Selected quad for the lemma: peace_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
peace_n justice_n recognizance_n session_n 2,152 5 10.8775 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A59082 An historical and political discourse of the laws & government of England from the first times to the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth : with a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England : collected from some manuscript notes of John Selden, Esq. / by Nathaniel Bacon ..., Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. 1689 (1689) Wing S2428; ESTC R16514 502,501 422

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Labour or other Contribution none of which ought to be done but by publick Law. And therefore when the Inhabitants of the County of Cornwal were to make defence against Invasion and Piracy from the Coast of Little Britain in regard they were a long slender County and upon sudden surprizals People could not so readily flock together for their joynt defence they obtained an Act of Parliament to give them power to fortifie the Sea-coasts according to the direction of the Sheriff and Justices of the Peace Lastly Wars once begun must be maintained at the charge of the undertakers If they be the Kings own Wars he must maintain them out of his own Treasury till the benefit of them do prove to the common good and in such cases the charges have been sometimes provided before the work by Act of Parliament and sometimes after Henry the Seventh and Henry the Eighth both of them at their several times went to Boloigne with their Armies Henry the Seventh with an intent to gain profit to himself by an advantagious peace and had his ends therein and was ashamed to ask aid of the people towards the charges of that War. Henry the Eighth went upon his own charge also with his Army trusting to the Parliament for consideration to be had of his employment wherein his expectation did not fail and in his absence made Queen Katherine General of all the Forces of England in his absence and gave her power with other five Noble Personages to take up Money upon Loan as occasion should require and to give security of the same for the maintaining and raising of Forces if need should require as is more particularly set forth in the Patent-rolls of these times Nevertheless the War at Sea Infra quatuor Maria was ever reputed defensive as to the Nation and under the publick charge because no War could be there but an Enemy must be at hand and so the Nation in imminent danger and therefore the maintenance of the Navy-Royal in such cases was from the publick Treasury To conclude therefore if the Parliament and Common Law in all these Cases of Levies of men for War payment of Souldiers and their deportment in cases of Fortifications and of maintenance of Wars at Sea and the deportment of such as are employed therein I say if they give the Law and carry the Supream Directory then certainly the Law rules in that which seems most lawless and though Kings may be chief Commanders yet they are not the chief Rulers CHAP. XXXIII Of the Peace PEace and War originally depend upon the same power because they relate each to other as the end to the means and receive motion from one and the same Fountain of Law that ruleth both in Peace and War. It is very true that several Ages hitherto have been troubled with arbitrary Exhalations and these very times whereof we now treat are not altogether clear from such an air Two Kings we have at once in view both of them of an elate spirit one working more closely by cunning the other more openly by Command yet neither of them pretending so high as to do all or be all in all Peace suited more with Henry the Seventh than with his Son who delighted to be accounted terrible rather than good yet both of them were glad enough to be at peace at home and were industrious to that end though by several means Henry the Seventh pretended Justice and Peace a welcome news to a people that formerly accounted nothing theirs but by the leave of the Souldier and therefore sets upon the Reformation of the Sheriffs Courts in the entring of Plaints and making of Juries suitable to that present time wherein men of Estates were very scarce and much of the Riches of the Nation evaporated into the Wars both Civil and Foreign Although the continuance of that order concerning Juries in the succeeding times of opulency hath brought these Courts into contempt and made way thereby for the Kings Courts to swell in Glory and to advance Prerogative even above it self Secondly he reforms Goals as well in their number as their use During the Civil Wars every small party of men that could get a strong place made the same not onely a Castle but a Goal and usually imprisoned and ransomed at their own pleasure For remedy whereof Henry the Seventh restores all Goals to the Sheriffs saving such as hold by Inheritance and gives power to two Justices of the Peace one being of the Quorum to take Bail in cases bailable and Recognizances of the Peace to be certified at the next Sessions or Goal-delivery Thirdly both Kings concur in providing against such disorders as more immediately did trench upon the publick Peace and reached at the Crown it self by labouring to prevent by severe punishing and lastly by regulating the proceedings of Judicature in such cases These disorders were two inordinate wearing of Liveries and unlawful Assemblies The first being in nature of unlawful assembly of minds and spirits of men the second of their bodies and persons Both these had formerly been provided against but the Judges of the Common Law unto whose Cognizance these Crim● were holden did restrain their punishments to the rule of the Common Law then thought to be too facile and mean for disorders that did flie at so high a pitch and therefore they are reduced before a higher Tribunal as matter of State as hath been already mentioned The severity of punishment consisted not so much in aggravating the Pain as the Crime matters of injury being made Felonies and those Treasons This Crime of Treason at first it concerned matters acted against the Nation afterwards it reached to matters acted against the King now it reacheth even to the very thoughts and imaginations of the heart not onely of bodily harm to the King but of the Queen or their Heirs apparent or tending to deprive them of their Title of Name of Royal Estate This Crime was formerly made but Felony by Henry the Seventh and then onely extended to such offence committed by one of the Kings Houshold against the Person of the King or a Lord or any of the Council Steward Treasurer or Controller so as the Person of the Queen was not then in the case and yet then newly Crowned and at that instant bearing in her Womb the Royal Seed which was then the onely earnest of the stability and glory of England and therefore it is a subject of wonderment unless it were out of extremity of Jealousie lest he should seem to make too great account of her Title and thereby disparage his own And then is it a piece of wit but not without weakness for he that is jealous of the slightings of other men shews himself unresolved in his own pretensions Now Henry the Eighth not onely raised the price but added to the thing and not onely putteth the Queen but the Prince or Heir
from the gripe of the Clergie on the other who hitherto held the Cognizance of the Markets in Weights and Measures to themselves This model so pleased all men that Richard the Second that was pleased with nothing but his own pleasure gave unto the Justices of Peace yet further power to execute the Statute at Northampton against riotous ridings and to settle the Wages of Labourers and Servants to punish unlawful Huntings by the meaner sort of people and regrators of Wool false Weights in the Staple unlawful wearing of Liveries and unlawful Fishings contrary to the Statute at Westminster 2. Thus was the power of Justices of Peace grown to that heighth in these and other things that it undermined not onely the Council-Table and Kings Bench but the Commissions of Gaol-delivery and of Oyer and Terminer so far forth as their work was much less than formerly For Neighbours in cases of crime are better trusted with the Lives and Estates of men than Strangers so as in all this the people are still the gainers The manner of Judicature by these Justices of the Peace still remains nothing appears by any Statute in these times that one Justice of the Peace might do alone but record a forcible Detainer although questionless in point of present security of the Peace and good Behaviour by the intent of the Statutes he might do many things but in Cases of Oyer and Terminer all must be done in publick Sessions which the Justices of the Peace had power to hold by Commission onely until the Thirty sixth year of Edward the Third and ever after that they held their Sessions by vertue of the Statutes and had power to determine divers things in their Sessions according to discretion These were remedies after the Fact now see what preventing Physick these times afforded One thing that much irritated the spirits of men into discontents was false News or slanderous reports raised and spread amongst the great men For in these Times the Lords were of such a considerable power as the vexation of one Lord proved the vexation of a multitude of the meaner sort And though the Statute of Westminster the 1. formerly had provided against such Tales yet it touched onely such as concerned discord between the King and people although by implication also it might be construed to extend further But Richard the Second willing to live in quiet that he might enjoy his pleasure would have the people know their duties in plain words and agreed to a Law That all such as published such false News tending to sow strife between the Great men should be imprisoned until the first mover was found and if he were not found then the Relator should be punished by advice of the Council So much power was then given to the Council whatever it was Thus the seed was choked or was so intended to be though every passion was not thus suppressed For some angers conquer all fear and will hold possession come what will. In the next place therefore provision is made against the first Actings in sorting of parties by Tokens and Liveries utterly inhibiting the meaner sort of the people from giving of Liveries to maintain quarrels upon pain of Fine and Imprisonment and the Trial to be before the Justices of Assize which it seems was in affirmance of former Laws as by the Preamble of the Statute doth appear though the Laws themselves are not extant About Fifteen years after it was by sad experience found that the Lords maintained quarrels by multitude of Liveries and therefore another Law was made inhibiting the Lords to give Liveries to any but their menial Servants and it is ordered that the Justices of the Peace shall make enquiry of such offences and punish them according to their discretion A third prevention was provided against gathering together of Parties after they are sorted For the humours may so abound as nothing will keep them in they must either break out into a sore or a long sickness of State will certainly follow To this end therefore the Statute made at Northampton is again revived expresly forbidding all persons to ride armed unless in some particular cases of executing Justice or guarding the person of the King or his Justices and suchlike And if men will be so adventurous as to out●dare Law by publick force Troopings together and riotous Ridings another course is taken not by Commission of the Peace but rather of War directed unto valiant persons in every County and they have power thereby to apprehend such Offenders and imprison them until the Gaol-delivery though no Indictment be found thereof until the Gaol-delivery shall be By this Commission therefore power is given of Posse Comitatus in nature of a Commission of Array with an additional power of fighting and destroying so as though the King granteth the Power by the Commission yet the Parliament giveth the Power to the Commission and be it a Commission for Peace or War it is originally from that power The fourth and last prevention was the taking away means of continuance and supporting such Riotous ways Viz. Castles and Gaols out of the Custody of private hands and restoring them to their Counties For Gaols and Castles are taken promiscuously for places of security in times of Peace to keep ill persons from going out and in times of War from getting in Amongst these some belonged to the King and were committed to such as he favoured who commonly in such times of Oppression and Violence grew too big for Justice usurping a Gaol delivery and making such places of strength many times even to the innocent a Prison to keep them from the Law but unto guilty persons an Asylum to defend them against the Law. And these thus belonging to the King were under no Law but of Prerogative whereas other Castles of private persons were under the yoke of the Statute 13 E. 1. For remedy of all which the Kings Castles are once more returned to the Sheriff's Custody by Act of Parliament who questionless have the power to dispose of all places of strength whether in order to Peace or War and could not dispose them into a more safe and indifferent hand than the Sheriff's who is as well the King's Officer as the Kingdoms Servant and much intrusted by the Law in the execution of its own power And thus is this Nation now prepared for a setled Peace a condition that is long in ripening and soon rotten unless it be well fenced and over-awed by a good Conscience But Richard the Second was neither so good nor so happy his Heart affected to be high but his Head could not bear it he turns giddy and runs far wide Those that would reduce him he enforces into Foreign Countries and himself holds on his career over Hedge and Ditch into Ireland where under pretension of holding possession of that Kingdom he lost England and whilst he plays
But Queen Mary having gotten a safe reserve from Spain upon all adventures and a strong interest amongst the people by upholding the Catholick party made no bones to innovate in the point of arming of the Militia although it cost the people much more than was imposed upon their Ancestors The pattern hereof was taken from the Spanish Cabinet the Queen being loth to be inferiour to her own Husband in bringing as much strength to him as he to her and both of them willing enough to appear potent in the eyes of France that then stood in competition with them both A yoke it was yet neither the King nor Queens Will but the Parliament put it on and ere an Age expired it was cast off again For the better understanding see it in this Scheme Per Annum Lances Light-horse Corslets Bows Hacquebuts Bills 1000 l. 6 10 40 30 20 20 1000 marks 4 6 30 20 10 10 400 l. 2 4 20 15 6   200 l. 1 2 10 8 3   100 l.   2 3 3 2   100 marks   1 2 2 1   40 l.     2 1 2   20 l.     1 1 1   10 l.     A Coat of Plate 1 1   5 l.     A Coat of Plate 1     Goods 1000 marks 1 1 2 4 3   400 l.   1 1 2 1   200 l.     1 2 1   100 l.     1 2     40 l.     2 Coats of Plate 1   1 20 l.     1 Coat of Plate 2   1 10 l.       1 1 The Lances were to be compleatly harnessed or the one half of them The Corcelets furnished with Coats of Mail and Pikes the Bows with and Iron Cap and a Sheaf of Arrows the Hacquebuts with Sallets All which was to be over and besides such Arms as men were bound unto by Tenure or Covenant with the Landlord or by vertue of the Statute 33. H. 8. c. 5. besides Townships which were charged with joynt-arms Annuities and Copy-holds were charged as Goods If the Arms were lost in the Service the owner must make them good again The defaults were punishable with Fine by the Justices of the Peace who had the view and might present them at the Sessions to be proceeded upon as in other cases Here is provision enough yet not as the Arms of the Militia of the Kingdom but as a Magazine in the hands of every particular man and as his proper Goods to be imployed for the publick Service either upon suddain Invasion in a defensive War or when the Parliament shall send them abroad And yet it is also a rule unto the Crown against arbitrary Assessments upon discretion from which it cannot recede if it mean to do right It might now very well stand with the Justice of Queen Elizabeth to grant Commissions of Array Secundum formam Statutorum and do hurt to no man. It is true her Commissions of Lord Lieutenancy wanted that limitation in words yet they carried the sense For if the Crown were bound by the Law the Lord Lieutenants were much rather but the danger arose after the death of Queen Elizabeth For when King James came to the Crown under colour of pleasing the people and easing them of a burthen he pleased himself more and made the yoke upon the people much more heavy in the conclusion for where no declared Law is there the discretion of them that have the care lying upon them must be the Rule And thus came the Scotish blood to have pretensions to a greater Prerogative than all their Predecessors had upon this supposal that the Statute of Queen Mary took away all former Laws of that kind and then the taking away of the Statute of Queen Mary takes away all declared Law as to that point But more truly it may be inferred that if all Statute-Laws be taken away then the rule of Tenures at the Common Law must remain in force and no other Nevertheless this Statute of Queen Mary though in force for the present was not a general rule for Arms in all places of this Nation for the Marches of Scotland were a peculiar Jurisdiction as to this point They stood in more constant need of Arms than any other part of this Nation in regard of their uncertain condition in relation to their neighbouring Jurisdiction and therefore were the Farms of these parts generally contracted for upon a special reservation of Arms for each particular which being now decayed are again reduced by Queen Elizabeth to their ancient condition in the time of Henry the Eighth A second thing which may come under this general consideration of arming is the arming of places by making of Forts and Castles which was not in the immediate determinate will of the Crown to order as it pleased For though they may seem to be means of Peace and present Safety yet they are Symptoms of War and in the best times are looked upon with a jealous eye especially such as are not bordering upon the Coasts Because that Prince that buildeth Castles within the Land is supposed to fear the Neighbourhood This was more especially regarded in the days of Philip and Mary for when that Marriage was to be solemnized it was one of the Articles to provide for the safety of such Forts and Castles as then were maintained to the end they might be preserved free from Usurpation for the Use Profit Strength and Defence of the Realm onely by the natural born of the same And afterwards when occasion was offered for the building of more of that nature a new power is given to King Philip and Queen Mary to re-edifie or make Forts and Castles which must be executed by Commission to the Lieges for ten years and onely within the Counties bordering upon Scotland and these particularly named in the Statute So as the Crown had not power to build in all cases nor to any end they pleased Nor to place therein or betrust the same to whom it would Nor yet had Edward the Sixth that absolute power although not engaged in Foreign Interests as his Sister Mary was and therefore whereas Castellanes had been made for life by Patent and so the absolute power of the Crown was barred in the free disposal of the same during such time the Parliament gave the King power to remove such as were not liked or thought not faithful to the Publick Interest although they gave no cause of seizure by any disloyal act The like also may be observed of the Ships and Ordnance for they also do belong to the State as the Jewels of the Crown and therefore upon the Marriage of Queen Mary they also are by Articles preserved and saved for the use profit strength and defence of the Realm by the natural born of the same Thirdly As touching the ordering of the Souldiery the matter is not much to be insisted upon for little doubt is to be made but
