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A81194 A compendium of the laws and government ecclesiastical, civil and military, of England, Scotland & Ireland and dominions, plantations and territories thereunto belonging, with the maritime power thereof, and jurisdiction of courts therein. Methodically digested under their proper heads. By H.C. sometime of the Inner Temple. Curson, H. (Henry) 1699 (1699) Wing C7686A; ESTC R231895 237,927 672

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To take care of the Church and Church Assemblies The Overseers of the Poor To take care of the Poor Sick Aged Orphans and other Objects of Charity And Lastly The Clerk to wait on him at Divine Service And for The Civil Government of Villages THe Lord of the Manor or Soil who from the Crown immediately holds or mediately holds Dominium Soli Is said to have in him The Royalty as if he were a little King and hath a kind of Jurisdiction and a Court Baron incident to the Manor and sometimes a Court Leet by Grant from the King to which the Inhabitants owe Suit and Service and where smaller Matters as Escheats upon Felonies or other Accidents common Nusances c. Admitting of Tenants passing of Estates Reliefs Herriots Hunting Hawking Fishing c. or other matters Of which you may see more at large in the Description of the Jurisdiction of these two several Courts may be heard and determined And under the Lord is The Constable or Headborough Chosen yearly by the Lord or Steward in the Leet to keep the Peace in case of Quarrels to search any House for Robbers Murderers and others who have broken the Peace to raise Hue and Cry after Robbers to seize Offenders and keep them in the Stocks or other Prison till they can bring them before some Justice of Peace to whom the Constables are subservient upon all occasions either to bring Criminals before them or to carry them by their Command to the Common Prison Thus having in a Brief and Methodical manner described the Constitution of the English Government For the Excellency thereof we may wel● conclude with the Poet O Fortunatos nimium bona si sua Norint Angligenas THE ISLANDS Adjacent to ENGLAND CAlled by Heylin The Sporades not as he saith that they are so named in any Author but being many he thought fit to include them under that general Name The Chief of which are The Isle of Man INsula Euboniae modo Manniae hath been an ancient Kingdom as appears by Walsingham pag. 287. and Coke's Reports Lib. 7. fol. 21. Calvin's Case And yet we find it not Granted or Conveyed by the Name of a Kingdom Sed per Nomen Insulae c. cum Patronatu Episcopatus The Patronage of the Bishoprick of Sodor being a Visible Mark of a Kingdom Est nempe Jus ipsius Insulae ut quisquis illius sit Dominus Rex vocetur cui etiam fas est Corona Aurca Coronari Walsingh 17 R. 2. This Island was taken from the Britains by the Scots and from them regained by Edwin King of Northumberland Afterwards the Norwegians seised it from whom Alexander the Third wrested it and about the Year 1340. William Montacute Earl of Salisbury descended from the Norwegian Kings of Man won it from the Scots and afterwards sold it to W. Lord Scroope who forfeiting the same for Treason to King H. 4 he granted it to H. Percy Earl of Northumberland who being 5 H. 4. Attainted of Treason In 7 H. 4. it was by Parliament Enacted the King should have the Forfeiture of all his Lands and Tenements And afterwards 7 H. 4. the King granted the Isle cum Patronatu Episcopatus unto Sir John Stanley first for Life and afterwards to him and his Heirs Sir John had Issue Sir John Stanley Knight who had Issue Sir Henry Stanly Lord Chamberlain to King Henry the Sixth who Created him Lord Stanley He had Issue Thomas whom King Henry the Seventh Created Earl of Derby to him and the Heirs Male of his Body c. Vide Co. 4 Inst cap. 69. The Laws and Jurisdiction of this Isle differs from other places For they call their Judges Deemsters which they chuse out of themselves And they determine all Controversies without Process Pleading Writing or any Expence at all If any Cases be ambiguous or of greater weight it is referred to Twelve which they call Claves Insulae They have Coroners quos Annuos vocant who supply the Office of Sheriff But altho' the King's Writ runneth not into this Island yet his Commission extendeth thither for Redress of Injustice and Wrong The Bishop was Instituted by Pope Gregory the Fourth is under the Archbishop of York being annexed to that Archbishoprick by King Henry the Eighth but hath neither Place nor Voice in the Parliament of England In hac Insula Judex Ecclesiasticus citat definit infra Octo dies parent aut carcere intruduntur The People are a Religious Industrious and True People They have peculiar Laws or Customs For if a Man steal a Horse or an Ox it is no Felony because he cannot hide them but if he steal a Capon or Pigg he shall be hanged c. In this little Kingdom are Two Castles Seventeen Farishes Four Market Towns and many Villages It is scituate against the South part of Cumberland from