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A00007 The Cronycles of Englonde with the dedes of popes and emperours, and also the descripcyon of Englonde; Saint Albans chronicle. Higden, Ranulf, d. 1364. Polycronicon. 1528 (1528) STC 10002; ESTC S108645 466,261 386

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and came in to Normandy for to defende that londe And the warre bytwene them lasted two yere tyll at the last they two fought togyder and the king of Fraūce was dyscomfyted and escaped awaye with moche payne and the moost parte of his men were discomfyted and taken And the kyng dyd with them his pleasure some of them he let go frely and some he let put to deth But afterwarde the two kynges were accorded Whan kynge Henry had hoolly all the lo●de of Normandy discomfyted his enemyes of Fraūce he returned agayn in to Englonde with moche honour And his two sones Willyam Rychard wolde haue comen after theyr fader went to the see with a grete cōpany of people But or that they might come to lōde the shyppe stroke agaynst a roche brake in peces were all drowned that were therin saue one m● that was in the same shyppe y● escaped And this was on saynt ●atherynes daye these were the names of thē that were drowned Willyam Rychard the kȳges sones the erle of Chestre Ottonell his broder Geffrey rydel Walter emurci Godfrey archdeken the kynges doughter the coūtesse of perches the kȳges nece the coūtesse of Chestre many other Whan kynge Henry other lordes arryued in englōde and held these tydynges they made sorowe ynough all theyr myrth Ioye was turned in to mournynge sorowe ¶ How Maude the empresse came agayn in to englond how she was afterward wedded to Geffrey the erle of Angeo ANd whan two yere were gone that the erle had dwelled with the king the erle went from the king began to warre vpō hym dyd moche harme in the londe of Normandy toke there a stronge castell there he dwelled all the yere And than came to hym tydynges that Henry the emperour of Almayne that had spoused Maude his doughter was deed that she dwelled no longer in Almayn that she wolde come agayne in to Normādy to her fader And whā she was comen vnto hym he toke her than to hym came agayn in to Englonde made the englysshmen to do othe feaute vnto the empresse And the fyrst man that made the othe was Wylliam the arche bysshop of Caūterbury and that other Dauid kyng of Scotlonde after hym all the lordes and barons of Englonde ¶ Also after that the noble erle of Angeo a worthy knyght sent vnto the kyng of Englonde that he wolde graūte hȳ to haue his doughter Maud the empresse to wyfe And bycause that her fader wyst that he was a noble man the kynge graūted hym consented therto And than toke he his doughter ladde her in to Normādy came to the noble knyght Geffrey there he spoused the foresayd Maude with moche honour And the erle begate vpon her a sone that was called Henry the empresse sone And after whā all this was done kyng Henry dwelled all the yere in Normandy And after that a longe tyme a greuous sekenes toke hȳ where through he dyed And this king Henry regned .xxxv. yere and .iiij. monethes His herte was buryed in the grete chirche of our lady in Roen And his body was brought with moche honour in to Englonde and buryed in the abbey of Redynge of that whiche he was founder HEnricus the fourth was emperour in Almayn after Henry the thyrd xv yere This man put his owne fader in prison there helde hym tyll he dyed He toke pope Pascall with his cardynalles and prysoned them as is sayd afore for the whiche cause as it is supposed he lacked yssue For he wedded the kynges doughter of Englonde Maude But afterwarde he came to grace and all the lawes of the chirche he resygned frely to Calixte the pope and be●ought hym to gyue hym in penaunce that he sholde neuer come agayne to his empyre that he myght haue remyssyon of his trespace And after the opynyon of many a man he was wylfully exiled and bothe he and his wyfe dyed at Chestre in Englonde ¶ Gelasius was pope after Pascall two yere and fledde from Henry the emperour in to Burgoyn and there decessed This emperour chose Benedicte a Spanyarde to be pope the whiche stroue with Calixtus ¶ Calixtus was pope after hym two yere and fyue monethes This Calixtus was the sone of the duke of Burgoyne and was chosen in the place of Gelasius And whan he sholde come to Rome he toke the foresayd Benedictus and made hym to ryde afore hym shamefully For he on a mule turned his face to the tayle of the mule helde the tayle in his hande as a bry●●● tyll he came through the cite than he was put in pryson And the pope made peas with the emperour ¶ Honorius was pope after hym two yere lytel of hym is wryten ¶ Nora ¶ Henry the fourth Emperour of Ann●yne decessed this tyme was buryed with his proge●ytours after some men with suche an epi●aphe Filius hic pater hic auus hic proauus ●acer istis But it is lykely to be truer that the Gerald sayth in Itinerario wallie where he sayth that after he had prysoned his carnall fader his spirytuall fader the pope with his cardynals after he was reconsyled wylfully he was exiled And he left Maude his wyfe the kynges doughter of Englonde pryuely and lyued an heremytes lyfe at Chestre .x. yere where he myght lyue as no man knewe hym he called hȳselfe Godiscallus the whiche godson is called So the emperour went secretly awaye and Maude his wyfe the empresse went to her fader Henry in to Normādy where anone after she was wedded vnto Geffrey plantagines the duke of Andegāme vpon whome he begate Henry the seconde that afterward was kyng of Englonde vnder whome saynt Thomas of Caūterbury regned dyed ¶ Lotharius was emperour after Henry the fourth .xij. yere And lytell of hym is wryten but that he was manerly to the chirche and that he subdued Roger the vsurper of the kyngdom of Cycyle ¶ ●ag● de sancto Victore was a noble man this tyme at Parys and a noble doctour of the nacyon of Saxons ¶ The ordre of saynt Iohn baptyst at Ierusalem began this tyme by the worshypfull man Raymond myghtely disposed vnto the werkes of mercy All this ordre made theyr waye to serue poore men ¶ Anno domini M C .xxxiiij. INnocencius was pope aftre Honorius .xiiij. yere .vij. monethes This man was a very deuoute man with suche men he cöpanyed hym And he had stryfe .vij. yere agaynst Pyers of Lyon that whiche named hym Anoc●e●ū by strength he toke the poperyche the whiche Innocent sawe with two galeys fledde in to Fraūce was worshipfully receyued of saynt Bernard the whiche that tyme had all the kynges prynces in his handes and he ꝓuoked them for to brynge this pope Innocent in to his dignite agayn At the last all thynge was cessed and his enemyes
englond sent ouer the see to this rescowe certayn people well arayed of the best chosen men for the warre And the seconde day of August the foresaid duke of Glocestre arryued at Calays with all his armye and .v. hondred shyppes mo● And the duke of Burgoyne all his hoost that laye in the syege as soone as they espyed the sayles in the see before they approched Calays hauen sodeynly in a mornynge departed from the syege leuyng behynde hym moche stuffe vytayle and fledde in to flaundres pycardye And in lyke wyse dyd the syege that lay before Guynes where as they of Guynes toke the grete gonne of brasse called Dygeon many other grete gonnes serpentynes And whan the duke of Glocestre was arryued with all his hoost he went in to flaundres and was there .xij. dayes and dyd but lytell harme excepte that he brent two fayre vyllages Poperynge Belle and other houses whiche were of noo strength so he returned home agayne ¶ And this same yere the kynge of Scotlōde besyeged Rokesburgh with moche people But syr Rafe Gray departed frō the castel and ordeyned for rescowe But as soone as the kynge of Scotlonde vnderstode of his departynge sodeynly he brake his syege went his waye and lefte moche ordynaunce behynde hym where he gate no worshyp ¶ In this same yere the seconde daye of Ianuary quene Katherin whiche was the kynges moder wyfe to kynge Henry the fyfth dyed departed out of this worlde and was brought ryally through London and so to westmynster there she lyeth worshipfully buryed in our ladyes thapell ¶ Also this yere the fourth daye of Ianuary fell downe the gate with the toure on it on London brydge towarde Southwarke with two arches all that stode theron ¶ This same yere was a grete treaty holden bytwene Graueling Calays bytwene the kyng the duke of Burgoyn where for the kyng was the Cardinall of Englonde the duke of Norfolke many other lordes And for the duke of Burgoyn was the duches●e hauynge full power of her lorde as regent lady of his londes where was taken by the aduyse of bothe partyes an abstinence of warre for a certayne tyme in the name of the duchesse not of the duke bycause he had gone from his othe legeaūce that he had made to kynge Henry therfore the kyng neuer wold wryte no appoynt to haue to do with hym after but all in the duchesse name ¶ Also this same yere quene Iane dyed the seconde daye of Iuly whiche had ben wyse to kynge Henry the fourth was caryed fro Bermondsey to Caūterbury where she lyeth buryed by kyng Hēry her husbonde ¶ This same yere dyed all the lyons in the Toure of Londō the whiche had not ben seen many yeres before ¶ How Owen a squyer of wales that had wedded quene Katherin was arested of the scysme bytwene Eugeny Feli● IN the .xvi. yere of kynge Henry dyed Sygysmonde Emperour of Almayn knyght of the garter whose enteremēt the kyng kept at saynt Paules in London ryally where was made a ryall herse and the kynge in his estate cladde in blewe was a● euen at Dirige on the morow at masse ● ¶ And after hym was electe chosen Albert duke of Ostryche whiche had wedded Sygismondes doughter for to be Emperour This man was taken receyued to be kyng of Beme and Hungary bycause of his wyfe that was Sygismondes doughter whiche lefte none other heyre after hym This Albert was emperour but one yere for he was poysoned so dyed Some saye he dyed of a flix but he was a vertuous man piteful so moche that all the people that knewe hym sayd that the worlde was not worthy to haue his presence ¶ This yere one Owen a squyer of wales a man of lowe byrth whiche had many a day before secretly wedded quene Katheryn had by her .iij. sones one doughter was taken cōmaūded to Newgate to pryson by the duke of Glocestre ꝓtectour of the realme And this yere he brake the prison by the meane of a preest that was his chapelayn after was taken agayn by my lorde Bemond brought agayne to Newgate afterward delyuered at large one of his sones afterward was made erle of Rychemond an other erle of Penbroke the thyrde a monke of westminster whiche monke dyed soone after ¶ This same yere also on Newyeres day at Baynardes castell fell downe a stake of wode sodeynly at after none and slewe thre men myscheuously foule hurt other ¶ Also at Bedford on a sherthursdaye were xviij men murdred wtout stroke by fallyng downe of a stayre as they came out of the comin hall many sore hurt ¶ In the .xviij. yere syr Richard Beauchamp the good erle of warwyke dyed at Roen he beynge the tyme lewtenaūt of the kynge in Normādy frō thens his body was brought to warwyke where worshypfully he lyeth in a new chapel on the south syde of the quere ¶ Also this yere was a grete derth of corne in all englonde for a busshel of where was worth .xl. pens in many places of englond yet had they not ynough wherfore Steuen Brown that tyme Mayre of London sente in to Pruce and brought to London certayne shippes laden with rye whiche did moche good to the poore people for corne was so scarce in englōde that in some places of englonde poore people made them breed of ferne rotes ¶ This yere the generall concyle of Basilie deposed Eugenye they chose Felix that was duke of Sauoy thā began the scysme whiche endured vnto the yere of our lord M cccc .xlviij. This Felix was a deuout prȳce sawe his sones sone after lyued an holy lyf and was chosen pope of the concyle of Basile Eugeny deposed And so the scysme was lōge tyme this Felix had but lytel obediēce bycause of the neutralite for the moost part wel nygh all christēdom obeyed reputed Eugeny for very pope god knoweth who was very pope of them bothe for bothe occupyed during Eugenyes lyfe ¶ This yere syr Richard wyche vicare of Hermete sworth was degraded of his preesthode at Paules brent at tour hill as for an heretyke on saynt Botulphes day how wel at his deth he died a good christē mā wherfore after his deth moche peple came to the place where he was brent offred made a hepe of stones set vp a crosse oftre held hȳ for a saynt tyl the mayr shreues by the kȳges cōmaūdement bysshops destroyed it made there a dung hil ¶ Also this yere the shreues of Londō fet out of saȳt Martyns the grād .v. ꝑsones which afterward were restored agayn to the sentwary by the kynges Iustyces ¶ After Albert the thyrde Frederyk was chosen emperour This Frederyk duke of Osteryke was longe emperour dyfferred to be crowned at
sone to Ioathas regned ī israel .xvij. yere he troubled Amazia Vide pl’a plura iiij regū .xiij. ¶ Of kynge Leyr sone to Bladud of the answere of his yongest doughter that gracyously was maryed vnto the kynge of fraunce AFter kyng Bladud regned Leyr his sone and this Leyr made y● towne of Leycestre he let call y● towne after his name he gouerned y● towne well nobly This kyng Leyr had thre doughters y● fyrst was called Gonorill the seconde Rigan y● thyrde Cordeill and the youngest doughter was fayrest best of cōdicyons The kyng theyr fader became an olde man wolde that his doughters were maryed or y● he dyed but fyrst he thought to assay whiche of them loued him moost best for she y● loued him best sholde best be maryed And he axed of y● first doughter how well she loued hȳ And she answered sayd better than her owne lyf Now certes sayd her fader y● is a grete loue Thā he axed the seconde doughter how moche she loued hym And she sayd more passynge all y● creatures of y● worlde Per ma foy sayd her fader I may no more axe And than he axed of y● thyrde doughter how moche she loued him Certes fader sayd she my systers haue tolde you glosyng wordes but I shall tell you trouth for I loue you as I ought to loue my fader And for to brynge you more in certayne how I loue you I shall you tell as moche as ye be worth so moche shall ye be loued The kyng her fader wende y● she had scorned hym and became wonders wroth sware by heuē erth she shold neuer haue good of him but his doughters y● loued hym so moche shold be well auaūced maried And y● first doughter he maryed to Maugles kynge of Scotlonde the seconde he maryed to Hauemos erle of Cornewayle so they ordeyned spake bytwene them y● they sholde departe y● realme bytwene them two after y● deth of kyng Leyr theyr fader so y● Cordeill his yongest doughter sholde no thynge haue of his londe But this Cordeill was wonders fayre of good cōdicyons maners that y● kynge of fraūce Agāpe herde of her fame sent to kyng Leyr her fader for to haue her vnto his wyfe prayed hym therof And kynge Leyr her fader sent him worde y● he had departed his londe gyuē all to his two doughters before said sayd he had no more lond wherwith her to mary And whan Agampe y● kynge of fraūce herde this answere he sente anone agayne to Leyr sayd y● he asked no thynge with her but onely her clothinge her body And anone kyng Leyr sent her ouer y● see to y● kynge of fraūce And he receyued her with moche worship with solempnite he spoused her made her quene of fraūce ¶ How kyng Leyr was dryuen out of his londe through his folke And how Cordeill his yongest doughter helped hym at his nede THus it befell afterwarde y● these two eldest doughters wolde not abyde tyll Leyr theyr fader was deed but warred vpon hym whyles that he was on lyue dyd hym moche sorow shame wherfore they toke frō hym all the realme bytwene them had ordeyned that one of them shold haue kyng Leyr to soiourne all his lyfe tyme with .lx. knyghtes squyers that he myght worshypfully go ryde wheder that he wolde in to what coūtree that hym lyked to playe to solace So that Maugles kyng of Scotlond had kyng Leyr with hym in the maner as is aboue sayd or a yere was passed Gonoril that was his eldest doughter quene of Scotlond was so anoyed of hym of his people that anone she her lorde spake togyder wherfore halfe his knyghtes his squyers went frō hym no more were lefte with hym but .xxx. And whan this was done Leyr began for to make moche sorow for bycause that his estate was empayred men had of him more scorne despyte than euer they had before wherfore he wyst not what to do And at y● last thought y● he wold go in to Corne wayle to Rigan his other doughter And whā he was come y● erle his wyfe that was Leyrs doughter welcomed hym with hym made moche ioye there he dwelled with .xxx. knyghtes squyers And he had not scarsly dwelled there a yere but that his doughter of hym of his company was wery her lord she of hym had grete scorne despyte so that frō .xxx. knyghtes they brought vnto .x. and afterwarde had he but .v. so they left hym no moo Than made he grete sorowe sayd sore wepyng Alas that euer I came in to this londe sayd yet had it ben better to haue dwelled with my fyrst doughter And anone he went thens to his fyrst doughter agayn but anone as she sawe hym come she sware by god by his holy name by as moche as she myght that he shold haue no more with hym but one knyght yf he wold there abyde Than began Leyr agayne to wepe and made moche sorowe sayd Alas now to longe haue I lyued that this sorowe myschefe is to me now fallen For now am I poore that somtyme was ryche but now haue I no frende ne kyn that to me wyll do ony good But whā I was ryche all mē me honoured worshypped now euery man hath of me scorne despite now I wote wel that Cordeil my yōgest doughter said trouth whā she sayd as moche as I had so moche sholde I be loued all y● whyle that I had good so lōge was I loued honoured for my rychesse but my two doughters glosed me tho now of me they set lytel pryce sothe tolde me Cordeil but I wolde not byleue it ne vnder stande therfore I let her go fro me as a thinge that I set lytell pryce of now wote I not what to do syth my two doughters haue me thus deceyued that I so moche loued now must I nedes seke her that is in an other londe that lyghtly I let go ●●o me wtout ony reward or gyftes and s●e sayd that she loued me as moche as she ought to loue her fader by all maner of reason thā I sholde haue a●●d her no more those that me other wyse beb●ght through theyr fals speche now haue me deceyued In this maner Leyr 〈◊〉 tyme began to make his mo●e And at the last he shope hym to the see passed ouer into fraūce asked espyed where the quene myght be founde And men tolde hym where she was And whā be came to the cite that she was in pryuely he sene his squyer vnto the quene to tell her that her fader was comen to her for grete nede And whan the squyer came to the quene he told her euery dele of her systers from the
