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A29168 A complete history of England from the first entrance of the Romans under the conduct of Julius Cæsar unto the end of the reign of King Henry III ... : wherein is shewed the original of our English laws, the differences and disagreements between the secular and ecclesiastic powers ... and likewise an account of our foreign wars with France, the conquest of Ireland, and the actions between the English, Scots and Welsh ... : all delivered in plain matter of fact, without any reflections or remarques by Robert Brady ... Brady, Robert, 1627?-1700. 1685 (1685) Wing B4186; ESTC R19638 1,289,549 1,106

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the Twenty ninth year of his Reign this King [3.] Huntingd. f. 220. a. n. 10 20. The punishment of Priests permitted to the King He Compounds with them for the enjoyment of their Wives and Concubines Ki●g Henry's Taxations held a great Council on the First of August for the prohibiting of Priests to make use of their Wives or Concubines in which the Bishops and Clergy by the easiness of William Arch-Bishop of Canterbury granted to the King the Correction and Mulcts of the Priests for this Transgression He makes his advantage of it and upon Composition and a yearly payment permits them to enjoy their Wives and Concubines and by this means raised saith Huntingdon an infinite Sum of Money The extraordinary Taxations of this King are not particularly noted nor is it said how they were imposed In the Fourth year of his Reign [4.] Fol. 652. An. Do. 1104. Florence of Worcester says it was not easie to declare what misery England suffered by reason of the Kings Exactions In the Sixth year of his [5.] Eadm fol. 83. n. 30 40. Reign his Impositions were general and cruel according to Eadmers report and besides other rigorous Exactions from the Clergy he set a particular Sum upon every Parish Church and forced the Incumbent to pay it or according to the Historian to redeem the Church In the Eighth year of his Reign he had for the [6.] Hen. Hunt f. 217. b. n 10. Marriage of his Daughter Maude to the Emperor Henry the Fifth three Shillings of every Hide of Land in England which upon a just value at this day would be equal to 824850 l. In the Sixteenth year by reason of the Kings necessities England was oppressed with [7.] Ibidem f. 218. a. l. 6. Paris f. 67. lin 3. frequent and various Payments and Exactions I find no Scutage paid unless it were comprehended under Gelds and Exactions No doubt but it was often paid especially by such as did not accompany the King in his several Expeditions being summoned and sometimes also as an Aid at other times Besides his extraordinary Exactions if there be any credit to be given to the Laws attributed to this King or that are said to be in use in his time he had a constant annual Land Tax which is there called Danegeld of Twelve pence upon very (m) This Hidage or Danegeld was at first collected to hire Soldiers to repell the Danish Pirats upon their Landing Hidage or Danegeit what it was as it is said in the [1.] LL. Ed. C. 11. Laws attributed to Edward the Confessor But Florence of Worcester says more truly [2.] Flor. Wig. An. Do. 991. Ibid. in the same years that it was paid as a Composition and Tribute to the Danes that they might desist from their Rapines Burnings and killing of Men upon and near the Sea Coasts and for to have a firm Peace with them and that the first Payment made and Money given was 10000 l. in the year 991. In the year 994. they received 16000 l. Tribute in the year 1002. 24000 l. in the year 1007. 36000 l. in 1012. 48000 l. in 1014. 30000 l. in the year 1018. 72000 l. of all England and 10500 l. of London In this Kings Reign [3.] Lib. Nigr. in Scaccario Tit. 19. The price of Victuals in this Kings Reign Wheat to make Bread for One hundred Men one day was valued at one Shilling a Ram or Sheep at four Pence and the Allowance or Hay and Provender for twenty Horses one day at four Pence So that if we set things at twenty times the value now they were then that is that one Shilling or Groat then would buy as much as twenty Shillings or Groats will now and go as far in ordinary Expences which is no hard Account it follows that every 10000 l. then must be equal to 200000 l. In the time of the Heptarchy there were in England [4.] Cambd. Brit. f. 114. South of Humber 244400 Hides of Land b●sides what was in Wales and perhaps Cornwall and the five Counties beyond Humber Yorkshire Bishoprick of Durham Westmorland Cumberland Northumberland and part of Lancashire which at one Shilling per Hide amounts to 12220 l. which multiplied by twenty produceth 244400 l. and then allow the five Counties and part of Lancacashire to be the eighth part of the Nation Wales excluded there ought to be added 30550 l. more which makes the annual Tax of Hidage then at one Shilling per Hide equal to 274950 l. now Hide to be paid at certain Terms and a forfeiture set upon such as did not duely pay it Henry the First his Issue 1. HIS Lawful Issue by Maude of Scotland was only one Son named William who was drowned as aforesaid and died without Issue 2. One Daughter commonly called Maude the Empress because first Married to Hen. 5 th the Emperor Her second Husband was Geofry (n) Plantagenet or Plantagenist that is Planta genestae or Broom Plant Plantagenet the reason of the name because he wore in his Cap or Bonet a Sprig of Broom Plantagenet Earl of Anjou by whom she had Henry the Second King of England and two other Sons [3.] Chron. Norm 994. A. Geofry and [4.] Ibidem 999. C. William that died without Issue His Natural Children 1. RObert created Earl of Gloucester in the Ninth of Henry the First by [5.] Geneal Hist of the Kings of England fol. 45. Nesta Daughter of Rhees ap Tewdor Prince of South Wales 2. Richard begotten of the [6.] Ibidem fol. 30. Widow of one Anskil a Nobleman in Oxfordshire he was drown'd with Prince William his half Brother 3. Reynald created Earl of Cornwall in the Fifth of King Stephen was begotten of [7.] Fol. 50. Sibill Daughter of Sir Robert Corbet of Alcester in Gloucestershire 4. Robert by [8.] Fol. 30. Edith Daughter of a Northern Nobleman of England 5. Gilbert Ibid. f. 31. 6. William [9.] Ibidem de Tracey so named from a Town in Normandy who died soon after his Father 7. Henry by [1.] Ibidem Nesta aforesaid 8. Maude [2.] Ibidem f. 32. espoused to Rotro Earl of Perch who was Son to Arnulph de Hesding that had great Possessions in England 9. Another Maud [3.] Ibidem Married to Conan Earl of Britain 10. Julian [4.] Ibidem Married to Eustace de Pacie Bastard Son of William de Breteul eldest Son and Heir of William and elder Brother of Roger Earl of Hereford in England 11. Constance [5.] Ibidem f. 33. Wife of Roscelin Viscount of Beaumont so called from a Town in the County of Mayn 12. [6.] Ibidem Married to Matthew Son of Burchard of Montmorency from whom descended the ancient Family of that name 13. Elizabeth [7.] Ibidem by Elizabeth Sister of Waleran Earl of Mellent Married to Alexander King of Scots All these Base Children of this King are recounted in
Dead lay [6] Ibid. n 50. A. D. 1197. unburied in the Streets of the Cities of Normandy and the King being mightily Troubled the Archbishop would not Release the Interdict [7] Ibid b. lin 2. n. 10. King Richard sends Messengers to the Pope to make his defence sent the Bishop of Lisieux and Philip the Elect of Durham after Christmas to the Pope to make his Defence before him They appearing in his presence with the Archbishop He asserted his Right he had in Andeli and complained of the Injury King Richard had done by Building a Castle upon the Patrimony of the Church of Roven without his assent and contrary to his pleasure To which they answered [8] Ibid. n. 10. ●0 Their Plea in the Kings beha●f The King had often offered him by the Mediation of his Bishops and Abbats Earls and Barons full satisfaction by the Estimation of discreet understanding Men and did affirm on behalf of the King he could not part with That Island of Andeli in which the Castle was built because the King of France made his passage that way into Normandy and often wasted it and therefore the King of England fortified it for the Defence of his Country against the King of France [9] N. 20.30 The Popes advice to the Archbishop of Roven The Pope and Cardinals after long Deliberation attending the Damages which might accrue to Normandy if there were not a Castle built there Advised the Archbishop amicably to compose the Matter and to accept Recompence according to the Estimation of honest and wise Men Secundum proborum sapientum virorum Aestimationem Saying It was lawful for Kings and Princes to fortifie the weak places of their Countries to avoid Damage to themselves and People The Interdict released This done the Pope Released the Interdict The Messengers and Archbishop being Returned with the Determination of the Pope and Cardinals [1] Ibid. n. 40. What the King gave the Archbishop for a recompence the King summoned the Bishops Abbats Earls and Barons of Normandy together and gave to Walter Archbishop of Roven in Recompence of his Town of Andeli the Town of Deipe with its Appertenencies the Mills of Robec in the City of Roven and Loviers with its Appertenencies and much more according to the Kings Chart and the Popes Confirmation in [2] Col. 701. n. 40. Col. 702. Ralph de D●ceto by which exchange the Archbishop confesseth the Church got above Five [3] Ibid. Col. 700. n. 30. hundred Pounds The same year [4] Hoved. f. 437. b. n. 50. A. D. 1197. He plundered and burnt St. Valeri Richard came to St. Valeri and burnt the Town and Destroyed the Monks and carried with him into Normandy the Shrine and Reliques of St. Valerie in that Port he found Ships from England laden with Grain and Victuals he hanged the Mariners burnt the Ships and distributed the Corn and Victuals amongst his Soldiers Then came into King Richard [5] Ibid. f. 438. a. lin 2. Several People Confederate with King Richard against King Philip. the People of Champaign the Flemings and Britans they gave Pledges mutually they would not make Peace with the King of France but by common advice The King of England Bribed with Gifts many of the Great Men of France he gave to the [6] Ibid. n. 10. Earl of Flanders 5000 Marks for his assistance and he gave Hostages he should not make Peace with the King of France without his consent and the same the King of England did to him [7] Ibid n. 20.30 The King of France made him great Offers to leave the King but not being able to effect it he again Capitulated with the King of England The Sons of [8] Ibidem Hubert composes the Differences between the Welch Princes King Rese the Son of Gr●ffin contended after the Death of their Father who should Reign Hubert Archbishop of Canturbury went to the Borders of Wales and made them Friends Philip Bishop of Beavais [9] Ibid n 50. The Bishop of Beavals his complaint to the Pope against King Richard sent his Brother the Bishop of Orleans with his Epistle to the Pope informing him he was made Prisoner by the King of England and complaining how he was bound and laden with Irons notwithstanding the Dignity of his Order and as he says petitioned him with Tears for Relief The Pope [1] Ibid. b. n. 20. c. The Popes Answer writes back to him That he had put on a Soldiers Armour in stead of a Priests Habit and Vestments That the King of France was bound by Oath not to do any Damage to the King of England's Towns and Countries during the Time of his Peregrination and That he had impudently against his Faith and Oath by force seized his Towns and cruelly wasted his Countries That Humility against Pride Right and Equity against Wrong and Injury and Modesty against Arrogance fought for the King of England That he was not only a foolish Adviser of but an insolent Actor in his Kings extravagant Madness and at last told him he could only supplicate the King of England in his behalf for in such a case he neither could nor ought to Command But whether the Pope wrote in his behalf or notwithstanding what he wrote he remained in Prison and toward the latter end of the year 1198 offered King Richard for his [2] Ibid. f. 449. a. lin 4. Liberty 10000 Marks of Silver The two Kings made a Truce again for one year from the Feast of St. Hilary [ ] Ibid. f. 439. a. n. 10. A. D. 1198. And presently broken designing to make Peace A Truce made between the two Kings and final Concord between themselves But in September following this Truce was broken as hath been said in the Relation of the Skirmish between Gamache and Vernon and the Battel between Curcels and Gisors yet in November that [4] Ibid. f. 446. b. n. 40. year they made Truce again until the Feast of St. Hilary from this time to the Death of Richard all Hostility ceased between the two Kings These are some of the Battels Skirmishes and Engagements and the most notorious that were fought and happened between King Richard and King Philip in France some of the Truces that were as soon broken as made some of the Barbarous Devastations and Plunderings some of the Inhumane Killings and Leadings into Captivity committed and practised there during those last five years King Richard was in that Kingdom from the middle of May 1194 to the 6th of April 1199 the time of his Death Let us now take a Turn into England In the year 1198. Geofrey Fitz-Peter A. D. 1198. the new Justitiary of England sent forth [5] Ibid. f. 445. b. lin 7. Itinerant Justic●s sent forth by the Chief Justic●y Itinerant Justices and Hugh Bardulf Mr. Roger Arundel and Geofrey Haget had committed to them and journeyed through Lincoln
he came into Normandy he forthwith went to Stephan Langeton performed his Canonical Obedience to him and was Consecrated by him on the 20th of December And when it was Known to the King he seized the Bishopric and confiscated the Profits and Delivering the Seal to VValter de Gray made him Chancellor King Iohn kept his Christmass at Windsor [2] Ibid. n. 20. A. D. 1210. The great men attend upon the King notwithstanding the Interdict where all the great men of England attended upon and conversed with him notwithstanding the Sentence of Interdict but whether out of Loyalty or Fear it remains Doubtful The Historian says Omnibus sese subtrahentibus Rex nocivè insidebatur the King sat upon the Skirts of all such as withdrew or absented themselves This year the [3] Ibid. f. 230. lin 6. n. 20. King passed over with an Army into Ireland and having [3] Ibid. f. 230. lin 6. n. 20. disposed all things according to his mind returned and Landed in England on the 30th of August and making great speed to London caused all the Prelates of England to appear before him Upon this [4] Ibid. n. 30. He Summons all the Prelates of England to appear before him All Ecclesiastics forced to a Composition general Summons there came Abbats Priors Abbesses Templars Hospitallers the Guardians of the Towns of the Order of Clugny and other Transmarine Aliens of what Order or Dignity soever who were all forced to so great a Composition as it was Reported the Summe amounted to an hundred thousand pounds Sterling And the White Monks only all other excepted were forced to pay to the King 40000 l. of Silver The King [5] Ibid. n. 40. A. D. 1211. He raised a great Army and Marched into Wales Summoned a great Army to meet him at VVhitchurch in Shrapsh●re with which on the eighth of July he marched into VVales as far as Snowdun and carried all before him the Kings and Nobles he subdued without Resistance for their future subjection he received twenty eight Pleges And having passed all over that Nation came back to VVhitchurch on the 15th of August He subdued them and received Pleges for their obedience and proceeding from thence to Northampton where the Popes Nuntio Pandulph and Durand a Templar met him who came into England to make Peace between the Secular Government and the Ecclesiastic Qui ad hoc venerunt ut pacem inter Reg●um Sacerdotium Reformarent At the Request of these men the King [6] Ibid. n. 50. This willingness to receive the Archbishop and all the proscribed Bishops freely granted that the Arch-Bishop of Canturbury and the Monks and all the Proscribed Bish●ps might return in Peace and Security to their own places But because the King would not make satisfaction for the Damages done to and the Goods of the Arch-Bishop and Bishops which were Confiscated The Treaty came to nothing the Nuntio and his assistant returning into France [7] Ibid. He ●axed those that did not go with him in h●s Welch expedition So soon as they were gone the King took of these M●litary men that were not present in the Welch expedition for every Knights Fee two Marks of Silver About [8] Ib. f. 231. lin 1. A. D. 1211. Reginald Earl of Bologn ill used by the King of France He is kin●ly received by King John this time Reginald de Domino Martino Dan Martin Earl of Bologn was thrust out of his Earldom and deprived of all his Goods by the King of France who gave it to his own Son Philip in perpetual right with the Daughter and Heir of that Earl who came into England and was Honorably received by King Iohn by whose Bounty he received 300 l. a Year in Land and did Homage and Fealty to him [9] Ibid. l. 7. Tho. Walsin Hypodig Neust f. 460. n 20. Leolin Prince of North Wales made some incursions into England but was repelled and forced to subjection The Pope [1] Paris f. 231. n. 10. The Pope absolveth all his Subjects from their Allegiance much admiring the Contumacy of King Iohn That he would not comply with the Dictates of his Nuntio absolved all his Subjects high and low from their Fidelity and Subjection to him Forbidding all and singular under the pain of Excommunication strictly to avoid him at his Table in Counsel Discourse and Conversation At Dinner on [2] Ibid. n. 30. A. D. 1212. Mid-Lent Sunday the King Knighted Alexander the King of Scots Eldest Son and Heir And about that time Mauger [3] Ibid. Bishop of Worcester Dyed at the Abby of Pontigny in France Not long after [4] Ibid. n. 40. The Welch make Incursions into England the Welch made hostile irruptions and took several Castles in England and cut off the heads of the Defendants burnt many Towns and returned with great spoils into their own Country The King was much moved at this action and levyed a great Army exercitum innumerabilem of Knights and ordinary Horse and Foot resolving to harrass all Wales and exterminate the Inhabitants and in Revenge [5] Ibid. King John Hanged the Welch Hostages Hanged up the twenty eight Hostages or Pleges he had Received the year before Just as he was ready for the Expedition he received [6] Ibid. n. 50. He hath notice of a Conspiracy against him but slights it Letters from the King of Scots and his Daughter Wife to Leolin King of Northwales and others of a Traiterous Conspiracy formed against him all which he neglected and slighted and went on to Chester where again he received Letters [7] Ibid. f. 232. lin 1. That if he Marched forward he would either be Slain by his Noblemen or delivered to his Enemies to be Destroyed At these Repeated Letters he was much Troubled and when he understood his great men of England were absolved from their Obedience and Fealty he gave more Credit to the Letters [8] Ibid. lin 3. At length he was convinced and sent to his Great men for Pleges Atque cum intellixisset Magnates Angliae a sua esse Fidelitate absolutos majorem literis sibi destinatis Fidem adhibuit And then changing his Design Disbanded his Army and came to London and sent his Commissioners to all the Great Men he suspected to send him Pleges That thereby he might know who would or would not obey him Those who dare not resist the Kings Commands Some sent their Sons c others refused and fled sent their Sons Nephews and nearest Relations That so they might in some measure appease his indignation But Eustachius de Vesci and Robert Fitz-VValter being accused of the Treason fled out of England Eustachius into Scotland and Robert into France Some while after one [9] Ibid. n. 10. Peter the Hermite his Prophesie Peter an Hermite in the Diocess of York after he could not but see the Pope would Depose King Iohn Prophesied that
Kings time and Money Levied by him for Scutage Service c. SOon after his first Coronation which was on the 27th of May 1199. [9] Rot. Pip. 1 Johanis Civit London Middlesex He had a Scutage Tax of two Marks of every Knights Fee In the year 1200. he had of every Ploughland in England [1] Hoved. f. 454. b. n. 20. three Shillings In the year 1201. he had two Marks of every Knights [2] Paris f. 206. lin 9. Fee for Scutage Service of such as had his Licence to stay at home upon Summons to pass beyond Sea with him In the year 1203. he took a 7th part of all the Earls and Barons [3] Ibid. f. 209. n. 20. Goods that left him in Normandy In the year 1204. in a Parliament at [4] Ibid. n. 50 Oxford there was granted to him a Scutage Tax of two Marks and half of every Knights Fee In the year 1205. he [5] Ibid. f. 212. n. 20. levyed of the Earls and Barons that would not follow him beyond Sea with their Service infinitam pecuniam a vast Summe of Money In the year 1207. he took a thirteenth part of all the [6] Ibid. f. 221. n. 50. moveables and other things as well of Laics as of Ecclesiastics and Prelates all Murmuring but none dared to contradict it In the year 1210. he forced from the [7] Ibid. f. 230. n. 10. Abbats Priors Abesses Templars Hospitallers c. 100000 l. and from the White Monks or Cistertians 40000 l. In the year 1211. he had two Marks [8] Ibid. n. 50 Scutage Service of every Knights Fee which furnished not out its Service to the Expedition of Wales In the year 1214. he [9] Cl. 16 Johan m. 24. Dat. apud Partenay 26 Maii. took of every Knights Fee of those that were not with him in Poictou as well of Bishopricks in his hands as of Wards and Escheats three Marks The Issue of King John HEnry his [1] Paris f. 225. n. 50. Eldest Son afterwards King Henry the Third was Born on St. Remigius his Day That is the first of October in the year 1207. Richard his Second Son afterwards King of the Romans and Almain Earl of Poictiers and Cornwall was [2] Ibid. f. ● 226. lin 1. born in the year 1208. His Daughters JOane the Eldest was Married to [3] Pat. 10. Hen. 3. n. 1. Dor● Alexander King of Scots as appears upon the Patent Roll 5 Hen. 3. M. 6. Dors Dated at York June 28. 1221. Alienor his Second Daughter [3] Pat. 10. Hen. 3. n. 1. Dor● Married to William Marshall the Younger who Dyed without Issue A. D. 1231. and was remarried to Simon Monfort Earl of Leicester on the [4] Paris f. 465. n. 40. Morrow after Epiphany A. D. 1238. Isabell his third and youngest Daughter was Married to [5] Ibid. f. 414. n. 30 40. Frederi● the 2d Emperor of Germany at the Age of One and twenty Years on the Twenty Seventh of February A. D. 1235. His Natural or Base Issue RIchard [6] Ibid. f. 298. n. 40. the Eldest Geofrey [7] Sand. Genealog Hist f. 86. Fitz-Roy Osbert mentioned as King Johns [8] Sandf ut supra f. 87. Son in Rot. Pat. 17 Johan Part. 2. M. 16. Olivar mentioned as King Johns Son in Rot. Cl. 1 Hen. 3. part 2. M. 23. and as King Henry's Brother in Rot. Cl. 2. Hen. 3. part 1. M. 9. Joan [8] Sandf ut supra f. 87. Married to Llewellen the Great Prince of north-North-Wales THE REIGN OF King Henry III. IN the Eve of Simon and Jude [1] Paris fol. 289. n. 10. A. D. 1216. Henry the 3. Declared King Eight days after the death of King John in the presence of Walo the Popes Legate Peter Bishop of Winchester Iocelin Bishop of Bath Sylvester Bishop of Worcester Ranulphe Earl of Chester William Marshal Earl of Pembroke William Earl of Ferrars John Mareschal and Philip de Albeney with Abbats Priors and a very great multitude met at Glocester to advance Henry the eldest Son of King John to the Crown of England The day after all necessaries being in a readiness for his Coronation His Coronation The Legate accompanied with the afore-mentioned Bishops and Earls brought him in Solemn Procession into the Conventual Church Declaring him King Being placed before the great Altar in the presence of the Clergy and Laity Coram Clero Populo laying his Hand upon the Holy Gospels and Reliques of many Saints Iocelin of Bath dictating the Oath He [2] Ibid. n. 20. His Oath Swear That he would bear Honor Peace and Reverence to God Holy Church and all its Clercs all days of his Life That he would administer due Justice to the People That he would abolish all bad Laws and ill Customs if any were in his Kingdom and would observe and cause to be observed all good ones He doth Homage to the Pope Then he did Homage to Holy Church of Rome and to Pope Innocent for the Kingdoms of England and Ireland And Swear Faithfully to pay the Thousand Marks yearly to the See of Rome which his Father King John had given After this And receives the Homage of all his Bishops Earls and Barons present Peter Bishop of Winchester and Iocelin Bishop of Bath anointed and Crowned him King with the usual Solemnities The day after he received the Homages and Fealties of all the Bishops Earls and Barons and all others who were present all promising him most faithful Obedience After his [3] Ibid. n. 40. The Earl of Pembroke Protector Coronation he remained in the Protection of William Earl of Pembroke Great Mareschal who forthwith sent Letters to all Sherifs and Castellans of the Kingdom of England Commanding Obedience to the new Crowned King and promised many Gifts and Possessions to all such as should faithfully adhere to him upon this all those Noblemen and Castellans who had continued firm to his Father stood the more close and faithful to him Lewis and his Adherents Excommunicated and every one prepared to fortify his Castles as well as he could and they were the more encouraged when they saw that Lewis his Accomplices and Favourers were Excommunicated every Sunday and Holy-day All endeavours were used by the Protector the Bishop of Winchester and others to reduce the Barons to their Allegiance and Obedience to their Natural Prince who then wanted One Moneth of the age of Ten years In whose Name they wrote to * Append. N. 143. Hugh de Lacy and gave him a safe Conduct to return to his Fealty and Service and that he might come to speak with the King and return safely and promised him the Restitution and injoyment of all his Rights and Liberties if he complyed with that invitation which bears the Earls Teste and is Dated November 18 the First of his Reign When Lewis and the Barons who besieged Dover Castle heard certainly that
