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A36231 Judge Dodaridge, his law of nobility and peerage wherein the antiquities, titles, degrees, and distinctions, concerning the peeres and nobility of this nation, are excellently set forth : with the knights, esquires, gentleman, and yeoman, and matters incident to them, according to the lawes and customes of England.; Magazine of honour Bird, William, 17th cent.; Doddridge, John, Sir, 1555-1628. 1658 (1658) Wing D1794; ESTC R11125 103,063 198

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all legall proceedings he ought to be stiled by that his dignity In the first yeer of King Edward 3. fol. 151. a Writ of Formedon was brought against Richard son to Allin late Earl of Arundel and did demand the Mannor of C. with the Appurtenants c. The Tenant hy his learned Councell did plead that he is Earl of Arundel and was Earl the same day of the Writ purchased and demanded Judgement of the Writ because he was not named in the same according to his dignity and title of Honour to which the Demandant saith That at day and time when he did purchase the Writ the Tenant wat not known nor taken to be an Earl and it is hard Justice if the Writ should abate without any default in the Plantiffe Neverthelesse Because the truth of the matter so that the Earldom did descend unto him before the Plaintiff commenced his Action and purchased his Writ against him therefore by judgement his Writ was abated although the Tenant was not at that time known or holden to be an Earl But if a Baron be Plantiff or Defendant c. It is not of necessity to name Baron 8. H. 6.10 Yet see a distinction of Barons concerning this matter heer following Fol. 27. b. And so Reynald Gray was reputed an Esquire after the Earldom discended to him till at the last it was published and decla●ed by the Queen and by the Heralds that he was Earl of Kent in right and by discent although he was reputed or named Earl before that time Dyer 318. lib. 10. Addition of Name BUt an Addition may be used or omitted at pleasure except in some speciall cases where processes of Utlary lyeth as hereafter followeth the title of Supremum caput ecclesiae Anglicanae which was by Act of Parliament in the 26. yeer of H. 8. c. 1. an 35. H. 8. cap. 3. annexed to the Emperiall Crown of this Realm is no parcell of the Kings by stile but only an addition of the Kings stile so that it may be omitted in the Summons of the Parliament as it was done in the first yeer of Queen Mary or used as it was by the late Queen Elizabeth and by the King that now is at his pleasure and so it is adjudged as you may read in Dyer In the first yeer of Queen Mary Fol. 98. And so is the Law declared by authority of Parliament 1. 2. Phil. Mary cap. 8.256 See in Fox his Book of Martyrs Fol. 217. An argument made by Hiles contrary But between the Majesticall stile of the King and the title of honour appertaining to a Subject this cifference is between grants or purchases made by or to the King and grants or purchases made by or to a Nobleman c. For in that first Case it is necessary that the Name of Kings be expressed otherwise they are voide and of none effect But if a Duke Earl or other of the Nobility do purchase or grant by the Name of Baptism and surname omitting other title of honour it is not void but good enough for it is a rule in the Law That every mans grant shall be construed most strongly against the grantor and must for the benefit of him to whom the grant is made and so ut Res magis valeat quam pereat that the matter may rather be strengthened then void for there is a great diversity in Law between Writs and Grants for if Writs be not formally made they shall be abated which is no greater prejudice then the purchasing another Writ But if a Grant should so Ligerfie be made void then the party hath no remedy to have a new for that cause the Law doth not favour advantages by occasions of Misnomer more then the strict rule of the Law doth require Cooks 6. part 64. b. Et sequentia false Latine shall abate a Writ but not a Grant Ibidem And if an Earl be Plantiff or Demandant and hanging the Writ shall not abate but neverthelesse he shall proceed and count by the name of an Earl according to such title of honour as he did b●ar at the time of his action commenced Pasch 13. Edw. 3. brief 259. Pasch 19. Edw. 3. Procedendo 2.32 Hen. 8.39 7. Hen. 6.14 b. Et sequentia 25. Ed. 3.39 22. Rich. 2. brief 9.37 Pasch 24. Edw. 3.14 But if the Plantiff in a quere impedit be made Knight hanging the Writ the Writ shall abate Cooks 7. part 27. b. There is a Statute made in the first yeer of H. 5. c. 5. where in is contained as following Item It is ordained and established that in every