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A47023 A theatre of wars between England and France in all the kings reigns, from the time of William the Conqueror to the conclusion of the peace, on the 10th of September, 1697 ... : with a map of England and France on a copper plate / by D. Jones. Jones, D. (David), fl. 1676-1720. 1698 (1698) Wing J934A; ESTC R43322 51,271 110

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surnamed Ceur de Lion was the third Son of Henry the II. but the Eldest when his Father died aged 35 years when he began his Reign the former part whereof was spent by him in the Wars in the Holy-Land William Longshamp Bishop of Ely and Chancellor of England governing the Kingdom during his absence in this War he signalized his Valour to a wonder having first taken Cyprus in his way thither and at Acon in Syria so behaved himself that he became an object of Envy to other Christian Princes especially to King Phillip of France as you shall see hereafter where ever he went Terror was his forerunner insomuch that it grew common amongst those Eastern People to terrifie their Children with the apprehension of King Richard's coming in his return being driven upon the Coast of Dalmatia and thinking to pass home by Land incognito he was made Prisoner by the Duke of Austria who brought him to the Emperor Henry and was detained by him in Custody for a Year and five Months till he paid a great Ransom his unparallell'd Valour and Bravery was the occasion of this misfortune these and other Princes bearing him Envy especially the French King who invades Normandy during his absence which obliged Richard to make a Peace with Saladine for Three Years much to the disadvantage of the cause they fought for Phillip attacked Gisors and had it surrendred to him and many other Places and then hasted to lay Siege to Roan but found such a vigorous defence made by the Valiant and Noble Earl of Leicester that he was forced to quit his Enterprize and so returned into France On the 12th of March 1194. King Richard landed at Sandwich was recrowned again reduced the Kingdom entirely to his Obedience which was much divided because of his Brother John's pretentions in his absence and hearing the King of France had besieged Vernail he passed over into Normandy and arrived at Harfleur with 100 Ships full of Horsemen Armour c. the noise whereof so frighted the Monsieur that he left the Siege and went his ways whereupon Richard enters the French Dominions takes in several strong Places but the Noble Leicester had the misfortune to be taken Prisoner who afterward paid a great summ of Money for his Ransom and soon after ensued a Truce for a short time which was no sooner ended but Richard takes the Field possesses himself of the Castle of Brisen Novencourt c. the French King in the mean time besieging Albermarl whither Richard hastening to succour the Place a sharp Battle was fought between both Armies wherein the French prevailed chiefly upon the account of the English being wearied with their hard March But Richard had no sooner recruited and refreshed his Soldiers but he laid Siege to Miligio took it and burnt it down to the Ground whereupon ensued some overtures of Peace Albemarl in the mean time falling into the French hands and ran the same fate with Miligio Some three Years after Richard turned his Arms against the Barons of Poictiers that rebelled against him with prosperous success till at last besieging the Castle of Chaluz and having brought it to that extremity that he would grant no other Conditions but a surrender at Discretion he was shot in the left Arm out of a Cross-bow with an invenomed Dart by one Bartram de Gordon of which wound he died the 6th of April 1199. after he had reigned Nine Years and Nine Months and was buried at Fonteverard at his Fathers Feet The Causes were that while Richard went on so prosperously in the Holy Land the French King out of Envy and contrary to his Sacramental Oath invaded Normandy which forc'd King Richard to make peace with Saladine so much disadvantagious to all Christendom JOHN THe Brother of Richard who died without issue and youngest Son of Henry the II. succeeded his Brother to the prejudice of Arthur Geoffrey his Elder Brothers Son who was the real heir of Course This Arthur in right of his Mother was Earl of Bretagne in France so that by this exclusion England lost one of the best Provinces in that Kingdom and by advancing John to the Throne we not only lost almost all our Possessions in France but England it self became vassal to the Pope the Clergy of those times growing strangely bigotted to Rome and perverse to the King King John was in Normandy when his Brother dyed and though he wasted over into England with all possible speed to take Possession of the Crown and that his presence was so necessary here for to keep his new Subjects in their Obedience to him yet he could make no long stay for before a Year came about he was forced to return into Normandy again upon information that Phillip King of France had with a powerful Army made an irruption into Normandy who took the Country of Main and several other places from the English the Britons at the same time possessing themselves of the City of Angiers the Towns of Gorney Butenant and Gensoline Arthur doing also Homage to King Phillip for Anjou Poictiers Turain Main Bretaign and Normandy but soon after a Peace was concluded between the Kings and thereby many places confirmed to the French King that he had taken and others yielded up by John upon the account of his neece Blanch's Marriage with Lewis heir of France besides 30000 Marks in Silver paid to Phillip and all this to the great dishonour as well as detriment of the English Nation About two Years after this to wit the third of the Kings Reign one Hugo Brune a Noble Man of Aquitain raised a Rebellion against King John in