begynnynge vnto the ende Cordeil the quene anone toke gold syluer plente toke it to the squyer in coūseyle that he sholde go in to a certayne cite and hym araye wasshe than come agayn to her and brynge with him an honest company of knyghtes .xl. at the leest with theyr meyny and than he sholde sende to her lorde the kynge feyne that he were comen for to se speke with his doughter hȳ And so he dyd And whan the kynge and the quene herde that they came with moche honour they hym receyued And the kynge of fraūce than let sende through all his realme cōmaūded that all men sholde be as entendaūt to kynge Leyr y● quenes fader in all maner of thinges as it were vnto hymselfe Whā kyng Leyr had dwelled there a moneth more he tolde to y● kynge to y● quene his doughter how his two eldest doughters had serued hym Agampe anone let ordeyne a grete host of frenshmen sent in to Britayne with Leyr y● quenes fader for to conquere his kyngdome agayne And Cordeil also came with her fader in to Britayn for to haue the realme after her faders deth And anone they went to shyppe passed the see came in to Brytayne fought with the felons discōfited them slewe than had he his londe agayn after lyued thre yere helde his realme in peas afterward dyed And Cordeil his doughter him let bury with moche honour at Leycestre ¶ Anno mūdi .iiij. M. iij C .xlix. Et ante Christi natiuitatem viij C .liij. AMasias sone to Ioam regned on the Iewes .xxix. yere after y● whiche y● kyngdom of iewes was wtout kyng .xiij. yere This man worshypped the goddes of Seyr Vt pꝪ patet .ij. para .xxv. ¶ Ieroboam sone to Ioam regned on Israel .xlj. yere y● whiche was manly vyctoryous for he ouercame the kynge of Sirie restored Israel Damaske after the worde of Iono y● prophete but he was not good Therfore sayth saynt Austyn Yf good men regne they ꝓfyte many men And yf yll men regne they hurte many men ¶ Anno mūdi .iiij. M. iij C .lxxxviij. Et ante Christi natiuitatem .viii. C. xj Ozias or Azarias sone to Amasias regned on the Iewry .lij. yere the whiche lyued well afore our lorde of hȳ is none euyll thȳge wryten but that he vsurped the dignite of preesthode vnder Azari the whiche he forbade hym For the whiche cause our lorde stroke hym with a lepre Vt patet .ij. para ¶ Ozee bysshop prophete was this tyme the fyrst of the .xij. that was sent agaynst y● xij trybes Iohel the seconde of the .xij. prophecyed of Iuda Ananias y● thyrde prophecyed agaynst many people Abdias the fourth of the .xij. prophecyed agaynst Edom. ¶ zacharias sone to Ieroboam regned in Israel .vj. monethes the whiche began to regne the .xxxviij. yere of Ozias was nought in his lyuynge as his predecessours were And zellum slewe hym regned a moneth And Manahen slewe hym and toke his kyngdome Vt pꝪ patet .iiij. regū This Manahen regned .x. yere the whiche began to regne y● .xxxix. yere of Osias he ruled hym mischeuously our lord betoke hym in y● power of y● kyng of Assuriorū and he payed to hym a. M. talentes of syluer Vt pꝪ patet .iiij. regū ¶ Phaseia sone to Manahen regned in Israel two yere and he began to regne the .l. yere of Ozias and he was nought in his lyuyng ¶ Phasee slewe Phaseia regned .xx. yere he began to regne the .lij. yere of Ozias dyd as other cursed men dyd Vide pl’a plura iiij regū And after this Israel was wtouten ony kyng .viij. yere ¶ How Morgan Conedag neuewes to Cordeil warred on her put her to deth WHan that kyng Leyr was deed Cordeill his yongest doughter regned y● .x. yere of Ozias kyng of the Iewry And after her regned Conedag the .xv. yere of Ozias And Cordeill that was Leyrs yongest doughter after the deth of her fader had al y● londe fyue yere in the meane tyme dyed her lorde Agampe y● was kyng of fraunce And after his deth there came Morgan Conedag that were Cordeyls systers sones to her had enemite for as moche as theyr aunt had y● londe so y● bytwene them they ordeyned a grete power and strongly warred on her neuer rested tyll they had taken her put her to deth And than Morgan Conedag seased al the londe departed it bytwene them they held it .xij. yere whan y● .xij. yere were gone there began bytwene them a grete debate so y● they warred strongly togyder dyd to eche other moche dysease for Morgan wold haue all y● londe fro beyonde Humber y● Conedag helde But he came agaynst hym with a stronge power so y● Morgan durst not abyde but fledde away in to Wales and Conedag pursued hym toke hym slewe hym And than Conedag came seased al the londe in to his handes helde it regned after .xxxiij. yere than he dyed lyeth at newe Troy ¶ And bycause y● mater cōteyneth most cōmodiously togyder of y● kynges of Britayn now called Englonde for y● tyme of them is not certaynly knowen what tyme of y● worlde these kynges folowynge regned therfore they shall be togyder tyll it be comen vnto Euentolyn kyng of Brytayne now called Englonde ¶ How Reynolde that was Conedags sone regned after his fader and in his tyme it rayned blode thre dayes in tokenynge of grete deth AFter this Conedag regned Reynold his sone y● was a wyse an hardy knyght curteys y● well nobly ruled y● londe was well beloued of all folke And in his tyme it rayned blode y● lasted thre dayes as god wolde soone after there came a grete deth of people for hoostes wtout nōbre of people fought tyll y● god therof toke pite than it cesed And this Reynolde regned .xxij. yere than dyed lyeth at Yorke ¶ How Gorbodian regned in peas that was Reynoldes sone AFter this Reynolde regned Gorbodian his sone .xv. yere than dyed and lyeth at Yorke ¶ How Gorbodian had .ij. sones how the one slewe y● other for to haue y● londe how ydoyne theyr moder slew y● other wherfore the londe was destroyed WHan this Gorbodian was deed his two sones y● he had became stoute proude euer warred togyder for the londe y● one was called Ferres y● other Porres And this Ferres wolde haue all y● londe but that other wold not suffre hym This Ferres had a felonous hert thought through treason to slee his broder but pryuely he wente in to fraūce there abode with the kynge Syward tyll vpon a tyme whan he came agayn to fyght with his broder Ferres but full euyl it happed him for he was slayne fyrst Whan ydoyne theyr moder
from the moneth of Marche to the moneth of July there fel no rayne on the erth wherfore all fruytes sedes herbes for y● moost part were lost in defaute wherfore came so grete dysease of men beestes derth of vitayles in englonde so y● this londe y● euer afore had bē plenteous had nede y● tyme to seke vitayles refresshyng at other out yles coūtrees ¶ And in y● .xxix. yere of kyng Edward it was accorded graūted sworne bytwene the kyng of Fraūce kyng Edward of Englōde y● he shold haue agayn all his lōdes lordshyps y● longed to the duchy of Guyen of olde tyme y● whiche had ben wtdrawen and wrong fully occupyed by diuers kynges of Fraūce before hand to haue to holde to kȳg Edward to his heyres successours for euermo re frely peasybly in good qu●ete vpon this couenaūt that the kyng of Englōde sholde leue of relese all his ryght day me that he had claymed of y● kingdom of Fraunce of the tytell y● he toke therof vpon whiche speche and couenaūtes is was sent to the courte of Rome on bothesydes of y● kynges that y● foresayd couenaūt sholde be embulled but god erdeyned better for y● kynges worshyp of Englonde for what through fraude deceyt of y● frensshmē what through lettyng of y● pope of y● court of Rome y● foresayd couenaūtes were disquat lefte of And in the same yere y● kynge reuoked by his wyse and dyscrete coūseyle the staple of wolles out of Flaūdres in to Englōde with al y● libertees fraūchises free customes that longed therto ordeyned it in Englōde in dyuers places that is to saye at Westminster Caūterbury Chichestre Brystow Lyncolne Null With all the foresayd thynges y● longe therto And y● this thȳge y● shold thus be done y● kyng swore hȳselfe therto prynce Edward his sone with other many grete witnesses y● there were p̄sent ¶ And y● .xxx. yete of his regne anone after whytsontyde in y● parlyament ordeyned at Westmynster it was tolde certifyed to y● kyng y● Philip that helde the kyngdom of Fraūce was deed that John his sone was crowned king that this John had gyuē karoll his sone y● duchy of Guyen of y● whiche thȳge whan kyng Edward wyst therof he had grete indignacion to hym was wonders wroth strongly meued And therfore afore al y● worthy lordes y● were there assembled at y● parliamēt he called Edward his sone vnto hym to whom y● duchy of Guyen by right herytage shold longe to gaue it hȳ there byddynge strengthyng hym y● he sholde ordeyn hȳ for to defend hym auenge hym on his enemyes saue maynteyn his ryght And afterward kyng Edward hymselfe his eldest sone Edward went to diuers places sayntes in Englond on pylgrymage for to haue y● more helpe grace of god of his sayntes And y● seconde kae of July whan all thynge was redy to y● viage batayl al his retynue power assembled his nauy also redy he toke with hym y● erle of Warwyk the erle of Suffolk the erle of Salysbury y● erle of Oxford and a. M. men of armes as many archers on y● Natiuite of our lady toke theyr shyppes at Plommouth began to sayle And whan he was arry ued in Guyen he was there worshypfully receyued of the moost noble men lordes of y● coūtre And anone after kyng Edward toke with him his two sones y● is to saye syr Leonell erle of Vlton and syr John his broder erle of Rychemonde syr Henry duke of Lancastre with many erles lordes men of armes two M. archers sayled towarde Fraūce rested hym a whyle at Calays afterwarde the kyng went with his folke afore said with other soudyours of beyonde the see that there abode y● kynges comynge the seconde day of Nouember toke his iourney toward kynge John of Fraūce there as he had trowed to haue founde hym fast by Ddomarū as his lettres couenaūt made mencyon that he wolde abyde hym there with his hoost And whākyng John of Fraūce herd tell of the comynge of y● kyng of Englonde he went away with his men caryage cowardly shamefully fleynge wastynge all vytayles y● englysshmē shold not haue ther of Whan kynge Edward herde tell y● he fled he pursued hym with all his hoost tyll Hedyn than he beholdynge y● scarsete wantynge of vitayles also y● cowardyse of the kynge of Fraūce he returned agayn wastynge all the coūtree ¶ And whyle all these thynges were a doynge the Scottes pryucly by night toke the towne of Barwyck sleynge them that with stode them no man els but blyssed be god the castell was saued kepte by englysshmen y● were therin Whan y● kyng wyst of al this he returned agayn in to Englōd as wroth as he myght be wherfore in y● parlyament at Westmynster was graūted to the kynge of euery sacke of wolle .l. shyllynges durynge the terme of .vi. yere y● he myght y● myghte lyer fyght defende the realme agaynst the Scottes other mysdoers And so whan all thynges were redy the kynge hasted hym towarde the syege ¶ How kynge Edwarde was crowned kyng of Scotlōde how prȳce Edward toke y● kynge of Fraūce syr Philyp his yonger sone at the batayle of Poytiers ANd in the .xxxi. yere of his regne the .xiii. daye Janyuer the king beynge in the castell of Barwyk with a fewe men but he hauynge there fast by a grete hoost and a goodly the towne was yelden vnto hym without ony maner defence of 〈…〉 an the kyng of Scotlande y● is to say syr Iohn Ba● loll cosydecynge how y● go● dyd many me●uayles gracyous thynges for kyng Edward at his own wyll fro day to day he toke gaue vp y● realme of Scotlond at kilburgh in the kynges handes of Englond vnder his paten● lettres there madt And anone after king Edward in presence of all y● prelates worthy men y● were there letcrowne by kyng of Scotlond Whan all thyges were done ordeyned mȳ coūire at his wyll he returned agayn in to Englonde with a grete worshyp And whyle this v●age was a doynge in Scottonde syr Edward prȳce of wales as a man enspiced of god was in Guyen in y● cite of Burdeux tretyng speking of y● chalenge of y● kynges right of Englōde y● he had to y● realme of Fraūce that he wold be auestged with stronge hande y● prelates peres mighty men of y● coūtree cōsented well to hym Than syr Edward y● prynce with a grete h 〈…〉 gadred to hȳ the .vj. daye of Jui y● went from Burdeux goynge trauaylyng by many dyuers coūtrees he ●oke many prysoners moo than .vj. thosande men of armes by y● coūtre as he went toke the towne of Remorant in Saloygne and desyeged the castell vj dayes at
craftes of London went 〈…〉 to the toure of London there came 〈…〉 the Constable of the toure and gaue the Mayre sheryues theyr othe charge as they sholde haue takē in y●●●cheker of Westmynster in y● kynges courte of his Iustyce barons of the escheker than went they home agayne And than the kyng his coūseyle for y● grece malyer despyte y● they had to y● cite of Londen remeued all his courtes frō Westmynster vnto the cite of yorke that is to saye the chaūceler the escheker the kynges br●che the comyn place there they held all these courtes of lawe fro ●●ds●mer y● is to say the feest of saynt Iohn bapryst vnto y● feest of Chrystmasse next comyng And than the kynge his coūseyle it not so ꝓfytable there as it was at London Than anone he remeued if agayne to London so to westmynster for grece ease of his offycers and aua●rage to the kynge and al the comyns of the realme And whan the people of London sawe 〈◊〉 knewe y● these courtes were come aga 〈…〉 and the kyng his people also than the Mayre the aldermen with y● chefe comyns of the cite let gadre a grete somme of golde of all the comyns of the cite and ordeyned made grete rialtees agaynst his comynge to London for to haue his grace good lordshyp and also theyr lybertees fraūchyses graūted to them agayne as they were wont to haue afore tyme. And through grete instaunce and prayer of the quene of other lordes ladyes the king graūted them grace And this was done at Shene ī sothery And than y● kynge wtin two dayes after came to London And the Mayre of the cite with the sheryues aldermen all the worthy men of the cite afterwarde rode agaynst hym in good aray to y● heth on this syde the manoyr of Shene humbly mekely submyttynge them with all maner obey saūce vnto hȳ as they ought to do And thus they brought y● kynge the quene to London whan the kynge came to y● gate of London brydge there they presented hym with a mylke whyte stede sadled brydled trapped with cloth of golde and reed partyed togyder And the quene a palfrey all whyte in the same araye trapped with whyte reed all the cōdytes of London ranne with wyne bothe whyte and reed for all maner people to drynke who wolde And bytwene saynt Paule and the crosse in chepe there was made a stage a ryall standyng on hye therin were many aūgels with dyuers melodyes songes And than an aūgell came downe from the stage on hygh by a vyce set a crowne of gold pyght with ryche perles precyous stones vpon the kynges heed an other vpō the quenes heed And so y● citezyns brought y● kyng and y● quene to Westmynster in to theyr palays And than on the moro we after y● Mayre the sheryues the aldermen of London came vnto the kynge to his palays at westmynster presented hym with two basyns of syluer ouer gylted ful of coyned golde the somme of .xx. C. poūde prayenge hȳ of his hygh mercy grace and lordshyp specyall grace that they myght haue his good loue with the lybertees fraūchyses lyke wyse as they were wont for to haue before tyme and by his lettres patentes and his chartre confyrmed And y● quene other worthy lordes ladyes fell on theyr knees besought y● kynge of grace to rōfyrme this Than the kynge toke vp the quene and graunted her all her askynge And than they thāked y● kynge the quene went home agayne ¶ And in the .xvj. yere of kynge Rychardes regne certayn lordes of Scotlonde came in to Englonde for to gete worshyp as by fayte of armes And these were the persones the erle of Marre he chalenged y● erle Marshall of Englōde to Iust with hym certayn poyntes on horsbacke with sharpe speres they rode togyder as two worthy knyghtes lordes certayne courses but not y● full chalenge that y● scottysshe erle made for he was cast downe bothe hors man two of his rybbes broken with the fall so he was borne thens out of Smythfelde home to his inne within a lytell tyme after he was caryed home in a hors lytter at porke he dyed And syr William Darell knyght the kynges banerer of Scotlond than made an other chalenge with syr Piers curtayn knight y● kynges banerer of Englonde of certayn courses yet on horsback in y● same felde whan he had rydden certayn courses assayed he myght not haue the better he gaue it ouer wolde no more of his chalenge with syr Pyers courtayn knyght y● kynges banerer of Englonde turned his hors rode to his inne And one Cokborne a squyer of Scotlonde chalenged syr Nycholl Hawberke knyght of certayn courses yet with sharpe speres rode .v. courses togyder at euery course y● Scotte was cast downe bothe hors man And thus our Englysshe lordes thanked be god had the felde ¶ In the .xvij. yere of kyng Rychardes regne dyed the good gracious quene Anne that was wyfe to kyng Richard in the manoyre of Shene in the shyre of Surrey on whytsondaye And than was she brought to London so to Westmynster there was she buryed and worthely entered besyde saynt Edwardes shryne vpon whose soule almyghty god haue pyte mercy Amen ¶ How kynge Rycharde spoused dame Isabell y● kynges doughter of Fraūce in the towne of Calays brought her in to Englōde let her be crowned quene in y● abbey of saynt Peters of Westmynster IN the .xx. yere of kyng Rychardes regne he went ouer see to Calays with dukes erles lordes and barons many other worthy squyers with grete araye and comyn people of the realme in good araye as longed to suche a kynge prȳce of his nobley and of his owne persone to do hym reuerence obseruaunce as ought to be done to theyr lyege lorde so myghty a kynge emperour in his owne to abyde receyue there that worthy gracyous lady that sholde be his wyfe a yonge creature of .xix. yere of age dame Isabell the kynges doughter of Fraūce many other worthy lordes of grete name bothe barons knyghtes with moche other people that came to y● towne of Grauenynge and two dukes of Fraūce that one was the duke of Burgoyn and that other the duke of Barre that wold no ferther lesse than they had pledges for them And than kynge Rycharde delyuered two pledges for them to go safe and come safe his two worthy vncles the duke of Glocestre the duke of Yorke these two went ouer y● water of Grauenyng abode there as for pledges vnto y● tyme that the maryage the feest was done that these two dukes of Fraūce were comen agayn vnto ▪ Grauenynge water And than