Womanhood 138. Coverture 139 Custos Regni a formality of State under the Parliaments Order 79. many times conferred upon Children 80. and upon a Woman 148. D. DElegates though named by the King yet by Authority of the Parliament 133 Defender of the Faith 122 Dispensations Licenses and Faculties never in the Crown but by the Parliament givent to the Archbishop under limitations 137 139 Duels ordered by the Marshal as subservient to the Common Law 63. E. EDward the Third his Reign 2. his Title upon Entry by Election ibid. Edward the Fourth his Reign though had Title of Inheritance yet entred by Election 106 Edward the Fifth approached the Crown by Inheritance but never put it on 108 Edward the Sixth his Reign his Title and Possession did meet though he was a Child and his Sister Mary grown in age 152 Ecclesiastical power vide Prelacy and Prelates Elizabeth Queen her Reign 155. her Title by Election 163 Englishire taken away 56 Episcopacy vide Prelates and Prelacy Errors vide Heresie Exchange ordered by the Statute 38 Excommunication 159. the Writ de excommunicato capiendo ordered 169. vide Parliament exportation 38. F. FAlse News punished 66 Felony by riding in armed Troops 56 66 101 150 174 First-fruits regulated 90. taken away from Rome 130 Forcible entries 101 Forts Fortifications and Castles ordered by Parliament 147 171. G. GOal-delivery by the Judges of the Benches 54 97. vide Judges Goals regulated 67 149 Guard for the Kings Person brought in by Henry the Seventh 113 Gypsies made Felons 174 H. HEnry the Fourth his Reign doubtful in his Title but rested upon Election chosen by Parliament sitting when there was no King 68 c. Henry the Fifth his Reign his Title by an Intail by the Parliament 70 c. Henry the Sixth his Reign his Title by the Intail last mentioned though a Child he is admitted to the Crown 72 c. Henry the Seventh first setled a constant Guard his sixfold Right to the Crown and his gaining Prerogative in the persons and Estates of the people ibid. 113 c. Henry the Eighth his natural endowments 116 c. his power in the matters Ecclesiastical 120 c. in Temporals 125 c. Heresie and Errour in Doctrine under the cognizance of the Civil Magistrate 36 92. not punishable by death by Law till Henry the eighths time 126 138. the Writ De Heretico comburendo hath no legal ground in any of those former Times 67 93 95 126 138 Honours vide Parliament Hospitals visited by the Pelacy 90. I. IMportation 42 Judges of Assizes 97 142 Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical not originally in the Prelacy nor absolutely 137 Justices of the Peace their residency and quality their number various their work also 62 99. one Justice 63. and the setling of their Session ibid. their power to take Bail 149. K. KIngs vide Parliament Allegiance Supremacy Militia L. LAbourers their Work and Wages 42. ordered by the Justices of the Peace 63 Lancaster the Princes of that House friends to the Clergie in policy 86 Laws made by the Successors of Henry the Eighth during their minority annulled 69. Ecclesiastical Laws vide Parliament Lieges by Birth though not born within the Allegiance of England 57 Liveries and Tokens inhibited to the Lords 64 103. and limited in the Kings person ibid. means of jealousie between the King and his people 143 Libels in the Spiritual Court to be delivered in Copies upon demand 90 Licenses vide Dispensations Lords their power and jurisdiction in the Parliament 14. in Council 17 142 Lunacy no impediment in Trial of Treason 151. M. MAry Queen her Reign 153. her Title by Election 164. she prejudiced her Supremacy by Marriage 163 Marque and Reprisal 122 Martials Court 62 Matrimonial Causes after the Reformation by Henry the Eight in the Cognizance of the Clerge by leave 139 Militia 58 102 143 122. vide War. Mint 44 84. vide Parliament Monasteries dissolved 117. maintained by Henry the Fourth 86 Money out of England to Rome stopped 32. N. NAvy Royal as Forts for the publick safety maintained at the publick charge 148 Nisi prius 98 Non-residency 139 Noble Ladies Trial 101. O. OYer Terminer 54 98 Ordinary not to be questioned in the Civil Courts for things under Ecclesiastical jurisdiction 28 29. hath cognizance of Vsury 28. of Avoidances Bigamy and Bastardy 29. grant Administration 30. visit Hospitals and call Executors to account 90. hath power to fine and imprison 91 141. to keep Courts but the Authority doubtful 137. have Cognizance of the Heresie 91 138. Matrimony Non-residence ibid. In Queen Elizabeth's time their jurisdiction left in doubt 168 c. Oath ex Officio first brought in by the Church-men in matters Ecclesiastical 92. afterwards by the Parliament into the Star-chamber in cases criminal 142. P. PArdon of Crimes not absolutely in the King 11 Parliament without the King consisting of three States 69. without the Clergie 34 Parliaments power in ordering of the Crown 75 133 162. In ordering the King's person by Protectors 9. vide Protector In ordering their Children In ordering their Family 10 75. In ordering their Revenues 10 75 68. In ordering their Council 83 In the Militia vide Militia and War. In conferring places of Honour and Trust 11 23 In ordering the Mint vide Mint In making Ecclesiastical Laws Concerning Church-Government 131 c. 121 165. Concerning Doctrine 123 131 138 c. Concerning Worship 131 Concerning Church-censures 140 In granting Licenses and Dispensations 137 In final Appeals 133 In ordering it self 14 76 In Judicature 15 111 Parliament not inconstant though mutable 110 Peace Justices and their Sessions 62 c. 99 c. 148 c. 173 c. penal Laws executed to get money 108 114 Pleadings in English 57 Pope's power in England abated 33 c. vide Ordinary Supremacy Archbishop Prelacy not favoured by the Canon 140. their power since the time of Queen Mary 166. their dignity and power distinguished 28 34 Priests Wages 41 91 Praemunire and Provisors 32 34 c. 89 Proclamations made equal to Laws 125. altered 158 Protectors variety of them makes a doubtful Government 3 5 72 Purveyance regulated 31 39 R. RAvishment consented to forfeits Joynture 56 Request Court established by Cardinal Wolsey 140 Richard the Second his Reign 6. endeavours to over-rule the Parliament but failed in the conclusion 7 Richard the Third's Reign 108. his Title by Vsurpation and Murther ibid. Riots 101. S. SAnctuaries changed into fewer priviledged places 151 Servants imbezelling Felony ibid. 174 Sheriffs Courts regulated 149. Election of Sheriffs 55. Farm of the County 98. continuance in service ibid. Extortion ibid. Souldiers vide War. Staple 42 c. 111 Star-chamber 19 c. 141 Stealers of Men and Women Felony 174 Supremacy Supream Head 120. certainly not Absolute or Arbitrary power nor a Legislative power 166 c. Supream Governour 159. in causes Ecclesiastical ibid. c. in Temporal ibid. T. TEnths and First-fruits
which shew him to be a brave King if he was not a very rich man. Henry the second was more heavy because he had more to do yet find we but one assessment which was Escuage unless for the holy War which was more the Clergy-mens than his Richard was yet a greater burthen his Reign was troublesome to him and he deserved it for from the beginning thereof to the ending could never the guilt of his disobedience to his Father be blotted out but it was more troublesome to the people because it cost so much treasure was managed by such ill Governours except the Archbishop of Canterbury and was unsuccessful in most of his undertakings yet never invaded the liberties of the Commons by any face of Prerogative But what wanted in him was made compleat and running over in his Successor John who to speak in the most moderate sence of his Government being given over to himself when he was not himself robbed the Lords of their authority bereaved the Church of its Rights trod under foot the Liberties of the people wasted his own Prerogative and having brought all things into despair comes a desperate cure the head is cut off to save the body and a president left for them that list to take it up in future ages And thus that which Steven gave Henry the second lost Richard the first would not regain and John could not and so all were gainers but the Crown CHAP. LXI Of Judicature the Courts and their Judges IT is no silent argument that the Commons gain where Laws grow into course and it was the lot of these troublesome times to lay a foundation of a constant Government such as all men might learn which formerly was laid up onely in the breasts of wise experienced men The two most considerable points in Government is the Law and the Execution the latter being the life of the former and that of the Common-wealth I say not that the Law was augmented in the body of it or that the Execution had a freer course than in the best of the former times but both were more and more cleared to the world in many particulars as well touching matters concerning practice of the Law as touching rules of righteousness For the first whereof we are beholding to Glanvil in Henry the second 's time and for the latter to King John or rather the Barons in his time in the publishing of the Grand Charter or an enumeration of the Liberties or Customes of the people derived from the Saxons revived continued and confirmed by the Normans and their Successors which for the present I shall leave in lance dubio to stand or fall till occasion shall be of clearing the point in regard that King John soon repented of his Oath the Bond of his consent and to heal the Wound got the Pope's pardon and blessing thereupon so easie a thing it was for a Son of the Roman Church to pass for a good Catholick in an unrighteous way The execution of the Law was done in several Courts according to the several kinds of affairs whereof some concerned matters of Crime and Penalty and this touched the King's honour and safety of the persons of himself and his Subjects and therefore are said to be contra coronam dignitatem c. The second sort concern the profits of the Crown or treasure of the Kingdom The third concern the safety of the Estates of the people These three works were appointed unto three several Courts who had their several Judges especially appointed to that work Originally they were in one viz. in the supream Court of Judicature the Court of Lords whereof formerly was spoken but after through increase of affairs by them deputed or committed to the care of several men that were men of skill in such affairs and yet retained the Supremacy in all such cases still And because that which concerned the publick Treasure was of more publick regard than the other the deputation thereof was committed probably to some of their own members who in those days were Barons of the Realm and afterwards retained the Title but not the Degree and therefore were called for distinction-sake Barons of the Exchequer The particular times of these deputations appear not clearly out of any monument of antiquity nevertheless it is clear to me that it was before Henry the second 's time as well because Henry the first had his Judex fiscalis as Glanvil so frequently toucheth upon the King's Court of Pleas which cannot be intended at the Court of Lords for that in those days was never summoned but in time of Parliament or some other special occasion But more principally because the Historian speaking of the Judges itinerant reciteth some to be of the Common-pleas which sheweth that there was in those days a distinction of Jurisdiction in Judicatures And it may very well be conceived that this distinction of Judicature was by advice of the Parliament after that the Grand Council of Lords was laid aside by Kings and a Privy-Council taken up unto whom could not regularly belong any juridical power because that remained originally in the grand assembly of the Lords Over these Courts or two of them one man had the prime Title of Chief Justice who then was called Lord Chief Justice of England and whose office was much of the nature of the King's Lieutenant in all causes and places as well in War as Peace and sometimes was appointed to one part of the Kingdom and by reason thereof had the name onely of that part and some other of the other parts The greatness of this Office was such as the man for necessity of state was continually resident at the Court and by this means the King's Court was much attended by all sorts of persons which proved in after-times as grievous the King as it was burthensome to the people Other Judges there were which were chosen for their learning and experience most of them being of the Clergie as were also the under-Officers of those Courts for those times were Romes hour and the power of darkness Other Courts also were in the Country and were Vicontiel or Courts of Sheriffs and Lords of Hundreds and Corporations and Lordships as formerly and these were setled in some place But others there were which were itinerant over which certain Judges presided which were elected by the Grand-Council of Lords and sent by Commission from King Henry the second throughout the Kingdom then divided into Six Circuits unto each of which was assigned Three Justices so as the whole number of Justices then was Eighteen The office was before the coming of the Saxons over hither but the assignation was new as also was their Oath for they were sworn But the number continued not long for within four years the King re-divided the Land into four Circuits and unto each Circuit assigned five Justices making in the whole the number of Twenty and one Justices for the Northern
It seemeth also that the loss not onely of Chattels and Goods but also of Lands c. extended to Outlawries I conceive in case of Felony and the King's Pardon in such case could not bind the Lord's right of Escheat although it might discharge the Goods and the year and day whereunto the King was entitled which case alone sufficiently declareth what power Kings had in the Estates of their Subjects Manslaughter made not bailable This was Law in Henry the second 's time although it crossed the Norman Law and questionless it was upon good ground for the times now were not as those in the Conquerour's times when shedding of Bloud was accounted Valour and in most cases in order to the publick service And now it seems it was a growing evil and that cried so loud as though in case of Treason bail might be allowed yet not in this case ubi ad terrorem aliter statutum est saith the Author Robbers shall be committed to the Sheriff or in his absence to the next Castelane who shall deliver him to the Sheriff And the Justices shall do right to them and unto Trespassers upon Land. By the Conquerour's Law these Offenders were bailable and I conceive this was no Repeal thereof and the rather because Glanvil alloweth of Pledges in all cases except Manslaughter yea in those Crimes that did wound Majesty it self although they concern the destruction of the King's person or Sedition in the Kingdom or Army thereof The Justices herein mentioned were intended to be the Justices itinerant and the Trespasses upon Land are meant such as are contra pacem Domini Regis as riotous and forcible Entries for some Trespasses were against the peace of the Sheriff as formerly hath been observed Fauxonry is of several degrees or kinds some against the King others against other men and of those against the King some are punished as Wounds of Majesty as falsifying the King's Charter and whether falsifying of Money were in that condition or not I leave or falsifying of Measures yet more inferiour I cannot determine but it is clear by Glanvil that falsifying of the Deed of a private person was of smaller consideration and at the utmost deserved but loss of Member Inheritances may not be aliened Inheritances were in those times of Lands or Goods for it was the custom then that the personal Estate the Debts deducted was divisible into three parts one whereof belonged in right to the Wife as her reasonable part the other to the Heir and a third to the Testator to make his Will of them and of the other two parts he could not dispose by Will. Concerning Lands it was regularly true that no man could alien his whole Inheritance to the disherisin of his Heir either by Act in his life-time or any part thereof by his last Will without the concurrence of the Heir But of purchased Lands he may give part by Act executed in his life-time though he have no Lands by inheritance and if he hath no Issue then he may alien all And where a man hath Lands by inheritance and also by purchase he may alien all his purchased Lands as he pleaseth If the Lands be holden in Gavel-kind no more of the Inheritance can be conveyed to any of the Children than their proportionable parts will amount unto This Law of Inheritance was divers according to the Tenure for the Lands in Knights-service always descended to the Heir but such as were holden in Socage passed according to the custom either to the eldest or to the youngest or to all equally And thus stood the general state of Inheritance from the Normans time hitherto seeming somewhat too strait for the Free men that by Law of Property might challenge a power to do with their own as they pleased But the Normans saw a double prejudice herein the first was the danger of ruine of many of their Families who now ingrafted into the English stock and yet not fully one might expect a late check to their preferments from the Saxon Parents after a long and fair semblance made of their good Will. The second prejudice was the decay of their Militia which was maintained by Riches more than by multitude of men partly because that rich men are most fearful of offending and therefore ordinarily are most serviceable both with their Bodies and Estates against publick dangers and partly because by their Friends and Allies they bring more aid unto the publick by engaging them in the common Cause that otherwise might prove unsensible of the condition of their Country The Heir of a Free-man shall by descent be in such seisin as his Ancestor had at the time of his death doing service and paying relief and shall have his Chattels If the Heir be under age the Lord shall have the Wardship for the due time and the Wife her Dower and part of the Goods If the Lord with-hold seisin the King's Justice shall try the matter by twelve men The first of these branches is declaratory of a ground of common Law but being applied to the last is an introduction of a new Law of tryal of the Heir 's Right by Assize of Mortdancester where formerly no remedy was left to the Heir but a Writ of Right If these three branches be particularly observed they speak of three sorts of Heirs of Tenants by Knight-service viz. such as are Majors or of full age and such as are Minors or under age and such as are of a doubtful age Those that are of full age at the death of their Ancestors may possess the Lands descended and the Lord may not disseize him thereof but may be resisted by the Heir in the maintenance of his possession so as he be ready to pay Relief and do service that is due and if the Lord expel him he shall have remedy by Assize Those Heirs that are Minors shall be under the Lord's guardianship till they come to one and twenty years The Heirs of such as hold by Socage are said to be at full age at fifteen years because at that age they were thought able to do that service but the Sons of Burgesses are then said to be of full age when they have ability to manage their Father's Calling such as telling of Money measuring of Cloath and the like yet doth not Glanvil or any other say that these were their full age to all purposes albeit that some Burroughs at this day hold the last in custom to all intents whatsoever The last branch provideth the remedy to recover to the Heir his possession in case it be detained either through doubtfulness of age of the Heir or his Title and it directs the Issue to be tryed by twelve men This tryal some have thought to be of Glanvil's invention and it may well be that this tryal of this matter as thus set down was directed by him yet he useth often in his book the word solet and in his Preface