that Province but he and his Adherents being unable to withstand John's Forces made complaint of him to Phillip of France whereupon he was summoned by the Nobles of France as Duke or Earl of Aquitain and Anjou to appear before the French King and to stand to the Judgment of his Peers which he refused upon which the Court adjudged him to be deprived of all his Lands which he or his Predecessors held of the King of France King Phillip forthwith raises a great Army invades Normandy takes in many Castles and a great part of the Country without resistance but Arthur Duke of Bretaign besieging the Castle of Mirable with Queen Eleanor then in it King John fell upon him there with such Force and Fury that he routed his Army and took Arthur and many others of Note Prisoners Arthur sometime after was sent Prisoner to the Tower of Roan and was there barbarously Murdered some said by King John's own hands but in all this time Phillip prospered in so much that in a very short space King John was in a manner despoiled of all the Lands he held in Fee of the Crown of France King John once and again made great preparations to recover his lost Dominions and had the good success to destroy the French Fleet and recover the Province of Poictou but his Domestick troubles both
from his Barons and Clergy prevented his further designs yet about the 15th Year of his Reign having entred into a strong confederacy with other Foreign Princes he set sail for Bretaign and laid Siege to Nantes where a bloody Battle was fought the French King being once in great danger of his Life but at length proved victorious and took many Prisoners whereof of Note were the Earls of Brabant Holland Flanders and Bolloign the Emperor who was also at the Battle being driven out of the Field and 6000 marks on the King of Englands part was the purchase of a Truce for Five Years Commotions in England soon followed upon the neck of this and for male-Administration in so much that a● length Lewis the Dauphine was invited over by the Barons to take upon him the Crown of England who came accordingly with little opposition but being soon after displeased with their new King they resolved to cast him off and so he was fain at last to depart from whence he came This was an unhappy Reign but memorable for Magna Charta and for building of London Bridge of Stone This King dyed at Lyn as he was marching with his Army to Fight the Dauphine when he had reigned Seventeen Years and about five Months and was Aged 51 Years Anno. 1216. The first ground of this War was That Phillip of France did infringe the Truce made with England for 5 Years and invaded Normandy Then another Truce being made he violated that also and still fomented the Barons Wars HENRY III. COmmonly called Henry of Winchester from his Birth Place succeeded his Father King John at the Age of Nine Years as next heir maugre all the attempts of Lewis the Dauphine of France whose Forces were defeated at Lincoln by the Kings Guardian and Brother-in-Law the famous Earl of Pembrook and so from that time forward things went worse and worse with him most places yielding by Land and his Fleet utterly destroyed by Sea by Hubert de Burg Eustace a Monk that commanded it being slain by Richard a Bastard Son of King John he yielded up his claim to the Crown and so returned with a glimmering of it into France Henry about the 14th Year of his Reign determined to make War upon France and to that purpose he assembled at Portsmouth all his Nobility Knights and such a vast number both of Horse and Foot as never was done by any of his predecessors designing to have recovered all those Territories his Father had lost but when they came to be Shipped they had not Carriages enough for half the Army which he imputed to the Treachery of Hugo de Burg his chief Justice and in a rage drawing his Sword would have killed him had it not been for the Earl of Chester that interposed the Earl of Bretaign who was present and bound by an Oath to conduct the King to his Country and others perswaded him to defer his Expedition for that Season and so his mighty Preparations for the present vanished But the Year following King Henry with a mighty Army sailed into Bretaign and after he had ravaged and committed great Spoil in the Country laid Siege to the City of Nantes but after the Consumption of a vast Treasure and the loss of many Men by sickness and otherwise returned into England the same Year but set all things first in order for the Conservation of the Country of Bretaign The French making use of the Opportunity of the King's absence took the City of Rochel and so pushing on their Conquest reduced the whole Province of Poictiers to their obedience which King John his Father had Conquered whereat Henry being nettled prepared for another mighty Expedition but with the same fatal success as before For after several Bickerings wherein were lost many of his Men he made a Peace and returned re infecta but recovered at last the Province of Aquitain The later part of his Reign was so taken up with intestine Broils in the Barons Wars wherein sometimes he was worsted and imprisoned sometimes prevailed against his Enemies that he had no leasure to look after his Territories abroad and call the French to an Account for them till at last after he had lived 65 Years and of them Reigned 56 and odd Days and lavished away an immense Treasure he resigned his Breath to him that gave it at Edmundsbury in Suffolk was buried at Westminster Anno. 1272 and was happy in nothing so much as in the hopes of his eldest son Edward 1. One Cause of his Wars with France was that the French assisted the Scots against him 2. Another was the Recovery of those Towns and Provinces the French unjustly took from him and his Ancestors EDWARD I. SUrnamed ●ong-shanks the Son of Henry was in the Holy Land with Eleanor his Wife when the Crown fell to him