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A91303 The treachery and disloyalty of papists to their soveraignes, in doctrine and practise. Together with an exact parallel of the jurisdiction, power, and priviledges claimed and exercised by our popish Parliaments, prelates, Lords and Commons in former times, with those now claimed and practised by the present Parliament, Lords and Commons, which are here manifested to be farre more loyall, dutifull, moderate; more consistent with, lesse invasive on, and destructive to the Kings pretended soveraigne power and prerogative, then those of popish parliaments, and subjects. Wherein likewise the traiterous, antimonarchicall doctrines, practises and attempts of papists upon their soveraignes prerogatives, crownes, persons, with the dangerous consequences, effects, and designes, of their present illegall arming, and accesse to the Kings Army, and person by meanes of evill counsellours, are briefely discovered; ... It is ordered by the Committee for Printing that this treatise be forthwith printed and published, by Michael Sparke, senior. Januar. 13. 1642. John White.; Soveraigne power of parliaments and kingdomes. Part 1 Prynne, William, 1600-1669.; England and Wales. Parliament. 1643 (1643) Wing P4108; Thomason E248_1; ESTC R203188 101,087 43

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we also shew unto you that one old statute and laudable custome is approve 〈…〉 which no man can deny That the King our Soveraigne Lord may once in the yeare lawfully summon his high Cou 〈…〉 of Parliament and call the Lords and Commons thereunto as to that which is the highest Court of this Real 〈…〉 In which Court all equity and justice must shine even as the Sunne when it is at the highest whereof poore and ri 〈…〉 may take refreshing where also must be reformed all the oppressious wrongs exactions and enormities within t 〈…〉 Realme and there to consult with the wise men for the maintenance of the Kings estate And if 〈…〉 might bee knowne that any persons within the Realme or without intended the contrary there also m 〈…〉 bee devised how such evill weeds might be destroyed There also must be studied and foreseene that if a 〈…〉 charge doe come upon the King and his Realme how it may be well and honorably supported and sustained Hither 〈…〉 to it is thought by the whole Realme that your Subjects have lovingly demeaned themselves to you in ayding 〈…〉 with substance to the best of their powers and they desire to have knowledge how and by whom these goods be spe 〈…〉 One thing resteth yet to declare in their behalfe unto you * Not● The King should be present in Parliament once in 40. dayes how that by an old Ordinance they have an Act if t 〈…〉 King absent himselfe 40. dayes not being sicke but of his owne minde not heeding the charges of his people 〈…〉 their great paines will not resort to his Parliament they then may lawfully returne home to their houses And 〈…〉 sir you have beene absent a longer time and yet refuse to come amongst us which greatly is our discom 〈…〉 for t And our Parliaments present case To this the King answered by these words Well we doe con 〈…〉 der that the people and Commons goe to rise against us wherefore we thinke we can doe no better then to aske a 〈…〉 of our Cosin the French King and rather submit us to him then to our owne Subjects The Lords answered S 〈…〉 that Counsell is not best but a way rather to bring you into danger For it is well knowne that the French King 〈…〉 your ancient enemy and your greatest adversary and if he set foot once within your Realme he will rather dispo 〈…〉 you invade you and depose you from your estate royall then put any hand to helpe you c. And as th 〈…〉 King cannot be poore that hath rich people so cannot he be rich that hath poore Commons And all these inconven 〈…〉 〈…〉 es be comne by the evill Counsell which are about you And if you put not your helping hand to the redresse ●he premises this Realme of England shall be brought to nought and utter ruine which clearely should be laid 〈…〉 our default and in your evill Counsell Seeing that in the time of your Father this Realme throughout all the 〈…〉 rld was highly esteemed and nothing ordered after these wayes Wherefore we be sent unto you to exhort you to 〈…〉 uester all such persons as might be the occasion of ruine either of you or else of your Realme By these good 〈…〉 swasions the King was appeased and promised within three dayes after to come to the Parliament and to 〈…〉 descend to their Petitions And according to his appointment he came Where soone after John Fordham 〈…〉 hop os Durham was discharged of the Treasurourship and the Bishop of Hereford ser in his place de la 〈…〉 le was put from his Chancellourship for divers crimes frauds briberies and treasons by him com 〈…〉 tted to the prejudice of the King and his Realme committed to the Tower and fined 20. thousand 〈…〉 rkes to the King in releeving of the Commons Divers other Judges Knights and Delinquents of all 〈…〉 t s were condemned and executed others banished and their states confiscated others put out of office 〈…〉 this Parliament as you may reade in our Histories and in the k 10. R. c l 11. R. 2. c. l 29 3 4 5 6. 2 R. 2. c. 2. 3. 12. Statutes at large in which Statutes the 〈…〉 schievous effects of these evill Counsellors to King Kingdome and people are at full related whereby 〈…〉 e King and all his Realme were very nigh to have beene wholly undone and destroyed the Lords ●ay●g of Forces against them resolved to be lawfull and these traytorous Delinquents made uncapable of 〈…〉 y pardon l See the Records of this Parliament published by order of both Houses Aug. 27. 1642. and their raysing of Armes against the Parliament and kingdome though with the Kings 〈…〉 ne consent and his command declared and enacted to bee high Treason These proceedings ratified 〈…〉 d assented to in Parliament by the King much against his will wrought an intolerable secret 〈…〉 tred and desire of revenge in his heart against the Lords which for want of power he concealed neare 〈…〉 yeares space but in the 20. yeare of his raigne being somewhat elevated in his spirit with a rumour 〈…〉 at he should be elected Emperour he suddenly apprehended the Duke of Glocester the Earles of Warwicke 〈…〉 d Arundell the chiefe sticklers in the premises committing them to severall prisons And to blinde the 〈…〉 ples eyes lest they should riseup in Armes to rescue these Lords the King sent out a feigned Proclamation which he caused to be proclaymed throughout the Realme that these Lords were apprehended onely for 〈…〉 w Treasons committed against him for which he would he prosecute them in the next Parliament and not for the 〈…〉 trepasses After which he proclaimes those Lords Traytors Which done he summoned a m Grafion p. 329. c. Mr. saint-Saint-Johns Speech 1640. p. 33. 1. H 4. No. 21. 21. 48. Parliament at Westminster to this Parliament the King commanded to 〈…〉 me all such as he had best confidence in omitting the rest and the Knights were not elected by the Commons 〈…〉 custome required they should be but by the Kings pleasure yea he put out divers persons elected and put in other 〈…〉 their places to serve his turne which was one Article objected against him when he was deposed Against 〈…〉 e time of this Parliament the King received a guard of 4000. Archers all Cheshire men as if he would 〈…〉 ve gone in battle against enemies so that divers came armed to the Parliament out of feare These 〈…〉 eshiere men were rude and beastly people and so proud of the Kings favour n As the Cavaliers do now that they accounted the 〈…〉 ng to be their fellow and set the Lords at nought though few of them were gentlemen but taken from the 〈…〉 ough and other trades After these ●usticall people had a while courted they grew so bold that they 〈…〉 uld not let neither within the Court nor without to beat and slay the Kings
