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A31234 A reply to the ansvver of the Catholiqve apology, or, A cleere vindication of the Catholiques of England from all matter of fact charg'd against them by their enemyes Castlemaine, Roger Palmer, Earl of, 1634-1705.; Pugh, Robert, 1609-1679. 1668 (1668) Wing C1246; ESTC R38734 114,407 289

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speak Tragically this does rather seem a piece of Drollery But you have your design either way for no man can read it but he must either laugh or shake his Head SECT XXXXVII APOLOGY We know My Lords and Gentlemen that from your hearts you do deplore our condition yet permit us to tell you your bravery must extend thus far as not to sit still with pity only but each is to labour for the distressed as far as in reality his ability will reach some must beseech our Gracious Soveraign for us others must again undeceive the Good though deluded Multitude Therefore all are to remember who are the prime raisers of the Storm and how through our sides they would wound both the KING and You for though their hatred to our selves is great yet the enmity out of all measure encreases because we have been yours and so shall continue even in the fiery day of trial Protect us we entreat you then upon all your former Promises or if that be not sufficient for the sakes of those that lost their Estates with you many of which are now fallen asleep But if this be still to weak we must conjure you by the sight of this Bloody Catalogue which contains the Names of your murthered Friends and Relations who in the heat of Battail perchance saved many of your Lives even with the joyful loss of their own ANSWER XLVII In answer to this last he has nothing to say but that the Rebels harrassed the Papists to make the King odious and enrich themselves That we were necessitated to what we did either for Subsistance or Protection but the Protestants had no such necessity Concerning the Estates we lost the sum of his answer is That after the Rebels had devoured ours they fell upon the Protestants with more colour and nevertheless appetite REPLY to ANSW XLVII For our necessity other then our Duty to engage for his Maiestie I have answered it at large in the Preface For the loss of our Estates I say here is an excelent encouragement for Subjects according to this mans Doctrine But I see by the whole manner of his writing that he is some inconsiderable man whose name would be as little known if prefixt as it is now being concealed and therefore there is no wonder if what he writ be inconsiderable also Concerning the Catalogue of those brave Catholicks that laid their lives down for their King the Minister saith thus ANSWER XLVIII That he can reckon a far greater number of Protestants then I can pretend to do Papists Secondly that I have omitted many in my List which he could name but this he thinks was out of design that I might more excusably reckon some names which I ought to have omitted viz. My Lord of Carnarvan who he says in his extremities refused a Priest and ordered the Chaplain of his Regiment to pray with him REPLY to ANSW XLVIII For my Lord Carnarvan Reader you must know he was a Ward taken by my Lord Pembroke from his Catholique Mother and then married to his Daughter In the Army my Lord never marched without a Priest whē he was wounded to death he sent for his Brother in law the Lord Herbert late M. of Worster and desired him to go tell the King That he could do no more then die in his Quarrel and if he would grant him but this request he would think his Majesty sufficiently recompenced him for his life His petition was That his Mother might have the breeding up of his Son and the end of this he said was That the Child might be educated in the Catholick Religion After this he received all the rites of the Roman Church and died in the arms of a Priest now alive that belonged to many of my Lords Relations Concerning my Catalogue in general you must know Reader I have been often chid at London for omitting so many considerable Catholicks but this I could not help for the Catalogue was collected by Mr. Blunt as I take it who is to be much commended for his pains When I printed the Apology I was in such hast that I