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A54595 The constitution of parliaments in England deduced from the time of King Edward the Second, illustrated by King Charles the Second in his Parliament summon'd the 18 of February 1660/1, and dissolved the 24 of January 1678/9 : with an appendix of its sessions / observed by Sr. John Pettus ... Knight. Pettus, John, Sir, 1613-1690. 1680 (1680) Wing P1905; ESTC R18517 172,347 454

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Curiae Cancellariae but whether it was the same Office which is now executed by the Masters of the Chancery Non Constat however they were then under the notion of Clerks in an Ecclesiastical sence but as Writs were sent to Clerks or Ecclesiasticks with the Title of Magister so in Henry the Fourths time and not before there were Writs sent to Laicks with that Title and those were Persons of high Quality viz. in the 2.3 and 6. Hen. the 4th Magistro Thomae de la Ware sometimes call'd Ware and Warre to attend those Parliaments and the same Thomas was also Summon'd to the Parliaments of the 1.2.3.4.5.7.8 and and 9. of Hen. the 5th Magistro Tho. de la Ware and so to the 1.2 and 3. of Hen. the Sixth but in the second Parliament of that year Mr. De la Ware was not Summon'd but one VVrit was Magistro Johanni Stafford Thes Angliae and another VVrit Magistro Willielmo Alremith Custod privati Sigilli But in the 4th and 6. of Hen. the Sixth both those were left out and the same Magistro Tho. de la Ware Summond again and for brevity passing to the 36. of Hen. the Eighth and then it was expressly Roberto Bows Mil. Magistro sive Custod Rotulorum Cancellariae being then also chief of the twelve Masters of Chancery However Sir Edw. Coke saith they are Assistants to the Lord Chancellor or as the Manuscript saith Cojudices and thereupon ex Officio do sit in the Lords House and the antiquity of the Places allotted them there as will be shewn and their Imployments in every Parliament makes their attendance a kind of Praescription And now I proceed to such as sit in the Lords House by Patent only without Tenure VVrit or Praescription CHAP. XVII Of the Clerks of the Lords House HEre I am to speak of such as have places allowed them in the House of Lords by vertue of Patents only and first of the Clerks This Title of Clerk from Cleros when the Clergy had by reason of their great learning the guidance of Civil Offices was given as an honour to them and most of the great Offices as the Privy Seal Master of the Rolls c. had the Titles of Clerks but now that Title remains to a lower sort of which there are 26. in number who still retain that Title The first as to the Progresses of Parliament is the Clerk of the Pettibag which is under the Conduct and within the Patent of the Master of the Rolls who is the chief of all the Clerks in the Lords House of which Office I have spoke in that Section of the Rolls and in other places 2. The Clerk of the Crown in the Chancery call'd Clericus Coronae in Cancellario in his Patent of whom I have also spoke cursorily in several places is an Officer to whose care many great things are committed which may be read in Compton and others but as to what concerns this Subject I must again remind that all Parliament VVrits which are sent from the Pettibag are return'd and kept by the Officer so that the Pettibag gives as it were the beginning this the continuance and ending to a Parliament So as this Clerk of the Crown hath three Capacities Before the Sitting of a Parliament to receive returns of VVrits which were issued from the Pettibag And in Parliament to take care according to directions for the issuing of Writs in case of change or mortality And in the Lords House he first reads the Titles of all Bills to be presented to his Majesty of which and other parts of his Duty I shall speak more 3. The third Clerk is term'd in his Patent Clericus Parliamentorum because he is Clerk in all Parliaments during his life his imployment here being only conversant about the Affairs of Parliament Now in respect that all Bills and Matters of State have here their result in the Lords House he is the proper Keeper of such Records for the Lords House is a Court of Record and to that end his Books are fairly writ exactly compos'd according to the very words and sence of that House and constantly perus'd by some Lords appointed for that purpose as well for his own justification as others satisfaction He hath also an Assisting Clerk allowed him who is of great use and ease to him both of them being well grounded in learning experience and ability in the safe expediting the concerns of that House which hath both an Ocean of VVisdom and curious Rivolets of Honorary punctilios not to be omitted by them somewhat different from all other Courts he hath also a Reading Clerk allowed him who likewise attends the Lords Committees and these are all the Clerks which constantly attend in the Lords House and are within the Bar. 4. Of the Clerks of the House of Commons I shall speak in the second part 5. As I have shewn the Imployments of the Clerks