Selected quad for the lemma: nation_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
nation_n write_v writer_n year_n 162 4 4.5696 4 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
A39396 Cambria triumphans, or, Brittain in its perfect lustre shevving the origen and antiquity of that illustrious nation, the succession of their kings and princes, from the first, to King Charles of happy memory, the description of the countrey, the history of the antient and moderne estate, the manner of the investure of the princes, with the coats of arms of the nobility / by Percie Enderbie, Gent. Enderbie, Percy, d. 1670. 1661 (1661) Wing E728; ESTC R19758 643,056 416

There are 33 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

to the River Dee again This land was of old time divided into four parts of which the chifest was Môn in English Anglesey Môn where the Princes chief house was at Abersfraw which is an Island separated from the mainland with an arme of the sea called Maenai and had in it self three Cantreds or hundreds which were subdivided into six Comots as Cantreff Abersfraw to comot Lhion and comot Malhtraeth Cantreff Cemais to the comots Talebolion and Tur Celyn An other absurd errour in Polidore Cantref Rossir to the comots Tindaethwy and Menai And at this day there is a trim town in that Island called Buemarish and a common passage to Ireland at Caergibi called in English Holy-head but here I cannot wink at that notable error of Polidore which after his accustomed fashion deemeth this Isle to be called not Môna but Anglesia or Anglorum Insula because it is called in English Anglesey and giveth this name Mona to Man and so hath lost the names of both Isles which ignorance and forgetfulness might be forgiven him if he had not drawn a great number to this errour with him which in their Charters do daily wrong-name these Isles which may be easily proved First because the Inhabitants of the Isle do know no other name but Môn and it is called through all VVales Tîr Môn that is to say the land of Môn unto this day so that neither by memory of Man neither by any Monument in writing in the British tongue can it appear that ever it had any other name but Môn yet there be manifest monuments for these 1000. years It is also grown to a proverb through VVales for the fertility of the ground Môn mam Gymry that is to say Môn mother of VVales The ancient history of Cornelius Tacitus which it seems age had beaten out of Polidors head saith that the Souldiers of Paulinus Suetonius and after of Julius Agricola after they had passed through Northwales then came over against Mona where they did swim over an arme of the sea 200. paces and so by force wan the Isle Now whether is it more reasonable thus to swim over 200 paces or 20 miles I know there are many believe Polidor in this point let all men therefore by this judge the rest As for that which he saith of the great woods Môn the seat of the superstitious Druids it is nothing for both the Romans and after when the Christian faith took place in the Realm the Christians did fall and root them out of the abominable Idolatry and superstition practised by the Druids in them as is touched before that the King of Man sent for timber to Mon Great trees found in the Earth read the life of Hugh E. of Chester which also is evident by the great beeches and other trees found in the earth in those dayes His other reason is because it is called Anglesey in the English tongue So is Lhoyger called England and Cambry Wales are those therefore the old names no surely and what if the inhabitants called it so as they did not had it not a name before the Angles wan it yes I warrant you but he had forgotten that Now the name of Man was ever or at the least these 1000 years named in Brittish Manaw of which cometh the English name Man The Inhabitants there call it so and no nation about it did ever call it Môn nor any writer but Polidor which was too young a Godfather to name so old a child For Gildas writ above 900. years since whose writings Polidor never saw but untruly fathers upon his own device Geraldus in his description of Ireland to Henry II and Henry Huntington do plainly call Man in Latine Eubonia adding thereto either Manaw or Man for the better understanding of the name will you believe them or Polydor other arguments there are which I passe over till I have more leisure and occasion to write of this matter Arvon The seccond part of Northwales was called Arvon which is as much as to say over against Mon and had in it four ●cantrefs and ten comots Cantref Abeer had in it three comots Y Lhechwedh Vchaf Y Lechwedhisat and Nanconwy Cantref Arvon had two comots Ywch Owyrnai and Isgwyrnai Cantref Dunodic had two comots Ardudwy and Enionyth Cantref Lhyyn containeth three comots Cymitmain Tinlhain and Canclogion This is now called Carnarvonshire the chief Town whereof is Carnarvon heretofore it was strongly walled and had a very fair Castle Edward the II. King of England was here borne and hence according to the custome of those times entituled Edward of Carnarvon The Princes of Wales had in this place their Chancery and Exchequer for all Northwales which was no small improvement to it Earl it had never any till this present age in which the late K. Charles conferred that title 1628. on Robert Lord Dormer of Wing created Earl of Carnarvon 4o. Carol. Aug. 2. and lost his life in the said Kings service Lord Dormer his son Earl of Carnarvon now living Azure 10 billets 4 3 2 and 1. Or in a chief of the second a Lyon Issuant sable incensed Gules And as Carnarvon hath given title to an Earl so hath Anglesey also though not by her ancient name Môn for anno 1624. Christopher Villiers brother to the D. of Buckingham was created E. of Anglesey September 24. Charles Villiers second Earl Argent on a crosse Gules five escolops Or a mullet for difference This Môn is also called Anglesey shire and hath both it and Carnarvonshire the same divisions at this day In this shire are Snowden hills called Eryri neither in height fertility of ground wood cattel fish and foul giving place to the famous Alps and without controversie the strongest country in Brittain Here is the Town of Carnarvon called in old time Caersegonce and there is also Conwey called Caer Giffin and See of Bangor with divers other ancient Castles and places of memory and vvas the last part of Wales that came under the Dominions of the Kings of England It hath on the North the Sea and Maenai upon the East and South East the River Conwey vvhich divideth it from Denbighshire vvhose principal Tovvn is Denbigh vvhich hath had Lords good store and of several families but none of them Parliamentary Peers in reverence to it till these latter times Of late it hath given title both of Lord and Earl to tvvo several families viz. to these 1 Robert Lord Dudley created Baron of Denbigh and Earl of Leicester Eliz. 6. Sep. 29 Or a Lyon Rampant his tail double forked vert 2 William Viscount Fielding created Earl of Dinbigh 20. Jac. Sept. 14. Master of the Ward robe c. Argent on fess Azure 3. fusils Or. This Shire is parted on the South West and West from Mirioneth with high mountains and Rivers and other Mears Merionith The third part of Gwineth was Merioneth containing three Cantrefs and every Cantref three comots
cloaths was deemed prejudicial lest thereby those pictures should be hid A Nation most warlike and thirsty after blood and slaughter content with a small Shield and Javelin yet having a sword appendent to their naked bodies brest-plate or helmet they undervalue as obstacles and impediments to the passing over Fords and Rivers Plinius de Magia Plinie treating de Magia or Art Magick saith that the Brittains so admirably honoured it with uncough Ceremonies that they may seem to have sent it unto the Persians Another Author saith that the Brittains far exceed the French in Stature and bigness of body affirming Strabo apud cundem that he himself had seen Brittish youths in Rome to surpass their tallest men in height at least half a foot Diodorus Siculus saith Brittains spend their time after the custom of their ancient Forefathers and in wars used Chariots as did the Grecians in time of the Trojan war and who knows The honesty of Brittains commended by Di● Siculus Mr. Camb. denies not Brute Mr. Broughton fol. 289. The Brittains called Gens Bruti Leges S. Ed Reg. apud Guli Lamb. l. d. priseu legi fol. 36. Gildas apud Galf. l. 1. c. 17. Vic. l. 1. Pont. Nen. Hist Antiq. Land Eccles Isiad●r l. Et●m Thom. Eliot apud Stow. proof for Brute Thaliesnanus apud pris p. 27 Gal. Manus apud eundem H●n Hunting Hist de Reg. Brit. cum maltis aliis ibidem Brute landed here in the time of Holy Samuel the Prophet Brittannia so called from Brutus Gualt Oxor. apud Hard. c. 16. Bal. 2. cent Sigib Gembl hist de regn Britt Mariam apud Hard. c. 10. Liter● defensoris Ed Reg 1. ad ●apam apud Th n Walsin Hist 〈…〉 Y● lib. Neustr A● 1301. Gri● apud Hi. ea● M. S. chr● c 47. Galf. M●n l 1. Hist Britt but that custom might be continued from their first founder Brutus Their houses compact of wood reed or thatch their sheafs of Corn they stored under dry roofs threshing out every day as much as served for present use honest and just in conversation much differing from the subtilty and cunning of our men content with ordinary and indifferent Diet detesting the gurmandizing of gluttons and Epicures the Isle replenished with multitude of men In matters concerning the Inhabitants of this Isle Mr. Cambden is very copious producing several opinions but I finde no Commander in chief whether King Duke or General named Brute excepted of whom he saith shall I so mean a man give a determinate sentence in so weighty a matter I leave it to the Senate of Antiquaries undecided In the mean time I deny not Brute but leave every one to his own best liking and opinion So that it is manifest Mr. Cambden naming no other principal Commander or Guide of that people who first Colonized and Inhabited this Land doth not altogether deny Brute but leaves it to the Counsell Consent and Decree of the Learned Parliament and Senate of Antiquaries Let us hear what others write Mr. Broughton out of an old Brittish History saith Having thus invincibly proved by all Antiquities that there were among the Gentiles especially in this Kingdom of Brittain not only Flamens but Arch-flamens and they seated in the principal governing Cities in several Provinces and how after the coming of Christ even from the Apostles time and by their Ordinance and Institution their Residences were to be changed into Archiepiscopal or Metropolitan chief commanding Sees in the Christian Religion If we had no other particular proof in this but in general terms St. Edwards Laws the testimony of Gildas Nonnius the Antiquities of Landaff St. Isiodore who as Pope Eleutherius also calleth this Nation Gens Bruti the off-spring and Nation of Brute Thomas Archbishop of York a Norman by birth in time of King VVilliam the first Thaliessianus above a thousand years since VVilliam of Malmesbury Henry of Huntington Gualterus Calenus Sigibertus with many others before Galfrid Mon. wrote and Vicunnius himself with innumerable after both of this and other Nations and publick Parliament as that in the time of Edward the first at Lincoln who after most diligent search of Antiquities and due examination as the greatest matter the right of a Kingdom required sent his Apologetical Letters to the Pope of Rome sealed with an hundred Seals and Witnesses wherein is declared and justified that in the time of Hely and Samuel the Prophets Brutus the Trojan landed here and by his own name called the Country Britannia before named Albion And having three sons Locrinus Camber and Albanact did at his death divide the Land into three parts or portions Leegria now England to Locrinus his eldest Son Cambria Wales to Camber and Albania Scotland to Albanact This might suffice for this business but being testified by so many Domestical and Forreign private and publick witnesses that the Tripartite division was here from the first n●me and beginning of Brittain we must needs for every several part and Province assign a several Government and order therein as their Rulers and Governers were divers and distinct But our Antiquaries carrie us further and inform us that not only London Caerlegeon and York were the several chief Cities in this division but the Kings which founded them for such ordained them likewise to be the Seats and Residencies of three several Archflamens or Pr●●●●amens for the glory and nobleness of London thereupon named Augusta it is the common opinion of Antiquities that it is the most ancient Citie of this Iland builded by Brutus as not only the Brittish History Galfridus Vicunnius and our English Antiquaries after them but G●ldas Sigibertus and others sufficiently witness And except Mr. Stow be deceived in his Authors Aethieus an old Pagan Philosopher testifieth no less affirming that Brutus named this Kingdom Brittannia and John Harding in his plain Verses with others Recordeth how he there from the very first beginning Instituted an Archflamens Seat At Troynovant he made full especially An Arch-flamine his See Harding Chr fol. 16. cap. 14. Cathedral certain A Temple thereof A policy to obtain By Trojan Law This is commonly written to have been a thousand years before Christ and it is a common received opinion among our Antiquaries that Ebrincus son to Mempricius builded the City of York of which more hereafter in its due place That this Island was called Albion before the coming of Brute all Authors seem to agree though there seem to be some difference the just and most rational Writers call Albion ab albis Rupibus from the high and white Cliffs and Rocks discovered by Navigators as they sailed by it yet some will be more quaint and fetch it further as if far fetcht and dear bought were always good for Ladies and tell of a Damasella called Albone or Albina daughter of Dioclesian King of Syria and this some of our Histories seem to aver notwithstanding no Authentick Writer as yet ever produced any such King to
quite environed with the Sea excepting the passage on the North side thereof Candida Casa vocatur locus in extremis Angliae juxta Scotiam finibus ubi beatus Confessor Niva requiescit Natione Brito qui primus ibidem Christi praedicationem Evangelizavit Nomen loco ex opere inditum quod Ecclesiam ibi ex lapide polito Britonibus miraculum fecerit The Count Palatine will have this King to have reigned fifteen years alone and speaks some thing favourably in his behalf Regina Martia saith he gubernaculum 7 annorum accepit cum filio unico adhuc puero qui Sisillius eo nomine secundus appellatur feliciter insequutus vestigia patris administrat quindecim annos postea solus mortuus Caerleili sepelitur To this account of fifteen years agreeth the English History saith Fabian but the Flower of Histories alloweth unto his Reign onely seven years howsoever Death demanded his due and summoned this King into another world Sisillius burled at Caerleon whose Body as Mr. Howes saith was buried at Caerleon and not at Caerlile but the nearnesse of the Names questionlesse breeds the mistake He left behind him his Son Kimarus to succeed him KIMARVS KIMARVS Son of Sisilius after the death of his Father was with all solemnity advanced to the Throne and Crown of Brittain in the year of the worlds Creation four thousand eight hundred fourscore and six The English Chronicle calleth him Kymor Fabian saith that there is no mention made of this King either concerning his deeds and course of life or concerning the length of his Reign yet he alledgeth an old Chronicle to aver that he was a wild young man and lived after his pleasure wherefore as he was at his disport of Hunting he was by his Ill-willers slain when he had ruled scarcely three years but the Count Palatine saith he was killed by wild Beasts Illius filius saith he speaking of Sisilius Chimarus in imperando successit moribus adolescens improbus suique in rebus omnibus agendis arbitrii ac voluntatis adeo ut post tres annos quibus rexit à feris bestiis dum venabatur occisus est Kimarus succeeded a young man of most dissolute life and behaviour who swayed all things according to the humour of his own vain and fantastick imagination and not according to the rule of reason and judgement insomuch that after the three years of his Reign he was devoured of wild Beasts It behoves Princes as well as others to have a care how they live For the holy Writ tells us Fire hail famine and death Eccles c. 39. all these things are created for mans punishment the Teeth of Beasts for the utter extermination of the wicked It is great reason that Princes should regulate their lives after the true square of vertue for a Prince cannot with reason expect that the severity of Laws or other Politick means shall represse in his Commonwealth any Vice which shall be Authorised by the Example of his own Practice For as the Poet saith Totus componitur Orbis Regis ad exemplum nec sic inflectere sensus Humanos edicta valent ut vita Regentis That is to say all the World is framed after the modell of the King and no Laws or Edicts can so move the mind of men as doth the life of the Governour which Plutarch confirmeth notably saying That even as a Square or Rule must be streight in it self before it can make other things streight so the Prince who is as it were the Rule of his Subjects ought first to rectifie himself before he go about by Laws or other means to rectifie his Commonwealth for he that is falling saith Plutarch is not fit to uphold others nor he that is ignorant to teach nor he that is incorrigible to correct nor he that is himself disordered to put others in order ELIANVS ELIANVS the Son of Kimarus whom some also call Danius as the Flower of Histories affirmeth but Gaufride saith he was Kimarus Brother was Crowned King of Brittain in the year of the worlds Creation four thousand eight hundred fourscore and nine This Prince by the English Book is called Howan one Chronicle will have Kimarus and Elianus to be one and the same person though others think otherwise and that he reigned two years little or nothing being left to posterity of any memorable Acts of his either good or bad only the Count Palatine tells us Frater eum sequitur Elianus natura stupidior legum spretor quocirca rem administrabat imprudenter bellis seditionibus undecunque vexatus neque pacem habere potuit vel publice vel privatim illis decem annis quibus imperabat Elianus his Brother succeeded him of a most stupid nature and a contemner of all Laws which was the cause that he governed with great indiscretion his Kingdome and Commonwealth being continually vexed and troubled with insurrections and seditions insomuch that during the ten years of his Reign he could never enjoy either privately or otherwise one hour of peace this was one amongst the Brittish Princes for whose sake as Gildas the wise writeth the whole Nation suffered MORINDVS MORINDVS the Bastard-son of Elianus as Gaufride affirmeth with others took upon him the Crown and Government of this Island of Great Brittain in the year of the worlds Creation four thousand eight hundred and ninety Elianus begat this Prince upon Tanguestula his Concubine who proved as Bastards commonly doe being gotten in the heat of Courage a most resolute and couragious Chieftain but so over-swayed by his own passions especially that of anger that in his fury no mans life was secure To the matchlesse strength of his body Nature added all those features which might make him the most handsome and accomplisht Gentleman in all his Kingdome these his admirable endowments he beautified with a most Princely liberality being very open-handed when the least merit required During the Reign of Morindus there arrived out of Mauritania which Country according to Strabo is seated between Hungaria and Fohemia a war-like and most cruel people which with Fire and Sword consumed all before them Morindus having tidings brought to him of those insolences and misdemeanours with all speed Levied an Army and with speedy Marches encounters his Enemy and after a most bloody Conflict compels the greatest part of the unwelcome Intruders back to their Ships the rest he sacrificeth to his own anger causing some to be dismembred others cast into the fire some chopt in pieces not a few strangled death acted several parts in this most horrid execution no manner of torment imaginable to Morindus was left uninflicted so great was the tyranny of his blood-thirsting revenge After this great overthrow and most cruel Massacre this Brittish King progressing a long the Sea coasts for his Recreation chanced to discry a most hideous Monster coming out of the Irish Ocean Morindus is overjoyed at this presented occasion to try the edge of his
with his Countrymen by working their subversion to his own dishonour and advantage of a Forraign enemy His Father Imanentius having been sometime chief Ruler of the City of Trinobantes and well esteemed among them was slain by Cassibelin the present Governour against whom the Citizens desired Caesar to protect Mandubratius and to commit unto him the Government of that City which Caesar granted upon delivery of a certain number of Pledges and a sufficient proportion of Victuals for provision of his Army Hereupon divers petty states thereabout sent Embassadors and yielded themselves to Caesar who understood by them that Cassibelina his Town being well stored with Men and Cattle was not far from thence this Town was only a circuit of ground inclosed with wood and marshes or else entrenched with a Ranger of Earth about it Caesar coming with his Legion to this place which he found very strong as being fortifyed Naturally and also by the industry of man began to assail it on both sides The Brittains having expected a while the event of the enterprise and perceiving themselves unable to withstand the assault issued out at a back way where many of them being slain and some taken as they fled the Town it self and all the provisions within it were left as a spoil to the Romans while these things were doing among the Trinobants Cassabelin dispatched messengers into Kent or Cantium that lyes upon the Sea The Inhabitants of these parts were better furnished to make War then any other of the Isle the Country at that time was Governed by four Kings as Caesar himself calleth them either for that they had among them a kind of absolute Government in several or else for that being the Register of his own Acts he supposed it would be more for his glory to be reputed a Conqueror of Kings their names were Cingetorix Carvilius Taximugulus and Segonax whom Cassibelin then required to raise all the power they could make and on the sudden to assail the Roman Forces that Guarded their ships at the Sea side This was attempted accordingly but with ill successe for that the Romans having timely advertisement of their purpose prevented the execution thereof by setting upon them as they drew near the Roman Army and so after a great slaughter made of the Brittains Cingetorix a Noble Captain and one of the Princes being taking prisoner the Romans returned safe to their Camp Cassibelin hearing of the unhappy issue of his enterprize after so many losses sustained on his part his Country being wasted with War and himself in a manner forsaken by the revolt of the Cities round about which most of all disc●uraged him sent Embassadors to Caesar by Comius of Arras offering to submit himself upon reasonable conditions Caesar determining to winter in Gallia the state of his affairs there requiring it and the summer being almost spent commanded that he should deliver certain pledges for assurance of his obedience and that he should offer no wrong nor give cause of offence to Mandubratius or the Troynobants whom he had taken into special protection and then having imposed a Tribute to be paid yearly by the Brittains to the people of Rome he marched towards the sea side where he embarked his Forces and arrived with them safely in the Continent Thus Caesar having rather shewed some part of Brittain to the Romans then made a Conquest of the whole supposed he had done sufficiently for his own glory in undertaking a matter so rare and difficult in those Times At his coming to Rome he presented there certain Captives which he had taken in the Brittish Wars whose strangenesse of shape and behaviour filled the peoples eyes both with wonder and delight He offered also in the Temple of Venus Genetrix a Surcote embroidered with Brittish Pearl as a Trophy and spoil of the Ocean leaving to posterity a perpetual remembrance of his Enterprize in this Iland to the honour both of his own Name and of the Roman Nation After the death of Julius Caesar by reason of the civil Wars among the Romans the Isle of Brittain was for a time neglected and Augustus Caesar being setled in the Empire which was then grown to such greatness as it seemed even cumbred therewith accounted it good policy to contain the same within it known bounds Besides the attempt was like to prove dangerous and a matter of very great expence to send an Army so far off to make War with the Brittish Nation for desire of glory only no special cause besides moving thereto Howbeit as some Writers Report above Twenty years after Julius Caesar's first Entrance Augustus intended a Voyage hither in person alledging for pretence of the War the wrong offered to the Roman State by such Princes of the Isle as had for certaine years witheld the Tribute which Caesar his Praedecessor had imposed upon them intelligence whereof being got the Brittains sent over Embassadours who meeting the Emperour in a The Countrey between the Rivers Garony and Seinin France Gallia Celtica declared their submission and desired pardon And the better to win favour they had carried over certain gifts of good value to be presented as offerings in the Roman Capitol having already learned the Art to flatter for Advantage and to appease Princes by rewards Hereupon a conditional peace was granted them and the Emperour having pacifyed some troubles in Gallia returned to Rome then began the Ilanders to pay Tribute and Custome of all kind of Wares which they exchanged with the Gaules as namely Ivory boxes Iron chaines and other trinkets of Amber and Glasse which were Transported Too and Fro both out of Gallia and Brittain The year following the Brittains having failed in performance of Conditions he prepared for another expedition but being set forward on his Voyage the revolt of the b The Biscayans Cantabrians and c The Inhabitants between Gallicia and Portugal Assyrians stayed him from proceeding any further therein after which time the Brittains were left to themselves to enjoy their Liberty and use their own Laws without molestation of forraign Invaders for that the Romans having found the sweetnesse of peace after long civil Wars sought rather to keep in obedience such Provinces as had been before time brought under subjection then by attempting new Conquests to hazard the losse of that they had already gotten In those dayes the Countrey of the Troynobants in Brittain was Governed by Conobelin who kept his residence at a Malden in Essex Camalodunum he began first to reclaim the Brittains from their ill customes and to make his state more respected he afterwards caused his own Image to be stamped on his Coyne after the manner of the Romans a custome never used by the Brittains before his dayes and but then newly received by the Romans themselves for before that time the Brittains used Rings of Iron and little plates of Brasse of a certaine weight instead of Coyne During the time of his Government
