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A13961 The fierie tryall of Gods saints (these suffered for the witnes of Iesus, and for the word of God, (vnder Queene Mary,) who did not worship the Beast ... As a counter-poyze to I.W. priest his English martyrologe. And the detestable ends of popish traytors: (these are of Sathans synagogue, calling themselues Iewes (or Catholiques) but lie and are not ... Set downe in a comparatiue collection of both their sufferings. Herewith also the concurrance and agreement of the raignes of the kings of England and Scotland, since the first yeare of Q. Mary, till this present, the like before not extant. Burton, Francis, fl. 1603-1617. 1612 (1612) STC 24270; ESTC S118537 37,474 82

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at Chichester Rich Colliar Wil Cooker Wil Hooper Henry Lawrence Rich Wright and Wil Store bur eodē mēse at Cāterbury Ely Warne bur   at Stratf Bow Robert Smith bur   at Vxbridge Steph Harward bur eodē mēse at Stratf Bow Thomas Fust bur   at Ware Wil Haile bur   at Barnet Wil Allen bur   at Walsigham Roger Coo bur   at Yexford Thomas Cobbe bur mēse S●pt at Thet̄ord Rob Streater George Catmer Anth Burward Geo Bradbrige and Iames Tutty bur eodē mese at Cāterbury Io Goreway and Tho Hayward bur eodē mēse at Lichfield Rob Glouer and Correlius Bongey bur Septēb 20 at Coventry Bishop Ridley and Bish Latimer bur Octob. 16. at Oxford Wil Wolsey and Robert Piggot bur eodem die at Ely Iohn webb George Roper Gre Parke bur Nouē 30. at Cāterbury Io Philpot Archdeacon bur Decē 18. in Smithfield Thomas Whittle Barthelet Greene Iohn Tudson Io. Went Thomas Browne     Isabell Foster and Ioane Warren bur Janu. 27 in Smithfield Iohn Lomas Anne Abbright Ioane Catmer Ioane Soke and Agnes Snoth bur 31. at Cāterbury Thomas Cranmer Archbish of Canter bur March 21 at Oxford Iohn Spicer Wil Cobberley Io Maundrell bur 24. at Salisbury Ioane Trunchfield and Agnes Potten bur eodē mēse at Ipswich 1556. Mariae Ang. 4. Mariae Scot. 15. Iohn Harpoole and Ioane Beech bur Aprill 1. at Rochester Iohn Hulliar bur 2. at Cambridge Rob Drakes Wil Tymmes Rich Spurge Tho Spurge Io Cauell George Ambrose bur 24. in Smithfield Christopher Lyser Io Mace Iohn Spencer Simō Ioyne Rich Nichols and Iohn Hamund bur 28. at Colchester Thomas Drury and Thomas Crooker bur May 5. at Gloucester Hughe Lauerhoke and Ioh. ap Rice bur 15. at Stratford-Bowe Katherine Hull Ioane Horns Eliz Thackvell and Margery Ellys bur 16. in Smithfield Tho Spicer Ioh Denny Edmund Poole bur 21. at Beckleys in Suffolke Tho Harland ●oh Oswald Tho Auington and Tho Read bur Iune 6. at Lewis in Suffolke Tho Whood and Thomas Mylles bur 20. at Lewis in Suffolke Thomas Moore bur June 26. at Leicester Henry Adlington Lawrence Pernham Henry Wye Wil Halliwell Tho Bowyer George Searle Edm Hurst Lyon Cawch Ralph Iackson Iohn Derrifall Iohn Rowth Elyz Pepper and Agnes George bur 27. at Stratford Bowe Roger Bernard Rob Lawson and Adam Foster bur 30. at Bury Iulius Palmer Io Gwyn Thomas Askine bur Iuly 16. at Newbery Katherine Cawches Guilian Gilbert Perotine Massey and the said Masseys Infant breaking violently out of the Mothers wombe into the fire was taken out once and presently throwne againe into the fire bur 18. in the Isle of Garnsey Tho Dungale Iohn Foremā Anne Try bur eodem die at Greensted Ioane Wast bur August 1. at Darby Edw Sharpe bur Septem 8. at Bristow Iohn Hart Tho Rauensdale as also a Shoomaker and a Currier bur 24. at Mayfield A Carpenter bur 25. at Bristow Iohn Horne and a woman bur 27. at Wooton-vnderhedge Wil Waterer Steph Kempe Wil Hay Tho Hudson Wil Lowicke and William Prouting bur Janua 15 at Cāterbury Ni Final Mat Brabridge b 16. at Ashford Io Philpot Thomas Stephens bur in Janu. at wye Martine Bucer Paulus Phagius bones digged vp and with their bookes bur also Peter Martyrs wiues bones remooued and buried in a dunghill Febru 16. at Cābridge 1557. Mariae Ang. 5. Mariae Scot. 16 Tho Loseby Henry Ramsey Tho Thirtle Marg Hyde Agnes Stanly bur Aprill 12. in Smithfield Rich Sharpe Tho Hale bu May 7. at Bristow Steph Gratwicke Wil Monāt one King bur eodēmēse in S. Georges field Ione Brabridge Wal Aplebly Petronell