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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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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
good advice of * Who now give the King no such advice Schollers which he would not of his Peeres summons another Parliament to be holden at Westminster giving th 〈…〉 world to know withall that his purpose was to amend by their advice whatsoever was to be amended But the Baro 〈…〉 considering that still there arrived more and more strangers men of warre with horse and armes as now alas we s 〈…〉 they doe and not trusting the Poictovine Faith as we have now cause to mistrust the perfidious Papists and malignant Cavaliers and seeing no footstep of peace our present condition refused to come at the appointe● day sending the King word by solemne messengers that he should without any delay remove Peter Bishop of Winchester and the other Poictovians out of his Court which if he refused they all of them by the common consent of t 〈…〉 who le kingdome would drive him with his wicked Counsellors out of the Kingdome and consult about creating 〈…〉 new King Thesethings thus acted the King was much dejected in mind and all his Court hanging down 〈…〉 their heads and fearing not a little lest the errors of the Sonne should become worse then the fathers errors whom hi 〈…〉 Subjects indeavouring to depose from his royall Throne almost detruded him to that name which was give 〈…〉 him by a certaine presage John the Banished Wheresore hee could easily have beene drawne to redeem 〈…〉 the love of his naturall Liegemen with the disgrace of a sew strangers But the Bishop of Winchester with other his ill Counsellours and Poictovine Cavalieres counselled hi 〈…〉 to take up armes against his rebellious Subjects as they stiled them and to give their Castles and Lands to them w 〈…〉 would defend him and the kingdome of England from these Traytors The Counsell now given to his Majesty 〈…〉 his ill Counsellours and Cavalieres Hereupon the King inclining to the worser part raiseth an Army of Poictovine and Foraine Souldiers which came to him being sent for out of Flanders from whence the King no 〈…〉 hath many old Souldiers and Commanders sent him seiseth a Manour of Guilbert Bassers a Noble man give 〈…〉 him by King John calling him Traytor when he demanded it sets downe a day wherein all his Lords he suspected should deliver him sufficient pledges of their loyalty and being at Glocester with his Army whith 〈…〉 the Lords resused to come being required the King thereupon as if they were Traytors burnes their Manor 〈…〉 destroyes their Parkes and Ponds besiegeth their Castles and without the judgement of his Court and of thei 〈…〉 Peeres denounceth them exiles and banished men gives their Lands to the Poictovines and adding griefe to grie 〈…〉 wound to wound commanded their bodies to be apprehended where ever they were within the Kingdome he likewise sends a Defiance to the Earle Marshall whose Lands he had wasted who thereupon understood himselfe discharged of that obligation by which he was iyed to the King and free to make his defence Whereupon h 〈…〉 seeing * Note neither Faith nor Oath nor peace to be kept by the King or his ill Councellours who contrary to their promise and Oath refused to deliver up his Castle which they promised to render to him upon demand h 〈…〉 raiseth a grea● Army and takes his Castle On this the King upon better consideration did againe promise 〈…〉 and affirme That by advise of his great Councell all that was amisse should be rectified and amended And at th 〈…〉 day and place appointed he holds a great conference with the Lords But the evill Councellors he followed suffered him not to make good his promise For when divers there present greatly in the Kings favour with sundry Preachers and Fryers whom the King was wont to reverence and hearken to Humbly beseeched and earnestly exhorted the King to make peace with his Barons and Nobles and to embrace them with due affection being The Parliments present case his naturall Subjects whom without any judgement by their Peeres he had banished destroying their Manors Woods Parkes Ponds and being led and seduced by evill Councels lesse regarded his faithfull Subjects whose native bloo 〈…〉 would not permit them to bow downe then Forainers and which is worse called them Traytors by whom ●e ought t 〈…〉 settle the peace order the Councels and dispose the affaires of his Kingdome The Bishop of Winchester of●ended it seemes at Peers takes the word out of the Kings mouth and answers That there are not Peeres in England as in the Realme of France and that therefore the King of England by such Justiciars as himselfe pleaseth ●o ordaine may banish any offenders out of the Realme and by judiciall processe condemne them Which insolent ●peech the English Bishops relished so harshly that they presently with one voyce threatned to accurse and excommunicate by name the Kings principall wicked Counsellors of whom Winchester being the foreman appealed whereupon they accursed and I would our Bishops would doe so now if the God-dam-me Cavaliers accurse ●ot themselves sufficiently all such as alienated the heart of the King from his Subjects and all others that per●urbed ●he peace of the Realme and so the hoped accommodation vanished into greater discontents Hereupon the Earle Marshall and other Lords with their Forces sell pell mell upon the Kings Army slew divers of his for●einers and in conclusion