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A96344 For the sacred lavv of the land. By Francis Whyte. White, Francis, d. 1657. 1652 (1652) Wing W1765; Thomason E1330_2; ESTC R209102 136,470 313

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before William the first that he sided not against him and that being found true he and all those in his condition h Weentun Monum hi● example ●n C●●ington of Sir Rob. Cotten like to lose all were confirmed in their Lands and Lordships to have and hold those are the words of the confirmation as wholly and peaceably as ever they did before the conquest By the Records of Term. Trin. 21 E. 3. Comit. Ebor Com. Northumb Rot. 191. This Drench is described thus That the foresaid Vghtred held the said lands viz. In Northumberland of our Lord the king and of his progenitors kings of England by the service of a Drench which service in the parts foresaid is such that of whomsoever he holds any thing there by such service it is held and if the Tenant dye his heire being within age the Wardship of the heir and land belongeth to the Lord of which c i D. Spelm. gloss verb● Dronches with the marriage Whether wardship and marriage as the Lord Cook k 4. Inst 193. no badges of servitude be of the same antiquity with king Aelfred I will not take upon me to determine the Lord Cook as also the Mirrour in the place cited by him are for the affirmative l Inst 1. p. 76.4 Inst 292. mire sect 3. graft 911. c. By a law if any man dye intestate the Lord is to have nothing but what is due by the name of Hereo● m Ll. Cnu●● c. 68. by Mr. Lambard this is acknowledged Engish-Saxon and thought to be the same with relief one place sayes Relief or rather Herent n Not. in radwes 152 and Hereot or relief o 154. 161 id compares the Hereota to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hereor is a service and acknowledgement of the seigniory of another a tribute so Dr. Cowel given to the Lord amongst the Saxons for his better preparation toward the war In the Monastical institutions of king Edgar Hereot is called geƿunlic gae ul a customary Cens or duty said to be given to the kings by the great men of this Country after geþtenege their death It is forbidden by this king to be given for all Abbots and Abbesses p In not ad eadm before as it seemeth not so free as here the words By the great men after their death make it quite another thing though it is called so from relief which is for the heir and never paid but where there is one q Gloss verbo Hereot The Hereot was to be reasonable and here again we shall see the ranks of the Saxon noblesse The Earls eight horses four sadled four not four Helmets four coats of maile and eight spears as many shields four swords and two hundred * Saxon ● Marks of Gold The greater Thanes the kings Thanes four horses two sadled two not two swords four spears as many shields an helmet a coat of maile and fifty marks of Gold The Medmere or under Thane one horse ready his weapon or as amongst the West Saxons his neck ransome amongst the Mercians two pounds amongst the Eas●-Angels two pounds The Kings Thanes Hereot amongst the Danes who has free jurisdiction ðe his socne haeb●e foure pound and if he be further knowne to the King two Horses one sadled the other not one Sword two Speares two Shields and fifty markes of gold The conclusion has not Infimae conditionis Thani as the Latin is But he that has lesse and lesse may be he two pound r Ll Conti. c 69. other Lords had their Hereot too The Lawes of Kings William which as the title were the same which King Edward obserued calles this which in these Lawes is Hereot reliefe and the Earle Kings Thegne and Underthane who are here charged as is said there are called and named Cnute Barun and Vavasour and charged much in the same manner ſ ● 22 23 24 v. c. 20. with little difference King Edwards Latin Lawes where any man falls in warre before his Lord by Land or else where forgives his reliefe t c. 3● and gives his Heires his Lands and Money without diminution u ibid. I will observe a little out of those old grants and Charters which preceed the Normans by which the religious heretofore made their titles onely carefull to get and to be free where we shall finde other men were not so The confirmation of Pope Agatho of the new raised Monastery of Medeshamstede after Peterborough before the age of Charters w An. 680. Concil Sax. 164. recites the immunities It was to be in no ðeudom in no kinde of servitude neither to King Bishop nor Earle No man was to have any rent or tribute there in the Councel of Becanceld King Withered freed the Church from all difficulties of saecular servitude from feeding the King Princes Aldermen Earles from all works the greater and lesser grievances c. x Concil Becanceld Au. 694. Concil