his wife Edm Allen Kath his wife Ioa Manings a blind maid bu Iune 18. at Maidstone Ioane Fishcoke Nich White Nich Pardue Barbara Finall Brabridge his widdow wilsons wife Alice Benden bur 19 at Cāterbury Rich Woodmā George Stephēs Wil Mainard Alex Hosmā Thomasine Wood Mar Morris Iames Morris Denis Burgis Ashdōs wife Groues wife bu 22. at Lewys in Sussex Simō Myller Elyzab Cooper bu July 13. at Norwich Wil Bongor Wil Purcas Th Benold Agnes Siluerside alias Smith Helene Euring Elyzab Folkes Wil Mount Alice his wife Rose Allyn     and Ioh Iohnson bur August 2. at Colchester Rich Crashfield bur 5. at Norwich A woman and one named Fryar bur 20. at Rochester Tho Benyon bur 27. at Bristow Ralfe Allerton Iames Austoo Marge Austoo and Rich Rooth bur Septem 17 at Islington Agnes Bongor Margaret Thurston bur eodem die at Colchester Ioyce Lewis bur eodē mēse at Litchfield Iohn Kurd bur 20. at Northamp Iohn Noyes bur eodē mēse at Layfield Cycely Ormes bur 23. at Norwich Iohn Halingdale Wil Sparrow Rih Gibson bur Nouem 18 at Colchester Iohn Rough Margery Mearing bur Decem. 22 in Smithfield Iohn Warner Tho Athoth Io Mylles Nich Holden Iohn Ashdon Tho Spurdance bur eodem An. in Chichester Diocesse 1558. Mariae Ang. 6. Mariae Scot. 17. Hugh Fox Iohn deuenish Cuthbert Simson bur March 28 in Smithfield Wil Nicholne bur Aprill 9. at Hereford Wil Seaman Thomas Carman Tho Hudson bur May. 19 at Norwich Wil Harris Richard Day Christian George bur 26. at Colchester Henry Pond Raynold Eastland Robert Southam Mat Richardby Roger Holland bur June 27. in Smithfield Richard Yeoman bur July 10 at Norwich Robert Mylles Steph Cottō Robert Dynes Ste Wight Iohn Slade Wil Pikes bur Iuly 14. at Brainford Iohn Cooke Robert Myles Alex Lane Iames Ashley bur eodē mēse at Bury Thomas Bembridge bur eodē mēse in Winchester Diocesse Alex Gowch and Alice Driuer bur Nouē 4. at Ipswich Phil Humfrey Iohn David Hen Dauid and a woman named Preest bur eodē mēse at Exceter This yere the 17. of Nouem dyed Q. Marie Iohn Corneford Christopher Browne Io Herst Alice Snoth and Kathe Knight alias Tynley being as sayth M. Fox the last that suffered in Queene Maries Raigne were burned 10. at Cāterbury           The whole number of Martyrs burned in 5. yeres of Qu. Maries Raigne by this account is about 260. A Beadroll of all such traiterous Priests Iesuits and Popish Recusants as by I. W. Priest in his English Martyrologe are by him recorded for Martyrs in this Kingdome since the first yeare of Queene Elizabeth vntill the latter end of the sixt yeare of King Iames our now Soueraigne Lord his Raigne ❀ Drawen jnto such an order as that at one viewe you may behold the yeare of our L God the yeares of the Princes Raignes both of England and Scotland the Names of those that suffered the day and moneth wherein they suffered and the places of their suffering ¶ A Table very necessary for all Lawyers Scriueners Clarkes or whosoeuer else desire vpon any occasion to know how the double account of the yeares of the Raignes of the Princes of England and Scotland since the first yeare of
feruent desire to doe my Country some publique seruice in helping as much as in me lyeth to stop the mouths of our common aduersaries the Papists whose lauish tongs haue spit out aboundance of venome and their pennes stung like Scorpions not onely our late most gracious and woorthy Queene Elizabeth of euer-blessed memorie for the many vnspeakeable blessings that God with and through her bestowed vpon this and other Kingdomes But also our present Soueraigne Lord and King with both their state Ministers by charging them as falsely so maliciously with cruelty breach of promise bloud and bloudy persecution for conscience hath mooued mee to jmploye the best talent of my small ability to convince them of jmpudent and lying malicious slaunders and reproachfull vntruths First in a few following lynes directed vnto all Romish fauorites clearing my present gracious Soueraigne of breach of promise with Recusants for toleration of Popery wherein also I haue touched the ground of that slaunder with the occasion and Authors thereof with some other matters of speciall moment Secondly in a tabular computation by a