unknown or of little credit he only preserved the books of the Sybills making also the best choice of them and those he layed up in two guilded chests under the Base of Apollo Palatinus And was so convinced in his understanding by these means of the truth of Christ that as our moderne Writers with others write when the Romans came to him said Te volumus adorare quia deus est in te si hic non esset non tibi omnia tam prospere succederent we will adore thee because God is in thee if he were not here all things could not succeed so prosperously with thee yet he being the greatest Conquerour that ever was in the world and was never Conquered and overthrown in battel Quum ipsum pro Deo colere vellent Romani prohibuit nec se Dominum appellari permisit when the Romans would haue worshipped him for God he forbad it and would not suffer himself to be called Lord. And if we may follow our Brittish Histories Mathew of Westminster a Man as all tell us excellent for History and supputation of years Quantum ad Historiam in recta annorum supputatione singularis and our late Writers By computation of time our King Kymbeline was then in Rome Ja. Bal. l de script cent 3. fol. 143. in Math. Flor. Calf Mon. Hist l. 4. c. 11. Ponticus aerun Hist Brit. l. 4. Heath West Anno Dom. 5. for we are told Post Tenantium ad culmen regale Kimbelinus filius suus miles strenuus quem Caesar Augustus nutriverat promotus est After Tenantius Kimbeline his Sonne a Valiant Knight whom Augustus Caesar had brought up and promoted to the Kingdome of Brittain Kimbeline was but young when Augustus Caesar first brought him up and he stayed in Rome so long that as divers and also Verunnius affirmeth Augustus made him Knight quem Aug. Caesar nutrierat armis decoraverat and if we follow this exact supputator of times Mathew of Westminster he was come from Rome to be King here but five years before the birth of Christ Anno Dominicae Inacrnationis quinto Kimbelonus Rex Brittaniam decem annos tenuisset And most certain it is by all Histories of our Noble and Renowned Brittish Hostages resident in Rome all the time of Augustus Caesar and after that we had many worthy Brittains there both ear and eye witnesses to know these passages by themselves and to testifie them to their Countrymen and Friends at home This Kimbeline Sonne of Tenantius was made King of the Brittains in the year of the world 5180 of his Reign Authors write diversly some shewing no years others very few Fabian fol. 39. part 3. which agreeth not well with the Computation of other Writers The Author of the Flower of Histories affirmeth that he Reigned thirty five years after which time gloriously spent he died and was buried at Caer Lud leaving two Sons Guiderius and Arviragus The Brittish History written by a namelesse Author yet some suppose him Noble and for private reason to have conceal'd his Name maketh little mention of Tiberius concerning our Brittish Affairs but because certain passages with happened during the time of his Empire will redound to the glory of the Brittish Nation it is expedient and I hope will not offend the Reader to write some things hapning in his life time Kimbeline continued King of England till the 15 or 16 year after Christs Nativity which must needs he in this Tiberius his time Mr. Bro. fol. 12. when the true knowledge of Christ was more clearly manifested unto the world and among others to some Brittains of this Nation especially such 〈◊〉 then lived in Rome For as in the time of this Emperour our Saviour began and ended his preaching and suffered his Passion for our Redemption so those things in such order as they were accomplished in the Land of Jury they were presently and truly declared and sent to the Emperor at Rome and others there Matthew of Westminster and Ranulphus Higeden consent in this with others that Tiberius was truly informed at Rome of Christs miraculous life and preaching long before his Passion Mr. Bro. ibid. and being afflicted with a Leprosy was so confident in the heavenly power of Christ esteeming him then at the least for a great Prophet Saint and worker of Miracles that he sent with great solemnity Volusianus to Hierusalem to entreat Christ Jesus to come with him to Rome to cure him of his incurable Malady but the Jewes had caused Pilate to put him to death before The Magdeburgians with others have published to the World an Epistle of Lentulus out of the Annals of the Roman Senators to this Emperour Tiberius before the death of Christ thus beginning Apparuit his temp ribus adhuc est homo magnae virtutis nominatus Iesus Christus qui dicitur à Gentibus Propheta quem ejus Discipuli vocant filium Dei suscitans mortuos sanans omnes languores There appeared in these time and still is a man of great vertue named Christ Jesus who is called of the Gentils a Prophet whom his Disciples call the Son of God raising the dead and curing all diseases And presently upon the death of Christ as it is proved both by our own and Forraign Antiquaries ancient and later Greek and Latine Pontius Pilate wrote unto Tiberius the Emperor of Rome of the Passion of Christ in this manner De passione Dominica Pilatus Tiberio Caesari scripsit in hunc modum Episcopus Anacet de morte Christi Matth. Westm an 33. Flor. Wigorn. an 38. Tertull. Apolon c. 5 21. Eust Hist l. 1. c. 24. Oros l. 7. c. 4. Nuper accedit quod ipse probavi Judaeos per invidiam se suosque posteros crudeli damnatione peremisse nam cum promissum haberent Patres eorum quod Deus illis mitteret de coelo Sanctum suum qui eorum qui eorum merito Rex diceretur ut hunc se promiserit per Virginem missurum ad terram iste me praside Haebraeorum Deus cum venerit ut vidissent eum caecos illuminasse leprosos mundasse paralyticos curasse Daemones ab hominibus fugasse mortuos sucistasse ventis imperasse super mare siccis pedibus ambulasse multa alia mirabilia fecisse cum omnis populus Judaeorum hunc Dei Filium dicerent invidiam contra eum passi sunt Principes Sacerdotum mihique tradiderunt alia pro aliis mentientes dixerunt illum magum esse contra eorum legem agere ego autem credidi ita esse flagellatum tradidi arbitrio eorum At i●i crucifixerunt eum sepulto ei custodes adhibuerunt ille vero militibus meis custodientibus eum tertia die resurrexit Sed in tantum exarsit nequitia eorum ut darent eis pecuniam dicentes Dicite quia Discipuli ejus corpus ipsius rapuerunt veruntamen milites cum accepissent pecuniam quod factum fuerat tacere non
brake the rest of his body Many converted at St. Amphibalus his martyrdom Jacob. Gonnen in vita S. Amp Manus Antiq. Capg in eodem After all which this holy Martyr stood with as chearful a countenance as if he had suffered no hurt at all and more constant though he now bore the signes of his Martyrdom in all his body Giving a miraculous spectacle of himself that he could still live after so great torments and so many kinds of death whereupon very many beholding and more and more wondering at the constancy of the blessed Martyr renouncing their Idols submitted themselves to the Christian faith and prayed with a loud voice to God that by the merits and intercession of the blessed Martyr they might be worthy to be partakers of everlasting life 1000 converted and presently put to death at the martyrdom of St. Amphibalus which when the Prince perceived and knew he presently called for the Tormentors and commanded all that had rejected and forsaken the worship of their Gods and embraced the doctrine of Amphibalus to be put to death Which savage Edict the Pagan Souldiers effected and killed a thousand which St. Amphibalus beholding and commending their souls to God perswaded his persecutors to renounce their errors and be converted to Christ without whom no salvation can be had nothing but hell and eternal damnation to be expected But the persecutors did still persevere in their impiety not ceasing so to torment this holy Saint with cruel stoning him besides so many tortures before remembred that when his body was afterward miraculously found there was not one whole bone in it Although it seemeth by the History of his life that many of his bones were broken with stones by those so enraged persecutors that after his blessed Soul was separated from his body thus lying still bound and tied they ceased not to break it more with their casting great stones upon it But so long as he lived in so great extremity of torments although the stones were cast at him as thick as hail as some write he still persevered in prayer never moving himself on the one side or other And being now come to the period of his punishments and to yield his Soul to God looking toward Heaven as another St. Stephen he saw Jesus standing at the right hand of his Father and heard a consort of Angels in Heaven and among them knew St. Alban whom he invocated to assist him saying O holy Alban pray unto our God that he will send a good Angel to meet me that the dreadful Robber lead me not nor the wicked part hinder me in my journey And a voice spake to him from Heaven in the hearing of all in this manner Verily I say unto thee this day thou shalt be with thy Disciple Alban in Paradise And two Angels shining with an heavenly brightness came down unto him and taking with them the Soul of the blessed resplendent with a wonderful whiteness with Hymnes and Praises carried it to Heaven which done to make him both glorious there and honourable on earth a Christian secretly conveying his body reverently buried it And God himself began now to honour him here and be revenged upon his Enemies and Persecutors Those lips of theirs which had been opened before to blaspheme towards God and revilings towards his holy Saints are now miraculously drawn away that their speech is hindred The tongues which had so abused him now burn and the faces of them which had so deformed him were made deformed all their members are so stiff that the stoners and tormentors of this holy man could not now lift one stone from the ground and the Judge or Prince himself losing his understanding of reason became mad and how many soever had lifted up their hands against our Lord did of him receive due revenge for their demerits Hereupon the whole City received the Faith of Christ and desired to be Baptized and many by the inspiration of God forsaking their goods go to Rome to bewail their sins and confess their errours With St. Amphibalus nine other Christians were martyred as Matthew of Paris writeth neither is it probable Matthew Paris Hist pag. 179 180 181. 182 183. that so renowned a Bishop as St. Amphibalus was apprehended alone being take as he was preaching to the people or such rage as then reigned in the persecutors would yield them much more favour than they did to St. Amphibalus but their malice being most unto him and he so famous all our Histories remember him almost forgetting the rest It is no great marvel though so few names of so great numbers and thousands are left unto us when by some Writers the persecution was so great in Britainy that except those which hid themselves and could not be Witnesses of things publickly done all the Christians of Brittain were then martyred Harpsfield Hist Eccle. Ang. in 6. primis soeculis c. 10. p. 17. and St. Gildas himself doth seem to declare no less when he saith they which were then left alive had hidden themselves in Woods Deserts and Dens yet he tempereth this hard assertion where he saith this persecution was so rigorous onely in some not all places of this Countrey And those parts which were then absolutely under the Romans command were by their merciless cruelty in this estate So many mutations of times changes of the names of Places the rages of Infidels Romans Saxons and others have deprived us both of the names and holy relicts of those Martyrs But after the death of so many renowned and glorious Martyrs Maria Sco. l. 2. Aetat 6. Col. 304. in Constant Flor. Wigorn. Chron. an 321. 299. Capg Catal. prefat in vita St. Helenae Marianas Sco. l. 2. Aetat 6. in Aurel. Bar tomo 2. Annal. an 306 Jac. Gordon an 273. in Aurel. Harris Hist Eccl. Britt Tom. 4. c. 2. Zosim l. 2. Suid. in Constan Matth. West an 273. Mar. Sco. l. 2. Aetat 6 in Aurel. whose blood beautified and encreased the Church of God Sanguis Martyrum semen Ecclesiae let us return to Constantius Clarus and his most admired consort and chaste Spouse St. Helena Some there be whether to detract so great a glory from his Nation and give it to another or of Ignorance in History do say that one Theodora was the first lawful wife of Constantius and the blessed Helena mother of that happy Emperour the great Constantine was not only a stranger to this Nation but of a mean estate and which is unworthy to be written not the wife but concubine of Constantius with name and attribute Concubina this the most noble Empress St. Helena is stiled by not onely among divers forreign Writers but of this Nation also as Marianus Scotus and Florentinus Nigorniensis as they are now published many of which do not to the dishonour of that most holy Lady and this her Countrey abstain from the same phrase of speech This errour being overthrown
ENDERBIE CAMBRIA TRIVMPHANS OR BRITTAIN IN ITS PERFECT LUSTRE SHEVVING THE Origen and Antiquity OF THAT ILLUSTRIOUS NATION THE Succession of their Kings and Princes from the First to KING CHARLES Of Happy Memory The Description of the Countrey The History of the Antient and Moderne Estate The manner of the Investure of the Princes with the Coats of Arms Of the Nobility By PERCIE ENDERBIE Gent. LONDON Printed for Andrew Crooke and are to be sold at the Green Dragon in St. Paul's Church-Yard 1661. TO HIS SACRED MAJESTY Charles the Second KING of Great BRITTAIN and PRINCE of WALES c. Most DREAD SOVERAIGN HE who is so brain-sick as to question or dispute the Antiquity of KINGS and MONARCHICAL Government will put the choicest Wits to their Trumps to find out a Nomenclation to expresse his Folly the Word Fanatick being too weak and slender KINGS write in the plural Number Mandamus volumus facimus c. which is GOD's own Stile And in Scripture we oft find them called GODS and Man as a civil Creature was directed to that kind of subjection as if the sole Observation of Nature had necessarily led this Affections of Men to this kind of STATE Whence it is also that whilst Others of the most curious in Philosophy tell us of Angels and the Supreme Heavens being immediately Governed by the Maker of all things they add together that upon the Earth KINGS are in like sort of Government as if natural Reason had at first Ordained them on Earth by an unavoidable imitation of their Creators Providence and questionlesse MONARCHY as far exceeds Oligarchy Democratie Aristocratie or that so much lately gaped after Anarchy as the Sun in its purest and most perfect lustre the smallest Star Why then O why then should the Commons of England Vote the Office of King in this Nation and to have the Power thereof in any single person unnecessary and burdensome to the liberty and publick Interest of this Nation This pleased their palats whose proper Advance and not the common Good was sought after and therefore one King was more then laid aside to whom all Allegiance was due and Forty Tyrants set up to whom we owe no allegiance at all Great Monarch Man proposeth but God disposeth and therefore after a dark and tedious night of care and anxiety hath reduced and plac'd you in your proper sphere like to a morning Sun and Sun of Justice to drive away our cares and rectifie our miseries by this your auspicious return assured hope shines in us that the Prophesie is fullfil'd Carolus a Carolo descendens erit Carolo Magno Major This ensuing Treatise will lay open and unfold the manner of Great Brittains Government which was ever Princely contrary to this Chymerical Anarchy the which your Majesties most faithful and humble Subject with much of fear and reverence as being too rustick and homely to appear before so great a Majesty offers up begging of Almighty God to grant You a long and happy Reign Fruitful and Princely Off-spring adorned with all Vertues and heroick Endowments to Succeed You that You may say with the Prophetical King and Kingly Prophet Blessed be the Lord my God who hath caused my Eyes to see this day that one of my own Loyns shall sit upon my Throne And for this all Loyal Subjects ought pray and so shall he incessantly who is Your MAJESTIES Most Loyall And Obedient Subject P. E. THE GENEALOGY OF CHARLES THE II d. MONARCH of Great BRITTAIN from the WELSH Blood CAdeth King of South-wales Howell Dha Prince of South-wales Owen King of Wales who Married Augharad D. and Heir to Lhewely Prince of Powis Meredith King of Wales Lhewelyn ap Sissylht Descended from Anarawd King of North-wales by the Marriage of Angharad D. and H. of King Meredith was King of Wales Griffith ap Lhewelyn King Wales Nest the Daughter of Griffith ap Lhewelyn was Married Fleance Son of Banquo whose Issue was Walter Stuart Alan Lord Stuart Alexander Lord Stuart Walter Lord Stuart Alexander Lord Stuart John Lord Stuart Walter Lord Stuart Married Margery D. and Heir of Robert the first King of Scots and had Issue Robert the Second King of Scots Robert the Third King of Scots James the First King of Scots James the Second King of Scots James the Third King of Scots James the Fourth King of Scots Married Margaret Eldest Daughter to King Henry the 7 th King of England James the Fifth King of Scots Henry in Right of his Wife Queen Mary sole Daughter and Heir to James the Fifth King of Scots James Monarch of Great Brittain Charles Monarch of Great Brittain Charles the Second Monarch of Great Brittain whom God of his infinite Goodnesse protect from his Enemies TO THE Gentle Reader VVhether WELSH or ENGLISH P. E. wisheth all Happiness Courteous Reader LET it not seem strange unto you that being no Native of Waies but born as far remote as Caer luid Coyd I should attempt to compile a General History and entitle it The Ancient and Modern Brittish and Welsh History Sir Walter Raleigh wrote a History of the whole World Mr. Knolls composed the Transactions of the Turkish Empire both English both excellent and approved Authors many more have done the like The enducements which drew me on to attempt this work were first the marriage of a person of quality of that Nation Secondly my long continuance and aboad in that Country which hath rendered me in a manner a Native the civilities of the Gentry prick me forwards and the help of a good Library of Sir Edward Morgans of Lantarnam encouraged me to bring the Embrion to its full maturity many and those most learned both Accademicks honoured with the scarlet robe and Martialists enobled with sword and spurs have added much lustre to the almost perisht Brittish glory unto whose writings I must acknowledge my self highly engaged from their Hives I have ext acted many drams of hony and laid it up in store to present unto the VVorld in a whole Mass that many may undeceive themselves and rectifie there misled judgments who apprehend the thirteen Counties of Wales to produce nothing but Barrenness as for the language if any seem to make a question this I suppose may give satisfaction unto his curiosity That The beginning and original thereof as yet was never fully discovered some dream that it was had from the Gallick as Neighbouring others from the Romans as conquering yet is it so far different from all the Europaean and VVestern tongues at least as now they are and hath so little affinity and resemblance of them that its improbable from them to have either extraction or derivation They I think do not judge amiss who affirm that amongst the rest it received its first being at the confusion of Babel for it sounds most after the Eastern way having little or no congruence or affinity with the VVest unless some few words scattered and left by the subduing Roman and so lately
4122. Authors write very sparingly of the Acts of this King only all agree that during the time of his Reign which continued for the space of Forty years a time too long for any Tyrant he ruled insolently with Oppression and Tyranny Vindex nocentes sequitur a tergo Deus for being at his sports of Hunting he was slain and torn to pieces by Wolves and other savage Beasts leaving two Sons Mempricius and Manlius Jac bus Gordonus Scotus Fol 9. This King being Grandchild to Brute the Trojan I think it not amiss to give my Reader some satisfaction concerning Old Troy Si 300 annis stetit Regnum Trojanum caepisse oportet ante 4 annos in Dardano 1. Rege 2520. sed Dardani regnum rectius sub finem Ducatus Moysis ab hoc anno 2524. exortum putatur Nam a Dardano ad Ilii excidium sunt anni 296. Contigit igitur Ilii casus anno nostro 2820. sic enim peritiores numerant hos reges Dardanus regnavit annis 65. Erichtanus 46. Tros 40. Ilus 49. Laomedon 44. Priamus 52. Ex quibus colliguntur anni illi 296. hunc Regum Catologum ad suas neomenias reducit Scaliger lib. 2. Can. sub finem nostris annis probe consentit As for the Destruction of Troy what Homer the Greek and Virgil the Prince of Latine Poets have written I pass by as being Poetical fictions each striving to advance the glory of his own Nation But Gordon in the same Folio tells us Circae haec tempora praesertini sub Ducatu Judicis Aod ponitur Tros Dardaniae Rex tertius quem sequuti sunt alii Hic Tros à quo Trojani belium intulit Tantalo regi Phrygiae ob raptum Ganymedem and for this Gordon cites Eusebius 99. cap. 8. and so proceeds Juxta regum Catologum anno 2524. notatum sequitur hunc annum 5. quo regnavit Tros quod recte consentet tum cum Ilii excidio tum cum chronologia inter hunc Troem Tantalum ac denique cum anno quo Pelopidae Mycenis soli regnaverunt pulsis Heraclidis à Trois autem morte usque ad Atreum Tantali ex Penelope nepotem vix sunt anni 71. juxta regum annos notatos Dardania quidem anno Orbis 2524. Mycaenarum 99. c. 8. Consurgunt quoque anni tantum 20. ab obitu Trois usque ad mortem Acrisii caesi à Perseo nepote quando caepit Mycenarum regnum nec ab his alienus est Tatianus qui Pelopei è Phrygia exitum refert ad Acrisii tempora De Trojano Excidio Si quod supra indicavi condita Troja est anno Orbis 2524. Gordon fol. 11. inquem incidit initium Ducatus Josue Cum steterit Ilium annis 296. ut probatissimi Autores magno fere consensu testantur necesse est excidium hoc incidisle in annum 2820 ab orbe condito recte sunt enim sic ab eversa Troit ad primam Olympiadem anni 407. quod intervallum doctissimi quique probarunt Scaliger lib. 5. de Emen pro hac suae ac vera sententia veteres citat Ephorum Calisthenem Damascen Sane tabula Eratosthenis quam habet cap. 18. an Appen idem perspicue refert Hanc tabulam laudat sequitur Dionysius Halic Idemque intervallum ex Diodoro colligit citatus Scaliger ab hoc autem excidio ad Palilia anni consurgunt 432. hunc numerum saepe repetit Dionysius Halicar quem Glareanus alii libenter sequuntur c. MEMPRICIVS MEmpricius the Eldest Son of Madan his Father being dead by right of Inheritance was Crowned with the Royal Diadem of Brittaine about the Year of the worlds Creation 4142. but long he enjoyed not his Soveraignty without Troubles and Opposition for Manlius his younger brother a man of an Ambitious spirit Haughty and aspiring to Royal dignity would not content himself with any Titles of Honour under the degree of a King and therefore to bring this his Designe to his wisht for Period he resolves either to subdue or to expell his brother and to this purpose he insinuates himself into the bosomes of the Nobles casts Aspersions upon his brother Detracts and Malignes all his Actions and so farre prevailes that Rebellion is rais'd and an unnatural Warre taken in hand which was eagerly prosecuted on each part and continued a long time at length both Nobles and Commons finding Bellum minime bellum and perceiving these intestine broyles to wast their Country and threaten an utter Ruine incline to peace no fitter way can be thought upon then an attonement and reconciliation between the brothers and therefore a day of meeting is appointed and great hopes conceived of a final peace and Concord but Mempricius having now got his brother under the fair pretence of becoming friends into his power to avoid all Jealousies and Fears of future deceit and Treachery becomes a Traytor himselfe and by Treason caused his own brother to be slain making that saying of the Poet good Rara est concordia fratrunt This perfidious and tragical scene performed Mempricius his brother Manlius being taken away enjoyes as he conceives a happy peace this peace makes him forgetful both of his person and Honour and now fearing nothing he contemns even the Deity and precipitates not only himself but his subjects also into Sloth Idlenesse and Treachery and when the Gate is set open and free scope given to sin though nemo repente fit pessimus yet those who forsake Grace and Abandon themselves over to unlawful lusts and pleasures fall from one sin to another till they arrive at last at the very Jawes of Hell so fares it with Mempricius his Wife or Wives give him not content the fairest and choicest beauties must be his Concubines and these as many as his own wandering fancy shall think fit in these horrid sins he wallowes with all sensuality I know some of Epicurus his Scholars or rather Atheists will excuse Mempricius for this his Platonick as it is now commonly stiled love and tell you that whatsoever is natural is no sin and out of this deduce a most damnable consequence or conclusion which chast ears abhor to hear but this natural act as it is called ●●●fied not Mempricius he falls to that which is most unnatural the sin of Sodomy with wild and brutish Creatures and by this means becomes hateful both to God and Man but not without just punishment from Heaven for intending to disport hemself in hunting becomes a prey to wild beasts and by them is torn to pieces after he had enjoyed the Kingdome twenty years leaving to succeed him in his Throne a son by his lawful wife called Ebrank Mempricius his Reign is observed by those who write of him to have been Tyrannical Plutarch though a Panim saith De sera numinis vindicta that God doth serve himself of wicked Tyrants as of Hangmen to execute his justice upon others no lesse or more wicked then they and that as poysons are sometimes
