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A44774 Medulla historiæ Anglicanæ being a comprehensive history of the lives and reigns of the monarchs of England from the time of the invasion thereof by Jvlivs Cæsar to this present year 1679 : with an abstract of the lives of the Roman emperors commanding in Britain, and the habits of the ancient Britains : to which is added a list of the names of the Honourable the House of Commons now sitting, and His Majesties Most Honourable Privy Council, &c. Howell, William, 1638?-1683. 1679 (1679) Wing H3139A; ESTC R41001 296,398 683

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place where the Colledge of Gods-house stood 1505. St. Johns Coll. was erected upon the ruines of an ancient Hospital of regular Canons by the said Margret Countess of Derby 1508. Magdalen Coll. first an Hall wherein Monks of divers Monastries studied but in the year 1542 Thomas Audley Lord Chancellor of England founded there a new Colledge in honour of St. Mary Magdalen Trinity Coll. founded by King Henry the 8th in A. D. 1546. Emmanuel Coll. founded by Sir Walter Mildmay 1584. Sidney Sussex Coll. was founded by Frances Countess of Sussex the Daughter of Sir William Sydney A. D. 1598. EDward sirnamed the Elder EDWARD A.D. 901. the eldest Son of Alfred was Crowned at Kingstone upon Thames At Wodnesfield near Wolfrune Hampton he obtained a great victory over the Da●es for two of their Kings were slain many of their Nobles and an innumerable company of their commons which caused him both to be feared and loved His Sister Elfleda had very hard travel of her first Child therefore ever after she forbare the nuptial embraces Athème A.B. Cant. alledging it to be an over-foolish pleasure which brought with it so great pains And listing her self under Mars she in person assisted her Brother against the Danes performing many manly feats King Edward dyed at Farringdon and was buried in the new Monastry of Winchester in A. D. 924. His Issue were Ethelstan Elfred Elsward Edwin Edmund Edred and Nine Daughters He built a Castle at Stafford in A.D. 914 He likewise built a Castle at Huntingdon in A. D. 917 which Henry the 2d afterward demolished as some say He also built Hereford out of the ruines of old Aviconium Manchester in Lancashire anciently Mancunium having been destroyed in the Danish Wars this King caused to be built again because the Inhabitants had behaved themselves manfully against the Danes King Edward the elder built a new Town over against Nottingham and made a Bridge over the River betwixt the two Towns Ethelstan A. D. 924. EThelstan was Crowned at Kingstone by Athelme Arch-Bishop of Canterbury This Prince by the evil suggestions of his Cup-bearer became suspitious of some Treason to be wrought against him by his Brother Edwin therefore caused him to be put in a small vessel without Tackle and Oars and so to be exposed to the mercy of the Waters whence the young Prince overcome with grief cast himself headlong into the Sea whose Ghost the King sought to pacifie by a Seven years voluntary penance and building the two Monastries of Middleton and Michelness He also took revenge on his Cup-bearer by this occasion On a festival-day as his Cup-bearer was serving one of his feet hapned to slip but he recovered himself with the other and thereupon pleasantly said You see how one Brother helpeth another Then the King with grief called to mind the death of his innocent Brother and forthwith commanded execution to be done upon his Cup-bearer the procurer thereof King Ethelstan or Adelstane overcame in fight Godfrey the Danish King of Northumberland Constantine King of Scots and Howell or Ludwall King of Wales constraining them to submit unto his pleasure which done he presently restored to their former estates saying That it was more honour to make a King than to be a King He enlarged his dominions beyond any of his predecessors and was in the greatest reputation with all foreign Princes who sought his friendship both by alliance and rare presents Hugh King of France besides some inestimable Jewels sent him the Sword of Constantine the Great in the Hilt whereof all covered with Gold was one of the Nails as 't was said which fastned Christ to the Cross He sent likewise the Spear of Charles the Great reputed to be the same which pierced the side of our Saviour also a part of the Cross whereon he suffered and a piece of the Crown of Thorns with also the Banner of St. Maurice And from Otho the Emperor who had married his Sister was sent a vessel of precious Stones artificially made wherein were Lantskips with Vines Ulfelinus or Wolstane A.B. Cant. Corn Men all seeming so naturally to move as if they had been really the things themselves And the King of Norway sent him a famous and rich Ship Some of these Relicks he gave unto Swithuns Abby in Winchester and the rest to the Monastry in Malmsbury He beautified the City of Excester founded St. Germans in Cornwall St. Petrocus at Bodman the Priory of Pilton and enriched every famous Abby in the Land either with new-buildings Jewels Books or Revenues as also he did certain Cities with the Mintage of his Money Whereof in London were Eight Houses at Winchester Six Lewis Two Hastings Two Hampton Two Warham Two Chichester One Rochester Three two for the King and one for the Bishop Canterbury Seven four for the King two for the A. Bishop and one for the Abbot He caused the Holy Bible to be translated into the Saxon Tongue He dyed at Glocester called by the Britains Caer-Gloue i. e. Fair City in A. D. 940 and was buried at Malmsbury in Wilts first built by Malmutius a King of the Britains About this King Ethelstans time if ever lived that famous Guy Earl of Warwick EDMOND A.D. 940. EDmond the 5th Son of King Edward was Crowned at Kingston He obtained many signal victories over the Danes in divers parts of the Land recovering out of their hands several Counties and Cities but at his Mannor of Puckle-kerks in the County of Glocester whilst he was interposing himself between his Sewer and another to part a fray he was with a thrust through the body wounded to death in A. D. 946 and was buried at Glastenbury His Issue was Edwy and Edgar EDred was the sixth Son of King Edward EDRED A. D. 946. and succeeded his Brother in the Non-age of his Sons Wolstane Arch-Bishop of Canterbury for some misdemeanors he committed to custody but afterwards in reverence to his office discharged him So devout he was in the Religion of those times that he suffered his royal body to be chastised at the will and direction of Dunstan Abbot of Glastenbury unto whose keeping he also committed the greatest part of his treasures and richest Jewels The stately Abby of Mich at Abingdon built by King Inas but destroyed by the Danes he repaired and most richly endowed it confirming the Charters with Seals of Gold St. Germans he ordained a Bishops See which there continued till by Canutus it was annexed to the Bishoprick of Kyrton in Devon both which Sees were by Edward the Confessor translated to Excester He dyed in the year of Grace 955 and was interred in the old Minster or Monastry of Winchester His Issue Elfrid and Bertfrid EDwy the eldest Son of King Edmond was Crowned at Kingstone EDWIE A.D. 955. and on the day of his Coronation as some Monks say he in sight of his Nobles as they sate in Councel abused the body of a great Lady
Welsh they made some stirs And one Fitz-Arnulph a Citizen of London attempted to set up Lewis again for the which himself and two others were hanged and many more had their hands or feet cut off The Barons they were high for a confirmation of their Liberties And Lewis of France upon the death of his Father seized Rochel and the whole Country of Poictou which belonged to the King of England into his hands under pretence that K. Henry an Homager for Aquitain was not present at his Coronation nor yet excused his absence by Ambassadors Whereupon Henry summons a Parliament for Aids to recover his losses which being granted he sent over his forces which discomfited the French But the King necessitated for more Monies for the carrying on of his design in Gascoign wrung from the Londoners Five thousand Marks above their Fifteenths alledging that they had to his prejudice given Lewis the like sum The Clergy also were compelled under pain of Papal censure to pay the Fifteenth not only for their temporal but also Ecclesiastical Goods And by advice of Hubert de Burgo Chief Justice the King revoked the Charters of Liberties which for about two years had been practised through the Realm pretending his Non-age when granted Which caused in all a great heart-burning against Hubert Howbeit the King was well furnish'd with money and men which he caused to be transported into Britain and on the same day in which he set sail from England himself in person did visit the poor and feeble dealing large Alms to them and not refusing to kiss the sick and leprous But before that the King had opportunity to effect any thing in those parts considerable the Irish rebelled constraining him to return to reduce then in●o order Which when he had done he advanced against the Welsh whom he also repressed though not without considerable loss About this time Hubert de Burgo Earl of Kent was accused by the Bishop of Winchester and others for the committing of many great crimes and he doubting that he should not have a fair Tryal retired himself into Essex whither he was prosecuted by Armed men and in a Chappel at Burntwood was apprehended out of which the rude Soldiers hailed him and sent for a Smith to make Shackles for him which when the Smith understood that they were for him fetching a deep sigh he said Do with me what you please and God have mercy on my soul but as sure as the Lord lives I will never make Iron-Shackles for him but will rather dye the worst death that is For is not this the most Loyal and Courageous Hubert who so often hath preserved England from being destroyed by strangers and restored England to England Let God be judge between him and you for using him so unjustly and inhumanely requiting his most excellent deserts with the worst recompence that can be Notwithstanding all this Sir Godfrey de Crancomb who commanded the party bound the Earl and conveyed him to the Tower of London where he had not long been ere the Bishop of London procured his