Sax. 190. Witlafe King of the Mercians in the yeare 833. confirmes to the Monastery of Crowland their Lands and Tenements thus I grant deliver and confirme those Lands and Tenements c. for a peaceable and perpetuall possession to have from me and my Heires whosoever Kings of the Mercians after me to succeed in puram Eleemosynam in perpetuall and pure frankalmoigne Libere quiete et solute or as we now use it quit and discharged from all saecular charges exactions and tributes whatsoever by what name soever y Ingulp hist Concil Sax. 328. as another place amongst many things done said Ceolnoth the Archbishop before the whole Councell of Kingston shewed That the aforesaid Kings Egbert and Aethelwulfe his Son gave to Christ-Church at Canterbury the Mannor called Mallings in South-saxon free from all secular seruice and tribute royal except these three expedition military fird or firdfare upon the Herebanne the proclamation or edict military and to repair Bridges Castles Brugbote and Burgbote z Concil 340. by some not to be released * Charta E●dbaldi M●lmsb de gest reg l. 1. I●ae reg Glelienb Concit 228. which was not true The most learned Mr. Selden saies in England before the Normans were military fiefes the Earles and Thanes were bound to a kind of Knight service all the Lands of the Kingdom except some priviledged c. held of the Crown mediatly or immediately but saies he the expedition mulitary c. those three were not so much by reason of tenure as general subjection to occasions of the state a Tit. Hon. 1 Edit 321. likely so yet to recite the opinions of others there are that thinke this firdfare to be the same with our escuage the Charter of Kenulph An. 821. the Mercian King to Abingdon discharges all services but the expedition of twelue men with their shields cum scutis burgbote c. as the most knowing Knight In the antient Charters
The Lord Chancellours oath is thus That he shall doe right to all manner of people poore and rich according to the lawes and usages of the Realme s 10. R. 2. rot Parl. 8. The Barons of the Exchequer sweare no mans right to disturbe let or respite contrary to the lawes of the land t 4. Jnsti 109. which must be meant of the knowne and certain Law of the Land called in Magna Charta Legemterrae upon which all Commissions are grounded wherein is the clause to do what belongeth to Justice according to law and custome of England u 2. Jnsti 51. The illustrious Viscount of St Albane amongst his Aphorismes of universall Justice has this Let no Court deale in cases capitall our Lawes say Civill too but out of a knowne and certaine law God denounced death then he inflicted it nor is any mans life to be taken away who knew not first he had sinned against it w Augm. scient 402. By this Law of the Land although there is not nor cannot be any liberty which should protect the transgressors of it yet have all Offenders a legal tryall nor are possessours of the worst faith thrown out without the hand of the Law onely against those who attempt to subvert or weaken the Lawes there is a Writ to the Sheriffe in nature of a Commission to take the impugners and to bring them as the Register to the Gaole of Newgate x Regist 64 2. Justi 53. This as the Lord Cooke is lex terrae The Law of England to take a man without answer or summons in this case and the reason given is He that would subvert all Lawes deserves not the benefit of any Amongst the articles exhibited to King Henry the eight against Cardinall Wolsey he is charged with oppression in imprisoning Sir John Stanly and forcing him to release a farme taken by Covent Seale of the Abbot of Chester c. as the words by his power and might y Artic. 38. And that he threatned the Judges to make them deferre judgement z Artic. 39 that he granted many Injunctions the parties not called nor any bill put in by which diverse were cast out of their possessions of their Lands and Tenements a Artic. 21. The close was That by his cruelty iniquity and partiality he hath subverted the due course and order of the lawes His Inditement went higher and accused him That he intended the most ancient lawes of England wholly to subvert weaken and this whole Realme of England and the people of the same to the Lawes Imperiall commonly called the Civill Lawes and to their Canons for ever to subiugate c. b Mich. 21. H. 8. Coram Rege Now although the Civill Law deserves as much honour as can be given it and commands and is obeyed much abroad yet this Law of the Land held the possession here by a long unquestionable prescription and after the tryall of many ages got the affection of the people whose fathers grew up happily under it which was not easily to be removed the rather because seldome doth any Nation willingly submit to or welcome the Customes and Laws of another which