Stamford in Lincolnshire for his design and purpose Mr. Cambden according to his wonted custome not willing to write any thing which may advance the glory of the Welsh or Brittish Nation giveth a slender account of this place saying that the Saxons called it Sveanford ex Saxo structili and that Edward the Elder built them a Castle against the Danes which at this day is quite demolished and that Henry the Second gave totam Villatam de Stanford quae erat in Dominio suo exceptis feodis Baronum Militum ejusdem Villae Richardo de Humetz sive Humete c. and that afterwards Gulielmus comes Warrenae eandem tenuit per voluntatem Regis Joannis that in the time of Edward the 3. by reason of a division and falling out amongst the Scholars of Oxford the one Part came hither and here opened Schools and began a third University of which as yet the Citizens boast but the intestine broiles between the Yorkists and Lancastrians so defaced this famous place that as yet it hath scarce recovered its pristine glory yet it so flourisheth at this day that it hath an Alderman and twenty four Brethren seven parish Churches two Hospitals the one very fair and ancient built by a Citizen of that place called William Brown the other of late Erection founded by William Cecill Baron of Burleigh the Nestor of his times But let us look a little beyond the Saxons by Mr. Cambden's leave the Author cited in the Margent writing of K. Bladud saith Richardus Vitus l. 2. Hunc principem diustuduisse Athenis indeque secum abduxisse quatuor Philosophos qui Scholas aperirent in Britannia eo loco quo post Vrbs dicta Stanfordia structa fuit quo universi litterarum artiumque studiosi magno numero undicunque convenerunt adeo ut Juvenalis Saty. 15. dixerit Nunc totus Graias nostrasque habet Orbis Athenas This Prince studied long at Athens and from thence brought with him four Philosophers who taught School at Stanford whither such as desired Literature and the knowledge of Arts flocked from all places nay he further bringeth in Caius Plinius lib. 3. c. 1. to tell you that propter illicitas artes Magicas usitatas in Britannia scripserit Magiam esse transgressam quoque Oceanum ad inane naturae provectam honorari quidem tantis ceremoniis in Brittannia ut ipsa illam Persis dedisse atque in ea re toti mundo quanquam ignoto sibi longeque distanti consentire videatur M. B. fol 206. 8. And again another Author having spoken of Cambridge proceedeth and saith so may we more then probably hold of our other Schools and Universities in this our Brittain then namely Stanford founded by King Bladud and furnished with Philosophers of Athens by him and so continued a place of Learning untill the coming of St. Augustine hither when it was by the Pope interdicted for Heresies This King not only founded Stanford and furnished it with Philosophers to instruct Youth in learning and other qualities to inform and beautifie the intellectual part but built the famous City now called Bath and so provided Waters and hot Springs that his Subjects might not alone take pleasure and delight in those warm and pleasing Baths but even by their occult Vertue find ease and relief for their infected and diseased limbs and members William of Malmesbury will have Julius Caesar the Author of these Baths But Richardus Vitus tells the old Monk Id opus falso à quibusdam Julio Caesari assignari cum ille ad illum locum nunquam pervenisset That work is falsly attributed to Julius Caesar who never came so far as that place Another Monk will have St. David to have been Causer of the hot baths saying At the place now called Glastenburie Father Hierom F●●ter in his Saints Lives printed at D●ray 1632. in the life of S. David 1. Ma●t He viz. St. David built a Church new from the ground and coming thence to Bath he cured the Infection of the Waters thereabouts and with his holy prayers and benedictions gave them a perpetual heat and made them very healthfull and soveraign for many diseases ever after as to this day is experienced to the wonderfull comfort and commodity of all England But this Relation is as true as is that other of his where out of ignorance he placeth the Metropolitan See of Wales at West-chester and that 's as true as that the Sea burns for I will make it appear in the sequel of this Book that Caer leon upon Vsk and not Caer leon gaur was the Arch-bishops See Ptolomeus calls this Caer Badon Aquas folis Thermas and aquae calidae some called it Akmanchester i. e. the City of such as are sick or troubled with aches Stephanus calls this city Badiza the Latines Bathonia the English Bath Cambden will have this city to be Caer Paladur that is the city of warm or hot-water but will not admit Bleyden cloyth i. e. Bleyden the Magician to be the builder and therefore rather then allow the Foundation thereof to a Brittain he produceth no Founder at all Solinus cap. 24. saith In Brittannia sunt fontes calidi opiparo apparatu exculti ad usus mortalium quibus fontibus praesul est Minervae numen in cujus aede ignes perpetui c. In Brittannie there are hot baths adorned with exquisite buildings for mortals use and convenience dedicated to Minerva in whose sacred Temple is kept perpetual fire which is never permitted to go out Athenaeus scribit Herculi balnea consecrata esse quae sua natura scatent è visceribus terrae sane quidem Graeci Palladem Herculi post labores exantlatos lavacra primum administrasse den onstrant These two Acts of this learned King had he proceeded no farther had left his Name famous to all Posterity as likewise his building a Temple to Apollo and placing therein a ●●amen which after in King Lucius his time became the See of a Christian bishop but pride and vain-glory made him become ridiculous as indeed these two Vices have the power to make all men who follow them his vain thoughts being composed more of Air then any other Element tickle him with ambition to leave the Earth and live in the Air he beats his brains how to bring this his new conceived invention to a timely birth he provides feathers wax glew and all such Utensils as his abused brains apprehended necessary to quillifie him into the nature of a fowl or rather a fool and thus like Esops crow deckt with feathers not his own he appears more formidable and monstrous then the Griffons in the Mountains of Armenia Et ignotas animam dimittit in artes Naturamque novat nam ponit in ordine pennas A minima caeptas longam breviore sequente Et postquam manus ultima caepto Imposita est geminas opifex libravit in alas Ipse suum corpus motaque pependit in aura
and ten poor people with a Collegiat Church a Dean twelve Canons Prebendaries as many Vicars sufficiently provided for with Revenues wherein himself lyeth buried and it was the greatest ornament of that City untill the hand of King Henry the eight lay over heavy upon all the like foundations and laid their lofty tops at his own feet In this City also was buried another Crouch-back viz. Richard the third in the Church of the Gray-Friers but now nothing remains of his Monument but only the stone chest wherein he was laid a drinking Trough now for horses in a common Inne This place hath given the Titles of honour to many Honourable Families year 1057 1057. 1. Algar the Saxon. year 1103 1103. 2. Edwin died 1071. 3. Robert de Bellamonte Gules a cinquefoyle Ermine 4. Robert de Bellamont 5. Robert de Bellamont L. Steward 6. Robert de Bellamont L. high Steward 7. Simon de Montfort married Amicia sister and coheir to the last Earl Robert L. high Steward 8. Simon de Montfort L. high Steward Gules a Lion rampant his tail double forked salteir wise Argent 9. Edmond Earl of Lancaster L. high Steward 10. Tho. Earl of Lancaster L. high Steward 11. Hen. D. of Lancaster L. high Steward 12. Henry D. of Lancaster L. high Steward England a Label of 5. points Ermine 13. William of Bavaria Earl of Heinalt married the Lady Maud of Lancaster Bendis losengè Argent and Azure 14. John of Gaunt D. of Lancaster L. high steward Henry D. of Lancaster Lord high steward Quarterly France and England a Label of 3. points Ermine Robert Dudleigh Lord Denbigh c. Or a Lyon rampant his tail double forked Vert. Robert Sidney Viscount Lisle descended of a sister of the said Robert Robert Sidney Earl of Leicester Or a Phaon Azure CORDEILLA THis Heroine Lady after just revenge taken upon her two sisters husbands and her fathers and husbands death by the consent of most Writers by the joynt suffrages and votes of the Brittains was admitted to the Royal Scepter in the year from the worlds creation four thousand three hundred and ninety eight years she governed her people and subjects for the space of five years with great applause and general liking but the two sons of her sisters Morgan of Albania and Cunedagius of Cambria and Cornwal envying her prosperity and thinking themselves injured in their birth-right their grandfather Leir having divided the kingdom equally betwixt their Mothers upon their Marriages conspire together and mustering their forces invade Cordeilla and reduce her to that necessity that she is taken prisoner and by her merciless Nephews cast into Gaol which she patiently a while endured but perceiving no hopes to regain her freedom or repossess her kingdom scorning to be any longer a slave to her insulting enemies seeing she could not free her body from bondage with true Trojan and masculine Heroick Spirit she makes a divorce between her purer soul and encaged carcass giving it free power to pass into another world leaving those parts which participated of drossie mold to be interred again in the earth from whence at first it came at Leicester in the Temple of Janus by the Sepulchre of her father Cunedagius and Morgan THe obstacle which hindered the designs of these two aspiring Princes Cordeilla the gallant Brittish Amazon and Virago being by violent death perpetrated by her own hand taken out of the way divide the kingdom betwixt them and became both kings in the year of the world four thousand four hundred and three but this gallantry lasted not long for the Court-Gnats whose life is a perpetual buzzing of news and flatteries fall upon the ear of Morgan and so fill his head with projects that he highly conceives he is injured by the equal dividing of the kingdom and thus discourses with himself And am not I the son of Gonorilla and she the eldest daughter of my Grand-father to me then as lawfull Heir Brittains Crown belongs Why then do I admit a corrival competitor and co-equal one firmament admits not two Suns nor one kingdom two kings no reason I should lose my birth-right no I am resolved I will not Cunedagius shall know that Morgan can rule the Brittains without his help this fire once kindled his flattering parasites bring fewel enough to augment it Cunedagius must bear rule no longer a private life or none at all must content him it is no small policy for Princes to have Spies in neighbouring Courts Cunedagius is quickly enformed of all the passages of his Cozen Morgan and thinks there is no security in delays and therefore puts himself into a posture as well to offend as defend yet to make his case the better and to ingratiate himself with the subjects he sends Messengers to Morgan who is already firing and destroying his Territories to Treat of a reconciliation and atonement but Morgan puft up with his imagined good success and thinking the offer of his kinsman to proceed either from fear or want of ability to resist him lends a deaf ear to the Treaty of peace and will have no other Arbitrator but the sword Cunedagius now resolved comes into the field and offers battell to his enemy his cause being just the Celestial powers seem to second his attempts and he who would have all or nothing is put to flight where the Conqueror makes use of his advantage and taking occasion by the foretop to prevent all hopes of recruiting and rallying again so hotly pursues his victory that Morgan is chased from place to place from Province to Province till being beaten into Cambria now Wales a Territory belonging to his Mortal Foe and there being most sharply put to it lost his life yet with this honour that that Country ever since from him hath had the appellation of Glanmorgan which is as much as to say in the vulgar tongue Morgans Land and thus after two years joyntlie reigning with his kinsman Morgan departed this life leaving Cunedagius to rule alone Cunedagius to shew an humble thankfulness to his Gods for so great a Victory having fully setled his Kingdom erects a stately Temple to Mars at Perth which is now St. Johns town in Albania now abusively called Scotland then a part of Brittannia and inhabited by the Brittish Nation We finde saith my Author in several Authors and Antiquaries to speak in their words that 800. years before the coming of Christ Cunedagius King of all Brittain Mr. Broughton fol. 336. 6. builded a Temple of Mars at Perth that is now St. Johns town in Scotland and placed there a Flamen Therefore we may not singularly deny unto this old city a Flamens Seat which Antiquaries generally grant unto all such in this time to have been changed into a Bishops See If any one ask what I have to do with Scotland my Scene being only the Brittish History I answer that to the great glory of the Brittains that which is now called Scotland was formerly
Brittains in the year of the World four thousand eight hundred seventy and nine The English Chronicle calls this King Seizill either he lived in great peace and tranquil●ity as well he might his most worthy Parents both the heroick Prince his Father and beautiful and prudent Queen his Mother having quite extinguisht all even the least sparks of Sedition and Rebellion and left the Realm in perfect quietnesse or else the Records of his life perished for Writers relate very little of him only Mr. Howes tells us as the Scotch Writers say that he Reigned seven years and that in the very first year after his coming to the Crown Picts arrive in Brittain the Picts arrived in Brittain and possessed those parts which now be the Marches of both Kingdomes betwixt England and Scotland and confusedly makes no distinction betwixt Scots and Picts whereas Authors affirm that the Highland-men the natural Scots indeed are supposed to descend from the Scythians who with the Getes infesting Ireland The Author of a Book of Maps printed 1646. printed for Wil. Humble Anonymus left both their Issue there and their manners apparent in the wild Irish and Highlanders even to this day And from Scythia as is thought the name of Scots grew for so the Netherlands by Scutten expresse indifferently the Scythian and Scot so Gildas calleth the Irish Brittains Scythians so King Elfred in translating the History of Orosius turneth Scots in Scyttan and so saith Walsingbam from one and the same Original Scythe Scytici Scotae Scotini take their names as from Getae Getici Goti Gotici have done As for the Picts saith the same Author anciently inhabiting part of that Kingdome they were Inborn Brittains and such as thither fled to avoid the Romans servitude whose Names began first to be distinguished under Dioclesian the Emperour when they were termed Picts from painting their bodies like the Brittains as saith Flavius Vigetius which is more strengthned for that the Northern Brittains converted by St. Columb are called Brittan Picts but the Conversion of that Nation may more properly be attributed to Saint Ninian Ninianus Bernicius ex Regio Brittannorum sanguine procreatus Italiam adhuc adolescens literarum studio petit Romae apud divini Verbi ministros mysteria Veritatis edoctus ad plenum celer in-patriam remigrabat ubi Magister Paedonomus non vulgaris concreditum à Deo Talentum per Brittannorum Scotorum Australiumque Pictorum terras latissime profudit Hujus pia industria Picti primum relicto Idololatriae cultu St. Ninian a Brittain veram Christi fidem percepere Ninian born of the Royal Brittish Bloud being yet a youth went into Italy to follow his Studies and at Rome was fully taught the Mysteries of Truth by the Teachers of the divine Word and then returned into his own Country where becoming a Master and Instructor above the ordinary pitch of men he distributed the Talent bestowed upon him by Almighty God amongst the Brittains Jo. Bal. li. de Ser. Brit. cen 1. iu Niniano Bernicio Hector Boetius Scot. Hist li. 7. Fol. 119. Scots and Southern Picts cast off the bondage of Idolatry and embraced the sweet yoak of Christianity And for those holy labours was in former times as our Histories testifie by all throughout all Brittanny called by the title of Doctor and Inctructor of the Scots Picts and Brittains Scotorum Pictorum Britonumque Doctor Paedonomus non vulgaris eo nomine omnibus qui Albionem incolunt vel hac nostra aetate in multa veneratione habitus and in that respect was had in great veneration by all the Inhabitants of the Kingdome of Albion The first King I read of of that Nation that was Christian was Hiergustus King of the Picts who with his Pictish people and subjects were Christians Mr. Br. fo 582. and publickly professed that Religion but in the time of Maximus all the Scots were banished out of this Land which was in the year of Christ Hec. Boe. l. 6. Histo Buchan Rer. Sco. l. 4. in Rege 39. 379. ' Annus à Christi adventu in carnem tricentesimus septuagesimus nonus the Picts were generally and publickly instructed and professed Christians And also in the days of King Fincomark of Scotland who reigned 47 years and died multis virtutibus nobilis and in the year of Christ 358. ' Salutis humanae anno trecentesimo quinquagesimo octavo the Picts had received the Faith of Christ and before that time For whilst King Fincomark reigned Annal. Scot. Hec. Boe. sup l. 6. fol. 104. Hollish Hist of Ireland Fincomarko Rege Scotis adhuc imperante By divers Writers many of the Irish people received the law of Christ by means of a worthy Christian woman of the Picts as the Scottsh and other Histories testifie Per id tempus mulier Christianae pietatis cultrix Pictici eam fuisse sanguinis Scotici asserunt Annales Regina insinuata Christi nomen illi mirifice praedicavit reverendumque effecit This our Brittish St. Ninian deserveth eternal memory for converting the Picts Interea Sanctus Ninianus Australes Pictos quibus adhuc error gentilis inhaerens Idola venerari ac colere compellebat aggrediens Evangelii veritatem sequentibus signis praedicabat caeci vident claudi ambulant leprosi mundantur surdi audiunt mortui resurgunt oppressi à daemonibus liberantur sicque fides suscipitur error abdicatur destructis Templis Ecclesiae eriguntur currunt ad salutis lavacrum divites pauperes gratias Deo agunt in insulis quae procul sunt habitantes Ordinavit Presbyteros Episcopos consecravit totam terram per certas parochias divisit In the mean time St. Ninian going to the Picts which yet were Pagans and worshipped Idols preached the Truth of the Gospell unto them with these signes following The b lind see the lame walk lepers are cleansed the dead are raised and they which were oppressed with Divels are delivered And so the Faith is received Error abandoned Pagan Temples are destroyed Christian Churches erected Rich and poor are baptized those that inhabit in the Isles a far off give thanks to God He ordained Priests consecrated Bishops and divided the whole Land by certain Parishes Bede Hist lib. 3. cap. 4. Capgr in St. Ninio Guli Malm. l. 4. de gest Pont Angl. The first Stone building in Britt And having thus converted and confirmed the people unto and in the Faith of Christ being the chiefest end of his Mission and coming hither he returned to his Church Confirmatis in fide omnibus ad Ecclesiam suam est regressus This House and Episcopal Church which he now returned unto was the same which he had built before of stone called for the rarenesse of such building in Brittain that being the first as our History saith and thereby named Candida Casa the white House or Church at a place called Witerne between Scotland and England as they are now termed upon the Sea coast
rest of the Voyage he made by Land to a Bolein in Picardie Gessoriacum in Gallia where he embarked His forces being safely transported into the Isle were led towards the River Thamesis where Plantius and Vespasian with their power attended his coming so the two Armes being joyned together crossed the River again the Brittains that were assembled to encounter them began to Fight which was sharply maintained on both sides till in the end a great number of the Ilanders being slain the rest fled into the woods through which the Romans pursued them even to the Town of b Malden in Essex Camolodanum which had been the Royal seat of Canobeli●● and was then one of the most defensible places in the Dominions of the Trynob●b● this town they supprized and afterwards fortifyed planting therein a Colony of old Souldiers to strengthen those parts and to keep the Inhabitants therein obedience Then were the Brittains disarmed howbe●● Claudius remitted the confiscation of their goods for which favour the Ilanders erected a Temple and an Altar unto him honouring him as a God Now the states of the Country round about being so weakned by the losse of their Neighbours and their own civil dissensions as they were unable to resist the Roman power any longer began to offer their submission promising to obey and live peaceably under the Roman Government and so by little and little the hither part of the Isle was reduced into the form of a Province In honour of this Victyro Claudius was divers times saluted by the name of Imperator contrary to the Roman custome which permitted it but once for one expedition The Senate of Rome also upon advertisement of his successe decreed that he should be called Brittanicus and that his son should have the same Title as a surname proper and hereditary to the Claudian Family Massilina his Wife the monster of her sex for impudency and lasciviousnesse had the first place in council assigned her as Sivia the Wife of Augustas sometime had and was also licensed to ride in a Chariot at his return to Rome which was the sixth month after his departure thence having continued but sixteen dayes onely in this Isle he entred the City in triumph performed with more then usual ceremonies of state whereat certaine Presidents of Provinces and banished men were permitted to be present On the top of his pallace was placed a crown set with stems and fore-parts of ships which the Romans called Corona Navalis as a sign of the conquest of the Ocean divers Captains that had served under him in Brittany were honoured with Triumphal ornaments yearly playes were appointed for him and two Arches of Triumph adorned with Trophies were erected the one at Rome the other at Gessoriacum where he embarked for Brittany to remain to succeeding Ages as perpetual records of his victory and a work of such merit to have subdued so small a part of this Island About this time as it may be probably conjectured Christian Religion being yet green and of small growth began to cast forth some small sparkes of her brightnesse in the Isle of Brittain whether Christians of Rome and other countries then flying persecution resorted for safety and quietnesse as to a place remote and by reason of the Wars and Troubles there not much subjected to inquisition whereas also divers Brittains remaining at Rome where Christianity then increased either for Hostages The History of Great Brittain part 1. fol. 35. or detained as Prisoners or haply for some private respects of profit and pleasure had opportunity and liberty to converse with the Roman Christians and to be by them instructed and confirmed in the Faith of Christ The gate being now set open by this Author to discourse of our Famous and Saintly Brittains who even with the very first submitted themselves to the most heavenly and sweet yoak of their divine Master and Lord eternal Redeemer of Mankind God and Man Christ Jesus I shall endeavour to make it evident by the Testimony of Learned and apporved Antiquities to the great glory of the Brittish Nation that divers of them were the adopted sons and children of their eternal Father and the never-erring Catholick Church their Mother within few years after the Death and Passion of our most blessed Redeemer To begin therefore this intended Relation I will begin with St. Mansuetus the Disciple of St. Peter the Apostle and by him ordained the first Bishop of Tullum or Teul in Lorain who was born in that part of Brittain which now and for many years hath been called Scotland but whether he was a Brittain or a Scot will more fully appear hereafter and that he was by birth that part of the I le now called Scotland being at that time a part of Brittain and long after which among others Martial the Poet maketh manifest for that time who writing to Quintus Ovidius who was to to travel into those parts saith Quinte Caledonios Ovidi visure Britannos a Caius Calig Quintus Ovidius Roman called so To view the Caledonian Brittains now doth go St. Mansuetus a Brittain by St. Peter Consecrated Bishop of Tullum In the time of this Emperor we read that St. Peter the Apostle consecrated our holy Countryman St. Mansuctus whom he had Christened before in the time of Tiberius a Bishop and sent him to Tullum in Loraine The inhabitants of Tullum in Loraine had for their Apostle and first Bishop of their Faith in Christ St. Mansuetus a Scot by Nation the Disciple of St. Peter the Apostle and companion of St. Clement This is testified also by many others as Gulielmus Eisengrenius Antonius Democharez Petrus de Natalibus with others saying Mansuetus by Nation a Scot so they term our Northern Brittains according to the last Name thereof born of a Noble Family the Disciple of Simon Bar-Jonas the chief of the Apostles fellow of Saint Clement the Bishop of Metz was consecrated by Saint Peter the first Bishop in the city of Tullum Hitherto these Authors onely the difference I find between them is this Mr. Bro. f. 31.3 that Arnoldus Mirmanunus saith St. Clement whose companion Mansuetus was was Bishop of Metz by St. Peters appointment in the 40 year of Christ when Caius Caligula was Emperor and Eisengrenius tells us that St. Mansuetus was Bishop of Tullum in the year 49. eight or nine years after which may easily be reconciled together by saying St. Mansuetus was sent by St. Peter in the year of Christ 40. and took not upon the charge of Tullum untill the year 49. in the mean time being otherwise or elsewhere imployed in preaching the Gospel of Christ Neither will it avail or prove any thing to the contrary for any man to object that S. Peter was not yet come to Rome nor after until the beginning of the Empire of Claudius for although he came not thither to make any residence there til about that time yet this nothing hindred
