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A17167 A confutation of the Popes bull which was published more then two yeres agoe against Elizabeth the most gracious Queene of England, Fraunce, and Ireland, and against the noble realme of England together with a defence of the sayd true Christian Queene, and of the whole realme of England. By Henry Bullinger the Elder.; Bullae papisticae ante biennium contra sereniss. Angliae, Franciae & Hyberniae Reginam Elizabetham, & contra inclytum Angliae regnum promulgatae, refutatio. English Bullinger, Heinrich, 1504-1575.; Golding, Arthur, 1536-1606. 1572 (1572) STC 4044; ESTC S106868 129,668 182

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of Sweueland and Austriche two of the auncientest and noblest houses of Germanie Afterward Rafe Duke of Haspurge a Swicer seased vppon both the Duchies and bestowed them in Fée vppon his two sonnes Albert Rafe of whom Rafe was made Duke of Sweueland and Albert Duke of Austriche I haue recited this pitifull and lamentable storie out of Iohn Auentine somewhat the more at large bycause that in it as it were in a cleare glasse a man may behold the bloudthirstie nature of the Popes bearing hatred in minde most spitefully of couetousenesse and ambition vtterly vnsatiable malitious in all respectes outraging with beastly woodnesse and crueltie And also to what point the Bulles of the Romish Bishops haue driuen kingdomes and common weales casting downe some and aduauncing othersome at the pleasure of the Bishops and also acquitting the nobilitie and commons of their fealtie and obedience dew to their Princes Now if any man in way of obiection demaund wherefore God giueth these beastes leaue to outrage agaynst all good men and to bring to passe so great thinges and not rather ouerthroweth the seate them that sit in the seate the aunswere is ready shapen The Scriptures must néedes be fulfilled and specially the prophesie which Daniell vttereth in these wordes The Horne that grew vp had eyes and a mouth speaking great things and his looke was grimmer then all his felowes And he fought a battell with the Saintes and preuailed against them vntill the auncient of yeares came and iudgement was giuen to the high Saintes and so forth as foloweth in the vij and eight chapters of Daniell In the last end of their reigne when there shal be great store of wicked folke there shall stand vp a king of a stoute countenance that vnderstandeth riddles and he shall excell in strength howbeit not by his owne power and he shall make wonderfull hauocke and speede his matters prosperously and trouble the strong and the holy people and he shall bring his businesse to passe luckely through his owne wylinesse and craftes Also he shall presume great things in his hart and being furnished with store of thinges he shall spoile many men Furthermore he shall set himselfe against the highest Prince and shal be broken in péeces without handes For S. Paule also hath sayd that Antichrist shal be slayne that is to witte in the hartes of the faythfull not with swoorde speare or gunnes but with the breath of the Lordes mouth and be quyte done away at the commyng of the iudge to the last iudgement of the world But like as the former Bishops aforesaid drew the Frenchmen into the kingdome of Sicill Naples Puell So the latter Popes that is to say Adrian the fifth and Nicolas the third sought all the meanes that could be to haue them dispossessed of the same the one of them calling in the Germanes and the other calling in Peter of Aragon with the Spaniardes against the Frenchemen Contrariwise Martine the fourth aduaunced Charles the French king againe whom Nicolas had displaced and restored him againe to his former state Howbeit to no purpose For all at one same time the Frenchmen were diminished with a sore slaughter at an Euensongtime of the Sicilians and driuen out of the Isle and Peter of Aragon receiued in Who also vanquishing the sonne of king Charles in a battell vpō the Sea not farre from Naples caried him away prisoner into Spayne to the great grief of his father And Charles himselfe sayling ouer into Aphrike pyned away for pensiuenesse a iust punishmēt as many men then iudged for his most shamefull vniust putting of the ij Princes of Sweueland Austriche to death at the instigation of the Pope But Martine the fourth beyng moued with Charles miserie excommunicateth Peter of Aragon and giueth his kingdome for a pray to him that would inuade it assoyling his subiectes from the bond of their othe and finally proclayming a Croissy against him Besides this he sent Ambassadours into Fraunce to king Philip and commaunded him to inuade the kingdome of Aragon out of hand Once againe therfore when the Pope had sounded his trumpet