had not time to examine it nicely among my friends I am now Reader also a great way from London and therefore am forc'd to print it again without amendmēts all that I can do at present is to desire a leaf or two of white paper be added in which we may write down as we shall from time to time be informed the names of those Heroick men that died in defence of their King and Country I wonder very much that this Minister is not ashamed to urge such a foolish thing viz. That more Protestants dyed in this War then of our Religion This no body doubts of and may well be seeing we are not the hundredth part of the Nation and yet by my imperfect List it appears that there were killed 190. Catholiques of Quality when as by the List called the Royal-Martyr and printed by Thomas Newcomb 1660. there died in the War but 212. Protestants the rest there named being Papists as you may see if you compare their names with my Catologue Let the Word then judge whether we ought not to have some compassion shewed us and not to be thus calumniated by every impertinent Scribler Reader those that follow are the Ministers exhortations which are so like the Pedantry of his pulpit that they alone without the rest would have assured me of the Authors calling That you may see what they are I have divided them into eight several Advices or Desires for so he is pleased to call them First Sect. He desires us to be content with our condition and not under value the Liberty we now enjoy if it exceed what was granted our Fathers To this I say Reader that we are contented with any favour yet 't would be no arrogance if we require more them our Fathers had because it seems the Minister counts them all Traytors when as we as all the World knows have shewn the utmost duty that Subjects can do Second Sect. Not to proclaim about the World for the paring of our nayls that we are persecuted To this I will give a larger Answer in the Postscript and will only say here that I defie any man to shew me in Christendome a Party that bears their misfortunes with more submission then we Third Sect. To abhor them that wish disturbances or Invasions to settle Popery To this I say I think that nothing can make it more manifest that we do abhor such men then to see that all catholicks detested the French evē then when we were forsakē by our friends and they as most thought upō the point of landing Fourth Sect. To keep our Religiō to our selves and not expect such harvests as we had in the late confusions I say Truly we are like to keep it to our selves for 't is too severe to be embraced by Worldlings and if care be not taken the same times will come again
then private men can be conceived to do But yet it were severe to indite this man for a Libeller or say because he begs that he mutinies against Obedience and Rule Niniveh might call for mercy without affronting Heaven even after sentence was given nor has ever the King of Kings when he punishes forbad his children to cry Remember Abraham Remember Isaac Remember Jacob O Lord remember the promises that thou hast made of old My second Reason was as a Subject to keep the Peace and to the utmost of my power to prevent all strife and division This is an obligation which no son of Adam can plead exemption from for seeing all men are under somme Government or other and Quiet the sole end of that everybody must use the best means he can so it contradict not Laws to preserve the thing for which Magistracy it self was established No Creature I am sure can be ignorant of the distraction then in England for he that was in the City fled to his Farm frightned with the noise of a new fire and he that got into the Country poasted again to Town to escape the Massacre which designed whispers dayly threatned If this disorder was amongst Protestants what dreadful confusion must you imagine amongst Catholiques who are but a handful comparatively to the whole and yet the famed Authors of these two Conspiracies Was it unbeseeming then an English Christian to wish a better understanding among his Countrymen and to desire the Royal-Party should not be disjoyned especially when an Invasion was menaced by our Confederate Neighbours and a Rebellion newly broke out within the Circuit of our own Island If remedies