seem to say Petrus Cluniacensis and I may add Tertullian tells us that the people of Brittain in the North where the Scots now be were the first Christians Petrus Cluniacensis calleth the Scots the more ancient Christians and hereto we may add the testimony of Tertullian who saith the places of the Brittains which were unaccessible to the Romans were subject to Christ and addeth of the Brittains the name of Christ reigned among them which our English late Authors in their Theatre confirm in this manner It is certain that the Brittains were with the first Converts and Tertullian who lived within 200 years of Christs Nativity sheweth no lesse who the more to provoke the Jewes against whom we wrote calleth to witnesse the fruitful encrease of the Gospel of salvation through many countries and nations and among them nameth the Brittains to have received the word of life The power whereof saith he hath pierced into those places whither the Romans could not come Whence Petrus Cluniacensis supposeth the Scottish men the more ancient Christians The like have other late Writers and those their cited Authors which cannot be otherwise verified but by applying this preaching of the faith of Christ unto those Northern Brittains either by this their holy Countryman St. Mansuetus the first Bishop we ●●n find of this Kingdome or some other associate of his sent hither at or about that time 〈◊〉 the same holy Apostle St. Peter for in all other respects whether we speak of the Brittish Christians here in the time of Claudius or Nero of which these modern Antiquaries will tell us more hereafter or the coming of St. Joseph of Arimathea in his Religious companions into this Kingdome in the days of Nero or the general conversion of the Kingdome of Brittain unto the trenches of Severus in the time of King Lucius by Elutherius all these were long before the conversion of the Scots in the time of K. Donaldus either by Pope Victor or Zepherinus as Harrison rather supposeth the first time which is assigned by any being in the 203 year of Christ and if it was under Pope Zepherine it was after that time for he was not chosen Pope until the year 209. before which time or the beginning it self of the papacy of St. Victor which was in the year 198. this our Brittain on this side the division had generally and publickly received the faith of Christ And the very words of Tertullian living and dying before the conversion of Scotland within the first two hundred years writing in his book against the Jews that the places of Brittain which the Romans could never conquer or come to did acknowledge Christ and his name did reign in them do manifestly convince it to be so For Tertullian living and writing in Affrica could not possibly take notice of things done here in an Island so far off presently after they were first effected and by no means could either he or any other Writer speak of things done so long after truly to report them done so long before he had been the greatest prophet that ever was St. Claudia of whom mention is formerly made was the daughter of Brittish parents which then lived as Hostages at Rome to the Emperor for this land and Kingdome of Brittain and by that means it was their happiness and honour to give the first entertainment to that blessed Apostle St. Peter at his first coming thither as that Roman tradition of that their house after by marriage with the holy Brittish Lady Claudia Mr. Bro. f. 53.3 their daughter and heir with Pudens the Senator Floren. Wigor Hist an 38. and 60. Stow and Howes and so long after this coming of St. Peter to Rome named the house of Pudens the Senator assures us which I prove by another undoubted tradition of the Romans That St. Peter was 15 years in Rome before St. Paul came thither so writeth Florentius Wigorn with the common consent of Antiquity and Writers both ancient and modern And the Roman Martyrology tells us of this Pudens the Senator Mr. Bro. f. 56. that he was baptized by the Apostles And there calleth him plainly Pudens the Senator Father of St. Pudentiana the Virgin so that being baptized by the Apostles St. Peter and St. Paul for no others were then in Rome this could not be by true account untill at the soonest fiveteen years after St. Peter was first received in that house And if the Martyrology could carry that interpretation to understand by the Apostles in the plural number one Apostle one proper constructoin yet by this Friendly and more then lawful interpretation he must needs be baptized by St. Peter and so also a most unprobable thing that divers Christians then being in Rome St. Peter would first commit himself to a Pagan or Catechumen and he and the Christians of Rome make such an house their chiefest Church and place of Assembly for Divine things Martial 11. Epig. 54. de Clau. Ruff. This Lady Claudia though born of Brittish parents yet was not born in this Isle Martiall saith Claudia caeruleis cum sit prognata Brittannis but not in Brittain only she is called of the same Poet peregrina a stranger as the children of strangers usually are termed both with us and other people And the time of her birth and age so convince And whereas we find no memory at all of any natural parents of St. Pudens dwelling at Rome we have sufficient testimony not only of the permanent dwelling both of the Father and Mother of St. Claudia there but that by divers probable Arguments they dwelled in that very House where Pudens continued with them after his marriage with their Daughter and were holy and renowned Christians although their native Country of Brittain hath hitherto been almost wholly deprived of their honour and so must needs be by the Roman Tradition the first entertainers of St. Peter in Rome for as a late Author writeth Pudens and Claudia were two young persons but faithful Christians Godwin com of Brittain p 17. c. 3. 2 Tim. 4.21 at that time unmarried when Paul writ the second Epistle unto Timothy which was in the last year of Nero as all men suppose that I have read except Baronius and that they were married in the later end of Vespasian or about the beginning of Domitian Therefore Pudens being so young in the end of Nero his Empire although we grant him then newly married yet this was by all Computations at the least 24 years after the coming of St. Peter to Rome and so it could not possibly be Pudens but the parents of Claudia our Brittains that entertained first St. Peter in their House at Rome who for certain being Brittains of Noble Order and Degree and living in Rome as Hostages by all judgement they enjoyed more freedome and liberty in matters of Religion then the Romans did at that time The Emperors of Rome then nor long after intermedling with the
the house Mr. Broug fol. 59. 6. or all and make him a stranger there I cannot find it by St. Paul onely repeating them of one family or any other warrant For it was plain here by the Apostle that he was a chief and principal Christian in Rome and first named among those worthies and before St. Linus a Bishop then and Pudens a Senator and absolutely there set down as their chiefest receiver friend and patron which cannot agree 〈◊〉 any other better then to the Father of St. Claudia St. Eubulus probably a Brittain this Father in Law to her Husband St. ●●dens and first entertainer of St. Peter the Apostle in Rome by the Romans tradition for neither Dorotheus the continuator of Florentius Wigor nor any other that write of the Disciples there place him among Clergy-men and St. Paul which giveth him that honour in that place clearly proveth he was none of his Disciples then in Rome for he writeth in the same place only Luke is with me No Martyrology speaketh of him neither any Historian or Interpreter of Scripture to my reading setteth down of what Nation he was but leave him for a stranger as likewise many do St. Claudia Therefore except better Authority can be brought against me seeing he is by the Apostle so signified and placed the first in that family and salutation Eubulus greeteth you 2 Tim. 4. and Pudens and Linus and Claudia there is no cause yet I find to deny him to be the owner and Master of that house that first entertained St. Peter in Rome and he himself the first happy man that gave that glorious Apostle entertainment there that he was our most renowned Countryman of Brittain and Father of Lady Claudia for there is no other by any probable conjecture was likely to perform this duty in that house Pudens as before was either then unborn or an Infant of his own parents Father or Mother there is no mention in antiquities that either they were Christians or that they dwelt at all in Rome much lesse in that house being inhabitants of Sabinum and by Country Sabinites far distant from Rome And so there is none left unto us to be a Christian and left to entertain that heavenly Messenger and Guest S. Peter in that time and place but the renowned parents of St. Claudia then dwelling in Rome and there confined to a certain house and place of permanency by command of the Roman power to whom with many other Noble Brittains they were hostages and pledges for the fidelity and obedience of this Kingdome to the Roman Emperours at that time Mr. Broug fol. 59. 6. To strengthen this opinion we may add that St. Paul sendeth to St. Timothy his Disciple the salutations of Eubulus before all others of which sending the greetings of so few by name it will be no easie search to find out a better or more probable reason then this that St. Timothy so neer and beloved a scholar of St. Paul lodged usually in this house he also was there with his Master entertained by Eubulus the owner thereof and by that Title of his Hospitality obtained the first place in that salutation otherwise no man will doubt but S. Linus Bishop by calling so honourable in the Church of Christ ought and should have been named before him And that this familiar acquaintance between St. Timothy and these our holy Christian Brittains received original from their ancient entertainment of St. Timothy in their house in Rome many years before this their salutation in the Epistle of St. Paul it is evident for St. Paul being now lately come to Rome when he wrote this Epistle neither he nor St. Timothy were after St. Pauls first dismission from prison there so long before it is manifest that these though the Lady young in years were ancient Christians at that time and we have an uncontroleable warrant from St. Paul himself in his Epistle to the Hebrews that St. Timothy was at Rome when he was first prisoner there in the beginning of Nero his Empire For thus he writeth Know you that our brother Timothy is set at liberty Thus St. Paul writeth from Rome in the time of his first imprisonment there and so maketh these our country Christians to be acquaintance of St. Timothy then to be more ancient in the school of Christ then either St. Timothy or St. Paul at his first coming to Rome when there was none to instruct either them or others in Christian Religion at Rome but St. Peter and his Disciples I add to this the charge and warning which Martial the poet gave before to Pudens Rufus my lines from thy Wives Father keep an evident testimony that they then lived in one house together and so the poems sent to Pudens might easily come to his Father in law his hands and reading except Pudens hae been so forewarned to keep and conceal them from him whereof there had been no danger nor need of that admonition if they had lived in distinct places and not in one House And thus much of the Father of the Lady Claudia Concerning her holy Mother also so good a Nurse and Tutrix to so happy a child we are not altogether left desolate without hope but we may probably find her forth for the honour of this Kingdome her Country And except the Roman Historians can find unto us a Christian Father to St. Pudens and dwelling with his wife in the same House as I have found unto them a Father unto St. Claudia and Father in law to Pudens an holy Christian dwelling in that house before Pudens his time by Nation of this Kingdome which by that is said before they cannot doe seeing that Noble Matron which is acknowledged by the Roman Writers even Baronius to have dwelt in that House and Grandmother to St. Claudia her children Priscilla foundresse of a Church-yard in Rome of her Name Mother of St. Claudia very probable Baronius in Annot. in Martyrolog Rom. July the 8. St. Pastor Sen. Hermes in Act. St. Pudens Baron Tom. 1. Annal. Anno 159. an 166. must needs be her Mother her Fathers wife and Mother in law to Pudens I am bold to assign that glorious and renowned St. Priscilla Foundresse of that wonderful and religious Church-yard to be the same Brittish Christian Lady Baronius though staggering sometimes in his opinion herein saith plainly There was a most Noble Matron in Rome called Priscilla Grandmother of the Virgins Pudentia and Praxedes of whom there is mention in the Acts of Pudentia written by St. Pastour The like he writeth in other places whereas she is there by him called the Mother of Pudens he must needs be understood to speak in their phrase which ordinarily all Mothers in law use by the absolute name of Mothers as the common custom is Sometimes in other places Baronius saith St. Priscilla was wife to Pudens and Mother to St. Novatus Pudentiana and Praxedes so likewise doth Zepherinus
9. Sect. 5. As concerning St. Peters preaching himself in Brittain the Theatre of Great Brittain saith If Peter were here at all it was before he went to Rome and that the Gospell was preached here before it was in Rome if Peter were the first as some hold who preached there both which may be more probable if we consider the huge multitudes of Christians 1500 saith Baronius which dispersed themselves into all parts of the world upon the Martyring of St. Stephen at Hierusalem Baron Annal. Tom. 1. an Chr. 58. p. 597. Metaphr die 29 Jul. And Baronius himself speaketh in this manner When we knew that the rest of the Apoples were not sent into the West as into the Eastern parts of the world except only Barnabas who a short time taught the Ligurians or James if we shall consent to them who deliver that quickly to return from thence he went into Spain it manifestly appeareth that none of the others were sent into the West part of the world Therefore it was the Office of Peter who having travelled very many provinces of the East in preaching the Gospel now which was left to doe he should compasse the Western world and as Metaphrastes and others witnesse penetrate to the Brittains preaching the Faith of Christ Where he maketh it a certain known truth and manifestly apparent in Histories That none of the twelve Apostles but only St. Peter preached the Word of God in Brittain And among others he citeth Metaphrastes for that manifest Truth and when he had alledged divers and approved Authors for Christs appearing unto St. Peter and sending him into the West part of the World he addeth Metaphrastes consenting unto these writeth thus Our Lord appeared unto St. Peter in a Vision Baron Anueal Tom. 1. in Indice v. Petrus Theater of great Brit. l. 6. saying O Peter arise and go to the West for it hath need to be lighted by thy links and I will be with thee And he saith plainly for his own opinion Peter admonished by our Lord so to do came into the West and setteth down the time of his coming hither into Brittain in the time of Claudius the Emperor But to come to things certain and undoubted in this History of St. Peters living and teaching in this I le it is an Historical Verity out of Question that he was here both in the time of Claudius and Nero also his being here in the time of Claudius what time soever it was of his Empire must needs be long before St. Paul St. Joseph of Arimathea or any other that is thought to have preached here or came into these parts to which I add the Testimony of Gildas our most ancient and renowned Historian who in his Book De excidio Brittanniae of the Destruction of Brittain Gildas Epist de excid Brit. thus writeth So that this Iland might rather be deemed Romania then Brittania and whatsoever coyn it had either brass silver or gold it was stamped with the Image of the Roman Emperor in the mean time while these things were doing Christ who is the true Sun not onely from the temporal Firmament but from the high Tower of Heaven exceeding all times shewing his exceeding brightnesse to the whole world doth first afford his beams to wit his precepts to this Iland stiffe with frozen cold by a long distance of Land removed from the visible Sun Therefore seeing this Nation did first receive the Faith of Christ it must needs be in the time of Claudius when first and never before this Iland was in that state Mr. Bron. fol 86. 3. And this is that very time which so many Antiquaries Sameon Metaph. Surius Luppomannus Cambden Audrie Chesne and others agree upon that St. Peter preached in this Kingdom To which St. Paul himself by his Epistle written to the Romans at that time and amongst so many Christians in Rome then which he remembreth and never once saluting either St. Paul St. Aristobulus who some Authors say died here and by Martyrdome at Glastenbury Arnoldus Mermannus saith in the time of Domitian St. Clement Soph. Hier. li. de laboribus St. Petri Pauli Metap die 29. Junii Mr. Brough fol. 88. 4. or any one that is supposed to have been in these parts with St. Peter giveth no small allowance And St. Paul saluting the Family of Aristobulus in Rome and omitting him doth sufficiently insinuate that St. Peter had acquainted him with this his Western Voyage and taking St. Aristobulus with him or sending him hither before him for except Identity of Name both Sophronius and Metaphrastes deceive us St. Aristobulus brother to St. Barnabas was Father in law to St. Peter and so following him did likely at the coming of St. Peter to Rome remove his Family thither and left it there and he himself employed by St. Peter Probable that St. Peter was in Brittain or sent Disciples about the coming of Claudius hither Baron Tom. 1. ann in S. Petro. Auth. of the 3 conversions Math. West ann 49. Mich. Singel in Martyrio Dion Ariopac Clem. Rom. ep 1. Hist antiq Mos Eccles Cant. ad ci●c ann 49. Guliel Eiseng cent 1 dist 3. Math. West an 46. Eiseng sup in St. Mansuet Epist Gall. Arnold Mir. Therat Conc. gent. Cent. 1. Francis Bell. Cosmagr Tem. 1. in Tou● Mr. Brou f. 89. Anton. Doniocharuz l. 2. de miss Cont. Cal. c. 30. Eiseng cent 1. fol. 56. Bed Mart. prid Cal. Jan. Pet. de Natale l. 2. c. 25. Anton. part 1. tit 6. c. 25. Sect. 3. Mart. in Chr. Vicol in Hagiol Vn●r Carth. in fascul temp Eiseng Cent. 1. Fran. Bell. Tom. 1. p. 202. l. 2. Godwyn Con. of Brittain c. 1. p. 6. and p. 5. and by him ordained Bishop of this our Brittain must needs be here or in his journey hither at that time Whether St. Peter was here in or about the beginning of the Empire of Claudius and his Invasion of this Nation in the Fourth year of his Reign as the common opinion of Antiquaries is I dere not absolutely determine though divers together with Baronius incline to that opinion and reasons be not wanting to give probability to it For if Pomponia Graecina the wife of Aulus Plautius the Emperors Lieut. in Brittain was converted here to the Faith of Christ this being before the persecution which they say Claudius raised against the Christians the 49. year of Christ Aulus Plantius then being returned to Rome together with his Wife and Company to triumph there therefore she could not be converted here by any which they say fled hither from Rome in the beginning of that persecution and they can find no other Christians here except St. Peter or some other sent by him which they do not expresse our late Writers to perform that holy Office Secondly whereas it is manifest that St. Peter after his coming to Rome changed the darknesse of the West into most bright splendour and was commanded to
illuminate the West the more dark or obscure part of the World it carrieth great probability that he began this work before his coming from the East to Rome the second time after the Assumption of the B. Virgin Mary and had enterprized it here in Brittain before those dayes for we read in our own ancient Authors especially the Manuscript-Antiquity of Canterbury that about the 49. year of Christ Peter did take the Roman Chair again which must needs be to make it true after his return to Rome out of some of these West parts Thirdly We find in the French Annals cited by Gulielmus Eisengrenius divers Bishops consecrated by St. Peter in this time for our neighbouring Country of France as namely St. Maximinus or Maximus at Aquens or Aix and St. Lazarus at Marsiles in the year of Christ 46. St. Martial at Limoges and St. Julian at Maus in the same year St. Paulus Sergius at Narbon in the year 48. when St. Paul the Apostle was not come into these parts to place him there And to make this more credible If we follow that Author with his Antiquities St. Clement at Mentz and our Countryman St. Mansuetus at Toul in Loraine who in this opinion may be thought to be left there by St. Peter in his first return from Brittain to Rome being in his way from hence thither and this the rather because many Historians testifie he was ordained there by St. Peter and yet not any one remembreth any place from whence he was directed thither but only affirm as he expoundth them that he was consecrated Bishop of that place by St. Peter in the 49. year of Christ And this more probable because after this 49. year of Christ the French Historians which take pains to set down exactly the very year wherein their first Apostles and Bishops were ordained unto them by St. Peter which are many do not set down the year wherein any one after this time was Consecrated until the 54 of the Nativity of Christ by and before such time S. Peter was come unto Hierusalem and the Eastern parts the second time into these Western Nations of the world when he both was and stayed long time in this our Brittain And this giveth light unto us that about this year of Christ 54. S. Peter came hither to stay long time in Brittain for in this year as the French Antiquaries write S. Peter Consecrated many Bishops in France in his way from Rome to Brittain in this year as they write he ordained S. Sabinianus or Sabinus one of the 72 Disciples primate of all France Archbishop of Sens in which year also he Consecrated as these Authors say many other Bishops in France as St. Nathaniell spoken of in the Gospell and by some named Vrsianus S. Amator S. Potentianus S. Fronto and others among which the rather to induce us to think that S. Peter was then in France this S. Fronto then Consecrated Bishop by S. Peter was a Frenchman born as many Authorities prove unto us and so most likely to be Consecrated in his own Country and the Authority of S. Simeon Metaphrastes who was as Godwyn calls him An Author without exception who of all others doth most particularly set down the travailes of S. Peter will bring him into Brittain about this time the second time as it seemeth of his being here for bringing him to Rome as others do in the beginning of the Reign of Claudius he addeth of him when he had stayed not long with the Romans and baptized many one founded the Church Probably St. Peter came into Brittain the second time about the 54. year of Christ Ant. Demochar lib. 2. Eisengre f. 56. Pet. de Natal l. 2. c. 25. Anton. part 1. tit 6. c. 25. Fran. Bellef To. 1. p. 202. l. 2. Pet. de Natal apud Eisergr in St. Fronto in Gall. Mr. Br. f. 89. 5. and ordained Linus a Bishop he went into Spain then into Egypt and so into Hierusalem by revelation for the transmigration of the Mother of God then returned into Egypt and through Africk returned to Rome whence he came to Millan and Photice and so into Brittain which time being truly calculated will teach us that he came hither in or about the 54 year of Christ when in the way hither he made so many Bishops in France long before S. Paul came although as a prisoner first to Rome or any other Apostle thither or any other Western Nation For as it is proved before S. Peter going up to Hierusalem by revelation at the death of the blessed Virgin did stay but a short time there and in the Eastern parts in that Journey but the charge of the Western world being more particularly committed unto him before he returned unto it to discharge his duty here and although Metaphrastes bringeth him back again to Rome yet he speaketh of no stay he made there at his time but presently bringeth him into Brittain And Mr. Broughton to confirm this Verity of St. Peters being in Brittain hath these words When St. Peter miraculously testified concerning the Church of Westminster in London I have quoth St. Peter a place in the West part of London chosen to my self and dear unto me which sometimes I did dedicate with my own hands renowned with my presence and illustrate with divine miracles the name whereof is Thorney which cannot litterally and truly be understood of any spiritual Vision wherein St. Peter in his only glorified soul should appear as in the time of King Ethelbert we read he did but of his personal presence there before his death when and never after untill the day of Judgement and general Resurrection St. Peter had or at any time shall have proprias manus his own Hands or any part of his Body united unto his soul and yet he speaketh plainly here that he consecrated the place with his own Hands which is not true either in a spiritual Vision or where an assumpted Body is used for an assumpted Body cannot be called the own body of any person Having thus passed over and related unto you the admirable sanctity the constant faith ardent charity and pure and unfeigned zeal of our never to be forgotten pious Brittains I will return again to the Roman Transactions in this our Isle In those terms as you have heard before stood the state of Brittain when Plautius the Lieutenant was revoked and the persecution of the War committed to P. Ostorius Scapula who at his landing found all in an uproar the Brittains that were yet unconquered ranging the confederate Country aad using the greater violence for that they supposed the new Captain as unacquainted with his Army the Winter also being then begun would not come forth to encounter them but he knowing well that in such Cases the first successe breedeth either fear or confidence drew together with speed his readiest Cohorts and made towards them slaying such as resisted and pursuing the residue whom he found stragling
