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A11927 The three partes of commentaries containing the whole and perfect discourse of the ciuill warres of Fraunce, vnder the raignes of Henry the Second, Frances the Second, and of Charles the Ninth : with an addition of the cruell murther of the Admirall Chastilion, and diuers other nobles, committed the 24 daye of August, anno 1572 / translated out of Latine into English by Thomas Timme minister.; Commentariorum de statu religionis et reipublicae in regno Galliae. English. 1574 Serres, Jean de, 1540?-1598.; Hotman, François, 1524-1590. De furoribus gallicis.; Tymme, Thomas, d. 1620.; Ramus, Petrus, 1515-1572. 1574 (1574) STC 22241.5; ESTC S4897 661,140 976

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the Church Canonicall Bookes Actes 17. 2. Peter 1. Cap. 6. lib. 2. in Hiere Hom. 49 in Math. 24. Basill in noua summa Mora. cap. 22. Espensius i●…e Sorbonist Succession ordiniarie and extraordinary Traditions of the Fathers Thre councels in S. August time Traditions coū ted of a Monk of greater force than the scriptures Tertullian Imposition of handes Signes of laufull calling The cōfirm●…tion of the ministerie Miracles The Gospell Truth will be truth still The place taken out of Tertullian explaned Titus 3. The place of Chrisostome expounded Cardinall of Lorain moderator of the controuersie Augustane confession The subtill sleighes of one Balduine Balduines inconstancie King of Nauar an Apostata 1. Timo. 3. Titus 1. The braule of the Cardinall with Beza Peter Martyr interrupted by the Cardinall The vnapte compa●…son of a Spanisha Monke Aust. ad Bonifacius ▪ How the Sacramēt●… vnder the law were Figures Beza is here threatned The article agreed vpō betvvene the Papistes and the protestantes concerning the presence The deceite of the Cardinall The end of the conference of Pos●…cene King Philip by the suff●…rance of the Pope had certain yeares inioyed the king dome of Nauar which lyeth at that parte of Spaine that bordereth on the mountains Pyrenaei The sedition of Sanmedard The cause of the Edict of Ianuary The Edict of Ianuary Sermōs without the cities permitted Protection of the protestātes Inhibition of armour Synodes and Consistories Contribution of money Poll ●…ike laws to be obserued The oth of the Ministers Bookes of infamie The dutie of Magistrates Luke 13. Anno Domini 1561. The very cause of the Ciuill warres was the breaking of the Edict of Ianuary Momorentius the Constable made a friend to the Guises The conspi racie of the Guises the Constable and the Martiall of S. Andrew against the Gospell Queene of Scotts promised to be giuen in mariage to the king of Nauar. The slaugh ter at Vassi made by the Duke of Guise Complaint of the fai●…h full of the flaughter The Guise commeth to Paris against the Queenes commaundement The practi ses of the Guises to expell the Prince of Conde out of Paris The Prince of Conde forsaketh Paris The Guise hauing go●… ten Paris seke to ge●… the King also The Prince of Conde commeth to Orleans The purpose of the Guises con cerning VVarre Ruzeus a professour of the Gos pell commaunded towarde The Prince of Conde specially in clined to peace The league betweene the Prince of Conde and the Nobles of Fraunce Letters of the Queen to the Prince of Cond●… ▪ The prince of Conde complayneth of the murther Letters of the Prince of Conde sent to the reformed churches Certayne Idols broken down letters sent from the Queene to the Prince of Conde Letters frō the Senat of Paris to the Prince ▪ of Conde This name Triumuiri signifieth three chosē officers of equall authoritie The secōd declaratiō of the Prince of Conde A Tragedy beginneth merily but endeth sorowfully Letters of the prince of Conde to the Emperoure Letters sent to the prince of Palatine A Synode at Orleans Letters sēt from the Synod Letters to the Countie Pallentine from the Synod Vasconia is Gascoyne the slaugh ther of Tolosa Mont aubon The actes of Narbon in general Nemaux otherwise called Nimes Auinion in Prouince Valentia taken Mottecondrinus slaine Saltanus Liefetenāt of Lions Saltain Liuetenāt of Lyon. Lions wonne by the Protestants The Prince of Conde sory for that Mo●… condrin was slayne A Supplica tion offered in the name of the T●…iumuiti Another supplicatiō offered to the Kinge by the Guise and his The Aunswer of the Prince of Conde to the Supplications ▪ Communication be twene the Quene the King of Nauar and the Prince of Conde Letters of the Prince of Conde to the Queene The beginning of ciuill warres The conditions of peace offered by the king to the faithfull The petitions of the faythfull Triumuiri are these three Guise the Cōstable and the Marshi all of Saint Andrew The Guises vnder the collour of peace seeke to deceiue the Prince of Conde The Guise go home to their houses the Prince of Conde became pledge The practise of the Guises to take the Prince of Conde They meane the Queene and the Kyng of Nauar. The nobles of the Prince of Cōdes side wēt to the Queene The communicatiō betweene the queene and the Nobles The queen denieth the vse of the reformed Religion The queen woulde haue the Prince of Conde his friends banished The Prince of Conde retourned to his army The Guises remoue their army frō Bogencia take Blesa and Towers The Prince of Conde returneth to Orleans with his ▪ army Roan besie ged in vain by the Aumale Orenge assaulted takē by the papistes The army of Suze in Dolpheny greatly anoyed the faithfull The actes of Monsuer de Adretze in Dolpheny and in the Countie of Venais The Marshiall of S. Andrew winneth Poictiers The Germanes and Swisers aid the Guises The decree of the Senate of Paris against the men of Orleans A greeuous pestilence at O●…leans The Prince of Conde craueth helpe of the queene of England and of the Germane Princes The aunswer of the Prince of Conde his friends to the Decree of the Senat of Paris Of this Edict ther is mencion made in the 4. book going before He dehorteth the Germaines which came vnder the charge of the Rokendolfe and the Rhengraue from bearing armour against the King. By the states ye must vnderstand the Nobilitie the Clergy the Tempo 〈◊〉 The true cause of the first warres Power spec●…all consti tutions in the Kyngs minority The first The secōd The third The fourth These things are touched before The assault geuen to Cesteron The Army of Monsuer Monbrun put to flight Great wickednes cōmitted in Prouance against the faithfull The horrible slaughter at Mōbriso by Adretz Cōspiracy against Lāguedoc Monsieur Ioyse besie ged Montpellier A Franke is a peece of French coyne in value ij s. ij d. q. This great Prier was brother to the Cardinall of Loraine Chaimaiergon the proper name of Camargua A wonderfull victory gotten by Monsieur Bulargues Great slaughter of the Papistes Letters found Montpellier a towne of Surgery phisike The besieging of Burges in Ber●…i The besieging of Roan in Normādy The death of the king of Nauar. the Queen of Nauar a vertuouse Lady A writing published by the Queene of England concerning the helpe she sent to the Prince of Conde She meaneth ▪ Callice Shee meaneth the Scottish Queene Letters of the Princes of Germany to the Germaynes which wer in the army of the Guises ▪ Quillebedouius The Kings letters patents graūted to those that started away from the Prince of Conde and the frutes there of The Guise tetourneth to Paris The Guise cōmeth to Paris Ayde commeth from the Princes of Germany to the Prince of Conde Another writing of the Prince of Conde Of this mē cion was made in the second booke
to their confession which latelye they defended might go vntroubled and vnconstreyned to doe anye thyng agaynste their conscience that nothing myght bée deuysed to put them in peryll of lyfe and goodes and that they whiche were in prison myght bée sette at libertie To conclude they affirme that they perceyue that their earnest requestes shall no lesse preuayle with him than the cryings and importunitie of the aduersaries of the truth hath done The which if it come to passe according to their expectatiō he shall fulfill the commaundement of the sonne of God who specially committeth his Church which he hath redéemed with his most precious bloude to Princes also shall shewe great mercie and compassion and be very beneficiall towardes his subiectes if so be he woulde giue them leaue to inuocate and worship God aright In reknowledging whereof they testifie themselues to be ready and vpon this condicion will constantly avide for euer the Kinges friendes To these letters subscribed the Earle of Palatine the Duke of Sax●…nie Marchio of Brandeburge VVolfgangus Earle of Weldentsius and the Duke of Wirtemberge The king when he had suluted the Ambassadours according to the maner and custome maketh a very short aunswere in this forme saying that he will forthwith sende such an aunswere that he trusted thereby sufficiently to satisfie them But notwithstanding the Ambassadours of the Princes were as yet scarcely departed but that the fire of persecution which séemed to be extinguished before by their comming burned the faithfull a freshe Moreouer the causes of those Counsellers who as we sayd before were taken in the Senate of Paris came now in question Iudges also were chosen which shoulde consider the cause of Annas Burgaeus but not indifferent Iudges but such as were great enimies to that which he defended And among others the Bishop of Paris and Demochares the Inquisitor were chosen for this purpose the which Iudges when Burgaeus refused desiring that he might be iudged of the whole felowship and assemblie of the Senate according to the ancient and accustomed lawe of the Senate of Paris he was commaunded by the Kings letters patents to aunswere before those iudges The which letters when he had hearde them red he affirmed that for obedience sake to the King he woulde aunswere otherwise he woulde haue made no aunswere at all therefore they demaunding of him he made aunswere to all those principall points of Popish religion which are at this day in controuersis as to the traditions of the Church to inuocation of Saints to Purgatorie to the Masse and to the rest All the which he dislyking and gaynsaying was at the last condemned by the Bishop of Paris for an heretike and bicause he had taken certayne orders as they call them the same Bishop giueth commaundement that he shoulde be disgraded and so giuen ouer to the secular power The which sentence as it was falslye giuen so Burgaeus appealed from the same to the celestiall Iudge And nowe at this time those outragious stormes of persecution did seeme to beate vpon euery corner of the church of christ The King sent new letters to euery Parliament in the which he commaundeth that the Lutheranes shoulde be most seuerely persecuted Heretofore sayth he in the troublesome time of warres the Lutheranes greatly increased but now that he had inioyed and gotten peace he wold wholy bende himselfe and all his force vtterlye to race and destroy them wherefore he exhorteth them to vse the same diligence in doing the like If they want power and stregth he promiseth that he will prouide for them a bande of souldiers to be redy to ayde thē at al néede In any wise he willed them not to be colde in their businesse as some began to be for if they were he woulde first begin with them and make them féele the smart of punishment prepared for others Therefore all the Courtes Senates and Assemblies being with this general commaūdement of the King mooued they thunder out and shake ▪ both heauen and earth with newe threatnings and Edicts In the middest of this great distresse and troubles of the faithfull there was great ioye triumph solemnitie and feasting for the peace confirmed betweene the two Kinges by the knot of matrimonie all which ioy and pleasure was by and by sodenly turned into great sorrowe and wo. For King Henrie to solemnise the matrimonie willed a Iusting or running at Tylt to be prepared the which being done and diuers of his Péeres and Nobles armed in a readinesse he himselfe desired among all others to runne against Momgomerie Captaine of his garde who being very loth and vnwilling so to doe was commaūded earnestly of the King to run against him the King himselfe putting a speare into Momgomeries hande and running togither in a broade way that leadeth to S. Anthonies stréete not farre from the Castell into the which the two Counsellers of whome we spake before were put a péece of one of the Speares or iusting staues by the great force and violence of their running strake the King through the helmet into the eye and so to the brayne wherewith he was sore hurt Then the wounded King after much bléeding was caried into the house called the smal towers Manye men report that he sayde in his greatest griefe and payne that he greatly ●…eared that he had committed wickednesse and done iniurie agaynst his two Coūsellers but the Cardinall of Loraine did labor earnestly to turne his minde from that opinion often crying and inculcating these wordes into his eares The aduersarie of the faith tempteth thee perseuere constantly in the faith The King by the earnest and continuall perswasion of that Cardinall had bene verye cruellye minded and bent against those Counsellers in so much that threatening he spake these wordes I my selfe will see the burning of Burgaeus It was noted of manye that the King was wounded and stayne by him whome he commaunded to carie Burgaeus to prison who was as is sayde before Momgomerie a mortall enimie at that time to the reformed Religion the which he vehementlye persecuted vpon the straite commandements and charge giuen vnto him for the same purpose But afterwarde he was brought to the knowledge of the truth became a very profitable member of the Church of christ And thus king Henrie being weary of his mortall life through extreme griefe and paine surrendred the same againe to him that gaue it in the yeare of our Lorde god M. D. LIX the. x. day of August By this sodaine chaunce the ioy and mirth was turned into sorrowe and beauinesse all men woondring to beholde so sodeyne an alteration and chaunge The Court which was séeled pergitted sumptuouslye decked and prepared for dauncing leaping and other pastyme to make a pleasant and ioyfull mariage was nowe conuerted to another vse namely to kéepe the Kings deade bodie There bewaylings were made with dolefull and lamentable songs in blacke and mourning garments the space of fortie days and fortie nightes