of the Crown Office in Chancery so to prevent misapplications it is fit to shew the Imployments also of the Clerk of the Crown Office in the King's Bench who is no constant attendant in this House or in the House of Commons but only upon contingencies and then by Order but more especially in the Lords House for producing reading and managing Records concerning VVrits of Error Habeas Corpus c. of which I shall speak in order but his most eminent Imployment is upon the Tryal of Peers as will be shewn Of the 26. Clerks before mention'd who still retain that Title these five which I have named are the chief which are imployed in Parliamentary Matters but of the other 21. which may be seen in Lambert Fitz Herbert c. neither the six Clerks in Chancery being Officers of Eminency imployed in that Court bearing that Title nor are the other Clerks which are imployed also in that Court in the least as I know of ingag'd in the Fabrick of Parliaments Note that those five Clerks whom I first mention'd have places allotted them within the Bar of either House as I said And now I must speak of other Attendants of another nature viz. the Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod and the Serjeant at Arms. CHAP. XVIII Of the Gentleman Vsher of the Black Rod. THere are but three ways by which the House of Lords do send any Message to the Commons of two of them I have spoken viz. by some of the Judges or by some of the Masters of Chancery and the King also uses two ways viz. by his Secretaries or some of the Privy-Council when they are Members of the House of Commons both upon ordinary and extraordinary occasions or for attending his Person upon Addresses c. But when he hath occasion to Command the House of Commons to attend him in the House of Lords he only sends this Officer the manner of which Ceremony I shall shew in order He is call'd the Black Rod from the Black Staff or Rod about three foot long tipt with
Silver and guilt with the Kings Arms at one end and a Lyon Couchant at the other end and a guilt Knob in the middle which he carries in his hand he is always a Person of Quality and born the Kings Subject and if not a Knight is made one upon admission to this Office and hath his Office by Patent the first Grant of it beginning in Hen. the 8. time 1. Before the Sitting of Parliament he observes the Lord Chamberlains directions in taking care that the House be fitted with all things for the Reception of the King and those who are to sit there 2. His Imployment also is to introduce Lords into that House 3. And after that House is Sat he hath Imployments concerning the Commitment of Delinquents c. 4. He hath a Seat allowed him but without the Bar and to ease him more in these and many other Imployments he hath an Usher to assist him call'd the Yeoman Usher also Door Keeper c. as will be shewn And so I am come to the last Attendant Officer of Note in that House viz. the Kings Serjeant at Arms. CHAP. XIX Of the Kings Serjeant at Arms Attendant in the House of Lords I Have spoken of the Servientes ad legem or Serjeants at Law Now I come to the Servientes ad arma Serjeants at Arms these were such as amongst the Romans were call'd Satellites Caesaris or a Guard to the Emperor and sometimes they were call'd Macerones from whence probably the word Mace might be us'd which these Serjeant at Arms use to carry before the King c. Of these Serjeants at Arms for I meddle not with the lower degree in Corporations sometimes call'd Serjeants of the Mace or only Serjeants there are twenty in number which are call'd the Kings Serjeants at Arms and these are Created with great Ceremony for the Person who is to be Created kneeling before the King the King himself lays the Mace on the Serjeants Right Shoulder and says these words Rise up Serjeant at Arms and Esquire for ever He hath his Patent for the Office besides of which and of the particulars of his Imployments Segar in his Book of Nobility gives a full account but of these twenty the King appropriates sixteen to his Personal Service whereof four wait on him every Quarter the other four are thus distributed viz. in time of Parliament one is to attend the Speaker of the House of Lords in case he is not Lord Chancellor another to attend the Speaker of the House of Commons one other to attend the Lord Chancellor and another the Lord Treasurer as well in as out of Parliament But in respect the Lord Chancellor and Speaker of the Lords House is usually the same Person there were but three of the twenty us'd in this time of Parliament and but two out of Parliament so as the other one or two are reserv'd for accidental occasions The Serjeant at Arms who attends the House of Lords hath the privilege of carrying the Mace before the Speaker whether he be the Lord Chancellor or not within the Lords House up to the very Chair of State and after he hath made his Obeysances he lays it down on the first Woolsack by the Speaker and so departs till the Speaker hath occasion to use him again upon the Rising of the House And herein methinks the Serjeant at Arms of the House of Commons