good Subjects as the Cavaliers doe 〈…〉 w and to take from them their victuals at their pleasure paying little or nothing for them and to ravish their 〈…〉 ves and daughters And if any man persumed to complaine to the King of them he was soone rid out of 〈…〉 way no man knew why nor by whom so that in effect they did what they listed In this Parliament 〈…〉 King having made the Speaker and a great part of mercinary proud ambitious men of the Commons 〈…〉 use to be of his side to act what he required them he then prevayled likewise with the upper house 〈…〉 with the Prelates then with the Lords more out of feare of him then any reason by meanes where 〈…〉 the Commission Charters of pardon and Acts made in Parliament in the 10. and 11. yeare of his raigne 〈…〉 re quite revoked and declared voyd in Law as being done without authoritie and against the will and 〈…〉 ertie of the King and of his Crowne And withall they declared the Judges opinions for which they were 〈…〉 demned in that Parliament to be good and lawfull and attainted the said imprisoned Lords of high 〈…〉 eason and confiscated their lands The two Earles hereupon were beheaded and the Duke by reason 〈…〉 is p●pulat●tie smothered onely for their former actions which done the King adjourned the Par 〈…〉 ent to Shrew●bury where he subrilly procured an o 21. R. c. 12. Act to passe by common consent that t●e power 〈…〉 he Parliament should remaine in seven or eight persons who after the Parliament dissolved should deter 〈…〉 e certaine petitions delivered that Parliament and not dispatched By colour whereof Those Commit 〈…〉 proceeded to other things generally touching the Parliament and that by the Kings app 〈…〉 ment in derogatien p 21. R. 2. c. 16. Walsing Hist Aug. Ann● 1398. p 394 〈…〉 he state of the Parliament the dis●ommodity and pernicious example of the whole Realme And by colour 〈…〉 Authority hereof the King caused the Parliament Rols to be altered and defaced against the effect of the 〈…〉 said grant After which he much vexed and oppressed his people with divers forced Loanes Oathes 〈…〉 positions and oppressing Projects to raise money seeking to trample them under his feet and 〈…〉 roy the Realme and tooke all the Jewels of the Crowne with him into Ireland without the Kingdomes 〈…〉 sent Which rendered him so odious to his people that Henry Duke of Lancaster landing in England the whole kingdome came flocking to his ayde so that he had an Army of 60000. men in a short time who v 〈…〉 ed to prosecute the Kings ill Counsellours Whereupon King Richard returning out of Ireland hearing 〈…〉 the Dukes great Army assembled against him and knowing that they would rather dye then yeeld 〈…〉 of their hatred and seare of him he dismissed his Courtiers hiding obscurely in corners till he was a 〈…〉 prehended and by a Parliament summoned in his name though against his will judicially deposed 〈…〉 his misgovernment Among which Articles of his misgovernment for which he was judicially dethroned these are rema 〈…〉 able First * Graft p. 400 401 402 c. That he was●fully spent the Treasure of the Realme and had given the possessio●s of the Crow 〈…〉 to men unworthy by reason whereof daily new charges more and more were laid on the neckes of the poore C 〈…〉 monalty And when divers Lords were appointed by the High Court of Parliament to commune and t 〈…〉 of divers matters concerning the Common-wealth of the same which being busie about those Commissions he 〈…〉 other of his affinity went about to impeach them of high Treason and by force and threatning compelled 〈…〉 Justices of the Realme at Shrewesbury to condescend to his opinion for the destruction of the said Lords 〈…〉 somuch that he began to raise warre against John Duke of Lancaster Thomas Earle of Arundell Rich 〈…〉 Earle of Warwicke and other Lords contrary to his honour and promise Item He assembled certaine Lancashire and Cheshire men to the intent to make warre on the fores 〈…〉 Lords and suffered them to rob and pillage without correction or reproofe Item Although the King flatteringly and with great dissimulation made Proclamation throughout 〈…〉 Realme that the Lords before named were not attached for any crime of Treason but onely for extortions 〈…〉 oppressions done in the Realme yet be laid to them in the Parliament rebellion and manifest Treason Item He hath compelled divers of the said Lords servants and friends by menace and extreame paines 〈…〉 make great sines to their utter undoing And notwithstanding his pardon to them granted yet he made the fine of new Item That he put out divers * Note Sheriffes lawfully elected and put in their roomes divers of his owne Mi 〈…〉 on s subverting the Law contrary to his Oath and Honour Item For to serve his purpose he would suffer the Sheriffes of the Shire to remaine above one yeare or two Item He borrowed great summes of money and bound him under his Letters Patents for repayment of the sa 〈…〉 and yet not one penny paid Item He taxed men at the will of him and his unhappy Councell and the same Treasure spent in folly not pay 〈…〉 poore men for their victuall and viand Item He said That the Lawes of the Realme were in his head and sometime in his brest by reason of wh 〈…〉 phantasticall opinion he destroyed Noble men and impoverished the Commons Item The Parliament setling and enacting divers notable Statutes for the profit and advancement of the Co 〈…〉 monwealth he by his private friends and solicitors caused to be enacted * Such a kinde of proviso was endevoured to beadded to the Petition of Right 3 Caroli That no Act then enacted should 〈…〉 more prejudiciall to him then it was to any of his Predecessors though with proviso he did often as he listed 〈…〉 not as the Law meant Item That he at his going into Ireland exacted many notable summes of money besides Plate and Jew 〈…〉 without Law or custome contrary to his Oath taken at his Coronation Item That without the assent of the Nobility he carryed the Jewels Plate and Treasure of the kingdome o 〈…〉 the Sea in to Ireland to the great impoverishing of the Realme And all the good Records for the Comm 〈…〉 wealth and against his extortions he privily caused to be imbezeled and conveyed away Item When divers Lords and Justices were sworne to say the truth of divers things to them committed in cha 〈…〉 both for the honour of the Realme and profit of the King the said King so menaced them with sore threatning 〈…〉 that no man would or durst say the right Item He most tyrannically and unprincely said that the lives and goods of all his Subjects were in the Prin 〈…〉 hands and at his disposing Item He craf●ily devised certaine privy Oathes contrary to the Law and caused divers of his
doe both ● point of Law Divinity conscience resist the highest powers because they resist the Parliament and ● shall receive damnation to themselves for it either here or hereafter if they repent not which I seriously ●sire all those Delinquents Papists Malignants ill Counsellers and Cavaliers to consider who con●ary to severall Orders and Declarations of Parliament yea contrary to the Law of God of Nature of the ●ealme have like unnaturall Vipers taken up offensive Armes against the Parliament and Kingdome to ●ine them with our Religion Lawes and Liberties at once Thirdly Hence it followes that the Resolutions and Declarations of the Lords and Commons in Parlia●ent the supremest Court against the Commission of Array Arming of Papists raising of Forces impo●g Taxes to maintaine Warre against the Parliament plundering and the like ought to be obeyed and sub●itted to as lawfull and binding both by the King himselfe the Kingdome and every private Subject ●hatsoever and that the Kings extrajudiciall and illegall Declarations out of Parliament in direct oppo●ion and contradiction to the resolutions and Votes of both Houses in Parliament ought not to be obeyed ●e King himselfe as our Law Bookes resolve being no t 8 H. 4. 13. b. 24 H. 8. c. 12. 52 H. 3. c. 1. 25 H. 8. c. 21. Cookes 1 Institutes on Mag. Charta f. 103. See here p. 14. 