whiche they knowe that thereby it may be knowne how necessary it is to haue either a generall counsell or a Nationall counsell For it is verye profitable to call and assemble all the states together that all men may perceiue and sée how wel the Realme is gouerned And thus he made an ende When they had thus vttered their sentences and minds the King and Quéene gaue thankes to the whole assembly whose Counsell they saide they were readye to followe graunting vnto them that whereupon they had concluded namely That all the states of the Realme should be assembled togither and that if there coulde not be a generall councell there shoulde be with all speede a Nationall Councell Therefore they determined and concluded that the states of the Realme should be at Meldis the tenth day of the moneth of December nexte comming excepte it shoulde please the kings maiestie to appointe some other place And that the States belonging to euerye prouince should make in their prouince an assembly and consultation particular before that time to the ende that those things which should be debated of in the general assemblies might be vnderstoode Also that bycause it was in a maner agréed of a generall Coūcell betwéene the Pope the Emperour and the Christian princes the Bishops should come the tenth day of Ianuary next comming to the king that they might agrée conclude of the sending to the generall Councel or else of the hauing of a particular and Nationall Councell And that in the meane time the Bishops should get them to their Diocesses both to prepare them selues and also diligently to note and marke those things which lacke reformation In like maner that the Ciuill and substituted Magistrates shoulde kéepe the people in peace and obedience sparing and omitting neuerthelesse paynes and punishmentes due to offenders excepte it be to suche as put themselues in armes and moue sedition and yet notwithstanding the King to reserue vnto him selfe his power and authoritie to punishe those which are counted the authors of seditions and tumultes This was the conclusion of that consultation the which shall appéere wonderfull if we consider the state of the former times For that libertie which as yet is but little but before lesse being restored frō fiery flames and from death it selfe so preuailed before the King that it increased more and more But for all that the aduersaryes ceassed not their wicked Councels and practises what faire and paynted wordes so euer they vsed who by and by againe burst forth shewed them selues by these occasions There was a certaine seruant belonging to the King of Nauar whose name was Sagua who being come to a place called Fontisbellaquaeum and méeting with a certain souldier called Banna talked with him earnestly persuaded with him that he would not serue vnder the Guises for sayth he there are wayes deuised to punishe and handle them as they haue deserued and at the laste made rehersal of certaine things more particularly Banna the souldier hearing this went and tolde the whole circumstance to Marshall Brissacus who exhorted him to goe to the Duke of Guise To him therfore he went and tolde him all the whole matter in order Then the Guise desired him to faine friendship and familiaritie toward this Sagua and to fawne vpon him often times to repeate their former communication also to shewe him to one of his householde seruants The which this Banna did And Sagua was apprehended by the Guise There were also taken in the hands of Sagua certaine letters of Monsier Vidam of Carnutum to the Prince of Conde in the which he declared That if the Prince would take any thing in hande worthy of kinglike seruice he was ready to serue him and for his sake to spende both goods and life Upon the onely occasion of these letters the king gaue commaundement that Monsier Vidā of Carnutū shuld be takē The which was with all diligence broughte to passe by the Guises In the meane time there came from Lions frō the Abbat Sauignius letters concerning the bewrayed frustrated practises of Malignius who was said to go about to take Lions Sauignius for his rewarde receiued the Archbishopricke of Orleans By the meanes of these newe tumultes the king came from Fontisbellaquaeum to the Citie Sangerman But the cause and mischiefe of all these things was layde vpon the Prince of Conde who was openlye accused to séeke the alteration of the state of the common weale and also to be the author of the tumulte of Ambaxian Then was Cursolensis sente to the King of Nauarre to commaunde him to come vnto the King and to bring his brother the Prince of Conde with him In the meane time Monsier Vidame althoughe he was very sicke yet was he very straitly imprisoned in so much that his owne wife might not come to visite him And being straitly syfted by those whiche were appointed to examine him concerning the meaning of his letters he still made this answere namely That he did write expresly of those things which appertained to the obedience of the king and of whatsoeuer else that shoulde be done by the kings commaundement Also he saide that he was a néere kinsman and friend of the Duke of Guises yet for all that if there were any priuate controuersie betwéene him and tho King of Nauar and the Prince of Conde he woulde rather take part with them thā with him in so much that for them two namely for the King of Nauar and for the Prince of Conde he would spend both life and goods On the other part the familliar friends of the Prince of Conde with whome he was thoughte to haue conference and consultation were dayly caste in prison and the suspicions of the Huguenotes dayly increased more more for by this newe and straunge name were the faithfull of the reformed Church then called Then was there a newe Edict made That no Prince or any other man whatsoeuer shoulde contribute money armor horses and such like to the setting forth of Souldiers and that he which shoulde be founde to doe this should be counted a Traitor to the King. There was yet a seconde messenger sent to the King of Nauar that he and his brother should come with all spéede This Messenger was Cardinall Burbonius their brother Publique supplicatiōs for the peace of the kingdome were euery where forbidden And wheras the assembly of States was determined before to be holden at Meldis it was now translated and remoued to Aurelias Marshall Termensis being sente with two hundred armed men to kepe the citie At the feast of Saint Michaels order Monsier Vidam being one of the foresaide order put vp a certaine supplication by the Cardinall of Loraine as by the Chauncelor of that order desiring that according to the auncient custome he mighte be iudged of all those that were of that honorable order of Saint Michael and that for those causes onely for
the which he deserued to be dismist of the same This thing at the length was graunted through the earnest sute of the Constable and the selfe same day that Monsier Vidam was dismist of the order of Saint Michael there were xvij into the same honorable order by a newe and vnacustomed maner chosen by the trauaile and meanes of the Guyses ▪ to the intent they might bynde many vnto them by that benefite or promotion While the king of Nauar and the Prince of Conde were loked for commaundement was giuen to the Gouernour of Poictiers to goe to Pictauium and not to suffer the King of Nauarre and the Prince of Conde his brother to come into the Citie But for al this at the length by the kings letters and commaundement the King of Nauar was receiued of the Marshall Termensis into Pictauium with all his trayne being neuerthelesse on euerye side beset with armed men the which suspicions the King of Nauarre toke in verye euill part Then the King came frō Sangermane to Paris with a great armie both of footemen and horsemen in battaile aray the Duke of Guise and the Cardinall of Loraine attending vpon him From thence he went to Aurelias with the same army and in warlike order entered into the Citie being reported abroade that the King came thither for two causes the one was to kéepe the Citie from the treason of the king of Nauarre the other was to call and summon a Parliament Many therefore were made afearde but speciallye they which were chosē to be of the assembly or Parliament whē they hearde that so greate an armie of men came with the king Then cōmaundemēt was giuē that euery one should rehearse confesse the confessiō of his faith according to the prescript rule of those articles which were set forth by the Papistes in the yéere of our Lord God M. D. XLII and it was reported for truth that the Cardinal of Loraine had drawn forth in writing those things which shoulde be inacted and established in that assemblye There was also watche and ward throughout the whole Citie appointed to be kept euen as if the enimie had come to assaulte the same Againe commaundement was sent to the King of Nauar that he should come with al spéede and bring his brother the Prince of Conde with him many also were sent into diuers partes of the Realme to take the names of all those that were noted to be of the reformed Religion At the length the king of Nauar the Prince of Conde his brother came to Aurelias there to salute the king But so soone as they had saluted the King the chiefe principall of the kings Garde as they were cōmaūded layd hands vpō the Prince of Conde caried him to the next hold prepared for y same purpose The which holdes were forthwith fortified and made strong with Irō grates in euery window a Castell was hard vy the same erected built to receiue the footemen Thē were there certain mē chosē to watch kepe the King of Nauar whose Chaūcelor also was taken by by with al spéede was the Lady Roye mother in lawe to the Prince of Conde takē and arrested brought to the citie Sangerman to whose charge it was layde that she was giltie of treason The Magistrates were ready to take receiue hir opened the prison dores to bring hir in Straight after this also was Hieroine Grostotius the Gouernour of Aurelias taken in whose house the king lodged being accused of negligence and stouth in searching out the heretikes Howbeit he was quit and discharged of this matter by the decrée Iudgemēt of the Senate of Paris But the Andelote whē he had saluted the King and the Duke of Guise had excused himselfe by the disobedience of the French hoast of footemen departed in very good time otherwise as the most likly report went he should haue bene taken with the Prince In the meane time there were subtile deuises and craftie meanes inuented to assault and trouble the Prince of Conde And when Iudges were chosen oute of the Senate of Paris as Fagus and Viollaeus the Lieutenant of Thou the kings Solicitour was commaunded to open the cace now in controuersie and to procede with the same But the Prince alleaging for himselfe his noble bloud princely state standeth with them vpon this point that he ought not to be iudged of them but rather of the king him selfe of no other in the Senate of Paris the Peeres and Nobles of the Realme beyng assembled together Therfore he saide that he appealed to the