liberty though shortly after he was again imprisoned In his place the King elected for his Councellor and Confident Peter de Rupibus Bishop of Winchester who displaced the English Officers and in their Rooms placed Poictovins and Britons stuffing the Kings Castles with them intrusting as it were the treasures strength and Realm it self in their hands to the great discontent of the English Peers Who now confederated against the strangers and refused upon the Kings summons to appear in Parliament sending this impudent Message to their Soveraign That if out of hand he removed not the Bishop of Winchester and strangers out of his Court they all of them by the common consent of the Kingdom would drive him and his wicked Counsellors out of it and would consult about creating of a new King Whereupon the King animated by Winchester commanded the Earl-Marshal with all others whom he suspected to appear at Glocester where the King was with an Army Which they refusing to do the King burnt their Mannors and gave away their Inheritances to the Poictovins The Earl-Marshal he contracts strict amity with Leweylyn Prince of Wales and made great spoil on the possessions of the Kings reputed Seducers Shrewsbury he sackt and burnt Gilbert Lord Basset the Earls great Confederate set fire on Alkmundbury not far from Huntingdon But the Earl-Marshal having crossed the seas into Ireland there to recover his Lands taken from him by the fraud of the Bishop of Winchester was there wounded to death for whose loss the King to the wonder of all that saw it broke forth into tears affirming That he had left no Peer about him in the Kingdom And now the Bishop of Winchester hated of the people was commanded by the King not to meddle any farther in State-matters And against Peter Rivallis Lord Treasurer the King was so in raged that he sware he would pluck out his eyes were it not for reverence of holy Orders And by the workings of the Bishops an accord was effected betwixt the King and his Peers and the Poictovins were commanded to depart the Realm Howbeit the Land was not yet eased of its Oppressors and Oppressions for the Pope sent over into England three hundred Romans requiring to have the first Benefice that should become vacant to be bestowed on them requiring also great sums of money of the Clergy for maintenance of the Pope's Wars against the Emperor Which though the Clergy at first opposed yet were forced to yeild unto it at the last The Pope himself had a mind to have come hither in his own person but the King's Councel liked not thereof alledging that the Romans Rapines and Simonies had enough stained England's purity though the Pope himself came not personally to spoil and prey upon the Wealth of the Church About the year 1240 Richard Earl of Cornwall the King's Brother with the Earls of Pembroke Chester Lincoln Salisbury and many other honourable persons departed for the Holy Land and in A. D. 1242 the King passed the Seas to recover Poictou but effected not any thing remarkable though he expended great store of Treasure Upon his return into England he was therefore compelled to be burthensome to his subjects for recruiting of his exhausted Treasure as well by the levy of Escuage as of Loan and otherwise The Jews in especial manner were made sensible of his wants Too much of their money thus rais'd 't is said he expended in Entertainments and Shows though afterward the King reflecting on his former profuseness in gifts and entertainments he shortned the allowances of his houshold and entertainments without any regard to Majesty And to spare his own charge the more he invited himself now to this mans house now to that but no-where contenting himself with his welcome unless himself and his Queen Son Edward yea and chief Favourites were presented with costly Gifts 'T is said that he was sometime
head Howbeit the Traytor Banister did not only lose his promised reward but also received just punishments from Heaven for his eldest son fell mad and so died in a Hogstie his second son became deformed and lame in his limbs his third son was drowned in a small puddle of water his eldest daughter was struck with a foul Leprosie and himself being of extream age was found guilty of murder but saved by his Clergy Divers of the Earl of Richmond's party were put to death and so jealous was the King now of his ill-gotten greatness that he stored the Sea-coasts with armies of men furnished the Ports with store of munition and made all things ready to prevent Earl Henry's arrival caused a Parliament to be assembled at Westminster wherein the said Earl and all such as had fled the Land in his behalf were attainted and were made enemies to their native Country their Goods confiscate their Lands and possessions condemned to the Kings use Moreover the Usurper sent his Agents laden with Gold and many gay promises to the Duke of Britain offering what not if he would either send Earl Henry into England or commit him there into Prison but the Duke himself lying extream sick his Treasurer Peter Landose corrupted with Gold had betrayed the Earl into Richard's hands had not the Earl had timely notice of it and prevented it by a speedy escape unto the French-Court where he received great favours Dr. Richard Fox then a Student in Paris was eminently serviceable to the Earl in that Nation And the Duke of Britain when he understood the treachery of Landose was highly displeased and continued a favourer of the Earl and his Cause But all these things with many more were against K. Richard which he very well foresaw though he knew not well how to remedy yet that he might make his Title and interest as good as he could he devised to marry with his Neece the Princess Elizabeth but his Queen Anne stood in his way to this for the present though not long for she fell into the remorseless hands of death but whether a natural or violent is not well known After which Richard courts the Lady Elizabeth his own Brothers daughter though in vain for she detested him Howbeit when Henry heard of Richards attempts herein and not knowing what time through flattery and perswasions from some persons might do upon the young Princess her good nature he hastned for England setting sail from Harfleet with about 200 men August 15 and arrived at Milford-Haven the seventh day following from vvhence he advanced tovvards Shrewsbury On his way to which place there met him Sir Rice ap Thomas a man of great command in VVales with a great body of men to side in his quarrel which Earl Henry afterwards requited by making this his first Alder Governour of VVales From Shrewsbury the Earl marched to Newport where Sir Gilbert Talbot met him with two thousand men from the Earl of Shrewsbury Thence he passed to Litchfield where he was honourably received But when the Usurper understood that the Earl daily increased in strengths and that he was advanced so far without any opposition from his Court at Nottingham he set forth his Host to meet the Earl which he did near unto Market-Bosworth in Leicestershire His Vant-guard he disposed of a marvellous length to strike the more terror into the hearts of his foes the leading whereof was committed to John Duke of Norfolk His own Battalion was furnished with the best approved men of War When he had ordered his army for fight he animated his followers to behave themselves valiantly alledging to them that it was against a company of Runnagates Thieves Outlaws Traytors beggarly Britains and faint-hearted French-men that they were to fight who would oppress and spoil them of their Lands Wives and Children that these their enemies were such Cowards that they would fly faster from them than the silly Hart before the Hound that the Earl of Richmond Captain of the rebellion was but a Welsh Milk-sop For their love to him their Prince their zeal to their native Country he wished them that day to shew their English valour assuring them that for his part he would either triumph in a glorious victory or die in the quarrel with immortal fame Now S. George for us and us for victory saith he Haste therefore forward and remember this that I am he that with high advancement will prefer the valiant and hardy and with severe torture will punish the dastard and cowardly run-away The Earl of Richmond's forefront was commanded by the Earl of Oxford the right wing by Sir Gilbert Talbot the left by Sir John Savage the main Battel by the Earl himself and his Uncle Jasper When the Earl had ordered his small Host consisting of about 5000 men he rode from rank to rank and wing to wing encouraging his followers to fight alledging the justness of their quarrel which God would bless assuring them that for so good a cause as to free the Land of a Monster a Tyrant a Murderer he would that day rather become a dead carrion upon the ground than a Carpet-prisoner kept alive for reproach Advance therefore forward saith he like true-hearted English-men display your Banner in defence of your Country get the day and be Conquerors lose the day and be villains God and St. George give us a happy success Then immediately a fierce Battel commenced and was manfully continued on either part At length the King having intelligence that Earl Henry was but slenderly accompanied with men of Arms he therefore with his Spear in the Rest ran violently towards the Earl in which rage at the first brunt he bare down and overthrew the Earls Standard slew Sir William Brandon the bearer thereof next encountred Sir John Cheiny whom he threw to the ground thereby making an open passage to the Earl himself In which very instant when the Earl was like to be distressed the Lord Stanley sent in aids of fresh Soldiers under the leading of Sir William Stanley which were raised as he pretended for Richard but intended them when he should see his time for Richmond's service These entred the fight with such courage that they put the Usurpers forces to flight when the Usurper closing his Helmet said to such that brought him a swift horse for his escape This day shall finish all Battels or else I will finish my life So thrusting into the throng of his enemies he manfully fighting died in the place A. D. 1485 Aug. 22. There died with him that day the Duke of Norfolk the Lord Ferrers of Chartley Sir Richard Ratcliff Sir Robert Brakenbury The number of both parts slain in the field were 4000 Sir William Catesby with two other persons of quality were taken and two days after were beheaded at Leicester Thomas Howard Earl of Surrey the Duke of Norfolks son and heir being then also taken prisoner the Earl of Richmond demanded of him how he
