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A61094 Reliquiæ Spelmannianæ the posthumous works of Sir Henry Spelman, Kt., relating to the laws and antiquities of England : publish'd from the original manuscripts : with the life of the author. Spelman, Henry, Sir, 1564?-1641.; Gibson, Edmund, 1669-1748. 1698 (1698) Wing S4930; ESTC R22617 259,395 258

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139. Tylney 138. Tylney-smeeth ibid. V Vacation what 72. A particular Vacation appointed by the Longobards 84. Valvasini 58. Valvasor 16 17 58. Vassalagium what 34. Vassalli 3 9. Venatio clamosa quieta aut modesta 109 114. Villanus what it signifies in Latin 14. W De Waceio Radulphus Princeps militiae Normannorum 165. Wallington 14● Walpole 138. Walsham 153. Walsingham 149. Walsoke 138. Walter Arch-deacon of Oxenford 100. Walter Bishop of Durham bought Northumberland 116. Sate himself in the County Court ibid. By whom kill'd ibid. Walter Marshal of England the fourth son of William the King's Marshal 166. When he dy'd ibid. Walton 138. Walworth Sir Will Lord Mayor of London 168. Wapentakes 50. Watton 161. Waxham 153. Wardship no profits arising from it in the Saxons time 25. The original of its name ibid. Wardship in Scotland 27. Warenna Guil. de 19● Were or Weregild what 15. West-acre 141. West Saxon-Law 49. Wic what it signifies in the Saxon tongue 156. Wichingham 151. Wigenhall 138. William the Conquerour transfer'd his Country customs into Ireland 5. Makes Feuds and Tenures hereditary there ibid. Priviledges granted by him to the Cinque-Ports 26. Gave certain lands to Baldwin Abbot of St. Edmund s-bury 45. His Laws made by the consent of the Bishops and Barons 61. His Constitution concerning Festivals and Law days 8● Made a Law that no man should be put to death for any crime 82. Laws of Scotland Reg. Maj. 131 Laws Saxon in the King's Library MS. 17. Lind. Cland. Despons 80. Littleton Justice 6. His Tenures 35. Longobard-laws 89 131. Loyseau de Seigneurs 13 92. Ludovici Pii Exauctoratio 185. Vita 185. Lyndwood 109. M Major Joh. 27. An ancient Manuscript of Saxon Laws in the King's Library 17. Marculphus 9 128 129. Matthew Paris 11 62 71 116 118 12● 138 151 152 166 167. Merula 5. N Neapolitan and Sicilian Constitutions 10 80. Norman Customs 30 80. Novella of Constantine Porphyrogenneta 36. O Osbertus 99. Oswald Bishop of Worcester 4 P Pancirollus 148 154 Pasquier 13. Paulus Diaconus 84. Pausanias 3. Philo Judaeus 75. Placita Coronae 60. de Platea Joh. 64. Plinius 138. Polydorus Virgilius 62 71. Prosper 93. R Radevicus de Gest Frid. I. 82. Radulphus Niger 90 117. Ramsey-Abbey MS 29 53 128 139 140 146. Rastal 86. S Selden 26. Sigonius 127. Skeneus 28. Smith Sir Tho. 6 75. Soto 109 112. Spelman's Glossary 1 3 12 15 Codex legum 96. Spelmans Concilia Britannica 8 17 18 23. Sprott a Monk of Canterbury 45. Statius 84. Stow. 147 154 168 186 213. Suarez 109. Suecus Gravius 3. Synod of Eanham 78. T Tabienus 90 91. Tacitus 3 4 15 35 51 59 74 127 149. V Vegetius 147. Vincent 168 169. Virgilius 93. W Walsingham Hypodigma Neustriae 82 92 151 167. Waraeus 140. K. William I's Laws 82 84. William of Malmsbury 119 145. Y York Herald 168 169. FINIS 1 Pag. 188. 2 Pag. 208. 3 Pag. 212. Durham-house Birth 1 Praef. ad Gloss Edit 1687 by J. A. Education 2 Praef. ad Gloss 3 Letter against Impropriations printed among the Treatises publisht by Jer. Stephens 1647. 4t● Sent to Lincoln's Inn. Marriage 1 2 Jac. 1 Employments 2 Hacket Life of Bishop Williams Part 2. pag 93. Knighted Came to live in London 1 Pref. to the Gloss Study of our ancient Historians 1 Law-Terms Chap. 8 in MS. Oxon Glossary 1 Praef. ad Gloss 2 Brady Answ to Mr. Petit pag. 229. The second part of the Glossary 1 Mr. Petit's Jani Anglorum facies Nova p. 219. 265. And the answer to it by Dr. Brady pag. 229. 1 Brady pag. 229. Councils 1 Praef. ad Concil Vol. I. 〈…〉 Councils 1 〈…〉 Council The second Volume of the Councils 1 Life of Mr. Somner 2 Mr. Nicolsons English Library part 2. pag. 43. 1 〈…〉 As●mol Oxon 〈…〉 1 Pag ●24 Larger Work of Tithes The History and Fate of Sacriledge MS 2 Ath. Oxon p. 230. Part 2. Codex Legum Veterum MS. De Sepultura Aspilogia Book of Abbreviations 〈…〉 1 Pref. to that Book 〈…〉 〈…〉 1 Dedicat. ad Tho. Adamsium ante Bedam Acquaintance Children 3 Praef. ad Concil T. 1. 2 Camd. Ep. 226. 〈◊〉 Spelman Clement Spelman 1 Wood At h Oxon. p. 511. part 2. 〈…〉 〈…〉 d●finit●●n of a 〈◊〉 Th● 〈…〉 1 Cujac in praefat ad lib. 1. feud p. 10. seq 2 Cujac ad lib. 3. feud tit 1. p. 178. Instances of Feuds among the 〈◊〉 3 1 Chron. ●hap 23 2● 4 Ibid. Cap. 23. 5 Cap. 27. 1 Num. 21. 14. 1 Kings 13. 17. 2 Lib. de Phocid p. 118. Among the Gauls 3 Bell. Gall. lib. 6. p. 118. Ambact● 4 Bell. Gall. p. 184. 5 Ibid. p. 124. 6 Genes 14. 14. 7 Germ. Mor. p. 129. 8 Cujac ad Constit Lotharii feud lib. 5. p. 284. 9 Bell. Gall. lib. 6. p. 120. 10 Germ. Mor. 11 Bell. Gall. p. 121. 12 In Epist ad Bon. Vulcan Vid. Bellagines in Glossario nostro 1 Cujac in pr●● a● lib. p. 1. 2 Cujac ad li● 1. feud p. 21. 3 Vid infra Chap. ●6 Tenu●e●●●r Li●e How Feuds became hereditary Feuds hereditary in England 1 Comment in consuet F●●d Cap. 1. 2 Rex Mediolan lib. 3. 3 Gunt p. 409. 1 A● lib. 1. Feud Tit. 1. p. 21. The great growth of 〈◊〉 ●s to title 2 Cujac Feud lib. 3. p. 180. 3 Ibid. 4 Lib. 1. p. 7. 5 Feud lib. 1. p. 5. 6 〈◊〉 3. ● 5. 〈◊〉 437. No proper Feuds before the Conquest What Tenures were in use among the Saxons Tenures when first used Translation of Saxon Charters No Feodal words among the Saxons The charter of Beorredus examined 1 Hist Lib. 2. c. 5. Saxon Charters in the Saxon tongu● 2 Concil Brit. p. 378. 1 In praesatione illius Libri Feudum not in use in Beorredus's days 2 Chap. 20. 21. 3 Ad Marcul● p. 470. 4 P. 550. 5 Prooem ad lib. Feud p. 7. Feuda and Beneficia 1 Lib. 1. Tit. 65. c. 2 Lib. 3. Tit. 21. c. 3 Norm Reform p. 4. 4 In Gul. Rege No Tenures in Capite among the Saxons Tenure in Capite of two sorts 1 Lib. Ramsey f. 42. d. §. 279. 2 Pap. 157. Distinction of persons among the Saxons Lands among the Saxons Bocland 1 Vid. Gloss in Verb. Foresta Folcland Inland 2 Ing. Sax. p. 864. Outland 3 Praef. ad libr. Fend p. 12. 4 Itinerar Cant. p. 495. Earl no title of dignity anciently 1 Asser de gest Alfredi p. 21. 2 Ibid. No Earldoms hereditary Earldoms in France 3 Loyseau ●e Seignier c. 5. p. 106. lin ●lt Ceorls 1 Cap. 70. Ceorls 2 P. 116. 3 De Mor. Germ. p. 132. 4 Cap. 65. 5 Fol. 55. C. 6 Cap. de Weregild 7 Ll. Aethelst ibid. Earls capable of Knight's-Fees Thane what Th● quality of Thanes 1 Hist Se●● Lib. 6. 2 It●n Cant. p. 502. 1 Cap. de dignitate hominum f. 163.