king Then the appeale was brought vnto the Priuye Counsell the which appeale they said was nothing and of no force And this was done often times But at the laste they concluded that excepte the Prince woulde answere before those Iudges he should be condemned of hie treason Then the Prince of Condes wife desired of the King that so much libertie might be graunted to hir husband as to cōsult with learned counsell The which was graūted vnto hir in so much the he was permitted to take y coūsel of two lawyers namely of Petrus Robertus Frāciscus Marillacus coūlellers in the court of Paris but he was no otherwise permitted to haue them thā vpon this conditiō that whensoeuer he cōsulted with then the king to haue vmpires indifferent mē to be present at their talke The Prince also required the it might be lawful for him beside these two counsellers to consult confer with his two brethrē the king of Nauar the Cardinal of Burbō also with his wife to ioyne with thē what vmpires witnesses soeuer it shoulde please the King affirming that he was very loth to doe any thing without his brethrē specially in a matter of so great waite The which request notwithstanding was denied him only he obtained leaue to write vnto them his minde At the length being come to the matter in controuersie he said to his counsellers that were present that the affliction which he now suffered was not laid vpon him by God for that he had gone about to worke any thing against the kings maiestie but rather that by this affliction he might trye his constancie Also he said that he did not thinke him selfe to be Captiue seing that he inioyed the fredome of minde and a pure and sound conscience but rather that he thought those to be captiues which had their mindes consciences bound and clogged with the burthen of their sinnes and wickednesses in a body set at libertie When he had thus spoken he gaue certaine notes of the defence of his cause vnto his Counsellers For king Frances by the subtill meanes and false persuasions of the Guises was fully persuaded that the Prince of Conde conspired his death and that therefore he was giltie of treason and worthy to suffer condigne punishment for the same Therefore while the bloudy
if they had any thing to obiect against the Prince of Conde Who affirmed in generall by a solemne othe that they had nothing to obiecte against him Then was the final sentēce of the Senat giuen in maner forme folowing that is to say That the Prince of Conde had done nothing against the kings Maiestie but was pure innocent and guiltlesse of all those crimes layd to his charge ▪ that all actions commensed against him were voyde Also that he should haue libertie to arrest and sue whom he thought good that hee myght bee satisfied according to the dignitie of his person VVith prouiso also that this decree shoulde be proclaymed in the hyghest Courtes of the king and registred in publike Recordes Thys ordinaunce and decrée was pronounced and openly read ▪ by the chiefe iudge of the Senate the gates of the Senate house beeing set wyde open and all the Senatours assembled together solemnely apparelled in their Scarlet Roabes accordyng to order And also at the Readyng hereof there was a great multitude of people and the greatest part of the Nobilitie of Fraunce as the kyng of Nauarre the Cardinall Burbon Monpensier and others of the Princes the Kinges kinsmenne and with these also were present the Dukes of Guise Nemorosius the Constable Momorentius the Marshall of Santandrae the Cardinal of Lorrayn and the Chastillion Others also which were accused for the same cause with the prince of Conde receiued the sentence of their purgation openly read And vndoubtedly the Prince of Conde alwayes denyed that he was the author or of the counsell of that ●…umult of Ambaxian howsoeuer the Guises maliciously interpreted that counsell and way which was deuised to kepe them vnder to be intended against the kings maiestie and the state of the realme By these and such like practizes those two brethren the Guyses inflamed the yong king Frances against the men of Burbon leauing nothing vndone that might séeme to proue their accusations Accusers were diligently sought for and matters of accusation inquired after By gifts by threatnings all things were attempted And in the iudgement of the Prince of Conde they leaned specially to one witnesse whose name was Sagua a seruant of the kyng of Nauar of whom we haue made mention before That Sagua being taken and apprehended by the Guises was diligently examined concerning the Prince of Conde if he knewe whether he had conspired against the king or no. Sagua at the first denied this saying that he knew no suche matter But at the length Frances the duke of Guyse broughte it to passe hauing with him a hangman and a halter by thretning death vnto him except he would plainly accuse the Prince of Conde of conspiracie against the king But at the length being escaped out of the Guyses hands he most cōstantly sayd both by word and writing that the accusation agaynst the prince of Conde was extorted from him by force This publike sentence therfore of the Senate toke away from the Prince of Conde that spite and slaunder wherby he was sayd and thought to be guiltie of the tumult of Ambaxian But if the sentence of the Senate had not cléered and purged him yet the effect and sequele of that whiche followed maye be sufficient to approue that he neuer conspired against the king As his only studie and moste vndoubted good will in defending the young king and the realme also being in great perill from the mischiefe and lyings in wait of forrain enimies The which he would neuer haue doon if he had intended to hurt the king any maner of way The Cardinall of Lorrayn complayned to the Quéene that the matter was euery daye worse and worse and that the people presumed and toke too much libertie vpon the kings Edictes and also that the negligence and carelesnesse of the Iudges increased more and more affirming that there was no wiser way to be found than in suche troublesome matters to take counsell of the Senate of Paris It was reported that he went about this thing being assured and certified before of many of the mindes of the Senatours that by this preiudice he myghte helpe the Nationall Councell shortly at hande Therefore the King and the Quéene and all the priuie Councell came vnto the Senate to deliberate wyth them of those matters whiche appertayned to Religion and the gouernement of the realme The Chauncellor briefly declared that they wer therfore called togither by the kings commandement that they might shewe certaine ready and exquisite wayes to qualifie those perturbations and troubles whiche would euery day more and more increase by reason of the diuersitie of Religion to the ende the Kings subiects might peaceably lyue vnder his obedience To the which matter he sayd it pertained nothing at al to talke of religiō bicause the ciuil gouernmēt was only now in hand as for religion he sayd it should be reserued to be handled in the Nationall Councell to whome it belonged to discusse the same When the Chauncellour had ended his oration euery man spake his iudgement Some wishing punishements for religions sake to ●…e st●…yde vntil the C●…uncel had determined of the same Other some wyshing to haue punishment by death which was contrar●…e to the ancient c●…nstitutions of the Bishops of Rome Other some deeming it best to haue the whole matter left to the author●…tie of Ecclesiastical iurisdiction In the meane tyme they thought good to forbid that there should be no conuenticles or assemblies either priuate or publike ▪ eyther with armes or withoute armes allo that there shul●… be no sermons or administrations of Sacraments otherwyse than according to the vsuall maner of the Church of Rome And thus the whole assemblie were deuided into three ●…eueral opinions Uerie many were of the first opinion how beit the last opinion and ad●…iss pr●…uayled hauyng three voyces more than the other had for the whych cause there arose contention many men suspecting that the Notarie being corrupted wroughte deceytfully re●…koning the names of some whiche came vulooked for whyle the assemblie were vttering their opinions the whiche was againste all order and custome of the Senate Neuerthelesse there was an Edicte made whyche was called the Edicte of Iulye The effecte whereof was thys That all men should liue peaceably that there shouled bee no iniuries doone vnder the pretence of religion That all disturbers and breakers of the peace shoulde suffer death that there should be in no wyse any maner of elections or any other things which pertayned to factions or diuisions That preachers should vse no wordes of offenc●… that myght breed sedition among the people but shuld rather modestly instruct them and that also vnder payn of death That ther should be no sermons made or sacraments ministred either priuatly or publikely either with armes or without armes after any other maner than that which was vsed in the catholike Church set forth by the king and his clergie of France
thus Tr●…aeus hauing no hope to preuaile by wars against these mē certified the Duke what a hard matter he had taken in hand Afterward the men of the valleys were called to parley with whom these couenantes were made namely That they shoulde vse their accustomed exerci●…es of Religion that they should by no maner of meanes be accused or called to account for this warre that they shoulde haue free libertie and intercourse to bie and sell through all parts of the Dukes dominion that they shuld render vnto the Duke all dutie and obedience belonging vnto him that they also should li●…e without offence There were diuers other particular matters which because they serue not for our purpose we omit While these things were thus handled Philip King of Spaine on the other side left nothing vndone to punishe vex with all maner of torments so many as imbraced the Gospel in any part of his dominiōs but specially in Spaine Belgio the murdering inquisitiō in euery place most cruelly was executed the houses in the which the faithfull came together were burned they which were taken were spedilye put to death some being burned some drowned some tormentes with new kinds of death yea there was no respect of persōs had were he poore or rich gentlemā or noble mā he was not frée frō these torments The king being greatly inflamed pricked forward herevnto by the Cardinall Granuellan who a little before was made Cardinall in Belgio at the creation of new bishops Neuerthelesse the faithful of the p●…rsecuted churches offer their confessiō to the king of Spaine and publish the same euery where abrode by publique writing open their cause to the magistrates shew how iniurious a thing it is to condemne a man before his cause be heard beséech that they might haue libertie to be heard that their confessiō might be read which would manifestly declare that they were vniustly condemned these troubles say they do arise of two sorts of men The first are such as are led by rashe vndiscrete zeale to defend their errors which haue long time continued in the Romish Church The second are such as are afeard to haue the Gospell preuaile bicause they know that the doctrine therof reproueth their wicked doings affections It is great arrogancie to condemne those that leane to the worde of God to prefer the inuentions of mē before the same Wherfore they desire that before they be cōdēned they might be cōuinced by the word of God that the disputatiō might not be with fire and sword for say they the word of God is the vndoubted certaine rule of truth But this was the sum of their confession We beleue in one true God which by his glorious names titles may be discerned frō false counterfeite Gods which may also be knowne by that most mighty worke of the whole world but specially by his word we also im●…race receiue the only word of God by faith not so much bicause the Church receiueth the same but bicause it is sealed in the hartes of the faithful by the holy ghost We beleue that one God in essēce is distinguished into thrée persons which are the father the sonne the holy Ghost reseruing notwithstanding to euery persō his special propertie We beleue that God which hath created the worlde doth gouerne preserue the same by his prouidence We beleue that he created man after his owne image liknesse that is to say holy good perfect that he fell by his owne faulte hath wrapped his prosteritie in y same giltinesse of sinne corruptiō that he him selfe was in We beleue that Iesus Christ both God and man in one person is a true mediator the onely meane way to saluation We beleue that he beyng promysed long before vnto the Fathers and represented and shadowed vnder the Ceremonyes and fygures of the