34. competent Judge especially out of his Courts ●hat is Law or what not in those Cases but the Parliament onely Which extrajudiciall new device of con●olling affronting the Resolutions and Declarations of both Houses by opposite Proclamations and ●●clarations published in his Majesties name is such a transcendent violation of and contempt against ●e knowne priviledge the sacred venerable Authority and power of Parliaments as I am confident ●● age can parallell and if not severely vindicated by exemplary punishments of the highest nature up●● those ill Counsellors and corrupt Lawyers who contrive and pen them will bring this Highest grea●st and most honorable Court wherein the u 31 H. 8. c. 1 1 Jac. c. 1. Dr. Student 44. a. whole Kingdome and every member of it are represented into ●eater contempt and lesse estimation with all men whether Natives or Forainers then the basest Court ●● Pipouders is No King nor Subject ever yet attempted such affronts against the Resolutions of any Jud●s in inferiour Courts Let no person whatsoever then presume by pen or tongue any longer to a●●igne or traduce the Resolutions and Ordinances of this highest Tribunall If Kings or Counsellors of ●ate willinstruct or excite the Subjects perempto●ily to disobey and contemne the Ordinances the ●udgements of the Parliament let them never expect the least obedience or submission to any of their ●wn commands which are of lesser credit and Authority Fourthly That the Parliament and whole Kingdome being the highest power or any Member of ●●e Parliament cannot by any publicke Acts or Votes of theirs consented to in Parliament become Tray●●s or guilty of high Treason against the King either by the Common Law o● the S●atute of 25. Ed. 3. b page 4 5. ● 2 of Treasons which running in the singular number If A MAN c. that is any private man ● men by their owne private authority shall levy warre against the King c. it ought to be judged high ●reason extends not to the whole Kingdome or Court of Parliament representing it of which no trea●n was ever yet presumed and by this very act is made the Judge of all Treasons that are doubtfull being ●ver yet included within the words or meaning of any Law concerning Treasons and therefore cannot be ●ilty of it Hence the depositions of a Graf par● 6. p. 62 63. Galfredus Mo●●● Fabia● Polychr others Archigallo and Emcrianus two ancient British Kings by the unani●ous assent of the Lords and Commons for their rapines oppressions and Tyranny with other forenamed Sax● Kings and of Edward the second Richard the second Henry the sixth Edward the fourth by Acts ●● Parliament the creating of Richard the third King and the frequent translations of the Crowne from ●e right heire at Common Law to others who had no good title by the whole Kingdome or Parliament ●o lesse then c Bracton l. 2 Glan l. 2. f. 112 Myrror c. 1 sect 4. Britton c. 8. f. 16. c. 22. f. 39 25. E. 3. ● 2. See Rastal ●rote Sta●●f Crompt Dalton in their Titles Chapters of Treason high Treason in private persons was never yet reputed much lesse questioned or adjudged ●igh Treason in the whole Kingdome or Parliament or any chiefe active Members in these Parliaments which being above the King are uncapable of Treason for any their judiciall actions and resolutions in such cases being onely Tortious and Erroneous reversible by other Acts in Parliament not Trayterous and Rebellious as appeares by all the forequoted Statutes and by 13 Eliz. c. ● which makes it high Treason d page for any person to affirme That the Queene by Authority of the Parliament of England is not able to make Lawes e Walsingham Holin Graf Sto. Speed Martyn Fab. Polychro in 21 R. 2. 11 R. 2. c. 3 4. 21 R. 2. c. 12. and Statutes of sufficient force to alter limit and binde the Crowne of this Realme and the descent limitation inheritance and government thereof And for direct Authorities in this very point Robert Tresylian and Belknap then chiefe Justices Holt Fulthorpe and Burgh Judges Locton Kings Sergeant and Blake the Kings Counsell in the Parliament o● 1● Rich. 2. were condemned executed and banished the Realme as guilty of high Treason onely for affirming under their hands and seales f See the particulars more at large in 21 R. 2 c. 12. That the Duke of Glocester the Earles of Arundell aad Warwicke were and that other Lords and Commons might be guilty of high Treason for procuring a Commission and other proceedings in Parliament and be punished for it as Traytors Which opinion of theirs being afterwards affirmed for Law in a packed Parliament 21 Rich. 2. was the very next Parliament in 1 Hen. 4. c. 2 3 4. repealed and the judgement given against those Judges for this Trayterous opinion tending to the utter subversion of Parliaments resolved and enacted to be just This g See 1 H. 4. c. 3. and here p. 13. Judge h Spee p. 747 Belknap foresaw and therefore was unwilling to put his Seale to this opinion Saying There wanted but a hurdle a horse and hal●●● to carry him where he might suffer the death HE HAD DESERVED for if I had not done this ● should have dyed for it and because I have done it I DESERVE DEATH for betraying the Lords Which makes me wonder at a passage in i Hist p. 675 Speed who records it now frequent in Malignants mouthe● That the very shop where the Barons originall Treasons were forged was THE PARLIAMENT HOUSE wherein from time to time they
and strength of the kingdome in their hands which they insolently abused to the great hazard ●f the whole estate for that they made no conscience of an Oath Law Justice or the Churches censures Therefore we 〈…〉 King speake these things faithfully unto you in the presence of God and man and doe counsell beseech and adm●nish ●ou to remove such a Councell from about you and as it is the usage in other Realmes governe yours by the faith●ull and sworne children thereof To which the King in briefe answered That he could not suddainely put off h●● Councell and therefore prayed a short respite Nothing ●ad hither to preserved the King more Then that he could ●ithout griefe forgo● any favorities if he were nearely pressed the contrary quality whereof hath beene the cause of ●i●all desolation to so many Princes For though choyce of Counsellours ought to be free yet by common in●endment they should be good or how ever they are or are not it is madnesse to hazard a Crowne or lose the love ●f a whole Nation rather then to relinquish or diminish a particular dependance for which the publique must not be ●azarded nor subverted The King therefore in this point not infortunate commands Bishop Peter from his Court to keepe residence at his Cure without once medling in State affaires removes all his evill Counsellors derives them of their Offices and puts good men in their places and commands all Poictovians and Foraine forces to de●art the Realme receives all his Nobles into favour restoring them to their lost Offices Lands Castles admits them 〈…〉 to his Court and Councell puts all his ill Counsellours and Delinquent Officers to their legall trials and fines And ●r Peter Rivales his Treasurer he was so vehemently inc●nsed against him for his ill Counsell that he sware 〈…〉 would plucke out his eyes were it not for reverence of his holy Orders And at his Arraignment at Westminster 〈…〉 e King sitting in person with his Justices upon the Bench and shooting Rivales through with an angry eye ●ake thus to him O ihou Traytor by thy wicked advise I was drawne to set my Seale to those treacherous Letters ●r the destruction of the Earle Marshall the contents whereof were to me unknowne and by thine and such like Coun 〈…〉 ll I banished my naturall Subjects and turned their mindes and hearts from me By thy bad counsell and thy com 〈…〉 lices I was moved to make warre upon them to my irreparable losse and the dishonour of my Realme in which ●n●rprise I wasted my Treas●re and lost many worthy persons together with much of my Royall respect Therefore I 〈…〉 act of thee an account and thou shall be carryed to the Tower of London to deliberate till I am satisfied And 〈…〉 us were these civill warres and differences reconciled ill Counsellors removed enormities reformed De 〈…〉 nquents punished not without reducing store of coyne to the King and peace established in the King●ome Which History I have more largely recited because most of its passages are Paralell to the Kings 〈…〉 d his evill Counsellors present proccedings on the one hand and to the Parliaments in some sort on the o 〈…〉 er hand in the premises and I doubt not but they will prove parallels in the conclusion to the terrour of 〈…〉 ill Councellours and Cavalieres the just punishment of Delinquents all good Subjects joy and content●ent and the reestablishment of our peace in truth and righteousnesse To end the point proposed * Walsingh Hist● p. 84. 