which it is distant 21 Miles Is in Length 30 Miles in Breadth 15 but in some part only 8 Miles The Soil is abundant in Flax Hemp Oats Barley Wheat and Bishop Merrick writing to Cambden when he was composing his Britannia saith Our Island for Cattle Fish and Corn hath not only sufficient for it self but sendeth store into other Countries The chief Towns are Balacurri and Russin or Castle-Town the Seat of the Bishop On the Hill Sceaful may be seen England Scotland and Ireland Here are also bred the Soland Geese The People speak a Mixture of the Norwegian and Irish Tongues Anglesey IS accounted a Shire of Wales bordereth on Carnarvanshire is in Length 20 in Breadth 17 Miles containing in former times 360 Towns and Villages the chief whereof are 1. Beaumaris towards Wales 2. Newburg 3. Aberfraw on the South-side This Island for its abundant Fertility is called Mam Cymri i. e. Mother of Wales It was once the Seat of the Druids first Conquered by Suet onius Paulinus and united to the English Crown by the Valour of Edward the First Jersey olim Caesarea IS in Compass 20 Miles and sufficiently strong by reason of the dangerous Seas It containeth 12 Towns or Villages the Chief being St. Hillary and St. Malo and four Castles The Ground is plentiful in Grain and Sheep most of them having four Horns of whose Wool our Jersey Stockings are made Gernsey olim Servia IS distant 20 Miles from Jersey to whom it is much Inferiour in respect of Fertility and Largness but more commodious by reason of the safe Harbours It containeth 10 Parishes the Chief being St. Peters the Port or Haven and Market Town These Islands of Jersey and Gernsey lye both nigh unto Normandy and Bretaign and did in ancient time belong to the Dutchy of Normandy But Henry the First Overthrowing his Elder Brother Robert united the Dutchy of Normandy with these Isles to the Kingdom of England And altho' King John lost Normandy and Henry the Third took Money for it yet these Isles continued Faithful to England the possession thereof being a good Seisin of the whole
the Second in Propriety unto the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Clarendon George Duke of Albemarle William Earl of Craven John Lord Berkley Anthony Lord Ashley after Earl of Shaftsbury Sir George Carteret after Lord Carteret Sir John Coleton Knight and Baronet and Sir William Berkley Knight By which Letters Patent the Laws of England are to be in force in Carolina But the Lords Proprietors have power with the Consent of the Inhabitants to make By Laws for the better Government of the said Province so that no Money can be Raised or Law made without the Consent of the Inhabitants or their Representatives They have also power to appoint and impower Governours and other Magistrates to grant Liberty of Conscience make Constitutions c. with many other great Priviledges as by the said Letters Patent will more largely appear And the said Lords Proprietors have there settled a Constitution of Government whereby is Granted Liberty of Conscience and wherein all possible Care is taken for the equal Administration of Justice and for the lasting Security of the Inhabitants both in their Persons and Estates by the Care and Endeavours of the said Lords Proprietors and at their very great Charge Two Colonies have been settled in this Province the one at Albemarle in the most Northerly part the other at Ashley River which is in the Latitude 32 Degrees odd Minutes Care is taken by the Lords Proprietors That no Injustice be done the Natives who are here in perfect Friendship with the English in order to which is established a particular Court of Judicature to Determine all Differences The Lords Proprietors do at present Grant to all Persons that come to Inhabit there several reasonable Advantages to all Conditions of Men and sell their Land to any after the Rate of 50 Pounds for 1000 Acres The manner of Purchasing is The Party seeks out a place to his mind not possessed by any other then applies to the Governovr and Proprietors Deputies who thereupon Issue out their Warrant to the Surveyor General to measure him out a Plantation who making Certificate That he hath Measured out so much Land appointed a Deed is prepar'd of course which is Signed by the Governour and the Lords Proprietors Deputies and the Proprietors Seal affixed to it and Registred which is a good Conveyance in Law of the Land therein mentioned to the Party and his Heirs for ever Thus having Travelled the Main Land of America we must Cross the Seas and take a View of the Islands belonging to the Crown of England in the West Indies The first being Bermudas OR Summers Islands which are a Multitude of Broken Isles some write no less than 400 scituate directly East from Virginia from which they are distant 500 English Miles and 3300 Miles from the City of London so named from John Bermudaz a Spaniard after Summers Islands from the Shipwreck of Sir George Summers there The Island of more Fame and Greatness than all the rest and to which the Name of Bermudaz is most properly ascribed is scituated