lawe came in his time and fulfilled all things that pertayned to oure saluation and that withoute greate sacrilege and robbing him of his honor no other meane can be taken also that the faithful are partakers of these benefites which are the Church of God which is gouerned by the holy ghost and not tyed to places or perfons We beléeue that the pure and sincere preaching of Gods worde the pure Ministration of the sacraments and the discipline by the which the Churche is gouerned according to the rule of Gods worde are notes and markes of the visible Churche We beléeue that the Sacraments were ordained to confirme our faith and doe then profite when they are ioyned to the power of the holy Ghost We beléeue that there doe belong onely two sacraments to the Church namely Baptisme which is a seale of remission of sinnes and of our regeneration and therefore a testimonie of our entrance into the Churche And the Lords supper which signifieth that we are truely made partakers of the body of Christ and of all his graces and benefites that is to saye that oure soules are nourished to euerlasting life by his fleshe and bloude euen as our bodyes are nourished with breade and wine but we muste bring faith to receiue the truth of that Sacrament that is to say Christ therefore we beléeue that the Lords Supper doth only profite the faithfull bringeth to the vnworthie that is to the vnbeléeuing condemnation We beléeue that God to defende and preserue the societie of men hath ordayned lawes and pollitique gouernement which al men ought to obey that tributes custome and other taxes ought to be payed to Magistrates who ought to be reuerenced and for whome we ought to pray vnto God. We beleeue also that Christ shall come againe with al power maiestie and glory in the latter day to iudge the quicke and the dead Thus much concerning their persecution But now to returne to our selues againe When the Duke of Guise had bene at no small variance with the Prince of Conde he purposed with himselfe partlye by his owne mind in hope of profite partly by the Counsel of his friends to come into his fauour and friendship again the Quéene and the Constable exhorting him ther vnto and helping him to haue hys purpose Therefore the King when he had called the Prime Councell together and all the Princes beyng present he called both of them before hym and when the matter was opened he commaunded the Duke of Guise to declare the whole matter to the Prince of Conde The which the Duke of Guise did protesting that he neuer caused nor counselled the King which was departed to apprehend the Prince of Conde To which the Prince of Conde answered that he did counte him a wicked and naughtie person which wente aboute to worke him that mischiefe what so euer he was The Duke of Guise sayde that hée thoughte him in lyke manner to be no lesse but he coulde not helpe it At the length by the Kings
churches any diuisions for this matter Then Beza proceeding with his former purpose sayd Beza Concerning the seconde we doe not saye that the m●…rites of the death and passion of Christ are onely signified by the outward signes of bread and wine but also that the verie bodie of Christe which was cru●…ified for vs his bloud which was shed for vs is by them represented Also that Iesus Christ very God and perfect man is offered vnto vs by visible signes that our myndes being lifted vp by faith to heauen wher Christ now is may spiritually behold him receiue enioy all his graces to euerlasting life and that so certainly and truely as we sée and receyue and eate and drinke the corporall and visible signes To this the Cardinall of Loraine agreed affirming that he was glad to heare those wordes for so muche as he perceiued that the doctrine of the Faithfull was otherwise than he thought it to bée Beza Concerning the thirde there is greate difference betwéene common water and that with the which we are washed in baptisme betwéene the bread and wine whiche we dayly vse and that whiche is vsed in the Supper For the water of Baptisme the breade and wyne of the Supper are Sacramentes that is to saye visible sygnes and Testimonies of the bodie and bloud of the Lorde But we denie saith he that there is any such mutatiō in the substāce of the Elements but we affirme that the change is in this that they are applyed to an other vse than that which is naturall bycause they seruing of themselues by their owne nature for the nutriment of the body being Sacraments they signifie that thing whiche doth feede our seules Furthermore we doe not assigne the cause of this mutation to the words or to the mynd and purpose of him that pronoūceth them but to the vertue and power of God whose will is reuealed in his word Therfore bycause the thing signified is offred vnto vs and so truly giuen vnto vs as the signe it selfe we muste also acknowledge by the same reason the coniunction of signes with the thing signifyed And by this meanes the body and bloude of Iesus Chryste in that they are truely giuen vnto vs are in the administration of the Supper and not with vnder or in the breade or in any other place than in heauen where as he is ●…an he is contained vntill he shall come to iudge both the quicke and dead The Cardinal also agréed to the same and affirmed that he did not allow Transubstantiation but thought rather that Chryste shoulde be sought in heauen Notwithstanding as one in dout he added other sayings of certayne Germanes to the end he might therby séeme not to haue greatly trauelled in this matter excusing himselfe to be let from the same by other businesse Then sayde Beza I graunte that we and certaine Germanes doe disagrée in this thyrde Article but in this notwithstanding we agree that we altogyther ioyntly with one consent denie your Transubstantiation Card. Lor. Doe ye confesse that we are truely and substancially partakers of the body and bloud of Chryst Beza This is the fourthe principall poynt whiche before I noted and resteth to be declared In sūme therefore we do affirme that the visible signes whiche are naturally eaten and dronken are touched with the handes that the matter of the Sacrament that is to say the body bloud of Chryst Iesus is offered truely and without deceyte to all men that the same is receyued by faythe and not by naturall reason but yet that the same is so truely giuen vnto vs by faythe as if we were naturally ioyned with Chryst. Then the Cardinall affirmed that Beza hadde satisfyed him in this poynte and very friendly and louingly desired B●…za that he might haue conference with him Notwithstanding it was reported that the Cardinall had confuted B●…za by these firste small tryalles and assayes And so they fully persuaded themselues to haue the victorie But when they which were the chosen mē of the Churches to dispute lawe that new delayes were founde out day by day they vrged that their petitions whereof we spake before might be graunted vnto them and they desired also to vnderstande the Kings mynde in writing At the length they receyued this answere of the Queene that the Prelates shoulde not be their Iudges but that there shoulde be graunted vnto them certayne of the Kings Secretaries that the matter should be ruled wholy by the word of God and that the King with the Princes his kinsmen woulde be at the disputation And herewith she admonished them to behaue themselues modestly and to seeke onely the glorie of GOD whiche she thought she sayde they greatly desired But to graunt them any thing in writing she thought it not expedient séeing their wordes might serue well inough When the chosen men of the Churches hadde receyued this answere and were departed there came strayght way vnto the Queene certaine Papistes beseeching hir that she woulde not heare these men of the newe religion and if she were mynded to heare them that she would at the least beware and sée that the yong king came not to their disputations bycause it was daungerous least hée in his yong and tender yeares shoulde be taken and snared therewith For say they it is not meete that they shoulde be hearde which not long agoe were conuicted of heresie To whome the Quéene onely answered that she woulde doe nothing without due Counsell and aduise and that they shoulde well vnderstande that the matter shoulde not be handled after the wil and pleasure of those men of the new doctrine as they termed them The next daye after which was the ninth day of September was the time appoynted to begin the disputation Therefore the King and the Quéene his mother the Duke Aurelian the Kings brother Margare●… his Sister the King and Queene of Nauarre the Prince of Conde with the reste of the Princes the Kings kinsmē and the Priuie Counsel and a greate number also of Noble men and Gentlemen were assembled together in a verye large hall which men commonlye call the H●…ll of the holye Virgins of Posiac Hyther came also the Popes chiefe Prelates the Cardinals the Archebyshoppes and Bishoppes to the number of fiftie beside a great many substitutes and deputies in the places of those that were absent a great many diuines and men of learning counted standing about them In the highest place sat the King and harde beside him according to custome the Princes his kinsmen the Bishops sitting all a long on both sides the hall vpon gréeces one aboue another Then were brought in the chosen men for disputation of the reformed Churches which were twelue Ministers and twentie others which were sent also of the same Churches whom the Kings Gard at the commaundement of the king had brought from Sangerman thyther least there should be some tumult raised against them When euery man
seeme to goe home to their houses 134. Guyses remoue their armye from Bogencia and take Blesa and towers 137. Guyses ayded by the Germans and Switsers 145. Guyses authours of moste horrible murder done at Vassy 10. Guyses come to Paris againste the Queenes commaundement 16. Guyses hauing gotten Paris seke to get the king also 19. Gnyses seeke to staye the Prince of Conde from ioyning wyth the Englishmen 237. Guyse being at the siege of Orleans was slaine by treason 258. H Horrible murder done to them of Towers by the Guyses after they had won the towne 137. Horrible murder cōmitted at Mōb●…yse by Baron des Adretze 183. Helpe desired by the Prince of Con de of the Queene of England the princes of Germany 146. I Idols broken downe and defaced at the Citties of Towers and Blayse 50. Idols broken downe at Orleās 50. K King of Nauarie being shotte into the shoulder with a small pell●…t dyeth 202. L League made betwene the Nobles and the Prince of Conde 25. Letters sent by the olde Queene to the Prince 31. Letters sent from the Prince of Con de to the reformed churches 47. Letters sent by the olde Queene to the Prince 50. Letters sent frō the prince of Cōde to the Emperour 70. Letters sent from the Senate at Paris to the Prince of Conde 51. Letters sent from the Prince of Cōde to the Prince of Palatine 71. Letters sent to euery congregation from the Counsell holden at Orleans 73. Letters sent to the countie Palatine from the Synode at Orleans 76. Letters from the Prince of Conde to the Queene 115. Letters from the Prince to the king of Nauar. 118. Letters sent by the Prince of Conde to the Queene of Englande and the German princes for aide 146 Letters found in the Papistes tent●… after they were put to flight bewraying their hole purpose 195. Letters sent to the Germanes which were in the hoast of the Guyses by the Priaces of Germany to dis●…ade them to take his part 210. Letters parents giuen out to them which had started awaye frō the Prince of Conde 212 Letters written to the Germanes which were in the princes of Cōde his army to dehort them from his seruice 2540 M Marshall of S. Andrew being taken and wounded in the head dyeth in the fielde 243. Momorantius the Constable ioyned in amitie with the Guises 3. Montauban taken by the Faythfull 74. Monsieur Montbron put to flighte with his army 181. Monsieur ●…oyse besieged Montpelier 185. Monsieur Bularges got a wonderfull victory ouer the enemy 193. Monsieur de Adretze his acts done in Dolphiny and in the countie of Venayas 143. Mottecondrine slaine 81. N Names of the Captaines ouer the faithfull 139 Narbone is left by the faithfull too the tuition of the Papistes 79 Nemeaux otherwise called Nemis is taken by the faithfull 80 Nemours winneth Vienna 248 Nemours deceiued by an Inhabitant of Lions 249 Noble men of the Prince of Cōdes side went too parley with the Queene 133 Nonay cruelly spoyled 252 O Orenge assaulted and taken by the Papistes 140 Orleans vexed with a greeuous pestilence 146 Orleans besieged by the Papists 255 P Paris being gotten by the Guises they seke to get the King also 19 Parleyes hadde betweene the olde Queene the Admirall and the Prince of Conde 2●…4 Peace offered by the king too the faithfull but vppon conditions 124 Peace taken on bothe partes 260 Poictiers woon by the Ma●…shall of Saint Andrew 145 Pollicies wrought by the Guises to expell the Conde out of Paris 17 Prince of Conde becōmeth pledge 131 Practises to take the Prince of Conde 131 Prince of Conde returneth to his ar mie backe againe 136 Prince of Conde forsaketh Paris 17 Prince of Conde specially inclined to peace 24 Prince of Conde cōplaineth of the murther done at Sens. 34. Prince of Conde receiueth letters from the Senate at Paris 51 Prince of Conde returneth from Paris to ioyne with the Englishmē 237 Prince of Cōde taken prisoner 242 Purpose of the Guises concerninge warre 22 Pultrot sent from Lions to Orleans with letters 256 Pultrot s●…apeth the Guise and by the meere prouidēce of God is taken againe 258 Pultrot is drawne in peeces with horse for killing the Guises 265 Q Queene of Scottes promised to bee giuen in mariage to the king of Nauar. 