the countree and they brought hym from the myll vnto the Plasshe to the same place the kynge Rycharde had arested syr Thomas of Wodstok the duke of Glocestre and right there in the same place they smote of the dukes heed of Excestre and brought it to London vpon a pole it was set vpon London brydge ¶ And in the same yere at Brystowe was taken the lorde Spenser that kyng Rycharde had made erle of Glocestre the comyns of the towne of Brystowe toke hym and brought hym in to the market place of the towne and there they smote of his heed sente it to London there it was set vpon London brydge ¶ And in this same yere was syr Bernard Brokeys knight taken arested put in the cou●e of London and syr Iohn Shelley knyght syr Iohn Mawdelyn and syr Willyam Feribe persones of kynge Rychardes they were arested put in to the cou●e of London And thyder came the kynges Iustices and sa●e vpon them in the ●oure of London there they were dampned all .iiij. to deth the dome was gyuen to syr Bernard Brokeys that he sholde go on fote from the ●oure through the cite of Londō vnto Tyburne there to be hāged after his heed smytten of syr Iohn Shelley knyght syr Iohn Mawdelyn syr Willyam Feribe ꝑsons were drawen through out the cite of London to Tyburne there they were hanged theyr hedes smytten of and set on Londō brydge ¶ And in this same yere kyng Henry sent quene Isabell home agayn in to Fraūce that whiche was kyng Rychardes wyfe gaue her golde syluer many other Iewels so she was discharged of all her dowry sent out of Englōde ¶ And in the second yere of kyng Henry the fourth was syr Roger Claring ton knyght two of his men the pryour of Laūde .viij. freres mynours some maysters of dyuinite other for treason that they wrought agaynst the kynge were drawen hanged at Tyburne all xij persones ¶ And there began a grete discencion debate in the coūtre of Wales bytwene the lorde Grey Ri●hen Owen of Glender squyer of Wales this Owen arered a grete nombre of Walsshmen kepte all that coūtre about ryght strongly did moche harme and destroyed the kynges townes lordshyppes through out al Wales robbed slewe the kynges people bothe englisshe walsshe thus he endured a .xij. yere largely he toke the lorde Grey Ri●hen prysoner kepte hym fast in holde tyll he was raūsomed of prysoners of the marche kepte hym longe tyme in holde And at the last he made hȳ to wedde one of his doughters kepte hym there styll with his wyfe and soone after he dyed And than kyng Henry knowynge this mischefe destruc ciō treason that this Owen had wrought anone he ordeyned a strōge power of mē of armes and archers and moche other stuffe that longed to warre for to abate destroye the malyce of this fals Walssheman And than the kyng came in to Wales with his power for to destroye this Owen other rebelles fals Walsshmen And anone they fledde in to the moūtayns and there myght the kynge do them no harme i no maner wyse for the mo●●ayns And so the kyng came agayn in to Englonde for lesynge of moo of his people thus he spedde not there ¶ And in this same yere was grete scarsete of where in Englond for a quarter of where was at xvj shyllynges And there was marchaundyse of Englonde sent in to Prure for where anone they had laden and fraught shyppes ynough came home in safete thāked be god of all his gyftes ¶ And in the thyrde yere of kynge Henryes regne there was a sterre seen in the firmament that shewed hymselfe through all the worlde for dyuers tokens that sholde befall soone after the whiche sterre was named by clergy Stella cometa And on saynt Mary Mawdeleyns daye next folowyng in the same yere was the barayle of Shrowesbury thyder came sir Henry Percy the erles sone of Northumberlonde with a grete multitude of men of armes archers gaue a barayle to kyng Henry the fourth through the fals wycked ●oūseyle of syr Thomas Percy his vncle erle of Worcestre there was sir Henry Percy ●layne the moost parte of his people in the felde syr Thomas Percy takē and kepte fast in holde two days ●yll the kyng had set rest amonge his people on bothe sydes And thā syr Thomas Percy was iudged to be drawen hanged his heed smytten of for his false treason at Shrowesbury his heed brought to London set on the brydge And the other people that there were slayne on bothe partyes the kynge let bury And there was slayne on the kynges syde in the batayle the erle of Stafford syr Walter Bloūt in the kynges cote armure vnder the kynges baner many moo worthy men on whose soules god haue mercy Amen ¶ And in the fourth yere of kynge Henryes regne came the emperour of Cōstantynople with many grete lordes knyghtes moche other people of his coūtre into Englonde to kynge Henry with hym to speke to disporte to se the good gouernaūce condicions of our people to knowe the cōmo dytees of Englonde And our kyng with all his lordes goodly worshypfully receyued welcomed hym all his meyny that came with hym dyd hym all the reuer●●e worshyp that they coude myght anone the kyng cōmaūded al maner offycers that he shold be serued as ryally as it longed to suche a worthy lord emperour vpon his owne cost as longe as he his men were in Englond ¶ In this same yere came dame Iane the duchesse of Brytayn into Englonde and londed at Falmouth in Cornewayle and from thens she was brought to the cite of Wynchestre there she was wedded vnto kynge Henry the fourth in the abbey of saȳt Swythyus with all the solempnite that myght be done made And soone after she was brought from thens to Londō And the Mayre the aldermen with the comyns of the cite of Londō rode agaynst her welcomed her brought her through the cite of London to Westmynster there she was crowned quene of Englonde there the kynge made a ryall a solempne feest for her for all maner men that thyder wolde come ¶ And in this same yere dame Blaūche the eldest doughter of kyng Henry was sent ouer see with the erle of Somerset her vncle with mayster Rychard Clyfford than bysshop of worcestre with many other worthy lordes ladyes worthy squyers as longed to suche a noble kynges doughter came vnto Coleyn And thyder came the dukes sone of Barre with a fayre cōpany receyued this worthy lady the bysshop of Worcestre wedded sacred them togyder as holy
Rome bycause of the scysme but after the vnite was had he was crowned with the imperyall dyademe with grete glory triūphe of pope Nicolas the fourth This was a peasyble mā quyete of singuler pacience not hatyng the chirche he wedded the kynge of Portyngales doughter ¶ How the duchesse of Glocestre was arested for treason cōmytted to perpetuall pryson in the yle of Man of the deth of mayster Roger Bolyngbroke IN this yere Elenore Cobham duchesse of Glocestre was arested for certayn poyntes of treason layd agaynst her where vpon she was examyned in saint Stephens chapel at westmynster before the archebysshop of Caūterbury there she was enioyned to open penaūce for to go through chepe berynge a taper in her hande after to perpetual prison in the yle of Man vnder the kepynge of syr Thomas stanley Also that same tyme was arested mayster Thomas Southwell a chanon of westmynster mayster Iohn Hume a chapelayn of the sayd lady mayster Roger Bolyngbroke a clarke vsyng nygromancy one Margery iourdemayn called the wytche of Eye besyde westmynster These were arested as for beynge of coūseyle with the sayd duchesse of Glocestre And as for mayster Thomas southwell he dyed in the Toure the nyght before he sholde haue ben reyned on the morow For he hymselfe sayd that he sholde dye in his bedde not by iustyces And in the .xx. yere mayster Iohn Hume and mayster Roger Bolingbroke were brought to the gylde hall in London there before the Mayre the lordes the●e Iustyces of Englonde were reyned and dampned bothe to be drawen hanged quartred but mayster Iohn Hume had his chartre was pardoned by the kyng but mayster Roger was drawen to Tyburne where he cōfessed that he dyed gyltles and neuer had trespaced in that he dyed for Notwithstādyng he was hanged heded and quartred on whose soule god haue mercy And Margery iourdemayn was brent in smythfelde ¶ Also this yere was a grete fraye in London in Flete strete by nyght tyme bytwene men of courte men of London and dyuers men slayne some hurt one Herbotell was chefe causer of the mysgouernaunce fraye ¶ Also this yere at chosynge of the Mayre of Londō the comyns named Roberte Clopton Raulyn Hollande tayllour And the aldermen toke Robert Clopton brought hym at the ryght hande of the Mayre as the custome is And than certayne tayllours other hande crafty men cryed nay nay not this man but Raulyn Hollād wherfore y● Mayre that was Padysly sent them that so tryed to Newgate where they abode a grete whyle and were punysshed ¶ In this same yere were dyuers embassadours sente in to Guyan for a maryage for the kynge for the erles doughter of Armyna● the whiche was concluded but by the meanes of the erle of Suffolk it was let put aparte And after this the sayd erle of Suffolk went ouer see in to Fraunce there he treated the mariage bytwene the kynge of Englōde the kynges doughter of Cecyle of Iherusalem And the neere yere that mariage was fully concluded by whiche maryage the kyng sholde delyuer to her fader the duchy of Ang●o the erledom of Mayne whiche was the key of Normādy Than departed the erle of Suffolke with his wyfe diuers lordes and knyghtes in the moost ryall estate that myght be out of Englonde with newe shares palfreys whiche wēt through Chepe and so went ouer the see and receyued her sythen brought her in the lent after vnto Hampton where she londed there was ryally receyued ¶ And on Candelmasse euen before by a grete tempest of thondre lyghtnynge at after none Paules steple was set on fyre in the myddes of y● shafte in the tymbre whiche was quenched by force of labour specyally by y● morowmasse preest of y● Bowe in chepe whiche was thought impossyble saue onely the grace of god ¶ This yere was y● erle of Stafford made create duke of Buckyngham y● erle of warwyk duke of warwyk the erle of dorset markys of dorset the erle of Suffolke was made markys of Suffolke ¶ How kynge Henry wedded quene Margarete of her crownacyon THis yere kyng Henry maryed at South wyk quene Margarete and she came to London the .xviij. daye of Maye by the waye all the lordes of Englonde receyued her worshipfully in dyuers places in especyal the duke of Glocestre on the blacke heth the mayre with the aldermen and all the craftes in blewe gownes browdred with the deuyse of theyr crafte that they might be knowen mette with her with reed hodes brought her to London where were dyuers pagentes countenaūces of dyuers hystoryes shewed in dyuers places of the cyte ryally and costly ¶ And the .xxx. day of Maye the foresayd quene was crowned at westmynster And there was Justes thre dayes durynge within the sentwary before the abbey ¶ This yere the pryour of Kylmayn appeled the erle of Vrmond of treason whiche had a daye assygned to them for to fyght in smythfelde the lystes were made and the felde dressed But whan it came to poynt the kynge cōmaunded that they sholde not fyght but toke the quarell in to his hande And this was done at the instaūce labour of certayne prechours doctours of London as mayster Gylbert worthyngton persone of saynt Andrewes in holborne and other ¶ Also this yere came a grete em bassadour in to Englonde out of Fraūce for to haue concluded a perpetuall peas but in cōclusyon it turned vnto a trewse of a yere ¶ About this tyme dyed saynt Barnardyn a gray frere whiche began the newe reformacyon of y● ordre in many places in so moche that they that were reformed ben called Obseruantes whiche Obseruātes ben gretly encreaced in ytalye in Almayne This Bernardyn was canonysed by pope Nicolas the .v. in the yere of our lorde M cccc .l. Ioh̄es de Capistrano was his dyseyple whiche ꝓfyted moche to the reformacyon of y● ordre for whome god hath shewed many a fayre myracle ¶ Also here is to be noted y● from this tyme forwarde kyng Henry neuer profyted ne went forward but fortune began to turne from him on all sydes as well in Fraūce Normādy Guyen as in Englond Some men holde opynyon that kynge Henry gaue cōmyssyon plenarly to syr Edwarde Hull syr Robert Roos dene of saynt Seuerynes other to conclude a maryage for hym with y● erle of Armynakes syster whiche was ꝓmysed as it was sayd cōcluded but afterward it was broken he wedded quene Margarete as afore is sayd whiche was a dere maryage for the realme of Englonde For it was knowē veryly that for to haue her was delyuered the duchy of Angeo the erle dom of Mayne whiche was the key of Normandy for the frensshmen to entre And about this y● sayd Markys of Suffolke asked in playne parlament a .xv. an halfe to fetche her
duke of Somerset the duke of Bokyngham y● 〈◊〉 of Stafford y● 〈◊〉 of Northumberlonde y● lord Clyfford many other ¶ And what tyme that the duke of yorke his 〈◊〉 vnderstode that the kyng was departed 〈◊〉 these lordes from London anone he chaūged his waye costed the coūtre 〈◊〉 came to saynt Albons the. xxii● 〈◊〉 of Maye there mette with the kynge to whome the king sent certayn lordes desired 〈◊〉 to kepe the peas departe but 〈…〉 syon whyle they treated on y● one syde y● erle of Warwyk with the March 〈…〉 and other entred y● towne on that other syde sought agaynst the kynge his partye so began the batayle 〈◊〉 whiche enduted a grete whyle But in conclusyon the duke of yorke o 〈…〉 and had the victory of that ●ourney In 〈…〉 of Somer 〈…〉 y● lord 〈…〉 〈…〉 of 〈…〉 estate 〈…〉 whiche was 〈◊〉 in y● by● 〈…〉 London in whiche 〈…〉 the 〈◊〉 of ●orke was made 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 and the 〈◊〉 of W 〈…〉 and the erle of Salysbury Chauncelet of Englonde And all suche persones as had the rule before aboute y● kyng were sit aparte and myght not rule as they dyd before ¶ And this same yere dyed pope Nycolas the fyfth And after hym was Calixt y● thyrde This 〈◊〉 was a Catalane and the art 〈◊〉 of hym shall be shewed here after ¶ In this same 〈◊〉 fell 〈…〉 Londō agaynst 〈…〉 bycause a yo 〈…〉 man toke 〈…〉 from 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 was sent for to come before 〈◊〉 Mayre the ●ldermen there for the offence he was ●ōmytted to warde And th● the Mayre departed from the 〈◊〉 for to go home to his 〈…〉 but in Chepe the yonge men of y● 〈…〉 for the 〈…〉 prentyses 〈…〉 in Che●e 〈…〉 was 〈…〉 〈…〉 〈…〉 from wherfore the Mayre and the ●ldermen come with the honest people of the Cite and droue them thens and 〈◊〉 some of them that had stolen to Newgate And whan y● yonge man y● was 〈…〉 by his ●elawes sawe this grete rumour af fraye robbery enswed of his fryst meuynge to the Lombarde departed and wente to Westmynster to sent wary or 〈…〉 had cost hym his lyfe For anont after came downe an Oyer determined for to do iustyce on all them that so ●ebelled in the Cite agaynst the Lombardes on whiche sate with the May●e that tyme Willyā Marow y● duke of Bo 〈…〉 am many other lordes for to se exe 〈…〉 dont But the comyns of the 〈…〉 ly made them redy and dyd arme them in theyr houses and were in purpose to haue rongen the comyn bell whiche is called home bell but they were 〈…〉 sadde men whiche came to y● knowlege of the duke of Bokyngham other lordes and incōtynent they arose for 〈◊〉 ●urst no lenger abide for they 〈…〉 that the hole Cite wolde haue rysen agaynst them But yet neuerthelesse or thre of y● Cite were iudged to doth for this robbery were hāged at 〈◊〉 ¶ And anone after y● kynge the quene other lordes rode to Couentre withdrewe them from London for this cause And a lytell before y● duke of yorke was sent for to 〈…〉 there was discharged of the prot 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 of Salysbury of his C 〈…〉 after this they were sent for by y● 〈◊〉 scale for to come to 〈◊〉 where they were almoost y● erle of war 〈…〉 also and sholde haue ben destroyed yf they had not seen well to ¶ How the lord 〈◊〉 was taken by the 〈◊〉 of Sa 〈…〉 and of the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 THis yere were taken foure grete fysshes bytwene Ereth Londō that one was called Mors marine the seconde was a swerde fysshe the other twayne were whales ¶ In this same yere for certayne frayes done in the north countree bytwene the lorde Egremond the erle of Salysburyes sones the sayd lorde Egremond whom they had taken was condēpned in a grete somme of money to the sayd erle of Salysbury therfore he was commytted in to pryson in Newgate in London where whan he had ben a certayne space he brake the pryson thre prisoners with hym escaped went his waye ¶ Also this yere the erle of warwyk his wyfe went to Calays with a fayre felawship toke possessyon of his offyce ¶ Aboute this tyme was a grete reformacyon of many monasteryes of relygyon in dyuers partyes of the worlde whiche were reformed after the fyrst institucyon and cōtynued in many places ¶ This same yere was a grete batayle in the marches bytwene the londe of Hungry and Turkey at a place called Septedrad where innumerable turkes were slayne more by myracle than by mannes hande for onely the hande of god smote them Saint Iohn of Capistrane was there present ꝓuoked the chrysten people beynge than aferde for to pursue after the Turkes where an infynyte multytude were slayne destroyed And the Turkes sayd that a grete nombre of armed men folowed them that they were aferd to turne agayn they were holy aūgels ¶ This same yere the prysoners of New gate in London brake theyr pryson and wente vpon the ledes fought agaynst them of the cite kepte the gate a longe whyle but at the last the cite gate the prison on them than they were put in fetters ●●ens were sore punysshed in ensam 〈◊〉 of other ¶ In this yere also there was a grete erthquake in N●ples in so moche that there perisshed .xi. M. people that sanke therein to the e●th ¶ Also in the yere .xxxvj. saynt Osmond sometyme bisshop of Salisbury was ●anonysed at Rome by pope Calixt the .xvj. daye of Iuly he was translated at Salysbury by the bysshop of Caunterbury many other bysshops ¶ And in August after syr P●ers de Bresay Senesshall of Normandy with the capytayn of Dep● and many other capytayns men of warre went to the see with a grete Nauy and came in to the downes by nyght And on the morow ●ely before daye they londed came to Sandwiche bothe by londe water toke the towne ry●●ed despoy led it ●oke many prysoners lefte the towne all bare whiche was a ryche place moche good therin ladde with them many ryche prisoners ¶ In this same yere in many places of Fraūce Almayn Fla●idres Hollande 〈◊〉 chyldren gadred them togider by grete cōpanyes for to go on pylgrymage to saynt Myghels moūt in Normādy whiche came fro ferre coūtrees wherof y● people meruayled And many supposed that some wicked spiryte moued them to do so but it dured not longe bycause of the longe waye also for lacke of vytayle as they went ¶ In this yere Reynold Pecocke bysshop of Chestre was ●o●de an herety ke the thyrde daye of 〈◊〉 was 〈◊〉 at Lam●●th 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the archebysshop of 〈◊〉 and many other bysshops doctours lordes 〈…〉 all his ●okes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ¶ Ye haue herde before
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●or des were 〈◊〉 at saynt 〈◊〉 wh 〈…〉 fore was alway a grutchy●ge ●r●th had by the heyres of them that wh 〈…〉 slayn agaynst the duke of yorke the r●●e of Warwycke and the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 ry wherfore the kynge by the 〈◊〉 of his coūseyle sente for them to London to whiche place the duke of Yorke came the .xxvj. daye of Ianuary with .iiii. C. men lodged hȳ at Baynardes castell in his owne place And the .xv. daye of Ianuary came the erle of Salisbury with v C. men was lodged in therber his owne place And than came the duke of Excestre of Somerset wt. viij C. men laye wtout temple barre And the erle of Northumberlond the lorde Egremond and the lorde Clifford with .xv. C. men and lodged wtout the towne ¶ And the Mayre that tyme Geffray Boloyne kepte grete watche with the comyns of the cite rode aboute the cite by Holborne Flete strete with .v. M. men well arayed armed for to kepe the peas ¶ And the .xiiij. daye of February the erle of Warwyk came to London frō Calays well beseen worshypfully with vj C. men in reed Iackettes broddred with a ragged staffe behynde before and was lodged at the gray freres ¶ And the .xvij. daye of Marche the kyng the quene came to London And there was a cōcorde a peas made amonge these lordes they were set in peas And on our ladyes day in Marche in the yere of our lorde M cccc .lviij. the kyng the quene all these lordes went on processyon at Paules in London and anone after the kyng the lordes departed ¶ And ī this yere was a grete fraye in Flete strete bytwene men of courte men of the same strete In whiche fraye the quenes atturney was slayne ¶ How the kynges housholde made a fraye agaynst the erle of Warwyk and of the iourney at Bloreheth ALso this same yere as the erle of Warwyck was at counseyle at Westmynster all the kynges housholde meyny gadred them togyder for to haue slayne the erle but by the helpe of god his frendes he recouered his barge and escaped theyr euyll enterpryse how well the cokes came rennynge out with spyttes and pestels agaynst hym And the same daye he rode toward Warwyk soone after he gate hym a cōmyssyon wente ouer see to Calays ¶ Soone after this the erle of Salysbury comynge to London was encoūtred at Blor●heth with the lord Awdley moche other people ord●y ned for to destroye hym But he hauyn● knowlege that he sholde be mette with 〈◊〉 was accompanyed with his two sones syr Thomas syr Iohn Neuyll a grete 〈◊〉 shyp of good men And so they fought to gyder where the erle of Salysbury wa● the felde the lorde Awdley was 〈◊〉 many gentylmen of Chessh 〈…〉 〈◊〉 moche people hu●te And the erles two sones were hurte goynge homeward afterward they were taken had to Ch 〈…〉 by the quenes meyny ¶ After 〈◊〉 Pius was pope was chosen this yere M cccc .lviij. and he was called before Eneas an eloquent man and a poete 〈◊〉 reate He was embassadour of the empe rours afore tyme. And he wrote in the 〈◊〉 seyle of Basyle a noble treaty for the 〈◊〉 rite of the same Also he canonysed 〈◊〉 Katheryne of Senys This pope ordey ned grete indulgence pardon to them the wolde go warre agaynst the Turke 〈◊〉 wrote an epystle to the grete Turke 〈◊〉 hortynge hȳ to become chrysten And in the ende he ordeyned a passage agaynst the Turke at Ankone to whiche moche people drewe out of all partyes of chrystendome of whiche people he sent many home agayne bycause they suffysed not And anone after he dyed at the sayd place of Ankone the yere of our lord M cccc .lxiiij. the .xiiij. daye of August ¶ How Andrewe Trollop and the sow●youres of Calays forsoke the duke of Yorke and theyr mayster the erle of war wyk in the west countree THe duke of Yorke the erles of warwyk of Salysbury sawe the gouernaūce of the realme stode moost by the quene her coūseyle how the grete prynces of the londe were not called to coūseyle but set aparte not onely so but it was sayd through the realme that those said lordes sholde be destroyed vtterly as it opēly was shewed at Bloreheth by them that wolde haue slayne the erle of Salysbury Than they for saluacyon of theyr lyues also for the comyn wele of the realme thought to remedy these thynges assembled them togider with moche people toke a felde in the west coūtre to whiche the erle of Warwyk came fro Calays with many of the olde sowdyours as Andrewe Trollop other in whose wysdome as for the warre he moche trusted And whā they were thus assembled made theyr felde the kyng sent out his cōmyssyons preuy seales vnto all the lordes of his realme to come wayte on hym in theyr moost best defensable aray And so euery man came in suche wise that the kyng was stronger had more people than the duke of yorke the erles of warwyk of Salysbury For it is here to be noted that euery lorde in Englonde durst not disobey the quene for she ruled peasybly all that was done about the kyng whiche was a good a well disposed man And thā whan the kyng was comen to the place where as they were the duke of yorke his felaw shyp made theyr felde in the strōgest wyse purposed verily to haue bydē fought but in the nyght Andrewe Trollop all the olde sowdyours of Calays with a grete felawshyp sodeynly departed out of the dukes hoost wente streyght to the kynges feld where they were ioyously receyued for they knewe the entent of the other lordes also the maner of theyr felde And than the duke of yorke with the other lordes seynge them deceyued toke a coūseyle shortly in the same nyght departed from the felde leuynge behynde them the moost party of theyr people to kepe the felde tyll on the morowe Than the duke of Yorke with his second sone departed through wales toward Irlonde leuynge his eldest sone that erle of Marche with the erles of warwik of Salysbury whiche rode togyder with thre or foure persones streyght in to Deuenshyre there by helpe ayde of one Denham a squyer gate for thē a shyppe which cost .xj. score nobles with the same shyppe sayled frō thens ī to Garnesey there refresshed them fro thens sayled to Calais where they were receyued in to the castell by that posterne or they of the towne wyst of it And the duke of Yorke toke shyppynge in Wales sayled ouer in to Irlonde where he was well receyued ¶ How the erles of Marche Warwyk Salysbury entred in to Calays how the erle of warwyk went in to Irlonde THan kynge Henry
And now to ꝓcede to the cronycles of Englonde for that whiche namely this boke is made ¶ Venys Padua were buylded about this tyme of the resydue of the Troyans ¶ Homere the grete poete about this tyme was that whiche wrote fayned gloryously many a lesynge ¶ Incipit regnum Britannie nunc dicitur Anglia ¶ Here may ye se how Englonde fyrst began at Albyon Albyon ¶ Afore that I wyll speke of Brute it shall be shewed how the londe of englonde was fyrst named ●byon for what cause it was so named IN the noble londe of Sirrie there was a noble kynge myghty a man of grete renome that was called Dioclesyan that well worthely hȳ gouerned ruled through his noble chyualry So that he conquered all the londes about hym so that almoost all the kynges of the worlde to hȳ were attendaūt It befell thus that this Dioclesian spoused a gētyll damoysel that was wonders fayre that was his vncles doughter Labana she loued hym as reason wolde so that he gate on her .xxxiij. doughters of that whiche the eldest was called Albyne and these damoyselles whan they came vnto age be came so fayre that it was wonder whereof Dioclesian anone let make a somnynge cōmaunded by his lettres that all the kynges that helde of hym sholde come at a certayn daye as in his lettres were conteyned to make a feest royal At whiche daye thyder they came brought with them admyrats princes dukes noble ch●ualry The feest was royally arayed and there they lyued in ioye and myrth ynough that it was wonder to wyte And it befell thus the Dyoclesyan thought to mary his doughters amonge all those kynges that were at the solempnite And so they spake dyd that Albyne his eldest doughter all her systers rychely were maryed to .xxxiij. kynges that were lordes of grete honour at this solempnite And whan this was done euery kynge toke his wyfe ladde them in to theyr owne coūtre there made them quenes And it befell thus afterward that this dame Albine became so stoute so sterne that she tolde lytel pryce of her lorde of hyȳ had scorne despyte wold not do his wyll but she wold haue her owne wyll in dyuers maters And all her other systers euerychone bare them so euyll agaynst theyr lordes that it was wonder to wyte And for as moche that them thought that theyr husbondes were not of so hye parentage comē as theyr fader But those kynges that were theyr lordes wold haue chastysed them with fayre maner vpon al loue frendshyp that they shold amende theyr euyll condicyons But all was for nought for they dyd theyr owne wyll in all thynge that them lyked had of power Wherfore those .xxxiij. kynges vpon a tyme often tymes bette theyr wyues For they wende that they wold haueamended them theyr tatches wyckednes But of suche condicions they were that for fayre speche warnynge they dyd all the worse for betynges eftsones moche the worse Wherfore the kyng that had wedded Albyne wrote the tatches and condicyons of his wyfe Albyne the lettre sent to Dyoclesyan her fader And whan the other kynges herde that Albynes lorde had sente a lettre to Dioclesyan anone they sente lettres sealed with theyr seales the condicyons tatches of theyr wyues Whan the kynge Dioclesyan sawe herde so many complayntes of his doughters he was sore ashamed and became wonderssy angry and wroth toward his doughters and thought how he myght amende it that they so mysoyd anone sent his lettres to the .xxxiij. kynges that they sholde come to hym brynge with them theyr wyues euerychone at a certayn day for he wolde there chastyse them of theyr wyckednes yf he myght ī ony maner wyse So that the kynges came all at the tyme daye that tho was set bytwene hym and the kynges Dioclesyan receyued them with moche honour made a solem●e feest vnto all that were vndernethe his lordshyp And the thyrde daye after that solempnite the kynge Dioclesyan sent after his .xxxiij. doughters that they shold come speke with hym in his chambre And whā they were come he spake to them of theyr wyckednes of theyr cruelte angerly them reproued blamed said to them That yf they wolde not be chastysed they sholde lose his loue for euermore And whan the ladyes herde al this they became abasshed gretly ashamed sayd to theyr fader that they wolde make all amēdes And so they departed out of theyr faders chambre And Albyne that was the eldest syster ladde them all to her chambre tho made to voyde al that were therin so that no psone was amonge them but she her systers togyder Thāsayd this Albyne My fayre systers well we knowe that the kyng our fader vs hath reproued shamed despysed for bycause to make vs obedyent to our husbondes but certaynly that shall I neuer whyles the Ilyue syth that I am come of a more hyer kynges blode than myn husbonde is And whan she had thus said all her systers sayd the same And than sayd Albyne Well I wote fayre systers that our husbondes haue cōplayned vnto our fader vpon vs wherfore he hath vs thus foule reproued despysed wherfore systers my coūseyle is that this night whan our husbōdes ben a bedde all we with one assent to kytte theyr throtes than we may be● peas of them better we may do this vnder our faders power thā ony where els And anone all the ladyes consented graūted to this counseyle And whānyght was comen the lordes ladyes went to bedde And anone as theyr lordes were a●●ept they kytte all theyr husbōdes throtes so they shewe them all Whan Dioclesian theyr fader herde of this thynge he became wroth ryght furyously agaynst his doughters anone he wole them all haue brent But all the harons lordes of S●rrye counseyled not so for to do suche straytnes to his owne doughters but shold boyde the londe of them for euermore so that they neuer sholde come agayne so he dyd And Dioclesyan that was theyr fader anone cōmaūded them to go in to a shyppe delyuered to them ●itayles for halfe a yere And whan this was done all the systers wente in to the shyppe sayled forth in the see betoke all theyr frendes to Appolyn that was theyr god so longe they sayled in the see ●yll at the last they came arryued in an yle that was all wyldernes And whan dame ●●yne was come to the londe all her systers this ●●byne went fyrst forth out of the shyppe sayd to her other systers For as moche as I am the eldest syster of all this cōpany first this londe haue take for as moche as my name is Alb●ne I wyl ● this londe be called Albion after my●● owne name And anone all her systers graūted