Jester I will take off the fools Cap which I now put upon thy head for sending him thither and put it on the King of Spains for letting him return When the Prince was returned from Spain a Wife was sought for him from France by a marriage with Henrietta Maria the daughter of King Henry the fourth The love of whom the Prince had received by the eye and she of him by the ear For having formerly received impressions from the reports of his gallantry when she was told of his passing through Paris she answered That if he went to Spain for a Wife he might have had one nearer home and saved himself a great part of that labour Prince Charles after the celebrating of his Fathers Funerals whereat himself was chief Mourner he next hastned the coming over of his dearest Consort the Princess Henrietta Maria whom the Duke of Chevereux had in his name espoused at the Church of Nostredame in Paris and he receiving her at Dover the next day after Trinity-Sunday at Canterbury began the Nuptial embraces A. D. 1625 and June the eighteenth a Parliament was assembled at the opening of which the King acquainted them with the necessities of supplies for the War with Spain which themselves importunately had ingaged his Father in and made it as hereditary to him as the Crown But through the practises of some unquiet persons of that Parliament two petitions one respecting Religion the other redress of grievances were brought into debate both formed in King James his time which delayed the succours and increased the necessities Yet at length the Parliament granted two Subsidies Which done and divers Acts passed the Parliament was adjourned till August and their Convention to be at Oxford by reason of the plague then raging in London When the Parliament was met again according to the time appointed there were high and furious debates of grievances as That evil Councels guided the King That the Treasury was misimployed with reflections on the Duke of Buckinghams miscarriages The Commons consulting to divest the Duke of his Admiralship and to demand an account of those publick moneys wherewith he had been intrusted The King hereupon dissolved the Parliament And the infection decreasing at London his Majesty was Crowned at Westminster February the second And February the sixth another Parliament was begun wherein the Commons voted the King four Subsidies But some of the Members highly taxed the Duke of Buckingham and Articles were carryed up against him to the Lords House for his ill management of the Admiralty his ingrossing Offices preferring his kindred to places unfit for them making sale of places of Judicature and his Mother and Father-in-Law's fostering of Popish Recusants These leading Commoners were Mr. Cook Dr. Turner Sir Dudley Digges Sir John Elliot and Sir William Walter And to make the Faction more sport the Duke and Earl of Bristol did mutually impeach each other But his Majesty to put a stop to these contrasts dissolved the Parliament June 18 1626 before the Bill for the Subsidies was passed Therefore the King by the advice of his Council took care to provide money some other ways hence followed the levying of Customes and Imposts upon all such Merchandizes as were imported and exported Then compositions to be made with Recusants for the Leases of their lands and tenements for forfeitures due since the tenth year of King James Also Privy-Seals were issued out and Benevolence proposed c. The several Maritime Counties and Port-Towns were ordered by the Council to set out Ships for the guarding of the Sea-Coasts against the attempts of Spain and Flanders which they very unwillingly if at all yielded unto A Royal Fleet was also preparing to be set out designed for Barbary as was given out But at last as the most expeditious way for raising of money a general Loan was resolved upon and Commissioners forthwith appointed for the purpose which grand Assesment of the Loan met with much opposition from people of all sorts and degrees upon which divers Gentlemen were committed prisoners and George Abbot Archbishop of Canterbury refusing to License a Book in behalf of the Loan was suspended for a time from his Archiepiscopal jurisdiction and Dr. Williams Bishop of Lincoln for speaking some words concerning the Loan in disadvantage of the King fell into some disfavour and Sir Randolph Crew for being backward to promote it was displaced from his Office of Lord Chief Justice A. D. 1627 His Majesty being now sued by the French Protestants of Rochel for his protection and because the King of France had seized on the English Merchants goods in the river of Burdeaux therefore sent the Duke of Buckingham to attach the Isle of Rhee which had now submitted to the English valour had not the Duke managed that War more with the Gayeties of a Courtier than the Arts of a Souldier In this expedition many brave English-men lost their lives from which when the Duke was returned those poor remains of his Army most of them Irish and Scots were billeted in divers villages of England to the great discontent of the Country This Epedition being so unhappy and the miseries of Rochel making them importunate for the Kings assistance he therefore summoned a Parliament to meet March 17th 1627 He also passed a Commission under the great Seal to levy monies throughout the Nation by impositions in nature of Excise When the Parliament were met at their prefixed time there was forthwith presented to the House of Commons a certain Paper called a Speech without-dores Wherein was laid open the miscarriages of many persons in places of Trust with several sorts of National grievances The first matter that the Parliament took into their consideration was the grievances of the Country and the first grievance they debated was the Case of those Gentlemen who having refused the Loan were notwithstanding their Habeas Corpus committed to prison This business took up a long debate and earnest which was chiefly managed by Sir Francis Seymour Sir Thomas Wentworth Sir Benjamin Rudyard Sir Edward Cook and Sir Robert Philips Next the House proceeded to the drawing up of a Petition against Recusants to which Petition the King gave a satisfactory answer Then after the granting of the King five Subsidies they took into debate the Petition of Right wherein they prayed his Most Excellent Majesty First That no man hereafter be compelled to make or yield any Gift Loan Benevolence Tax or such like charge without common consent by Act of Parliament and that none be called to make answer or to take such Oath or to give attendance or be confined or otherwise molested concerning the same Secondly That no Free-man be taken and imprisoned or be disseized of his freedom or liberty or his free-customes or be out-lawed or exiled but by the lawful judgment of his Peers or by the Laws of the Land Thirdly That the Souldiers and Mariners now billeted in divers Counties might be removed and the people
should of himself or with a few flatterers pass over his Crown and enthrall his Nobles especially to the Pope who should follow St. Peters steps to win souls and not to meddle with Wars and murders of mens bodies And Prince Lewis declared That he would chuse rather to be excommunicated by the Pope than to falsifie his promise to the English Barons So without more ado he speedily set forth for England with his Fleet of 600 Ships and 80 Boats which coming to shore in Kent the Barons joyned forces with him King John whose Army consisted most of stipendiary Forreigners thought it best for a time to forbear Battel with Lewis and not to commit his whole fortunes to the hazard of their sudden defection therefore drew towards Winchester Lewis marching forward towards London taking all the strong-holds in his way excepting Dover Castle kept by the valiant and faithful Hubert de Burgo London received Lewis the Citizens swearing truth to him so did the Barons at Westminster Lewis swearing to them That he would restore all men their right and recover to the Crown what ever had been lost by K. John All or most places where the French Prince came submitted to him At Odiam Castle indeed wherein were but 13 English men Lewis and his whole Army was not only braved 15 days but also sallying forth upon them every one took an enemy surrendring the Castle at last upon honourable terms K. John in other parts of the Realm with a very considerable Host ruined the Barons Castles and possessions But setting forth from Lyn in Norfolk where for their faithful services he bestowed large Franchises and his own Sword and a gilt Bowl with a full resolution to give Lewis Battel as he was passing the Washes with his Army and Carriages towards Lincolnshire all his Carriages Treasures and Provision were irrecoverably lost himself and Army hardly escaping And now by this time the Barons were struck with some remorse to see their Native Country by their procurement to be so miserably wasted and afflicted and which grieved them the most was that their faithful services to Lewis were but slightly regarded by him at present and were like to be ill repayed in the future for Viscount De Melun a Noble Frenchman had on his death bed privately discovered to them how that Lewis had sworn That if ever Englands Crown was setled on his head he would condemn unto perpetual exile all the disloyal Barons as Traytors to their Sovereign and extirpate all their kindred Forty of the Barons therefore presently addressed their Letters of submissive suit to the King but he was dead before the Messengers came Some say he dyed of a Flix some of a Surfeit but the most report that he dyed of Poyson for K. John coming say they from the Washes to Swinshed Abby and there taking notice as he sat at meat of their too prodigal provision he swore That if he lived but half a year longer he would make one half-peny Loaf as dear as twelve To prevent which a Monk presented him with an invenomed Cup tasting first thereof himself so becoming the wicked instrument of his own and Sovereigns death Octob. 