Selected quad for the lemma: majesty_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
majesty_n earl_n lord_n ormond_n 3,393 5 13.7087 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A71332 The Parliamentary intelligencer [no.24 (4 June-11 June 1660)] comprising the sum of forraign intelligence with the affairs now in agitation in England, Scotland, and Ireland : for information of the people. Muddiman, Henry, 1628 or 1629-1692, editor.; Dury, Giles, editor.; Macock, John, publisher.; Newcomb, Thomas, d. 1681 or 2, publisher. 1660 (1660) Thomason E186_2; ESTC P1015 12,263 16

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

them from the Commons requiring them to make their appearance at 〈◊〉 certain that fate as Judges upon the late King or else to be excepted 〈…〉 the act of Oblivion and Indempnity as to life and estate The same day at the House of Commons The Right Honorable the Marquess of O●mond Lord Steward administred the Oath of Allegeance and supremacy to several Members of the House Upon report made of ●o●ble Returns it was resolved that the person following were duly elect●d viz Mr. Arthington and Mr Je●ni●gs for Rippon in Yorkshire Mr. Bampfield and S●ri●a●t ●ai●ard for ●x●n Mr. Cleyton and Mr. M●yl or L●sti●hiel in Cornhil General Montague being elected for D●ver and Weymouth waved his ●●lection for Weymouth and ma●e choice to serve for Dover whereupon it is ordered that a new Writ shall issue for the Election of another to serve for Weymouth The Bill of Oblivi●n and ●ndempnity was this day under consideration several Amen●ments made and the further debate adjourned till to m●rrow Edinburgh May 29. Several Noblemen are coming to congratulate His Majesties happy a●●ival into England and to r●pre●ent the grievances of that Kingdom to His Majesty Other Commissioners are also coming from the Kirk of Scotland amongst whom are Mr. Robert Douglas and Mr. David Dick The Lord of Argyle is upon the way to London and several of the Nobility and Gentry of Scotland Whitehal On Sunday after Divine Service was said the Bishop of Ely preached before His Majesty His Majesty being informed by the Houses of Parliament That several Riots and forcible Entries were made upon the Possessions of divers of His Majesties Subjects Ecclesiastical and Temporal that were setled in the same by lawful or pretended Authority and that without any Order of Parliament or conviction by Law did set sorth a Proclamation thereby commanding all persons to forbear the disturbance of any such possessions till the Parliament take further care therein or they shall have evicted them by due course of Law and requiring all Ministers of Justice to be aiding in the execution of the same His Majesty likewise set forth another Proclamation commanding all Irish Rebels such onely excepted as have by Articles had the liberty of residing in the Dominions and have not forfeited the same that still stay or shall resort to England or Ireland to be apprehended and proceeded against as Rebels and Traitors and that the Adventurers and Soldiers shall not be disturbed in their possessions until His Majesty by advice of Parliament shall take further Order or they be legally evicted and requiring all Officers both Civil and ●ilitary to see the late P●oclamation put in due execution Munday June 1. This day several of the Regimen●s of the Army mustered two of Horse in Tutt●e fields whom the Duke of York honored with his pre●ence and they sensible of that high favor received him with loud acclamations and several volleys Tuesday at the House of Commons The House took care for the paiment of the 20000 l. forme●ly ordered to the Lord General Monck The House ordered Mr. Car●● one of the la●e Kings ●rie●s taken at Plimouth to be brought up to VVestminster Col. Hutchinson sent a Letter to the House signifying ●is hearty sorrow for being drawn to be one of the late Kings Judges and his abhor●ncie of that upon reading of which the House ordered that he be set at liberty upon his pa●ol The House resumed the debate on the Bill of Indempnity and agreed to several Amendments His Majesty hath sate in Privy-Council of which these are said to be the names The Duke of York Lord Chancellor Marquess of Ormond Lord High Chamberlain Linsey Earl of Berkshire Earl of Southampton Earl of Norwich Viscount Seymour Lord Say and Seal Lord Wentworth Sir Edward Nicholas Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper The Duke of Glocester Lord General Monck Marquess Hertford Earl of Manchester Chamberlain of Houshold Earl of Northumerland Earl of St. Albans Earl of L●●●●ster Lord Culpepper Lord Roberts Sir William Morris Mr. Annesley Mr. Denzil Hollis Colonel Charles Howard is likewise reported to be one of the Privy Council The Clerks of the Council are Sir Richard Brown Sir George Lane Sir Edward Walker Mr. John Nicholas Dublin May 28. The Convention ordered that tomorrow be kept as a day of Thanksgiving and observed with great sole●●ity 〈…〉 of his most ●xcellent Majesty it being the day it pleased God to b●●●ow to gracious a Prince upon these Kingdoms They likewise ordered That the persons who gave information about the Treasonable Speeches against his Sacred Majesty be examined upon Oath that the Offenders may be proceeded against They also ordered that all the Laws against Sabbath-breaking Cursing Swearing Drunkenness c. be put in execution and commended it to the Mayor c. to be done accordingly They likewise