7 Queene mother denieth thevse of the reformed Religion too the Prince of Conde 134 Queene mother would haue the Prince of Conde and his friendes banished 135 Queene of Nauar sheweth her self to be a vertuous Lady 202 R. Requestes made by the faithful 124 Roan in Normandye besieged but in vayne 138 Roan besieged the second time 201 Ruzeus a professour of the Gospel commaunded to ward 23 S. Saltanus Lieuetenant of Lyons anenemie to the gospell 82 Slaughter at Tholoze 79 Slaughter of the faythfull at Vassy cōmitted by the Duke of Guise page 10 Supplication offered to the King Queene in the name of the Triumuiri 87 Supplication offered the seconde time to the King and Queen by the Guises and his confederates pag. 90 Suze his army in Dolphiny greatly anoyed the faithful 146 T Talke betwixt the King of Nauar the Old Queene and the Prince of Conde 115 Talke betwene the old Queen and the Nobles on the Prince of Cōde his side 133 The second declaratiō of the prince pag. 59. The true cause of the firste warres pag. 168 The beginning of the ciuill warres pag. 124 The reasons that stayed the Prince of Conde from going into exile pag. 222 The forme of the gouernement of the realme in the Kings minoritie 222 The order of the meeting of booth the battailes on the plane of Dreux 238 The first battaile wherein the Constable was taken and many Swit sers taken and slaine 240 The Admirall goeth into Normandie 257 V Valentia taken by the faithfull 81 Vienna woon by the Papistes 248 IV VVarre purposed by the Guises 22 VVickednes almost vncredible com mitted by the Papists against the faithfull in Prouance 185 VVritings published by the Queen of England cōcerning the helpe she sent to the Prince of Conde page 203 VVritinges published by the Prince of Conde wherin hee declareth himselfe not to be the beginner of these warres 215 FINIS Faultes escaped in Printing both in the second part and also in the last part Page 57. line 7 leaue out of the which Page 88. line 10. for and reade an Page 97. line last for They then sayd read Thus much they said at that time Page 105. line last for they read the. Page 133. line 13. for orget read forget Page 147. line 13 for oh read of Page 169. line 27. for Bishoppes read Kyngs Page 175. line 6. for a read as Page 174. line 28. for the read then Page 176. line ●…6 for rnd read and. Page 187. line 8. for breathe read bredth Page 188. line 22. for ayy read any Page 204. line 30. for my sée read maye sée Page 224. for it it
should séeke to escape by flight crying out moste outrageously against thē and incouraging his soldiers to the slaughter Who making a violent assault fell vpon the fearefull and trembling multitude and suche as sought to escape by flight or by climing vp to the top of the house they slew without pity or mercy yea whomsoeuer they met withall were they men or wemen olde or yong they put them to the sword most cruelly against all humanity making hauocke of them all together In the meane time the clamors howlings and pitifull cries of these innocent shéepe appoynted to the slaughter were not ceased but were made wyth the sound of the trumpet whych blew all the time of the flanghter to be more dolefull and terrible to all those that hearde the same Wher vpon the Duches of Guise the Dukes wife walking by chaunce by the walles of the citye and hearing this feareful noise was abashed therat In so much that shée sending straight way a messenger to her husband earnestly desired and beséeched him to cease and mak●… an ende of that miserable slaughter least wemen great with childe in the city hearing that fearful noise should be deliuered before their time Therefore the Duke of Guise being troubled and somewhat terrefied with hys owne horrible and wicked enterprise commaunded a retreit to be blowne And then was brought to hym the Preacher whom he miscalled and reuiled at hys pleasure and then committed him to the charge and custody of a souldier But yet for all this the soldiers ceased not to slay and kill committing murder in diuers places of the citye and defiling the streates wyth bloude yea with the bloud of innocents to describe the whych as it was don in déede by these bloudy butchers it wold abhorre any christian heart to heare At the last when they had made an ende of killing and slaying they searched throughoute euery corner of the place where the people had assembled them selues together they ouer●…hrew the seates and benches that were therein and brake them to péeces they did cut the holy Bible in péeces yea and the rascall soldiers spake thus of the same What shal I do with this word of God I passe not for it I can make no money of this geue me therefore the golde the siluer and apparell It cannot be vttered with what and howe many blasphemies the gospell was blasphemed The Cardinall Guise also had in his hande a certaine Bible which was found in the pulpet Of him the Duke of Guise demaūded what booke it was The Cardinall answered that it was the holy scripture What holy scripture is it sayeth he and loking vpon the first leafe of the booke he sayde that that booke was not made aboue two yeres since shewing by hys warlike rudenes and ignorance what litle knowledge and vnderstanding he had of the word of God. At the last euen as if the city had ben ouer runne and vanquished by the forraine enemy the lackeis and seruing men fayning the voyce of a Crier sold gowns coates cappes and w●…mens apparell to the popish sort of the towne which greatly scorned derided the faithfull The houses also of the outdwellers and borderers vppon the citie were despoyled and many by the waye as they went were euill intreated and slaine Then the Duke of Guise commaunded the kéeper of the Castell to come before him whome he sharply reprehended because he knew of those sermons that were made in the Citie and threatned to punish him commaunding him to follow him Many also of the townesmen were led away with them bound The Minister or Preacher of whom we spake before being sore mangled and wounded and lying groueling vppon a Ladder was so caried by the commaundement of the Guise to a towne called Sandiser being derided miscalled and euill intreated as he went. Now the fame of this horrible act and butcherly slaughter was brought by and by to the Churches bordering therabouts and thereof also diuers rum●…rs and reports arysing it was diuersly reported in the Kyngs Court and sodenly astonished and amazed all those that heard of the same vntill within few dayes after certaine messengers came from Vassi and from certaine of the Churches thereabouts certifying the truth of the matter and complayning of the horrible fact e●… the Gui ses and making humble supplicatiō that remedy might be prouided for so great a mischiefe●… adding hereunto that the true subiects of the King could not beare any longer the great crueltie and iniuries of the Guises being straungers The matter being thus reported séemed to all men very presumptuous rash Insomuch that the Prince of Conde the Chastilons the Chauncelour others cried out against the same saying that it was a wicked and horrible act and against the Edicts and lawes of the Realme and that therfore it was nedefull to prouide a present remedie Notwithstanding the dayly rumors of the comming of the Guises to Paris caused al mē to feare foreséeing diuers great troubles and calamities like to ensue At this time the King was at Monceaulx a house belonging to the Quéen his mother who was there also accompanied with the Prince of Conde But the King of Nauar the Martiall of S. Andrew the Brissac were at Paris to whom straight waye also came the Constable Now the Duke of Guise was come to Nantuille a place of his dominion and it was reported that he woulde come the next daye to Paris The Prince of Conde much marueiled at this sodaine and hasty comming of the Guises to Paris after the comitting of so wicked presumptuous a déede against the kyngs Edict He went therfore to the King and Quéene and declared that the matter was such that except a remedie were prouided in time great destruction would fall vppon the whole Realme Wherfore he wished that so great a mischiese might might procéede no farther For saith he if the Duke of Guise come to the Citie there will followe present perill of most gréeuous calamities The Quéene the Kinges mother liked well of this aduise of the Prince and agréed to the same Therfore she wrote to the kyng of Nauar exhorting him according ●…o his office to sée that the kinges Maiestie and the Realme also fell into no perill and chargeth the Guise also by her letters not to come to the citie but to come him self to the King with a few only wayting vpō him To the which the Guise aunswered that hée was busie in entertayning his fréendes and could not come Whereu●…pon the Quéene wrote her letters againe but in vai●…e Therfore after deliberation had the Duke of Guise came to Paris the twenty day of March with his brother the Duke of Aumal the Martiall of Saint Andrew which came to him to Nantueile and with a great many noble men more and with a great Armie of horsemen also And entering into the citie there went to méete and entertayne him the chief master of the marchaunts a man of great
aucthoritie and estimation among the Parisians thrée counsels of the Citie sumptuously apparelled and a great concours●… of the Citizens crying God preserue the Duke of Guise The which acclamation is proper only to Kinges Now when they were come there were many doubtfull and vncertaine reportes in the Citie and the conspiracy betweene the Guise the Constable and the Martiall of S. Andrew euidently appeared to all men Who ioyning with them certayne of the Senators of Paris sate in counsell euery daye The Prince of Conde also came to Paris accompanied with certaine noble men and exhorted the faithfull not to forsake him in so great perill and daunger The Guises were very sory for this comming of the Prince of Conde which they iudged would be very hurtfull for them For although the common sort of people of the Citie of Paris were foolish hawtie stout at the first by the cōming of the Guises yet notwithstanding their courage and pride was brideled and abated euen with the name of the Prince of Conde insomuch that they stayed from open outrage Therfore the Citie by the comming of the Prince of Conde was quieted and as it were newly altered But this thing did very much hinder the purpose of the Guises which greatly desired to obtayne Paris being the chiefe Citie of the kyngdome and a very fit place to bring their matters to passe Therfore first of all they saw that they must bring to passe that the Prince of Conde might depart from the citie Wheruppon they practised by the King of Nauar that Marshall Memorencie the Lefetenant of the citie might be called backe againe and that the Cardinall of Borbon which woulde be at their commaundement might be sent in his stede the necessitie of the tyme saye they greatly requiring this thing The Constable brought to passe that his sonne Momorencie should not greatly refuse this thing who if hée had cōstantly withstoode them and denied their request they had very hardly brought their purpose to effect hée being a man of excellent wisdome and experience but yet withall a tyme seruer By this tyme the King of Nauar was come to the King and the Quéene which lay at Moncaulx thither came also out of hand the chief master of the Marchāts an Authour of Seditions hyred and sent by the Guises This fellow declared to the King and Quéene that the Prince of Conde wrought sedition at Paris the whiche would shortly tourne to great mischief except he departed from thence the which if it should come to passe hée to whom authoritie was giuen to prouide remedies for the same should beare all the blame So that with hys often complaynts