saith That he will set down frequentius usitata and it is past question but that the tryal by twelve men was much more ancient as hath been already noted One thing more yet remaineth concerning the Widow of the Tenant whose Dower is not onely provided for but her reasonable part of her Husband 's personal Estate The original hereof was from the Normans and it was as popular as that of Wardships was Regal and so they made the English women as sure to them as they were sure of their Children The Justices shall by Assize try Disseisins done since the King 's coming over Sea next after the peace made between him and his Son. This is called the Assize of Novel disseisin or of disseisins lately made It seems that the limitation was set for the Justices sake who now were appointed to that work which formerly belonged to the County-courts and to prevent intrenchments of Courts a limitation was determined although the copy seemeth to be mistaken for the limitation in the Writ is from the King 's last Voyage or going into Normandy Justices shall do right upon the King 's Writ for half a Knights Fee and under unless in cases of difficulty which are to be referred to the King. The Justices itinerant ended the smaller matters in their Circuits the other were reserved to the King in his Bench. Justices shall enquire of Escheats Lands Churches and Women in the King's gift And of Castle-guard who how much and where So as the Judges itinerant had the work of Escheators and made their Circuits serve as well for the King's profit as justice to the Subjects They used also to take Fealty of the people to the King at one certain time of the year and to demand Homage also These matters of the King's Exchequer made the presence of the Judges less acceptable and it may be occasioned some kind of oppression And as touching Castle-guard it was a Tenure in great use in these bloody times and yet it seemeth they used to take Rent instead of the personal service else had that enquiry how much been improper Of a Tenants holding and of several Lords That one man may hold several Lands of several Lords and so owe service to them all is so common as nothing can be more nevertheless it will not be altogether out of the way to touch somewhat upon the nature of this mutual relation between Lord and Tenant in general that the true nature of the diversity may more fully appear The foundation or subject of service was a piece of Land or other Tenement at the first given by the Lord to the Tenant in affirmance of a stipulation between them presupposed by the giving and receiving whereof the Tenant undertook to peform service to the Lord and the Lord undertook protection of the Tenant in his right to that Tenement The service was first by service solemnly bound either by Oath which the Lord or his Deputy by the Common-Law hath power to administer as in the case of Fealty in which the Tenant bound himself to be true to the honour and safety of his Lords person and to perform the service due to the Lord for the Tenement so given or otherwise by the Tenants humble acknowledgment and promise not only to perform the services due but even to be devoted to the Lords service to honour him and to adventure limb and life and be true and faithful to the Lord. This is called Homage from those words I become your man Sir and yet promiseth upon the matter no more but fealty in a deeper complement albeit there be difference in the adjuncts belonging to eách For though it be true that by promise of being the Lord's man a general service may seem to be implied yet in regard that it is upon occasion only of that present Tenure it seemeth to me that it is to be restrained only to those particular services which belong to that Tenement and therefore if that Tenement be holden in Socage although the Tenant be bound to homage yet that homage ties not the Tenant to the service of a Knight nor contrarily doth the homage of a Tenant in Knight-service tie him to that of Socage upon the command of his Lord though he professeth himself to be his man. Nor doth the Tenant's homage bind him against all men nor ad semper for in case he holdeth of two or divers Lords by homage for several Tenements and these two Lords be in War one against the other the Tenant must serve his chief Lord of whom the Capital house is holden or that Lord which was his by priority who may be called the chief Lord because having first received homage he received it absolutely from his Tenant with a saving of the Tenant's Faith made to other Lords and to the King who in order to the publick had power to command a Tenant into War against his own Lord. If therefore he be commanded by the King in such cases unto War he need not question the point of forfeiture but if he be commanded by a chief of his other Lords into War against a party in which another of his Lords is engaged his safest way is to enter upon the work because of his Allegiance to that Lord yet with a salvo of his fealty to that other Lord. But in all ordinary cases Tenants and Lords must have regard to their stipulation for otherwise if either break the other is discharged for ever and if the fault be in the Tenant his Tenement escheats to his Lord and if the Lord fail he loses his Tenure and the Tenant might thenceforth disclaim and hold over for ever Nevertheless the Lords had two Priviledges by common custom belonging to their Tenures which although not mentioned in the stipulation were yet more valuable than all the rest the one concerning matter of profit the other of power That of profit consisted in aids and relief The aids were of three kinds one to make the Lords eldest Son Knight the other to marry his eldest Daughter the third to help him to pay a relief to his Lord Paramount which in my opinion sounds as much as if the Tenants were bound by their Tenures to aid their Lord in all cases of extraordinary charge saving that the Lord could not distrain his Tenant for aid to his War and this according to the Lords discretion for Glanvil saith that the Law determined nothing concerning the quantity or value of these aids These were the Norman ways and savoured so much of Lordship that within that age they were regulated But that of reliefs was an ancient sacrifice as of first-fruits of the Tenement to the Lord in memorial of the first Lords favour in conferring that Tenement and it was first setled in the Saxons time The Lords Priviledge of power extended so far as to distrain his Tenants into his own Court to answer to himself in all causes that concerned his
sad experience of the latter Government of Kings in these times had taught the Knighthood of England to hold for the future Ages No Tenant in ancient Demesnes or in Burgage shall be distrained for the service of a Knight Clerks and Tenants in Socage of other Mannors than of the King shall be used as they have been formerly Tenants in ancient Demesne and Tenants in Burgage are absolutely acquitted from foreign service the one because they are in nature of the King's Husbandmen and served him and his Family with Victual the other because by their Tenure they were bound to the defence of their Burrough which in account is a Limb or Member of the Kingdom and so in nature of a Castle guard Now as touching Clerks and Tenants in Socage holding of a Subject they are left to the order of ancient use appearing upon Record As concerning the Clergy it is evident by what hath been formerly noted that though they were importunate to be discharged of the service Military in regard that their profession was for Peace and not for Bloud yet could they never obtain their desire for though their persons might challenge exemption from that work yet their Lands were bound to find Arms by their Deputies for otherwise it had been unreasonable that so great a part of the Kingdom as the Clergie then had should sit still and look on whilst by the Law of Nature every one is engaged in his own defence Nor yet did the profession of these men to be men for Peace hold always uniform some kind of Wars then were holden sacred and wherein they not onely adventured their Estates but even their own Persons and these not onely in a defensive way but by way of invasion and many times where no need was for them to appear Tenants in Socage also in regard of their service might plead exemption from the Wars for if not the Plough must stand still and the Land thereby become poor and lean Nevertheless a general service or defence of the Kingdom is imposed upon all and Husbandmen must be Souldiers when the debate is who shall have the Land. In such cases therefore they are evocati ad arma to maintain and defend the Kingdom but not compellable to foreign service as the Knights were whose service consisted much in defence of their Lord's person in reference to the defence of the Kingdom and many times policy of War drew the Lords into Arms abroad to keep the Enemy further from their borders and the Knights then under their Lords pay went along with them and therefore the service of Knighthood is commonly called servitium forinsecum Of these Socagers did arise not onely the body of English Foot-men in their Armies but the better and more wealthy sort of them found Arms of a Knight as formerly hath been observed yet always under the pay of the common Purse And if called out of the Kingdom they were meer Voluntiers for they were not called out by distress as Knights were because they held not their Land by such service but they were summoned by Proclamation and probably were mustered by the high Constables in each Hundred the Law nevertheless remaining still entire that all must be done not onely ad fidem Domini Regis but also Regni which was disputed and concluded by the Sword. For though Kings pretended danger to the publick oftentimes to raise the people yet the people would give credit as they pleased Or if the King's Title were in question or the Peoples Liberty yet every man took liberty to side with that party that liked him best nor did the King's Proclamation sway much this or that way It is true that precedents of those times cry up the King's power of arraying all Ships and men without respect unless of age or corporal disability but it will appear that no such array was but in time of no less known danger from abroad to the Kingdom than imminent and therefore might be wrought more from the general fear of the Enemy than from the King's command And yet those times were always armed in neighbouring Nations and Kings might have pretended continual cause of arraying Secondly it will no less clearly appear that Kings used no such course but in case of general danger to the whole Kingdom either from foreign Invasion as in the times of King John or from intestine Broils as in the times of Henry the third and the two Edwards successively And if the danger threatned onely one coast the array was limited onely to the parts adjacent thereunto Thirdly it seemeth that general arrays were not levied by distress till the time of Edward the first and then onely for the rendezvouze at the next Sea-coast and for defence against foreign Invasion in which case all Subjects of the Kingdom are concerned by general service otherwise it can come unto no other account than that Title Prerogative and therein be charactered as a trick above the ordinary strain Fourthly those times brought forth no general array of all persons between the ages of sixteen years and sixty that was made by distress in any case of Civil War but onely by Sheriffs summons and in case of disobedience by summons to appear before the King and his Council which sheweth that by the common Law they were not compellable or punishable Lastly though these arrays of men were sometimes at the charge of the King and sometimes at the Subjects own charge yet that last was out of the road-way of the Subjects liberty as the subsequent times do fully manifest And the like may be said of arrays of Ships which however under command of Kings for publick service were nevertheless rigged and paid out of the publick charge The sum of all will be that in cases of defence from foreign Invasion Kings had power of array according to the order of Law if they exceeded that Rule it may be more rightly said they did what they would than what they ought CHAP. LXXI Of the Peace WAR and Peace are two births by several venters and may like the day and night succeed but can never inherit each to other and for that cause they may claim to belong to one Father and that one and the same power should act in both and yet it is no good Maxime That he that is the chief Commander in War ought to be the chief in the order of Peace For it naturally befalls that War especially that which we call Civil War like some diseases in the body does rather breed ill humours than consume them and these must be purged by dieting the State and constant course of Justice unto which the rugged Waves of War have little or no affinity if they have not enmity Nevertheless the wisdom of our Ancestors thought it most meet to keep their Kings in work as well in time of Peace as of War and therefore as they anciently referred the principal care thereof to the Lords who together
with certain select persons in every County did administer Justice in several Iters or Circuits so when Kings had once gotten the name of being chief in civil affairs as they had it in martial they soon left the Lords behind them who also were willing enough with their own case and had the name of doing all notwithstanding it was done by advice of the Lords and directory of Ministers or Commissioners thereto deputed And thus that Peace which formerly passed under the Titles of Pax Domini pax Vicecomitis which is pax Regni became by eminency swallowed up in that which was called the Kings Peace and the Justices called the Kings Justices and himself flattered into that Title of Fountain of Justice which belongeth onely to him that is The Most High or Chief Law-giver The manner how this honourable care of the Safety and Peace of the Kingdom was employed may be referred to a double consideration the one in execution of Justice upon Delinquents the other in preventing occasions of offence or delinquency by means whereof the publick Peace might be endangered The first was acted diversly according to the present sence of affairs for what was at first done by the Princes in their Circuits with one hundred of the Commons called Comites and that done per pagos vicosque was afterwards done by itinerant Judges sent from the King for the greatest matters and by Lords in their Leets Governours or chief Magistrates of Towns in their Courts and Sheriffs in their Torns as Judices stati for the ease of the people in matters of less moment I say I conceive it was in the Torn for I suppose no emergent Court taken up upon occasion could by the Law draw a necessity of a sudden appearance of all above twelve years of age at the same And for the same cause it seemeth that one certain Torn every year was holden for inquiries of Homicide unto which all above twelve years of age were to come except Barons Clergie and Women or otherwise all such had been bound to attendance on every Torn Nevertheless the work of the Torns continued not to hear and determine as anciently they had done For in Henry the third's time and formerly divers men had Prisons to their own use some as Palatines others as Lords of Franchise and others by power and usurpation and had the benefit of all Fines incident and by this means many were fined that deserved it not and some also that deserved worse To prevent which evil Henry the third took away that power of holding Crown-pleas And Edward the first took away their power to determine Escapes and left them onely the power of inquiry and to certifie at the next coming of the Justices But these injurious times had holden too long to be forgotten or laid aside by such cool pursuit Men were still ordinarily imprisoned and so continued oftentimes till the coming of the Justices itinerant For whereas in case of Bloudshed the Writ de odio atia was a remedy the other had no remedy but by procuring a Commission of Oyer and Terminer which ordinarily was a cure worse than the hurt As a remedy hereof Edward the first found out the new way of making Justices of Peace as may appear by the Statute at Winton which Law being purposely made for the conserving of the Peace providing for penalty of Crimes already committed as well as for the suppressing of future ordaineth That offences against that Law shall be presented to Justices assigned to enquire thereof and though these at the first might be itinerant yet it soon made way to resiant And before that Statute it seemeth the King had found out the way if that Note be true which is left revived into memory by that honourable Reporter which relating to the sixth year of Edward the first saith That then prima fuit institutio justiciariorum pro pace conservanda And yet some semblance there is that it was yet more ancient even in the time of Henry the first if I mistake not the sence of that clause in his Laws concerning Vagabonds he ordereth that they shall be carried Justiciae quae praeest although the Language be not so Clerkly as to speak the sence out Now though their Work as yet was but in tryal and they were onely trusted with power of inquiry yet it induced a new way wherein the Sheriff was not so much as intrusted to intermeddle and which not onely intermitted the course of his proceedings in such matters but also led the way to the dispoiling of the Sheriff's Torn and Lord's Leet of that little remainder that was left them of Judicatory power in matters that were against the Peace and made their Inquisitory power less regardful and eased the Justices itinerant of much of their Work in regard they were speedily to certifie up to the King and so these matters should be determined in Parliament according as those Justices were elected in Parliament who as it seems were jealous of giving the power of determining those offences into any sudden hand To sum up then the first part as touching the punishment of offences against the Peace the wheel is now in the turning the Leets and Torns begin to be slighted the labour of the Justices itinerant lessened the Commissions of Oyer and Terminer disused by the bringing in of a new Order of Justices for the Peace especially appointed and the Parliament as the supreme Providers left as the reserve for the asserting and maintenance of the same albeit that under it the power of determining much rested upon Justices or Judges that attended the King's Court after that the Common-pleas were setled and confined to a certain place The preserving of the Peace for the future consisted in preventing and suppressing Riots Routs unlawful Assemblies and in apprehending and securing of such as were actors and contrivers of such designes and other Malefactors And herein we are to consider 1. The Laws 2. The Means 3. The executive power Concerning the first there is no question to be made but that the power of making Laws for the maintenance of the Peace rested in the Parliament although endeavour possibly might be used to settle the same in the sole order of the King 's own person and therefore we find not onely the assize of Arms but generally the substance of the Statute at Winton to be formerly taken up by Proclamation by Kings predecessors to Edward the second who first that I can find put the same into force of a Law by Parliament finding by experience that Proclamations may declare the King's Mind but not command the Peoples Wills although peradventure the thing enjoyned was of ancient use and little inferiour to Custom or Common Law. Such are the Distempers of Civil Broils that bring up Peace in the rear as a reserve when their own strength is wasted rather than out of any natural inclination thereto A brief