hath more respect afforded him than the Serjeant at Arms to the House of Lords for the Commons Serjeant hath the freedom to stand at the Bar and hear all Debates and when weary of standing hath an easie seat by the door but the Lords Serjeant is not permitted to be in the Lords House whilst it is Sitting nor hath any Station within the Bar nor Seat without the Bar as the Gentleman Usher hath and yet this Office is more ancient than that and is not only Serjeant at Arms to the Speaker and Chancellor the Parliament not sitting but is the chief of the twenty of the Kings Serjeants at Arms he hath his Duputy so as if there should be occasion of two viz. for a Speaker and Chancellor he may supply one and his Deputy the other and besides his Deputy he hath also other Agents under him and hath use for them For upon Commitments of Delinquents without door he is to see them forth coming and in bringing them to the Bar but upon consmements or Commitment of any Member within doors that peculiarly belongs to the Gentleman of the Black Rod. So as these 2 Officers set the first wheel of a Parliament in motion for the Serjeant at Arms conducts the Chancellor or Speaker into the House of Lords the King sends the Black Rod to the Commons to bring up their Speaker who being confirm'd by the King goes to his Chair in the Commons usher'd with the other Serjeants at Arms and so when each Speaker retires from each House each Serjeant is to each a Conducter A Corollary to this First Part. I Have now shewn the General Warrants for Summoning a Parliament and the particular Writs and Patents impowring those who are to sit in the Lords House as also the Act of Precedency to prevent Disorders of Places when they meet there and given a touch of Proxies and of the words Lords and Peers and of other Accidental Writs and of the Returns of their Writs and of some who sit there without Writs or Patents and of others who are imployed there meerly by vertue of Patents And of all these I have made some Discourses as well to revive the notions of those who need no other information as to inform others who have little knowledge therein but what they gain from the short Memorials of Writers or from the imperfect Discourses which they glean from such as know some things in part but have not the true Concatenation of the Grandeur of a Parliament These discourses and those intended will I hope contain the whole System of this Constitution This part hath applied it self wholly to the Offices Degrees and Qualities pertinent to the House of Lords in general but as to the particular Persons owning those Offices Degrees and Qualities I reserve them for the Subsequent Parts of this Treatise that is after I have discours'd of the seven remaining Exemplar Writs in the Pawn which particularly concerns the House of Commons Viz. To Cornwall To Cambridge To London To Dover To Lancaster To Chester To Carnarvan in Wales And also shewn the Writs or Precepts derivative of those seven Exemplars and the manner of Elections and Returns of Writs and Precepts the Discourse of which will comprehend all the County Shires Cities and Burroughs which have power of Electing Members for Parliaments I shall then shew you the Places adapted for both Houses to meet in as also of the Members Summon'd and imployed in both Houses in this Parliament After these I shall speak of such Ceremonies as are us'd before any Members be admitted into
but from his insight and transacting in matters of a more transcendent nature which dayly also come before him either of Publick or Private Concerns But in all Transactions in this World there is a Right and a Wrong which latter is term'd Unjust and sometimes it may be positively judg'd to be so yet it may so happen that summum jus may do injury whereupon there is a necessity of interposing Equity lest the Wrong by Custom should prove an esteem'd Right or that Right by necessary fix'd Rules which may be safe at one time and not at another or an unlimited use or power should slide into Wrong so as the due and critical time of applying this Equity to summum jus which is gain'd by reading Law and Precedents doth still improve and exalt the Character of a wise Man 4. But because most men are either negligently or wilfully ignorant in the way of attaining these excellent Vertues the wisdom of all Governours hath by the help of these learned Professors establish'd certain Rules to direct men which the Latin call Regulae from Regere intimating the care of Governours in Exhibiting such Rules for the good of those who are under Tuition but generally such Rules are called Laws which the Latins term Leges from Legere to Read so as every man who is not careless of his own Felicity or Justice towards others may thereby be instructed to what he ought to perform 5. In ancient times when People were not dispers'd into various Regions nor into great Societies of Towns Cities and Kingdoms but consisted of some few Families or Villages it was no hard matter to transmit those Rules or Laws to one another by singing them in Meeter or some other ways of Tradition