Selected quad for the lemma: land_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
land_n john_n son_n succeed_v 1,708 5 9.7941 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A12738 The history of Great Britaine under the conquests of ye Romans, Saxons, Danes and Normans Their originals, manners, warres, coines & seales: with ye successions, lives, acts & issues of the English monarchs from Iulius Cæsar, to our most gracious soueraigne King Iames. by Iohn Speed. Speed, John, 1552?-1629.; Schweitzer, Christoph, wood-engraver. 1611 (1611) STC 23045; ESTC S117937 1,552,755 623

There are 31 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

7 His warres thus prospering his puissance grew dreadfull and his glory much enuied at by the other Princes whereof Bernulfe of Mercia was the first attempter that sought to plucke the wing of this west-Saxon Eagle but thereby wrought his owne downefall for Egbert ioyning battaile with him at Ellenden ouerthrew his power and in that quarrell Bernulfe was lastly slaine 8 Kent was the next and fairest marke in Egberts 〈◊〉 whose 〈◊〉 not gratious in his own subiects ●…ight was the 〈◊〉 to be subdued him he chased ouer Thamisis and added not onely that Countie but also Sussex and Surrey for Prouinces vnto his owne Kingdome next were the East-Saxons the East-Angles and in truth all both vpon the North and the South of Humber gaue him obedience so that the bounds of his Dominion were greatly enlarged and his royall authority by those seuerall Kings acknowledged 9 Then hee to confirme his estate called an assembly vnto the City Winchester where causing himselfe to bee solemnly crowned became the first Saxons absolute Monarch of the whole Iland so reducing the Monarchiall title from the Mercians to the West-Saxons in whose Progeny it continued without reuersement vntill the Danes first got and againe lost it and the Saxons issue failing the same fell to the Normans Duke by Conquest as in continuance of our history Christ assisting shall be seene 10 His Coronation was at Winchester and entrance in the yeare of Grace eight hundred and nineteene at which time by his Edict in that City dated he caused all the South of the Iland to bee called England according to the Angles of whom himselfe came and promising great felicity to his State and Successors was therein not so happy as in his affaires he had beene fortunate 11 For those Saxons that by warre and blood had made themselues Lords of other mens rights and of one Kingdome no lesse then seuen are now endangered to bee made seruants vnto subiection and by warre and bloud their seuen-fold Kingdome brought againe vnto one neither yet freed from the reuenge of bloodie violence for that a fierce and cruell nation the Danes ceased not continually to inuade them till they had subdued and set the crowne thereof vpon their owne heads who in King Brightrick dayes and about the yeere seuen hundred eighty seuen hauing with three vessels landed in the West of England at three seuerall times in so many seuerall places sought the ruine of the land in the raigne of this Egbert 12 The first was in his thirty third yeare when with thirty fiue ships they landed at Lindisferne vpon the North of England where they were met and fought with at Carham but with such losse to the English that two chiefe Captaines Dudda and Osmond two Bishops Herefrid of Winchester and Vigferd of Shirborne with many Souldiers were therein slaine King Egbert himselfe hardly escaping by the couert of the night 13 Their second attempt was in the second yeare following when in West-Wales they landed vnto whom the Britaines there ioyned and in the place called Hengistenton abode the King in field where Egbert with prosperous fortune vanquished and slew both the Danes and the Welsh 14 The third place of their arriuage was Sheepie in Kent which Iland they sacked and with much a doe were expelled in the last of King Egberts raign and but the new beginning of their sauage cruelties 15 This Egbert by Florentius of Worcester is said to be the sonne of Alkemund who was the sonne of Eafa and he the sonne of Eoppa the sonne of Ingils the brother of Ine the eleuenth King of the West-Saxons and both of them the sonnes of Kenred descended from Cherdik the first King of that Prouince he was but ●…ow o●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strong of ●…mme very valiant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 skilfull souldier and as great in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in warre he raigned ouer the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of thirty six yeares and seuen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the whole Iland seuenteene his d●…th 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fourth day of February and yeare of Chr●…s ●…nation eight hundred thirty six 16 His bodie was with all 〈◊〉 solemnly buried at Winchester and his bones sin●… taken vp ●…maine with others in that Cities Cathedral 〈◊〉 bestowed in Chests set vpon the Wall of each 〈◊〉 the Quier with these verses neither ancient nor 〈◊〉 thereon inscribed Hic Rex Egbertus pausat cum Rege Kenulpho Nobis egregia munera vterque tulit His wife 17 Redburg the wife of King Egbert was the first of the West-Saxons that by their new made law was depriued of title authority or place of a Queene notwithstanding it seemeth shee bare a great stroke with her husband in that Iohn B●…uer the Monke of Westminster reporteth that shee procured a law to be made against the Britains the penalty whereof was present death for any of them to set footing within the realme of England or to passe the Ditch that King Offa had made His Issue 18 Ethelwolfe the eldest sonne of King Egbert and Lady Redburg his wife was in his childhood committed to the charge of Helmestan 〈◊〉 of Winchester vnder whom hee was carefully trayned vp in learning and vertue who comming to mans estate proued also a perfect Souldier and had 〈◊〉 leading of his fathers power against Baldred King 〈◊〉 Kent whom he forced to flie ouer the Thamisis and to abandon his Kingdome which he subdued to the subiection of his father and afterwards succeeded him in the Monarchy of the Englishmen 19 Ethelstane the younger sonne of King Egbert and of the Lady Redburg his wife was by his father deputed King ouer the Kentishmen the South-Saxons and the East-Saxons after hee had brought them vnto his subiection which people hee most valiantly defended against the inuasions of the Danes defeating their forces both by sea and land and at Sandwich gaue them a most memorable ouerthrow in the yeare of our Lord eight hundred fifty one being the sixteenth of his brother King Ethelwolfes raigne in whose time hee deceased and is reported to haue left a sonne named Ostride who by reason of his minority succeeded not in his fathers dominions which Ethelbert the second sonne of King Ethelwolfe entred vpon and being Monarch reunited these kingdomes inseparably vnto the Monarchy 20 Edgith commonly called Saint Edith the daughter of King Egbert was in her childhood by her brother Ethelwolfe committed to the charge and bringing vp of a Lady in Ireland greatly renowmed for her holinesse of life named Modewine by whom she was afterwards recommended to a Disciplesse of the said Lady named Athea and made Gouernesse of a Monastery of the Ladies by her planted in a place which the King her brother had giuen her called Pollesworth situated in Arden in the north verge of the County of Warwicke wherein she liued died and was honourably buried and the place in regard of her afterwards called Saint Ediths of Pollesworth ETHELVVOLFE THE
bin twice endangered and had at both times been wonderfully preserued and while the young King by profound dissimulations plotted to bring both his Father and Brother Richard into subiection behold the hand of God by taking away the young King at Martell not farre from Linoges where his Father lay at siege gaue an end to this odious fowle and intricate contention 87 Thus was his life cut off like a Weauers threed say Authors who had by dying cut of the hope of many But whatsoeuer his life was which God thus shortned at his age of twentie and eight yeeres certainely his death was not inglorious but worthy to be set out in Tables at large as a pattern to disobedient Children for his Father refusing to visite him fearing his owne life but sending his King in signe of forgiuenes the dying Prince most humbly with flouds of teares kissing the same made a most sorrowfull confession of his sinnes and fecling death approch would needs be drawne as an vnworthy sinner out of his owne bed and laid vpon another strewed with ashes where his soule departed in a most penitent manner from his body which being related to the Father hee fell vpon the earth weeping bitterly and like another Dauid for his Absolon mourned very much O quam nefandum est saith one most grauely O how hainous a thing it is for sons to persecute the father for neither the sword of the fighter nor the hand of an enemy did auenge the fathers wrong but a feuer and a flux with excoriation of the bowels His body was buried by his own desire at Roan which yet was not done without trouble as if the factions of which hee was the cause in his life did by a kind of Fate not forsake him beeing dead for the Citizens of Mauns hauing enterred it they of Roan without menaces and the fathers expresse commandement could not obtaine it who thereupon was taken vp againe but his wife Queene Margaret was sent backe into France and his suruiuing sonnes were once againe reduced to due obedience not any enemie daring to appeare 88 Who would not haue thought that this stirring Prince should haue had opportunitie to end his daies in peace and glorie but it was otherwise ordained by God and ancient writers hold hee was principallie scourged for beeing drawne by seeming reasons of State to put off an holy enterprize the occasion whereof was laid as it were at his foote For Heraclius Patriarcke of Hierusalem drawne with the supereminent fame of King Henries wisdome valour riches and puissance trauailed from thence into England where at Clerkenwell by London in an assemblie of the States purposelie called the king made knowne to them That Pope Lucius had by ernest letters commended the lamētable state of the Holie-land and the Patriarcke Heraclius vnto him That Heraclius there present had stirred compassion and teares at the rehersall of the tragicall afflictions of the Easterne world and had brought with him for memorable signes that the suite was by common consent of the Countrey the Keies of the places of Christs Natiuitie Passion and Resurrection of Dauids Tower and of the holy Sepulchre and the humble offer of the Kingdom of Hierusalem with the Ensigne or Standard of the Kingdom as dulie belonging to him who was right heire thereunto to wit the sonne of Geffrey Earle of Aniou whose brother Fulke was king of Hierusalem 89 Neuerthelesse the King hauing at leftwise formally adiured the Lords to aduise him that which should bee most for his soules health it was thought fit to aid the cause with money but not to emploie his person northe person of any child hee had which was the Patriarcks last request and therupon to the vnspeakable griefe of the said Patriarcke and of the whole Christianitie of the East hee refused the said Kingdome and abandoned as noble an occasion of immortall renowne as euer any King of England had beene offered but gaue leaue to all such as would to take vpon them the Crosse and serue This Heraclius is hee who dedicated the Temple Church in London as by this Inscription ouer the Church doore in the Stone-worke doth appeare ANNO AB INCARNATIONE DOMINI M. C. LXXXV DEDICATA HEC ECCLESIA IN HONOREM BEATE MARIE A DNO ERACLIO DEI GRATIA SANCTE RESVRRECTIONIS ECCLESIE PATRIARCHA II IDVS FEBRVARII Q i EAM ANNATIM PETENTIBVS DE INIVNCTA Si PENITENTIA LX DIES INDVLSIT 90 Thus the sorrowfull Patriarcke being dismissed not forgetting as some doe write to thunder against the King for abandoning the cause brought back nothing but discomfort and despaire the Westerne Princes by the Diuels malicious Arts beeing wrapt and knotted in mutuall suspitions and quarrells indetermined whereupon shortly after ensued with the losse of Ierusalem the captiuity of Guido King thereof and of innumerable Christians besides whom Sultan Saladin Prince of the Musulmans or Saracens to the griefe and disgrace of all the Christian world did vanquish 91 But King Henries mind was more fixed on setling the state of his already-possessed Kingdomes and therefore in a great Parlament held at Oxford vnto which came Rhesus and Dauid Kings of South-Wales and North-Wales with other their chiefe Nobles which al did there sweare fealtie to the King he beeing desirous to aduance his sonne Iohn whom he exceedingly loued and commonly in sport hee called Sans-terrae hauing assured vpon him certaine Lands and Rents in England and Normandie did there verie solemnly giue him also the title Kingdome of Ireland for besides the foresaid Bull of Pope Adrian the fourth who for signe of inuestiture had also sent a ring of gold which were laid vp in the Records at Winchester Giraldus who liued in that age tells vs to omitte what hee writes of one Gurguntius that Guillomar King of Ireland was tributarie to the famous Arthur that Baion whence saith hee the Irish came was at that present vnder King Henrie the second and that the Irish Princes had voluntarily submitted themselues as vnto him who by the * Law of a Sociall warre was become their Soueraigne But that Author had not seene belike or did not remember when thus he went about to prooue a legall right in the King what others write of Egfrides vngodly spoiles in Ireland or of Edgars Charter in which is said to bee contained that he had vnder his rule the chiefe City of Ireland Dublin and the greatest part of the kingdome also But King Henrie strengthening his other rights with Grants of the Popes Adrian and Alexander obtained also of Vrban the third for Luciue the third who was Alexanders successor would not gratifie the the King therein that it should bee lawfull for him to crowne which of his sonnes hee would King of Ireland to whom hee sent a crowne of Feathers wouen with gold in all their Grants reseruing to the Roman See the Peters pence and
sonne Iohn first in the Catalogue of the Conspirators against him in that action hee bitterly cursed the howre of his birth laying Gods curse and his vpon his sonnes which hee would neuer recall for any perswasion of the Bishoppes and others but comming to Chinon fell there grieuously sicke and feeling death approch hee caused himselfe to be borne into the Church before the Altar where after humble confession and sorrow for his sinnes hee departed this life 100 It shal not in contempt of humane glory be forgotten that this puissant Monarch being dead his people presently left him and fell to spoile all he had leauing him naked of whom one saith trulie and grauely Verè melmuscae c. Surely these flies sought honey these wolues a Carcase these Ants grain for they did not follow the Man but the spoile and bootie Neither must it be vnremembred that the fierce and violent Richard now heire of all comming to meete his Fathers body roially adorned for the buriall according to the Maiestie of his estate the very Corse as it were abhorring and accusing him for his vnnaturall behauiours gushed forth bloud whereat Richard pierced with remorse melted into flouds of teares in most humble and repentant maner attending vpon the remaines of his vnfortunate Father to the Graue His Wife 101 Eleanor the Wife of King Henry was the eldest of the two Daughters and the sole Heire of William Duke of Aquitaine the fift of that name the ninth in succession sonne of Duke William the fourth her Mother was Daughter to Raimund Earle of Tholo●…se and her great Dowrie was motiue first to King Lewis who had two daughters by her Mary and Alice and after to King Henry to marry her There are of the French Historians who report that king Henry had a former wife and that shee bare vnto him Prince Henry but Writers of our owne affaires and some also of the French acknowledge but onely Eleanor for his Wife Certain it is that king Henries times were much famoused by two Women of much differing qualities the one was his renowmed Mother Matildis whose Epitaph thus comprised part of her glory Ortu magna viro maior sed maxima prole Hic i●…cet Henrici Fili●… Sponsa Parens Here Henries Mother Daughter Wife dothrest By Birth much more by Spouse by Child most blest The other was this Eleanor his Wife the first cause of these bloudie Warres which long after continued as hereditary betwixt England and France yea and the bellows of that vnnaturall discord betwixt her husband and his sonnes Shee much out-liued her husband as a bad thing stickes longest beeing so happie as to see three of her sonnes aduanced to the Crowne and so vnhappie as to see two of them in their graues for she liued till King Iohns time His Issue 102 William the eldest sonne and first child of King Henry and Queene Eleanor his wife was borne before his father was King and while hee was but Duke of Normandy in the eighteenth yeere of the raigne of King Stephen 1152. and the fourth yeere after his father beeing then King and in the second yeere of his raigne the Nobilitie of England sware vnto him their fealtie as to the heire apparant of the Kingdome at the Castle of Wallingford in Barkeshire but he deceased the yeere following being the third of his fathers raigne and the fift of his owne age 1156. He was buried in the Monastery of Reading at the feete of his great Grandfather King Henrie the first 103 Henrie the second sonne of King Henry and Queene Eleanor beeing borne the last of Februarie 1156. was their heire apparant after the death of his brother William was Duke of Normandie Earle of Aniou and Maigne and was crowned King of England at Westminster by Roger Arch-bishop of Yorke the fifteenth of Iulie 1170. His wife was Margaret daughter of Lewis the Yonger King of France married to him at Nuburgh in Normandy the second of Nouember 1160. crowned Quene at Winchester by Rotrocke of Warwicke Arch-bishop of Roan the 21. of Nouember 1163. and suruiuing him was remarried to Bela King of Hungarie He died without issue before his father at Marcell in Tour●…ine the eleuenth of Iulie the twentie sixe yeere of his fathers raigne 1182. and was buried in the Church of our Lady at Roan 104 Richard the third sonne of King Henrie and Queen Eleanor was born at Oxford in the Kings Pallace there called Beau-Mount in September the fourth yeere of his fathers raigne 1157. He proued a Prince of great valor and was therefore surnamed in French Cuer-de-Lion in English Lions-Heart hee was created Earle of Poyton and had the whole Dutchie of Aquitaine for which he did his homage to King Lewis the Yonger of France in the eighteenth yeere of his fathers raigne 1170. yet afterward he conceiued some discontentment against his father and maintained warres vpon him but was reconciled againe into his loue and succeeded him in his Kingdome 105 Geffrey the fourth sonne of King Henrie and of Queene Eleanor was borne the twentie third of September in the fifth yeere of his fathers raigne 1159. Hee married Constance daughter and heire of Conan Duke of Britane and in her right was Duke of Britane and did his homage to his brother Henry for the same Dutchie and receiued the homages of the Barrons of the same hee died at Paris in the thirtie two yeere of his fathers raigne 1186. the nineteenth of August and is buried in the quire of our Ladies Church there hee had issue Arthur Duke of Britane borne after his fathers decease the heire apparant of King Richard and by some supposed to bee made away by King Iohn and also Eleanor called the Da●…sell of Britane who died in prison in the raigne of King Henrie the third 106 Philip the fifth sonne of King Henrie and Queene Eleanor may bee mistrusted to be mistaken by Antiquaries of our time as misunder-standing the ancient writers who mentioning the birth of Philip the Kings sonne might by good likelihood be thought to meane Philip sonne of Lew●… the Yonger King of France who was borne about this time and was after King of the same Countrey But Mr Tho●…as Talbot an exact trauailer in genealogies hath not onely set him downe in this place amongst the children of this King but also warranteth the same to bee done with good authoritie howsoeuer it is apparant his life was verie short 107 Iohn the sixth and yongest sonne of King Henrie and Queene Eleanor was borne in the thirteenth yeere of his fathers raigne in Anno 1166. hee was iestinglie surnamed by his father Sans-terre in English without Land because hee was borne last as if there had beene nothing left for him Notwithstanding soone after hee was created Earle of Mortaigne and had more-ouer by degrees the Earledomes of Cornwall and Glocester the Counties of Derby and Lancaster the Honors of Wallinford and Nottingham the Castles of
first thus ordered the Queen with her sonne and whole power pursues the King as it had beene agreede by the Councell of warre taking first her way to Oxford where the whole Vniuersity being called together in the presence of the Queene the Prince Roger Mortimer and the rest of that troope the Bishop of Hereford the Queenes bosome Counsellor preaching to them on this Text My head my head aketh deliuered to them the reasons of the Queens comming with her Army concluding more like a Butcher then a Diuine that an aking sick head of a kingdom was of necessity to be taken off and not to be tampered with by any other physicke 60 The Londoners in fauour of the Queene and hatred of the Spensers committed sundry outrages besides bloudy sacrilege in cutting off the Bishop of Excesters head and some others whom the King had made Guardian of London in their popular fury among the which one of them was a Citizen of their owne Iohn le Marchal who had beene of the yonger Spensers acquaintance The Tower of London they get into their possession placing and displacing the Garrison and Officers therein at their pleasure vnder the name of the Lord Iohn of Eltham the Kings second sonne whom they proclaimed Custos of the City and of the Land They also set at liberty all prisoners which by the popular Queenes commandement was done through the whole Realme and all banished men and fugitiues were reuoked who all flocking vnto London brought no small encrease to her forces 61 Whither in the meane space doth wofull Edward flie what force what course what way takes hee poore Prince O fearefull condition of so great a Monarches State when a Wife a Sonne a Kingdome are not trusted and those onely are trusted who had nothing strong but a will to liue and die with him The Queene passing from Oxford to Glocester onward to the siege of Bristow Castle grew all the while in her strengths like a rowled snow-ball or as a Riuer which spreades still broader from the fountaine to the Ocean vires acquirit eundo For thither repaired to her for the loue of the young Prince the Lord Percy the Lord Wake and others aswell out of the North as Marches of Wales But Edward hauing left the Earle of Winchester the elder Lord Spenser in the Castell of Bristol for the keeping thereof meditates flight with a few into the Isle of Lundie in Seuerne Sea or into Ireland while hee wandreth about not finding where to rest safe his roiall credite name and power like a Cliffe which falling from the toppe of some huge rocke breakes into the more pieces the farther it rolles are daylie more and more diminisht as they scatter till now at last they are come vnto a very nothing After a weeke therefore spent vpon the Sea Sir Thomas Blunt forsaking him and comming to the Queene he came on shore in Glamorganshire where with his few friends hee entrusted himselfe to God and the faith of the VVelsh who indeed still loued him lying hidden among them in the Abbey of Neath 62 Now had the Queene and her sonne for his name was abused to all sorts of turne-seruings taken the elder Lord Spenser at the Castell of Bristol who without any forme of triall was cruelly cut vp aliue and quartered saith de la Moore our Knight being first at the clamours of the people drawne and hanged in his proper Armories vpon the common Gallowes without the City but his grandchild Hugolin stood so valiantly in defence of himself within the Castell of Kerfilli that hee had his life and the liues of all his assistants saued 63 The King not appearing Proclamations were euery day made in the Queenes Armie declaring That it was the common consent of the realm that hee should returne and receiue the gouernement thereof so as he would conforme himselfe to his people This whether Stratagem or Truth not preuailing Henry Earle of Lancaster the late Earles Brother Sir William la Zouch and Rhese ap-Howell a Welshman who all of them had Lands in those parts where the King concealed himselfe were sent with coine and forces to discouer and take him The Queene and her people lay in the City of Hereford the Episcopall See of that great Arch-plotter of her courses Adam de Orlton where by aduise and consent of the Lords her sonne the Duke of Aquitaine was made High-Keeper of England and they as to the Custos of the same did sweare him fealty And here also the Bishoppe of Norwich was made Chancellor of the Realme and the Bishoppe of Winchester Treasurer 65 What will not money diligence and faire words doe with corrupt dispositions euen to euerting of all bands of either religious or ciuill duties By such meanes therefore the desolate sad and vnfortunate King came into his cosen of Lancasters hands and with him the yonger Lord Spenser Earle of Glocester Robert Baldock Lord Chancellour and Simon de Reding there being no regard had to the detention of any other The King was conueied by the Earle from the place of his surprise to Monmouth to Ledburie and so to the Castell of Kenelworth belonging to the Earle of Leicester who was appointed to attend him that is to keepe him safe The other three Spenser Baldock and Reeding were strongly guarded to Hereford there to bee disposed of at the pleasure of their most capitall enemies 66 Before whose comming to satisfie Roger Mortimer the Lord Edmund Earle of Arundel and two Gentlemen Daniel and Micheldene were beheaded at Hereford The Lord Mortimer was so high in the Queenes fauour that she could doe no lesse as weee may suppose then gratifie him with a few hated heades But Mortimer there will bee a time when the cry of this and other bloud sacrificed to thy priuate reuenge while thou abusest the publike trust will neuer giue ouer the pursuit till it hath deseruedly drawne thine in lieu thereof 67 The Lord Spenser and the rest on whom VVilliam Trussell the Iudge gaue sentence of death being now drawne to Hereford the said Lord being clad in his coat-armour was most despitefully dragged to the place of execution where being first hung vpon a gallowes fifty foot high hee was afterward headed and cut into quarters they who brought him to the Queene hauing the promised summe of two thousand pounds distributed among them for reward His head was set vp at London and his quarters in foure parts of the Kingdome Simon de Reding was hanged ten foot lower then hee in the same place 68 This Execution saith Walsingham was done vpon a Munday in reuenge of the death of Thomas Earle of Lancaster whose bloud was likewise shed vpon a Munday Robert Baldock late Lord Chancellor was committed to the keeping of the Bishop of Hereford who after a time caused him to bee brought vp to Hereford-house in London where the tumultuous people