were needful what Medicament could be better applied then the gentle balm of true perswasion By this men saw the Tares which the Enemy sowed whilst they slept and thus they began to reknow their often tried friends descended according to Nature and Grace from those Ancestors who like so many Atlas's upheld the Grandeur of our Kings whilst the whole World from East to West admired their Victories Consider then I beseech you Great Patriots in whom the Prince of darkness reigns whether in me that am termed a Jesuit and would banish all discord from among my Brethren or in this strange Minister who to sow Sedition plows with perverted Storie and then harrows with downright falsities and untruths How does this poor man rip up old tales of Popes and by discovering his passion and fancy infer that it is a check to the Glory of Kings and utter loss of Soveraignty to be under the spiritual Jurisdiction of this Universal Bishop Why do not the Kings of France Spain Portugal and Poland see this How comes it to pass also that the Emperor who is Absolute Monarch of Hungary and Boheme and the other great Princes of Germany are ignorant of a thing of so much concernment This I much wonder at indeed especially since their Countries have so swarmed with these Reformed Evangelists But it may be they are carelesse of their interest and so is the simple Florentine who with the Duke of Savoy and the rest of the Italian Regulets want as much wit as they do Authority and Power These Princes even these very last live as I may say just under his Holiness his Nose and yet when they please dispute about Temporals not only with Sword in hand but are so absolute and arbitrary in their Dominiōs that England would groan to bear once in many ages what their Subjects daily suffer Reflecting thus on the premises might not I well wonder in our Apology how so wild a calumny could be laid to our charge as that our Principles are destructive to Soveraignty Truly I did wonder and that not a little especially since our fore-fathers were so eminent in Religion and yet our Kings rather Monarchs of Europe then of half an Isle giving Laws wheresoever they pleased If some Popes have been exorbitant 't is no more our Faith to believe their actions iust then that humane transgressions are the true Precepts of Christianity As some wicked mē dealt ill with Gods Anointed so on the other side who defended these Princes against pretended illegal impositions of Rome were they not Papists Yes and so fervent for that Truth that the next day they would take the Croisado next against any forreign Hereticks 'T is no breach in our Religion to say that Popes in their private Determinations may erre much less that they sin like men A Pope and Council in matters of Faith I confess Infallible and therefore I look upon the Decrees of Trent as divine as those of Nice nor were there I am sure more tricks against Protestants pretended in this then in the former against the strong and numerous Arrians No man abominates Prelatick insolencies more then I Bring out then the Glorious Roll and upon examination you will find that our bravest Catholique Princes have been the best sons of the Church nor is yet a King by our Tenets the worse Child for defending his Rights and Priviledges Caesar must have what is Caesars and to God we must ●●nder what is Gods Shall Notions then convince Experience when as Demonstration it self often gives way to Practice Let us now summon for witnesses to this great Truth the present Kings of our Profession and though their thoughts towre far higher then Eagles they will not only deride the contrary but unanimously proclaim that their people are not rebellious by reason of Ecclesiastical dependence abroad nor do they think themselves less absolute then that very Prince who cries There ought to be no other Pope then Me. What shall I say then to such a man who will yet affirm our Principles inconsistent with Obedience To advise him to Anticyra is vain for no Ellebore can purge that madness which first taking root by ignorance has afterward been quite transformed through interest into an obstinate and selfdeceiving wilfulness My Lords and Gentlemen As malice has forced the Answerer thus ill to apply his reading so also it hath