19 1216. He was buried at Worcester His Issue were Henry Richard Joan Eleanor and Isabel Base issue Jeffry Fitz-Roy Richard and Jane He appointed those excellent forms of Civil government in the Cities and incorporate Towns of England endowing them also with their greatest Franchises He setled the rates and measures for Wine Bread Cloth and such like necessaries of Commerce He planted English Laws and Officers in Ireland Now lived one Simon Thurvey who for his pride in Learning especially for his blasphemies against Moses and Christ became so utterly ignorant that he could hardly read a Letter in the Book In or the near the year 1176 London-Bridge was begun to be built of Stone by Peter of Cole-Church Priest and was finished in A. D. 1209. Mayors in this Kings time were these following In the 10th year Henry Fitz Alwin was first Mayor Peter Duke Thomas Neal Sheriffs In the 11th year Idem Mayor Peter le Josue William Blounde Sheriffs In the 12th year Idem Mayor Adam Witley Stephen le Grass Sheriffs In the 13th year Idem Mayor John Fitz Peter John Garland Sheriffs In the 14th year Idem Mayor Randolph Egland Constantine Josue Sheriffs In the 15th year Idem Mayor Martin Fitz Alice Peter Bate Sheriffs In the 16th year Idem Mayor Solomon Basing and Hugh Basing Sheriffs In the 17th year William Hardel Mayot John Trevers Andrew Newland Sheriffs HENRY III. HENRY 3d. at about 10 years of Age was Crowned King A.D. 1216 the Ninth day after his Father K. John's decease the Earl of Pembroke being by common consent of Peers and Prelates constituted Guardian of him during his Non-age This Noble Earl set out against Lewis and at Lincolne utterly defeated his Army which discomfiture was called Lewis Fair from the great spoil that the Earls Soldiers took from the Lewysians and City of Lincolne Here the chiefest of the malignant Barons were taken with about 400 Knights besides Esquires and of other sorts innumerable A great number also of such as escaped out of the Fight were knockt on the head by the Country people Likewise about the same time a fresh supply of men and Money coming from France were scattered sunk and taken by the English Fleet the English in the engagement using unslaked Lime which they threw into the faces of the Monsieurs blinding their sight therewith Then to give no rest to Lewis his declining fortunes the Earl of Pembroke clseloy besieged London with Lewis in it where he brought the matter to capitulation The heads whereof were That Lewis and the Barons should submit to the judgment of the Church whose censure they had long contemned That Lewis should depart the Land Richard Magnus A.B. Cant. and never return with design to do harm That he should endeavour with his Father that all such things that belonged to the English Crown might be restor'd and that when Lewis himself should be King he should peaceably part with them That Lewis should immediately render to K. Henry all holds and places taken in the War for the performance of all which Lewis took his Oath On the other part the King Legate Wallo and the Earl swore That the King should restore to the Barons and others all their rights and inheritances with all their liberties formerly demanded of K. John That none of the Laity should suffer damage and reproach for taking part on either side That Prisoners should be released This done Wallo absolved Lewis and his adherents and Lewis took his leave of England Yet was not England quiet long for William Earl of Aumarl Foulk de Brent and Robert de Veipont with others committed divers furious Riots the Church and State being grown into such disorder that every man dared to attempt in either what his own audaciousness should suggest The
latter forsook the Barons cause and joyned himself with Roger de Mortimer and his associates to whom not long after Earl Warren and William de Valence Earl of Pembroke with other Peers united themselves and Prince Edward escaping came in safety to them the Counties of Hereford Worcester Salop and Chester coming in to their assistance When the Prince having a considerable strength marched against Montford who hearing of the Princes advance encamped at Evesham where Prince Edward inclosed him compelling him either to fight or yield The first of which he elected both Armies joyning battle before the Town of Evesham where the Earls host was with much slaughter especially of the Welsh utterly in the end distressed and discomfited Symon de Montford being slain in fight had his head hands and feet chopt off The King who had been brought a prisoner into the field by his friends valour and good hap was restored to his Liberty And he presently after this cruel battel called a Parliament at Winchester by whose approbation he seized into his hands the Charters of London and other disloyal Towns disinherited such as were on the Earls side distributing their estates amongst his well-deserving Subjects The Legate Cardinal Ottabon excommunicated the Bishops of London Winchester Worcester and Chichester for their adhering unto the Earl And now all things being calm in England Prince Edward with many of the Nobles took the Cross upon them for the holy-Holy-Land And the King to secure the Nations peace held a Parliament at Marleborough where the statutes of Marleborough were enacted But King Henry having been at Norwich to punish the Citizens outrage in burning the Priory Church he in his return fell grievously sick at the Abby of St. Edmond in Suffolk and there died in A. D. 1272. Whose issue was Edward Edmond Sirnamed Crouchback Richard John William Henry Margaret Beatrice and Katherine This King laid the first stone of the new work of the Abby-Church at Westminster He founded the house of Converts where such as forsook the Jewish Religion had provisions for maintenance He also erected and endowed a famous Hospital at Oxford both for the entertainment of Forreigners and Pilgrims and for relief of such as were diseased He was so disposed to performing acts of charity made Leoline Prince of Wales Montfords confederate when he was threatned hardly if he would not live at peace to answer thus I more fear the Alms deeds of the King than all the men of war which he hath and his Clergy to boot King Henry because Thomas de la Linde killed a white Hart in Blackmore Forest which he much fancied set a perpetual fine upon the land which at this day is called White-H●●●-Silver In the 17. year of his reign four mock Suns were seen from morning till evening after which followed so great a Dearth that people were forced to eat horse-flesh and barks of Trees and in London twenty thousand were famished A D. 1241. Certain Jews of Norwich were hanged for circumcising a Christian Child and their house called the Thor was destroyed A Scholler of Oxford who attempted to kill the King in his chamber at Woodstock was pulled in pieces by wild Horses Now arose in England a most monstrous impostor who pretended himself to be Christ procuring himself to be wounded in the hands feet and side thinking thereby the more easily to delude the people his punishment was immuring between two walls together with an old hag pretending her self to be the Virgin Mary there to pine to death In this Kings reign flourished in England the Irrefragable Doctor Alexander de Hales who was School-Master to the Angelic Dr. Thomas Aquinas Now also lived Robert Grosthead Bishop of Lincoln called Romanorum Malleus who writ boldly against the Pope reproving his arrogant to call them no worse practises At Sorbiodunum or Salisbury Richard Poor then Bishop of Sarum built that stately Church which hath in it as many windows as are days in the year as many marble-pillars as hours as many doors as months Magna Charta containing the Sum of all the written Laws of England was ordained in the ninth year of Henry the third The Mayors and Sheriffs of London in this Kings Reign In his first Year William Hardel was Mayor John Travers Andrew Newland Sheriffs In his second Year Robert Serl was Mayor Thomas Bokerell Ralph Holyland Sheriffs In his third Year Robert Serl continued Mayor Benet Senturer William Blundivers Sheriffs In his fourth Year Robert Serl continued Mayor John Wail or Veil Josue le Spicer Sheriffs In his fifth Year Robert Serl continued Mayor Richard Wimbledon John Wail or Veil Sheriffs In his sixth Year Robert Serl continued Mayor Richard Renger John Veil Sheriffs In his seventh Year Robert Serl continued Mayor Richard Joyner Thomas Lambert Sheriffs In his eight Year Richard Renger was Mayor William Joyner Thomas Lambert Sheriffs In his ninth Year Richard Renger continued Mayor John Trevers Andrew Bokerill Sheriffs In his Tenth Year Richard Renger continued Mayor John Trevers Andrew Bokerill Sheriffs In his Eleventh Year Richard Renger continued Mayor Roger Duke Martin Fitz-Williams Sheriffs In his Twelfth Year Roger Duke was Mayor Stephen Bokerell Henry Cocham Sheriffs In his Thirteenth year Roger Duke continued Mayor Stephen Bokerell Henry Cocham Sheriffs In his Fourteenth Year Roger Duke continued Mayor William Winchester Robert Fitz-John Sheriffs In his Fifteenth Year Roger Duke continued Mayor Richard Walter John de Woborn Sheriffs In his Sixteenth Year Andrew Bokerel was Mayor Michael of St. Helen Walter de Enfield Sheriffs In his Seventeenth Year Andrew Bokerel continued Mayor Henry de Edmonton Gerard Bat Sheriffs In his Eighteenth Year Andrew Bokerel continued Mayor Simon Fitz-Mary Roger Blunt Sheriffs In his Ninteenth Year Andrew Bokerel continued Mayor Ralph Ashwy John Norman Sheriffs In his Twentieth Year Andrew Bokerel continued Mayor Gerard Bat Richard or Robert Hardel Sheriffs In his Twenty first Year Andrew Bokerel continued Mayor Henry Cobham Jordan Coventry Sheriffs In his Twenty second Year Andrew Bokerel continued Mayor John Tolason Gervais the Cordwainer Sheriffs In his Twenty third Year Richard Renger was Mayor John Codras John Whilhall Sheriffs In his Twenty fourth Year William Joyner was Mayor Raymond Bongy Ralph Ashwy Sheriffs In his Twenty fifth Year Gerard Bat was Mayor John Gisors Michael Tony Sheriffs In his Twenty sixth Year Reymond Bongy was Mayor Thomas Duresm John Voyl Sheriffs In his Twenty seventh Year Reymond Bongy continued Mayor John Fitz-John Ralph Ashwy Sheriffs In his Twenty eighth Year Ralph Ashwy was Mayor Hugh Blunt Adam Basing Sheriffs In his Twenty ninth Year Michael Tony was Mayor Ralph Foster Nicholas Bat Sheriffs In his Thirtieth Year John Gisors was Mayor Robert Cornhill Adam of Bewley Sheriffs In his Thirty first Year John Gisors continued Mayor Simon Fitz-Mary Lawrence Frowick Sheriffs In his thirty second Year Peter Fitz-Alwin was Mayor John Voil Nicholas Bat Sheriffs In his thirty third Year Michael Tony was Mayor Nicholas Fitz-Josue