with ease shaken off the yoak and prevented our perill we as yet never touched never subdued but born to be free not slaves to the Romans we I say are now to make proof of our Valour and to shew in this encounter what manner of men Calidonia hath reserved in store for her self Do you think that the Romans be Valiant in War as they are wanton in peace no you are deceived for they are grown famous not by their own vertue but by our jars and discord while they make use of their enemies faults to the glory of their own Army composed of most divers Nations and therefore as by present prosperity it is holden together so doubtlesse if fortune frown on that side it will soon be dissolved unlesse you suppose the Gauls and the Germans and to our shame be it spoken many of our own Nation which now lend their lives to establish a Foreign Usurper to be led with any true-hearted and faithful affection No it is rather with terrour and distrust weak-workers of love which if you remove then those which have made an end to fear will soon begin to hate All things that may encourage and give hope of Victory are now for us The Romans have no Wives to hearten them on if they faint nor Parents to upbraid them if they fly most of them have no Country at all or if they have it is some other mens They stand like a sort of fearful persons trembling and gazing at the strangenesse of Heaven it self at the sea and the Woods And now the Heavens favouring our cause have delivered them mewed up as it were and fettered into our hands be not terrified or dismaid with the vain-shew and glittering of their gold and silver which of themselves do neither offend nor defend And think that even amongst our enemies we shall find some of our side when the Brittains shall acknowledge their own cause the Gauls remember their old Freedom and the rest of the Germans forsake them as of late the Vsipians did what then should we fear The Castles are empty the Colonies peopled with aged and impotent persons the free Cities discontented and distracted with factions whilst they which are under obey with ill will and they do govern and rule without right Here is the Roman General and the Army their Tributes Mines with other miseries inseparably following such as live under subjection of others which whether we are to endure for ever or speedily to revenge it lieth this day in this Field to determine wherefore being now to joyn Battel bear in mind I beseech you both your Ancestors which lived in the happy estate of Liberty and your Successors who if you fail in this enterprize shall live hereafter in perpetual servitude This Speech delivered with great vehemency of voice and action was chearfully received by the Brittains with a Song after their fashion accompanied with confused cries and acclamations As the Roman Cohorts drew together and discovered themselves whilst some of the boldest pressed forward the rest put themselves in array and Agricola albeit his Souldiers were glad of that day and could scarce with words have been withholden yet supposing it fit to say somewhat He encouraged them in this wise AGRICOLA his Speech to his Souldiers FEllow-souldiers and Companions in Arms your faithful diligence and service these eight years so painfully performed by the Vertue and Fortune of the Roman Empire hath at length conquered Brittany In so many Journeys so many Battels we were of necessity to shew our selves either valiant against the Enemy or patient and laborious above and against nature it self in all which Exploits we have both of us carried our selves as neither I desired better Souldiers nor you other Captains We have exceeded the limits I of my Predecessors and you likewise of yours The end of Brittany is now found not by Fame and Report but we are with our Arms and Pavillions really invested thereof Brittany is found and subdued In your marching heretofore when the passage of Bogs Mountains and Rivers troubled and tired you how often have I heard the valiant Souldiers say When will the Enemy present himself Lo now they are put out of their holes and here they are come lo now your wish lo here the place for trial of your Vertue and all things likely to follow in a good and easie course if you win contrariwise all against you if you lose For as to have gone so much ground escaped the Woods and Bogs and passed over so many arms of the sea are honourable testimonies of your forwardnesse so if we fly the advantage we have had will become our greatest disadvantage For we are not so skilful in the Countrey we have not the like store of provision we have only hands and weapons wherein our Hopes our Fortune and all things else are included For mine own part I have been long since resolved that to shew our backs is dishonourable both for Souldier and General and therefore a commendable death is better then life with reproach surety and honour commonly dwelling together Howbeit if ought should mishappen in this Enterprize yet this will be a glory for us to have died even in the utmost end of the world and of nature if new Nations and Souldiers unknown were in the field I would by the example of other Armies encourage you But now I require you only to recount your own victorious Exploits and to ask counsel of your own eyes these are the same men which the last year assailed one Legion by stealth in the night and were suddenly and in a manner by the blasts of your mouths overthrown These of all the Brittains have been most nimble in running away and by that means have escaped the longest alive For as in Forrests and Woods the strongest Beasts are chased away by main force and the cowardly and fearful scarce only by the noise of the Hunters so the most valiant of the Brittish Nation we have already dispatched the raskal herd of dastardly cowards only remaineth and lo we have now at length found them not as intending to stay and making Head against us but as last overtaken and by extreme passion of fear standing like stocks and presenting to us occasion in this place of a worthy and memorable Victory Now therefore make a short work of a long warfare and to almost fifty years travel let this day impose a glorious end Let each of you shew his Valour and approve to your Country that this Army of ours could never justly be charged either with protracting the War for fear or upon false pretences for not accomplishing the Conquest As Agricola was speaking the Souldiers gave great tokens of their fervent desire to fight and when he had ended his Speech they joyfully applauded it running streight wayes to their weapons and rushing furiously forward which the Roman General perceiving forthwith ordered his Army in this manner with the Auxiliary Footmen he fortified the
a Parish Church bearing the name of Saint Dervian as a Church either by him Founded or to him Dedicated so likewise is there another in Glamorganshire called Saint Fagans where every year is a very great Fair continuing many dayes where also my honoured Patron the Right Noble William Lewes of the Van Esq Son to Sir Edward Lewes and the Right Honourable Lady Beauchamp Daughter of the Earl of Dorset hath a stately Habitation and if I mistake not is Lord of the Mannor Betwixt this Elutherius and King Lucius many Letters passed and the said Bishop granted many priviledges to Universities and places of learning in Brittain as to Cambridge Stanford Cricklade or Greeklade and in Glamorganshire I suppose this place was either Caerwent or Caerleon for all which is now called Monmouthshire was then called Glamorgan where they say learning flourished as well as at Cambridge before the coming of Julius Caesar Mr. Bro. f. 270. and the Schoole of Glamorgan being so near Caerleon upon Vsk in that Countrey where one of the three great Idolatrous Temples of Brittain and seat of the Archflamen of those Western provinces was and thereby a Nursery of Paganisme which those holy men laboured by all means to root out and for that cause where Archflamens were Archbishops were placed and where Flamens Bishops The Brittish Histories Ponticus Virunnius and others say of these Prelates that they delivered the Brittains from Idolatry and converted them to Christ Radulphus de Diceto in his manuscript History proveth as much that they converted all the Cities of Brittain as well as their Flamens and Archflamens by whom they were directed in their Idolatrous worship as others And the principal states and members of this Kingdome King Lucius his Nobles Universities Philosophers Flamens and chiefe Priests and Teachers of the Pagan Subjects and their chief places of commorancy and command being thus converted the conquest over the Vulgar sort was easie and soon effected The Author of the Brittish History testifyeth Mr. Br. f. 271. that so soon as the people of Brittain knew that their King was a Christian they gathered themselves together to be Catechised and received Baptisme and that those holy Legates did blot out Paganisme almost through all the Island and Ponticus Virunnius saith that they baptized all the people of Brittany all this may easily be confirmed by divers Authors but I will conclude with Harding Eluthery the first at supplication Of Lucius sent him two holy Men That called were Fagan and Dungen That Baptized him and all his Realm throughout With hearts glad and labour devout There were then twenty eight Flamens and three Arch-flamens to whose power other Judges were subject and these by the command of the Pope his Legates delivered from Idolatry and where there were Flamens they placed Bishops where Arch-flamens Arch-bishops The Seats of the Arch-flamens were in the three most noble Cities London York and the City of Legions which the old Walls and Buildings do witnesse to have been upon the River of Vsk in Glamorgan King Lucius sent to Elutherius not only for his assistance in spiritual matters but also in his temporal Mr. Br. f. 301. 6. Bridges defence l. 16. p. 1355. Galf. Mon. l. 2. c. 17. Bro. Virunnius Stow Hollinshed as the governing his people and making wholsome Lawes The Lawes which were established here were the old Brittains Lawes ascribed for their greatest part to Mulmutius Dunwallo corrected and made conformable to holy Christian Religion We have all kind of Antiquities Brittish Saxon French Italians Ancient and Modern for Witnesses These Lawes were translated out of Brittish into Latine long before this time by the ancient Gildas that lived about the time of the Birth of CHRIST as many both ancient and late Writers agree and continued here till late time and in divers respects at this present King Lucius being thus informed and secured in conscience by Saint Elutherius his Letters and by his Declaration that the whole Kingdome of Brittain with the Ilands belonged to his temporal charge and government and that so much as he could he was to win his Subjects to the Faith and Law of Christ and his holy Church and provide for the peace and quiet of the same and the Members thereof he did first in receiving and admitting these new corrected Lawes by the advice of the Clergy and Nobles of his Kingdome see them so qualified that they were for the defence and propagation of Christian Religion and further Founded many godly costly and memorable Monuments as Churches Universities or Schools Monasteries and other such comforts helps and furtherances of that holy end So that as he was the first King that publickly with his Kingdome professed Christ so he won the honour to be the first Nursing Father among Kings of his holy Church as the Prophet had foretold Kings shall be thy Nursing Fathers He was also first among Kings called properly the Vicegerent of God being the first King which so religiously performed his will And that Title which the Pope gave to King Henry the 8. when he was better then he proved after Defender of the Faith was among Kings the first due and right of King Lucius for his so heroical and Religious fortitude and magnanimity in defending the Faith and Church of Christ Being now come to celebrate the day of the death of our glorious King Lucius for the joy that he enjoyed thereby Mr. Br. f. 346. 1. and bewail it for the unspeakable losse this Nation received thereby we are to fall into some difficulties both of the time and place thereof William of Malmesbury in his Manuscript-History of Glasten and other old Antiquities do prove that St. Damianus and Faganus after they had converted this Kingdome continued nine years at Glastenbury at the least King Lucius still living and reigning here Polidor Lilly Hollinshed Stow and others cleave to this Opinion A great Controversie ariseth where this King died many Forreign Authors say That he forsook his Crown and Kingdome and became a Clergyman went into Germany to convert that Nation was Bishop of Curre and there was Martyred the day of his death is agreed upon by all to have been on the third day of December but if those Authors who transport this our blessed King into Germany look but upon what hath been said before they shall find that it was not Lucius who was actually King of Brittain and converted by the means of St. Elutherius but another Lucius who was indeed Son of a King of Brittain and might have been King himself had he not been banished for the reason before related and this was that St. Lucius who with his sister St. Emerita were both Crowned with the glorious Crown of Martyrdome in Germany That our first Christian K. Lucius could not be Bishop of Curre is evident for having been so long King here he was so disabled for Age that he was nor capable of such a journey Further they which
Brook in K. John begotten on Agatha daughter of William Earl Ferrers and Derby 1204. with whom her father gave in marriage the Castle and Lordship of Ellinsmere or Ellesmere in the Marches of Southwales which deed beareth date at Dover 17. April 6. Johannis this Llewellin and Agatha had issue David Prince of Northwales sans issue Roger Lord Mortimer Gladis sister of the whole blood to David Prince of Northwales and his heir Powel fol. 314 Roger L. Mortimer and by right of inheritance Prince of Northwales Maud daughter to William de Bruse L. of Brecon Edmund Lord Mortimer Margaret Fendlesse Roger L. Mortimer created Earl of March by K. Edw. III. Joane daughter and heir to Sir Peter Genivill or Jenevill Edmund Mortimer Earl of March Daughter and co-heir of Bartholomew Badelsmere L. of Leeds in Kent Roger Mortimer restored in blood Earle of March an 29. Edw. III. Philippa daughter of William Montague Earl of Sarum Edmund Mortimer Earl of March Philippa sole daughter and heir of Lyonel D. of Clarence Sir H. Percy Knight son and heir to Henry Percy Earl of Northumberland Eliz. daughter to Edm. Mort. E. of March Philippa heir to Lyonel D. of Clarence Henry Percy Earl of North. Elinor daughter to Ralph Nevil first Earle of Westmerland of that name Henry Percy Earl of North. Elinor D. and h. of Richard Lord Poynings Henry Percy Earl of North. Maud daughter of Will. Herbert E. of Pembroke by which match this honourable family descends from divers Welsh branches as shall appear in the pedegree of the Earle of Pembroke Henry Lord Percy Earl of North. Mary D. to George Lord Talbot E. of Salop. Tho. Lord Percy E. of North. nephew to E. Henry Anne d. to H. Somerset E. of Worcester where again this family descends from the Welsh as in the genealogy of Worcester Sir Henry Percy brother to Earle Thomas Earle of North. Katherine one of the daughters and co-h of J. Nevil L. Latimer which family of the Nevils streams from the Welsh as in the pedegree of Abergavenny Henry Lord Percy Earle of Northumberland Dorothy daughter to Walter Devereux Earle of Essex Algernon Percy Earl of Northumberland Anne d. of Will. Cecil E. of Salisbury by which this right honourable Family to whom God grant a long and prosperous posterity descends from many Brittish progenies as in the pedegrees of Salisbury and Exceter The Earle of SHREVVSBURY John L. Talbot E. of Sbrewsb descended from Gilbert L. Talbot temp H. 3. who married Gwenllian d. to Rees ap Gruffith P. of Southw Maud d. and sole heir to Thomas Nevil L. Furnival which family of Nevil descends from the Welsh as in Abergavenny John L. Talbot E. of Shrewsbury L. Furnival and Verdon Eliz. daughter of James Butler Earle of Ormond By this match of Verdon by which the title of Lord Verdon came appears an other stream of Welsh blood for Theobald Lord Verdon married Maud daughter of Edmund Mortimer descended from Llewellyn Prince of Southwales ut ante in Oxford John Lord Talbot Earle of Salop. Katherine d. to Humphrey D. of Buckingham George Lord Talbot Earle of Shrewsbury Anne d. of William Lord Hastings descended from the Prince of Wales Francis Earle of Shrewsbury Mary d. to Thomas L. Dacres of Gilesland George Earle of Shrewsb Gertrude daughter to Thomas E. of Rutland descended from the Welsh line Gilbert Earl of Shrewsbury Mary daughter of Sir William Cavendish Edward Earle of Shrewsbury Joan daughter and co-h of Cuthbert L. Ogle George Talbot son and heir to Talbot of Grafton Esq heir male of Sir Gilbert Talbot of Grafton Knight Banneret and Knight of the Garter second son to John Lord Talbot second Earle of Shrewsbury of that name was by King James admitted to the Earledom of Shrewsbury but he dying without issue the Earledome fell to the issue of John Talbot Esquire his brother   John Talbot Earle of Shrewsbury Mary daughter to Sir Francis Fortescue Kt. George Lord Talbot daughter of Sir Percy Herbert L. Powis by which match many Welsh branches devolve unto this honourable family THE ANTIENT MODERN BRITTISH AND WELSH HISTORY Beginning with BRUTE and continued until King CHARLES the first The Fourth Book CARAVSIVS a Brittain of unknown birth Matth. West an 286. was of the Brittains made Ruler Anno Dominicae Incarnationis 218. Hollenshed also placeth Carausius next to Bassianus though others name him not Galf. Mon. Hist l. 5. c. 4. Pont. Virun l. 5. Matth. West an 292 293. 294. Harding Chron. c. 56 57. Galf. Mon. lib. 15. Pont. Virun l. 5. Hard. Chron. c 59. Matth. West 302. Cat. Reg. Britt alii Matth. West an 286. Harrison Discr of Brit. Hollenshed Hist of Eng. l 4. c. 23. The learned Mr. Broughton searcheth this business to the quick and therefore to give more life to this History you shall hear what he saith Bassianus being as before murthered Macrinus a Mauritanian or Moriscan by Nation with his son Diadumenus or by some Diadumenianus obtained the Empire but they were both slain by their own Souldiers rebelling against them when they had been Emperours but one year and two moneths after whom Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Heliogabalus or Elagabalus son of Bassianus Caracalla before spoken of was chosen Emperour by the Army his mother was named Soemiades or Semiamira the daughter of Mesa sister of Julia the Empress the second wife of Severus and this Soemiades or Semiamira or Semiamides was sister to that renowned Christian Lady Mamea mother to Alexander the Emperour Henry of Huntington and Florigerus ascribe four compleat years to the Emperour Heliogabalus Martinus alloweth him not fully so long a reign yet Martinus saith with Roman Writers that he was Emperour four years and eight moneths Florentius Wigorniensis hath the like words both for that continuance of his Empire and authority of the Roman History affirming it that he was true and immediate next King of Brittain not onely during the time of his Empire but in that space also when Macrinus and his son Diadumenus were Emperours even from the death of Antoninus Bassianus Caracalla his father the undoubted King of Brittain both by his fathers and mothers title For although Martinus saith that Severinus son of Bassianus was Emperour with his father yet seeing this Authour who so writeth consenteth with all others that Macrinus immediatly succeeded to Bassianus Caracalla and Heliogabalus to Macrinus he must needs too justifie that his Testimony of Severinus being Emperour with his father Matth. West an 213. Otto Frising Chron. l. 3. c. 29. Floren. Wigorn an 204. 226. Marian Aetat 6 an 218. in Cara alla Galf. Mon. Hist Reg. l 5. c. 3. Pont. Vir. l. 5. that this Severinus died with his father or before or was the same son of Bassianus which others do call Heliogabalus Marcus Antoninus and other names which Heliogabalus is stiled by in Histories While these things were acted with the Romans the State of Brittainy was
or the Mother of Histories in our Tongue that this Carausius or as he calls him Carassius was first a Treasurer or such a high Officer among the Romans by reason whereof he engrossed great abundance of Riches and by that means became gracious with the Senators and in time was elected Senator and became a man of such authority that Basianus made him Protector of the City and Country of Alexandria from this his advancement and greatnesse issued pride and that pride begat Tyranny insomuch that the Country grew weary of their heavy and servile bondage and impositions insomuch that his death was conspired and decreed which he perceiving first revenged himself upon the conspirators and then left the Country and Province At his comming to Rome the Senate finding him to be of an austere and ridged disposition assigned unto him the rule of Brittain with three Legions This is Fabians relation but what is formerly set down from Mr. Broughton carrieth with it more authority Alectus Alectus sent from Rome by the Emperour and Senate began the time of his government Fabian fol. 49 c. 64. in the year of our Lord 227. We do not find that Alectus after he had slain Carausius in battail and taken upon him the Kingdom which he held for the space of three years did persecute the Christian Brittains under pretence of Religion but for following Carausius and not yielding subjection to the Romans as they required where we see the reason of that affliction of the Brittains by the Romans because they had forsaken the Common-Wealth and Government thereof and followed Carausius an Usurper as the Romans estemed him And other Historians make it plain that only the followers of Carausius and no others were thus persecuted by Alectus and Mathew of Westm. also saith that Alectus did afflict only those Brittains who forsaking their Country had committed themselves to the command of Carausius which Harding more plainly confesseth when he saith of Alectus Pont. Virum l. 5. Galf. Mon. l. 5. c. 4. Mat. West an 294. Harding c 56. Hollersh Hist of Eng. l 4. c. 23. Stow Stowes in Ascepiod Hard. c. 56. Galf. Mon. 5. c. 5. Virum l. 5. Mat. West an 294. Allecto then crowned and made King of all Brittain reigning fully years three and well he ruled in all manner of working or if Alectus or his Pagan Souldiers and under-Rulers did unjustly persecute any Brittains for Religion neither he nor they did escape the just vengeance of God executed upon them by the Christian Brittains in the like kind for when Alectus and his Infidel consorts were at London gathered together to make solemn sacrifice to their Idols they were by the Christians driven from their sacrifice Alectus shamefully put to flight and slain his army scattered and though by Livius Gallus his Collegue in some part renewed again yet both the General Gallus and all his Romans were slain by the Christian Brittains in one day and their Leader Gallus contemptuously thrown into a brook taking name thereof as our modern Antiquaries with antiquity thus deliver Asclepiodotus recocovered Britain and slew the Romans Captain named Livius Gallus neer unto a brook there at that time running into which brook he threw him by reason whereof it is called in Brittish Nant Gallon since in the Saxon tongue Gallus or Wallus brook and to this day the street where sometime the brook ran is called Walbrook And proveth the History of this brook both by publick Records and Inquisitions This Alectus reigned according to Fabian six years Asclepiodotus Asclepiodotus Duke of Cornewal as saith Gaufride but after the saying of Eutropius and Beda he was President of the Pretory of Rome began his dominion over the Brittains in the year of our Lord 232 who upon his victory was crowned King of Brittain by Parliament saith Harding and by common consent of the people as both the Brittish History Pont. Virun and Matthew of Westm being Duke of Cornwal before All these last writers except Matt. West say Dioclesian his persecution began here in his time of which I shall speak hereafter And it seemeth that divers Historians not observing that Constantius was here twice marrying St. Helena the first time and the second time receiving her again when Maximian the persecuting Emperour had forced him to put her away do thereupon vary and differ much about the years of our Kings in those times an old manuscript Chronicle doth say Bassianus reigned 27 years Carausius whom it calleth Carencius 39 years Alectus 15 years Asclepiodotus 10 years Coel 4 years and after him his son in law and daughter Constantius and Helena 11 years The moderne Catalogue of our Kings hath told us that Asclepiodotus did reign 30 years the same hath Hellenshed calling it the common accompt of our Chroniclers and by the same Authors and divers others King Coel in the latter end of whose reign the Romans by Constantius came in again c. Authours excuse Asclepiodotus from being any mover of that persecution which then was in Brittain but suffering the Tyrant Maximian to prosecute it and not resisting him therein which is rather imputed to want of power than will and desire in him when he saith I mean Harding Who for great fear suffered all this pain Of Christians And durst nothing against this Tyrant steer But him withdrew to hide him was full fain Where he doth insinuate that Asclepiodotus was in judgement a friend rather than persecutor of Christians and himself in some sort persecuted by the Roman Pagans in that respect which seemeth expressed in that this Authour sayeth of him That he was inforced to hide himself from the Pagan Roman persecutors And we find divers Antiquities testifying that before there was not any persecution here against Christians but their Religion was in peace and quiet publickly professed and this Asclepiodotus to redeem and preserve such Brittains liberty in that and all other priviledges warred against Alectus the Pagan Roman Governour and in sign of his detestation of their Idolatry beset and assaulted him and his Confederates when they were doing their greatest and most solemn sacrifices to their gods Now to calm these Tempests of Troubles I suppose by our best Histories that this persecution of Dioclesian and Maximinian here raged about the space of nine or ten years in the time of Asclepiodotus principally and that now at the Martyrdom of St. Amphibalus so great miseries and afflictions had been laid upon our holy Christians here long time as their flying from hence unto other Nations their abode there return hither again and continuing no short space before they were put to death as is manifest in the case of St. Amphibalus not martyred till almost a year after St. Alban who was kept in prison six moneths before his Martyrdom that now thousands were converted to Christ and the chief municipal Cities themselves where Idolatry so reigned that a Christian was rare to be then found