thought fit to omit it and I would not have the good Man depriv'd of such a publick testimony of his Modesty and love for Truth About the Year 1637. Sir William Dugdale acquainted our Author that many Learned Men were very desirous to see the Second Part publisht and requested of him to gratifie the world with the Work entire Upon that he show'd him the Second part as also the improvements that he had made upon the First but withall told him what great discouragements he had met with from the Booksellers So for that time the matter rested and upon the Author's death all the papers came into the hands of his eldest Son Sir John Spelman a Gentleman who had sufficient parts and abilities to compleat what his Father had begun if death had not prevented him After the Restoration of King Charles II. Arch-bishop Sheldon and the Lord Chancellor Hyde enquir'd of Sir William Dugdale what became of the Second part of the Glossary or whether it was ever finisht He told them that it was finisht by the Author and that the Copy was in the hands of Mr. Charles Spelman Grandson to Sir Henry They desir'd that it might by all means be printed and that he would prevail upon Mr. Spelman to do it for the Service of the Publick and the honour of his Grandfather Whereupon having got a good number of Subscriptions the management of that whole affair was referr'd to Sir William Dugdale as well to treat with the Booksellers as to prepare the Copy for the Press The share that Sir William Dugdale had in the publication of this Second Part has been made the ground of a suspicion that he inserted many things of his own that were not in Sir Henry Spelman's Copy and particularly some passages which tend to the enlargement of the Prerogative in opposition to the Liberties of the Subject The objection has been rais'd on occasion of a Controversie about the Antiquity of the Commons in Parliament the Authority of Sir Henry being urg'd to prove that there was no such thing as a House of Commons till the time of Henry III. It is agreed on all hands that this Learned Knight was a very competent Judge of that Controversie that as he had thoroughly study'd our Constitution so he always writ without partiality or prejudice that he was not engag'd in a party nor had any other design but to publish the truth fairly and honestly as he found it asserted by the best Historians Upon these grounds his Opinion in matters of this nature has ever been thought confiderable and his bare Judgement will always be valu'd when we can be sure that it is his own And there can be no doubt but his Assertions under the Title Parlamentum upon which the controversie is rais'd are his own and not an interpolation of Sir William Dugdale's For the very Copy from which it was Printed is in the Bodleian Library in Sir Henry Spelman's own hand and agrees exactly with the Printed Book particularly in the passages under dispute they are the same word for word So far then as this Copy goes for it ends at the word Riota it is a certain testimony that Sir William Dugdale did no more than mark it for the Printer and transcribe here and there a loose paper And tho' the rest of the Copy was lost before it came to the Oxford Library and so we have not the same authority for the Glossarie's being genuine after the Letter R yet it is not likely that Sir William had any more share in the seven last Letters of the Alphabet than he had in the others For all the parts of such a Work must be carry'd on at the same time and so to be sure the Author left equal materials for the whole The Gentleman also who is concern'd to prove the Second Part to be all genuine has urg'd Sir William Dugdale's own authority for it and that too while he was living Then I have seen a Letter from Sir William Dugdale to Mr. Spelman giving him an account of the great losses he had sustain'd by the Fire of London and the pains he had taken in the publication of the Councils and Glossary As to the former he expresly lays claim to the better half of it as his own Work and Collection adding that if the Impression had not perisht in all right and reason he ought to have had consideration for the same as also so he goes on for my pains in fitting the Copy of the Glossary for the Printer by marking it for the difference of Letter and introducing and transcribing those loose papers left by your Grandfather without fit directions where they should come in This is all that he pretends to in the Glossary and if he had any further share in it t is likely he would have insisted upon it on this occasion to convince Mr. Spelman the more effectually of the good services he had done him in that business I have been the more particular in this matter because if it should appear in the main that Sir William had taken the liberty of adding or altering every single passage after would be lyable to suspicion and the authority of the whole very much weaken'd For tho' that worthy Person was extremely well vers'd in our English affairs yet it must be own'd that Sir Henry Spelman was a better judge of our ancient Customs and Constitutions and consequently whatever he delivers as his opinion ought to be allow'd a proportionable authority Had he put his last hand to this Second Part the Glossary as it is now printed together would have made a much nobler Work But the latter part in comparison of the other is jejune and scanty and every one must see that it is little more than a collection of Materials out of which he intended to compose such Discourses as he has all along given us in the First Part under the words that are most remarkable It was my good fortune among others of his papers to meet with two of these Dissertations De Marescallis Angliae and De Milite which are publisht among these Remains for the present and will be of use hereafter in a new Edition of the Glossary as properly belonging to it and originally design'd for it by the Author Tho' it is not likely that he should lay aside his Glossary for the sake of the Councils yet it is certain that he enter'd upon this latter Work before the Glossary was finisht He was particularly encourag'd in it by Dr. George Abbot and Dr. William Laud successively Arch-bishops of Canterbury and above all by the most Learned Primate of Armagh Archbishop Usher And in his Preface he tells us that he was much confirm'd in his design by what he had heard from Dr. Wren first Bishop of Norwich and afterwards of Ely He told him how Dr. Andrews the then late Bishop of Winchester had been reflecting with great concern upon the
Reliquiae Spelmannianae THE POSTHUMOUS WORKS OF Sir HENRY SPELMAN Kt. Relating to the LAWS and ANTIQUITIES OF ENGLAND Publish'd from the ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPTS With the LIFE of the AUTHOR Sine dubio domus Jurisconsulti est totius oraculum Civitatis Cicero OXFORD Printed at the THEATER for Awnsham and John Churchill at the Black-Swan in Pater-Noster-Row LONDON 1698. Imprimatur JOH MEARE VICE-CAN OXON Jan. 17. 1698. TO THE Most Reverend Father in God THOMAS LORD ARCH-BISHOP OF CANTERBURY PRIMATE of All ENGLAND And METROPOLITAN And one of his Majesty's most Honourable Privy Council MY LORD I BEG leave to lay before your Grace these Posthumous Discourses of Sir Henry Spelman promising them a favourable reception both for their own worth and for the sake of their Author He was a Person endow'd with those excellent Qualities which never fail to recommend others to your Grace's good opinion and esteem A Gentleman of great Learning and a hearty Promoter and Encourager of it In his Temper Calm and Sedate and in his Writings Grave and Inoffensive a true lover of the Establisht Church and a zealous maintainer of her Rights and Privileges In which respect the Clergy of this Nation were more particularly engag'd to Him because being a Lay-man and so not lyable to the suspicion of Prejudice or Interest his Reasonings carry'd in them a greater weight and authority than if they had come from one of their own Order I might add as some sort of excuse for this Trouble that He had the honour to be particularly respected by two of your Grace's Predecessors and some of his Posthumous Works by a third Arch-bishop Abbot and his immediate Successor were the chief Encouragers of the First Volume of his Councils and after his death the Second Part of his Glossary was publisht by the procurement of Arch-bishop Sheldon So that these Papers have a kind of hereditary right to your Grace's Protection All the share that I have in this Work is the handing it into the World and to make the first Present to your Grace would be no more than a decent regard to the Eminence of your Station though I had no particular obligation to do it But in my Circumstances I should think my self very ungrateful if enjoying so much Happiness under your Grace's Patronage I should omit any opportunity of expressing my Thankfulness for it Especially since such small Acknowledgements as this are the only Returns that I can ever hope to make for the Encouragement which You daily afford to Your GRACE'S most obliged and most dutiful Servant EDMUND GIBSON THE PREFACE I Shall not make any Apologie for the publication of these Treatises They seem'd to me to be very useful towards a right understanding of the Laws and Antiquities of England and I hope they will appear so to others too Nor need I endeavour to recommend them to the world any otherwise than by shewing them to be the genuine Labours of Sir H. Spelman whose Learning Accuracy and Integrity are sufficiently known The first of them concerning Feuds and Tenures in England was written in the Year 1639. and is printed from a fair Copy in the Bodleian Library corrected with Sir Henry Spelman's own hand The Occasion of writing it was the Great Case of Defective Titles in Ireland as may be gathered in some measure from the hints that our Author has given us but is much more evident from the Case it self printed afterwards by order of Thomas Viscount Wentworth the then Lord Deputie The Grounds thereof with the Pleadings and Resolutions so far as they concern the Original of Tenures were in short thus The several Mannours and Estates within the Counties of Roscomon Sligo Mayo and Gallway in the Kingdom of Ireland being unsettl d as to their Titles King James I. by Commission under the Great Seal dated the 2d day of March in the 4th Year of his Reign did authorize certain Commissioners by Letters Patents to make Grants of the said Lands and Mannours to the respective Owners Whereupon several Letters Patents to that effect passed under his Majesties Great Seal by virtue of the said Commission for the strengthening of Titles that might otherwise seem defective And afterwards in the Reign of King Charles I. upon an Enquirie into his Majestie 's Title to the Countie of Mayo there was an Act of State publisht commanding all those who held any Lands in that County by Letters Patents from the Crown to produce them or the Enrollment thereof before the Lord