in the Latitude of 32 Degrees and 30 Min. North. The Air is sound and healthy very agreeable to the English Bodies the Soil as fertile as any well Watered plentiful in Maize of which they have Two Harvests yearly that which is sowed in March being cut in July and what is sowed in August is mowed in December No Venemous Creature is to be found in this Isle nor will Live if brought thither and besides these Advantages it it so fenced about with Rocks and Islets that without knowledge of the Passages a Boat of Ten Tun cannot be brought into the Haven yet with such knowledge there is Entrance for the Greatest Ships The English have since added to these Natural Strengths such Artificial Helps by Block Houses Forts and Bulwarks in convenient places as may give it the Title of Impregnable It was first Discovered rather Accidentally than upon Design by John Bermudas a Spaniard about 1522 and thereupon a Proposition made in the Council of Spain for settling a Plantation therein as a place very convenient for the Spanish Fleet in their Return from the Bay of Mexico by the Streights of Bahama yet was it neglected and without any Inhabitants till the like Accidental coming of Sir George Summers sent to Virginia with some Companies of the English by the Lord De la Ware in 1609 who being Shipwreck'd on this Coast had the Opportunity to survey the Island which he so well liked that he Endeavoured to settle a Plantation in it at his Return in 1612. The first Colony was sent over under Richard More who in Three years Erected 8 or 9 Forts in convenient places which he planted with Ordnance In 1616 a New Supply was sent over under Captain Tucker who apply'd themselves to sowing of Corn setting of Trees brought thither from other parts of America and Planting that gainful Weed Tobacco In 1619. the Business was taken more to Heart and made a Publick Matter many Great Lords and Persons of Honour being interested in● it Captain Butler was sent thither with 500 Men. The Isle was divided into Tribes or Counties a Burrough belonging to each Tribe and the whole reduced to a settled Government both in Church and State according to the Laws of England After this all succeeded so well that in 1623 there were said to be 3000 English and Ten Forts whereon were planted Fifty Pieces of Ordnance their Numbers since increasing daily both by Children born within the Island and Supplies from England All the Isles together represent an Half-Moon and Inclose very good Ports as the Great Sound Harrington Inlet Southampton and Paget's Bay with Dover and Warwick Forts having their Names from the Noble Men who were Undertakers therein The greatest Isle is called St. George five or six Leagues long and almost throughout not above a quarter or half a League broad The Air is almost constantly Clear Except when it Thunders and Lightens is extream Temperate and Healthful few dying of any Disease but Age so that many remove from England hither only to enjoy a long and healthful Life and after having continued there are fearful of Removing out of so pure an Air. The very Spiders here are not Venemous but of divers curious Colours and make their Web so strong that oftentimes small Birds are entangled and caught therein Their Cedar Trees are different from all others and the Wood very sweet In 1685. the Governour hereof was Sir Henry Heydon The Caribee Islands NExt present themselves so called in General because Inhabited by Canibals or Man-eating People at the first Discovery as the word Caribee imports They ly extended from the Coast of Paria to the Isle Porto Rico many in number 27 of them known by proper Names In Nine whereof the English are concerned viz. Barbuda Anguilla Montserrat Dominica St. Vincent Antegoa Mevis or Nevis St. Christophers and Barbadoes And first in Barbuda SCituate in 17 Degrees of North Latitude
vel Cont●nuum Regis Concilium This is the Hig● Watch-Tower wherein the King an● his Nobles Counsellors survey all h●● Dominions and sometimes all the D●minions of the World Consulting th● Honour Defence Profit and Peace 〈◊〉 his People and their Protection fro● Violence or Injuries either at home 〈◊〉 from abroad And these Privy Counsellors by the Custom of the Kingdom being part of the Fundamental Laws of England as before is mentioned are such as the King pleaseth to choose and are made without Patent or Grant being only Sworn that according to their Power and Direction they shall truly justly and evenly Counsel and Advise the King in all Matters to be treated in His Majesties Council and shall keep Secret the Kings Council c. And they are so to continue during the Life of the King or during the Kings Pleasure And these Lords of the Privy Council are as it were incorporate with the King in bearing the burthen of his Cares wherefore the Striking in the House or Presence of a Privy Counsellor shall be grievously Fined Conspiring his Death by any within the Cheque-Roll is Felony and Killing any one of them is High Treason And although before the latter end of Henry the Third Quod provisum fuit per Regem