44. Ypod. Neust p. 101 Anno Dom. 1315. King Edward the second by his Writ summoned a Par 〈…〉 ment at London But many of the Lords refused to come pretending causes and impediments by which their ab 〈…〉 nce might well be excused and so this Parliament tooke no effect and nothing was done therein In this Parti 〈…〉 lar then Popish Prelates Lords and Commons have exceeded Protestants in this or any other Parlia●ent Fifthly Popish Parliaments Prelates Lords and Subjects have by Force of Armes compelled their Kings to grant and confirme their Lawes Liberties Charters Priviledges with their Seales Oathes Proclamations the Popes Buls Prelates Excommunications and to passe confirme or repeale Acts of Parliament against their wills Thus the Barons Prelates a●d Commons by open warre and Armes enforced both a Mat. Pa. An. 1214 1215. p. 240 to 256. Mat. West Walsingham Ypodig Neu. An. 1214 1215 Fabi. Caxton Hol. Graf Daniel in the life of K. John Hen. 3. Sp. Hist p. 578. to 637. King John and King Henry the third to confirme Magna Charta and Charta de Foresta both in and out of Parliament sundry times with their hands Seales Oathes Proclamations and their Bishops Excommunications taking ● solemne Oath one after another at Saint Edmonds upon the High Altar An. 1214. That if King John should refuse to grant these Lawes and Liberties they would wage warre against him so long and withdraw themselves fro● their Allegiance to him untill he should confirme to them by a Charter ratified with his Seale all things which th●● required And that if the King should afterwards peradventure recede from his owne Oath as they verily beleev●● he would by reason of his double dealing they would forthwith by seizing on his Castles compell him to give satisfaction Which they accordingly performed as our Histories at large relate Yea when they had enforce● King b Matth. Par. p. 252. Sp. Holinsh accordingly John thus to ratifie these Charters for the better maintenance of them they elected 25. Barons ●● be the Conservators of their Priviledges who by the Kings appointment though much against his liking ● afterwards appeared tooke an Oath upon their Soules that with all diligence they would observe thes● Charters Regem cogerent and would COMPELL THE KING if he should chance to repent to observe them All the rest of the Lords and Barons then likewise taking another Oath to obe● the commands of the 25. Barons After this c Matth. Paris An. 1258. p. 9. 940 941. Matth. West 1258. Sp. p. 635. Hol. Graft Dani. Polychron An. Dom. 1258. King Henry the third summoned a Parliament at Oxford whither the Lord came armed with great Troopes of men for feare of the Poictovines to prevent treachery and civill warres a●● the Kings bringing in of Foraine force against his naturall Subjects to which end they caused the Sea Ports ●● be shut up and guarded The Parliament being begun the Lords propounded sundry Articles to the King which they had immutably resolved on to which they required his assent The chiefe points whereof we●● these That the King should firmely keepe and conserve the Charter and Liberties of England which King John ● Father made granted and ratified with an Oath and which himselfe had so often granted and sworne to maintai● inviolable and caused all the infringers ofit to be horribly excommunicated by all the Bishops of England in h● owne
but beauty also and ornamen● writes John Speed After all this i Walfing Hist Ang. p. 349. to 400 ●podigm Newstriae p. 144. to 158 Speed Hist p. 747. to 762. Holin Graft St●w Fabian Caxton and others King Richard the second in the ninth yeare of his reigne summoned a Parliament where●● Michael de la Pole Earle of Suffolke for cheating the King was put from his Lord Chancellorship of England by th● Parliament and the Seale taken from him against the Kings will and given to Thomas Arundell Bishop of Ely Whereupon both Houses gave halfe a tenth and halfe a fifteene to be disposed of as the Lords thought fit for th● defence of the Realme The Parliament was no sooner dissolved but the King recals de la Pole and other ill counsellors to the Court shewing them greater favour then before In so much that at Christmas the King mad● de la Pole sit at his owne table not in the usuall garment o● a Peere but of a Prince out of a stomacke and hatred again●● the Peeres whom from thenceforth he never regarded but feinedly and then fals to plot the death of the Duke of Gl●cester and other Nobles who opposed his ill Counsellors For which purpose he appoints a meeting at No●●ing ha●● Castle with a few persons generally ill-beloved ill-advised and ill-provided The course agreed upon by th● King and that ill-chosen Senate was first to have the opinion of all the chiefe Lawyers who saith Spe●● seldome faile Princes in such turnes concerning certaine Articles of Treason within whose nets they presum●● the reforming Lords were and if the Lawyers concluded those Articles contained Treasonable matters th●● under a shew of justice they should be proceeded against accordingly The Lawyers who were the very me●● which in the last Parliament gave advice to the Lords to doe as they did now meering were demanded Whether by the Law of the Land the King might not disa●ull the Decrees of the last Parliament They joyntly answe●ed he might because he was above the Lawes a most apparent errour confessing that themselves had in th● Parliament decreed many things and given their judgement that all was according to Law which they acknowledg● to be altogether unlawfull The King thus informed appointeth a great Councell at Nottingham and witha●● sends for the Sheriffs of Shires to raise Forces against the Lords who denyed saying that they could not rais● any competent Forces or Armes against them the whole Counties were so addicted to their favours and being furthe● willed to suffer no Knights to be chosen for their shieres but such as the King and his Counsell should name they a●swered that the election belonged to the Commons who favored the Lords in all and would keepe their usuall customes a good president for our present Sheriffes whereupon they were dismissed Then were the Lawye● and Judges Robert Tresilian and his companions called before the King to determine the judgements of Treason against the Lords to be legall and to set their Seales thereto which they did Meane time the King and Duke of Ireland sent messengers to hire what Forces they could That they might stand with them if neede we●● against the Lords in the day of battle * Note this Many of which answered that they neither could nor would stand against th● Lords whom they knew for certaine intimately to love the King and to endeavour all things study all things doe a●● things for his honour yet many out of simplicity thinking themselves to be hired promised to be ready upon the King●●o●●ce The Lords hearing of these proceedings were much sadded being conscious to themselves ●● no 〈…〉 ●●rthy the Kings so great indignation The Duke of Glocester sent his purgation upon Oath by the Bishop ●● London to the King w●o inclining to credit the same was in an evill houre diverted by de la Pole ●he Duke hereupon makes his and their common danger knowne to the rest of the Lords upon which ●ey severally gather forces that they might present their griefes to the King How he favoured Tray●rs not onely to them but to the Publique to the imminent danger of the Realme unlesse it were spee●ly prevented The King on the other side by Trayterous Cōunsellours advise sought how to take ●em off single before they were united but in vaine by reason their party was so great Meane time ●me peaceable men procured that the Lords should repaire safe to Westminster and there be heard Thi●er approaching they are advertised by some who had sworne on the Kings behalfe for good dea●●g to be used during the interim that in the Mewes by Charing-Crosse a thousand armed men which ●ithout the Kings privity Sir Thomas Trivet and Sir Nicholas Brambre Knights were reported to have ●●d for their destruction attended in ambush The King sweares his innocency promising safe con●●ct to the Lords if they would come who thereupon came strongly guarded and would trust no longer ●he King sitting in royall State in Westminster Hall the Lords present themselves upon their knees