ordered that the peace be kept in all places and no possessions to be altered untill his Majesties pleasure be further known they also 〈…〉 Order for the speedy suppression of the Tories and other Robbers And did nominate a Committee to fit during their adjournment and then still adjourn themselves untill the first of November next unless his Majesty be pleased sooner to command their convencing May 29. The Members of the Convention went to Christ-Church where Divine Service was read with great devotion and much spiritual joy and thankfulness expressed After Sermon was ended they dined together where was much civil mirth and friendship and as they first met upon necessity and with sadness for want of the Kings presence so now upon expectation of his most gracious Majesties arrival they could not but part with great Joy as we●l for his Return to receive the Crown as his being born that day H●ir to it and are all retiring home to live his Loyal Subjects May 30. The Commissioners that are to go to his Majesty intended to have taken shipping this day for England but the wind not being fair they have put it off untill to morrow morning Wednesday June 6. At the House of Commons The House this day received a Letter from the Duke of York and upon reading of it they returned his Highness the most hear●y thanks of the House for sending so affectionate a Letter to them They proceeded likewise to the naming of the other persons to be excepted out of the Act of Pardon for Life and Estate and resolved upon the●● following viz. Colonel Harrison Willi●n Say John Jones Thomas Scot Cornelius Holland John Lisle John Barkstead Whitehal On Tuesday the University of Cambridge the Heads of the Houses and Doctors in Scarlet and the Masters of Art in Gowns and Hoods being introduced by th● 〈◊〉 of Manchester Lord Ch●mberlain their Chancellor to H●s Majesty who are in a Chair of State in the Matted Gallery to receive them Dr. Love one 〈◊〉 noted for his eloquence made a Latine Speech to His Majesty shewing the great l●ss which that University and Learning had suffered by His Majesties absence To which
His Majesty returned a very gracious Answer and gave them the honor t● kiss His Hand His Majesty hath to add the Earl o●Oxford Knight of the most Noble Order of the Gart●r His Majesty hath been pleased likewise to confer the honor of Knighthood on several Gentlemen and amongst the rest on Col. Ralph Knight a person that in obedience to his Excellencies commands hath been very active in this happy restauration of his Majesty to his people St. John de Luz 27 May 1660 The Marriage between the King and the Infanta is to be celebrated as we hear at Fontarabia upon the second of the next moneth and to be consummated here four days after We hear that the Spaniards are much amazed to see our Court so gallant and so richly apparelled their own though very sumptuous being much inferior to it The Deputies of the Rentier● of Parts are arrived here and had their audience of the Cardinal Mazarine who told them the King was very much satisfied with their proceedings and that upon the delivery of their Memorials they would speedily have a favourable Answer The King hath given his consent to the Ma●riage betwixt the Count of Lillibone and the Duke of Lorrains Daughter by Madame de Canturoix whom the said Duke hath sent a Gentleman to fetch from Mons in Haynault Orange the same date Mr. de Bezons having received an Order from the Court of France for the demolishi●g of the Fortifications of this place hath sent hither 1000 men out of Languedoc and as many from Dauphine to hasten the work the more diligence being used therein as the most intelligent persons do judge because the Court would have it don● b●fo●e ●h● Ki●g of England should be able to make an instance to the contrary From Legorn May 14. 1660. The three Galleys of the grand Duke of Tuscany are gone from hence towards the Levant for the service of the Republick of Venice The Patron of a Bark lately arrived here from Candia doth report that he hath seen about Sicily the Ships lately gone from Toulon with the French Infantry St. John de Luz May 30. 1660. The Cardinal Mazarin hath received a Letter from Don Lewis d' Aro whereby he tells him that the King of Spain was no less weary of being upon the frontier then his most Christian Majesty himself and that therefore he earnestly wished that all things might be speedily regulated to the mutual satisfaction of both the Nations The 28 instant the King gave order for the preparing of the Church of St. John in this Town for the celebrating of his Marriage The same day the King sent an Express into Provence to have all the French guards that were there sent speedily to Paris At the same time the Bishop of Orange and M. de Lyonne were sent to the Spanish Court The regulating of the limits of Roussillon hath been ended with content to each the parties and much civility between the two chief Ministers As M. de Lyonne was debating those differences with the Spanish Commissioners and chiefly with Don Lewis d' Aro at Fontarabia an Express came thither who acquainted with the King of Spains resolution to refer wholly his interests to Cardinal Mazarin to whom the said M. de Lyonne presently repaired to acquaint him with the said Declaration of the King of Spain and further that Don Lewis d' Aro would subscribe whatsoever the said Cardinal should pronounce upon that subject The same was confirmed again the next day by the Count de Fuensaldagne sent expresly to the French Court for that purpose and to take directions for the marriage and for the enterview of the two Kings It is thought the celebration of the said marriage will be at Fontarabia upon the second of June the first enterview the third the second upon the fifth and the Consummation upon the sixth that the Court might set forward for Paris upon the tenth The King shall carry with him to the enterview but two hundred musketiers a Brigade of his light horsemen as many of his Gensd'armes and two hundred of his French Guards his Majesty having reduced himself to that small number that his Guard might not be bigger then that of the King of Spain who was expected yesternight at Fontarabia Paris Iune 12. 