Deputie and Council by a certain day To the end that they might be secur'd in the quiet possession of their Estates in case the said Letters were allow'd by that Board to be good and effectual in Law In pursuance of this Order several Letters Patents were produc'd and particularly the Lord Viscount Dillon's which last upon the perusal and consideration thereof by his Majestie 's Council were thought to be void in Law And therefore it was order'd by the Lord Deputie and Council that the doubt arising upon the Letters Patents should be drawn up into a Case and that Case to be openly argu'd at the Council-Board The Case was drawn up in these words King James by Commission under the Great Seal dated the second day of March in the fourth year of his Reign did authorize certain Commissioners to grant the Mannour of Dale by Letters Patents under the Great Seal of this Kingdom to A. and his heirs and there is no direction given in the said Commission touching the Tenure to be reserv'd There are Letters Patents by colour of the said Commission pass'd unto A. and his heirs to hold by Knights Service as of his Majesties Castle of Dublin Here it was agreed on all hands that the Letters Patents were void as to the Tenure and that the Commissioners had acted beyond their Commission in reserving a mean Tenure to the prejudice of the King when they ought either to have reserv'd an express Tenure by Knight's Service in Capite or have mention'd no Tenure at all but have left the Law to imply a Tenure in Capite The question therefore was Whether the deficiency of the Tenure did so far affect the Grant as wholly to destroy the Letters Patents Or Whether the Letters Patents might not be good as to the Land and void only as to the Tenure The Case was argu'd several days by Counsel on both sides and was afterwards deliver'd up to the Judges who were requir'd by the Lord Deputie and Council to consider of it and to return their Resolution But upon private Conference not agreeing in their Opinions it was thought necessary for publick satisfaction to have it argu'd solemnly by them all which was accordingly done And when it came to be debated whether the reservation of a Tenure so different from that intended and warranted by the Commission could make void the whole Grant this happen'd to lead them to a more general Enquirie What the reservation of a Tenure is
every feodal Lord and not begun in France 'till Feuds were there made hereditary by Hugh Capet nor in England till William the Conqueror did the like as before appears The reason of it was to preserve the memory of the Tenure and of the duty of the Tenant by making every new Tenant at his entry to recognize the interest of his Lord lest that the Feud being now hereditary and new heirs continually succeeding into it they might by little and little forget their duty and substracting the services deny at last the Tenure it self We see at this day frequent examples of it for by neglecting of doing homage and those services Tenures usually are forgotten and so revolv'd to the King by Ignoramus to the great evil of their posterity that neglect it But the Saxons having only two kind of lands Bocland and Folcland neither of them could be subject unto homage for the Bocland which belong'd properly to their greater Thanes tho' it were hereditary yet was it alodium and libera ab omni seculari gravedine as before is shewed and thereby free from homage And the Folcland being not otherwise granted by the King or his Thanes than at will or for years or for life the tenant of it was not to do any homage for it For Justice Littleton biddeth us note that none shall do homage but such as have an estate in fee simple or fee taile c. For saith he 't is a maxim in law that he which hath an estate but for term of life shall neither do homage nor take homage But admit the Saxons had the ceremony of doing homage among them yet was it not a certain mark of Knights-service for it was usual also in Socage-Tenure And in elder ages as well a personal duty as a praedial that is done to Princes and great Men either by compulsion for subjection or voluntary for their protection without receiving any feud or other grant of land or benefit from them And he or they which in this manner put themselves into the homage of another for protection sake were then called homines sui and said commendare se in manus ejus or commendare se illi and were thereupon sometimes called homines ejus commendati and sometimes commendati without homines as in Doomsday often Tho' we have lost the meaning of the phrase yet we use it even to this day Commend me unto such a man which importeth as much as our new compliment taken up from beyond the Seas let him know that I am his servant See the quotations here annexed and note that tho' the Saxons did as we at this day call their servants and followers homines suos their men yet we no where find the word Tenure or the ceremony of homage among them nor any speech of doing or of respiting homage CHAP. XXI What manner of Fealty among the Saxons SO for Fealty if we shall apply every oath sworn by Servants and Vassals for fidelity to their Lord to belong unto Fealty we may bring it from that which Abraham imposed upon his servant put thy hand under my thigh and swear c. For the Saxons abounded with oaths in this kind following therein their Ancestors the Germans who as Tacitus saith took praecipuum Sacramentum a principal oath to defend the Lord of the Territory under whom they lived and to ascribe their own valour to his glory So likewise the homines commendati before mention'd yea the famuli ministeriales and houshold servants of Noble persons were in ancient times and within the memory of our fathers sworn to be faithful to their Lords These and such other were anciently the oaths of Fealty but illud postremo observandum saith Bignonius a learned French-man of the King 's great Council fidelitatem hodie quidem feudi causa tantum praestari shewing farther that Fealty was first made to Princes by the Commendati and Fideles without any feud given unto them and that the Princes afterwards did many times grant unto them feuda vacantia as to their servants but whether the oath of fealty were so brought in upon feodal tenants or were in use before he doth not determine In the mean time it hereby appeareth that fealty in those days was personal as well as feodal or praedial which imposeth a necessity upon them of the contrary part in the Report that if they meet with fealty among the Saxons they must shew it to be feodal and not personal for otherwise it maintaineth not their assertion I will help them with a pattern of fealty in those times where Oswald Bishop of Worcester granting the lands of his Bishoprick to many and sundry persons for three lives reserv'd a multitude of services to be done by them and bound them to swear That as long as they held those lands they should continue in the commandments of the Bishop with all subjection I take this to be an oath of Fealty but we must consider whether it be personal or praedial If personal it nothing then concerneth Tenures and consequently not our question If praedial then must it be inherent to the land which here it seemeth not to be but to arise by way of contract And being praedial must either be feodal as for land holden by Knight-service or Colonical as for lands in Socage If we say it is feodal then must there be homage also as well as fealty for homage is inseperable from a feud by Knight-service but the estates here granted by Oswald being no greater than for life the Grantees must not as we have shewed either make or take homage And being lastly but Colonical or in Socage it is no fruit of a Tenure in Capite by Knight-service nor belonging therefore to our question So that if fealty be found among the Saxons yet can it not be found to be a fruit of Knight-service in Capite as the Report pretendeth it See Fidelitas in my Glossary CHAP. XXII No Escuage among the Saxons What in the Empire THe word Scutagium and that of Escuage is of such novelty beyond the Seas as I find it not among the feudists no not among the French or Normans themselves much less among the Saxons Yet I meet with an ancient law in the Novella of Constantine Porphyrogenita Emperour of Greece in the year 780. that gives a specimen of it tho' not the name Quaedam esse praedia militaria quibus cohaereat onus Militiae ita ut possessorem necesse sit se ad militiam comparare domino indicante delectum vel si nolit aut non possit se ad delectum exhibere certam eo nomine pecuniam fisco dependere quae feudorum omnium lex est c. This tells us that there were certain lands to which the burden of warfare was so adherent that every owner of them was tyed upon summons made by his Lord to make his appearance therein or else to pay certain money by way
viz. Towns or Mannours to the Lords thereof whom the Saxons called Theings after Barons Hundreds to the Lords of the Hundreds Trithings or Lathes to their Trithingreves Counties to their Earls or Aldermen and the larger Satrapies to their Dukes or chief Princes All which had subordinate Authority one under the other and did within the precinct of their own Territories minister justice unto their Subjects For the Theinge or Lord of the Town whom the Normans called a Baron had of old Jurisdiction over them of his own Town being as it were his Colony and as Cornelius Tacitus saith did Agricolis suis jus dicere For those whom we now call Tenants were in those ancient times but Husbandmen dwelling upon the soil of the Lord and manuring the same on such conditions as the Lord assigned or else such as were their followers in the wars and had therefore portions of ground appointed unto them in respect of that service which portion was thereupon called a Knights-fee for that a servant in the war whom the Saxons called a Knight had it allotted unto him as the fee or wages of his service Neither at the first had they these their fees but at the Lord's pleasure or for a time limited and therefore both these kinds of Military and Husbandmen dwelling upon the Town or Colony of the Lord were as in reason they ought under the censure and will of their Lord touching the lands they ocucpy'd who therefore set them laws and customs how and in what manner they should possess these their lands and as any controversy rose about them the Lord assembling the rest of his followers did by their opinion and assistance judge it Out of which usage the Court-Barons took their beginning and the Lords of Towns and Mannours gain'd the priviledge of holding plea and jurisdiction within those their Territories over their Tenants and followers who thereupon are at this day called Sectatores in French Suitres of suivre to follow But the Saxons themselves called this jurisdiction sacha and soca signifying thereby Causarum actionem and libertatem judicandi for sacha signifieth causa in which sense we yet use it as when we say For God's sake and soca signifieth