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B20451 Justice vindicated from the false fucus [i.e. focus] put upon it, by [brace] Thomas White gent., Mr. Thomas Hobbs, and Hugo Grotius as also elements of power & subjection, wherein is demonstrated the cause of all humane, Christian, and legal society : and as a previous introduction to these, is shewed, the method by which men must necessarily attain arts & sciences / by Roger Coke.; Reports. Part 10. French Coke, Roger, fl. 1696. 1660 (1660) Wing C4979 450,561 399

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Essex and Edmund Earl of March the true and undoubted Heir of the Crown of England both condemned unheard and without tryal in Parliament when as he might have instanced twenty Sir Thomas Seimer Admiral of England and Brother to the Protector Anno 1549. the third year of Edward the Sixth was condemned to death unheard by a Law in Parliament Henry the Third after all the Acts of Grace of Magna Charta Charta de Foresta c. instead of means Good Governors are the Preservers or enlargers of the Government Parliaments have ever been the bane of the greatness of the English Monarchy given him by Parliament for the recovery of his right of the Dutchy of Normandy usurped and taken by the French King from his Father King John and the Dutchy of Guienne and Earldom of March the year before usurped and taken from him by the French King had all the exercise of Regal Government taken from him and given to the Twelve Peers by the * Insanum Parliamentum Mad Parliament whereof ensued the Barons Wars to the destruction and confusion of so many English-men as nothing but a Parliament could have done Henry the Fourth in the first year of his usurped Reign had the Crown entailed upon him and his Heirs in Parliament from whence ensued all the Wars of the Houses of York and Lancaster At a Parliament holden Anne Dom. 1470. begun at Westminster 26 November the Crowns of England and France were entailed upon Henry the Sixth and the Heirs male of his body lawfully begotten and for want of such Heirs unto George Duke of Clarence being the yonger Brother of Edward the Fourth the undoubted Heir of the Crown of England whereby a double injustice was done first to Henry the Sixth excluding his Heirs general then to Edward the Fourth to prefer his yonger Brother Clarence before him in case of want of Heirs male to Henry the Sixth See the Factious Conspiracy of the Commons together with the consequence against the Duke of Suffolk Speeds History Henry 6. p. 675. Para. 47 48. The Parliament in the First of Richard the Third his Reign though a bloody Usurper presented a Bill for the entailing the Crown upon his Heirs Ann. 1 Hen. 7. Nor was the Act of Parliament less injurious which entailed the Crown upon Henry the Seventh and the Heirs of his body he having no colour of title to it but in right of his Wife and because he suspected his title and reigned in his own right to the wrong of his Wife and after her decease to the wrong of his Son Henry the Eighth in the eleventh year of his Reign he got an Act of Parliament to pass which should protect all Subjects who should assist the King be he so by right or not for the time being So that other offences should be punished but he that perpetrates the highest villany by invading a Crown should be protected by Law Henry the Eight by authority of Parliament an 1533. Bastardized Queen Mary and so soon as he had cut off Anne Bullens head by authority of Parliament Bastardized Queen Elizabeth smally to his credit one would think Add hereunto the ridiculous yet cruel Act of Hen. 8 his Headship of the Church So that a stranger being one day in Smithfield and seeing one burnt for denying the Six Articles and another hanged for denying his Headship cried out Bone Deus quo modo hic agunt vivi hic comburuntur Papistae ibi suspenduntur Antipapistae The bloody Laws passed in Parliament in prosecution of the Six Articles in the time of Henry the 8. and the bloody Parliamentary Laws for Religion in Queen Mary's reign c. and all those Sacrilegious Acts made in the reigns of Hen. 8. and Ed. 6. and sure no man can imagine such horrid acts could be perpetrated but by Parliaments Nor have the General Assemblies in France who were wont to be assembled once or twice a year demeaned themselves much better then the Parliaments in England but in stead of providing good Laws fell into such Factions and used such affronts to the Regal power that Lewis the Eleventh a most subtile and cunning Prince was wont to say It was time to put the French Kings horce de page out of their minority and from being Pages any more and so he did And since his time they have been rarely convented in France For since the General Assembly at Bloys anno 1587. by Henry the Third where the famous Duke of Guise was killed there hath been but