stained his face with so deep a dye that now he blushes at nothing nor regards any more whatever he says Well might I have pardoned him his rude upbraiding That our sufferings were but Duties because it is a real Truth yet no Subject takes pleasure in the sound when in rancour and despite it is used against him I say well might I with silence have swallowed this seeing afterwards I was to hear him with impudēce proclaim That Papists were forc'd to their bravery and like a hard-hunted-Deer we threw our selves into the Herd glad to be sheltered under the Royal covert Glad we cōfess as Loyal men grasp the occasion of expressing zeal but that we could not sit quietly at home I flatly here deny nay day is not clearer then this that had not our Loyalty forbad we might with triumph have been received even into the very embraces of the Enemy Had this Minister perused Books any farther then their
when he speaks of the commotions of a Party yet here I am accused to think Rebellion no crime and to excuse their faults because I tell you what Papists in those days said for themselves The Minister can call himself a Loyal Subject and yet defend the Hugonots who were the most notorious and insolent Rebels that any History can shew nor had they any other pretence for the Massacres and continual ravages committed by them but Mr. Calvin and Mr. Beza's telling them God said thus and thus and therefore unless their respective Kings would suffer them to destroy a Religion in quiet possession since the Reign of Clouis they would bring Armies into the field and fortifie Towns against their Liege-Lords as every body knows they did till subdued in the time of Lewis the XIII I think good Mr. Parson I am as well known in England as your self and am sure can find more Protestants of Quality that shall engage for my Loyalty thē you can people of any sort 'T is not this Minister Reader only but others have called my narration of the matter of fact a questioning of Queen Elizabeths Title judge you by my words in the Apology whether it be so or no nor could I omit in honour the Plea of the foregoing age their misdemeanours being every day thrown in my dish But suppose I had questioned her Title there is no Treasonable intention in it I am sure because the Title of our King has no dependance upon that Princesse nor was she the first of our Monarchs against whose right Posterity has argued No body is blamed for saying King Stephen was an usurper or that Edward the Fourths Title was better then that of the three preceding Henry's What is 't then I beseech you were the fact proved against me I have committed that Protestant Authors have not done and worse Sr. Walter Rawley in his Preface of the History of the world has not only something to say against almost all the Kings of Englād but Buck in his Ric. 3 has bastardized Hen. 7 and all his offspring and thereby invalidates theire title to the Crowne either as Yorkists or Lancastrians Nor does Speed refraine from questioning the right of most of our Princes from the Conquest till Henry the fowrth's Reigne Yet none of these have been branded with the Character of ill Subjects 'T is he that is to be accounted wicked who sedititiously descants on Titles to breed Commotions and Disorders The Minister says I defend the calumny of those Catholicks in saying 'T was a very hard question whether the right to the Crown lay in Queen Elizabeth or in the Queen of Scots Reader that which I said was That this was a harder Question then the Dispute of York and Lancaster which cost so much Blood and Treasure and because I would know your opinion I will state these two Questions to you York had the interest of a third brother by Marriage Lancaster that of a fourth Brother and these two dispute about the Crown of England which women are capable of The second Question is this Henry the eighth married his brothers wife who was said to be a Virgin for Prince Arthur was but fifteene and a little more wen he died By this Princess K. Hen. had our Q. Mary and after he had lived with her 20 years he fell in love with a handsome young Lady whereupon he had in short time a scruple of Conscience that it was unlawful to live longer with his old wife because she had been-married to his brother