Originall Writ of accounts personall Appeals and Indictments in which the Exigent shall be awarded in the Name of the Defendants In such Writs originall Appeals and Indictments addition shall be made of their estate and degree or mistery and the Towns Hamlets or places and the Counties where they were or be conversant and if by Processe upon the said Originall Writs Appeals or Indictments in the which the additions be omitted any Outlaries be pronounced the said Writs and Indictments shall be abated by the execution of the party wherein the said additions are omitted provided alwayes that though the said Writs of additions personall be not according to the Records and deeds by the surplussage of the additions aforesaid That for this cause they are not abated and that the Clerks of the Chancery under whose names such Writs shall go forth written shall not leave out or make omission of the said Additions as is aforesaid upon point to be punished and to make a fine to the King by the discretion of the Chancellor And this Ordinance shall begin to hold place at the suite of the party from the least of Saint Michael next ensuing forwards Although the addition of estate degree and mystery to be added unto names be written in the Statute first and before the additions of place and Counties yet it hath been used alwayes after the making of the said Statute to place the additions of estate degree and mistery after the places and County in every Writ Appeals and Indictments against common persons But the use is otherwise in Appeals and Indictments of Treason or Fellony against Dukes Marquesses and Earls for their names of degrees are in such Cases put before the Additions of places and Counties as Charles Earl of Westmerland late of Bramspeth in the County of Durism Thelowell lib. 6. cap. 14. Names of dignity as Dukes Earls Barons Knights Serjant at Law c. Be contained within this word degree for gradus continet statum in se non è contrario degree doth contain state in it self and not of the contrary for the state of a man as Gentleman Esquire Yeoman Widdow single-Woman c. And the art or craft of a man is his mystery by Brook chief Justice in the Common-Pleas in abridgement of the Case of 14. Hen. 6. fol. 15. titul nosve dignitat 33. See in
other parts holden by the same tenure of the King by posteritie the King granteth his Seigniory to the Queene and afterwards the Tenant dyeth the sonne within age in this case the King shall have the Wardship of the Body and have the Prerogative even as the King himselfe should have had 3. E. 3 4. vide etiam Stamford Prerog Reg. cap. 2. The Queene wife unto the King or widdow shall not be amerced if she be non-suited in any Action or otherwise in which cases any other subject of what degree soever shall be amerced for in this case the Queen shall participate the Kings Prerogative Cookes 6. Report 62. But the Queene shall not in all cases have the same Prerogatives that the King shall have in the same case as for Example Petition is all the remedy the Subject hath when the King seizeth his Lands or taketh away his Goods from him having no title by order of Law so to doe contrary to the opinion of some ancient Bookes as you may see Stamfords Prerog cap. 19. But in such suit shall be made to the Queene but actions against other Leiges of the King according as the case shall require for by the same reason that the Queene may be Plaintiffe and Demandant in actions without the King by the same reason that the Queene may be Plaintiffe and Demandant in actions without the King by the same reason he shall be Defendant or Tenant without pertaking such Prerogatives as doe appertaine to the King 11. H. 4.64 B. Stamford Prerog cap. 22. ●n fine Against the King by his Prerogative Nullum tem●us occurit Regi but time shall runne against the Queen H. 18. E. 3.2 a. and aplenarty by sixe mouthes is a good plea in a Quare Imp. brought by Philippa Regina Angliae ibid. fol. 1. et 13. b. Stamford Prerog cap. 18. trope finem In 21. E. 3.13 b. It is thus to be read note that a protection was sued forth against the Queen in a Writ which she brought and it was allowed though shee be a person exempt Neverthelesse by this short case following may bee observed that the Justices doe not easily suffer any proceedings in Law against the Queene wife or widdow but will hold with their Inmities as much as they may by Law A Writ of dower was brought against Isabel Queene of England mother of the King that then was and the Court said to the Plaintiffe the Queene is a person of dignitie and excellencie and we are of opinion that she shall not answer to the Writ but it behooveth you to sue to her by Petition and thereupon the Demandant dixit grat and shee prayed the Court to grant a continuance of her Action untill another day so that in the meane time she might sue to speake with the Queen but the Court would not agree to make a Continuance but said that upon her request they might give d●● precepart and so it was done for the Queenes Councel would not agree to a continuance for thereby th● Queene should bee accepted as answerable 10. 