they have not been acquainted with and our Judges who wil not in our Books part with one of its Maximes c 2. Jnst it 210. would not have fallen downe before the shrive of any unknown Themis and have offered up the whole tables It were no hard matter to heape up testimonies Vid chap. 3 if some would thinke it lawfull to trust men in their owne arts or professions and can it not but be more reasonable that such should be heard in the defensive then that those who professe full Hostilitie bringing with them onely mistakes of their owne prejudice should sit Judges of the tryal which is in their own cause and if thus far the reines be given to turbulent desperate spirits every thing how sacred soever may be arraigned at these tribunalls the articles of our faith will quickly totter nor will any principle be safe This discent will be fatall there being no stay in the precipice the bottome onely must receive men where he that falls is crushed to pieces what is worse those unhappy ones who follow cannot see their danger Thus we have seen what the common Law the Liberty and Franchise of the free people of England the law of the land is The law of antient time d. 27. E. 1. of old time used e 25. E. ● the old law f 42. E. 3. for ages according to the judgement of these Parliaments makes the law more venerable it is an addition of honour to it Now it followes in order to speake something of the Antiquity of this law The Antiquity of the Law But as the beginnings of things sometimes are rather guessed at then knowne it is no wonder that there should be no generall agreement here of opinions some will make the Law a Colossus of the Sun knocking the Starres with its head more ancient then the Dipthera or Evanders mother others a late small spark struck from the clashing of the Norman Swords the child rather of Bellona then Jove terrible in the Cradle the truth being mistaken by both To relye upon the authority of a Chancelour or rather chiefe Justice in the time of King Henry the sixth upon which the * r. 2. Epi. r. 6. Epist antiquity should be raised was lesse then that of Aventine who professed History where after a prodigious linke of German Kings before the Arcadian Moone he will needs bring his Dutch to the Wars of Troy which he proves out of the laws of Charles the 4. who lived lesse then two hundred yeare before Aventine and some three hundred yeares before us from which he is peremptory there must be no appeal g Boicar Hist 49. for a great Lawyer continually imployed in the publick affaires or in his study where his many volumes upon the law show the whole man might well be taken up to faile in a piece of History if he may justly be said to faile this way who onely trusted another who was carelesse It is no blemish such as can deserve the censorian rod of our Criticks besides all men love to consecrate their originalls This is allowed to antiquity saies Livie mixing things humane with divine to make the beginnings of Cities more majestick and we may say as he doth of his Rome of our Lawes if it be lawfull to canonize any to carry them up to Heaven or fetch them downe from thence that glory alone is due though it needs not to the most sacred lawes of the land Sir John Fortescue his words are to this effect That if the lawes of England had not bin most excellent the Romans who cry up their Civill Law Saxons Danes or Normans had altered them h de lg Ang l. c. 17. by which our Lawes must be Brittish at least and our
and Leases often profectio militaris and expeditio are the same which amongst the Saxons is called here fare amongst the Germans Hereban with us and the French escuage at least that which is certaine b Glos verbo Heribannm The Charter of Bertulph King of the Mercians Anno 851. to the Monastery of Crowland grants All those abovesaid Churches Chappell 's Lands Tenements Pastures Fishings Mannors Mansions Milles Marshes free and discharged from all secular service and earthly charge c. and I free from all duty of the King and of every other Lord and man of what dignity excellency and honour soever c Concil 346. Jngulph Hist 861. King Athelwulf the West Saxon and Monarch in his grant of the tenth Mansion and of the tenth of all goods to the Church differs little from these Hee will have that tenth part to be free as the severall Copies have it and as we find it hitherto to have been from all socular servitudes and from all royal tributes the greater and the lesser or from the taxes as in Ingulphus which we call winterden as Malmesbury Witerden as Math of Westminster Witeredden who agrees with the others in this part onely he has secular services for servitude all of them make the Charter conclude contrary to the Charter of Eadbald before and let it be free c. to serve God onely without expedition repaire of Bridges and Castles which by the old law or old policy rather of the English Saxons it is said the Kings could not discharge This is therefore called the writing of the Liberty of the Churches of England This Charter worthy of everlasting memory was granted in a Generall Councell at Winchester such one as is called Pan Anglicum where were present three Kings Athelwulf the Monarch the West Saxon Beared the Mercian after driven out by the Danes and Edmund the Eastangle the Martyr slaine by those Danes Hence the most worthy Knight thinkes the rectory and the glebe to have had their beginning though faire additions from the munificence of pious patrons have been made to it since d concil 349. 