concerning Calvin's Case fol. 45 IX Of Courts for Causes criminal with their Laws fol. 54 X. Of the course of Civil Justice during these times fol. 56 XI Of the Militia in these times fol. 58 XII Of the Peace fol. 62 XIII A view of the summary courses of Henry the Fourth Henry the Fifth and Henry the Sixth in their several Reigns fol. 68 XIV Of the Parliament during the Reigns of these several Kings fol. 75 XV. Of the Custos or Protector Regni fol. 79 XVI Concerning the Privy Council fol. 83 XVII Of the Clergie and Church-government during these times fol. 86 XVIII Of the Court of Chancery fol. 95 XIX Of the Courts of Common-pleas and Common Law. fol. 97 XX. Concerning Sheriffs fol. 98 XXI Of Justices and Laws concerning the Peace fol. 99 XXII Of the Militia during these times fol. 102 XXIII A short Survey of the Reigns of Edward the Fourth Edward the Fifth and Richard the Third fol. 106 XXIV Of the Government in relation to the Parliament f. 109 XXV Of the condition of the Clergie fol. 112 XXVI A short sum of the Reigns of Henry the Seventh and Henry the Eighth fol. 113 XXVII Of the condition of the Crown fol. 118 XXVIII Of the condition of the Parliament in these times fol. 130 XXIX Of the power of the Clergie in the Convocation f. 134 XXX Of the power of the Clergie in their ordinary Jurisdiction fol. 136 XXXI Of Judicature fol. 141 XXXII Of the Militia fol. 143 XXXIII Of the Peace fol. 148 XXXIV Of the general Government of Edward the Sixth Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth fol. 152 XXXV Of the Supream power during these times fol. 157 XXXVI Of the power of the Parliament during these times fol. 162 XXXVII Of the Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical during these last times fol. 166 XXXVIII Of the Militia in these later times fol. 168 XXXIX Of the Peace fol. 173 XL. A summary Conclusion of the whole matter fol. 174. THE CONTINUATION OF AN Historical and Political Discourse OF THE Laws Government OF ENGLAND THE former times since the Norman entry like a rugged Sea by cross Winds of Arbitrary Vapours in and about the Crown and by Forrein Engagements from the holy Chair made the true face of affairs cloudy and troublesome both for the Writer and the Reader Henceforward for the space of Three hundred years next ensuing Kings by experience and observation finding themselves unequal to the double chace of absolute Supremacy over the sturdy Laity and encroaching Clergie you will observe to lay aside their pretensions against the Peoples Liberties and more intentively to trench upon the Spiritualty now grown to defie all Government but that of Covetousness Nor would these times allow further advantage to Kings in this work they being either fainted by the ticklish Title of the Crown hovering between the two Houses of York and Lancaster or drawn off to forrein employments as matters of greater concernment for the present well-being of the Kingdom or for the spreading of the fame of such as desired to be renowned for valiant men It will be superfluous to recount the particular atchievements formerly attained by these Ecclesiastical men the former Treatise hath already said what was thought needful concerning that For the future I shall even premise this that the ensuing times being thus blessed with a Truce or stricter League between the Kings and Commons the errours in Government more readily do appear the corruptions in natures of men more frequently discover themselves and thereby the body of the Statute-Laws begins to swell so big that I must be enforced to contract my account of them into a narrower compass and render the same unto the Reader so far forth only as they shall concern the general stream of Government leaving those of privater regard unto every mans particular consideration as occasion shall lead him For whatever other men please to insist upon this I take for a Maxime That though the Government of a King is declared by his Actions yet the Government of a Kingdom is onely manifested by ancient Customs and publick Acts of Parliament And because I have undertaken a general Survey of the Reigns of thirteen several Kings and Queens of this Nation for I shall not exceed the issue of Henry the Eighth and to handle each of them apart will leave the Reader in a Wilderness of particulars hard to comprehend in the general sum I shall therefore reduce them all into three heads viz. Interest of Title Interest of Prerogative and Interest of Religion the last of which swayed much the three Children of Henry the Eighth the second as much in their two Ancestors viz. Henry the Eighth and Henry the Seventh and the first in the three Henries of Lancaster and three succeeding Kings of the House of York And because Edward the Third and his Grand-child Richard the Second do come under none of these Interests I shall consider them joyntly as in way of Exordium to the rest although the course of the latter was as different from the former as Lust falls short of a generous Spirit CHAP. I. A sum of the several Reigns of Edward the Third and Richard the Second SEveral I may well call them because they are the most different in their ways and ends of any two of that race that ever swayed their Scepter and yet the entrance of the first gave countenance to the conclusion of the last For the Scepter being cast away or lost by Edward the Second it was the lot of his Son Edward the Third a youth of Fifteen years of age to take it up he knowing whose it was and feeling it too heavy for him was willing enough it should return but being overswayed by Counsels drawn from reason of State and pressed thereto by those that resolved not to trust his Father any more he wisely chose to manage it himself rather than to adventure it in another hand But that is not all for as it is never seen that the Crown doth thrive after divorce from the Scepter but like a blasted Blossom falls off at the next gale of adversity such was the issue to Edward the Second his power once gone his Honour followeth soon after he had ceased to be King and within a small time did cease to be Edward His Son thus made compleat by his Fathers spoil had the honour to be the Repairer of the ruines that his Father had made and was a Prince which you might think by his story to be seldom at home and by his Laws seldom abroad Nor can it be reconciled without wonder that Providence should at once bestow upon England a courageous People brave Captains wise Council and a King that had the endowments of them all Otherwise it had out-reached conceit it self that this small Island wasted by the Barons Wars the people beaten out of heart by all Enemies in the time of the Father should nevertheless in the time of the Son with honour
and Masters under Cade and Straw that might have brought the Commonwealth into a hideous Chaos had not the Lords and Great men betimes bestirred themselves and the King shewed an extraordinary spirit or rather a kind of rage that put it self forth beyond the ordinary temper of his mind Much of this mischief was imputed to Wickliff's Doctrine for it is an ordinary thing to proclaim all evils concurring with the very joynt of Reformation to be the proper fruits thereof But I look upon it as a fruit of corruption that endeavours to stop the breath of Reformation in the birth And there is somewhat of a hidden influence from above in the thing for it was not onely the Cup of England to be thus troubled but France and other places had their portion suitable The King's minority rendred him unequal unto these contrary motions he was in his Eleventh year when he entred the Throne and which was worse his years came on faster than his parts but his work posted before them all The common help of Protectors left him yet more unhappy for they were prepossessed with strong engagements of particular Interests and so were either not wise enough or not good enough for all This brought forth a third inconvenience the change of Protectorship and that change of Affairs and Interests an uncertain good that brings forth a certain evil for variety of Instruments and Interests move several ways and though the end be one the difference concerning the way many times doth as much hinder the Journey as so many blocks in the way The Protectorship was thrice changed the King's Uncles had the first essay any one of them was big enough for one Kingdom but all of them together were too great to make one Protector The Duke of Lancaster would have done well alone if he had been alone and minded that work alone but he being somewhat engaged with the Wickliffists and so entangled with the Clergy and other restless spirits and drawn off by his private aim at the Crown of Castile saw this work too much and so he warily withdrew himself leaving the Directory to a Committee of Lords a soveraign Plaister questionless where the times are whole but not for these distractions wherein even the Committee it self suffered its share Thus the breach is made the wider and for a cure of all the Government is committed into one hand wherein the Earl of Warwick acquitted himself well for he was wise enough to observe such as the people most honoured And thus passed over the two first years of the King's Reign The remainder of the King's minority was rather in common repute than in true account For the King however young took little more from the Protector than he saw meet to colour his own commands with opinion of Regularity and so his Will came to full strength before his Wisdom budded Thus lifted up he sets himself above all interests of Parliaments Protectors Counsellors Uncles Wise men and Law leaving them all to be rules for those below And so long as the King's desire is thus served he is content to be reputed a Minor and be as it were under protection of others though not under their direction and is content to continue thus until his Two and twentieth year Some might think him very moderate had he been moderate but he forbears suing out his Livery so long as he may live without care and spend without controul For by this time the humour of his great Grandfather budded in him he pawned his Heart to young men of vast desires and some say so inordinately as he prostituted his Chastity unto them And it is no wonder if the Revenues of the Crown are insufficient for such Masters This the people soon felt and feared their own Free-holds for they are bound saith he not to see the Crown deflowred for want of maintenance it is very true nor to see the Crown deflowred of its maintenance A Parliament therefore is called in which divers Lords associate and prepare Physick for the King 's lavish humour which being administred wrought for Ten years after till it had purged him of his Life and the Kingdom of their King. It was an Act of Parliament that gave power to Fourteen Lords and others to regulate the profits and Revenues of the Crown and to do Justice to the people this was to continue for one whole year The Parasites no sooner found the effect hereof to their cost but the King grows sick of it and finds an Antidote to over-rule Acts of Parliament by Acts of Privy-Council declares this ill-favoured Commission void and the Contrivers Advisers and Enforcers Traytors To make it more Majestical he causeth the Judges to subscribe this Order and so it becomes Law in repute This foundation thus laid he buildeth in haste an Impeachment of these Commissioners of High Treason and supposing that they would not readily stoop himself stoops lower for he would put his Right to trial by Battle which was already his own by the judgement of the Masters of the Law For so they may be well called seeing they had thus mastered it In this the King had the worst for he lost his Honour and himself God hath a care of common Right even amongst Idolaters Then comes the Parliament of wonders wherein the Kings Party are declared Traytors and the chief Judges with their Law judged by another Law. The King not meddled with thinks it high time to come out of his Minority and assumes the Government of the Kingdom and himself to himself being now Three and twenty years of Age old enough to have done well if he had cared for it But resolving to follow the way of his own will at length it led him to his own ruine Onely for the present two things delayed it viz. the Authority Wisdom and Moderation of his Unkles especially of the Duke of Lancaster now come out of Spain and the great affection which the King pretended to the Queen who had also gained a good opinion amongst the people The benevolent aspect of the people not for their own advantage but for the publick quiet procured many Parlies and Interviews between the King and people and many Laws for the upholding of the Court and Government although both War Laws Justice and Councils all are faint as all is faint in that man that hath once dismann'd himself This he perceives well enough and therefore Peace he must have by any means The Queen dies himself being nigh Eight and twenty years old takes a Creature like a Wife but in truth a Childe of Eight years old and this is to get peace with France It is no wonder if now he hunts after unlawful game and that being ill taken brings all things out of order For abused Marrige never wants wo. Civil men are now looked upon as severe Cato's and his Unkles especially the Duke of Gloucester with a jealous eye which accomplished his death in
way is different from the common Road both in it's original and in the course of proceedings nor could it otherwise be considering the condition of the Nations and the people of the same interested in common Traffique The people thus interested as much differed from the other sort of Dry men if they may be so called as Sea from Land and are in nature but as March-men of several Nations that must concentre in some third way for the maintenance of Commerce for peace-sake and to the end that no Nation may be under any other Law than its own The condition of the Nations in the times when civilized Government began to settle amongst them was to be under the Roman Emperours who having setled one Law in the general grounds throughout all Nations made the Sea likewise to serve under one rule which should float up and down with it that men might know upon what terms they held their own wheresoever they went and upon what terms to part with it for their best advantage In its original therefore this Law may be called Imperial and likewise in the Process because it was directed in one way of Trial and by one Law which had its first birth from the Imperial power and probably it had not been for the common benefit of Europe to have been otherwise at other time or by other directories formed Nevertheless this became no Gem of Prerogative to the English Crown for if England did comply with forrein Natives for its own benefit it being an Island full of the Sea and in the common Road from the most parts of Europe that border upon the Sea and of delight in Merchandise it is but suitable to its self and it did so comply as it saved the main Stake by voluntary entertaining those Laws without being imposed upon by Imperial power For the Saxons came into this Kingdom a free people and so for ought yet appeareth to me continueth to this day I say that in those first times they did take into the consideration of Parliament the regulating of the fluctuating motions of Sea-laws nor were they then or after properly imposed by the King's Edict For though it were granted that Richard the First reduced the Sea-Laws in the Isle of Oleron yet that the same should be done without advice of Parliament in his return from the Holy land is to me a Riddle considering what Histories do hold forth concerning his return through Germany nor can that be good evidence to entitle Kings of England to a power to make and alter Laws according to their private pleasure and interest Nor doth that Record mentioned in the Institutes warrant any such matter but rather on the contrary groundeth the complaint upon Laws Statutes Franchises and Customs established and that this Establishment was by the King and the Council This Law was of a double nature according to the Law of the Land one part concerning the pleas of the Crown and the other between party and party for properly the King's Authority in the Admiralty is but an Authority of Judicature according to Laws established which both for process and sentence are different from the Common-Law as much as the two Elements do differ yet not different in the power that made them I shall leave the particulars to be enquired into by them that shall mind it elsewhere and only touch so much as shall reflect upon the main Government This power was executed by Deputies diversly according as the times and opportunities were for War or Peace and either transitu or portu What was done in time of War or whilst the Ship is out of the English Seas comes not to our purpose and therefore I shall not meddle with that further than this that in the first times Kings were wont to divide the work of Judicature and of War into several hands The power of War and Peace they committed unto men of approved Courage and Skill in that service and therefore generally not to the men of highest rank who had neither Mind nor Skill for a work of such labour dyet and danger This power passed under divers names sometimes by grant of the custody of the Sea-coasts sometimes of the parts and Sea coasts sometimes by being made Captain of the Sea-men and Mariners and sometimes Admiral of the Ships It was a great power and had been much greater but that it suffered a double diminution the one in the time for three or four years commonly made an end of the command of one man and at the best it was quam diu Regi placuerit the other diminution was in circuit of the power for all the Maritine Coasts were not ordinarily under the power of one man but of many each having his proper precinct upon the South or North East or Western shores and under the Title of Admiral in the times of Edward the First and forwards who brought that Title from the Holy Land. Nevertheless about the end of the times whereof we now Treat the custody of the whole Sea began to settle in one hand under the Title of Admiral of the English Seas and the place was conferred upon men of the greatest rank and so continued ever afterward The power of Jurisdiction or Judicature all this while remained distinct and it seems was setled in part in the power of the Sheriff and Justices For by the Law the Sheriff and Justices had cognizance of matters between the high water and the low water mark and what was done Super altum mare was within the directory of the Admiral these were but few things and of small consideration the principal of them being concerning War or Peace and those only within the English Seas But after Edward the Third had beaten both the French and Spaniards at Sea the people grew much more towards the Sea and became so famous that the greatest Lords thought the Regiment of Sea-affairs worthy of the best of their Rank and were pleased with the Title of Admiral whilst they left the work to others and so the Admiral became a person of more honour and less work than he had been formerly The greatness of the honour of this place thus growing soon also began to contract greatness of power beyond what it had formerly and this was principally in matter of Jurisdiction For not contented with the power of a chief Justice of War and Peace within the Seas which was his proper dominion the Lord Admiral gained the same within the low water mark and in the main streams below the next Bridge to the Sea and in all places where Ridels were set and yet these places were within the body of the County Nor did he endeavour less to gain in matters of distributive Justice for although he had a legal Jurisdiction in things done upon the Sea so far as to defend order determine and cause restitution to be made in cases of damage done unjustly yet was it no less difficult to keep