but when those lesser Societies grew into the greater forms of Government their Legislators invented a more certain way or art of communicating their just Rules or Laws by legible Characters Words and Sentences either Writ or Printed containing those Rules which as I said were originally only certain tunable unwritten Instructions and after when mens dispositions grew more and more deprav'd there was something of Coertion added to those Laws which Coertions or inflicting of Penalties for disobedience to those Laws increas'd with the increase of unconformable tempers and herein there is nothing so great an argument of a wise and good disposition as when he makes it his study to satisfie himself and thereby able to inform others in the knowledge of such Laws or Rules as may make our Lives in this World happy and conscientious which can no ways be obtain'd but by knowing and obeying good Laws 6. For these are they as the learned Sir John Davies says to which all Kingdoms and Common-wealths are indebted for all their temporal blessings of Peace Plenty Civility and all moral parts of honesty By these saith he we injoy our Relations Lands Goods good Names or what ever is sweet or dear unto us for quid sunt Regna nisi magna latrocinia sine Justitia Legibus the Land would be full of Thieves the Sea of Pyrats the Commons would rise up against the Nobility the Nobility against the Crown without these there would be nothing certain no Contracts no Commerce no Conversation but Confusion and even Dissolution of Human Society for good Laws are Comforts to the Griev'd Counsels to the Perplex'd Reliefs to the Circumvented Preventions of Ruin to the Improvident Preservations to the Innocent Supports to the Impotent they Relieve the Oppress'd protect the Orphan Widow and Strangers they are Oculi Caecis Pedes Claudis Cures for lame and blind To sum up all they are the Secular Arms to defend both the Church True Religion and the Common-Weal of the Kingdom or State 7. For these reasons the Successive Kings of this Island have constantly as rewards set such a mark upon those who are Professors of the Laws and whose study and experience in Laws have attain'd to so great a sagacity as to know how to apply them to the publick good that the chief of them is made Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England of whom I have spoken who for the most part hath been a Professor of Divinity Law or Equity the next of whom I am now to treat is made Chief Justice of England his very Title Justice rendring him in one sence even Superior to the Law it self for the Law it self is but Lex tacens but he that distributes that Law is Lex loquens 8. This Title of Justice given also to every one of the twelve Judges or chief Dispensers of Laws is so ancient that in former times they were call'd Justitiae as containing that vertue not only in the singular but in the plural number and afterwards they were call'd Justitiarii Angliae and Justitiarii without addition of Angliae and after Justitiarii Regis which last Title was to the four Justices of the Kings Bench the chief of which four was anciently called Summus and at this day Capitalis Justitiarius Angliae which generally we term in English the Lord Chief Justice of England there was also anciently another sort of Justitiarii ad placita applyed only to the four Justices of the Common Pleas the chief of which was and is to this day also called Capitalis Justitiarius omitting Angliae and which we in English term the Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. And to ease the People from going for Justice to them these Justices did go to the People to distribute Justice These Motions in process of time were call'd their Circuits because they did in a manner go round the Kingdom and for these Motions they were called Justitiarii Itinerantes Justitiarii ad Assisas Juratas Certificationes There were also anciently another sort of Justitiarii which it may be for distinction sake were called Barones Scaccarii consisting also of four and this Title is applied only to the Exchequer where their Justice was to be shewn in the management of the Revenue of the Crown and these four also were and are constantly mixt with the other Eight in their Itineranciis in all making Twelve 9. And for further Honor to these Eminent Professors as well out of Parliament as in Parliament they have peculiar Courts as Regalias allotted to them wherein they have daily opportunities to manifest their Wisdom These Professors I divide into three Orbs and their Courts accordingly viz. to the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper the Court of Chancery to the Lord Chief Justice of England the Court call'd the Kings Bench to the Master of the Rolls or Keeper of the most eminent Office of Records the Rolls Chappel in the nature of a Court to the other Lord Chief Justice the Court of Common Pleas to the Lord Chief Baron the Court of Exchequer and these are the five Courts or Regalias belonging to five of the first Orb of that Profession yet not excluding the other Nine so as The second Orb