great Army and Besieged it both by Land and Water Lewis finding himself reduced to great streights signified to the Legat and Mareschall that he would submit to their advice and consent to any thing [1] Ibid. f. 299. n. 10. Lewis offereth a Treaty consistent with his own Honor and without Scandal to his Friends They being very willing to be rid of him send him a [2] f. 299. n. 10. The Legat and William Marshal send him a Form of Peace He accepts it King Henry and Lewis meet at Stanes A. D. 1217. Form of Peace to which if he would Consent he should have free passage and conduct out of England if not they would endeavour the destruction of him and his Accomplices Lewis and his Councellors accepted the offer and sent to the Mareschall and Legat to fix upon a place and day that a speedy Peace might be concluded They appoint a place nigh Stanes by the River Thames where King Henry the Legat and the Mareschall with many others on the one side And Lewis with the Barons on the other side met and agreed upon this Form of Peace on the Eleventh of September Lewis [3] Ibid. n. 20.30.40 The Form of Peace Swore that he and all with him that were Excommunicated would stand to the Judgment of Holy Church and for the future would be faithful to the Pope and Church of Rome That he would forthwith depart the Kingdom of England and never more return again with any ill design during his Life And that he would endeavor what he could to induce King Philip his Father to restore to King Henry all his rights beyond the Seas and that when he should come to be King he would quietly restore them And that he should immediately deliver to the King all those Castles with their Lands he had possessed himself of in England during this War King Henry with the Legat and Mareschall Swore they would restore to the Barons of England and to all others of the Kingdom All their Rights and Inheritance together with the Liberties they before desired for which there arose so great discord between King John and the Barons neither should it be any Damage or Reproach to any that had adhered to the one or to the other side That all Prisoners who had redeemed themselves before this Peace was made and had paid part of the money for their redemption what was paid should not be returned and what remained should be remitted Lewis Borrowed 5000 l. of the Citizens of London and passeth into France That all Prisoners either taken at Lincoln or at Sea whether of the Kings or Lewis his side should without any difficulty or price of redemption be set free After this Lewis and all his Followers were absolved and returned to London where having borrowed 5000 l. Sterling of the Citizens he was by the great Mareschall conducted to the Sea and so passed over into France When the Legat [4] Ibid. n. 40 50. The Bishops Abbats c. that assisted Lewis excepted from absolution The Legat sent out Inquisitions to find out all Clercs that were inclined to Lewis and deprived them of their Benefices absolved Lewis and his followers he excepted all such Bishops Abbats Priors Secular Canons and Clercs who assisted or favoured Lewis and the Barons particularly Simon de Langton and Gervase de Hobrugge who caused Holy Mysteries to be performed by such as were excommunicated They were first deprived of all their Benefices and then forced to go to Rome Soon after Lewis his departure The Legat sent Inquisitors all over England and whomsoever they found the least ingaged or inclined to Lewis and the Barons of what order and Dignity soever they were They first suspended them and then sent them to him who deprived them of all their Benefices The Bishop of Lincoln paid 1100 Marks for his Bishoprick and bestowed them on his own Clercs Hugh Bishop of Lincoln paid to the Popes use 1000 Marks and 100 to the Legat for his Bishoprick whose Example many of the Bishops and Religious followed This year on the sixteenth of July dyed * Ibid. fol. 297. n. 40. A. D. 1218. Pope Innocent the Third To whom succeeded Honorius the Third King Henry [5] Ibid. fol. 300. n. 20 30. Several of the Barons were loath to part with the Lands they had gotten in the late Wars kept his Christmass at Northampton and Fal●asius supplyed him with all necessaries for the Festival In those days several of the Nobility and others The chief of which were VVilliam Earl of Albemarle Falcasius with his Castellans Robert de Vipont Brian de Lisle Hugo de Bailluel Philip Marc and Robert de Gaugi having in time of War accustomed themselves to Rapine could not forbear exercising the same in time of Peace but forcibly held the Castles with the Lands and Possessions belonging to them of some Bishops and great men contrary to the Kings Will and Command Robert de Gaugi refused to deliver the Castle and Town of Newark to the Bishop of Lincoln The King Besieged it and is yeilded upon Terms but especially Robert de Gaugi though Admonished several times by the King refused to yeild up the Castle and Town of Newark to Hugh Bishop of Lincoln Whereupon the Great Mareschall at the Kings Command raised an Army and Besieged the Castle after eight days Siege Robert de Gaugi capitulated with the Bishop to Deliver the Castle to him upon payment of an Hundred pounds Sterling for the Victuals that was in it the Bishop with the Kings consent did accept the Terms so the Siege was raised and every one went to their own home This Year on the 18th of February the Protector * Append. N. 144. Clercs that adhered to Lewis Banished wrote in the Kings Name to the Sheriffs to make Proclamations in their Counties That all Clercs that had adhered to Lewis and were therefore Excommunicated and not absolved should be Banished and if they departed not the Nation before Mid-Lent they were to be imprisoned And such as were Absolved if they remained Friends to Lewis c. they were however to be Imprisoned He wrote on the 22d of the same Month also to the * Append. N. 145. The Charter of Liberties to be observed Sherifs of the several Counties for the better satisfying the minds of men That they should look after the observation of the Charter of Liberties and the Forest and see all Castles built in the time of War Demolished On the 16th of March in the same year Llewellen Prince of north-Northwales north-* Cl. 2. Hen. 3. M. 4. The Prince of North Wales receives in Custody the Kings Castles c. Received in Custody from Gualo the Popes Legat the Kings Castles of Kaermarden and Kaerdigan with their Lands and all appurtenances in the presence of Peter Bishop of Winchester William Marescal Earl of Pembroke and many other Bishops Earls and Barons there named and others
put the rest to flight The Citizens returned into the City meditating revenge and met in great Numbers Serlo the Major hearing of their tumultuous proceedings came to them and advised them to make their complaint of the injury they had received to the Abbat of Westminster and if he would punish the Offenders to take that for sufficient satisfaction Constantine a popular Citizen the chief Author of that Riot But Constantine a man very popular among them opposed this method telling them the Abbat and Steward deserved to have their houses pulled down and levelled with the ground This Counsel was approved of and executed by the rabble to the great prejudice of the Abbat When Hubert de Burgh the Justiciary had notice of these Ryotous proceedings he came to the City with some Troops of Soldiers and Commanded the Principal Citizens should with speed come to him of whom he inquired who were the Authors of this Sedition and Subverters of the Kings City His Answer to the Justiciary and who they were that thus dare presume to break the Kings Peace Constantine answered They had done less then they ought to have done and would stand to what they had done Adding The King had violated his Oath whereupon Lewis justly refused to perform what was covenanted between them When the Iusticiary heard this Confession he dismissed all but Constantine and his Nephew He is Hanged with two others and one Geofry that proclaimed Constantine's Edict whom he ordered to be hanged next day Morning When the Rope was about Constantine's Neck he offered 15000 Marks of Silver for Pardon but to no purpose When the Sentence had been pronounced without noise or the knowledge of the Citisens Falcasius with a Guard carried him by Water upon the Thames to the place of Execution After this * Ibid. n. 50. the Iusticiary and Falcasius i. e. Fawks de Breant with a considerable Guard went into the City and whosoever he found Guilty of the Sedition he imprisoned and caused either their Feet or Hands to be cut off and then set them at Liberty many fled for fear and never returned The King punisheth the City of London for the Riot And turns out the Officers and for a greater punishment to the City the Kings turned out all the City Magistrates and appointed new Prefects Governors or Officers in their place Rex in majorem vindictam omnes Vrbis Magistratus deponens novos in Civitate constituit Praefectos Not long after the King * Append. n. 147. Thirty Hostages given for the security of the City of London named Thirty persons to be Security and Hostages for the Good Behaviour preserving the Peace and faithful Service of the City of London The Vniversity or Community whereof bound themselves to the King by a Chart Sealed with their Commune Seal to deliver them or more to the King or Justiciary whenever they were called for and if any of them dyed to add others On the 29 th of January following the King * Append. n. 148. The King Lets the Office of Chamberlan of London at 100 l. per annum Let out to Farm to William Ionner Citisen of London the Office of Chamberlan of London with all things belonging to it for two years at One hundred pounds a year to be paid into the Exchequer Reserving to himself the Prizes or Customs of Grey Work that is Grey Cloth of Wax and Silk Cloaths to be delivered to the King for his own use by the Hand of the Farmer In the year 1223. the King kept his [5] Ibid. f. 316. n. 50. The Archbishop and great Men desire a Confirmation of their Liberties Christmass at Oxford A. D. 1223. and on the 13th of January met his Barons at London in a Parlement or Conference apud Lundonias veniens cum Baronibus ad Colloquium where the Archbishop of Canturbury and other Great Men Et alii Magnates Requested that the King would confirm the Liberties and free Customs Libertates liberas Consuetudines for which a War was made with his Father urging moreover that when Lewis departed from England both he and all the Nobility of the Kingdom had sworn to observe and cause to be observed those Liberties and therefore could not R●fuse to do it William Briwere one of the Kings Counsellors replyed That the Liberties they desired were violenely Extorted and therefore ought not to be observed The Archbishop in a Passion reproved him and said if he loved the King he would not hinder the Peace of the Kingdom The King [6] Ibid. f. 317. l. 3. seeing the Archbishop moved The King promiseth to preserve their Liberties assured them that he had bound himself by Oath to preserve their Liberties and what was Sworn should be observed And having called a Council he forthwith sent his Letters to all the Sherifs of the Kingdom to make inquiry by the Oath of Twelve Knights or Legal Men in every County And causeth Inquisition to be made what they were what were the Liberties in England in the time of King Henry his Grandfather and to make a return of them to London Fifteen days after Easter The Contents of the * Append. n. 149. The Writ of Inquiry directed to Twelve Knights c. Writ it self do in many things differ from this report of Mat. Paris by which the Sheriffs were commanded to make diligent inquiry by the Oaths of Twelve of the most legal and discreet Knights of their Counties in a full County Court what Customs and Liberties King John his Father had the day in which the War began between him and his Barons concerning Lands and other things within Burghs and without and cause them to be proclaimed and observed in their Counties and to cause the Inquisition and Writ to be returned to the King at Westminster on the Morrow of the close of Easter This year while William Mareschal [7] fol. 317. n. 10. Lewelin King of Wales takes two of the Marshals Castles The Marshal retakes them And kills 9000 Welsh Earl of Pembroke was busied in Ireland Leolin King of the Welch took Two of his Castles and put all to the Sword that he found in them and placed Welch-men in their room The Mareschal having notice of what was done returned with great speed into England and forthwith Besieged these Castles and retook them and cut off the Heads of all the Welch-men and then marched into Leolin's Countrey and wasted all before him with Fire and Sword Having totally defeated the Welch He took and slew about 9000 few escaping by flight After this the same Lewelin Prince of north-North-Wales acknowledged by his * Pat. 7. Hen 3. M. 2. dors Lewelin binds himself to give King Henry satisfaction for the damages done him Chart Sealed with his Seal and witnessed by many Bishops Earls and Barons That he had Sworn to give satisfaction to his Lord Henry King of England and his People within
to the Archbishoprick of Canturbury John Blundus a Student in Divinity at Oxford was elected Archbishop of Canturbury and this year about the beginning of April the Pope voided his Election because he had given 1000 Marks of Silver to the Bishop of Winchester for his promotion to the Archbishoprick Soon after [1] fol. 386. n. 10. The Earls and Barons refuse to obey the Kings Summons ●he King summoned all the Earls and Barons of the Kingdom to meet him at Oxford on the Feast of St. John Baptist but they refused to obey his Summons both because they feared and hated the Forreigners which were placed about him Then he was advised to send out a Second and Third Summons to try whether they would come or not to Westminster on the 11th of July [2] Ibid. n. 30. They pretend fear of Strangers that were insensibly landed in the Nation and promised by their Counsel to reform whatever was amiss But when the Great Men heard that upon the Kings invitation many Strangers in small numbers with Horse and Arms were landed in England Paulatim applicuerunt in Regnum and seeing not the least prospect of accommodation they laid aside all thoughts of meeting the King on the day appointed and by Solemn Messengers declared unto him Their Insolent Message to the King That unless forthwith the Bishop of Winchester and the Poictovins were removed from his Court they would by the Common Counsel of the Kingdom force both him and his evil Counsellors out of the Realm and would Treat about creating a new King Ipsi omnes de communi Consilio totius Regni ipsum cum iniquis Consiliariis suis a Regno depellerent de novo Rege creando contrectarent The [3] Ibid n. 40 The Bishop of Winchesters advice to the King King and the Court being startled at this Message He was advised by the Bishop of Winchester to reduce his rebellious Subjects by force and dispose of their Castles and Lands to the Poictovins who would defend the Kingdom of England from his Traytors Qui Regnum Angliae a suis proditoribus tuerentur The First that fell under the King's displeasure was Gilbert Basset a Nobleman who applying himself to the King for a Manner he had taken from him was called Traytor and threatned if he did not depart the Court he should be hanged The next was Richard Sward a Knight who had Married Gilberts Sister or Neice The King commanded him to be apprehended and brought before him and from every Noble or powerful Man he suspected He required pledges for their Fidelity and by his Letters ordered them to be presented to him before the beginning of August On the First of August the [4] fol. 387. lin 3. The Earls and Barons come Armed to London The Earl Mareschal retired into Wales Earls and Barons came with a great number of Armed Men In magno Militi● apparatu to London to a Conference or Parlement Ad Colloquium according to the day prefixed But Richard Earl Mareschal having received advice from his Sister Isabel Wife to the Earl of Cornwal the Kings Brother at whose House he lodged in London that snares were laid for him retired into Wales But the Earls of Chester Lincoln Ferrars and Earl Richard the Kings Brother with many other Earls and Barons came thither but nothing was done because Earl Mareschal and Gilbert Basset were absent Then the King by the advice of the Bishop of Winchester and Stephan Segrave [5] Ibid. n. 20. The King summoned all that ought him Military Service to meet him at Glocester Upon their refusal they are proscribed and Treated as Traytors summoned all that ought him Military Service to come to Glocester on the Sunday before the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin that is the 15th of August with Horse and Arms. But Richard Mareschal and others who were confederated with him refused to come Upon this the King as if they had been Traytors burnt their Towns destroyed their Parks and Warrens and besieged their Castles and without judgment of his Court or their own Peers proscribed them and disposed of their Lands to the Poictovins and commanded their Bodies should be taken where ever they were found in the Kingdom The [6] Ibid. n. 30. Several of the Nobility deserted the Mareschal Bishop of Winchester by 1000 Marks gained the Earls of Chester and Lincoln to the Kings ●de the Earl of Cornwal had before left the Mareschal and returned to his Brother When the Mareschal saw himself deserted by the aforesaid Earls he entred into a Confederacy with Leolin Prince of Wales and other chief Men of that Countrey He confederated with Leolin Prince of Wales and entred into an Oath to make no Peace but by general consent Then the King [7] fol. 388. lin 1. The King besieged one of the Mareschals Castles but without success It is delivered upon condition to be restored in Fifteen days defied him by the Bishop of St. Davids and commanded his Army to March against him and besiege his Castles one of which was so well defended that the King feared he should be baffled and with disgrace forced to raise the Siege whereupon he sent some Bishops to the Earl to offer him that if he would surrender the Castle to the King it should be restored entirely again within Fifteen days to him and he would correct what was amiss in his Kingdom by the Counsel of his Bishops who should be his Sureties Upon these Conditions the Castle was delivered to him and the day appointed for the doing of these things was the Sunday next after Michaelmass-day When the [8] Ibid. n. 50. The Mareschal demands restitution of his Castle The Kings Answer Fifteen days were expired the Mareschal according to agreement and Oath expected the restitution of the Castle and sent to the King to demand it but the King answered he would not restore it but would endeavour to subdue his other Castles The Mareschal seeing neither Promises nor Oaths were observed by the Kings Counsellors besieged the Castle and without difficulty gained it On the 9th of October [9] fol. 389. lin 1. The Great Men and Preaching ●y●rs supplicate the King to be reconciled to hi Nobility the Great men met the King at Westminster to reform what was amiss in the Kingdom according to appointment who humbly supplicated him to be reconciled to his Barons and Nobles also the Preaching Fryars and Minors whom the King much reverenced exhorted him to extend his affection to his Native Subjects and not to Banish Spoil and destroy them without Legal Process and not to call them Traytors who endeavoured the Peace and by whose Counsels the Management of the Affairs of the Kingdom ought to be directed To this the Bishop of Winchester replyed [1] Ibid. n. 10. The Bishop of Winchesters Reply The Bishops threatened to Excommunicate him and the rest of the Kings Counsellors He slighted their Threats and appealed to
Then the Mareschal and those that were confederated with him ravaged spoiled and burnt the Lands Goods and Houses of the Kings principal Counsellors so that nothing escaped them from the borders of Wales to Shrewsbury which they also burnt And all the time King Henry remained with the Bishop of Winchester at Glocester not having sufficient force either to oppose The Bishops urge the King to make peace with the Mareschal but he refused or repress these Devastations From whence he went to Winchester and left those Countreys to his Enemies The Bishops urged the King to make peace with the Mareschal he refused unless he would acknowledge himself a Traytor with a Halter about his Neck When the King's [4] Ibid. n. 40 50. Counsellors saw their Houses burnt their Fields destroyed and their Friends the Poictovins in great numbers slain and themselves without remedy They studied to ruine the Mareschal by Treachery whom they could not conquer by force which they compassed by this means The Kings Counsellors contrive the Mareschals destruction They composed and wrote Letters in the Kings Name without his privity Sealed with 〈◊〉 and Eleven of their own Seals and directed them to Maurice Fitz-Gerold the Kings Justiciary in Ireland to Walter and Hugo de Lascey Richard de Burgh and Geofrey Mar●h and to several others Juratos Marescalli Homines the Marescals sworn Men shewing that although the Mareschal was proclaimed a Traytor and by the Judgment of the Kings Court Proscribed and Devested of his Paternal Inheritance yet he ceased not to persue the King with his wonted Malice wherfore they willed them as the Kings faithful Subjects to use their utmost endeavors when ever the Mareschal should come thither to take him alive or dead and present him to the King which if they carefully performed all his Inheritance and Possessions in Ireland should be divided among them Their Proposals to the Irish for which they had the Kings promise and they would become Sureties for the performance of it When the [5] fol. 395. n. 10. Irish heard the tenor of these Letters they sent private Messengers to the Counsellors with Letters assuring them That if they could be secured by the Kings Charter of what was promised they would undertake to effect what was desired Then the Counsellors stole the Seal form Ralph Bishop of Chichester the Chancellor and Sealed a Charter without his knowledge by which all the Rights and Possessions of the Mareschal were to be divided among them and dispatcht a Messenger w●h it to the above-named Irish Great Men who no sooner received it but they confederated and resolved the destruction of the Mareschal Then they raised a great Army and entred his Lands took his Castles and plundered them that they might provoke him to come over into Ireland On Candlemass-day [6] Ibid. n. 40. The King rebuked some Bishops for corresponding with his Mareschal the King came to a Conference Rex venit ad Colloquium at Westminster wherin the King severely rebuked Alexander Bishop of Chester and some other Bishops for having too much correspondence with the Earl Mareschal and for endeavouring to dethrown him The Bishop in a great heat Excommunicated all those that suggested such things to the King [7] Ibid. n. 50. Edmund the Elect of Canturbury was present at this Conference who with many Bishops of that Province went to the King and represented to him the miserable state both He and the Kingdom was brought into by his following the Counsels of Peter Bishop of Winchester The Bishop● advise the King to remove Forreigners from his Counsels upon whose Advice and Counsels they charged all the Events Wars and Calamities that happened to King John and the Nation in his time and also what had happened in this Kings time and Peter de Rivallis and their Accomplices [8] fol. 396. n. 40. Adding That if he did not very suddainly remove from his Court such Counsellors and receive his Native and Liege Subjects to his Counsels and management of the Affairs of the Realm as is the custome of other Nations they must proceed to Ecclesiastical Censures against all Gain-sayers The King answered He could not Reform his Council His Answer until he had taken their Accounts and desired a small Respite So the Colloquium or Conference was dissolved and every one went away satisfied and full of hopes of a speedy accommodation On the Second of April [9] f. 397. l 7. A.D. 1234. Edmund was Consecrated Arch-Bishop of Canturbury the King being present On the 9th of April the [1] fol 397. n. 10 20 30. He proceeds to reform his Court and Council King the Earls and Barons the new consecrated Archbishop with his Suffragans and other Prelates met at a Conference ad colloquium convenerunt at Westminster wherein he promised to be directed by their Counsels and some few days after he commanded the Bishop of Winchester to retire to his Bishopric and mind the care of Souls and not concern himself any further in the Affairs of the Kingdom He likewise commanded Peter de Rivallis to give up his Accounts and yield up his Castles and depart the Court assuring him upon his Oath if he were not a Beneficed Clerc he would cause his Eyes to be bored out He also discharged the Poictovins from his Service both in his Court and Garrisons commanding them to go into their own Countrey and never see his Face more Thus having purged his Court and removed his evil Counsellors and cleared his Kingdom of Strangers he submitted himself to the Advice and Counsels of the Archbishop and Bishops by whom he hoped to reduce his unsetled Kingdom to a prosperous condition After this he sent [2] Append. N. 155. Edmund the Archbishop of Canturbury with the Bishops of Chester and Rochester to Leolin Prince of Wales and Richard Earl Mareschal 〈◊〉 Treat about Peace [ ] 〈◊〉 n. 40. The Mareschal passeth over into Ireland to secure his Lands and Castles But the Mareschal receiving notice of the spoils and rapine that was committed upon his Lands and Castles in Ireland and seeing the King was gone Southward and had left his design against Wales took with him only fifteen Knights and passed over Sea and as soon as he landed Geofry Marsh with the other Great Men that were confederated against him came to him and advised him to reduce his Enemies by force and he might thereby easily bring all Ireland to his Obedience [4] Ibid. n. 50. The Mareschal fearing the innate Treachery of the Irish was not willing to close with the Advice given But Geofry having at first reproached him for his cowardise and telling him of and urging his Right by lineal Descent from Strongbowe that had conquered Ireland and then giving him full assurance of their Assistance and Fidelity He reduced the Irish to his Obedience He is treacherously betrayed and desperately wounded He raised a great Army and proceeded