this power within its own bounds than the watry Element upon which it sloated but it made continual waves upon the Franchise of the Land and for this cause no sooner had these great men savoured of the Honour and Authority of that Dignity but comes a Statute to restrain their Authority in the Cognizance of Cases only unto such matters as are done upon the main Sea as formerly was wont to be And within two years after that Act of Parliament is backed by another Act to the same purpose in more full expressions saving that for Man-slaughter the Admirals power extended even to the high water-mark and into the main streams And this leadeth on the next consideration viz. What is the subject matter of this Jurisdiction and Authority I shall not enter into the depth of particulars but shall reduce all to the two heads of Peace and Justice The Lord Admiral is as I formerly said a Justice of Peace at Sea maintaining the Peace by power and restoring the Peace by setting an Order unto matters of Difference as well between Foraigners as between the English and Foraigners as may appear by that Plea in the fourth Institutes formerly mentioned Secondly That point of Justice principally concerneth matters of Contract and Complaints for breach of Contract of these the Admiral is the Judge to determine according to Law and Custom Now as subservient unto both these he hath Authority of command over Sea-men and Ships that belong to the State and over all Sea-men and Ships in order to the service of the State to arrest and order them for the great voyages of the King and Realm and during the said voyage but this he cannot do without express Order because the determining of a voyage Royal is not wholly in his power Lastly the Lord Admiral hath power not only over the Sea-men serving in the Ships of State but over all other Sea-men to arrest them for the service of the State and if any of them run away without leave from the Admiral or power deputed from him he hath power by enquiry to make a Record thereof and certifie the same to the Sheriffs Mayors Bailiffs c. who shall cause them to be apprehended and imprisoned By all which and divers other Laws not only the power of the Admiral is declared but the original from whence it is derived namely from the Legislative power of the Parliament and not from the single person of the King or any other Council whatsoever But enough hath been already said of these Courts of State in their particular precincts One general interest befalls them all That as they are led by a Law much different from the Courts of Common-Law so are they thereby the more endeared to Kings as being subservient to their Prerogative no less than the Common-Law is to the peoples liberty In which condition being looked upon as Corrivals this principal Maxime of Government will thence arise That the bounds of these several Laws are so to be regarded that not the least gap of intrenchment be laid open each to other lest the Fence once broken Prerogative or Liberty should become boundless and bring in Confusion instead of Law. CHAP. VI. Of the Church-mens Interest BUt the Church-mens interest was yet more Tart standing in need of no less allay than that of the King's Authority for that the King is no less concerned therein than the people and the rather because it was now grown to that pitch that it is become the Darling of Kings and continually henceforth courted by them either to gain them from the Papal Jurisdiction to be more engaged to the Crown or by their means to gain the Papal Jurisdiction to be more favourable and complying with the Prerogative Royal. The former times were tumultuous and the Pope is gained to joyn with the Crown to keep the people under though by that means what the Crown saved to it self from the people it lost to Rome Henceforth the course of Affairs grew more civil or if you will graced with a blush of Religion and it was the policy of these times whereof we now treat to carry a benign Aspect to the Pope so far only as to slave him off from being an enemy whilst Kings drove on a new design to ingratiate and engage the Church men of their own Nation unto it's own Crown This they did by distinguishing the Office or Dignity of Episcopacy into the Ministerial and Honourable Parts the later they called Prelacy and was superadded for encouragement of the former and to make their work more acceptaple to men for their Hospitalities sake for the maintenance whereof they had large Endowments and Advancements And then they reduced them to a right understanding of their Original which they say is neither Jus Divinum nor Romanum but that their Lordships power and great possessions were given them by the Kings and others of this Realm And that by vertue thereof the Patronage and custody of the Possessions in the vacancy ought to belong to the Kings and other the Founders and that unto them the right of Election into such advancements doth belong not unto the Pope nor could he gain other Title unto such power but by usurpation and encroachment upon the right of others But these great men were not to be won by Syllogisms Ordinarily they are begotten between Ambition and Covetousness nourished by Riches and Honour and like the Needle in the Compass turn ever after that way Edward the Third therefore labours to win these men heaped Honour and Priviledges upon them that they might see the gleanings of the Crown of England to be better than the vintage of the Tripple Crown Doubtless he was a Prince that knew how to set a full value upon Church men especially such as were devout and it may be did somewhat outreach in that course For though he saw God in outward events more than any of his Predecessors and disclaiming all humane merits reflected much upon God's mercy even in smaller blessings yet we find his Letters reflect very much upon the Prayers of his Clergy he loved to have their Persons nigh unto him put them into places of greatest Trust for Honour and Power in Judicature and not altogether without cause he had thereby purchased unto his Kingdom the name and repute of being a Kingdom of Priests But all this is but Personal and may give some liking to the present Incumbents but not to the expectants and therefore the Royal Favour extended so far in these times as to bring on the Parliament to give countenance to the Courts and Judiciary power of the Ordinaries by the positive Law of the Kingdom although formerly the Canons had already long since made way thereto by practice I shall hereof note these few particulars ensuing Ordinaries shall not be questioned in the King's Court for Commutation Testamentary Matters or Matrimonial Causes nor other things touching Jurisdiction of Holy-Church Things
Indefinite or terminated in the Natural Capacity of the King. And to make a full period● to the point and make the same more clear I shall instance in one Precedent that these times of Edward the Third produced The former English Kings had Title to many Territories in France but Edward the Third had Title to all the Kingdom And being possibly not so sensible of what he had in possession as of what he had not He enters France in such a way and with that success that in a little time he ●●ns the highest seat therein and so brought much honour to the English Nation and more than stood with the safety of the Kingdom For in the union of two Kingdoms it is dangerous for the smaller lest it be swallowed by the greater This was foreseen by the English who knew England did bear but a small proportion to France and complained of that inconvenience and thereupon a Law was made that the people of England should not be subject to the King or his Heirs as Kings of France Which manifestly importeth that an English King may put himself in such a posture in which Legiance is not due to him and that this posture is not onely in Case of Opposition but of diversity when he is King of another Nation and doth not de facto for that Time and Place rule an English King. Which if so I suppose this notion of Natural Absolute and Indefinite Legiance to the King in his Natural Capacity is out of this Kingdom if not out of the World and then the foot of the whole Account will be that the Legiance of an Englishman is Originally according to the Laws the sum of all being comprehended in the joynt safety of the people of England CHAP. IX Of Courts for Causes criminal with their Laws THe great growth of Courts founded upon Prerogative derogated much in these times from the Ancient Courts that formerly had attained the Soveraignty over the people and in the hearts of them all This was a hard lesson for them to learn but especially of the King's-Bench that was wont to learn of none and yet must be content to part with many of their Plumes to deck the Chancellor much of their work to busie the Prerogative Courts holden Coram Rege and more to those holden Coram Populo I mean The Courts of Oyer and Terminer Goal-delivery and Justices of Peace Those of Oyer and Terminer were now grown very common but less esteemed as being by men of mean regard nominated for the most part by the party that sued out the Commission which for the most part was done in behalf of those that were in danger and meaned not to be justified by Works but by Grace These escapes though small in the particulars yet in the full sum made the matter so foul as it became a common grievance and a Rule thereupon set by the Parliament for the regulating both of the Judges of such Court and the Causes The Commissions for Goal-delivery likewise grew more mean and ordinary The chief sort of Men in the several Counties had formerly the power but were found to savour too much of Neighbourhood and Alliance The leading of the work therefore is now committed to the Judges at Westminster and the other made onely Associates to them But above all the Courts of Sheriffs Coroners Leets were now grown sowr with Age having attained courses by common practice differing from Oppression onely in Name and yet were the times so unhappy as by these courses they had obtained favour and respect amongst the great men and so gained more power from above to abuse them below These men loved to be Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer and having learned how to make capital offences pecuniary found-such sweetness as they used not to be weary of their places though the Country grew weary of them and therefore disliking uncertaintes in such matters of benefit they cannot rest till they obtain more certain settlement in their places some for Years others for Life and some for ever The Disease thus contracted by degrees the Cure must be accordingly First the Sheriffwicks much dismembred to please the Court-favourites and fill the Kings privy Purse and all raised to the utmost peny of the full and beyond the just value A Law is made to restore the several Hundreds and Wapentakes to the Sheriffs and their Counties and all of them are reduced to the old Rent And it is likewise provided that none shall execute that place in County or Hundred who shall not then have sufficient Lands in that County to answer damages for injustice by them done And that no Sheriff shall serve in that place above one year and then not to be chosen again for that service till three years be past which latter clause was onely a medium taken up for the present occasion in regard that men of ability became very rare in these times especially in some of the Counties The election of the Sheriff is likewise not to be forgotten for though the Counties had the election of Coroners in regard they looked that no man should come nigh their bloud but whom they trusted yet the Sheriff came not so night their skin nor yet so nigh their Free-holds as anciently they had done for that their power in Judicature was much abated and so not worthy of so high regard yet in respect he was still to be a Minister of Justice and his place valuable more than formerly it was holden convenient that such as had the chief power of Judicature at Westminster viz. the Chancellour Treasurer Chief ●aron and the two Chief Justices should nominate the man that should be their Servant and in the Parliament nevertheless they interposed in that Election as often as they saw cause Secondly As touching Causes criminal which more ordinarily come within the cognizance of these Courts They generally held the same regard in the eye of the Law in these times that they had done formerly nevertheless in two crimes these times wrought diversly urging the edge of the Law against the one and abating it as to the other The latter of these is commonly called Petit Treason which is a murther destructive to the Commonwealth in an inferiour degree and at a further distance because it is destructive to that Legiance by which Families do consist and of whom Kingdomes are derived In former times it extended unto the Legiance between Lord and Tenant and Parents and Children But by this Law of 25 E. 3. it is reduced to the Legiance onely of Man and Wife Master and Servant Clerk and his Ordinary the last of which was now lately taken up and might have been as well laid aside as divers others were but that in these times much is to be yielded to the power of the Prelacy who loved to raise the power of the Ordinary to an extraordinary pitch that themselves might be the more considerable
wounds the heart and being of as little use in a Commonwealth as of benefit therefore is laid aside nor need I to speak any more concerning it There is one thing more somewhat like a Torniament but that it is in good earnest and that is called Duel This cometh likewise within the Cognizance of this Court but in a Ministerial way and as subservient to the Common Law in cases of Appeal and Right Hereof needs likewise little more than the naming and therefore I shall leave the Reader that would understand the particular managing thereof unto the discourse compiled by the Duke of Gloucester in Richard the Second's time Lastly As touching the antiquity of this Court though it may be great yet the power thereof was doubtful and scarce taken notice of in any publick Act of State till about these times whenas a complaint was made by the Commons for the encroachment of that Court upon the Liberty of People and bounds of the Courts of Common Law. Nor is it strange that such unquiet times brought forth such Precedents but much more strange that the Common Law held up its head against such violent irruptions of War. CHAP. XII Of the Peace YOu have seen the Kingdom in Armour now see it in Robes and you will say that its Majesty therein is as grave as it was in the other brave It is true the tempers are so contrary as it may be wondred how one and the same should be wise and willing for both but when God will do much he gives much and can make a People as one man like unto Caleb fitted both for War and Peace Besides the Times were now much conducing hereto It is vain to endeavour to allay Humours in the Body which are maintained by Agitation they must be purged out or the whole will still be endangered and therefore although Kings hitherto did endeavour to establish a peaceable Government yet being led by ill Principles of private Interests they laboured to little purpose But now the Scene is altered and one wise moderate King that was as wise as valiant did more than they all And first set a rule upon his own desires contenting himself with the condition of an English King and then upon his people making them contented with the condition of English men The order herein was no less observable for the former wrangling Times having trained up the mindes of men in a tumultuous way nor could they skill to pace in the steps of Peace the King led them into Foreign parts to spend their heat till being either weak or weary they are contented to return home and study the happiness of a quiet Life These men thus ordered the rest at home are made more cool like a Body after Physick and all are now contented to submit to Law and Magistracy 〈◊〉 fitting time now it was for Justices of Peace to come upon the Stage in their best garb For though the work was more ancient yet like some loose Notes laid aside in several places it was not to be found but at a distance and after long delay But Edward the Third sums up all into one brief and brings a compleat Model thereof into the World for future Ages to accomplish as occasion should lead the way The course was now established to have Justices setled in every County there to be resident and attending that Service First they were named Guardians or Wardens of the Peace but within a few Years altered their Title to Justices First they were chosen out of the good and lawful men of each County After that they were two or three chosen out of the worthiest men and these were to be joyned with Lawyers Then was one Lord and three or four in each County of the most worthy men adjoyned with Lawyers Afterward in Richard the Second's time the number of the Justices in each County might attain to the number of Six and no Steward of any Lord to be admitted into the Commission but within half a year all is at large so be it that the choice be out of the most sufficient Knights Esquires and Gentlemen of the County Again within two years the number in each County is set at Eight yet in all these the Judges and Serjeants were not reckoned so as the work then seemeth not so much as now a days although it was much of the same kind and yet it grew up into that greatness which it had by degrees Before they were setled by Edward the Third there were Custodes pacis which might be those whom we now a days call the High Constables of the Hundred whose work was purely Ministerial Afterward about the second year of Edward the Third the Guardians of the Peace had power of Oyer and Terminer in matters of riding armed upon the Statute 2 Edw. 3. After that they have power of enquiry by Indictment in certain Cases within four years after they have power of Oyer and Terminer in Cases of false Jurors and Maintenance and about ten years after that they obtained like power in matters of Felony and Trespass The way of Commissions in case of Life and Member thus opened another occasion of Commission offers it self for a determinative power in case of offences against the Statute of Labourers and the Cognizance hereof is soon setled upon Commissioners in the Counties specially chosen for that Service which questionless as the Times then stood was as commendable work as it was necessary For Souldiers were so many that Labourers were very few and those that once are accustomed to Arms think ever after meanly of the Handicraft nor will they ever stoop thereto after their Spirits are once elevated by mastery of Adventures And secondly those few Labourers that remained of the Sword Plague and other disasters of these wasting times understood their advantage and set a value upon their Labours far above their merit apprehending that men would rather part with too much of a little than to let their work lie still that must bring them in all they have But these Commissioners lasted not long though the work did The Justices of Peace are looked upon as meet for that service and it is a vain thing to multiply Commissions where the work may be done by one that before this time had obtained an additional Cognizance of all Causes of Riots Batteries wandering dangerous persons and offences in Weights and Measures and in Purveyance To them I say all this work concerning Labourers is also committed by the Parliament and herewith a way was laid open for Crimes of greatest regard under Felony to be determined by Trial in the Country according to the course of Common Law. The issue of all which was not onely ease to the people but a great escape from the rigour of the Council-Table in the Star-chamber and the Kings Bench at Westminster on the one side and also
this Kingdom and yet the Law for all this suffered no change nor did the House of Commons however the name is thrust into the English Ordinary Print ever yield unto the passing of the same but in the Parliament next ensuing complained thereof and protested they would not be bound by such Laws whereto the House of Commons had not given their consent And this dashed the Law quite out of countenance although it holds the place still amongst the number for within four years after the Clergie bring in another Bill of the same nature in general though varying in some particulars but the same was again rejected All the strength therefore of this Law resteth upon the King and House of Lords engaged by the Clergie whom they trusted for their Religion for Book-learning was with them of small account and no less by the King who knew no better way to give the Clergie content that gave him so much as to set the Crown upon his Head nor to discharge his Royal Word passed by the Earls of Northumberland and Westmorland in his behalf unto the Convocation viz. That they were sent to declare the Kings good will to the Clergie and Church-Liberties and that he was resolved to defend all the Liberties of the Church by his Kingly power and to punish Hereticks and the Churches Enemies in such manner as the Clergie should think meet and therefore desired their daily prayers for his own and the Kingdoms safety And yet for all this the people were not of this mind no small part of the Kingdom being overspread with these opinions After Henry the Fourth comes Henry the Fifth and he also makes another essay the former opinions then known onely by the general names of Heresie are now baptized by the new name of Lollardry and grown so overspreading that all the troubles of these times are still imputed to them It was indeed the Devils old and common trick thus to inrage earthly powers against these men although he be hereby but an instrument in the hand of the chief Builder that in laying a sure Foundation doth as well ram down as raise up for the malice of these men made the people of God to multiply Henry the Fifth also published a Law to this same purpose That all persons in place of Government shall swear to use their diligence to destroy all Heresies and Errors called Lollardries That all Lollards convict by the Clergie left to the secular power according to the Laws of Holy Church shall forfeit their Lands and Tenements to their Lords And the King to have the Year and Day and Waste and all his Goods and Chattels If the Lord be the Ordinary the King shall have all No forfeiture to be till the Delinquent be dead They shall be found by Indictment before the Justices of the Peace This Indictment being found shall be sent to the Ordinary with the Prisoner The Indictment shall not be for Evidence but onely for Information These are the principal things contained in this Law which by the manner of the composure seemeth to be of an uncertain colour neither made by the Clergie nor Laity but spoiled between them both The intent thereof seemeth to be principally to draw on the House of Commons to pass the Law under hope of gain by the forfeitures for the penalty is like that of Felony though the crime be not expresly declared to be Felony But the intent fell short in event For first The nature of the Crime is not defined nor declared by any Law and therefore can no man by Indictment be found to be such Secondly No penalty of death hath been by any former or by this Law determined upon such as are guilty for it is not enacted by any Law that such persons shall be delivered to the Secular power c. Thirdly This Statute determining the forfeiture to be not till death and neither that nor any other Law of this Kingdom determining death then is no forfeiture determined Fourthly Though this Law taketh it for granted that Heresie and Errours belong to Ecclesiastical Cognizance yet the same allows of no further proceedings than Ecclesiastical censures Lastly By this Law there can be no proceeding but in case of Indictment for otherwise without Record no forfeiture can be therefore where no Indictment is there is no forfeiture In all which regards it is evident that the Clergie could by this Law neither get fat nor bloud And therefore at their Convocation in the next year following they took another course and ordered that three in every Parish should make presentment upon Oath of such persons as are defamed for Hereticks and the truth so far as they can learn. Which puts me in mind of a Presentment that I have seen by some of St. Mary Overies in these times Item We saine that John Stevens is a man we cannot tell what to make of him and that he hath Books we know not what they are This new course shews plainly that the former held not force as they intended it So God blasted the practices of the Clergie at this time also rendring this Law immaterial that had the form as the other missed in the form and had the matter CHAP. XVIII Of the Court of Chancery IT often befals in State-affairs that extraordinary exigencies require extraordinary remedies which having once gotten footing are not easily laid aside especially if they be expedient for Prerogative The Privy Council in the Star-chamber pretends default of the Common-Law both in speed and severity in Cases whereby the State is endangered The Chancery pretends default by the Common-Law in point of equity and moderation The people taken with these pretences make that Rod more heavy which themselves had already complained of What the Chancery was in times past hath been already shewed still it is in the growing and gaining hand First In the Judicatory power it prevailed in relation to the Exchequer exercising a kind of power to survey the proceedings thereof in cases of Commissioners distrained to account for Commissions executed or not executed For it was no easie matter to execute Commissions from the Exchequer in those times of parties nor were men willing with such unwelcome occasions between Friends and Neighbours and it may be they grew weary of embroiling themselves one against another and of being Instruments of the violent countermotions of Princes and great men Secondly It gained also upon the Admiralty which by former Laws had Jurisdiction in all cases incident upon the great Sea. But now either through neglect of the Admiral or the evil of the Times occasioning Piracies to grow epidemical the ill government upon the Sea became dangerous to the State trenching upon the Truce made between this and other Nations For a remedy whereof first Conservators of the Truce were setled in every Port who had power committed to them to punish Delinquents against the publick Truce both by Indictment at the Kings