they met together in mortall battell by the riuer of Geround And at the first the Frenchmen had the better but anone after the Spanyardes get the vpper hand What néedeth many wordes there was a miserable and sorowful slaughter all thinges were wasted farre and wyde bloud was shed without measure As soone as Martine was dead byanby there steppes vp another Hyen Honorius the fourth Who least there might be any abatement of miserie calleth Rafe of Haspurge king of Romanes out of Germanie to Rome there to receiue the name of Augustus to recouer Campain Calabrie Puell and Sicill to the Romane Empyre by driuing the Frenchmen and Spanyardes from thence For the which matter Rafe sommoned a Parlament at Wirtsburge thether there came a very great resort vnto whō Probus a Diuine of Tubing the Bishop of Tull made an Oration wherin amōg all other thyngs How long I pray you my right deare brethren sayth he will these Romish kytes abuse our patiēce I pray God I may not say our foolishnesse How lōg shall we beare with their trecherie couetousenesse pride superfluity This worst kind of Archsinagoges will neuer leaue till it hath brought all men to beggerie and slauerie This mischief hath growen through our debate It is our debate that setteth those rakehelles in their ruffe Neither is it possible for vs to maynteine peace and godlinesse as long as they reigne Not long ago they set the Sarons and Sweuians together by the eares Afterward they depriued Friderike the second a Prince most profitable for the common weale and Conrade his sonne and foure Princes of Sweueland of Empyre and life together They haue sowed the séede of discord in Germanie Besides this when Corradine that noble young gentlemā of excellent towardnesse who neuer did harme sought to recouer the heritage of his aunceters by the law of all nations they tooke him prisoner by craft and pollicie and put him to death They set the Sweuians and Frenchmen of Westrich at warre one against another and then stirred vp the Spanyardes against the Frenchmē and now they labour to set vs at oddes with the kinges of Spayne and Fraunce our owne kinsmen which came in old tyme out of Germanie And so forth as foloweth in the same Bishops Oration in the seuenth booke of Auentines Chronicles the 15. leaf What mā reading or hearyng these such other like doinges of the Romish Bishops can take them for Apostolike men that preach peace to folke and not rather for apostaticall Bellonase cursed féendes and the very furies or hellhoundes themselues About this time Meynhard the Earle of Tyroll entered into certein Castles that belonged to him by right of inheritaunce which notwithstanding the Bishop of Trent auouched to be his was not ashamed
the Pope And if he obey not he commaundeth all his Lordes temporall and spirituall to forsake their Prince and to compell him to obey the Pope This Bull was published the xv day of October the yeare of our Lord God. 1323. But Lewes asked the aduise of all the Clerkes that were best séene in the lawes as well of God as man through Germanie Italie and Fraunce at Paris Bononie Padua and other Uniuersities who gaue an agreable aunswere That the Popes doinges against the Emperour are contrarie to Christian doctrine that the Pope was out of his wittes and made hauocke of Christes people for desire of dominion and that the Emperour was not subiect to the Pope but the Pope to the Emperour For the seruaunt of seruauntes ought not to beare rule but rather to do seruice to such as sit at the table But the Bishop cryes out that all these which gaue the Emperour this aunswere are heretickes and he excommunicateth them all with the Emperour and burneth their bookes The Emperour for all this called a Parlament about the matter and sommoning a Counceil deposed the Pope For he was openly proclaymed for an heretike a tyraunt of the Church and a troubler of the common peace and thereunto his image was burned in the Marketsted Neuerthelesse when Iohn the xxij was dead Clement the sixth continewed the displeasure still agaynst Lewes commaunding him likewise to depose himselfe from the Empyre Yea he proceded yet further and reuiuyng all Iohn the xxij processes denounced the Emperour to be an heretike and a schismatike moreouer commaundyng the Electors to chuse another king by a tyme appointed except they had leuer that the Bishop himself should giue them a king They therfore obeying his manaces chose Charles Marques of Morania But for asmuch as the better part of the Empyre was displeased both with the Pope with Charles and sticked still to Lewes their true souerein Lord and Emperour it came agayne to swordes drawyng on both sides and there was burning wasting and sleayng the accustomed frutes of the Byshops of Rome which neuer