Consilium suum Privatum Sigilloque Regis Confirmatum proculdubio Legis habuit vigorem saith Spelman yet at present they take Cognizance of few Matters that may well be determined by the known Laws and Ordinary Court of Justice The President of this Council was sometime called Principalis Conciliarius and sometimes Capitalis Conciliarius and this Office was never granted but by Letters Patent of the Great Seal durante bene placito and is very ancient for John Bishop of Norwich was President of the Council Anno 17 Regi● Johannis Dormivit tamen hoc Officium regnante magna Elizabetha The Lord President is said in the Statute of 21 H. 8. cap. 20. to be attending upon the King most Royal Person and the reason o● his attendance is for that of latter times he hath used to report to the King the Passages and the State of the Business at the Council Table Next to the President sitteth in Council c. The Lord Privy Seal who besides his Oath of a Privy Counsellor taketh a particular Oath of the Privy Seal which consisteth of four parts First That he justly exercise the Office of Keeper of the King 's Privy Seal to him committed Secondly Not leaving so to do for Affection Love Doubt or Dread of any Person Thirdly That he shall take special regard that the said Privy Seal in all places where he shall go to may be in such substantial wise used and safe kept That no Person without the Kings Special Command or Assent shall Move Seal or Imprint any thing with the same Fourthly Generally he shall observe fulfil and do all and every thing which to the Office of the Keeper of the Kings Privy Seal duly belongeth and appertaineth This is an Office of great Trust and Skill That he put his Seal to no Grant without Warrant nor with Warrant if it be against Law undue or inconvenient but that first he acquaint the King therewith Upon the Lord Privy Seal are attendant four Clerks of the Privy Seal How the Kings Grants Writings and Leases pass the three Seals viz. The Privy Signet the Privy Seal and the Great Seal and the Duties of the Clerk of the Privy Signet and Privy Seal and what Fees shall be paid and where none at all c. and many Articles concerning the passing of the Kings Grant c. you may Read in the Stat. of 27 Hen. 8. This Officer is named in some Statutes Clerk of the Privy Seal in others Garden del Privy Seal and in the Stat. 34 Hen. 8. Lord Privy Seal By Stat. 11. R. 2. cap. 10. It is provided That Letters of the Signet nor of the Kings secret Seal shall be from henceforth sent in Damage or Prejudice of the Realm nor in Disturbance of the Law It appeareth by Writs and Records of Parliament that the High Court of Parliament is resolved to be holden by the King Per advisamentum Consilij sui viz. by advice of his Privy Council Acts and Orders of Parliament for the Privy Council and other things concerning them in the Rolls of Parliament you may Read in the Statutes and Originals at Large mentioned in Cokes 4. Inst. cap. 2. No Lo●d of Parliament takes any place of Precedency in respect he is a Privy Councellor but under that Degree such place a Privy Councellor shall take as is set down in Serie ordinum tempore Hen. 7. The King by advice of his Privy Council doth publish Proclamations binding to the Subject provided they be not against Statute or Common Law The Privy Councellors sit in order Bareheaded when the King Presides and the lowest declares his Opinion first and the King last declares his Judgment and thereby determins the matter For their Precedency and Place see the Statute of 31 H. 8. directing the same The time and place of holding the Council is wholly at the Kings pleasure which is seldom or never held without the presence of One of The Secretaries of State of which since the latter end of the Reign of H. 8. there have been Two both of equal Authority and both styled Principal Secretaries of State these every day attend upon the King and receive and make dispatch of the Petitions and Desires of the Subjects at home and for Foreign matters The Sectetaries have the Custody of the Kings Seal called the Signet which gives denomination to an Office constantly attending the Court called The Signet Office wherein Four Clerks prepare such things as are to pass the Signet in order to the Privy Seal or Great Seal The Four Clerks in Ordinary of the Privy Council are to Read what is brought before the Council and draw up such Orders as the King and Lords shall direct and cause them to be Registred And belonging to the Secretaries is The Paper-Office where all Paper-Writings and publick Matters of State and Transactions of Ministers abroad and what passes the Secretaries is transmitted and kept And now we proceed to The Ecclesiastical Government THe King being Chief Person as being Persona Sacra Mixta cum Sacerdote is the Supream Bishop of England For at his Coronation by a solemn Consecration and Unction he becomes a Spiritual Person Sacred and Ecclesiastical having both Corona Regni Stola Sacerdotis put upon him He is Patron Paramount of all Ecclesiastical Benefices to whom the last Appeal in Ecclesiastical Affairs is made and who alone hath the Nomination of all Persons for Bishopricks and Chief Dignities and Deaneries and some Prebends in the Church c. And next to the King are the Primates Metropolitans or Archbishops one of Canterbury the other of York each of which have their peculiar Diocess besides a Province of several Diocesses and
