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A59100 Tracts written by John Selden of the Inner-Temple, Esquire ; the first entituled, Jani Anglorvm facies altera, rendred into English, with large notes thereupon, by Redman Westcot, Gent. ; the second, England's epinomis ; the third, Of the original of ecclesiastical jurisdictions of testaments ; the fourth, Of the disposition or administration of intestates goods ; the three last never before extant.; Selections. 1683 Selden, John, 1584-1654.; Littleton, Adam, 1627-1694.; White, Robert, 1645-1703.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. Jani Anglorum facies altera. English.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. England's epinomis.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. Of the original of ecclesiastical jurisdiction of testaments. 1683 (1683) Wing S2441; ESTC R14343 196,477 246

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at Rome One hundred for the honour of S. Peter to find Lights for his Church another hundred for the honour of S. Paul on the like occasion and the third hundred for the Pope's use to enlarge his Alms. This was done in the year 858. when Leo the Fourth was Pope Lin. 9. Thirty pence of live money Possibly the worth or value of thirty pence in Goods and Chattels King Offa in his Grant thus words it quibus sors tantum contulit extra domos in pascuis ut triginta argenteorum pretium excederet who had an Estate besides Houses in Lands which might exceed the value of thirty silver pence Lin. 15. Out of a Rescript of Pope Gregory We have the whole Letter set down in Spelman which speaks in English thus GREGORY the Bishop Servant of the Servants of God to his Worshipful Brethren the Arch-Bishops of Canterbury and York and to their Suffraegans and to his beloved Sons the Abbots Priors Arch-Deacons and their Officials appointed throughout the Kingdom of England unto whom these Letters shall come Greeting and Apostolical Benediction In what manner the Pence of S. Peter which are due or owing to our Chamber are to be gathered in England and in what Bishopricks and Dioceses they are owing that there may arise no doubt on this occasion we have caused it to be set down in this present Writing according as it is contained in the Register of the Apostolick See Out of the Diocess of Canterbury seven pounds and eighteen shillings sterling Out of the Diocess of London sixteen pounds ten shillings And so of the rest Yeoven at the old City April 22. in the second year of our Popedom There is some difference though in the account of the Dioceses For after Lincoln he leaves out Coventry and puts Chichester for Chester 8 l. and then after Bath he puts in Salisbury and Coventry with a mistake 10 l. 10 s. for 5 s. and leaves York last Besides every body knows there are more Dioceses now than were then This was Gregory the Fifth that wrote this and it was our Author tells us in the time of King Edward the Second But Edward the Third in the year of the Lord 1365. and of his Reign 39. forbad these Peter-pence to be paid any more at Rome or to be gathered any longer in England CHAP. XV. Pag. 81. lin 10. Into six Provinces or Circuits As they are for number still with two Judges a piece though at first three How these differ from what they now are as to the Counties the Reader may easily satisfie himself Here are thirty seven of them as we now reckon only with this difference that Monmouth and Rutland are left out and Richmond and Copland are put in Pag. 82. lin 27. And if he perish i. e. sink let him lose one foot For that in this tryal by water was the sign and proof of guilt if the party thrown in did not swim which is quite contrary in the tryal of Witches as you will find in the next Chapter which treats of Ordeals Lin. 39. The Kings great Assise Assise is a word that hath many significations in our Law It is here in the Title taken for a Statute The Assises i. e. the Statutes and Ordinances of King Henry made at Clarendon But in this place it is used for a Jury and it is either the Great or Grand Assise which serv'd for the right of Property and was to consist of twelve Knights or the Petty Assise which served for the right of Possession only and was made up of twelve lawful men CHAP. XVI Pag. 86. lin 34. The superstitions and fopperies These you have also in Sir H. Spelman with an Incipit Missa Judicii which shews that the Church of Rome did once approve of these Customs which since she hath condemned notwithstanding her pretence of being Infallible I would to God she would deal as ingenuously in throwing off those other errors and corruptions we do so justly charge her with CHAP. XVII Pag. 87. lin 21. Hogenhine Or Agen-hyne that is ones own servant It is written also Home-hyne that is a servant of the house Lin. 33. Holding in Frank Pledge The Latin is francus tenens Wherefore amend the mistake and read holding in Frank Fee For Frank Pledg is a thing of another nature as belonging to a mans Behaviour and not to his Tenure Now Frank Fee is that which is free from all service when a man holds an Estate at the Common Law to himself and his heirs and not by such service as is required in ancient demesne Pag. 88. lin 12. The Falcidian Law So named from one Falcidius who being Tribune of the people in Augustus his time was the Maker of this Law Lin. 33. Twenty pounds worth of Land in yearly revenue So I render 20. libratae terrae For although Cowell in proportion to Quadrantata or Fardingdeal of Land which he saith is the fourth part of an Acre seem● at first to gather that Obolata then must be half an Acre Denariata a whole Acre and by consequence Solidata twelve Acres and Librata twenty times twelve that is two hundred and forty Acres Yet this was but a conceit of his own For by having found the word used with reference to Rent as well as Land thus 20. libratas terrae vel reditûs he is forced to acknowledge that it must signifie so much Land as may yield twenty shillings per annum To which opinion Spelman also giv● his assent But what quantity of Land this Librata terrae is cannot so easily be determined Cowell out of Skene tells us it contains four Oxgangs and every Oxgang thirteen Acres if so then it is fifty two Acres and twenty of them which make a Knights fee come to one thousand and forty Acres which somewhat exceeds the account here set down of six hundred and eighty out of the Red Book of the Exchequer But there is a great deal of more difference still as the account of the Knights fée is given by others In one Manuscript we read that A Yardland contains twenty four Acres four yard-Yard-lands make one Hide that is ninety six Acres and five Hides make a Knights fee that is four hundred and eighty Acres the Relief whereof is a hundred Shillings Another Manuscript hath it thus Ten Acres according to ancient custom make one Fardel and four Fardels that is forty Acres make a Yardland and four Yardlands that is one hundred and sixty Acres make one Hide and four Hides that is six hundred and forty Acres make one Knights fee. A third reckons it otherwise that sixteen yard-Yard-lands make a whole Knights fee which if we make a yard-Yard-land to be twenty four Acres according to the first account com●s to three hundred eighty four Acres but if according to the second we take it for forty Acres it amounts to six hundred and forty Acres And saith he when they are taxed at six Shillings four Pence that is every of