liberty or priviledge as Cyri●socne libertas Ecclesiae But by this manner the Lords of Towns as ex con●●etudine Regni came to have jurisdiction over their Tenants and followers and to hold plea of all things touching land But as touching cognizance in criminal matters they had not otherwise to meddle therewith than by the King's Charters For as touching the King's peace every Hundred was divided into many Freeborgs or Tithings consisting of ten men which stood all bound one for the other and did amongst themselves punish small matters in their Court for that purpose called the Lete which was sometime granted over to the Lords of Mannours and sometime exercised by peculiar officers But the greater things were also carryed from thence into the Hundred Courts so that both the streams of Civil justice and of Criminal did there meet and were decided by the Hundreds c as by superiour Judges both to the Court Baron and Court Leet also Edward the Confessor Ll. ca. 32. saith that there were Justices over every ten Freeborgs called Deans or Tienheofod that is head of ten which among their Neighbours in Towns compounded matters of trespasses done in pastures Meadows Corn and other strifes rising among them But the greater matters saith he were referred to superiour Justices appointed over every ten of them whom we may call Centurions Centenaries or Hundradors because they judged over an hundred Freeborgs The Lord of the Hundred therefore had jurisdiction over all the Towns of the Hundred as well in Criminal matters as in Civil and they that failed of their right in the Court Barons Tithings or Leets might now prosecute it here before the Lord of the Hundred and his followers called the Suitors of the Hundred which were the Lords and owners of lands within that Hundred who were tyed to be there at every Court which as appeareth by the Laws of H. I. ca. 8. was to be holden twelve times in the year that is once every month But especially a full appearance was required twice in the year in memory whereof the Suitors are at this day called at our Lady and Michaelmass Courts by the Steward of the Hundred These as I said before held piea of trespasses done in Pastures Meadows Corn and such like and of other strifes arising between Neighbour and Neighbour and as by and by also shall be shewed of Criminal matters touching the very life of a man Decrevit tum porro Aluredus c. King Alured then further decreed that every Free-man should be settled in some Hundred and appointed to some Freeborg or Tithing as did also Canutus Ll. par 2. cap. 19. and that the heads of these Tithings or Freeborg whom we now call Capitales plegii should judge the smaller matters as in Leets c. but should reserve the greater for the Hundred Court and those of most difficulty to the Alderman and Sheriff in the County Court Lamb. voc Centuria The order of which proceedings in the Hundred Court do there also appear out of the Laws of King Ethelred made in a great Assembly at Vanatinge Cap. 4. In singulis Centuriis Comitia sunto c. Let the Courts be holden in every Hundred and let twelve men of the elder sort together with the Reve of the Hundred holding their hands upon some holy thing take their oath that they shall neither condemn any man that is innocent nor quit him that is guilty And it seemeth by the Laws of Canutus par 2. cap. 16. 18. That a man was not to be delayed above three Court days from having his right for if he were he might then resort to the County and if he obtained it not there within four Courts then he might seek unto the King And no doubt but this Law opened a great gap for the carrying of matters from the Hundred and County Courts up to the King 's Court. The Jurisdiction also of this Court seemeth to be further abated by H. I. who tho' he establish'd the ancient manner of holding it yet pulled he from it some principal parts thereof as after shall appear in a Writ of his touching this and the County Court directed to the Sheriff of Worcester MS. Co. pa. inter 48. 49. The Thrithingreve or Leidgreve whom I take to be the same called in the Salic Laws Tungimus but doubt whether he or no that in our Laws of H. I. is called Thungrevius was an officer that had authority over the third part of the County or three or more Hundreds or Wapentakes whose Territory was thereupon called a Thrithing otherwise a Leid or Lath in which manner the County of Kent is yet divided and the Rapes in Sussex seem to answer the same And perhaps the Ridings also of Yorkshire
Towns call'd Burgesses and the Barons of the Cinque-ports The first sort are to appear personally or by particular Proxies for the words as touching them are Summoniri faciemus sigillatim but as touching the others it is Summoniri faciemus generaliter c. not that all should come confusedly but that they should send their Advocates which commonly are but two to speak for them These the French in their Parliaments call Ambasiatores and Syndicos In the first rank the Earls and greater Barons have their place in this Council for that they hold of the King in Capite by a Baronie And the Bishops and Abbots with them of the second rank so likewise for that it was declared and ordained in the Council of Clarendon that they should have their possessions of the King as a Barony and should be suiters and sit in the King's Court in judgements as other Barons till it came to the diminution of Members or matter of death But this Council of Clarendon did rather affirm than give them their priviledge For the Prelates of the Church were in all ages the prime part of these great Councils In the third rank the Burgesses and Barons of the Cinque-ports have their place not so much in respect of Tenure for they were not conceived to be owners of lands but for that in Taxes and Tallages touching their goods and matter of Trade they might have some to speak for them as well as other Members of the Kingdom But here then ariseth a question how it cometh to pass that every poor Burrough of England how little soever it be two excepted have two to speak for them in this great Council when the greatest Counties have no more It seemeth that those of the Counties whom we call Knights served not in ancient time for all the Free-holders of the County as at this day they do but were only chosen in the behalf of them that held of the King in Capite and were not Barones majores Barons of the Realm For all Freeholders besides them had their Lord Paramount which held in capite to speak for them as I have shewed before and these only had no body for that themselves held immediately of the King Therefore King John by his Charter did agree to summon them only and no other Freeholders howbeit those other Freeholders because they could not always be certainly distinguish'd from them that held in capite which encreased daily grew by little and little to have voices in election of the Knights of the Shire and at last to be confirm'd therein by the Stat. 7. Henr. IV. and 8. Henr. VI. But to come to our question why there are but two Knights for a County It may well seem to be for that in those times of old there were very few besides the Barons that held in capite as appeareth by that we have already spoken and that two therefore might seem sufficient for these few as well as two for the greatest Burroughs or City of England except London And it may be that of the four which serve for London two of them be for it as it is a City and two other as it is a County tho' elsewhere it be not so But when two came first to be chosen or appointed for the rest of the Burrough or County I cannot find It seemeth by those Synods that were holden in the times of the Saxon Kings and by some after the Conquest that great numbers of the common people flowed thither For it is said in An. 1021. Cum quamplurimis gregariis militibus ac cum populi multitudine copiosa And An. 1126. Innumeraque Cleri populi multitudine and so likewise in An. 1138. and other Synods and Councils By what order or limitation this innumera populi multitudo came to these Assemblies it appeareth not Bartol that famous Civilian and Hottoman according with him thus expoundeth it in other places Nota quod Praesides Provinciarum coadunant universale Parlamentum Provinciae quod intellige non quod omnes de Provincia debent ad illud ire sed de omnibus Civitatibus deputantur Ambasiatores qui Civitatem repraesentant And Johan de Platea likewise saith Vbi super aliquo providendum est pro utilitate totius Provinciae debet congregari generale Concilium seu Parlamentum non quod omnes de Provincia vadant sed de qualibet Civitate aliqui Ambasiatores vel Syndici qui totam Civitatem repraesentent In quo Concilio seu Parlamento petitur proponi sanum ac utile consilium But our Burgesses as it seemeth in time of old were not call'd to consult of State matters being unproper to their Education otherwise than in matter of Aide and Subsidy For King John granteth no more unto them than ad habendum commune consilium regni de auxiliis assid●ndis if his Charter be so pointed that this clause belong to that of the Liberties granted to them which is very doubtful and seemeth rather to belong to that which followeth otherwise there are no words at all for calling them unto the great Councils or Parlaments if you so will term them of that time And yet further it is to be noted that this whole branch of his Charter touching the manner of his summoning a great Council was not comprised in the Articles between him and his Barons whereupon the Charter was grounded but gain'd from him as it seemeth afterward And that may be a reason why it is left out in the Magna Charta of Henry III. confirm'd after by Edward I. in such manner as now we have it The Charter of these Articles I have seen under his own Seal After the death of King John I find many of these great Councils holden and to be often named by the Authors of that time Colloquia after the French word Parlament but no mention in any of them of Burgesses saving that in An. Dom. 1225. Regis 10. it is said that the King held his Christmass at Westminster Praesentibus clero populo cum Magnatibus regionis and that the solemnity being ended Hugh de Burgo the King's Justice propounded to the Arch-Bishop Bishops Earls Barons aliis universis the losses the King had received in France requiring of them one XV th And in the year 1229. the King summoneth to Westminster Archiepiscopos Episcopos Abbates Priores Templarios Hospitalarios Comites Barones Ecclesiarum Rectores qui de se tenebant in capite about the granting a tenth to the Pope wherein those that held in capite are call'd as in Henr. II. to the Council of Clarendon and as the Charter of King John purporteth but no mention is here made of Burgesses THE ORIGINAL OF THE FOUR TERMS Of the Year By Sir HENRY SPELMAN Kt. Printed in the Year 1684. from a very uncorrect and imperfect Copy Now Publish'd from the Original Manuscript in the BODLEIAN Library Sir William Dugdale in his Origines Juridiciales Chap. 32.