.j. And more in scripture is not had of him ¶ Omias bysshop was sone to Symō Symon was bysshop after hȳ whiche was a very religyous mā he reformed the tēple of god better encreaced y● cite of Ierusalē with many other good thȳges ¶ Sēproniꝰ Appius Claudiꝰ Gueus Gaius Attiliꝰ Regulꝰ Emilius Fabiꝰ this tyme were senatoures at Rome This Sēproniꝰ fought agaynst y● countre of Picentes almoost y● cheualry on bothe partes were slayne except a fewe Romayns were lefte alyue y● subdued y● coūtre Appiꝰ Claudiꝰ subdued Syracusanas y● coūtre of Penos put grete tribute on them Attiliꝰ Regulꝰ a noble senatour ouercāme .iij. kynges .lxxiij. citees subdued a dragon of C .xv. fote he slewe Afterward whā he was ouer cruell agaynst his enemyes denyeng to gyue them peas but yf they wold paye a mighty tribute they almost in despayre fought agaynst him ouercame hȳ his hoost toke hym yet they wolde fayne haue had peas but this faythful man had leuer dye in payne thā to gyue peas to cursed people His louyng saynt Austyn gretly exalteth Emiliꝰ Fabius Gaius wold haue deliuered Regulus but they obteyned not ¶ Ptholomeas Euergites this tyme was king of egipt a victoryous prynce a myghty This man subdued Syriā Ciciliā y● moost parte of Asie and toke theyr goddes brought them in to his coūtre ¶ Ptholomeus Philopater sone to Euergites regned in Egypte .xvij. yere This man fought agaynst .ij. brethern Selencū grete Anthiocū he prostrated many a thousande but neuerthelesse he preuayled not Vide pl’a plura i Iohāne suꝑ Daniel ¶ Hanyball the moost cursed kynge of Penorum or of affricanorum mightely hated the Romayns for he destroyed them almoost to y● vttermest ende nygh y● cite of Rome he destroyed so many noble men of Romayns he slewe at one tyme that thre busshelles of golde rynges he drew of theyr fyngers Also in a certayn water of the slayne bodyes of these Romayns he made as it were a brydge y● his hoost myght passe And at y● last Cipio y● noble senatour directed his host to hym discōfyted hym almost Cipios host of Romayns were slayne ¶ Lucatius cōsul Sipronius valeriꝰ Fulnius lutinꝰ Gaius Scipio ruled at Rome This tyme the Romays had peas one yere alone it was takē for a myracle y● they had so lōge rest for afore this tyme in iiij C. .xl. yere y● Romayns had neuer rest These cōsules whā y● yere was done cōgregated all y● strēgth of ytaly they had in theyr hoost .viij. M. armed men for drede of y● frensshmen whome they drad strongly afterwarde y● Romayns subdued them ¶ Epiphanes y● sone of Philopat regned in egypt .xxiiij. yere Cleopatra doughter to grete Anthiocꝰ was his wyfe ¶ Anthiocꝰ magnus this tyme regned in Syrry whiche dyd moche mischefe to y● Iewes Vt pꝪ patet Math. ¶ Onias this tyme was bysshop in Ierusalē This Onias for y● tyranny of Anthiocus fled with many iewes into egypt feynynge hym to fulfyll the ꝓphecy of ysaie .xix. that is to wyte to buylde the temple But in y● he synned for he sayd otherwyse than he thought The kynge of Egypte gracyously receyued hym gaue hym y● londe of Helipolees there he buylded his tēple Symon his sone was bysshop at Ierusalē after that his fader was fledde ¶ Circa annum mūdi .v. M .xxxiiij. Et ante Christi natiuitatem C .lxv. ELeasar of the lyne of Chryst was about this tyme of hȳ no thynge is wrytē in scripture but y● Math. nombreth hȳ Vt pꝪ patet .j. ¶ Omas Pius was to y● Iewes bysshop this tyme an holy man well beloued with god man not all onely with good men but yll men also At the last vnright wysly was slayne of Andronito Vt pꝪ patet .ij. macha .iiij. ¶ Paulus Terentius Scipto Affricanꝰ these were senatours at Rome these two erected an hoost agaynst Hanyball there almost y● Romayns hope dyed for there was slayne .xliiij. thousand Romayns And this noble man Scipio Affricanus brought agayn the state of y● Romayns the whiche stode in a despayre neuer to haue recouered For he fought with Hanyball manly discōfyted hȳ All Spayne he ouercame All Affryke he subduedgrete Anthiocꝰ he brought to be his seruaūt All Asiam he made tributary to y● Romayns This man so noble so victoryous by his own vnkynde coūtre was outlawed there he dyed ¶ Philometor the sone of Epiphanes of Cleopatra regned in egypt .xxxv. yere This kyng yet a chylde noble Anthiocus gretly oppressed with many deceytes But y● Romayns sent legates y● which cōmaūded Anthiocus y● he sholde cesse of his tyranny agaynst hym And Marcus Publiꝰ made a cercle about Anthiocus sayenge thus The senatours of rome y● people cōmaūde y● that y● go not out of this cercle tyll y● haue answered to this mater This Anthiocus seynge y● he might not contynue his tyrāny sayd Yf it be thus cōmaūded me of the senatours and Romayns I must nedes turne agayn so wood angry he was y● he lost y● syege of Alexādre turned to y● poore releues of the Iewes vēgyng hȳ on them bycause he myght not venge hym on no myghtyer people Vt pꝪ patet in lib. macha .j. et .ij. MAthathias an holy man of all praysynge moost worthy hated in his herte the cōuersacyon of all synners all onely trustyng in our lorde god of Israel Vt pꝪ patet prio macha .ij. And this mā had .v. sones of the same loue vnto god This man was not bysshop in Israel but his .iii. sones were ¶ Iudas Mathabeꝰ was bysshop .iii. yere he was sone to Mathathias This machabeus was the moost named man that euer was in Isarel that whiche had neuer none lyke hym afore ne after He was in batayle a myghty man offred hȳ to dye a martyr for the lawes of god ¶ Ionathas his broder suceeded hym rir yere the whiche grewe in vertue gouerned abode stedfast in the lawes of god after falsly was slayne of Criphone two of his sones V●de p●a iuda et fr̄e etꝰ lib. macha ¶ Antiochus Epiphanes sone to Antio thus the myghty this tyme was kyng of Sirry This man frō the heed vnto the fote wtin wtout al was cursed therfore he was fygured to Antechryst Many mar tyrs he made cruelly falsly he disposed hȳ to entre in to Egypt as his fader dyd but he obteyned not for the Romayns letted hȳ to his vnhappy werke how he was in hostage at Rome how the ꝓphe cy of Daniel is cōpleted in hȳ ye may se in the boke of Macha ¶ Quintus flami nius Marchꝰ Catho Thiberiꝰ Graceꝰ were senatours of Rome This tyme so meche batayle was the lerned men of gen tyles of the true fayth bothe were wery to wryte the actes or haue them in mynde In
a grete prynce came fro Rome in to this londe y● was called Seuerye not for to warre but for to saue the ryght of Rome But neuertheles he had not dwelled halfe a yere in this londe but that the brytons slewe hym And whan the Romayns wyst that Seuerye was so slayne they sente an other grete lorde in to this londe that was called Allec that was a stronge man a myghty of body dwelled in this londe longe tyme dyd moche sorow to the brytons so that after for pure malyce they chose them a kynge amonge them that was called Asclepades and assembled a grete hoost of Brytons went to London to seke Allec there they foūde him and slewe hym all his felawes one y● was called walon defended hym fyersly fought longe with the Brytons but at the last he was discōfyted the Brytons toke hym boūde hym handes feet cast hym in to a water wherfore y● water was called for euermore Walbroke Than regned Asclepades in peas tyll one of his erles that was called Coyl made a fayre towne agaynst the kynges wyll let call y● towne Colchestre after his name wherfore the kynge was wroth thought to destroye hym and began to warre vpon hȳ brought grete power of men gaue the erle batayle the erle defended hym fyersly with his power slewe the kynge hymselfe in that batayle And thā was Coyll crowned and made kynge of this londe This Coyll regned nobly was well beloued of the brytons Whan y● Romayns herde y● Asclepades was slayne they were wonders glad sent an other grete prȳce of y● Romayns that was called Constance he came to kynge Coyll for to chalenge y● trybute of Rome which he graūted hym full gladly So they accorded y● kyng Coyll gaue to hym his doughter Eleyne to wyfe y● was bothe fayre wyse well lettred dwelled togyder in loue And soone after this kyng Coyll dyed in the .xiij. yere of his regne lyeth at Colchestre ¶ How Constance a Romayn that had spoused Eleyne kynge Coyls doughter was chosen kynge after kynge Coyll AFter this kynge Coyll Cōstance was made kynge crowned for as moch as he had spoused kyng Coyls doughter that was heyre of the londe the whiche Constance regned well worthely gouerned the lōde And he begate on his wyfe Eleyne a sone that was called Cōstantyne And this kyng bare true fayth truly dyd to them of Rome all his lyfe And whā he had regned .xv. yere he dyed and lyeth at yorke ¶ How Constantyne that was kynge Constances sone sone to saynt Eleyne gouerned and ruled the londe and after was emperour of Rome AFter kynge Constance deth regned Constantyne his sone sone to saynt Eleyne that foūde y● holy crosse in the holy londe how Cōstantyne became emperour of Rome It befell that in that tyme there was an emperour at Rome that was a sarasyn a tyraūt that was called Maxence whiche put to deth al y● byleued in god destroyed holy chirche by all his power slewe all chrystē men that he myght fynde amōge all other he let martyr saynt Katheryne many other christen people that had drede of deth fled came in to this londe to kyng Constantyne tolde hym of y● sorowe that Maxence dyd to chrystē folke wherfore Cōstantyn had pite made grete sorow assembled a grete host a grete power and went ouer vnto Rome there toke the cyte slewe all y● was therin of mys byleue And than was he made emperour was a good man and gouerned hym so well y● all londes were to hȳ attendaūt for to be vnder his gouernaūce ¶ And this deuyll tyraūt Ma 〈…〉 y● tyme was in the londe of Grece herde these tydȳges sodeynly became wood dyed sodeynly ¶ Whan Constantyne went from this londe to Rome he toke with hȳ his moder Eleyne for her grete prudence thre other grete lordes y● 〈◊〉 moost loued the one was called Howell y● other Taberne the thyrde Mo 〈…〉 And toke all his londe to kepe to the erle of Cornewayle that was called Octauian And anone as this Octauian wyst that his lorde dwelled at Rome incontynent he cesed all the londe into his handes therwith dyd all his wyll amōge 〈◊〉 lowe they helde hym for kyng Whan these tydynges came to Cōstantyne the emperour he was wonders wroth towarde the erle Octauyan and sent Taberne with .xij. M. men agaynst hym they arryued at Portesmouth Whan Octauian wyst that he let assembled a grete power of Brytons dyscomfyted hym And Taberne fledde in to Scotlonde ordeyned there a grete power came agayne in to this londe another tyme for to gyue batayle to Octauyan And whan Octauyan vnderstode that he assembled a grete power and came towarde Taberne as fast as he myght so that those two hoostes mette togyder on Stanesmore strongly smote togyder And than was Octauyan dyscōfyted fledde thens vnto Norway And Taberne seased all the londe in to his handes bothe townes castelles But Octauyan came agayne fro Norway with a grete power droue out al the Romayns than he was made kyng of this lond ¶ How Maximian that was the emperours cosyn of Rome spoused Octauyans doughter and after was made kynge of this londe THis Octauian gouerned the londe well and nobly but he had none heyre saue a doughter that was a yōge chylde that he loued as moche as his lyf And for as moche as he waxed seke and was in poynt of deth and might no longer regne he wolde haue made one of his neuewes to be kyng which was a noble knyght a stronge man that was called Conan Meriedok he shold haue kepte the kynges doughter haue maryed her whan tyme had ben But the lordes of the londe wolde not suffre it but gaue her coūseyle to be maryed to some hygh man of grete honour thā might she haue al her lust the coūseyle of her lord Cōstātyne the emperour And at this coūseyle they accorded chose Cador of Cornewayle for to go to the emperour on this message he toke the waye went to Rome tolde the emperour these tydynges well wysely And the emperour sent in to this londe with hym his owne cosyn that was his vncles sone a noble knyght a stronge that was called Maximyan he spoused Octauyans doughter was crowned kyng of this londe ¶ How Maximian that was the emperours cosyn cōquered the londe of Amorican gaue it to Conan Meriedok THis kyng Maximian became so ryall that he thought to conquere the londe of Amorican for the grete rychesse that he herde tell that was in y● londe so that he ne left no man of worthynes knyght ne squyer ne none other mā that he ne toke with him to the grete domage of all
so that no man was so hardy to name god and yf they dyd they were put to straūge deth But the bysshop of London that was tho whiche was called Gosselyn scaped went thens to them of Rome to seke socour to helpe to destroye the sarasyns that had destroyed this londe And the Romayns sayd that they had ben so often anoyed for theyr sendyng of folke in to Britayne all for to helpe the Britons they wold no more so do And so the bysshop Gosselyn went thens without ony socour or helpe And than went he to the kyng of lytell Brytayne that was called Aldroie this was the thyrde kyng after Gowan Meriedok as before is sayd The bysshop prayed this kynge Aldroie of helpe socour And the kynge had pite in his herte whan he herde how the bysshop fledde how the chrysten men were so slayne in grete Brytayne through the paynyms sarasyns he graūted hym Cōstantyne his bro●er for to helpe hym with power of folke And cha● dyd araye hors harneys shyppes all thynge that neded to that vyage And whan all thynge was redy he called the bysshop sayd to hym I take you here Cōstantyne my broder vpon this couenaūt that yf god gyue hym grace to discōfyte the infydelēs that than ye shall make hym kyng And the bisshop graūted it with a good wyll Cōstantyne the bysshop toke leue of the kyng Aldroie betoke hym to god toke .xij. M●inen went to theyr shippes sayled towarde grete Britayn arryued at Totnes Whan the Britons herdethese tydynges that socour came they were glad ordeyned them an huge nō●re of people went receyued them with moche honour ¶ Gowan anone as he wyst of these ty dynges he assembled all his farasyns came agaynst them gaue thē batayle And Cōstantyn slewe hym with his owne handes all the other sarasyns were dyscomfyted slayne that none escaped excepte those that were couerted to god ¶ How Constantyne that was the kynges broder of lytel Britayn was crowned kynge of grete Brytayne for his worthynes ANone after the batayle they went to London crowned there Constantyne kyng of this londe the bysshop Gosselin set the crowne on his heed and a●oynted hȳ as it belongeth for a kyng And thā began christēdom in this londe agayn And anone after whā this kyng Constantyn was crowned he spoused a wyfe through roūseyle of the Brytons begate on herthre sones The fyrst was called Cōstance the seconde Aurilambros the thyrde Vter This Constance that elder broder whā he came to o●● he 〈◊〉 hym a monke at Wynchestre And Constātyne theyr fader was slayne through treason For it befell vpon a tyme that a Pehyte came to hym vpon a daye as it were on a message sayd that he wolde speke with the kynge pryuely in coūseyle The kyng let ●oyde his chambre of the men that were there within and there abode no moo but the kynge and the Pehite and he made a countenaūce as though he wolde haue spoken with the kyng in his eere And there he shewe hym with a longe knyfe And after that he went meruaylously out of that chambre in to an other chambre so that at the last no man wyst where he was b●romen Whan the kynges men wyst that theyr lord was so deed they made than so moche sorowe that they wyst not what for to do For as moche as his two sones Aurilambros and Vter were so yonge that none of them myght be kynge and the thyrde broder was a monke at ●●● chestre as is sayd before But ●o●nger that was erle of Westler thought pryuely in his herte through some subry●e for to be kynge hymselfe And wente to Wynchestre where as Constance was monke sayd to hym Cōstance qued be your fader is deed your two brethern that ben with Gosselyn the bysshop of London to nourysshe be so yonge that neue of them may be kyng wherfore I coūseyle you that ye forsake your habyte come with me and I shall make suche a meane vnto the Brytons that ye shall be made kynge of this londe ¶ Of Constance that was kynge Constantynes sone whiche was a monke at Wynchestre and how he was made kynge after his faders dethe through counseyle of ●o●●ger that was ●●●e of Westser for as moche as Aurilambros and 〈◊〉 his two bretherne were but yonge of age And Vortiger let shee ●ya● for to be kynge hymselfe THis Vortiger coūseyled this Cōs●āce so moche tyll he forsoke his ab●ot and went with hym And anone after he was crowned kyng by the assent of the Brytons This kynge Constance whan he was crowned made kynge he wyll ne knewe but lytell of the worlde nor coude no thynge what knyghthode axed And he made Vortyger his chefe mayster coūseyler gaue hym all his power for to ordeyn to do as moche as to the realme aperteyned So that hymselfe no thynge entermedled but onely bare the name of kyng Whā Vortiger sawe that he had all the lōde in his warde gouernaūce at his owne wyll he thought by preuy treason to slee Cōstance the kyng that he myght hȳselfe be crowned made kyng regne let sende after an hondred knyghtes of Pehytes the worthyest of all the londe them helde with hym for to dwell as to be kepers of his body as he wolde go through the londe to ordeyne thynges that appertayned to a kyng And this Vortiger honoured so moche the hondred knyghtes so moche gaue them of golde syluer of ryche iewelles robes horses other thȳges plente wherfore they helde hym more lord than they dyd the kyng And Vortiger told them yf he myght be kyng ye as it were through treason he wold make them rychest of the londe So at the last through grete gyftes that he had gyuen largely they cryed through the court that Vortiger were better worthy to be kyng thā Cōstance Wherfore Vortiger made semblaūt as he had ben wroth he departed thens from the courte and sayd he must go elles where for thinges that he had to do And so the traytour sayd bycause that they sholde slee kynge Constance Whan this Vortiger was gone it befel soon easter 〈◊〉 those hondred knyghtes of Pe●ites wiche the dores of the kynges chambre there they slewe hȳ smote of his heed ba●e it to Vortiger there as he dwelled And whā Vortiger sawe the heed he wepte full tenderly with his eyen neuertheles he was somdele gladde in his herte of his deth And anone Vortiger let take those hondred knyghtes of Pehites hadde his seruaūtes bynde theyr haudes behynde them lede them to London and there they were dampned to deth as fals traytours And anone after all the Brytons of the londe by the comyn assent crowned Vortiger made hym kyng of the londe ¶ Auno domini C .lxxiiij. SOther a martyr was pope after