Lieutenant of Ireland hauing in the yeere before while he too much trusted to his owne Forces been slaine with very many others by O-Brin and the Irish of Leinster at a place called Kenlis King Richard determines in person to reuenge the bloud of his Noble kinsman being the man to whom hee meant the Crowne of England if issue failed to himselfe Hee remembred not how broken an estate hee had in England where the peoples hearts were strongly alienated not onely for the death of the late great Lords and banishment of the Duke of Hereford whose calamitie encreased his popularity or for the like passed exasperations but for that to furnish his Irish voyage he had extorted money on al hands taking vp carriages victuals and other necessaries without any recompence whereby the hatred of his gouernment grew vniuersall 106 But the euill fortune which hung ouer his head laid forth an alluring baite to haste his destruction by occasion of the Duke of Lancasters decease which hapned about Candlemas and the absence of his banished sonne and heire Lord Henry The king most vniustly seizeth vpon the goods of that mighty Prince his vncle as if all things now were lawfull which but liked him he determines to banish the new rightfull Duke of Lancaster Henrie not for a few yeeres but for euer for which cause hee reuoked his Letters Patents granted to the said Henry by which his Atturnyes were authorised to sue his Liuerie and to compound for the respite of his homage at a reasonable rate whereby he made it seem plaine to the world that hee had not banished him to auoid dissentions but as many said to fill vp the breaches which his riote had made in the roiall treasures with plentifull though an vndue Escheate as that of his deceased vncles fortune 107 The one stedfast base and buttresse of all lawfull Empire is Iustice that supports the kinglie throne This he ouerthrew and how then could himselfe hope to stand long He lands at Waterford in Ireland with a Nauie of two hundreth ships hauing with him the sonne of the late Duke of Glocester and of the now Duke of Lancaster to secure himselfe the rather His forces consisted much of Cheshire men But that king is deceiued who reposeth his safetie in violence It was no great matter hee did there that which fell out to bee done elsewhere was great indeed His warre in Ireland was more dammagefull then fishing with an hooke of gold for here the baite and hooke was not onely lost but the line rod and himselfe were drawne altogether into the depthes of irrecouerable ruine Duke Henry sees the aduantage which King Richards absence gaue him and vseth it In his Companie were Thomas Arundel the banished Archbishoppe of Canterbury and his Nephew the sonne and heire of the late Earle of Arundel and not aboue fifteen Lanciers His strength was where the Kings should haue beene in the peoples hearts Neuerthelesse the Duke did not sodainely take land but houered vpon the Seas shewing himselfe to the Country people in one place now and then in another pretending nothing but the recouery of his rightfull Heritage 108 Edmund Duke of Yorke whom King Richard had left behind him to gouerne England hearing this cals vnto him Edmund Stafford Bishoppe of Chichester Lord Chancellor the Earle of Wiltshire Lord Treasurer and the Knights of the Kings Councell Bushie Bagot Greene and Russell Their conclusion was to leuie a force to impeach Duke Henries entrance The assembly was appointed to bee at S. Albans which came to worse then nothing for the protestation that they would not hurt the Duke whom they knew to bee wronged was generall This made the Treasurer Sir Iohn Bushie and Sir Henrie Greene flie to the Castle of Bristoll Sir William Bagot to Chester from whence he got shipping into Ireland Meane while Duke Henry lands at a village heretofore called Rauenshire to whom repaired Henry Earle of Northumberland his sonne Henry Lord Percie lands at Neuill Earle of Westmerland and many others who saith Walsingham greatly feared King Richards tyrannie With an Armie of about threescore thousand multitudes offering their seruice they come to Bristoll besiege the Castell take it and in the same the foresaid Treasurer Bushie and Greene whose heades at the cries of the Commons were the next day after their surrender seuered from their bodies 109 King Richard was in the City of Dublin when these most heauie newes arriued His courage which at no time seemed great was shortly none at all Somewhat must bee done hee leaues the sons of Duke Henry of his late vncle of Glocester which hee retained as pledges for his owne indemnity in the Castell of Trim and returnes himselfe into England entending to encounter the Duke before his force should bee too much established The great names which accompanied him were his late noble Creatures the young Dukes of Aumarle Excester and Surrey the Bishops of London Lincolne and Carleol and many others There had beene some more hope for vpholding his right if hee had not made the worlde know that tenne yeers space was not able to burie in him the appetite of reuenge which made many forget their owne loyalty to him and the Crowne Princes see in him the vse of obliuion but some conscience of euill deserts seeming to haue taken from him all confidence he dismisseth his Armie bidding his Steward Sir Thomas Percy others to reserue themselues for better dayes 110 His last refuge is in Parlea For that cause there repaired to him at the Castell of Conway in Northwales for thither he was now come the late Archbishoppe of Canterbury and the Earle of Northumberland at the Kings appointment The sum of his demaundes were that if hee and eight whome he would name might haue honourable allowance with the assurance of a quiet priuate life he would resigne his Crowne This Northumberland did sweare should be whereupon he forthwith departs to the Castle of Flint in their company After a short conference there had with the Duke they all ride that night to the Castell of Chester being attended by the Lancastrian Armie If to spare his peoples bloud he was contented so tamely to quit his royall right his fact doth not onely not seeme excusable but glorious but men rather thinke that it was sloth and a vaine trust in dissimulation which his enemies had long since discouered in him and for that cause both held his amendment desperate and ran themselues into these desperate Treasons 111 The King did put himselfe into the Dukes hands vpon the twentieth day of August beeing but the forty and seuenth from the Dukes first landing From thence they trauell to London where the King lodged in the Tower Meane while writs of Summons are sent out in King Richards name for a Parliament to bee holden at Westminster Crastino Michaelis The tragicall forme of Resignation you haue had already in Edward the second of whom this
learns to sing 8 It hath also passed with allowance among the learned Senate of our Antiquaries that when Claudius Nero began to banish and persecute the Christians in Rome whose superstitions as Tacitus pleaseth to tearme them from Iudea had infected the Citie it selfe many Romanes and Britaine 's being conuerted to the Faith fled thence vnto these remote parts of the earth where they might and did more freely enioy the libertie of their Professions vntill the search of Tyrants by the flame-light of Persecutions had found out all secret places for the safeties and assemblies of Gods Saints as after in the daies of Dioclesian we shall finde And from this Sanctuarie of Saluation the sad lamenting Lady * Pomponia Graecina the wife of Aulus Plautius the first Lord Lieutenant of Britaine brought that Religion whereof she was accused and stood indited vpon life and death which was none other then the Christian Profession seeing the same both by Tacitus and Suetonius is euerie where termed the strange superstitions and new kinde of Sect that the Christians imbraced and for which they were accounted vnworthy to liue 9 And much about these times as Beatus Rhenanus in his Historie of Germanie Pantaleon and others doe report one Suetonius a Noble mans sonne in Britaine conuerted to the Faith by the first Planters of the Gospell in this Iland and after his Baptisme called Beatus was sent by the Brethren from hence vnto Rome to be better instructed and further directed by Saint Peter himselfe and returning thorow Switzerland found such willingnesse and flocking of the people to heare and receiue the Doctrine of Christ that he there staied and built an Oratorie not farre from the lake Thun and neare the Towne called Vnderfewen wherein preaching and praiers he imploied his time to the day of his death which happened in the yeare of grace 110. And that there were Christians in Britain at these times I make no questiō thogh some exceptions may be taken against the Monk of Burton the reporter therof who saith in the 141 yeare and raigne of Hadrian nine masters of Grantcester were baptized themselues preached to others the Gospell in Britain howsoeuer he faileth in the Emperours name which yeare was the second of Antonins Pius his successor and ascribeth to these men Schoole-degrees altogether vnknowne for nine hundred yeares after yet these do not hinder the truth of the thing though that Monke was none of the best Historians It is reported also that Patricke the Irish Apostle and Canonized Saint long before the Raigne of King Lucius preached the Gospell in many places of Wales As also that Ninianus Bernicius of the race of the British Princes conuerted the Picts to the Religion of Christ. Vnto these aforesaid authorities and testimonies howsoeuer we stand affected yet it is certaine by Chemnitius citing Sabellicus that the Britaine 's were with the first Conuerts And Tertullian who liued within two hundred yeares of Christs Natiuitie sheweth no lesse Who the more to prouoke the Iewes against whom he wrote calleth to witnesse the fruitfull increase of the Gospell of Saluation through many Countries and Nations and among them nameth the Britaines to haue receiued the Word of life the power whereof saith he hath pierced into those parts whither the Romanes could not come Whence Petrus Cluniacensis supposeth the Scotish men the more ancient Christians as not being in the like subiection to the Romanes as other then were 10 Origen who flourished not much aboue two hundred yeares after Christ in his Homilies vpon Ezechiel sheweth that the first fruits of Gods haruest was gathered in the Iland of Britaine who consented to the Christian faith by the doctrine of their Druides that taught one onely God with whom Hector Boetius agreeth saying that some of these Druides condemned the worship of God in Images and allowed not the applicatiō of the God-head vnto any visible forme which might be the cause why Claudius the Emperour forbad their Religion as sauouring in these things too much of Christianitie whom likewise he banished Rome as some from Suetonius coniecture Of these Druides wee shewed before that their offices were most imploied about holy things and that their doctrine chiefly consisted in teaching the immortalitie of the soule the motions of the heauens the nature of things and the power of the Gods yea and Postellus from others will inforce that they prophecied likewise of a virgins conception These were the helps saith Tertullian that caused the Britaines so soone to imbrace the Doctrine of Christ and thereupon immediately after his death doth Gyldas fasten our conuersion where he writeth That the Glorious Gospell of Iesus Christ which first appeared to the world in the later time of Tiberius Caesar did euen then spread his bright beames vpon this frosen Iland of Britaine 11 Whereby wee see the waters of life flowing from Ierusalems Temple into these farre set Countries and vttermost Seas to be made both fruitfull wholesome according to the sayings of the Prophet that in that day the waters of life should issue from Ierusalem halfe of them toward the East Sea and halfe of them towards the vttermost Sea and shall remaine fruitfull both in Sommer and winter and euen in the infancie of Christianitie both the Apostles themselues and also the Proselytes their Disciples to become fishers therein for the Soules of Men as Christ in chusing of them said they should bee whereby his Kingdome was soone enlarged vnto these Ends of the Earth and his Throne established among those Heathen whom God his Father had giuen to be his So fruitfull and famous was this spreading of the Gospell that Baptista Mantuan a Christian Poet compares the increase thereof with that of Noah thus alluding vnto it Sicut aquis quondam Noe sua misit in orbem Pignora sedatis vt Gens humana per omnes Debita Coelituum Patri daret orgia terras Sic sua cùm vellet Deus alta in regna renerti Discipulos quosdam transmisit ad Vltima Mundi Littora doct●…ros Gentes quo numina ritu Sint oranda quibus Coel●… placabile Sacris In English thus As Noah sent from the Arke his sonnes to teach The Lawes of God vnto the World a right So Christ his Seruants sent abroad to preach The Word of Life and Gospell to each Wight No place lay shadowed from that glorious Light The farthest Iles and Earths remotest bounds Embrac'd their Faith and ioi'd at their sweet sounds 12 To which effect also the sayings of S. Iohn Chrysostome Bishop of Constantinople enforce who shewing the increase of Christianitie and the successe of the Gospell preached sheweth the power thereof to haue extended not only to the Countries farre iacent in the Continent but also to the Ilands situated in the Ocean it selfe and amongst them expresly nameth this our Britaine whose
raigned the space of six yeeres and chose for their Gouernour his sonne young Vortimer 9 His Sonne he was indeed by nature but not his in conditions who besides the quarrell of his Queene mother for Rowenas sake reiected bare an inward loue to his natiue Country and an outward hate to the strangers that daily sought the subuersion thereof and presently encountred with them in a pitched Battell neere vnto Ailsford in Kent wherein Catigern and Horsa brethren to Vortimer and Hengist in single fight hand to hand slew each other In which place Catigern was buried and a Monument in memory of him erected the stones whereof to this day appeare and stand vpon a great plaine in the Parish of Ailsford and from Catigern as yet is corruptly called Cits-Cotihouse The like Monument the Saxons built for Horsa which time hath now defaced and whereof Beda maketh mention who saith that a tombe bearing his name was in his daies to bee seene in the East part of Kent The credit whereof is continued to this day where the Village Horsted is reported to haue receiued that name from him which standeth in the very same place where that Battle was fought as the Inhabitants report 10 Three other Battles after this with variable successe were fought betwixt the Britaines and the Saxons one at Craford another at Weppeds-fleet and the third vpon Colmore in which last the Britaines bare themselues so valiantly that the Saxons were driuen into the Isle of Tanet if not ouer the seas so that small hope rested for them so long as this valiant Vortimer liued who had dispossessed them of all their footing in the Continent and often assailed them in Tanet as Fabian saith After this Victorie long hee liued not but was made away by poison through the meanes of Rowena the mother of all this mischiefe when he had sate King the space of foure yeeres and the father againe reestablished 11 Vortigern now was no sooner restored but that Hengist had notice thereof who was then in building a Castle at Leiden in Holland as their Annales doe witnesse and Iohn Dousa in his verses specifie where leauing all as it were at randome returned to follow his fortunes further in Britaine and with a mighty Armie of his Saxons thought to land without impeachment but the Britaines growne bold by their former victories and their bloud not cooled since it was heat in fight admonished their reestablished King who with them went to withstand his ariuage When Hengist therefore perceiued their courage and knew their hatreds to him and his Saxons hee sought by smooth words to gaine the shoare and by some stratageme his wished desire therefore pretending only to visit his daughter yea and to rid the Land of her if so he might haue leaue of the King and them and therefore desired a conference in friendly manner after which his Saxons should depart the Land and rest the like friends to the Britaine 's as they were when first they came in 12 This motion seemed reasonable to the Nobilitie and the place and time appointed which was the first of May and vpon the Plaine of Ambrij now called Salisbury whither vpon equall tearmes as was thought each partie repaired and a while conferred with friendly semblances but in the end the Saxons vrging their wrongs fel from words vnto blowes the watch-word first giuen by Hengist their Leader The Britaines meant simply and ware no weapons according to couenāts but the Saxons vnder their long Cassocks had short Skeines hid with which no sooner the words Nem eowr Seaxes were pronounced but that each slew him with whom he conferred by which treason the Britaines lost three hundred of their disarmed Nobilitie onely Eldol Duke of Glocester as Randulph Higden declareth with a Stake gotten from the hedge slew seuenteene Saxons The King they tooke prisoner for whose ransome the Countries of Kent Sussex Suffolke and Northfolke were deliuered vnto these Infidels who shortly defiled the beauty of Christianitie with their Paganisme and heathenish cruelties Then saith Beda the fire of Gods vengeance was kindled by these wicked Conquerors and raged first vpon those Countries next adioyning and afterwards from the East Sea vnto the West without resistance made to quench the same publike and priuate houses were ouerthrowne and laied leuell with the ground Priests were slaine standing at the Altars and Bishops with their flocks were murthered neither was there any to bury the dead And these are the times whereof wespake and wherein the miserable Britaines abandoned the Land or hid themselues in caues where in they either perished for hunger or redeemed their liues with perpetuall slauery 13 Neither were their calamities greater in outward afflictions then their soules polluted with the heresie of the Pelagians brought by Agricola the Son of Seuerianus a Pelagian Bishop that did foulely corrupt the faith of the Britaines to redresse which Germanus Altifiodorensis and Lupus Bishop of Trecassa in France were by the brethren desired and sent vnto their thus troubled and declining estate These pillars of Gods truth after they had powred forth praiers and conuicted the Heretikes lead an Armie of Britaines against the Picts and Saxons and gained the victorie after which like vnto people that drew on Gods vengeance and their owne destructions they fell to robberies and rapine one Citie banding against another and all laid waste by the Saxons and themselues These miseries doth Gildas impute to haue hapned to his Britaines because they tooke no care to preach the Gospell of Christ vnto those Infidels the English-Saxons that in their heathenish cruelties sought the Lands destruction 14 Vortigern thus dispossessed for his further securitie betooke himselfe into Wales where among those vast Mountaines hee built a strong Castle of whose foundation Merlin the Welsh Wizard with the future successe that should afterward follow the Britaines haue by way of prophecie vainly spoken This Castle most of our Writers haue said to bee in South-Wales vpon a rockie and solitarie mountaine called Breigh or after others Cloarie in the West of that Prouince not farre from Radnor and neere vnto the Riuer Gnaua but the inhabitants of North-Wales report by the reports of their ancestors that in old Bethkelert was that Castle which Vortigern built and is yet called Embris from Merlin Embris as they affirme And surely besides the craggie and solitarinesse of the place which seemed to mee rather an entrance into the shadow of death then to be the Palace or Court of a King the Riuer Llynterrenny mooueth much by which Faustus his sonne begotten of his own daughter Rowena is said to spend his life in continuall praiers 15 But whilest Vortigern was busied in building this Castle and the Saxons making spoiles wheresoeuer they came the Britaines vnder the conduct of Aurelius Ambrosius began to
Northumberland and receiued Baptisme himselfe at the hands of Bishop Finnan and at the place called The Wall procured vertuous Cedda to be his assister for the plantation of the Gospell in his Kingdome He was murdered by two of his kinsmen who as Beda saith were Brethren no other cause moouing them but his ouermuch lenitie and clemencie He raigned by the foresaid account sixteene yeeres leauing issue a young sonne named Selred that succeeded Seofrid in that Kingdome SWithelme succeeded his brother in the Prouince of the East-Saxons nothing being mentioned of his life or raigne besides his Baptisme by Bishop Cedda and that his God-father at the Font-stone was Edelwald King of the East-Angles SIghere the sonne of Sigebert the little entred his raigne ouer the Kingdome of the East-Saxons the yeere of our Lord 664. and was the eighth King of that Prouince in part whereof Sebba his nephew raigned with better commendations then Sigehere at his beginning had done for Beda reporteth that vpon a great mortalitie and plague to appease the wrath of his Gods Sighere became an Apostata and forsooke the faith of Christ wheras SEbba continued constant with those in that Prouince vnder his Iurisdiction yet by the diligent care of Wulfere King of the Mercians Sighere and his people were reclaimed throwing downe the Temples and Altars erected to Idolatrie and opening againe the Christian Churches for the Saints assemblies that so saith hee they might rather die in hope of the Resurrection then wallow in sinne and liue in Idolatrie His wife was Oswith the daughter of Edelfrith King of Northumberland whom Capgraue maketh a Saint and Abbesse of Berking neere London euen in the daies of her husband SEbba the Brother of Segebert the Little and Sonne of Seward as we haue said succeeded as sole King in the Prouince of the East-Saxons and with much equitie and administration of Iustice raigned therein thirty yeeres towards the end whereof the better to prepare his mind for contemplation he relinquished his Princely Robes and put on the Habit of Religious Profession in the Monastery of S. 〈◊〉 in London as Radulphus de Diceto with others at tirme Wherein this penitent King liuing a while in fasting and praiers died the yeere of Christ 693. whose body was intombed in a Coffin of Gray Marble the Couer copped and as yet standing in the North wall of the Chancell of the same Church A miracle thereof Beda reporteth needlesse either then to be wrought or now of vs repeated were it not to point at the blindnes wherein euen good men were then led and thus it is They hauing prepared a Tombe-stone to lay his body in found it too short by the quantitie of an hands bredth and hewing it longer yet would not serue therefore they minding to bow vp the knees laid the body therein and suddenly it lengthned of it selfe with more then was sufficient But surely howsoeuer this tombe was then set on this Monkish tenter it is now since shrunke againe in the standing and exceeds not in measure fiue foot in length His wife but vnnamed hee likewise instigated to leaue the momentanie pleasures of princely State for that which is permanent which thing with much adoe he lastly obtained leauing her to follow him in his vertuous deuotions and his two sonnes to succeed him in his kingdome SIgherd the Sonne of King Sebba whom Beda maketh a Monke with his Father followed him also in the succession of the East-Saxons Kingdome the time of whose entrance is set in the yeere of Christs Incarnation 694. and his death in 701. no other mention being made either of Acts Wife or Issue SEofrid the Sonne of King Sebba and Brother to King Sigheard either ioyntly raigned with him or successiuely after him of whom I finde nothing mentioned worthy inserting hauing had neither Wife nor issue that are recorded OFfa the Sonne of Sighere and of Queene Oswith his Wife a man noted for his comely feature and sweet countenance succeeded King Seofrid in the Kingdome of the East-Saxons the yeere of grace 701. He both enlarged with buildings and enriched with lands the goodly and beautiful Church of Westminster but after he had ruled eight yeeres being moued with a supposed religious deuotion hee abandoned Kineswith his wife the daughter of Penda the Mercian King his lands kinne and Country and with Kenred King of Mercia and Edwine Bishop of Worcester went to Rome where he was shorne a Monke and in that habit died leauing his Cosen Selred to succeed in his kingdome His wife Kineswith after his departure with the like penancie vowed her selfe a vailed Nunne in the Abbey of Kineburg whereof his sister was Abbesse who had been wife to Alfrith King of Northumberland SElred the Sonne of Sigebert the Good who was murthered for his ouermuch clemencie attained to the Kingdome of the East-Saxons in the yeere of grace 709. His raigne was long though his acts are little spoken of either that others worther affaires filled the pens of those Story-writers or that his time was so peaceable and vnactiuely spent that it ministred not matter whereof to indite Hee raigned 38. yeeres and died Anno 746. without relation either of Wife or Children SVthred after the slaughter of Selred was made King of the East-Saxons which title hee retained vntill that Egbert King of the West-Saxons taking Armes against him expulsed him out of that Kingdome as also the same yeere he did Baldred King of Kent which was in the yeere of Christs Incarnation 827. and made it a Prouince annexed vnto the West-Saxons after it had stood in state of a Kingdome 281. yeeres THE KINGDOME OF NORTHVMBERLAND CIRCVIT AND CONTINVANCE WITH THE SVCCESSIONS AND ISSVES OF THOSE KINGS VNTO THE LAST SVBVERSION THEREOF BY KING EGBERT CHAPTER IX THis Kingdome of Northumberland consisted at first of two distinct Prouinces whereof the one was called Deira and the other Bernicia and were gouerned sometimes by their Kings seuerally and sometimes vnder one as successe of warre or other casualties incident did afford The royall descents of whose Kings are brought by Florentius both from the Fourth and Fifth Sonnes of Prince Woden after this manner Ella vnder whom the Kingdome of Deira beganne was the sonne of Iffi who was the sonne of Wuskfrea the sonne of Wilgils the sonne of Westorwalchna the sonne of Seomel the sonne of Suearta the sonne of Saepugell the sonne of Seabald the sonne of Siggeot the sonne of Suebdeg the sonne of Siggar the sonne of Weadeg the fourth sonne of Woden And the descent of Ida the raiser of the Bernicians kingdome is brought from Bealdeag the fifth sonne of Woden for Bealdeag was father to Brand whose sonnes were Beorn and Freodegar the latter of which twaine was the progenitour of Cherdik the first West-Saxon King and his brother Beorn begat another Beorn also and hee Wegbrand