honorem nostrum ac jurium dicti regni nostri commodum diligitis nullo modo omittatis Teste Rege apud Turrim London XII die Junii Per ipsum Regem ¶ Vide plus de Returnis Ll. H. II. cap. 59. CHAP. VIII Why I have used so much Canon and Foreign Law in this discourse with an excursion into the Original of our Law I Have used much Canon and some other Foreign Law in this discourse yet I take it not impertinently for as these Western Nations are for the most part deduced from the Germans so in ancient times there was a great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and affinity in their Laws Facies non omnibus una Nec diversa tamen qualem decet esse sororum They that look into the Laws of our English Saxons of the Saliques French Almayns Ripuarians Bavarians Longobards and other German Nations about 800. years since shall easily find it Out of them and other Manners Rites and Customs of the Saxons and Germans is the first part and foundation of our Laws commonly called the Laws of Edward the Confessour and Common Law Two other principal parts as from two Pole-Stars take their direction from the Canon Law and the Law of our brethren the Longobards descending of Saxon lineage as well as we called otherwise the Feodal-law received generally through all Europe For in matters concerning the Church and Church-men Advousons Patronage Presentations Legitimation Matrimony Wills Testaments Adultery Defamation Oaths Perjury Days of Law Days of Vacation wager of Law and many other things it proceeded sometimes wholly sometimes for the greater part by the rules and precepts of the Canon Law And in matters touching Inheritance Fees Tenures by Knights-service Rents Services Wards Marriage of Wards Reliefs Treason Pleas of the Crown Escheats dower of the third part aids fines Felony Forfeiture Tryal by battel Essoine Warrantie c. from the Feodal Law chiefly as those that read the books of those Laws collected by Obertus and Gerardus may see apparently Tho' we and divers other Nations according as befitteth every one in their particular respects do in many things vary from them which Obertus confesseth to be requisite and to happen often among the Longobards themselves I do marvel many times that my Lord Cooke adorning our Law with so many flowers of Antiquity and foreign Learning hath not as I suppose turned aside into this field from whence so many roots of our Law have of old been taken and transplanted I wish some worthy Lawyer would read them diligently and shew the several heads from whence these of ours are taken They beyond the Seas are not only diligent but very curious in this kind but we are all for profit and Lucrando pane taking what we find at Market without enquiring whence it came Another great portion of our Common Law is derived from the Civil Law unless we will say that the Civil Law is derived from ours Dr. Cowel who hath learnedly travelled in comparing and parallelling of them affirmeth that no Law of any Christian Nation whatsoever approacheth nearer to the Civil Law than this of ours His meaning is no Municipal Law Yet he saith that all of them generali hujus disciplinae aequitate temperantur quasi condiuntur Had he not said it his book it self intituled Institutiones Juris Anglicani ad methodum seriem Institutionum Imperialium compositae digestae would demonstrate it which Bracton also above 300. years before right well understanding not only citeth the Digests and Books of Civil Law in many places for warrant of our Common Law but in handling our Law pursueth the method phrase and matter of Justinian's Institutes of Civil Law When and how these several parts were brought into our Common Law is neither easily nor definitively to be expressed Those no doubt of Canon Law by the prevalency of the Clergy in their several Ages those of the Feodal by military Princes at and shortly after the Conquest And those of Civil Law by such of our Reverend Judges and Sages of ancient time as for Justice and knowledge sake sought instruction thence when they found no rule at home to guide their judgements by For I suppose they in those days judged many things ex aequo bono and that their judgements after as Responsa Prudentium among the Romans and the Codex Theodosianus became precedents of Law unto posterity As for the parts given unto Common Law out of the Constitutions of our Kings since the Conquest and before Magna Charta I refer them as they properly belong to our Statute Law tho' our Lawyers do reckon them ordinarily for common Law Among these various heads of our Law I deduce none from the Scots yet must I confess that if those Laws of theirs which they ascribe to Malcolm the Second who lived about sixty years before the Conquest be of that antiquity which I cannot but question and that our book called Glanvil be wholly in effect and verbatim for the greatest part taken out of the book of their Law called Regiam Majestatem for they pretend that to be elder than our Glanvil I must I say ingenuously confess that the greatest part or portion of our Law is come from Scotland which none I think versed either in story or antiquities will or can admit To come therefore to the point if my opinion be any thing I think the foundation of our Law to be laid by our German Ancestours but built upon and polished by materials taken from the Canon Law and Civil Law And under the capacious name of Germans I not only intend our Saxons but the ancient French and Saliques not excluding from that fraternity the Cimbrian Nations i. e. the Norwegians Danes and Normans And let it not more mislike us to take our Laws from the noble Germans a prime and most potent people than it did the conquering Romans theirs from Greece or the learned Grecians theirs from the Hebrews It is not credible that the Britains should be the Authors of them or that their Laws after so many transmutations of people and government but especially after the expulsion in a manner of their Nation or at least of their Nobility Gentry and Free-men the abolishing of their Language and the cessation of all commerce with them and an hereditary hostility settl'd between these Nations that after all this I say they should remain or be taken up by the conquering enemy who scarcely suffered one Town in a County to be called as they named it or one British word almost that I yet have learned to creep into their Language Admit that much of their servile and base people remained behind them pleased perhaps as well with their new Lords as with their old can we think that the Saxons should take either Laws or Manners or form of Government from these base and servile people I would not blemish the least feather of the British honour but I must follow the truth
in Shoe-lane by a Lease from the Bishop of that See temp Edw. VI. yeilding some Rose or other small or not valuable Rent 19. The Bishop of LINCOLN'S Place was Southampton-house in Holborn convey'd temp Edw. VI. to the Lord Writoheseley then Lord Chancellor in fee for which the Bishop hath no other house in or near London as is thought 20. The Bishop of CHICHESTERS Place or Palace as Matthew Paris in his Chronicle calleth it reciting the story of the Lord Arch-bishop of Canterbury visiting St. Bartholomews did at that time lye in that house which was in Chancery-lane where Sir Richard Read sometime a Master of the Chancery and Mr. Atkinson the Counsellor at Law and others dwelt and dwell in and is said to be in Lease from the Bishop's Predecessors for divers years What the Rents reserv'd yearly be the Lease will shew the same 21. The Bishop of St. ASAPH never had Place at or near London that I can learn of neither in the valuation of the See where all his Possession and Jurisdictions be valu'd in the First-fruit-office is there mention of any such Place neither doth the now Bishop of that See know the same 22. The Bishop of the ISLE OF MAN call'd Sodorensis Episcopus altho' the same be an ancient Bishoprick yet was he never Lord of the Parliament of England having no Chapter or other Clergy but only an Archdeacon and all the Incumbents of the several Parishes of that Isle And before the said Statute of 33. Hen. VIII was neither a Suffragan of the Province of Were wont in former times to ride on Mares or Mules 119. Prohibited to take cognizance of Wills 129. Blackney Harbour 151. Blicking 151. The birth place of Q. Anna Bullen ibid. Bocland what 12. Not subject to Homage 35. Bond-men anciently not valu'd or rated 15. Reputed only as part of their Master's substance 11 15. Boors who 14. Bouthorpe 157. Bramsil 108 109. Brancaster 147 148. Breakspear Nich. converted Norway 139. Made Cardinal and Pope ibid. Breclys 161. Brennus a Britain invades Greece 3. His attendants ibid. Brictrick a Saxon Thane 22. Britains none of 'em remaining after Cadwallador's departure 100. Their Laws alter'd by the Romans 101. Bronholm 152. Brotherton Tho. Earl of Norfolk and Earl Marshal of England 167. When he dy'd 168. Buckenham 158. Burg-Castle 155. Burghesses of old not call'd to consult of State-matters 64 65. Burghbote and Brugbote 17 22 40. Burnham in Norfolk 149. Burnham-East in Com. Bucks 23. By what it signifies 3. 