Grendon William Lord Leibourne John de Greystock Lord of Morpath Matthew Fitz-John Lord of Stockenham Nicholas de Nevill Lord of Wherlton and John de Painell Lord of Ateli POPE Boniface the eighth perceiving these high resolutions and having enough to do with the King of France left the Scots to look to themselves as well as they could Over whom King Edward had appointed the valiant Lord Segrave Custos but notwithstanding his valour the Scots discomfited him and took him Prisoner whom Sr. Robert de Neville rescued as also the rest of the prisoners without the loss of one man of his own When the report of this success of the Scots came to Edwards ears he went in person with a great Army piercing therewith through all Scotland from Roxbrough to Cathness being about three hundred miles not an enemy appearing with power to obstruct him but all either submitting to him or betaking themselves with their Captain Walleys to the Woods and Mountains King Edward after he had settled affairs in that Nation to his best conveniency returned to London whither not long after Captain Walleyes a Knights son having been betray'd was brought prisoner and at Westminster for Treason and other crimes was tryed found guilty and adjudged to death which sentence was executed on him and his quarters set up in divers parts of Scotland After this mans death generous Bruce who attained the Crown of Scotland headed his Country-men the Scots but was put to flight by Aymery de Valence and forced into the utmost Isles of Scotland where for a while he lived in great distress till seeing his time he appeared again in an hostile manner in Scotland John Stratford A.B. Cant. doing many things above the opinion of his means This induced martial King Edward to advance towards Scotland but in his march he fell sick at Carlisle where amongst other things given in charge he commanded his son Edward that he should be industrious in carrying on his design against the Scots and that he should carry his skeleton along with him through the Scotish Nation For said the King whilst thou hast my bones with thee none shall be able to overcome thee He likewise commanded the Prince on pain of his Curse not without common consent to repeal Pierce Gaveston who for abusing the Princes tender years with wicked vanities by common decree was banished He charged the Prince too That he should send his heart into the Holy-Land accompanyed with an 140. Knights and their retinues for whose support he had provided thirty two thousand pounds of Silver Lastly He charged him That upon pain of eternal damnation the said monies should not be expended upon any other uses This Heroick King dyed of a Dysentery at Burgh upon Sands A. D. 1307. and was buried at Westminster His Issue were John Henry Alphonse who dyed before him Edward Thomas Edmond and ten Daughters In remembrance of his first wife Queen Eleanor who dyed at Herdeby in Lincoln-shire he erected Crosses between that and Westminster in all places where her Hearse rested 'T is said that he built Hull in York-shire which was afterward beautified with fair buildings by Michael de la Pole Earl of Suffolk In the eighth year of his Reign he sent out his Writ Quo Warranto to examine by what Title men held their Lands which brought him in much money till John Earl Warren being called to shew his Title drew out an old rustie Sword and said he held his land by that and by that would hold it till his death In a Synod holden at Reading it was Ordained That no Ecclesiastical person should have more than one Benefice to which belonged the Cure of Souls There was executed at London 297 Jews at one time for defacing the Kings Coyn. Now flourished Roger Bacon a Franciscan Friar an excellent Philosopher and Mathematician Mayors and Sheriffs of London in this Kings Reign In his first Year Sir VValter Harvey was Mayor John Horn Walter Potter Sheriffs In his second Year Henry VValleys was Mayor Nicholas VVinchester Henry Coventry Sheriffs In his third Year Gregory Rokesley was Mayor Lucus Battencourt Henry Frowicke Sheriffs In his fourth Year Gregory Rokesley continued Mayor John Horn Ralph Blunt Sheriffs In his fifth Year Gregory Rokesley continued Mayor Robert de Arar Ralph L. Fewre Sheriffs In his sixth Year Gregory Rokesley continued Mayor John Adrian VValter Langley Sheriffs In his seventh Year Gregory Rokesley continued Mayor Robert Basing William le Meyre Sheriffs In his eighth Year Gregory Rokesley continued Mayor Thomas Box Ralph Moore Sheriffs In his ninth Year Gregory Rokesley continued Mayor VVilliam Farendon Nicholas Winchester Sheriffs In his tenth Year Henry VValeys was Mayor VVilliam le Meyre Richard Chigwel Sheriffs In his eleventh Year Henry VValeys continued Mayor Ralph Blunt Hawkin Betuel Sheriffs In his Twelfth Year Henry VValleys continued Mayor Jordan Goodcheap Martin Box Sheriffs In his thirteenth Year Gregory Rokesley was Mayor Stephen Cornehil Robert Rokesley Sheriffs In his fourteenth Year Ralph Sandwich was Mayor Walter Blunt John VVade Sheriffs In his fifteenth Year Ralph Sandwich continued Mayor Thomas Cross VValter Hawteyne Sheriffs In his sixteenth Year Ralph Sandwich continued Mayor William Hereford Thomas Stanes Sheriffs In his seventeenth Year Ralph Sandwich continued Mayor William Betaine John of Canterbury Sheriffs In his eighteenth Year Ralph Sandwich continued Mayor Fulk of St. Edmund Salomon Langford Sheriffs In his nineteenth Year Ralph Sandwich continued Mayor Thomas Romain VVilliam de Lyre Sheriffs In his twentieth Year Ralph Sandwich continued Mayor Ralph Blunt Hamond Box Sheriffs In his twenty first Year Ralph Sandwich continued Mayor Elias Russel Henry Bole Sheriffs In his twenty second Year Ralph Sandwich continued Mayor Robert Rokesley Martin Awbery Sheriffs In his twenty third Year Sir Ralph Sandwich continued Mayor Henry Box Richard Gloucester Sheriffs In his twenty fourth Year Sir John Briton was Mayor John Dunstable Adam de Halingbery Sheriffs In his twenty fifth Year Sir John Briton continued Mayor Thomas of Suffolk Adam of Fulham Sheriffs In his twenty sixth Year Henry Walleys was Mayor Richard Refham Thomas Sely Sheriffs In his twenty seventh Year Elias Russel was Mayor John Armentor Henry Fingene Sheriffs In his twenty eight Year Elias Russel continued Mayor Lucas de Havering Richard Champnes Sheriffs In his twenty ninth Year Sir John Blunt was Mayor Robert Collor Peter de Besenho Sheriffs In his thirtieth Year Sir John Blunt continued Mayor Hugh Pourte Simon Paris Sheriffs In his thirty first Year Sir John Blunt continued Mayor William Combmartin John de Burford Sheriffs In his thirty second Year Sir John Blunt continued Mayor Roger Paris John de Lincoln Sheriffs In the thirty third Year Sir John Blunt continued Mayor VVilliam Cawson Reginald Thunderley Sheriffs In his thirty fourth Year Sir John Blunt continued Mayor Geoffry at the Conduit Simon Billet Sheriffs EDWARD II. A.D. 1807. EDWARD called Caernarvon after that he had provided for the affairs of Scotland and
VVarwick fled into France thinking to take sanctuary at Callis but there the Lord Vawclear whom VVarwick had substituted his Deputy denied them admittance bidding them defiance with his great Guns for which good service King Edward mad Vaw●lea● himself Governour of Callis But though these Lords were rejected here yet were they with great respect received at the ●rench Court K. Lewis furnishing them with aids which effected they set sail and landed at Dartmouth from whence Warwick marched towards London proclaiming Henry King and commanding all from sixteen to sixty upon a great penalty to take arms against the Usurper Edward Duke of York And incredible it was to see the confluence of them which came armed to him who a little before applauded and approved none but King Edward The Bastard Fawconbridg in the West and the Earl of Pembroke in Wales every-where proclaimed King Henry also And the Lord Montacute who having mustered 6000 men in the name of King Edward and brought them forward almost to Nottingham drew them back again alledging King Edward's ungratefulness to his friends Every one cryed now A King Henry a King Henry a Warwick a Warwick and indeed all so applauded the passage now on foot that King Edward was forced to flye beyond the seas His Queen Elizabeth stole out of the Tower and took sanctuary in Westminster where on the 4th of November she was delivered of a son which without all pomp was there also baptized by the name of Edward Other Sanctuaries were also full of Edwards Friends And now the Kentish men took the opportunity to rob spoil and do much harm about London and some in London it self and more would have done had not the Earl of Warwick come in to the rescue which encreased his name that was great enough before On October 6 the said Earl entred the Tower wherein King Henry had been detained prisoner almost the space of 9 years whom he released and restored to him the title of King and forthwith conveyed him through London to the Bishops palace where a pompous Court was kept till the 13 of the same month on which day Henry went Crowned to St. Pauls the Earl of Warwick bearing his Train and Earl of Oxford the Sword the people crying God save King Henry November 26 following a certain Parliament was begun at Westminster wherein K. Edward was declared a Traytor to his Country an Usurper of the Crown and had all his goods confiscate the like judgment passed against his adherents John Tiptoft Earl of Worcester was beheaded All the Statutes made by K. Edward were revoked The Crowns of England and France entailed to K. Henry and his Heirs Male and for want of such unto George Duke of Clarence and the Earl of Warwick was made Governour of the Land in those turbulent times But K. Edward having received some aids from the Duke of Burgundy and the promises of more in England landed at Ravenspur in Yorkshire At his first arrival he seemed to lay aside his claim to the Crown pretending only to his rights as a private person howbeit when he had possest himself of York and got his friends about him he then marched in an hostile manner till he