brought tydinges of peace but alwayes blew vp the trumpet to battell And least Italie and Naples might take breath any while from their slaughters and wastinges Vrbane the sixth of that name made sute to Lewes the puissant king of Hungarie that he should send Charles Duke of Durace into Italie with an host of Hungarians for he would bestow the kingdome of Sicilie vpon him Therfore when he came to Rome he crowned him king of Sicilie howbeit in such wise as he departed with certeine of the best Earledomes in the Realme to the Bishops neuew Againe least Clement the Antipope might séeme of lesse authoritie then Pope Turbane he crowned Lewes Duke of Angeow a sideman of his kyng of Sicilie who immediatly enters into Italie with threescorethousand mē Then folowed spoilyng burning and sleaing againe and all maner of crueltie was exercised on either side verely by the instigation of these good and peaceable Apostles the souerein Shepeherdes of the Church of Rome I wittingly passe ouer here many outrageous doynges of the Bishops which the storywriter Theodoriche of Nyem prosecuteth very largely and truly in his thrée bookes of the Schisme Now come I to Martine the fifth that was created Bishop at the Councell of Constance who being nothing vnlike his predecessors gaue Sicilie in Fee to one Aloyse of Sicilie against Alphons king of Spayne Wherupon rose againe not a few nor small calamities The same Byshop was the cause of the Ciuill warre in Beame and that the Germanes that went into Beame with a great power brought nothing thence but dishonour very great losse I will not pursue the slaughters burninges wastringes miseries of that warre They be described at large by Aenaeas Syluius in his Historie of Beame The same author setteth out the horrible and blouddy practises that Eugenie the fourth and his successor Martine the fifth vsed to ouerthrow the Councel of Basill And it hath ben shewed already how great mischief the same Eugenie the fourth brought vpon Christendome when he inforced kyng Ladislaus vnto vnhappie warre contrarie to his othe made vnto Amurathes Prince of Turkye Pius the second and Sixtus the fourth were forewarder to feates of armes then to peace and preaching of the Gospell They neuer yelded an inche to any Prince but indeuered most scoutly not onely to maynteine but also by hooke and by crooke to increase the maiestie of their sea The histories beare witnesse hereof abundantly I will not any further report what the Byshops of Rome haue committed in our age and within the remembraunce of man least I trouble the gentle reader to much for they be better knowen then that they néede to be rehearsed For who knoweth not how great lawlesnesse they haue abused in transposing kingdomes in dischargyng subiectes from their dew faithfulnesse and obedience in putting downe and settyng vp of kynges and in hatching of most blouddy and mortall warres The horrible trecherie of Alexander the sixth agaynst Charles kyng of Fraunce is well inough knowen in that he made him take armes vppon him and called him into the kyngdome of Naples agaynst the kyng of Spayne and yet for all that did byanby after most trayterously take part with the Spanyardes agaynst him Iulius the second a Lombard practised the Uenetian warre which being the greatest and sorest of all others continewed eight yeares with excedyng great bloushed before it could be ended and stirred vp Lewes kyng of Fraunce agaynst the Uenetians and byanby after led not onely the Uenetians but also all the puissantest Princes and people of Europe agaynst Lewes Also he behaued himselfe after such a sort in the matter of calling a Councell that euen the Papistes themselues do greatly blame him and finde fault with him in that behalfe Yea and euen Onuphrius Panuinius hath blamed this dealing in Iulius the second Leo the tenth not onely appeased not the troubles styrred vp by Iulius but also continewed them doubblyng mischief vppon mischief armyng nation agaynst nation and kéepyng promise neither with Germanes nor with Frenchmen Clement the seuenth passed Leo and some of his predocessours For first he tooke part with the Emperour and afterward slipt away to Fraunces the French king to whom he was the occasion of a very great losse For in the kyngdome of Naples whether Lawtreche had brought his army very well appointed by the instigation of the Pope he lost the greater part of his armye by reason of an vnmercyfull plague that fell vpon them The storie of Frijndsperg Captein of the Almaine souldyers auoucheth in the eighth booke and the hundred and thréescor the leafe that of fourescore thousand there remained alyue scarcely one thousand and seuen hundred What troubles Paule the third the Romish Byshop wrought vnto Germanie the warre that