the sixteen yard-Yard-lands which make up the Fee at so much they make the summ of one hundred Shillings or five Pound which was the ancient Relief of a Knights fee. But this is a mistake either of the Author or the Citation it is six Shillings three Pence which makes that just summ from whence we learn also what proportion was observed by the Lord in setting and demanding of the Relief upon the next Heir after his Ancestor's decease Further in the Kings Writ as Glanvil cites it it is said that twelve plough-Plough-lands make one Knights fee which allowing to a Plough-land one hundred twenty Acres amounts to one thousand four hundred and forty Acres In the main as to the value of a Knights fee 't is enough what Cowell tells us that it was so much inheritance as was sufficient yearly to maintain a Knight wi●h convenient Revenue which in Henry the Thirds dayes Camden sayes was fifteen Pounds and Sir Thomas Smith rates at forty But to confirm the account which our Author here gives us we find in the Statute for Knights in the first of Edward the Second that such as had twenty Pounds in Fee or for term of life per annum might be compelled to be Knights And as to the various measure of Land of which we have had a remarkable instance in this business before us Spelman hath given us good reasons for it since where the Land was good they might probably reckon the fewer Acres to a yard-Yard-land a Hide a Knights fee c. and where it was barren they might allow the more Beside that some Lords who lett these Fees might be more bountiful and profuse others more parsimonious and severe to their dependents and that the services which were imposed upon these Fees might in some Mannors according to custom be lighter in others upon agreement and covenant more heavy All which might strangely diversifie the account as to the quantity or measure of those Lands which were to make up a Knights fee. CHAP. XVIII Pag. 91. lin 4. A little Habergeon or Coat of 〈◊〉 In Latin Halbergellum a diminutive from the Saxon Halsberg armour for the Neck and Breast It is written also Haubergellum and Hambergellum They mistake themselves who translate it a Halbert in French Halebarde anoffensive Weapon for a Coat of Mail which is armour of defence in French Haubert or Hauberk whence Fée de Hauberk which we have already explained somewhere before Lin. 5. A Capelet of Iron A little Iron or Steel Cap instead of a Head-piece or Helmet which the better sort wore For by comparing this with the two fore-going Sections we find they were to have a difference of Arms according to their different Quality and Estate Lin. 7. A Wambais Wambasium or Wambasia so called I suppose because it reached over the belly or womb was a Jacket or Coat of defence used in stead of the Coat of Mail perhaps like unto our Buff-coats though probably not of Leather only but of any other material as the Wearer should think fit Pag. 92. lin 6. Timber for the building of Ships In Latin here Mairemia written also Meremia and Meremium and Maremium and Muremium from the French Meresme Timber to build with Lin. 14. Stercutius Saturn so called as being the first Inventer of dunging Land Lin. 28. Vnder the title of Free-men Here the Author himself hath in the Latin added a Marginal Note which I thought fit to remove to this place He saith that among the ancient Germans the Alway free the Middlemost free and the Lowermost free were as it were the Classes and several Ranks of the lesser Nobles i. e. of their Gentry For the title of Nobless as also in our Vulgar Language was given only to Princes and Great Men. And for this he quotes Munster Cosmog lib. 3. CHAP. XIX Pag. 93. l. 32. In the borders of the Carnutes A people of France whose Countrey is called Chartrain and their chief City Chartres about eighteen Leagues from Paris Eastward That Town eight Miles off called Dreux in Latin Drocum was so named from the Druids who dwelt there at first and likely enough afterward often resorted thither P. 94. l. 37. Of the three Estates the King the Lords and the Commons There are indeed three Orders or Estates acknowledged by true Divines and sound Lawyers in the English Government to wit the Lords Spiritual the Lords Temporal and the Commons of England But the fundamental mistake of our Learned Author is that he hath joyned those two sorts of Lords whose very character shews them to be of a distinct species though as to the publick Welfare and the Kings Service they ought to be of one and the same interest into one Estate and to make up the third Estate thought himself obliged to bring in the King himself for one who is Lord paramount over all the three and by this means ipsam Majestatem in ordinem redigere I call this a fundamental mistake as a most probable ground of Rebellion as it was in the Barons Wars and in our late Civil Broils inasmuch as if the King make one of the three Estates as they fancy he doth and hath as they do from thence conclude he hath no more but a co-ordinate power with both or either of the other two Estates that then it is lawful for both or either of those Estates in case of publick grievances to quarrel the King their co-ordinate if he will not give way to their redress that is if he will not consent to do what they would have him to do and upon his refusal of so doing to raise War against him to sequester and murder his Loyal adherents to destroy his Royal Person and finally if he escape the hazards of Battel when they get him into their hands to bring him to account for a pretended male administration and the violation of a trust which God and not the People put into his hands and having gone so far that they may if possible secure themselves to put the Monarch to death and to extirpate Monarchy it self This was the ground and method of our late Republican policy and practice Wherein yet they did not foresee what examples they set against themselves supposing this Doctrine of the three Estates in their sense to be true and that King Lords and Commons had an equality of trust and parity of power that the same outrage which the Rump-Commoners acted against the King to the destroying of him and against the Lords to the outing of them and voting them useless and dangerous as to their share of Government might one time or other be more plausibly promoted and more effectually put in execution by one or both of the other two Estates with the help and assistance of great numbers of the Commoners as there ever will be in such National divisions against themselves and all men whatever of such pernicious and destructive principles No. This false Doctrine I hope will