before ●m and being required by the Lord Chancellour Why they were in warlike manner assembled at ●aring gye Park contrary to the Lawes their joynt answer was That they were assembled for the good of the ●ing and kingdome and to weed from about him such Traytors as be continually held with him The Traytors ●ey named to be Robert de Vere Duke of Ireland Alexander Nevill Archbishop of Yorke Michael de ● Pole Earle of Suffolke Sir Robert Tresilian that salse Justiciar Sir Nicholas Brambre that false Knight ● London with others To prove them such They threw downe their Gloves as gages of challenge for a tri●l by the Sword The King hereupon replyed as knowing they were all hidden out of the way This ●all not be done so but at the next Parliament which shall be the morrow after Candlemas all parties shall ●ceive according as they deserve And now to you my Lords How or by what authority durst you presume to levy ●orces against me in this Land did you thinke to have terrified me by such your presumption Have not I men and ●mes who if it pleased me could environ and kill you like sheepe Certainely in this respect I esteeme of ●u all no more then of the basest Scullions in my Kitchins Having used these and many like high words ●e tooke up his Unckle the Duke from the ground where he kneeled and bade all the other rise The ●st of the conference was calme and the whole deferred till the next Parliament then shortly to be hol●●n at Westminster In the meane time that the world might see how little able the King was to equall ●s words with deeds a Proclamation was set forth in which the King before any tryall cleareth the ●ords of Treason names those persons for unjust accu●ers whom the Lords had before nominated The ●ords neverthelesse thought not good to sever themselves but kept together for feare of the worst which
42. 76. 33. H. 6. 17. adjudged accordingly Br. Prerogative ●34 cannot with his Lords devise make or establish any Law The reasons are these whe● Parliaments were first begun and ordained there were no Prelates or Barons of the Parliament an● the temporall Lords were very few or none and then the king and his Commons did make a fu●● Parliament which authority was never hitherto abridged Againe every Baron in Parliament do● represent but his owne person and speaketh in the behalfe of himselfe alone But in the Knights Citizens and Burgesses are represented the Commons of the whole Realme and every of these g●veth not consent onely for himselfe but for all those also for whom he is sent And the king wit● the consent of his Commons had ever a sufficient and full authority to make ordaine and establis● good and wholesome Lawes for the Common-wealth of his Realme Wherefore the Lords bein● lawfully sommoned and yet refusing to come sit or consent in Parliament cannot by their folly ● bridge the king and the Commons of their lawfull proceedings in Parliament Thus and mo●● Iohn Vowell in his Order and usage how to keepe a Parliament Printed Cum Privilegīo But we need● not retire to this last refuge the Honorable faithfull Lords now present though not so many ● could be desired are the intire House of Peeres in judgement of Law as those present at the Election of Knights of the shire or Burgesses though the major part be negligently or wilfully absent are the whole shire or Burrough and the wilfull absence of the residue though the greater number being e See Stamford ● 38. 155. 3. E. 3. 19. Coro 161. contrary to Law contrary to the Priviledges of Parliament and their late Protestation● tending to the very subvertion of Parliaments for which they and their posterities too may justly b● disabled for ever to sit as members of that House which they have so dishonourably if not treache● rou●ly deserted even as f Dyer f. 60. n. well as Knights and Bargesses whose personall attendance is so necessary th● if during the Parliament they absent themselves from it about any businesses of their owne without leave ● the House they may be presently expelled and others chosen in their place to make the House compleat ca● no more disable those now present from being a true and lawfull House of Peeres then the multitudes departing from the true Church of God to the false disproves it to be the true Church of Christ g Luke 12. 32 Mat. 13. 23. Mat. 7. 13. 14 whose true flock is but little In a word h See Bishop Iewell Defence of the Apologie part 6 c. 7. Di●is 1. Bishop Bilsons●● true difference of Christian Subjection unchristiā Reb part 3. p. 540. 541. 542. Bishop Pilkington of the burning of Pauls steeple Keilway f. 184. b. Cromptons Iurisdiction of Courts f. 19. 20. 10. E. 4. f. 6. Stamfords Plees l. 3. 6. 1. f. 153. Br. Corone 135. Antiq. Ecclesiae Brit. p. 299. 300. Speed p. 1156. Martyns Hist p. 450. to 454. Iohn Vowel● Chronicle of Ireland p. 127. 128. divers Parliaments have beene kept and held and * 25. E. 3. stat 6. de Provisionibus 31. E. 3. c. 4. 36. E. 3. c. 8. 3. R. 2. c. 12. 1● R. ● Preface c. 3. 12. 1. E. 3. c. 2. 14 E. 3. stat 3. Preface See 20. H. 3. c. 9. 21. H. 3. stat of Leape-yeare 4. H. 3. stat of Marlbridge 4. E. 1. de Big Prolog c. 6. 6. E. 1. stat de Gloster Preface 13. E. 1. Acton Burnel 13. E. ● c. 43. ●●●●alefact in part 21. E. 1. Eschetors 3. E. 1. Quo warranto 9. E. 2. Artic. Cleri Pref. Act● made without Bishops or Abbots heretofore even while they were reputed members of the Lords House an● one of the 3. Estates in Parliament therefore this Parliament which hath taken away Bishops Vote for ever ● may be lawfully held notwithstanding any Lords or Commons wilfuls absence from it i● person who yet as long as they are members of the Parliament shall still be adjudged legally present wherher they will or no. One puny Iudge in the Courts of Westminster may and doth usually give judgement and make binding Orders though the Chiefe Justice and his fellowes be absent Sixthly It is most apparent both by i Sam. 19. 20. 2 Sam. 5. ● 12. 2 Chron. 9. 8. Isay 49. 23. Rom. 13 4. 5. 1 Pet. 2. 13. 14. Scripture the verdict of all k Atist Polit. l. 3. 5. Plato Age●ilans Xenophon de In●●it Cyri. Hist Caelius Rhodig Antiq. Lect. ●8 c. 1. Bodin de Republica Osorius de Rege Regum In●●it Polititians and writers ● note the l The preambles of all ancient statutes Bracton l. 1. c. 8 l. 3. c. 9. Fleta l. 1. c. 5. 17. Fortescue c. 9. to 15. Statutes of our Realme and Lawyers that Kingdomes Subjects and Parliaments were not created by God for the wills pleasures profit or benefit of Kings who by birth and nature differ not at all from the meanest of their Subjects but Kings were at first constituted and stil continued for the protection welfare benefit service of their Kingdomes Parliaments People whose publike Servants Ministers Sheapheards Fathers Stewards and Officers they are Now nature reason and n Gen. 1. 26. to 31. c. 9. 2. 3. 4. Psal 8. 6. 7. 8. Scriptures resolve that he wh● is instituted meerely for the benefit and service of another as all the n Creatures were created for man● use and therefore are inferiour unto man in dignity and power is of lesse dignity power and jurisdiction then the intire body of those for whose good he was instituted as the o Ephes 6. 5. Col. 3. 22. 23. 24. servant is inferiour to his Master the p Gen. 8. 18. c. 3. 16. 1 Cor. 11. 3. 8. 9. Ephes 5. 23. 24 1 Pet. 3. 1. 1. 3. 18. wife to her husband for whom they were created the Major to the whole Corporation and the King to his whole Kingdome and Parliament which consideration hath caused sundry Kings and Emperors not onely to adventure their lives in bloody battles but to lay downe their Crownes for the peace and safety of their Subjects witnesse q See Eutropius Grimston and others in his life Otho the first and others with the Examples of Moses m 1 Cor. 3. 21. 22. 23 Exod. 32. 9. to 15. 32. Numb 14. 11. to 15. of David ● Sa● ●9 ●7 1 Chron. 21. 17. and Iohn 10 ●1 15. with other presidents which I pretermit The King then being made King onely for the Kingdomes Parliaments Peoples service must needs ●n this regard be inferiour to not Paramont them in absolute Soveraigne power though greater * 2 Sam. 18. ● better then any particular Subjects Seventhly the Parliament as our q Law bookes and r Cromptons Iurisdiction of Courts f. 1. c. Bracton l.