and Morgan of Carleon concerning the Castle of Carleon And after this Arbitration or Determination what amends was to be made on both sides Edmund Archbishop of Canturbury renewed the * Append. n. 158. The Truce renewed Truce for one year longer That is until the Feast of St. James in the One and Twentieth year of his Reign between King Henry and Prince Lewelin and all that were openly concerned on either side so as the King and Prince should be in the same possession of Lands and Tenements Men and Homages as they were the Day of the making this Truce Saving to Morgan de Carleon his Lands and Chattels which Gilbert Earl Mar●hal possessed himself of within the time of the Truce If any Lands or Castles had been seised During the Truce no Amends were to be expected for them but for goods or moveables amends was to be made for them by the Arbitrators which were sometime called Correctors sometimes Dictators of amends The Conditions on which it was to continue The Truce still to continue so as no Namia Reprisals or Distresses were to be taken for any Interception made of moveables within the time of the Truce nor for any contention before the making of it No new Castles were to be Built or Fortified in the Marches or those which were Demolished repaired during the Truce and the Lands in the Marches were to remain Commune according to the Stipulation in the last Truce A. D. 12●6 On the 29 of April the King [3] fol. 429. n 30. A conference at London called the great men of England Congregati sunt magnates Angliae ad Colloquium together at London to treat about the Affairs of the Kingdom and on the first day of the Assembly he removed into the Tower of London but not one of the Great men would come to him whereupon he came again to his Pallace and in treating of many things for the Good of the Realm Unjust Sherifs removed and Corruptions in that Office prevented the King laudably performed one thing which was to remove all Sherifs that were unjust and unfaithful in the discharge of their Office and substituted men of Birth and Estates in their Room who would not so readily be corrupted by Gifts and Rewards and made them Swear they would receive no other Presents but Meat and Drink and that very moderatly In this Assembly the King of Scots by his Messengers required of the King the restitution of such Rights as belonged to him by Charter The King of Scots Demands and the Testimony of many great men but nothing was determined in that Affair At the same time was a great difference between Richard Earl of Cornwal and Richard Sward which the King endeavoured to compose but could not Several of the Court Officers removed and thereupon he Banished Sward the Kingdom He likewise removed Ralph Fitz-Nicholas the Steward of his House and many other great Officers of his Houshold both from their Offices and his Council and [4] f. 430. l. 1. The Chancellor refused to deliver the great Seal required the Bishop of Chichester his Chancellour to deliver up the Great Seal but he refused Affirming he received it by the Common Council of the Kingdom Communi Consilio Regni and would not resign it up to any one without their Consent At this time the Emperor sent to demand the Money King Henry had promised with his Sister Some time in May [5] fol. 431. n. 20. Peter de Rivallis Rivallis and Segrave received into favour and Stephan Segrave were received into the Kings Favor On the 8th of [6] Ibid. The King thought such grants invalid that wanted the Popes Confirmation June the King called the Great men of England together at Winchester where the King by virtue of the Popes Bull endeavoured to void some Grants he had made before he was Married alledging they were invalid because they wanted the Popes Confirmation to whom the Right of the Kingdom belonged ad quem jus regni Spectabat conferre The Great men were much surprised at the Kings endeavors to enslave his Kingdom to such base Conditions This year the [7] f. 432. n. 40. The King of Scots meeteth the King of England at York King by the advice of his Great men went to York to compose the difference between him and Alexander King of Scots who affirmed he had not only a Charter but the Testimonies of many Bishops Earls and Barons of King Johns Grant of the County of Northumberland to him upon the Marriage of his Daughter Iohanna Adding That if he would not peaceably restore unto him his Right He would recover it by force That which encouraged the King of Scots to make this Demand at this time was What encouraged him to offer such demands to King Henry that Leolin Prince of Wales would be easily induced to break Peace with King Henry and the Affinity of Gilbert Mareschal who had marryed Margaret his Sister and also the present Hostilities beyond Sea [8] Ibid. n. 50. King Henry gives him satisfaction The King of England having consulted his present Circumstances for the preservation of the Peace of his Realm offered the King of Scots in lieu of the County of Northumberland the yearly revenue of LXXX Marks in some other place which gave satisfaction to all and so this Colloquium or Conference was Dissolved This year the [9] f. 433. l. 1. The Popes Policy to gain Money from the English Fryars Predicants and Minors went through Cities Towns Castles and Villages in England and offered plenary Indulgences to any who were confessed and truly penitent that would undertake the Cross and soon after the Pope sent into England Fryar Thomas a Templar and one of his Domestics with his Bull to absolve any one from his vow upon payment of a certain Summ of Money towards the defraying the Expences of the Holy War and whoever should pay any Money for this end although he was under no Vow yet he should have the Benefit of this Indulgence In the year 1237. at Christmass the King kept his Court at [1] fol. 435. n. 10 20 30 40 50. A. D. 1237. A Parliament at Winchester Winchester from whence he sent out his Writs Commanding all that belonged to the Kingdom or Government namely Archbishops Bishop Abbats Installed Priors Earls and Barons That all without fa●l should meet at London on the * That is Jan. 13th Octaves of Epiphany to treat about the Kings Affairs which concerned the whole Realm Rex praecipiens omnibus ad regnum Angliae spectantibus videlicet Archiepiscopis Episcopis Abbatibus Prioribus installatis Comitibus Baronibus ut omnes sine Omissione in Octabis Epiphan●ae convenirent regia negotia tractaturi totum Regnum contingentia The Great men yielded a ready obedience to the Kings Summons believing some very great and difficult affairs were to be transacted and accordingly on St. Hilary's day an
infinite Number of the Nobili●y that is the whole Vniversity of the Kingdom met at London Infinita Nobilium multitudo scilicet Regni totalis Vniversitas Londonias venit When they were all met and Seated in the Kings Palace at Westminster William de Kele Clerc and a Domestick of the Kings a discreet man and well skilled in the Laws arose and as a Mediator between the King and Great Men The Kings gratious offer and Demand declared the Kings Pleasure and intention That the King Commanded him to tell them that whatever he had done hitherto He would for the future be wholly directed by their Counsels who were his Natural and Faithful Subjects That those who had been his former Treasurers had been unfaithful in that Office That the Kings necessities at this time pressed him to require an Ayd of them but he would consent that whatever was granted should be both Collected and Disposed of for the necessary uses of the Kingdom by such whom they should name and choose for that purpose To this they replyed The Reply made to him That they had very often Granted and paid sometime a Twentieth then a Thirtieth and again a Fiftieth part to the King yet h● could never be prevailed with to remove or banish from him any one of the Enemies of the Kingdom That he had never enlarged but had streightned his Dominions And for the Assistance of others had extorted very frequently great Summs of Money from his own natural men à naturalibus suis hominibus as from the meanest of Slaves The King Answered The Kings Answer That his Sisters Portion Paid to the Emperor and his own Wedding had emptied his Pockets and if they would grant him a Thirtieth part He assured them upon Oath He would never more give them an Occasion to Complain They replyed That these things were done without their consent and seeing they were free from the fault they ought not to partake of the punishment After this they retired to consider how they might moderate and also satisfie the Kings desires And on the other side the King being much [2] fol. 436. lin 1. He is concerned how to gain the good will of his Barons concerned how he should gain the good will of his Barons assured them that he never endeavoured by the Popes Bull to void those Grants he had confirmed to them by his Charter and if any such thing had been Suggested to him he altogether disallowed it and that he would inviolably observe all the Liberties of the Great Charter Omnes Libertates Magnae Chartae observare and for their better security Commanded the same Sentence that Stephan Archbishop of Canturbury denounced against the infringers of this Charter to be again solemnly pronounced that the Violators might be the more inexcuseable After this he added the Earl of Warren William Ferrars and John Fitz-Geofry to his Council who Swore they would never be corrupted by gifts to deviate from truth and would always give the King good and wholesome Counsel A Thirtieth part of all Moveables granted to the King Then a Thirtieth part of all moveables was granted to the King excepting every mans Gold and Silver and his Horses and Arms which were to be used for the Benefit of the Commonwealth And for the due [3] See Append n. 159. Collection of the aforesaid Thirtieth part which was made the year following four Trusty Knights 4 Milites fide dignos [4] Ibid. n. 20 30. The manner how it was to be Collected and Secured were to be chosen in every County To whom the King was to add one Clerc in every County in England who were all Sworn duly to Collect and Secure the Money in some Abby Church or Castle That if the King should recede from his promise it might be restored to every one again So that when the Collectors came to Levy it was paid on this condition On what conditions paid That from thence forward the King should reject all Counsels and Advices of Forreigners and Strangers and adhere to those of his Faithful and Natural Men. Annexum fuit in conditione quod ex tunc deinceps consilio alienigenarum omnium innaturalium derelicto suorum fidelium Naturalium hominum consiliis adhaerebit About this time [5] Ibid. n. 50. vid. fol. 403. n. 40. Leolin Prince of Wales puts himself under the Kings protection Leolin Prince of Wales being wearied out with continual Wars and Age sent Messengers to the King to desire a confirmation of the League that was between them and also to put himself and all his under his protection and that he would hold his Lands of him in Fealty and Friendship by an indissoluble League promising to assist him in all his Expeditions with Men Horse and Money as far as his ability would reach The King accepted his Offer and sent the Bishops of Hereford and Chester to confirm it The Record on the close Roll of 21 Hen. 3. m. 11. Dors Dated June 16. seems to give much credit to this Relation This year [6] fol. 437. n. 10 20. Hubert incurs the Kings displeasure but is soon again reconciled Hubert Earl of Kent incurred the Kings displeasure in Marrying Richard Earl of Glocester his Ward to his Daughter Margaret without the Kings consent but was soon reconciled again Hubert protesting that he did not know the King had designed another for him And also promised to pay a sum of Money which appeased the Kings Anger About the Nativity of St. John Baptist [7] fol. 439. n. 30 40. A. D. 1237. Frederick the Emperor invited all Christian Princes to meet at Vantulur to Treat about some difficult Affair which concerned as well other Kingdoms as the Empire The King of England designed to send Richard Earl of Cornwal his Brother with other Great Men under the conduct of the Arch-Bishop of York and the Bishop of Ely to be his Deputies at this Meeting The Bishop of Winchester was chosen but he refused to go because the King had formerly accused him to the Emperor as one that disturbed the Peace of his Kingdom When every thing was prepared for their Journey they had notice from the Emperor that the Assembly was deferred till Christmass following About the Feast of St. Peter and St. Paul June 29. [8] fol 440. n. 10. Otto the Popes Legate comes into England at the Kings request Cardinal Otto the Popes Legate came into England at the request of the King but without the Knowledge of his Great Men for which it was said the Archbishop of Canturbury very much blamed the King as a thing prejudicial to his own Dignity and a great damage to the Kingdom However he would not hearken to his Counsel but received him as also did the Clergy with great Pomp Ceremony and large Gifts [9] fol. 443. n. 10. He reconciled the Noblemen that were at ●ariance Some of which he refused contrary to the
yet he extorted much Money from the Religious Soon after the Legate went towards [6] Ibid. f. 498. n. 20. A. D. 1239. The Legate refused entrance into Scotland Scotland with a guard of English to secure him from any treacherous attempts But before he entred that Kingdom he was met by the King of Scotland who told him That never any Legate had entred there before and there was no occasion for any at this time for Christianity flourished there and the Church was in a prosperous condition But when words began to multiply on both sides and the King ready to prohibit his Entrance At last he is admitted but under conditions through the intercession of the Great Men of England it was agreed under Hand and Seal of the Legate that this should not be drawn into a president This year several [7] f. 525. n. 50. Articles of High Treason drawn up against Hubert Earl of Kent Articles of Treason and high misdemeanors were by the Kings Order drawn up against Hubert Earl of Kent pretended to be committed by him while the management of the Kings Affairs passed through his hands To all which he answered by [8] f. 51● n. 29. Lawrence a Clerc of St. Albans his close Friend in all his Adversities with such modesty and submission that all that heard him were satisfied with the Earls Innocency although the King and all the Lawyers or rather Serjeants did what they could to make him guilty Licet Rex cum omnibus prolocutoribus Bane● He resigned into the Kings hands four of his Castles Quos narratores vulgariter appellamus in contrarium niterentur However the wrath of the King was not appeased until he had resigned into the Kings Hands four of his Castles namely Blanch Grosmund Screnesrith and Hatfield The Articles and the Earls [9] Append. n. 160. Plea to them are to be seen at large in Lib. Additament Paris f. 149. This year the Pope [1] f. 517. n. 50. Robert Brother to the King of France chosen Emperor by the Pope and his Conclave wrote to the King of France to let him know that He had by the advice of his Brethren excommunicated and deposed Frederic the Emperor and had made choice of Earl Robert his Brother to succeed in the Empire and promised not only his own but also the assistance of the Vniversal Church to establish him in the possession of the Imperial Crown To which the King of France answered That he knew not [2] Ibid. f. 518. lin 4. The King of France refused to be ingaged in the Affair by what Authority so Great a Prince was deposed nor was satisfied that the crimes objected against him were ever proved and if they were it ought to be done by the Act of a General Council and not by the Pope who was his Capital Enemy nor had he found so much Religion in the Pope as in him and therefore would not be ingaged in so dangerous an Affair In the year 1240. A. D. 1240.3 f. 523. n. 30. King Henry kept his Christmass at Winchester where he Knighted Baldwin de Ripariis that is Rivers and then made him Earl of Wight and Married him to the Daughter-in-law of his Brother Richard Earl of Cornwal In the Octaves of Epiphany or 13th of January [4] Ibid. n. 50. The Bishops complaint before the King of injuries offered to the Church the Arch-Bishops and Bishops with many Great Men Cum multis aliis Magnatibus met at London the Legate being present where before the King in his own Court they made grievous Complaints of the Injuries Oppressions and Desolations that were brought upon the Church by his means contrary to his Charters and Oath in keeping many Churches void for a long time and taking the Profits of them and for hindring Canonical Elections And about 30 Chapters The Chapters second the Bishops 30 Circiter Capitulae seconded the Bishops in their complaints against the King and at length they proceeded to Excommunicate all those Counsellors of the Kings who had inclined his Mind to such Enormities At this time the King received Letters by Messengers from [5] f. 524. n. 20. The Emperors complaint against the King the Emperor wherein he complained that he had forgotten he had Married his Sister when he suffered the Popes Sentence of Excommunication against him to be published in his Realm and had inconsiderately called in and continued in his Kingdom the Popes Legate and Coadjutor in these practices against him Wherefore he desired he might be thrust out of England as an Enemy and pillager of his Subjects to whom the King most shamefully answered The Kings Answer That he ought to obey the Pope and his Ecclesiastical Commands because he was His Tributary and Feudatary [6] Ibid. n. 30. He adviseth the Legate to depart his Kingdom The Legates reply However after some consultation with himself he advised the Legate to leave his Kingdom lest by his stay here he should incense the Emperor He replyed that he had called him into his Kingdom and therefore required safe conduct for his return but in the mean while he was not idle in collecting and [7] Append. 161. forcing the Clergy to pay Procurations Moreover hearing as he said that some that had undertaken the Croysado and were unable to fight went to Rome for Absolution from their Vow by his Letters he invited all such that were desirous of [8] Append. n. 162. His policy and contrivance to get Money Absolution and willing to spare their labour and expences to come to him and upon the payment of a sum of Money they should be Absolved from their Oath for that he had received the Popes Command that he ought not barely to Absolve them but also to compel them to redeem their Vow That is to compound for their Absolution In April following Simon [9] Ibid. n. 20. Montfort kindly received by the King and Court Montfort Earl of Leicester returned again into England and was very kindly received by the King and Court but designed to make no stay here but only to furnish himself with Money from his Tenents and other necessaries for his journey to the Holy Land At the same time there arose such a difference between the Scholars and Citizens of Oxford that many of them removed from thence and came and settled at Cambridge [1] Ibid. A great difference between the Scholars and Townsmen of Oxford where the Scholars obteined certain Liberties from the King against the Townsmen and had his Grant or Charter of them About this time also the King [2] Ibid. n. 40. Allegiance sworn to Prince Edward caused the Citizens of London and the Wardens of the Cinque Ports to Swear Allegiance to Prince Edward his first Born On Tuesday before the [3] Append. n. 163. A. D. 1240. David Prince of Wales offers Homage to King Henry for that Principality Feast of St. Dunstan