352. In optona grena Vpton grene as Ingulphus St Gutlac the tutelar speciall Saint of Crowland had and bath Woods and Marshes c. in the time of King Edward free and quit from all services e Hist 909 from the time of King Etheldred was the Seat of our Abby sayes he quit and discharged from all secular services and our Abby was quit and free from all secular services in the time of that King who was the lawfull Successour of the royall blood of the English and father of the most pious King Edward f p. 911. s 30 40.50 And againe a great part of the Marshes and Meadowes of the Seat of our Monastery saies he I demised for a certain yearely rent and other services to be done g 912. The Folcland of the basest tenure amongst the Saxons as M. Lombard which passed without writing was that which now we call Copy-hold at the will of the Lord h Glos terra exscripta whose condition as also that of those who held by socage was far more servile before the Norman entrance then in some times since before the services of all these consisted in fcasance in doing after in render by payment c. as the most reverend Judge Littleton of those who hold by socage Afterward these services were changed into money by consent of the Tenants and desire of the Lord viz. into an annuall rent c. yet the name c. remaineth and in divers places the Tenants yet doe such services with their Ploughes to their Lords i L. 2 s 119. Bracton calles the Copy-holder villein sockman or sockman of base tenure k L. 2. c. 8. others tenant in villeinage servitude indeed or villeinage since Richard the seconds time is by degrees rather worne out then abolished by any law nothing now is left but the name the last man which I have knowne claimed for a villein being Crouch of Sommerset-shire in Queene Elizabeths time l Dy. 266. 283. This too is Saxon English and preceded the Normans but was never favoured by the Law m Dy. 267. lit s 193. Forost c. 42. The Saxon lawes call the villain ðeoƿ mon or man ðeoƿ and ðeoƿe indifferently a servant man or servant not that freemen were not servants too as since they are both which are visible in that Law of King Ina If a Servant man worke on Sunday by his Lords command be he free and the Lord shall pay thirty shillings for a penalty if he worke without his Lords knowledge he shall lose his hide be whipped or his hide gild the price of it but if a Freeman worke that day without his Lords command he shall lose his freedome or sixty shillings n Ll. Ina c. 3.23.46.73.50 Ll. Aelfr c. 5. In that extract of the Lands of the Monastery of Crowland taken out of the Dooms-day Book by Ingulphus the Abbot we finde in Langtoft S. Guthlac bas c. viz. five Carues eight Villains * Barders sup 81. four Bord. and twenty having soc socham habentes 5 Carucatas it should be twenty socm habentes 5 Carucatas and in Bston c. There in Dominio one Carue five villains two Bord. and seven soem with two Carues in Soudnave slound two servants six villaines three Bord. with one Sochman having three Carues c. with much more of the same o Ingulthus Savil. 908. In the yeare 1051. Thorold of Buckenbale Sheriffe of Lincolnshire likely of the the blood a descendent of the former Thorold who had Lands in Buckenhale grants the Mannor of Spalding to Wulgate Abbot of Crowland in these words I have given c. to God and St. Guthlac of Crowland c. all my Manor scituate neer the Parochial Church of the same Town with all the lands and tenements rents and services c. which I had in the same Manor c. with all the appendants viz. Colgrin my Reeve and his whole scquele with all the goods and chattels which he hath in the same town fields and marches c. also Harding the Smith and his whole sequell with all the goods and chattels which he hath in the same town c. also Leftan the carpenter and his whole sequell with all the goods and chattels c. also Ringulph the * Ringulphum primum first and his whole sequell with the goods and chattels c also Elstan the Fisher and his whole sequell with the goods and chattels c. Also Gunter Liniet c. Outy Grimkelson c. Turstan Dubbe c. Algar the black c. Edric the son of Siward c. Osmund the miller c. Besy Tuke c. Elmer of Pincebeck c. also Gouse Gamelson c. With the same clauses to them as before The conclusion is these my servants servos and their goods and chattels with all