castell of Tyntagell aske entre there and haue your wyll The kyng toke pryuely all the hoost to gouerne and lede to a knyght that he moche loued toke his waye towarde the castell with hym toke Vlfyn his chamberlayne and Merlyn And whan they came thyder y● porter wende it had ben his owne lord And whā tyme came for to go to bedde y● kyng went to bedde with Igreyne the erles wyfe and dyd with her all his wyl begate vpon her a sone whiche was called Arthur And on the morowe the kyng toke his leue of the lady and went agayn to his hoost And the same nyght that the kynge laye by Igreyne in bedde that was the erles wyfe the kynges men gaue a grete assaute to the castel And the erle his men manly defended them But at the last it befel so that in the same assaute the erle hȳselfe was slayne the castell taken And the kyng anone returned agayn to Tyntagell and spoused Igreyne with moche honour and made her quene And soone after that the tyme came y● she sholde be delyuered had a sone whiche was called Arthur And after that gate on her a doughter that was called Amya And whan she was of age a noble baron that was called Aloth y● was lorde of Leons wedded her ¶ Whan Vter longe tyme had regned there came vpon hȳ a grete sekenes as it were a sorowe And in the meane tyme those that had in kepynge Otta that was Engistes sone and Ossa his broder that than were in pryson they let them goo for grete gyftes that they gaue and wente with them And whan these two bretherne were escaped came agayne in to theyr owne coūtree they ordeyned a grete power of folke began to warre agayn vpon the kyng ¶ How kynge Vter chose Aloth to kepe the londe of Brytayne whyle that he was seke for as moche as he myght not for his sekenes ANd for as moche as kyng Vter was seke myght not helpe hȳ selfe he ordeyned Aloth sone of Eleyne that than was chosen for to be wardeyn and ●heftayne of all his folke And so he anone his Brytons assembled a grete hoost gaue batayle to Otta and to his folke but Otta at the last was discomfyted ¶ It be fell thus after warde that these brytons had indignacyon of Aloth wolde not be to hym attendaūt wher fore y● kynge was wonders fore anoyed and let put hym in a lyttet is the hoost amonge his folke And they ladde hym to Vero●oin that than was a fayre cite where as saynt Albon was martyred and after was that cite destroyed with paynyms through warre and thyder they had sent Otta Ossa theyr people entred in to the towne let make fast the gates there they helde them And the king came besyeged them made a stronge assaute But they y● were win manly defended them The kyng let ordeyn his gōnes his engynes for to breke y● walles y● walles were so strōge y● no thynge myght misdo thē Otta his people had grete despite y● a kyng lyenge in a lytter had besteged them toke coū seyle to come out on the morow gyue batayle to the king in that batayle Otta Ossa were slayne al the other alyue fled in to Scotlonde made Colegrin theyr cheftayne And the saxons y● were escaped brought agayn a grete strength sayd amonge them yf kyng Vter were deed they shold well cōquere the lōd thought to poyson hȳ ordeyned men to do this dede gyuyng them grete gyftes they went thyderward in poore mēnes wede to accomplysshe theyr fals purpose but it auayled not for they myght not come nygh y● kyng Tyll at the last they espyed that the kyng drāke none other ly●our but water of a clere well y● was nigh besyde these traytours on a day priuely went to the well put therin poyson so that al the water was poysoned anone after a● the kyng had dronken of y● water he began to swell soone after dyed as many as dranke of y● water dyed also And anone as this was espyed folke of the towne let stop y● well for euermore Whā the kyng was deed his folke bare hȳ to Stonehenge with grete solempnite of bysshops barons y● were there to bury hȳ besyde Aurilambros his broder after returned agayn euerythone sent after Arthur his sone they made hym king of the londe with moche reuerence after his faders deth .xvij. yere of his regne ¶ How Arthur that was the sone of Vte● was crowned after his faders dethe how he droue out of this londe Coleg 〈…〉 the saxons Cheldrik of Aimayne WHan Arthur was made kynge of the londe he was but yonge of .xv. yere of age but he was fayre and bolde and doughty of body to meke folke he was good and curteys and large of spendynge and made hym wondersly well beloued among all men where it was nede And whā he began to regne he sware that the saxons neuer showe haue peas ne test tyll he had dryuen them out of the londe assembled a grete hoost fought with Colegrin the whiche after the tyme y● Otta was deed the saxons maynteyned And this Colegrin was discōfyted fledde vnto yorke toke the cite there helde hym And the kynge besyeged hym there but he gate no thynge it was so stronge y● cite defended it manly In y● meane tyme Cole grin left y● cyte to Bladud fled hymself to Cheldrik that was kyng of Almayne for to haue socour of hym And he assembled a grete power arryued in scotlond with .v. C. shyppes And whan Arthur wyst of these tydynges sawe he had not folk ynough to fyght with Cheldrik he lefte the syege went to London sent anone lettres to Howell of lytell Brytayn his neuewe his systers sone that he sholde come to hym with all the power that he myght And he assembled a grete host arryued at southampton where king Arthur receyued hym Ioyously with moche honour And those two hostes mette assembled them toke theyr waye to Nichol that Cheldrik had besyeged but it was not taken And they came vpon Cheldrik his people or they wist where that they were assayled thē egerly Kyng Cheldrik his men defended them manly to theyr power But kyng Arthur and his men slewe so many saxons y● neuer was seen such slaughter And Cheldrik his men that were left alyue fledde away and kyng Arthur pursued them droue thē out in to a wode that they myght no ferder passe Cheldrik his mē sawe well that they were brought in to grete disease yelded them to kyng Arthur in this maner wise that he shold take theyr horses harneys all that they had they wold onely go on fote in to theyr shyppes so they
Romayn was pope after Martyn two yere and. viij monethes no thynge of hym is wryten ¶ Iohānes the .xij. a Romayn was pope after Agapitus almoost .viij. yere and he had a fader that hyght Alberyke was a worthy man in the cite of Rome He enduced the noble men to swere that after the dethe of Agapitus they sholde those Octauianū his sone pope And so it was done was named Iohn he was a hunter and a lecherous man so that openly he kepte women Wherfore certayn cardynalles wrote to Ottonem the emperour of Almayn that he sholde come to Rome for to helpe to destroye the sclaundre of the chirche This the pope perceyued the hande that wrote that pystle he made to be cutte of And many tymes he was warned by the Emperour the clergy that he sholde correcte hym selfe But he wolde not for no thynge Than he was deposed Leo was put in to his place Wherfore the emperour was anoyed and came agayne and besyeged Rome so longe tyll they toke Benedicte to hym and restored Leo. ¶ Of kynge Edgar that regned aboue the kynges of Scotlonde and of Wales And how he was begyled through the takynge of his wyfe ANd after this Edwyne regned Edgar his broder a man that moche loued god peas holy chirche also and was a worthy man a grete lorde of blode myghty maynteyned well this lōde in peas And this Edgar was lorde kyng aboue all the kynges of Scotlond of Wales from the tyme that Arthur was gone was neuer syth kynge of his power And this Edgar was saynt Edwardes fader And whā Edgars wyfe was deed that was sa yt Edwardes moder and buryed he herde speke of the fayrnes of Estrylde that was Orgarus doughter a baron of Deuenshyre that was so fayre a woman that all men spake of her He called one of his knyghtes that he moche loued trusted vpon sayd to hym Go sayd he to the noble baron Orgarꝰ of Deuenshyre se yf that his doughter be so fayre as men speke of yf it be soth I wyll haue her to my wyfe This knyght that was called Edelwolde went forth his waye as the kynge hym had sayd came where as the lady was And whā he sawe her so fayre he thought to haue her hȳselfe to his wyfe therof spake to Orgarus her fader her fader was an olde man and had no moo chyldren but her onely and sawe that Edelwolde was a fayre yonge knyght and worthy ryche and was well beloued with the kynge and thought his doughter shold well be maryed beset vpon hym graūted hym his doughter yf the good lorde the kyng wolde cōsent therto And thā this Edelwold came agayn to the kyng told hym that she was fayre ynough to se vpon but she was wonders lothly Than answered the kyng sayd that he toke but lytel charge Syr sayd Edelwold she is her faders heyre and I am not ryche of londes yf ye wolde consent graunte that I myght haue her than shold I be ryche ynough In goddes name sayd the kyng I consent therto Edelwold than thanked the kynge moche and went agayn in to Deuenshyre and spoused the damoysell and in that coūtree he dwelled And thus it befell vpon a tyme that he tolde his counseyle all this thynge vnto his wyfe how in what maner he had ●egyled his lorde the kyng that wolde haue had her to wyfe And anone as she it wyst she loued hym neuer more after warde as she dyd before This lady conceyued by hym a sone And whan tyme was that the chylde shold be borne Edelwold came to the kyng prayed hym to heue a sone of his at the fontstone The kyng hym graūted let call him Edgar after his owne name And whan this was done he thought that al was syker ynough for the kyng that he wolde not take his wyfe for as moche as his lord was a ioly man and an amerous ¶ How kynge Edgar wedded Estrylde after the deth of Edelwolde ●Hus it befell that all men in king Edgars court than spake sayd that Edelwolde was rychely auaunced through the maryage of his wyfe and yet they sayd he was auaunced an hondred folde more for he had spoused the fayrest woman that euer was seen And whan the kyng herde speke so moche of her beaute he thought that Edelwold had hym deceyued begyled and thought pryuely in his herte that he wolde go in to Deuenshyre as it were for to hunt for the harte for the hynde other wylde beestes than he sholde se there the lady or he departed thēs And this lady was dwellynge at a maner place besyde the forest where that the kyng wolde hunt at that maner he was herborowed all nyght And whan tyme came that the kyng sholde soupe the sonne shone the kynge asked after his gossyp after his godsone And Edelwold made her to come before the kyng neuerthelesse yf it otherwyse myght haue ben she sholde not haue comē in his syght by his wyll The lady welcomed the kyng swetely hym kyssed And he toke her by the hande and nexte by hym her set and so souped they togyder And there was a custome and an vsage in this londe that tyme that whan one dronke to an other the drynker sholde saye wassayle and that other sholde answere and saye drynke hay●e And thus dyd the kynge the lady many tymes also kyssed And after souper whan tyme was to go to bedde the kyng went to bedde thynkyng hertely on the fayrnes of that lady than was ouercomen for her loue that hym thought the he sholde dye but yf he had his wyll on her Vpon the morowe the kynge arose and went in the forest for to dysporte hym with hartes hyndes all other wylde beestes and of the hartes grete plente he sente to that lady And thryes he wente to solace speke with that lady wh●●es he dwelled there in that countree And after that the kynge remeued th 〈…〉 s bethought hym how he myght best delyuer Edelwolde from his wyfe as he had hym fyrst deceyued And the kynge anone after .viij. dayes let ordeyn a parlyament at Salysbury of all his baronage to haue counseyle for to ordeyne how the countree of Northumberlonde shold best be kepte that the danes came not there to destroye the londe And this Edelwolde came vnto the kynges parlyament And the kynge sent hym vnto yorke for to be keper of that countree And thus it befell that men that knewe hym not slewe hym by the waye And anone as the kyng herde tell that Edelwolde was deed he let sende after the fayre lady Estrylde that she sholde come to the cyte of London and there be wedded to the kynge with grete solempnite and worshyp And whan he was come to London soone after he helde a solēpne feest
that rebelled and prospered ryght wysly euermore on them At the last with a blyssed ende he decessed And in the lyf of saynt Laurence he and his wyfe be put for ensamples bycause of theyr holy and vertuous lyuynge ¶ Benedictꝰ was pope after Iohn .xi. yere This man had grete stryfe in his dayes For he was put out an other was put in And this Benedictus after that he was deed was seen of an holy bysshop in a wretched fygure he had grete payne And this fygure sayd he trusted no thynge in the mercy of god no thynge profyted hym that was done for hym for it was goten by extorcyon vniustly Thā this bysshop lefte his bysshopryche for drede of this sight went in to a monastery lyued vertuously all his dayes ¶ Iohānes the .xx. was pope after hym .xi. yere lytell profyted ¶ Of kyng Knoght that was a Dane ANd after the deth of this Eldred Knoght that was a Daue begā to regne But Edmund Irensyde that was king Eldredes sone by his fyrst wyfe ordeyned a grete power of men began to warre on kynge Knoght And so he dyd many tymes ofte the warre was so strōge harde the wonder it was to wyte And the quene Emme that than dwelled at westmynster had grete drede of her two sones Alured Edward lest they sholde be destroyed through the warre wherfore she sente them ouer see in to Normandy to the duke Richard theyr vncle there they dwelled in safete peas lōge tyme. ¶ This Edmund Irensyde Knoght the Dane warred fyersly togyder But at the last they were accorded in this maner that they sholde departe the realme bytwene them and so they dyd and loued togyder lyke two bretherne ¶ How kyng Edmund Irensyde was slayne through treason by a traytour that was called Edryth of Stratton ANd than after regned kyng Edmūd Irensyde Knoght the dane But thus it befel afterward that in the same yere that they were accorded so moche loued togyder wherfore a fals traytour had enuy at the loue that was bytwene them whose name was Edrith of stra●to● that was a grete lorde that was Edmunde Irensydes man of hym helde all the londe that he had neuerthelesse he thought to betraye his lorde make Knoght kyng of all the londe to the entent rychely to be auaūced with hym to be well beloued Wherfore he prayed his lorde Edmunde Irensyde on a daye with hym for to ete And the kyng hym curteysly graūted and to hym came at his prayer And at meet the kyng was ryally serued with dyuerse metes and drynkes And whan nyght came that he sholde go to bedde the kyng toke his owne meyny and went to the chambre where as he shold take his nyghtes rest And as he loked aboute hym he sawe a fayre ymage a well made in semblaūt as it were an archer with a bowe bent in his hande in the bowe a fyne arowe Kynge Edmund went nere to beholde it better And whan he was by it anone the arowe smote hym through the body there slewe the kynge for the engyn was made to slee his owne lorde traytoursly And whan kynge Edmund was thus deed slayne he had regned but .x. yere And his people made moche sorowe for him his body they bare to Glastenbury there buryed hym And this fals traytour Edrith anone went to the quene that was kynge Edmundes wyfe that wyst not of her lordes deth toke from her two sones that were fayre yonge that her lorde had goten on her that one was called Edwarde that other Edwyne ladde them with hym to London toke them to kyng Knoght that he sholde do with them what his wyl were And told hȳ how subtylly he had slayne king Edmund bycause the Knoght sholde haue all the londe of Englonde ¶ O thou fals traytoure hast thou slayne my true broder that was so true bycause of me a man that I moost loued in the worlde Now by my heed I shall for thy trauayle the well rewarde as thou hast deserued anone let hym be taken and boūde hym handes feet in maner of a traytour let cast hym in to the ryuer of Tamyse And in this maner the fals traytour ended his lyfe The kyng toke the two chyldren put them vnto the abbot of West mynster to warde to kepe tyll he wyst what was best with them for to do ¶ How kynge Knoght sent bothe kyng Edmondes sones in to Denmarke for to be slayne and how they were saued ANd it befel soone afterward that kynge Knoght had all the londe in his handes spoused the quene Emme through consent of al his barons for she was a fayre woman the whiche was Eldredes wyfe and the dukes syster of Normandy they lyued togyder with moche loue as reason wolde The kyng asked vpon a daye coūseyle of the quene what was best to do with Edmond Irensydes sones Syr sayd she they be the ryght heyres of the londe and yf they lyue they wyll do you moche sorowe with warre and therfore let sende them in to a straūge londe aferre to some man that may destroye them The king anone let call a Dane that was called Walgar cōmaūded hym that he sholde lede those two chyldren in to Denmarke so to do and ordeyne for them that he sholde neuer more here of them Syr sayd this Walgar your commaūdement gladly shall be done And anone he toke the two chyldren ledde them in to Denmarke And for as moche as he sawe that the chyldren were wonders fayre m●ke he had of them grete pite ruth wold not slee them but ledde them to the kynge of Hungary for to nourysshe For this Walgar was well beknowen with the kynge well beloued Anone the kynge asked fro whens the children were And Walgar tolde hym sayd that they were the ryght heyres of Englonde and therfore men wolde destroye them therfore syr vnto you they be comen to seke mercy helpe for soth yf they may lyue your men they shall become and of you they shall holde all theyr londe The kynge of Hungary receyued thē with moche honour and let them worthely be kepte And thus it befell afterwarde that Edwyne the yonger broder dyed Edwarde the elder broder lyued a fayre man and a stronge and a large of body gentyll and curteys of condicyons so that all men loued hym And this Edwarde in the cronycles is called amonge Englysshmen Edwarde the outlawe And whan he was made knyght the kynges doughter of Hungary loued him moche for his goodnes and his fayrnes so that she called hym her derlynge The kynge that was her fader perceyued well the loue that was bytwene them two he had none heyr but onely that doughter And the kynge vouchedsafe his doughter to no man so well as he dyd to hym that she loued