〈◊〉 3.379 The wife of the Kings eldest sonne also hath som● Prerogative in regard of the excellencie of her Husband which the wives of other Noblemen have not fo● by the Statute of 25. E. 3. it is high Treason to violate the wife of the Kings eldest sonne and heire Dutchesses also and Countesses have speciall Honour appertaining to their Estates as kneeling and tasting and such like which things as appertaining more properly to the Heraulds then to this legall discourse I leave unto them By the Statute made 7. Iac. cap. 6. intituled And Act for the Administring the oath of Allegiance and Reformation of Women recusants if any person or persons of or above the age of 18. yeeres and degrees aforesaid must and hereafter shal stand and be presented indicted or convicted for not comming to Church or not receiving the holy Communion or Sacraments of the Lords Supper according to the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme before the Ordinary or other having lawful power to take such presentment or indictment then 3. of the Privie Counsell of the King his Highnesse his Heires or Successours and no other whereof the Lord Treasurer the Lord Chancellour Lord Privie Seale or principall Secretary to be one upon knowledge shall require such person or persons to take the said Oath but it shall be lawfull to and for every Bishop within his Diocesse to require any Baron or Barons of the age of 18. or above to take the said Oath Also in cases of indictment of Felony or Treason a Baronesse shall have the same tryall by Peeres as doth appeare by the Statute of 20. H. 6. cap. 9. which any other Noble woman of higher degree shall have which priviledge is denyed to all of a lower degree then a Baronesse Ladies in Reputation The wife and widdow and widdow of the sonne and heire of a Duke or Earle in the life of his Father is a Lady by courtesie of speech and honour and taketh place according as in ancient time hath been permitted by the Soveraign Prince and allowance of the Herauld but in legall proceedings they are not to have priviledges nor to be named according to such sirnames of dignity but the King may at his pleasure create such men in the life time of their Ancestors into degrees of Lords of his Parliament and then the Law is otherwise If a Noblewoman of Spaine come into the Realme by safe conduct or otherwise by the King shee be stiled by such her forraign stile of dignity yet in the Kings Courts of Justice she shall not be named by such title though by common speech she be a Lady in reputation An English woman borne doth take to her Husband a Spanish or French Duke though he be made a Denizen yet he shall not beare his title of dignity in legall proceedings A German woman is married to the Earl of Northam or to other the Nobility of England unlesse she be made a Denizen she cannot lawfully claim the priviledges or title of her husband no more then she can to have dower or any jointure from him An English Woman doth take to Husband the Earle of Kildare in Ireland or if a Lord of Scotland though he be a post natus take an English woman to his wife their wives shall not participate their husbands Titles of Dignitie But if the King do create one of his Subjects of Scotland naturalized here by Act of Parliament to be Viscount Rochester within England and after by his Writ of Summons under his Great Seale doe call him to his uper House of his Parliaments and assigne him a place there in his great Councell amongst the Lords and Peeres of the Realme hee is now also a Peere of this Realme and shall be partaker with them in all Priviledges and by consequence his wife widdow and children after him 32. E. 3.35 in le case de Gilbert Humfrevill But if an Englishman by the