drew him to such straits that enforced him to be capable of better advise Then Edmund ●rchbishop of Canterbury elect with other suffragan Bishops bewayling the estate of the Kingdome presented themselves before the King at Westminster telling him as his loyall liegemen and O that some Bishop or faith●ull person if there bee any such about his Majestie would now deale thus clearely with him touch●ng his evill Counsellors That the Councell of Peter Bishop of Winchester and his complices which now he had and ●sed was not sound nor safe but euill and dangerous to himselfe and his Realme First for that they hated and de●ised the English calling them Traytors turning the Kings heart from the love of the people and the hearts of the peo●le from him as in the Earle Marshall whom being one of the wort●iest men of the Land by sowing false tales they ●rave into discontentment Secondly that by the Counsell of the said Peter his Father King John first lost the hearts of ●is people then Normandy then other lands and finally wasted all his treasure and almost England also and never af●er had quiet Thirdly That if the Subjects had now beene handled according to justice and law and not by their ungod●y Counsels these present troubles had not happened but the Kings lands had remained undestroyed his treasure unex●austed Fourthly that the Kings Councell is not the Councell of peace but of preturbation because they that cannot ●aise themselves by peace must raise themselves by the troubles and disinherison of others Fiftly That they had the Trea 〈…〉 re Castles Wardships
to deliver Piers into their hands or drive him from his company out of England as being perswaded ●hile that King-●ane breathed peace could never be maintained in the Realme nor the King abound in treasure nor the Queene enjoy his love But the wilfull King preferring the dearenesse of one stranger before the love of the ●hole Realme would no● condiscend Whereupon the Lords thus contemned and deluded presently raise ●n Army and march with all speed towards Newcastle not to offer injury or molesta●●on to the King writes ●alsingham the case and purpose of the present Parliaments Army but that they might apprehend Piers him●elfe and judge him according to the Lawes enacted Which when the King heard he fled together with Piers like a proscribed and banished man to Tynemouth and from thence to Scarborough Castle Where Piers was forced to yeeld himselfe upon condition to speake but once more with the King And then carryed to Warwicke Castle where he had his head strucke off at the command and in the presence of the Earles of Lan●aster Warwicke and Hereford as one who had beene a subverter of the Lawes and an open Traytor to the Kingdome and that without any judiciall proceedings or triall of his Peeres though an Earle and so deare a Favourite of the Kings Which bred a lasting ha●red betweene the King and his Nobles Who being afterwards charged by the King in Parliament with their contempt against him in the spoiles committed by them at Newcastle and wick●dly killing Piers They stoutly answered That they had not offended in any point but deserved his royall favour ●or that they had not gathered force against him but against the publike enemy of the Realme And then obtained an Act ●f Pardon that no man should be questioned for Gavestons returne or death printed in old g T●tles Magn● Charta part 2. f. 50 to 57. Magna Charta Not long ●fter this unfortunate King doting upon the two h Wal●ing Hist p. 90. to ●10 ypodig Neust p. 105. to 111 Speed Hist p. 674. to 683. See Fabi●n Holm Graf Tho●●●de ●● More Higd●● Caxton in his life Spencers as much as ever he did on Gaveston to whom they ●ucceeded not onely in pride rapine oppression and intolerable insolencies but even in height of familiarity and power with the King So as they ruled and lead the King as they pleased in so much that no Earle Baron or Bishop was able to dispatch any thing in Court without their advise and favour which made them generally envied of all because they domineered over all The Lords and Barons hereupon confederated together to live and die for ju●tice and to their power to destroy the Traytors of the Realme especially the two Spencers And meeting together with ●heir forces at Sbirborne Thomas of Lancaster being their Captain they took an oath to prosecure their designe to ●he division of soule body Then they spoyled these Spencers their friends goods take their Castles by vio●ence waste their Manors through malice slay their servants utterly omitting the usuall wayes of Law equitie following the impetuousnes of their minds they march on to S. Albans with Ensignes displayed sent solemn messengers to the King then at London commanding him not only to rid his Court but kingdome too of the Traytors of ●he Realme the Spencers condemned in many Articles which they had framed against them by the commonalty of the Realme if he loved the peace of the Kingdome And they further required the King to grant letters Patents of indemnity to themselves and all such as had bore armes in their company that they should not be punished by the King or any other for their for epast or present trangressions The King denyed both these demands at first as unjust and illegall swearing that he would not violate his Coronation Oath in granting such a pardon to contempiu●us Delinquents Whereupon running to their armes they marched up to London entred the Citie and to avoyd dange● the King through the Queenes and others