one anno 1614. in the fourth year of the reign of Lewis the Thirteenth and that succeeded so ilfavoredly that there is no probability of ever being another 4. Besides the general and particular Customs and Acts of Parliament there are almost infinite Corporations Colledges and Companies who have divers and sundry priviledges which are granted by the Kings Letters Patents and are observed as Laws and to all intents and purposes have the effect of Laws 5. But in all Maritime cases the Kings of England being Soveraigns of the Narrow Seas whatsoever Grotius says to the contrary and all actions done upon a Navigable river are judged by the course of Civil law and so the Probate of Wills and Letters of Administration are determinable by the Civil law Judge Jenkins a learned Gentleman and a stout Champion for the Laws of this Nation in the first page of his Lex terrae divides the Laws of this Nation into three grounds or species viz. 1. The Customs 2. Acts of Parliaments and 3. Judicial Records and that the two latter are declarations of the former touching Royal government so that he makes Custom to be the ground of Royal government and Acts of Parliament to have but a declaratory power of the Common Law touching Royal government and Judicial Records to be equivalent to Acts of Parliament In all which he is most manifestly mistaken For first there are an exceeding many Acts of Parliament which have no manner of dependence or affinity with the Common-Law and so cannot be declarations of it nay there are many Acts of Parliament which are so far from being declarations of the Common-Law that they do annihilate it and create other things in lieu thereof as the Statute of West 2. cap. 1. called the Statute de donis conditionalibus annihilated all the Conditional estates in Fee at Common-Law and created estates in Tail in lieu thereof At Common-Law no Lands or Tenemers were deviseable by Will but the Acts of 32 34 H. 8. create a power of devising Lands and Tenements in Fee by Will and Tenants at Common-Law might choose whether they would attorn to any Grant of the Lord but now the Lords Grant is good without it by 27 H. 8. cap. 10. Sir Ed. Coke com on Lit. sect 574. says Stat. 32. H. 8. takes away the reason of the Common-Law so that that cannot be a declaration of what it takes away the reason It were tedious
institution and therefore incommunicable or alienable yet after it pleased God that Kings should be nursing fathers and Queens nursing mothers to his Church the exercise endowment priviledges and immunities of Christian power is of positive humane institution The obedience therefore or subjection due to them who have oversight over us in the Lord is not formally due to such Bishops and Priests who have once had the oversight over us but to such Bishops and Priests who are legally constituted to exercise the jurisdiction or function in such Dioceses or Parishes where they are so constituted which exercise is alienable or transferrible though not at the will of the Incumbent yet at the will of Supreme powers and legally at the will of the Donor CHAP. II. Of Inheritance and Succession 1. NO humane law can create a humane right Jura sanguinis nullo jure No Humane law can make a Royal heir civili dirimi possint Nor is this right of succession from Divine positive laws but observed as well where Gods revelation of himself is not received as where it is And if according to the resolution of all the most learned and reverend Judges in Calvin's Case subjection is from no humane law but from the law of nature Then of necessity must Regal right and inheritance be from the law of nature for no man supposeth subjection where he does not presuppose power The Will therefore of Henry the Eight where for want of issue of Edward Mary and Elizabeth he gives the English Monarchy to the issue of Frances and Elianor daughters of Mary his younger sister before the right heirs of Margaret his eldest sister wife of James the Fourth of Scotland was void and not to be allowed and so was that of Edward the Sixth who did disinherit his sisters Mary and Elizabeth and gave the Crown to Jane daughter of Frances the French Queen aforesaid by Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk and so were the Acts of Parliament made by H. 4. 5. and 6. which entailed the Crown upon their Heirs so was the Acts of the last of Henry the 6. which entailed the Crown upon him and the heirs males of his body and so were the Acts of the first of Rich. 3. and H. 7. which entailed the Crown upon them and their heirs Neither is succession and inheritance of Crowns declared by any humane Law in the world that I know of but only the pretended French Salique Law which we shall examine afterwards 2. None but God can make an Heire to a Crown solus Deus haeredem None but God can make an Heire to a Crown facere potest non homo Co. Lit. Sect. 7. And this Heire which Sir E. Co. here speaks of is but heire in fee to Lands or Tenements according to common Law or Custom if then only God can make such an Heire then sure none but God can make an Heire which makes humane Laws and permits Customes 3. It is not only humane Laws which say a bastard is filius terrae None can inherit not born in Matrimony Gen. 22. 