degree which they call creation Money this is so annexed unto the Dignity that by no grant assurance or any manner of Alienation it can be given from the same but is still incident and a support of the same Creation Dyer fol. 21. c. Jn all Cases wherein Suite of Law a Baron or Peere of the Realme is to be amerced other then a Duke his amercement is no lesse t●e 12 100. s 9 E. 4.9 21. E. 4.77 38. E. 3.31 9. H. 6.21 but the amercement of a Duke is 10. l. 19. E. 4.9 1 H. 6.7 although the Statute of Magna Charta Chap. 14. be in the negative viz. Comites at Barones non amerciantur nisi per pures suos et non nisi secundum modum delicti and yet the usage hath ●educed it into a certainty also by the same Statute it ●ppeareth that such amercements should be afferred per ●ures suos but for that it were troublesome to assemble ●arons for so small a matter such amercements in times ●ast hath beene afferred by the Barons of the Exchequer who sometimes were Barons of the Realme as is be●ore in this Treatise mentioned and hereof writeth Bracton Lib. 3. Tract 2. chap. Fol. 116. viz. Comites ●iero vel Barones non sunt amerciandi nisi per paces suos secundum modum delicti hoc per Barones de Scacario vel coram ipso Rege Vid. Cooke 8. part 39. sequentiae this Section is to be omitted because it is more fitly to be written hereafter If a Plaintiffe recover against a Peere of the Realme in an Action of debt or trespasse upon such a Plea pleaded by him or other default in him so that a Fine thereby doth grow to the King and thereupon on a Capias per Fine issueth out against him this shall not prejudice that Nobleman so as the Plaintiffe may thereby take advantage by prayer that he shall abide in Execution for the Plaintiffe neither without his prayer nor though he doe pray it by the opinion of Brian Justice 14. H. 7.21 VVhereas by a Statute made 32. H. 8. Cap. 16. Jt is enacted that the Subjects of the Realme shall not keepe in their Families or Houses above the number of Foure Strangers borne neverthelesse by a proviso in the said Act every Lord of the Parliament hath his priviledge allowed unto him to keepe in his Family the number of six Strangers borne any thing in that Act to the contrary notwithstanding By the Statute of 24. H. 8. Cap. 13. a. A Priviledge was granted to the Nobility according to their degrees concerning their Apparell but because by a Statute made in the first Yeare of the King that now is Chap. 25. all Lawes and Statutes made concerning Apparell are taken away I leave further to speake of that matter 1. Jac. cap. 25. By the Statute of 5. R. 2. cap. 12. The King our Soveraigne Lord of his Royall Majesty defendeth the passe utterly of all manner of people aswell Clarkes as others in every Port and other Towne and place upon the Coasts of the Sea upon the paine of forfeiture of all their goods except onely the Lords and other great men of the Realme and true and Noble Merchants and the Kings Souldiers and every person then is before excepted which after publication of this Ordinance made shall passe out of the said Realme without the Kings speciall Lycence which Lycence the King willeth and commandeth that it be not from henceforth made but in one of the Ports vnder written that is to say London Sandwich Dover Southampton Plimouth Dartmouth Bristoll Yarmouth St. Buttolphe Kingstone upon Hull Newcastle upon Tine and the other parts and passages towards Ireland and the Iles pertaining to England shall forfeit towards the King as much as he hath in goods as afore is said but because this Statute is also taken away by a ●●te Act of Parliament made in the fourth yeare of King James cap. 1. J doe not set downe this for ●ne of the Priviledges appertaining to the Nobility 〈◊〉 this day But Phillip Earle of Arundel Sonne of Thomas Duke of Norffolke was taken upon the Sea passing in●o France about the 30. yeare of the late Queene ●nd was fined in the Star-chamber to a great summe because he did not take Shipping at one of the Ports mentioned Cromptons Courts 31. Whereas by the Statute of 2. H. 2. Parl. 2. cap. 1. Jt is ordained that the Justices of Peace in every County named of the Cuorum should be resident in the Shieres wherein they are Justices there is a Proviso whereby the Lord and Peeres of the Realme named in such Commission are excepted By the Statute of 1. E. 6. cap. 12. amongst other things it is enacted that in all and every case and Cases where any of the Kings Subjects shall and may upon his Prayer have the Priviledge of his Clergie as a Clarke Convict that may make purgation in all those Cases and every of them and also in every Case and Cases of Fellony wherein the priviledge and benefit of Clergie is taken away by this Statute wilfull malice and poysoning of malice prepensed onely excepted the Lord and Lords of the Parliament and Peere and Peeres of the Realme having place and voyce in Parliament shall by vertue of this Act of Common grace upon his and their Requests and Prayer alleadging that he is a Lord or Peere of the Realme claiming the benefit of this Act though hee cannot reade without burning of the Hand losse of Inheritance or corruption of his blood bee adjudged deemed taken and used for the first time onely to all Jnstructions intents and purposes as a Clarke Convict which may make purgation