comparatiue collection of all such Martyrs as were burned in Queene Maries days with all such Priests Iesuites popish Recusants as their Pseudomartyrologist I. W. Priest pretends but pretends to haue byn executed in England Religionis ergò since the beginning of Q. Elizabeths raigne vntill this present yere 1608. I haue cleared the second accusation of cruelty bloud and bloudy presecution for conscience evidently proouing by their owne account vnto the vnderstanding of the most simple that is not wilfully blind that many more of the first sort suffered death and were in fire consumed onely for their conscience within the lesse then six yeares raigne of Queene Marie then of the second third and fourth sort to wit Priests Iesuites and Recusants in 52. yeares since and that not for Religion but Treason Whereby it appeareth how vnjustly our late woorthy Queene our present gracious King their State-ministers haue been and are most jmpudently falsely of bloud cruelty accused taxed Nor haue I ought herein written to giue satisfaction to any such for let them sincke in their owne sinnes as being ouer deeply bewitched with Romes jdolatry doe hold that all Treasons all Rebellions all Attempts vi aut fraude against the persons and states of our late Queene Elizabeth and our now present King both were and are not only lawfull but meritorious But to enforme such of them as being of a milder temper and yet looking that way willingly confesse and acknowledge that all such as haue beene or are guilty of such crimes haue deseruedly been punished but yet doe or at least seeme to conceaue that their Priests and Iesuites haue suffered onely for their Consciences and therefore their persecution they being many in nomber is in their judgement great and lamentable Which were it graunted or could as it neuer can bee prooued that they all dyed for their conscience onely which yet is a conscience mis-enformed yet doth the nomber of our true Martyrs in lesse then 6. yeres of Queene Maries raigne although it should be permitted vnto them to take also into their number those fifty and two lay persons for so many I thinke there are registred with the Priests and Iesuites in their owne Martyrologe not onely equallize but exceed the number of theirs in full fifty yeares since by the number of almost 100. persons Insomuch that if the numbers of persons suffering and the number of yeeres of both sorts wherein they suffered bee compared and the cause of all their sufferings admitted to be alike just or vnjust of which there is no comparison yet did the cruelty of Queene Marie and her popish Clergie out-strip Queene Elizabeth and king Iames conjoyned more then tenne for one and therefore learne you that haue any sparke of grace remaining in you to be good subiects to your King and cease now at last to taxe your soueraigne any more of persecutiō whose heart bleeds that he is forced to draw bloud from others for their jntollerable demerits As for the truth of these collections whereat perhaps and not vnlike some popish spirits will take exception vnderstand that M r. Foxe that sometime reuerend Father of our Church is my Author whome for the number of such professors of the Gospell as were burned in Queene Maries dayes I haue soly followed who albeit happily for it is almost jmpossible to bee otherwise in some things in so large a volume hee might commit some small errour in some particular cicumstances because no Historian can possibly be present euery where with his owne eyes and eares but must of necessity giue credite vnto the relations of others in many poynts Yet the granity of his person his excellent learning his great reading his worthy and sober cariage his sound judgement and therein his wise choyce of Authours and the generall report of his honest and religious mind by an vniforme consent of all such as knew him freeth him from taxation of any wilfull and grosse errour or willing mistaking and from any malicious aslertion against the Papists without a probable ground throughout his worthy woorke in whose behalfe I thinke it needlesse to bestowe much paines because the honester and greater sort are honestly already of him perswaded and for the