at his funeral going before his corps with an infinite number of people and Souldiers attending with all honour and pompe some going before others following with most sweet harmony of singing This was the End which God shewed of this Emperours Godly and Religious manners and life evidently to all people then living as Eusebius witnesseth who also then lived and called him most holy Euseb l. 1. de vita Constan c. 16. which he a learned christian Bishop could not give to any but an holy professed Christian in his knowledge or judgement and therefore attributeth so much to Constantius in this kind that he calleth Constantine the great himself whom he so much extolleth for his Christian Religion and advancement thereof a follower of his fathers piety in such affairs Constantine the Great Constantius having thus honourably ended his dayes and declared Constantine his eldest son successor in his Empire his whole Army doth presently with mutual consent and joy proclaim him King and Emperour and all Nations subject to his fathers Empire were filled with incredible joy and unspeakable gladness that they had without intermission so worthy and renowned an Emperour Of the coming of this most noble Brittain to the Empire escaping and preserved from so many dangers and difficulties before Euseb c. 18. so generally and joyfully chosen and accepted and proving after so happy a Ruler Eusebius saith that he was chosen by God himself and that no mortal man could glory of this onely Emperour his advancement for although he was generally and ordinarily chosen and accepted by men yet as the same Authour writeth he was miraculously preserved by God and by his extraordinary protection brought safely from all danger to his father here in Brittain old and ready to die to be invested in the Empire after him And so soon as he was Emperour as the same Authour then living and well known unto and knowing Constantine Euseb l. 1. vit Const c. 12. testifieth and so declared by the Armies as the custom was being chosen of God long before to that end insisted in his fathers steps in favouring and advancing Christian Religion Euseb Hist l. 8. c. 14. So that in this part of the world as Brittain and France where Constantine succeeded his father and now reigned there was no persecution used against Christians but all favour and indulgence towards them and that assertion of divers Historians both of this and other Nations which affirmeth that the persecution begun by Dioclesian and Maximian did continue after their forsaking the Empire Euseb in Chron. Flo. Wigorn. in Chron. Mar. Sco. Aetat 6. l. 2. in Const and until the seventh year of the reign of Constantine is to be understood of those parts which until about that time were not under the Rule of Constantine but of Galerius Severus and Maxentius persecutors and so Florentius Marianus and others expounded it and it can have no other construction to be true for evident it is in Histories that not onely from the beginning of the reign of Constantine but in his fathers time all Christians under their Government were free from persecution And so soon as Constantine had conquered Maxentius and was sole and absolute Emperour all Christians in the world under him were delivered from persecution and set at liberty even publickly to profess their Religion And from his first entrance into the Empire and to be King of Brittain the Christians here in this Nation did not onely enjoy Religion but as in the time of his father made and freely had publick exercise and profession thereof as our old Churches re-edified new builded and erected Bishops Priests and all Clergy and religious men restored to their former Quiet Revenues Honours and Dignities witness Of this we have divers Testimonies and Examples in particular yet left unto us as out of the old Annals of Winchester where we find of that old Church builded in the time of King Lucius and destroyed in the late persecution The Church of Winchester builded in the time of King Lucius and hallowed and dedicated October the twenty and ninth Annals Eccle. Winton one hundred eighty nine by Faganus and Damianus Bishops amongst the rest at this time of Dioclesian went to wrack the building thereof being ruined Godwin Catal. of Bish Winch. In initio and made even with the ground and the Moncks and all the Officers belonging unto it either slain or enforced to flye for the present time In the year three hundred and nine the Church aforesaid was again re-edified and that with such wonderful forwardnesse and zeal as within one year and thirty dayes both it and all the edifices belonging unto it as chambers and other buildings for Moncks and Officers were quite finished in very seemly and convenient manner The fifteenth day of March following it was again hallowed and Dedicated unto the honour and memory of St. Amphibalus that had suffered death for Christ in the late persecution by Constans Bishop of Winchester at the request of Diodatus Abbot of this New erected Monastery It is evident by this relation that this holy work so publick with freedom and zeal was quite finished in the time of Constantine his being here before he went hence against Maxentius And yet we see both Bishop Priest and Abbot and religious men publickly and honourably restored to their former condition The Church with unspeakable devotion builded and dedicated to the holy Saint and Martyr who in the late persecution was most hated by the enemies of Christ So I say of the Church of St. Alban a Church of wonderfull workmanship Bede Eccl. Hist l. 1. c. 7. Math. West Anno. 313. and worthy of his Martyrdoni was builded so soon as the Christians were here at quiet Matthew of Westminster hath the same words and explaineth this time of the quiet of Christians here when this Church was so sumptuously builded to have been ten years after his Martyrdome the perfect finishing whereof he setteth down to have been the same year in which Constantine went from hence towards Rome against Maxentius which was by him in the sixt year of Constantine and before the general occasion of persecution in other places Constantine not being absolute and sole Emperor untill his victory against Maxentius nor the general quiet then ensuing Both St. Bede and the Monck of Westminster write that in their several times often curing of Infirmities and other miracles were wrought there The old Churches of St. Julius and Aaron The foundation of Lhanturnanus and St. Julians Church in Caerleon Martyred in the late persecution in the City of Caerlegion derive their ancient foundation from this time so do many others founded in honour of several Martyrs then cruelly put to death for the name of Christ so I affirm of all the Cathedral Churches Archiepiscopal and Episcopal with their particular Sees and Cities founded in the time of King Lucius and destroyed in the time of the
all and his Son Jesus Christ he alone by right obtained this honour by the will of God to have that which was buried in death to reign among men Howe 's of the Romans f. 45. In the 20. year of this Constantine was held as saith Mr. Howes the Councel of Nice with great Solemnity wherein were condemned and suppressed the damnable Heresies of Arius Bigot the vain-glorious and dissembling Minister whereof the Arian Heresie took the Name and for a long space after much troubled Christendom And at this time the Nicene Creed was commanded to be sung and said in all Churches And the forenamed Arius pretending to make a Retract of all his Heresies took his leave of the Emperor The fearfull end of an arch Heretick as if he had great necessity to take Physick to purge his Body which Purgation never ceased working till it had purged him of all his bloud and bowels and so he died most miserably and shamefully How es ibid. About this time saith the same Author Octavius whom Constantine left Governor in Brittain rebelled against whom Constantine sent Traherne his Uncle with a Legion of Romans who after divers Conflicts was slain Old English Chronic. f. 34 p. 4. The old English Chronicle saith When Constantine went from this Land to Rome he took all his lond to keep to the Earl of Cornwall that was called Octavian And anon as this Octavian wist that his Lord dwelt at Rome incontinent be ceased all the lond into his hands and therewith did all his will among hy and low and they held him for King But other Historians both Brittish and English Domestical and Foreign affirm that Constantine at his going from Brittain to Rome committed the Government of this Countrey to the Roman Proconsuls and the named Octavian or Octavius took arms against them slew them and so obtained to be King here The Monk of Westminster saith this Octavius was a King before a Regulus or Prince of the People in and about Worcestershire Harding saith he was Duke of West Sex he must mean where the West Saxons after ruled for they came not into Brittain till a long time after this But after his day came one Octavius Duke of West sex that crowned was for King That slewgh the Werdins of Constantinus Which that he set for Brittain governing In his abscence to keep it in all thing Besides this there be other difficulties among the Historians about this Octavius and such as will discredit him for having had many great and chief and long Commands as a King in this Nation Math Westm setteth down his conquering the Roman Proconsul here in the year of Christ 314 when divers more ancient and received Historians say that S. Helen our Queen and Empress continued here long after that time Br. fol. 543. 4. And her Son Constantine Emperor now at the highest of his Glory Power and Victories and having so many Brittish Soldiers without imployment in France so near unto us cannot be immagined to have suffered any Enemy in his own native Countrey so to have prevailed or how could such a man as Octavius is supposed to be assemble such an Army in Brittain where that victorious Emperor was undoubted King and whence he had so great an Army of Brittains so lately before that by them as our Historians write he vanquished all most innumerable Companies of his most potent Enemies And as these Relators of Octavius his proceedings themselves are Witnesses the power with Constantine was so great that the Romans which came hither unto him seeing his power said No Prince in the world was comparable to him for strength Where then in Brittain could Octavius gather an Army so soon to encounter and overthrow three Legions of Roman Soldiers besides their Adherents as these men say And Eusebius saith that Constantine himself came hither again and was here longer after this pretended Revolt and at his death gave Brittain the ancient Patrimony to his Eldest Son Again these men say Octavius was King here until Maximus his time and married his only Daughter and Heir unto him when it is a common consent in Antiquities that this Maximus or Maximinianus was not King in Brittain till after the 380. year of Christ Therefore he must needs be granted to be very young of too few years at the going of Constantine hence for him to commit the Government of Brittain unto him or for himselfe to have so soon Usurped against it so rightfull and potent King and Emperour Our most ancient and best Historians S. Gildas S. Bede Marianus Florentius Wigorniensis Ethelwardus Henry of Huntington and William of Malmsbury although as diligently as they could recounting our Kings of Brittain never mention any such Octavius or Octavian but the chiefest and most ancient among them S. Gildas plainly saith that this Island was at this time and until Maximus or Maximinian a Brittain took upon him the Empire a Roman Island Insula nomen Romanum tenens And divers Historians both late and ancient do particularly set down our Kings after Constantine the Great and Roman Leivtenants here until these daies as Constantine Constantius Julian Valentinian Gratian Emperors or Kings Martinus Lupicinus Nectaridius Theodosius Fraomarius and other Roman Lievtenants and Governors here And when the Councel of Ariminum was kept about the year of Christ 360 and the 23. year of Constantius son of Constantine the Great it is certain that this Constantius was our King in Brittain and bore the charge of the poorest Bishops of this Kingdom as then under his Government which were present there and he was so far from losing Brittain or any other Countrey of his Empire then as Sozomen and others testifie that Councel thus wrote unto him Epist Arimin Conc. ad Constant Imp. apud Sozoni Hist l. 4. c. 47. at this time this Empire so encreased that all the World was under his Government this was above twenty years after the death of the great Constantine in whose time this Revolt of Brittain from him is thus supposed and above twice so long time of the imagined usurpation here by Octavius And Zonaras writeth that this Constantius in the fourteenth year of his Empire banished or rather carried with him Athanasius into Brittain at his coming hither Therefore I dare not assent that in this time of the greatest flourishing Estate of the Roman Empire and the power thereof in Brittain Harding Cron. c. 63. f. 51. Galf. Mon. Hist Reg. Bri. l. 5. cap. 9. Pont. Virun Hist l. 5. Math. West an 379. especially from whence the glory of it grew to that greatness either Octavius or any other so much prevailed here to bar the Emperors of that honour But he might towards the time of Maximus or Maximianus when the Empire had more Enemies and less power prevail in some such sort as these Historians have written of him although they differ also in Maximian as well as in Octavius one saith he
was the Son of Traherne the Uncle of St. Helen Maximian King Trahern his Son next Heir to Constantine others say he was Son of Leolinus another Uncle of St. Helen Great Uncle to Constantine and one of them Gal. Mon. l. 5. c. 12.15 Pont. Virun lib. 5. Math. West an 390 392. Manus Anti. in vit S. Nin. Capg in eod Bal. li. de Scrip. Cent. 1. in Nin. saith Octavius was King but 14 yeares ending with the beginning of Maximian his Reigne And so we may well allow such an Octavius to have the name of a King in Brittain in those troublesome daies of the Romans ruling here divers petty Kings being probably at that time in this Nation as well by the Testimony of these Authors which then make Octavian King as others So they terme Conanus a King and that Maximian took his kingdom from him So was Dionotus King in Cornwall So was his brother Carodocus before him and yet under one chief King and Emperor Maximian at that time And St. Nimen who lived Bishop here in the end of this age had Kings for his Ancestors and yet the great distance of the place of his birth from King Coel argueth he was not of their line And all these Kings or Regents here were most certainly by our Antiquaries Chatholick Christians Constantinus After the death of Constantine the great Constantinus his eldest Son injoyed Brittain as a portion of his Dominion till making some attempts upon his brother Constans for the enlarging of it Brittish Hist fol. 239. he was by him slain Then was the Empire divided between Constans and Constantius the two younger brethren Constans seised upon the Provinces which Constantinus his brother had held and made a voyage into Brittain where Gratianus a Hungarian by birth had then charge of the Army This Gratianus was surnamed Funarius for that he being a young man was able as it is written of him to hold a Rope in his hand against the force of five Souldiers assaying to pull it from him But Constans afterwards following ill counsel the ready way to Princes ruines and giving himself over to all kind of vice was slain by Magnentius Taporus the Son of a Brittain who then invaded the Empire usurping the Government of Gallià and Brittain till after three years warr with Constantius the successor of Constans his brother finding himselfe unable any longer to uphold his greatnesse Mr. Br. fol. 548. 1. he murdered himself This Constantius in processe of time was infected with the Arian heresy but neither so as to endanger Brittain or any other Nation under his command He consented to the recalling of St. Athanasius out of exile and sometime to his continuing his dignity at Alexandrea And whether it was for the love of St. Athanasius or fear of his brother Constans writing expresly unto him in favour of St. Athanasius is uncertain he also consented to the calling of the great general Councel of Sardyce 10 or 11 years after the death of his Father as Socrates and Sozomen affirm wherein St. Athanasius was proved innocent and as he then present with many others proveth the Nicon faith was confirmed and utterly forbidden to be questioned Mr. Bro. fol. 548. Socr. l. 2. c. 16. Soz. l. 3. c. 11 12. Athan. Apol. 2 cont Arianos Divers Bishops of Brittain 5 at the least present at the Councel of Sardyce Baro. Spon an 347. Sex Ruff. Brem Rev. gest po Ro. ad Valent. And at the calling of this Councel the same renowned Doctor called this said Constantins as also his brother a known Cacholick Emperour and a Religious Prince and we are sure that at this time our Kingdome of Baittain detained the former glorious estate and glory of Religion it had before in the daies of Constantine and was still free from Arianisme For the same glorious Athanasius present in that Councel faith that amongst more than 300 Bishops assembled there which freed him and professed the Nicen faith the Bishops from the Provinces of Baittain were there And as the Roman writers testifie there were from the division of the Empire by Constantine and as many suppose before five provinces here in Brittain Maxima Caesariensis Valentia Baittannia prima Brittania secunda Flavia Caesariensis So that if we should allow but one Bishop out of every of those provinces to have been at the Sardyce Councel and there to have subscribed for the rest of Brittain their Provinces or Dioceses we must grant five Brittish Bishops to have been there and supplyed this duty and Office for the rest of Brittain That this our Country of Brittain flourished after this with great numbers of worthy Bishops no City then vacant here of such a Pastor and Rider we may gather from divers Antiquities Epist Concilii Arimini ad Const apud Socr. l. 2. Hist c. 29. Soz Hist Eccl. l. 4. c. 16. Sever sulp sacra Hist l. 2. c. 21. Lib. Notitia Epis orb Chr. sive Cod. Provin Rom. as from the Epistle of the great Councel of Ariminum in Italy not long after this time written to Constantius the Emperour where our Bishops were present testifying unto him that they were assembled there forth of all Cities towards the West most properly and significantly to be applyed to this Kingdom most West from thence And the words All Bishops out of the Western Cities cannot carry any other true construction but our Episcopal Cities in Baittain were then so furnished and many or most of them present at that Councel This is confirmed by the number of Western Bishops above 400 as Sozomen and others write assembled at Ariminum besides 160 from the East at the same time gathered together at Seleucia in Isauria when it is manifest in the old Manuscript Catalogue of Bishops that Brittain and all the Western Nations present in the Councel of Ariminum had not at that time many more than 400 Bishops Therefore we must needs grant that the Bishops of all Cities as well of Brittain as other Countries of the West which had not excuseable lets and impediments were there present in such sence as the Epistle of that Councel is cited and Severus Sulpitius is sufficient witnesse that this our Brittain in particular that it had many Bishops there for relating the number to have been above 400 out of the West And the Emperour the better to incline them to the Arian heresie as it seemeth commandeth that provision should be made for them at his cost But the Bishops of France Aquitaine and Brittain refused it and rather made choice to live at their own charges than to be maintained by the Emperour and this refusal was general to all the Bishops of Brittain Aquitaine and France except three only of Brittain which received allowance from the Emperour and refused maintenance by the other Bishops themselves being poor And the same Authors prove that our Bishops were drawn or forced to come to that Councel by the Officers of Constantius
Constantius Chlorus by Theodora a man by no title of descent heir or King of Brittain was acknowledged for Emperor for although this Constantius last Emperour by the instigation and perswasion of Eusebia the Empress made him a Caesar in the Empire he himself not able to discharge the whole burden of so manifold troubles and invasions of the Barbarous for so the Romans called strangers in divers places of the Empire especially in Gallia now France whereas Zosimus saith they took 40 Cities neer the River of Rhene and gave unto him in marriage his Sister Helena and sent him to Govern the part of the Empire on this side the Alps Zosim Hist l. 3. Socr. Hist Eccl. l. 3. c. 1. Cassiod Tripart Hist l. 6. c. 1. Nicep l. 10. c. 1. Bar. Spond Annal. anno 360. Soc. l. 3. c. 1. Cassiod Tri. Hist l. 6. c. 1. Amianus l. 21. Socrates Cassiodorus and others testifie it was thought that when Constantius sent him into the dangerous wars of Gallia his Wife Helena being then dead he did it to have him slain by the cruel and potent Enemies And Constantius limiting his power to do nothing without consent of others And not only this but he secretly incited Vadomarus King of the Franks to take Armes against Julian and incited others by his letters which they sent to Julian for their excuse to invade the Romans where Julian Ruled which when Julian perceived and remembring the old hatred he had born him from his Childhood he required him with the like measure shewing much love and favour to those under his command whom Constantius hated or dis-favoured which among Christians were the Catholick Bishops and others whom he had persecuted And this his favour and kindnesse towards Catholicks had continued with him even from his first being Caesar in these parts as evidently appeareth in the case of St. Hillary that renowned glory of Gods Church who at the same time he was exiled by the procurement of the wicked Arians and consent of Constantius unjustly was by Julianus whom he called his Lord and Religious Caesar adjudged Innocent and for his love and defence of St. Hillary did suffer more reproach of the Arian persecutors than St. Hillary endured injury by that exilement Thus we see Julian whilst he continued in these Western parts was a favourer of the Catholick Religion but Julian quite leaving these Western Nations before either he persecuted Christians or left the profession of their Religion living so short a time Emperor not two years by two Moneths and three dayes Baron an 363 as Baronius thinketh he doth demonstrate and never returning Westward again Brittain could not be afflicted with his Apostasie After the death of Constantius who is said to have repented three things at his last gasp first that he caused the death of his Son-in-Law The second that he made Julian who proved an Apostate Emperour Mr. Bro. fol. 56. And the third that he professed and favoured the Arian Heresie for which offences craving pardon and repenting he died a holy death Gregor Nazian in Orat. in Julianum Nicep l. 9. Hist c. 50. British Hist 141. and was buried with such solemnities as the Catholicks use in the funerals of them that make a holy end And to confirm the opinion of men with the authority and Testimony of Heaven and Angels he saith it was commonly related that his body was with such solemnity carried to Constantinople to be buried there an Angelical Harmony was heard by many as reward of his piety Julianus possessing the Empire which he had usurped in the life time saith the Brittish History of Constantius banished Palladius an honorable person into Brittain and sent Alipius to repair the walls of Jerusalem in which attempt God discovering his wrath by terrifying the Builders with thunder and lightning and killing many thousand Jewes gave an apparent testimony how vain a thing it is for man to oppose himself against the uncontrollable Decree of Almighty God and who so shall consider the strange and miraculous death of this Julian as being slain from Heaven and his desperate crying out Thou hast vanquish'd me O Galilean when he yielded up his damnable Soul I suppose will be terrified both from falling into Apostasie or taking any Oath of abjuration concerning his Faith and Religion Jovian Jovian succeeded Julianus in the Empire which he held but few months when he was chosen Emperor as Ruffinus Theodoret Socrates and others testifie he refused it Ruffinus Hist l. 2. c. 1. Theodoret l. 4. c. 1. Socr. Hist l. 3. c. 19. Matth. West ann 366. and being thereto taken by the Soldiers against his will openly professed that he being a Christian would not be Emperor over Infidels but all of them confessing themselves to be Christians he accepted the Empire This Christian magnanimity appeared evidently in this new elected Emperor before in the time of Julian for Julian apostating and making a Decree that Soldiers should either sacrifice to Idols or leave the wars he being then a Tribune rather made choice to forsake all hope of temporal preferment than obey that wicked Edict Whereupon Julian then standing in need of such Assistants retained him still in the number of his Commanders notwithstanding he so couragiously professed himself a Christian This renowned Man was at one and the same time as Ruffinus cals him a Confessor Emperor and Extinguisher of Error Jovian commended and God wonderfully honored his constancy even in his life not only in the conferring the Imperial honor upon him but in the manner thereof Ruff. sup Theodoret l. 4 c. 1. that being so professed a Catholick Christian the whole Army did with one voice choose him Emperor which joyned with that is said of them before upon Jovianus refusing to be Emperor over Pagans how with one voice they all confessed themselves to be Christians sufficiently proveth that either the Edict of Julian to force his Soldiers to sacrifice to Idols was never received or generally observed or they sinned only in external act of Idolatry by that compulsion still persevering in judgement and affection Christians Socr. l. 3. c. 5. Ruff. l. 2. c. 1. Socrates saith he reigned but 7 months Ruffinus eight Valentinian Now therefore although Jovianus was a worthy Catholick Christian Emperor ever following that Religion and Doctrine against the Arians as Socrates and others prove Socr. l. 3. c. 20. and shutting up the Pagan Temples and forbidding their Sacrifices yet being Emperor so short a time and chosen living and dying in the East Countries far remote from Brittain it did not receive so great benefits by so good an Emperor as nearer Nations did but during his short Regiment continued much after the same manner it did before until Valentinian was chosen Emperor who being a Catholick and reigning divers years over Brittain and his Son Gratian after him this Kingdom in their times was free from Heresie which they persecuted Socr.
