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honour_n duke_n guilty_a steward_n 1,360 5 13.5250 5 false
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A63208 The tryal of William Viscount Stafford for high treason in conspiring the death of the King, the extirpation of the Protestant religion, the subversion of the government, and introduction of popery into this realm : upon an impeachment by the knights, citizens, and burgesses in Parliament assembled, in the name of themselves and of all the commons of England : begun in Westminster-Hall the 30. day of November 1680, and continued until the 7. of December following, on which day judgment of high treason was given upon him : with the manner of his execution the 29. of the same month. Stafford, William Howard, Viscount, 1614-1680. 1681 (1681) Wing T2239; ESTC R37174 272,356 282

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Rabble Lord High Steward Is it your Lordships pleasure to Adjourn Lords Ay Ay. Lord High Steward Then this House is Adjourned to the Parliament Chamber Then the Lords withdrew in their former Order and the Committee of Commons went back to their House Mr. Speaker resumed the Chair A Message was sent from the Lords by Sir Timothy Baldwyn and Sir Samuel Clarke Mr. Speaker The Lords have commanded us to acquaint this House that they have appointed William Viscount Stafford to be brought to the Bar in Westminster-Hall to morrow morning at Ten of the Clock to receive Judgment The Commons Adjourned to Eight of the Clock the next Morning The Seventh Day Tuesday December 7. 1680. ABout the hour of Eleven the Lords Adjourned into Westminster-Hall going thither in their former Order into the Court there erected and Mr. Speaker having left the Chair the Committee of Commons were seated as before The Lords being sate Proclamation was made for Silence and the Lord High Steward being seated on the Wool-pack with Garter Principal King of Arms the Usher of the Black Rod Nine Maces attending him with all the rest of the Solemnity as was at first expressed took the Votes of the Peers upon the Evidence beginning at the Puisne Baron and so upwards in this Order the Lord Stafford being as the Law requires absent Lord High Steward My Lords I am an humble Suitor to your Lordships That you will give me leave to collect your Votes as I sit for I am not able to stand Which being granted the Lord High Steward proceeded Lord High Steward My Lord Butler of Weston Is William Lord Viscount Stafford Guilty of the Treason whereof he stands Impeached or Not Guilty Lord Butler Not Guilty upon my Honour The same Question was put to the rest whose Names and Votes follow Lord Arundel of Trerice Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Crewe Guilty upon my Honour Lord Cornwallis Guilty upon my Honour Lord Holles Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Wootton Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Rockingham Guilty upon my Honour Lord Lucas Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Astley Guilty upon my Honour Lord Ward Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Byron Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Hatton Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Leigh Guilty upon my Honour Lord Herbert of Cherbury Guilty upon my Honour Lord Howard of Escrick Guilty upon my Honour Lord Maynard Guilty upon my Honour Lord Lovelace Guilty upon my Honour Lord Deincourt Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Grey of Wark Guilty upon my Honour Lord Brook Guilty upon my Honour Lord Norreys Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Chandos Guilty upon my Honour Lord North and Grey Guilty upon my Honour Lord Pagett Guilty upon my Honour Lord Wharton Guilty upon my Honour Lord Eure. Guilty upon my Honour Lord Cromwell Guilty upon my Honour Lord Windsor Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Conyers Guilty upon my Honour Lord Ferrers Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Morley Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Mowbray Not Guilty upon my Honour Lord Viscount Newport Guilty upon my Honour Lord Viscount Faulconberge Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Conway Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Berkley Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Maslesfield Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Hallifax Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Feversham Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Sussex Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Guilford Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Shaftsbury Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Burlington Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Ailesbury Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Craven Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Carlisle Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Bath Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Essex Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Clarendon Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of St Albans Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Scarsdale Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Sunderland Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Thanet Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Chesterfield Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Carnarvan Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Winchelsea Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Stamford Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Peterborough Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl Rivers Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Mulgrave Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Barkshire Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Manchester Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Westmorland Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Clare Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Bristol Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Denbigh Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Northampton Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Leicester Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Bridgwater Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Salisbury Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Suffolk Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Bedford Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Huntingdon Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Rutland Not Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Kent Guilty upon my Honour Earl of Oxford Guilty upon my Honour Lord Chamberlain Not Guilty upon my Honour Marquess of Worcester Not Guilty upon my Honour Duke of Newcastle Not Guilty upon my Honour Duke of Monmouth Guilty upon my Honour Duke of Albemarle Guilty upon my Honour Duke of Buckingham Guilty upon my Honour Lord Privy-Seal Guilty upon my Honour Lord President Guilty upon my Honour Lord High Steward Guilty upon my Honour Prince Rupert Duke of Cumberland Guilty upon my Honour Lord High Steward My Lords upon telling your Votes I find there are Thirty one of my Lords that think the Prisoner Not Guilty and Fifty five that have found him Guilty Serjeant make Proclamation for the Lieutenant of the Tower to bring his