came near to the City of Warwick where his Brother Clarence brought in to his assistance 4000 men And Clarence reconciled to K. Edward sought to draw in Warwick to which end he sent messengers to him to the Town of Warwick where he then lay but Warwick bade the Messengers go tell the Duke from him That he had rather be an Earl and always like himself than a perjured Duke and that ere his Oath should be falsified as the Dukes apparently was he would lay down his life at his enemies foot which he doubted not should be bought very dear This stout resolution made Edward more wary therefore he hastens forward to obtain London whither when he was come the Citizens set open their Gates to him And now peaceable Henry becomes Prisoner again to K. Edward who hearing of Warwicks advance towards London draws forth his forces to meet him taking Henry along with him and upon Gladmore neer Barnet on Easterday in the morning the Kings and Earls hosts joyned Battel the best of the day for a while being Warwicks but at length through the fogginess and darkness of the Air the Stars embroidered on the Earl of Oxfords mens Coats who were in the left wing of the Battel were mistaken for the Sun which K. Edwards men wore in which error VVarwicks Battalion le ts fly at their own fellows that were in great forwardness of gaining the victory and they not knowing the cause of the errour judged themselves betrayed whereupon the Earl of Oxford with 800 men quit the Field Which great VVarwick perceiving he couragiously animated his men and furiously rushed into the midst of his enemies battel so far that he could not be rescued where valiantly fighting he was slain Marquis Montacute making forward to relieve him was also slain whereby ended that bloody days task On King Edward's part died the Lord Cromwel Lord Bourchier Lord Barnes and Sir John Lisle On the other part the Earl of Warwick and his brother John Nevil Marquis Montacute On both sides ten thousand most of which were buried upon the same plain where afterwards a Chappel was built In this same year 1471 and within few weeks after this was a battel fought at Tewksbury betwixt King Edward and the Martial Queen Margaret the defeat hapning to the Queen On whose side were slain John Lord Sommerset John Courtney Earl of Devonshire Sir John Delves Sir Edward Hampden Sir Robert Whittingham and Sir John Lewkner with three hundred others Amongst them that fled Prince Edward King Henries son was one him Sir Richard Crofts apprehended and presented him to the King whom the King a while beheld with austere countenance at last demanded of him How he durst with Banner display'd so presumptuously disturb his Realm To which the Prince answered That what he did was to recover his Fathers Kingdomes and his most rightful inheritance How darest thou then added the Prince which art his subject display thy Colours against him thy Liege-Lord Which answer so moved King Edward that he dashed the Prince on the mouth with his Gantlet and Richard Duke of Glocester with some of the Kings servants most shamefully murdred him at the Kings feet His body was buried in the Monastery of the black Friars at Tewksbury Edmond Duke of Sommerset the Pryor of St. Johns with many Knights and Esquires were taken forth of Sanctuary and executed at Tewksbury Queen Margaret in this fatal day of battel took into a religious house from whence she was taken and committed to sure and strait keeping in which condition she remained till such time that she was ransomed by her Father Duke Renate May 20 King Edward entred London and in few days after the Crookback'd Duke of Glocester stabbed harmless King Henry to the heart Whose
Northumberland Marquess of Winchester c. Upon the receipt of the Letters the Queen removed from Keningal to Fremingham-Castle unto whom the Suffolk-men first resorted offering their service with condition that they might still embrace the Gospel in the same manner that King Edward had established it To which she then condescended though afterward being petitioned to perform her promise herein she both punished the Writer and answered that they should one day well know that they being but members should not direct her their head July the twelfth the Earl of Oxford and other Lords came in to the Queens assistance and proclaimed her at Norwich and July the fourteenth the Duke of Northumberland with an Army set forth off London towards Norwich but few or none of the people bade this ambitious Duke God-speed which himself took notice of as he marched out of London with his Army But whilst Northumberland was on his way the Lord Windsor and other Gentlemen raised the Commons of Buckingham-shire for Queen Mary so Sir John Williams and Sir Leonard Chamberlain of Oxford-shire and Sir Thomas Tresham in Northampton-shire And at London the Tide turned and Queen Mary was there proclaimed and many of the Lords deserted the Duke insomuch that the Duke himself thinking it the easiest to swim with the stream even fairly in the Market-place at Cambridge proclaimed Mary Queen of England throwing up his Cap in token of joy The way thus made free Queen Mary repaired to London and there set at liberty Edmond Bonner imprisoned in her brothers time restoring him to the See of London which Dr. Ridley had possessed and made him a prisoner Other Protestant Bishops she removed placing Papists in their steads Doctor Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury she committed to the Tower and Stephen Gardner she made Lord Chancellor And to assure her estate the better the Duke of Northumberland was Arraigned and condemned and brought upon the Scaffold on Tower-hill to suffer death Where this Duke having promise of life if he would recant the reformed Religion did so and withall exhorted the people to follow the Romish way though when he had so done the executioner made him shorter by the head with him suffered Sir John Gates and Sir Thomas Palmer August 22. A few days after which the Queen was Crowned at Westminster by Stephen Gardner Bishop of Winchester And October 18th began a Parliament wherein that Act was repealed which was made in Edward the 6th's time intituled An Act for the uniformity of Common Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments Then came all the Popish trinkets into fashion again the Mass-Book Crucifixes Agnus Dei's Reliques with all the Idols and Abominations And the temporising Priests were forced to forgoe their Wives though not to live honestly For as Mr. Heywood merrily said to the Queen concerning these men when she told him that the Priests must no longer have their Wives Your grace then must allow them Lemmons for the Clergy cannot live without sawce A. D. 1553 was the Lady Jane Grey and her Husband Arraigned and condemned at the Guild-hall in London and February 12th her Husband Gilford Dudley 4th son to the Duke of Northumberland was had to the Tower-hill where with prayers and great signs of repentance he ended his life Whose body all bloody laid in a Cart together with the head wrapt in a cloth was brought into the Ch●ppel of the Tower even in the sight of this sorrowful Lady his Wife who was now to mount the Scaffold raised upon the Green within the ●ower whither being ascended she with a cheerful countenance spake unto the spectators declaring that her offence was only in consenting unto others That she never sought that greatness Then desired the people to bear her witness that she died a true Christian woman and looked to be saved by no other means but only by the mercy of God in the blood of Christ Jesus his only son confessed that when she did know the word of God she neglected it and loved the world and her self and that therefore this plague and punishment justly hapned to her for her sins Lastly desired the people to pray for her whilst she lived Then kneeling down said in English the 51 Psalm which done she stood up and gave her Book to Mr. Bridges Lieutenant of the Tower then by the help of her two Gentlewomen made her self ready for the Block and commending her spirit into the hands of the Lord Jesus her head was severed from the body Thus ended the life of this most ingenious and vertuous Lady ruined by the Ambition of her own especially Husbands Father On the 23 of the same month her Father Henry Duke of Suffolk for a second offence the promoting an insurrection to hinder the Queens marriage with Philip of Spain was beheaded on the Tower-hill And A. D. 1554 April 23 was his Brother the Lord Thomas Grey beheaded in the same place Against this foresaid match with Spain many combinations were made and many persons in divers places of the Realm were up in Arms. And amongst the rest Sir Thomas Wiat with the Kentishmen against whom the Duke of Nurfolk was sent but many of his followers forsook him and joyned with Wiat. Then Wiat advanced to Dartford and from thence to Deepford by Greenwich at whose approach so nigh the City the fears were there so great that the Lord Mayor Aldermen and most of the Citizens were in armour and the Serjeants and Lawyers in Westminster in the Hillary-Term pleading their Causes in harness The Queen to make the City sure on her side came unto the Guild-hall where she made an Oration to the Citizens therein acquainting them That though the Rebels pretence was to resist the marriage with Spain yet that their intention was against her Religion That they arrogantly demanded the possession of her person the keeping of the Tower the placing and displacing of her Councellors She also therein alledged her right to the Crown professed her intire love and affection to her subjects promised them in the word of a Queen that if it should not probably appear before the Nobility and Commons in Parliament that her designed marriage with Prince Philip would be for the profit of the Nation she would abstain from it Wherefore saith she good Subjects pluck up your hearts and like true men stand fast with your lawful Prince against these Rebels both Ours and Yours and fear them not for I assure you I do not Against these Rebels the Earl of Pembroke was made General and a hundred pound lands by the year was promised to be given to him and his Heirs for ever that should bring Wiat either alive or dead Howbeit Wiat with fourteen Ensigns and about five thousand men advanced to Southwark where he made Proclamation That no Souldier should take any thing without due payment Southwark he fortified planting divers great Guns therein And London was fortified against him and the draw-bridge cut down Wherefore when Wiat perceived