without any further or other benefit of the Clergy to any such Lord or Peere from thenceforth at any time after for any cause to bee allowed adjudged or admitted any Law Custome Statute or any thing to the contrary notwithstanding By this Statute a Lord of the Parliament shall have the priviledge of his Clergy where a common person shall not viz. for the breaking of a house by day or night for robbing of any in the high way and in all other cases excepted in the Statute of 1. E. 6.12 saving in wilfull murder and poysoning But in all other cases wherein Clergy is taken away by any Statute made since the said Statute of 1. E. 6. he is in the same Degree that a common and inferior person is but the Court will not give him the benefit of this Statute if he doe not require it Jf the Lord of the Parliament doth confesse his offence upon his Arraignment or doth abjure or is outlawed for Fellony it seemes that in those cases he may have the benefit of this Statute viz. his Clergy for that by the Statute of 18. Eliz. cap. 18. he nor any other need to make his purgation but shall be forthwith delivered out of prison by the Justices sed quaere Poulton 202. b. By the Jmperiall Constitutions
where the originall was made and at last it was resolved by all the Court that the Record should be amended by the Cursitor and made according to the Note or Title delivered unto him by the Plaintiffes Attorney Cook 8. part fol. 15. b. It appeareth in our Book of Law that the highest and lowest Dignity are uniuersall For as if a King of a Forreign Nation come into England by leave of the King of this Realm as it ought to be in this case he shall ●●e and be sued in the name of a King 11. Ed. 3. Test Breccon 473. So shall he sue or be sued by the Name of a Knight whersoever he received that degree of Dignity ●o Ed. 4.6 H. 6.14 but otherwise it is as ●f a Duke Marquesse Earl or other Title of Honour given by any Forreign King yea though the King by Letters Pattents of ●ife conduct do name him Duke or by any other his for●eign Title of Dignity For experience sheweth that Kings joyned in league together by a certain mutuall ●nd as it were a Naturall power of Monarchs according ●o the Law of Nations have denized one anothers sub●ects and Ambassadors graced with this title of Honour Therefore though a Knight receive his Dignitie of Forraigne Prince he is so to be stiled in all Legall proceedings within England Vide Cooke 7. part fol. 16. b. And Kings were wont to send their sonnes to the●● Neighbour Princes to receive Knighthood at thei● hands Vide Selden fol. 331. 308. thinking that i● was more honourable to take Armes of some other le●● affection might seeme to prevent judgement when th● father gave them that honour Thus was our King H. 2. sent unto David King o● Scots and Malcombe also king there sent unto our H 2. and our king to the king of Castile to take of them Military or Civill Armes for the tearmes and phrase● they used in that age for the making of a knight Vid● Camden 174.8 vide Selden fol. 315. And knights in all forraigne Countries have eve● place and precedencie according as they are ancient knights which priviledge is deemed to Noblemen for be they never so ancient in forraigce Countries they shall goe before as Puesneys The degree of knighthood is not onely a Dignitie and honour to the party for so it is termed in Brooke title Additions fol. 44. but honourable for the kingdome and therefore it hath been an ancient Prerogative of the kings of this Realm at their pleasure to compell men of worth to take upon them this degree upon the payment of a Fine as appeareth in Ann. 7. H. 6.15 Pitzh Abridg. tit Im. 12. and by the Statute a. 1. Ed. 2. de militibus But we see by experience in these daies that none are compelled thereunto and that is the reason wherefore if the Plaintiffe be made knight hanging the Writ it shall abate because he hath changed his name and that by his owne act Vide Cooke 7. part f. 27. b. part 10. b. 1 Ed. 6. cap. 7. contrary And for that cause also by the common Law not only the king but every Lord of a Manor ought to have of every of his tenants a reasonable fine to make his eldest son knight Vide Bracton fol. 36. b. and all lands are subject to these aides except onely ancient Demeasnes and grand and petty serjeantly tenures as the Law hath been anciently delivered Vide Fiszh Nat. bre f. 83. a. and Selden f. 13. where it is also said one that wrote a little after the statute of West the first allowes as a good barre to the avowry for the tenant to plead that the father himself is no knight so that one not knighted cannot claime the aide of his own Tenants Briton de Prises de Avers And it was not at the liberty of the Lord to make