vse of his owne youth and losse got thereby experience both to defense himselfe and to prouoke others and with such victories abroad repaired his losses at home that as farre as Humber he made all subiect to Kent 3 Thus growne to be the greatest of any Saxon before him hee sought to hold it vp by forraine alliance and to that end became suter for Berta a most vertuous Christian Lady the daughter of Chilperik King of France vnto whom by her father she was lastlie granted but with these conditions that she might reserue her Christian Profession enioy the presence and the instructions of Luidhard her learned Bishop with the place of his Queene 4 These couenants concluded and many French Christians attending her in his Court by their daily seruice of God and continuall practise of pietie drew many of the English to fauour their Religion yea and the King also to bee inclined that way And as these were working the saluation of Kent behold Gods proceedings for the conuersion of the rest 5 It chanced great Gregory then but Arch-deacon of Rome to see certaine youths of this Iland brought to that Citie to be sold for slaues His Christian heart pitying at such heathenish tyrannizing and beholding stedfastly their faces to be faire and Angel-like demanded of their Merchants of what Nation they came who made him answer that they were Angles and by that name were knowne vnto other Nations Indeed said he and not without cause for their resemblance is Angelicall and fit it is that they be made inheritours with the Angels in Heauen But of what Prouince are they said Gregory It was replied Of Deira a Country situated in the Continent of Britaine Now surely saith he it is great pity but these people should bee taken from Dei ira the ire of God And farther asking what was the name of their King it was answered that he was called Ella whereunto he alluding said that Alleluia to the praise of God in that Princes Dominions should shortly be sung 6 And to that purpose himselfe being afterwards Pope sent Austine a Monke with forty others for assistance whereof Melitus Iustus and Iohn were chiefe These landing in Tanet in the moneth of Iuly about fiue hundred ninety and six yeeres after the Incarnation of Christ and one hundred forty and seuen after the first arriuage of these Angles into Britaine had immediately accesse vnto the presence of King Ethelbert but yet in the open Field for hee feared to conferre with them in any house lest by sorcerie as hee fondly surmised he might be ouercome 7 These preaching vnto him the word of life his answer was that presently he could not consent to their Doctrine neither rashly forsake his ancient and accustomed Religion But seeing said hee you tell vs strange things and giue vs faire promises of after life when this life shall be ended wee permit you to preach the same to our people and to conuert as many as you can and wee our selues will minister all things behoouefull for your liuelihood Which promise hee instantly performed and in Canterburie his head City allowed them fit places for residence and sufficient prouision for their maintenance wherein these religious men following in some measure the examples of the Apostles spent their times in preaching and praiers watching for the peoples conuersions and exercising the workes of true piety as examples and motiues vnto others to embrace the Gospel which they sought to plant 8 Neere vnto the East part of the City stood an ancient Church built by the Christian Romans whiles they had dwelt in Britaine and by them dedicated to the honour of S. Martin and is so yet called To this Church the Christian Queene Berta with her Communicants the French daily resorted to pray and vnto these and in this Church Austine and his fellowes began daily to preach vnto whose Sermons so many of the Kentish also resorted that a plentifull haruest in short time appeared vpon the seede-plot of their tillage for it is reported that ten thousand of the English people were baptized there in one day insomuch that the King himselfe forsooke his Heathenish Idolatrie and likewise receiued the Sacrament of Baptisme vnto his saluation in Christ in witnesse whereof hee gaue the Lordship and Royaltie of his chiefe Citie Canterburie vnto Augustine and resigned his princely Palace therein vnto him who in the East of this City laid the foundation of that great and afterwards magnificent Church dedicated to the seruice and name of Christ which at this day is the Cathedrall of that Metropolitan See and Ethelbert to giue him more roome withdrew himselfe vnto Reculuer in Tanet where he erected a Palace for himselfe and his successours the compasse wherof may be traced by an old wal whose ruines remaine there yet to this day 9 Austine thus seated and in the well deserued fauour of King Ethelbert got one request more which was this that whereas by the Law of the Twelue Tables it was forbidden to bury the dead within the walles of any Citie the practise whereof wee daily finde by monuments taken vp in the fields adioining it would please him to giue to that vse an old Idoll-Temple standing without the East Wall of the Citie wherin the King himselfe had wontedly worshipped his Idols This obtained and the Church purged frō that prophane exercise to the seruice of God being honored with the name of S. Pancras King Ethelbert added thereunto a most faire Monasterie built vpon his owne cost and dedicated it vnto the name of Peter and Paul the Apostles appointing it to bee the place for the Kentish Kings Sepulchers and Austine likewise meant it for the burials of his successours in that See But first it became the Monument of his owne name for in regard of the Procurer both Pancras Peter and Paul were soone swallowed vp and the whole called onely by the name of S. Austines In this place eight Kings of Kent had their bodies interred and tenne of their Arch-bishops therein laid vntill that Cuthbert the eleuenth in succession in fauour of S. Iohns a new Church by him erected procured of King Egbert the sonne of Ercombert that the succecding Arch-bishops might be buried there This Monasterie as all the rest did came to her fatall period in the daies of King Henry the Eighth whose vncouered walles stood so long languishing in time and stormes of weather that daily increased the aspect of her ruines till now lastly they are made subiect to other publike vses and the whole tract of that most goodly foundation in the same place no where appearing Onely Ethelberts Tower in memorie and honour of the man as yet hath escaped the verdict and sentence of destruction whose beauty though much defaced and ouerworne will witnesse to succeeding ages the magnificence of the whole when all stood compleat in their glory together 10 These his happie beginnings Austine signified by
the first and second Kings of the West-Saxons and the third and fourth Monarchs of the Englishmen She was the second Kings wife that was debarred of the title and place of Queene Shee deceased three years before the King her husband in the nineteenth yeare of his raigne being the yeare of Christs Natiuity eight hundred fifty fiue 10 Iudith his second wife was the daughter of Charles the Emperour and King of Fra●…e as wee haue said her Mother was Queene 〈◊〉 the daughter of Vodon Earle of Orl●…ance She was a Lady of passing beauty and marryed to this King in France and when she came into England was receiued with the title and place of a Queene in abolishment of the peruerse law of the VVest-Saxons made against the Kings VViues as before was touched She was his wife three yeares and suruiued him without any issue His Issue 11 Ethelbald the eldest sonne of King Ethelwolfe and of Lady Osburg his first wife was brought vp in his youth in the exercise of warre and serued vnder his Father in the great victory obtained against the Danes at Ocley in Surrey in the yeare eight hundred fifty one afterwards hee turned his force against his Father and at his returne from Rome practised to defeat him of his Kingdome and was ready to haue giuen him battaile had not his Father parted with him his Dominion 12 Ethelbert the second son of King Ethelwolfe and Lady Osburg his first wife was in the life time of his Father after the decease of his vncle Ethelstan appointed and placed his Successor in his Kingdome ouer the South-Saxons the Kentish and the East-Saxons without any mention or meaning as it seemeth that hee should intermeddle further with any other part of England Notwithstanding after the death of his brother Ethelbald it was generally holden of all men for law equity and reason that he should succeed him in the Monarchy and so he did with the consent of his Brethren and without resistance or contradiction of any other 13 Ethelred the third sonne of King Ethelwolfe and Lady Osburg his first wife had by the disposition of his Father in his last will the one halfe of his Fathers proper inheritance which was all such land as King Egbert his Grandfather had before hee was King and was no part of the Demaines of the Kingdome and this was diuided betwixt him and his brother Elfred as the kingdome was betweene their elder Brethren Ethelbald and Ethelbert with an intent that this Ethelred should succeed his brother Ethelbald in the kingdome of the West-Saxons notwithstanding his brother Ethelbert after the decease of King Ethelbald entred into the other part adioining it to his former kingdome and was king of the whole and after left it entire to this Ethelred who succeeded him in the Monarchy 14 Elfred the fourth sonne of King Ethelwolfe and of Lady Osburg his first wife was borne at Wantage in Barkeshire in the yeare of our Lord God eight hundred forty nine and the thirteenth of his fathers raign Being a child of fiue yeeres old he was sent very honourably attended to the City of Rome where Leo the fourth then Bishoppe confirmed him was his Godfather at the confirmation and annointed him to the expectation of a kingdome growne in yeares hee grew so in discretion magnanimity and fauour of all men that in the successiue raignes of his three elder Brethren he ruled as a Vice-roy or secondary king vnder euery of them and after them at the last succeeded in the English Monarchy 15 Ethelfwith the daughter of King Ethelwolfe and Lady Osburg was maried to Burthred the twentieth King of Mercia which mariage was solemnized at the towne of Chippinham in Wiltshire in the moneth of Aprill and yeare of Christs Natiuity eight hundred thirty fiue and the fifteenth of her fathers raigne but within twenty two years after they were both forced by the Danes to abandon their kingdom and departed into Italy where the King died the same yeare in the English Colledge at Rome shee liued after him fifteene yeares in the habite of a N●…ne at the City of Pad●…a and there died and was honourably buried in the yeare of our Lord God eight hundred eighty nine which was the eighteenth yeare of her brother King Elfreds raigne 16 Ne●…te supposed by Iohn Capgra●…e the Legend writer to be the sonne of King Ethelwolfe was in his youth brought vp at Glastenbery vnder Dunstan who was afterward Arthbishop of Ca●…terbury He proued a man of great learning and was one of the first Readers of Diuinity in the Vniuersity of Oxford at the foundation or as some will haue it the restauration thereof by King Elfred hee planted a Monastery in Cornwall whereunto hee vsed for deuotion and studious meditations often to withdraw himselfe which of his abode there was afterward called Neotestoke and when he was dead his body was with great honour enterred in the County of Huntingdon at a place then called Anulfesbery and afterward in regard of his enterment Saint Neotes and now Saint Needes ETHELBALD THE TVVENTIETH KING OF THE VVEST-SAXONS AND THE TWENTIE ONE MONARCH OF THE ENGLISHMEN HIS ACTS AND RAIGNE CHAPTER XXXIII EThelbald the eldest sonne of king Ethelwolfe hauing had part of the kingdome in the life time of his Father after his death entred vpon the whole and was the twentieth King of the West Saxons and the twenty one Monarch of the Englishmen beginning his raigne in the yeere of Christs incarnation eight hundred fiftie seuen 2 His youth he had spent in the exercise of war hauing made proofe of valour in his seruice against the Danes in many battels and likewise attempted though not in so good a cause to haue fought against his owne father Which his assaies as they seemed violent and vnnaturall yet being in the quarrell of the West-Saxons law enacted in preiudice of their Queenes he was both sided and approued as hath been said 3 But howsoeuer vnwilling he was this faire Queene should sit in state by his fathers side yet contrary to all lawes either of God or man hee laid her by his owne and by nuptiall rites brought her to his sinfull and incestuous bed Which act though foule enough some haue made worse in reporting his Wife to be his owne Mother whom King Ethelwolfe kept for his Concubine And surely this his sin was not long vnpunished by the shortnesse of his raigne and life leauing no other memory of his acts besides this foule blot to his faire name 4 His raigne was onely two yeeres and an halfe and death chanced vpon the twentieth day of December the yeere of Christs assuming our flesh eight hundred sixtie His body was first buried at Sh●…rburne in the County of Dorset where at that time was the Cathedrall Church and Episcopall See but afterwards was remoued and enterred at Salesbury in the County of Wiltshire His Wife 5 Iudith the
two yeeres though this line againe failed before it was well begunne EDVVARD THE CONFESSOR SONNE OF KING ETHELRED THE THIRTIE SEVENTH MONARCH OF THE ENGLISHMEN HIS RAIGNE VERTVES AND MARRIAGE CHAPTER VI. EDward the Third of that Name before the Conquest halfe-brother to the deceased Hardi-Canute and sonne to King Ethelred by Queene Emma his wife was by the prouident care of a Mothers affection when the variable successe of Warre doubtfully depended betwixt Edmund the English and Canutus the Dane sent into Normandy to Duke Richard her Brother there to bee secured from all domesticall stirres and now before the dead corps could be enterred wi●… generall consent of the Nobles was elected their King 2 I know well that in the legend of this holy mans life more things are recorded then with safetie of truth may be either beleeued or deliuered as that he was chosen King by consent of Parliament when as yet he was in his mothers wombe Ethelred his Father at the same time hauing many other sonnes aliue as also when the destroying Danes had extinguished by their warres almost the whole Royall issue of the English the holy Monke Brightwold of Glastenbury deploring their losse and the Lands miserable estate had in vision this Edward then an Exile presented vnto him by the Apostle S. Peter himselfe who then annointing him King in his sight telling him that his Raigne should be peaceable and twenty three yeeres for continuance Brightwold yet vnsatisfied who should next succeed demanded the resolution and was answered by Peter that the Kingdome of England was Gods owne Kingdome for whose successors himselfe would prouide With such vaine predictions our otherwise true Stories are ouer-charged which moued Comineus the worthy French Historian to tax the English with ouer much credulitie that way 3 But most true it is that the English Nobilitie disclaiming all Danish subiection presently vpon the death of King Harold enacted That none of their bloud should any more raigne ouer them putting this their decree in execution by cassiering all Danes from the Castles Forts and Garrison Townes throughout all the Land whence some euen of their Bloud Royall were forced to depart Then sending securitie into Normandy with proffer of the Crowne vnto Prince Edward had his consent and assistance of Duke William his cosen germane 4 This Edward as elsewhere hath been said was borne at Islip neere vnto Oxford and tenderly educated by Queene Emma his Mother and after his Fathers death for safety sent into France where by his sweet conuersation hee gained the loue of all and as much himselfe affected those strangers which was some blemish of policie in the face of his gouernment when he had got the Diadem as being of disposition ouer-soft and euer too pliant an imperfection in a Soueraigne to take the impresse of any stampe In which mould the aspiring Goodwin Earle of Kent doth cast the fabrick of his owne designes who had made away Alfred his younger but of a more resolute spirit that so the basis of his owne piller whose top in time he hoped to crowne might be set if not vpon yet with the neerest to the Throne 5 Hee therefore the formost both in will and power vsed both to establish Prince Edward in his right being seconded by Leofrick Earle of Chester and Lyuingus Bishop of Worcester and indeed with the generall assistance of all the English who now were so iealous of all forraine powers that they forbad an ouergreat traine of Normans though comming for his aid to attend their new-chosen King 6 His Coronation was at Winchester with great concourse of people and the celebration performed by Edsine Archbishop of Canterbury vpon the very day of Christ his resurrection being also a new-rising day to the English Nation the yeere of grace 1042. himselfe being aged then towards forty and was in number the thirty seuenth Monarch of England where he raigned with such Iustice Piety that he obtained the venerable name of Saint and vnto posterities is distinguished from the other Edwards by the adiunct Confessor 7 In the entrance of his gouernement to witnes his loue to his people hee sought euery way the furtherance of their wealth and afterwards remitted the most heauy Tribute of forty thousand pounds yearly gathered by the name of Dane-gilt which had bin imposed by his Father and payed for forty years continuance out of the lands of all except only the Clergie because say our ancient lawes the Kings reposed more confidence in the prayers of holy Church then in the power of Armies Then from the diuers Lawes of the Mercians West-Saxons Danes and Northumbrians he selected the best and made of them one body certaine and written in Latin that all men of anie learning might know wheron to rely to be the touch of his Common-wealths Pleas and the squire by which he would haue euery right to be measured being in a sort the fountaine of those which at this day we terme the Common Lawes though the formes of pleading processe therein were afterward brought in by the Conquest 8 The raigne of this King by most writers records was more spent in peace works of true piety thē in warres and bloud though some dissensions happened both domesticall and forreine for about the yeare one thousand forty fiue and third of his Raign a royal Nauy was rigged in Sandwich hauen against Magnus King of Norway who then intended to inuade England and indeed had so done if the wars of Sweyn king of Denmark had not diuerted his purpose 9 This Sweyn was the sonne of Duke Wolfe by Ostryd his Duchesse sister to Hardi-Canut who as I find written in the manuscript of Aimundus Bremensis being in possession of two kingdomes prepared his Nauy for the conquest of England also But saith hee King Edward gouerning that Kingdome with great Iustice and Loue chose rather his peace with proffers of Tribute and promises that after his death the Crowne should be his yea though himselfe should haue children how beit this seemeth not to sound for truth For Sweyn sending his Ambassadors vnto Edward to craue ayde against Magnus his grieuous and mortall Enemy could obtain none and Harold Harfager the successor of Magnus and enemy to Sweyn presently thereupon sent vnto Edward for a league of amity which was ratified firmely betwixt them 10 Neither may wee thinke that euer hee meant his Crowne that way for that besides the decree enacted against all Danish claims his desire to establish it in the English bloud is most manifest by sending for Edward his Nephew the sonne of Edmund Ironside remaining in Hungary and that so long out of England that hee was called the Outlawe who comming ouer brought with him his wife Agatha and children Edgar a sonne and Margaret and Christian his daughters him Edward meant to haue made heire to the Crowne had he not beene preuented by hasty death