l. 3. c. 11. for Valens himself being Brother to Valentinian and by him chosen Assistant in the Empire was then a Catholick and so continued in the time of Julian that he forsook all preferment under him rather than his Religion Thodoret Hist l. 4. c. 12. And although by the perswasion of his Arian Wife and others he after fell into Heresie he being Emperor of the Eastern remote Nations from hence this Kingdom was free from his afflictions being under the command of the Catholick Emperors Valentinian and Gratian his Son until Maximus descended of a Brittish race was both King of Brittain and Emperor also who also being a Catholick Brittain could not then be endamaged in spiritual affairs by the temporal Rulers thereof Maximus Emperor a Brittain excused and defended Ruff. l. 2. c. 14. Socr. l. 3. c. 11. although in civil respects it was much infested by the Scots and Picts from which Maximus freed it in his time by his climbing and aspiring minde to be Emperor and to compass that ambition spoiling Brittain of the armed force and power thereof transporting it into foreign Nations gave occasion of greater miseries here afterward both by the Scotch Picts and Saxon Pagans About this time saith the Brittish History the Picts Scots Brit. Hist l. 3. fol. 142. and Atticots invaded the Roman Province here in Brittian These Picts and Scots as some Writers report came first out of Scythia Picts who from whence though it be not probable that the Picts were any other than such Brittains as being either born in the Northern Promontory of this Isle or fleeing thither out of the South parts entred into confederacy with the Scotchmen and retained for a time their ancient name of Picts as being so called by the Romans in respect of the old custom of painting their bodies to distinguish them from the Brittains then dwelling within the Province Neither is there any mention made of their name before the time of Dioclesian and Maximian These Picts encreasing in number did afterwards inhabit the Isles of the Orcades and being for the most part rude and Savage as the Scottish men also then were did often times harrow the borders and grievously annoy their civil Country-men there being commonly no greater hatred than that which is bred and nourished among the people of one Nation when they are severed each from other by difference of manners and customes The name of Picts in processe of time being changed into that of Scotish men as of the more popular Nation was in a manner clean forgotten when by society and alliance they became one people The Scots from whence at first That the Scotish men had their original from the Scythes their very name may seem in some sort to discover howbeit divers histories affirm that they travelled first into Cantabria in Spain where perhaps dislikeing that barren Soile they continued not long but sailed into Ireland and from thence a great number of them came over into Brittain Brittish Hist l. 3. fol. 142. landing in the North part of the Isle where afterward they seated themselves They were for the most part addicted to war using peace only but as a means to repair their losses they were people of great courage and boldnesse of stature tall strong of body their complexions some what Ruddy and high Coloured their apparrel was either very slender or none at all save only to cover their shame Neither was their peace altogether Idle for even then they accustomed their bodies to labour no less painfull than war it self and ofttimes no lesse dangerous To ride with swift pace up a steep hill to swim over Lakes and standing Meeres to pass over Bogs and Fenny grounds were things in ordinary use with them as being accounted exercises of recreation only But above all others the Nobility and better sort were delighted with hunting and that in such measure that they could more patiently endure the want of meat drink and sleep than restraint from that pastime which they esteemed manly and generous In their consultations they were very secret and sudden in the execution thereof by which meanes they ofttimes struck terror and amazement to the hearts of their Enemies and so much annoyed the Roman Princes in Brittain They were better contented with the necessities of nature and more able to endure all extremities of fortune than the Brittains in those times as being lesse acquainted with the vain superfluities and delicacies of the Romans In behaviour the Brittains were noted to be more civil but the Scotish men as a people unconquered and admitting no customes but their own refused to imitate them who were brought under the subjection of a stranger or to be reputed like to any other then to themselves Wrongs and Indignities offered as well to others as themselves they sharpely revenged the slaughter wounding or disgrace of any of their kinred allies or companions being commonly the occasion of rooting out the whole family of him that first gave the offence violent persuits seising by strong hand the goods and possessions of their neighbours burning the houses and killing upon cold blood such as they had taken in War which others termed crueltie they accounted manhood and policie supposing the assurance of their estates to consist rather in diminishing the number of their enemies by open acts of hostility than by pretended reconciliations and leagues of amity which are either kept or broken at the will of him that hath the greater power Their names first mentioned in histories about the reign of Constantine the Great Though the Scotish Writers affirme that they were governed by Kings of their own Nation many hundred yeers before this time But of things so ancient to have the certain knowledg it is no easie matter neither is antiquity in it selfe very much to be regarded where true Nobility and Vertue is wanting For all nations at the first were of barbarous and uncivil behaviour till time taugh them other customes and emulation kindled the hearts of the better sort to seek fame by their own valour rather then the Genealogies of their Ancesters Those Scotish men and Picts being now assisted with forraine power presumed more boldly to assail the Brittains both by Sea and Land killing Nectaradius the Admiral of the Brittish Fleet and surprizing Bulchebandes one of their chief Captaines the mutiny at that time in the Roman Campe giving them opportunity and boldnesse to do in a manner what they listed For the Legionarie Souldiers refused to obey their Leaders and even the Deputies themselves complaining of the partiality of their Generals who punished the least offence of a Common Souldier and winked at the great abuses of Commanders and Officers hereupon a warlike troope of Almans were sent over under the Conduct of Fraomarius their King who exercised there the authority of a Tribune Severus the Emperors steward of his houshold and Jovinius were appointed to second him with certain
that he carried himself as Emperor and Lord and not as Captain and Officer for to represse and chastize him he entertained into his service the Picts and Hunnes a feirce cruell and Barbarous people who had conquered the Gothes and done wonderous things by their force of armes These being gathered together under the command of Melga Captain of the Picts and Gaunus General of the Hunnes began to molest the Seas and to lie coasting about after the manner of Pirates robbing spoiling all that fell into their hands with intent to passe over into Brittain and expulse Maximus and to serve Gratian the Emperour who for that purpose had entertained them these Barbarous people were at that present where these blessed Virgins arrived and perceiving that the ships belonged to their enemies and to Maximus in particular against whom they had undertaken that voyage they encountered with them and seeing that they were loaden with Virgins being as dishonest and lascivious as they were cruel and furious they intended to ravish them But these holy Virgins Vrsula being leader and encouraging them determined rather to loose their lives than their chastity and hereupon as well in deeds as in words shewing their valour and constancy and that they were prepared rather to suffer what torments soever than to offend God the Barbarous people converting their love into fury and detestation of Christian faith fell upon them like Wolves upon a flock of Lambs and put them all to the Sword 11000 Brittish Virgins at one time martyred because they would remain there no longer but passe over speedily into Brittain which they thought had been uninhabited because Maximus had drawn so many Souldiers from thence Of all that holy and Virgin company only one called Cordula remained alive who through fear did hide herself at the time of that slaughter but seeing what had passed and that all the rest of her companions were martyred being encouraged by the motion of our Lord who had chosen them all for himself the next day following she discovered her self and obtained also the Crown of Martyrdome Some are of opinion A strange wonder that the place in which the holy bodies of these Virgins now remain is the very same in which they were martyred because the earth on which that Church is built will not retain any dead body although it be a child newly baptized Lindanus Bishop of Ruremund but by might it casteth it forth as Lindanus Bishop of Ruremund recounteth giving this as a token that God will not have any other body to be buried where the bodies of those so many Virgins and Martyrs lie who shed their blood for confession of his Faith and defence of their Chastity Now the Roman Monarchy was drawing on to her fatal period when Honorius succeeding Theodosius his Father in the Westerne Empire Brit. Hist l. 3. fol. 148. sent Stilico into Brittain to defend the Brittains against the Picts and Scottish men who assailed them in most parts of the Isle working upon the weaknesse of the Province in which the most choice and able men having been from time to time transported and wasted in the Roman Wars with other Nations there remained not then sufficient to defend it self The common Souldiers there seeing the state in combustion took upon them to elect and depose Emperours first proclaiming Gratian a free Citizen of Rome but not long contented with his government they murdered him and elected one Constantine for the namesake only supposing the same to be auspicious Constantine transporting the flower and strength of all Brittain into Gallia made many dishonourable leagues to the prejudice of the Empire with the Barbarous Nations that then envaded it and sent his Son Constans whom of a Monk he had made a Caesar into Spain where Constans having put to death some principal men whom he suspected to favour Honorius committed the Government of the Country to Gerontius his chief Captain by whom he was afterwards slain at Vienna in Gallia And Constantine his Father having run through many fortunes was in the end beseiged at Arles where he was taken and slain by the Souldiers of Honorius the Emperor which then recovered Brittain Chrysanthus a man of consular dignity was then Deputy of Brittain where he won so great reputation for vertue and integrity in the Government both of the Church which was then tainted with the gracelesse heresie of Pelagius the Brittain and also of the Weal publick of the Province as he was afterwards though against his will preferred to the Bishoprick of Constantinople This Pelagius the Brittish Heretick was as the traditions of those parts say born at Vsk a Market Town in Monmoth-shire Virun Hist Scot. Hector Boet. Hist l. 9. fol. 179. p. 1. Geor. Bucan Rerum Scot. l. 5. Reg. 52. p. 160. Hollinshed Hi. of Scot. in frequa hand Aug. Epist 106. Bede Hist l. 1. Hen. Hunt Hist l. 1. Math. West Chron. an 404. Floren. Wig. Chron. an 413 alii 435. Mr. Bro. fol. 605. Aug l. de Heres Cler. 88. l. 2. de Pecc origin c. 11. Epist 106. l. 2. de pec orig c. 8 9. 14. l. 2. Retr c. 47. Hier. Ep. 79. ad Alip Dial. cont Pelag. Prosper de Ingrat Isidor Pelus Epist 314. Mr. Broughton fo 606. Bed l. 1. hist c. 17. Math. West Chron. an 442. Pits aetat 4. p. 85. Bal. l. de scrip cent 1. in Pelag. The Heresies of this Pelagius and he the first Authour and name-giver unto them have given the greatest stain and blemish in that kind to this Nation and in this time For as his heresies were most pestilent dangerous and infections so they took first root and afterward fixed themselves so deeply in this Brittain that they were not rooted out untill after the coming of St. Augustine hither about two hundred yeares after Notwithstanding we had so many and worthy men here both of our own Nation and others divers of them sent hither by the See Apostolick to oppose and suppresse it as both our Scottish and English Writers do testifie It is the common consent of Historians both of this and foreign Countries that this Pelagius as is said before was a Brittain of this Kingdom divers of our Antiquaries hold that he was a Monk and Abbot after in our old received Monastery of Bangor which is made more probable both in respect that Leporius Agricola his Scholler and follower in his errors a long time though after recanting them was a Priest and Monk of the same Monastery and of all places in Brittain the places thereabout were most infected with the heresie rageing there long after the time of St. Germanus and Lupus sent thither by Pope Celestine to suppresse it and was in a Synod of all the Bishops Abbots and chief Clergy men of Cambria there confuted and confounded by St. David All authors agree that this Pelagius was very learned and the title Arch-Heretick which is commonly given unto him doth
truth of Christianity which seemed to be born down by the subtil allegations of humane Reason Hereupon the Bishops called a Synod wherein Germanus the Bishop of Auxerre and Lupus Bishop of Troyes in Champaigne were appointed to go into Brittain and to undertake the Cause which they afterwards prosecuted with so good success as many Hereticks among the Brittains were openly convinced and Christians confirmed in faith About the same time Ninianus Bernitius of the Race of the Brittish Princes was sent into Pictland to convert the Inhabitants there to Christianity Brittish Hist l. 3. f. 153. Palladius a Grecian was likewise appointed by Celestine Bishop of Rome to Preach the Gospel in Scotland unto such there as yet remained in Infidelity and to suppress the Pelagian Heresie new sprung up in that Kingdom to be the first and chief Bishop of the Church there for which purpose also Patricius surnamed Magonius born in Brittain was sent to the Irish and Scotch men that then dwelt in the Isles of the Orcades and Hebrides these three Religious Fathers were much honoured in those dayes for the reverend opinion which most men had of their Learning and Integrity of life and they are accounted the Apostles and Patrons of the Scotish Irish and Pictish Nations as being the several Instruments of the general Conversion of each of them Within few years after the Brittains were again hotly pursued by the Scotchmen and Picts who swarmed over a great part of the Land taking from the Brittains for a time all opportunities of convening and assembling themselves together as in former dangers they had been accustomed whereby no small number of the Inhabitants of the Province dispairing of better success retired themselves giving way unto the present necessity while each man as in common calamities oft times it falleth out laying aside the care of the publick made provision for his own safety leaving the Enemy in the mean time to take and kill such as resisted Some of the Brittains being driven out of their own houses and possessions fell to robbing one another encreasing their outward troubles with inward tumult and civil dissention by which means a great number of them had nothing left to sustain them but what they got by hunting and killing of wild beasts Others burying their Treasures under ground whereof great store hath been found in this Age Brit. Hist l. 3. fol. 158. did flee themselves either into the Countrey of the a Southwales Silures and b Northwales Ord●nices and into the West part of the Isle where the c Cornwall Devonshire Damonians then inhabited or else into Amorica in France the rest being hemmed in with the Sea on the one side and their Enemies on the other sent to the Emperor for aid which they could not obtain for that the Goths and Hunns invading Gallia and Italy the greatest part of the Forces of the Empire was drawn thither for defence of those places by reason whereof the State of Brittain now declining with the Empire and shrinking under the burthen of barbarous Oppression the Brittains sent Embassadors again to Aetius the President in Gallia desiring him to relieve their necessities declaring withall that themselves were the small remnant which survived after the slaughter of so many thousands whom either the Sword or the Sea had consumed for the barbarous Enemy drave them upon the Sea the Sea again upon the Enemies between both which they suffered two kindes of death as being either killed or drowned that it imported the Majesty of the Roman Empire to protect them who had so many hundred years lived under their obedience and were now plunged into the depth of intollerable miseries for besides the calamities of War both civil and foreign at one instant they were afflicted with dearth and famine which forced them sometimes to yield themselves to the merciless Enemy But their complaints availed nothing for the Romans plainly denied to send them any more succour whereof the Scotishmen and Picts being certainly advertised and knowing how small a number of able men remained in the Province to withstand their attempts assailed first such places of strength as guarded the borders and afterwards entred the Province it self where by continual course of Conquests they found a passage into the heart of the Isle spoyled the People of their wealth burnt their Cities and brought the Inhabitants thereof under a miserable Servitude Thus about five hundred years after the Romans first Entrance and four hundred forty six after our Saviours birth the Isle of Brittain which had been not only the principal Member of the Empire but also the seat of the Empire it self and the Seminary of Soldiers sent out into most parts of the World was now in the time of Honorius bereaved of the greatest part of her ancient Inhabitants and left a prey to barbarous Nations SHREWSBURY SHREWSBURY is the principal Town in Sh●opshire and stands neatly upon a Hill and i● almost encompassed round by the River Severus that part thereof which is not fenced by the River being fortified by a very strong Castle built by Roger de Montgomery the first Earl thereof A fair and goodly Town it is well traded and frequented by all sorts of people both Welsh and English by reason of the Trade of Gloath and other Merchandise this being the commont Mart and Empory between England and Wales it standeth in the very midst or centre as it were of the whole Countrey which generally is inferiour to none about it for delight and plenty for the number of Towns and Castles standing exceeding thick on every side as having formerly been a frontier Countrey very far above them It belonged anciently to the Cornavii and at the Norman Conquest was bestowed on Roger de Montgomery who first made it ●eminent and with his Successors and sin●e them the honorable Family of the Talbots enjoyed the Stile and Title of Earls of Shrewsbury 1. Roger de Montgomery 2. Hugh de Montgomery 3. Robert de Montgomery 4. John Talbot Marshal of France created Earl of Shrewsbury by K. H. 6. 5. John Talbot L. Tre. 6. John Talbot 7. Geo. Talbot 8. Francis Talbot 9. Geo. Talbot 10. Gilbert Talbot 11. Edward Talbot 12. Geo. Talbot 13. John Talbot now living and Earl of Shrewsbury 1661. The Earl of DERBY Thomas Stanley Earl of Derby Knight of the Garter c. Elinor Daughter to Richard Nevil Earl of Salisbury Tho. Earl of Derby c. Anne Daughter to Ed. L. Hastings which Family descends from the Brittish line as shall appear in its proper place Edward Earl of Derby c. Dorothea Daughter to Thomas Howward Duke of Norfolk by which March this honorable Family descends from the Brittish line as in the Pedegree of the Duke of Norfolk Henry Earl of Derby c. Margaret Daughter to Henry Clifford Earl of Cumberland and Elinor his Wife Daughter and Coheir to Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk and Mary Queen of France
never saw them they be in divers places to be had so that the Truth may be eastly proved To make an end I say that he being a stranger born as also ignorant in our Histories and in the Tongues and Languages wherein they were written Polidores ignorance the cause of many mens errours in History could never set forth a true and perfect Chronicle of the same but he having a good Grace and fluent Phrase in the Latine Tongue and finding himself in a countrey where every man either lacked Knowledge or a Spirit to set forth the History of their own country took this enterprize in hand to their great shame and no less dispraise because he a blinde leader should draw a great number of undiscreet and rash followers as well Geographers Cosmographers as Chroniclers Historiographers to the dark pit of Ignorance where I leave them at this time remitting the Reader to the Apology of Sir John Price Kt. and his Brittish History written by him on purpose against the envious Reports slandrous taunts of the said Polidore where he shall see a great number of his Errours confuted at large And to return to my former matter concerning the name of Wales which name to be given of late by a stranger Nation may be otherwise proved That which is now abusively called Welsh was the ancient Language of the first Brittains for the Welshmen themselves do not understand what these words Wales and Welsh do signifie nor know any other Name of their countrey or themselves but Cambry nor of their Language but Cambrae which is as much as to say as Cambers Language or Speec so likewise they know not what England or English meaneth but commonly they call the Countrey Lhogier the Englishmen Sayson and the English Tongue Saysonaec which is an evident token that this is the same Language which the Brittains spake at the beginning for the works of Merdhin and of Taliessin who wrote above 1000. years since are almost the same words which they use at this day or at the least easie to be understood by every one which knoweth perfectly the Welsh Tongue especially in North-Wales Besides this whereas at this day there do remain three Remnants of the Brittains divided every one from the other with the seas which are in Wales Cornwal called in British Cerniw little Brittain yet almost all the particular words of these three people are all one although in pronunciation writing of the sentences they differ somewhat which is no marvell seeing that the pronunciation in one realm is often so different that the one can scant understand the other But it is rather a wonder that the Welshmen being separated from the Cornish well nigh these 900 years and the Brittains from either of them * In this Authors time 290 before that and having small traffick or concourse together since that time have still kept their own Brittish tongue They are not therefore to be credited which deny the Welsh to be the old Brittish tongue And here I cannot passe over what one of the five Chroniclers writ of late of the name of Brittain affirming that it should be so called of Brittain in France as the elder of that name but sure he had either never seen Ptolomy nor Caesar nor any other ancient writer or read them with small judgment and memory for there he might have learned that when this land was called Brittain the other was called Armorica and how in Maximus time Conan Meriadoc was the first that gave it that name and inhabited it with Brittains out of this Isle other derivations of these words out of Greek and Latine I am ashamed to relate of which I have spoken formerly I will therefore returne to the description of Wales which was almost in old time compassed about with the Irish seas and the Rivers Dee and Severne although afterwards the Saxons wan by force from the Brittains all the plain as is already said and champion Countries over the rivers and specially Offa King of Mercia who made a ditch of great breadth and depth to be a Meare betwixt his Kingdom and Wales which ditch began at the river Dee by Basingwerk between Chester and Ruthlan and ran along the hills sides to the South sea a little from Britstol reaching above an hundred miles in length and is in many places to be seen at this day bearing the name of Clawdh Offa viz. Offa's ditch and the Country between it and England is commonly called in Welsh Y Mars although the greatest part of it be now inhabited by Welshmen namely in Northwales which yet keepeth the ancient limits to the River Dee and in some places over it Other as Sylvester Giraldus make the river Wy called in Welsh Guy to be a mear between England and Wales on the South part called South-VVales who measureth the breadth of VVales from Sallowe or VVillowford called Rhydyrhelig upon VVy to St. Davids in Menevia a 100 miles and the length from Caertheon upon Vsk in Gwentland to Holy head called Caergibi in Anglesey in Welsh called Môn above a 100 miles And these be the common mears at this day although the Welsh tongue is commonly used and spoken England-ward beyond these old mears a great way as in Herefordshire Glocestershire and a great part of Shropshire and thus for the general description of Wales which afterward about the year of Christ 870. Rodericus Magnus King of Wales divided it into three territories which he called Kingdoms which remained till of late dayes These three were Gwyneth Northwales Dehenbarth Southwales and Powis land in every of which he ordained a princely seat or Court for a Prince to remain at most commonly as in Gwyneth which some old writers call Venedocia Abersfraw for Gwinethia Abersfraw in the Isle of Môn or Anglesey In Deheuberth called in Latine Demetia ' Caermardhyn from whence it was afterwards removed to Dinevowr eight miles thence Dinevowr In Powis Penguerne called Y Mwythic and in English Shrewsbury Methraval from whence it was removed to Mtheraval in Powis land And because this history doth as well intreat of wars betwixt these three Provinces as betwixt them and the Saxons Normans and Flemmings I think good to set forth the particular description of every part by it self and first of Northwales as the chiefest part which he gave his Eldest Son Northwales ordering that either of the other two should pay him yearly 200. pound of tribute as it appeareth in the lawes of Howel Dha which are to be had in Welsh and also in Latine Therefore Gwyneth called Northwales had upon the Northside the Sea from the River Dee at Basingwerck to Aberdyni and upon the West and Southwest the river Dini which divideth it from Southwales and in some place from Powis land And on the South and East it is divided from Powis land sometimes by the mountains and sometimes with rivers till it come