mediation condescended to their desires passing an Act for th● Spensers banishment and the Barons indemnities which you may reade in ancient Part 2. ● 50. Magna Chartaes Upo● this the Barons departed neither merry nor secure despairing of the Kings Benevolence which made them goe alwayes armed and to retire to safe places The King soone after recalling the Spensers reversed the sentence against them as erronious gathers an Army encounters and defeats the Barons and puts many of them to deat● by these Spencers procurements who not content with their blood procured also the confiscation of their goods a●●●nheritances Whereupon getting into greater favour and power then before puffed up with their good successe and new honours they discontented not onely the Nobles but Queene too who going over into Fran● with her sonne the Prince whose lives these favorites attempted She raysed an Army beyond the Seas and returning with it into England most of the Lords and Commons resorted to her and fell off from the King● who being destitu●e of friends and meanes demanded assistance of the Cirie of London whose answer was That they would honour with all dutie the King the Queene and Prince but would shut their gates against Foreine● and Traytors to the Realme and with all their power withstand them And under the name of John of Eltham th● Kings second sonne whom they proclaymed Custos of the Citie and of the Land they got the Tower ●● London into their possession placing and displacing the Garrison and Officers therein as they pleased Th● King hereupon after he had commanded all men to destroy and kill the Queenes partakers none excepted but her self ●●er sonne and the Earle of Kent and that none upon paine of death and losse of all that they might lose should ayde ●● assist them and that he should have a 1000. l. who did bring the Lord Mortimers head flies to Bristol in the Castle whereof the elder Spenser was taken by the Queenes Forces and without any formall tryall cruelly cut ●● alive and quartered being first at the clamours of the people drawne and hanged in his proper armour upon the common Gallowes without the Citie After which the King forsaken of all his Subjects flies into Wales for shelter wher● he was taken prisoner and then by his Lords and Parliament forced to resigne his Crowne to his sonne confessing That for his many sins he was fallen into this calamitie and therefore had the lesse cause to take it grievously That ●● much sorrowed for this that the people of the kingdome were so exasperated against him that they should utterly abh●● his any longer rule and Soveraignty and therefore be besought all there present to forgive and spare him being so afflicte● Soone after he was murthered in Barkly Castle And so the sicknesse and wounds which the Commonwealth sustaine● by his ill raigne upon the ch●●ge of her Physician recovered not onely health and strength
●ll out for their advantage For the Duke of Ireland with the Kings privity such was his false dissim●●tion had gathered a power in Wales and Cheshire which they intercepting neare Burford and Bablecke ●ew Sir William Molineux leader of the Cheshire men and made the Duke to flye in great feare A●ong the Dukes carriages was found as the devill or rather God would have it certaine Letters of the ●ings to the said Duke by which their Counsells were plainely discovered The Lords hereupon ●arch with speed up to London having an Army of forty thousand men the Lord Major and City doubt●ll whether to displease the King or Lords upon consultation receive the Lords into the City and sup●y their Army with provisions in the Suburbs Which the King hearing of seemed to slight them say●g * Note the perill and policy of protracting Let them lye here till they have spent all their goods and then they will returne poore and empty to their ●uses and then I shall speake with and judge them one after another The Lords hearing this were exceed●gly moved and sw●re They would never remove the●e till they had spoken with him face to face And ●rthwith sent some to guard the Thames lest the King should slip out of their hands and then sco●●e at ●em The King being then in the Tower and seeing himselfe every way encompassed sent a message ●● the Lords that he would treat with them who thereupon desired him That he would come the ne●●●y to Westminster where they would declare their desire to him The King replyed That he would not treat ●ith them at Westminster but in the Tower To which the Lords answered That it was a suspicious place ●●cause traines might there be laid for them and dangers prepared to destroy them Whereupon the King ●nt word They sh●uld send thither two hundred men or more to search and view all places lest any fraud should ●e hid Upon which the Lords repaired to the Tower and in the Kings Bed-chamber laid open to ●●m briefly all his conspiracy in causing them indirectly to be indicted They object to him his mutability ●d underhand working producing his owne Letters to the Duke of Ireland to raise an Army to destroy them ●gether with the French packe●s they had intercepted whereby it appeared he had secretly practised to flye with ●e Duke of Ireland into France to deliver up Callice to the French Kings possession and such pieces as the ●rowne of England held in those parts whereby his honour might diminish his strength decay and his fame ●erish The King seeing this knew no● what to doe especially because he knew himselfe notably ●e●ressed At last craving leave they left