Tikhill Marlborow and Ludgarfall with many other great Seigniories and aboue them all was also Lord of Ireland and at the last succeeded his brother Richard in all his-Dominions and was King of England 108 Maud the eldest daughter of King Henry and Queene Eleanor borne in the third yeere of her fathers raigne married to Henrie surnamed the Lion Duke of Saxonie Lothar that died yong Otho the fourth German Emperour and William borne at Winchester progenitor of the Dukes of Brunswicke who bare for their Armes the Coat of England with the two Lions as King Henrie his Grandfather bare before the match with Queene Eleanor and Maud married to Geffrey Earle of Perch Shee suruiued him and died in the first yeere of the raigne of her brother King Richard and was buried by her husband in the Church of S. Blase at Brunswicke 109 Eleanor the second daughter of King Henrie and Queene Eleanor was borne at Roan in Normandy in the eight yeere of her fathers raigne 1162. She was married to Alf●…se the ninth of that name surnamed the Good King of Castile in Spaine and had issue by him Sa●…ches that died in his infancie Ferdinando that died in his youth Henry King of Castile after his Father Blaunch Queene of France wife to King Lewis the 8. and mother of Saint Lewis Berengar married to Alfonso king of Lion Vrraca Queene of Portugall and Eleanor wife of Iames king of Arragon 110 Ioane the third and yongest daughter of king Henry and Queene Eleanor his wife was born at the City of Angiers in France in the moneth of October the 13. yeare of her Fathers raigne which was the yeere of our Lord 1166. when shee was eleuen yeeres of age shee was with great honour conueied to the City of Palermo and there married to William the second of that name king of Sicil Duke of Apulia and Prince of Capua vpon Sunday the 13. day of Februarie 1177. and was crowned Queene the same day at the same place Shee had a sonne by him named Boamund whom his Father when hee was returned from his Christning created Duke of Apulia but the child died first and the Father after leauing no issue And she suruiuing married againe and was the third wife of Raimund the fourth of that name Earle of Tholouz by him shee had Issue Raimund the last Earle of that house Bertrand Lord of Branquell Montelore and Saluiac and a daughter married to Berald of Elbeine Prince of Orenge His Naturall Issue 111 William the Naturall sonne of king Henry born of Rosamund the daughter of Walter Lord Clifford which Lady for her incomparable beauty was reputed with allusion to her name Rosa-mundi the Rose of the world the deare affection the king bare her caused both burning iealousie in the Queene and fatall ruine to her selfe albeit the amorous king for her secresie and security but what walles will not a iealous eye pierce through had built for her a most artificiall Labyrinth at Woodstocke in Oxfordshire with such cunning windings and intricate passages as had not Fate and Heauens reuenge on Adultery shewed the way the enraged Queen had not so soone beene rid of her Riuall nor that wanton Dame of her life Shee was buried in the Nunnery of Godstow by Oxford with this Epitaph Hac iacet in Tumba Rosa 〈◊〉 non Rosa munda Non redolet sed olet quaredolere solet Rose This Tombe doth here enclose the Worlds most be●…teous Rose passing sweet ere while Now ●…ght but edour vile But Hugh called the Saint Bishop of Lincolne thought the Hearse of a Harlot no fit spectacle for a Quire of Virgins to contemplate therefore himselfe in person caused her bones to be cast foorth of the Church which yet those chast sisters afterward recollected and placed there againe with much honour ●…cting a goodly Crosse thus inscribed to the honour of her memory Qui meat hac oret Signumque salutis adoret Vtque tibi detur requies Rosamunda precetur All you which passe this way This Crosse adore and pray That Rosamunas Soule may True rest possesse for ●…ye The first Sonne which by her King Henry had was the said William surnamed in French Longespee in English Long-Sword He was Earle of Salisburie in right of Ela his Wife Daughter and h●…ire of William Earle of that County son of Earle Patrick by whom hee had Issue William Earle of Salisbury Stephen Earle of Vlster Ela Countesse of Warwicke Ida Lady Beucham of Bedford and Isabell Lady Vescie his sonne Earle William the second had Earle William the third Father of Margaret Wife of Henry Lacie Earle of Lincolne hee died in the Castle of old Salisbury and was buried in the Cathedrall Church of the New City in the ninth yeare of the raigne of king Henry the third 112 Geffrey an other Naturall sonne of king Henry was borne of the Lady Rosamund aforesaid This man in his tender youth was by his Fathers procurement made Archdeacon of Lincolne and after Bishop of that See which hee held aboue seauen yeeres without consecration and then resigning it in the yeare 1181. into the hands of Richard Archbishop of Canterbury and his Father hee was made Chancellour of England and afterward by his brother king Richard hee was aduanced to the Archbishopricke of Yorke being consecrated at Tours in France An. 1191. which See he gouerned with good approbation But in the time of his Brother King Iohn hee vnderwent many difficulties by opposing the Kings purposes who therefore made seisure of his whole state and An. 1207. he left the Land and after fiue yeeres banishment died viz. Ann. 1213. 113 Morgan an other Naturall sonne of King Henry is thought by some because so small mention is made of him to haue beene of no long life after his birth and to haue beene borne of some woman in Wales where this Christian name is most commonly vsed and whither this King vpon many occasions sometimes resorted But some others whose studious paines deserue much thankes of posteritie report that hee was gotten on the wife of one Rodulph Bloeth or Blewet a knight and liued both to bee Prouost of Beuerley and to be elected to the Bishopricke of Durham when comming to Rome for a dispensation because his Bastardie made him otherwise vncapable the Pope willed him to professe himselfe Blewets lawfull son and not the Kings Naturall promising to consecrate him on that condition but he vsing the aduise of one William Lane his Clerke told the Pope that for no worldly promotion he would renounce his father or deny himselfe to bee of roiall bloud so blind were some Prelats of those times who esteemed spirituall functions to be but worldly promotions RICHARD THE FIRST DVKE OF NORMANDY GVYEN AND AQVITAINE c. THE FORTIE FOVRTH MONARCH OF THE ENGLISH-MEN HIS RAIGNE ACTS AND ISSVE CHAPTER VI. RICHARD succeeding to his deceased Father Henrie brought forth that wonder which a Writer ofthat age
hee makes Arthur they say hee was a valiant man hee saith he was a Coward where they make him pursuing and Philip flying hee chargeth him to haue made only plaints when he should haue drawne swords where they charge the Peeres for drawing backe from his Warres hee makes them the onely Hasteings and Iohn the Hinderer briefly if a fire-shooting Meteor appeare aboue it portends Heauens fury on Iohn if the watry Element ouerflow it bodes Iohns fury on his Land But surely that part thereof which fell on Geoffry it was you see not vndeserued notwithstanding vpon the Kings returne into England and Geoffreys to his more loyall carriage submission his Peace was made at the very time for the more celebrity of Queen Isabels Coronation with whom the King himselfe was again crowned at Westminster by Archbishop Hubert 10 The Pompe of that solemnitie ended the King resolued of ending a long depending controuersie with King William of Scotland who formerlie before Iohn was proclaimed King had challenged as his patrimoniall Right the Counties of Northumberland and Cumberland and afterward seeing he got but words and delaies was ready King Iohn being then in France with an hotter and more forceable argument to winne what hee could not craue but being in dark deuotion all Night at Saint Margarets Hearse the still true English-hearted Queen perswaded him by a Dreame for certainely it was no other not to infest England her natiue soile who therupon sent backe his Army But now he commeth with a more friendly traine vpon King Iohns sending to him in Honourable Embassage the Earles of Huntingdon and Hereford King Williams Brother and Nephew his three Sonnes in Law Lacy Vescy and Ros with others to desire him to giue him meeting at Lincolne where accordingly they both meet with kingly curtesies and the next day King Iohn to auspicate his Temporall affaires with Spirituall deuotions and yet to shew what hee thought of some superstitious follies of those times went vndauntedly into the Cathedrall Church being much disswaded by many for Monkish Impostures perswaded many it was very ominous for a King to enter that and certaine other places and there offered a golden Chalice on Saint Iohns Altar which no King before him durst doe Where his Deuotions performed the two Kings in presence of three Archbishops thirteene Bishops the King of South-Wales with a multitude of English Scottish French and Irish Princes and Peeres ascending the toppe of that conspicuous high hill on the North side of the Citie did there in a glorious solemnity sweare amitie and faithfull loue vpon the Crosier of Archbishop Hubert 11 That Spectacle so roial to the beholders was seconded with another no lesse Honourable to K. Iohn for Humility in such great ones is more glorious then their glory when the King hauing latelie left Hugh Bishoppe of Lincolne called the Saint for the opinion of vnfained integrity though blemished with some obstinacies and surcharged with Legends of fained Miracles at London very sicke where himselfe with gracious care went to visite him and both confirmed his Testament and promised the like for other Bishoppes after now hearing hee was dead and his Corpes then bringing into the gates of Lincolne hee with all that princely Traine went forth to meete it the three Kings though the Scottish was to depart that very day with their roiall Allyes carrying the Hearse on those shoulders accustomed to vphold the weight of whole kingdomes from whom the Great Peeres receiued the same and bare it to the Church Porch whence the three Archbishops and Bishops conuaied it to the Quier and the next day it there lying the meane time open faced mitred and in all Pontificall Ornamentes with Gloues on his hands and a Ring on his finger interred it with all solemnities answerable Yet here the King rested not to giue proofe in so great a height of his lowly mind and then benigne how euer afterward auerted to the Clergy when twelue Abbots of the Cisteaux Habit whose whole Order had displeased him by refusing to giue Aid towardes his great payment of thirtie thousand pounds came now to Lincolne and all prostrate at his feet craued his gracious fauour for that his Forresters had driuen out for so the King had giuen commaund of his Pastures and Forrests all their Cattle wherewith themselues and Christs Poore were sustained The King touched with remorse on so venerable a troope of Suppliants though so great offenders commaunded them to rise who were no sooner vp but the King inspired with diuine Grace fell flat on the ground before them desiring pardon adding that hee not onely admitted them to his loue their beasts to his Pastures a speciall fauour which Kings had graunted that Order but would also build an Abbey for men of their sort if they would designe some choice seat wherein himselfe meant to bee enshrined Neither did he promise then more then hee performed nor were those wylie Humiliates regardlesse of choosing a delicate plotte for the purpose where hee built a goodlie Abbey of their Order deseruedly for the pleasance of the place named Beaulieu and of rich Reuenue and excessiue Priuiledge continuing long of great renowne as a Castle of refuge inuiolable our Auncestors thinking it most hainous sacrilege thence to draw any though wilfull Murderers or Traitors wherein the Founders of such vnsanctified Sanctuaries Temples of Mercy so they called thē throughout this Kingdom seemed rather to take Romulus for their President thē Moses who granting fauor to casuall Manslaughters yet commanded wilfull Murderers to bee drawn from the Altar to the slaughter 12 By what degrees men not onely of such reputed-religious habit but also of the Secular-Clergy fell afterward more and more from such fauours of the King and hee from theirs a man that will not purposely winke may easily behold both sorts standing so stiffe on their persons and their possessions Exemption from Regall commaund that whiles the Pope could haue all for any superfluous imploiment the King could get nothing though his Kingdome were in hazard as you heard by the disloyall obstinacies both of the Archbishop of Yorke who denied the King his personall attendance and those Cisteaux Monkes whose Coffers were thus lockt against him The like pretended Exemptions of their Clergie-Prelacies as well as of their Persons and Purses wrought also like offences both with former Kinges and now with King Iohn who on the death of Bishop Hugh resoluing to conferre by gift as his Ancestors did and himselfe elsewhere lately had that See on some whom either merite or affection had endeared to him the rather because men of those places in those dayes were vsually their Soueraignes bosom-Counsellors hee was with peremptory affronts
of K. Iohn yet bitterly taxeth saying the English Bishops were farre from that dutifull obseruance towards their Soueraigne which the French Bishops perfourmed to theirs at whose commaund they maintained Souldiers in his warres against King Iohn acknowledging they were so bound to doe as often as the King pursued the warres in person though now also they did it where hee was not in person And indeed how hollow-hearted to the State those money-murmurers were their owne friend bebewraieth shewing how with curses they wished and prayed to God that these exactions might neuer haue any good successe though they knew it was purposelie for preseruing a maine part of the Kingdome A disloyalty the more vnsufferable by the King knowing that but a very little before the Popes Legate Io. Fiorentinus nick-named Ferentinus for bearing away so much money had gathered of the Clergy a huge masse os money which in full chests hee conuayed to Rome Yet all these domesticke grudges abated not the Kings due care nor yet his good hopes which were soone after much augmented by the encouragements of Othoes Imperiall presence who in person arriuing here in England to proiect for his owne and his vncles warres was with great ioyes met by the King and conducted through London by night where all the City was seene in her glory all the streetes adorned with richest hangings beautified all along with the lustre of pendant Crownes and burning lampes who after some dayes of royall entertainements hence departed not vnfurnished with helpes to defray his warres 36 Whiles King Iohn is thus busied about his open hostilities Pope Innocentius is plotting his secret Stratagemes against him at Rome where like vnto that other old Roman who being chosen vmpere touching some march-march-lands betwixt two neighbour Nations vnpartiall to either adiudged it from them both to the Romane State so hee now being Arbiter betwixt the King Bishops Monks concerning their choice hee means to defeat them all and adiudge the right of disposing thereof to his Romish See Therfore at the fore-limited day of hearing his first care was that the Bishops lippes for euer should bee sealed vp notwithstanding their allegations of Law Reason Decrees and Practise frō intermedling in choice of their own Primate Wil you heare the maine reason because himselfe and some other Popes would haue it so Which definitiue sentence being sent to the Prelates into England it was thought a point of prudence also to prepare the King and worke him pliable before hand to entertaine that which was to follow which must be done by amiable lines and gemmes wherewith he knew the King was much delighted His Present being 4. gold Rings with foure precious stones an Emrauld Saphire Ruby Topaze he so vainely childishly though ignorance enstile it eloquence celebrateth in his Epistle for their number forme and colour that no man will question whether it were dictated with an Apostolicke Spirite The Rings Roundnesse must remember the King of Eternity the Quadr at number of Constancy and of the foure Cardinall vertues Iustice Fortitude Prudence Temperance the Golds price of Wisedome the Emraulds greenenesse of Faith the Saphires brightnesse of Hope the Rubies readnesse of Charity the Topazes clearenesse of operatiue Sanctitie c. Which though toyes were yet accepted as pledges of loue for a while till at last the King finding by the sequele they were but baites to beguile him esteemed the Popes Gold as drosse his Iewels as Iewish fraudes and his loue as most rancored hatred For shortly after came to his notice the most indignious iniurie which the Pope meant to obtrude vpon him and his Kingdome hauing not onely hunted both Reynard and Gray out of their holdes but also imposed vpon him for the chiefe place and managing of his State one whome hee reputed a chiefe and dangerous Enemy to himselfe and it which thus was fetcht about 37 The Monkes freed from the Bishops impugning were hote now in the strife amongst themselues the one side against Reyners election vrged it wanted Royall assent the greater and sounder part of Electoro due solemnities due time the other against Norwich that no second election could be validous vnlesse the former were first annulled Both their Reasons pleased well the Pope who as pre-possessed Iudges often vse made shew of great diligence in pondering the Pleadings whereas himselfe long before had resolued on his Sentence which was that by Apostolicall definitiue dome neyther of the Elects should euer bee capable of that See So great rubbes hath the Pope with so little breath blowne out of his way The man whose aduancement al this while hee had aimed at was now commended to them who must be there presently chosen for their Primate Stephen de Langton a Cardinall English by birth French by education and affection one of so transcendent power in the Romane Court that the Pope was thought not for loue but for enuy as being himselfe eclypsed by his necrenesse to haue wished his seruice in some remoter dignity But the Monks ill apaide with what was done already and very tremulous to enter matter of new intrications alleadged against all further courses that no Canonicall Election could be there made they hauing consent neither of King nor Couent at which word the Pope snapping them vp bad them know that he had there plenitude of power ouer the Church of Canterbury and besides that no consent of Princes vsed to bee expected in Elections celebrated where the Pope was hee therefore charged them vnder paine of his high curse a terrible bug-bear in those daies there presently to choose him for their Primate whom himselfe thought good to nominate vnto them Thus trembling vnder the cracke of his Thunderbolt they all excepting one Helias de Brantfield whose constancy shall perpetuate his memory durst not sor feare but elect him though very vnwillingly and with murmurations whose Consecration followed by the Popes owne handes at Viterbium and his earnest recommendation by the Popes flattering letters to the Kings fauourable acceptance And this was the vnblessed beginning of those new miseries which brought the King to his ending and his Kingdome to vn-reportable calamities all which little did his Holinesse or his Charity reckon of so his desperate Policie might take effect Yet not vnduely fell those iudgements on manie Princes of those times who neglecting the domesticke execution of Supreme iustice suffered their Subiects at so high a rate both of expence and trauels to buy such arbitrary and dangerous formes of a forraine and falsly-named Iustice. 38 Two very presumptuous Lawes hath one obserued to haue beene first hatched by this lawlesse Pope the one occasioned by King Iohns and Philips formet strife that Princes delinquent must bee lyable to correctionfrom the Pope the other vpon the choice of the Emperour
King made humble supplications to the Lord Pope that hee would vouchsafe in a touch of pious compassion to support the English Church being at the point of ruine At whose earnest sollicitation the tender-hearted Pope grieuously lamenting the desolation of the Kingdome of England decreed by solemne sentence That King Iohn should bee deposed from his Kingdome and that the Pope should prouide some other who should bee deemed worthyer to succeed To effectuate the former clause Innocentius eagerly pursued the latter sending speedy letters to whom but King Iohns most mortall enemy Philip King of France requiring him to vndertake the labour of the dethroning King Iohn with no lesse reward then pardon for all his sins and enioying of the English Crowne to him and his heires for euer A goodly large patent both for a Spiritual and Temporall Kingdome which more like Mars his Priest then Christs Vicar he meanes to seale with a deluge of Christians bloud For not thus yet satiated hee transmits his Letters generall To all Potentates Souldiers men of warre of all nations to signe themselues with the Crosse and to follow their Captaine Philip for the deiection of King Iohn assuring all that their assistance whether in Person or Contribution shall bee no lesse meritorious then if they visited our Sauiours Sepulchre That this Pope vnder colour of such Crusadoes did formerly cloake his own Auarice his owne Monkes auerre but here hee cloakes therewith both his Pride and a far more sauage vice the thirst not of mens gold but of their bloud In which seruice with King Philip hee vsed the same English Prelates for his Negotiators which were before his Solicitors thereunto with whom also he sent his Factour Pandulph giuing him in priuate secret instructions how to manage euery particular of the whole designe to the most behoofe of the holy See 47 The French King likewise receiuing from the Archbishoppe and his Associates in a councel the Apostolike sentence was very apprehensiue of that imployment whereto not so much the Papall commaund as his owne ancient malignity and the English Barons traiterous requests had prepared him both which he was now willing to maske with the speous pretext of iustice and deuotion Vnder which colors hee had speedily marshalled an immense Army at Roan drew a mighty Nauy richly furnished to the mouth of Seyn al his Dukes Earls Barons Knights souldiers being sūmoned to the exploit vnder pain of hie Treason and disherizing who therforeboth in feare hope of spoile came flocking without number 48 A preparation of so great importance that all Christendom tooke notice of could not long be hidden from King Iohn whose care by reason of his now doubled opposition forrain domestick could be no lesse for his owne and his Kingdoms safety then was his Enemies for impugning both Wherfore his Summons being sent to all his officers both for Sea and land for speedy furnishing both of a Nauie an Army equiualent to encounter so powerfull an Inuasion such innumerable multitudes swarmed to Douer and other harbours for landing that the Chiefe-leaders for want of prouision dismissing the rest encamped at Barham-Downes onely with 60000. choice valiant and well appointed men who if they had carried all one mind and true affection towards their King and safegard of their Country there breathed not any Prince vnder heauen whose assault England had not beene able to repell And being no worse appointed for a Sea-fight his intent was to graple first with the French Fleet making no doubt of sinking them all so secure and confident was he in expectation of all Inuaders In which braue addresse whiles both shores of the Sea are thus belaid with both those Kings puissant Armies the one waiting for the Enemy the other for faire windes and more forces behold Pandulphus the Popes Pragmaticke hauing first desired safe conduct of King Iohn arriues at Douer to put in execution those secret Instructions which his Lord who made his aduantage of the Foxe-skinne as well as of the Lions had expresly prescribed He there vnfoldes to the King the innumerable multitude both of King Philips shippes and of his Souldiers Horse and Foote all in readinesse to passe and yet more expected to follow to bereaue him of his Kingdome by Apostolicall authority and to enioy it himselfe with his Heires for euer That with him were also comming all the English Exiles both Clergy and Lay they by his forces to repossesse their estates maugre the king and hee from them to receiue allegiance as from his sworne Subiects That hee had the fealty of almost all the English Peeres obliged to him by their owne Charters which made him distrustlesse of attayning easily his wished successe which calamities the more vnsufferable because imposed by his insulting enemie and his owne Subiects he might yet euade and retaine his Crowne which by Sentence hee had already lost if penitently hee would submit himselfe to the Churches iudgement Doubtlesse the straites whereinto the King saw himselfe plunged were very dreadfull so many deadly enemies abroad to assault him so few trustie friends at home to guard him which droue him into this sad cogitation that those his perfidious Peeres would now with their followers abandon him in the field or betray him ouer to the Sword of his Enemies Yet not vnlikely other motiues also might forcibly perswade him to relent the remembrance of the Emperour Otho whom this very Pope not without foule blot of Iniustice and Leuity had both eagerly aduanced and furiously dis-empyred the boundlesse furies of the Crusado promulged against him wherewith this Pope vsed to ouerflow as with a mercilesse Ocean all such Princes as withstood his will which once broken in would neuer end but with the end and ruine of all Thus thinking it better to yeeld to the time with assurance both of his Crowne and of the Popes fauour then desperatelie to hazard Life Crowne and all to his immortall foes hee redeemes his safety on such conditions as tiable that with money eyther paid or promised hee might be wrought like waxe and made plyable to all wicked actions Thus hauing the true length of the Popes foot he fittes him accordingly with rich presents and golden promises crauing by such mouing Rhetoricke not his aide onely but his Curse also against the Archbishoppe and Barons who so vncessantly distressed him But Innocentius forward of himselfe without any Motiues to put in vre those his Papall vertues and the execution of his late-vsurped power vpon the first gladsome newes of Englands Vassallage to his See had presently dispatched for England an Agent of greater port then Pandulph a Subdeacon Nicholas Bishoppe of Tusculum with no meaner credence and instructions for preseruing what the Pope had guilefully gotten then Pandulph had to purchase what hee ambitiously gaped