154. By-laws 3 154. C Cadwallader Prince of the Britains fled into Armorica 100. Calthorp 151. King Canutus how he publish'd his Laws 61. His Constitution touching Festivals 79. Capet Hugh usurpt the Kingdom of France 5 He grants his Nobility a perpetual enjoyment of their Feuds and Honours ibid. 14. Capitales plagii 52. Capitanei Regis regni 58. Caput feodi aut Capitaneus feodi 11. Carbrook 161. Carolus Calvus Emperour and King of France his Synodical Edict 54 55. Carolus Magnus or Charlemaigne divided his Territories between his three Sons 128. Castle-acre 141. Castle-rising in Norfolk the Parson has the Probate of Wills in that Town 130. Caston 151. Castor 155 156. Ceorls who 12. Of two sorts 14. The chiefest part of their profits redounded to their Lords ibid. Their service no bondage ibid. Their valuation and priviledges ibid. Not capable of a Knights Fee ibid. Champain in France 128. Chancery-Court 94. Charta de Foresta 109 114. Charter the first by whom made and where kept 8. Saxon Charters usually writ in that Language ibid. Charters of Thane-lands granted by several Kings 19 20. Chichley Henr. Arch-bishop of Canterbury canoniz'd St. George's day 93. The occasion of that Constitution ibid. Chindavintus King of the western Goths his Law concerning Wills 130. Cingulum quo sensu accipiendum 185. Cinque-Ports priviledges granted to them by King Edward the Confessour c. 26. Clacklose-Hundred 139. Clergy-men forbidden to use hunting 109 112 113. seq When they took upon them to prove Wills 129. Prohibited by Justinian to meddle with those matters ibid. Cley harbour 151. De Clifford Rob. Marshal of England 167. K. Canute's Charter of donation to the Thane Orc. 20. Coin of England in Q. Elisabeth's time 203 c. Colloquia 65. Comites who and why so call'd 3. Commendati 35. Congham 145. Conradus Salicus made a Constitution touching Feuds 4 5. Consecration a strange one of Eadmer a Monk of Canterbury 119. Consilium regni 60. Controversies among the ancient Britains by whom judg'd 74. Conveyance of lands how made by the Saxons 8. Cosshering what 60. Cossey 157. Counties in England 5. County-Courts how often kept 54. Were proclaim'd a sennight beforehand ib. Earl's County and Bishop's Diocess had but one limit 130 131. Ecclesiastical and Secular causes there decided 131. Court-Baron 4. It s Original 51. Court-Leet 51. Sometimes granted to the Lords of Mannours ibid. Court-Christian or Ecclesiastical when it sprung up 131 132. High Courts of Justice why they sit not in the Afternoons 89 90. Why they sit not all some days 90 91. Why they sit on the Rogation days ibid. Why on some Festivals and not on others 91 The Admiralty-Court why always open 94. Chancery-Court said to be always open ib. Cowshil 153. Creak 149. Cromer 152. Crostwick 153. Crowner's Office not before the Conquest 27. D Dane-blood 149. Dane-law 45. Danes not capable of devising lands by will 22 David I. King of Scotland and Earl of Huntingdon 11 131. Dean his Office and Functions 50. The priviledges of a Bishop's Dean ibid. Deerham West 140. Defensor Plebis 129. Degradatio Militis 185. Deira a Province 13. Demains or Demesne what 12. Ancient Demesnes had not any lands by Knight-service 44 57. D'Evreux Robert Earl of Essex Viscount Bourchier c. 171. Sent into Spain with an army ibid. Storm'd Cadiz ibid. Created Marshal of England ibid. Made Lord Deputy of Ireland ibid. When beheaded ibid. Dies juridici 72 73. Dies feriales 72. Dies pacis Ecclesiae ibid. 79. 82. Dies pacis Regis ibib 82. Dies novem Lectionum 91. Dies feriati repentini 93. Dower why judg'd to belong to the Ecclesiastical Court 132. Downham 140. Druides who 74. The sole Judges of controversies among the old Britains 74. Suppos'd to have us'd the Greek tongue 103 Had no knowledge of the Latin ibid. Dudley John Duke of Northumberland and Earl Marshal of England 170. E Eadmere a Monk of Canterbury made Arch-bishop of St. Andrews in Scotland 119. King Eadwigus's Charter of Thane-lands granted to Aelswine 19. Earl Marshals of England 169 170 171. Earl of a County see Alderman Earldoms not hereditary in ancient times 13. Earldoms in France ibid. 14. Earls among the Saxons 13 14. Earl no title of dignity anciently 13. Their Office depended on the King's pleasure ibid. An Earls Heriot 31. Easter-Term how limited anciently 83. Easter-week when exempted from Law business 76. Ebsam in
Surrey 23. King Edgar's Charter of donation of certain Thane-lands 19. Another Charter granted by him to the Monastery of Hide near Winchester 20. By whose advice his Laws were made 61. King Edward the elder how he propos'd his Laws 61. The first that prohibited Law business on Festivals 77. King Edward the Confessor's Charter of donation to Thola 20. Several priviledges granted to the Cinque-Ports 26. His Laws by whom collected 61. His Constitution touching Festivals 79. Edward Earl of Norfolk and Marshal of England 168. Dyed in his minority ibid. Edwin son of Othulf gave certain lands to Arch-bishop Odo 29. Elfere a Saxon bequeath'd Snodland to the Church of St. Andrews 128. Publish'd his Will before Odo Arch-bishop of Canterbury c. 130. Elfstane Bishop of Rochester 130. Elfsy Priest of Croyden 130. Ellingham 161. Elmham 150. Erpingham 151. Erpingham Tho. Commissioner for executing the Office of Earl Marshal of England 169. Escheats the signification of the word 37. No feodal Escheats among the Saxons 37 38. Escuage what in the Empire 36. Neither its name nor rules us'd by the Saxons 37. Essoyning the manner of it not in use before the Conquest 27. King Ethelbald's Charter to the Monks of Croyland 22. Ethelbert the first Christian King of the Saxons 8. He causes his Laws to be put in writing ibid. He took somewhat from the Roman law 102 Etheldreda daughter of K. Alfred her dowry 8. King Etheldred ordain'd every eight Hides of land to find a man for the naval Expedition 17. His Charter of donation to Aethelwold 19. Another Charter granted by him to his Thane Sealwyne ibid. King Ethelstane whom he consulted in making his Laws 61. King Ethelwulfs Charter of priviledges 23. He divided his lands by Will among his three sons 128. Euricus King of the Goths 102. Exauctoratio Militis 185. Expeditio what it signifies in Latin 17. F Fakenham 150. Fasti or Law days among the Romans why so nam d. 72. Seldom two Fasti together 75. Fasti proprie ibid. Fasti intercisi ibid. Fasti Comitiales ibid. All the Fasti not apply'd to Judicature ibid. Fealty the definition of it 35. No Fealty but for a fee. 36. What manner of Fealty among the Saxons ibid. Felbrig 152. Felewell 161. Feodal words none among the Saxons 7 8 9. Feorme what it signifies in the Saxon tongue 15 Ferdwite 37. Festa majora vel principalia 91. Festivals how exempted from Law days 76. The differences of them 91. The Festivals of St. Peter and Paul 92. Of St. George 93. Of Gun-powder Treason ibid. A Feud what it is 1. It s general and particular definition 2. Feuds among the Jews ibid. Among the Gauls 3 Their original 4. Made perpetual and hereditary 5. When and how they became so ibid. Especially in England ibid. The difference between them and Benefices 6 9. The great growth of them ibid. No proper Feuds before the Conquest ibid. Feudal-law generally receiv'd in every Kingdom 5. It s youth infancy and full age 9. Where it had its original ibid. Feudatarii 9. Feudum militare nobile 4. Rusticum ignobile ibid. Feuda majora regalia ibid. The word Feudum or Feodum not us'd in K. Beorredus's days 9. Fideles who 4. Fidelity what 59. Fines for Licence of alienation 33. The Thane-lands free from them ibid. Not in use among the Saxons 34. Fitz-Alan Jo. Lord Maltravers Marshal of England 168. Fitz-Osborn Will. Lord Marshal to King William the Conquerour 165. Flegg 154. Flitcham 145. Flitchamburrough 52 145. Folcland what 