him confounded and shedding teares yet upon condition that ●e should come to Westminster the next day where he should heare more and trea●● of the necessary affaires of the Kingdome Which he promised to doe retaining the Earle of Darby to sup with him 〈…〉 before he went to bed O the ficklenesse of weake Princes and faithlessenesse of their royall words a 〈…〉 Protestations some whisperers telling him that it was not decent safe nor honorable for the King 〈…〉 goe thither he changed his resolution The Nobles hearing this were very sad and discontented a 〈…〉 thereupon sent him word That if he came not quickely according to appointment they would chuse them anoth 〈…〉 King who both would and should obey the Counsell of his Peeres The King strucke with this dart came t 〈…〉 next day to Westminster there attending his Nobles pleasures To whom after few discourses the Nobles said That for his honour and the benefit of his kingdome all T 〈…〉 tors whisperers flat terers evill instruments slanderours and unprositable persons should bee banished out of b 〈…〉 Court and company and others substs●uted in their places who both knew how and would serve him more honora 〈…〉 and faithfully Which when the King had granted though with sorrow they thought fit that Al 〈…〉 an●er Nevill Archbishop of Yorke John Fordham Bishop of Durham with sundry other Lords Knights a 〈…〉 Clergy men should be removed and kept in strait prison to answer such accusations as should bee object 〈…〉 against them the next Parlia Whereupon they were apprehended forthwith and removed from the Co 〈…〉 After the feast of Purification the Parliament much against the Kings will who would have shifted it 〈…〉 at that time began at London The first day of the Session Fulthorpe and all the rest of the Judges w 〈…〉 arrested as they sate in judgement on the Bench and most of them sent to the Tower for that having fi 〈…〉 overruled the Lords with their Counsels and direction which they assured them to be according to Law 〈…〉 afterward at Nottingham gave contrary judgement to what themselves had determined formerly Tresilian t 〈…〉 chiefe Justice prevented them by flight but being apprehended and brought backe to the Parliament 〈…〉 the forenoone had sentence to be drawne to Tiburne in the afternoone and there to have his Thro 〈…〉 cut which was done accordingly The King seeing these proceedings by advise of his ill Counsellors * Grafton p. 348 349. 150 151. absented himselfe from his Parliament and sent Michael de la Pole then Lord Chancellor to demand foure fifteenes in his name ●f the Commo 〈…〉 for that without lesse he could not maintaine his estate and outward warre To which the body of the Parliame 〈…〉 made answer that without the King were present they would make therein no answer and that unlesse the Ki 〈…〉 would remove him from his Chaneellorship they would no further meddle with any Act this Parliament Th 〈…〉 King upon this sent to the Commons that they should send to Eltham where he then lay 40. of the wis 〈…〉 and best learned of the Commons who in the name of the whole house should declare unto him their minde Up 〈…〉 which message the House were in more feare then before for there went a talke that the King intended 〈…〉 betray divers of them which followed not his minde either that way or at a banquet appointed to be made purpos●ly a● London if Nicholas Exton the Maior of London would have consented thereunto at which time t 〈…〉 Duke of Glocester should have beene taken Wherefore the Lords and Commons assembled together agree 〈…〉 with one assent that the Duke of Glocester and Bishop of Ely should in the name of the whole Parliament be se 〈…〉 to the King to Eltham which was done and the King well pleased that they should come When they cam 〈…〉 into his presence they most humbly saluted him and said Most high and redoubted Soveraigne Lord the Lor 〈…〉 and Commons of this your Parliament assembled with most humble subjection unto your most royall Majesty desi 〈…〉 your most gratious favour so that they may live in tranquillitie and peace under you to the pleasure of God a 〈…〉 wealth of the Realme On whose behalfe
Subjects f 〈…〉 to be sworne to observe the same an● after bound them in bonds for the firmer keeping of the same to the great 〈…〉 doing of many honest men Which how parallel they are to the late and present Court Practises and Doctrines of our times 〈…〉 wise men determine The King being thus Judicially dethroned in Parliament Henry the fourth 〈…〉 the same Parliament which continued notwithstanding Richards deposition who summoned it 〈…〉 created King who in the q ● H. 4. c. 1. 2 3 4. first Parliament of his Raigne reversed and annulled as illegall the P 〈…〉 liament of 21 Rich. 2. with all its Acts Circumstances and dependants and revived that of 11 Rich. 2. 〈…〉 all points as made for the great honour and common profit of this Realme To these I might adde t 〈…〉 r Walsing hist Angl. p. 416. 417. Ypodig p. 168. 