which was May the 14th David the Son of Lewelin Prince of north-Northwales offered King Henry his Homage for that Principality and the Lands which King Henry's Barons held there And they both submitted themselves to the Arbitrement of Cardinal Otto the Popes Legat and the Bishops of Norwich and Worcester the Earl of Cornwall and John de Monmouth on the Kings part and the Bishop of St. Asaph Idenevet Vaghan and Eynguan Vaghan on Prince Davids part And both parts bound themselves by Oath to stand to this Arbitration and furthermore they both submitted themselves to the Jurisdiction and Determination of the Legat so long as he staid in England The agreement between both parties to compel either part by Ecclesiastical Censure that should not observe the Articles of the Arbitration or refuse to make amends for any Transgression against it as he should award And after this Legantin Office was determined or that he was Recalled then they submitted themselves to the Jurisdiction and Coertion of the Arch-Bishop of Canturbury and his Successors and Church of Canturbury And by this Peace all the Homages of the Barons of Wales were to be performed to the King and all Burnings Slaughters and other mischiefs done on both parts were to be remitted About that time [4] f. 526. n. 20. An assembly of the Bishops and great men at Reading The Legat demandeth a Fifth part of all Goods the Arch-Bishops Bishops Abbats and some of the Great Men of England met at Reding to hear from the Legat what the Popes demands were When they were come together and Silence made The Legat declared the Popes care and charge in securing the Peace of the Church against the assaults of Frederick the Emperor and for his support he required one Fifth part of all Goods The King had before given his consent affirming he neither [5] Ibid. l. 9. The Bishops at first oppose it would nor durst oppose the Pope But the Bishop looked upon this as an insupportable burden and that it concerned the Vniversal Church wherefore they desired time to deliberate upon an Affair of so great weight [6] f. 527. n. 30. But at last consent to pay it After some consideration the Archbishop of Canturbury consented to pay the Fifth part of his Rents which amounted to 800 Marks [7] f. 532. n. 50. The Archbishop leaves England and the rest of the Prelates of England followed his example But when they saw the Church of England was every day more and more oppressed spoiled and deprived of its Liberties without hopes of remedy and that the 800 marks he gave to the Pope availed nothing he left England and setled himself in the Abby of Pontiniac in France This year the [8] Ibid. n. 40. Pope sent his Precept directed to the Arch-Bishop of Canturbury and to the Bishops of Lincoln and Salisbury Three ●u●dred Romans sent into England by the Pope to be Beneficed commanding them to prefer 300 Romans to the first vacant Benefices in England and not to collate any others till they were all sufficiently provided This year [9] Ibid. n. 50. Peter Ruby sent hither to be the Popes Collector His contrivance to squeeze Money from the Religious the Pope sent into England Peter Ruby to be his Collector in England who went about to the Chapters of Religious Houses and of some he gained a promise to pay so much Money for uses not mentioned as such a Bishop or such an Abbat had done and then urged to others their examples whereby many were seduced and cheated of their Money When the Abbats were sensible of this detestable practice [1] f. 534. n. 10. two of them namely the Abbats of St. Edmund● and of Battle-Abby went to the King and made known their grievance to him urging if such Exactions were suffered the Baronies they held of him would not answer the Services that were due to his Crown Two Abbats represent the Oppressions to the King He received them with frowns and threats and therefore they humbly supplicated him for remedy and redress But the King received them with frowns and told the Legat who was then present that He might do what he pleased with them adding that he would accommodate him with one of his Castles to imprison them Upon this some yielded to the fore-mentioned exactions but others refused to bring themselves under such detestable servitude [2] Ibid. n. 20 30 40 50. The Bishops steady resolution not to consent Then the Legat with Peter Ruby Assembled the Bishops at Northampton but could gain no positive Answer from them but only several exceptions against the Contributions Then he summoned the Rectors of Churches in Berkshire to meet him and his Accomplices and endeavoured both by promises and threats either to allure or affright them into a complyance The Clergy of Berkshire refuse to comply with the Legat. But they resolutely stood it out affirming they ought not [3] f. 535 l. 5. and n. 10 20 30 40 50. Their reasons against paying any Money to contribute any thing against the Emperor because he was neither convicted or condemned by the judgment of the Church nor because he possessed himself of the Patrimony of the Church which used not Secular force against Hereticks although he was Excommunicated by the Pope Item That as the Roman Church had its own Patrimony so other Churches had theirs also by the Grants and Beneficence of Kings Princes and other Great Men no ways Tributary to the Church of Rome Item That although the care of the Church belonged to the Pope yet the Dominion and Propriety did not Item That their Revenues were so small that they would scarce supply them with necessaries therefore they ought not to be compelled to any Contribution When the [4] f. 536. n. 30. The Legat's policy ●o gain his ends Legat and his Accomplices saw the steadiness and constancy of the Clergy one to another they endeavoured to set them at variance The Legat went to the King and soon inclined him to favour the Popes cause and his Associates went to the Bishops and Archdeacons some of whom they gained by promises of preferments and rewards and by this means the unanimity and strength of the Vniversity of the Clergy was broken This year Gilbert [5] f. 540. n. 20 30. Gilbert Earl Mareschal reconciled to the King Earl Mareschal was through the powerful intercession of Richard Earl of Cornwal reconciled to the King And Mauritius Justiciary of Ireland came to London and by the Kings means the Earl Mareschal and He were made friends and soon after [6] f. 542. n. 30 40. He removed Simon Norman from being Chancellor Simon Norman the Chancellor and the Kings chief Favorite and the Legats close Friend was removed from the Chancellorship and all other preferments but the Archdeaconary of Norwith This year [7] fol. fol. 545. n. 30. Edmund Archbishop of Canturbury dyed beyond Sea In
the year 1241. A. D. 1241. King Henry [8] fol. 548. n. 50. Otto the Popes Legat leaves England kept his Christmass at Westminster where he Knighted the Legat's Nephew and a Provincial and gave them plentiful Revenues Four days after the Legat received Letters from the Pope commanding him without delay to come to Rome After he had taken his solemn leave of the King with many Sighs and kind Embraces they parted He took Ship at Dover the day after Epiphany and left England no one but the King [9] fol. 549 n. 20. His great Oppression and Extortion from the English Clergy lamenting his departure for he had so pillaged the Clergy that setting aside the Holy Vessels and Ornaments of the Church he left them not so much as he had extorted from them besides 300 Rich Benefices and Prebendaries were appropriated to his own and the Popes use This year [1] 550. n 30. The Jews fined and forced to pay great sums to the King the Jews were fined and forced to pay the King 20000 Marks or were to be banished or perpetually imprisoned This year the Pope [2] fol. 554. n. 40 50. The Pope's demand of the Abbat and Convent of Burgh wrote to the Abbat and Convent of Burgh Commanding them to Grant unto him One of their Parsonages of the yearly Rent of 100 Marks but if it were double that value it would please him better and He would Rent it to them again at 100 Marks by the year and the residue should be their own He likewise wrote to many Romans that were Beneficed in England to sollicite and further it by admonition if not to compel them to a complyance with his desires The Monks answered they could do nothing without the Kings consent who was their Patron and Founder The Monks Answer They refuse to comply and also their Abbat was now absent Then the Italian Clercs came into England to Peterburgh and urged them to do it without either the Privity of the King or their Abbat This the Monks utterly refused but desired they might not be pressed for an Answer till their Abbat came home and then they sent [3] Ibid. 555. lin 8. The King displeased at the practice of the Italian Clerc and acquainted their Abbat with the whole business who sent William de Burgh his Clerc to the King to let him know how dangerous the consequence of such a thing might prove The King being made sensible of the detriment the Church would hereby sustain and detesting the Covetousness of the Court of Rome strictly prohibited them from proceeding any further in such enormous Attempts In April following the [4] Ibid. n. 30 40 50. A. D. 1241. Boniface the Queens Uncle elected Arch-Bishop of Canturbury Monks of Canturbury by the Contrivance and great industry used by the King in that affair elected Boniface Queen Alienors Uncle Archbishop of the placr who was approved of and confirmed both by the King and the Pope This year June the 27 Gilbert Earl Mareschal was [5] fol. 565. n. 30. Earl Mareschal slain in a Turnament at Hertford killed by the unruliness of his Horse after the Rains were broken in a Tournament at Hertford At the same time Robert Say one of his Knights was likewise slain and many Esquires wounded and hurt Otto the Popes Legat at his Departure left behind him [6] fol. 566. lin 7. Peter Ruby and Peter Supin and with them the Popes Bull by which they had power to Collect Procurations to Excommunicate Interdict and by several ways to Extort Money from the English Church On [7] Ibid. n. 20. Midsummer day June 24th when Richard Earl of Cornwall and Poictou was in the Holy-land the King of France invested his Brother with the Honor of that Earldom This year [8] fol. 569. n. 50. Griffin treacherously de●lt with by his Brother David The Bishop of Bangor Excommunicates David Griffin the Son of Leolin Prince of Wales was treacherously Imprisoned by his Brother David who would not be perswaded to release him Upon this Richard Bishop of Bangor first Excommunicated him and then applyed himself to King Henry for Remedy who sent to David and severely blamed him for his Treachery and unkindness to his Brother and urged and commanded him to give him his liberty to whom David returned a malepert Answer Affirming Wales would never enoy peace if he were s●t at liberty When [9] fol. 750. lin 1. Griffin offers to become Tenent to King Henry for his liberty Griffin understood this He sent privily to King Henry That if he would free him from his imprisonment He would become his Tenent and pay him 200 Marks a year for his Land and swear Fealty to him and would assist him in subduing the rebellious Welch At the same time also Griffin the Son of Madoch the most potent Man of the Welch promised the King his utmost assistance if he would enter Wales with force The King having so advantageous an Offer made him joyfully accepted it and [1] Ibid. f. 570. n. 10. The King accepts the offer and prepares to enter Wales David affrighted into a Capitulation summoned all who ought Military Service to meet him at Glocester with Horse and Arms in the beginning of Autumn and from thence with a great Army he marched towards Chester which so affrighted David that he capitulated and freed his Brother from his imprisonment and delivered him to the King whom He sent with several other Noblemen of Wales that were the Hostages of David and other Wel●hmen to London under the conduct of John de Lexintun to be secured there in the Tower Eight days after Michaelmass David came to London and having done his Allegiance and taken on Oath of all manner of Fealty and Security to the King he was dismissed in peace and so returned home These things were done between the 8th of September and Michaelmass The exact History of this Welch Transaction was thus The King had [2] Append. N. 164. The King summons David Prince of North Wales to appear before him A. D. 1241. summoned David Prince of north-North-Wales to appear before him at Worcester to appoint Arbitrators in the room of such that were named in the Instrument of Peace made between them the year before who were then beyond Sea that they might do Justice according to that form of Peace He came not but sent three Messengers one of which came to the King without power to do what was required Whereupon the King on the 19th of February Commands him by virtue of his Allegiance all excuses laid aside personally to appear at Shrewsbury on the Sunday before Palm-Sunday before such as he should send thither to transact that Affair On Sunday [3] Append. n. 165. next before the Invention of Holy Cross in the year 1241. that is before the 3 of May the day assigned to him and the Marchers to appoint Arbitrators in place of those beyond
Sea to do and receive Justice according to the form of Peace between the King and him his Procurators or Commissioners appeared with full power to do what was desired Ralph Mortimer Roger Steward of Chester and Griffin for themselves and other Marchers appeared and desired Justice might presently be done according to the proof of Witnesses at Shrewsbury before Stephen de Segrave New Arbitrators chosen between the King and Prince David and his fellow-Judges who were there instead of the King After two days wrangling instead of Otto the Legat the Bishops of Worcester and Norwich the Bishop of Coventry John Fitz-Geofry Herebert Fitz-Mathew and Walter de Clifford were appointed Arbitrators And a day was appointed a Moneth after Whitsunday at Maneford Bridge beyond Shrewsbury to hear what could any ways be proved concerning the injuries done on either side and on that day another day was appointed for Judgment to be given by the Arbitrators according to the proof before them Not long after this the King was informed That [4] Append. n. 1●6 The King had notice of a Confederacy against him by Prince David David contrary to his Oath given unto him had confederated with and drawn off the Brothers of Griffin Son of Madoch and certain of the Kings Men in Kers who had done Homage to him from their Service and Fealty and had received them into his Countrey and that he intended to commit Burnings and Slaughters in the Lands of Ralph Mortimer and other his Feudataries That he had ●y force seized the Lands of O. Vaghan and his Nephews against Justice which were adjudged to them in his Court That he had caused a Ship of Chester to be stayed in his Countrey laden with Wheat and other Victuals making no satisfaction to such as ought the Goods That when he sent his Commissioners to Shrewsbury in contempt of the King he neither came nor sent any Procurators to meet them The King writes to him concerning them Whereupon he wrote to him on the 14th of July that he should not omit to let him Know before the First of August what satisfaction he would give for these Injuries Before the 15th of that Moneth [5] Append. n. 167. Senana the Wife of his Brother Griffin came and complained to the King That David had imprisoned her Husband with his Son Owen and in the name of her Husband offered the King 600 Marks to cause her Husband and Son to be released out of prison so as he might stand to the Judgment of his Court whether he ought to be kept in prison and that the King afterwards would by the Judgment of his Court according to the Law of Wales cause him to have that part of his Fathers Inheritance which he ought to have which David by force with-held from him And Senana undertook that her Husband and his Heirs should pay to the King and his Heirs for ever 300 Marks a year a Third part in Money a Third part in Oxen and Cowes and a Third part in Horses at Shrewsbury to the Sherif of Shropshire She undertook further for her Husband That if at any time any Welch-man rebelled against the King or his Heirs he would at his own cost compel him to give satisfaction and for the performance of all this in the name of he Husband Griffin gave to the King as Pledges Ralph Mortimer Walter de Clifford Roger de Monte-alto Steward of Chester Mailgun Son of Mailgun Mereduc Son of Robert Griffin Son of Maddok de Baunfeld Howel and Mereduc his Brothers Griffin Son of * He was Lord of Powis Wennuwen who all undertook for Senana and gave the King their [6] Append. n. 168. Charts That what she propounded should be performed And all the Noblemen of Wales that favoured Griffin swore Fealty to King Henry and gave him their [7] Append. n. 169. Charts That they would faithfully serve him with all their force and power all days of their life when ever he wanted their assistance and that they would observe the Truce between them and Ralph Mortimer And for the observation of these things they put themselves under the Jurisdiction of the Bishop of Hereford or Bishop of Coventry which the King should choose to Excommunicate them and all theirs and Interdict their Lands if they did any thing contrary to this Agreement which was Signed August the 16 th On the 29th of the same Month Prince David Sealed his [8] Append. n. 170. Charter of Submission to the King First That he would deliver his Brother Griffin or Gruffith and his Son to him Secondly That he would stand to the Judgment of the Kings Court whether Griffin ought to be prisoner or not and also for the Portion of his Fathers Inheritance which he claimed according to the Custom of Wales and should hold that Land of the King in Capite Thirdly That he should restore to Roger de Monte-Alto Steward of Chester his Land of Montalt or as it is commonly called Mauthaut or Mould with its Appurtenances Fourthly That he should restore to other Barons all such Lands Lordships and Castles as had been taken from them since the beginning of the Wars between King John and his Father Lewelin Prince of Wales Fifthly That he would defray all the charges of King Henry in the last Expedition against him Sixthly That he would make satisfaction for all the Injuries done by him or his unto the King or his People That he would restore unto him all the Homages which King John had or that he ought to have especially of the Noblemen of Wales Seventhly The Land of Ellesmer with the Appurtenances was to remain to the King for ever Eighthly That he should not receive any of the Kings Subjects within his Countrey of Wales that were Outlawed or Banished Ninthly And that for the performance of this he would give Pleges and Security according to the Kings Will and Pleasure and would do all his Commands and stand to the Law in his Court. After this on the 31 of August [9] Append. n. 171. he made his Chart to the King freely and willingly That he and his Heirs should faithfully serve the King and his Heirs and assist him all days of their lives and if at any time they should act contrary to that ingagement then all his Lands or Countrey should be forfeited to him and He and his Heirs should injoy them for ever And for the greater Declaration of this Matter he caused the Bishops of Bangor and St. Asaph to put their Seals to this Chart. This year [7] fol. 570. n. 40. Tinn-Mines first discovered in Germany Tinn-Mines were first discovered in Germany and by reason of the Purity and Quantity of that Tinn the price of that Mettal was much lessened here for before that time none had ever been heard of but in England About this time [8] fol. 57● n. 40. Walter at first is refused but afterward is restored to the Earldom and
well Bishops and Abbbats as lay-Barons which held of him in Capite Quilibet Baro tenens ex Rege in Capite to have all their Service ready at Newcastle upon Tine to force the King of Scots to give satisfaction unless he would hear their Advice where they appeared accordingly Congregata igitur Vniversitate totius Angl●ae Nobilium apud Memoratum Castrum About the Assumption of the Virgin that is the 15th of August they had a serious Treaty about this Weighty Affair Where by the means of Earl Richard and other great Men there was a Peace made upon these Terms [6] Append. n. 171. Articles of the Peace between the Kings of England and Scotland That the King of Scots and his Heirs should keep Perpetual Faith and Friendship toward King Henry and his Heirs That he should not League with the Kings Enemies That the Peace should stand Good that was made in the presence of Otto the Popes Legat and the Agreement concerning a Contract of Marriage to be had between the King of Scots Son and the King of Englands Daughter The [7] f. 647. n. 30.40 The Welch spoil the Borders Welch at this time made great Slaughters Devastation and burnings upon the Borders of which the King having notice he sent Herebert Fitz Matthew with Three hundred Horse to subdue them Disbanding the rest of his Army and going to London himself The Welch took Courage upon this Discharging the Army They rout those that were sent to repress them and had routed and destroyed the forces of the Earl of Hereford and Ralph de Mortemer before Herebert got up to them and when he attacqued them the Day after they put him to flight On the Morrow of all Souls November 3d the [8] f. 650. n. 50. The Great men deny the King an Ayd against the Welch Prince David offered to hold his Kingdom of the Pope great Men of England met of whom the King required an Ayd against the Welch which they denied him David Prince of north-North-wales intending to cast off the Yoak of his Subjection to the King of England sent to the Pope and offered his Country to him so as he would defend it against him and that David and his Heirs might hold it of him Paying yearly 500 Marks for a great Sum of Money obtain'd the Popes ●ll directed to the Abbats of Aberconwey Kemere by which he Constituted them his Inquisitors whether Prince David by force and fear was compelled to subject himself and swear Fealty to the King of England and if they found it to be so to Dispence with release and make Null and voyd his Oath and Engagements and by Virtue of this Bull they [9] Append. n. 172. summoned the King to appear before them on the Vigil or Eve of St. Agnes January 21 at Keyrus in Wales to answer Prince David concerning the Contents of the Bull. This inraged the King and also the Great Men so as they urged him to March against David without Delay On the [1] Paris f. 654. n. 50. The Welch overthrown first Sunday in Lent the Constable of the Castle of Montgomery with such forces as he had with him by stratagem overcame the Welch and killed above 300 of them David to make good this loss besieged the Castle of [2] f. 255. n. 30. David besieged and took Monthalt Castle Monthalt and took it by assault and killed most he found in it but missed of Roger de Monte-alto the Proprietor of it whom he thought to have found there About [3] f. 658. n. 50. The yearly revenue of the Roman and Italian Clergy in England Whitsunday the King caused diligent Inquiry to be made in Every County whose Revenues the Romans and Italians were possessed of in England [4] f. 659. line 4. by Gift of the Court of Rome and they were found to be 60000 Marks by the year The Consideration of which great Sum moved the King both to Admiration and Anger and the Vniversity of the Kingdom composed an Elegant [4] f. 659. lin 4. Epistle in which they set forth the Execrable Papal Extortions The English Complaint at the Council of Lyons and by whom made and the Exactions of the Legats in qua Extortiones Papales Execrabiles c. And sent it to the Council of Lyons by Earl Roger Bigod John Fitz-Geofrey William de Cantelupe Philip Basse● Ralph Fitz-Nicholas and Master William Poweric a Clerc in the Name of the whole Vniversity who were to declare the importable Burthens of the Kingdom by reason of the Popes Exaction of Tribute to which the Vniversity thereof never consented and to seek for Redress On the 30 th of [5] f. 659. n. 10 20. Fulke Fitz-warrin sent to Martin the Pope's Legat. June the Vniversity of Military Men that intended a Torneament which was prohibited by the King met at Luton and Dunstable in Bedfordshire sent Fulk Fitz Warin to the New Temple at London to Mr. Martin the Popes Clerc and Instrument of his great Exactions when he came to him he looked upon him with a stern Countenance He treateth the Legat roughly and bad him be gone out of England immediately Who commands me to do this said Mr. Martin Is it your self To whom Fulk answered the Vniversity or Body of armed men that lately appeared at Luton and Dunstable by me do Command you to do this and bad him again be gone or he and his Followers would in three Days be cut in Pieces Mr. Martin much affrighted at this Salutation went immediately to the King and told him what he had heard and asked if it was done by his Authority The King told him he was not the Author of any such thing but my Barons saith he can scarce contain themselves from an insurrection against me for that I have so long suffered your Depredations and Injuries in my Kingdom Upon this Discourse with the King he Requested his Pasport which was readily granted The Legat leaveth England and for his greater security the King sent with him Robert Noris one of his Marshals to conduct him to the Sea The [6] f. 666. n. 40. A. D. 1245. The English Procurators complaint in the Council of Lyons Procurators of the Vniversity or Body of the Nobility of England before named sitting in the Council at Lyons Mr. William Poweric their Clerc stood up and propounded the Grievances of the Kingdom of England in behalf of the said Vniversity lamentably complaining of a Tribute injuriously imposed on the Kingdom by the Court of Rome to which the Fathers of the Nobility nor they themselves had ever consented nor did at present or ever should consent whereupon they craved Justice with Remedy To which complaint the Pope made no answer yet William Power●c produced the [6] Append. n. 173. Epistle which de●lared the many Extortions made in England by the Roman Church which was read in the Council After some time of Wayting the