that were defectyue And after he sent to al the lordes of Wales by his lettres patentes that they sholde come all to his parlyamēt And whan they were comen the kynge sayd to them full curteysly Lordes ye be welcome me behoueth your coūseyle your helpe for to go in to Gascoyn for to amende the trespace that to me was done whan I was there for to entreate of peas bytwene the kynge of Aragon the prȳce of Morrey And all the kynges liege men erles barons consented graūted therto And than kynge Edwarde made hym redy went in to Gascoyn let amende all the trespaces that was done hȳ in Gascoyn And of the debate that was bytwene the kyng of Aragon the prynce of Morrey he cessed accorded them And whyle kynge Edward quene Elenore his wyfe were in Gascoyn the good erle of Cornewayle was made wardeyn of Englonde tyll that kyng Edward came agayn And thā enquyred he of his tray tours that coniected falsnes agaynst hym And eche of thē all receyued theyr dome after that they had deserued But in the meane tyme whyle that kyng Edward was beyonde that see to do them for to make amendes that had trespaced agaynst hȳ there was a fals traytour that was called ●isap Meridoc began to make warre agaynst kynge Edward that was for cause of syr Payne Tiptot the wrongfully greued diseased the foresayd Bisap Meridoc And whan kynge Edward herde all this he sente by his lettres to Bisap Meridoc that he sholde make no warre but that he sholde be in peas for his loue whan he came agayne in to Englonde he wolde vndertake the quarell amende all that was mysdone This foresayd Risap Meridoc despysed the kynges cōmaundement spared not to do all the sorowe that he myght to the kynges men of Englond But anone after he was taken ladde to yorke and there he was drawen hanged for his felony ¶ Of the redressyng that king Edward made of his Iustices and of his clerkes that they had done for theyr falsnes and how he droue the Iewes out of Englonde for theyr vsury and mysbyieue WHan kynge Edward had dwelled thre yere in Gascoyn a desyre came to hȳ for to go in to Englonde agayn And whan he was comen agayn there were so many cōplayntes made to hym of his Iustices of his clerkes that had done so many wronges falsnes that wonder it was to here For whiche falsnes syr Thomas weylonde the kynges Iustyce forswore Englonde at the Toure of Londō for falsnes that men put vpon hym wherof he was atteynt proued fals And anone after whan the kynge had done his wyll of the Iustices than let he enquyre espye how the Iewes deceyued begyled his people through theyr synne of falsnes of vsury and let ordeyn a preuy parliament amonge his lordes And they ordeyned amōge them that all the Iewes shold voyde out of Eng lōde for theyr misbyleue also for theyr false vsury that they dyd vnto chrysten men And for to spede make an ende of this thynge all the comynalte of Englonde gaue vnto the kynge the .xv. peny of al theyr goodes mouable And so were the iewes dryuen out of Englonde And than went the iewes in to Fraūce there they dwelled through leue of kyng Philyp that than was kynge of Fraūce ¶ How kynge Edwarde was seased in all the londe of Scotlonde through cōsent and graūte of all the lordes of Scotlonde IT was not longe after the Alexander kyng of Scotlonde was deed and Dauid the erle of Huntingdon that was the kynges broder of Scotlond asked claymed the kingdom of Scotlonde after that his broder was deed bycause that he was rightfull heyre But many grete lordes sayd naye wherfore grete debate arose bytwene them theyr fren des for as moche as they wolde not con sent to his crownacyon And the meane tyme the foresayd Dauid dyed And so it befell that the sayd Dauid had thre dough ters that worthely were maryed The fyrst doughter was maryed to Bayloll the seconde to Brus the thyrde to Hastynges The foresayd Bayloll Brus chalenged the londe of Scotlonde grete debate stryfe arose bytwene them thre bycause eche of them wolde haue ben kyng And whan the lordes of Scotlonde sawe the debate bytwene them they came to kyng Edward of Englonde seased hym in all the londe of Scotlonde as chefe lord And whan the kyng was seased of the foresayd lordes of Scotlonde the foresayd Bayloll Brus Hastynges came to the kynges courte asked of the kynge whiche of them sholde be kyng of Scotlonde And kyng Edward that was full gentyll true let enquyre by the cronycles of Scotlonde of the gretest lordes of Scotlonde whiche of them was of the eldest blode And it was foūde that Bayloll was the eldest that the kyng of Scotlonde shold holde of the kyng of Englonde and do hym feaute homage And after this was done Bayloll went in to Scotlonde and there was crowned kynge of Scotlond And the same tyme was vpon the see grete warre bytwene the englyssh men the Normans But vpon a tyme the Normās arryued at Douer there they martyred an holy man that was called Thomas of Douer And afterward were the Normans slayne that there escaped not one of them ¶ And soone after kynge Edward sholde lese the duchy of Gascoyn through kyng Philip of Fraūce through his fals castyng of the Dou●e peres of the lond wherfore syr Edmond that was kyng Edwardes broder gaue vp his homage vnto the kyng of Fraūce ¶ And in that tyme the clerkes of Englonde graūted to kynge Edward halfe dele of holy chirche goodes in helpynge to recouer his londe agayn in Gascoyn And the kynge sent thyder a noble company of his bachelers And hymselfe wolde haue gone to Portesinouth but he was letted through one Maddok of Wales that had seased the castell of Swandon in to his handes for that cause the kyng turned to Wales at Chrystmasse And bycause that the noble lordes of Englond that were sent in to Gascoyn had no cōfort of theyr lorde the kyng they were taken of syr Charles of Fraūce that is to say syr Iohn of Brytayne syr Robert Typtot syr Raufe Tanny syr Hugh Bardulf syr Adam of Cretynge And yet at the Ascencyon was Maddok taken in Wales another whiche was called Morgan and they were sent to the toure of London and there they were byheded ¶ How syr Iohn Bailoll kyng of Scotlonde withsayd his homage ANd whā syr Iohn Bailoll kyng of Scotlonde vnderstode that kyng Edwarde was warred in Gascoyne to whome the realme of Scotlonde was delyuered falsly than agaynst his othe wtsayd his homage through procuryng of his folke sent vnto the courte of Rome through a fals suggestion to be assoyled of the othe that he swore vnto the kynge of Englonde And so
of his mouth whan he conquered it through dynt of swerde For the prynce Lewlyn Dauyd his broder Rys Morgan were put to deth through theyr falsnes theyr foly And he set his fote in wike conquered Barwyke at the whiche conquest were slayn .xxv. M. and. vij C. out take them that were brent in the reed hall And the walles that he let make shall be noyous vnto his sede as men shall here after se in the lyfe of syr Edward of Carnaruan his sone And yet sayd Merlyn that he sholde make ryuers ren in blode with brayn that semed well in his warres where as he had the maystry And yet Merlin sayd that there shold come a people out of the north west durynge the regne of the foresayd dragon that sholde be ladde by an yll greyhoūde that the dragon sholde crowne kyng that afterward sholde flee ouer the see for drede of the dragon without comynge agayn that was proued by syr Iohn Bayloll the kyng Edward made to be kynge of Scotlonde that falsly arose agaynst him after he fled to his owne londes of Fraūce neuer came agayne in to Scotlonde for drede of kynge Edward And yet sayd Meriyn the people that sholde lede the foresayd greyhoūde shold be faderles vnto a certayn tyme he sayd sothe for the people of Scotlonde gretely were dyseased syth that syr Iohn Bayloll theyr kung was fledde And yet layd Merlin that the sonne shold become in his tyme as reed as blode in tokenynge of grete mortalite of people that was well knowē whan the scottes were ●ay● And Merlyn sayd that same dragon sholde nourysshe a foxe that sholde meue grete warre agaynst hym that shold in his tyme be ended that semed well by Robert the Brus that kyng Edward noursshed in his chambre that sythen stale aware meued grete warre agaynst hym wh● the warre was not ended in his tyme. And afterward Merlyn tolde that this dra gon shold be holden the best body of all the worlde he sayd sothe for the good kyng Edward was the worthyest knyght of all the worlde in his tyme. And yet said mer lyn that the dragon sholde dye in the marche of an other londe that his londe sholde be longe wtout a good keper that men sholde wepe for his deth from the yle of Shepey vnto the yle of Mercill wherfore alas shal be theyr songe amonge ye●●myn people faderles in the londe wasted And the p●h● cy was knowen ouer all full well For the good king Edward dyed at Burgh vpō sandes that is in the marche of Scotlonde wherfore the englysshmē were discōf●ed sorowed in Northumberiend bycause the king Edwardes sone set by the Scottes no force for the tyot of Pyers of Ganaston wherfore alas was the song through out all Englonde for defaute of theyr good wardeyn from the yle of Shepey vnto the yle of Mareyll the people made moche sorowe for good king Edwardes deth For they wende that kyng Edward shold haue gone in to the holy lond for that was holly his purpose Vpon whose soule god for his hygh grace haue mercy ¶ Anno d●●i M CC. lxxxiii● CElestinus was pope after Nicolas .v. monethes and no thynge noble of hym is wryten but that he was a vertuous man ¶ Bonifacius the. vii● was pope after hȳ .viij. yere This Boniface was a man in those thynges that apperteyneth to courte for he was very e●pert in suche maters And bycause he had no pere he put no mesure to his prudence toke so grete pryde vpon hym that he sayd he was lord of all the worlde And many thȳges he dyd with his myght that fayled wretchedly in the ende He gaue an ensample to all prelates that they shold not be proude but vnder the forme of a very shepeherde of god they sholde more study to be loued of theyr subiectes than to be drad This man is he of whome it is sayd that he entred as a fox he lyued as a lyon dyed as a dogge ¶ This tyme the yere of grace was ordeyned from an C. yere to an C. yere the fyrst Jubile was in the yere of our lord god M CCC ¶ Benedictꝰ the .xj. was pope after Boniface .xi. monethes This man was an holy man of the ordre of the frere prechours lytell whyle lyued but decessed anone ¶ Adulphus was Emperour .vj. yere This man was the erle of Anoxone and was not crowned by the pope for he was slayne in batayle ¶ Albertus was emperour after hȳ .x. yere This man was the duke of Austrie fyrst was repreued of the pope after was confermed by the same pope for the malyce of the kyng of Fraūce whiche was an enemy vnto the chirche And to that Albert the same pope gaue the kyngdom of fraūce as he dyd other kyngdomes but it ꝓfyted not for at the last he was slayne of his neuewe ¶ Clemēs was pope after Benedictus almoost .ix. yere This man was a grete buylder of castels other thynges And he dampned the ordre of Templers And he ordeyned the .vij. boke of decretalles the whiche be called y● questyons of Clementyns And anone after in a coūseyle the whiche he helde at Vienna he reuoked that same boke the whiche his successour Iohn called agayn incorpored it publysshed it This Clement fyrst of al popes translated the popes seet from Rome to Aumyon And whyder it was done by the mocyon of god or by the boldnes of man dyuerse men meruaylleth ¶ Iohn the .xxij. was pope after hym xviij yere This man was all gloryous as for those thȳges that were to be vsed through the actyfe lyfe And he publysshed the Constytucyons of the Clementynes sent them to all the vniuersitees And many sayntes he canonysed And the fatte bysshopryches he deuyded And he ordeyned many thynges agaynst the plu ralite of benefices and many heretykes he dampned but whyder he was saued or not our lorde god wolde not shewe to those that he loued very well ¶ Henry the .vij. was emperour after Albert .v. yere This Henry was a noble man in warre and he coueyted to haue peas by londe water He was a gloryous man in batayle was neuer ouercome with enemyes And at the last he was poysoned of a frere whan that he houseled hym by receyuynge of the sacrament ¶ Of kynge Edwarde that was kynge Edwardes sone ANd after this kynge Edwarde regned Edwarde his sone that was borne at Carnaruan And this Edward went in to Fraūce there he spoused Isabell the kynges doughter of Fraūce the .xxv. daye of Ianuary at the chirche of our lady at Boloyn in the yere of our lorde Iesu Chryst a. M CCC .vij. And the .xx. daye of Feueryer the nexte yere y● came after he was crowned solemply at Westmynster of the archebysshop of Caūterbury of the archebisshop of winchelse And there was so grete prees of people that syr Iohn
these two worthy dukes came ouer y● water at Grauenyng so to Calays with this worshyp full lady dame Isabell y● was y● kynges doughter of Fraūce and with her came many a worthy lord lady knyghtes squyers in y● best araye that myght be And there they met with our meynr at Calays whiche welcomed her her meyny with grete reuerence so brought her in to the towne of Calays there she was receyued with all the solempnite worshyp y● might be done to suche a lady And than they brought her to y● kyng the kynge toke her welcomed her all her fayre cōpany made there a grete solempnite And than y● kyng his coūseyle asked of the frensshe lordes whether all the couenaūtes forwardes with the cōposycyon y● were ordeyned made on bothe partyes shold be truly kepte holdē bySpan● thē And they sayd ye there they swore toke theyr charge vpon a boke and made theyr othe well truly it to holde i al maner poyntes couenaūces wtout cōtradic cyō or delay in ony maner wyse And thā was she brought to saȳt Nicolas chirche in Calays there was worthely wedded with the moost solempnite y● ony kyng or quene myght be with archebysshops bysshops all y● mynystres of holy chirche And than they were brought to the castell set to meet were serued with all delycasy of ryall metes drȳkes plenteously to all maner of straūgers al other no creature warned y● feest but al were welcome for there were grece halles tentes set vpon y● grene wtout y● castell to receiue al maner of people euery office redy to serue thē all And thus this worthy mariage was solemply done ended with all ryalte Than these two dukes of Fraūce with theyr people toke theyr leue of the kynge of the quene wente agayne vnto Grauenynge water And there the Frensshe lordes that is to saye the two dukes all theyr folke were comen ouer the water to Grauenyng and there they mette euerichoue toke leue at other so they departed our lordes came agayne to Calays the Frensshe lordes wente ouer the water so home in to Fraunce agayne And anone after the kyng made hym redy with the quene and all his lordes ladyes and all theyr people with them came ouer the see in to Englonde and so vnto London And the Mayre and the sheryues with all the aldermen worthy comyns rode agaynst them vnto the blacke heth in Kent and there they mette with the kyng and the quene welcomed them that in good araye and euery man in the clothyng of his craft theyr mynstrels before them And so they brought them to saynt Geor ges barre in Southwerke there they toke theyr leue And the kynge and the quene rode to Kenyngton and than the people of London turned home agayn in turnynge agayne to London brydge there was so grete prese of people bothe on hors on fote that there were deed on the brydge .xi. persones of men women and chyldren on whose soules god haue mercy pyte Amen And than afterwarde the quene was brought to the toure of London and there she was all nyght on the morowe she was brought through the cite of London and so forth to Westmynster there she was crowned quene of Englonde than she was brought agayne vnto the kynges palays and there was holden open courte and a ryall feest at her crownacyō of all maner people that thyder came And this was done the sondaye nexte after the feest of saynt Clement in the .xx. yere of kynge Rychardes regne ¶ And than the .xxv. daye of August nexte after by euyll excitacyon fals coūseyle and grete wrath malyce that the kynge had of olde tyme to his vncle the good duke of Glocestre to the erle of Arundell to the erle of war wyk Anone the kyng by his euyll excitacyon his euyll counseyle and malyce late in the euenynge on the same daye aboue sayd ma 〈…〉 edy with his strength and rode in to 〈◊〉 to the towne of Chelmel●ord and ●o came to Plasshe sodeynly there syr Thomas of Wodstok the good duke of Glocestre laye And the good duke came anone to welcome the kynge And the kynge arested the good duke hymselfe his owne body so he was ladde down to the water anone put in to a shyppe and had to Calays brought in to the capytayns warde to be kepte in holde by the kynges cōmaundement And that tyme the erle Marshall was capytayn of Calays And anone after by cōmaūdement of the kynge by his fals coūseyle commaūded that capytayn to put hym to deth And anone certayn yemen that had the good duke in kepyng toke theyr coūseyle how that they sholde put hym to dethe And this was theyr appoyntment that they shold come vpon hȳ whan he were in his bedde a slepe on a fether bedde anone they boūde hym hande fote and charged hym for to lye styll And whan that they had done thus they toke two towelles made on them two rydynge knottes cast the towelles aboute his necke than they toke the fether bedde that laye vnder hym cast it vpon hym and than they drewe theyr towelles eche wayes some laye vpon the fether bedde and vpon hym vnto the tyme that he was deed bycause that he sholde make no noyse And thus they strangled this worthy duke vnto the deth vpon whose soule god for his hygh pyte haue mercy Amen ¶ And whan the kyng had thus arested this worthy duke his vncle and sente hym to Calays he came agayn to London in all the haste with a wonders grete nōbre of people And as soone as he was comen he sent for y● erle of Arundell for the good erle of warwyk And anone as they came he arested them hymself and syr Iohn Cobham and syr Iohn Cheyn knyghtes he arested them in that same ma ner tyll he made his parliamēt anone they were put into holde but the erle of Arundell went at large vnto the parly a ment tyme for he foūde sufficient surety to abyde the lawe to answere to all ma ner poyntes that the kynge his coūseyle wolde put vpon hȳ ¶ And the .xxi. yere of kynge Rychardes regne he ordeyned hȳ a parlyament at Westmynster whiche was called that grete parlyament And this parliament was made for to iudge these thre worthy lordes other moo as them lyst at that tyme. And for that iudgement the kyng let make in all the haste a long hous a large of tymbre the whiche was called an hall couered with tyles ouer it was open all aboute on bothe sydes at the endes that all maner of men myght se throughout there the dome was holden vpon these foresayd lordes iudgemet