His Conscience being still tender he caused the Scriptures to be searched and found not only there the Marriage to be void but that the Pope himself had no power in England and besides that rich Abbies were also contrary to the word of God Being thus truly informed he threw away Wife Pope and Monks and married the other by whom he had Queen Elizabeth while his first Wife lived 'T was thought by many curious wits that there could be but one of the daughters legitimate because both Mothers were contemporaries and that to Christians the Scripture permits but one wife at a time After the death of this King and his Son 't was put to the Kingdom to decide which of these children were lawfully begotten both Lords and Commons acknowledged Mary for their Queen which was as much to say she was born in true Wedlock Nor did Luther himself fail to disapprove of Queen Elizabeths birth I doubt not but the people were informed of the cause of the Kings scrupule as also that this brother Arthur had never known his wife Nay before K. Henry married Queen Katherine she protested she was a Virgin and offered to be tryed by Matrons The Bishop of Ely also deposed That the Queen whom all even the King himself esteemed for a Saint had often in confession told him she never carnally knew the Prince Nor in the whole examination was there any colourable pretence produc'd but the common vanity of all boys to be thought men before their time For 't was affirmed Arthur should say the next morning after Marriage that he had been in Spain that night Besides this there were those I believe that told the People that though St. John forbad Herod to take his brother Philips wife because his said Brother was then alive for Josephus sayes Herodias parted from her husband Philip in his life time and in contempt of the lawes married Herod yet he never prohibited by those words a Christian to marry his sister in-law if her Husband were dead The Case being thus fancied by the Papists in the time of Queen Elizabeth they argued that if Mary was the true Child then the other was the Natural but Mary was owned Legitimate And my Lord Bacon say's the ligitimation of Queen Mary and Elizabeth were incompatible Ergo the Kingdom not being Elective Mary Stuart the next Legal Heir must necessarily succeed her Yet suppose these Papists were wrong in their conclusion I am sure nevertheless I am still in the right viz. That it is a harder Question to resolve whether the Marriage be Null if a woman marries two Brothers then whether a third or fourth brother has the better Title to the Crown for that was the contest betwixt York and Lancaster But the Minister urges if the Papists thought Queen Elizabeth an Usurper why did not they stir sooner for there was no Rebellion he says in ten years and when after ten it broke out in the North there was not the least mention made of the Q. of Scots or her Title I wish the Catholicks had not only sat still ten years but forty five years also yet to shew you that this Minister will be wrōg in every thing I shall give you a most succinct account of this business Queen Mary of England in the latter part of her Reign was in open war with France and the Qu. of Scots was
been struck at but that the Bishops and Church of Englād felt also the blow and how much Episcopacy is advātageous to Monarchy none can be now ignorant Who therefore My Lords and Gentlemen will be so little pitied as you if you should be twice deceived after the same method and māner But to conclude no Kingdom I dare say looses-so much as ours by their cry against Catholicks for 't is very certainly true were not this a Bar and he who doubts it will soon be convinc'd let him step but beyond Sea that the Spanish Provinces in the Netherlāds and for a small matter with their Kings consent as his case lately stood would joyfully put themselves under the gentle yoak of our easie Government nor are they in Normandy shie to say that had not Papists been so harrassed with us they would not have slipt so many late oportunities of returning to their Lawful Duke and Soveraign FINIS REader I hope this Impressiō will be better thē the last which was very falsely printed For the Printer not only Italicated where he should not and omitted it where he