Noblemen and was placed in the Seat of Charles the Great with the usual Solemnity It is reported by [8] f. 942. n. 10. The Great Riches and Treasure of Richard King of the Romans Mat. Paris That this King and Earls Treasure was so great that he could spend an hundred Marks every day for Ten years together not accounting the Revenues he received from England and Germany The Welch [9] Ibid f. 949. n. 50. The Welch ravage and destroy the English Borders this year plundered and burnt the English borders and killed the Inhabitants notwithstanding the assistance of the Earl of Glocester and remained triumphant in those parts [1] Ibid. f. 951. n. 56. The King raiseth all his Military Service to repress them About the Feast of St. Mary Magdalene or 22 of July the King marched into Wales with his whole Military Service which he had summoned by his Writ to repress their incursions who having notice of his coming fled to the Mountains and inaccessible places carrying with them their Wives and Children and driving their Cattle thither they Plowed up their Meadows destroyed their Mills brake down their Bridges and digged great and deep pits in their Fords to make them unpassable and at length confederating with those of [2] Ibid. f. 953. n. 40 50. Part of the Army ba●led South-Wales by the treachery of Griffin de Brun who was a Welchman that served the King made an Assault upon part of the Kings Army and Baffled it The King with the residue of his Military Men making a great Army marched towards [3] Ibid. f 954. n. 30 40. The Welch offer to submit upon Terms but are refused Chester and burnt all the Corn in the borders thereabouts The Welch offer to submit so as they might enjoy their Laws and ancient Liberties and not be subject to Prince Edward or any but the King himself who refused the Terms and towards [4] Ibid. f. 955. n. 40. Winter made a shameful Retreat into England having spent much Treasure and done nothing About [5] Ibid. f. 956. lin 1. The Elects of Ely and St. Edmunds-Bury return from Rome Michaelmass this year the Elects of Ely and St. Edmunds-Bury returned from Rome where they had spent given and promised vast sums of Money for obtaining their Rights by which the Historian I suppose means their Confirmations Electus Eliensis Electus Ecclesiae Sancti Edmundi Tantam pecuniam in Curia Romana dando promittendo effuderunt pro jure suo obtinendo ut in considerando Thesauri Quantitatem poterunt prudentes admirari cum admiratione Stuporem excitare And then it was that a new Law was made at Rome That every Elect whether Bishop Abbat or Prior should come thither and compound for this Confirmation Ecce [6] Ibid. l. 6. Statutum Romae cruentissimum quo oportet Quemlibet Electum personaliter transalpinare in suam laesionem imo Eversionem Romanorum loculos impraegnare Soon after [7] Ibid. f. 958. n. 20. that time the Bishop of Worcester the Elect of Winchester the Abbat of Westminster the Earl of Leicester Earl Hugh Bigod the Mareschal Peter of Savoy and Robert Waleran were sent to the King of France to demand the Restitution of King Henry 's Rights in Normandy King Henry's Rights in Normandy and France demanded and the other parts of France but returned without success A. D. 1258. In the year 1258. and Forty second of Henry III he kept a magnificent Christmass at [8] Mat. Paris f. 959. lin 5. The Bishop of Ely and Abbat of Bury Confirmed by the Pope London and about that time notwithstanding all the Interest the King and Arch-Bishop could make at Rome The Bishop of Ely and Abbat of Saint Edmunds-Bury returned from thence Confirmed So as saith the Monk the King using ill advice every day lost somewhat of his Royal Dignity and studied how to damnify the Church The [9] Ibid. n. 30. Noblemen sent by the King to the King of France to Demand Normandy and his other Rights in that Kingdom were civilly received by himself but his Brothers and other Great Men much opposed them so as they returned as they went on the 6 th of January or Twelfth-day About this time [1] Ibid. n. 50. The Welch destroy some of Prince Edward's Towns the Welsh despairing of Peace and distrusting the Kings Mercy seized some good Towns of Prince Edwards and other Great Mens in the borders of Wales and plundred them and afterwards burnt them and killed all the People It was about this [2] f. 960. n. 30. The Pope is angry with the King for his Excesses time also that the Pope was in great passion with the King because he observed not his repeated Promises when he had bound himself saith the Monk under pain of losing his Kingdom to correct his Excesses and at the instance of Lawrence Bishop of Rochester and many others He propounded after many fruitless Admonitions to Excommunicate him He threatens to proceed to Ecclesiastic Censures but is appeased Interdict his Kingdom and proceed further as he should see cause The King in great Confusion sent him Five thousand Marks to bring him into temper and put off the Sentence for a time with which and the Kings earnest Petitions he was satisfied In Mid-lent [3] Ibid. n 40 Rustand accused and removed from his Dignity and power Master Rustand returned from Rome Deprived of his former Authority having been accused by some of his Rivals That he was too Rapacious and had laying aside the fear of God gained many great Rents and Estates And that he might obtain the Kings favour in acquiring of them he affirmed he was born at Burdeaux and promised as the Kings Liege and Natural Subject effectually to procure the Dominion of the Kingdom of Apulia and transact other Business for him at the Court of Rome and otherwhere with such flattering Promises he circumvented the easy King Regis simplicitatem circumveniens so as he was endowed with great Revenues yet was sent for to Rome and severely chidden by the Pope being hardly restored to his former Favour however he was removed from the Dignity and Power he had enjoyed Soon after or before his departure in the week before Easter Master [4] Ibid. n. 50. Herlot the Popes Notary comes into England with great power Herlot or Arlot the Popes Notary and special Clerc came with great pomp into England furnished with great power who though he was not stiled a Legat yet wanted not his greatness On the 14 th of March King Henry [5] Cl. 42. Hen. 3. M. 11. Dors Summoned all that ought him Service both Clergy and Laity to meet him at Chester eight days before Midsummer to march into Wales against Lewelin the Son of Griffin and his Accomplices who had seized on All that ought the King service summoned to meet at Chester to repress the Welch and wasted
approve who acted rather against than for him Now the King thinking himself secure on every side [8] Paris fol. 991. n. 50. He taketh the advantage of the Popes Absolution He displaces his great Officers of State resolved to take the advantage of the Popes Absolution and went to several Cities and Castles and took possession of them and the Government of the Kingdom encouraged to this by the promise of assistance he received from the King of France and his Great men Afterwards the King came to Winchester and removed from their Offices the Justiciary and Chancellor that were appointed by the Baronage and constituted * He made Walter de Merton his Chancellor and Philip Basset his Chief Justice Mat. Westm fol. 380. lin 7. others in their places according to his own pleasure and sent his [9] Append. n. 205. Reason why he could not stand to his Oath Writ to all the Sheriffs of England wherein he relates his own Submission and the Affairs of his Realm to the Provisions at Oxford under certain conditions which the Barons performed not the injustice of their Ordinances to the prejudice and depression of his Royal power and D●mage of his People his Absolution from his Oath to observe them both by Pope Alexander and Vrban his Successor His readiness to do justice to all men Great and Small in his Courts to which they might freely resort with security and to observe the Articles conteined in the great Charter and Charter of the Forest which they were commanded to proclaim in all places and to apprehend and secure all such as adhered to the former Ordinances or presumed to speak or act any thing prejudicial to the Rights of his Crown Honor or Dignity or to his Execution of his Office Upon this the [1] Paris ut Supra The Barons come Armed to Winchester Barons came Armed to Winchester and John Mansel went privately to the King and acquainted him with the danger he was in The King retires to the Tower and constrained him to hasten his return to the Tower of London In the year 1263 at Christmass [1] Paris f. 992. lin 1. n. 10. A. D. 1263. 47th Hen. 3. the King Queen and Council were in the Tower of London at which time both the English and French Bishops took great pains to make peace between the King and Barons and at length Both sides referred their Differences about the * See the Compromise it self on the Kings behalf in Append. n. 206. and observe the date of it on Sunday after St. Lucy's day 13th of December 1263. so that it had been agreed to Refer these Differences to the King of France before Christmass The King of France nulleth the Oxford Provisions Oxford provisions to the King of France who calling together his Bishops Earls and great men at Amiens on the 22 d of January in that Assembly pronounced sentence for the King of England against the Barons and Nulled those provisions But by Evacuating of them he did not intend altogether to abrogate King Johns Charter Upon which Exception S. Montfort and others took advantage and said The provisions were founded upon that Charter and therefore would not submit to the King of France his Sentence This Parlement of the King of France as the Monk calls it being Dissolved the [2] Ibid. Several noble men desert Montfort King of England and his Queen the Arch-bishop of Canterbury the Bishop of Hereford and John Mansel who were all there returned home And from that time [3] Ibid. n. 20. Henry Son to the King of Almain Roger de Clifford Roger de Leybourn John de Vallibus or Vaus Hamo L'estrange and many other Barons left Montfort and Roger Mortimer wasted his Lands and Estates But he confederating with Leolin Prince of Wales the Kings great Enemy sent an Army thither that invaded destroyed and burnt the Estate and Lands of Roger. In the mean while the [4] Mat. Westm f. 382. n. 40. Barons in other parts of the Kingdom by advice and under the conduct of the Earl of Leycester Resolving to make good the Oxford provisions armed themselves The Barons Arm themselves and seize the Kings Towns and on a sudden when they thought not of it fell upon the Strangers the Kings Counsellors and all they knew adhered to him and in an Hostile manner seised upon their Estates Places of Strength Castles Towns and Goods [5] Ibid. f. 384. n. 50. 385. n. 10. Montfort with his Army took in Glocester Worcester Bridgnorth and Shrewsbury Prince Edward and the Noble men that were of the Kings party took in the Castles of Haye Huntington Brecknoc c. and on both sides they wasted burnt and destroyed their Lands and Estates The Londoners also [6] Ibid. f. 385. n. 20. The Londoners second the Barons going out of their City in great numbers wasted and burnt the farms and possessions of the King of Almain Philip Basset and many others that were of the Kings party and imprisoned the Kings Clercs the Barons of the Exchequer and Justices of the Bench. The King was at this time in the [7] Ibid. f. 383. n. 20 30. Mat. Paris f. 993. lin 2. n. 10. The King maketh peace with the Barons Tower of London with his Queen and John Mansel one of his chief Counsellors who fled from thence fearing the Rage of the Barons and when he was gone the King fearing he should be besieged by their Army against all the power and perswasion of the Queen by the mediation of some Honourable persons made peace with them the Articles whereof were these First That [8] Ibid. The Articles of the peace Henry Son of the King of Almain should have his Liberty Secondly That the Kings Castle should be put into the Hands of the Barons Thirdly That the Statutes and Provisions made at Oxford should be inviolably observed as well by the King as others Fourthly That all strangers except such as the Well-Affected should think fit to stay should presently avoid the Nation never to return again A. D. 1264. 48. Hen. 3. But this peace did not hold long for the Soldiers that were within Windsor Castle [9] Paris f. 993. n. 20. furnished it with Arms and Victuals which raised great suspition in the Barons and it added much to it that when Prince Edward had desired of the Bishop of Worcester who was of the Barons party to conduct him from Bristol to his fathers Court when he came near Windsor he left the Bishop and went into the Castle which he took very ill [1] Ibid. n. 30. Prince Edward kept prisoner by Montfort and Simon Montfort coming to besiege it Prince Edward met him at Kingston and offered a Treaty of Peace But by advice of the Bishop Simon kept him prisoner until the Castle was delivered to him upon condition that such as were in it might go whether they would and the strangers and such others
Bull was Dated at Viterbo in Italy 5. Idus Junii 9 th of June in the 2 d. year of his Pontificate which was A. D. 1267. the 51 st of this King and Directed to his Legat Ottobon but not put in Execution until after Christmass following The English and Welch every year almost and sometimes often in the same year made inrodes into each others Countries The Welch and English destroy one ●others Cou●tries fired and burnt Houses took possession of each others Lands and Goods and more especially spoiled and wasted the Borders on both sides of which Actions seeing they were Ordinary and frequent I have not taken notice for many years But Lewelin Son of Griffin having been a great Friend to Montfort The King d●●signed to ch●stise Lewelin Prince of Wales and a great support to him in his Rebellious practices in September this year the King came with a great Army to Shrewsbury with Design to March into Wales and Chastise him for his Vnfaithfulness to him who now wanting the help of the Rebellious Barons by Diverting the King applyed himself to the Legat He desires peace and o●tains it by whose Mediation a Peace was made [3] Cart. ●1 Hen. 3. M. ● De Reform●tion● pa● i●ter Regem ● Lewelinum Principem Wallia The Articl● of the peac● so as all Lands should be restored on both sides and that the Customs of the Marches should still remain That King Henry should grant unto him and his heirs the principality of Wales and that they should be and be called Princes of Wales That they should receive the Homage and Fealty of all the Barons of Wales who were to hold their Lands of them in Capite except the Homage of Meredu● the Son of Rhese which the King reteined to him and his Heirs and if ever the King should grant it to him he should pay for it 5000 l. He likewise Granted him the four Cantreds of Borthwlad to hold and possess them as fully as ever the King and his Heirs had possessed them For which Principality Lands Homages and Grants the same Prince and his Successors were to swear Fealty and do Homage and perform the accustomed Services due to the King and his Heirs as they had been done by him and Predecessors to the King and his Ancestors And further was to give him 25000. Marks This Agreement bears Date at Shrewsbury 25 th of September 1267. The Record is long but this is all that is material in it A. D. 1268. 52 Hen. 3. The Pope having in his Bull of the Grant of the tenths of all Arch-Bishopricks Bishopricks c. before mentioned Commanded his Legat to Collect or Receive it or cause it to be Collected or Received by other fit persons [4] Cart. 51. Hen. 3. M. 10. in Cedula The Legat appoints Collectors of the tenth lately granted He assigned Walter the Elect of York Stephen of Canturbury and Ruffin Clivel Arch-Deacons in that Church to receive and pay it to the King one third part at Easter following another third part at Midsummer and the last at Michaelmass and so for every of the three years and the King by the Assignment of the Legat appointed [5] Pat. 52. Hen. 3. M. 32. intus M. 33. Collectors of this tenth in every Diocess The Dean and Chapter of Salisbury [6] Pat. 52. Hen. 3. M. 9. intu● Salisbury and Bath and Wells compound by the year with the King compounded with the King for 1000 l. a year for all the tenths arising out of that Diocess and the Dean and Chapter Abbats and all the Clegy of the Diocess of Bath and Wells [7] Ibid. M. 2. intus compounded with him for 500 Marks down and 350 l. 4 s. ob each year for their own tenths The King with his Army this year Marched [8] Paris fol. 1004. n. 30.40 The King Marcheth against the disinherited in the Isle of Ely He soon reduced or dispersed them toward the Isle of Ely to reduce or disperse such as had taken refuge there and by the assistance and advice of such as inhabited thereabout he made Bridges with Planks and Hurdles at convenient places so that the Soldiers with little difficulty entred the Isle and presently brought many of them to the Kings obedience and put the rest to flight In the year 1269. King Henry was at London [9] Ibid. fol. 1005. lin 1. A. D. 1269. Edward and Edmund the Kings Sons undertake the Cross with his Queen and Ottobon the Legat who called a Council at London and there constituted many things for the Reformation of the Church of England Soon after at Northampton he signed with the Cross Edward and Edmund the Kings Sons the Earl of Glocester and many other Noblemen of England and then with an inestimable Treasure returned to Rome At the same time the King [1] Ibid. n. 10. The Kings Proclamation for the security of his subjects goods caused it to be proclaimed throughout all England in every County that whoever should invade or injustly usurp any ones goods or possessions he should be lyable to a Capital Punishment which was soon after executed upon one at Dunstable who had driven away twelve Oxen that were the Villans of Colne belonging to the Abby of St. Albans who persued him and took him and brought him before the Baylif of the Liberties of St. Albans who read to him in English the Kings Letter before the whole Multitude and then by virtue of the Kings Command Sentenced him to be beheaded This year the King of [2] Ibid. n. 20. The King of France his invitation to Prince Edward France sent Messengers into England to invite Prince Edward to accompany him into the Holy-Land Prince Edward accep● his offer to whom the Prince replyed that the late Wars between the King and his Great-men had exhausted the English Treasury so that he had not sufficient to supply his necessary Expences for such an Expedition The King of France offered that if he would comply with his desires he would furnish him with 30000 Marks To which Prince Edward consented and forthwith offered Gascoigny as security for his Mony and then came into England to obtain leave of his Father King Henry which he granted with Tears and gave him his Blessing In the same year [3] Fol. 10● lin 4. A Parleme● at Merleber● Statutes m● there in the Octaves of St. Martin or the 19 th of November a Parlement was held at Marlebergh in which by the Assent of the Earls and Barons were made the Statutes of Merlebergh in quo assensu Comitum Baronum edita sunt Statuta quae de Marleberwe vocantur In the year 1270. King Henry [4] 1006. n. 10. A. D 1270. Prince Edmund Marri● with his Queen and the Chiefs of the Kingdom was at Christmass at Eltham On the eighth of April Edmund the Kings Second Son Married Auelin the Daughter of William de Albamarla
St. Albans f. 487. E. At Reading f. 490. B. At St. Pauls London f. 492. A. B. In a Meadow between Stanes and Windsor f. 496. F. The two Charters of Liberties and Forests granted there f. 497. C. Of the Great Men at Westminster f. 529. E. Vid. Parlement Conveyances of Land where entred f. 79. C. Philip de Covel made Sheriff of Middlesex by Henry the Third f. 654. A. Council of Bishops called at Hartford by Arch-bishop Theodore f. 106. D. At Hatfield at the Command of four Kings Ibid. E. At Becanceld where King Withred presided f. 107. C. The Acts of it subscribed by Women Ibid. At Cloveshoe where Elthelbald presided f. 108. A. A second there where Arch-bishop Cuthbert presided Ibid. C. D. E. At Winchester where Tithes were setled f. 112. C. At Aenham by Ethelred f. 126. lin 1. What Canons were made there Ibid. A. B. At Winchester by the Conqueror f. 212. F. At Lambeth by Anselme f. 235. lin 3. At Roven f. 247. F. At Rhemes under Pope Calixtus f. 250. B. At Westminster under Anselme f. 257. F. At Troyes to dispose of vacant Churches f. 262. E. At Winchester to which King Stephen was cited f. 278. A. Another at Winchester which set up Maud the Empress f. 283. F. At Lateran under Innocent the Second f. 294. A. At Northampton by Ottobon the Legat f. 659. E. At Westminster called by the Popes Legat f. 287. B. At Devises by Maud the Empress Ibid. F. In Normandy with the Decrees made there f. 410. F. and 411. At Westminster by Richard Arch-bishop of Canterbury f. 414. D. At York by Arch-bishop Hubert f. 458. D. At Reading by Jo. Ferentin the Popes Legat f. 475. D. Court of Guard whence it came f. 4. F. Leet and Baron whence derived f. 55. A. Courtesie of England what f. 175. A. From whom brought f. 71. F. Croyland Abby plundered by the Danes the great Treasure found in it f. 114. E. Cross The Controversie between the Arch-bishops of Canterbury and York about bearing it f. 414. E. Crusado undertaken by the Kings of England and France f. 342. D. Such as refused were to pay the Tenth of their Estates f. 344. B. They that refused to pay were imprisoned Ibid. E. Cuneus what it signifies in a Military sense f. 47. E. F. Cunobelin made Governour of the Trinobants f. 11. A. John de Curcy sets upon Ulster took Doun and obteined a great Victory over Roderic f. 366. B. C. D. He entred into an Alliance with Amoric de S. Laurentio f. 367. A. B. His second Battel with the Irish at Fern Ibid. E. F. His third and fourth Battels with them f. 368. E. F. and 369. B. He was made Governor of Ireland f. 372. F. Cursac Emperor of Cyprus taken Prisoner by Richard the First fol. 430. F. He was sent Prisoner to Tripoli f. 431. lin 4 He is set at Liberty f. 438. A. D. DAnes Invade England f. 109. C. They are vanquished by King Egbert f. 111. A. They receive constant supplies of Men f. 112. A. 114. D. E. They come under the Conduct of Hingnar and Hubba fol. 113. D. They Pillage and Destroy Religious Houses and all other places f. 114. B. They are overthrown by Aelfred and beg Peace f. 115. B. What King Elthelred granted them f. 123. E. F. Dane-geld what it was Ibid. Danes said to be Massacred on St. Brice's night f. 124. A. The Truth of the Story questioned Ibid. E. Danish Fleet assist Edgar Etheling and his Confederates against the Conqueror f. 195. B. David King of Scots invaded England f. 274. C. A Peace between him and King Stephen Ibid. He assisted Maud the Empress f. 279. F. His Army routed by the English f. 280. lin 1. David Prince of Wales offered his Homage to Henry the Third fol. 575. A. The Agreement between them Ibid. B. C. His Treachery to his Brother Griffin f. 578. lin 1. He Swears Fealty to King Henry Ibid. C. The Articles of his Charter of Submission f. 580. A. B. C. He offered to hold his Kingdom of the Pope f. 592. D. He besieged and took Monthalt Castle Ibid. F. He died without Issue f. 594. B. Deans rural who they were f. 537. F. Dermot Fitz-Murchard Prince of Leinster ravish'd Prince Ororic's Wife f. 350. E. He was driven out of his Country and came to implore the King of Englands Assistance Ibid. F. He obteined the Kings Letters Patents f. 151. A. He gave large Promises to the English to assist him Ibid. C. D. His Bargain with Richard Earl of Strigul and Robert Fitz Stephen Ibid. and f. 352. A. He reduced Wexford and Marched to Ossery f. 353. A. B. The Osserians routed and their Prince Swear Fealty to him Ibid. D.C. He concluded a Peace with Roderic f. 354. C. He wasted the Country about Dublin Ibid. E. He designed to make himself Monarch of Ireland f. 355. A. He sent for more English Forces Ibid. B. His Death f. 357. B. Dermot Mac-carti Swore Fealty to King Henry the Second f. 359. F. Ralph de Diceto His Account of King Richard's Coronation fol. 422. A. B. Aulus Didius Claudius his Lieutenant in Britain f. 17. A. Dinoth Abbat of Bangor opposed Augustin f. 103. B. C. Dioclesian Saluted Emperor f. 31. D. He was a great persecutor of the Christians f. 32. E. Disinherited vid. Barons Such as had no Lands how punished f. 659. A. Ditches of Defence where usual cast up f. 87. B. Devils Ditch where and its extent f. 86. D. Domesday Book by whom made and in what Method f. 205. A c. Why so called and how Towns and Maners were entred f. 206. and 207. A. Donald O Bren breaks his Oath to Henry the Second f. 363. A. He besieges Limeri● f. 364. A. Dorchester made a Bishops See f. 105. F. Dublin besieged and taken by Reymond f. 356. C. D. Besieged by the Irish Princes and much pressed for want of Victuals f. 357. E. F. 'T is delivered up to Henry the Second King of England f. 360. D. Duncan by the Assistance of William Rufus obteins the Kingdom of Scotland f. 222. E. He was treacherously slain f. 223. E. Dunstan enjoyned King Edgar seven years penance for forcing a Nun f. 121 F. Dunwich made a Bishops See f. 105. C. E. EAdbald Son to Ethelbert relapseth to Paganism but is again converted by Laurentius f. 104. B. Eadmer Chaplain to Arch-bishop Lanfranc elected Arch-bishop of St. Andrews in Scotland f. 268. D. He ws rejected for his haughtiness Ibid. E. Earls Chief Justiciaries of England f. 151 152. Earldom a name of Office and when it became Hereditary f. 81. B. Not hereditary in King Elfreds days Ibid. D. What Possessions and Profits belonged to it Ibid. F. and f. 82. A. Easter a great Controversie about the observation of it f. 106. A. Edgar reproved the Clergy for their idleness and viciousness f. 121. A. He appointed three Bishops to reform them Ibid. B. His Justice and Sobriety