had sworne After ●hich he rightly setled the affaires of England by the counsell of his Nobles and then passed over in●o Normandy But how ill he kept this his Oath and others of this Nature and how he violated the ●tatutes of Magna Charta and D● Forresta which he had confirmed with his hand seale oath Pro●amations the B●shops Excommunications and the Popes Bull within three moneth● after he had on firmed them and procured a dispensation of his oath and abrogation of these Lawes making ●loody warres upon his Barrons and Subjects who confiding to those confirmations and royall pro●ises expected no such strange performances spoyling robbing and destroying his people every ●here in the selfe-same manner as we now are plundered * See before p. 5. 8. Graf p. 11. Mat. Paris p● 243. to 247. worthy reading and consideration the Histories of his life too manifestly ●● late which oft put his Crowne in danger of utter los●e Lewis of France being crowned king by the ●●rons in his steed who renounced their allegiance to him for his perjuries and breach of faith and ●aking warre upon them John departing this life his sonne Henry being but 9. yeares old was pro●aimed king through the pe●swasion of the Earle Marshall and of Pembroke afterwards made his ●rotector who informed the Lords and Commons h Fox Acts Mon. Ed. t●lt v. 1. p. 334 Speed p. 591. that though King Iohn for his evill demeanors ●eserved their persecution and l●sse of his crowne yet his young child tender in yeares was pure and inno●nt from his fathers doings Wherefore ●ith every man is to be charged with the burthen of his owne trans●ressions neither shall the child as scriptures teach beare the iniquity of his Fathers they o●ght of duty ●nd conscience to beare themselves ●ildly towards this tender Prince and take comp●ssion of his age And ●r as much as he was Iohns naturall and eldest sonne and ought to be their Soveraigne let us with one joynt ●llistance APPOINT HIM our King and Governour let us renounce from us Lewis the French kings ●onne and suppresse his people which are a confusion and shame to our Nation and the yoakes of their Ser●itude let ●s cast from our shoulders Vpon which perswasions Henry was presently proclaimed and crowned king at Glocesler And though he were but an infant yet being i Mat. Paris p. 278. 305. set before the High Altar he swore before the Clergy and people upon the Holy Evangelists and divers Saints Reliques Ioceline Bishop of Bath dictating the Oath That he would beare honour peace and reverence to God to ●● Church and Priests all the dayes of his life He likewise swore that he would maintaine right Iustice among the people committed to his Charge And that he would blot out ill Lawes and unjust customes if that should be any in the kingdome and observe good ones and cause them to be kept by all men How well ● observed this solemne oath with many others of like nature made to his Lords and Subjects f● confirmation of Magna Charta and their Liberties k In his Edition Tiguri 1589. p. 876. 938. 958. 959 960. Mathew Paris will informe us who writ● that the King in all his Oathes and promises did so farre transgresse the bounds of truth that the Prela●● and Lords knew not how to hold this Proteus the King for where there is no truth there can be no ●ix● confidence That thought he sometimes humbled himselfe confessing that he had beene often bewitched ● ill Counsell and promised with a great Oath solemnely taken upon the Altar and coffin of Saint Edwar● that he would plainely and fully correct his former Errors and graciously condescend to his naturall Subject good counsell yet his frequent preceding breaches of oathes and promises sepenitus incredibilem reddider●● made him altogether incredible so that though he usually heard three Mosses every day but seldome a● Sermons as l Hist Angl. P. 1. Walsingham notes yet none would afterwards beleeve him but ever feare and susp●● his words and actions and to avoyd the infamie of perjurie which he feared he sent to the ●ope● absolve him from those Oathes he repented of who easily granted him an absolution Such faith and assurance is there in the Oathes and Protestations of Princes to their Subjects whose Politicke capacities oft times have neither soule nor conscience This perfidiousnesse in the king made his long raig● full of troubles of bloody civill warres and oft times endangered the very losse of his Crowne a● kingdome as our Historians informe us for which he repented and promised amendment at h● death m Lib. 3. c. 9. f. 107. Bracton an ancient Lawyer in this kings dayes writes That the king in his Coronation OVGHT by an Oath taken in the name of Iesus Christ to promise these three things to the people subject to hi● First that he will command and endeavour to his power that true peace shall be kept to the Church and ● Christian people in his time Secondly That he will prohibit rapines or plunderings and all iniquities ● all degrees Thirdly That in all Iudgements he will command equitie and mercy that so God who is gracious and mercifull may bestow his mercy on him and that by his justice all men may injoy firme peace F● saith he a King is SACRED and ELECTED to wit by his kingdome for this end to doe justis unto all for if there were no justice peace would be easily exterminated and it would be in vaine to make Lawes and doe justice unlesse there were one to defend the Lawes c. And before the Conquest I re● in n Fox Acts and Monuments Edition 1641. vol. 1. p. 214. and Lambards Archaion Leges Edwardi c. 17. Bilson par 3 p. 494. King Edward the Confessors Lawes not onely the Office but Oath of the King whom he an● Bracton oft stiles Gods and Christ Vicar upon earth thus excellently described A King ought abo● all things to feare God to love and observe his Commandments and cause them to be observed through h● whole kingdome He ought also to set up good Lawes and customes such as be wholesome and approved s●● as be otherwise to repeale them and thrust them out of his kingdome Item he ought to doe justice an● judgement in his kingdome by the counsell of the Nobles of his Realme All these things ought the King ● his owne person to doe taking his oath upon the Evangelists and the blessed Reliques of Saints swearing ● the presence of the whole state of his Realme as well of the temporalty as of the spiritualty before he ●● crowned of the Archbishops and Bishops Three servants the King ought to have under him as Vassals fleshly lust avarice and greedy desire whom if he keepe under as his servants and slaves he shall reigne well an● honorably in his Kingdome He must doe all things with good advisement and praemeditation and th● properly
a Seneca de Cleme●●●a l. 1. as may winne their hearts and affections and not to straine their pretended Prerogatives beyond the bounds of Law this being a most certaine experimented rule which b Polit. l. 5. c. 10 11. p 367 368 See Polybius Hist l. 6. Aristotle the Prince of Politicians gives That there are two intestine causes most perilous and frequent of all others by which a kingdome is usually lost and subverted The first is if the Nobles and people dissent from the King himselfe The second if Kings will Reigne tyrannically and usurpe a greater domination or prerogative then the Lawes of their kingdomes give them Then he addes Verily a kingdome is preserved by contrary remedies specially by a moderate kinde and temperate forme of Government For by how much the c Deut. 17. 19 20. See Prov. 16. 12. c. 20. 28 c. 29. 4. 14. c. 25. 