to the Quéene he brought about that according to his request the king of Nauar should goe out of hand to Paris Then the Guises ioyning with thē certayne of the Senate of Paris that were fittest for their purpose and séeking to haue the greater authority through the presence of the king of Nauar which was chiefe Uicegerent they determined to haue a common counsell to the which they neuer called the Prince of Conde And this they called The Kings Counsel The king of Nauar by the decrée of this counsel wrote out of hā●… to the Quéene that it was necessary that the Prince of Cōde should departe from Paris and get him home to hys house except she would haue present perill of sedition by reason of his presence to burst foorth into open and manifest perturbation and garboyle Notwithstanding it was to be doubted what would come to passe For a man might beholde thoroughout the citie the diuersitie of mennes myndes by diuers shewes Somewhile they trembled somewhile they triumphed both partes in one hower chaūged Di●…ers rumours were disperst abroade In so much that there appeared euident and most certayne tokens of imminent sedition Great was the power of the Guises through the authoritie of the king of Nauar The Senat had the handling of the cause The greatest part of the people consented the common multitude being easely led On the other parte the authoritie of the Prince of Conde was not small his name hauing suche a maiestie that the people trembled at the same great also was the number of the faythfull and no lesse was their power In so much that there was no great inequalitie betwéene both partes yet 〈◊〉 the twayne the Popes number was the greater yea by many Also the Prince of Conde perceyued well enough all the practises of the Guises and how they went about to bring the king and Quéene to Paris But hée was not as yet fully determined what to doe for he feared least hée forsaking Paris the Guises should possesse the same and if hée should abyde at Paris that then by the Counsels of the Guises the King and the Quéene should bée wonne from him Notwithstanding he wayed and considered with himselfe the gra●…itie and wisedome of the Quéene of whom he was fully persuaded that shée would withstande the practises of the Guises And hée could not be altogyther certi●…ied That his brother the king of Nauar would be so blynd as to preferre straungers before his owne bloud Being therefore doutefull what way to take hée was the more colde in his bus●…nesse In the meane tyme the Queene being stirred and prouoked with the dayly complayntes of the Marchant maister wrote vnto the Prince of Conde wisshing him to forsake Paris and to come to the King And the Prince of Conde was dayly disturbed and persuaded hereunto by the Cardinall of B●…urbon his brother who was sent as we sayd before to kepe the Citie Therefore he went from Paris to his house called Fertea in his owne Dominion purposing to goe from thence to the Kinge as the Queene had giuen commaundement Things being thus appointed and the Guises being free from their g●…t feare by the departure of the Prince of Conde they appointed a very great and strong garrison of soldiours ordayned before by the Marchant maister to keepe Paris Thus when they had gotten the citie according to their own desire they seek●… to atchieue and bring about another principall poynt of their counsels and deuises Therefore they made hast with an armie of men to the king who at that tyme was at Fontainbleau The Queene being amased and afrayd at his sodein preparation looked for the Prince of Conde who euen now also had taken his iourney to come Of the which when the Duke of Guise had intelligence fearing least the Prince of Conde would enter into Paris hée gaue charge and commaundement to the Marchantmaister to looke diligently thereunto Uppon this commaundement the Marchantmaister warned the Captaynes to haue their Souldiours armed and in a readinesse appointed watch and ward to be in euery place of the citie and planted péeces of Ordinance in suche places as he thought néedefull Therefore when the Prince of Conde came néere the citie notwithstanding mynding not to enter therein the whole citie roonge and sounded with the
Conde séeing that this motion for diuers circumstances is subiecte to diuers mennes Iudgements and because the knowledge hereof appertaineth to all men would to put away all occasions of slaunders shewe to all men manifest reasons whych haue constrained him to ioyne with a great number of his fréends and retainers to serue the King Quéene and to procure the peace and tranquillity of the whole Realme All men know that after the diuers perturbations and troubles for Religions sake when as greater also wer lyke to ensue to stay appease them at the last in the moneth of Ianuary laste past there was made an Edicte by the Kings commaundement to quiet and pacifie bothe partes wyth the aduice and consent also of the most Noble of the high Court of Parliament The Proclamation of thys Edicte whych at the first was much hindered caused suspicions to arise that these things were done not wythout a confederacie which te●…ded to a farther matter The which suspitions wer increased the more by the méetings of the constable and the Magistrates of Paris by the cōmoning of the senators also by the often assemblies of the chéefe Marchantes notwithstanding all the whych the Prince of Conde or any of the reformed Churches neuer did or spake any thing which might interrupt or breake the publike peace any manner of meanes Yea euen in the midst of those vexations and troubles they loked quietly and modestly for the Proclamation of the same Edicte in the Senate of Paris Thys proclamation being at the lengthe made at Paris and being extorted by the Supplications of the King and Quéene rather than by commaundements the Prince of Conde after his gréeuous sicknes when he had saluted the King and Quéene gotte hym home to hys house to recreate him selfe Amidst these troubles there came newes concerning the cruell and horrible slaughter at Vassi done in the presence of the Duke of Guise and by hym many of the Kings Subiects both men and women being slain which according to their manner by the benefite of the Kings Edict came together to heare the worde of God. This horrible Acte being reported at Paris greatly moued the mindes of all men of bothe partes insomuch that much mischéefe was like to followe And among other Rumors it was reported that the Duke of Guise was comming with a great armye of men to the intent he might vtterly destroy the churches of the reformed Religion Whervpon the mē of those Churches came out of diuers places to the Court and required of the King and Quéene punishment of so greate and notable wickednesse committed Thys was the cause why the Prince of Conde going homeward stayed at Paris went from thence to Monceaulx at the commaundement of the King Quéene to whom he said he feared the commotions troubles like to ensue to stay the which he sayd he thought this the only remedy namely that the Duke of Guise which was said to be cōming to Paris with a great army of men might not be suffered to enter therein the which aduise séemed to please the Quéene and the king of Na●…rre very well And according to this aduise the Quéene wrote her letters to the Duke of Guise intreating him that he would come to the king and to her to Monceaulx The which thing being twise required by the Quéene was also twise denied of the Guise the first tyme hée made excuse that hée was busied in entertayning his friendes which were come to sée him and the second time by silence making no aunswer at all ▪ But hée came to Paris with a great nomber of armed men hauing also with him the Constable the Martiall of S. Andrew and diuers others of his counsell And hée was receyued into the citie by the citizens with great pompe the Marchantmaister being their Captayne and the people crying as hée entered into S. Anthonies gate euen as if hée had bene king God preserue the Duke of Guise he séeming in no point to dislike of the same The Prince of Conde returning from Monceaulx that hée might goe to his house according to his former purpose and being certefied of the cōming of the Duke of Guise and of his company to Paris hée altered his purpose and determined to abyde at Paris according to his dutie to defende the kings subiectes being persuaded that his presence would staye the mindes of the citizens of Paris which began to waxe somewhat haughty by the comming of the Guises And truely all men knowe that so long as the Prince remained at Paris there burst forth no great Sedition Notwithstanding there were many great reasons why the Prince and many of the Nobles which were with him should be disdayned For the Guises so soone as they were come to Paris calling vnto them such out of the Senat as they thoght méet had a counsel which they called the Kings counsell as though a councell consisting of the chief officers of the king were very lawfull The which truly séemed very straunge to the Prince of Conde and to those noble men that were with him Is it lawfull to haue any other kings counsell than that which is néere to the king and Quéene and the Prince of Conde the kings néere kinsman to whome a care of the king and Quéene appertayned and being also in the same town in the which the counsell was held not to know thereof This euidently declared a manifest conspiracy which would bring no small hurt to the king and Quéene For if in that counsell of the Guises those things were handled which appertayned to the preseruation of the kings authoritie and the common wealth what cause was there why thei should shoon the presence of the king and Quéene and of the kings co●…sell Moreouer it is well enough knowne what displea sure the Guise tooke with the Quéene when he departed from the court complayning misliking that he was thoght to be made acquainted with Nemours his dealing who was accused to go about to carry away the king The Constable also of late very contemptuously vsed the Quéene in woordes méeting with the kings retinew and being told that the king was present hée passed by so vnreuerently as if hée had met with some straūgers his proud and lofty wordes whiche he also oftentimes vttered at Paris did plainly declare that ther were some new things a working Also the Martial of S. Andrew ▪ did not only refuse to goe to attend vpon his charge cōmitted vnto him by the kings commaundment but also before all the kings counsel he so contented with the Quéene in brawling woordes that it might euidently appeare that hée leaned to some other greater trust In consideration therfore of these men which seperating themselues from the Kings counsell called a coūsell of their owne authoritie and put men in armour the Prince of Conde could not but looke for some lamen table ende Beside all this when the Quéene had openly declared that hir will was that