Messengers at Rome promised the Pope a Tenth of all Moveables in England and Ireland Ibid. B. He prepared to go over Sea but wanted Ships f. 543. B. C. He laid the Blame on Hubert Earl of Kent Ibid. D. An Enterview between him and the King of Scots Ibid. F. A great Sum granted for his Expedition into France f. 544. l. 1. He received the Homages of the Britans Anjovins Poictovins and Gascoigns Ibid. A. B. f. 445. B. His Army impoverished and his return into England Ibid. D. E. He demanded Scutage of his Military Tenents f. 546. A. He was disswaded from marrying the King of Scots Sister f. 547. E. His Great Men deny him an Aid f. 548. A. B. He pleads his Poverty and called his Great Officers to an account f. 549. E. F. He was much incensed against Hubert Earl of Kent f. 550. D. A fortieth part of all Moveables granted to him Ibid. E. His Severity to Hubert f. 551. C. 552. A. B. He is moved to compassion towards him Ibid. C. He removed Englishmen from his Councils f. 553. F. The Insolent Message he received from his Barons f. 554. F. His Military Tenents that refused to obey his Summons treated as Traytors f. 555. C. D. He broke his promise to Richard Earl Mareschal f. 556. lin 3. He commanded the Bishops to Excommunicate him but they refused him Ibid. D. His Army defeated by the Mareschals Policy Ibid. E. F. He was advised by the Bishops to remove Foreigners from his Council and his Answer f. 559. B. C. He reformed his Court and made a Truce with Wales Ibid. E. F. f. 560. F. His Summons to his old Counsell●rs to stand to the Law f. 561. B. He sent Assistance to the Earl of Brittan f. 562. A. He married Alienor Daughter to the Earl of Provence f. 563. A. He removed several Sheriffs and Court Officers f. 564 D. E. His Chancellor refused to deliver up the Seal Ibid. F. He endeavored to void such Grants as wanted the Popes confirmation f. 565. A. His gracious Offer and Demand f. 566. A. A thirtieth part of all Moveables granted and the condition upon which it was to be paid Ibid. E. f. 567. lin 1. His Liberality to Strangers f. 568. lin 3. An Agreement between him and the King of Scots Ibid. C. D. He sent Assistance to the Emperor f. 571. A. A Plot against his Life discovered Ibid. D. His displeasure against Simon Montford f. 573. A. The Emperors complaint against him f. 574. C. He owned himself the Popes Feudatary Ibid. D. He countenanced Papal exactions on the Clergy f. 576. B. He was displeased with the Italian Clerks f. 577. D. He received the Homage of David Prince of Wales f. 578. C. He Resolved upon an Expedition into France though disswaded by the Parlement f. 581.582 How he was received in Gascoigny f. 583. F. His Daughter Margaret contracted to the King of Scots eldest Son Ibid. He refused to renew the Truce with France f. 584. B. The Earl of March deserted him f. 585. D. He was put to great streights and many flights Ibid. B. f. 586. A. B. Scutage paid him all over England f. 587. A. His Great Men leave him and return to England Ibid. B. He sent into England for supplies of Victuals and Money f. 587. C. 588. A. He was much deceived by Foreign Counsels f. 587. D. A Truce between him and France confirmed f. 588. B. His return into England and Pompous reception Ibid. C. D. He seized the Normans Estates in England f. 589. D. E. The King of Scots refused to be his Tenent f. 590. A. The Great Men refuse him an Aid unless their Grievances were redr●ssed Ibid. C. E. F. A new Government projected for him f. 591. B. His promise to the Great Men Ibid. E. Articles of Agreement between him and the King of Scots f. 592. A. His success in his Expedition against the Welch f. 593. F. 594. A. He first prohibited and then consented to the Popes Exactions f. 596. B. C. D. E. He restrained the Jurisdiction of the Clergy f 599. D. E. He was sharply reproved by his Great Men and then promised them to correct what was amiss f. 601. A. His Speech to the Parlement Ibid. C. He was constrained to sell his J●wels and Plate Ibid. D. E. His wants forced him to ask Money of his Subjects f. 602. B. C. D. He and s●veral of the Nobility undertake the Cross f. 603. B. He retrenched the Expence of his Houshold f. 604. E. His Daughter Margaret married to Alexander King of Scots f. 606. B. The Pope sollicited him to assist the King of France Ibid. D. Simon Montfort Earl of Leicester gave him the Lye f 607. E. The Great Men take his part against him f. 609. D. His want of Money reduced him to great streights f. 610. D. A tenth of all Church Revenues for three years and a Military Aid of three Marks granted him f. 611. A. B. His Expedition into Gascoigny and success Ibid. D. E. His Message to the Parlement at London for Assistance against the King of Spain f. 612. B. The Answer of the Queen Earl Richard and the Great Men Ibid. C. D. E. F. The Expences of his Expedition f. 613. B. He asked Money of his Great Men but was denied f. 614. A. His journey into Scotland to remedy his Daughters Complaints Ibid. E. His Brother Richard and the Great Men refused to lend him Money f. 615. E. F. His Demands for his Expedition into Sicily f. 617. B. C. D. Hard Conditions put upon him by the Pope f. 618. E. F. His kindness to his Brothers and various ways to raise Money f. 620. E. F. The great Interest of his Debts f. 621. A. He demanded his Rights in Normandy and France f. 622. C. He appeased the Pope with a Present of 5000 Marks f. 623. lin 3. He is upbraided by Montfort f. 624. B. He put himself under the Popes power Ibid. D. What he granted the Barons in the Parlement at Oxford f. Ibid. E. F. Why he l●ft out the Titles of Duke of Normandy and Anjou f. 635. C. He employed the Treasure in the Tower to repair it f. 636. D. False Stories report●d of him Ibid. E. The Pope absolved him from his Oath to the Barons Ibid. F. He is reconciled to his Great Men and confirmed the Oxford Ordinances f. 638. A. B. He displaced such Officers as were appointed by the Barons Ibid. D. The reasons why he stood not to his Oath Ibid. E. The Articles of the Peace between him and his Great Men f. 640. A. His Success against several places and refusal of the Barons Offer Ibid. E. F. f. 641. D. He and his Brother Richard taken prisoners Ibid. He appointed Conservators of the Peace f. 642. D. None to bear Arms without his Licence● f. 643. A. He was forced to agree to a new Form of Government f. 644. He stood obliged to confirm whatever Peter
Montfort should swear f. 645. E. And forced to own whatever Simon Montfort suggested f. 646. A. c. His Command to all Sheriffs to keep out Strangers Ibid. B. C. D. E. F. f. 647.648 A. He was put under Guardians and Keepers f. 649. A. His endeavors to reconcile Simon Montfort and the Earl of Glocester f. 650 A. B. He declared his Son Prince Edward a Rebel Ibid. E. F. He prohibited all his Subjects to assist him and commanded the Bishops to Excommunicate him f. 651. A. C. He was forced to declare his Loyal Subjects Rebels Ibid. F. He was wounded in the Battle at Evesham f. 652. F. He seized the Liberties of London f. 653. D. The Rebels Lands given him by Parlement Ibid. E. His Grant of them to his Faithful Subjects Ibid. F. His Clemency to such Rebels as submitted to him Ibid. He appointed a Custos of the City of London f. 654. B. F. His kind Offer to the Disinherited Barons f. 657. B. He was forced to pawn his Jewels f. 660. F. A Tenth upon all Ecclesiastical Revenues for three years granted to him by the Pope f. 663. B. C. He reduced or dispersed the Disinherited in the Isle of Ely f. 664. C. D. His great care to secure his Subjects Goods Ibid. F. His Sickness and Death f. 667. B. Church Affairs in his Reign f. 668 669 c. Taxes in his Reign f. 671 672. The Irish Affairs in his Reign f. 673 674. His Issue f. 675. Henry Eldest Sonto Henry 2. born f. 299. B. He was married to Margaret Daughter to the King of France f. 303. B. He received the Homages of the Bishops and Abbats of England King of Scots Princes of N. and S. Wales and their Great Men f. 304. C. F. He was made Seneschal of France and doth Homage to that King f. 307. C. He was Crowned King and made Viceroy of England f. 310. A. E. He was Crowned again with his Queen f. 311. C. He was alienated from his Father by the King of France f 312. D. He forced his Servants to swear Fealty to him against his Father f. 313 B. He received the Homages of many Great Men and Princes Ibid. E. His designed Expedition into England prevented f. 317. A. 318. F. 319. B. He was recalled by the French King Ibid. F. His submission to his Father and kind reception f. 321. A. B. C He did Homage to him f. 323. B. He passed over into Normandy with his Brother Richard fol. 329. lin 1. His undutifulness to his Father and submission f. 338. C. D. His Brother Geofry did him Homage but Richard refused Ibid. E. F. He and Geofry con●ederate against their Father f. 339. A. ●e undertook the Cross against his Fathers will Ibid. B. His Death Ibid. Henry Son to Richard King of the Romans sent as an Hostage by the Barons to Dover Castle f. 642. l. 2. He was slain at Viterbo in his return from Jerusalem fol. f. 666. l. 2. Henry Bishop of Winchester King Stephens Brother made Legat in England f. 277. l. 1. He Summoned King Stephen to appear before him Ibid. A. He sideth with Maud then Empress f. 283. B. He acknowledged her to be Queen Ibid. D. E. His Speech to the Bishops in her behalf against King Stephen f 284. His Answer to the Londoners Petition Ibid. E. He deserted the Empress and adhered to King Stephen f. 285. F. His complaint against the Empress and design to ruine her f. 287. B. He deposed her and Excommunicated her Friends Ibid. D. His Repentance and labors for an Agreement f. 293. A. Henry Earl of Britan doth Homage to Henry 3 d f. 543. E. He prevented the French Kings designs f. 546. E. He surrendred Britany to the French and turn'd Pyrate f. 562. C. D. Henry of Bath Justiciary of Henry 3 d accused of Bribery c. fol. 605. A. The King much incensed against him Ibid. C. Earl Richard stood his friend and made his peace Ibid. D. Heregeat or Heriot what it was f. 69. l. 1. And when paid f. 82. D. Hereward defended the Isle of Ely against the Conqueror f. 196. C. D. He made his escape f. 197. A. Herlot the Popes Notary sent into England f. 623. C. He privately withdrew himself f. 632. F. Hertoldus Governor of Mirabell Castle his fidelity to Hen. 3. f. 586. B. He was kindly used by the French King Ibid. C. Herulians who they were and where they dwelt f. 35. C. D. Hidage what it was f. 204. B. Hingnar and Hubba two Leaders of the Danes f. 113. D. Honor what it was f. 199. F. Honorius 3 d made Pope f. 528. A. He declared Hen. 3. to be of Age f. 533. B. His demands of the English Prelates by his Legat f. 538. B. Their Answer to his Demands f. 539. B. His Demands opposed and rejected in France Ibid. E. F. His Death f. 540. A. Horesti who they were and where they dwelt f. 26. D. Hubert Bishop of Salisbury accompanied King Richard to the Holy Land f. 428. l. 1. He was Elect●d Arch-Bishop of Canturbury and made Justiciary of England f 438. l. F. He excommunicated Earl John and his Accomplices f. 441. A. He was made the Popes Legat f. 447. E. He desired to be eased of his Justiciariship but was denied f. 448. B. What he raised in England in two years for the Kings use Ibid. C. The Monks of Canturbury complain against him to the Pope f. 449. F. He was removed from all Secular Offices upon the Popes Letter f. 450. A. He seized the Oblations at Beckets Tomb Ibid. E. He Crowned King John and Queen Isabel f. 468. A. His Death f. 474. C. Hubert de Burgh made Governor of Dover Castle f. 509. F. His resolute Answer to Prince Lewis his Summons f. 523. C. He Married the King of Scots Sister f. 530. B. How he punished the London Rioters f. 531. A. B. The great Mens complaint against him f. 533. A. He advised the K. to cancel the Charters he had granted f 539. F. He appointed what every one should pay for renewing their Charters f. 540. A. He is made Earl of Kent Ibid. C. He fell under the Kings displeasure but is soon reconciled fol. f. 543. C. D. E. The King wholly guided by him f. 545. A. He was accused for countenancing those that plundered the Italian Clercs f. 549. A. He is removed from his Office and charged with great crimes fol. 550. A c. He took Sanctuary and refused to plead Ibid. F. He was forceably drawn from thence f. 551. C. He was restored but after carried prisoner to the Tower Ibid. E. F. He submitted to the King and was committed to four Knights f. 552. B. D. He endeavored to make his escape but was taken and ill used fol. 557. C. D. He escaped into Wales in a Soldiers Habit f. 558. lin 3. He is reconciled to the K. received into his Council f. 560. D. F. He incurred his displeasure
Common Pleas by whom appointed Ibid. Justices Itinerant by whom sent f. 446. A. William Kele a Mediator between Henry the Third and his Barons f. 566. A. Kenelworth Castle stood out against Henry the Third f. 655. C. Their barbarous usage of the Kings Messenger f. 656. D. The Kings Clemency to the Defendants after it was taken f. 657. D. Dictum de Kenelworth where and upon what account made f. 658. A. c. Kent given to Hengist the Saxon by Vortigern f. 94. D. Kentish-men of their own accord submit to the Conqueror f. 189. E. They attempted Dover Castle but were beaten f. 192. A. Knight-hood when first instituted f. 56. A. All that had 10 l. per Annum forced to receive the Order f. 620. lin 4. Knights-Fees why called Scuta f 211. F. Twelve chosen in every County to inquire evil Customs and Practices f. 499. C. All that refused to obey them to be imprisoned Ibid. D. E. Four sent by the Barons to the Pope f. 632. B. Four chosen in every County to inquire into grievances fol. 633. A. They had their expences allowed Ibid. B. Three in every County summoned by the Barons to meet at St. Albans f. 637. F. Four summoned in every County to meet the King at London f. 642. F. L. HUgh de Lacy made Governor of Dublin by Henry the Second fol. 360. F. 370. C. He was revoked and soon after restored f. 371. D.F. He was discharged f. 372. A. His Prudent Management and Government of the Irish fol. 371. C. His Death f. 374. A. Lands how transferred before the Norman Conquest f. 204. lin 1. When first by Writings and Sealing Ibid. A. Lanfranc Arch-bishop of Canturbury his Controversie with Odo Earl of Kent for Land belonging to Canturbury f. 140. A. B. He pleaded his own Case and recovered his Lands Ibid. D. He presided in many Councils f. 215. A. The Controversie between him and York about Primacy determined on his side f. 214. A. Stephen Langton chosen Arch-bishop of Canturbury f. 476. B. He and other Bishops supplicate the Pope against King John f. 483. B. He pronounced the Sentence of Deposition against him and encouraged Philip King of France to execute it f. 484. A. B. He hindred King John from reducing his Barons f. 488. A. He confederated with them against the King Ibid. C. D. E. He is offended at the Popes Legate f. 490. F. He was the Head of the Barons Conspiracy f. 495. D. He was suspended for Disobedience to the Pope f. 503. F. He is absolved f. 507. C. He and the Great Men demanded a Confirmation of their Liberties of Henry the Third f. 531. D. He Excommunicated Falcasius and his followers f. 534. D. His Decree against Priests Concubines f. 536. F. His Death f. 541. B. Simon Langton his insolent reply to King John f. 478. E. He was chosen Arch-bishop of York but refused by the Pope f. 504. C. He was made Chancellor to Prince Lewis f. 510. D. He was excommunicated by Walo the Popes Legat Ibid. E. Roger de Lasci his Courage and Fidelity f. 472. F. 473. F. 2d Lateran Council held under Pope Innocent the Second f. 294. A. Canons and Constitutions made there brought hither Ibid. B. C. D. Amoric de Sancto Laurentio His Adventures and Courage in Irish Engagements f. 367. A. B. C. 368. B. Laws Salic Lombard Burgundian Wisigoths and Saxons when first written f. 60. D. G●rman how made f. 84. C. D. English Saxon how made f. 85. A. Danish and Mercian why so called Ibid. C. Different among Germans and Saxons Ibid. B. D. No Nation governed by the same f. 155 C. The chief of ours were Norman Ibid. E. and f. 161. A. B c. The Practice alike in both places f. 179. D. c. Of England not carried into Normandy by the Confessor fol. 180. B. C c. Canon Law when first brought into and used in England f. 296 E. Laws against Robbers of Warrens and Parks f. 594. C. Lawrentius succeeds Augustin in the Arch-bishopric of Canturbury fol. 104. A. Popes Legats none here before the Conquest f. 88. A. Not received in England before Henry the First f. 256. E. None to be sent hither but upon the Kings request f. 268. A. An Oath put upon one by Henry the Second f. 333. D. Legion how many men it consisted of f. 2. F. Pope Leo the Ninth his Letter to Edward the Confessor suspected fol. 91. C. D. Leofric Earl of Mercia opposed Earl Goodwin f. 132. D. Lewellin Prince of North Wales besieged Buet Castle without success f. 530. A. He bound himself by his Charter to satisfie for damages done to King Henry the Third f. 532. D. He made Incursions into England f. 546. D. He and his followers Excommunicated Ibid. A Truce between him and Henry the Third f. 560. F. It was violated but again renewed f. 563. F. The conditions of it f. 564. A. B. He put himself under the protection of Henry the Third fol. 567. A. Lewes a Battle fought there between Henry the Third and the Barons f. 641. D. E. Lewis King of France invaded Normandy f. 248. D. He was overthrown by Henry the First Ibid. F. His complaint of King Hen. in the Council at Rhemes f. 250. D. He was divorced from his Queen f. 291. D. His hatred to Henry the Second f. 311. E. His kindness to the Rebellious Sons of Henry 2d f. 313. C. D. He was routed by King Henry and hindred a peace between him and his Sons f. 214. D. E. 215. F. Articles of Agreement between King Hen. and him f. 332. A c. He came into England to visit St. Thomas his Tomb f. 335. A. His kind reception by King Henry and beneficence to the Monks Ibid. His Son Philip Crowned and proves undutiful to him Ibid. D. E. His death f. 33● D. Prince Lewis Son to Philip King of France chosen King of England by the English ●arons f. 5●7 A. He encouraged the Barons to persist in their Rebellion f. 5●● A. His Reasons against King John and the Pope Ibid. E. F. His Claim to England f. 5●9 l. ● He lan●ed in the Isle of Thanet Ibid. D. E. He was joyfully received by the Londoners and Barons f. 51● A. He was excommunicated by Walo the P●pes ●egat Ibid. E. His Envoys Objections and Replies to King John'● Commissioners f. 512 513 He ravaged over Essex Norfolk and Suffolk Ibid. C. D. Alexander King of Scots did him Homage and a●i●ed him Ibid. ● 514. D. His designs against the English Barons discovered Ibid. E. F. His success against m●ny places in England f. 522. C.D.E.F. He passed over Sea and lost his interest with the Barons f 524. C. His Army routed at Lincoln f. 526. B. The Succors sent him by his Wife beaten and taken Ibid. E. F. The form of Peace between him and Henry 3d. f. 527. B C D. He borrowed Money of the Londoners and left England Ibid. E. His Answer
on all sides they assail the Forragers and Charge up to the very Legions and Standards the Romans by a stout onset repelled them and the Horse never gave over the Pursuit being confident in the aid of the Legions that followed them until they totally routed them and having killed a great number of them The Britains Totally Routed Very many slain they gave them neither time to Rally to make a Stand or to leap from their Chariots Forthwith upon this Overthrow the Auxiliaries which had come from all parts departed neither after that time did the Enemy appear with so great strength Caesar knowing their Design Caesar Marches toward Cassibelans Country Marches with his Army towards the Frontiers of (h) Cassivellannus Cassibelanus or rather Cassibelinus Prince or Ruler of the Cassii Cassibelan Who. some remains of whom there seems yet to be Caisbo Hundred wherein are Situated the Ruines of Verulam Cassibelaus Chief Town Belinus signifying commonly in this Island a Chief King Prince or Ruler So Cinobelin as it were Icenobelin Prince of the Iceni Camb. Britan. 275.292 Annotations on Giral Cambr. Desc of Wales c. 3. Camb. Brit. 213. Bede Eccles Hist cap. 2. fol. 26. and happily might be the same that Czar Cham Sultan Tentomarus and Gottiso are and were among the Moscovites Tartars Turks Tentones and Goths Dr. Powel sayes further That Hely the Father of Lud and this Cassibeline was called Magnus Belinus that is Great Belin. Cassibelan upon the River Thames (i) Near Oatlands in Surrey sayes Cambden at a place called Cowaye-Stakes and in this conjecture he affirms he could not be mistaken for that it was 80 Miles from the Shore of Kent as Caesar accounted and for other Reasons there assigned which was passable with Foot in one place only and that with difficulty when he came thither he perceived great Forces of the Enemy in good Order ready to receive him on the other side of the River the Bank being set with (k) Bede says the Remains of these Stakes were to be seen in his time which were about the Bigness of a Mans Thigh and Plated over with Lead sharp Stakes and others of the same kind covertly placed in the River whereof Caesar having notice from Prisoners and Fugitives sending his Horse first over presently Commands his Legions to follow who waded over so speedily and resolutely their heads only appearing above water and both Horse and Foot Charged the Enemy with such violence that they forsook the Bank and fled Cassibelan now out of hope to contend for Victory Cassibelan dismisseth the greatest part of his Army Keepeth only 4000 Charioteers to attend Caesar's Motion dismisseth the greatest part of his Forces keeping about 4000 Chariots to attend the Motion of the Romans and going somewhat out of the way securing himself in Woods and Fastnesses drives all away both Men and Cattel where the Romans were to pass whose Horse as they roved up and down to Wast and Plunder the Charioteers sallying out of the Woods surprized and cut off hereupon Caesar commands them not to depart from the Legions so that now as they Marched there was nothing left to do but to Wast empty Fields and Burn Houses Meanwhile the (l) Trinobantes Middlesex and Essex Trinobantes a very considerable People among the Britains from whom (m) He is by Entropius Bede and later Writers called Androgens as is noted by Cambden but why he knows not unless for his Wickedness and Treason for such a signification is plainly couched in that Name and he was one of the three first that called the Romans into Britain and betrayed the Country Mandubrace went to Caesar into Gallia and followed his Fortune his Father Imanuentius having been King in that Country whom Cassibelan had slain and this young Man saving his Life by flight send Ambassadors to Caesar The Trinobantes send Ambassadors and yield themselves who promising to yield themselves and be at his Command desire him to Protect Mandubrace and to commit the Government of their Country unto him Caesar requires Forty Hostages and Provision for his Army and sends Mandubrace unto them they comply with his Commands and sent what he required The Trinobantes being Protected from the violence of the Soldier the (n) The * Camb. 329. Iceni Who. Cam. Brit. 19● There 273. There 207. Camb. Brit. 275.292 Cassibel Town There 292. Cam. Brit. 298. Dio. Book 43.224 225. Caesar 's Origin from Anchises and Venus Iceni who possessed Northfolk Southfolk Cambridge and Huntington-shires Cenimagni (o) were People in Hamshire in Holdshot Hundred and thereabouts Segintiaci (p) They inhabited Henley Hundred in Oxfordshire Ancalites (q) Their Seat was the Hundred of Bray about Maydenhead in Barkshire which seems to be a Contract from Bibract Bibroci (r) They gave name to the Hundred of Caisho● in Hertfordshire in which Old Verulam stood and where and in the Country thereabouts the Cassi were placed Cassi by their Ambassadors yield themselves to Caesar from these he understood Cassibelins (ſ) Verulam out of whose Ruines St. Albans was Built Town was not far off strengthned and surrounded with Woods and Marshes Several other Nations also yield to Caesar well filled with Men and Cattel for the Britains call intricate Woods compassed about with a Mud-Wall and a Ditch a Town whether they were wont to resort for the avoiding the Incursions of their Enemies Thither Marches Caesar with his Legions he found the place notably Fortify'd by Nature and Art yet he Assaults it in two places Cassibelin's Town The Britains for some while defended it but not able to sustain the Force of the Romans fled out at another part of the Town What a Town was among the Britains Cassibelin's Town taken great store of Cattel were found there many were taken and many were slain in their flight While these things are done here Cassibelin sends into Kent where there were Four Kings Reigning Cingetorix Carvilius Taximagulus and Seegonax them he Commands to raise all the Force they could The Roman Ship-Camp assaulted The Britains Beaten Lugotorix taken and suddenly to assault the Ship-Camp this was attempted but when they came near unto it the Romans sallyed out killed many of them and took their Noble Leader or Captain (t) Or Cingetorix rather Lugotorix retreating safely to their Camp Cassibelin hearing of the Event of this Enterprise being often defeated and his Country wasted but most of all moved with the Revolt of his (u) Cities or People for Caesar always called a People living under and using one Law and the same Customs Civitas or a City Cities useth the Mediation of Comius of Arras to send Ambassadors about his Submission to Caesar who determining to Winter in Gallia Caesar departs taking Hostages c. Thus far Caesar's Commentaries Pliny Nat. Hist lib. 9. c. 35. by reason of some sudden Commotions there and the Summer being almost