the nature and disposition of the people or whether they will breed any inconvenience or no but a custome never bindeth till it hath been tryed and approved time out of minde during which no inconuenience did arise for if it had been found inconvenient it had been used no longer but had been interrupted and so had lost the vertue of a Law This is declared to be so by the Lords and Commons in Parliament in the 25 yeare of King Henry the eight which I shall cite below and if the Judgements and Declarations of Parliaments be not regarded I know not what can give satisfaction * Vid. 3. c. Ancient liberties and customes which have been usitatae approbatae used and approved m c. 9. Stat. Mert. make the Common law The statute called dictum de Kenelworth speakes thus the party convict shall have judgement according to the custome of the land n 57 Hen. 3. c. 25. The 27 of King Edw. the first of Fines Contrary to the lawes of our Realme of ancient time used The 34 of the same King confirmes to all Clerks and Laymen their lawes liberties and free customes as largely and wholely as they have used to have the same at any time when they had them best o c. 4. law and custome of the Realme are made the same p 1. E. 2.34 E. 3. Abjuration is called custome of the Realme q 9. E. 2. c. 10. The 25 of King Edward the third saies According to be lawes of the land of old time used r C. 2. The title of the 27 of this King speaks in maintenance of the lawes and usages the Statute 36 of the same King Lawes Customes and Statutes Å¿ C. 15. Statute 42. according to the old law t C. 3. In the time of Richard the second Law and usage are the same u 1 R. 2. c. 2. It would be tedious to heap up more of this kinde I will only adde the declaration of the Houses of Parliament in the time of Henry the eight which is thus Their words being directed to that King This your Graces realme c. hath been and is free from subjection to any mans lawes but only to such as have been devised made and ordeined within this realme for the wealth of the same or to such other as by the sufferance of your Grace and your Progenitors the people of this your realme have taken at their free liberty by their owne consent to be used amongst them and have bound themselves by long use to the observance of the same c. as to the customed and ancient lawes of this realme originally established as laws of the same by the said sufferance consents and custome and none otherwise w 25. Hen. 8. c. 21. Now if what the people of England have taken up out of long use custome and consent be not good agreeable and convenient after so much and so long triall they would appear the most foolish of all people They would not deserve that free liberty which themselves by their repraesentors tell us at the submitting to and taking these lawes they had and if they be good agreeable and convenient they would appeare the most foolish of all people by their change No lawes ever were or can be made with more equity then these to which besides use and custom and experience free liberty and consent of those who were to observe them gave life There is custome of Courts which is law too part of the Common law x Plowd Com. 320. as the Statute of Kenelworth If any man shall take revenge because of the late stirres be shall be punished according to the custome of the Court c. y C. 26. Six times is the Common law called by Littleton common right It is sometimes called right sometimes justice z Mirc c. 2 Sec. 16. Fleta 6. c. 1. Mag. Ch. c. 29. Magna charta calls it justiciam vel rectum justice or right Westm 1. Common right and the King wills these are the words That the peace of holy Church and of the land bee well kept in all points and that common right be done to all as well to poore as rich c. later statutes have Justice and right a 1. R. 2. c. 2. full justice and right b 2. H. 4.1 good justice and even right c 7. H. 4. c. 1. Common droiture in a statute d West 1. c. 1. is rendred Justice according to the law and custome of England e 2 Just 161. called common right as the Lord Cooke Because the common law is the best and most common birth-right the Subject hath for the safegard and defence not only of goods lands and revenues but of his wife and children body life and fame also f 1 Just 142 2 Just 56. That which is called common right in the second of King Edward the third g C. 8. In the first of that King h C. 14. is called common law Not onely as Fortescue doe the lawes of England favour liberty i C. 42. But they are notioned by the word The word liberties in Magna Charta signifie the lawes k C. 1.29 and in that respect is the great charter called the charter of the liberties l 2 Just 47 The Statute de Tallagio non concedendo has these words That all the Clerkes and Laymen of our realme have all their lawes liberties and free customes c. m C. 4. In the 38 of Edward the third the Laws are called Franchises in the old Bookes the great Charter the fountain of all our * Just 81. Foundamentall Lawes is called the Charter of Franchises the common Liberty the Liberties of England n Bract. 