170. Pol. l. 8. c. 10. Caxt. p. 430. Hal Chr. par 1. f. 25 Hol. p 529. Speed p. 775. Maroin Fabian Grafion and others Rebellious insurrectious of Richard Scroope Arch-bishop of Yorke the Earle of Northumber land a 〈…〉 their Complices against King Henry the fourth Anno 1405. to reforme the State and government 〈…〉 lieve the Church and Common weale and Depose King Henry in and by a forced Parliament The Spee p. 486 Hunting lib. 8. insurrection of the Popish Nobles against King Stephen for violating his Oath touching Forrests and 〈…〉 ther immunities of Church and Commonwealth which they would force him ●o confirme the severall k Wal●ing ham Hist Angl. p. 258. to 281. Speed ● 849. c. 734. c. insurrections of Jacke Cade Jacke Straw Wat Tyler and their Popish Vulgar rabble to force their King to call Parliaments to alter and repeale old Lawes enact new displace offensive great Officers promote new ones of their nomination to ratifie what propositions they required and subvert the government of the Real 〈…〉 with the l Speed p. 1032 to 1049 1112. to 1120. See Hall Grafton Holinshed Howes Martin in the lives of H. 8. Ed 6. and Q. Eliz. severall Rebellions of the Popish Lincolne-shire and Yorke-shire men under Doctor Mackarell a Monke and some men of quality in Henry the 8 his raigne Of the Cornish men Norsolke men Ket and others in Edward the 6. his rule of the Popish Earles of Northumberland Westmoreland and other Northern Papists in Queene Elizabeths dayes by force of Armes to compel● these severall Princes to summon Parliaments to repeale all Lawes against Mosse and Popery and for the establishment of the Protestant Religion with other Acts concerning the government of the Common-wealth to enact divers new Lawes and propositions which they demaunded to remove great Officers and privie Counsellors from their places and the like All which transcend the Acts and proceedings of this or any other our Protestant Parliaments or subjects being done without any preceding Order or resolution of both houses representing the whole Kingdome and against the generall consent of the people But I shall conclude with one ancient president more in one of our be●● Kings reignes In 25. E. 1. m Walsig Hist Angl. p. 36 37 38. 39 40. 41. 42 44. 48. Ypoaigm● Neustriae p. 83. 84. 85. 86. 97. Cookes Magna Charta p. 530. to 580. The Lords and Commons in Parliament grievously complained and Petitioned to the King against divers taxes tallages and pris●ges wherewith they were oppressed by him to the great impoverishing of the Realme against the violation of Magna Charta the Charter of the Forrest the imposition upon Woolls and their sommons to goe with him into Flanders to which they were not bound by Law The King excusing these taxes by reason of his necessity to mainetaine the warres and giving them a dilatory answer the Earle Marshall and Hereford withdrew themselves from Parliament and with their complices commanded the Barrons of the Eschequor not to levie the 8. penny of the people granted to the King at S. Edmonds and induced the Citizens of London to joyne with them to recover their Liberties Whereupon the King sending to them for peace they would condescend to no peace but on these termes That the King should confirme Magna Charta and Charta de Forresta with the other Articles to them annexed that he should enact and take no ayds tax or tallage from the Clergie or Commons without their common consent in Parliament and that he should remit all offences to these Earles and their confederates all which the King ratified by his * Articuli s●per Charta● Charter at large by his oath and by a solemne excommunication of the Bishops twice every yeate of all those who should transgresse this Charter of his For which the Laity gave him the 9 and the Clergie the 10. penny of their goods And because this confirmation was made in Scotland the Kings and divers others promised for him that he should confirme it when he came into England which they pressing him to doe in a Parliament at London in the 27. yeare of his Reigne after some delayes he ratified it with this addition in the close saving the right of our Crowne which when the Lords heard they departed home in great discontent but the King re-sommoning them at quinidena Pasche granted all things absolutely according to their desire committing the per-ambulation of the Forests throughout England to 3. Bishops 3 Earles and 3. Barrons to settle their bounds according to God and justice which not being speedily executed but neglected the King having purchased a dispensation of his oath wherewith he had ratified his foresaid Charter from the Pope 〈…〉 ereupon the King holding a Parliament at Stamford the 29. of his Reigne the Lords and Barrons repaired thither with great store of horses and Armes with a purpose to extort a●ull execution of the Charter of the Forrest hither to deferred upon which the King considering their earnestnesse and importunity condescended to their will in all things Sixtly Parliaments Lords and Prelates in former times have affirmed that when a Parliament was once met together by lawfull sommons it might not be dissolved or discontinued againe at the Kings meere pleasure till all the publicke affaires for which it was called were dispatched all grievances redressed and all Petitions exhibited therein fully heard and answered agreeable to the resolution of the great a Surius Concil Tom. 4. p. 103 c. Fox Act. and Monuments vol. 1. ●dit ult p. 879 c Councils of Basil Constans and divers Popish * John White his way c. Sect 37 n. 30. p. 102 Writers that a generall Councell once lawfully sommoned by ●he Pope and met cannot be dissolved by him againe at his pleasure without the Councels consent before all the Churches affaires be therein setled Vpon which resolution th●se Coun●ells continued together and deposed sundry Popes notwithstanding their Bulls to dissolve them to keepe themselves in their chaires This is apparent
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
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.
