommunications have been sent out against us what Secret and Horrible Plots have been contrived to destroy our Kings and Kingdoms I hope will never be forgot and all this not so much to reestablish here the Religion as the Authority which the Pope hath lost and the right of that Title which he claims to this Kingdom he thinks equal to that pretended from Constantin's Donation And to this purpose his Sub-Collector Polidore Virgil tels us that Ina was the first King who made this Kingdom of England Tributary to the Pope But he forgets himself pag. 740. where he saith Peter pence was given Pietatis Religionis Causa for Gods sake and therefore not by way of Homage and Subjection This Gift was continued by Offa Atulphus Canutus and Edward the Confessor who calls it the Kings Almes William the Conqueror alloweth this gift but renounceth all Obedience to the Pope as appears by Lanfranks Epist Pope Pascal 2. in a Letter to Hen. 1. calls this Donation Beati Petri Eleemosyna and Bishop Andrews tells us that it was an Alms given to a Hospital at Rome where they used to entertain Pilgrims out of England The Second pretended Title is from King John's Resignation of the Crown to Pandulphus the Popes Legate and receiving it again under Fealty and Homage and at the yearly Tribute of a Thousand Marks Which Title upon several accounts will appear invalid First as to matter of Fact Sir Thomas Moor who could not want all advantages of informing himself in affairs of this nature denies it his words are these Some Writers say that King John made England and Ireland Tributary to the Pope by the grant of a thousand Marks we dare surely say again that this is untrue and that all Rome neither can shew such a grant nor ever could and if they could it were right nought worth For never could any King of England give away the Realm to the Pope or make the Land Tributary if he would nor no such money is there paid nor never was These are the words of that great States-man who was no enemy to the Popes Authority But granting there was something done to this purpose in the presence of a few Peers and without the Consent of Any as Mat. Paris a Monk of Saint Albans who lived at that time acquaints us I shall take my Second Argument to invallidate this Title from the words of Sir Thomas Moor before cited for if they could