291 414. Pleta l. 2. c. 48 Brit. 178 because so the Lord Cooke they make frecmen o 1 Jnst 1 The customes of England bring a freedome with them therefore in Magna Charta are they called Free Customes p 2 Just 47. Mag. Char. c. 29. the Courts of Justice are also called Liberties because in them as the same book the Law which maketh free-men is administred q Mich. 17. Epist 1. in com berot 221. 2. 2 Jnst 4. the Law then is Liberty it selfe Liberty and Law are convertible nor is this Liberty titular onely and a Liberty of words In the expressions of the Petition of right out of Magna Charta cited in the first Chapter and out of the 28 of Edward the third No free man shall be taken imprisoned or disseased c. but by lawfull judgement or by Law of the land and no man of what estate or condition soever shall be put out of his lands or tenements nor taken imprisoned nor dis-herited nor brought to death without being brought to answer by due process of Law which is as after in that Petition of right either Customes of England or Acts of Parliament r 3 Car. Reg
to be that there was no such overturning of things as is believed The Title of the Lawes called the Lawes of King William the first published by M. Selden with his learned Notes upon Eadmer and since with the Saxon Lawes is this These are the Lawes and Customes which William the King granted to the whole people of England after the Conquest of the Land these were those which the King Edward his Cousen beld before him In these Lawes recited by Hoveden in the life of King Henry the second ' King Edwards Lawes are confirmed in these words This we command That all men have and hold the Law of Edward the King in all things together with those Lawes which we have added for the profit of the English g Pars Poster 661. This Confirmation was not freely given but in this manner King William having heard the Lawes of the Danes and Normans and approved them as the Chronicle of Lichfield having approved the Lawes of those of Norfolke Suffolke Grantbridge and Deira c. he commanded they should be observed through the Kingdome as more just then any others because himselfe and his Barons were Norwegians by extraction not a word is there of any resolution to introduce his Norman Laws this the English thought a more killing blow then that of his Victory they beseech him and by the soule of King Edward c. to permit them to injoy their owne ancient Laws and Customes under which their Fathers lived themselves were borne and bred up to wit the Lawes of holy King Edward and they tell him it could not but be very hard to receive Lawes unknowne and to judge of those things they understood not h The Paraphrast of these Laws Chron. Lich. The King long resolute at last yeelds and as these with much authority were venerate and through the whole Realme corroborate and before other Lawes of the Realm the Lawes of King Edward not because he found them but because be restored them sayes Gemeticensis of the same age with King William i l c. 9. The Chronicle of Lichfield and Hoveden are more large with which agrees the first Chapter of the Lawes of good King Edward thus it speaks Which King William confirmed all of them use neer the same expressions By Precept of King William say they are elected out of every of the Counties of all England twelve of the most wise men who were injoyned before King William that in what they might neither declining to the right hand nor the left in a direct way they should lay open the Constitutions of their Laws and Customes nothing omitting nothing adding nothing out of prevarication changing k Hoved. 601 Chron. L●ch ll Ed. c. ● Further yet in that Chronicle Aldred the Archbishop of Yorke not Thomas Archbishop of Canterbury as the Paraphrast would have it there being no Thomas of that See till lawlesse Beckets dayes who as this and Malmesbury crowned him l Malms● l. 3. 