2. quasi nullius filius Et qui ex damnato coitu nascuntur inter liberos non computentur but God calls Isaac Abrahams only Son although at the same time Abraham had his Son Ismael by Hagar his Handmaid or Concubine And Abraham gave all he had to Isaac but to the Sonns of the Concubins which Abraham had he gave gifts Gen. 25. 5 6. So though Ismael were Isaacs elder brother yet in comparison of Isaac born in wedlock God himself did not account him Abrahams Son Nor can one instance be given that ever by Gods either command or permission any born out of marriage did inherit By the Law therefore of God aswell as humane Law none can inherit which are born out of matrimony 4. That which no humane Law prescribes and yet is observed by all The Issue male shall inherit before the Issue female in Royalty men generally in all ages is from the Law of Nature But no humane Law prescribes the male to inherit before the female in regality yet it is observed by all men generally therefore that the issue male shall inherit before the female in regality is from the Law of Nature 5. If primogeniture had not been a sacred thing and inheritance annexed Of the Issue male the first born is to be preferred to it by the Law of Nature then could not Esau have been pronounced a prophane person for selling his birthright Heb. 12. 16. although he did it to save his life Gen. 25. 34. but being due by the Law of Nature I say Esau by his sale could not transfer it to Jacob yet because Esau did despise it Gen. 25. 34. it was just with God to transfer it to Jacob neither can it be shewed any where in sacred writ but that alwaies primogeniture in royal descent was a good title where God did not interpose 6. Only the King can inherit and succeed because his Royal capacity is Why only the King is said to inherit and succeed and Subjects do either inherit or succeed but never both affixed and inseparable with his person In the Oath therefore of Ligeance Subjects swear to beare faith to the King his Heirs and Successors but no Subject can both inherit and succeed because there is no succession can be affixed to the person of any Subject by vertue of inheritance All Corporations therefore do not descend by inheritance but are acquired as they are nominated or elected in such manner as is granted by the King or supream power 7. There are but two waies by which hereditary or successive Monarchies How many waies hereditary Monarchies descend do descend the one is Lineal descent the other Lineal Agnatical Cognatical or Collateral or as we say the one descends to the heire general the other to the heire male This latter by vertue of a Salique law takes place only in France we will therefore see what may be said and objected against the former and how the latter hath been observed in France and of what Authority it is 8. That cannot be against the Law of God which he has owned and Gynococratia or inheritance of Women not unnatural nor against the Law of God given a blessed president of but that God has owned Gynaecocraty and that in a great and miraculous delivery of his own people is evident in Deborah And that Women may inherit when the daughters of Zelophehad made their plea for their inheritance Numb 27. They first pleaded negatively Our Father was not of the company of them that gathered themselves against the Lord in the company of Corah which is a plain argument that rebellious Subjects have no property against supream powers but forfeit their goods aswell as lives for God saies ver 7. the daughters of Zelophehad spake right why should the name of our father be done away from his family because he has no Son And God himself
if any one do erect in his ground a Mill of new and after the Parson of the same place demandeth Tithe for the same the Kings Prohibition doth issue in this form Quia de tali molendino hactenus decimae non fuerunt solutae prohibemus c. Et sententiam Excommunicationis si quam hac occasione promulgaveritis revocetis omnino The Answer In such case the Kings Prohibition was never granted by the Kings assent nor never shall which hath decreed that it shall not hereafter lie in such cases Where a Suit for one offence may be prosecuted both in Court Spiritual and Temporal Also if any cause or matter the knowledge whereof belongeth to a Court Spiritual and shall be definitively determined before a Judge Spiritual and does pass into a Judgment and shall not be suspended by an Appeal and after if upon the same thing a Question is