being then about 33 Years old He began his Reign the 16th o● November and arrived with his Queen in England the 15 of Aug. following being in the Year 1273 He proved a warlike wise and victorious Prince and may justly be stiled The best Law-giver He made several Expeditions against Wales and Scotland the latter became Tributary to him and the former he reduced entirely under the Obedience of the Crown of England and has so continued to this day but the Stratagem he used for to satisfy those unruly Spirits and keep the● in Subjection may be worthy of observation Having about the 12th Year of his Reign reduced all Wales and by a Statute made at Ruthyn incorporated and annext it to the Crown of England but finding he could not win the good will of the People unless he would engage to reside amongst them or allow them a Prince of their own Nation to govern them and that after several Conferences no English Deputies would do but that they were content to submit to any Man he should name provided he were a Welchman at length he privily sends for his Queen then big with Child and caused her to remain at Carnarva● Castle where she was brought to bed of a Son at which time he sends for the Barons and chief Men of Wales to come to him to Ruthyn to deliberate about the affairs of the Country and when they came he told them he had now occasion to go out of that Country but before he went he was determined to name them a Prince if they promised to obey him they replyed They would provi●●d he were one of their own Nation wherefore 〈◊〉 King rejoined he would name one born in 〈◊〉 m and that could speak never a word of ●●glish and who was of unspotted Life and Con●● Csation and when all was agreed to he nam●d his Son Edward born as aforesaid But notwithstanding this King had so much to do with Wales and Scotland yet he was no ways ●egligent of his Affairs and Interest in France 〈◊〉 as soon as he had any leasure which was 〈◊〉 the 22d Year of his Reign first like a wise
had landed on the Coast of Normandy and burnt to the number of 21 Towns and Villages together with many Ships in the Haven of Trapart Staples and other places The French King by the means of Pope Leo with whom he was now accorded sues for a Peace which was at length concluded the Lady Mary the King's Sister for the tying of the knot being given to the French King in Marriage whom however she did not long enjoy Lewis XII dying 82 days after The remainder of this King's Reign was in a manner spent in Domestick Affairs which is not our Province to treat off till about the 35th Year when in conjunction with the Emperor he again makes war upon France the Emperor took the Field in Person and the English joining him under the command of Sir John Wallop laid siege to Landarsey the French King hasted with a great Army to succour the Town which was brought to great extremity upon whose approach the Emperor expecting to give Battle raised his Siege the Town being by this means relieved that was all the French cared for declining to hazard a Battle and so upon the approach of Winter both Camps broke up The Year following the King raised a mighty Army the Front led by the Duke of Norfolk the main Battle by the Duke of Suffolk where the King intended to be present himself also and the Rear by the Lord Russel attended with many other Nobles as the Earls of Surrey Oxford c. which about Whitsuntide landed at Calais and from thence leaving Bolloign to the right directed their march towards Muterell and were as they passed joined by the Emperors Forces under the Count of Buren but finding the foresaid place extraordinarily well fortified and provided for its defence the Duke of Suffolk with the King's Army wheels off towards Bolloign where he arrives July 19th and pitched his Camp to the East of the Town upon the Hill but thence removing into a Valley after many sharp skirmishes entred the lower Town deserted by the Inhabitants who under the covert of the Smoak got into the high Town undiscovered soon after the Tower called the Old Man was yielded up by sixteen Soldiers that kept it which notwithstanding discouraged not the Garrison who continued to make a vigorous Defence on the 26th of July the King arrives in Person orders a Mount to be raised upon the East-side planted with diverse pieces of Cannon and Mortars which incommoded the Town very much so that few Houses were left whole within it in this distress 200 French and Italians under the conduct of Joncurtio attempted to get into the Town in the Night and succeeded so well by the means of a Priest that spoke English that most of them were got over the Trenches before discovered and a matter of 120 got in the rest being either slain or taken at length a peice of the Castle being blown up the King stormed the place but did not carry it however the Cannon continuing playing and the Garrison having lost the best of their Commanders and men in this Action and fearing as well as concluding that such another assault must carry the Town thought it time to Capitulate before things came to the last extremity and so Articles were agreed upon and the Garrison marched our with Bag and Baggage to the number of 67 Horse 1563 Foot 87 wounded and 1927 Women and Children On the 25th of September the King with the Sword bore before him by the Marquess of Dorset enters Bolloign in Triumph the Trumpets all the while sounding on the Walls and two days after viewing of the Place caused St. Maries Church to be pull'd down and a mount to be made in the Room of it for the strengthning the Town and at his departure made Sir John Dudley Governor and on the first of October lands in England next year September 9th Sir John Dudley then Admiral lands with 6000 Men at Trey Port in Normandy burns the Town and Abby and 30 Ships in the Haven with the loss of 14 Men only The French attempted the recovery of Bulloign again and