suit and according to the course of the Admiralty by complaint saving matters of death to the cognizance of the Admiral But this was soon found defective for Justice done in the dark is many times more respective and less respected and therefore within a few years it is provided That Offenders against the Kings Truce upon the Sea or in any of the Ports shall be proceeded against in the Chancery before the Chancellor who hath power given him of calling to his assistance some of the Judges to execute the Statute of 2 H. 5. foregoing by a handsome contrivance For that Statute was once and again suspended for the rigour that was used by the former Conservators who being borderers upon the Sea for their own peace spared as few as they could which had so discouraged the Seamen that the Kingdom had been almost utterly bereaved of its strength at Sea. Nevertheless all this while these Laws were but penal and not remedial for the parties wronged and therefore another Law is made to give the Chancellor and Judges power to make restitution and reparation Thirdly The Chancery gained upon the Ecclesiastical Court. For whereas by the Canon the Church-men were to be judged by their Superiours according to Ecclesiastical and Ordinary Jurisdiction and the iniquity of the times was again returned to that height that Parents could not enjoy their own Children but the little ones were allured stoln away and detained in Cloisters nor did the Church-men afford remedy in such cases A Law was made that upon complaint hereof made to the Chancellor the Provincial should be by him sent for and punished according to his discretion Lastly The Chancery encroached upon the Common Law For whereas the stirs between the two Houses of York and Lancaster began to rise men made their dwellings in places of security and strength Women likewise and other persons flying thither for refuge especially such of them as had most to lose these were contrary to the Law of common honesty urged to engage their Estates unto the desires of such to whom they had fled for refuge and sometimes compelled to marry before they could gain their liberty It was now provided that all such complaints should be heard and determined by the Chancellor Secondly As touching the Ministerial power of the Chancery this likewise was enlarged in making of Process to compel appearance in cases of forcible Entries Murders Manslaughters Robberies Batteries Assemblies in nature of Insurrections Riots and Plunder committed by Servants upon their Masters goods before their Masters death and suchlike offences now grown common and in need of sudden remedy Thus as the work and power of the Chancery grew so did the place and person of the Chancellor grow more considerable raised now from being the Kings Secretary for no better was he in former times to be the Kingdoms Judge and of such trust that although the King might make election of his own Secretary yet the Parliament would first know and allow him that must be trusted with the power over the Estates of so many of the people And therefore did in these times both place and displace him as they saw expedient In a word he is become the Kingdoms Darling and might be more bold with the Common Law than any of his Peers CHAP. XIX Of the Courts of Crown-Pleas and Common Law. AS the Chancery on the one side did swell and increase so was the Kings-bench in an ebb the Council-Table in the Star-Chamber on the one side and the Itinerant-Courts in the Country intercepted and drew away much to their own shares making themselves fat the Kings-bench lean and the Rural Courts for Crown-Pleas almost to starve The Crown-Pleas formerly had been determinable in the Kings-bench Gaol-delivery Oyer and Terminer and many of them by Justices of the Peace Coroners and Sheriff The Gaol-delivery was afterwards united to the Judges of Assize and if one of them were a Clergy-man then to the other and chief men of the County This was useful for the Publick but not beneficial for some men and therefore they laboured for Commissions especially directed to parties that they thought would partake but these were found soon to be dangerous soon taken away and the Gaol delivery restored to the Judges of Assize as formerly The Commissions of Oyer and Terminer were sued forth upon extraordinary Emergencies and Offences wherein the State was much concerned for speedy Execution In former times both these and Gaol-deliveries were but rarely had and then granted unto some that perchance knew more of the Case than before-hand was meet to be known Edward the Third amended this Errour and ordered that no Commissions of Oyer and Terminer should issue forth but unto Commissioners named by the Court and not by the party complaining But the Judges of Assize are now on the growing hand both for Honour Use and Power the rather because their persons are of high repute in the Benches at Westminster which are the Master-pieces of Judicature and their Iters are constant and ordinary Nevertheless the Judges of Assize though they have the Gaol-delivery annexed to them yet have they not that absolute power of the Kings-bench but are still under the rule of their Commission which is not alterable but Parliament and which by it was altered by way of adding new powers as new crimes arose that required the eye of the State to provide And so the Judges of Assize by degrees grew to be the ordinary Administrators of Justice throughout the Kingdom yet holding still forth to them a limited power to hear and determine in some Cases but in others onely to enquire and certifie as in the case of false Returns by the Sheriff of persons elected for the Parliament And also in cases concerning the Statutes of Labourers and unlawful Games and Pastimes in which case the Certificate is to be made to the Chancellor And also in cases concerning Liveries contrary to the Statutes wherein the Certificate is to be made to the Kings-bench which power in this last case continued in that manner by the space of thirty years and then by another Statute they had the power to determine such cases before themselves In like manner they had power to hear and determine cases of falshood in counterfeiting and corrupting of Money by washing clipping c. And also defaults committed by Sheriffs Bayliffs and their Officers against the Statutes of Forcible Entries and of wearing of Liveries as aforesaid These were signs of much confidence and trust in them and yet notwithstanding not in these nor in these were the Penalties by Fine left to the Arbitry of the Judges no nor to the Justices of the Kings-bench but were by the very Letter of the Law determined Nor would the Parliament trust these men with doing Justice in the cases aforesaid in their own Counties where they dwelled nor did it think expedient to
allow the Chief Justice of the King-bench unto that service in any of them all but onely once in the County of Lancaster and then onely at the King's pleasure Otherwise it was to be as was used by the space of one hundred years foregoing possibly because his power was too great to be trusted amongst the people Lastly the Judges of Nisi Prius were anciently made by Edward the First by whom also the Assizes were settled at certain times of the year and afterwards by the Statute of York the Nisi Prius in smaller cases was granted before one Justice of the Bench where the Plea dependeth and one substantial man of the County but those of greater concernment were to be had before two Justices of that Bench or in case they were wanting then before Justices of the other Bench or in default of them before the chief Baron if he were a man of Law and in default of that before the Judges of Assize Therefore in those days the Justices of the Benches in their Iters in the Counties were divided in their power some being for Assizes others for Nisi Prius and in some times and cases some were for both For in those times of Edward the Third Judges of Assize had power to enquire in some matters that concerned the Crown or to try Nisi Prius Nor were these powers united till in Henry the Sixth's time Justices of Nisi Prius had the power of Oyer and Terminer annexed to them in all cases of Felony and Treason What was formerly provided by Edward the Third and Richard the Second for instruction to these Judges and to bind them thereto by solemn Oath I shall not particularly mention but shall leave the consideration of the Original of the whole Judicature of this Nation unto the Readers observation upon the premises CHAP. XX. Concerning Sheriffs HEnry the Fourth after a small rest in his Throne though he always sate loose sought after the civil Peace as the corner-stone of his subsistence and that by a way of Justice which found more acceptance with the Vulgar than the common Education of the greater number in these times could promise for the worst of men cannot endure to suffer Injustice though themselves will do it Now because where Kings are reputed to be the Fountain and Life of Justice Sheriffs may be reputed to be the breath thereof and by their Irregularities do render the Government of the King as loathsome as unsavoury breath doth the person whose it is Therefore Henry the Fourth chose rather to be a loser in his Farm●●ts of the Sheriff-wicks than to occasion the Sheriffs to save their bargains by oppression And to this end he took away the course of farming of Sheriff-wicks and made the Sheriffs bare accountants for the Annual profits and as touching the casual profits the Sheriff discharged himself upon Oath This was a good security to the King but yet the People was not herewith satisfied For though the Sheriffs might not take to Farm yet what they had they might let to Farm and then wherein are the people the better for these Laws seeing it is all one for them to be oppressed by the Sheriff immediately as by the Proxy For preventing of this inconvenience another Law is made That the Sheriff shall not let his Bailywick to Farm nor be Non-resident and to this he must bind himself by Oath So as now the Sheriff is double girt and may be fairly ridden without danger to the King or People But men ride Horses for ease and pleasure and he that must bend his mind always to watch his Horses motion will chuse rather to go on foot And therefore Henry the Fifth renewed the Law of Richard the Second that Sheriffs shall be but for one year and then not to be chosen again nor serve for three years next following This Order continued for the space of eight years within which time War and Pestilence had consumed so many of the richer sort of people that a Dispensation is granted that Sheriffs may continue in their places for four years And it was above twenty years after e're the Stock was recruited again after which time the substance of the former Statutes of Edward the Third Richard the Second and 1 Henry the Fifth is revived again with a penalty upon the Sheriff his Deputy or Clerk that shall execute that place above one year So the custom of holding that Office ten or twelve years by occasion of the Dispensation for four years was laid aside But the Cure would never be perfect so long as Sheriffs held by Inheritance for it was easie to find new Deputies but not to lay down old Customs nor could it be lasting unless the penalties also had been annexed to the particular Crimes For a Sheriff before he is a year old by experience formerly had becomes too cunning for all these Laws and therefore Laws are made also against the ordinary corruption of these places such as are extorting of Fees false making of Juries false returns of Writs c. and damages in such cases given to the party wronged and when all is done he is not trusted with taking of Indictments Thus with much ado a Sheriff is made a tolerable Officer and his place by degrees so hedged in that what was in former times hard to pluck up is now become hard to set CHAP. XXI Of Justices and Laws concerning the Peace THE faint Title of Henry the Fourth to the Crown made him ever tender of the Civil Peace without breach whereof he was sure to be quiet in the Throne He undertook not this work by any superlative power from and by himself but useth the help of the Parliament and Laws wherein he was industrious pretending love of Unity amongst his people which nevertheless he liked not unless in order to quiet between himself and them The former way of Justices of Peace he followed close reducing the persons to their ancient qualifications The most sufficient persons Inhabitants in the County worth at least twenty pound yearly unless they be Lawyers or such as are Justices in Corporations Nor is the King troubled or trusted with the naming or electing of these men but the Chancellor or the Kings Council so as now by Law the King can neither be Justice nor make Justice Jure proprio but as his interest with the Council is more or less prevalent and that power that first gave it to the Crown the same power took it away or imparted and placed it else where But as touching the Work or Power of the Justices themselves it grew exceedingly much whereof was only of enquiry and to make Certificates as of Heresie Treason Falshood of Sheriffs c. But more of Oyer and Terminer as in case of Watches deceitfulness in Trades as of making Arrow-heads guilding of Metal
tanning of Leather imbasing of Silver selling of Waxen Images and Pictures c. For the superstition of these times was such as these petty Gods were not set at so high a price by the Seller but a higher price by the Buyer The Parliament therefore set a true value of them viz. For the Wax so much as the Wax is worth by weight and but four pence for the godhead So as it seems the Parliament was not very superstitious in their House whatever they were at Church Furthermore the Justices of the Peace had power to punish deceit in Measures Weights Forcible Entries and Detainers In many of which cases the penalty being Fine and Imprisonment became a snare to many of the Justices especially such as were of the greater and higher rank who having Castles of their own under colour of Justice imprisoned Delinquents in their own Castles and ransomed them at their own pleasure which proved a great oppression to the people and occasioned a Law that no Justice should commit any Delinquent to other than the County-Gaol saving Franchises to the Lords Those times are happy when Justice waits not altogether at Court but grows up in the Fields and Justices of Peace as the Kings Arms upon the Royal Mace are terrible onely to the bad and not as they are pictured before an Ale-house-door to invite men to transgress The Laws for the preservation of the peace concern either punishment of Crimes committed or prevention of them from being committed There is a succession of crimes as of Men and Ages because the Scripture tells us that the hearts of all are fashioned alike yet it is with generations as with men some incline to some crimes more than other and that is the reason that the title Treason sometimes is set forth in Folio sometimes in a lesser Volume It is evident is Story that the violent times of Richard the Second had raised the value of that amongst other offences above measure not long before his time his Father had reduced that wild notion of Treason to a certain rule that formerly wandred in a Wilderness of opinions But Henry the Fourth either to save his own stake or to take the people or both reduced it again to the Statute-rule of Edward the Third and made void that Statute of his Predecessors which had made a former Act of Parliament and all the service thereby done Treason The Dimensions of Treason thus clearly limned and declared taught ill-disposed minds to keep out of the Letter and yet to be bold with the Scene Counterfeit Money they durst not yet to diminish the same they thought came not within the Circle and so it became a common grievance till a Law was made That all purposed impairing of Money should be Treason And so the Parliament held forth to all men that they had a power to declare Treason without the bounds of the Statute of Edward the Third The like power it held forth in the time of Henry the Sixth for men knew that Burglary and Robbery were mortal crimes they would no more of that now they devise a way to spoil and prey for themselves and yet neither to rob nor break House To this end they would scatter little Scrolls in writing requiring the party that they intended to prey upon to leave so much money upon such a day at such a place and this was Sub poena of burning the parties House and Goods which many times did ensue upon default made This practice was at once made Treason to prevent the growth of such an evil And the like was done with Robberies and Manslaughters contrary to the Kings Truce and safe-conduct As many or more new Felonies were also now created One was the cutting out of mens Tongues and plucking out of Eyes a strange cruelty And that shewed the extream savageness of those times so much the more intolerable by how much the poor tortured creature could hardly be either Eye or Ear-Witness of the truth of his own wrong A second Felony was the customary of carrying of Wool or Wool-fells out of the Realm to other places except Calis Another Felony concerneth Souldiers which I refer over to the next Chapter The last was Servants plundering their Masters Goods and absenting themselves if upon Proclamation made they appear not this was also made Felony In the next place as touching Forcible Entries and Riots the remedies so often inculcated and new dressed shew plainly the nature of the times These kind of crimes commonly are as the light Skirmishes in the beginning of a War and follow in the Conclusion also as the faintings of a Battle fought till both sides be weary I shall not enter into each particular Statute divers of them being little other than as asseverations annexed to a Sentence to add credit and stir up minding in men that otherwise would soon forget what is said or done The remedies formerly propounded are now resined and made more effectual First In regard of speed which is as necessary in these forces as the stopping of the breaches of Waters in the first act and therefore one Justice of the Peace may proceed upon a holder by force or breaker of the Peace with a Continuando but Riots are looked upon as more dangerous and the first opposition had need be more stiff lest being uneffectual it aggravate the violence and therefore it is required that two Justices and the Sheriff should joyn in the work to carry on the work with more Authority and Power And what they cannot do in the punitive part they must certifie to the King and his Council or to the Kings Bench if Traverse be made So as though the power of the County be annexed to the Sheriff Jure ordinario to maintain the Peace yet the Parliament did delegate the same upon Justices as it thought most expedient To maintain and recover the Peace when it is broken shews more Power but to prevent the breach shews more Wisdom and therefore to all the rest the Wisdom of these Times provideth carefully First For Guards and Watches according to the Statute at Wint. and committed the care thereof to the Justices of the Peace And Secondly Against the gendring of parties for it is commonly seen that such as the admired for excellencies of person are so far idolized of some as that their Gestures Actions and Opinions are observed Tokens of favour though never so small are desired from such and the Idol likes it well gives Points Ribbons it may be Hats and with these men are soon gained to be Servants in the fashion and not long after to be Servants in Action be it War or Treason or any other way This manner of cheat the former times had been too well acquainted with Knights and Esquires are not to be feared in times where the word Lord carries the wonderment away their offences against the Statutes of