people Nor do they hold on never to be appeased For even Murder is expiated by a certain number of some head of Cattel and the whole Family of the murdered Person receives satisfaction Murders formerly were bought off with Head-mony called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though one had killed a Nobleman nay the King himself as we may see in Athelstan's Constitutions But good manners I suppose have prevailed above Laws 33. The Lord imposes upon his Tenant a certain quantity of Corn or Cattel or Clothes We see here clearly enough the nature of Country Land-holders Fees or Tenures As to military or Knights Fees give me leave to set that down too Dionysius Halicarnasseus gives us a very ancient draught and model of them in the Trojans and Aborigines Florus in the Cymbrians and Lampridius in Alexander Severus Both the Northern people and the Italians do owe them to the Huns and Lombards but these later according to a more modern form Let these things suffice out of Cornelius Tacitus which belong to this Head CHAP. XXII Since the return of Christianity into the Island King Ethelbert's Law against Sacriledge Thieves formerly amerced in Cattel A blot upon Theodred the Good Bishop of London for hanging Thieves The Country called Engelond by Order of King Egbert and why so called The Laws of King Ina Alfred Ethelred c. are still to be met with in Saxon. Those of Edward the Confessor and King Knute the Dane were put forth by Mr. Lambard in his Archaeonomia BEfore that the Christian Doctrine had driven out and banished the Saxon Idolatry all these things I have hitherto been speaking of were in use Ethelbert he that was the first King not only of Kent but of all England except Northumberland having been baptized by Austin the Monk the Apostle as some call him of the English amongst other good things which by Counsel and Grant he did to his Nation 't is venerable Bede speaks these words he did also with the advice of wise men appoint for his peoples use the orders of their proceedings at Law according to the examples of the Romans Which having been written in the English tongue says he are hitherto or to this time kept and observed by them Among which orders or decrees he set down in the first place after what manner such an one should make amends who should convey away by stealth any of those things that belonged to the Church or to a Bishop or to the rest of the Orders In the Laws of some that came after him as those of King Alured who cull'd out of Ethelbert's Acts to make up his own and those of King Athelstan Thieves make satisfaction with mony accordingly as Tacitus says of the Germans That for lighter offences those that were convicted are at the rate of their penalties amerced such a number of Horses or other Cattel For as Festus hath it before Brass and Silver were coyned by ancient custom they were fined for their faults so much Cattel But those who medled with any thing sacred we read had that hand cut off with which they committed the theft Well! but am I mistaken or was Sacriledge even in the time of the Saxon Government punisht as a Capital crime There is a passage of William of Malmsbury in his Book de Gestis Pontificum that inclines me to think so Speaking of Theodred the Bishop of London when Athelstan was King he says That he had among the common people got the sirname of Theodred the Good for the eminence of his virtues Only in one thing he fell short which was rather a mistake than a crime that those Thieves which were taken at St. Edmunds whom the holy Martyr had upon their vain attempts tied with an invisible knot he means St. Edmundsbury in Suffolk which Church these Fellows having a design to rob are said by miracle to have stood still in the place as if they had been tied with Cords These Thieves I say were by his means or sufferance given up to the severity of the Laws and condemned to the Gallows or Gibbet Let not any one think that in this middle Age this Gallows or Gibbet I spoke of was any other thing than the Roman Furca upon which people hang and are strangled till they die 34. Egbert King of the West-Saxons I make use of Camdens words having gotten in four Kingdoms by conquest and devour'd the other two also in hope that what had come under the Government of one might likewise go under one name and that he might keep up the memory of his own people the Angles he gave order by Proclamation that the Heptarchy which the Saxons had possest should be called Engelond John Carnotensis writes that it was so called from the first coming in of the Angles and another some body says it was so named from Hengist a Saxon Prince There are a great many Laws of King Ina Alfred Edward Athelstan Edmund Edgar Ethelred and Knute the Dane written in the Saxon language which have lasted till these very times For King Knute gave order 't is William of Malmsbury speaks that all the Laws which had been made by former Kings and especially by his Predecessor Ethelred should under pain of his displeasure and a Fine be constantly observed For the keeping of which even now in the time of those who are called the Good people swear in the name of King Edward not that he appointed them but that he observed them The Laws of Edward who for his piety has the sirname of Confessor are in Readers hands These of the Confessor were in Latin those others of Knute were not long since put into Latin by William Lambard a learned man and one very well vers'd in Antiquity who has recovered them both and published the Saxon Original with his Translation over against it Printed by John Day at London Anno 1567. under the Title of Archaeonomia or a Book concerning the ancient Laws of the English May he have a good harvest of it as he deserves From Historians let us borrow some other helps for this service CHAP. XXIII King Alfred divides England into Countyes or Shires and into Hundreds and Tythings The Original of Decenna or Court-leet Friburg and Mainpast Forms of Law how People were to answer for those whom they had in Borgh or Mainpast 35. INgulph the Abbot of Crowland writing of King Alfred says That he was the first of all that changed the Villages or Lordships and Provinces of all England into Counties or Shires Before that it was reckoned and divided according to the number of Hides or plough-Plough-lands by little districts or quarters He divided the Counties into Hundreds and Tythings it was long before that Honorius Arch-Bishop of Canterbury had parted the Country into Parishes to wit Anno 636. that every Native home-born lawful man might be in some Hundred and Tything I mean whosoever was ●ull twelve years of age and if any