moved before a Temporal Judge between the same parties and it be proved by witness or instruments such an Exception is not to be admitted in a Temporal Court The Answer When any one case is debated before Judges Spiritual and Temporal as above appeareth upon the case of laying violent hands upon a Clerk it is thought notwithstanding the Spiritual Judgment the Kings Court shall discuss the same matter as the party shall think expedient for himself In what case only the Kings Letter shall be sent to discharge an Excommunication Also the Kings Letter directed unto Ordinaries that have wrapped those that be in subjection unto them in the sentence of Excommunication that they should assoil them by a certain day or else that they do appear and shew wherefore they have excommunicated them The Answer The King decreeth that hereafter no such Letter shall be suffered to go forth but in case where it is found that the Kings liberty is prejudiced by such Excommunication Clerks in the Kings service shall be discharged of their Residence but shall be corrected by their Ordinary Also Barons of the Kings Exchequer claiming by their priviledge that they ought to make answer to no complainant out of the same place extend the same priviledge unto the Clerks abiding there called to Orders or unto Residence and inhibit Ordinaries that by no means or for any cause so long as they be in the Exchequer or Kings service that they call not them to Judgment Ans It pleaseth our Lord the King that such Clerks as attend in this service if they offend shall be correct by their Ordinaries like as other but so long as they are occupied about the Exchequer they shall not be bound to keep residence in their Churches This is added of new by the Kings Council The King and his Ancestors since time out of mind have used that Clerks which are imployed in his service during such time as they are in his service shall not be compelled to keep residence at their Benefices And such things as be thought necessary for the King aad Commonweal ought not to be said to be prejudicial to the liberty of the Church Distresses shall not be taken in the High-ways nor in the antient Fees Cap. 9 of the Church Also the Kings Officers as Sheriffs and other do enter into the Fees of the Church to take Distresses and sometimes they take the Parsons beasts in the High-way where they have nothing but the land belonging to the Church The Answer The Kings pleasure is that from henceforth such Distresses shall neither he taken in the Kings High-way nor in the Fees wherewith Churches in tiimes past have been endowed Nevertheless he willeth Distresses to be taken in possession of the Church newly purchased by Ecclesiastical persons They that abjure the Realm shall be in peace as long as they be in the Church or High-way Also where some flying unto the Church abjure the Realm according to the custom of the Realm and Laymen or their enemies do pursue them and pluck them from the Kings High-way and they be hanged or headed and whilst they be in the Church are kept in the Church-yard with armed men and sometime in the Church so straitly that they cannot depart from the hallowed ground to empty their belly and cannot be suffered to have necessaries brought unto them for their living The Answer They that abjure the Realm so long as they be in the common way shall be in the Kings peace nor ought to be disturbed of any man and when they be in the Church their Keepers ought not to abide in the Church-yard except necessity or peril of escape do require so And as long as they be in the Church they shall not be compelled to flee away but they shall have necessaries for their living and may go forth to empty their belly And the Kings pleasure is that Thieves or Appellors whensoever they will may confess their offences unto Priests but let the Confessors beware that they do not erroniously inform such Appellors Religious Houses shall not be charged by compulsion with Corodies Pensions Resort or taking in of Horses and Carts Also it is desired that our Lord the King and the Great men of the Realm do nor charge Religious houses or Spiritual persons for Corodies Pensions or Sojourning in Religious houses and other places of the church or with taking up of horses or carts whereby such houses are impoverished and Gods service diminished and by reason of such charges Priests and other Ministers of the Church deputed unto Divine service are oftentimes compelled to depart from the places aforesaid The Answer The Kings pleasure is that upon the contents in their Petition from henceforth they shall not be unduly charged And if the contrary be done by Great men or other they shall have remedy after the form of the Statutes made in the time of King Edward Father to the King that now is And the like remedy shall be done for corodies and pensions exacted by compulsion