rest as they are for number fewer and their honesty little worth so ate they many of them wilfully obstinate and will not bee perswaded As for the other sort to wit popish Priests Iesuites and Recusants such as haue beene executed since the beginning of Queene Elizabeths raigne as I. W. pretendeth for religion vntill the yeare 1608. they are coppyed word for word out of a booke called The English Martyrologe by the authority of the popish supervisors as it should seeme allowed vnles the nameles author thereof I. W. Priest doe belye them Wherin I haue dealt as truely with them to a letter as I could saue onely that I haue left out one person and in steed thereof added two to wit William Watson and William Clarke both Priests executed at Winchester Novemb. 29. 1603. I know not how by the Pseudomartyrologist omitted for he might as well haue enrolled them as those which he hath done being all alike traytors to their Prince and Country Noram I disposed to cauill for that I find diuers of their Priests noted in that his Martyrologe by one name which yet I find set downe in our Chronicles by an other name as for example in An. 1585. Ianuary 21. Edward Transam and Nicho. Wodfine so by this our Martyrologist noted are by others named Edmund Barbar and Nicholas Deuorax which I note chiefly for this end that none might be deceiued in thinking that more haue been executed then in deed haue been because one and the same persons are in their and our writings noted by different names for they haue so many false names that amongst them all I find
a seeming Protestant but vnder-hand and couertly willing to be held a Papist jnsomuch that by his close carriage hee was very honourablie thought of by his Majestie chosen by his Majestie to be very neere vnto him and yet neuerthelesse highly accompted of and respected amongst the Romanists for a sure friend of theirs vpon whom they might hold a Dependance Testified hereby that with his owne hands he deliuered and presented their Popish Supplication vnto his Majestie at Theobalds for a toleration in Anno. 1603. And that I may not seeme maliciously of my selfe without a ground to taxe him herein of ambition obserue with me that at his tryall by one for his learning judicious for his knowledge experienced in matters of State it was by euident arguments prooued that his proceedings argued a manifest Discontentmēt and withall that all discontentments proceeded from either want disgrace or ambition but not from want for his possessions and yearely revenues were exceding great not frō disgrace for his Majestie had many waies graced highly honoured him which graces as he then did so I now could particularly jnstance but that thereby I must needsly discouer his person and therefore of necessitie from Ambition Likewise as then by one was obserued his ambition in his jntentions and thoughts so by another of higher rancke and dignitie was noted his dissimulation in his actions for said he there are in all his proceedings Vestigia manifesta vestigia occulta giving withall an jnstāce herein That this great personage had admitted T. P. that Archtraitor to be a Pentioner but yet without hauing any oath administred him either for his allegeance or yet for his particular discharge of that place whereunto he was admitted and yet vnderhand giuing out that he was sworne wherevpon he jnferred thus That wheresoeuer things were palliated which were or fayned to be which are not there alwaies is some deceit At which time he was by a third honourable personage taxed expreslie for his Hippocrisie as being Iacke on both sides whereby hee had made himselfe odious to both Protestants so tearmed and Papists nor yet though these are jnough are these all But to returne to our purpose and matter in hand Before he ascended vnto that height of honor which then by the Kings speciall favour he was advanced vnto I meane in Queene Elizabeths time when his predecessours carriage had givē just occasion of the successours further disgrace then at this very time was the same person imployed vnto his maiestie with letters from Garnet the Iesuites Prouinciall who had about that time receaued the Popes Breues to this purpose