fancy of the Clerks or Notaries However the last words which are the close of these Grants and Patents are not to be slighted These we may see in that of Cedwalla King of the South-Saxons made to Theodore Arch-Bishop of Canterbury in the year 687. thus For a further confirmation of my grant I Cedwalla have laid a Turf of the Land aforesaid upon the holy Altar of my Saviour And with my own hand being ignorant of Letters have set down and expressed the mark or sign of the Holy Cross. Concerning Withred and a Turf of Land in Kent Camden has the same thing And King Ethelulph is said to have offered his Patent or Deed of Gift on the Altar of the holy Apostle St Peter For a conclusion I know no reason why I may not set underneath the Verses of an old Poet wherein he hath comprised the instrument or Grant of founding an Abby which Ethelbald King of the Mercians gave to Kenulph Abbot of Crowland Verses I say but such as were made without Apollo's consent or knowledge Istum Kenulphum si quis vexaverit Anglus Rex condemno mihi cuncta catella sua Inde meis Monachis de damnis omnibus ultrà Vsque satisfaciat carcere clausus erit Adsunt ante Deum testes hujus dationis Anglorum proceres Pontificesque mei Sanctus Guthlacus Confessor Anachorita Hic jacet in cujus auribus ista loquor Oret pro nobis sanctissimus iste Sacerdos Ad tumbam cujus haec mea dona dedi Which in Rhyme dogrel will run much after this hobling rate If any English vex this Kenulph shall I King condemn to me his Chattels all Thenceforth until my Monks he satisfie For damages in Prison he shall lye Witnesses of this Gift here in Gods sight Are English Peers and Prelates of my Right Saint Guthlac Confessor and Anchoret Lies here in whose Ears these words I speak yet May he pray for us that most holy Priest At whose Tomb these my Gifts I have addrest Thus they closed their Donations or Grants thus we our Remarks of the Saxons being now to pass to the Normans THE SECOND BOOK OF THE ENGLISH JANUS From the NORMAN Conquest to the Death of King Henry II. CHAP. I. William the Conquerour 's Title He bestows Lands upon his followers and brings Bishops and Abbots under Military Service An account of the old English Laws called Merchenlage Danelage and Westsaxen-lage He is prevailed upon by the Barons to govern according to King Edward's Laws and at S. Albans takes his Oath so to do Yet some new Laws were added to those old ones WILLIAM Duke of Normandy upon pretence of a double Right both that of Blood inasmuch as Emme the Mother of Edward the Confessor was Daughter to Richard the first Duke of the Normans and withal that of Adoption having in Battel worsted Harald the Son of Godwin Earl of Kent obtain'd a large Inheritance and took possession of the Royal Government over all England After his Inauguration he liberally bestowed the Lands and Estates of the English upon his fellow-soldiers that little which remained so saith Matthew Paris he put under the yoke of a perpetual servitude Upon which account some while since the coming in of the Normans there was not in England except the King himself any one who held Land by right of Free-hold as they term it since in sooth one may well call all others to a man only Lords in trust of what they had as those who by swearing fealty and doing homage did perpetually own and acknowledge a Superior Lord of whom they held and by whom they were invested into their Estates All Bishopricks and Abbacies which held Baronies and so far forth had freedom from all Secular service the fore-cited Matthew is my Author he brought them under Military service enrolling every Bishoprick and Abbacy according to his own pleasure how many Souldiers he would have each of them find him and his Successors in time of Hostility or War Having thus according to this model ordered the Agrarian Law for the division and settlement of Lands he resolved to govern his Subjects we have it from Gervase of Tilbury by Laws and Ordinances in writing to which purpose hè proposed also the English Laws according to their Tripartite or threefold distinction that is to say Merchenlage Danlage and Westsaxenlage Merchenlage that is the Law of the Mercians which was in force in the Counties of Glocester Worcester Hereford Warwick Oxford Chester Salop and Stafford Danlage that is the Law of the Danes which bore sway in Yorkshire Derby Nottingham Leicester Lincoln Northampton Bedford Buckingham Hertford Essex Middlesex Norfolk Suffolk Cambridge Huntingdon Westsaxenlage that is the Law of the West-Saxons to which all the rest of the thirty two Counties which are all that Malmesbury reckons up in Ethelred's time did belong to wit Kent Sussex Surrey Berks Southampton Winton Somerset Dorset and Devon Some of these English Laws he disliked and laid aside others he approved of and added to them some from beyond Sea out of Neustria he means Normandy which they did of old term Neustria corruptly instead of Westrich as being the more Western Kingdom of the Franks and given by Charles the Simple to Rollo for his Daughter Gilla her portion such of them as seemed most effectual for the preserving of the Kingdoms peace This saith he of Tilbury Now this is no rare thing among Writers for them to devise that William the Conqueror brought in as it were a clear new face of Laws to all intents and purposes 'T is true this must be acknowledg'd that he did make some new ones part whereof you may see in Lambard's Archaeonomia and part of them here subjoyned but so however that they take their denomination from the English rather than from the Normans although one may truly say