whereof no mention is made in the said Statutes A Clerk excommunicated may be taken out of the Parish where he dwelleth Cap. 12 Also if any of the Kings tenure be called before their Ordinaries out of the Parish where they continue if they be excommunicate for their manifest contumacy and after forty days a Writ goeth out to take them and they pretend their priviledge that they ought not to be cited out of their Town and Parish where their dwelling is and so the Kings Writ that went out to take them is denied The Answer It was never yet denied nor shall be hereafter The examination of a Parson presented to a Benefice belongeth to a Spiritual Judge Also it is desired that Spiritual persons whom our Lord the King doth present unto Benefices of the Church if the Bishop will not admit them either for lack of learning or for other cause reasonable may not be under examination of Lay-persons in the cases aforesaid as it is now attempted contrary to the Decrees canonical but that they may sue unto a
with the Opinion of Learned men That the marriage with his Brothers wife was contrary to the Law of God and void The King not expecting the Popes sentence anno 1533. marries his beloved Anne but such love is usually too hot to hold for about two years after he cut off her head yet the King did not wholly renounce the Papacy but still expecting the Popes sentence The Pope for the reasons aforesaid not desiring to end the business The slow proceedings of the Pope but to expect advantage from time reduces the matter into several points or heads which he would have particularly disputed and at the time of the Kings marriage with Anne was not got further then the article of Attentates in which the Pope gave sentence against the King that it was not lawful for him to put away his wife by his own authority without the Ecclesiastical Judge For which cause the King in the beginning of 1534. denied the Pope his obedience commanding his Subjects not to pay any money to Rome nor to pay the ordinary Peter-pence This infinitely troubled the Court of Rome and they daily consulted of a remedy Some thought to proceed against the King with censures and to interdict all Christian nations all commerce with England But the moderate counsel pleased best to temporise with him and to mediate a composition by the French King K. Francis accepted the charge and sent the Bishop of Paris to Rome to negotiate a Pacification with the Pope where they still proceeded in the cause gently and with resolution not to come to censures if the Emperor did not proceed first or at the same time with his forces They had divided the cause into twenty three articles and then they handled whether Prince Arthur had had carnal conjunction with Queen Katherine in this they spent time till Midlent was past when the 19. of March news came that a Libel was published in England against the Pope and the whole Court of Rome and besides a Comedy had been made in presence of the King and Court to the great disgrace and shame of the Pope and every Cardinal in particular For which cause all being inflamed with choler ran headlong to give sentence which was pronounced in the Consistory the 24. of the same month That the marriage between Henry and Katherine was good that he was bound to take her to wife and that in case he did not he should be excommunicated But the Pope was soon displeased with this precipitation For six days His rash censure repented of after the French Kings letters came That the King was content to accept the sentence concerning Attentates and to render obedience upon condition that the Cardinals whom he mistrusted should not meddle in the business and that persons not suspected should be sent to Cambray to take information ●and and the King had sent his Proctors before to assist in the Cause at Rome Wherefore the Pope went about to devise some pretence to suspend the precipitate sentence and again to set the cause on its feet But the King so soon as he had seen it said It was no matter for the Utterly loses the obedience of England Pope should be Bishop of Rome and himself sole Lord of his Kingdom And that he would do according to the antient manner of the Eastern church not leaving to be a good Christian nor suffering the Lutheran Heresie or any other to be brought into his Kingdom From that time forward Henry the Eighth of a zealous Assertor of the No anger lost between the King Pope Papacy both by pen and purse became the first and greatest Opposer of it of all the Western Christian Princes for the Eastern Christian Princes except sometimes the Emperors of Greece and the Kings of Holy Land did seldom or never submit to the Papacy in her Spirituals yet did he afterwards seed to be reconciled to the Pope even by means of his Nephew Charls the Fifth Nor were the Popes much behind hand with him For besides Clement's petty