should but also left out some words and changed others as if there had been a private correspondency betweene my Adversary and him for soe I le assure yow I am informed The only alteration I make is putting the Citations out of the Margent into the body of the treatise for I found that it distracted or at least much interupted the Reader in often running from one place to another especially if what I quoted were long I have also added to the list more Catholiques of quality that lost their lives for the King The names I receiv'd from some Ladyes of their Relations who are now become Religious at Paris I have plac't them by themselves after all to put the Readers in mind that they forgett not to insert also those whom hereafter they shall have notice of and had I time to send to friends I doubt not but the increase would be considerable A CATOLOGUE OF THOSE CATHOLICKS THAT DIED AND SVFFERED FOR THEIRE LOYALTY THe Earl of Carnarvan slain at Newbury first Battle Lord Viscount Dunbar at Scarborough and two of his sons much wounded Knights Sir John Smith Banneret who rescued the Kings Standard from the Rebels at Edg●il slain at Alresford in Hampshire Sir John Cansfield wounded at Neubury of which he died a lingring death Sir Hen. Gage Governour of Oxford slain at Collumbridge 11. Jan. 1644. Sir J. Digby wounded at Taunton and died at Bridgewater Sir P. Brown wounded at Naseby died at Nortbampton Sir Nich. Fortescue Knight of Malta slain in Lancashire Sir Troylus Turbervil Captain-Lieut of the Kings Life-Guard slain upon his Majesties marching from Newark to Oxford Sir J. Preston wounded at Furnace of which he died a lingring death Sir Arthur Aston Gouvernour of Red●ling slain at Tredaugh in cold blood Sir Thomas Tildesly slain at Wiggan Sir Hēry Slingsby beheaded on Towerhill Colonels Col. Th. Howard son of the Lord William Howard slain at Peirsbridge Col. Tho. Howard son of Sir Francis at Atherton-Moor The gaining which Battle was principally ascrib'd to his Valour Col. Tho. Morgan of Weston in Warwicksh slain at Newb. first battle he raised a Regiment of Horse for the King at his own charge and his Estate was given to Mr. Pyms son Col. Cuthbert Conniers at Malpass Col. Tho. Dalton of Thurnham mortally wounded at Newbury second battle and died at Marlborough Col. Francis Hungate slain at Chester Col. Poor Governour of Berkley-Castle neer Lidney Col. Will. Ewre son to the late Lord Ewre at Marston-Moor Col. Ra. Pudsey at Marston-Moor Col. Cuthert Clifton slain at Manchester Col. Cassey Bental at Stow in the Wolds Col. Trollop slain at Wiggan Col. William Bains at Malpass Col. William Walton at Tredagh Col. Rich. Manning at Alresford Lieut. Colonels Lieut. Col. Thomas Markham of Allerton slain neer Gainsborough L. Col. Lancelot Holtby at Branceford L. Col. Haggerston at Preston L. Col. Pavier at Linc. L. Col. Jordan Metham at Pontefract L. Col John Godfrey at Tewksbury L. Col. George Preston at Bradford L. Col. Will. Houghton at Newbury Lieut. Col. Phil. Howard slain at Chester L. Col. Middleton at Hopton-Heath L. Col. Michael Constable there also L. Col. Sayr at Nasby L. Col. Scot at Alresford L. Col. Thomas Salvin at Alresford L. Col. Richard Brown at Alresford L. Col. Goodridge wounded at Alresford and died at Oxford L. Col. Congrave slain at Dean in Gloucest Serjeant-Majors Major Cusand slain at the taking of Basing in cold blood Major Rich. Harborn wounded at Malpass dy'd at Kendal Major T. Vavasor slain at Marston-Moor Maior Panton wounded at Cover dy'd at Highmeadow Major Hudleston slain at York Maj. Thomas Ewre at Newbury 1. Major Lawrence Clifton at Shelfordhouse Maior Thomas Heskith at Malpass Maj. William Leak at Newbury 1. Maj. Rively wounded at Naseby dy'd prisoner at London Maj. Richard Sherburn at London Maj. Holmby at Henly Major Rich. Norwood slain before Taunton Captains Captain Marmaduke Constable Standardb●●rer to L. Gen. Lindsey slain at Edgehill Capt. Wil. Laborn and Cap. Mat. Anderton at Sheriff-hutton in Yorkshire Capt. Joseph Constable at Newbury Captain Wiburn slain at Basing in oold blood Capt. Burgh slain at Cover Capt. Thurston Anderton wounded at Newbury died at Oxford Cap. Haggarston eldest son of Sir Thomas in Lancashire Cap. Anthony Rigby at Bazing-house