according to what Lawyers dispute that the English Empire and Government was overthrown by him That he did more especially affect the Laws of the Danes which were not much unlike to those of the Norwegians to whom William was by his Grand-father allied in blood I read in the Annals of Roger Hoveden And that he openly declared that he would rule by them at hearing of which all the great men of the Countrey who had enacted the English Laws were presently struck into dumps and did unanimously petition him That he would permit them to have their own Laws and ancient Customs in which their Fathers had lived and they themselves had been born and bred up in forasmuch as it would be very hard for them to take up Laws that they knew not and to give judgement according to them But the King appearing unwilling and uneasie to be moved they at length prosecuted their purpose beseeching him that for the Soul of King Edward who had after his death given up the Crown and Kingdom to him and whose the Laws were and not any others that were strangers
nor upon the death of Arch-Bishop or Bishop or Abbot will I take any thing of the domain of the Church or of the men thereof till a Successor enter upon it And all evil Customs wherewith the Kingdom of England was unjustly oppressed I do henceforward take away which evil usages I do here in part set down 18. If any one of my Barons Counts or others that hold of me shall dye his Heir shall not redeem his Land as he was wont to do in the time of my Father but relieve it with a lawful and due relief In like manner also shall the Homagers or Tenants of my Barons relieve their Lands from their Lords with a lawful and just relief It appears that in the times of the Saxons a Hereot was paid to the Lord at a Tenants death upon the account of provision for War for here in Saxon signifies an Army and that which in our memory now in French is called a Relief Henry of Bracton sayes 't is an engagement to recognize the Lord doth bear a resemblance of the ancient Hereot Thereupon it is a guess saith William Lambard that the Normans being Conquerors did remit the Hereot to the Angles whom they had conquered and stripped of all kind of Armour and that for it they exacted money of the poor wretches To this agrees that which is mentioned in the State of England concerning the Nobles of Berkshire A Tain or Knight of the Kings holding of him did at his death for a Relief part with all his Arms to the King and one Horse with a Saddle and another without a Saddle And if he had Hounds or Hawks they were presented to the King that if he pleased he might take them And in an ancient Sanction of Conrade the First Emperour of Germany If a Souldier that is Tenant or Lessee happen to dye let his Heir have the Fee so that he observe the use of the greater Vavasors in giving his Horses and Arms to the Seniors or Lords John Mariana takes notice that the word Seniors in the Vular Languages Spanish Italian and French signifies Lords and that to have been in use from the time of Charlemain's Reign But these things you may have in more plenty from the Feudists those who write concerning Tenures 19. If any of my Barons or other men Homagers or Tenants of mine I return to King Henry's Charter shall have a mind to give his Daughter or Sister or Niece or Kinswoman in marriage let him speak with me about it But neither will I take any thing of his for this leave and licence nor will I hinder him from betrothing her except he shall have a design of giving her to an enemy of mine 20. If upon the death of a Baron or any other Homager of mine there be left a Daughter that is an Heiress I will bestow her with the advice of my Barons together with her Land 21. If upon the death of the Husband his Wife be left without Children she shall have her Dowry and right of Marriage as long as she shall keep her body according to Law and I will not bestow her but according to her own liking And if there be Children either the Wife or some one else near of kin shall be their Guardian and Trustee of their Land who ought to be just 22. I give order that my Homagers do in like manner regulate themselves towards the Sons and Daughters and Wives of their Homagers 23. The common Duty of Money or Coinage which was taken through all Cities and Counties which was not in the time of King Edward I do utterly forbid that henceforward this be no more done 24. If any one of my Barons or Homagers shall be sick and weak according as he himself shall give or order any one to give his money I grant it so to be given but if he himself being prevented either by Arms or by Sickness hath neither given his money nor disposed of it to give then let his Wife or Children or Parents and his lawful Homagers for his souls health divide it as to them shall seem best And in Canutus his Laws Let the Lord or Owner at his own discretion make a just distribution of what he hath to his Wife and Children and the next of kin But at this time and long since Church men have been as it were the Distributors and Awarders of the Goods of such persons as dye Intestate or without making their Wills and every Bishop as Ordinary in his own Diocess is the chief Judge in these cases John Stratford Arch-Bishop of Canterbury saith it and it is averred in the Records of our Law that this Jurisdiction also concerning Wills was of old long time ago in an ancient Constitution intrusted to the Church by the consent of the King and Peers However in what Kings time this was done neither does he relate nor do I any where find as William Lindwood in his Provincial acknowledgeth It is a thing very well known that after Tryal of right Wills were wont to be opened in the Ecclesiastical Court even in the Reign of Henry the Second Ralph Glanvill is my witness contrary to what order was taken in the Imperial Decrees of the Romans And peradventure it will appear so to have been before Glanvill as he will tell you if you go to him although you have quoted by my self some where a Royal Rescript or Order to a High Sheriff That he do justly and without delay cause to stand i. e. appoint and confirm a reasonable share to such an one that is that the Legatee may obtain and enjoy his right what was bequested to him by the Sheriffs help I come back now to my track again 25. If any one of my Barons or Homagers shall make a forfeit he shall not give a pawn in the scarcity of his money as he did in the time of my Brother or my Father but according to the quality of his forfeiture nor shall he make amends as he would have done heretofore in my Brothers or Fathers time 26. If he shall be convicted of perfidiousness or of foul misdemeanors as his fault shall be so let him make amends 27. The Forests by the common advice of my Barons I have kept in mine own hand in the same manner as my Father had them 28. To those Souldiers or Knights who hold and maintain their Lands by Coats of Male that is per fee de Hauberke that they may be ready to attend their Lords with Habergeons or Coats of Male compleatly armed Cap a pee I grant the Plough-lands of their Domains acquitted from all Gelds and from every proper Gift of mine that as they are eased from so great a Charge and Grievance so they may furnish themselves well with Horse and Arms that they may be fit and ready for my service and for the defence of my Realm 29. I restore unto you the Law of King Edward with other amendments