to this See July the 20 1595. and translated to St. Asaph September the 16 1601. 1601. 68 Francis Godwin translated to Hereford this Francis Godwin being then Subdean of Exceter was he who compiled the Catalogue of Bishops here cited year 1618 1618. 69 George Carleton translated to Chichester year 1619 1619. 70 Theophilus Field translated to St. Davids year 1628 1628. 71 John Murrey Bishop first in Ireland a Scot by Nation had his Majesty had Bishopricks sufficient to have stoptd all their mouths Episcopacy had not so been bandied against 1639. 72 Morgan Owen Bishop 1641. This Bishoprick was valued in the Exchequer at 154 l. 14 s. 1 d. and paid for first fruits 700 Ducats year 1155 In the beginning of King Henry the 2d. his reign and in the year of our Lord God 1155 Rees ap Gruffith ap Rees whom the Welsh book surnameth Lord Rees and all the Latine and English Writers of that times name King of South Wales did leavy all his Forces to defend his Countrey from Owen Gwineth whom he understood to be raising of men to conquer South Wales So that Rees came as far as Aberdyni over against North Wales and perceiving the rumour to be false built a Castle there and so returned back Caerneon Castle built At the same time Madoc ap Meredyth Prince of Powis did build a Castle at Caerneon besides Pymer at that time Meyric his nephew escaped out of prison where he had been long kept Eglwys Vair built then also Eglwys Vair in Myvot was built At this time King Henry banished the Flemmings whom King Stephen had brought in and sent some of them to their cozens into West VVales About this time Caradocus Lhanoarvan who is reputed and taken of all learned men to be the Authour of the Welsh History ended his Collections of the Brittish Transactions from Cadwalader to this present time of whom some studious Antiquary composed this following Distichon Historiam Britonum doctus scripsit Caradocus Post Cadwalladrum Regia scripta notans In these two Abbies the Princes of Wales were usually buried The Successions and Acts of the Princes of VVales after this time until the year 1270 were kept and recorded from time to time in the Abbeys of Conwey in North VVales and Stratflur in South VVales as witnesseth Gutryn Owen who living in the dayes of Edward the 4th wrote the best and most perfect copy of the same year 1157 The King gathered his Forces from all parts of England intending to subdue North VVales being thereunto procured and moved by Cadwalader whom the Prince his brother had banished out of the land and bereaved of his living and by Madoc ap Meredyth Prince of Powis who envied at the liberty of North VVales which knew no Lord but one and hereupon the King conducted his Army to VVestchester and encamped on the march called Saltney So also Owen like a valiant Prince listed all his people fit for service and came to the utter Mears of his land purposing to give the King battel and encamped himself at Basingwerk which thing when the King understood he selected out of his Army divers of the chiefest bands and sent certains Earls and Lords with them towards the Princes Camp and as they passed the Wood called Coed Zulo David and Conan the Princes sons met with them and fiercely assaulted them and what by reason of the advantage of the ground and suddenness of the action the Englishmen were put to flight and many slain the rest being pursued to the Kings Camp They being exceedingly vexed with this disaster removed alongst the Sea coast thinking to get betwixt Owen and his Countrey but Owen fore-seeing the intent retreated back to a place which is called to this day Cil Owen that is Owens retreat and the King came to Ruthlan In the first voyage of King Henry against the VVelsh he was put in great danger of his life in a strait at Counsylth not far from Flint where Henry of Essex whose office was by inheritance to bear the Standard of England cast down the same and fled which thing so encouraged the VVelsh that the King being sore distressed had much ado to save himself and as the French Chronicle saith was glad to fly on whose part Eustare Fitz John and Robert Curcie two worthy Knights with divers other Noblemen and Gentlemen were slain After this Owen encamped and entrenched himself at Brynypin and daily skermished with the Kings men whilst in the mean time the King fortified the Castle of Ruthlan his Navy which guided by Madoc ap Meredyth Prince of Powis anchored at Môn or Anglesey and landed the Souldiers who spoiled two Churches and some of the countrey thereabout but as they returned unto their ships all the strength of the Isle set upon them Sacriledge punished and slew them all so that none of those who plundered the Churches brought tidings of their fortune The Marriners beholding this liked not the harbor but weighed up anchors made for Chester in the mean time there was a peace concluded between the King and the Prince K. Hen. buildeth a house for the Templers in Wales upon condition that Cadwalader should have his lands again his brother should be friendly unto him Then the King having the Castles of Ruthlan and Basywerk well fortified and manned after he had built a house thereby for the Templers returned into England At that time also Jorwerth Goch ap Meredyth got the Castle of Yale and burnt it Yale Castle burnt The year following Morgan ap Owen was traiterously slain by the men of Jorwerth ap Meyrick with whom died the best Poet in the Brittish Tongue of his time called Gurgan ap Rees and his brother Jorwerth got the Town or City of Caerleon upon Vsk Caerlheon upon Vsk City taken and the lands of Owen Now it was that the King made peace with all the Lords and Princes of VVales except Rees ap Gruffith ap Rees Prince of South VVales which Rees fearing the Kings power caused his people to remove their cattel and goods to the Wilderness of Tywy he still making War against the King Therefore the King sent for him to come to his Court to conclude a peace before the Forces both of England and VVales should be sent for him Rees after consultation came to the King and an order was taken that Rees should enjoy the Cantref Mawr as it should please the King so that his land should be whole together and not in divers Places and Shires but the King did contrary to his promise appointing Rees divers lands in several Places and Lordships intermingled with other mens lands which deceit although he perceived well enough yet he received it piece-meal as it was and lived quietly until Roger Earl of Clare hearing this came to the King and desired his Highness to give him such lands in VVales as he could win which the King granted Then he came with a
Matthaeus 1358 17 Thomas de Ringsted 1367 18 Gervasius de Castro 1370 19 Howel II. 1374 20 John Gilbert translated to Saint Davids 1376 21 John Clovensis   22 John Swaffan 1400 23 Richard Younge translated to Rochester   24 Lodovicus the II. 1408 25 Benedict Nicols translated to St. Davids 1418 26 VVillyam Barrow translated to Carlile   27 Nicolaus 1436 28 Thomas Cheriton 1448 29 John Stanbery translated to Hereford   30 Jacobus 1464 31 Thomas Edwane 1196 32 Henry Dean translated to Salisbury 1500 33 Thomas Picot 1504 34 John Penvy translated to Carlile 1505 35 Thomas Skenington 1534 36 John Capon translated to Salisbury 1539 37 John Bird translated to Chester 1541 38 Arthur Bulkeley or Bulkeby the bellseller 1555 39 VVillyam Glynn 1559 40 Rowland Meyric 1566 41 Nicholas Robinson 1585 42 Hugh Bellot translated to Chester 1595 43 Rich. Vaughan translated to Chester 1596 44 Henry Rowland 1616 45 Lewes Bayley 1632 46. David Dolvin 1633 47 Edward Gruffith 1637 48 VVillyam Roberts Sub-Almoner Bishop of Bangor 1641. About the year 1162. Howel the son of Jenaf ap Cadogan ap Athelstan Glodrydh got the Castle of VValwern in Cyvelioc and razed it which thing when it was told Owen Prince of Northwales it displeased him wonderfully at the which he was so grieved that nothing could make him merry untill such time as he had gathered his power and came to Lhanthinan in Arustly and thence sent away great spoiles which caused the People of the Country to come unto their Lord Howel ap Jenaf who followed the spoile to the Severn side where the Princes camp was the Prince apprehending now an occasion of revenge offered him was right glad and set upon his Enemies and slew the most part of them the rest with their Lord escaped to the woods and rocks The Prince being well pleased with this revenge built up his Castle again and fortified it strongly Castelh Catrec Hova The year following Owen the son of Gruffith ap Meredyth named Owen Cyvelioc and Owen ap Madoc ap Meredyth got the Castle of Carrechona by Oswestrie and wasted it year 1163 About the year 1163. King Henry the second gathered a strong army against Southwales and came himself as farr as Pencadyr beside Brecknock where Rees came to him and did homage and gave him pledges which done the King went out of Wales About this time Eneon the Son of Anarawd ap Gruffith Nephew to Prince Rees was murdered in his bed by a Man of his own named Lhywarch Also Cadogan ap Meredyth was slain in the like manner by one Walter ap Ricard The Lord Rees as he is called in Welsh or King Rees as Latin Authors call him took the Cantreff Maur which is a great Country and the Land of Dynevowr and enjoyed it And this year died Cadivor ap Daniel Archdeacon of Caerdigan and Henry ap Arthen who was the worthiest Clerk that had been in Wales many years The year ensuing the Lord Rees seeing he was not able to maintain his Estate with such Lands as the King had appointed him entered into the Territory of Roger de Clare Earl of Glocester for by that Earls means his Nephew was murdered and wan the Castles of Aberheidol and of the sons of Wywyaon and raised them And thus in short time he brought all Caerdigan under his subjection from thence he made many inroads against the Flemmings and brought away great spoiles This happy fortune caused all VVales to conspire the shaking off of the Norman yoak whose treason and cruelty they could not abide and to elect Princes of their own Nation In the year 1165. David the son of Owen Prince of Northwales did destroy all Flintshire which was the Kings K. Henry's third voyage in vain against the Welsh and carried all the people and cattel with him to the Dyffryn Cloyd now called Ruthin Land which when the King had notice of he levyed an army in haste and came to releive his Castels and people as far as Ruthlan and after he had rested there three dayes and could do no good he returned into England where he gathered another Army of selected Soldiers and chosen through all his Dominions sending for Auxiliaries from Flanders and Brittain and then returned to Northwales with resolution to destroy all that had life in the Land and coming to Croes Oswalt called Oswaldstree incamped there on the contrary side Prince Owen and his Brother Cadwalader with all the power of Northwales and the Lord Rees withall the forces of Southwales and Owen Cyvelioc and the Sons of Madoc ap Meredyth with the strength of Powis and the two sons of Madoc ap Edwerth with all the people betwixt Wye and Severne gathered themselves together and came to Cawen in Edierneon with purpose to defend their Country But the King understanding that they were so nigh being wonderous desirous of battail came to the river Ceireoc and caused the wood to be felled whereupon a number of the Welsh understanding the passage unknown to their Captains met with the Kings Ward where were placed the choyce men of all the Army where began a hot skirmish and divers worthy Men were slain on each side but in the end the King obtained the passage and came to the Mountain of Berwyn where he lay in camp certain dayes and so both the Armies stood in awe each of other the King kept the plains as being doubtfull to be entrapped in straits but the Welsh watched for the opportunity and advantage of the ground and kept the King so straightly that neither forrage nor victuall might come to his camp The Welsh united invincible against the English neither durst any Soldier stir abroad and to augment these miseries there fell such store of rain that the Kings Men could scarce stand upon their feet upon those slippery places in the end the King was compelled to return home without his purpose and that with great loss of Men and Ammunition besides his charges therefore in a great choler he charged the Pledges eyes A cruel act of K. Henry 2. whom he received long before that to be put out which were Rees and Cadwalhon sons to Owen and Cynwric and Meredyth the sons of Rees Roger Hove and other I find also saith Mr. Powel written by divers that in the assailing of a bridge the King was in no small danger of his life for one of the Welshmen shooting directly at him had pierced him through the body if Hubert de St. Clare Constable of Colchester perceiving the Arrow coming had not thrust himself betwixt the King and it Hol. page 408. whereby he saved his Master and lost his own life Then after long consultation the King came again to North Wales intending to have his Army conveyed by Sea and to Land in some convenient place of the Countrey and with his design he came to Chester and there reposed a certain time till all his Navy was gathered together as
franchises being possessed or claimed by any person or persons and which were to be seized into the Kings hands and of all escapes and Fellons and those inquisitions so from time to time to be taken to certifie into the Chancery And by the same Charter gave him power to substitute and appoint others under him for the better execution of the same which afterwards by Commission was executed accordingly And the said King also by his Charter bearing date 14 Junii 8º regni made and constituted the said Arthur Prince of Wales and Governour and Warden of the Marches towards Scotland and substituted as his Lieutenant and Vice-Warden under him Thomas Earle of Surrey for the due execution thereof Likewise the said King by his letters Patents dated 5. Novemb. 9. regni in augmention of the Revenue of the Prince did grant unto the said Prince the Honour Castle and Lordship of Wigmore and divers other Castles Mannours and Lands which some time had been belonging to the Earldom of March which came to the Crown by King Edward the IV. who was himself Earle of March before he assumed the regal estate To have and to hold during the pleasure of the King yielding yearly the Rent of 200 l. A Councel assigned the P. The Prince was sent unto the Marches of Wales for government of that Country and in the 17 regni Henry VII had a Counsell of wise and very worthy men assigned unto him as namely Sr. Richard Pool chief Chamberlain of the said Prince Sir Henry Vernon Sir Richard Crofts Sir David Philips Sir William Vdal Sir Thomas Inglefield and Sir Peter Newton Knights John Wilson Henry Marian Doctor William Smith after Bishop of Lincolne where he was buryed President of the Councel and Doctour Charles where not long afterwards the said Prince died in the Castle of Ludlow without issue I may not let passe what Mr. Lhoyd writeth concerning Sir Owen Tuder he saith that Sir William Stanley then Lord of Cromfield Mr. Lhoyd fol. 391. Yale and Chirkland aided Henry VII being followed by the Welshmen and that the said Henry knowing and pittying the thraldom and iniuries of that Nation from whom he descended took order to reform the same and granted vnto them a Charter of liberties The bondage of Hen. IV. taken from the Welsh by Hen. VII whereby they were released of that oppression wherewith they were afflicted by lawes I have set down before more heathenish then christian and here I cannot omit but some thing answer the reproachful and slanderous assertions of Joannes Bernardus Pontus Henlerus and others I my self have seen a manuscript where he is called a Shereman but rather ignorantly I hope then maliciously who go about to abase the noble parentage of Owen Tuder the Kings Grandfather following more their own affections then any good proof or authority for if they would read that noble work of Matthew Paris they shall find in page 843. of the printed book that Ednivet Vachan one of his Ancestours was the chiefest of Councel to Lhewelin ap Jorwerth otherwise called Leolenus Magnus and to David ap Lhewelin Princes of Wales as formerly They may also find in the Records of the Tower of London in an 29. Edward I. in the general homage done to Prince Edward of Caernavon first prince of Wales of the English bloud that Tuder ap Grono another of the Ancestours of Owen did his homage among the Nobles of Wales Owen Tuder descended from the K. of England as appeareth in the said Records Further the said Owens Grandmother the wife of Tuder ap Grono was Margaret the daughter of Thomas the son of Elianor which was the daughter of the County of Barr by Elianor his wife daughter to Edward I. King of England Besides all this there was a Commission at this time directed by King Edward VII to the Abbot of Lhan Egwest Doctor Owen Pool Canon of Hereford and John King Herald to make inquisition concerning the parentage of the said Owen who coming to VVales travelled in that matter and used the helps of Sir John Levof Guttin Owen Bardh Gruffith ap Lhewelin ap Evan Vachan and others in the search of the Brittish or Welsh books of Pedigrees out of the which they drew his perfect Genealogy from the Antient Kings of Brittain and the Princes of VVales and so returned their Commission which return is extant to be seen at this day And I God willing will set forth what I have in a compendium which I intend to annex to this present treatise of many things which cannot be well digested in method of History yet much conduce to the Glory of the Welsh the several princely stems from whence Owen Tuder and consequently the succeeding Kings of England descended Henry Duke of York After the death of Prince Arthur King Henry VII Charta creationis P. Wal. by his letters patents dated the 18 of February 19 regni in a parliament created Henry then his only son who after was King Henry VIII and whom before that in the 11. he had made Lord Lieutenant of Ireland by an other Charter of the same year Constable of the Castle of Dover to be Prince of Wales Earle of Chester being then about the age of twelve years To have and to hold to him and his heirs Kings of England for ever being the like limitation of Estate and with the like investure as in former times had been acustomed But whether the King did grant the lands and revenues belonging to the said principality unto the said Henry or no as he had done unto Prince Arthur his brother doth not appear by any Charter therof that as yet can be found After the death of King Henry VII the said Prince Henry was King of England by the name of King Henry VIII he had a issue son called Henry who dyed very young he likewise had issue the Lady Mary afterwards Queen and the Lady Elizabeth and lastly prince Edward the youngest in years who first reigned after the death of his said father by the name of Edward the Sixt. Mary The Lady Mary daughter to the same King Henry the VIII Mr. Lhoyd fol. 393. by the Queen Catherine his first wife was Princesse of Wales and in the 17. year of King Henries reign he sent John Voiseie Bishop of Exeter to be Lord President of the Councel of the said Princesse in the Marches of Wales Elizabeth Elizabeth daughter to King Henry the VIII Mr. Lhoyd fol. 394. was in a Parliament begun the 15 day of January in the 25 regni declared Princesse and Inheritrix of the Crown of England with all the Dominions to the same belonging in default of issue male of the body of the said King Henry Sr. John Dodridge doth not approve of King Edward VI. Queen Mary or Queen Elizabeth to have been Prince or Princesse formally for he saith there cannot be found any Charter among the records whereby it may appear that any of
contains in it 248. Parishes and in them 18. Market Towns the chief whereof is Dorchester as that which doth denominate the whole County A Town not much famous for much else then that it hath long been and doth still continue the honorary title of those noble Personages which have been severally Marquesses and Earls OF DORSET 1 Osmond de Sees E. 2 John Beaufort Marquess L. Adm. 3 Thomas Beaufort Earl Duke of Exceter Lord Chancellor and Lord Admiral 4 Edmund Beaufort E. and Marque 5 Henry Beaufort Marq. 6 Edmund Beaufort Marq. 7 Thomas Grey Marq. 8 Thomas Grey Marq. 9 Henry Grey Marq. D. of Suffolk 10 Thomas Sackvile Lord Buckhurst created Earl of Dorset 10 Jacobi Lord Treasurer and Chancellour of Oxford 11 Robert Sackvile E. 12 Richard Sackvile E. 13 Edward Sackvile E. Lord Chamberlain to the Queen 14 Edward Sackvile now Earl of Dorset 1661. The Earles of Salisbury and Exceter RObert Sitsylt came into Wales with Robert Fitz Hamon who conquered Jestin Prince of Glamorganshire an inheretrix by whom he had Halterennis and other lands in Herefordshire and Glocestershire James Sitsylt Esq   Iohn Sitsylt Esq The Lady Maud de Frenes Eustace Sitsylt Esq Elianor daughter to Sir VVill. Pembridge Knight Sir Baldwin Sitsylt Knight temp Hen. secundi daughter to Maurice de Brampton Esq Gerald Sitsylt Esq Mavil daughter to Sir Moygne Knight Robert Sitsylt Esq Alice daughter to Sir Rob. Trogois Knight James Sitsylt Esq Isabell daughter to Sir John Knell Knight Gerald Sitsylt Esq Margaret Daughter to Stephan de Ber. John Sitsylt Esq Sibil daughter to Robert of Ewyas Esquire Sir John Sitsylt Knight Alicia sister to Sir Richard Baskervile Knight Iohn Sitsylt Esq Jone daughter to sir Richard Monington Knight Thomas Sitsylt Esq Margaret daughter and heir to Gilbert de Winston Esq Philip Sitsylt Esq Margaret daughter to Iohn Philips Esq Richard Sitsylt Knight Cecil Esq Margaret daughter to Philip Vaughan Esq David Cecil Esq   Sir William Cecil Baron Burley Knight of the Garter c. Mary sister to Sir Iohn Cheek Kt. Rob. Cecil E. of Salisbury Elizab. d. to W. Brook L. of Cob. Will. Cecil E. of Salisbury 1661 Katherine d. to Tho. Howard E. of Suffolk Charles Lord Cranbourne Iane daughter to Maxwell Esq groom of the bed-Chamber to K. Charles of glorious memory Tho. Cecil E. of Exceter Dorothy d. and co-h to I. Nevil L Latimer Will Cecil E. of ●xceter Eliz. d h. of Ed. Mannors E. of Rutland D. Cecil now E of Exceter 1661 descended from a younger son of William L. Burley Eliz. d. to Iohn Egerton Earl of Bridgwater SALISBURY Salisbury is the chief City of Wilts it was at first seated high upon an hill as being a place designed for strength and war yet honoured for a while with a Bishops See and a fair Cathedral But the Bishops and the Clergy finding no good quarter amongst the Soldiers which were there in Garrison and being destitute of water upon so high an hill about the time of Rich. I. began to leave it and plant themselves down lower by the water-side being once setled there and raising a new Cathedral for Gods publick service the people also followed after and left old Sarum to it self which in short time became so totally deserted that now the ruines of it are hardly visible but for new Salisbury that grew up presently to a great renowne pleasantly seated on the river with water in every street thereof and for the populousness of the place plenty of provision and spacious market place and a fair Town hall is esteemed to be the second City of all that Tract and which adds no small lustre to it a place that hath been very fortunate in those eminent persons on whom the Kings of England have bestowed the title of Earls of Salisbury Earles of Salisbury Patrick d' Eureux Will. d' Eureux VVill Longespee base son to K. Henry 2. who married Ella daughter of VVill. d' Eureux VVilliam Longespee VVill. de Montacute VVill. de Mont. John de Mont. Tho. de Mont. Richard Nevil who married Elianor daughter of Thomas Mont. Lord Ch. Richard Nevil Earl of VVarwick George Duke of Clarence who maried Isabel daughter of Richard Earl of VVarwick Edward eldest son of King Richard 3. and Anne the second daughter of Richard Nevil Margaret daughter of George Duke of Clarence created Countess of Salisbury by King Henry 8. Robert Cecil Viscount Crambourne created Earl of Salisbury 3. Jacob. VVilliam Cecil now Earl of Salisbury 1661. EXCETER Exceter is now the chief City of Devonshire a fair and goodly seat it is placed upon the Eastern bank of the River Ex from whence it had the name of Exceter In circuit it contains within the walls about a mile and a half besides the suburbs which every way stretch out to a great length and in the circuit there are numbered fifteen Parish Churches besides the Cathedral the whole environed with deep ditches and very stronge wals having many Towers therein very well disposed and yet the animosity of the Inhabitants is a greater strength unto it then the walls or ditches whereof they have given notable proof in these later times to their great honour here followeth a Catologue of the Dukes Marquesses and Earles John Holland E. of Huntington made Duke of Exceter by Richard 2. Thomas Beaufort E. of Dorset Lord Ch. and Adm. made Duke of Exceter by King Henry 5. Iohn Holland Duke Lord Adm. Henry Holland Duke Lord Adm. Henry Courtney E. of Devon created Marquesse of Exceter by K. Henry 8. Thomas Cecil Lord Burley created Earl of Exceter 3. Jaco VVilliam Cecil David Cecil now Earl 1661. THE SECOND BOOK Arma Paterna year 877 ANARAWD the Son of Roderick began his Reign over VVales in the year of Christ 877. year 878 The year 878. died Fedan the son of Melht a noble man of VVales and the second year following there was a great Battel fought by the Danes and the Englishmen of Mercia against the Welshmen upon the River Conway where the VVelshmen had the Victory and this was called the Revenge of the Death of Roderick year 879 About this time Eveneth the Son of Bledrid a Baron of VVales died Forrain and alwaies pernicious and Anarawd King or Prince of North-Wales came with a great Army of English-men and made War against his Brother Cadeth and spoiled the country of Caerdigan and Ystradgwy The Danes being put hard to their shifts by Alfred left their Wives and children in Essex and passed spoiling the Land to * Forsan Cowbridge Quadbridge upon Severn and so passed the River and spoiled the countries of Brechnock Gwentland and Gwenthwg About the year 900. Igmond with a great number of Souldiers came to Anglesey and the Welshmen gaue him a Battel at Molerein There be some Brittish Copies of this History which affirm that this battel between Igmond Captain of the black Nations and the Brittains wherein Mervin was slain was
fought at a place called Meilon of the which it was called Maes Rhos Meilon year 907 The year 907. died Cadeth King or Prince of South-Wales third Son to Roderick the Great leaving behinde him three Sons Howel Dha that is to say Howel the Good who succeded his Father in the Kingdome of South-Wales Meyric and Clydawc Shortly after there came a great Navy from Tydwick with Vther and Rahald and past the Western Sea to Wales and destroyed Saint Davids and there fought the Battel Dinerth where Mayloc the Son of Peredur Gam was slain year 913 In the year 913 Anaawd chief King of Wales dyed and left behinde him two Sons Edwal Voel who reigned after him and Elise 〈…〉 Mr. Mills fol. 292. Anno 877. Mr. Mills differeth here from Mr. Powel the one setting Voel the other Mervin to succeed I will therefore set down both Writings the former of these two saith Mervin the first begotten son of Rhoderick the Great Prince of all VVales by the Gift and Grant of his Father was made Lord or Prince of that Country of Wales which the Inhabitants call Gwyneth the Englishmen North-VVales and the Latines Venedotia This province was divided into four countries or quarters which contained fifteen Cantreds This word Cantred being compounded of the Brittish and Irish Language is said to be such a portion of Land as may contain an hundred Villages The chief and principal place of this Country was the Isle of Anglesey or Mon and in Aberfraw a city thereof was the Royal pallace of the Kings of North-VVales now the reason why the Kings of Gwyneth were called Kings of Aberfraw was for that in the Laws of the good Howel Prince and Law-giver it was decreed That as the Kings of Aberfraw ought of Right to pay threescore and three pounds in way of Tribute to the King of London so the King of Dynefur and Mathraval should also be hound in like manner to pay the like mony unto the King of Aberfraw as it were also by way of Tribute by vvhich it appeareth that this Lord vvas the chief Prince of VVales The VVife of Mervin the Son of Roderick Prince of Venedotia or North-VVales thus saith Mr. Mills but names her not Their Issue Idwallo surnamed Voel Prince of Venedotia Edwal Voel Ut ante After that Edwal Voel began his Dominion over North-Wales Mr. Powel fol. 46. Howel Dha being King or Prince of South-VVales and Powis land a terrible Comet appeared in the Firmament at which time the year following Leicester was nevv built year 917 The next year follovving the men of Denelm did destroy the Isle of Môn or Anglesey and the year 917. Clydawc the Son of Cadeth vvas slain by the hands of his brother Meyric and about the same time the Englishmen did overthrovv the Danes Much about this time Elfled Dutchess of Mercia sent her vvhole Army into VVales Ren. Cest Math. West Hel. pa. 222. and fought vvith the VVelshmen and vvan Brecknock and took the Queen and three and thirty men This vvas it vvhich is called in VVelsh Gweythy Dinas Newydh that is to say The battel of the new Citty also she vvon the Tovvn of Derby John Castoreus reporteth this story in this manner Huganus Lord of VVest VVales Jo. Cast perceiving King Edward to be occupied in the Danish VVar far enough from him gathered an Army of Brittains and entred the Kings Land whereupon Elfled Lady of Mercia and Sister to King Edward came to Wales with a strong Army and fought with the Welshmen at Brecknock and putting Huganus to flight took his Wife and thirty four Captives and led them with her to Mercia Huganus thus discomfited fled to Derby and there being peaceably entertained of the Countrymen with fifteen men of War and two hundred Souldiers well appointed joyned himself with the Kings adversaries the Danes of which thing when Elfled was certified by the men of Derby she followed him with a great Army and entred the Gates of that Town where Huganus resisted her and slew four of her chief Officers But Gwyane Lord of the Isle of Ely her Steward set the Gates on fire and furiously running upon the Brittains entred the Town then Huganus being overmatched A stout resolution of a valiant Welshman and choosing rather to dye by the Sword then to yield himself to a Woman was there slain The same Authour also reporteth that about this time Leofred a Dane and Gruffith of Madoc Brother in Law to the Prince of West Wales came to Ireland with a great Army to Snowdon and minding to bring all Wales and the Marches thereof to their subjection overran and subdued all the Countrey to Chester before King Edward could be certified of their Arrival whereat he was much discontented and being loth to trouble his subjctes in that behalf made a vow that he and his Sons with their own people would he revenged on Leofred and Gruffith and thereupon came to Chester and wan the City from them after which he divided his army into two Battails whereof he and his Son Athelstane led the first and Edmund and Eldred the second and so followed them with as much celerity as he could and overtook them at the Forrest of Walewood now Sherwood where Leofred and Cruffith set upon him fiercely so that the King in the beginning was in some Distress until Athelstane stepped in between his Father and Leofred and wounded the Dane in the arme in such sort that he being not able to hold his spear was soon taken and committed to the custody of Athelstane In the mean time Edmund and Edred encountring with Gruffith slew him and brought his head to their Father Then Athelstane caused Leofred to be beheaded and so both their heads were set up together on the top of the Tower of Chester The year 933. Owen the Son of Gruffith was slain by the men of Cardigan 933. Wil. Malmsh Hol. p. 225. Jo. Cast Mat. West Ren. Cest P●w●l fol. ●50 The B●●tains removed into Cornwal Math West Hol. pag. 226. Then Athelstane did enter Wales with a great Army and brought the Kings of the Country to subjection and received yearly of Tribute twenty pounds in gold and three hundred paid in silver and two hundred head of Cattel yet the Laws of Howel appointed to the King of Aberfraw to pay yearly to the King of London no more but sixty six pounds for a Tribute and that the Prince of Dinevowre and the Prince of Powis should pay a like summ of sixty six pounds yearly to the King of Aberfraw In the year 936. dyed Euneth the son of Clydawc and Meiric the son of Cadeth at this time also Athelstane did remove the Brittains that dwelt in Exeter and thereabouts to Cornwal and appointed the River Cambria to be the utter Mere towards England as he had before appointed the River Wy to be the Mere of England and Wales About the year 940. Cadeth the son of Arthvael a noble