Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n john_n king_n pope_n 14,323 5 7.1772 4 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
A44712 A discours of the empire, and of the election of a king of the Romans, the greatest busines of Christendom now in agitation as also of the Colledg of Electors, their particular interests, and who is most likely to be the next emperour / by J.H. Howell, James, 1594?-1666. 1658 (1658) Wing H3065; ESTC R4781 35,171 133

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

wheras a Boore or Plebean is condemn'd according to the quality of his offence to carry only a Chair from one County to another such a peculiar punishment ther was of old in France for wheras ther was a law call'd la loy de la chevelure that none shold wear long hair but the Nobles he who had committed any degenerous offence was adjudg'd to have his hair cutt off before the tribunal of Iustice and so was degraded from being a gentleman his honor going away with his hair and so made a Roturier or Yeoman The story tells us that the Emperour Frederique Barbarossa made Hermannus Count Palatin of the Rhin and ten Counts more to carry doggs above one German mile for the praedations and ill balancing of dollars with other insolences they had committed while he was in Italy warring with the Pope against whom we read he had twelve pitched battails Such another clash the Emperour Conradus had with Guelphus Duke of Bavaria who bore up a good while against him at last the Emperour recruting his Army with Italian Auxiliaries shut up the Duke in VVinsberga and beleagred him so close that he was ready to famish And the Emperour having bin provok'd so farr that he had vow'd to put all to fyre and sword The Duchesse being a comely couragious Lady went through the throng of the army into the Emperours tent and made such a flexanimous speech which so melted the Emperour that he publish'd a proclamation that for her sake all the Women of VVinsberga shold have safe conduct to depart and carry away upon their backs as much of their most precious wealth that they could bear Herupon the Dutchesse took the Duke upon her back and evry wife by her example her husband mayds and unmarried women took up their brothers and kindred and so all marched out The Emperour being much taken with this witty peece of humanity publish'd a generall act of Amnestia and so the Duke was redintegrated into his favor This memorable story I couch'd once into verse being a task impos'd upon me and the Epigram runns thus Tempore quo Bavarum superârat Roma Guëlghum Seria festivo Res fuit acta joco Conradus victor VVinsbergam oblesserat Vrbem Hinc fame Deditio facta premente fuit Matribus at miserans Bavaris sponsaeque Guelphi Induperator iis tale Diploma dedit Quaelibet ut Mulier tuto cum Rebus abiret Quas humeris posset sustinuisse suis Cum reliquis Comitissa novo Diplomate nixa Inde viros portant pondera grata suos Pendebant collo nati nataeque lacertis Sic abiit licita Faemina Virque fugâ Hac delectatus Caesar pietate pepercit Omnibus atque novum cum Duce faedus init But to return where we left another cause of the Empours decay was that being often reduc'd to som exigents for want of money they us'd to have recours to the richest Imperial towns for a supply who us'd to lend them money and the Emperours payed them their money back with immunities Many towns in Italy got their necks out of Caesars yoak this way and som of them very cheap as Florence for it cost her but six thousand Crownes and Luca ten thousand c. In so much that the liberties of most of the free Citties of Italy much more of high and low Germany sprung out of the necessities of the Emperours wherby their power as well as their glory did daylie decline Adde herunto that the Bishopps of Rome feather'd their nests from time to time with the Eagles plumes specially in Italy for besides the City of Rome and the Countreys adjacent such was the high reverence the Church had in those daies that many other territories were given to the Apostolical See and since by well devoted Princes Insomuch that the Pope is grown herby to he a great temporal Prince for the state of the Church