made with the Cross and Harp on one side and this Inscription The great Seal of England on the other side the picture of the House of Commons with this Inscription In the first year of freedom by Gods blessing restored 1648. And afterward they appointed that all moneys to be coyned should be stamped with the Cross and Harp on one side and the Cross on the other with this Motto The Commonwealth of England God with us And instead of the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance they imposed an Engagement upon the people To be true and faithful to the Commonwealth as it was then established without King or House of Lords A Council of State they constituted by the name of the Keepers of the Liberties of England consisting of forty persons who were to have the executive part of the Government Thus was Englands ancient Government soon changed by about 50 persons who stiled themselves a Parliament and the Representative body of England The maxim upon which they grounded these their alterations and all other their illegal proceeds was this That all power and authority is originally in the people and that they were the peoples Representative When this Junto had made such a module of Government they erected another High Court of Injustice for the trial of Duke Hamilton as Earl of Cambridge of the Earls of Holland and Norwich the Lord Capel and Sir John Owen all which were condemned to die for engaging in their Soveraign's cause but the Earl of Norwich and Sir John Owen were reprieved the other three were beheaded in the Palace-yard at Westminster March the 9th The ever loyal Lord Capel in his speech on the Scaffold declared that he died against the Justice of the known Laws of the Land and for no other cause than his asserting the Fifth Commandment prayed heartily for the King for his restoration long life and prosperity shutting up his Speech with a profession of his cheerfulness in forgiving his Enemies Other good Subjects they put to death in other places of the Nation Lieutenant Colonel Morris Mr. Beaumont a Minister Major Monday and Cornet Blackburn And many were the loyal persons that were now proscribed and had their Estates confiscated as the Marquess of Newcastle Earl of Bristol the Lords Cottington Widdrington Culpepper Byron Sir Edward Hide Sir Philip Musgrave Sir Marmaduke Langdale Sir Richard Greenvill with others And all that had been in actual Arms for the King or other service were forced to compound for their Estates if they had any to the great impoverishing of the Royal party A. D. 1649 and April the 7th The Members at Westminster for the better supply of their Army and taking away of free-quarter passed an Act for the levying of 90000 l. a Month upon England for six months Then took into consideration the sale of Dean and Chapters Lands May the 15th divers Troops of the Army for mutinying were surprised by Fairfax at Burford where some few of the Ringleaders were shot to death and the rest disbanded There were of that party a people called Levellers who in those times of distraction would have all things in the Common-wealth ordered according to their wild humours and yet all their cry was for the Liberties of free-born English men About this time Dr. Dorislaus whom the disloyal Members had sent over as their Agent into Holland was there slain by Colonel Whitford a Scotch man and not long after one Ascham another of their Agents sent into Spain was there slain by one Sparks May the 30th in the City of London England was proclaimed a Free-State And June the 13th the House ordered that no ceremony should be used to the Kings Children the Duke of Glocester and Lady Elizabeth then in the Junto's custody In Ireland the Kings Lieutenant the Marquess of Ormond in order to promote the Kings cause there concluded a peace with the Irish and June the 22d he besieged the City of Dublin but August the 2d Colonel Michael Jones with his whole strength being betwixt 8 and 9000 sallied out upon the besiegers who were 19000 Horse and Foot and routed them totally slew of them about 3000 took Prisoners 2517 took all the Marquess's train of Artillery and Amunition and a very rich booty in the Camp August the 16th Oliver Cromwell landed with his forces at Dublin and after a short stay there marched with great expedition against Tredagh or Drogedah where Sir Arthur Ashton was Governor the defendants of that Town did bravely behave themselves howbeit Oliver gained it by storm giving strict order to his Soldiers that they should afford quarter neither to Man Woman or Child but should kill all He vowed to one of his Commanders That he would sacrifice their bodies to the souls of the English men they had formerly murdered Next Oliver besieged Wexford which through the treachery of one Strafford was yielded And shortly after this many engarisoned places were reduced by Olivers forces The Plantation of Virginia that had refused subjection to the new Republick of England was forced to a conformity by Sir George Ayscoughs Fleet. October 23 Mr. John Lilbourn the Leader of the Levelling party one that had wit enough but of a thwarting turbulent spirit was tryed at Guildhall in London for writing against the Members at Westminster and their Council of State but he so well pleaded his case and had so lucky a Jury that he was quit in despight of his Judges About this time Prince Rupert the King's Admiral was distrest and put to his shifts by the Junto's Fleet losing most of his Ships with his Brother Prince Maurice who was then cast away A. D. 1650. In the beginning of this year the truly Loyal and Magnanimous Marquess of Momross was defeated in Scotland by Major General Straughorn the Marquess himself by quitting his Horse and shifting himself into an ordinary Highlanders habit made a shift to escape for the present his standard was taken in which was pourtrayed the Head of King Charles the first lying a bleeding and severed from the body with this Motto Judg and revenge my cause O Lord. The Marquess after some days wandring about in by-places came to the Laird of Astons House a person whom the Marquess had done several kindnesses for but this false Scot whether for fear or lucre betrayed this distressed Peer into the hands of his Enemy David Lesley who sent him to the City of Edenbrough where the common Hangman met him at the Towns end and first pulled off his Hat then forced him into a Cart which had a high Chair placed in it in which the Marquess was seated that thereby he might be the more obnoxious to the scorns of the vulgar But his noble soul was not at all dismayed for God he said did all the while most comfortably manifest his presence to him and furnished him with courage to overlook the reproaches of men and to behold him for whose cause he suffered After the sentence of Parliament was
defence of the Reformed Religion because of the bloody Inquisition that without respect had persecuted her subjects Because the King of Spain had sent forces into Ireland and lastly to prevent her enemy the Spaniard from being so nigh a neighbour to her A. D. 1587 and Febr. 7 was Mary Queen of Scotland King James's Mother beheaded at Fotheringhay Castle to the great discontent 't is said of Queen Elizabeth who committed Secretary Davison to the Tower thereupon and never admitted him more to his place because of his forwardness in promoting the death of that Roman-Catholick Queen But what is above us is nothing to us The matters for which she was condemned in the Star-chamber Court at Westminster were her pretending title to the Crown of England her being privy to certain Treasons of Anthony Babington and others tending to the hurt and death of the Royal person of Queen Elizabeth This she absolutely denied affirming that she never attempted any thing against the Queens person though for her own delivery out of prison she confessed she did make some attempts Babington with thirteen other Traytors were executed A. D. 1588 Henry third King of France who ever honoured Queen Elizabeth and not the least because of her Religion sent speedy and secret notice unto her of the Spaniards intentions to invade her Realm of England Against whose coming the Queen caused her Trained-bands to be in readiness Tilbury in Essex was the place for her Camp whereunto were appointed to march 15000 Horse and 22000 Foot And for her special Guard out of the several Counties of the West East and South parts of England were selected 2352 Horsemen and 34050 Footmen The Queen her self was Generalissimo and Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester Lieutenant-General A. D. 1588 and May 19 the Armado or invincible Navy of the Spaniards as they termed it loosed Anchor from Lisbon and on July 20 it passed by Plimouth towards Callis hoping about those coasts to have met with the Prince of Parma but in their way the English Fleet changed some bullets with them July 21 the two Fleets fought within Musket-shot when the English Admiral Lord Charles Howard fell most hotly on the Spaniards Vice-Admiral In this fight they well perceived how that their great unweildy Ships were unfit for service in those narrow Seas the English smaller Ships being too nimble for them as well in respect of saving themselves as in annoying the Spanish July 22 Sir Francis Drake Vice-Admiral took one of their great Gallions wherein was Don Pedro de Valdez with divers other Noblemen The Soldiers had the spoil of this Ship in which was 55000 Duckets of Gold July 23 the Spaniards came right against Portland when the sorest fight was performed and the English gained a great Venetian Ship with other lesser ones July 24 the fight was only betwixt the four great Galleasses and some of the English Ships July 25 the Spaniards came aaginst the Isle of Wight where was a terrible Encounter till at length the English so battered the Spanish tall Ships that they were forced to secure themselves in an Half-moon posture July 28 as the Spanish Fleet lay at Anchor within sight of Callis the English sent in amongst them eight Fire-ships filled with Gun-powder pitch brimstone and other combustible matter their Ordnance charged with bullets stones chains and the like These being