again but to little purpose so that at length a Peace was concluded wherein it was agreed the French King should pay King Henry 800000 Crowns within the term of Eight Years and then to have Bulloign restored to him but whilst the Oath for Confirmation hereof was taken by both Kings Monsieur Chatillon began to make a new Bastillion at the very mouth of the Haven of Bulloign calling it Chatillon's Garden the Lord Grey of Wilton then Governor of Bulloign advertised the King hereof by Sir Thomas Palmour requiring to know his pleasure therein the King advises with his Councel who all agree the Conditions of Peace ought by no means to be infringed and therefore to let the Bastilion stand whereupon the King ordered his Secretary to write to the Lord Grey to that purpose but then called to Sir Thomas privily and told him that notwithstanding the Contents of that Letter he should from him command the Lord Grey to rase the Fortification to the ground with all speed Sir Thomas replyed That a message by Word of Mouth contrary to a Letter would never be believed well saies the King tell him as I bid you and leave the doing of it to him Sir Thomas upon his arrival at Bulloign delivered the Governor the Letter and withall the Message who hereupon calls a Council what to do wherein they all agreed the Letter should be obey'd to which the Lord Grey himself said nothing but caused the Message to be written down verbatim from Sir Thomas Mouth and those of the Council to set their hands to it and when this was done the very next Night he issues out and rases the Fort to the ground and then sent Sir Thomas back to the King with Letters to acquaint him with what he had done who as soon as he saw him asked aloud What will he do it or no Sir Thomas delivering the Letter said Your Majesty shall know by these but the King half angry said Nay Tell me has he done it or no and being told it was done he turn'd about to his Lords and said what say you my Lords to this Chatillon's Garden is rased down to the ground whereunto one presently answered that he that had done it deserved to lose his Head to which the King immediately replies That he would rather lose a dozen such heads as his was then one such servant that had done it and therewith commanded presently the Lord Grey's Pardon to be drawn which he sent to him with Letters full of thanks and promises of Reward The cause why the King took this course was this lest if he had given order in writing for the rasing of the Fort it might have come to the knowledge of the French before it was done and so have been prevented This may be taken as an instance of King Henry's great Capacity and was the concluding act of his
A THEATRE OF WARS BETWEEN England France In all the Kings Reigns from the time of William the Conqueror to the Conclusion of the Peace on the 10th of September 1697. in the Eighth Year of the Reign of our Gracious Sovereign K. William III. Containing The Causes of the War the Battels Sieges State Policies Naval Fights Treaties and the several Truces Peaces Concluded Leagues made and broken c. With a large Discourse of the Salique Law by which to prevent the Right of other Princes the French pretend to Exclude Females from Enjoying the Crown of France and many other Transactions between the two Nations both Publick and Private With a Map of England and France on a Copper Plate By D. Jones London Printed for W. Whitwood at the Rose and Crown in Little-Britain 1698. A Map of ENGLAND and FRANCE To the Right Honourable ROBERT Lord Viscount LISLE c. My Lord THe Topicks usually insisted upon to engage the Favours of the Great are those of Honour and Goodness of both which your Lordship has no common share and if upon others they have been so powerfully influential in Addresses of this kind Your Lordship will Pardon me if being carried with the same current I presume to commit this little Treatise to Your Patronage as to a safe Azilum sufficient to skreen it from all the assaults of Male-volence and if it be an Argument of Imprudence to range far abroad for that Good which is attainable nigh at hand my Vicinity to your Lordship will not only justifie this my Practise but should I have neglected the improvement of it upon this occasion as I would hardly be brought to forgive my self for being guilty of the grossest Folly so would it bear a Semblance of the highest indignity offered to Your Honour and of the basest diffidence of Your Goodness The Subject My Lord must be acknowledged to be of an Heroical Nature and therefore a fit entertainment to Heroick Minds and consequently cannot but be so to Your Lordship however the structure may have suffered through the debility of the Architect who yet has this humbly to offer to your Lordship and under Your Patronage to the World that Truth is the great standard I have endeavoured to fix my Eye continually upon having strenuously avoided all false Idea's of the actions of my Country and herein have done both the Enemy that justice due to them in their various conflicts with us and made it appear there was no need of any such prevarication in that True Glory has been no stranger to the English Arms through the series of many hundred years together and though things may not here be exposed in their Native Lustre and Excellency yet I cannot otherwise then perswade my self but they retain still their Native and Original verity But to dwell no longer upon the Products of my own Teeming Fancy I submit all to Your Lordships adequate Judgment and if in this my studied Brevity you meet with any thing grateful or divertive so as that it may conciliate Your Lordship's Good Opinion of me his highest ambition is gratified who begs leave to subscribe himself My Lord Your Honours most Humble and most devoted Servant D. Jones TO THE READER GReat and Various have the Actions been between England and France since the Invasion of