〈◊〉 vita Pontific and Hugh Bishop of London by command of the king writ with their own hands what the foresaid jurates said from the laws of holy mother the Church beginning c. Ingulphus Secretary to William in Normandy and after made Abbot of Crowland by him is witnesse enough alone and as he I brought this time with me from London where he had been about the businesse of his house to my Monastery the laws of the most just king Edward which my Lord William the renowned king of England had proclaimed authentick and perpetual all England over to be kept under most grievous penalties commended to his Iustices in the same tongue they were set forth m Ingulph p. ult This proclamation was not all to allay the stormes which perhaps the violation of these laws had raised for the good of peace says an ancient Monk He swears upon all the reliques of the Church of S. Albane touching the hol Gospel Abot Fretherick ministring the Oath the good and approved ancient laws of the realm which the holy and pious Kings of England his ancestors and especially King Edward set forth inviolably to keep n Vita Ab. S. A●b 8. s ●0 that the English laws were in use then I can prove out of that famous plea of Pinnende●e betwixt Lanfranck Archbishop of Canterbury and Odo Bishop of Baieux and Earl of Kent there it is said the King comanded al the County without delay to sit all the French of the County especially the English in the antient laws customes skilled to assemble o Not. ad E●d 198. William the 2. promises onely easie laws justice equity and mercy and laws desirable p Hunting l. 7.372 ead 13. Ma Par. 14 Heved in h. 1. which his successour Henry the first construes and there could be no other meaning to be meant of these laws he swears To take away all the injustices and oppressions of his brother promises the good and holy laws to keep and to strengthen the liberties and ancient customes which flourished in the realm in the time of S. Edward the King q Ead. 55. Malmsb. in Hen. 1.156 Ma. Pa. 55. and in his laws he says The law of King Edw. I grant you with those amendments made by my father with the counsel of his Barons r Ll. Hen 1. c. 2. Ma. Pa. 56. and in the same place those things which hence forward shall be done shall be amended secundum lagam according to the law of King Edward yet after he imposes a new law a medley out of the salick ripuarian and other forreign laws with some pieces out of King Cnuts Danish laws which were but a small time observed and could not take any thing from the lawes of King Edward king Stephen confirms the laws in these words all the liberties and good laws which Henry King of England my Vnkle granted them and I grant them all the good laws and good customes which they enjoyed in the reign of King Edward s Ex lib. autiqu Ll. The Londoners request of Maetildis the Empresse daughter of Hen. the 1. That they may be suffered to use the laws of Edward because as they they were the best and not the laws of her father Henry because they were grievous which she refused whence great commotions were made t Florent wig in an 11 42. cont which grievous laws certainly were that salic rapuarian Danish medly and likely enough a commotion in those boisterous times would follow the refusal many of the disquiets and tumults of those first reigns being raised upon the pretence of the breach of these laws a pretence so taking that the No●mans themselves either coloured their insurrections with it or else preferred these before their own laws and ran the hazard of their lives fortune in earnest for them Henry the 2. commanded the laws of his Grandfather to be observed u Hov p. pricr in H. 2. of which below
whom death with so much infamy so often really before their eyes cannot fright will never think any torment whatsoever where life is left them though with more misery then can be spoken terrible But it is thought horrible and grievous that a mans life which is invaluable in the law should be taken away for a thing of nothing for 12 pence Which says the most learned Knight is the antient law of the English Nay for lesse by the antient law of the English I may say so King Aethelstanes lawes begin with thieves and speak thus First that man spare no thiefe so I render it according to the words who in the manner having in his hand taken is above twelve yeers old c above eight ponce n c.r. either eight pence or twelve pence The law is full of equity this king gives a ram c. in the Preface as the Saxon worth four pence that which as Sir Henry Spelman sold heretofore for twelve pence would now be worth 20 or 40 s. in the Assise of bread long after the Saxons in the 51 of Hen. 3. eight bushels of wheat are valued but at twelve pence and although now the 12 keepes not the old rate but the modern yet things are prized in trials of life far below their worth and no man loses his life but where the thing stoln in estimate rises to more then many twelve pences That title of Cosroes amongst his others a king who hateth war may justly be given to our laws Peace the greatest blessing of this life and without which nothing else can be a blessing is everywhere provided for everywhere charged and