gyuen at this foresayd parlyament And for to come to this parlyament the kyng sent his wrytes to euery lorde baron knyght s●uyer in euery shyre throughout Englonde that euery lorde sholde gadre brynge his retynue with hym in as shorte tyme in the best araye that they myght ge●e in mayntey●yage strengthinge of the kyng agaynst them that were his enemyes that this were done in all the haste come to hym 〈◊〉 payne of deth And the kyng hymself sent into Cl 〈…〉 shyre to che●taines of the 〈…〉 tree they gadred brought a grete and an huge multytude of people bothe of knyghtes ●●uyers pryncypally of yemen of Chestershyre whiche ye●ten archers the kyng toke to his own courte and gaue them bowge of courte good wages to be kepers of his owne body bothe by nyght by daye aboue al other persones moost loued best trust the whiche soone afterward turned the kyng to grete losse shame hyndrynge his vtter vndoynge destruccion as ye shall here afterwarde And that tyme came sir Henry of Derby with a grete meyny of men of armes archers And the erle of Rutlonde came with a stronge power of people bothe of men of armes archers The erle of Kent brought a grete power of men of armes archers the erle Mar shall came in the same maner the lord● Spenser in the same maner The erle of Northumberlonde and sir Henry Pe 〈…〉 his sone syr Thomas Pet●y the erles broder all the worthy lordes brought a fayre meyny a strōge power and eche man in his best aray the duke of Lancastre the duke of yorke came in the same maner with men of armes archers folowyng the kyng syr Willyam S●rope tresourer of Englonde came in the same maner And thus in this araye came all the worthy men of this londe vnto our kyng all this people came to London in one daye in so moche that euery 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lane in London in the subbarbes were full of them lodged and .x. or x●● myle about London euery waye And this peo ple brought the kyng to Westmynster 〈◊〉 went home agayne to theyr lodgyng●s bothe hors man than on the monday● the .xii. daye of September the pa 〈…〉 began at Westmynster whiche was cal led that grete parlyamēt And on that frydaye next after the erle of A●●dell was brought in to the parlyamēt amonge all the lordes and that was on saynt Mathewes day the apostle and euangelist there he was for iudged vnto the deth in this hall that was made in the palays at Westmynster And this was his iudgement He shold go on fote with his handes boūde behynde hym from the place that he was iudged in so forth through the cite of London vnto the toure hyll his heed to be smytten of so it was done in dede in the same place And vl of the gretest lordes that sate on his iudgement rode with hym vnto the place there he was done to dethe so to se that the execucyon were done after the dome by the kynges cōmaundement with them wente on fote men of armes archers a grete multytude of Chestre shyre men in strengthynge of the lordes that brought this erle to his dethe for they were in drede leest the erle sholde be rescowed taken from them whan they came in to London Thus he passed forth through the Cite vnto his deth there he toke it full pacyently on whose soule god haue mercy Amen And than came the Austyn freres toke vp the body the heed of this good erle bare it home to theyr place buryed him in theyr quere And on that morow after was syr Rychard erle of warwik brought in to the parlya ment there as the erle of Arundell was for iudged they gaue the erle of warwyk the same iudgemēt that the foresayd erle had but the lordes had compassyon on hym bycause he was of more greter age and released hym to perpetuall pry son put hym in the yle of Man And than on the mondaye nexte after the lorde Cobham of Kent and syr Iohn Cheyn knyght were brought also in to the parlyament in to the same hall there they were iudged to be hanged and drawen but through the prayers and grete instaunce of all the lordes that iudgement was forgyuen them and released to per petuall pryson ¶ And this same tyme was Rychard Whyttyngdon Mayre of London and Iohn Wodecocke Wyllyam Askam sheryues of London And they ordeyned at euery gate of London durynge this same parlyament stronge watche of men of armes archers and through out euery warde also And the kynge made .v. dukes one Markeys foure erles the fyrst of them was the erle of Derby and he was made duke of Herford and the seconde was the erle of Rutlonde he was made duke of Awemarle the thyrde was the erle of Kent and he was made duke of Surry the fourth was the erle of Huntȳgdon he was made duke of Excestre the fyfth was the erle of Notyngham he was made duke of Northfolk And the erle of Somerset was made Markeys of Dor set the lorde Spenser was made erle of Glocestre the lorde Neuyll of Raby was made erle of Westmerlonde syr Thomas Percy was made erle of Worcestre syr Willyam Scrope that was tresourer of Englonde was made erle of Wylshyre syr Iohn Montagu erle of Salisbury And whan the king had thus done he helde the parlyamēt ryall feest vnto all his lordes to all maner of people that thyder wolde come ¶ And this same yere dyed syr Iohn of Gaūt the kynges vncle duke of Lancastre in the bysshops Inne in Holborne was brought fro thens to saynt Paule there the kyng made helde his enteremēt well worthely with al his lordes in the chirche of saynt Paule in London there he was buryed besyde dame Blaūche his wyfe that was doughter heyre vnto the good Henry that was duke of L 〈…〉 te ¶ In the same yere there fell a 〈…〉 cyon bytwene the duke of Herford the duke of Norfolke in so moche y● they waged batayle cast down theyr gloues than they were ta ken vp ensealed the batayle ioyned the daye set the place assygned where and whan this sholde be at Couentre And thyder came the kyng with all his lor des at that day was set in the felde than these two worthy lordes came into the felde well clene armed well arayed with all theyr wepen redy to do theyr batayle were redy in the place to fyght at vtteraūce But the kyng had them cesse toke the quarell in to his handes And forth with ryght there present exiled the duke of Herford for terme of .x. yere the duke of
chirche it wold And there was made a ryall feest a grete iustyng in the reuerence worshyp of them all people that came thyder And whan this maryage and feest was done the erle the bysshop all theyr meyny toke theyr leue of the lorde lady came home agayne in to Englonde in safete thanked be god ¶ And in the .v. yere of kyng Henryes regne the lorde Thomas his sone went euer see the erle of Kent many other lordes knyghtes with men or armes and archers a grete nombre to chastyse the rebelles that afore had done moche harme to our englysshmen marchauntes to many townes portes in Englonde on the see costes And the lord Thomas the kynges sone came into Flaūdres before a towne that is called Scluse amōge all the shyppes of dyuers nacyons that were there after there they rode with theyr shyppes amonge them and went on londe sported them there two dayes came agayn to theyr shyppes toke the brode see there they mette with thre Carackes of Gene that were laden with diuers marchaūdyses well manned they fought togider longe tyme but the englysshmen had the victory brought the Carackes into the Cambre before Wyn chelsee and there they ●anted all these goodes and one of these Carackes was sodeynly brent there And the lordes and theyr people turned them home agayne went no ferther at y● tyme. ¶ And in the same tyme Serle yeman of kynge Rychardes robes came into Englonde out of Scotlonde tolde to dyuers people that kyng Rychard was onlyue in Scotlōde so moche people byleued his wordes wherfore a grete parte of the people of the realme were in grete errour grutchȳg agaynst the kyng through informacyon of lyes fals lesynges that this Serle had made For moche people trusted byleued in his sayenge But at the last he was taken in the northcoūtre there by lawe iudged to be drawen through euery cite good burgh towne in Englōde so he was serued at the last he was brought to London to the gyld hall before the Iustice there he was iudged for to be brought to the Toure of London there to be layd on a hurdell thā to be drawen through the cite of Londō to Tyburne there to be hāged than quartred and his heed smytten of set on Londō brydge his quarters to be sent to foure good townes of Engloude there set vp thus was he rewarded for his fals treason ¶ And in the syxth yere of kyng Heuryes regne the erle of Marre of Scotlōde by safecon duyte came into englōde to chalenge syr Edmond erle of Kent to certayn courses of warre on horsbacke And so this chalenge was accepted graūted the place taken in smythfelde at Londō And this erle of Marte came proudly in to the felde as his chalenge asked And anone came in the erle of Kent rode to the Scotte manfully rode togyder with sharpe speres dyuers courses but the erle of Kent had the felde and gate hym moche worship and thanke of all maner men for his manfull dedes ¶ And in the .vij. yere of kyng Henryes regne syr Richard Scrop archebys shop of Yorke the erle Marshall of Englonde gadred vnto them a stronge power agaynst kyng Henry And the kyng herynge therof in all the haste that he myght came with his power Northward and mette with them at Yorke there were these two lordes taken brought to the kyng And anone the iudges were set these two lordes brought forth there they were iudged to deth bothe theyr hedes smytten of and there they made theyr ende on whose soules god for his pyte haue mercy Amē And whan this was done the kyng came to London agayn there rested hym Anone god of his grete goodnes wrought and shewed many grete myracles for this worthy clerke archebysshop of Yorke that thus was done to deth ¶ And in the .viij. yere of kynge Henryes regne dame Luce the dukes syster of Mylen came in to Englonde so to London there was wedded to syr Edmond Holland erle of Kent in the pryory of saynt Mary ouereys in South warke with moche solempnite grete worshyp The kynge was there hymselfe gaue her at the chirche dore whan they were wedded masse was done the kyng his owne ꝑsone brought lad this worthy lady in to the bysshops place of Winchestre there was a wonders grete feest holden to all maner people that wold come ¶ And the same yere syr Robert Knolles knyght a worthy warryour dyed at his manoyr in Norfolk frō th●ns he was brought to London on a hors bere with moche torche light so he was brought to the whyte freres in flete strete there was done made for hym a solempne feest a ryall enter●ment for those that thyder wold come bothe ryche poore there lyeth buryed by dame Cōstance his wyfe in the myddes of the body of the chirche on whose soule god haue mercy Amē ¶ And in this same yere sir Thomas Rampston knyght Constable of the Toure of London was drowned at London brydge as he came fro Westmynster inwardes to the toure in a ●arge all through lewdnes ¶ And in the same yere dame Philyp the yonger doughter of kyng Henry was ladde ouer see with syr Richard the dukes broder of Yorke syr Comond Courtney bysshop of Norwiche many other lordes knyghtes squyers ladyes gentylwomen that apperteyned to suche a kinges doughter came in to Denmarke And the kyng receyued this worthy lady for his wyfe welcomed these worthy lordes did vnto them moche worshyp and they were brought to a towne that was called Londō in Denmarke and there was this lady wedded and sacred to the kynge of Denmarke Norway Swethen and there was crowned quene of Denmarke with moche solempnite there was made a ryall feest And whan this feest and maryage was done ended these lordes ladyes toke theyr leue of the kynge the quene came agayne in to Englonde in safete thanked be god ¶ And in the. viij yere of kyng Henryes regne there was a man that was called the Walsshe clerke and he appeled a knight that was called sir Percyuall Snowdon of treason there they were ioyned to fight to the vtteraūce within lystes the daye place tyme assigned lymyted to be done ended in Smythfelde at whiche daye those two persones came in to the felde fought sore myghtely togyder But at the last the knyght ouercame the clerke made hȳ to yelde hym creaūt of his fals empechement that he had sayd on hym than was he despoiled of his armure drawen out of the felde to Tyburne there he was hanged the knyght takē to grace and was a good man ¶
closed the pyt aboute with a wall is now in the chirche yerde at the eest ende of the chirche fast shette with a stronge dore for no man sholde nycely go in without leue of the bysshop or of the pryour of y● place Many men went in and came out agayne in saynt Patrykes tyme tolde of paynes Ioye that they had seen and the meruayles that they sawe ben there yet wryten and bycause therof many men turned were conuerted to ryght byleue Also many men went in came neuer out agayne In kyng Stephens tyme kyng of Englonde a knyght y● hyght Owayne went in to saynt Patrykes purgatory came agayn dwelled euer after duryng his lyfe in the nedes of the abbey of Ludensis that is of y● ordre of Cysteaux tolde many wonders that he had seen in Patrykes purgatory That place is called Patrykes purgatory and the chirche is named Reglis No man is enioyned for to go in to that purgatory but coūseyled that he sholde not come therin but take vpon hym other penaūce And yf a man haue auoided be saable and wyl nedes go therin he shall fyrst go to the bysshop and than he shall be sent with lettres to the pryoue of y● place they bothe shall coūseyle hym to leue And yf he wyll nedes go therto he shall be in prayers in fastynge .xv. dayes and after .xv. dayes he shall be houseled ladde to the dore of the purgatory with processyon letany and yet he shall be coūseyled to leue it yf he be stedfast and wyll en●●e the dore shall be opened he blyssed go in goddes name holde forth his waye and the dore shall be fast shette tyll the nexte daye and whan the tyme is the pryour shall come and open the dore and yf the man be comen he ledeth hym in to y● chirche with ꝓcessyon and there he shall be xv dayes in prayers and fastynge ¶ Of the meruayles of sayntes of Irlonde Ca .xxix. HEre Giraldꝰ maketh mynde that as men of this nacyon ben more angry than other men more hasty for to take wreche whyles they ben alyue so sayntes halowes of this londe ben more wrechefull than sayntes of other londes Clerkes of this londe ben chaste and saye many prayers done grete abstynence a daye drynke al nyght so is accoūted for a myracle y● 〈…〉 ery 〈…〉 th not there as wyne regneth and ben chasen out of abbeys in to the clergy done as monkes sholde But they y● ben ●●yll of them ben worste of all other So good men amonge them though they ben but fewe ben good at the best Prelates of that countree ben full ●●owe in cor 〈…〉 o● trespace and besy in cōtemplacyon and not in prechyng of goddes worde Therfore it is that all y● sayntes of that londe ben cōfessours and no martyrs amonge them no wonder for al the prelates of this londe clerkes and prelates sholde do is to them vnknowen Therfore whā 〈◊〉 was put agaynst the bysshop of Cassyll how it myght be that so many sayntes ben in Irlonde neuer a martyr amōge them all sythen y● the men bē so shrewed and so angry the prelates so recheles and slowe in cor●eccyon of trespace The bysshop answered frowardly ynough sayd Our men ben shrewed and angry ynough to themselfe but to goddes seruaūtes they ley neuer hāde but do them grete reuerence worshyp but englyssh men come in to this londe that can make martyrs were wont to vse that crafte ¶ 〈◊〉 The bisshop sayd so bycause y● kyng Henry the seconde was tho newe comen in to Irlonde fresshely after the marty● dome of saynt Thomas of Caūterbury ¶ Gir. In this londe in wales in 〈◊〉 londe ben belles and staues with croked hedes other suche thȳges for retykes in grete reuerence worship so y● men of this londe drede more for to swere vpon one of those belles golden staues than vpon the gospels The chefe of all suche relykes is holden Iesus staffe that is a● Deuelyn with y● whiche staffe they say that y● fyrst saynt Patryke droue y● wormes out of Irlond ¶ Augꝰ de ci dei ca .vij. yf men a●e how it may be y● dyuers maner of beestes of dyuers kynde that 〈◊〉 kyndly goten bytwene male female come 〈◊〉 ben in ylondes after Noes flode Men suppose that suche beestes ●wāme in to ylondes about● fyrst to the nexte and ●o forth in to other Or els men saylynge in to ylondes brought with them suche beestes for loue of huntynge Or aungels at god almyghtyes camaunde mēt brought suche beestes in to ylondes aboute or the erth brought them forth fyrst and fulfylled tho goddes cōmaundement that cōmaūded y● erth to brynge forth grasse and quycke beestes ¶ Here endeth the descripcyon of Brytayne the whiche conteyneth Englonde Wales and Scotlond and also bycause Irloude is vnder the ●ule of Englonde of olde tyme it ●ath so contynued ther fore I haue set the descripcyon of y● same after the sayd Brytayn whiche I haue taken out of 〈…〉 cronycon And bycause it is necessary vnto all Englysshemen to knowe y● propertees 〈…〉 modytees meruayles of them I ●illyā Caxton haue set them fyrst in imprynt accordynge to the translacyon of Treuisa whiche at y● request of the lorde Barkeley trāslated y● boke of Polyeronycon in to Englysshe ¶ Lately fynysshe● and Impaynted at London in Fletestrete at the sy 〈…〉 of the Sonne by wynkyn de Wo 〈…〉 the yere of our lorde god M CCCCC 〈…〉 viij the .ix. daye of Apryll