the Normans Anno Dom. 1066. which makes September next just 629 Years but that the French Nation should make a Conquest of England hereby nothing is more manifestly untrue that People being a distinct Nation from the French who conquering that Province by main force from Neustria call'd it Normandia in the Reign of Charles le Simple whence by the way 't is worth the remarking what kind of Kings France hath often had and what sort of Epithetts their own Cronicles give them which stand upon publick Record to all posterity as Charles le Simple Charles le Chauve Charles le Gros Charles le Gras Charles le Phrenetique Philip le Long Lovis le Begue c. Now tho there have been many and mighty Quarrels War-like Encounters and Feuds betwixt England and France yet in the reign of the Saxon Kings the Historians make little mention of any but since England was joined as it were to the Continent by addition of Normandy there have been as frequent traverses of War as have happen'd between any two Nations for of those 28 Kings and Queens which have reigned here from William the First to William the Third now Regnant there have been but a very few of them free from actual Wars with France yet in so long a tract of time when the French were at their highest pitch of Power they never did nor had any adequate power to invade England 't is true that they took footing once or twice in the Isle of Wight but it quickly grew too hot for them And touching Lewis the French King's Son who did stay and sway the Scepter here about two Years whereof they so much vaunt That was no Invasion but an Invitation being brought in by the discontented Barons in England so that in a manner France was the Theater of the War between the two Nations down from William I. to the present time As for the great Battles which were fought from time to time 't is confessed by the French Historians themselves that the English were at most but half in number to them in almost all Engagements insomuch that by pure prowess and point of the Sword the English possess'd two parts in three of that populous Kingdom and how all came to be lost again will appear by the sequel of the Story but here I cannot omit one remarkable accident that was concomitant with the English Arms in France and that is that when the English were at the height of their conquests in that Kingdom the Pope came to reside at Avignon in France and there was a common saying which continues still in memory among the Vulgar Ores le pape est devenu Francois Christ est devenu Anglois i. e. Lo the Pope is become a Frenchman and Christ an Englishman which related to the marvelous Exploits and Successes the English had in that Kingdom which were such that Sir Walter Rawleigh speaking of the famous Punick Wars puts this Quaere If one should ask which was the valiantest the Roman or the Carthaginian one might answer the Englishman who performed greater feats of Arms then either of them insomuch that some foreign Authors give this Character of France that it was the stage whereon the English acted their valour so often 'T is true that in canvassing of Treaties in subtleties or shuffling the Cards and mental reservations they were mostly too hard for the English who naturally use down right dealing and real integrity but in point of performance of what was stipulated especially if the Article related to Money whereof we drew from them vast summs they seldom exactly performed the Capitulation of any Treaty as Foreign Writers observe
so that part of King John ' s ransom is yet behind besides the Mony which was to be paid for Tournay in Henry VIII time the 500000 Crowns which Edward VI. was to have for Bolloign and those great expences which Queen Elizabeth was to have for sending her Armies to aid Henry IV. and the French Reformists two parts of three are not paid to this day but of these and other things more hereafter in their proper place THE WARS BETWEEN England and France ENGLAND exclusive of Scotland which had but very little share in the Wars we are to treat off is the greatest most Southern and best part of the Island of Great Britain heretofore called Albion and Britannia it lies together with Wales in the form of a great Triangle whereof the Southern Shoar is the base and Berwick the opposite Angle it was divided by the Romans into five parts by the Saxons into seven Kingdoms and now Wales included into fifty two Shires or Counties it s a fruitful Country full of valiant and industrious Inhabitants but in regard of its boundaries bears no proportion to France even considered in its narrowest Limits over which notwithstanding it has so often and so gloriously triumphed as will manifestly appear in the Series of the ensuing History But because the Wars with France in the time of the Saxons are very obscurely Recorded as to their Time Causes and Effects we will therefore begin with WILLIAM I. WHo was invidiously termed the Conqueror by the Monks of those times as the learned Sir William Temple has well observed though it s as true he could not claim in right of Succession himself being illegitimate and Edgar Atheline of the Saxon Blood Royal to take place before him but must therefore reign by vertue either of a compact or previous choise of the people of England the Sword which he had then in his Hand no doubt powerfully disposing of them also to such an Election he proved to be a Warlike King of England as he had been a successfull Duke of Normandy But tho he had wonderful Success in the Battle of Hastings which was fought October 14. Anno 1066. and got the day with the Slaughter of above 60000 of his English Enemies yet things did not succeed so well with him in his Kentish expedition for directing his March towards Dover with a design to reduce Kent first under his Obedience as considering this Country to be the Key of England and that what he had already done would be