commanded Peace is commanded to be kept in the Pallace or Hall of the king the forfeiture of the breach being the losse of all the offendor has and his life at discretion in the church the house field and town the mulct of wrangling was made 30.8 o Ll. Ina. c. 6. Ll. Alfr. c. 7. Ll Edv. sen c. 4. Ll. Etheldr c. 6 Every man was to give pledges heretofore of his good behaviour the violation of Faith so given was punished and is called breach of the peace Every breach of the peace was such violation Everymans house as the law since expresses it is to be his Castle He who infringed the freedome or liberty of the house called r●m soone by house breaking forfeited all he had and his life was to be at the kings wil p Ll. Edm. c. 6. Grith or frithbrice were the terms for breach of the peace King Cnut in his laws first wills that Gods peace and the peace of the Church be kept then his own q Ll. Cnuti c. 12.14 and again We must provide for peace or the amendment of it most desired by dwellers and most odious to thieves r c. 8. Amongst the Prerogatives of the West Saxon kings are these breach of peace house freedom ſ c. 12.14 The Statute called Westm the first speaks Let the peace of the Land be maintained in all points The first of R. 2. Let the peace be well and surely kept c. according to the Law of the Land In the title of the Statutes of the 50 of Ed. 3. are these words To the honour of God and of holy Church and quietnesse of the people Which used to be the title of Parliaments t ● Inst 9. The Statute of Hen. the 7. concerning Justices of peace has That the subjecti may live in surety uner his peace in their bodies and goods Inprimis interest reipub ut pax observetaer is a mixime of the Common Law affirmed by Parliament u 2. Inst 158. In all Actions for any thing done against a Statute law where the words vi armis are left out yet the Writ has contra pacem against the peace w r. 9.50 Every affraying as Mr. Lambard or putting in fear is breach of the peace The laws do not onely make orders for the maintenance of the peace but as to the execution of the charge have appointed general and particular Officers and Ministers to manage this part and to undergo this care The Lord Chancellour Lord High Steward of England Lord Marshal c. Justices of the kings Bench says Mr. Lambard had authority inclosed in their Offices for the conservation of the peace all England over The Justices of the Common pleas are said to be conservators onely in special places The Master of the Rolles was a general conservator by prescription Coroners and Sheriffs are to be conservators within their Counties Justices of the peace instead of the ancient conservators antiquated are especially warders of the peace so are Tithing men Borougheads Constables and petty Constables in their limits As the first of Ed. 3. x 1. E. 3. c. 15.4 E. 3. c. 2. In every County good men and lawful that been no maintainers of evil nor barretours in the Country shall be assigned to be Justices of the peace As the 18 of that king Two or three of the most substantial men with other learned in the Law as the 34. A Lord with three or feur of the most substantial c. By a Statute of King Henry the 6. The Justice must have Lands and Tenements to the value of xx l. by the yeer he is to be sworn duly and without favour to keep 13. R. 2. c. 7 and put in execution all the Statutes and Ordinances touching his Office As by the Iaws of all Nations civil Religion and the Priesthood have their priviledges and honour so no laws ever favoured piety and the Church more then these and this fully and so often that if it be made by any an objection of prejudice it cannot be denied it must be confessed by all hands Those of the Roman new creed have in every age very clamorously and furiously slandered our Laws not onely as short and imperfect but as unjust to be detested by all the faithfull y Becket in Ma. Par. 101. Such as without a saving the honour of God and of holy Church z Hoved. Savil. 492. are not to be sworn to against the faith as the Bishop of Rochester may be thought to mean a Graft 1187. The exemption of the Clergie taken away by the Laws of Clarendon where yet only the old Laws were restored was thought as legal an impiety as heinous as could be yet Bellarmine though a man more nimble then ten thousand Beckets durst not make it of Divine Right Jure Divine valde conforme is as much as he thinks it is Not of Divine Right that were too high not of Humane that were as much too low but very conformable to Divine Right which is a ridiculous conforformity and makes it neither the one nor the other Within five years in the time of King Henry the 2. there were above one hundred murthers committed in England by Priests and men within Orders so that it was time to take heed of these