more or lesse of his Tenants by the common Law in this case but by the statute at Westminster 1. cap. 35. it is put into certainty viz. forasmuch as before this time reasonable and to make one son knight or to marry his daughter was never put into certainty nor how much should be taken at that time whereby some levyed unreasonable aide and more often then seemed necessary whereby the people were sore grieved And it is therefore provided that from henceforth a whole knights see be taken but 20. s. and of more more and of lesse lesse after that rate and that none shall levie such aide to make his son knight untill the sonne be 15. yeares of age nor to marry his daughter untill she be of the age of 7. yeares and of that there shall be mention made in the kings Writs formed on the same if any one will demand it and if it happen that the Father after he had leavied any such aid of his Tenants did before he hath marryed his Daughter the Executors of th● Father shall be bound to the daughter for so much as th● Father received for the Aid And if the Fathers goods b● not sufficient his heir shall be charged therwith unto th● daughter and this Heir is so incident that although th● Lord do confirm unto the Tenant to hold by fealty an● certain Rent and release unto him all other services an● demands yet he shall have the aid to make his elde●● Son Knight Anno 40. E. 3. f. 22. Finches book 24. but the King was not bound by the statute beforementioned because the King was not named in that statute and therfor● by the statute 25. E. 3. cap. 11. The Kings aids were brought to a like value Selden fol. 3.30 The intention of the Law is that an heir within the age of 21. years is not able to do Knight-service till his full age of 21. years Littleton lib. 2. cap 4. f. 22. But such a presumption of Law doth give place to 〈◊〉 judgment and proof to the contrary as Bracton saith Sa●●litur presumptioni donec probetur in contrarium And therfore the King who is the Sovereign and Supream Judge of Chivalty hath dubbed him Knight he by this hath judged him able to do him Knight-service and all men concluded not to say to the contrary therfore such an heir being made Knight either in the life of his Father or afterwards during his minority shall be out of ward and custody both for Lands and for his body or marriage by the ancient common Law by reason also that the Honour of Knight-hood is so great that it is not to be holden under by any yet if the King do create any such an Heir within Age a Duke or Marquesse Earl Count Viscount or Baron by this he shall be out of ward ●nd custody both for his Land and for his body vide ●ook 6 part 74 a. And therfore it is provided by the statute of Mag●●●harta Cap. 3. Ita tamen quod si ipse dum infra aetatem fue●●t fiat miles nihil ominus terra remaneat in custodia do●inorum suorum So that although
out of use with us at this day nor with the French as also amongst the Italians Dominae for them is familiar vide Seldens title of Honour 1. part fol. 53. But if shee bee named Countesse or Baronesse shall abate the writ 14. H. 6.2 And Cookes 6. part des reports 53. b. By the statute of Magna charta cap. 21. Knights are free from cart taking that no Demeasne cart of them shall bee taken By the statute of 1. Iac. cap. 27. It seemeth that Knights may keepe Greyhounds and setting Dogges or Nets to take Pheasants or Partridges in though they cannot dispence 10. l. per annum nor bee worth 200. l. For the expresse words of that statute are that all the Sons of Knights are excepted Observations concerning a Knight Batchelour A Knight Batchelour cannot claime the priviledge that Knights have from cart-taking by Magna charta cap. 21. A Knight Batchelours Sonne cannot keepe a Greyhound because hee is not within the statute of 1. Iac. cap. 27. unlesse hee have 10. l. Lands c. Quars whether the Knight Batchelours addition doe abate any action c. If one bee Knighted in the life time of his Father it frees him of wardship but è contrario of a Knight Batchelour Knights are excused from attendance at Leets but so are not Knights Batchelours Of Esquires ALthough by the Civill Law there bee no Gentlemen of title under Knights but all the rest wont under the name of people yet with us there are in the ranke who have names of preheminence whereby they are in degree above the rest as Esquiers and Gentlemen all which give ensignes or coates of armes and thereby are distingnished from the meaner sort of people in which respect Bartol Tract de Insignis calleth Noble but of a weake Nobility for it hath no further prerogative in it then that it makes them differ from the baser sort of people Of these two sort of Gentlemen with us the Esquire hath the