1660. The 7 instant the Queen of England received an Express from the King her Son who advised her Majesty of his safe arrival to Canterbury and of his reception by General Monck and an infinite number of his Subjects The ninth her Majesty made great rejoycings at the Palais Cardinal where many fire-works and other bonfires expressed the joy of her Court several hogsheads of Wine having been given to the people and a Ball there danced that night where Duke de Beauort was much admired This week several reports did fly abroad here of a massacre lately happened at Dieppe upon the French Protestant Inhabitants of that place but upon the best enquiry the business is briefly thus About ten or fifteen dayes since some Scholars of that Town and other rude people inticed as it is supposed by the Priests and Moncks came forth into the Suburbs where the Protestant Church is situated and where at that time the Synod of the Province was held and having forcibly broken the gate of the Church-yard and part of the walls they broke likewise the Church-door and coming in great number into the Church they overthrew all the seats and benches broke to pieces the Pulpit and made great havock there and had they not been hindered would have burned the Church to the ground but partly the Magistrates by their authority to avoid the tumult and p●●tly the Capucines shrewdly suspected to have set them on by their admonition slappeased them and made them retire but before they had besides what is aforesaid broke open the Chamber of the Consistory ransacked all the Books Registers and Papers there which they carried away with them The several Protestant Ministers of that place and some other Inhabitants fearing this tumult would have some further consequences by the rage of their implacable enemies saved themselves some to Rouen and some to other places What hath since happened therein is not yet come to our knowledge only some report that the Magistrate of the place have since banished out of it the chiefest Ringleaders of that sedition We hear likewise that the same happened about the same time at Falaise and other places of Normandy which gives some ground of suspition that it is a general combination hatched and carried on under-hand for a general mischief upon those lambs scattered among the wolves Thursday June 7. This day was published a Proclamation by his Majesty to summon the persons therein named who sate gave Judgement and assisted in that horrid and detestable murder of his Majesties Royal Father of blessed memory to appear and render themselves within fourteen dayes after the publishing of that his Majesties Royal Proclamation to the Speaker or
is properly his own and which he hath not 〈…〉 of or doth belong unto the publick The Petition of Francis Lassells was read and it was resolved that he be discharged from being any longer a Member uncapable of any office or place of publick trust and that he pay one years value of his estate upon payment whereof he shall not be excepted as to any part of his estate that is properly his own c. The Petition of Colonel Hutchinson was read expressing much hearty sorrow and it was resolved that he be discharged from being further a Member uncapable of any office and not to be excepted out of the Act of pardon Resolved that the Lord Grey of Groby be not excepted out of the Act of pardon Colonel Dove's Petition was read and referred to a Committee The Petition of Sir Gilbert Pickering was read and it was resolved that he shall be excepted as to the penalties and forfeitures not reaching to life to be inflicted by an Act to be provided for that purpose as also Thomas Challone● James Challoner Sir James Harrington Lord Monson John Fry Tho. Lister Sir Henry Mildmay and Mr. John Phelps Miles Corbet John Okey Robert Lilburn Sir ●ich Livesey Sir William Constable Jo. Blackston Isaac Pennington Sir Tho. Malev●rer Sir John Danvers Sir Hardross Waller VVilliam Goff Edw. VVhaley Isaac Ewers Sir Jo. Bourchier Edmund Ludlow VVilliam Hoveningham VVilliam Purefoy Gilbert Millington Henry Martin Robert Tichbourn Richard D●a●e John Carew Owen Rowe Colonel VValton James Temple Peter Temple Francis Allen Daniel Blagrave Thomas VVaite Simon Meyne Tho. Andrews Alderman of London Geo. Fleetwood Augustine Garland VVilliam Cawley Tho. Horton John Downes Vincent Potter Nich. Love Jo. Dixwell Tho. Hammond Sir Greg●ry Norton Peregrine Pelham Humphrey Edwards Henry Smith John Venn Edmund Harvey Tho. VVogan Jo. Aldred and John Hewson Resolved that the Serjeant at Arms do summon Mr. Wall●p to appear on Monday next Whitehall On Wednesday the sixth instant the Bailiffs Burgesses and commonalty of the Town of Ipswich accompanied