of little account if this were not accomplished The Kentish Men upon report hereof assembled to Archbishop Stigand at Canterbury and after serious Consultation resolved to arm and to force the Conqueror either to confirm their ancient Liberties or to die valiantly in the Field in defence of them and so under the command of the Archbishop and the Abbot Eglesine rendevouz'd at Swanescomb where it was agreed all the Passages should be stopped and that they should make use of the adjacent Woods for a covert from the discovery of the Enemy till he were fast within their Net the Duke next day expecting no such ambuscade in his March finds himself with part of his Army surrounded all of a sudden with numerous squadrons of Horse and Battalions of Foot which seemed the more surprizing to him because that every Man for a Signal as it was before agreed upon carrying a green Bough in his Hand they appeared unto him like a moving Wood wherein he was in danger quickly to lose himself Stigand approaches to the Duke tells him the occasion of such an assembly what their Demands where and what their Resolves if refused the Duke wisely considering the danger grants all their request and upon that was admitted into Rochester had the Earldom of Kent and Dover Castle yielded to him The former part of this Kings Reign as may be well imagined was taken up in making provision for his Adventurers and in subduing settling and modelling of his new English Subjects amongst whom were frequent Tumults and Insurrections occasioned mostly through the insults of the Normans that but too readily provoked them upon every occasion presuming no doubt very much upon the favour of the King their Countryman who on times shewed too much partiality in that regard 'T is true he had not been a year inthron'd before he was obliged upon some commotions there to pass over into Normandy but we do not find till about ten years after that he had any foreign Wars when passing over into Bretaign he laid Siege to the Castle of Dolence belonging to Earl Ralph which engaged Phillip King of France into the quarrel and so with a mighty Army marches against King William who finding himself hereby much streightned for Provision broke up his Siege not without loss both of Men and Horses and of some of his Baggage and hereupon ensued an accommodation but not a year after Robert the Kings eldest Son to whom upon his assuming of the English Crown he had assigned the Dukedom of Normandy in the presence of King Phillip of France because now his Father as he pretended would not suffer him to enjoy the said Dukedom in quiet went into France and being by the said King Phillip assisted with Forces committed great Ravages in Normandy burning many Towns and at length engaged with the King his Father in a Battel near the Castle of Garberie in France the King according to his usual manner charged with great Resolution and spared not to expose his Person to all dangers insomuch that he had in this Action first the misfortune to be unhorsed himself his Son William wounded and many of his Family slain and as an addition hereunto through imtemperate anger to curse his Son Robert who it was observed never prospered after Things after this continued in a tollerable State of amity between Phillip and this King till the last year of his Reign when residing in Normandy and being grown very corpulent the French King was pleased to speak reproachfully of him saying The King of England lyeth at Roan and keeps his Chamber as Women lying in do and there nourisheth his fat Belly which so offended King William that he said Well when after my delivery I go to Church I shall offer a Thousand Candles to him and sware to the same by God's Resurrection and his Brightness and this he made good the latter end of August the same year when he entred France with Fire and Sword and burnt down the City of Meaux together with the Church of St. Maries and two Fires inclosed therein who superstitiously perswaded themselves they ought not to forsake their Cell in such extremity tho to the apparent hazard of their lives This King died at Roan Anno Dom. 1087. when he had reigned 20 Years 8 Months and 16 days and lived threescore and four Years and was buried at Caen in Normandy The Causes of his Wars were 1. An Irruption made by the French into Normandy
contrary to the Articles of Peace and 2 The contumelious Language used by King Phillip concerning his Person WILLIAM II. SUrnamed Rufus or the Red during his 12 Years and about 8 Months Reign had no Wars with France neither do we read of any just cause given to engage him thereto but he unjustly invaded Normandy then subject to his Brother Robert and disposest him of the County of Owe many Castles and some Monasteries but was in the mean time by divine Justice assaulted by his younger Brother Henry in his own Dominions and it had like to have cost him his Life for he was bore down in fight from his Horse by a valiant Knight who taking his Sword for to kill him was stop'd by the Kings crying out Hold thy hand Knave I am the King of England which words so struck the Knight with Reverence that he mounted him on another Horse and the King to recompence his Valour and Submission swore by St. Luke's Face he should be his Knight and be written in his White Book He was accidentally killed by Sir Walter Tyrell as he was Hunting in the New Forrest Anno 1100. buried at Winchester and died unlamented HENRY I. WHo for his learning was called Beauclerke was youngest Son to William the Conqueror he passing over into Normandy made War against the Earl of Anjou who kept Main against his will and this engaged Lewis the French King to take part with the latter whereupon ensued many sore Battles both in France and Normandy between them with various success at length taking Anjou's Daughter for Wife to his Son William Peace was concluded But it will not