notwithstanding being carefull to defend thēselues euen now of late they had brought soldiours armour into the Citie In the meane time newes was brought to Lyons of the tumult of Valentia almost about that hower in which the sturre was there made Then wente Mongeron from Lyons and by and by Fame reported that Mottecondrin was slaine at Valentia Therefore the faithful thinking it best to behaue thē selues māly they in the night time secretly placed diuers armed soldiers in sōdry places of the cōmon streates at the length when thei had gotten the Townhouse had fortified euery place of the Citie and had taken the Churches they came into Parley with the Brother hood of saint Jhons which were fat and rich priestes who had leaue giuen them to departe out of the Citie vnarmed And so the faithfull had the City to themselues placed certaine péeces of ordinaunce in diuers conuenient places fortified the City After those things they came to Saltain the Liuetenaunt and declared vnto him that they had not done these thinges eyther for contempt of the king or his magistrates but to defend the Citye frō iniuries of open enemies and to kepe it for the Kynge obeyinge as their dutye required the commaundemēts of the Prince of Conde to whom the conseruation of the king and Quéen appertayned and therefore they willed him according to his accustomed maner to proceed in the gouernmēt of the citie But M. Saltain within a while after forsaking his office got him home to his own house And M. des Adretze in the name of the Prince of Conde tooke vpon him the gouernment of the Citie And when consultacion was made by the Citizens what were best to be done they agréed at the last vpon this That there shuld be chosen out two thousand men of the reformed Religion to kéepe the Citie and that they should be payed their wages both out of the common treasury and also out of Ecclesiasticall liuings That no man should be indammaged or hurt for his religion but that it should be lawful for euery one to liue with his conscience to him selfe Notwithstanding that there should no Masses or other rytes and ceremonies be vsed either within or without the citie That there should be twelue of the chiefest of the reformed Religion ioyned with the Consuls or Aldermen of the Citie And that it should not be lawefull for the Aldermen of the citie to do any thing without their cōsent And thus Lions came wholy into the handes and power of the faithfull After this the people spoyled the popish churches brake the Images and pictures of saincts and other ornamentes belonging to the Masse And it is reported that there were only thrée slaine in the winning of thys so great a citie Lyons being after this manner brought into the handes of the faithfull they tooke also the greatest part of Burgundy Monsieur Tauuanes the Liefetenant séeking in vaine to hinder and let them The newes of these things thus prospering on the Protestants side being spred throughout Fraunce troubled the mynds of the Guises a new and encouraged the Prince of Conde and those of his syde to procéed in their purpose Notwithstandinge the Prince of Conde was very sory that the men of Valentia had slayne M. Mottecondrin and much discommended them for the same Neyther did the Prince of Conde allowe the breakinge downe of Images and the spoyling of other such superstitions the which notwithstanding hée him selfe could not staye when hée was at Orleans the people crying euerywhere that the Idolles which were the causes of all these troubles ought not to be spared and that séeing the defenders of them were so cruell that they would not let to kill liuing men is it not necessary then to ouerthrow those false worshippes of Idols that the Idolatrers themselues mai see their punishments for their abominable wickednesse And the people were not a little displeased with the Prince of Conde for that he seuerely forbad these things to be done Therefore vpon a certayne small rumour of the throwing downe of Idolles which were set vp in a certaine place in the suburbes the fame thereof was by and by spred throughout the whole citie in so much that all men ran to the churches some into one church and some into an other and made such a spoile of Images and other monuments of Idolatry as thogh it had ben so appointed by the kings commaundement or by an Edict this I saye they dyd notwithstanding that the seruauntes of the Prince of Conde did all that they could to staye them And least that the church called Holy Rood Church which was more beautyful should be thus serued and spoyled the Prince of Conde commaunded certayne souldiours to garde the same but they also shutting vnto thē the church doores began to pull downe the Images and to deface the pictures In the meane tyme the papistes being sorrowefull ran vp and downe the Citie cryed that the kings Edictes were broken At the last the faythefull of the Churche of Orleans where this broyle was with much a do obtayned leaue ●…f 〈◊〉 ●…rince of Conde to haue sermons in the citie yea with importunate sute they went about to obtayne at the laste leaue to haue their Sermons in those Churches in the which the Idoles were defaced But the Prince of Conde said that his purpose was not to deface Idoles but to see that nothing shoulde bée done contrary to the Edict of January for the breaking wherof his aduersaries he sayd being giltie were to be punished But the common voyce notwithstanding of the people was this to him againe Séeing say they the aduersaries of the trueth haue first begoone to extingnish the reformed Religion and to persecute the professors thereof why should we not destroy all false worship And why should they deale coldly which had taken vppon them the defence of the trueth and of the liberty of the Realme séeing that their aduersaries had proclaymed open warres against the truth the Kyng the Realme The affayres of the faythfull going forward as ye sée diuers rumors of them in the meane tyme being brought to the Court the Duke of Guise the Constable Momorencius and the Marshiall of Saint Andrew to the end they might make it séeme a matter of enuy that they were charged to put themselues in Armour to kéepe the Kyng and Quéen captiues as might appéere by the Letters of the Prince of Conde which were spred abrode to that effect they would haue all men they sayd to know that all thinges were done by the authoritie and will of the Kyng and Quéene and that therfore they were falsely sclaundered They offered therfore to the King and Quéene a Supplication to this effect following TO THE intent it may appeare vnto you to the whole worlde that we haue alwayes borne towardes you and towardes the kinges your auncetors of happy memory our soueraigne Lordes a faythfull and louing mind and
his power and authoritye with these exceptions They then saide And now they go about to make that an euerlasting and irreuocable lawe which they thrée themselues haue deuised and decréed Truly we may with better reason and truth conclude that they go about to make the king a captiue and bon●…man vnto them not only in this his minoriti but in his maiority also Who séeth not their sondry and contrary deuises Who séeth not that they go aboute not only to haue the king in their handes and to rule him at theyr pleasure but the whole Realme also when as in a mat ter of so great waight and perillouse they dare take vpon them to determine decre what they thēselues list Dyd euer those Triumuiri of Rome namely Augustus Antonius and Lepidus which by their conspiracie peruerted the lawes and the common wealth of Rome any thing more bould and presumptiouse If they had ben moued by the loue of peace as they say and not by the outragiouse heate of sedition if they had ben moued by zeale of Religion and not by the force of ambition they would not haue begon those their counsailes with force and murder they would haue come reuerentlie and modestly they would haue declared the causes whi they could not allow of the Edict of January And they would haue intreated the kinge and quéene to consulte with their Coūsail for the remedeing of those troubles to the glory of God the dignity of the king and the conseruation of the Realme And so they should haue declared that they were moued by zeale of their consciences But while they go about these things they sufficiently declare that they take Religion but for a colloure to the end that they may draw away the Kinges subiectes to take their part that by their help by the help of straūgers they may bring al things to their rule Can the Princes the kings kinsmen suffer this that straūgers shal make lawes Edictes to rule the king the whole Realme 4 They require to haue the church of Rome which they call Catholike and Apostolicall to be alone through out the whole Realme and that the vse and administration of the reformed religion should be forbidden Let this be the Edict of the Duke of Guise a straunger of the Constable Momorentius and of the Marshall of saint Andrew the kinges seruauntes Let their willes mindes and decrese be set against the authority of the kinges Edict which the king the quéene the king of Nauar the Princes the kinges kinsmen the kinges Counsel and forty chosen men out of euery court of the realm haue made Let them oppose and set this their Edicte both against the decrées of the nobility and the cominaltye by their supplicatiō which they offered to the king first at Orleans then at saint German concerning the orderinge of Religiō after this maner thē they must nedes acknowledge and confesse that their Edict will be the cause of ciuil warres and in tyme the destruction of the realme But blinde Ambition carieth them out of the way to bind the king and the Realme to them as they saye by these merits For this I affirme that the Duke of Guise and his brethren can not deny but that while they go about to molest trouble those that are of the reformed Religion what zeale soeuer they pretende they brynge the Realme into greate perill Let them remember what happened of late almost in the same counsel to thē in Scotland There both sortes of men that is to say both papistes and Protestants liued peaceably obediently vnder the gouernement of the Quéene vntill it was commaunded by the aucthority of the Guises that no other religion should be there receyued then that which is of Rome Then a certen smal nomber of men for this cause being raised and appointed to battaile by the wisdome of the quene and by the help of the Nobility were easely put down again The which thing ought to haue made the Guises sease from their former purpose for feare of greater trroubles whiche would ensue by the meanes of those Edictes But they on the contrary part more obstinately went forwarde with their purpose to hinder the reformed religion writing sharp letters vnto the Quéen because shée shewed hirself so fauourable and perswaded with hir that it was necessary that the principal authours and many of the Noble men should be put to death Therefore to bring that to passe in déed which they vttered in woordes they sent an army of mē into Scotland with M. Brosseus the Bishop of Atniens At whose comming most seuere Edictes were made cōcerning the obseruation of popish rytes and comming to Masse The Bishop said that he would soone cal those that were gone astray as hée sayd to the obedience of the Church of Rome and monsieur Brosseus said that hée would quickly within few dayes by force of armes put all the rebels to flight And as cruelty hath always couetousnesse ioyned with it they beheld considered the landes and possessions of the noble men and wrot to the Guises that they could both make the people tributary to pay vnto the Frenche king two hundred thousande Crownes and also assigne to a thousand Noble men of France which should continually maintayne warre in Scotland houses and land The Guises hearinge of the which were glad but the Quéene Osellus a noble mā of Scotland said vnto M. Brosseus that the Scotts could not be so easely cōquered who if they were cōstrayned would craue helpe of straungees which imbracinge the same Religion would not desire to haue better occasion to banish the Popes Religion out of Scotland whereby the Kings Royall estate should come in peril But they refusing these admonitions of the Quéene Osellus said that the Quéene with hir facilitie and sufferance would marre all and they called Osellus foole and dastard Ther fore these wise men so wrought that the greatest parte of the nobility gathered vnto them an army of men and within few dayes eyther slewe or put to flight the Papistes and sacrifising priests which if this had not ben might haue liued peaceably And thus thei which before would binde Beares and which triumphed before the victory ▪ did not only dishonour the Duke of Guise but also lost the aucthoritie of the Church of Rome By this example the Guises ought to acknowledge their fault and to leaue of their enterprise also to haue no more in their mouthes these wordes One of those two Religions must be banished the realme and some muste needes giue place to other some These proud words become not subiectes and seruaunts but a king of full and perfect age And whereas they would haue no religion but the Romish religion established within the realme which they go about to defende by force of armes they bring the realme into great perill and daunger And truly it were a great deale better to kéepe both partes in peace and concord and