Capt. Richard Bradford at Bazing-house Capt. Kenelm Digby eldest son of Sir Kenelm Digby raised a Troop of Horse at his own charge and was slain at St. Neotes Capt. Ratcliff Houghton at Preston Capt. Rob. Molineux of the Wood in Lancashire slain at Newbury 1. Capt. Charl. Thimelby at Worcester Capt. Robert Townsend at Edge-hill Captain Matthew Ratcliff neer Henly Capt. Richard Wolsole at Newbury Capt. Anthony Awd Capt. Thomas Cole at Newark Capt. Partison at Wiggan Capt. Maximil Nelson at Marston-moor Capt. Fran. Godfrey slain at Sherburn Capt. Tho. Meynel at Pontefract Capt. John Clifton at Shelford-house Capt Abraham Lance. Capt. Robert Lance at Rowton in Chesh. Capt. Anth. Hamerton neer Manchester Capt. Will. Symcots Capt. Lieut. to the Lord Piercy slain at Newberry 1. Capt. Tho Singleton at Newberry 1. Captain Francis Errington of Denton in Northumberland at Rotheran Captain George Singleton at Rotheran Capt. Mich. Fitzakerly at Liverpool Capt. Daniel Thorold at Nasby Capt. Franc. Clifton at Newberry 1. Capt. John Lance at Islip Capt. George Cassey at Hereford Capt. Langdale at Greekhovel in Wales Capt. Carver in Monmouthshire Capt. John Lingen Ledbury Capt. Samways at Newberry 2. Captain John Plumton slain at York Capt. Pet. Forcer at York Capt. Thomas Whittinghā at Newberry Capt. Winkley at Leverpool Capt. Thomas Anderton at Leverpool Capt. Rich. Walmsly at Ormschurch Capt. John Swinglehurst and Capt. John Butler at Marston-moor Capt. George Holden at Usk. Capt. Richard Latham at Litchfield Capt. Tho. Charnock at Litchfield Capt. Rob. Dent at Newcastle Capt. Thomas Heskith and Capt. John Knipe at
Bindle Capt. Thomas Eccleston at Bindle Capt. John Hothersal Capt. Nic. Anderton at Gre●noo-Cattle Capt. Anthony Girlington Lancaster Capt. Francis Rou● in Dean-Forrest Capt. Randolph Wallinger at Cover Capt. Christoph Wray slain at Bradford Capt. Wil. Rookwood at Alresford Capt. Rob. Rookwood at Oxford Capt. Hoskins slain at Lidney in cold blood Capt. Phil. Darey at Lidney Capt. Wil. Jones at Ragland Capt. Henry Wells wounded at Newberry 2. died in prison at London Capt. Richardson slain before Taunton Captain Tho. Madden slain in Woodstreet by the Fanaticks Jan. 1660. Inferiour Officers Lieut. Will. Butler slain at Newberry Lieut. Rich. Osbalston at Leeds Lieut. George Hothersal at Leverpool Lieutenant William Girlington at Leverpool Lieutenant John Kulcheth at Worral Lieut. William Singleton at Marston Lieut. Peter Boardman at Bradford Lieutenant Short slain neer Glocester Lieut. Rich. Bradford at Blechington Lieutenant James Bradford at Blechington Lieut. Tho. Kinsman at Lincoln Lieutenant John Birch at ●irmicham Lieutenant Staley at Rushall-Hall Cornet William Culchereth at Newberry Cor. Deinton at Cardiff Cor. Robert Lance in Cheshire Cor. Edward Walker at Burton Cor. Miles Lochard at Gooderidge Gentlemen-Volontairs Mr. Edward Talbot brother to the now Earl of Shrewsbury slain at Marston-moor Mr. Char. Townly and Mr. Charles Sherburn there also Mr. Nicolas Timelby at Bristow Mr. Pool of Worral at Bristow Mr. John Tipper at Ne●●am Mr. Christopher Blount at Edg●alston Mr. Theodore Mouse at Langpo●● Mr. Gerard Salvin at Langpo●● Mr. Francis Darcy at Langpo●● Mr. Wiburn at Basing Mr. Robert Bowles at Basing Mr. Wil. Stoner at Basing Mr. Price of Washingly in Northamptonsh slain at Lincoln in cold blood Mr. Cuthbert Ratcliff slain at Newcastle Mr. Thomas Latham at Newarck Mr. Andrew Giffard at Hampton Mr. ●ew is Blount at Manchaster Mr. Cary ād M Gēnings at Shelfordhouse Mr. James Anderton in Wales Mr. Thomas Roper at Gootheridge Mr. Stephen Pudsey in Hold●rness Mr. Francis Pavier at Marston Mr. James Banton at Cover Tho. Pendrel at Stow. Mr. Boniface Kemp and Mr. ●●lde●ons Hesket slain neer York in cold blood Mr. Mich. Wharton at Scarborough Mr. Errington at Chester Tho. West by Doctor of Physick at Prestō Mr. Peter Davis at D●nbigh Mr. Edward Davis at Chester Mr. Bret at Chester Mr. Roger Wood at Chester Mr. Henry Lawson at Melton Mr. Tho. Craithorn the elder at Uphaven Mr. Henry Johnson at Uphaven Three so●● of Mr. Kitby of Rancliff John Witham at Preston Wil. S●lby at Preston John 15. 