be amiss to give the Reader a tast of the high Spirit and Resolution of this King in a personal quarrel he had in France In his fathers life time he accompanying his eldest Brother Robert into that Kingdom while the latter associated himself with the then French King Henry according to the suitableness of their years took up with the company and divertisements of the Dauphine and being one Evening at Chess together the Dauphine happened to lose a considerable summ of Money to the Prince at that Game whereat the former grew so enraged that after some reproachful Language he struck the Prince who not brooking the high affront with the Chess-board knocks the Dauphine fairly down to the ground and being intent to pursue his Revenge his Brother Robert fortunately came in and minding him of the danger away they both fled and with great hast and difficulty recovered the next part of Normandy before their pursuers could reach them This King made his Exit as his Father before him in Normandy in the Year 1135. after he had reigned 35 Years and 4 Months The cause of this War we have before assigned to wit the King of France's taking part with Anjou against Henry STEVEN KIng of England was Son to Adella a Daughter of William the Conqueror and Nephew to the two last Kings he laid claim to the Kingdom of England in the year 1135 notwithstanding his Oath to Mawd the Empress and Daughter to Henry the First to the contrary wherefore without looking abroad into France for any Wars his whole Reign which was Eighteen Years and about ten Months was in a manner taken up in intestine Broils and Contests about his right to the English Crown wherein he was stiffly opposed by several Nobles and by the said Empress Mawd and her Son Henry afterwards Henry the 2d whom she bare to Geoffrey Plantagenet Earl of Anjou and Duke of Normandy from whence sprang the Noble Family of the Plantagenets that so long governed England he was once made Prisoner at Bristol and at last notwithstanding he had Children of his own was forced to adopt Henry for his Son and Heir and the Nobles sware fealty to him accordingly HENRY II. SOn of Mawd and Geoffrey Plantagenet as aforesaid at the Age of Three and Twenty Years and even in the life time of his Mother under whom he claimed began his Reign over England in the Year 1154. This Prince notwithstanding his Domestick Troubles and famous Atchievements against the Welch and his conquest of a great part of the Kingdom of Ireland so as he was the first of our English Kings that was stiled the Lord of that Country yet found opportunity to make War in France upon several occasions the Allyance he had made with the French Court by the Marriage of his Son Henry to King Lewis his Daughter Margaret proving rather an incitative to Contention and Discord then a bond of Peace and Amity The famous city of Tholouse was chiefly the seat of this War which was once and again bravely Assaulted by King Henry and as vigorously defended by Lewis In his first Expedition against this Place he was accompanied with Malcolm King of Scots a Welch King and with others of highest Rank and Dignity in England Normandy Aquitain Anjou and Gascoigny during his second expedition in France the Earls of Bulloign and Flanders with 600 sail of Ships attempted to make a Descent into England but their undertaking proved frustrate and abortive through the vigilance Courage and Prudence of Richard Lacy who then Governed England This King is famous or rather infamous in History for the many base Children he had being no less then 19 in Number for his fair Concubine Rosamond for whom he built that celebrated Labyrinth at Woodstock the recesses whereof could not be penetrated into but by insuperable jealousie the Queen as it was said by the help of a clew of Thread finding of her out at last and so used her that she lived not long after and no less to be mentioned for the troubles he met with from that proud Prelate Thomas a Becket to whose shire after his Murder much blind Devotion has been paid even by the greatest Potentates Tho his Son Henry who was crowned King in his life time and dyed before him gave him much disturbance yet when he found after his death that others and particularly his Son John conspired against him he was so strucken with grief that cursing his Son and the day of his own Birth he died July 6. 1189. Aged 61 having reigned 34 Years and almost seven Months The causes of the War were That King Lewis did incite the Prince his Son against the laws of Nature to oppose Henry his Father in the war time Lewis had promis'd upon the word of a King to meet him in order to a Treaty but he failed for his own Advantage whereupon Henry being sensible of the Fraud sought him out with his Army and made him give ground thereupon another interview being appointed betwixt Terwyn and Arras Histories relate that as the two Kings were busie in Conference there fell a clap of Thunder between them and meeting the next day the like accident happen'd which struck a Consternation in both Armies and inclined the Kings the more to an accommodation RICHARD I. WHo for his Valour was