5. more moderate the King shall be and contented with smaller and fewer prerogatives by so much the more constant and longer-lasting shall his kingdome necessarily be For by this meanes it recedes farther from the domination of Tyrants and it comes nearer to the equability of manners and humanity of life and is lesse envyed by their Subjects which he proves by the notable speech and example of King Theopompus And indeed this is the principall policy which God himselfe hath prescribed a King to prolong his dayes in his kingdome he and his children after him to keepe all the words of this Law and those Statutes to doe them that ●s to governe himselfe and his Subjects onely by Law not power to doe justice and judgement avoid oppression and not to liftup his heart above his brethren as if they were his vassals and no● men or Christians of the same kinde and quality as himselfe is Wherefore I shall close up this with old Bractons resolution d Lib. 3. c. 9. f. 107. Fleta lib. 1. c. 17. Potestas itaque Regis juris est non injuriae Exercere igitur debet Rex potestatem Juris ●icut Dei vicarius Minister in terra quia illa potestas SOLIUS Dei est potestas autem injuriae Diaboli non Dei cujus horum operum fecerit Rex ejus Minister erit cujus opera fecerit Igitur dum facit justitiam vicarius est Regis aeterni minister autem Diaboli dum declinat ad injuriam * See Leges Edwardi Confessoris cap. 17. in Lambards Archaion f. 130. accordingly Dicitur enim Rex a bene regendo non a regnando quia Rex est dum bene regit Tyrannus dum populum sibi creditum violenta opprimit dominatione Temperet igitur potentiam suam per legem quae fraenum est potentiae quod secundum leges viva● quia hoc sanxit Lex humana quod leges suum ligent latore● alibi in eadem digna ●ox Majestate regnan●●s est legibus alligatum se Principem profiteri Item nihil t●m proprium est imperii quam legibus vivere Et majus imperio est legibus submittere Principatum merito debet retribuere legi quia Lex tribuit ei facit enim Lex quod ipse sit Rex Item cum non semper oporteat Regem esse arma●um armis sed legibus addiscat Rex sapientiam conservet justitiam All which is notably seconded by Judge Fortescue De Laudibus Legum Angliae c. 9. to 15. worthy any Princes serious perusall And thus doing neither he nor his Posterity need ●eare this Supreame Prerogative Power of Parliaments which hath ●aine dead and buryed for many ages Et pereat positum rubigine telum 11. All Papists e See p 2 3. the Authours there quoted Bishop Jewels View of a seditious Bull and of the Popes Supremacy Cassanaeus Catagloria mundi part 4. attribute farre more divine authority and Soveraigne Jurisdiction over Emperours Kings Princes Kingdomes Subjects to the Pope their Lord and God whom they make the Supreame Monarch of the World and all kingdomes in it and give him greater Authority to summon ratify and dissolve generall Councels then ever any Christian King or Emperour challenged or usurped yet those who maintaine these Paradoxes of the Popes Supremacy confesse f See John Whites Way sect 36. n. 30. 34 35. p. 102. 104 105. Surius Tom. 3. 4. that a generall Councell is above the Pope and may upon just cause not onely convent and censure him for his misdemeanours but likewise actually depose him and set up another in his stead as the Councels of Pisa Constans Basil which deposed foure Popes namely Gregory the 12. Benedict the 13. John the 23. and Eugenius the fourth the Councell of Chalcedon against Pope Leo the Councell of Sinuessa against Pope Marcellinus the sixth seventh and eighth generall Councels against Honorius the Councels of q Wormes and Brixia against Hildebrand the Councell of Pisa summond 1511. of purpose to depose Pope Julius for his perjury h See John Whites Way sect 36. n. 30 p. 102 and n. 34 35. p. 104 105. sundry Popish Writers acknowledge Now the Councell of Basil as I shewed * See p. 4. before defined That the whole Kingdome and Parliament hath as great a power over their Kings as a Councell hath over the Pope therefore by Papists verdicts it is above the King in point of Soveraigne power as a Councell is above the Pope which John Mariana De Rege Regis Instit lib. 1. c 3. to 10. professedly proves at large 12. That Court which may lawfully coniure question depose banish execute the Kings greatest Favorites Officers Judges yea Lord Protectors themselves the highest Peeres of the Realme notwithstanding such are said to be i Psal 82. 1 2. Exod. 22. 2● John 10. 34. Gods k Rom. 13. 1 2 3 4. Ordained of God Gods Ministers To l Prov. 8. 15. decree Judgement g Fox Acts Monuments vol. 1. p 231. 235. 879 to 890. 962. by God to be the higher powers c. in Scripture as well as Kings and that not onely with but against the Kings Good will must questionlesse be the highest power and Jurisdiction in the Realme else the King and their Authority might protect them against its Justice But the Parliament may lawfully censure question depose banish execute all or any of these not onely without but against the Kings consent witnesse the proceedings in Parliament against m Hoveden p. 702 703. 705 706. with Speed Holinshed Grafton Stow Matthew Paris Polychronicon Fabian William Longchamp Bishop of Ely Chiefe Justicia● Lord Chancellor and Vice-roy of England in Richard the first his Reigne during his absence in the Holy Land from which Offices he was by the Peeres and Commons deposed for his misd●meanours and oppressions n Walsingh Speed Holinsh Fabian in Edw. 2. Froyssards Chron. part 1. c. 12 13. Piers Gaveston and the two Hugh Spensers in Edward the seconds Reig●e oft banished
Kings eldest sonne was created Duke of Cornwall by Parliament which then also entailed the Dutchy of Cornwall upon the eldest sonnes of the Kings of England See 21 R. 2. c. 9. * 7. H. 4. c. 2. Hals Chronicle 1. H. 4. f. 10. 15. Fabian par● 7. p. 376. Speed p. 763. King Henry the fourth the ●et●er to assure the inheritance of the Crownes and Realmes of England and France to him and his posterity caused them by a speciall Act of Parliament in the first yeare o● his raigne to be entailed and setled on himselfe and the heires of his body begotten and Prince Henry hi● eldest sonne to be established pronounced ordained and decreed heire apparant to him and to succeed hi● in the said Crownes and Realmes to have them with their appurtenances after the Kings death to him an● the heires of his body begotten And if he should die without heire of his body begotten then to remaine to th● Lord Thomas the Kings second sonne with successive remainders to Lord John the third and Lor● Humfry the Kings fourth sonne and the heires of their bodies begotten After which Act passed for t●● avoyding for all claimes titles and ambiguities to be made unto the Crowne he thought never by any of his Subjects to be molested or troubled the rather because in this Parliament it was first concluded that deposed King Richard should continue in a large prison and ●e plenteously served of all things necess●ry both for viande and apparell and if any persons should presume to reare warre or congregate a multitude ●o deliver him out of prison that then he should be the first that should die ●or that sedi●ious comm●tion Which King Richard as * Fabian part 7. p. 373. Sir John B●got by his Bill exhibited to this Parliament averred h●● divers times at sundry Parliaments in his time holden said that he would have his intent and pleasur● concerning his owne matters whatsoever betide of the residue and if any withstood his will or minde b● would by one meanes or other bring him out of his life And further said to him at Lichfield in the one ●● twentieth yeare of his raigne that he desired no longer for to live then to see his Lords and Commons ha●● him in ●s great awe and dread as ever they had of any his Progenitors so that it might be chronicled of him that none passed him of honour and dignity with condition that he were deposed and put ●●rom his said dignity the next morrow after So wilfull was he as to preferre his will before his Crowne or safety n Hall An. 38. 39. H. 6. f. 176. to 183. Fabian An●o 1441. p. 470. Grafton p. 643. to 648. Holins Stow Howes An. 1440 144● In the yeares 1440. and 1441. Edward Duke of Yorke came into the Parliament House an● there in a large Oration laid claime and set forth his Title to the Crowne of England which King He●ry the sixth had long enjoyed desiring the Parliament to determine the right of the Title betweene the● both ●ides submitting to their resolution as the proper Judges of this weighty royall controversie After lon● debate and consideration of the case among the Peers Prelates and Commons of the Realme it w●● finally agreed and resolved by them That in as much as Henry the sixth had beene taken as King for 38. yea●● and more that he sh●uld enjoy the name and title of King and ●ave p●ssessi●n of the Realme during his n●turall life And if he either died or resigned or FOR FAITED THE SAME for breaking ●● part of this concord then t●e said Crowne and authority royall should immediately descend to the Duke ●● Yorke King Edward the 4. his Father if he then live● ●r else to the next heire of his line And that the s● Duke from thenceforth should be Protector and Regent of the Kingdome Provided alway that if the Ki●● did closely or apertly study or goe about to breake or alter this agreement or to compasse or imagine the de●● of the said Duke or his bloud then he TO FORFEIT THE CROWNE and the Duke T● TAKE IT These Articles made by the Parliament betweene them they both subscribed sealed ● swore to and then caused them to be enacted Loe here we have these two Kings submiting their Titles ● the Crowne and Kingdome it selfe to the Resolution of both houses of Parliament as the Soveraig● Judge betwene them who settled the Crowne in this order under paine of ●orfeiting it by Ki●● Henry if he violated their Decree herein and appointing a Lord Protector over the Kingdome in ●● full age as o Historia Angliae p. 458. Parliamentum fuit c●nv●catum in qu● Parliamento ex assensu omnium Statuum idem Dux Defensor seu Protector Angliae fuera● nomina●us ordina●us omniaque Regni off●cia beneficia ejus dispositioni sunt commissa Walsing●am informes us a Parliament c●nstituted Duke Humsry to be protector of hi● and h●s Kingdome of England and the Duke of Bedford to ●e Regent of France during his minority wh● exercised all regall power by vertue of that authority which the Parliament derived to them A●● this in these two Kings reignes p See Grafton p. 691. 