12. Not alienated without licence 33 34. Free from homage 35. Ford-Park 110. Forests belong to the King alone 118. Subjects can have 'em only in custody ibid. Fouldage 162. Franc-almoin 2 7. Frank-tenements 12. Freeborgs or Tithings 51. Frekenham 153. G Garbulsham 158. Gavelkind what and why so call'd 12. Observ'd throughout all Kent 43. At first the general Law of all Nations ibid. Germans their Customs and Tenures carry'd into several Countries 5. They receiv'd the Roman Law 127. Gey-wood 143. Gilbert the third son of William the King's Marshal 166. Made Marshal of England ibid. Kill'd in a Tournament ibid. Gimmingham 152. Goths carry the German Laws into Spain Greece c. 5. They were the first that put their Laws in writing 102. Trusted Priests with the passing of wills 130 Government the ancient Government of England 49. c. 53. Grand-days in France and England 92. Grand Serjeanty 2. Grantesmale Hugh Marshal under K. William I. 165. Greeks from whom they had much of their ancient Rites 74 127. Gresham 152. Gressenhall 150. Grey Rad. de exauctoratur 185. Guthrun the Dane 61 77. H Hales 156. Harkela Andr. de exauctoratur 185. Harleston ibid. Hartlebury-park 110. Hawkins Pet Keeper of Bramsil-park wounded by Arch-bishop Abbot 109 c. Hengham 157. King Henry I. imprison'd the Bishop of Durham 62. His Constitution about Festivals and Law-days 81. King Henry II. ratify'd the Laws of Edw. the Confess and Will the Conquerour 81. Henry Bishop of Winchester conven'd K. Stephen to his Synod 132. Heribannum what 17. Heriots paid after the death of great Men. 31 32 To whom forgiven 32. The difference between them and Reliefs 32 33. By whom and when first ordain'd 32. What the word Heriot signifies ibid. Heriots and Reliefs issuing out of the same lands 33. No badge of lands held by Knight-service ibid. Heydon 151. High Courts see Court of Justice Hikifricus Pugil quidam Norfolciensis 138. Hilary-Term its ancient bounds 82 83. The end of it sometimes held in Septuagesima 95. Hockwold 161. Holkham 149. Holland Tho Marshal of England 168. Holland Tho. Earl of Kent Duke of Norfolk 169. Made Earl Marshal of England ibid. Holland Tho. Farl Marshal of England during the minority of John Mowbray 165. Holme in Norfolk 147 152 Homage by whom first instituted 5. Feodal homage 34. Of two sorts ibid. When begun in France and England ibid. The reason of it 34 35. Who are to do it 35. Usual in Soccage-tenure 35. As well a personal as a praedial duty ibid. Homines commendati 35. Hominium homagium what 34. Homagium ligeum ibid Feodale aut praediale ibid. Hoveden Roger when he wrote 31. Howard Sir John Kt. created Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshal of England 17● Slain in Bosworth-field ibid. Howard Tho. the son of the former Earl of Surrey 170. Imprison'd in the Tower ibid. Defeated the Scotch under K. Henry VII ibid Made Lord Treasurer of England and restor'd to his fathers dignities ibid. Kill'd James IV. K. of Scotland in battel ib. Sent Ambassadour into France ibid. Made Vice-Roy of England ibid. Where he dy'd ibid. Howard Tho. the fourth Duke of Norfolk of that name and Earl Marshal of England 1●1 Howard Tho. the Grand-son of the former Earl of Arundel and Surrey ibid. The first Earl of England ibid. Made Earl Marshal for life ibid. Hugh Bishop of Coventry exercis'd the Sheriffs place 116. Excommunicated ibid. De Hum●z
Richard Tribunus Regis or Marshal to King Henry II. 166. Hundradors 51. Hundreds their original 50. Hundred Courts 51. Hunting forbidden to Clergy-men 109 112 113 114 115. Hydes what 17. When disus'd 4● I Ibreneys Rad. de 190. Iceni 135. Eorum nomina derivatio ibid. Icenia 135. Ejusdem termini ibid. Coelum solum 13● Ina King of the West Saxons adjusted the quantity of Rent for every Plough-land 15. By whose advice he made his Laws 61. Made a strict Law against working on Sundays 57. Ingolsthorp 146. Inland what 12. Intwood 157. K. John's Magna Charta 63. John Marshal to King Henry I. 165. Irregularity of Clergy-men wherein it consists 109 112. I se fluvius unde dictus 135. Ejusdem aestus 139. Islepe Sim Arch-bishop of Canterbury 90. Jury taken out of several Hundreds in a County 53. Jurours prohibited to have meat c. till agreed of their Verdict 89. Jus Gentium 2. Justices of Evre when instituted 27. Justinian the Emperor when he flourish'd 129. He prohibited Clergy-men to take cognizance of Wills ibid. Justitium what 72. K Keninghall 158. Kent the custom of Gavelkind in that County 43. Kettringham 15● The King the fountain of all Feuds and Tenures 1● The King to have his Tenants lands till the heir has done homage 3● The King universal Lord of his whole Territories 37. Anciently granted Churches to Lay-men 115 Knight what among the Saxons 51 58. Why there are but two Knights of the Shire for a County 64. Knight's-fees 3 4 51 58. When introduc'd 45. The number of them ibid. The value of a Knights-fee ibid. Knight-service 2 7. Kymberley 158. S Sacha Soca what in the Saxon tongue 51. Saliques bring the German feodal Rights into France 5. Sall in Norfolk 151. Sandringham 146. Sanhadrim when and where the Judges of it sate 75. Satrapies among the Saxons 50. Saxons the first planters of the German Rites in Great Britain 5. Their Charters translated 7. The manner of making their conveyances 8 Distinction of persons among them 11. How many degrees of Honour they had 16. How they held their lands 40. What oblig'd 'em to so many kinds of services ibid. Saxons very much given to drunkenness 89. When they took possession of England 100. They swept away the Roman Laws there 101 Yet took somewhat from them 102. Why their Laws were not at first put in writing ibid. When they had written Laws ibid. The use of wills unknown to the ancient Saxons 127. Our Saxons observ'd the Civil Law in their wills 128. Scutagium 36 37. Sedgeford 146. Segrave Nicholas Marshal of England 167. Seignory wherein it consists 2. Services how many sorts of 'em upon lands 17. Personal services 40. Praedial ibid. Alodial ibid. Beneficiary ibid. Colonical ibid. Servitia militaria what 46. The difference between them and Servitutes militares ibid Seymour Edward Duke of Somerset Nephew of King Edw. VI. 169. Made Lord Treasurer and Earl Marshal of England ibid. Shardlow Joh Justice of Oyer had a licence to hear causes on a Festival 95 96. Sharnburn 146. History of the Family 189 c. Shelton 156. Shouldham 142. Shyre gemot what 53. Signioral authority what 6● Snetsham 146 189 190 c. Socage 3 7 33 43. Socmen 1● 15 57. Sprowston 153. Stanchow 146 19● Star chamber Court 94 95. Stigand Arch-bishop of Canterbury depos'd 119. Stock-Chappel 146. Stow-Bardolfe 140. Strangbow Gilb Earl of Pembroke and Marshal of the King's Palace 165. Suiters of the Hundred 51. When and by whom call'd at this day ibid. Summons the manner of it in the Empire 36. Sunday how exempted from Law Suits 76. Sustenance what 59. Swasham 141. Swainmote-Courts 85. Syndici who 63 64. Synod of Eanham when held 78. T Talbot George Earl of Shrewsbury 171. Executed the Office of Lord High Steward of England ibid. Tallagium 60. Tasburg 156. Tassilo Duke of Bavaria did homage to King Pipin 34. Tenant lands of how many sorts 4. Tenants by Knight-service 4. Tenant in capite 10. Tenant in menalty ibid. Tenant Paraval ibid. Tenant's land or the Tenancy 12. Tenants what they were in ancient time 51. Tenants in Socage 57. Tenants forc'd to pay a fine upon the marriage of a Daughter 60. To furnish their Lords with provisions ibid. To present them with gratuities ibid. Tenure in capite 2. By Knight-service 4 7. The Original of Tenures 4. Tenure in Socage 4 7. Tenures for Life ibid. What tenures were in use among the Saxons 7. When first us'd ibid. No tenures in capite among the Saxons 10. Tenure in capite of two sorts ibid. The fruits of feodal tenures 24. The name of tenures not us'd by the Saxons 40. Terminus what it signifies 71. When the word became frequent ibid. Terms their definition and etymology 71. Several acceptations of the word 70. Full term and Puisne term ibid. The Original of Terms 73 77. Two Terms among the Welch 74. The Terms laid out according to the ancient Laws 82. The ancient bounds of Hilary-Term 82 83. Of Easter-Term 83. Of Trinity-Term 84 85. Of Michaelmass-Term 85 86. How Trinity Term was alter'd 87. Michaelmass-Term how abbreviated 88. Why the Terms are sometime extended into the Vacation 95. Terra Regis 57. Terrae testamentales 12. Terrington 138. Tertium denarium 14. Testaments