for by whose arriuall the King seemed to be possessed of those his desires before his golden letters arriued at Rome to craue them 54 For this Legate was infected with the like itches Ambition and Auarice as his Master and therefore King Iohn knew how to demerite his fastnesse and loue by supplying him with like ointments whereby the Archbishop and Barons soone perceiued that the Legate was wholy Regall and the King Papall which iealousie made both their Actions more distastfull The Ouert and professed end of his comming being to release the Interdict hee first tampered a little to accord the King and Prelates vpon couenantes of Restitution towardes which though the king offered ten thousand marks yet the Prelates repining at the Legates partiality to the King in approuing that offer chose rather to suffer the whole land to grone vnder that vnchristian and truly-styled Curse then to defalcate any iot of their couetous demaunds Vnder which colour the Popes Agent a fitte helue for such a hatchet brake his mind to the King of a more secret principall cause of his Legacie which was for the contriuing of a more validous and vnexceptionable conueyance of his Kingdomes to the yoake of Romish Soueraignety pretending doubtlesse as Pandulph had done that hee could neuer be safe or quiet but vnder the powerfull protection of the Popes winges What iust exceptions the World might take to the former Graunt his Holinesse was not ignorant it being an Act in the King both of manifest* Periurie against his oath at his Coronation and also of* Constraint * Circumuention and * Feare hee being driuen thereto by the Pope himselfe who had set vp both the French power and his owne Barons against him an Act of one * actually excommunicate as also were the * Witnesses conuersing with him in that action whereto as neither the * next Heyres nor the * Clergy nor * Body of the Kingdome gaue any consent so an * open disclaime thereof was made by the very Principall man there present in the name as is likely of all the rest and that all was ingrossed with so many grosse * vntruthes as if done most voluntarily without any feare or force in a general Assembly of the Barons onely by a diuine inspiration and because the King had nothing fitte to pacifie God for his sinnes but the giuing away of his Kingdomes Well might the Pope blush at these shamelesse abusions and therefore if now the King standing on calmer termes can be wrought to ratifie his former Graunt though the dealing bee more fraudulent yet the Act will seeme more colourable because sauouring of lesse constraint and more free deuotion But if we looke with an vnpartiall Eye wee shall see both the plight of King Iohn and the action of Innocentius still like it selfe the Interdiction still burthening his land his Barons more molestious to him then forraine foes his Prelates greedily grating on him to empouerish his meanes his Archbishop stopping all proceedings against forraine or home-bred enemies and if hee had thwarted the Popes commaund herein hee foresaw farre greater stormes at hand then hee had hitherto escaped Thus in desire to settle his Kingdomes quiet for his owne time and in hope perchance that his Successors would as since by diuine blessing they haue vindicate it againe from such an enforced slauery hee condescended to renue his Charter of Subiection knowing belike that his expresse reseruation to himselfe and his Heires of all due administration of Iustice all Liberties and Regalties as being excepted out of the Graunt was forcible of it selfe to make it vnforceable For how hath hee his wonted power of Iustice who was supreme and is made subordinate how his wonted liberties who was absolute is made Homager and Pensioner how his fore-vsed Regalities whom another may name and command as his vassall Yet this Charter adorned with a Golden Bull fitte for the Roman Phalaris whereas the former was but sealed with wax was at a meeting in Saint Paules Cathedrall Church pretended for other businesses about the Interdict presented for more authenticke solemnity at the High-Altar where in the King and Legates presence the Archbishoppe of Canterbury himself also both a Cardinal and a Legat in this acting the office of a stout Patriote and noble Prelate as the Archbishop of Dublein had done at the first Graunt stept forth and in the name of the whole Clergy and Kingdome boldly and earnestly presented at the same Altar in solemne manner his Appeales against that Charter so execrable to the whole world as likewise formerly he had vsed all possible endeuor to diuert the kings hart frō that subiection to the Pope and Court of Rome That the Peeres of the land accorded with the Archbishop in the Appeale and more then in Appeales both the Kings owne letters to the Pope saying they openly professed that they forcibly made head against him because hee had so enslaued his land and their owne bitter exclamations against it so frequently in Authors reiterated doe demonstrate and yet both the Archbishop and other Barons are so cunningly named in the Popes Transcript as if they had not onely beene present and witnesses at the doing but also approuers of the deed What comfort then had Innocentius of renouncing his old Charter and thus shuffling for a new Surely but little it seemeth especially when he saw both his owne Creatures in England thus oppugne it and Christian Princes abroad yea King Iohns mortall enemies who not onely denied that England notwithstanding this Transaction was any patrimony of S. Peter and condemned the Pope for holding an errour so pernicious to all Kingdomes but also vowed to die before they would yeeld that any King can of his owne will make his Kingdom Tributary and his Nobles slaues to others By which vniuersall detestation of this the Popes vsurping it is not improbable though for the present hee flourished the Transcript thereof which hee sent into England with the Preface of Christ and Melchised●…h being Kings and Priests and that therefore in one person of Christs Vicar as the Soule and the Body so both Kingdome and Priesthoode did now concurre that yet ere long hee was no lesse ashamed of this latter then of his former Charter Whereto well suteth his testimony who writes that a Parliament was held at London the yeere 1214. Where the Archbishop sate as President with all the Clergy and Layty wherein by commandement of the Pope the Charter Fealty and homage by which the King was obliged to the Pope was absolutely released on the 7 day of Iuly which if bee true no maruaile if the Court of Rome cannot produce though often challenged thereto this Charter whereof so much they vaunt Notwithstanding some vnquiet Spirits aspiring long after to
as were vacant alienating them from his estate that hee was onely to be called a King in name rather then for any riches which he had that his Ancestors magnificent Princes abounding in all sorts of worldly glorie and wealth heaped to themselues inestimable treasures out of no other meanes but the Rents and Profites of the Kingdom 31 The King stung with this iust reprehension beganne by their instructions to call the Sheriffes of Shires Baylifes and other his Officers to a strait account for all such receites as appertained to the Exchequor thrusting some out of their places and wringing out of all their full spunges store of coine till hee satisfied himselfe both for the arrerages and interest Out of Ralph Briton Treasurer of his Chamber hee screwzed a thousand pounds and also put him from his place into which by the Bishoppe of Winchesters suggestion who now predominated in Court hee substituted Peter de Oriuail a Poictouine the Bishoppes Nephew or Sonne if Paris say true and so saith hee the Kings coffers otherwise empty and leane were by these means stuffed againe though not to their full surfet For these were but preparatiues to a farther scrutinie and ransacke intended against the Earle of Kent whom vpon the Bishoppes suggestion the King remoued from the Proto-Iustitiarishippe or high office of his Chiefe Iustice and put in his place Sir Stephen Segraue a Knight onely in name Then is a strict and captious account demaunded of the Earle of Kent for all such things as he was in any sort chargeable with as 1. For such receipts or debts as were due to King Iohn or to this King Henry himselfe 2. For the meane profites of such lands as the King was seised of from the day of the death of the first great William Earle of Pembroke his Iustitiar and Marshall whither those lands were in England Wales Ireland or Poictou 3. For such Liberties or free Customes which the King had in Forrests Warrens Counties and else where and how they were kept or alienated 4. For such things as the King lost by Huberts negligence 5. For the wronges and dammages offered to the Romane and Italian Clerks and to the Popes Nuncios against the Kings will by authority of Hubert who would take no order to correct the misdoers as by vertue and nature of his place hee was obliged 6. For the many escuages comming by Carrucages gifts and presents or for the rents of Custodies belonging to the Crowne 32 To all which heades the Earle answered that hee had the Charter of the Kings Father by which hee was freed from giuing any account eyther for things passed or to come and that hee had giuen such proofe of his fidelity vnto King Iohn as he would not endure to heare him make an account Peter Bishoppe of Winchester replyed hereunto that such a Charter after the death of King Iohn had no force and therefore the Fathers Charter and graunt of Priuilege was no reason why he should not stand accountant to the Sonne This defence for money dangers in this sort trauersed or auoyded they labored to draw him in for his head by charging him with sundry Articles sounding treasonable as 1. That Hubert had disswaded the Duke of Austria from matching his Daughter with the King who sought it 2. that he had hindred the King from entring vpon forrain lands to him belonging whereby the King Peeres and People consumed their Treasures vainely 3. that hee had enticed the Daughter of the King of Scots whom King Iohn had entrusted to his custody meaning himselfe to marry her traiterously defiled the noble yong Lady whom he married in hope to bee King of Scotland in her right if shee suruiued her Brother 4. that hee had stolne out of his Iewel-house a precious stone of wonderfull value whose vertue was to make him who had it inuincible in Battle that he gaue that stone to Lewelin prince of Wales the Kings enemie 5. that he by his letters had caused Lewelin to hang William de Breuse 33 The Earle much preplexed with these accusations whither true or false could hardly obtaine a short respite to make his answere Thus that Hubert say the Monkes who for loue of the King and defence of the Kingdome had prouoked the hatred of all the great Lords now being forsaken of the King is left sole and solitarie without friends or comfort Onely Luke Archbishoppe of Dublin neuer fosooke him but with prayers and teares besought the King on his behalfe but could not bee heard against so great opposites on so great pretenses When the cry was thus vp and that the world saw it was no superficiall displeasure into which the Earle was faln with the mutable King there rise forth many accusations sauouring of much malignity round about vpon hope to oppresse bury Hubert vnder them for euer as 1. that he had poisoned the two noble Earles of Salisbury and Pembroke 2. that hee had also procured Falcasius de Brent and Richard Archbishop of Canterbury to be made away 3. that by Sorceries and Enchantments hee had drawne the King to fauour him aboue all other 4. that in the victory gotten against the French by Sea hee forceably tooke many Prisoners from the Kings Sailers and made his benefite of their ransoms contrary to right and that hee had spoiled and disinherited many 5. that hee had without triall vniustly put to death Constantine for which excesse the Citizens of London required iustice against the said Hubert The King hereupon makes Proclamation through the City that all such as could charge Hubert with any wrong should repaire to Court and there receiue immediate redresse This strange course of proceeding did so appale and terrifie the Earle that hee forthwith fled to the Priorie Church of Merton in Surrey where among the Chanons hee sheltered his head for a time 34 The King with his Prelates and Peeres meeting at Lambeth at the day appointed for Huberts answere hee being made to beleeue that the King would put him to a most soule death durst not appeare or peepe forth of his sacred refuge The Londoners were assembled in Armes by the Kinges commaund to the number of about twenty thousand vnder banners displayed to dragge the Earle out of Sanctuary but vpon the Earle of Chesters wiser Counsell the prey was taken out of the hands of a bloudy multitude who mortally hated him for Constantines death and they returned againe to their City The Archbishoppe of Dublin still performing the office of a true friend ouerslips not this occasion and by his importunity obtayned day for Hubert till about Twelfe-tide then next ensuing and the King for his assurance during the Interim giues him letters Patents Hubert thinking himselfe secure for the present is now vpon his way toward his wife at the Abbey of Saint Edmund in Suffolke but his enemies so preuailed by their suggestions
strike aside to Grosmont Castle where the Earle with his Confederats and the power of Wales so awaited their time that assailing the Kings Campe vnawares there were taken about fiue hundreth horse with the Sumpters riches and carriages of the Armie vpon which losse his men also greatly scattered the King leauing two noble Gentlemen with the Poictouins to make good the Marches against the Welsh returned more empty and inglorious then before The Earle found them worke whom the King had left behind and as hee was a man of no lesse courage then deepe witte whereas Baldwin de Gisnes the valiant Flemish knight with a thousand Horsemen thought to haue surprized him who hauing but a tenth part of that number came to view the Castle of Monmouth the Earle alone defended himselfe against twelue of his enemies and when his horse was cowardly slaine by them he pitcht one of them by the legge out of the Saddle and leapt into it himselfe neuer giuing ground till his Arruie came to the rescue and obtained a faire victorie with the slaughter and captiuation of many Poictouines and others His other exploits in and about Wales were not few nor vnfortunate if it were not onely in this as what indeed could be more grieuous or vnglorious to a noble mind for that his Soueraigne was vpon the contrary side 42 The King about this time to strengthen his life and State with the prayers of Beneficiaries and other deuoted affections founded the house of Conuerts where such as forsooke the Iudaicall Superstitions had prouisions for maintenance vnder a sober rule and ruler he also erected and endowed a famous Hospitall at Oxf●…rd both for the entertainement of Forrainers and Pilgrimes who thither much frequented and for reliefe also of such as were diseased So that Leoline Prince of Wales the Earles chiefe Confederate when hee was threatned sore if hee would not liue in quiet did not speake more magnificently of charity then honourably of the King I more feare quoth hee the Almesdeedes which the King dooth then all the men of warre which hee hath and the whole Clergy put together 43 The Earle Marshall encreasing in strength and hatred against such as were the Kings reputed Seducers makes spoile and booty on their possessions and ioyning with the power of Leoline puts all to fire and sword as farre as Shrewsburie part whereof they burnt to Ashes and sackt the residue The King then at Gloster for want of sufficient Forces departed thence greatly grieued to Winchester abandoning those other parts as it were to wast and ruine It therefore seemes that he was not growne stronger or richer by the displacing of Hubert Earle of Kent and the rest and by taking new into their roomes who commonly bite and sucke hard till they haue glutted themselues if at leastwise there be any satietie in auarice whereas the old officers hauing prouided in a sort for the maine chance haue the lesse reason to be grieuous 44 Therefore the Lions skin not being large enough for the Bishoppe of Winchester and his factious purposes they piece them out with the Foxes case an ineuitable stratageme is deuised The Earle Marshall had in Ireland all the ample Patrimonies of his Grandfather the famous Strangbow To make that member of his strengthes improfitable if not also pernicious they deuise certain letters directed to Maurice Fitz-Gerald Deputie Iustice of Ireland and other principall men who held of the Earle In them they signifie that Richard once Marshall to the King of England was for manifest treason by the iudgement of the Kings Court banished the Realme his Lands townes and Tenements consumed with fire other his Hereditaments destroyed and himselfe for euer disinherited that if vpon his comming thither they did take him either aliue or dead the King did giue them all the Earles lands there which now were forfeited by vertue of his Attainture and for assurance that the said gift should continue firme and good they by whose aduise the King and Kingdome were gouerned faithfully vndertooke To these letters which the Monkes call bloudy they caused the King to set his Seale as they themselues also being eleuen did theirs vpon receite of which lines the parties signifie backe vnder the seale of secresie that if the Contents of those letters were confirmed by the Kings Letters Patents they would performe that which was desired The Letters patents bee made accordingly and hauing fraudulently gotten the Great Seale from Hugh Bishoppe of Chichester Lord Chancellour who knew not thereof they make them authentike with the impression 45 The Kings mind therefore being still exulcerated towards the Earle Marshall hee grieuously charged Alexander Bishoppe of Chester that he had too much familiarity with the Earle affirming that they sought to thrust him from his throne the Bishop to cleare himselfe from so hainous a scandall puts on his Episcopall habite and solemnly pronounceth all those accurst who did but imagine a wickednesse of so foule a nature against the Maiesty or person of the King and thereupon by the intercession of other Prelates hee was receiued into grace The King was then at Westminster where Edmund the Archbishop of Canterbury elect with other his Suffragan Bishops bewailing the estate of the kingdome present themselues before him telling him as his loyal Liegemen that the Counsell of Peter Bishop of Winchester and his Complices which now he had and vsed was not found nor safe but cruell and perillous to himselfe and his Realme First for that they hated and despised the English calling them Traitours turning the Kinges heart from the loue of his people and the hearts of the people from him as in the Earle Marshall whom being one of the worthiest men of the land by sowing false tales they draue into discontentment 2. that by the Counsell of the same Peter his Father King Iohn first lost the hearts of his people then Normandie then other lands and finally wasted all his treasure and almost England it selfe and neuer after had quiet 3. that if the Subiects had now beene handled according to Iustice and law and not by their vngodly counsels those present troubles had not hapned but the Kinges lands had remained vndestroyed his treasures vnexhausted 4. that the Kings Councell is not the Councell of Peace but of perturbation because they who cannot rise by Peace will raise themselues by the trouble and disinherison of others 5. that they had the treasure Castles Wardships and strengthes of the Kingdome in their hands which they insolently abused to the great hazard of the whole estate for that they made no conscience of an Oth Law Iustice or the Churches censures Therefore we ô King said they speake these things faithfully vnto you and in the presence both of God and man doe counsell beseech and admonish you to remoue such a Councell from about you and as it is the vsage in other Realmes gouerne
to the English campe great numbers of Welsh souldiers with whom he releeued many of the English footemen tyred with seruice sending them backe into England Thither also came the Earles of Vlster with bands of Irish. 30 The King of England prospering thus passeth with his army ouer the Scottish Sea where while he kept the feast of Saint Iohn Baptist at Perth or Saint Iohns Towne there came messengers from Baliol and the Lords his factors to sue for mercy which was granted vpon condition that they should render themselues to him as his subiects Hector Boetius saith that after this agreement wherein Anthonie Bishop of Durham was vsed Iohn Comin brought Baliol void of all kingly habiliments with a white rod in his hand to the English campe at Montros where he resigned his whole right that he either had or might haue to the Crowne of Scotland into king Edwards hands and made thereof a formall Charter in French and at the same time also for feare of life gaue his sonne Edward for hostage and assurance of his fealtie by which final disclaime the Lord Bruces right might seeme now vnquestionable But this resignation being thus made king Edward returnes to Berwick where all the Nobles of Scotland at a Parliament there holden were sworne to be loyall and true subiects to king Edward for euer after and hereof a solemne instrument was sealed by the said Lords of whom Iohn Comin of Badenaw was first bearing date at Berwick in the twentie fifth yeere of the reigne of their Souereigne Lord King Edward 31 Iohn the late King was sent to the Tower of London and there was honourably attended hauing liberty for twenty miles about The Scottish Lords were confined within Trent ouer which Riuer they might not passe toward Scotland vpon paine of life The custody of Scotland was committed to Iohn de Warrenn Earle of Surrey and Sussex and the Treasurershippe thereof to Hugh de Cressingham but William de Ormesby was ordained Iusticiar with this particular commandement that hee should take the homages and fealties of all such as held lands of the King And the more to shew his purpose vtterly to dissolue the distinct Regality of Scotland and to vnite it to the English Monarchie as hee had done Wales hee tooke out of Edinbrough the Crowne Scepter and Cloath of Estate offering them vp at Saint Edwards shrine in Westminster if the Author mistake not for at Saint Thomas at Canterbury hee offered vp Baliols Crowne saith another and besides many other Acts tending to the abolishment of the Scottish Name which Hector relates as the burning their Records abrogating their lawes altering their forms of diuine seruice and transplanting all their learnedst men thence vnto his Vniuersity of Oxford hee tooke out of the Abbey of Scene the Marble Chaire in which the Kings of Scotland were wont to bee crowned and sent the same to Westminster for Priests to sit therein at Celebration This Chaire is the same vpon which was engrauen the famous Propheticall Distichon Ni falat fatum Scoti quocunque locatum Inuenient lapidem regnare tenentur ibidem If Fates goe right where ere this stone is pight The Regall race of Scots shall rule that place Which by whomsoeuer it was written we who now liue finde it happily accomplished But these great Acts of this yeere brought to the Commons of England small commodity vpon whom the charge of the warres lay heauily and it is not often found that the people gaine much by their Princes Conquests 32 The force of Scotland with a greater force being thus for the present broken who would suppose that it could once again haue lifted vp the head and that chiefly by the particular vertue of a priuate man as it after hapned which hee had the more oportunity to doe for that the King of England was diuersly diuerted by occasion of warres in Gascoigne for recouery of his owne and for aid of his friends in Flanders whom the French did afflict in hostile manner The Captaine of the reuolted troupes in Scotland was one William Wallace the sonne of Sir Andrew Wallace of Cragie Knight though some vpon hearesay write contemptibly of his course of life as of a publike robber who by the assistance of such as were outlawed for refusing to doe their homage to King Edward draue William de Ormesby the Kings Iusticiar out of Scotland Which King Edward hearing discharged Iohn Comin of Badenaw and the Earle of Bucquhan from their confinement to the entent that hee might by their endeuours the sooner settle matters but withall hee gaue Iohn de Warren Earle of Surrey commission to leuie an Army and the king loath to bee hindred from his other destinations easily yeelded to such requests as were propounded on the Scots behalfe for that time The voyage which hee had then in hand was to transport from Winchelsea an Armie to assist the Earle of Flanders his confederate 33 England at this time was not without great discontentments which Humphrey de Bohun Earle o●… Hereford and Essex Constable of England and Roger Bigot Earle of Norfolke Marshall of England did countenance for present satisfaction whereof the King yeelded among other things to confirme Magna Charta and Charta de Foresta and that there should no Subsidie nor taxation bee leuied vpon the people without the consent of the Prelates Peeres and people But before this time and while the King was absent out of the land the Scots vnder the leading of VVilliam VVallas put to flight the Earle VVarren and all the English Forces which were with him taking them at aduantage as they were passing ouer a narrow Bridge neare vnto the Castle of Striuelin the slaughter of the English was not smal There Hugh de Cressinghām Treasurer of Scotland for King Edward feel in battell whose dead body for speciall hatred borne vnto him the Scots did flea diuiding his skinne among them The King hearing of this ouerthrow commands the Lordes of England by his letters to bee ready to assist the said Earle VVarren his Custos or Guardian of Scotland with their Forces in the Octaues of S. Hilary at Yorke and also to proclaime such of the Scottish Lords as came not thither enemies of the State but they kept themselues within Scotland and came not Whereupon the English Captains marched to the rescue of the Castle of Rocksbrough whence VVilliam VVallace fled vpon notice of their approach to raise his siege But King Edward aduertised of these accidents hauing taken a truce for two yeeres with the King of France by mediation of Bonifacius the Pope who interposed himselfe non tanquam Iudex sed amicabilis Compositor saith VValsingham not as a Iudge but as a friendly Composer made hast into England where his presence was extremely wanting but in his way home at a Towne called Ardeburg all the Scots almost which hee had brought with