Northampton and in the third was the King himself The Field being thus ordered the King mounted upon a white Hobby and rode from rank to rank encouraging every one to the performance of his Duty The French Army was at least twice more in number consisting of above 60000 Combatants with the flower of all the French Chivalry whereof the chief was the Duke of Alanzon the King's Brother there were besides the Dukes of Lorain and Luxemburg the Earls of Flanders and Artois with other Foreign Princes The French King was so fierce in Confidence of Victory that he would scarce admit of any previous time for Counsel the old King of Bohemia advis'd that the Army should receive some refreshment before the Fight and that the ●rigade of Gen●ua whereof there were about 15000 Balestiers or Cross-bo●●s should make the first Front and the Cavalry to follow next which being agreed upon the Duke of Alanz● did stomack that the Genouese should have the Honour of the first Rank This bred such a discontent that they seem'd to be more incens'd against their Leaders then against the Enemy but in the interim there fell such a huge shower of Rain that wetted their Bow-st●ings which they had not the wit to cover all the while as the English did insomuch that for the limmerness thereof when they came to Engage they grew useless at the ceasing of the Shower Heaven appear'd in the Action for the English for the Sun did shine full in the faces of the French thereby dazling their Eyes but on the Back of the English King Edward being got into a Wind-mill all the while whence as from a Watch-tower he might explore and behold the face of the Enemy and discerning the disturbance that happen'd because the Genouese were put to change their post instantly gave order to charge that part which made the Genouese recoil Alanzon perceiving this rides about in a rage crying out Sa Sa le ts make way over the bellies of these Italians for they do but hinder us so riding thorow them he came up to the English wing where the Prince of Wales was the fight grew furious and doubtful insomuch that the Commanders about the Prince sent up to the King for a recruit of Power the King asking the messenger whether his Son was wounded or slain and being answered no he replied Then tell them who sent you that as long as my Son is alive they send no more to me for my will is that he win his Spurs and have the honour of this day so the combattings on both sides being wonderfully eager the French King had his Horse killed under him and so with-drew which being known by the English it added much to their Courage so that soon after they became masters of the Field and being in heat of Blood they made no Prisoners but put all to the Sword so that the number of the French slain surmounted the whole Army of the English for there fell about 30000 of the Enemy the chief whereof was the Duke of Alanzon the Dukes of Bourbon and Lorain the Earl of Flanders the Dauphine de Viennois Son to Imbert who afterwards gave the Province of Dauphiny to the French King provided his first Son should be called Dauphine in perpetuum and as a Corollary to this mighty Victory the next day sending Scouts abroad there was another French Army discovered under the conduct of the Arch-bishop of Roan whom the English encounter'd also and utterly defeated There was one passage very remarkable in this Battle whereof Sir Walter Rawleigh makes mention That a day before the Engagement the King sent one Captain David Gam a Welshman to explore and view the French Army which he did with no less danger than Fidelity and brought word that there were in the Enemies Army men enough to Kill enough to take Prisoners and enough to run away which proved true and so the Welsh Captain was knighted in the Field This mighty Victory was seconded a few years after by another more memorable for the Black Prince having now wun his Spurs and being taper'd up to his full growth was sent to Gascoigny where the truce being expir'd he overruns all the Country as far as Tourain thereupon John the then French King rais'd a potent Army more numerous then that at Cressy and going to find out the Prince of Wales he heard of him about Poictiers having not above 10000 effective Men in his whole Army and they also having been tir'd with long Marches whereas the French were fresh and were 6 times as many whereupon the Prince being advised to turn falls about towards Bourdeaux when he was suddenly surrounded by the French Army upon which a Battle being intended there came two Cardinals to mediate an Accommodation but the French King would hearken to none unless the Prince as a vanquish'd man would render up himself and his whole Army to discretion this was of hard digestion at a Prince of such a Courage therefore he answered That at the Mediation of the Holy Father he was willing to restore such places which he had taken en bonne Guerre provided this might be done without prejudice to his Honour whereof he was accountable to the King his Father c. the French King not hearkning to this resolved to fight thereupon the Prince also resolv'd for his part to part with his life at as high a rate as he could in such a strait wherefore making a vertue of necessity by a happy providence he makes choice of an advantagious ground for finding that the French Army consisted most in Cavalry he entrench'd among the adjacent Vineyards where when the French Horse furiously entred being wrap'd and entangled amongst the Vines the English Archers did so ply pelt and gall them that being thereby disordered unrank'd and routed the whole Army in a short time was totally defeated But it seems that this Battel was not so fierc● as that of Cressy where no quarter was given for in this a great number of Prisoners were made among whom was King John himself and Phillip his youngest Son whom the Princ● brought to England and as the French Historian themselves confess he was so civil unto him a● the while that he knew not whither he was i● quality of a free King or of a Captive And here a fair occasion is given to discover● and vindicate a great truth touching the individual person who first took King John and h● was a Welsh Gentleman one Howel of the Life-guard to the Prince which Guard used to carry a kind of battle Axes or Partisans th● Howel it seems being one of them in the confus'd medley and fury of the Fight did fortunately meet with the King and seis'd upon him but suddenly in the hurly burly there were some Frenchmen of the Prince's Army rush'd in and the King knowing one of them call'd to him whose name was Myrobrecht de Artois who going on with others to present the Prisoner to