rules ne gouvernes per la Loy Civil that is inasmuch as the Realm of England was not before this time nor in the intention of our said Lord the King and the Lords of Parliament ever shall be ruled or governed by the Civil Law And hereupon the persons impleaded are sentenced to be banished But here is an end of Stephen He fairly dyed CHAP. X. In King Henry the Seconds time the Castles demolished A Parliament held at Clarendon Of the Advowson and Presentation of Churches Estates not to be given to Monasteries without the Kings leave Clergymen to answer in the Kings Court A Clergyman convict out of the Churches Protection None to go out of the Realm without the Kings leave This Repealed by King John Excommunicate Persons to find Surety Laymen how to be impleaded in the Ecclesiastical Court A Lay-Jury to swear there in what case No Homager or Officer of the Kings to be Excommunicated till He or his Justice be acquainted AT length though late first Henry the Son of Jeoffry Plantagenet Count of Anger 's by the Empress Mawd came to his Grandfatherrs Inheritance Having demolished and levelled to the ground the Castles which had in King Stephen's time been built to the number of eleven hundred and fifteen and having retrieved the right of Majesty into its due bounds he confirmed the Laws of his Grandfather Moreover at Clarendon in Wiltshire near Salisbury John of Oxford being President by the Kings own Mandate there being also present the Arch-Bishops Bishops Abbots Priors Earls Barons and Peers of the Realm other Laws are recognized and passed whilst at first those who were for the King on one side those who were for the Pope on the other with might and main stickle to have it go their way these latter pleading that the secular Court of Justice did not at all suit with them upon pretence that they had a priviledge of Immunity But this would not serve their turn for such kind of Constitutions as we are now setting down had the Vogue 44. If any Controversie concerning the Advowson and Presentation of Churches arise betwixt Laymen or betwixt Laymen and Clergymen or betwixt Clergymen among themselves let it be handled and determined in the Court of the Lord our King 45. The Churches which are in the Kings Fee cannot be given to perpetuity without his assent and concession Even in the Saxons times it seems it was not lawful without the Kings favour first obtained to give away Estates to Monasteries for so the old Book of Abington says A Servant of King Ethelred's called Vlfric Spot built the Abby of Burton in Staffordshire and gave to it all his Paternal Estate appraised at seven hundred pounds and that this donation might be good in Law he gave King Ethelred three hundred Marks of Gold for his confirmation of it and to every Bishop five Marks and over and above to Alfric Arch-Bishop of Canterbury the Village of Dumbleton 46. Clergymen being arighted and accused of any matter whatsoever having been summoned by the Kings Justice let them come into his Court there to make answer to that of which it shall be thought fit that there answer ought to be made So that the Kings Justice send into the Court of Holy Church to see after what manner the business there shall be handled 47. If a Clergyman shall be convicted or shall confess the Fact the Church ought not from thenceforth to give him protection 48. It is not lawful for Arch-Bishops Bishops and Persons of the Kingdom to go out of the Realm without leave of our Lord the King And if they do go out if the King please they shall give him security that neither in going nor in returning or in making stay they seek or devise any mischief or damage against our Lord the King Whether you refer that Writ we meet with in the Register or Record NE EXEAS REGNVM for Subjects not to depart the Kingdom to this time or instance or with Polydore Virgil to William Rufus or to later times is no very great matter Nor will it be worth our while curiously to handle that question For who in things of such uncertainty is able to fetch out the truth Nor will I abuse my leasure or spend time about things unapproachable An sit hic dubito sed hic tamen auguror esse Says the Poet in another case And so say I. Whether it be here or no Is a Question I confess And yet for all that I trow Here it is too as I guess Out of King John's great Charter as they call it you may also compare or make up this Repeal of that Law in part Let it be lawful henceforward for any one to go out of our Realm and to return safely and securely by Land and by Water upon our Royal word unless in time of War for some short time for the common advantage of the Kingdom excepting those that are imprisoned and out-lawed according to the Law of the Kingdom and any People or Nation that are in actual War against us And Merchants concerning whom let such Order be taken as is afore directed I return to King Henry 49. Excommunicate Persons ought not to give suretiship for the Remainder nor to take an Oath but only to find Surety and Pledge to stand to the Judgment of the Church that they may be absolved 50. Persons of the Laity ought not to be accused or impleaded but by certain and legal Accusers and Witnesses in the presence of the Arch-Bishop or Bishop so that the Arch Deacon may not lose his right nor any thing which he ought to have therefrom 51. If they be such Persons who are in fault as no one will or dare to accuse let the Sheriff being thereunto required by him cause twelve legal men of the Voisinage or of the Village to swear before the Bishop that they will manifest or make known the truth of the matter according to their Conscience 52. Let no one who holds of the King in capite nor any one of the Kings Officers or Servants of his Domain be excommunicated nor the Lands of any of them be put under an Interdict or prohibition unless first our Lord the King if he be in the Land be spoke with or his Justice if he be out of the Land that they may do right by him And so that what shall appertain to the Kings Court may be determined there and as to what shall belong to the Ecclesiastical Court it may be sent thither and there treated of CHAP. XI Other Laws of Church affairs Concerning Appeals A Suit betwixt a Clergyman and a Layman where to be Tryed In what case one who relates to the King may be put under an Interdict The difference betwixt that and Excommunication Bishops to be present at Tryals of Criminals until Sentence of Death c. pass Profits of vacant Bishopricks c. belong to the King The next Bishop to be Chosen in