Prerogative priority but it seemes if an Esquire bee named Gentleman or a Gentleman bee named Esquire it is no vice in legall proceedings Brooke additions 44. Esquire seemeth by the Common name wee give him in Latine to have had his originall either for that hee carried the armour of the King Duke or other great personage as wee see not onely in the Scriptures as Saul and Jonathan had their armour bearers but in Poets and other Prophane stories Patroclus was Achilles his armour bearer and Clitus great Alexanders whereupon some write that hee whom wee call Armiger in Latine is a Foot-man that with a speare shield or head peece followeth an armed Knight in battaile or rather as some others suppose It is the Foot-man himselfe armed in the field but howsoever the word bee taken this is sure those men were of good accompt in old time as those who wonne themselves credit out of warre and so their estimation remained unto their posterity And as those were in time before so are these which are in our dayes as descending for the most part from their worthy Ancestours and our bookes of the Common Law doe distinguish them thus that is to say Knight-hood is a dignity but Esquires and Gentlemen are but names of worship An. 14. H. 5. And Brooke in his Abridgement in that case T it nosmer de dignity 33. saith to bee a Knight est Gradus but to bee an Esquire or Gentleman est Status For Gradus continet Statum inse non è contrari vide Thesoal 105. concerning this word worshipfull read in the printed booke Master Seldens title of honour Prima pars fol. 124. sequentia In time past every Knight had two of these waiting upon him they carried his morion and shield and as inseperable Companions they stuck close to him because of the said Knight their Lord they had certaine lands in escuage like as had the Knight himselfe who held them of the King by Knights service The beginning of armes in Europe amongst Christians is supposed from the ●oly warres for the Turke paint them not and so with us a●out H. 3. They became more hereditarily established and when the Prince enabled any hee gave them the parti●ular of his bearing in Blason Master Seld n in his Preface fol. 5. where you may also see an example in the Raigne of R. 2. But now adayes there are five distinct sorts of these for those whom I have spoken already bee now no more in any request the principall Esquires at this day are accompted those that are elected Esquires for the Princes body The next unto them be Knights eldest Sonnes successively In a third place are reputed younger Sonnes of the eldest Sonnes of Barons and of other Nobles of higher estate and when such Heires Males failes together with them also the title faileth In a fourth ranke are reckoned those unto whom the King himselfe together with the title giveth armes or createth Esquires by putting about their necks a silver Collar of S. S. and in former times upon their heeles a paire of white spurres silvered whereupon at this day in the West part of the Kingdome they are called white spurres and to the first begotten Sonne onely of these doth this title belong In a fift and last place be those ranked and taken for Esquires who have any superiour publike office in the Common-wealth or serve the Prince in any worshipfull calling at the Coronations of Kings and Queenes Knights of the Bath are made men of worth and honourable blood to the end that their Majesties may bee accompanied in their owne honours every of which Knight having two Gentlemen to attend him in that Ceremonie who are ever after enabled by that service to be Esquires during their lives But this name of Esquire which in ancient time was a name of charge and office only first crept in amongst other titles of dignity and worship so farre as ever I could observe In the raigne of R. 2. Camden fol. 176. vide Sir Thomas Smith de republica Anglorum fol. 26. where saith he that the Esquire is no distinct order of the Common-wealth and hereof see the statute of An. 16. R. 2. cap 4. and an ejusdem Regis cap. 2. A Serjeant of the Kitchin in the Kings house may beare the name and addition of Cooke or of Esquire by the opinion of Newton But Ienny said that such officers of the Kings House-hold would be much agreved if they should be named by their trade or occupation Paston peradventure faith in that case the writ may be good because of the Statute Anno 1. H. 5. cap 5. For the Statute is That hee shall be named of the Towne degree state condition or mysterie And when hee was named Cooke hee observed the Statute For hee hath named him by his name of mysterie and yet hee may be in that case an Esquire and a Cooke 14. H. 6. fol. 15. If a man be an Esquire or Gentleman only by office and lose his