him Robert Fitz-Stephan and Maurice Fitz-Girald with other twenty Knights or men at Arms. To Humfry Bohun he gave the command of Waterford and left with him Robert Fitz-Bernard and Hugh de Gundevill with forty Knights or men at Arms William Fitz-Aldelm had the Government of Wexford and with him were Philip de Hasting and Philip de Breus with twenty Knights or men at Arms. [1] Ibid. n. 30. A. D. 1173. Having made this Settlement such as it was on Easter Monday Morning i. e. by Sun-rising he went on Ship-board in the furthermost part of the Haven of Wexford toward the Sea and landed near St. Davids in Wales about Noon that day saith my Welsh Historian and from thence with all imaginable speed he passed to Portsmouth He leaves Ireland and hastens into Normandy where the Ships lay ready to transport him into Normandy he had intended to have staid in Ireland all the Summer and to have reduced the King of Connaught and the whole Nation had it not been for this sudden avocation into Normandy about the business of Thomas Beckett and the Differences between him and the King of France that were to be composed and determined by the two Cardinals Not long after the King's departure having left the Nation in some tolerable Tranquility [2] Ibid. c. 40. Ororic's Treachery to destroy Lacy and Maurice Ororic the one-ey'd King of Meth and Hugh de Lacy gave Counter-Security and made Oath each to other for their safe coming and going to and from the place appointed on a certain day met at Ororic Hill to confer and discourse for the better and more peaceable ordering of their Affairs they were to meet but a small number equal on both sides and unarmed Grifin the Nephew of Maurice Fitz-Girald had a jealousie of the Treachery of Ororic and brought with him seven choice Knights or men at Arms of his Relations after some time spent in Discourse upon several Proposals to no purpose Ororic gave the sign to his men he had laid in Ambush for the destruction of Hugh Lacy and Maurice and advanced to smite Hugh with his Irish Axe with which stroke the Interpreter interposing himself had his Arm chopt off of which wound he died Maurice and his Nephew Grifin came in to the Rescue of Hugh Lacy which when Ororic saw he intended to fly but in the very act of mounting his Horse Grifin charged him so home with his Lance Ororic killed by Grifin Nephew to Maurice that he pierced both man and Horse killing them both and afterward his Servants that brought the Horse the rest fled to the Woods of which several were killed in the persuit Ororic's Head was sent into England to the King In this conflict Ralph the Son of Robert Fitz-Stephan deserved praise before others for his Valour and Courage The Rebellion of the Sons of the King against him at this time and the Dissention both in England and Normandy and other parts of France under his Dominion which the Irish very well understood [3] Ibid. l. 2. c. ● The Irish incouraged to throw off the E●glish Yoke gave them an opportunity of taking Arms and endeavouring to throw off the English Government all the Princes of the Nation were in this Confederacy For the Suppressing of this Insurrection and reducing the Country into order again Earl Richard Strongbow was sent over with the Kings Commission who in a short time spent all the Treasure he brought over with him his Soldiers also that were under the conduct of Hervey de Monte-Morisco or Mont-Morice then * Herveio se Constabularium jam geren●e The S●ldiers desire Reymund for their General Constable or General wanted their Pay who came unanimously to the Earl affirming that unless he would make Reymund their General again they would all presently leave him and either return into England or go over to his Enemies In [4] Ibid. c. 2. Reymund invades and Plunders Ophaly this time of necessity Reymund was made Commander in Chief of these Forces with which he invaded Ophaly and got good Plunder recruiting his Soldiers with Horse and Arms from hence he went to Lismore and plundered that City and the Country about and laded with their great Booty some small Vessels which came from Waterford and other places which they found there and carried it to Waterford by Sea in the way they were set upon by the Inhabitants of Cork distant from Lismore sixteen Miles who had manned out 32 Vessels of War to intercept them There was a smart Engagement at length the men of Cork were beaten and their Admiral Gilbert Fitz-Cutger killed by Philip Welsh a very stout young man and Adam of Hereford came safe into Waterford with his whole Charge He vanquishes Fitz-Cutger and puts Dermot to flight Reymund was not in this Rencounter but by the way coming by the Coast to Waterford met with Dermot Mac-Carty Prince of Desmond coming to the assistance of Cork men they skirmished Dermot left the Field and Raymund went to Waterford with 4000 Head of Cattle Soon [5] Ibid. c. 3. after Reymund had notice that his Father William Fitz-Girald was dead and passed over into Wales in whose absence Hervey Mont-Morice was made Constable or Commander again in Chief of these Forces and that he might seem to do something extraordinary drew the Earl and the Soldiers with him to Cassil where the Forces of Dublin were commanded to meet them In their march thither they quartered one night at Ossory of which Donald O Breen Prince of Limerick had certain advice by his Scouts very early in the Morning he beat up their Quarters and killed 300 Ostmans The Irish unanimously rise up against the English with four Knights that commanded them the Earl hearing this returned in disorder to Waterford Upon occasion of this accident the whole People of Ireland unanimously rise against the English so as the Earl was as it were besieged in Waterford Roderic Prince of Connaught passed the River Shanon and invaded Meth demolished the Castles being without Garisons and with Fire and Sword wasted the Country almost to the very Walls of Dublin The Earl [6] Ibid. c. 4. was in a great streight and wrote into Wales to Reymund that he would return with all speed and bring what Aid he could and then upon his first landing he should enjoy and receive in Marriage his Sister whom he had long loved with all imaginable speed he and his Cousin Meyler with thirty Gentlemen of their kindred an hundred Horse and three hundred Archers chosen men of Wales shipped themselves in fifteen Vessels and landed at Waterford The Waterfordians design to kill all the English within their Walls at this time the Waterford men had designed to kill every English man within the Walls but when they saw these Vessels come from Wales with Flags and Banners displayed they altered their purpose So soon as Reymund entred Waterford with his
with such suceess that no one durst withstand him He took the City of Limeric and the Kings Castles as well as those of his Enemies The Irish let him know by certain Templars sent to him That he acted traiterously against his Prince in Ireland as he had done in England and by Geofry Marsh or de Marisco his contrivance was desperately [5] fol. 400. lin 4. wounded in Fight and taken prisoner where after some days continuance he dyed of his wounds [6] fol. 403. n. 10. The King laments his death When the King received the news of his death he much lamented the loss of so great a Soldier affirming he had not left his [7] Ibid. n. 30. He inviteth the proscribed Noblemen to an accommodation equal in the Kingdom The Archbishops and Bishops returned from Lewelin to the King at Glocester and informed him That before any Treaty he desired the Noblemen that were confederated with him might be received into Favor Then the King sent out his [8] Ibid. n. 40. A. D. 1234. Letters to all those that were proscribed to meet at Glocester on the 29th of May to be reconciled unto their King and to be restored to their Inheritances The Archbishop and Bishops promising them safe Conduct [9] Ibid. n. 50. The first that came to the Kings Peace was Hubert de Burgh late Justiciary of England and Earl of Kent whom the King received with Kisses and Embraces [1] fol. 404. n. 10 20. They accept the Offer and are reconciled to the King After him came Gilbert Basset and Richard Sward with many others who were proscribed with them and were all received with the Kiss of Peace and reconciled to the King and had all their Rights and Inheritances restored of which their Reconciliation [2] Append. N. 155. Several of them received into his Council and Restoration he gave Lewelin speedy notice and also at the Intercession of the Archbishop He Granted to Gilbert Brother to Richard Earl Mareschal late deceased all his Inheritance both in England and Ireland and received his Homage And on Whitsunday following at Worcester He Knighted him and gave him the Mareschals Staff of his Court and received Hubert de Burgh Gilbert Basset and Richard Sward into his Councils The Archbishop and Bishops that were sent to Treat with Lewelin made a [3] Ibid. n. 156. A Truce made between the King and Lewelin Prince of Wales Truce for two yeas from the Feast of St. James or 25th of August following upon these conditions That all injuries done on both sides since the last Truce should be referred to those ●at made it That all Lands taken from any one in the late War should be restored That all Men and Tenents that had receded from the Fealty of their Lords and adhered to the contrary party might return again without damage or being questioned for it Of this Truce he gave notice to his Brother Richard Earl of Cornwal and Ralph de Tony that they might be taken into it if they would for their Lands in the Marches At the same meeting the Arch-Bishop produced a Copy [4] 〈◊〉 n. 30 40. of that Treacherous Letter that was sent into Ireland against Richard Earl Mareschal And the King The treacherous design against the Life of Richard Earl Mareschal discovered The King summoned his old Counsellors to give up their Accounts and to stand to the Law before the whole Assembly of the Bishops Earls and Barons protested that through the importunity of the Bishop of Winchester Peter de Rivallis and other Counsellors he consented his Seal should be put to those Letters but assured them upon his Oath he never saw the Tenor of them Then the King summoned the Bishop of Winchester Peter de Rivallis Stephan Segrave and Robert Passelew to appear on the Feast of St. John Baptist to give up their Accounts and to answer to such Crimes as should be objected against them and stand to the Law But being conscious of their own wickedness and not daring to stand a Tryal some took Sanctuary in Cathedral or Conventual Churches and others fled as was believed but hid themselves in the New Temple Then the King [5] fol. 405. n. 10 20 30. Peter de Rivallis severely rebuked and threatened by the King at the request of the Arch-Bishop promised them safe Conduct and appointed the 14th of July for them to appear at Westminster to answer to the Articles against them Peter de Rivallis was the First that appeared in a Clercs Habit and saluted the King sitting upon the Bench with his Justices who as soon as he saw him called him Traytor and accused him for giving him pernicious Counsel and required him to give an account of his Treasuryship the Wardships of young Noblemen and Women and Escheats and other Profits of the Crown and then told him he would commit him to the Tower He said he was a Priest and ought not be imprisoned or be in the custody of Lay-men The King told him he had hitherto behaved himself as a Lay-man and as such he exacted what was committed to him yet said the Arch-Bishop was present and if he would undertake for him he should be delivered to him He was silent and the King sent him to the Tower He is committed to the Tower and seized all his Lay-possessions because under his Clercs Habit he had a Coat of Mayl and a Knights Falchion at his Girdle which did not become a Clerc he remained there only two days and then was taken out by the Arch-Bishop carried to Winchester But ta●en out by the Arch-Bishop and put into the Cathedral The same [6] Ibid. n. 40. Stephen Segrave called to an Account day appeared Stephan Segrave before the King He called him Traytor and added that it was by his wicked Counsel Hubert Earl of Kent was removed from the Office of Justiciary and imprisoned And that many of the Nobility were proscribed He required him also to give an Account of his Justiciaryship and by the Mediation of the Arch-Bishop and Bishops gave him time till Michaelmass following to prepare for it Hugo de Pa●eshulle named Justiciary Then the King named Hugo de Pateshulle a Clerc his Justiciary Son of Simon de Pateshulle who had formerly managed that Office with great integrity This year about the Feast of St. John Baptist The [7] fol. 406. lin ● The King sendeth Aid to the Earl of Brittain Truce between the Kings of England and France expiring King Henry sent over to the Earl of Brittain Sixty Knights and 2000 Welch to enable him to strengthen the weak places of his Dominions because the King of France had raised a great Army and had actually besieged one of the Earl of Brittains Castles but was soon defeated by the English Forces Their success against the French The King of France resolves to invade Brittain and many of the French were slain and all their
Brittain and his Calesians who had already thrice set upon them and spoiled them to their irreparable loss and damage both of Men Ships and Goods When the Archbishop heard their Answer He signified the same to the King and desired [9] fol. 599. n. 10. him to hasten his return into England On St. Gregories Day March 12th the 1 Fol. 600. n. 10. The Truce between England and France confirmed Five years Truce between the King of England and France were confirmed and by Agreement the King of France was to retain what he had got by the Sword and what the King of England had acquired by the help of the Gascoins was to be Restored to him About this time 2 Ibid. n. 40 50. The Kings passage into England delayed by many Accidents He commit's the Government of Gascoigny to Nicholas de Molis the King wrote to the Arch-bishop to provide such as might secure his passage into England commanding all the Great men to be in a readiness at Portsmouth to receive him at his Landing but by many accidents his passage was delayed the Queen was scarce recovered from her Childbed the Citisens of Burdeaux and all the Gasconians were unwilling to part with so profitable a Guest who was so generous in his distributions and after he was shipped he was forced to return again to Burdeaux to quiet the Tumults that arose among the Gascoinians whereby the Archbishop and Great men of England were wearied out with long attendance At length after he had settled Gascoigny and committed the Government of that Country to Nicholas de Molis he again took Ship and landed at Portsmouth on the 25 of September and was received at [3] fol. 604. n. 20 30. The King received by his Subjects with the greatest instances of Gratitude and Joy Winchester by almost all the Nobility with all demonstration of Joy and thanks and by the Citisens of London with variety of Inestimable Gifts and by the Clergy with a Pompous and Sumptuous Procession on the 13th of October following This Year on the Nativity of St. John Baptist Innocent the 4th was chosen Pope after One Year and Nine Moneths vacancy This Year the Jews [4] fol. 605. n. 50. The Jews forced to pay great Sums of money to the King The Religious made him great presents were forced to pay to the King great Sums of Money the Abbats also and Priors presented him with great Gifts which if they did not in value answer his expectation He rejected them and required others of more value On the first of November [5] fol. 606. n. 40. Beatrix Countess of Provence the Queens Mother came into England and brought with her her Daughter Cincia who was soon after Marryed [6] Ibid. n. 40. Earl Richard married to Cincia Daughter to Beatrix Countess of Provence to Earl Richard at Westminster on Saint Clements-Day the 23d of that Month and _____ th Weding was celebrated with great Pomp and Feasting there being no less than 30000 Dishes provided for one Dinner Triginta Millia Ferculorum prandentibus parabantur In the Year 1244. King Henry at [7] fol. 613. n. 30. The King and Court treated by Earl Richard at Wallingford Christmass was entertained at Wallingford by his Brother Earl Richard and nobly treated as likewise were most of the Nobility of the Nation his Wife C●ncia was there with Beatrix her Mother who soon after took her solemn [8] Ibid. n. 40. leave of the King and Court took Ship at Dover and passed into her own Country About this Time the Pope sent Master [9] Ibid. n. 50. Innocent the 4th Martin the Pope's Legate sent into England with an Exorbitant power He Exercise's it accordingly Martin his Legat into England with power to Excommunicate and Suspend whomsoever he should find refractory to his Commands by which Authority He suspended several Praelates until they should make such a provision for the Popes Clerks and Kinsmen as he desired who thought any Revenue under 30 Marks by the Year not worth his receiving lest he seem to be a Collector of Triffles Ne quisquilias colligere videretur Moreover he directed his Letters to several Abbats and Priors strictly injoyning them to send him such Horses as were fit for the Popes special Clerk and if they refused or made any Excuse though never so reasonable they were forthwith suspended as the Abbat of Malmsbury and Prior of Merton were until they should make full satisfaction and when any Prebendaries of Churches became void He presently seized them and by Virtue of the Popes Authority disposed of them as he pleased and gave one of the rich Praebendaries of Salisbury to a little Boy that was his Nephew against the Will of the Bishop and the whole Chapter Near the beginning of this Year the King of France [1] fol. 614. n. 50. The King of France his Offer to his Subj●cts that had Estates in England and France The King of England would not consent to it assembled at Paris all such of his Subjects that had possessions in England and declared to them That He thought they could not serve faithfully two different Lords at the same time and then gave them their Choice to whom they would adhere and after that to relinquish their possessions and Lands in the other Princes Dominions Upon this some kept their Estates in France and left those in England others kept their Estates in England and left those in France When this was known to the King of England He commanded the Normans Estates in his Realm to be forthwith Seized and would not give them their Liberty of Choice as the King of France had done this was by the French looked upon to be a breach of the Truce But their King was not so well recovered or at leisure to prosecute the violation by a new War but endeavoured to appease and repress the querulous Invectives His Norman Subjects made against the King of England In February King Henry received [2] fol. 616. n. 50. Several new Counsellers made Sir Paulinus Piper Steward of his Household and John Mansell Chancellor of St. Pauls into his Council and Master Lawrence of St. Martins was made Praesident of his Council and his Procurator in all Ecclesiastical Affairs [3] fol. 617. n. 20. The Unfortunate End of Griffin Prince Leolins Son About the same time Griffin Son of Leolin Prince of North Wales Prisoner in the Tower of London endeavoured to make his escape out of Prison by a Rope fastened to the Top of the Tower but being a Man of great bulk and weighty the Rope brake in his descent and he perished by that fall which happened on the 1st of March A. D. 1244. This Year notwithstanding their Oaths Engagements and Charts the Welch men and their Prince had made to King Henry [4] fol. 638. n. 10. The Welch revolt from King Henry they Revolted from his Obedience and made War
Procurators returned without [7] f. 681. n. 30. a satisfactory Answer yet at length he [8] f. 696. n. 10 20 30 40. The Popes Grant to Patrons of Benefices i● England Granted that all Patrons both Lay and Ecclesiastic should present whom they would to Ecclesiastic Benefices without the Let or hinderance of him or his Legats But afterwards with a Non [8] f. 668. n. 20. Obstante to this privilege he totally destroyed it when ever he had a Mind to prefer any of the Italian Clergy About the Beginning of July the King [1] fol. 660. n. ●0 Clau. 29. Hen. 3 M. 8. D. The King prepares for an Expedition into Wales Summoned all the Earls Barons Knights and others that held of him in Military Service and Serjeanty to March with him into Wales or to send their Service The Welchmen kept themselves upon their Mountains and in their Woods and fastnesses and took their Opportunities now and then to Destroy some Parties of the English and all that King Henry did in 10 Weeks time was to [2] f. 682. n. 20. f. 683. f. 684. n. 30. build the Castle of Bannoc which when he had finished and put a strong Garrison into it he returned into England having destroyed all the Victuals and Forrage upon the Borders and in those parts of Wales where he had been and returned into England with his Army At the same time the Irish by the King's Command landed in the Isle of Anglesey which was the place of Refuge for the Welch and burnt and destroyed the whole Country In the Spring following [3] f. 695. n. 40. A. D. 1246 Prince David dyeth without Issue died David Prince of b. The Prince of north-Northwales was the [7] Dr. Pow. Hist of Wales p. 315. Superior of all the Princes of Wales to whom the other Princes of South Wales and Powls paid a certain Tribute yearly as appears in the Laws of Howel Dha Northwales without Issue in whose place the Welchmen chose the Son of Griffin Prince of Wales Dr. Powel says from the British History That the Lords and Barons of Wales upon the Death of David came together and chose [ ] History of Wales p. 314. Owen and Lewelin who divided the Principality between them and received their Homages This year in a Parlement at London there were severe A Parlement at London Laws made against such as Robbed Parks or Warrens [6] Paris ut supra f. 695. n. 50. lib. Additam f. 156. n. 10. Laws made against Robbers of Warrens and Parks If the Malefactor fled and was Killed there was neither Law or Appeal allowed for his Death If an Earl Baron or Knight complained to the King that his Deer was stoln and Inquisition was made by the Kings Writ if he that was Indicted was Convicted he was to lye in the Kings Prison a Year and a Day and to pay three years value of his Estate having just sufficient allowed out of it to maintain him after which the King was to have two parts and he that received the injury one and then he was to find twelve Sureties that he should never do the like again in Parks Warrens or Forests nor do any thing against the Kings Peace who were to answer for his Body and Transgression And if any one were taken in a Park or Warren without the Kings Writ of Inquisition he was to be Imprisoned Fined and to give Sureties as before On Mid-Lent Sunday a most General Parlement of the whole Kingdom met at London according to Summons [8] Paris f. 698. n. 40 50. A General Parlement held at London where the King Conferred with the Bishops apart the Earls and Barons apart and the Abbats and Priors apart about the Popes not keeping his promises concerning the Removal of their Grievances which were these Papal Exctions and Oppressions First That the Pope not content with the payment of Peter-pence oppressed the Kingdom by Extorting from the Clergy great Contributions without the Kings Consent against the Antient Customes Liberties and Rights of the Kingdom and against the Appeal of the Procurators of the King and Kingdom in the General Council of Lyons Secondly The Church and Kingdom were oppressed in that the Patrons of Churches could not present fit persons to them because they were given by the Popes Letters to Romans who understood not the English Language and carried all the Money out of the Kingdom to the Impoverishing of it Thirdly The Nation was oppressed by the Popes Exaction of Pensions from Churches Fourthly The Church and Nation suffered for that Italians succeeded Italians and the English were forced to prosecute their right out of the Kingdom against the Customes and Written Laws thereof and against the Indulgencies of the Popes Predecessors granted to the King and Kingdom of England Fifthly The Church and Nation infinitely suffered by reason of the Clause of Non obstante which weakned and enervated all Oaths Ancient Customes Written Laws Grants Statutes and Privileges Sixthly The Church and Kingdom suffered for that in the Parishes where the Italians were Beneficed there was no Alms no Hospitality no Preaching no Divine Service no care of Souls nor Reparations done to the Parsonage Houses The Result of the Conferences upon these Grievances was That yet The result of this Conference upon these Grievances for the Reverence due to the Apostolic See they should again Supplicate the Pope by Letters to remove the intolerable Grievances and importable yoak and this was done according to the Kings separate Discourse with them The King wrote by [9] f. 699 700 701. himself the Bishops by themselves the Abbats by themselves and the Earls and Barons by the name of the Vniversity of England by themselves as appears by their particular Letters extant in Mat. Paris But notwithstanding this Appeal [1] f. 681. n. 40. The English Bishops at the Council of Lyons imposed upon by the Pope the Pope just before the Dissolution of the Council of Lyons caused the English B●shops to put their Seals to the Instrument of King John by which he engaged himself and Heirs to pay a Thousand Marks a year to Innocent the Third and his Successors Fulk Bishop of London was very unwilling to do it yet at last he suffered himself to be overcome They then also Signed the Instrument of the Deposition of Frederic the Emperor And yet further to the great prejudice of the King and Kingdom he [2] f. 701. n. 50. A new Oppression of the English Bishops by the Pope sent his Apostolic Commands to the Bishops That some of them should find him 15 others 10 others 5 stout men well Horsed and Armed for one year as the Pope should direct And lest the King should make provision against this Exaction the Bishops were Commanded not to discover it under pain of Excommunication This year by great [3] f. 705. n. 30. The Office of Marescalcie granted