692. Speed p. 869. 878. 859. 886. 1. E. 4. c. 1. 17. E. 4. c. 7. the Crown and its descent were variously setled by Parliament as I ha●● formerly manifested yet so as that which one Parliament setled in this kinde continued firme till it ●● akered or reversed by another Parliament King q Speeds Hist p. 928. 931 Richard the third comming to the Crown by usurp●tion to strengthen his Title procured the Lords and Commons to passe an Act of Parliament where in th● declare him to be their lawfull King both by election and fuccession entaile the Crowne upon him and the hei●● ●f his body lawfully begotten create his Sonne Edward Prince of Wales and declare him heire to succeed him in ●he royall Crowne and dignity after his decease In which Act of Parliament recited at large by Speed there is this memorable passage That the Court of Parliament is of such Authority and the people of this land of such a nature and disposition as experience teach●th that manifestation or declaration of any Truth or Right made by the three Estates of this Realme Assembled ●n Parliament and by the Authority of the ●ame makes before all other things most faith and certainty and ●uieting of mens mindes removeth the occasion of all doubts and seditious language r Halls Chro. 1 H. 7. f. 855. Henry the seventh af●erwards slaying this usurping Richard at Boswell-field to avoyd all ambiguities and questions of his Title to the Crowne in his first Parliament procured the Lords and Commons by a speciall Act to set●le the inheritance of ●he Crownes of England and France on him and the heires of his body lawfully begotten perpetually by the grace ●f God so to endure and on none
his finger he said * Neta Thou ●● in no wise be ruled by these men for these be those which brought me into this lamentable plight and the mi● thou seest me in A memorable strange speech of a distracted Prince And thus the Emperour 5 Grimstons Imperiall History p. 581 582. Sententia Ex●●ctorationis Depositionis Wencestai An. 14●0 in Germani Hist Tom. 2. p. 180. 181. Iean Crespin L estate de Lesglise p. 465. Wen●●us was likewise deposed by the Princes electors of the Empire For besotting himselfe so with pleasures ● as that he became altogether unfit for the government and a man unprofitable for the Empire and Christian ●●monwealth and Rupert Count Palatine of R●ine and Duke of Bavaria was elected Emperor in his stead ●● like no doubt might be lawfully done here in England by the whole Kingdome and Parliament if ● such cases of incurable folly or frenzy should befal any of our Kings who might then either create a Lord ●tector to governe both King or Kingdome during such disabilities of Government in the King as ●hildricke for a time before his deposition was governed and over-ruled in all thing● by the Marshall ●he Palace or else Crowne the next Heire King if he be capable to Governe Yea in the time of our ●on Kings when the right Heire was an In●ant unable to governe the Crowne usually descended ●he next Heire of full age Hence * Speed● hist p. 252 253. 262. 364 365 See Matthew West Poly●h●onicon Floren. Wigorniensis Holinshed Hun●●ndon and others Wibba King of Mercia deceasing Penda his Sonne being an Infant Crowne descended to his Nephew Ceorl of full age after whose death Penda being of ripe age inheri● the Kingdome So King Wulfeher deceasing leaving his Sonne Kenred within age his Brother Ethelred ●●eeded him who resigning his Crowne and turning Monke after he had Reigned 30. yeares Kenred ●● of full age enjoyed the Crowne So Ethelfred King of Northumberland dying Edelwald his Brother ●●ed the Government and Reigned Aldulfe Ethelherds Sonne being then a minor who enjoyed not ● Crowne till after Edelwalds death So * Gaufredus Monu lib. 3. c. 20. Grafton p. 67. Cassebelan succeeded Lud his Brother in the Kingdome of Bri●e Luds Sonnes being too yong and insufficient to Reigne The like was very usuall in Scotland of ●●h there are divers precedents in Gra●ion Hector B●etius and Buchanan which I pretermit All which 6 Aventine l. 3. f. 293. Fri●ingens l. 5. c. 13. Nauclerus vol. 3. Gen. 26. ●●iculars laid together are a most cleare unanswerable demonstration that the Soveraignest power and ●isdiction of all others resides in the whole Kingdome and Parliament not in the King h●mselfe since ●● may thus dispose of the very Crowne it selfe and determine all controversies all titles which con●e it The King alone having no power to transferre it to any other without the Lords and Com●●s free consents as was resolved in the case of King John who resigned and granted his Crowne to the ●e without the Kingdomes consent and therefore the resignation and grant were adjudged voyd not ●y by the 7 Gra●ton l. 1. 112. French King and his Lords but by our owne Parliament as you may read in 40 Ed. 3. ● 8. and Doctor Craken●●orpe Of the Popes temporall Monarch● cap. 2. p. 251. to 255. This point ●ave thus copiou●ly debated not out of any the least intention to derogate from his Majesties just ●re●acy and P●erogatives royall which I have of● solemnely sworne to maintaine to the utmost of my pow● and shall God willing performe but out of a serious desire to rectifie the generall mistakes of men ●ching a pretended Prerogative which their fantasies onely not the Law have unduely attributed to ● King and to vindica●e the just Liberties Priviledges and Prerogatives of the Parliament so much ●yed declaimed against of la●e by a company of ignorant Papists Ma●ignan●s Royalists who know not ●t the jurisdiction of Parl●aments is according to the Protestation the clearing of which points in my ●ke apprehension is the onely high and ready way to compose our present differences and settle all ● distractions which the ignorance and mistakes of the Kings and Parliaments just Preroga●ives and ●ers next to the trecherous ma●i●e of the Papists have principally raised among us almost to the ●e of the Kingdome For my part I professe sincerely I love and honour both King and Parliament ●● and in the controversies now betweene them concerning their Jurisdictions stand as a man indiffe● to doe right to bo●h without prejudice to either the King being the Principall Member of the Par●ent the elevating of its now disda●ned Power to its due altitude can be no depression but advancement ●e Kings prerogative which shines most perspicuously in Parliaments whiles King and Parliament ●●nited and is most eclipsed onely when they are divided as the precedents in all ages manifest And ● I dare confidently averre that there are no such enemies to the Kings Prerogative as those who ad●cing it beyond due bounds doe necessarily draw it into dispute in which it commonly comes off with ● and diminution in the end as in ●h● late cases of Lo●nes Ship-mony and the like If any here object against the premises f 1 El c. 2. that the King is the onely Supreme Governour of this R●a●● Object That g Li. 1. c. 8. f. 5 6. l 3. c 9. f. 107. Bracton h L. 1. c. 5. 17 Fleta and our i 3 E. 3. 19. Corone 161. 22 Answer E. 3. 3. b. Dyer 297 a. Stamfo 153. a. Law bookes resolve That the King hath no Peere in his Kingdo● for so he should lose his Empire since Peeres or equals have no command over one another much more then ou●● he not to have a Superiour or mightier for so he should be inferiour to those who are subject to him and infer●ours cannot be equall to Superiours The King ought not to be under man but under God and the Law If then J●stice be demanded of him by way of Petition because no writ runs against him though k 22 E. 3. 3. b anciently some w●● did if he doe not justice this punishment may be sufficient to him that he may expect God will revenge it Ne●● quidem de factis suis praesumat disputare m●lto fortius contra factum suum venire c. Therefore the K●● is above the Parliament and whole Kingdome not they above him I Answer First that the meaning of all these Bookes is that the King is above every one of his S●●jects and hath no Peere nor Superiour if they be taken particularly and distributively as single m●● as the words Parem Superiorem in the singular number and the like explaine the meaning of the Book● to be But if we take them collectively in Parliament as they are one body and represent the whole Ki●●dome then these very Authours resolve in their forequoted words