by Mr. Sicklemore Captain Sparrow Mr. Keen and divers other Gentlemen attended his Majesty and presented him with six hundred pieces of gold from the Town of Ipswich which his Majesty was graciously pleased to accept The same day the Earl of Cleaveland brought about two hundred Gentleman many of them Officers formerly serving under him the others Gentlem●n that rid in his troop to meet his Majesty to kiss his M●j●sties hand who kneeling down in the matted Gallery his Majesty was pleased to walk along and give every one of them the honour to kise his hand which favour was so highly resented by them that they could no longer stifle thei● joy but as his Maj●sty was walking out a thing though unusual at Court they brake out into a lou● shouting On Thursday Mr. VVallop the Deputy Steward and Burgesses of the City of Westminster in their Gowns being conducted by Mr. Gerard a member of Parliament for that City waited upon his Majesty and presented a Pe●ition wherein they desired that his Majesty would be graciously pleased to bestow the Office of Lord H●gh Steward of Westminster on his Excellency the Lord General Monck M. Gerard made a short speech to his Majesty and leaving it to the Steward to inlarge who delivered himself so rhetorically and with such due and a●ful respect to Maj●sty that he hath deservedly gained a very high reputation in the Court his Majesty returned a most gracious pa●don and afforded to a●l of them the honour to kiss his hand The same night his Majesty was graciously pleased to honour the General with his company at Supper at the Cock-pit before supper he conferred the honour of Knighthood on Colonel John Clobery who had deserved so well in his constant adhering to his Excellency and prudent mannagement of affairs for the happy restoring of his Majesty to his people After supper his Excellency entertained his Majesty with several sorts of Musick On Friday his Majesty went to Hampton-Court about five in the morning returned about eleven and then touch'd many that had been troubled with the Evil At three of the clock in the afternoon his Majesty gave a meeting to the Parliament in the Banqueting-house and having heard Mr. Speaker returned a most gracious Answer His Majesty was pleased to sup this night with the Lord Cambden at Kensington On Saturday the Knights of the sh●re for Sommerset a County that have sufficiently manifested their constant loyalty to his sacred Majesty as well by their early actings of late giving presidents to others to do those things that tended to the bringing in of his Majesty as their former fidelity delivered a Petition subscribed by many of the Nobility and Gentry of that County to his Majesty wherein after they had expressed their hearty joy for the happy restoration of his Majesty they humbly desired that his Majesty would be pleased to take care for the setling of the Church in such manner as it was in the time of his Royal Grandfather and Father of ever blessed memory At the Generals Quarters at the Cockpit Several Addresses from several Regiments of the Army to his Majesty expressing their great joy for his Majesties happy restoration and an assurance of their loyalty were early delivered to his Excellency though formerly forgot to be mentioned viz. his Excellencies own Regiment of foot Col. Fairfax his Regiment and the I●ish Brigades On Friday night his Excellency presented to his Majesty the addresses of the Regiments in Scotland viz. that of Col. Morgans Regiment of horse and subscribed a so by the Judges Commissioners of Excise and Customes and most of the considerable civil officers Col. Daniels Regiment Col. Clarks Col. Hughs and Co. Miles Man's The Commissioners from Ireland viz. Sir John Clotwerthy Sir John King Major Aston and Major Rawden who were here some time since the Lord Broghil Sir Paul Davies Sir Jamos Barry Sir Theo. Jones Sir Morris Eustace Arthur Hill Audle● Merrin and Rich. Kennady Esq la●ely come will suddenly make address to his Majesty having brought with them b●●ls for the twenty thousand pound for his Majesty and such other sums as the Convention ordered Sir Charles Co●t cannot yet be so well spared though chosen one of the Commissioners there having been lately some little c●ntests in Ireland which his presence will easi●y aw● Dunkirk June 1. The Ostend Pyrates do daily snap some of the English Vessels an house was unhappily blown up with three barrels of Gunpowder occasioned by making of fire-works but one child killed Edinburgh Major Aberin that was Deputy Governour of Edinborough Castle when Cromwel went into Scotland in 1656. lately hang'd himself Tho. VVielch walking upon the Peer at Leith was thrown into the Sea The Covenant is very much pressed in all parts and great hopes they have of enjoying their former freedom London Ullk and Puckle that conveyed away Miles Corbet taken at Yirmouth and one ●enon Tilham at Colchester were brought to London on Saturday and remain in the custody of the Serjeant at Arms The Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common-Council have taken the oath of Alleg● and Supremacy The East-India Company have bespake plate to the value of 3000 l. to be presented to his Majesty A Spirit was lately apprehended and carried to the Guard at the Tower for drawing away souldiers whom after he had deb●uched he put into ships to be transported but after four dai●s imprisonment he was released London Printed by John Macock and Thomas Newcomb 1660.