sonne the amiable and famous Edward by-named not of his colour but of his dreaded Acts in battell the Blacke Prince King Edward not long after with a small companie went into France and did homage to Philip de Valoys for his Dutchie of Gascoigne 21 Nemesis or rather Gods vengeance with swift pace did now approach and summon Mortimer to a bloudie account for the yong King addicting himselfe to serious thoughts and putting on the Man before his yeeres required easily saw his owne perill in the others potencie The Queene his mother to the common dishonour and griefe of the Kingdome being generally bruted to be with child by Mortimer hee vpon ripe aduise sodainely and aduenturouslie surprised the proud man at Parliament holden in Nottingham with whom were taken the L. Geofrey Mortimer his sonne and Sir Simon de Bedford who all three were sent prisoners to the Tower of London vnder a strong guard Which done the king by common consent of the Parliament tooke into his hands his mothers excessiue Dower put her to a narrow pension of one thousand pounds by yeer circumscribing her within as narrow limits for her abode but doing her yeerely the honour and comfort of once or twice visiting her though otherwise scarce thinking her worthy of life in regard of her priuacie with Mortimer and his many heinous practises 22 Oh what enchantments are Honour and Power to the minds of men how sodainely and how strangely doe they blow vp the same with the contempt of others and forgetfulnes of themselues Certainely the fraile estate of mans constitution is clearelie seene in this high Lord who drunken with felicitie and fearing neither God nor man fell into vtter confusion when least hee feared The probable manner whereof is worthy the relating There was in the Castle of Nottingham and at this day is a certaine secret way or Mine cut through a rocke vpon which the said Castle is built one issue whereof openeth toward the riuer of Trent which runnes vnder it and the other venteth it selfe farre within vpon the surface and is at this present called Mortimers hole through this the young King well armed and stronglie seconded was conducted with drawne swordes by some his trustie and sworne seruants among which was that braue Montacute whom his vertues vnder this King raised to the Earledome of Salisbury c. vp to the Queenes Chamber whose dore so feareles is blinded affection was vnshut and with her was Mortimer the kings Master as the rumor spred him readie to go to bed whom with the slaughter of a Knight and one or two that resisted they laid hold vpon This was not reputed a slender enterprise in regard that in Mortimers retinue were not fewer they say then one hundreth and fourescore Knights besides Esquiers and Gentlemen 23 The causes for which hee was condemned in open Parliament at Westminster these ragged verses following comprehend which without any disparagement to their makers iudgement might verie well haue beene in Prose but for breuitie and change wee haue here inserted them Fiue heinous crimes against him soone were had First that he causde the King to yeeld the Scot To make a peace townes that were from him got And therewithall the Charter called Ragman That of the Scots hee had bribed priuy gaine That through his meanes Sr. Edward of Carnaruan In Barckley Castle most traiterously was slaine That with his Princes mother hee had lain And finally with polling at his pleasure Hadrobd the King and Commons of their treasure But the most barbarous murther of the kings father and speciallie the dishonourable peace and contract with the then professed enemies of England were principallie insisted vpon as hainous treason He was after sentence ignominiouslie drawne to Tyburne the common place of execution then called the Elms and there vpon the common Gallowes was as ignominiouslie executed hanging by the kings commandement two daies and two nights a publike gladsome spectacle There died with him Sir Simon de Bedford Knight Iohn Deuerel Esquier aswell for expiation of the late King Edwards death as in complement as it were of so great a mans fall whose liues doe seldome or neuer perish single 24 Now came Scotlands turne about to suffer againe most grieuous losses and afflictions an ordinarie effect of Childrens gouernment whether Children in age or in discretion for the Lord Edward Baliol hearing of King Roberts death and the tender age of King Dauid as son and heire of that Baliol to whom king Edward the first had adiudged the Scotish crown with such voluntaries as hee could raise though his Father the Lord Iohn had released his claime to king Robert and though King Edward in fauour of his sister Ioan Queen of Scotland would not openly at first support him embarkt himselfe in Yorkeshire and inuaded that Realme where vpon his landing he slew Alexander Setoun at Kingorn and about nine hundred others putting the rest to flight Not long after that no mischiefe might come alone neere to the water of Ern at a place called Dupline where the Earles of Mar and March with two puissant armies of Scots for the defence of their yong King Dauid lay encamped the said Lord Edward whose small numbers not exceeding three thousand English the Earles as securely and as fatally contemned as the English vnder Edward the second had contemned the Bruce and his Scots obtained of them a wonderfull victorie Boetius who neuer or rarely leaues any ouerthrow purely to the manhood of the English will needs haue this discomfiture effected by a Camisado the Baliol and his English with others passing the water of Erne by a Foord in the night when the enemy little suspected it 25 The slaughter euen by his report was miserable for there were slaine saith he the Earles of Marre and Carricke and three thousand of the Noble beside Commons Our Writers agree that this Foord was passed in the night but that the fight endured from Sunne-rising till three of the Clocke afternoone and that besides the Earles of Marre and Carricke three other Earles Menteth Athol and Murrey twelue Barons eight hundreth knights and men of Armes beside aboue thirteene thousand other lost there their liues Of the English there were onelie slaine thirty and three Esquiers so that not without cause this victory was attributed rather to power diuine then humane 26 Yet this was but the beginning of farther calamities to the Scotish Nation which was in it selfe diuided into factions the one for Bruce the other for Baliol. The Lord Edward making vse of his good fortune got himselfe to bee crowned King of Scotland at Scone But king Dauid Bruce with his Queen fled into France to Philip de Valoys who raigned there entertained them with much compassion and honor giuing them Castle Galliard for the place of their abode till fairer fortune shone Meane-time the Scots sustained new
issue RICHARD THE SECOND KING OF ENGLAND AND FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND THE FIFTIETH MONARCH OF ENGLAND HIS RAIGNE ACTS AND TROVBLES CHAPTER XIII RIchard of Burdeaux sonne to that Great Star of English Cheualrie Edward by-named the Blacke Prince and grand-child to the most renowned Edward the third both of them lately deceased was crowned in the eleuenth yeare of his age and vpon the sixteenth day of Iuly Seldome hath been seen so magnificent a Coronation as that of this young King but the thing which gaue a better lustre of hope at his beginning then the shine and maiesty of that publike Act was the wise course which in this his childhood was taken to wit the reconciliation of the Lord Iohn Duke of Lancaster and the Citizens of London with the restitution of Sir Peter de la Mare Knight Speaker in the late Parliament whom King Edward had committed to prison at the instigation of Dame Alice Peeres now banisht and confiscated not onely to former liberty but likewise to fauour and honor extraordinary 2 At this Coronation which as matters not vnworthie to bee kept aliue wee following the immethodicall order of the Record haue here for perpetuall memory thought good to abridge out of authentike Monuments Iohn the Kings eldest vncle vnder the stile of Iohn King of Castile and Le●… and Duke of Lancaster by humble petition to the King claimed to bee now Steward of England in right of his Earledome of Leicester and as he was Duke of Lancaster to beare the Kings chiefe sword called Curtana and as Earle of Lincolne to cutte and carue at the royall Table before the King His petitions being found iust were confirmed to him and to his Assignes the two Earles of Derby and Stafford the first to beare the Sword while the Duke should be busied about other offices as Steward and the other to cut and carue The Duke then in great estate held this the Kings high Court of Stewardship in the VVhite-hall of the Kings Pallace at Westminster Knight the Constable thereof which yet the Earle of Northumberland vpon the ninth day after recouered by force putting those who had surprized it to the sword 9 Neither was the spirit of the English after it began to requicken idle elsewhere for as Sir Robert Rous had diuers wayes vexed the French and taken Ol●…uer the brother of that renowned Bertrand de Glequin prisoner so Sir Iohn de Harleston Captaine of Cherbrough after him slew and took diuers French in a skirmish These the few foregoing drops of greater approaching showers For Sir Hugh Caluerlee and Sir Thomas Percy made admirals of the narrow Seas tooke many rich prizes and exploited sundry other things very praise worthily bringing home the acceptable newes of the dislike which the Britons had conceiued against the French Kings Gouernment for he commanded them to render vp to him all their strengths Castles and walled Townes and many of them who refused to obey hee put to death 10 These emploiments and fresh designes for other like found need of pecuniary supplies whereupon in a Parliament holden at London it was agreed that for supply of the Kings wants the Commons should be spared and the burthen be wholie vndergone by the able The rates then of that taxe were these Dukes Archbishops Earles and Bishops at ten marks each mitred Abbots at as much besides fortie pence for euery Monke vnder their subiection Briefly saith Thomas Walsingham there was no religious person man or woman Iustitiar Sheriffe Knight Esquire Parson Vicar or Chauntry Priest free from this tax●… rated according to the value of their yeerely receipt●… 11 We formerlie mentioned how Iohn Shakell the other companion of Robert Haulee so execrablie murdered in Gods-house was taken He now vpon condition that the King besides 500. markes in money should giue him lands to the yeerely value of one hundreth markes and should also found and sufficiently endow at the Kings costs a Chantrie with fiue Priests for their soules whom the kings Officers had wickedly murthered he rendred vp his Hostage the eldest but naturall sonne of the said Earle of Dean At the discouery and bringing-forth of whom all men were stroken with wonderfull loue and admiration for the yong Gentleman hauing giuen his faith not to disclose himselfe appeared in the shape of a base groome in which vnknowne to all the world but his Master hee had of his owne accord lurked An example of such a point of perfect honestie as cannot be forgotten without iniurie 12 The same yeere the Lord Iohn Mountford whom the French had driuen out being inuited home by his Barons returned into his Dutchy of Britaine accompanied with the valiant Knights Caluerley and Percy aforesaid where he his friends and followers were receiued with singular honor Soone after Sir Iohn of Arundell brother to the Earle of Arundell being sent into Britaine to aid the Duke was with many other valiant Knights and Esquires drowned It is imputed by our Author to a iust effect of Gods anger against the said Sir Iohn and his houshold for their manifold vices and outrages practised by him and them before they set out from England for which they had the bitter curses of the people and the Angell of destruction to execute those imprecations vpon the delinquents 13 But the action of ●…iding did more deepely import then that it should bee abandoned for the losse of that vnfortunate fellowship and the exceeding riches which were with them therefore the Lord Thomas of Woodstock Earle of Buckingham with Caluerlee Percy Knols Windleshores or Windsor verie valiant knights other competent forces was sent to assist the Duke of Britaine But because the French Galleys houered vpon the narrow Seas they landed at Calleys and from thence march through France spoiling Countries burning townes the French not daring to empeach them and killing people till they and their whole equipage came safe into Britaine 14 There were about these times ciuill diuisions in France for the Duke of Burgundie younger brother of King Charles lately dead being made Guardian of the person and dominions of his Nephew Charles then in minority had the Duke of Aniou being an elder brother to the Duke of Burgundie a mortall enemie Their bloudy quarrels fell out luckily for the English aides in the Dutchie of Britaine out of which as Duke Iohn had beene driuen for adhering to his father in law the late king Edward so the English did their best to vphold him in it as there was cause 15 The French in these extremes are releeued by their ancient diuersion for the Scots entring about that time with fire and sword into Cumberland and Westmerland and the forrest of Inglewood draue away much Cattle slew the Inhabitants rifled the booths and houses of Perith in the Faire time killing and taking many and driuing away the rest The Earle of Northumberland preparing a bloudy
this so publike and solemne Oath and doth not tremble in euerie part Let vs hasten to their view least God perhaps may quietly seeme to haue beene mockt to his face by a vaine ambitious man 60 To diuert these home-breeding rancors and practises by employing the wits and bodies of men in other more honest things the Earle of Candal sonne to Captal de Budie who had vpon necessitie submitted his Seignouries to Charles the French King but reserued his person out of that obedience and the Lord L'Esparre come secretly from Burdeaux and pray an Armie for that Burdeaux and the Gascoigns would returne to the English if they might be supported An Armie is decreed for their reduction Iohn Lord Talbot the first Earle of Shrewsburie of his name as Generall in that enterprize lands in Gascoigne where he doth sundry exploits and the fame of his former cheualrie flying before with terrour makes many places the rather to yeeld Burdeaux her selfe secretly opens a gate vnto him which the French Garrison perceiuing fled out at a Postern but many being ouertaken were slaine by the Lord L'Esparre and the English New supplies and victuals arriue whereof the Earle of Shrewsburies yonger sonne Vicount Lile by his wife was a principall conducter Burdeaux thus throughly mand and fortified the Earle is aduertised that the French lay at siege before Castillion a place of importance vpon the riuer of Dardonne Thither the Earle marcheth and with too great a confidence charging the enemie vpon vnequall termes was there slaine together with his sonne the Vicount Lile and others Burdeaux receiued such as fled The English fortunes and hopes which began to quicken made this vnhappie Catastrophe in * Iulie to the infinite losse of our nation and griefe of the Gascoigns who generally misliked the French and inclined to the English hauing so honorablie and for so long a time gouerned those dominions This was the end of that great Earle after he had for the space of twentie and foure yeeres serued his Prince and Countrey in the French warres with highest commendation a most noble and most valiant man by whose vertue the English name did chiefly become terrible in France Burdeaux it felfe and all other places after this were by siege brought againe vnder the French King who prosecuted those affaires in person From that time forward the English neuer obtained there any hold or further footing the felicity of this attempt breaking all combinations of the Gascoignes This Dutchie of Aquitaine contained foure Archbishopriks foure and twenty Bishopriks fifteen Earledomes two hundred and two Barons and aboue a thousand Captainships and Bailywickes The losse of so goodly an inheritance which had continued English for almost three hundred yeeres the world may easily coniecture how iustly it was greeued and lamented for In this falne estate of the English the Queene vpon the thirteenth day of October was deliuered of her first sonne who was named Edward prouing the child of sorrow and infelicity 61 It were to be wished we might now rather number the following euils of England then describe them for what can we learne out of such vnnaturall and sauage destructions but matter of horrour and detestation but sith they must be handled the law and necessitie of our taske exacting it the sooner to be quit of so vnpleasing obiects it will bee best abruptly to thrust into the narration The Duke of Yorke wickedlie carelesse of an Oath so religiouslie and publikely taken to make his way to the Crowne more easie hath now procured his chiofe and most fearefull enemie the Duke of Sommerset to be sodeinely arrested of high treason doubtfull whether by any authority but his owne in the Queenes great Chamber and sent to the Tower of London vpon pretence that he had capitall matter to charge him with Yorkes principall friends vpon confidence of whom he dared so high things were Richard Neuil Earle of Salisburie second sonne of Ralfe Neuil Earle of Westmorland whose daughter the Duke of Yorke had married This Richard was Earle of Salisbury in right of Alice his wife sole heire to Thomas Montacute the famous Earle slaine at the siege of Orleance The Dukes other maine hope was Richard Neuil sonne of the former Richard Neuill who in right of his wife the Lady Anne sole sister and heire of the whole blood to Henry Beauchamp Duke of Warwick was by this King Henry the sixth created Earle of Warwick in a most vnhappie houre both for the King kingdome being inuicto animo c a man of an vndaunted mind but flitting faith 63 The King in the meane space while the Duke of Sommerset was thus endangered lay sicke and Yorke as Regent swayed and ouerswayed in Court but when the king perceiuing malice and practise to be the chiefe bases of Yorkes accusations had recouered his health and resumed the gouernment Sommerset is set at liberty and made Captaine of Calleis Yorke and his adherents repaire to open force They leuy their armie about the Marches of Wales with which they repaire toward London the maine obiect of Pretendents The King hearing of his enemies approach is accompanied with Humfrey Duke of Buckingham Edmund Duke of Sommerset Humfrey Earle of Stafford Henry Percie Earle of Northumberland Iames Butler Earle of Wiltshire and Ormond Beaufort Earle of Dorcet Iasper Theder Earle of Pembroke the Kings halfe-brother Thomas Courtney Earle of Deuonshire the Lords Clifford Sudley Berners Rosse and others and with them enters into Saint Albans in warlike manner hauing certaine thousands of common souldiers Thither also the Duke of Yorke and his adherents came This was toward the end of May The Dukes request to the King was that he would deliuer such persons to be deseruedly punished as he would name The King to let them know who he was returnes this confident answere That hee and the rest were Traitors and that rather then they should haue any Lord from him who was with him at that time hee himselfe would for their sake in the quarrell vpon that day liue and die 64 The Yorkists hereupon assaile the Kings people within the Towne and Warwicke breaking in through a Garden a sharpe battell is begun The losse fell lamentably vpon King Henries side for besides the Duke of Sommerset there were slaine the Earles of Northumberland and Stafford the L. Clifford with sundry worthy Knights and Esquiers of which forty and eight were buried in Saint Albans there being slaine aboue fiue thousand of K. Henries party and of the Yorkists about sixe hundreth The King himselfe was shot into the neck with an arrow other of his chief friends were likewise sore wounded and taken The Earle of Wiltshire and Thomas Thorpe Lord chiefe Baron of the Exchequer with others saued themselues by flight The Duke of Yorke the Earles of Salisbury and Warwicke with the King whome they in shew did vse most reuerently and as if they had
a Parliament begun at Westminster the fifteenth of Ianuary he was attainted of high treason but whether guiltie or guiltles to men saith Grafton that haue made large inquisition yea and of such as were of no small authority in those daies the certaintie thereof was hid and could not truly be disclosed but by coniectures which as often deceiue the imaginations of fantasticall folke as declare truth to them in their conclusions 105 I am not ignorant that some haue alleaged the cause of this Noble mans death to arise from a foolish prophecie whereof saith Comines the English-men are neuer vnfurnished this as the Cab●…sts who vsed to make an art of their letters gaue forth forsooth that a G. should raigne after an E. which must needes be George Duke of Clarence though Gloucester more craftie lay in winde for the game This indeed troubled the King not a little but the Queene and her blood much more and therefore of both King and Queene Duke George was mistrusted and greatly maligned in all that he did Who now a widower for Warwicks daughter was dead sent vnto his sister Margaret the Dutchesse of Burgundie to worke a marriage for him with her husbands daughter the Lady Marie Against which the Queene most earnestly interposed her selfe and sollicited the Ladie in the behalfe of Lord Anthonie Earle Riuers her brother whereby great discontent was ministred to the Duke and new iealousies daily bred in the Kings breast 106 Iohn Serres the French Historian interlacing the life of King Lewis with the Acts of K. Edward and his brethren saith confidently that the English King so much affected the league and alliance with France as that he caused his brother Clarence to be put in prison because he intended to haue past the Seas to succour the Dowager of Burgundie Ladie Margaret his sister vpon whose Territories King Lewis encroached after the death of Duke Charles her husband slaine at the battell of Man●…y 107 But howsoeuer Clarence had offended certaine it is that he was found guilty by the foresaid Parliament and the eleuenth of March following after he had offered his Masse-penny in the Tower of London was drowned in a But of Malmesey whose body was buried at Tewkesburie in Glocestershire by the bodie of his Dutchesse Ladie Isabell Countesse of Warwicke who being with Child died of poison a little before And although the King had consented to his death yet no sooner was it done but that he wished it againe vndone and was so greeued at the remembrance as when anie made suite for the life of a condemned he would openly say Oh ●…fortunate brother for whose life no 〈◊〉 would make ●…ite This good Duke for so was he called left issue behind him Edward Earle of Warwicke and Margaret afterwards Countesse of Salisbury both of them infants and followers of their fathers fortunes he a continuall Prisoner at foure and twentie yeeres of age vnder Henry the seauenth was beheaded vpon the Tower-hill and shee at sixtie two lost hers within the Tower and time of King Henrie the eight 108 But how dainty soeuer King Edward was of the breach of amitie betwixt him and the French King in regard whereof he suffered Mary the yong Dutchesse of Burgundy the daughter of his owne sisters husband to bee molested by 〈◊〉 of the French and all in fauour of the contract commenced betweene the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lady 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 daughter yet did 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ou●… 〈◊〉 For Ambassadors ●…ploied 〈◊〉 accomplishing ●…of they of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without 〈◊〉 o●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…he new were sent without 〈◊〉 while indeed Lewis 〈◊〉 working for his sonne another way First to match him with Mary Dutches of Burgundy but that refused with Margaret of Flaunders daughter to Duke Maximilian sonne to Fredericke the Emperor and to hold the world from suspition in the meane while Ladie Elizabeth the Infanta of England was in the French Court vsually called Madame the Daulphin and all things in France so soundly carried as Edward suspected no leake in the Caske for now growne fat and vnable for paines he both gloried in his nine famous victories at home atchieued and seemed sufficientlie satisfied that his yeerely tribute from France was so truly paied 109 At the same time Iames the third of that name King of Scotland sent his Ambassadors vnto Edward to obtaine the Lady Cicelie the Kings second daughter to be ioined in marriage with his sonne Iames the young Prince which was well listened vnto by Edward and his Counsell and least the motion should goe backe a great summe of money lent to the Scottish King with this condition that at a certain time appointed it should be at K. Edwards choise whether his daughter should match with that Prince or else to haue the said summe againe repaid Against which alliance and league as Lesly reporteth Lewis of France much repined and to annihilate the same sent Dr. Ireland a certaine knight and another religious man to moue King Iames to make warre against England 110 These no Peace-makers for Christ but firebrands of Belial blew the smothered sparkes of dissention into a flame of bloody warre which fell the more heauy vpon Scotland for that K. Iames much wedded vnto his owne will and altogether ruled by men of meane worth whom himselfe had aduanced from nothing had not only neglected by their instigations the loue of his Nobles but also banished the Realme of Scotland Alexander Duke of Albany his second brother and had caused the veines of Iohn Earle of Marre his other brother to be opened whereby he bled to death these and other discontents alienated his Subiects hearts from him which laid the land more open vnto the English Inuaders and yet to draw them more deadly against him relying vpon his ownevalor and the assistance of France he sent word vnto Edward that he should not aid his owne sister of Burgundy against K. Lewis being the Scots Allie as also with threats of warre commanded him to deliuer to his Ambassadors the Duke of Albanie then residing in the English Court and lastlie to make good and repay dammages done vpon the Scottish Borders 111 King Edward not a little inraged at these double dealings euen in the winter season mustered his men prep●…ed his artillery and rigged his ships that nothing should be vnready at the next Spring which no sooner was come but that he ordained for his Lieutenant his brother Richard Duke of Gloucester who with Henrie Earle of Northumberland Thomas Lord Stanley the Lord Louell G●…stock and others the Duke of Albany marching vnto Gloucesters banner with twenty thousand strong repaired into the North and first ●…sieged the strong Towne Berwick then en●…ing the chiefe City Edenborough vrged K. Iames to performe his couenants concerning the marriage betwixt Prince Iames his sonne with Lady Cicely before agreed vpon