Sixth was in view and the minds of men left unassured neither trusting much to Edward the Fourth nor he to them And after that Henry the Sixth was gone out of the way Edward the Fourth could not readily change his posture used Arguments of force and power and for the most part looked like a man in Arms with his hand on his Sword ready to draw upon the next man that stands in his way Thus are the people partly driven and partly drawn into an Oath of Allegiance unto Edward the Fourth under peril of Attainder and the Parliament assured unto him once more For immediately upon the departure of Edward the Fourth beyond Sea after Ten years of his Reign the Parliament never staying for the issue of Providence declared the Throne void of Edward the Fourth and Henry the Sixth King. The Judges likewise of the Courts of Westminster determined the same thing as may appear by the Law-Reports of those times in Print wherein reattachments were often granted by them upon discontinuance of Process by this Demise of Edward the Fourth And thus Henry the Sixth is once more King for six Months viz. from October to April at which time the Ballance turns Edward the Fourth returns gets into the Throne Henry the Sixth is again Dethroned all things are as they were and all confirmed by Act of Parliament For that Body is ever wise enough to side with Power rather than to spend much time upon fruitless Orders and Votes that will pierce no Armour and therefore like the times must needs be subject to fits of distemper at the coming in of every Tide and did build and pull down enact and disenact turn and return the English Crown from York to Lancaster and back again and in conclusion for some time did do little but undo Nor can they be justly censured herein for Councils of men are not ordained to hinder divine Providence or over-rule Fate but to foresee and close with Occasions in the most advantageous way for the publick good and when both Winds and Currents are uncertain to ride at flote till they can discern the most commodious Haven to Winter in To impute therefore fault unto the Parliament in such Cases for want of Uniformity and Immutability of Councils is somewhat like the Notion that Batchelors conceit of Wives they would have but they do not know what other 〈◊〉 an Idea of their own fancy Now if it be enquired which course prevailed in order either to the Kings Royalty or the peoples Liberty I shall answer Neither of these but the House of York prevailed to hold the Crown and might have advanced the Authority thereof had they not fall'n out amongst themselves for the spoil and Edward the Fourth was not altogether disposed thereto The success that he had in the Field and his Souldiery made him look big like a King of the greater size but Kings sleep not securely upon such Pillows When the Militia is on Horseback it is as ready to be a Guard upon the King as for him and when it is most sober not so easily governed as a Commonwealth And therefore Edward the Fourth now in Arms though he found it a hard Notion to maintain the peoples Liberty where no man is free from the Souldier yet he enclined thereto We read of a multitude of Taxations of all sorts and of Benevolences the worst of all those sorts For Souldiers must have money or if not they will have it but the King would not force things so far as his power could reach he will have Money but it shall be by order of the Parliament He might have pretended much upon the Commission of Array yet did it not but chose rather to be Lord of the Seas And because it was too great a Farm for his private Purse he prays aid of the Parliament by the way of Tumage and Poundage which was in demand nine years before the Parliament granted it And when it was granted it was with such restrictions that it is evident the King preferred the right of the Parliament therein above his private honour Secondly Titles of Honour are but windy Notions and every one knows what claim is made by Kings to have the sole interest in conferring the same This Edward the Fourth neglected so far as he interested the Parliament both in the conferring of them and resuming the same Thirdly The course of Trade was now more especially looked to not by the King and Privy Council but by the Parliament And because it was much decayed partly by reason of the ill government thereof and partly by the excessive lavishness of these times many Laws are made for remedy of both And first the Staple was setled sometimes at Calis alone sometimes at it and Middleborough and by this means England gained Trade from both Nations but the principal thanks is to be given to the interest between the King and the House of Burgundy Then course is taken for the bringing of the Staple Commodities onely to those places and the return to be made in Money and not Commodity by exchange Then for the well making of Staple-Manufactures and restraining Importation of Foreign Manufactures of such kinds Then against transporting of English Coyn and importing of Foreign Coyn other than Bullion And as touching the second grievance it seems gallantry or vanity of Apparel was a sore Disease of these times which were become times of Fashions and wherein the King led the way by his own example For he desired to be brave and that he might be more brave he passed Laws that the people should be less brave assessing a sort of Apparel for every degree and therein stooped so low as to define the fashions of their very shoes Fourthly The Parliament retained their ancient right of reducing the course of Judicature For whereas Sheriffs had hitherto holden their course of Trial of the moaner sort of Felonies and Trespasses and Offences determinable onely by Imprisonment or Fines and Amerciaments whereby mens Estates did lie under the continual pillage of these covetous and extorting Officers It was established by the Parliament that these men should have for the future only power of enquiry and to certifie at the next Sessions and there the Trial to be and Fines and Amerciaments to be set Taxed and Estreated unto the Exechequer and from thence to be levied and thereof the Sheriff give account This was a great security to the peoples Estates but gave them not a full remedy For though the Trial was now more fair yet these Officers were Judges of suspicion and had still power upon suspicion to imprison their persons and seize their Estates under colour to save them for the King in case Conviction followed For remedy hereof the Justices of the Peace have now power given them to Bail in Case of light suspicion and it is further declared that no mans Estate shall be first
shipped over the Popes power to the Chair of Canterbury and had made a Pope instead of an Archbishop but that the man was not made for that purpose What the Ordinary Jurisdiction got or lost we come in the next place to observe First they had still their Courts and Judicatory power but upon what right may be doubted Their first foundation was laid by the Civil power of a Law in the time of William the first Norman King yet the power of the Pope and Bishop growing up together they came to hold the power of the Keys by a Divine Right and so continued until these times of Henry the Eighth wherein they have a Retrospect to the Rock from whence they were first hewn and many seem to change their Tenure and therewith therefore are in right to change the Style of their Courts and Title of Summons but the times not being very curious and the work of reformation but in fieri the more exact lineaments must be left to time to finish and beautifie A greater blow did light upon the Law of these Courts which was left as doubtful as the Canons all which are now put to the question and to this day never received full resolution but were left to the Parliament to determine them at leisure and in the mean time to the Judges of the Common Law to determine the same Lawful or Unlawful as occasion should require Nevertheless the Courts still hold on their course according to their old Laws and Customs for their form of Proceedings some say by Prescription yet more rightly by Permission it being a difficult matter to make Prescription hold against a Statute-Law As touching the matters within their Cognizance the Law setled some and unsetled others First As touching Heresie the Church-men formerly thought scorn the Lay-Magistrate should intermeddle but not being able to stop the growth thereof by their Church-Censures prayed aid of the Civil Magistracy so by degrees arose the penalties of Imprisonment and Burning which brought the whole matter into Cognizance before the Civil Magistrate because no Free man might be proceeded against for loss of Life or Liberty but by the Laws of the Nation and for this cause the Civil Magistrate granted the Writ of Habeas Corpus and relieved many times the party imprisoned wrongfully or granted Prohibition as they saw cause And therefore it cannot be said rightly that the sole or supream Cognizance of this crime of Heresie belonged to the Clergie before these times Nor did their proceeding upon the Writ of Burning warrant any such thing partly because till these times the Canon-Law was the best ground that these proceedings had and the course therein was not so uniform as to permit the Title of a Custom to warrant the same Conviction being sometimes by Jury sometimes according to the Canon sometimes before the Ordinary sometimes before the Convocation sometimes before the King sometimes before special Delegates as the Histories of the Martyrs more particularly set forth and no Act of Parliament positive in the point But the time is now come when nighest Reformation that the thing is setled more to the prejudice of Reformation than all the endeavours foregoing like to the darkness of the Night that is at the Superlative degree when nighest break of Day A Statute is now made that indeed quite blotted out the very name of the Statute of Henry the Fourth De Haeretico comburendo but made compleat that Statute of 5 Rich. 2. and the other of 2 Hen. 5 both which were formerly neither good in Law nor effectual otherways than by Power and gave more settlement to the Ordinaries proceedings in such Cases For the Delinquent might be convict before the Ordinary by Witnesses or might be indicted at the Common Law and the Indictment certified to the Ordinary as Evidence Yet did the Parliament carve them out their work and in express words declared That Opinions against the Authority and Laws of the Bishop of Rome were not Heresie and by the same reason might have done more of that kind but that was enough to tell all the world that the Parliament could define what was not Heresie although they did not then determine what was Heresie And thus the judgement of the Romish Church is called into question in one of their Fundamentals and the Clergie left in a Muse concerning the rule upon which they were to proceed against this crime The Parliament within six years after undertakes though somewhat unhappily to determine and define certain points of Controversie which had some relation to the Worship of God and the publick Peace and declared the contrary to these determinations to be Heresie and the punishment to be Death and Forfeiture and the Trial to be before Commissioners by Jury or Testimony of two Witnesses or by examination in the Ecclesiastical Court or inquisition in the Leet or Sessions of the Peace Upon the whole matter therefore the Ordinary had a particular Power to determine Heresie but the Parliament determined such Heresies as were punishable with Death and Forfeiture by enumeration in the six Articles This was the Clergies Primer wherein they imployed their study as making most for their design and laid aside thoughts of all other Heresies as dry notions or old fashions laid aside and not worthy the setting forth to the common sale Secondly The Lesson concerning Marriage was no less difficult for the Clergie to take out They were put by their former Authority derived from abroad and their ancient rule of the Canon-Law With the Kings leave they do what they do and where they doubt they take his Commission So did the Archbishop of Durham in the Case between John and Jane Fisher In the Kings Case the determining part is put to the Parliaments conclusion and for a rule in other cases some persons are enabled to marry which formerly were not viz. Masters of the Chancery and Doctors of the Civil Law and some forbidden Marriage as all Priests by the Statute of the six Articles And unto the rest concerning degrees of Consanguinity or Affinity a particular enumeration is appointed to be observed within which Marriage is declared unlawful all other further off are made lawful In all which regards the Cognizance of Matrimonial Causes is theirs onely by leave Thirdly Residency and Non-residency was a Theme formerly learned from the Canon-Law in which as also in the thing it self the Clergie were the onely skilful men The rule of the Canon-law was strict enough considering the times but it was not ●●eel to the back The Parliament now undertakes the Cause and though it gave in some respects more liberty than the Canon yet stood it better to its tackling and kept a stricter hand upon the reins than was formerly used and by giving a general rule for Dispensation took away all arbitrary Dispensations and Licenses which were formerly granted beyond all rule but that of Silver or Gold
men of so high accomplishment And by this means Lordship once bringing therewith both Authority and Power unto Kings before Kings grew jealous of their greatness in these latter days is become a meer Jelly and neither able to serve the interest of Kings if the people should bestir themselves nor their own any longer Henceforth the Commons of England are no mean persons and their Representative of such concernment as if Kings will have them to observe him he must serve them with their Liberties and Laws and every one the publick good of the people No man's work is beneath no man 's above it the best honour of the Kings work is to be Nobilis servitus as Antigonus said to his Son or in plain English Supream Service above all and to the whole I now conclude wishing we may attain the happiness of our Forefathers the ancient Saxons Quilibet contentus sorte propria A VINDICATION Of the ancient way of PARLIAMENTS In ENGLAND THe more Words the more Faults is a divine Maxime that hath put a stop to the publishing of this Second Part for some time but observing the ordinary humour still drawing off and passing a harsher Censure upon my intentions in my First Part than I expected I do proceed to fulfil my course that if Censure will be it may be upon better grounds when the whole matter is before Herein I shall once more mind that I meddle not with the Theological Right of Kings or other Powers but with the Civil Right in Fact now in hand And because some mens Pens of late have ranged into a denial of the Commons ancient Right in the Legislative power and others even to adnul the Right both of Lords and Commons therein resolving all such power into that one principle of a King Quicquid libet lìcet so making the breach much wider than at the beginning I shall intend my course against both As touching the Commons Right joyntly with the Lords it will be the main end of the whole but as touching the Commons Right in competition with the Lords I will first endeavour to remove out of the way what I find pulished in a late Tractate concerning that matter and so proceed upon the whole The subject of that Discourse consisteth of three parts one to prove that the ancient Parliaments before the thirteenth Century consisted onely of those whom we now call the House of Lords the other that both the Legislative and Judicial Power of the Parliament rested wholly in them Lastly that Knights Citizens and Burgesses of Parliament or the House of Commons were not known nor heard of till punier times than these This last will be granted viz. That their several Titles of Knights Citizens and Burgesses were not known in Parliament till of latter times Nevertheless it will be insisted upon that the Commons were then there The second will be granted but in part viz. That the Lords had much power in Parliament in point of Jurisdiction but neither the sole nor whole The first is absolutely denied neither is the same proved by any one instance or pregnant ground in all that Book and therefore not clearly demonstrated by Histories and Records beyond contradiction as the Title-page of that Book doth hold forth to the World. First because not one instance in all that Book is exclusive to the Commons and so the whole Argument of the Discourse will conclude Ab Authoritate Negativa which is no Argument in humane testimony at all Secondly The greatest number of instances in that Book are by him supposed to concern Parliaments or General Councils of this Nation holden by the Representative thereof whereas indeed they were either but Synodical Conventions for Church-matters whereunto the poor Commons he well knoweth might not come unless in danger of the Canons dint or if they did yet had they no other work there than to hear learn and receive Laws from the Ecclesiasticks And the Lords themselves though present yet under no other Notion were they than as Counsel to the King whom they could not cast out of their Council till after-ages though they often endeavoured it Thirdly The Author of that Tractate also well knoweth that Kings usually made Grants and Infeodations by advice of the Lords without the aid of the Parliament And it is no less true that Kings with the Lords did in their several Ages exercise ordinarily Jurisdiction in cases of distributive Justice especially after the Norman entrance For the step was easie from being Commanders in War to be Lords in Peace but hard to lay down that power at the Foot of Justice which they had usurped in the rude times of the Sword when men labour for Life rather than Liberty and no less difficult to make a difference between their deportment in commanding of Souldiers and governing of Countrymen till Peace by continuance had reduced them to a little more sobriety Nor doth it seem irrational that private differences between Party and Party should be determined in a more private way than to trouble the whole Representative of the Kingdom with matters of so mean concernment If then those Councils mentioned by the Author which concern the King's Grants and Infeodations and matters of Judicature be taken from the rest of the Precedents brought by him to maintain the thing aimed at I suppose scarce one Stone will be left for a Foundation to such a glorying Structure as is pretended in the Title-page of that Book And yet I deny not but where such occasions have befaln the Parliament sitting it hath closed with them as things taken up by the way Fourthly It may be that the Author hath also observed that all the Records of Antiquity passed through if not from the hands of the Clergie onely and they might think it sufficient for them to honour their Writings with the great Titles of men of Dignity in the Church and Commonwealth omitting the Commons as not worthy of mention and yet they might be there then present as it will appear they were in some of the particular instances ensuing to which we come now in a more punctual consideration The first of these by his own words appear to be a Church-mote or Synod it was in the year 673 called by the Archbishop who had no more power to summon a Parliament than the Author himself hath And the several Conclusions made therein do all shew that the People had no work there as may appear in the several Relations thereof made by Matthew Westminster and Sir Henry Spelman an Author that he makes much use of and therefore I shall be bold to make the best use of him that I can likewise in vindicating the truth of the point in hand For whatever this Council was it is the less material seeing the same Author recites a Precedent of Aethelbert within six years after Austin's entry into this Island which was long before this Council which bringeth on the Van of all the rest of