Excommunication Paul the Third Anno 1538. thundred out such a terrible Excommunication against him as the like was never heard of which deprived him of his kingdom and his adherents of whatsoever they possessed commanding his Subjects to deny him obedience and Strangers to have no commerce in the kingdom and all to take arms against and persecute both him and his followers granting them their states and goods for their prey and their persons for slaves But the Popes anger ended in words whereas the Kings deeds took place against the Pope But what there was in all the Kings reign which might be called Reformation What was the Kings Reformation I do not understand For whatsoever the King took from the Pope except Peter-pence he ascribed to himself If the Pope would be Head of the Catholique Church the King would be Head of the Church of England If the Pope challenged Annates and First-fruits of the Bishops and Clergy the King would do no less If the Pope did give Abbots and Priors power being Ecclesiastical persons to make divers Impropriations to their benefit the King will take a power to take them all away and convert them into lay-Lay-fees and incorporate them so into particular mens estates that they shall never return to the Church more Nor had he any love or desire of Reformation of the Church but only to the church-Church-lands for all the Rites Ceremonies and Religion of the Church of Rome was continued and that with such bloody cruelty that a Stranger going over Smithfield one day and seeing two men there executed one for denying the Kings Headship of the Church and another for subscribing to the Six Articles cryed out Bone Deus quomodo hic agunt vivi hic suspenduntur Papistae ibi comburuntur Antipapistae And so zealous did he continue herein that Pope Paul the Third after he had fulminated so dreadfully against him Hist Conc-Trid fol. 90 proposed him for an Example to be imitated by Charls the Fifth Although such was the temper of this Prince that he never spared man The exclusion of the Papai jurisdiction was an act of the King Kingdom and Church of England in his rage woman in his lust nor any thing which might be called sacred in his avarice yet so absolute was he that his Divorce was attested by both the Universities at home besides that at Paris abroad his freeing himself and the Nation from the jurisdiction of the Pope was not only assented to by a Synod and Convocation of all the Clergy of England but the English and Irish Nobility did make their submissions by an Indenture to Sir Anthony Sellinger then chief Governor of Ireland wherein they did acknowledge King Henry to be their lawful Soveraign and confessed the Kings Supremacy Bram. Vind. of the Church of England p. 43. in all causes and utterly renounced the Pope But Divorce banishing the Papal authority
seized into the Kings hands for his Recusancy or any part thereof Every covicted Popish Recusant not married in some open Church or Chappel or otherwise then according to the Church of England by a Minister lawfully authorized shall be disabled to have any estate of Freehold by Curtesie of England And every woman being a popish Recusant convict which shall be married in other form then as aforesaid shall be disabled not only to claim any Dower or Joynture but also the Widowes Estate and Frankbanck in any customary Lands whereof her Husband died seized and likewise from having part of her husbands goods by virtue of any custome of any County City or Place And if a man be married contrary to the true intent of this Statute to a woman who hath no Lands or Tenements whereby he may become Tenant by Curtesie he shall forfeit 100 l. to be paid as aforesaid Every Popish Recusant which shall have a child born and shall not within a moneth after cause it to be baptized by a lawfull Minister according to the Lawes of the Realm in some usuall place of Baptisme or if by infirmity the child cannot be brought to such place then to be baptized by some Minister within the moneth if he beliving by the space of a moneth or if he be dead then Mother of such Child shall for every such offence forfeit one hundred pound one third part to the King the other to the Informer who will sue for it the other third part to the poor of the said Parish to be recovered in any of the Kings Courts wherein no Essoine c. shall be allowed If any Popish Recusant not being excommunicated shall be buried in any place other then the Church or Church-yard or not according to the Ecclesiasticall Lawes of the Realm That the Executors or Administrators of every such person so buried knowing the same or the party that so burieth him shall forfeit twenty pounds to be paid as aforesaid If the children of any of the Subjects within this Realm the said children not being Souldiers Mariners Merchants or their Apprentices or Factors shall be sent or goe