Prisoner to the Bar. which was done and his Lordship came to the Bar. Lord High Steward My Lord Stafford I have but heavy tidings for you your Lordship hath been Impeached of High-Treason you have pleaded Not Guilty my Lords have heard your Defence and have considered of the Evidence and their Lordships do find you Guilty of the Treason whereof you are Impeached Lord Stafford Gods Holy Name be praised my Lords for it Lord High Steward What can your Lordship say for your self why Judgment of Death should not be given upon you according to the Law Lord Stafford My Lords I have very little to say I confess I am surprized at it for I did not expect it but Gods will be done and your Lordships I will not murmur at it God forgive those that have sworn falsly against me My Lords I conceive I have something to say for respit of Judgment I have been at many Tryals in my Life but I never saw any Tryal where the party tried did not hold up his Hand which I was never asked to do I thought it had been a very material point in the Law That by the holding up of the Hand he might be known to be the Person I have read lately since I had the misfortune to be thus accused Sir Edward Coke upon the Pleas of the Crown and he says that Misnomer the not giving a man
made intercession by Friends to my Sister and she told me that she gave him 7 l. to bear his Charges to Paris with that Proviso that he would never trouble them more L. H. Stew. But were they not angry with him Mr. J. Turbervill Here he is he cannot say they ever gave him an angry word in their days I 'm sure I never did L. H. Stew. Did you not forbid him the House Mr. J. Turbervill No. Mr. Edw. Turbervill These are people that take not the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and therefore are not fit to be Witnesses L. Stafford Now your Lordships see what a Villain he is Mr. Serj. Maynard You must give good words my Lord for none but good words are given you Lord Stafford I must call them Vill●ius or my self Traitor L. H. Steward You say they gave him 7 l. upon condition they should never see him more Mr. J. Turbervill I did not say my Sister said upon condition she would give him 7 l. he would never trouble us more it was his Declaration Lord Stafford One thing I w●●ld ask Mr. Turbervill more and that is about this man's being disinherited Whether he could or whether he was Heir to any Estate or not L. H. Steward What say you to it Mr. J. Turbervill By all the Information of our Relations the Estate was made by my Grand-father to my Father for life and after my Fathers life to my Mothers and after my Mothers life to my Eldest Brother and the Heirs males of his Body and for want of such afterwards to me and the Heirs males of my Body and in case I had none then to my Fathers Brother and his Heirs males and if he had no Heirs males then after that to the right Heirs of the Grand-father This was before my time L. H. Stew. Well then that Remainder to the right Heirs might come to him and so there was some Estate for him to lose and that Remainder might be docked by the Tenant in Tail I would ask Was there any Recovery suffered to bar that Intail Mr. J. Turbervill Yes I think there was one upon my Brothers Marriage L. H. Stew. Mr. Turbervill Were you told you should be disinherited Mr. E. Turbervill Yes my Lords L. H. Stew. Who told you so Mr. E. Turbervill My eldest Brother L. H. Stew. What did he tell you Mr. E Turbervill He told me it should not come to me L. H. Stew. How should it come to you Mr. E. Turbervill I am not so good a Lawyer as to tell that whether it could or no but I thought by Succession Lord Stafford Then he says he came to serve my Lady Mullineux in 72. it may be it is so as he says I don't know it of my own knowledge but I pray he may answer whether it was in 71 or 72. Mr. J. Turbervill In January or February 71. Mr. Treby That is the beginning of the year 72 according to the Almanack L. Staff My Lords for the present I do not remember any thing more Oh yes my Lords he says he was at such a time at my Lord Powis's when my Lord Castlemain was at Powis-Castle which must be either in the year 72 73 or 74. Now I desire you would ask Mr. Lydcot whether my Lord Castlemain was there or could be there in any of those years Then Lydcot stood up L. H. Stew. What do you ask him my Lord Lord Stafford I desire to ask him whether in the year 72 73 or 74. which are the years Turbervill says he was at my Lord Powis's at Powis-Castle whether my Lord Castlemain was at Powis-Castle or could be there at that time L. H. Stew. Was my Lord Castlemain there in any of those years Lydcot My Lords I can prove he was not as much as I am capable of proving a Negative I was with him in the years 72 73 and 74. L. H. Steward Where Lydcot He was in England in 73. I was with him all the while and I am sure since I knew him he was never in Wales and I was never absent from him since I knew him which is nine years not four months in all I have travelled with him and been abroad with him L. H. Stew. Turbervill When do you say my Lord Castlemain was at Powis Castle Mr. Turbervill I think it was in the year 73. L. H. Stew. By what Token do you remember him there Mr. Turbervill He was arguing with my Lord Powis about Religion and several times he did so I believe it was in the year 73. L. H. Stew. What say you to that Lydcot I can assure your Lordships he was not there then I was always with him that year he had many times a design to go there but he could not but put it off and the last time he was there I can prove it was fifteen years ago L. H. Stew. I desire to know of you this Friend can you take it upon you to affirm upon the Faith of a Christian that you were never from my Lord Castlemain all the year 73 Lydcot I can give an account to half a week where he was And when I was absent from him it was beyond Sea and all that while I kept Correspondence with him every Post and received Letters from him constantly once a week dated from Liege This was in the time of my absence L. H. Stew. Were you at Liege when my Lord was in England or were you with him all the time that he was in England Lydcot My Lords I was with him all the time he was in England and was never absent from him all that compass of time but when he sent me into England from Liege L. H. Stew. Then he was at Liege himself Lydcot Yes my Lords L. H. Stew. Was that in the year 73 Lydcot Yes my Lords I was then in England But my Lords I can give you an whole account for my Lord and I never made any Journeys but I put them down L. H. Steward You say you can give a particular account of the whole year 73. even to the compass of four days in that year at most Lydcot No my Lords I do not say so but I say I can give an account of the whole time I have been with him within four months L. H. Stew. Were any of those months within the year 73 Lydcot No I was with him all the year 73. L. H. Stew. Will you take it upon you to say That every day in 73. you were with my Lord Lydcot Every day my Lords L. H. Stew. Every week Lydcot Yes I do not think but that I was My Lord did me the honour to make me as it were his Companion Mr. Serj. Maynard No you do your self the honour to make your self his Companion he made you his Servant L. H. Steward Come where are your Notes you pretend to speak by your Diary or your Journal let us hear a whole account of the year 73. for you come to testifie as if