basenesse for so many and great Peeres to be subject to a woman and that they were free● of their oath by her marying out of the Realme without their consents and Stephen Earle of Mortain● who had no good Title assembling the Bishops and Peeres at London promising to them an amendment of the Lawes according to all their pleasures and liking was by them all proclamed king● whereupon they all to●ke their oathes of Allegiance to him conditionally to obey him as their king so long as he should p●es●rve the Churches Liberties and keepe all Covenants and confirme them with his Charter according to the old proverbe Quamdi● habebis me pro Senatore ●go te pro Imperatore All this the king at his Coronation swore and promised to God the people and Church to performe● And presently after going to Oxford he in pursuance of his oath there sealed his fore promised Charter of many indulg●u● favou●s the summe whereof was this That all Liberties Customes and Possessions granted to the Church should be firme and in force that all bad usages in the lan● touching Forrests exactions and annuall Taxes which his Ancestors usually received should be● e●●rnally abolished the ancient Lawes restored prefacing therein d Assensa Cleri Populi in Reg ●e Angliaeelectus M●lm p. 179. That he obtained the Crown● by election onely Haec ●●tem special●ter ali●●ulta generaliter se servatur●m juravit sed nihil ●onum quae Deo promiser●t observavit writes Mathew Paris Hovenden and Huntingdon Pene omni● perperam mutavit quisi ad hoc tan●um jur●ss●● ●t praevaricatorem Sacramenti se regno toti ostenderet saith Ma●mes●ury * See Speed p. 483. 484. granting those in●●●●●ties rather to blind their eyes than with any purpose to man●cle his o●ne hands with such pa●chment chaines Such faith is to be given to the so●emnest Oathes of kings But this his perj●ry was like to cost him his Crowne his Prelates and Peeres thereupon revolting unto Maude The forme of King Henry the second his Oath I finde not onely I read e Hoveden p. 491. Graft p. 50. that upon his ●oronarion he caused the Lawes t● be reformed by advise of disc●eet men learned in the Law and by his Proclamation commanded that the good Lawes of his grand father Henry should be observed and firmely kept throughout the Realme Whe ●●ore it is probable he tooke the same oath that he did f Mat. Par. p 147. Hoved. p. 657 Wa●si● ●podigma Neustr An. 1189. p. 45. 46. Speed ● ●●● Richard the first succeeding at his Coronation in Westminster Church comming to the High Altar before the Clergie and people tooke this solemne oath upon the Holy Evangelists and many Saints reliques 1. That all the day●s of his li●e he would beare peace honour and reverence to God and h●ly Church and the ordinances thereof Secondly that to the people committed to his charge he would exercise Right Justice and E●uiti● Thirdly that he would abolish naughty Lawes and Customes if any were brought upon his kingdome and would enact good Lawes and the same in good sort keepe and without Mal-engy● Which oath most solemnely taken Baldwin Archbishop of Canterbury standing at the Altar forbad him in the name of Almighty God to assume that ●●n●●r VNLESSE HE HAD ● FVLL PVRPOSE TO KEEPE WHAT HE HAD SWORNE Whereunto Richard ASSENTING and promisi●g by Gods helpe to performe all the premises WITH●VT FRAVD With his owne hand humbly taking ●he Imperiall Crowne from the Altar delivered it to the Archbishop who set it on his head g Hoveden p. 793. Mat. Par. p. 189. 190. Speed p. 548. 549 550. See Polydore Virgil Holins King Richard deceasing John his younger Brother to put by Arthur the next heire to the Crowne came ●eedily out of Normandy into England where the great assembly at Northamp●on to preserve their ●ights and Liberties were content to accept of him for their king and yeeld fealty to him to keepe ●ith and Peace to King John upon condition onely if he would restore to every of them their Rights which ●fterwards was the occasion of great dissentions And-comming to London to be crowned Hubert ●rchbishop of Canterbury the Pillar of the Common-wealths stabilitie ●nd incomparable for deepe ●aching wisedome steps forth in the midst of all the Bishops Lords Barons and others there as●mbled at his Coronation and spake thus unto them Heare you all you are in discretion to know ●at no man hath right or any other fore-title to succeede another in a kingdome * A strange Archiepiscopall Doctrin unlesse first with invo●tion for