nor sent and of all such as depart without his Licence and keep them safe until further Order On the 24th of September the King [3] Pat. 48 Hen. 3. M. 3. Dors. wrote to the Sheriff of Oxford and Buckingham Shires to Command and Injoyn all Knights and Free-tenants in his Bailywic that were able to bear Arms and had Lands to the value of an Hundred Shillings or Ten Pounds a year under the penalty of losing all the Lands and Tenements they held in the Kingdom that they should come to him in their proper Persons with Horse and Arms where-ever he was in England in all haste to oppose the Strangers that were to come from beyond Sea who were to be furnished with Money for their Expences in the Army until Three Weeks after Michaelmass and the Sheriffs were to provide for the Expences of such as were not Able by taxing the County and also for the Expences of the Foot Matthew Westminster [4] f. 385. n. 10. What the King of France thought of the English says That almost all France as far as the Alps by the Instigation of the King of France Peter Earl of Savoy Boniface Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Elect of Lyons and other of the Queens Relations was in great Indignation with the English that behaved themselves Seditiously toward and Traiterously opposed their King which might raise a Suspicion in them of the Inclinations and willingness of those People to Assist the King but speaks not of any Shipping provided or Forces raised there to reduce them to Obedience Though the [5] Paris f. 996. n. 40 50. A. D. 1265. 49th Hen. 3. King was in the Custody of the Earl of Leicester and under his Power Richard King of Almain Prisoner in the Tower and their two Eldest Sons Prisoners and Hostages in Dover Castle Some Loyal Barons take up Arms against Montfort Yet there remained in the Marches of Wales several Stout and Loyal Barons Roger Mortimer Iames Audley Roger de Leyburn Roger de Clifford Hamo L'estrange Hugh Turbervile and many others being much troubled at the Usage of the King and Prince with one Consent took Arms against the Earl of Leicester They brake down the Bridges upon the River Severn and secured themselves in the Borders of Wales on the West side of it To Reduce these [6] Mat. Westm f. 389. n. 40 50. Montfort carries the King with him to oppose them Assumpsit secum Regem Henricum quem habuit adeo acclivem c. Montfort carried with him the obsequious King made so by Threats and marched with a great Army to Worcester And having his Fast Friend Leolin Prince of Wales to come upon the back of them they were forced to make a Peace on Condition they should leave the Nation for a year and deliver up their Castles to Leicester The Barons constreined to deliver up their Castles to him To which Terms they the more readily consented that Prince Edward might be freed of his Imprisonment by this Means Leicester became possessed of almost all the Castles upon the Marches from Bristol to Chester which City and Castle with the Earldom and Honour and the Appurtenances Prince Edward granted to him [7] Pat. 49 Hen. 3. M. 6. He made a plentiful provision for himself and Family under pretence of an Exchange before his Liberty could be Treated of which Grant was Confirmed by the King on the 20th of March following and also the [8] Cart 49 Hen. 3. M. 4. Castle and Honour of Pe● the Castle and Town of Newcastle Underline in Staffordshire were then granted with them to him and his Heirs And now all things being quiet in the [9] Mat. Westm f. 390. lin 7. Marches of Wales the King went toward Woodstock to keep his Christmass there And the Earl Fortune favouring him in all things he had contrived celebrated the same [1] Ibid lin 9. He Governs and Orders every thing in the Kingdom Feast at his Castle of Kenelworth At this time all England but the utmost North Parts of it which as yet held out against him by the Instigation of the King of Scots and John Baliol was subject to him [2] Ibid n. 10. The King only as a Shadow and always under a Guard all things were ordered by him all the Kings Castles were put into his hands Nor was the King that had now Reigned near fifty years any more than a Shadow so that he could not walk in his own Land without a Keeper and Guard and under the total Disposition of some other person And his [3] Ibid. f. 394. n. 30. Who were his Keepers Keepers usually were Montfort's Sons Hugh D'espenser and John Fitz-John the Earl of Glocester being excluded from the Custody of him whom they only feared as able to break this Confederacy They divide the Kings Castles and Forts among themselves All the Kings Castles and strong Forts of the Kingdom they divided amongst themselves and made the Kings capital Enemies Officers of his House There was also at this time much Discourse of [4] Ibid. n 40. Prince Edward purchaseth his Liberty Releasing Prince Edward which had continued almost a year until he had given him for his Liberty of being a Prisoner only at large the Earldom of Chester And for this [5] The Writ of Summons Cause chiefly and to Treat of some other Difficult Matters of the Kingdom was the famous Parlement of the 49th of this King called the first [a] Though the Keepers of the Peace in each County had Writs directed to them to send four Knig●t● to that Convention called a Parlement in June 48th of this King yet that was not a Parlement according to this Method and the Usage afterward for there was neither Citizens nor Burgesses nor any to Represent the Chapter of Cathedral Churches or the Ordinary Clergy and without doubt these four were of the Number of the small Barons or Tenants or Community in Capite and called to Represent them to give the more Credit to the Traiterous Ordinance then made Pattern of our Parlement since that time or from the eighteenth of Edward the First For the History whereof how it was summoned why called and the old way of Parlements at this time changed I refer the Reader to my Answer to Mr. Petyts Book of the Rights of the Commons asserted in my Introduction to the Old English History from fol. 136. F. to fol. 143. D. But Prince Edwards Release could not be agreed upon in this Parlement whatever other Business might be dispatch'd for there was another Treaty about it with the Great Men upon [6] Pat. 49 Hen. 3. n. 100. Thursday the morrow of Ash-Wednesday and the Discharge from the King to Henry Montfort his Keeper for the [7] Append. 219. Prince Edward still a Prisoner at large Receipt of his Body bears Date 10th of March and when he was released out of Dover Castle he
gratiam neque crudelitatem faciet quam praedictum est In cujus rei testimonium Dominus Rex praedicti Richardus Comes Cornubiae Pict●biae Willielmus Comes Warrennae Richardus Marelcallus Comes Penbrot Iohanes Comes Lincolniae Constabularius Cestriae huic scripto sigilla sua apposuerunt Hiis testibus Radulfo filio Nicholai Thoma de Muleton Willielmo de Insula Ricardo Duket Ada●o filio Willielmi Willielmo de Rak Roberto de Lexinton Radulfo de Norwico Civibus London aliis fidelibus Domini Regis ibidem existentibus REx omnibus c. Pat. 17. Hen. 3. M. 9. n. 31. Sciatis quod cum Lewelinus princeps de Abersrau Dominus Snauwerden nobis concesserit firmiter N. 153 promiserit quod stabit provisioni venerab lium Patrum Radulphi Cicestrensis Episcopi Cancellarii nostri Alexandri Coventrensis Lychefeld Episcopi dilectorum sid lium nostrorum R●chardi Marceschalli Comitis Penbroc Iohannis de Lascy Comitis Lincolniae Constabularii Cestriae Stephani de Segrave Justiciarii nostri Angliae Radulphi filii Nicholai Seneschalli nostri una cum Idenebet Senescallo ipsius Lewelini Werrenoc fratre ejus Amano Vathan Dav●● Clerico quam ipsi facturi sunt super congruis emendis nobis faciendis de omnibus excessibus nobis nostris ab eo suis factis de restitutione nobis hominibus nostris facienda de omnibus terris possessionibus nostris nostrorum per ipsum Lewelinum Walenses occupatis occasione Werrae inter nos ipsum morae simul etiam de recipienda restitutione a nobis nostris de omnibus terris ipsius Lewelini hominum suorum per nos nostros occupatis occasione Werrae praedictae de assignanda He was Son to Lewelin by Elianòr Daughter to Simon Montfort and Elianor his Wife Sister to H. 3. David filio ipsius Lewelini Ysabellae uxori ejus primogenitae filiae haeredis Willielmi de De Braosa Breus rationabili portione ipsam Ysabeliam contingente de terris quae fuerunt praedicti Willielmi patris sui de refusione pecuniae nobis facienda pro praedictis excessibus congrue emendandis portione praedicta assignanda provisa tamen super hoc ab eisdem sufficiente securitate de fideli servitio nobis praestando de tranquillitate nobis regno nostro Angliae observanda Ita quod dampnum vel periculum nec nobis nec regno nostro inde possit evenire Et si pendente provisione praedicta aliquid de novo emerserit emendandum idem Lewelinus voluerit concesserit quod per praedictos provisores emendetur Nos provisionem eorundem quam facturi sunt super omnibus praemissis gratam habemus acceptam pro nobis nostris sicut praefatus Lewelinus pro se suis Et in hujus rei testimonium has literas patentes inde fieri fecimus Teste me ipso apud Salop Septimo die Decembris anno regni nostri decimo Septimo Lewelin was Prince of north-North-Wales but here called Prince of Aberfrau and Lord of Snawden from the places of his abode Pat. 17. H. 3. M. 1. De Justitiariis Constitutis ad abjurationem Regni REx probis hominibus de Comitatu Wilts Sciatis quod constituimus Radulfum de Bray Radulfum de Norwico Justiciarios nostros ad abjurationem regni nostri Recipiendam de Huberto de Burgo si ecclesiam exire in Curia nostra juri stare noluerit vel ad justitiam ei in Curia nostra exhibendam si ecclesiam exire in N. 154 Curiam nostram ad hoc intrare voluerit secundum conventiones inter nos ipsum factas Mandamus autem vobis quod si praedictus Hubertus unum praedictorum nec aliud facere voluerit tunc Ecclesiam Sancti Iohannis Divisarum in qua se tenet Cemiterium ejusdem ecclesiae cum omni diligentia custodiatis sicut ipsi vobis dicent ex parte nostra In cujus c. Teste Petro Wintoniensi Episcopo apud Westmonasterium quintodecimo die Octobris Cl. 18. H. 3 M. 20. Dors REx c. Lewelino Principi de Aberfrau Salutem Sciatis quod recepimus in gratiam nostram Gilbertum Mareschallum N. 155 Of which the chief were Watler and Anselm their Brothers Gilbert and Philip Basset and Richard Sward See Cl. 18. H. 3. M. 19. Dors omnes qui fuerunt Inprisii Richardi Mareschalli tam de Anglia quam de Wallia qui ad pacem nostram venire voluerunt eis reddidimus omnes terras tenementa sua quae de nobis tenuerunt de quibus disseisiti fuerunt occasione guerrae motae inter nos praedictum Comitem nobis remanent quieta quaecumque super nos nostros per dictum Comitem vel suos imprisios occupata fuerunt quae vobis duximus significanda Volentes quod vobis innotescant quae penes nos acta sunt in hac parte Et quia per venerabilem patrem Edmundum Cantuariensem Archiepiscopum Coepiscopos suos captae sunt treugae inter nos vos sub firma spe tractandi de pace inter nos vos formanda fortius firmanda Mittimus propter hoc praedictum Archiepiscopum venerabiles patres Alexandrum Note in these times this Bishop sometimes had this Title and sometimes the Title of Bishop of Chester Coventrensem Lychefeldensem Henricum Roffensem Coepiscopos suos ad partes Marchiae Ita quod erunt apud Salop die Lunae in Crastino Sanctae Trinitatis rogamus vos quatinus sicut nostram desideratis amicitiam non omittatis quin in Crastino die Martis loco tuto competenti quem praedictus Archiepiscopus vobis significabit ipsi Archiepiscopo Coepiscopis suis occurratis ad tractatum cum eis habendum super praemissis In quorum etiam ore quaedam quae non duximus scripto commendanda posuimus vobis plenius exponenda rogantes quatinus sicut decet taliter ea quae reformationem pacis respiciunt qua ipsi plenius in hac parte vobis explicabunt audire cum effectu eisdem adquiescere velitis quod non stet per vos quin firmum et stabile pacis vinculum inter nos et vos roboretur ad nostrum pariter et vestrum commodum et honorem Tes●e Rege c. The Date of the next preceeding Record is May 31. and the next following is Dated June the 6th REx c. dilecto et fideli suo Richardo Comiti Cornubia et Pictaviae Salutem Cl. 18. H. 3. M. 17. Dors Sciatis quod treugae captae sunt inter nos et Lewelinum N. 156 Principem de Abberfrau per venerabilem patrem Edmundum Cantuariensem Archiepiscopum et Episcopos secum adjunctos et quosdam alios fideles nostros propter hoc ad partes Walliae destinatos duraturae à festo Sancti Jacobi anno regni nostri
demands Ibid. D. He and his Sons banished Ibid. F. They much infest the English Coast fol. 133. D. The difference between the King and them composed Ibid. E. F. His sudden death f. 134. A. Gogmagog Hills a Roman Camp f. 48. B. Goisfrid Bishop of Constance Chief Justiciary of England f. 151. C. D. Gothrun King of the Danes converted to Christianity f. 115. B. Northumberland granted to him by Elfred Ibid. C. Gratian otherthrown and slain by Maximus f. 37. D. John de Gray Bishop of Norwich chosen by the Monks Arch-bishop of Canturbury f. 474. E. The Suffragans oppose his Election f. 475. A. The Pope gave sentence on the Monks side Ibid. B. His Election nulled by the Pope f. 476. A. Walter de Gray chosen Arch-bishop of York and gave 10000 l. for his Pall f. 405 C. He was made Governor of England by Henry the Third f. 583. E. Gregory the Ninth made Pope f. 540. A. He voided and confirmed Elections of Bishops at his pleasure f. 542. B. C. A Tenth of all Moveables granted and paid him in England and Ireland Ibid. E. F. His Policy to get Money from the English f. 565. D. He Excommunicated Frederic the Emperor f. 572. C. He and the Conclave chose Robert Brother to Lewis King of France Emperor f. 573. F. His Demands of the Abbat and Convent of Burgh f. 577. C. The Monks Answer to his Demands Ibid. D. His Death 581. B. His Collector too nimble for Henry the Third Ibid. Griffin Son of Lewellin Prince of Wales treacherously used by his Brother David f. 578. lin 1. He offered to become Tenant to Henry the Third Ibid. A. and 579. C. His unfortunate Death f. 589. F. Ralph de Guader conspired against the Conqueror f. 20● B. C. He was defeated and put to flight and his followers barbarously used Ibid. D. His Valour in defence of Bretevil Castle f. 249. D. E. Guido the first Legat ever the Pope sent into England f. 256. E. Baldwin de Gysnes Governor of Monmouth Castle defeated by Richard Earl Mareschal f. 557. A. H. HAdrian Saluted Emperor and came into Britain with an Army f. 27. C. He made a wall eighty Miles in length Ibid. D. Hageneth Castle taken f. 315. F. Harde-Cnute made King by the English and Danes f. 130. B. He laid a great Tax upon the Nation f. 130. C. His sudden Death Ibid. D. Harold sent into Normandy by the Confessor to do Fealty to Duke William f. 135. B. His Promise to Duke William to Marry his Daughter and to secure the English Crown for him Ibid. D. E. F. He was Crowned King by Aldred Ibid. His Answer to Duke Williams Messengers f 136. A. His success against his Brothers and other Enimies Ibid. B. C. He was overthrown and slain by Duke William f. 137. B. His Sons invade England f. 194. C. Hasculf attempted to regain Dublin f. 357. C. He was repulsed taken and beheaded Ibid. D. Helena mother to Constantine who she was f. 33. A. B. Hengest and Horsa Chiefs of the Saxons f. 94. A. Kent given to them for a reward Ibid. D. Henry the First King of England born f. 193. C. His Charter for holding County and Hundred Assemblies f. 144. E. He convened the County at his own pleasure f. 144. B. Controversies between great Barons reserved to his own Court Ibid. C. Various accounts of his ascending the Throne f. 233. C. D. E. He is Crowned he sealed a Charter and revoked Anselme f. 234 B. D. E. He was reconciled to his Norman Nobility f. 235. E. F. He made Peace with his Brother Duke Robert 236. B. C. He summoned several great men to their Trials f. 237. D. The great men of Normandy invite him thither f. 240. C. He setled Peace among them and rebuked his Brother Ibid. D. E. His second Expedition into Normandy and success there against Duke Robert his Brother f. 241. A. B. E. F. and f. 242. C. He sent his Brother Robert Prisoner into England f. 243. A. He resumed his Fathers Lands in Normandy Ibid. B. C. His Justice upon all Out-rages Rapes and Coyners f. 244. C. D. His Success against the Earls of Montfort and Anjou fol. 245. C D. F. A Peace made between him and the King of France f. 246. A. He made a Compleat Conquest of Normandy Ibid. B. C. He destroyed his Enemies Towns and Castles there and overthrew Lewis King of France f. 248. D. E. F. Pope Calixtus moved him in behalf of his Brother Robert His Answer f. 251. C. His Return into England and Marriage Ibid. F. and fol. 252. B. He defeated the Confederacy of the Norman great men Ibid. C. E. F. They submit to him and are received into Favour f. 253. A. He sent for his Daughter Maud the Empress Ibid. B. He was disturbed by Geofry Duke of Anjou his Son in Law f. 254. E. F. His Clemency and Bounty a little before his Death fol. 255. B. He named his Daughter Maud his Success or Ibid. C. His kindness to the Clergy and rigor to Seculars Ibid. E. His quarrel with Anselm about Investitures f. 257. A. B. E. He is reconciled to Anselm and parted with the right of Investitures f. 261. A. 263. B. His great Exactions to raise Mon●y f. 261. C. D. He kept the Arch-Bishoprick of Canturbury five years in his hands after Anselm's death f. 265. E. He would not prefer any English Man f. 266. l. 1. He would not suffer a Legat to come into England until desired f. 268. A. 269. B. He confirmed the Canons of Councils Ibid. D. And compounded with Priests to l●t them live with their Wives Ibid. E. His Taxes and Impositions f. 270. His Issue Legitimate and Natural Ibid. C. D. f. 271. What Treasure he left f. 273 B. Henry 2d Eldest Son to Maud the Empress cometh into England and was Knighted by the King of Scots f. 288. D. E. f. 290. F. He received the Dukedom of Normandy f. 291. A. He married Alienor Countess of Poictou and secured Normandy and returned into England Ibid. D. E. F. 292. D. Overtures of Peace between him and King Stephen f. 292. F. The Terms on which the Accommodation was made f. 293. A. How he came to the Crown of England f. 298. C. He Banished Strangers and revoked the Crown-lands alienated by King Stephen Ibid. D. F. His Son Henry born f. 299. B. His Great Men swear Fealty to his Son William Ibid. He Subdued the Welch and received their Homage Ibid. C. D. He was absolved his Oath to his Brother Geofry by Pope Adrian f. 300. A. The Agreement between him and his Brother Ibid. B. Nants Surrendred to him by Conan Earl of Britany Ibid. E. And several other Castles yielded and taken Ibid. F. He claimed the Earldom of Tholouse f. 301. B. His Expedition to persue his Title and Success Ibid. D. E. f. 302. A. B. A Truce between him and the King of France Ibid. D. The Number and Pay of his
Soldiers Ibid. E. F. A firm Peace between him and France f. 303. A. He received Giso●s and its Dependencies and took into his hands all the strong Castles in Normandy Ibid. C. D. F. He and the King of France were Yeomen of the Stirup to Pope Alexander f. 304. B. He settled his Affairs in France and returned into England Ibid. E. The King of Scots Princes of South and North Wales and their great Men do Homage to him and his Son Henry Ibid. F. A breach between him and France f. 305. F. They burn each others Towns but came to a Trucé f. 306. A. 307. A. He subdues the Rebellious Poictovins Aquitans and Britans f. 306. C. E F. A Peace between him and France f. 307. C. He was in danger of being Shipwrackt in his return home Ibid. F. He appointed Inquisitors in all Counties in England f. 308. A. The Articles of their Inquiry Ibid. D. E. F. He caused his Son Henry to be Crowned and his Great Men to do him Homage and Fealty f. 310. A. B. C. He passed into Normandy and l●ft Young Henry Viceroy Ibid. E. His Son deserts him and adheres to France f. 312. E. His great kindness to his Son the young King f. 313. A. A general Insurrection against him in France f. 314. A. He routed the King of France and reduced his Rebellious Britans to Obedience Ibid. D. E. F. f. 315. B. He treated his Sons with great kindness Ibid. C. D. A Truce between him the King of France and King of Scots f. 316. E. His return into England and prevents his Sons designs f. 319. B. He passed again into Normandy and beat the French Ibid. F. f. 320. A. B. C. Articles of Peace between him and his Sons f. 321. A. B. They do him Homage f. 322. C. 323. B. He returned into England with his Sons and Fined all his Great Men for Forfeitures in his Forests Ibid. C. D. His Sons received the Homages of the King of Scots and his Nobility Ibid. F. 324. A. B. He divided England into six parts and sent three Justiciaries into every part f. 325. He Demolished several Castles in England and Normandy f. 329. A. He removed several Constables of Castles in England fol. 330. D. The Welch Kings and their Nobility do him Homage Ibid. F. He appeals from the Legat to the Pope f. 331. C. D. Articles of Agreement between him and France f. 332. A. c. The Oath he put upon the Legat f. 333. D. He divided England into four Circuits Ibid. E. He made young Philip sensible of his Duty to his Father Lewis King of France f. 335.336 He received the Homage of Philip Earl of Flanders fol. 336. A. The Peace between him and Philip King of France confirmed Ibid. B. C. He appointed an Assise of Arms in his Dominions Ibid. D. E. His Sons confederate against him f. 339. A. He sent Aid to Pope Lucius Ibid. F. He did Homage to Philip King of France for all his Transmarine Dominions f. 340. A. His Sons reconciled to one another f. Ibid. B. He and the King of France undertook the Cross f. 342. D. Articles of Agreement between them how to carry on and maintain the War f. 343. A. c. Articles concerning such as had undertaken and such as refused the Cross f. 344. A. c. He levied a Tenth upon his Subjects and imprisoned such as refused to pay it Ibid. E. His Answer to the Patriarch of Antioch's Letter f. 345. E. F. His Son Richard with the King of France entred and wasted his Dominions beyond Seas f. 346. A. B. 347. D. His Army routed by King Philip f. 348. B. He maketh Peace and doth Homage to him Ibid. D. E. What furthered his design of Conquering Ireland f. 350. A. c. He recalled his English Subjects from thence f. 357. A. He Landed at Waterford with a great Army f. 359. E. The Irish Princes and Clergy Swear Fealty to him and his Heirs f. 360. A. B. Ireland confirmed to him by the Pope Ibid. He confirmed the Decrees of a Council held at Cassil Ibid C. He settled the Government and hastened into Normandy Ibid. F. 361. A. He made his Son John King of Ireland f. 369. E. He divided that Kingdom amongst his Great Officers f. 370. D. His Title to Ireland f. 374. D. The Affairs of the Church in his Reign f. 377. to 414. His Laws condemned by the Pope f. 394. A. His Edict against the Pope and Thomas Becket Arch-Bishop of Canturbury Ibid. B. C. D E. F. His Edict against such as should bring Letters of Interdiction f. 396. D. How Appellants to Rome were punished Ibid. F. His Answer to the Popes Letter in behalf of the Arch-Bishop f 397. E. F. His Kingdom threatned to be Interdicted f. 403. C. D. He appealed and promised to submit to the Pope Ibid. F. His Reply to the Excommunicated Bishops Petition f. 406. D. The Arch-Bishop of York exasperated him against the Arch-Bishop of Canturbury Ibid. F. How his Envoys were received at Rome f. 408. A. B. His Expence at the Court of Rome Ibid. C. D. His purgation for the Death of Thomas Becket f. 409 D. His Oath of Satisfaction and Pennance f. 410. A. c. The manner of his Approach to St. Thoma's Tomb f. 412. D. E. F. He Cursed his Sons and soon after died f. 349. B. C. His Taxes and Issue Legitimate and Natural f. 416.417 418. The great Treasure he left f. 421. lin 3. Henry 3. declared King and Crowned f. 522. C. D. His Oath and Homage to the Pope Ibid. E. He rec●ived the Homages of the Bishops and Earls Ibid. A T●uce between him and Prince Lewis f. 524. B. A Peace concluded between them The Form of it f. 527. B. C. D. He was Crowned a second time An Aid granted him f. 529. C. 530. B. He Confirmed the Charter of Liberties f. 532. lin 2. His Writ of Inquiry to 12 Knights to search what they were Ibid. A. He demanded Normandy of King Lewis Ibid. ● He was declared of full Age by the Pope f. 533 A. B. His Lenity to Rebels an encouragement to them f. 529. F. His grant to his Great Men to take Scutage of their Tenents f. 534. F. He granted the Charters of Liberties and Forests f. 535. B. C. He Knighted his Brother Richard and made him Earl of Cornwall Ibid. E. H● appointed 12 Knights to set the number and bounds of Forests f. 536. D. E. He forbad the Prelates obliging their Lay-Fees to the Pope f. 538. C. D. He Fined the Londoners and Cancelled the Charters lately granted f. 539. D. F. A great quarrel between him and Earl Richard f. 540. D. E. He is reconciled to his Brother and his Great Men f. 541. A. He appointed new Measures of Grain Wine and Ale Ibid. B. He made a disadvantagious Peace with the Welch Ibid. F. He was invited into France but rejected the Offer f. 542. A. His