Quandocunque contigerit miseram illam faeminam meaning Q. Elizabeth ex hac vita exire c. that whensoeuer that wretched woman should die the papists should not admit of any other to inherite how neere so euer in bloud vnlesse he were a Romish Catholique and not so onely vnlesse he would also sweare to vphold to his power the popish Religion But the Kings happie acceptation with his good Subiects caused those to bee converted into ashes and then come other Breues enioyning their obedience to his Maiestie but Coacta virtus non est virtus Gramercy horse when you cannot choose then obay This is that Obedientia ex necessitate nempe ferreâ jlla coactâ which Bellarmine noteth Recognitionum pag. 16. And how long this vntill they be able to cast him out whō they were forced to receaue And your Watson soone attempted that which hee knew his vnholy Father the Pope hartily wished Hee was a lowe man in person but he aspyred high when he thought to bee Lord Chancellor of England but missing that hee was aduanced to the Gallowes for preferment but I thinke being purblind he missed the waye that hee meant I say did this double-hearted Lord jmploy T. P. the Traytor vnto the Kings Majestie then King only of Scotland with certain letters of advise but much in the behalfe of the English Romish Catholicks aduising him that he should at such time as it should please the Lord to call him to the possession of this his kingdome which as now he doth so long Lord grant he may quietly enjoye giue faire promises and hopes of tolleration vnto the Papists thereby as he therein pretended to prepare a more easie entrance for his Majestie when time should serue The Kings Majestie not as then suspecting the depth of this his Councellors drifts but vnderstanding him simply returned him an answere with thankes for his advise but withall jnferring a clause directly as since it appeareth contrarie to his Councellors expectation His Majesties words in answere to the letter were in effect as followeth Whensoeuer it shall please GOD in his due time to call mee to the possession of my right in England I purpose not to make any jnnovation in the State or to alter the Lawes and Ordinances thereof c. Wherevppon a wise man would as the L L. did haue thus jnferred No alteration in the State no changing of Lawes and Ordinances therein established why then no toleratiō of Poperie no allowance of Recusancy not because it pleased the kings Majestie out of the meeknesse of his Spirit voyd of guile and double dealing to returne him thankes for his aduise although hee did not so much as make shew that he liked thereof therefore to conclude that a toleration should be granted But he in his ambition besotted with his own follie not expounding his Majesties words as he meant but as he himselfe conceited them because he so as it should euidently appeare wished that it might bee did so farre exceed the limits of his commission and was so farre vainely transported as that at T. P. his returne from the Kings Majestie it was amongst the Papists divulged though falsely that the King had also by the sayd T. P. giuen directions to the afore-remembred great Personage by word of mouth to wind himselfe into their favours for that was the word and to giue hopes of toleration in his Majesties name vnto Recusants and herehence chiefly arose that scandall of the kings Honour that he had broken promise with Recusants For the better confirmation whereof and that his Majesty neuer intended any such matter of toleration Conferre herewith Watson the Priest his confession vnto the Honourable Lord the Lord of Northampton at Winchester who being by the Earle by his Majestie therevnto appoynted examined vpon the poynt of promise of toleration freely confessed that albeit he were by some falsly accused to be the Author of that report yet it was most true that hee could neuer at any time draw any comfort from his Maiestie in the point of conscience All which notwithstanding besides the just cause that the Powder-treason and other dangerous conspiracies against his Maiesties life and kingdomes hatefull to God and all good men gaue of an hard hand ouer the Papists yet let any of you that I may vse the