beyond seas without licence of the King or six of the Privy Councell whereof the principall Secretary to be one under their hands and seals that very such child shall take no benefit by any gift conveyance descent devise or otherwise untill he being above the age of eighteen years take the oath mentioned in an Act made that Session intituled An Act for the better discovery and repressing Popish Recusants c. before some Justice of Peace of the County where such Parents of such Children as shall be sent did or shall inhabit In the mean time the next of kin who is no popish Recusant shall enjoy all the said Lands c. untill the person so sent shal conforme himself and take the said oath receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and then he who hath received any profit as aforesaid shall restore the goods or value to him who shall so conform himself He that shall so send his child beyond seas shall forfeit one hundred pounds to be recovered as aforesaid No convict popish Recusant shall present to a Benefice with Cure Prebend or grant an Advowson or collate or nominate to any Free-school or Donative whatsoever The Chancellor and Scholars of the University of Oxford when any such become void shall have the nomination presentation collation and Donation of any such Benefice Prebend or Ecclesiasticall Living School Hospitall and Donative in the Counties of Oxford Kent Middlesex Sussex Surrey Hampshire Barkshire Buckinghamshire Gloucestershire Worcestershire Staffordshire Warwickshire Wiltshire Somersetshire Devonshire Cornwall Dorcetshire Herefordshire Northamptonshire Pembrokeshire Carmarthenshire Brecknock-shire Monmothshire Cardiganshire Montgomeryshire and the City of London so long as the Patron shall remain a Recusant convict The Chancellor Scholars of the University of Cambridge shall have presentation c. to all such Benefices aforesaid being in the Counties of Essex Hertfordshire Bedfordshire Cambridgshire Huntingtonshire Suffolk Northfolk Lincolnshire Rutlandshire Leicestershire Derbishire Notinghamshire Shropshire Cheshire Lancashire Yorkshire the County of Durham Northumberland Cumberland Westmorland Radnorshire Denbyshire Flintshire Carnarvonshire Angleseyshire Merionethshire Glamorganshire so long as the Patron shall continue a Recusant convict If the Chancellor and Shollars of either University shall nominate or present Quaere who shal have the next presentation nomination to any such Benefice c. any person who hath any other Benefice with cure of souls every such nomination and presentation shall be void A convicted Recusant shall neither be Executor or Administrator nor Gaurdian in Chivalry or Socage The next of kin of the children of Recusants convict to whom the Estate cannot descend who shall usually resort to Divine Service according to the Lawes and receive the Sacrament shall have the Guard and education of the children and of the Lands and Tenements holden in Knights-service untill the full age of 21 years and of the Lands in Socage as Guardian in Socage and of Customary Lands by copy of Court Roll so long as the custome shall permit the same and in every of the said places shall yeeld an account of the profits to the Ward All Grants of Wards either of the King or any other to any Popish Recusant shall be void No person shall bring from beyond Sea print sell or buy any Popish Primers Ladies Psalters Manuels Rosaries popish Catechisms Missals Breviaries Portals Legends and lives of Saints containing superstitious matter upon penalty of fourty shillings to be forfeited as aforesaid viz. one third part to the King an other to the Informer who will sue the other to the poor of the Parish where such book shall be found Justices of peace in their Limits Mayors Bayliffs chief Officers in Corporations may search the hous of every popish Recusant convict the hous and lodging of every person whose wife is a popish Recusant convict for popish books and Relicks of Popery And if any Altar Pix Beads Pictures or such like popish Reliques or any popish books shall be found as in the opinion of such Officers shall be thought unmeet for such Recusants they shall presently be defaced and burnt if meet to be burnt All Armour Gunpowder and Munition whatsoever any popish Recusant convict hath or shall have in his own house or in the hands of others shall be taken from them by warrant of four Justices of peace at their Generall or Quarter-sessions other then such necessary weapons as the four Justices shall think meet for defence of the said Recusants in defence of their houses and the said Armour and Munition so taken shall be kept at the costs of the said Recusants in such places as the four Justices shall appoint If any such Recusant which hath such armour c. or any person who hath any such armour c. for the use of such Recusant shall refuse to declare unto the