grace and guidance of Gods Spirit he b● BY THE BODY OF THE KINGDOME THEREVNTO CHOSEN and ●e indeede some choyce man and picked out for some ●menencie of ●is vertues according to the example and similitude of Saul the first annointed Ki●g whom God set over ●is people though neither the Sonne of a King nor of any royall discent So after him likewise David ●e son of I●sse the one for bei●g valorous and a person fitting Royall dignity the other for being holy and ●●ble minded To shew that whosoever in a kingdome excelleth all in valour and vertue ought to sur●ount all in Rule and Authority yet so as that if any of the Of spring of a deceased King surp●sseth o●ers it is fit joyntly to consent in election of such a one This therefore we have spoken in favour of eminent ●arle John who is present the brother of our most illustrious King Richard ●ow dece●sed wanting ●● heire of his body who being provident valiant and truely noble we havi●g invocated the grace of the ●oly Spirit have all unanimo●sly ELECTED as well in regard of his Merits as of his royal Blood Neither durst any doubt or demurre on these things knowing that the Archbishop had not thus de●ned without cause Wherefore Earle John and all men approving this speech they ELECTED ●nd ASSVMFD the Earle for their king and cryed out saying Let the King live But the Arch●ishop being afterwards demaunded why he had spoken these things answered that he was assured ●● some divining foresight that king John would worke the ruine of the kingdome corrupt the Crowne ●nd precipitate it into great confusion And that he might not have the reines free to doe this he OVGHT TO BE CHOSEN BY ELECTION NO● BY SUCCESSION King John at this ●is Coronation was involved in a threefold Oath namely That he should love holy Church and its Mi●isters and preserve it harmelesse from the in●ursion of Malignants That abolishing perverse Lawes be ●ould substitute good ones and exercise Right Iudgement in the Kingdome of England After which he ●as adjured by the Archbishop in the behalfe of God and strictly prohibited not to presume to accept this ●onour unlesse he fully purposed in his minde actually to fulfill what he had sworne To which he answe●ng promised that by Gods assistance he would bona ●ide keepe those things which he
That they l Bracton l. 2 c. 16. f. 134. ● Fleta l. 1. c. 17. are above the Ki●● and may and ought to restraine and question his actions if there be cause Secondly Bracton explaines himselfe how he is highest and without a Peere to wit In m Parem autem habere non debet nec multo for●●us superiorem maxime in justitia exhibenda licet in justitia recipienda minimo de regno suo comparetur l. 3. c. 9. f. 167 a. distribu●● Justice that is he is the highest Justiciar in the Kingdome but as small as any in receiving justice Thirdly Even in Parliament it selfe the King is the Supreme Member and in that regard the Parl●ment in most Acts and in all Petitions or Addresses usually stiles him n See Bodines Commonwealth l. 2. c 1 p. 192. the like of the Parliaments in France Their Soveraigne Lord B●sides the Parliament it selfe is ever o See Modus tenendi Parliamentum C●mb Brit. p. 177. Crompt Juris of Ceurts f. 1. to 6. Sir Tho. Smith● Common-wealth l. 2. c. 2. 3 Hol. Desc●●p of England c. 8. Cowel Minsh Tit. Parl. Mr. Hack. manner of passing Bils sect 8. summoned dissolved by his w●it in his name by his Authority A● in passing all Acts and Bils of Grace or such as are not simply necessary for the publicke safe●y and ●●li●y of his people He hath an absolute negative voyce and his Royall assent is simply necessary for the passing of● binding Lawes In which respects he is and may be truely said to be above the Parliament it selfe and ●● onely supreme Governour but ye● in the forenamed respects the Parliament may be truely said to be P●● mount him and the highest power Fourthly The Oath of Supremacy That the King is the onely Supreme Governour relates onely or p●●cipally to the Popes and foraine Princes authorities formerly usurped in this Realme as the Title Wo●● and scope of the Statute of 1. Eliz. c. 1. and the very next words in the Oath of Supremacy manif●● and that NO FORAINE Power person Prelate State or Potentate hath or ought to have any Jurisdi●●on power SUPERIORITY PREHEMINENCE or Authority Ecclesiasticall or spiri●● within this Realme and therfore I do utterly renounce and forsake ALL FORAINE Jurisdictions ● Therefore it refers not at all to