pray to God for him c. and this by divers Writers appears to be the practice used by the Primitive Churches And this Punishment if the Crime be not very notorious may by the Canons of the Church of England be commuted to a Pecuniary mulct to the Poor or to some other pious Use Punishments Ecclesiastical peculiar to the Clergy TO the before-mentioned Punishments both Clergy and Laity are subject but there are Punishments to which the Clergy only are liable as first Suspensio ab Officio Is when the Minister for a time is declared unfit to execute the Office of Minister Then Suspensio à Beneficio when the Minister is for a time deprived from the profits of his Benefice and these two Censures are wont to be for smaller Crimes Then Deprivatio à Beneficio is for a greater Crime wherein a Minister is wholly and for ever deprived of the profits of his Benefice or Living And Lastly Deprivatio ab Officio when a Minister is for ever deprived of his Orders and this is called Depositio or Degradati●● and is commonly for some heinous Crime deserving Death and is performed by the Bishop in a Solemn manner pulling off from the Criminal his Vestments and other Ensigns of his Order and this in the presence of the Civil Magistrate t● whom he is then delivered to be punished as a Layman for the like Offence And this may suffice for a sho●● view of the Ecclesiastical Government The Civil Government c. A Brief Account of the Ecclesiastical Government having been given In the next place we are to Treat of the Civil Government the first great Wheel moved therein by the King and his Privy Council Being The High Court of Parliament BEfore the Conquest called the Great Council of the King consisting of the Great Men of the Kingdom It was also called Magnatum Conventus or Praelatorum Procerumque Consilium and by the Saxons Michel Gemot and Witenage Mote after the Conquest it was called Parliamentum from the French word Parler still consisting of the Great Men of the Nation as some hold until the Reign of Hen. 3. when the Commons also were called The first Writs to Summon or Elect them being said to bear date 49 Hen. 3. above 400 years ago so that now this High Court consists of The King who being Caput Principium Finis Parliamenti Sits there as in his Royal Politick Capacity The Lords Spiritual As the Two Archbishops and Bishops being in number about Twenty four who sit there by Succession in respect of their Baronies and to every one of these Ex Debito Justitiae a Writ of Summons is to be directed The Lords Temporal As Dukes Marquesses Earls Viscounts and Barons who sit there by reason of their Dignities and were in the Lord Cokes time about 106 now near twice that number And every of these being of full Age Ex Debito Justitiae ought to have a Writ of Summons And The Commons of the Realm being Knights of Shires Citizens of Cities and Burgesses of Burroughs all which are respectively Elected by the Counties Cities and Burroughs and none of them ought to be omitted and these were in number in the Lord Cokes time 493 now about 513 persons Spiritual Assistants are Procuratores Cleri who are so called as by the Writ to the Bishop before mentioned appears to Consult and to Consent but never had Voices as being no Lords of Parliament And by the Treatise De modo tenendi Parliamentum they should appear cum praesentia eorum sit necessaria Temporal Assistants Are all the Judges of the Realm Barons of the Exchequer and of the Coif The King 's Learned Council and the Civilians Masters of the Chancery are called to give their Assistance and Attendance in the upper House of Parliament but have no Voice and their Writs differ from the Barons being Quod intersitis nobiscum cum caeteris de concilio nostro super praemissis tractaturi vestrumque Concilium impensuri Romulus Ordained 100 Sena●ours which were afterwards increased to 300 and of that number were our House of Commons in Fortescue's time The Person Summoning is the King or in his Absence the Custos Regni or in his Minority the Protector Regni doth Summon the Parliament which cannot be begun without the Kings Presence either in Person or Representation by Commission under the Great Seal or by a Guardian of England by Letters Patents The manner of Summoning a Parliament is in manner following About 40 days before their time of Sitting the King cum Advisamento Consilij sui Issues out of Chancery Writs of Summons to every Lord of Parliament Spiritual and Temporal Commanding the Lords Spiritual in Fide Dilectione and the Lords Temporal per Fidem Allegiantiam to Appear Treat and give their Advice in certain Important Affairs concerning the Church and State c. And the Warrant is per ipsum Regem