drove with wind and tide unto the Spanish Fleet and then taking fire such a sudden roaring clap was given that the Spaniards affrighted in the dead of the night were struck into an horrible fear lest all their Ships should be fierd by these wherefore in great haste they cut their cables hoised their sails and drove at random into the Seas July 29. ranging themselves in order they approached overagainst Greveling where the English again getting the wind of them discharged upon them from morning till night to the confusion of divers of the Spanish Ships The Hollanders with thirty-five of their Ships watched the coasts about Dunkirk to prevent the Duke of Parma from having any intercourse there July 30 the Spanish Dons having gotten more Sea-room for their huge-bodied bulks spread their sails and made away as fast as wind and water would permit them fearing the small fleet and forces of the English whereas had they known but the want of Powder that was on the English side they would sure have stood longer to their tacklings The English Admiral followed now the Vincible Armado towards Norway and the Spaniards for the saving of their fresh-water cast all their Mules and Horses over board The Duke of Medina their Admiral when he at last arrived in Spain was deprived of all his Authority and other ways disgraced Many of the Spanish Ships in their flight perished through tempest upon the Irish Seas others were driven into the Chanel of England where part of them were taken by the English others by the Rochellers and some arrived at Newhaven Of 134 Ships which had set sail from Lisbon only 53 returned into Spain Of the four Galleasses of Naples but one and of the ninety-one Gallions and great Hulks from divers Provinces only thirty-three returned Of the four Gallies of Portugal but one In brief there was missing of their whole Fleet eighty one Vessels and of the 30000 Soldiers 13500 and odd Of Prisoners taken in England Ireland and Low-countries were 2000 and upwards So that it appears there was small virtue in the Popes Crusado wherein he published a safe Pass-port for his Spaniards to enter England The English Fleet was betwixt fourscore and a hundred sail Captains therein were the Lords Howard and Sheffield Sir Francis Drake Sir John Hawkins Sir Walter Rawleigh Sir Martin Frobisher c. For this Deliverance the 19 of November was appointed a day of Thanksgiving Blessed be the Lord who gave us not a prey into their teeth c. Psal 124. Octogesimus octavus mirabilis annus Clade Papistarum faustus ubique piis Dr. Fulk The Thunder-clap of this Armado being thus over and the Invincible become Vincible the Queen determined to assist Don Antonio the expulsed King of Portugal for the regaining of his Kingdom to which end a Fleet was sent out under the conduct of Sir Francis Drake and Sir John Norris for the land-service was General These landing in a Bay of Galicia near to the Groin took the Base-town by surprize which they found well-victualled and stored with Wine to the damage of the English who taking too immoderately of it so inflamed and infected their blood that it caused great sickness and mortality in the whole Army After some conflicts with the High-town they fired the Base-town or suburbs and put again to Sea and when some struglings with the Winds were over they recovered the Burlings In which passage Robert Earl of Essex with his Brother Mr. Walter Deureux accompanied with other gallant men came Voluntiers to the Fleet which landing in Portugal won the Town and Castle of Peniche
Then the English Army marched over-over-land to Lisbon where a strong sally was made upon the English but the Earl of Essex chased them back to their very gates And the mean while Admiral Drake with his Fleet were come to Cascais and possessed the Town without any resistance and during the stay there the English took threescore Hulks from the Spaniards laden with Corn Masts Cables Copper and Wax About A. D. 1591 Queen Elizabeth sent Ayds into France in the behalf of Henry IV whom the Popish party would not admit to the Crown of France though his absolute right because he leaned to the Reformed Religion nor was he admitted till he had taken Oath to defend the Roman faith against all oppugners A. D. 1596 and June the first did Charles Lord Howard and the Earl of Essex with a gallant Fleet begin their Voyage for Cadiz which in a short time after their coming to it was surrendred to them The spoil thereof was given to the English soldiers the wearing clothes of the inhabitants only excepted and the Citizens upon the payment of an 120000 Duckets for their ransome had their liberty The Spanish Fleet which lay in the Harbour valued at twelve Millions of Duckets was fired by the Admirals command to the end it might not become a prize to the English The Town the English burnt and spoiled the Island then set sail towards Favo a Town in Algarva where the English landed forraged the Country for about three leagues burnt the Town Lotha and then returned for England But the wrongs which had been offered by the Spaniards seeming far greater to the English than was yet the justice upon them and the wise Queen holding it best to keep the Spanish King employed at home the Earl of Essex was therefore Commissioned with a well-furnished Fleet to sail for the Azores Islands Which Fleet upon Septemb. 15. 1597 fell with the Isles of Flores Evernes Fyall and Pike all which submitted to the Earl Then he sailed for St. Michaels where Sir Walter Rawleigh kept the Seas with the Ships whilst Essex landed and sacked the rich Town Villa Franca but the Winters storms approaching the Earl returned home bringing with him a Brazil-ship of War with three other prizes valued at 400000 Duckets The Pope and Spaniard though they had hitherto been frustrated in all their mischievous designments against the Queen and Church of England yet still they hoped that by one treacherous means or other they might at length effect the ruin of both though praised be God the ruin proved to their own vile instruments Patrick Cullen hired to murther the Queen was executed at Tyburn Philip Earl of Arundel and Sir John Perat were both condemned for high Treason but died by course of nature Roderick Lopez a Spaniard one of the Queens Physitians undertaking to poyson her was with his two complices executed at Tyburn Edmund York and Richard VVilliams hired by one Holt an English-Jesuite were executed for their Treasons Edward Squire was executed for impoysoning the pommel of the Queens saddle and pommels of the Earl of Essex his Chair though by Gods providence the poyson effected not what was intended by it One VVallpoll a Jesuite animated him to the fact by alledging that he might do it without much danger of his life but though he should lose his life for it yet he should be assured that in exchange of this transitory one he should enjoy the estate of a glorious Saint in Heaven So meritorious it seems it is to murder Catholique Princes so they be not Roman-Catholick ones But besides all these Romish-Agents there was the Irish Tir-Oen who used his greatest endeavours to divert subjection from the English Crown against whom that Martial Knight Sir John Norris was sent General who after he had brought Tir-Oen to a submission though as it after proved but a feigned one ended his days The Irish Rebelling again the Earl of Essex was sent thither where in the Province of Munster he became terrible to those wild Irish-Rebels chasing them before him into the woods though with more expence of time and loss of men than was well liked by some statists in England Then the Earl advanced into Leinster-Province against the O Coners and O Moils Then made towards Vlster where he entred into Parley with Tyrone But her Majesty being informed likely by some that envyed the Earls being so highly in her favour that the Spring Summer and Autumn were spent without service upon the Arch-Traytor Tyr-Oen that her men were diminished and large sums of mony consumed without the Earls doing that he was sent for That without her Highness order he entred into Parley with the Rebels Hereupon her Majesty sent sharp Letters unto the Earl upon the receipt whereof in discontent he hasted into England well hoping to pacify the Queens displeasure but after a short verbal welcom from the Queen he was commanded to his chamber and soon after committed to the custody of the Lord Keeper 1599. In the Earls stead Charles Blount Lord Montjoy was sent into Ireland who held Tyr-Oen very hard and forced him to withdraw into his old lurking places But to strengthen the Irish part the King of Spain sent into Ireland two thousand old trained Spanish Souldiers with certain fugitive Irish under the command of Don d'Aquila who strait after his arrival published a writing wherein he stiled himself Master-General and Captain of the Catholique King in the Wars of God for preserving the faith in Ireland Unto these two thousand Spaniards more were shortly sent under the conduct of Alohons O Campo but Alphonso had not long nested in Ireland ere himself and three of his Captains were taken and twelve hundred of his Spaniards were slain And at the siege of Kingsale the Spaniards made suit to the Lord General for a peace which was yielded unto whereupon the Spaniards departed and the Irish submitted themselves to the merciful Queen The Earl of Essex who had been committed to the keeping of the Lord Keeper was by her Majesties clemency quit of that durance and only commanded to his own house but the Earl of a daring spirit and exasperated by his Martial followers likewise presuming upon the Queens high respect towards him resolved by force and violence to have personal conference with the Queen and to remove from about her such as he deemed his enemies To effect which many of his favourers assembled at his house as well Noble-men and Knights as Captains and other Officers but this being understood by the Statists they made it known to her Majesty who thereupon sent four of her Honourable Counsellors to the Earl to offer him Justice and to command the Assembly to depart These Counsellors accordingly went to the Earl to Essex-house where they did their message to the Earl and commanded his followers whom they saw about him to lay down their weapons and depart but the Earl leaving these Councellors under custody in his own house with