extends above three hundred miles in length and about two hundred miles in breadth It contains the Dutchy of Ferrara Bologna Romania the Marquisat of Ancona Sabina Perugia with a part of Toscany the Patrimony of Saint Peter and Latium in these there are above 50 Bishopricks He doth signorize also over the Dutchy of Spoleto and the Exarchat of Ravenna he hath the Towns of Benevento in the Kingdom of Naples and the County of Venisse in France call'd Avignon he hath title good enough to Naples also herself and Calabria but rather than incurr the diplesure of the King of Spain his Champion and chief supporter of his Chair he is contented with an annual heriot of a white Mule with a pursfull of pistols about her neck He pretends also to be Lord paramount of Sicily Urbin Parma and Masseran as also of Norway Ireland and England since King Iohn did prostrat our Crown at Pandulpho his Legats feet His Dominions reach from one Sea to another viz. from the Tyrrhene to the Adriatique and these Territories run through the center of Italy which enables the Pope to do good or harm to the Princes about him and makes him capable to be an Vmpire or a potent Enemy his authority being mixt twixt secular and spiritual for he can use the sword and thunder-bolt of Excommunication at plesure And to return to our chief subject most of the Countreys pointed at before being feathers of the Eagle did much decrease her strength Moreover as the Roman Church did this way impair the power of the Empire so the Reformed Church and the difference of Religion in Germany did much enfeeble it For those Princes who turn'd Lutherans daylie encroach'd upon and impropriated the demeans of the Church which was a great support to the Emperour being more devoted to him than to the secnlar Princes But to go a little more particularly to work we will not rove in Asia and Afrique where so many mighty parts of the Continent fell from the Roman Empire nor will we look so farr back in Europe as to speak of the defection of Spain France and Great Britain which was the first Province that fell from Rome though indeed Rome may he sayed to have fallen first from Her being not able by reason of warrs she had in other Countreys to protect the Britains against the Picts as England sayes now in point of Religion that she had never fallen away from Rome unlesse Rome had fallen from her self I say we will not look so fart back but come to more modern Times since the Empire came within the German pale The Suisses were one of the last that revolted who being summon'd to the Imperiall Chamber at Spire they sent a rough hewn Ambassadors totell the Imperial Councel in these words Domini confaederati Heluetii vos vicinos suos salvere jubent mirantur verò quod tam crebris citationibus c. The Lords Confaederats of Switzerland do greet you their Neighbours but they wonder that by your so frequent citations you wold disquiet Them therfore they pray and exhort you
G GEnsericus the Vandal sacks Rome 5 Galba the first Emperour chosen by the Soldiers 7 A geer upon Rome and Venice 11 Of the Goths and Vandals 12 German Princes do carry Dogs for their punishment 17 German Princes feather themselfs with the Eagles Plumes 61 Germany able to raise 200 thousand electif men 54 H HUngary took name from the Huns 11 Henry the second in France had the first Title of Majesty 30 The high power of the King of the Romans 37 Hans-Towns whence derived 42 How Hamburgh first receiv'd the English staple 46 A hundred and fifty millions the revenues once of the Roman Monarchy 54 How the Imperial Towns got out of Caesars yoak 59 I IUlius Caesar cimented the Empire with his blood 7 Iulianus bought the Empire of the Soldiers 10 Imperial Towns 42 Immunities payed for monies to the Towns of the Empire 59 Ibraim the Turks Ambassador his witty Parable 64 King Iames his prophetique saying 68 K KIngs continued in Rome 140 years 7 King a more antient title than Emperour 29 Kings of Spain sometimes called Emperours 32 King of Denmark Arch-bishop of Breme 39 L THe late Swedish army like to have prov'd such another as that of the Goths and Vandals of old 11 Lombardy freed of the Goths by King Pepin 14 Lutherans a great