driuen by tempest in the moneth of Ianuary into England as hee meant to haue passed through the sleeue or English Ocean into Spaine there to take possession of that Kingdome and other the appertinances 69 The chiefe Ship of the Nauie Roiall wherein the King was and two other all the rest being scattered by the fury of the weather into seueral places and other Ports of England thrust into ●…arbour at Falmouth Himselfe weary and sicke with the violent tossings of the Sea whereunto hee had neuer as it seemes beene vse●… would needes come on shore and refresh his spirits though the principall men about him disswaded that course as foreseeing it would procure a longer stay then the nature of their occasions would perhaps well beare And so indeed it fel out for being now in another Princes though his friends dominions where he had no power ouer himself nor others the rumor of arriuall stirring the men in authority thereabout Sir Thomas Trenchard Knight with the suddē forces of the Coūtrey not knowing what the matter might bee came thither and vnderstanding the royall quality of the person inuited him with all humble humanity to his house and foorthwith dispatched postes to Court not long after Sir Iohn Car●… Knight with a great troupe of armed men repaired also pursuing the like humble entreaties which the King fearing constraint because they were but subiects and durst not let him passe without their Lord and Masters leaue necessarilie yeelded vnto Vpon notice of this mightie Princes casuall arriual King Henry presently commanded the Earle of Arundel to entertaine him till himselfe could come who very magnificently did so with three hundred Horses by Torch-light and in the meane while King Henry himselfe prepares Philip perceiuing that whatsoeuer speed his affaires required yet now there was no remedy but to stay thought not good to expect his approach but to preuent it and came vpon the spurre to Windsore that he might be gone againe the sooner after whom Queene Ioan his wife came leasureably The rest of this entertainement because it hath matter of weight and is well set downe by Polidor Vergil it shall suffice vs to follow his footsteps At Windsore the two Kings after long and seuerall discourses beganne to conferre about renewing their league Henry required that Edmund Earle of Suffolke might be deliuered vp into his power which Philip denied to be a thing that he could doe as holding it most vnreasonable to be the author of his death whom he had taken into Protection but when at the last he found that no excuse nor reason could satisfie for that Henrie voluntarily offered to saue the Earles life he promised to doe therein what he desired and presently tooke order for his sending ouer According whereunto King Henry to draw out the time till he had the wished prey conueied King Philip to London to shew him the head City of his kingdome out of which after a little stay hee reconducted him The Earle in the meane time who conceiued horror at the first newes of King Philips landing in England as fatall to him and resolued that no hope was longer to be reposed in the faith of forraine Princes came ouer not vnwillingly presuming that after pardon of life hee might also in time regaine his liberty or if that hope failed yet should he at lestwise obtaine to die and bee buried in his Countrey But King Philip and his Queene hauing feasted with her sister the Princesse of Walles departed England The Earle was brought through Flanders to Calleis vpon the sixeteenth of March and landed at Douer vpon the foure and twentieth of the same conueighed thither by Sir Henrie Wiat and Sir Iohn Wiltshire with threescore men in armour of the Garrison of Calleis and at Douer Sir Iohn Louel and others receiuing him guarded him safe to the Tower of London King Philipp not long after his landing in Spaine deceased being not thirtie yeeres old That tempest which draue him into England was holden by the people as prodigious for it blew down the golden Eagle from the famous Spire of Pauls Steeple being of Copper richly ouerguilt of fourty pounds weight in length foure foote and in breadth three which also in the fall thereof brake and battered the signe of the Blacke Eagle in Pauls Church-yard in the place where now the Schoole-house stands This accident euen then made some coniecture that the Emperour Maximilian whose Imperiall Ensigne the Eagle is should suffer some losse accordingly saith Polydore as indeed he did by the death of King Philippe his sonne Which if any supersticiously delight in Calculations of that blind nature we may well parallell with that lightning which stroke the letter C. out of Caesar in the inscription of Caesar Augustus his statue wherupon it was gathered that Augustus should liue but one hundreth daies after and then bee called a God Aesar the remaining syllables so signifying in the old Hetruscan tongue which accordingly hapned 70 Thus was the Earle of Suffolke brought backe and the King anchored his quiet at the safe custody of his person within the Tower The other wordly point wherein he chiefely bestowed his ages care was to gather money though by courses seeming very grieuous and full of bitternesse the too griping greedinesse and too-profuse lauishnesse of money in Princes being both alike offensiue to a well setled estate Some excuse his doings herein amongst whom Polydor is chiefe as not proceeding from any deprauation or vncorrected affection of his nature but from an opinion and forecast of generall profite because a Princes humor of gathering tendeth though with distast of particular men to the good publike whereas his profusenes though with some particular mens profite endeth in the empouerishment of the whole And Henry himselfe protested saith Polydor hee did it not for loue of money but with a purpose to bridle the fierce minds of a nation bred vp among factions though they saith the same author who felt the smart and were wounded by his Instruments cried out they were not so much the darts of seuerity which did hit them as of anarice Yet Polydors Apologie may be current for it is not to bee doubted but that such vse the King might propound himselfe and yet withall we can hardly find any commendable root thereof the wayes being so importune and harsh by which hee raised money Let vs heare in this point the obseruatiue Knight Of nature saith hee Henry coueted to accumulate treasure which the people into whome there is infused for the preseruation of Monarchies a naturall desire to discharge their Princes though it bee with the vniust charge of their Counsellors and Ministers did impute vnto Cardinall Morton and Sir Rcinald Bray who as it afterward appeared as Counsellors of ancient authority with him did so sound his humor as neuerthelesse they tempered it Where it is truly said it afterward appeared for till
M           Manchester C The Grelleyes Ancestors to Thomas West Lord La Ware tempore H. 5.           Penwortham M 0114 16 09 oo o Whalley M The Ancestors of the Lacyes Earles of Lincolne Anno D●… 1296. White Monkes 0551 04 06 oo o LEICESTER-SHIRE Places Dedication Founder and Time Order Ualue         l. 〈◊〉 d. ●…b q. Leicester Saint Mary M Robert de Bossu Earle of Leicester Blacke Canons or Friers Preachers 1062 00 04 ob q Iuxta Leicester Castle Saint Mary C Henry Duke of Lancaster 0023 12 11 o o Bredon A Cell to S Oswald M Fundator Domini Regis Proge●…tor Alij Al●… Earle of Cornwall Blacke Canons 0025 08 01 o o Bradley P 0020 15 07 oo o Burton Mowbrayes and by a common contribution ouer all England Leprosi 0265 10 02 o q Canwell M. The Ancestors of the Lord Lizle 0025 10 03 oo o Croxton M The Lord Barkleyes Ancestors Pramonstratenses 0458 19 11 ob q Castledonington S. Iohn Baptist. H 0003 13 04 o o Cumbe Saint Mary M White Mo●…kes           Cale P Blacke Canons           Dalby-Rothley Heyther Praceptoria 0231 07 10 oo o Garradon M Fundator Antecessor 〈◊〉 Comitissa Oxford 0186 15 02 ob o Gracedew nee re Donington N Roisia wife of Bertram de Verdon Nunnes ●…01 08 02 ob o Gerewerdon Saint Mary M White Monkes           Hinkley P Alien           Kirkby Bellers P Roger Bel●…rs and A●…yse his wife 0178 07 10 oo q Launda M Richard Basset Di●…c Lincoln Blacke Canons 0510 16 05 ob q Langley Fundator Antecessor Uxoris Frane Bigot Mil. 〈◊〉 Vxoris S●…rum Nunnes 0034 06 02 oo o Litterworth Saint Iohnns H 0●…26 09 5 o o Noui-Operis C 0595 7 04 o o Olneston or Oselneston M Robert Grimbald 0173 18 09 oo q Staue N Blacke Nunnes           Vlneserost P Roger Quiney Earle of Wint●…n 0101 03 10 ob o Werewerdon M Blacke Canons           Saint Ursula H 0008 00 00 oo o LINCOLNE SHIRE Places Dedication Founder and Time Order Value         l. s. d. ob q Lincoln Epātus Saint Marie M Secular Canons           Lincolne F M. Odo de Kilkenny a Scotish mam A. D. 1269. Carmelites or White Friers           Lincolne Saint August F Friers Eremites           Lincolne F Iohn Pickering of Stampwike Friers Minors           Iuxta Lincolne S. Katherine P Robert de Caneto Bishop of Lincolne Gilbertines 0270 01 03 oo o Aluingham Saint Mary P Anthony de Bec Bishop of Durham and Patriarch of Ierusalem White Canons and Nuns Gilbertines 0141 15 00 oo o Balwatus Aquilae 0124 02 00 oo o Bello-vero siue Beauuoir Saint Marie Ralph de Todeney Blacke Monkes of S. Albans 0129 17 06 o o Berling●…s M Radulphus de Haya 0307 16 06 oo o Bolyngton Saint Marie M White Canons and Nuns Gilbertines 0187 07 09 oo o Boston M S. Botolph in the Saxons time           Boston F Sir Orby A. D. 1300. Carmelites or white Friers           Boston luxta Mare Saint Mary P T. Morley Knight Iohn Bacon Esquier Iohn Hagon Thomas Hoke de Shynham and Iohn Hyrd of Boston           Boston Beatae Mariae C 0024 00 00 oo o Boston Corporis Christi C 0032 00 00 oo o Boston Saint Peter C 0010 13 04 o   Bradney Saint Oswald M Confirmed by William de Gannt sonne and heire of Gilbert de Gannt Anno Dom. 1115. 429 07 00 oo o Brunne Blacke Canons           Bryggerd P 0101 11 00 ob o Cateley or Catlin Saint Marie M Iohn Spaule Esquier White Canons Nuns Gilbertines 0038 13 08 o o Croyland or Crowland M Aethelbald King of the Mercians Anno Dom. 716. It was new built at the benenolence of the whole land giuen vpon pardon for their sinnes Blacke Monkes 1217 05 11 oo o Elsham P William Dyne Blacke Canons 0083 17 10 oo o Eppworth in the Isle of Axholme A Conuentual House Thomas Mowbray Earle of Nottingham Marshall of England Carthusians 0290 14 07 ob q Fosse N Nunnes 0008 05 04 oo o Frisetun Mauritius de Creon Baron Blacke Monkes           Glamfordbridge in Parochia de Wrawby H William Tirwhit           Goykewell N Nunnes 0019 18 06 oo o Greenfeild Saint Mary N Dudon de Gro●…esby Blacke Nunnes 0079 15 01 o o Grimmysby Saint Leonard N Robert Grosted Bishoppe of Lincolne and Thomas Hesterton Knight Blacke Nunnes 0012 03 07 o   Grimmesby S. Augustine S. Toloss Fundator Domini Regis Progenit●…r Blacke Canons           Hagneby M Herbert of Orbe●… or Orreby 0098 08 04 oo o Hauerholm Saint Mary M Alexander Bishoppe of Lincolne White Canons Nuns Gilbertines 0088 05 05 oo o Heuings N 0058 13 04 oo o Hunston or Humberston Our Lady S. Peter M Fundator Domini Regis Progenitor 0042 11 03 oo o Irford M 014 13 04 ob o Kirksted Saint Marie M Hugh Britay White Monkes 0338 13 11 ob q Kyme M Philip de Valisby 0138 04 09 oo o Letherstoke Iohn Gifford Clerke           Leyborne Our Lady M Robert Fitz Gilbert 0057 13 05 o q Louthparke Saint M●…ry M White Monkes 0169 05 06 ob o Markeby P 0163 17 06 ob o Newebo M 0115 11 08 o o Newhouse S. Martiall Peter de Ga●…lia White Canons the first house of the Order Prmonstratenses in England           Newnersby or Nun-orm●…by P White Canons Nuns Gilbertines 0098 00 00 oo o Newsom M 0114 01 04 ob o Newsted neere Stansford M Gilbertines 0042 01 03 oo   Newsted neere Axhol●…e P 0055 11 08 oo o Noton or N●…cton-Parke S. Mary Magd. M Robert D'Arci●… Blacke Canons 0052 19 02 ob o Nun-Cotton Saint Mary P White Canons and Nunnes 0046 17 07 oo o Oxeneyes Blacke Canons           Raueston Saint Augustin C           Reuesby or Reuyswy M William Romare Nunnes 0349 04 10 oo o Sempringham Saint Gilbert M Saint Gilbert beginner of the said Order White Canons Nuns Gilbertines 0359 12 07 oo o Sixle Saint Marie Whit Canons Nuns           Spalding Saint Mary and S. Nicholas M Iuo Talbois comes Andegauensis and William de Romara and Lucy Countesse of Chester and Lincolne Audegauenses Monachi 0878 18 03 oo o Iuxta Stansford Saint Michael M Blacke Monkes 0072 18 10 ob o Stanford Saint Mary Saint Nicholas Blacke Monkes 0065 19 09 o o Stanford F King Edward the third Carmelites or White Friers           Stanford H William Browne Citizen there      
to build their house larger Blacke Friers           Blyburgh P King Henry the first Richard Beluois or Beanuols Bishop of London Blacke Canons 0048 08 09 oo   Brisete P Saint Leonard Blacke Canons           Bungey N Roger Glanuil and Gundreda his Wife Alij the Ancestors of Tho. Brotherton Earle of Norffolke Nunnes 0062 02 0●… oo o Burshyerd or Brusyed M 0056 02 01 o   Butley P Saint Marie Ralphde Gla●…ile Blacke Canons 0318 17 02 ob q Campsey M Beatae Maria Virginis 0182 09 05 oo o Clara or Stoke P Saint Iohn Bapt. Henry Earle of Essex and Isabel his wife Blacke Monkes or Austine Friers           Cnobersburg or Burgh-Castell Fursey a Scotish man Also Sigebertus King of the East Angles           Denston C 0022 08 09 oo q Dodnash M Saint Mary The Ancestors of the Duke of Norffolke 0042 18 08 ob o Dunwich Sedes Episcopalis Foelix the Burgundian that reduced the East-Angles againe vnto the christian faith Anno Domini 630.           S. Edmundsbury M King Canute Blacke Monkes 2336 16 00 oo o Saint Edwards place si●… Edwardsstow M Peter Bishoppe of Winchester           Eye M Saint Peter Robert Malet Lord of Eye Blacke Monkes 0184 09 07 ob q Flyxton M 0023 04 01 ob q Heringflete M Saint Olanes Roger the sonne of Osbert Canons Regular 0049 11 07 oo o Hoxon M           Leiston N Saint Mary 1 Ralph Glanuile 2 Sir Robert Ufford White Canons Pramonstratenses 0181 17 01 ob o Letheringham P 0026 18 05 oo o Liteburch P Saint Mary Blacke Canons           Mettingham C Beatae Maria Uirginis Sir Iohn de Norwich Lord of Mettingham 0202 07 05 ob o Rafford M Our Lady Robert Bishop or Earle of Lincolne           Ratisford H Saint Iohn 0053 10 00 oo o Redlingfeild M Saint Mary Manasses de Guies Blacke Nunnes 0081 02 05 ob o Rumbuthe P Saint Michael Blacke Monkes           Snapes P Saint Marie William Martill Alij Domini Regis Progenitor Blacke Monkes Roffienses 0099 01 00 11 ob Stocke C 0324 04 01 ob o Suthbery P Saint Barthol●… Simon Sudbiry Archbishoppe of Canterbury and Iohn Chartsey Blacke Monks West●… or Friers Preachers 0122 18 03 o o Sybbeton M Saint Mary William Cheiney or de Caneto Blacke Monkes Cistertians 0250 15 07 ob o Walton P S. Foelicis Blacke Monkes Rochester           Wangsford P Saint Marie Ansered of France Blacke Monkes Cluniacenses 0030 09 05 oo o Wingefeild C 0069 14 05 oo o Woodbridge M Saint Mary 0050 03 05 ob o Wykes Domini Regis Progenitor 0092 12 03 ob o M Saint Bennet           Ykesworth or Ixworth P Gilbert Blund 0280 09 05 oo o SVRREY Places Dedication Founder and Time Order Value         l. s. d. ob q Barmondsey M S. Sauiours Alwyn Childe Citizen of London Ann. D. 1081. Monkes introduced A. D. 1087. Blacke Monks Cluniacenses 0548 02 05 ob q Chartsey M Saint Peter Frithwald a Petty Regent of Surry Anno Dom. 666. 0744 13 06 ob q Guilford F S. Crucis Preaching Friers           Guilford F Backe Friers           Horsham P S. Fidis Mary Saint Paul founded it Alij Robert Fitz-walter and his sonnes           Lingfeild C Reginald Cobham Knight William Cro●…an Iohn Arderne and Iohn Bayhall 0075 00 00 oo o Marton P Saint Mary King Henry the first An. D. 1117. Blacke Canons 1039 05 03 oo o Newarke vel de Nouo Loco P Saint Mary and S. Thom. Martyr 0258 11 11 ob o Reygate P Sanctae Crucis William Warren first Earle of Surrey and after Iohn Mowbray Augustines 0078 16 08 oo o Shene P King Henry the fifth Carthusian Monks 0962 11 06 oo o Southwarke M Sanctae Mariae Uirginis de Ouerey First by Swethen a noble Dame after by a maiden called Mary and after conuerted to a Colledge of Priests by William Pont-le-Arch Canons first introduced 1016. Blacke Canons 0656 10 00 ob o Southwarke H Saint Thomas Richard Prior of Bermondsey Anno Dom. 1213. 0266 17 11 oo o Tanrigge M 0078 16 10 ob q Wauerley N S. Mary William Gifford Bishop of Winchester White Monkes 0174 08 03 ob o SVSSEX Places Dedication Founder and Time Order Value         l s. d. ob q. Chichester Epātus Saint Trinity Radulphus Episcopus primo suo ipsius sumptu deinde munificentia Henrici pri●… postea Seffridus secundus eius nominis Episcopus tempore Regis Richardi primi Secular Canons           Chicheste M Saint Peter Grey Friers           Chichester F Blacke Friers           Iuxta Chichester H Saint Iacob S. Mary Mag. Leprosi 0004 03 09 oo o Infra Chichester H Saint Mary Pauperes 0011 11 06 ob o Arundel H Saint Trinity Thomas Earle of Arundel Beatrix his wife Elemosinarij 0042 03 08 oo o Arundel P Saint Nicholas Richard Earle of Arundel Blacke Monkes 0168 00 07 ob o Acceseale Saint Peter Blacke Monks           Battell M Saint Martin King William the Conqueror A. D. 1066. Blacke Monkes 0987 00 11 ob q Bidlington H S. Mary Magd. 0001 00 00 oo o Bosenham or Boseham M Di●…l a Scotish Monke           Boxgraue Saint Mary Iohn Saint Iohn Alij Robert de la Haye Blacke Monkes Benedictines 0145 10 02 ob o Durfford M S. Iohn Baptist. White Canons Pramonstratenses 0108 13 09 oo o Eastborne P 0047 03 00 oo o Hastings P Saint Trinity Founded by Iohn Pelham Knight when their lands were deuoured by inundation of the Sea Blacke Canons 0057 19 00 o o Lewis P Saint Pancras William de Warren first Earle of Surrey Black Monks Cluniacenses 1091 09 06 oo q Lullmenster N S. Mary Magd. Blacke Nunnes           Michelham P S. Mary Magd. Blacke Canons Aug. 0191 19 03 oo o Occeham P S. Laurence White Canons           Remsted N S. Mary Magd. Blacke Nunnes           Roberts Briggs M Saint Mary Aluredus de Sancto Martino tempore Hen ricisecundi White Monkes Cistertians 0232 09 08 oo o Rupperar N S. Mary Magd. Blacke Nunnes 0039 13 07 oo o Sel●…ey M sedes Episcopal King Cedwall           Shulbred P 0079 15 06 oo o Southmalling C 0045 12 05 ob q Stenings S. Mary Magd. Secular Canons           Shoreham F King Edward the second and the Lord Mowbray Carmelites or white Friers           Tortyng P S. Mary Magd. Blacke Canons 0101 04 01 oo o Winchelsea F King Edw. 2. Friers Preachers        
Vincen●… Antonin Edgar 〈◊〉 with a damsell Malms de regibus Duke Ordgarus Ethelwold Edgar a suter for Ethelwold Edgars plot to discouer Ethelwold Ethelwolds speech to Elfrida 2 Sam. 13. 〈◊〉 Virgil Aened Amnon and Thamar Wolfhilds Ethelfled Elfridaalone Elfrid●… disloialtie Ethelwold slaine The fifteenth saith Higden Ethelfleds parents Elfridaes second wife Wil. Malmsbury Edward the eldest sonne Edmund the second sonne Ethelred the third sonne Edgith Acts and Monuments in vita Edgar Polychr lib. 6. c. 9. Iohn Capgraue in vita san●… Edi●… Monarch 31 Edward An. Do. 975. Simon Dunel Roger H●…en Edward the son of Ethelfleda An. Do. 975 A bla●…ng starre Wil. Mal●… Fox Wil. Mal●… Simon D●… Ra●… Higd. Iohn Capgra●… 〈◊〉 in vita Edgari Dunstans counsell The Priests suspition of the Monkes An. Do. 977. A heauy mischance Polychr lib. 6. c. 12 Priests without cure but not without care Wil. 〈◊〉 Mal●…s de gestis Ponti ●…1 〈◊〉 Wil. Mal●… Polyd●… Rand Chest. 〈◊〉 P●… Alfredus 〈◊〉 Flares Histor. Rich. Cirecest Speculum hist. Queene Elfrid●… perfidie Mat Westminster Simon D●…l Fabian Polydor. Wil. Mal●… Almesbury and Worwel Monasteries founding Habacuc 〈◊〉 11. Ethelred Monarch 32. An. Do. 979. Wil. Malmsbury Spe●…l Histor. 〈◊〉 life malitiously reported 〈◊〉 Bishop of R●…ester An. Do. 980. ●…lyer lib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 13 An. Do. 981. Si●… D●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An. Do. 982. T●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polychron lib. 6. cap. ●…3 Wil. Malmsbury Mat. Westminster Simon Dun. An. Do. 989. An. Do. 991. Malmsb. de gest Pontif. l. 1. Polycr lib. 6. 〈◊〉 13. An. Do. 992. Wil. Malmsbury Elfrick Earle of Mercia An. Do. 993. Simon Dun. Polydor. Mal. West A Fleete of Danes on the Thames besiege London Matt West Simon Dun. An. Do. 997. An. Do. 998. An. Do. 999. An. D. 1000. Roger Houed Annal. pars pr●… Higden 〈◊〉 The Clergies coustousnesse The effects of it Hector Boetius Ethelreds bad policie Polycr li. 6. ca. 15. The massacre of the Danes Henry Hunting Matth. West Register of S. Frideswydes Malmsb. 〈◊〉 Charter Hen. Hunting Simon Dun. King Swaines inuasion An. D. 1003. Earle Edrick for his auarice surnamed 〈◊〉 An. D. 1004. Simon Dun. Norwich raced An. D. 1005. Henry Hunt An. D. 1006. The Danes in the I le of Wight An. D. 1007. Edrick an vntrusty Councellor Simon Dun. His accusations His subtilty His treachery An. D. 1008. An. Reg. 30. Henry Hunting Simon Dun. Matth. West Brithrick chasing Wilmot crossed by tempest Money paid the Danes An. D. 1009. Three Danish Captaines Money paied the Danes Three thousand Pound ●…aith Simon Dun. Edrick againe perfidious An. D. 1010. Henry Hunt The Dene●… forrage the Countries before them An. D. 1011. Henry Hunt Vincentius Addit ad Asseri●… Wil. Lambert in Peram Polychr li. 6. c. 16. An. D. 1012. Money paied the Danes An. D. 1013. Simon Dun. Canute London besieged Simon Dunel Mat. Westminster Henry Hunt Poly●… Wil. Malms Mat. Westminster A Battaile betweene Danes English Ethelreds Oration Paines taking for safetie Henry Hunting Simon Dun. An. D. 1014. An. Reg. 35. Swaine and Turkils domineering Houeden Annal. pars prior Fabian Chron. par 6. cap. 200. Polychron lib. 6. cap. 10. An. D. 1015 Canutus winneth loue of the English He is chased by 〈◊〉 Matth. West Wil. Mal●… Turkil inciteth Ca●… against England Canutus and his Nauie Money collected for the Danes Wil. Malmsbury Henry Hunt Mat. Westminster Simon Dunel Matth. West Simon Dun. An. D. 1016. Londons fidelley Canutus deuastatiōs Ethelred dieth The time of his raigning His Tombe in S. Pauls in London Fox M●…yrologe in King Egelreds life ex Hist. Ior●…lens Polycr li. 6. ca. 13. Elgiua the first wife by some called Elflede Emme the second wife Ethelstane the eldest sonne Egbert the second sonne Edmund the third sonne Edred the fourth sonne Edwy the fifth sonne Edgar the sixt sonne The eldest daughter Edgith the second daughter Elfgine the third daughter Gode the fourth daughter Edward the seuenth onne Elfred the eight sonne Edmund Monarch 33 An. D. 1016. Polycr lib. 6. 〈◊〉 ●…7 Henry Hunting Simon Dun. Proffer of single combat An. D. 1016. In the Rogation 〈◊〉 Polydor. Simon Dun. Matt. West Wil. Malmsbury Edrick●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Canut marcheth to London Dislodged by Edmund Edrik●… wicked counsell Henry Hunt Edmunds preparations Polyd●… Fabian Ran. Higd. Mat. Westminster Henry Hunt Wil. Malms A battaile between Edmund Canute Wil. Malmsb. Simon Dun. Ran. Higden Edmund put to retire London yeeldeth to Canute Mat. Westminster Polydor. The aduice of a Captaine for single combat Matth. West Edmund and Canute at single fight Mat. Westminster 〈◊〉 ●…o 〈◊〉 The Kingdome parted betweene them Edmund murthered A Spit saith Higden 〈◊〉 punisheth the trai●… Wil. Malmsbury Old Man●…st Fabian Ran. Higden Simon D●…el Marian. Scotus Ed●…ds raigne Polychr The feature of Edm●…nd Algi●… Edward the outlaw His wife His daughters Edmund Mat. Westminster Ier. 48. 〈◊〉 Esay 51. 17. 〈◊〉 2. And. 〈◊〉 Dudo S. Quint. Ptol. Geograp where some read 〈◊〉 Tacit. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verstegan Ant. cap. 6. Iosephus Antiq. lib. 18. cap. 6. Ionas Iacob Cambd. Brit. Dudo Cambd. Britan. The Religion of the Danes Verstegan Dudo Cambd. Brit. An. Do. 787. Cambden in Dan●… Iohn Stow. Lambert in Per●… mentioneth their Landing at Ty●…mouth in the North the neernesse of the name it seemes deceiued him An. Do. 800. See the seuenth Booke chap. 31. 〈◊〉 l. 5. c. 1 Fabian cap. 158. 2. Sam. 13. 1●… * That is Leather-brichs Flores historiarum Murther will out Rob. Fabian cap. 169. Polycr li. 5. ca. 3●… Abbas Floriacensis Alcuinus Wil. Malmsb. Roger Houed Ran. Higden Rob. Fabian Bloud reuenged with bloud Henry Hunt 〈◊〉 Angl. 〈◊〉 15. Rand. Hig Iohn Stow. Flores bister Some say forty eight thousand Languet saith fifty An. D. 1017. Polychr li. 6. c. 18. Feare makes flatterers Canutus eare and policies to 〈◊〉 his Crowne Booke 7. cap. 44. sect 20. Wil. Malms Henry Hunt 〈◊〉 Fabian Canutus marrieth Queene Emma Emma a very prudent Lady Matth. West A Parliament at Oxford Wil. Lambert Canutus his godlie Lawes 〈◊〉 An. D. 1019. Wil. Malmsbury Mat. Westminster Earle Goodwins good seruice to Canutus Henry Hunting 〈◊〉 Fabian Alb. Krantius An. D. 1028. Wil. malmsbury Mat. Westminster Rom. 10. 2. Wil. Malmsb. Canutus complaineth of the Pope●… extortions in England His godly resolution touching his own actions Touching his Counsellours Touching his Iudges and Iustitiaries Touching his Treasure Touching God●… Church Apocal. 3. 7. His Munificence His magnificent buildings c. Iosselin de Br●…klond S. Augustines arme at a high rate Canutus his flatterers Henry Hunt Mat. 〈◊〉 16. 17. Exod. 14. 21. His h●…ility Peter Pictan Iohn Castor Simon Dun. Polydor hist. Angl. lib 〈◊〉 Lanquet Saxo Grammaticus Alber. Crantius Aimundus Bremensis Holinsh. inuasion of Ireland Albert. Cram●… Polychr Ran. Higden lib. 〈◊〉 cap. 23. Wil. Malmsb. Albert. Crant Wil. Malmsb. de 〈◊〉 Augs cap. ●…2 Ran. Higden in Polycr lib. 6. ca. 〈◊〉 Henry Hunt lib. 6. Marian Scot.