Concilium And for Summoning the Commons a Writ goeth to the Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports for Election of the Barons of the Cinque Ports who in Law are Burgesses and to every Sheriff in the 52 Counties in England and Wales for the Choice and Election of Knights Citizens and Burgesses within every of their Counties respectively Two Knights for each County Two Citizens for each City and One or Two Burgesses for each Burrough according to Statute Charter or Custom Persons Elected for each County ought to be Milites Notabiles or at leastwise Esquires or Gentlemen fit to be made Knights they ought to be Native Englishmen or at least such as have been Naturalized by Act of Parliament No Alien or Denizen none of the 12 Judges no Sheriff of a County no Ecclesiastical person having Cure of Souls may be a Parliament Man And for Legality of Sitting in Parliament he must be 21 years old All the Members of Parliament both Lords and Commons with their Menial Servants and necessary Goods are Priviledg'd during the time of Parliament Eundo Morando ad proprium redeundo But not from Arrests for Felony Treason or Breach of the Peace If the King do not think fit the Parliament shall Sit at the day of Return of the Writ he may by Writ Patent Prorogue them till another day as was done 1 Eliz. At the day of Meeting of the Parliament The King and by his Direction the Lord Chancellor The Lord Keeper of the Great Seal or some other by the Kings appointment Declares the Causes of Calling the Parliament as in Ed. 3. time Sir Henry Green Lord Chief Justice although the Lord Chancellor were present And when a Bishop is Lord Chancellor he usually takes a Text of Scripture in Latin and Discouses thereupon And when a Judge by way of Oration he Declares the Cause of Calling the Parliament The Lords in their House have power of Judicature The Commons in their House to some purposes have power of Judicature and both together have power of Judicature But this
was before the Conquest For in an ancient and Authentical Manuscript Intituled Authoritas Seneschalli Angliae where putting an Example of his Authority saith Sicut accidit Godwino Comiti Kanciae tempore Regis Edw ' antecessoris Willielmi Ducis Normandiae pro hujusmodi male gestis consilijs suis per Seneschallum Angliae adjudicatus forisfecit Commitivam suam In the time of the Conqueror William Fitz Eustace was Steward of England and in the Reign of William Rufus and Hen. 1. Hugh Grantsemenel Baron of Hinkley held that Barony by the said Office Of ancient time this Office was of Inheritance and appertained to the Earldom of Leicester as it also appeareth by the said Record Seneschalcis Angliae pertinet ad Comitivam de Leicester pertinuit ab antiquo That is that the Earldom of Leicester was holden by doing of the Office of Steward of England Other Records testified tha● it should belong to the Barony of Hinkley The truth is That Hinkley was parcel of the Possessions of the Ear● of Leicester for Robert Bellomont Ear● of Leicester in the Reign of Hen. 2 Married with Petronilla Daughter and Heir of the said Hugh Grantsemenel Baron of Hinkley and Lord Steward o● England and in her right was Steward of England And so it continued until by the Forfeiture of Simon Montford it came to King Hen. 3. who i● the 50th year of his Reign created Edmond his Second Son Earl of Leicester Baron of Hinkley and High Steward of England which continued is his Line until Henry of Bullinbrook So● and Heir of John of Gaunt Duke o● Lancaster and Earl of Leicester who was the last that had any Estate of Inheritance in the Office of the Steward of England since which time it wa● never granted to any Subject bu● but only hac vice and the reason was for that the Power of the Steward of England was so transcendent that it was not holden fit to be in any Subjects hands For the said Record saith Es Sciendum est quod ejus Officium est supervidere regulare sub Rege immediatè post Regem totum regnum Angliae omnes Ministros legum infra idem Regnum temporibus pacis guerrarum c. and proceedeth particularly with divers exceeding High Powers and Authorities which may well be omitted because they serve for no present use And albeit their Power and Authority have been since the Reign of Henry the Fourth but hac vice yet is that hac vice limited and appointed As when a Lord of Parliament is Indicted of Treason or Felony then the Grant of this Office under the Great Seal is to a Lord of Parliament reciting the Indictment Nos considerantes quod Justitia est virtus excellens Altissimo complacens aeque prae omnibus uti volentes ac pro eo quod Officium Seneschalli Angliae cujus praesentia pro administratione justitiae executione ejusdem in hac parte facien requiritur ut accepimus jam vacat De fidelitate strenuitate provida circumspectione indu●tria vestris plurimum c●nfidente● ord●n●vimus constituimus vos ex hac causa causis Seneschallum nostrum Angliae ad Officium illus cum monibus eidem Officio in hac parte debitis pertinentibus hac vice gerend ' accipiend ' exercend ' dantes concedentes vobis tenore praesentium plenam sufficientem potestatem authoritatem ac mandatum speciale indictamentum praedict ' c. So that it appeareth that this great Officer is wholly restrained to proceed only upon the recited Indictment And he to whom this Offic is granted must be a Lord of Parliament and his proceeding is to be Secundum Leges Consuetudines Angliae for so is his Commission And hereof you may read more at large in Coke's 3 Inst Chap. High Treason Also at every Coronation he hath a Commission under the Great Seal hac vice to hear and determine the Claims for Grand Serjeanties and other Honourable Services to be done at the Coronation for the solemnization thereof For which purpose the High Steward doth hold his Court some convenient time before the Coronation See a President hereof before the Coronation of King Richard the Second John Duke of Lancaster then Steward of England who in Claims before him was styled Tres Honourable Seignior Roy de Castile Leon Seneschalle d' Engleterre and held his Court in Alba Aula apud Westm die Jovis proximè ante Coronationem Quae quidem coronatio habita solemnizata fuit die Jovis sequente viz. 16 Julij Anno 1 Ric. 2. The first that was Created Hac vice for the Solemnization of the Coronation of Henry the Fourth was Thomas his second Son and upon the Arraignment of John Holland Earl of Huntingdon the first that was Created Steward of England Hac vice was Edward Earl of Devon When he sitteth by force of his Office he sitteth under a Cloth of State and such as direct their Speech unto him say May it please your Grace my Lord High Steward of England The style of John of Gaunt was Johannes filius Regis Angliae Rex Legionis Castellae Dux Aquitaniae Lancastriae Comes Derbiae Linconliae Leicestriae Seneschallus Angliae And in respect his Power before it was limited was so Transcendent no mention is made of this Great Officer in any of our ancient Authors the Mirror Bracton Britton or Fleta It seemeth they liked not to treat of his Authority neither is he found in any Act of Parliament nor in any Book Case before the 1st of Henry the Fourth and very few since which hath caused me to be the longer saith the Lord Coke in another place to set forth his Authority and due proceeding upon the Arraignment of a Peer of the Parliament by Judicial Record and Resolution of the Judges agreeable with constant Experience As the Peers of the Realm that be Tryors or Peers are not sworn so the Lord Steward being Judge c. is not sworn yet ought he according to his Letters Patents to proceed Secundum legem consuetudinem Angliae Co. 4. Inst. cap. 4. In Enditemene de Treason ou Felony ver● un des Pieres del Realm le Tryal est per s●s Pieres quel maner de tryal in Appel nes● grauntable per que depuis que cel Trial per ses Pieres est le proper Trial que appertient al piere del Realm quant sur Enditement de Treason ou Felony il ad plead d●rien culpable Veions l'order proces d●cest Tryal Appiert An. 1. H. 4. fol. 1. An 13 H. 8. fol. 11. que quant un Seigniour del Parlement serra arraigne de Treason 〈◊〉 Felony dount il est endite Le Roy pers●● Letters patents ferra un graunde sag● Seigniour d'estre de grand Senescha●● d' Engleterre pour le jour de l'arraignment qui devant le dit jour ferra precept a son Serjaunt d'Arms qui
which they got leave of King James to put in there for Fresh-Water in their passage to Brasile and did not offer to plant till a good while after the English were settled in the Country In 1664. His late Majesty King Charles the Second sent over Four Commissioners to Reduce the Colonies into Bounds that had before Incroached upon each other who Marching with Three Hundred Red-Coats to Manhades or Manhatees took from the Dutch their Chief Town then called New Amsterdam now New York and August 29. Turned out their Governour with a Silver-Leg and all the rest but those who acknowledg'd Subjection to the King of England suffering them to enjoy their Estates and their Houses as before Thirteen days after Sir Robert Carr took the Town and Fort of Aurania and Twelve Days after that the Fort and Town of Arosapha then De la Ware Castle Mann'd with Dutch and Sweeds so that now the English are Masters of Three handsom Towns Three strong Forts and a Castle without the loss of one Man The first Governour of these parts for the King of England was Colonel Nichols one of the Commissioners This Country is blessed with the Richest Soil in all New England I have heard it Reported says an Author That one Bushel of European Wheat hath yielded One Hundred in a Year The Town of New York is well seated both for Trade Security and Pleasure in a small Isle called Manahaten at the Mouth of the Great River Mohegan which is very commodious for Shipping and about Two Leagues broad The Town is large built with Dutch Brick alla Moderna consisting of above Five hundred Houses the meanest not valued under One hundred Pounds To the Land-ward it is encompassed with a Wall of good thickness and Fortified at the Entrance of the River so as to Command any Ship