or Borough and before lawful men he cannot deny it afterwards before the Justices And if the same person without Seisin with Seisin in this place is the same as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as we commonly say in our Language taken with the manner shall recognize or acknowledge any thing of this nature before them this also in like manner he shall not be able to deny before the Justices 70. If any one shall dye holding in Frank Pledge i. e. having a free Tenure let his heirs remain in such Seisin as their Father had on the day he was alive and dyed of his fee and let them have his Chattels out of which they may make also the devise or partition of the deceased that is the sharing of his goods according to his will and afterwards may require of their Lord and do for their relief and other things which they ought to do as touching their Fee i. e. in order to their entring upon the estate 71. If the heir be under age let the Lord of the Fee take his homage and have him in custody or keeping for as long time as he ought let the other Lords if there be more of them take his homage and let him do to them that which he ought to do 72. Let the Wife of the deceased have her Dowry and that part of his Chattels which of right comes to her In former times peradventure it was a like generally practised by the English that the Wife and Children should have each their lawful Thirds of the estate each of them I say if they were in being but half to the Wife if there were no issue and as much to the Children if the Wife did not survive her Husband as it was practised by the Romans of old according to the Falcidian Law and of later time by the Novells of Justinian that they should have their Quarter-part For I see that those of Normandy of Arras of Ireland people that lay round about them had the same custom Of this you are to see Glanvill Bracton the Register of Briefs or Writs and William Lindwood beside the Records or yearly Reports of our Law 73. Let the Justices take the Fealties of our Lord the King before the close of Easter and at furthest before the close of Pentecost namely of all Earls Barons Knights and Free-holders and even of Rusticks or Vassals such as have a mind to stay in the Realm and he who will not do fealty let him be taken into custody as an enemy of our Lord the King 74. The Justices have also this to give in charge that all those who have not as yet done their homage and allegiance to our Lord the King do at a term of time which they shall name to them come in and do homage and allegiance to the King as to their Liege Lord. 75. Let the Justices do all acts of Justice and rights belonging to our Lord the King by a Writ of our Lord the King or of them who shall be in his place or stead as to a half-Knights fee and under a Knights fee in an old Book which pretends to more antiquity by far than it ought concerning the manner of holding Parliaments is said to be twenty pounds worth of Land in yearly revenue but the number prefixt before the Red Book of the Exchequer goes at the rate of Six Hundred and Eighty Acres unless the complaint be of that great concern that it cannot be determined without our Lord the King or of that nature that the Justices by reason of their own doubting refer it to him or to those who shall be in his place and stead Nevertheless let them to the utmost of their ability intend and endeavour the service and advantage of our Lord the King 76. Let the Justices provide and take care that the Castles already demolisht be utterly demolished and that those that are to be demolished be well levelled to the ground And if they shall not do this our Lord the King may please to have the judgement of his Court against them as against those who shew contempt of his Precept 77. A Thief or Robber as soon as he is taken let him be put into the Sheriffs hands to be kept in safe custody and if the Sheriff shall be out of the way let him be carried or brought to the next Constable of a Castle and let him have him in custody until he deliver him up to the Sheriff 78. Let the Justices according to the custom of the Land cause inquiry to be made of those who have departed or gone out of the Realm And if they shall refuse to return within a term of time that shall be named and to stand to right in the Kings Court i. e. to make their appearance and there to answer if any thing shall be brought in against them let them after that be outlawed and the names of the Outlaws be brought at Easter and at the Feast of St. Michael to the Exchequer and from thence be sent to our Lord the King These Laws were agreed upon at Northampton CHAP. XVIII Some Laws in favour of the Clergy Of forfeitures on the account of Forest or hunting Of Knights fees Who to bear Arms and what Arms. Arms not to be alienated No Jew to bear Arms. Arms not to be carryed out of England Rich men under suspicion to clear themselves by Oath Who allowed to swear against a Free-man Timber for building of Ships not to be carryed out of England None but Free-men to bear Arms. Free-men who Rusticks or Villains not such 79. THat henceforth a Clergy-man be not dragg'd and drawn before a Secular Judge personally for any crime or transgression unless it be for Forest or a Lay-fee out of which a Lay-service is due to the King or to some other Secular Lord. This priviledge of the Clergy the King granted to Hugh the Popes Cardinal Legate by the Title of S. Michael à Petra who arrived here on purpose to advance the Popish interest 80. Furthermore that Arch-Bishopricks Bishopricks or Abbacies be not held in the Kings hand above a year unless there be an evident cause or an urgent necessity for it 81. That the Murderers or Slayers of Clergy-men being convicted or having confest before a Justice or Judge of the Realm be punished in the presence of the Bishop 82. That Clergy-men be not obliged to make Duel i. e. not to clear themselves as others upon some occasion did by single combat 83. He ordained at Woodstock we transcribe these words out of Hoveden that whosoever should make a forfeit to him concerning his Forest or his hunting once he should be tyed to find safe Pledges or Sureties and if he should make a second forfeit in like manner safe Pledges should be taken of him but if the same person should forfeit the third time then for his third forfeit no pledges should be taken but the proper body of him who made the forfeit Moreover