130 Torniament 63 Tunnage and Poundage 110 Trade 38 111 Treason 45 c. by Thoughts by Marriage and counterfeiture 149 150. tried where the King will 151. Petty Treason 55. W. WAles subdued by Henry the Fourth 69. Vnited to the English Crown by Henry the Eighth 141 War by advice of Parliament 58 102. Levying of men 59 103 145 167. Jurati obligati ad arma taken away 57. Arming of men ibid. 167. Conduct to their Rendezvouz 59. Running from their Colours ibid. 63 172. plunder satisfied 58. Their pay 103 148 169. Offensive and Defensive 167 Watches enquired into by Justices of the Peace 101 Wickliff 37 Wills probate 90 Witchcraft made Felony 150 174. FINIS Caes. com lib. 5. Tacit. Anal. 14. Amian lib. 15. Caes. com lib. 6. Tacit. Caes. com lib. 5. Lib. 6. Hieron Caes. com 6. Isa. 42. 4. 51. 5. 60. 9. 66. 19. Tertul. adv Judaeos Platina de vit Eleuthe Bed● l. 5. c. 25. Origen hom 4. Ezek. Psal. 2. 3. Tacit. Vit. Agric. Tacit. vit Agric. M. Westm. an 181. M. Westm. an 303. Cic Attic. 2. Concil Brit. 42. M. Westm. An. 446. Beda Lib. 1. cap. 17. Concil Brit. p. 49 62 382. Concil Brit. 385 Gildas Amian l. 16. Zossimus hist lib. 3. Amian lib. 28. 30. Suffrid Petrus Fris. antiquit lib. 3. cap. 1. Caes. Com. Histor. Germ. Plutarch vit Solon Lycurg Albinus Sax. 72. Xenophon Tacit. Emius Avent Anal. Bowr 1. 10. Beuter in Tac. 125 Amian Naucler 505. Greg. Epist. lib. 5. Epist. 59. Bed. hist. lib. 3. cap. 25. Bed. hist. lib. 1. cap. 23. Lib. 3. cap. 4. Bed. hist. lib. 1. cap. 27. Lib. 2. cap. 2. Greg. Epist. l. 7. Epist. 13. 7. Concil Brit. 92. Bed. hist. lib. 1. cap. 29. Bed. hist. lib. 1. cap. 25. Greg. Epist. lib. Epist. 59. 2 Thes. 2. Bed. hist. lib. 2. cap. 2. Concil Brit. fol. 111. Tacit. mor. Serm. Greg. Epist. ad Eulog Concil Brit. p. 258. An. 745. Mag. cent 3 cap. 7. Concil Brit. p. 190. An. 694. Ant. Brit. p. 55. Malmsb. lib. 1. cap. 2. Ant. Brit. p. 54. Ant. Brit. Concil Brit 133. Ant. Brit. 45. Ibid. 53. Concil Brit. 238 246 261. Mag. Cent. 7. cap. 7. Bed. hist. lib. 4. cap. 3. Concil Brit. 196. An. 697. Ibid. 329. An. 816. Conc. 8. gen Constant. can 14. Mag. cent 8. cap 9. Concil Brit. 128. An. 693. Ll. Sax. cap. 37. An. Aetheist cap. 11. Concil Brit Concil Brit. p. 197. An. 697. Concil Brit. p. 576. Concil Brit. p. 448. Ll. Aethe●st 13. Ibid. 406. Concil Brit. p. 273. Ll. Aethel c. 2. Ll. Canut c. 12. Mag. cent 8 cap. 9. Deacons Sub-deacons Acolites Exorcists Concil Brit. p. 54. Lecturers Ostiaries Concil Brit. 261. An. 750. M. Paris in vit Eadrick Abb. An. 1009. Concil Brit. 513. Ll. Aetheld 31. First-fruits Concil Brit. p. 185. An. 693. Concil Brit. p. 545. Tythes Concil Brit. p. 298. An. 787. Concil Brit. 259. Ingulfus Gest. pontif Lib. 2. cap. 2. An. 854. Concil Brit. p. 392. An. 905. Ibid. 527. An. 1009. Luminaries Concil Brit. p. 377. Ibid. 545. An. 1032. Plough-alms An. 905. An. 1009. Soul-shot Concil Brit. p. 571. An. 1009. Glebe Concil Brit. 260. An. 750. Peter-pence Concil Brit. p. 230. An. 725. Concil Brit. p. 311. An. 791. Ibid. 313. An. 847 Ibid. 6. 1. Vit. Offae 19. Concil Brit. p. 445. 545. Concil Brit. p. 621. Fox Mary● p. 340. Brit. Ant. p. 18. Malms gest Reg. lib. 1. c. 4. Bed. hist. lib. 1. cap. 29. Malmsb. loco citat Vit. Offae Malmsb. Concil Brit. 133. Antiq. Brit. Antiq. Brit. p. 54. M. Westm. An. 775. Ll. Edw. conf cap. 31. Lindwood l. 1. de constit c. 1. Malmesh gest pontif lib. 3. fo 263. Baronius An. 930. Malmesb. gest pontif lib. 3. p. 263. An. 680. Concil Brit. p. 191. 310. 318. Ibid. 316. 318 387. Concil Brit. 245. 317 387. M. Westm. An. 955. 958. Concil Brit. 479. Ibid. 337. Ibid. 319. 332. Concil Brit. p. 334. Mag. cent 8. cap. 9. Heresie An. 446. Beda hist. l. 1. Blasphemy Concil Brit. p. 341. An. 840. Apostacy An. 314. Concil Brit. 41. Ibid. 367. False Worship Canon Apost cap. 10. Bed. hist. lib. 3. cap. 26. Mag. Cent. 7. cap. 6. Concil Brit. p. 306. Tacit. Mor. Germ. Concil Brit. 246. An. 745. Ibid. 377. Ibid. 405. An. 928. Perjury Ll. Sax. fol. 4. An. 9 28. Sacriledge Concil Brit. p. 127. An. 610. Ibid. 265. Simony Concil Brit. 163. Matrimonial Causes Beda hist. l. 1. cap. 27. Concil Brit. 219. Concil Brit. p. 427. An. 944. Bastardy Incest Concil Brit. p. 392. An. 905. Adultery Fornication Concil Brit. p. 558. Tythes Synod Durien cap. 7. An. 785. Rabban Epist. ad Hadubrand Concil Brit. p. 277. Concil Brit. p. 254. An. 747. Malmesb. gest pontif lib. 3. An. 680. Bonis epist. ad Cutbertum An. 745. Concil Brit. p 379. Concil Brit. p. 248 253. An. 747. Cantab. 10. 200 263. Witik in gest Saxon. lib. 1. M. Westm. An. 672. M. Westm. An. 912 919. Tacit. Cragius Mag. cent 8. cap. 2. An. 747. Tacitus Tacitus Concil Brit. p. 397. Ll. Inae Lamb. Miror cap. 1. Sect. 1. Wigorn. An. 1016. Tacitus Ll. Sax. Ed. cap. 17. M. Westm. An. 756. 758. Wigorn. An. 755. Concil Brit. 340. Tacitus Tacitus Mir. 101. 298. Ll. Edw. c. 4. Malmesb. gest pontif lib. 3. gest Reg. lib. 1 cap. 4. M. Paris An. 1095. Concil Brit. p. 614. An. 1066. Can●● cap. 67. Ll. Edw. cap. 35. Nitard lib. 4. Tacitus Tacitus Tacitus Miror cap. 5. Sec. 1. Concil Brit. p. 333. M. Westm. An. 854. Caes. Com. lib. 6. Tacitus Lamb. in 4. fol. 72. Tacitus Tacitus Tacitus Malmesb. gest Reg. lib. 2. cap. 9. Lib. 5. An. 978. Tacitus Tacitus Concil Brit. 126. Ll. Sax. Lamb. Cantab. fol. 2. Ibid. fol. 22. Ibid. fol. 53. Concil Brit. p. 219. Ll. Lamb. Cantab. fol. 36. Ll. Edw. Lamb. Cant. fol. 139. Antiq. Brit. p. 51. Concil Brit. 127. Ibid. 321. Ibid. 332. Cap. 1. Sec. 3. Sec. 2. Cap. 4. Sec. 11. Tacitus Plut. Lycurg Thucyd. lib. 1. de Lacedem Tacitus An. 1158. Concil Brit. p. 127. Ll Canut p. 2. cap. 79. Ll. Ed. cap. 35. Ll. Sax. Lamb. p. 1. Concil Brit. 219. Ingulfus Mag. cent 8. cap. 9. An. 712. Concil Brit. p. 189. An. 694. Tacitus Ll. Ed. cap. 35. Tacitus Ll. Sax. Lamb. Cantab. 10. Concil Brit. p. 528. An. 1009. Tacitus Ll. Ed. cap. 35. Ll. Canut c. 58. Seld. Tit. Hon. M. Westm. An. 794. Sheriffs Ll. Edw. c. 35. Coroners Miror cap. 1. Sect. 13. Miror p. 300. Fitz N. Br. 163 164. Folkmote or County-court Miror p. 147. Ll. Canut Miror cap. 1. Sec. 15. Miror cap. 5. Sec. 1. Ll. Canut Ll. Edgar Concil Brit. p. 197. tit 22. Ll. Edw. cap. 35. Ll. Edw. cap. 35. Ll. Edw. cap. 4. Sheriffs Torne Miror cap. 1. Sec. 16. Ll. Edgar cap. 5. Ll. Edw. cap. 35. Ll. Canut p. 2. cap. 17. Tacitus Cluer lib. 1. cap. 19. Malmesb. Reg. gest p. 54. Ll.
Bishop of London and the Embassadors from the West-Saxons could sit amongst them and attest the Conclusions therein made as well as the proper Members of that Nation He cometh in the next place to a Council holden in the year 855 which is more likely to be a Parliament than most of them formerly mentioned if the Tithes of all England were therein given to the Church but hereof I have set down my opinion in the former part of the Discourse And though it be true that no Knights and Burgesses are therein mentioned as the Opponent observeth out of the Title yet if the body of the Laws be duly considered towards the Conclusion thereof it will appear that there was present Fidelium infinita multitudo qui omnes regium Chirographum laudaverunt Dignitates verò sua nomina subscripserunt And yet the Wittagenmotes in these times began to be rare being continually interrupted by the invasions of the Danes The three next Councils alleadged to be in the years 930 944 948. were doubtless of inferiour value as the matters therein concluded were of inferiour regard being such as concern the passing of the Kings Grants Infeodations and Confirmations The Council mentioned to be in the year 965 is supposed to be one and the same with the next foregoing by Sir Henry Spelman which calls it self a General Council not by reason of the general confluence of the Lords and Laity but because all the Bishops of England did then meet The Primi and Primates were there who these were is not mentioned but it is evident that the King of Scots was there and that both he and divers that are called Ministri Regis attested the Conclusions It will be difficult to make out how these should be Members of the House of Lords and more difficult to shew a reason why in the attesting of the Acts of these Councils which the Opponent calls Parliaments we find so few of the Laity that scarce Twelve are mentioned in any one of them and those to descend so low as the Ministri Regis to make up the number Five more of these instances remain before the coming of the Normans The first of which was in the year 975 and in a time when no Parliament according to the Opponents principles could sit for it was an Inter-Regnum The two next were onely Synods to determine the difference between the Regulars and the Seculars in the King's absence by reason that he was under age and they are said to be in the year 977 and 1009. But it is not within the compass of my matter to debate their dates The last two were Meetings or Courts for Judicature to determine the Crime of Treason which every one knows is determinable by inferiour Courts before the high Steward of Judges and therefore not so peculiar to a Parliament as to be made an Argument of its existence And thus are we at an end of all the instances brought by the Opponent to prove that Parliaments before the Norman times consisted of those whom we now call the House of Lords All which I shall shut up with two other Notes taken out of the Book of Councils published by Sir Henry Spelman The first of which concerneth a Grant made by Canutus of an exemption to the Abbey of Bury Saint Edmunds in a Council wherein were present Archbishops Bishops Abbots Dukes Earls Cum quamplurimis gregariis militibus cum populi multitudine copiosa votis regi●s unanimiter consentientes The other taken out of the Confessor's Laws which tell us that Tythes were granted to the Church A Rege Baronibus Populo And thus I shall leave these Testimonies to debate with one another whilst the Reader may judge as seemeth most equal to himself Being thus come to the Norman times and those ensuing I shall more summarily proceed with the particulars concerning them because they were times of Force and can give little or no evidence against the Customs rightly setled in the Saxon times which I have more particularly insisted upon that the Original Constitution of this Government may the better appear Now for the more speedy manifesting of the truth in the particulars following I shall pre-advise the Reader in three particulars First that the Church-motes grew more in Power and Honour by the aid of the Normans Law refusing the concurrence and personal presence of Kings whom at length they excluded from their Councils with all his Nobles and therefore it is the less wonder if we hear but little of the Commons joyning with them Secondly That the Norman way of Government grew more Aristocratical than the Saxon making the Lords the chief Instruments of keeping Kings above and People underneath and thus we meet with much noise of meetings between the King and Lords and little concerning the grand meetings of the Kings and the Representative of the People although some foot-steps we find even of them also For the Kings were mistaken in the Lords who meaned nothing less than to serve them with the Peoples Liberties together with their own which they saw wrapped up in the gross Thirdly By this means the Councils of the King and Lords grew potent not onely for advice in particular occasions but in matters of Judicature and declaring of Law ordering of Process in Courts of Pleas which in the first framing were the works of the Wise and Learned men but being once setled become part of the Liberties of every Freeman And it is not to be doubted but these Councils of Lords did outreach into things too great for them to manage and kept the Commons out of possession of their right during the present heat of their ruffling condition yet all this while could not take absolute possession of their Legislative power I now come to the remainder of the particular instances produced by the Opponent which I shall reduce into several Categories for the more clear satisfaction to the Reader with less tediousness First It cannot be denied but the Council of Lords gave advice to Kings in cases of particular emergency nor is it incongruous to the course of Government even to this day nor is it meet that the Parliament should be troubled with every such occasion and therefore the giving of advice to William the Conquerour what course he should take to settle the Laws of England according to the instances in Councils holden An. 1060 and 1007. and to gain favour of the great men according to that in Anno 1106. and in the manner of endowment of the Abbey of Battel as in pag. 25 of the Opponents Discourse and what to do upon the reading of the Pope's Letter according to that in Anno 1114. And whether the Pope's Legate should be admitted as in pag. 18. And how King Stephen and Henry shall come to an Agreement as Anno 1153. And how to execute Laws by Judges and Justices Itinerant as Anno 1176. And touching the manner of ingaging for a Voyage
by Croisado to Jerusalem Anno 1189. And to give answer to Embassadors of a Foreign Prince pag. 25. And how King John shall conclude Peace with the Pope Anno 1213. Where nevertheless Matth. Paris saith was Turba multa nimis I say all these might well be done by a Council of Lords and not in any posture of a Parliament albeit that in none of all these doth any thing appear but that the Commons might be present in every one or many of them all Secondly As touching Judicature the Lords had much power therein even in the Saxon times having better opportunities for Knowledge and Learning especially joyned with the Clergie than the Commons in those times of deep darkness wherein even the Clergie wanted not their share as in the first part of the Discourse I have already observed Whatsoever then might be done by Judges in ordinary Courts of Judicature is inferiour to the regard of the Parliament and therefore the Plea between the Archbishop and Ethelstan concerning Land instanced Anno 1070. And between Lanfrank and Odo Anno 1071. And between the King and Anselme pag. 15 16. And the determining of the Treason of John afterwards King against his Lord King Richard pag. 23. And the difference concerning the title of a Barony between Mowbray and Scotvile pag. 25. And giving of security of good behaviour by William Brawse to King John pag. 26. All these might well be determined onely before the Lords and yet the Parliament might be then sitting or not sitting as the contrary to either doth not appear and therefore can these form no demonstrative ground to prove that the Parliament consisted in those times onely of such as we now call the House of Lords A Third work whereby the Opponent would prove the Parliament to consist onely of the House of Lords is because he findeth many things by them concluded touching the solemnization and the setling of the Succession of Kings both which he saith were done by the Lords in Parliament or those of that House and I shall crave leave to conclude the contrary For neither is the Election or Solemnization of such Election a proper work of the Parliament according to the Opponents principles nor can they prove such Conventions wherein they were to be Parliaments Not the Election of Kings for then may a Parliament be without a King and therefore that instance concerning William Rufus pag. 16 will fail or the Opponents Principles who will have no Parliament without a King. The like may also be said of the instance concerning King Steven pag. 18. Much less can the Solemnization of the Election by Coronation be a proper work for the Parliament Nevertheless the Opponent doth well know that both the Election of a King and the Solemnization of such Election by Coronation are Spiritless motions without the presence of the people and therefore though his instance pag. 17 concerning the Election of Henry the First by the Bishops and Princes may seem to be restrictive as to them yet it is not such in fact if Matthew Paris may be believed who telleth us that in the Conventus omnium was Clerus and Populus universus and might have been noted by the Opponent out of that Learned Antiquary so often by him cited if he had pleased to take notice of such matters A Fourth sort of Instances concerneth matters Ecclesiastical and making of Canons and hereof enough hath been already said that such Work was absolutely challenged by the Church-motes as their proper Work and therefore the Instance pag. 16 17. of the Council in Henry the First 's time and the Canons made by the Bishops there and that other called by Theobald Archbishop of Canterbury and instanced by the Opponent pag. 19. I say both these do fail in the Conclusion propounded Fifthly as touching the most proper Work of Parliament which is the making of Laws concerning the Liberties and Benefit of the people the Opponent produceth not one instance concerning the same which doth not conclude contrary to the Proposal for as touching those two instances in his Thirteenth page Anno 1060 they concern not the making of Laws but the reviving of such as had been disused formerly which might well enough be done by a private Council But as to that in his Fifteenth page of the Law made by the Conquerour concerning Remigius Bishop of Lincoln although it be true that we find not the particular Titles of Knights Citizens and Burgesses ●yet besides the Council of Archbishops Bishops and Princes we find the Common Council for so the words are Communi Concilio Concilio Archiepiscoporum Episcoporum Abatum omnium Principum although the Opponent would seem to wave these words Et Concilio by putting them in a small Character and the rest in Great Letters that the Readers eyes might be silled with them and overlook the other Secondly As to the instance of the Council at Clarindon in his Nineteenth page which he citeth out of Matthew Paris Matthew Westminster and Hoveden although he pleaseth to mention the several ranks of Great Men and those in black Letters of a greater size and saith That not one Commoner appears yet Mr. Selden's Hoveden in that very place so often by the Opponent cited tells him that both Clerus and Populus were there Thirdly The Opponent citeth an instance of Laws made by Richard the First in his Twenty fourth page and he setteth down the several Ranks of Great Men and amongst the rest ingeniously mentioneth Milites but it is with a Gloss of his own that they were Barons that were made Knights whenas formerly Barons were mentioned in the general and therefore how proper this Gloss is let others judge especially seeing that not onely Milites and Milites Gregarii but even Ministri were present in such Conventions even in the Saxon times And Mr. Selden in the former known place mentioneth an Observation that Vniversi personae qui de Rege tenent in Capite sicut caeteri Barones debent interesse judiciis curiae Domini Regis cum Baronibus Fourthly He citeth in his Twenty fifth page another instance in King John's time in which after the assent of Earls and Barons the words Et omnium fidelium nostrorum are also annexed but with this conceit of the Oponents that these Fideles were those that adhered to the King against his Enemies be it so for then the Commons were present and did assent or they may be saith he some specially summoned as Assistants take that also and then all the true-hearted in the Kingdom were specially summoned and were there so as the conclusion will be the same In the fifth place he cited a strange Precedent as he calls it of a Writ of Summons in King John's time in his Twenty seventh page wherein Omnes Milites were summoned Cum armis suis and he concludes therefore the same was a Council of War. First Because they were to come armed It is very