cause of the decay of the Empire 62 The latitude of power which the Princes of the Empire have 96 The lubricity of political bodies as well as natural 108 M THe Moors and Saracens sack Rome 5 The manner of electing an Emperour 25 Majesty and other high titles how they began 30 Maximilian Duke of Bavaria takes Prague from the Palatin with a lesser army 69 Marq-Spinola takes the Palatinat 69 The Mahumetan Moon fill'd by the wane of the Christian Empire 65 Of the Marquis of Brandenburg his interest 85 N THe names of divers of the Emperours that were put to violent deaths 9 A notable saying of Charles Martel 13 The names and offices of all the Electors 21 Nothing so unlike as the present Empire and the old 53 A notable story of a Bavarian Dutchess 57 The notable symbolisation of sense 'twixt the Psalmist and a Pagan philosopher 108 O ONe of the cause that may oververthrow the Turkish Empire 9 The new Ottoman Emperour must encrease the Ianizaries pay 9 Otho the third the first Establisher of the Electors 20 The Offers of Wenceslaus to the Electors to make his Son Emperour 55 Of the Swed 82 The tremendous Oath the Electors take 103 P THe present King of Spain a Goth by descent 12 Pepin a little man but a great Conqueror 14 Pope Iohn the ninth taken Prisoner and his eyes pluck'd out 20 Palatin of the Rhin Arch-sewer of the Roman Empire 22 Parallel 'twixt the Empire pass'd and present 51 Palatin of the Rhin adjudg'd to carry a Dog for his punishment 57 The Pope a great Temporal Prince 60 The poor revenues of the Empire 53 Q QUarrell 'twixt Rome and Germany for choosing the Emperour 19 Quarrel 'twixt Queen Elizabeth and the Hans-Towns 43 Quarrel 'twixt the Count Palatin and the Duke of Bavaria touching the Vicariat of the Empire 74 Quarrel 'twixt the King of Denmark and Hamburgh 81 A thing like a quarrel 'twixt the King of Scots and the Palsgrave 97 R THe Rise of the Roman Empire 5 Rome eight times ravish'd and ransack'd 5 The Roman Emperours held their lifes from the Army 8 The Roman Monarchy shrunk from a Giantess to a Dwarf Reasons why the King of Hungary is likeliest to be Emperour 88 The revennues of the French Church 300 millions of liures and 20. 91 S THe several kinds of Goverments in Rome 7 The Stewards in Scotland and Charles Martel of France had the same beginning 13 The Septemvirat or the seven Electors 18 Staplers their first rise 43 The Suisse one of the last that fell from the Empire c. 63 The Spaniard the Popes Champion 61 The small power of the Emperour 53 A sad saying of the Turks 66 The Spaniard comes from the elder House of Austria 90 The several Interests of the Princes of Germany 85 T TOtila the Hun sacks Rome 5 The translation of the Empire to Constantinople fatal to Rome 5 Thirty Emperours put to violent deaths by the Army 8 Two Turkish Emperours kill'd in less than 25 years 9 A Tradition remarkable how the House of Austria came to be so great 26 The Turk gives place to the Emperors Ambassadors above all other 31 The Titles of the Heirs apparent to the Empire from time to time 37 The Territories of the Pope 300 miles in length 60 The Pope pretends to be Lord Paramount of England by King Iohns Grant 61 Titles of the House of Austria 89 V THe Vastnes of the old Roman Monarchy 54 The vast circumference of Rome in Vopiscus time 50 miles compass 54 A very witty embleme of the Turks Ambassador touching Germany 64 A very witty devise of the Dutchess of Bavaria to preserve her husband 58 The Vicarship of the Empire challeng'd by the Count Palatin and his reasons 74 A very witty way found by a Iesuitt to make the old Duke of Bavaria get Children 71 The Upper Palatinat the County of Cham with the Electorship conferr'd upon the Bavarian 79 W THe wantones of the peeple more than the Tarquins cause of the expulsion of Kings 6 A weak Act of the Roman Senat. 7 The Welsh and Irish have no other name for an English man but Saisson or Saxon. 12 Wenceslaus the Emperour depos'd and the manner how it was 35 Why England fell from the Roman Emperour and from the Pope 62 Were not the Imperial Eagles imp'd with Austrian feathers they wold be as bare as a Coot Gloria Honorque Deo saeclorûm in saecula sunto Chronogramma