and last wills not in use among the ancient Hebrews 127. Not found in Scripture before Christ's time ibid. Expresly mention'd by St. Paul ibid. Not us'd by the Saxons or Normans ibid. The custom of making wills from whom taken up ibid. How many witnesses to a will requir'd by the Civil Law 128. Thane or Theoden who 10 11. Their several kinds 16. Not properly a title of Dignity ibid. The Etymology of their name ibid. The quality of their Persons ibid. The nature of their Land 17. The word Thane has no relation to war 21. A Thane's Heriot 31. Thane-lands not subject to feodal service 18. Charters of Thane-lands granted by Saxon Kings 19 20. The occasion of granting them 21. Thane-lands alienated ibid. Devised by will 22. Granted to women ibid. No service upon 'em but what was express'd ibid. Dispos d of at the pleasure of the owner 23. Charged with a Rent ibid. Might be restrain'd from alienation ibid. Thane-lands and Reveland what 38. Thani majores minores 16. Thani Regis ibid. Theinge 50. His jurisdiction ibid. Theowes and Esnes who 11. Thetford 158. Thokus Dominus de Sharnburn 189. Thola the widow of Ore had a grant of certain lands of K. Edw. the Confessour 20. Obtain'd a Licence to devise her Lands and Goods 34. Thrimsa what 15. Thrithingreves or Leidgerev●s their Office and Authority 52. What causes were usually brought before ' em ibid. Tribunus militum rei militaris aut exercitus 165. Tribute 59. Trimarcesia what 3. Trinity-term its ancient bounds 84 85. How it was alter'd and shortned 87. Trinodis necessitas 17 43. Trithings or Lathes 50. Why so call'd 52. Turfs why so call'd 139 140. Tydd
between servitia Militaria and servitutes Militares The one Heroick Noble and full of Glory which might not therefore be permitted in old time to any that was not born of free parents no not to a King's son as appeareth in Virgil wherein our Saxons also were very cautelous and accounted a Souldiers shield to be insigne libertatis the other not ignoble only and servile but deriv'd even from very bondage Let not this offend I will say no more 30. Julii 1639. FINIS Two Discourses I. Of the ancient GOVERNMENT of England II. Of PARLIAMENTS By Sir HENRY SPELMAN Kt. Publish'd from the Original Manuscripts Sapientia disciplina scientia Legum apud Deum Dilectio via bonorum apud eum Wisdom and knowledge and understanding of the Law are of God and Love and good works come of him Ecclus 11. 15. OF THE Ancient Government OF ENGLAND TO tell the Government of England under the old Saxon Laws seemeth an Vtopia to us present strange and uncouth yet can there be no period assign'd wherein either the frame of those Laws was abolished or this of ours entertained but as day and night creep insensibly one upon the other so also hath this alteration grown upon us unsensibly every age altering something and no age seeing more than what themselves are actors in nor thinking it to have been otherwise than as themselves discover it by the present Like them of China who never travailing out of their own Countrey think the whole world to extend no further As one therefore that hath coasted a little further into former times I will offer unto you a rude Mapp thereof not like those of the exquisite Cosmographers of our later ages but like them of old when as neither cross sails nor compass were yet known to Navigators Our Saxons though divided into many Kingdoms yet were they all one in effect in Manners Laws and Language so that the breaking of their Government into many Kingdoms or the reuniting of their Kingdoms into a Monarchy wrought little or no change amongst them touching Laws For though we talk of the West-Saxon law the Mercian law and the Dane law whereby the west parts of England the middle parts and those of Norfolk Suffolk and the north were severally governed yet held they all an uniformity in substance differing rather in their mulct than in their Canea that is in the quantity of Fines and Amercements than in the course and frame of Justice Therefore when all these Kingdoms grew into one Monarchy as under Alured Ethelstane Edgar c this bred no notable innovation in any of them for the King had no new Law to impose upon his new Subjects nor were his new Subjects unacquainted with his form of Government having always liv'd according to the same So that when Edward the Confessor came to take away these small differences that were between these three Laws he did it even in these fickle and unconstant times without all tumult or contradiction making that his alteration famous rather by the new name than by the new matter For abolishing the three particular names before-mentioned he now call'd it the Common Law of England for that no part of the Kingdom should henceforth be governed by any particular Law but all alike by a Common Law But insomuch as this Common Law is but the half Arch of the Government tending only to the Temporal part thereof and not unto the Ecclesiastical I cannot well present the one without the other and must therefore make a project of the whole Arch that so the strength and uniformity of both the parts may the better be conceived As therefore each side of an Arch descendeth alike from the Coane or top-point so both the parts of that their Government was alike deduced from the King each of them holding correspondency one with the other like two loving Sisters both in aspect and in lineaments To begin with the right side or eldest Sister the Estate Ecclesiastical was first divided into Provinces Every Province into many Bishopricks Every Bishoprick into many Arch-Deaconries Every Arch-Deaconry into divers Deanries Every Deanry into many Parishes And all these committed to their several Governours Parsons Deans Arch-Deacons Bishops and Arch-Bishops who as subordinate one to the other did not only execute the charge of these their several portions but were Accoumptant also for the same to their Superiours The Parson as ima species was to hear and determine the breaches of God's peace of love and charity within his parish to reprove the inordinate life of his parishoners and tho' he could not strike with the Ecclesiastical sword yet might he shake it against them by enjyoning notorious offenders to contrition repentance satisfaction and sometime by removing them from the blessed Sacrament The Dean to take cognisance of the life and conversation of the Parsons and Clergy-men of every Parish within his Deanry to censure breach of Church-peace and to punish incontinent and infamous livers by excommunication pennance c. And because there could be no breach of the King's peace but it must also break the peace and unity of the Church the Bishop's Dean in whose Deanry the peace was broken had in some cases 10s. for his part of the mulct or fine thereof as appeareth Ll. Ed. Confess cap. 31. The Arch-Deacon drawing nearer to the Bishop drew the more preeminence from him and was his coadjutor in the ordination of Clarkes having a superintendent power over all Parochial Parsons within every Deanry of his precinct The Bishop as the greatest orb of the Diocess had jurisdiction and coertion through the same in all Ecclesiastical causes and on all persons except Monasteries exempted And for this purpose had two general Synods in the year wherein all the Clergy of his Diocess assembled for determining matters touching the Church as well in faith as in Government But the Arch-Bishop to bind up this golden fagot in the band of Union and Conformity comprehended all the Bishops of his Province sub pallio suae plenitudinis or sub plenitudine potestatis having supreme jurisdiction to visit and reform in all their Diocesses whatsoever was defective or omitted That by this means no transgression might break through so many wards but if it escaped the Sword of Hasael Jehu might slay it or if it passed them both yet Elisha might light upon it This was the modell of the Church policy composed no doubt out of that fundamental rule of Government prescribed by Jethro unto Moses Appoint rulers over thousands over hundreds over fifties and over tens According to the steps whereof the State Temporal did likewise take her lineaments For the Temporal Government was likewise divided into Satrapies or Dukedoms which contained in them divers Counties the County divers Lathes or Trithings every Trithing divers Hundreds or Wapentakes every Hundred divers Towns or Lordships shortly after called Baronies And the Government of all these were committed to their several Heads