13. Greater love then this no. man hath then that one lay down his life for his friend Major General Will. Web. so wounded at Newberry by Case-shot that he lives a dying life The Names of such Catholicks whose Estates both Real and Personal were sold in persuance of an Act made by the Rump Iuly 16. 1651. for their pretended Delinquency that is for adhering to their King IOh. Lord Marquess of Winchester who so valiantly defended Basing-house Henry Lord Marquess of Worcester who has been at least 300000. l. looser by the War Francis Lord Cottington Lord John Sommerset Marmaduke L. Langdale and his son Sir John Winter who so stoutly defended Lidney-house Sir Thomas Tildesly himself slain and his Estate sold Sir Hen. Slingsby beheaded at Tower-hill and his Estate sold Sir Piercy Herbert now Lord Powys Sir Francis Howard Sir Henry Bedingfield Sir Arthur Aston Governour of Reading Sir Tho. Haggerston Rog. Bodenham Esq Charles Townly Esq Row land Eyre Esq Peter Pudsey Esq John Giffard Esq Other Catholicks whose Estates were sold by an Additional Rump-Act made Aug. 4. 1652. HEnry Lord Viscount Dunbar and his sō Sir Wil. Vavasor Sir Edw. Ratcliff Thomas Clifton Esq Peter Gifford of ●hillington Esq Walter Fowler of St. Thomas Esq Thomas Brook of Madely Esq Francis Biddulph of Biddulph Esq William Middleton of Stocton Esq Nicholas Errington Esq Lance Errington Esq Henry Errington Esq John Jones of Dingestow Esq John Weston Esq Phil. Hungate Esq Rob. Dolman Gent. Rich. Masley Gent. Geo. Smith Gent. Ralph Pudsey Gent. More Catholicks whose Estates were sold by another Rump-Act made Novemb. 18. 1652. HEnry Lord Arundel of Wardor who raised a Regiment of Horse for the King and whose Castle of Wardor was so gallātly defēded against Edward Hungerford Henry Lord Marley and Monteagle William Lord Ewre William Lord Powis who kept long his castle of Powis against the enemy and afterwards taken in it and thereupon was kept a great while prisoner at Stafford and died in durance at London Lord Charles Somerset Sir Walter Blount long a prisoner in the Tower Sir Edw. Widdrington who raised a Regiment of Horse Sir Richard Tichburn Sir Charles Blount slain also by one of his own Captains Sir J. Clavering dy'd a prisoner at Lond. Sir Iohn Cansfield Sir Iohn Timelby of Ernam Sir Philip Constable Sir Edward Plumpton Sir Nicholas Thornton who raised a Troop of Horse at his own charge Hugh Anderton of Exton Esq Thomas Langtree of Langtree Esq Will. Hoghton Esq William Hesketh Esq William Latham Esq Tho. Singleton Esq Iohn Westby Esq Sir Edward Charlton William Sheldon of Beely Esq William Gage of Bently Esq Tho. Clavering Esq Iohn Plumpton Esq Marm. Holby Esq Hen. Englefield Esq Robert Wigmore Esq Rob. Cramblington Esq Will. Sherburn Esq Iohn Constable Esq Richard Latham Esq William Bawd Esq Iames Anderton of Birchley Esq Thomas Singleton Esq Iohn Talbot Esq Nich. Fitzakerly Esq Iohn Piercy Esq Thomas Acton of Burton Esq Tho. Gillibrand Esq Tho. Grimshaw Esq Ralph Rishton and Wil. Floyer Gentl. Richard Chorley of Chorley Iames Anderton of Cleyton Esq Will Anderton of Anderton Esq With many others Mr. Edmund Church of Essex was one of the first whose personal Estate was plundred and his real sequestred which so continued without any allowāce to his wife and children from 1642. till 1649. when he died prisoner Mr. Iohn Barlow of Pembrookshire his whole Estate being at least 1500. l. per an was given to Col Horton and Cap. Nicolas without any allowance of any fifths or other sustenance for his wife and many children Here follow the new added names of those that were slaine in his Maiestie's service Sr. Timothy Tetherston killed at Chester Cap. Thomas Paston slaine at Yorke Cap. Henry Butler slaine at Brinle Mr. Richard Seborne slaine at Ragland Mr. William Alsley slaine at Wiggan FINIS Printed with permission an 1668. a Iosh. 6. 22. a Pyr. Tr. p. 4. a Cam. Brit. P. 163. B. b Vid. Rep. 6. c 645. Monasteries 110. Hospitals 90. colledges 2374. Chaunteries and free Chappels L. Herb. H. 8. p. 443. a Vid Rep. 48. sect 5. b St H. ● pag. 964. Reg. 26. a c. 20. p. 40. a Vid His last Speech etc. and Printed by Authority 1644. a Cib. B●it p. 143. b ●ep ●● a Fox Feb. 12. b Stovv Hen. 6. p. 627. 628. c Fox Ian. 7. d Stovv H. 5. p. 561. ● Hey● Geog. ● 20. a Du Moulins v●ords in ansv to Phil. p. 58. a Bates Elenc mo●