Regis faciant inde fieri recognitionem per XII legales homines quatem seisinam defunctus inde habuit die qua ficit vivus mortuus This is the very Mortdancester Et sicut recognitum fuerit ita haeredibus ejus restituant si quis contrà hoc fecerit inde attaintus fuerit remaneat in misericordiâ Regis XXXII Justitiae Domini Regis faciant fieri recognitionem de disseisinis factis super assisam à tempore quo D. Rex venit in Angliam proximo post pacem factam inter ipsum Regem filium suum XXXIII Justitiae capiant fidelitates D. Regis infra Claus. Pasch. ad ultimum infrà Claus. Pentecost ab omnibus videlicet Comitibus Baronibus Militibus liberè tenentibus etiam rusticis qui in regno manere voluerint qui facere ●oluerit fidelitatem tanquam inimicus D. Regis capiatur XXXIV Habent etiam Justitiae praecipere quod omnes illi qui nondum fecerunt homagium ligeantiam D. Regi quod ad diem quem eis nominabunt veniant faciant Regi Homagium ligeantiam sicut ligeo Domino XXXV Justitiae faciant omnes Justitias rectitudines spectantes ad D. Regem ad coronam suam per breve Domini Regis vel illorum qui in loco ejus erunt de feodo dimi●û milit infrà If the account of a Knights fee be by the annual value then confidently according to the quadruple proportion of the known Relief you may affirm it by xx l. Lands and so likewise by comparison with Soccage payment upon the Stat. of West 1. for aid A fair Fitz chivalier or a File marryer but by a calculation prefixed to the red Book of the Exchequer DCLXXX Acres make exactly the Summe nisi tam grandis sit querela quod non possit deduci sine D. Rege vel talis quam Justitiae ei reponent pro dubitatione suâ vel ad illos qui in loco ejus erunt intendant tamen pro posse suo ad commodum D. Regis faciendum XXXVI Faciant assisam de latronibus iniquis malefactoribus terrae quae assisa est per concilium Regis filii sui hominum suorum per quos ituri sunt Comitatus XXXVII Justitiae provideant quod castella diruta prorsus diruantur diruenda benè prosternantur Et nisi hoc fecerint D. Rex Judicium Curiae suae de eis habere voluerit sicut de contemptoribus praecepti sui XXXVIII Justitiae inquirant de Escaetis de Ecclesiis de terris de foeminis quae sunt de donatione D. Regis XXXIX Ballivi D. Regis respondeant ad Scaccarium tam de assiso redditu quam de omnibus perquisitionibus suis quas faciunt in balliviis suis exceptis illis quae pertinent ad vicecomitatum XL. Justitiae inquirant de custodiis castellorum qui quantum ubi eas debeant postea mandent D. Regi XLI Latro ex quo capitur Vicecomiti tradatur ad custodiendum si Vicecomes absens fuerit ducatur ad proximum Castellanum ipse illum custodiat donec illum liberet Vicecomiti XLII Justitiae faciant quaerere per consuetudinem terrae illos qui à regno recesserunt nisi redire voluerint infra terminum nominatum stare ad rectum in Curiâ Regis postea ut lagentur nomina ut lagorum afferantur ad Pascha ad Fest. S. Mich. ad Scaccarium exinde mittantur D. Regi While thus the King made provident Order for Lay-business Hugo à Petra Leonis the Pope's Legate in England laboured for dila●ation of Church to whom was granted by the King XLIII Quod de caetero Clericus Matthew Paris his report non trahatur ante Judicem secularem personaliter pro aliquo crimine vel transgressione nisi pro forestâ laico feudo unde Regi vel alii D. Seculari laicum debetur servitium XLIV Vt Archiepiscopatus Episcopatus vel Abbatiae non teneantur in manu Regis ultra annum nisi pro causâ evidente vel necessitate urgente XLV Vt interfectores Clericorum convicti vel confessi coram Justiciario regni praesente Episcopo puniantur XLVI Quod Clerici duellum facere non cogantur XLVII Statuit apud WOODSTOCK quod quicunque forisfecerit ei de forestâ suâ semel de venatione suâ de ipso salvi plegii capiantur si iterum forisfecerit similitèr capiantur de ipso salvi plegii si autem tertiò idem forisfecerit nulli plegii capiantur sed proprium corpus forisfactoris which concludes what of his Laws common Histories afford CHAP. IX Richard Ceur de Lion THIS Henry's Successor was the stout Richard Ceur de Lion Himself in Person attending the Eastern Wars Division by his Commission was made for maintaining the Laws and Customes of the Kingdom of the whole Government 'twixt Hugh of Pusar Bishop of Durham and William Bishop of Ely Lord Chancellor The stream of all howsoever there was an association of Hugh Bardulph and William Briwere was carried as the Prelates pleased until their ambitious insolency made a period to their too great authority After his return Justices in Eyre were sent into every County secundùm subscriptorum formam capitulorum saith Hoveden processerunt in justiciis exequendis Forma Procedendi in Placitis Coronae Regis I. INprimis eligendi sunt IV. milites de toto Comitatu qui per Sacramentum suum eligant II. legales milites de quolibet hundredo vel Wapentacco Et illi II. eligant super sacramentum suum X. milites de singulis Hundredis vel Wapentaccis● vel si milites defuerint legales liberos homines ità quòd illi XII insimul respondeant de omnibus capitulis de toto Hundredo vel Wapentacco Capitula Placitorum Coronae Regis II. DE placitis Coronae novis veteribus omnibus quae nondum sin● finita coram Justiciariis D. Regis III. Item de omnibus recognitionibus omnibus placitis quae summonita sunt coram Justiciariis per breve Regis vel capitalis Justitiae vel à capitali Curiâ Regis coram eis missa IV. Item de Escaëtis quae sunt quae fuerunt postquam Rex arripuit iter versus terram Jerusalem quae fuerunt tunc in manu Regis sunt modò in manu ejus vel non de omnibus Escaëtis Domini Regis si à manu sua sint remotae quomodò per quem in cujus manus devenerunt qualitèr qui exitus inde habuerit quos quid valuerint quid modò valeant si aliqua eschaëta sit quae ad D. R. pertineat quae in manu ejus non sit V. Item de Ecclesiis quae sunt de Donatione D. Regis VI. Item de custodiis puerorum quae ad D. Regem pertinent VII Item de malefactoribus eorum receptoribus