Rob. Fabian An. D. 1036. Mat. Westminster Wil. Malms Peter de Iohan. Henry Hunt Floriacensis Encom Emma 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rand Higden 〈◊〉 Polychr 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cap. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Henry Hunting Malmsb. Hen Hunting Stow. Monarch 36 Hardi-Canut An. D. 1040. Simon D●…nel Mat. West●… Iohn Stow. in his Suruey of London 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wil. 〈◊〉 d●… 〈◊〉 Aug. R●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polyer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wil. Mal●…bury Goodwins diuelish policy Henry Hunt Wil. Malmsbury Mat. Westminster Simon Dun. Goodwins gifts Aimundus Bremensis M. S. cap. 108. Idem cap. 109. Idem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Si●… D●… Matth. West Lambert 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 book●… 7. cap. 44. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An. D. 1042. Henry Hunting Polydor. Rand. Higden Legend Aur. in vit S. Edward Wil. Malmsbury Henry Hunt lib. 〈◊〉 Polycr li. 6. ca. 18. Philip 〈◊〉 Rand. Higden Marian. Scotus Alfred Beuerel Iohn Rouse Rand. Higden in Polychr lib. 6. cap. 24. Cambd. Britan. de Danis Albert. Crantius Aimund●… Bremensis Matth West King Edward de signeth the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eng●…sh-man An. D. 1053. Mat. Westmin●…er Chron. of Wales Wil. Malmsbury Rand. Hig. Malmsb. Rand. Higden Matt. West Si●…on Dun. Booke 1. chap. 27. Henry Hun●… Simon Dunel Wil. Malmsbury Ran. Higden Mat. Westminster Simon Dun. Ran. Higden 1. Cor. 7. 5. Holinsh. Rand. Higden in Polycr lib. 6. ca. 2●… Geruasius of Canturbury Wil. Malm●…b Polycr li. 〈◊〉 ca. ●…4 Scal. Chron. Wil. Malms Ordalium a triall of offenders by fire Rand. Higd. Wil. Malmsb. vita Edwardi Marian. Scot. 1. Cor. 7. 5. Egitha some call her Chr●… W●…l Ingulphus in hist. W●…l Melm●…b Ezek. 1●… 4. Edwardi vitae Edwardi legend eiusdem vit●… M. S. Saint Peter himselfe came down from heauen to the first dedication of that place if the foresaid M. S. er not T. Cliff●…rd Simon D●…n King Edward the founder of S. Mary Otery Colledge S●…w 124. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. W●…st Polyd●…r Vit. S. Edward An. D. 1055 Matth. West Simon Dun. An. D. 1058 Simon Dun. An. D. 1063. Mat. West Chro. Wal. Wil. Malms Mat. Westminst●…r Matthew Paris in Will Hen. Hunting Rand. Higd. Gemeticensis Wil. Malmsbury Mat. Westminst Marian. Scotus Mat. Westminster M. Thom●… Mille●… in Harold Wil. Malmsb. Rand. Higden in Polychr lib. 6. cap. 25. Alur Ri●…l Ran. Higden Polyer lib. 6. ca. 29 Matth. W●…st Si●… D●… Hol●…sh Camb. Brit. Alfred Benerl●…y Spec●… Histor. Rich. C●…st Flor●… Histor. Ed●… Maria●… Polyer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ca. 2●… Subiects loue the Soueraignes strength Rand. Higden in Polyc. lib. 6. cap. 29 Gemeticensi●… Bishop of 〈◊〉 Roger Ho●…d Si●… Mo●…t of Dur●…am ●…lter Co●… Mat. Westminster Ran. Higden Wil. Malmsb. Mat. Westm. Simon Dunel Wil. Malmsb. Henry Hunting Mat. Westminster Simon Dun. Mat. Westm. Cambd. Brit. Henry H●… Fox Acts and Monumenta Rand. Higden Rand. Higden in Polycbr li. 6. c. 29. 〈◊〉 in vita Caesar. Wil. Malmsb. Mat. Westminst Rand. Higden Caesar in Cōment Tho. Ni●…s Wil. Malmsb. Henry Hunting Chron. de 〈◊〉 Wil. Ge●… Mat. Westminster Giral Cambr. Io●…n le Tai●… in his history of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bremensis cap. 169. Maria●… I●… Rest. Math. Par●… Host. 14. 6. In the 〈◊〉 of the learned Knight Sir 〈◊〉 Sigebertus Wil. Gemitticen G●…lt Couen 〈◊〉 Woodbridge Aimund Brem chap. 1●…9 Allured Ri●…lle 〈◊〉 M Ferres Ca●…b in Sussex * Gr●… * A 〈◊〉 Iohn Capgraue Saxo Gram●…aticus lib. 11. 2. Cor. 4. 6. Gen. 49. ●…7 C●…bd Brit. 〈◊〉 de Nor●… 〈◊〉 Ro●… Albert Krant Polyer lib. 6. 〈◊〉 1. Rollo his dream Alb. Crantius The dreame expounded by an English Christi an Captiue Rollo sendeth to sound King Alstan Rollo commeth to Alstans Court Will. Gemetic lib. 2. cap. 6. Alstans bounty to Rollo Alstane faith to his friend Rollo the first Duke of Normandy Angiers Records M. S. Rand. Higden lib. 6. cap. 1. William Longespee second Duke of Normandy Polycr Richard I. the third Duke of Normandy * Emma Wal●…g Ypodig Neust. * Or 〈◊〉 Wals. ibi * Or 〈◊〉 ibi Richard 〈◊〉 the fourth Duke of Normandy Ran. Higden callth him Richard the third Richard 3. the fifth Duke of Normandy Robert 〈◊〉 the sixt Duke of Normandy Ran. Higden in Polycr lib. 6. c. 〈◊〉 Wil. 〈◊〉 of Roan Wil. Malmsb. li. 3. ca. 1. Rand. Higden 〈◊〉 Polyc. lib. 〈◊〉 cap. 〈◊〉 Wil. Malmsb. lib. 3. Monarch 39. William the Conquerour An. D. 1066 Simon D●… Lib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Pope powerfull to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wil. 〈◊〉 Trees cut downe to hinder William passage Iohn Stow. King Williams Coronation William fortifieth against inuasions Polydor. Math. Paris Iohn Stow. Archbishop Stigands perswasion of the Kentish Thom. Sprot The Kentish policie against King William Stigands Oration Wil. Thorne Simon Dun. Odo Bishop of Bayeux made Earle and gouernour of Kent Henry Hunt Poly●…r Ypodigma Neu●… Mari●…us The Welshmen tooke Armes against William Matth. West lib. 2. An. D. 1067 The lands of the English giuen to the Normans Warres euen in peace Mat. Paris The English became strangers Many Nobles flie out of England Mat. Paris Mat. Westm. King Malcolme 〈◊〉 Lady Margaret King William sendeth for Edgar out of Scotland An honourable saying The loue of alliance Fire and candle forbid at certain houres vnto the English M●… Westminster Goowin and Edmund out of freland inuade England Ca●…d D●… Excester yeelded to King W●…liam An. D. 1068 The Normans slaine in the north Polydor. An. D. 1069 M●…b Paris Mat. Westm. lib. 2. The Danes with English fugitiues inuade England Lib. ●…bor M. 5. Yorke set on fire by her owne souldiers The Danes victors ouer the English Willims policy to weaken the English Wil. Malmsb. The North miserably wasted An. D. 1070 Polydor. The English hated and banished Math. Paris Roger Wind. Wil. Malmsb. Ex Archi●… Colleg. Vniuersit Oxen. Tun. Apol. l. 2. Wil. Thorne Marianus Gerua Doraber M. Mils in Will Conq. Mard lawes imposed vpon the English King William his Seale An. D. 1072 Wil. Malms The English rise against William 1. King 12. 6. King William sworn vnto King Edwards lawes Lib. S. Alban M. S. in vita Fretheric A good speech ill taken King Williams angry answere Lib. S. Alban Simon Dun. Math. Paris King William worketh vpon aduantage Ran. Higden Henry Hunt Math. Paris The I le of Ely fortified against William Ingulphus King William assaulteth the I le of Ely Roger Wind. The Scots inuade Cumberland The Abbot would hold his howsoeuer the rest fared Iohn Stow. A small peece of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made more 〈◊〉 pa●… The English enter into ●…●…land 〈◊〉 with small successe Polydor. Matth. Par●… Henry Hunt Gemeticensis A stone Cross●… erected for a Meere marke to both the Kingdomes Hector Boetius * That is Kings Crosse. Cambden Brit. Hector ●…oet lib. 12. Cap. 10. An. D. 1074 Wil. Malms Math. Paris The bounty of King William towards Edgar Etheling I●…n Stow. A conspiracy intended and reuealed Mat. Westm. Henry Hunt Simon D●… Iohn Pike An. D. 1075 William returning vseth seuerity against the English Wil. Malmsb. Henry Hunt A kinde-hearted Wife An. D. 1076 Mat. Paris Matth.
King Richard courteth Lady Elizabeth Leuit. 18. 14. Thomas Earle of Darby much suspected of the King George Lord Strange deliuered in pledge to King 〈◊〉 Ha●…es be●…ged by the Garrison of Callis The Earle of Oxford freeth his old friends from Ha●…es King Richards conceit Henry solici●…h the French man by man Marquesse Dorset seeketh to escape frō Henry King Richard dischargeth his Nauie Earle Henry setteth forward his iourney A sudden feare Henry of Richmund ariueth at Milford hauen Henry sent word of ariuage to his Mother and others Sir Rice ap Thomas ioineth with Henry Sir Gilbert Talbot ioineth with Earle Henry Henry commeth to Lichfield King Richard at Notingham Iohn Duke of Norfolke Henry Earle of Northumberland Th●… Earle of Surrey sent for to the King Brakenbury 〈◊〉 Hungerford King Richard put incholler King Richard sets forward to meet his enemy King Richard cōmeth to Leicester Sir Thomas and Sir Walter Hungerford turne to Earle Henry Henry Earle of Richmund loseth his way Henries excuse King Richard ter rified with dreadfull dreames Richard set down his battel vpon 〈◊〉 Lord Stanleis answere vnto the Kings message The Lord Str●… commanded to be beheaded The order of R. Richards battell King Richard●… Oration vnto his Souldiers King Richard confefleth his fault The diuers opinious of King Richards host Lord Stanley sent for to Earle Henrie The Earle marshaleth his bat●…alions The Earle of Oxford Captaine of the Archers Henry Earle of Richmonds oration The readi●… of Earle Henries souldiers The purpose of Earle Henry The fight begun The strength courage of King Richard The two Chieftaines cope together Sir William Stanley commeth in with new supplies The Kings side giue ouer fight The valiant courage of King Richard King Richard slaine Men slaine in the battell C●…tesby h●…headed The number slain at 〈◊〉 field Harding saith 〈◊〉 Henry proclamed king in the ●…eld Dead Richards body starke naked was trussed vp to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 King Richard laid naked to be seene of all His badge defaced and torne downe K Richards monument K. Richards co●…●…n ade a drinking trough A flying prophecy of King Richard With Richards death dieth the quarrell of Yorke and Lancaster Phil. C●… l. 1. 6. 7. The description of K. Richard Ioh. Hardings 〈◊〉 Iohn Stow. Iohn Rows Iob. Ross. Warwic Camb. Brit. Monarch 57 Henry VII A. D. 1485. 22. August The date of his raig●… commencement G●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this Pr●… whole 〈◊〉 Con●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 K. H●… 〈◊〉 * Fabian saith Richard fearing little prouided ●…ttle defence Pl●… I●… The description of K. Henries minde and qualities * Sir Fr. Bacon f●…g MS. * Ioh. Da of Hert. MS. * Act. and 〈◊〉 p. 909. * Io. Stow. i●… Hen. 7. * Ber. Andr. MS. Fabian Polyd. Verg. c. * Mo●… at ●…st * Bernard 〈◊〉 Henries first actions after his victorie * Bern. Andr. * Fabian * Bern. Andr. MS. and vpon the 28. of Aug. saith Fabian * Fab. * Stow. His entrance into London * Latenter * See Camb. Mills c. * 30. October Mr. Stow. His Coronation His Marriage with the Lady Elizabeth debated * Holinsh. Edward Earle of Warwicke imprisoned * Bern. Andr. MS. Lady Elizabeth described * Bern. Andr. MS. * Sir Tho. Moore * Bern. Andr. MS. Het Christian S●… chaste meditation about marriage * How then did Andreas know i●… either hee doth poetize heere or else had it from her after-relati●… * Iohn D●… of Hereford MS. Holinshed * P. Nouemb. * Hollinsh * The Kings Guard first instituted King Richard and others ●…ed * Holinshed The Crowne entailed vpon King Henry and his heires * 18. Ianuary 1486. The King marieth the Lady Elizabeth * Bern. Andr. MS. Prince Arthur borne * Ber. Andr. M. S. The attempts of the Kings malignats The Lord Louell and the Staffords rebell Hardings continuer saith they had taken Glocester Polyd. Verg. in Henry 7. Holinsh. * Polyd. Verg. Yeere-booke of Henry 7. Anno 2. Traitors taken from Sanctuary and punished He is called Lord Stafford by Hardings conti●…er Corn. Tacit. Histor. Suet. in Ner. cap. 57. Counter feit Princes erected to defeate the true * Act 5. Mantell executed in Queene Elizabeths daies for assuming the person of King Edward 6. * Io. D●… M. 〈◊〉 * Polyd. Verg. i●… Henry 7. * Io. D●… M. S. The first Idole erected against King Henry * Polyd. Verg. i●… Henry 7. A false Edward in the forge * Polyd. Verg. l. 26. Bern. Andr. M. S. Polyd. Verg. H. 7. * Polyd. Ver. ibid. Holinsh. Iohn Stow. Lambert Sim●…ls Historie rectified and vindicated Bern. Andr. MS. * Iob. Stow was often heard to maintaine this opinion in seeming earnest * Ber. Andr. M. S. Lambert conuaied into Ireland and receiued * Polyd. Verg. Stow cals him Earle of Kildare and Lord Deputy of Ireland Lambert proclamed King of England Conclusions in the Councell of England vpon the fame of this conspiracy Queene Elizabeth depriued of her estate and condemned to a Monastery * Sir Fr. Bacon frog MS. A probable cause why King Henry dealt so rigorously with his ●…ther in law Iohn de la Pole Earle of Lincolne and others flie to the Dutchesse of Burgundy * Polyd. Verg. * Cambd. in Notting * 〈◊〉 Los●…e * Ber. Andr. * Phil. de Com. * Iohn Da. MS. * Polyd. Vergil saith he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lambert crowned King of England 〈◊〉 Dublin 〈◊〉 Stow. Bern. Andr. King Henry prouides for battell * Camb. in Oxf. Lambert lands in Lancashire Nottingham the Rendeuow of K. Henries ar●…y * Hist. Ang. l. 26. Great repaire of the noble and people to his 〈◊〉 Polyd. Uerg. * Polydor eals him Regulus m●…ning a Baron 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polydor erroneously Cals him * These three seeme Barons as them whom he meanes by principes viri * Bern. Andr. King Henries Oration before the battell at Stoke Bernard Andr. The battell of Stoke or Stoke field * Polyd. Verg. l. 26. Bern. Andr. * Io. Str●… The King pr●…●… * Polyd. V●… * Bern. Andr. The Earle of Lincolne and all the chiefe leaders of that side slaine in the field * Polyd. Verg. * Ed●… Compian Hist. of Ireland * Cr. Salust is 〈◊〉 Catil * Polyd. Verg. But Bernard Andr. saith that very fe●… were flaine * Fr●… MS. * Vapul●… Bern. Andr. MS. * Io. Da. MS. * Thomas 〈◊〉 in H. 4 〈◊〉 * Polyd. Verg. 〈◊〉 who also followes Polydor. * Polyd. Verg. Io. Da. of Her MS. * Polyd. Verg. Lamberts fortunes * Io. Da. MS. * 16. 〈◊〉 A. D. 1487. A. Reg. 〈◊〉 * Bern. And. Ms. * Polyd. Verg. * A. Reg. 〈◊〉 Ambassadors into Scatland * L●…st 〈◊〉 Iocob 3. Bishop F●…xe first a great furtherer and now a chiefe preseruer of King Henries Regality * Bern. Andr. MS. The Dulchesse of Burgundies immortall malice * Polydor. Uirg * Bern. Andr. * 3. ●…mber Anno D. 1●…87 * Add. to Fab. Elizabeth Crowned Queene of England A difficult case whether King Henry
their entrie was barred runne furiously to armes Cade endeauors to open his way by force but in despight of all his power the Citizens made good defended London-bridge against him though with the losse of many valiant and honest men for the conflict endured all night till nine in the morning Among such as were slaine on the Kings side were Iohn Sutton Alderman Mathew Gowgh himselfe and Robert Heysand Citizen This Gowgh an Esquire of Wales was a man of excellent vertue manhood and zeale to his Country and of great renown in the warre of France where he had serued with speciall commendations faithfully for the space of aboue twenty yeeres His deserts at this time deserued a Statue in the City for whose safety hee spent his last bloud To giue a quicke end to these miseries impunity is proclaimed for all offenders and sent to them in the Kings name by the Archbishoppe of Canterbury Lord Chancellour vnder the great Seale of England the rebels are scattred with this assurance of their safeties and euery man retires in peace from following so pestilent an Impostor A thousand Markes when Cade afterward attempted new troubles are promised to him who kils or takes this counterfeit Mortimer Alexander Eden a Gentleman of Kent had the happinesse to discouer and kill him at Hothfield in that County his wretched carkase was brought to London where his false head was set sentinell vpon London-bridge and his quarters were aduanced for terrour in seuerall parts of Kent There died also by the stroke of iustice twenty and sixe more whereof eight were executed at Canterbury and the rest elsewhere in Kent and Sussex The multitude it selfe came naked in their shirts to the King on Blacke-heath humbly praying mercy which they obtained 54 The Kentish rebellion thus pacified farre greater and farre more dangerous troubles ensued as it fareth in humane bodies which relapsing into sickenesses are shaken so much the more terribly These troubles had their fountaine and mediate Originall from Richard Duke of Yorke no degenerous sonne of that Richard whom King Henry the fifth had created Earle of Cambridge and enriched with much wealth honoring him aboue others in regard of his blood and parentage but no bountie nor benefits could change a treacherous disposition for as you haue heard before he conspired to murther his benefactor King Henry the fifth as the Duke of Yorke his true progenie labored to depose this King Henrie his aduancer The humors of the popular body were in the last commotion not obscurely discouered The Common weale had perhaps some few enormities through the abuse of Magistrates and men in place but yet such as the maladie was infinitely lesse pernicious then the remedy Vpon this intelligence the Duke comes sodeinely out of Ireland and to begin his vsurped censureship and dictature apprehends Iohn Sutton Lord Dudley Reignald Abbot of Saint Peters at Glastenbury and another whom he imprisoneth within his Castle of Ludlow Intollerable beginnings of more intollerable sequele Edmund Duke of Sommerset was the man who after Suffolks death most supported the Kings side by his vigilancie caresdangers and good Counsels endeuouring by all meanes to cleare the Realme from factions and to preserue the King and state in quiet 55 Yorke seeing this doth find that Suffolke perished in vaine if Sommerset held like grace against whose person he had a particular pretence of quarrell for that the City of Caen in Normandy which was the Duke of Yorkes charge was rendred vp to the French by him when the English affaires grew desperate in those parts Sir Dauid Hall Knight being at that time Captaine there for his Lord and Master the Duke of Yorke and not allowing it although the renowned Talbot himselfe was present at the render and became an hostage for performance of the Capitulations Yorke hereupon consults with his speciall friends Richard Earle of Salisbury and Richard his son who was afterward that most seditious great fighting Earle of Warwicke Thomas Courtney Earle of Deuonshire Edmund Brooke Lord Cobham and others how Yorke might get the Crowne of England and for that cause how to ruine or fret out the Duke of Sommerset who standing they were to looke for strong opposition In the end they conclude to take armes but yet to smother the mention of the Duke of Yorkes title giuing out to the world for the reason of their doings that they meant all honour and obedience to King Henry and only to remoue certaine bad men from about his person who afflicted the people and made a pray of the Common-wealth which to gaine the more credit and to blind the good King the subtile Duke declares by Proclamation wherein thus speaketh that Ambitious Hypocrite God knoweth from whom no thing is hid I am haue beene and euer will be his true liege man c. And to the very proofe it is so I offer my selfe to sweare that on the blessed Sacrament and receiue it the which I hope shall be my saluation at the day of doome c. In that it was the euill hap of the Duke of Sommerset that Normandy was lost during his Regencie his enemies had the more commoditie to incommodate him with the people who forbare not at his returne to offer to him sundry dishonours and iniuries till vpon paine of death they were restrained for breach of which Proclamation one had his head cut off in West Cheap London 56 The King notwithstanding all his Cosens arts and dissimulations seeing the hooke through the baite and the snake through the grasse by the aduise of his trusty friends chiefly of Edmund Duke of Sommerset thinkes not fit to relie vpon his enemies good nature but hauing a strong power and store of honorable men to conduct them he marcheth toward Wales against the Duke The King did herein wisely but not so much as the cause required Yorke hauing notice of the Kings approach turnes aside and with all speed marcheth toward London That City the vaine hope of all Rebellions would not harken Thereupon he slides with his people into Kent the nest of his hopes and at Brent-heath neere Dertford a towne about twelue miles from London encampeth meaning to fight The King is not slow but leauing his march toward Wales pitcheth vp his roiall pauilion vpon Black-Heath with a purpose to teach his cosen of Yorke more duty Behold the fortune of England God puts an excellent opportunity into the Kings hands of tearing vp the danger of his house by the rootes for the Duke was farre inferiour in numbers Such therefore as secretly fauoured him fearing his ouerthrow were willing to aduise a reconcilement Messengers goe betweene the hosts The Duke in his wonted manner pretends loialtie and particular iniuries as that the Kings seruants Sir Iohn I albot at Holt Castell Sir Thomas Stanley in Cheshire and others in other places were set to harken vpon him That by two
of the Norrices Bulkeley Grust Bould and other Gentlemen he was forbidden to land at Bewmaris or to haue any refreshment affirming that he the Duke of Yorke was against the Kings intent and as a Traitour The King stoupes so much as to answere the letter letting him to knowe That the suspition vniuersally conceiued of his behauiours moued those effects neuer thelesse in regard of the humble obedience which was now protested he for the easing of the Dukes heart doth declare repute and admit him as a true and faithfull subiect and as his welbeloued Cosen The Duke then aduanceth his practise one step further and writes to the King that Iustice might be done vpon all persons of what degree soeuer which were guilty or noised to be guiltie of treason aiming at the Duke of Sommerset whom he doubted not to ouerwhelme with sleights and calumnics as hee and his had done the Duke of Suffolke 57 The King is contented such weake or treacherous counsels he relied vpon that Sommerset for his satisfaction should be commanded Prisoner to his owne house and Yorke hauing first dissolued his armie should come in person and put himselfe into the Kings hand When he was come he exhibites a great complaint against the pride and auarice of the Duke of Sommerset and cunningly accusing none but him he seekes the good-will of all others A cunning drift as any considering that hereby he deriued vpon his enemie all the enuie of the people and left him single to withstand the effects Sommerset a Prince of great spirit and wit not thinking it reasonable as well in regard of his owne honour as the Commonwealthes interest to endure such indignity presents himselfe to the King against his accuser and resoluing not to be tender-mouthed in the so apparent perill of the King and Realme whose quiet was vndermined answeres Yorke face to face and in plaine termes accuseth him of highest treason as hauing conspired to depose the King and take vpon himselfe the Soueraignty vehemently vrging That the Duke of Yorke might be committed and arraigned to the intent that by his deserued death and the disenablement of his sonnes Ciuill warre might be extinguished praying finally that God would not suffer the enemie of the Kingdome to escape the hand of iustice 58 This had in likelihood beene done but that the publike faith seemed to stand engaged for the Dukes indemnitie he hauing come in vpon the Kings word and also for that the hearts of men were not well assured to the King which by executing Yorke would perhaps haue beene more vnsetled because not looking into the depth of the Kings perill it would haue beene thought that he had beene destroied to gratifie Sommerset and not to secure the Realme There was hope likewise to recouer Aquitain for that Burdeaux had offered to returne Lastly the Dukes sonne and heire Edward Earle of March afterward King was reported to be ready with a great force of Welshmen to succour his father Vpon these and other reasons the Duke is no longer restrained as vpon Sommersets most weighty accusations he had beene and to assure the gentle and indulgent King of his allegiance he makes his submission and solemnely TAKES HIS OATH to bee true faithfull and obedient subiect This was done vpon the tenth of March in the Church of S. Paul in London the King himselfe and most of the chiefe nobility being present as the Dukes of Buckingham Norfolke Sommerset nine Earles the Vicounts Beaumont and Wels manie great Barons Of the Clergy the Cardinall of Yorke the Archbishop of Canterburie the Bishops of Winchester Elie and London 59 Let vs view the forme and words of this Caution vpon which King Henrie measuring other mens hearts by his owne aduentured to repose his life and Kingdome which are these I Richard Duke of Yorke confesse and beknown that I am and ought to be humble subiect and liegeman to you my Soueraigne Lord King Henry the sixt and owe therefore to beare you saith and truth as to my Soueraigne liege Lord and shall doe all daies to my liues end and shall not at any time will or assent that any thing be attempted or done against your most noble person but wheresoeuer I shal haue knowledge of any such thing imagined or purposed I shall with all speed and diligence possible to me make that your highnesse shall haue knowledge thereof and ouer that doe all that shall possible be to me to the withstanding and let thereof to the vttermost of my life I shall not any thing take vpon me against your roiall estate or obeisance that is due thereto nor suffer anie other man to doe as farre forth as shal be in my power to let it And also shall come at your commandement whensoeuer I shall be called by the same in humble and obeisant wise but if I be letted by any sicknesse or impotencie of my person or by such other cause as shall be thought by you my Soueraigne Lord reasonable I shall neuer hereafter take vpon me to gather any rowt or to make any assemblie of your people without your commandement or licence or in my lawfull defence in interpretation or declaration of the which my lawfull defence I shall report me at all times to your highnesse and if the case require to my Peers nor any thing attempt against any of your Subiects of what estate degree or condition that they be But whensoeuer I find my selfe wronged and agrieued I shall sue humbly for remedie to your highnesse and proceed after the course of your lawes and none otherwise sauing in mine owne lawfull defence in manner abouesaid and otherwise haue to your highnesse as an humble and true subiect ought to haue him to his Soueraigne Lord. All these things abouesaid I promise you truly to obs●…rue and keep by the holy Euangelists conteined in the booke that I lay my hand here vpon and by the holie Crosse I here touch and by the blessed Sacrament of our Lords body that I shall now with his mercie receiue And ouer I agree me and will that if at any time hereafter as by the grace of our Lord God I neuer shall any thing attempt by way of feate or otherwise against your roiall Maiestie and obeisance that I owe thereto or any thing take vpon me otherwise then is aboue expressed I from that time forth be vnabled held and taken as an vntrue and openly forsworne man and vnable to all manner of worship estate or degree he it such as I now occupie or any other that might in any wise grow to me hereafter And this I haue here promised and sworne proceedeth of mine owne desire and free volunt and by no constraining nor Coaction In witnes of all which things aboue written I Richard Duke of Yorke aboue write subscribe with mine owne hand and seale This Oath he also tooke at Westminster and Couentree at sundrie times Who now can consider the effects of