Parliaments or their Jurisdiction Power Superiority Preheminen●● Authority not so much as once thought of by the prescribers of this Oath which had its Authority ●●● the Parliament and made some addition to the Kings Prerogative Fifthly p Common w. l. ● c. 9. l. 2. c. 5. Bodine and others as I shall hereafter manifest assure us that the Sovera●● power and jurisdiction both in the Roman and German Emperours and most foraine Christian Kingdo●● was and yet is in the Senate people Parliaments and Dyets yet this is no empeachment at all to their Supr●●cies no more then the asserting of generall Councels to be above Popes themselves by the learned●● Papists is ● derogation as they hold it is not to the Popes most absolute pretended Soveraignty q See p. 2 3. above all Em●●ours Kings Princes Prelates Subjects a●d the world it selfe of which they affirme him sole Monarch Th●●fore by the selfe-same reason this asserting of the whole Kingdomes and Parliaments power to be ab●● the Kings is no diminution at all much lesse a denyall of his Supremacy and just Prerogative R● all If then the Parliaments power be thus higher and greater then the Kings personall power and Juri●●ction out of Parliament it will necessarily follow from hence First That in these unhappy times of division and separation of the Kings personall presence not ●gall which cannot be severed from the Parliament the Lords and Commons Orders Votes and O●●nances made legally in Parliament it selfe are to be preferred obeyed by all the Kingdome before ● his Majesti●s Proclamations Declarations Commissions Warrants or Mandates made illegally out of ●●liament in affront of Both Houses proceedings and Decrees since when ever two dis●● powers command different things that a●e lawfull or of the same nature the higher power ought ● to be obeyed As if a Master commands his Servant one thing and the King another or the King ●ne ●● God another the King is to be obeyed before the Master because the Superiou● power but God before the K● because the highest power as the r See Gratian causa 11. quaest 3 wher he quotes 〈◊〉 Hier. Isi●dor to this purpose Fathers and Canonists resolve most fully Yea the Parliament being the highest power the King himselfe ought to submit thereto and ●●● ruled and advised thereby This conclusion though it may seeme a paradox to most men is an und●● table verity both in point of Divinity and Policy as is most apparent by the 1 Sa● 14. 38. to 46. an● 29. 1. to 11. 2 Sam. 18. 2 3 4. c. 19. 1. to 9. 1 King 12. 1. to 25. 1 Chron. 13. 1. to 6. 2 Chron. ● and 11. c. 30. 2 3. 5. 23. Esther 1. 13. to 22. Jer. 38. 4. to 28. Dan. 6. 4. to 20. Jonah 3. 7. Ezra 10. ● ●ccles 4. 13. Prov. 11. 14. c. 15 22. c. 25 5. compared together and with Josh 22. 11. to 34. Judges 20. ● to 20. and in point of Law and Conscience even in our owne Kings and Kingdome as is cleare by 20 ● 3. the Preface and c. 1. 25 E. 3. Parliament 6. the Statute against Provisors 38 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 1 2. 3 E. ● c. 17. and 48. and other Statutes which I shall hereafter cite at large in answer to the fourth Objection ●hich Texts and Statutes those who will may peruse at le●●ure for their better satisfaction And in Pauls ●me the highest Powers in Rome were not the Roman Emperours as ignorant Doctors make the unleared world beleeve but the Romane Senate who had full power not onely to elect and command but ●●nsure and depose their Emperours and adjudge them unto death as * Commonw l. 2. c. 5. John Bodin acknowledgeth ●nd I shall hereafter abundantly manifest in the Appendix Secondly That the Parliaments resisting of the Kings personall Commands especially such as are il●gall and destructive to the Kingdome or any private Subjects resisting them by vertue of a publique ●rdinance or Countermand from the Parliament is no resisting of the higher Powers against Pauls in●nction Rom. 13. 1. to 7. as ſ Resolution of Conscience sect 1 2. c. Revindication of Psalme 105 15. Printed at Cambridg 1643 Doctor Fearne and other ignorant Doctors vainly fancy but a direct ●bmission and obedience to the highest powers the Parliament and those who resist the Parliaments ●rdinances and Commands especially such as tend to the preservation of Religion Lawes Liberties ●iviledges of Parliament and the Kingdome or bringing Delinquents to condigne punishment though ●ey doe it by vertue of any extrajudiciall countermand from the King or his ill Counsellours