which passeth that way by a Fort called James Fort. It hath a Mayor Aldermen a Sheriff and Justices of Peace for their Magistrates The Inhabitants are most English and Dutch and have a considerable Trade with the Indians for Bever Otter Raccoon Skins with other rich Furrs Likewise for Bear Deer and Elk-Skins and are supply'd with Venison and Fowl in the Winter and Fish in the Summer by the Indians at an easie Rate The Province of New York formerly contained all that Land which lyes in the North parts of America betwixt New England and Mary-Land the Length towards the North is not fully known the Breadth is about 200 Miles The Principal Rivers are Hudson's River Raritan River and De la Ware Bay The chief Islands are Manahaten Island Long Island and Staten Island Manahaten Island so called by the Indians lieth within the Land betwixt 41 and 42 Degrees of North Latitude and is about 14 Miles long and two broad New York is seated on the West of this Island having a small Arm of the Sea which divides it from Long Island on the South Long Island runs Eastward above 100 Miles and is in some places 8 12 or 14. Miles broad Inhabited from one end to the other having an Excellent Soil for all English Grain the Fruits Trees and Herbs very good In May you may see the Woods and Fields so curiously bedeck'd with Roses and a multitude of other delightful Flowers as equal if not excel many Gardens in England There are several Navigable Rivers which run very swift and are well furnished with Variety of Fish as the Land is with all sorts of English Cattle besides Deer Bears Wolves Raccoons Otters and Wild Fowl in abundance Hudson's River runs by New York Northward into the Country toward the Head of which is seated New Albany a place of great Trade with the Indians betwixt which and New York being above 100 Miles distance is as good Corn Land as the World affords It was reduced to his Majesties Obedience by Colonel Nichols and a League of Friendship concluded between the Inhabitants and the Indians by whom they have never been since disturbed but every Man hath sate under his own Vine and hath peaceably Reaped and Enjoyed the Fruits of his own Labours New Jersey IS part of the Province of New Albion afore-mentioned and is Subdivided into East and West Jersey East Jersey lies between 39 and 41 Degrees of North Latitude being about 12 Degrees more to the South than the City of London It is bounded on the South-East by the Main Sea East by that vast Navigable Stream called Hudson's River West by a Line of Division which separates it from West Jersey and North upon the Main Land and extends it self in length on the Sea-Coasts and along Hudson's River 100 Miles and upwards The Proprietors of this Province Anno 1682. Published an Account of the Scituation Conveniences and Product thereof for Incouragement of such who had an Inclination to Settle there Which you may read in Burton's Description of America fol. 99. The Constitutions of this Country were made in the time of John Lord Berkley and Sir George Carteret the late Proprietors thereof in which such Provision hath been made for Liberty in matter of Religion and Property in their Estates that under the Forms thereof this Country hath been considerably increased Pensylvania BY Letters Patent Dated the 4th of March 1680. King Charles the Second in Consideration of the Faithful Service of Sir William Penne Deceased did Grant unto William Penne Esquire Son and Heir of the said Sir William Penne all that Tract of Land called Pensylvania as the same was Bounded on the East by De la Ware River from 12 Miles distance of New-Castle Town unto the 43 Degree of Northern Latitude with other Boundings and Limits therein mentioned And all Powers Preheminence and Jurisdictions necessary for the Government of the said Province And by other Letters Patent Dated April the 2d 1681. did Publish and Declare his Will and Pleasure That all Persons settled or inhabiting within the Limits of the said Province should yield all due Obedience to the said William Penne his Heirs and Assigns as absolute Proprietors and Governours thereof as also to the Deputy or Deputies Agents or Lieutenants Commissioned by him or them Whereupon William Penne taking upon him the Government in a Letter from Philadelphia the then intended Chief City Dated 16 Aug. 1683. giveth a full Description of the Province and the Soil Air Seasons and Produce thereof The Planted part of the Province being cast into six Counties viz. Philadelphia Buckingham Chester New-Castle Kent and Sussex containing then about 4000 Souls Two Assemblies had then been held with such Concord and Dispatch that in Three Weeks time at least Seventy Laws were past And for the Well-Government of the Counties Courts of Justices are Established in every County with proper Officers as Justices Sheriffs Clerks Constables c. Which Courts are held every Two Months but to prevent Law-Suits there are Three Peace-Makers chosen by each County-Court in the Nature of Common Arbitrators to hear and end Differences betwixt Man and