good lucke at the first finally through the daunger of the pestilence a greate nomber of his Soldiers went a side and many quight forsooke him Then were fastinges and prayers solemnly proclaimed to be in the Church to the which the Prince of Conde came oftentimes in his owne person He exhorted also his soldiers to be of good courage and was very carefull for the preseruation of Orleans and he sent Monsuer de Subize a noble and wise man to Lyons to be Lifetenant of the same because Monsuer de Adretze séemed to be to rash hardy and aduenterouse in his doing●…s And he sent letters oftentimes willinge that there should be diligent héede and care had of Lyons Dolpheny and Languedoc Also because the enemies power dayly increased by the meanes of forreine aids and because they were the more stout and bould vpon hope of newe aide the Prince of Conde sent Monsuer de Stuard a Scot with letters to the Quéene of England requiringe at her handes ayde in his owne name and in the name of his fellowes And he wrote also diuers letters to the princes of Germainy that were protestants in the which he craued help at their hands the Andelot himselfe be ing sent for the same purpose the more spedily to bring the matter to passe The helpers in this matter were said to be the Lantgraue Hessus the County Pallatine and the Duke of Bipont About this time the Prince of Conde published a writinge by which he ment to put awaye those rumores which were spred abrode of him and of his frendes by the Guises as though they had bin the authors and defenders of new and monsterouse opinions The libell published was to this effecte following Because saieth he we heare daily that our aduersaries accordinge to their accostomed maner oh lying and maliciouse dealinge against vs do in euery place slaunder and speake euill of al our doinges one while laying to our charge that we are Atheistes and Anabaptistes that by this meanes they might withdraw from vs their good willes care which séeke with vs to defend and mainetaine the true and pure worshippe of God by the doctrine of the prophetes and Apostles we thought good ouer aboue the former declarations of our cause to propounde a briefe summe of our faith By which faith we woorshippe and cal vpon the liuing God in the name of his only Sonne our Lord and sauiour Iesus Christ abiding in his feare seruice by the ministering of his woord and holy Sacraments that is to say by the institucion of Baptisme and of his holy supper To be short we condescend to al the articles of the primitiue Church as to the only rules of our saluation being grounded vpon the bookes of the Prophets Apostles as it is set forth more at large in the confession of our faith confirmed with the whole consent of al the reformed churches within this realme the copie whereof we send out into al forrain Nations to take away those detestable and wicked sclaunders and lyes by which the enemies both of God and of thys our realm being voyd of al shame haue sought in their libelles sealed letters to sclaunder backbyte and defame vs Wherefore we humbly pray and beséeche all those that loue the pure and sincere doctrine of the Gospell and which are the faithfull seruaunts of God yea we require them in the name of the liuing God that they first of all set before their eyes the flowing streames of innocent bloud that hath bene shed throughout this realme crying both from heauen and from earth for vengeance And we require all such that they helpe and ayde vs and that they ioyne with vs in this cause which is not our cause alone but also the cause of all the faithfull to represse and asswage their cruell tyrannie which goe about to take from vs the perfect and frée libertie of our consciences the benefit wherof was graūted vnto vs by our soueraign and leige Lord the Kings Maiestie and by the consent of all the states of the realm we being perswaded that we linked togyther in one religion and in one mind the most mighty and eternal God will stretch forth his gloriouse hande to saue hys Church and will also blesse our labour and indeuour to the glory of his and to the inlarging of the kingdom of his sonne Iesus Christ to whom with the father and the holy Ghost be all honor and glory world without end The Prince of Conde also made answer to the Ordinance and decrée of the Senat of Paris by the which his Adherentes were condemned of treason First of al refusing all those of the College as the Iudges and Senatours to be men vnméete for this cause and writing the causes of their appeale he sent the same vnto them Their answer was in manner and forme following Although I and my friends and fellowes haue sufficiently declared the equitie of our cause which hath constrayned vs to put our selues in armour namely the libertie and authoritie of the King and the obseruation of the Kings Edictes for the maintenance of the libertie of our consciences the peace of the reformed churches Yet notwithstanding séeing the open and sworne enemies of the glory of God and of the common wealth doo dayly publish and send abroad new sclaunders and infamies to the obscuring of my innocency and the innocēcy also of my fellowes we thinke it moste necessary and méet that if wicked and vngodly men will not cease too withstand the trueth and all equitie no more should we be weary to defende and maintayne the same trueth For so much as therefore the XXUI day of Iuly there was an ordinance and decrée of Condemnation established in the Senat of Paris by which they make those to be gilty of Rebelliō which haue borne armour to maintayne the authoritie of the King and his estates and against the tyrannie of the Guises and his adherents wée thinke it necessary that the Iustice of the sayde decrée should be declared and set forth not onely to the inhabitants of this Realme but also to other forreyne Nations and for an euerlasting remembrance to be cōmitted to all posterities For it wil be an example worthy to be remembred in the which men may behold and sée into what Laberinthes of blind peruerse iudgements the enemies of God and his Church do fall and are so mad and blind that for truth they mayntaine falsehode iudging them to be sedicious who to the vttermoste of their power séeke the peace and tranquillity of the common wealth and pronouncing them to be Rebels who laying aside all care and consideration of them selues do both hazarde their goods and their liues to mayntaine the obedience belonging to the Kyng and the due and lawfull authoritie of the kynges Edictes And to the end the same proclamation of Rebelliō may euidently appeare to be vnlawfull and vni●…st and r●…ther a sclaunder of the enemie than
that Edict The Ministers of the Gospel after their othe had authoritie giuen them by the Magistrat to preache in all Prouinces they had also places for the preaching of the word and for the administration of Sacraments graūted vnto them in the 〈◊〉 of the Cities al things else peaceably and without any ●…umult Our aduersaries enuying that all things went forwarde so well sought daylye newe occasions to moue troubles At the length their Captaynes the Constable and the Marshall of S. Andrew thinking it good to delay the tyme no leager wrote letters to the Duke of Guise to come with ayde and a power of man to the Court●… and hauing gotten the King of Na●…ar on their syde there was great hope that they should haue all things at their pleasure Then the Duke of Guise comming with a great Armie of footemen and a troope of horsemen made hast toward the Courte and by the waye as he came hée ●…uelly handeled the reformed Churches which peaceablely vsed the benefite of the Edict at Vassi setting sodenly vpon a great number of the faithful which were gathered togither to heare the word of God he slew mā woman and child without all pitie or mercy Thus beginning his busines he went forward on his iourney without feare and came to N●…antuil the house of his territory or Lordship whether the Constable and the Marshiall of Santandre came And when they had deliberated of the matter and had opened the causes of their complaynts some of them bewayling the decaye of their aucthoritie and rule which thei had in the daies of Kyng Fraunces the second other some repining that they must make their accompt according to the decrée of the States at the length they determined to arme them selues And thus of their owne priuate authority they put them selues in Armes to mayntaine their ambition and couetousnes which notwithstandinge they couer with the cloake of Religion they came to the Kyng and Quéene with an Army of men and made them subiect to their power and tooke vppon them the gouernement subtillie foreséeing that there was no better way to make the people to take their part than vnder the pretence of Religion and the name of the Kyng so to abolish the Lawes and constitutions of the States and the Edict it selfe Therfore from that time forward hauing gotten Paris into their hand and brought the Kyng captiue thither they left no kind of mortall crueltie vnshewed no one corner of the Realme was frée from the Ciuill warres which they had stirred vp insomuch that the lamentable remembraunce of things past and of the great destruction like to come would make a man to tremble Nothwithstanding the Quéene being certified of these thinges was very carefull to let and stay their purpose and to frustrate their deuises sent for the Prince of Conde to come to Monceaulx and prayed him to resist the violent force and crueltie of these men by force of Armes and for this cause she appoynted him to be Captaine generall and named certaine men vnto him whose helpe and furtherance he might vse But the Prince of Conde delaying the matter for feare of tumults and vproares was preuented with the expedition and hast of his enemies who had so gotten the Kyng and Quéene into their handes that they abused their willes at their owne pleasure deludinge and abusing also the facillitie and sufferance of the king of Nauar they séeke thereby coullers to hide their tirranie The which sufferaunce notwithstanding of the king of Nauar although his full consent were ioyned therwith as it ought not by any meanes to restraine or deceiue the king of his libertie euen so it can be of no force to excuse the vnbrideled ambition and presumption of the Guises For in giuing authority the simple and bare ratefying is not sufficient but the ciuill lawes do shew that it is néedefull to haue expresse commaundement Furthermore the Kyng of Nanar hath not this authoritie to rule and gouerne the Realme without the Quéene and neither of them haue any such authoritie that they can set ouer the same to any other without the consent of the States Moreouer as touching the tractation of warre and artillerie the Quéene her selfe during the time of the Kynges nonage can do nothing as of her owne authoritie séeing this thing pertayneth to the States who notwithstanding haue not decréed and appoynted this warre but the Guises which haue caused the same to be in euery corner of the Realme Is there any man in the whole Realme that can or ought to take vnto him such power and authoritie as to gather Armies of men and to moue warre to the detrement and hurt of the Kyng and the Realme as the Duke of Guise now doth And this is the seruice that the Triumuiri namely the Duke of Guise the Marshiall of Saint Andrew and the Constable do to the Kyng their soueraigne Lord in this his tender age in the which he is subiect to many iniuries that is to say their wicked actes by which they go about to ouerthrowe the Kyng with the kingdome Which are the causes O Emperour that we put our selues in Armour and haue chosen the Prince of Conde to be our Captaine who shewed him selfe willinger to take so notable a matter in hand being moued the runto by no lesse good will toward the King and the realme than we were The Quéene also her selfe both perswaded and commaunded him to take this warre in hand to deliuer her from that iniury which both she and the king sustayned as appeareth by her expresse wordes in letters to be séene the Coppies wherof we haue sent vnto thée O Emperour Notwithstanding al this the Prince of Conde which was the last which put himself in armes and that at the commaundement of the Quéene neuer ceased to séeke peace and concord offering all indifferēt and reasonable conditions that might be as That hée would put of his Armour depart from the Court and would go also if néede were out of the Realme so that his aduersaries would do the like and that the Edict of Ianuary might be obserued Also he prayed and doth pray and beséeth by his letters al Christian Princes that are in League and amitie with Fraunce to be meanes for the making of peace and concord and with them all Noble Princes of the Empire whose godly and commendable indeuours for peace and concord were notwithstanding hindered by the Guises who in the meane time sought by al meanes possible to be ayded by straungers And it is manifest that the Prince of Conde hath sought so many waies to establish peace and concord as they haue sought by all meanes possible to hinder the same as may appeare by the last Parley betwene the Quéen the prince of Conde at Baugence they séeking by Treason to circumuent the Prince of Conde Wherefore by the demonstration and knowledge of al these thinges both the trueth and equity of our cause and of the
Thirdly that the King himselfe might ratefie and allow y warre which they had mayntayned and what soeuer they had spent of the Kings money to mayntayne the same that there might be a cōmon and generall Counsell appointed in some conuenient place within this six monethes in the which neyther the Pope nor any other for hym might beare any rule Or if it might not be generall that then it might onely consist of our countrey men leaue being graunted to euery one to come thyther that both armies whether they were domesticall or forreyne might depart home euery man to his owne house and that it would please the King to account the Prince of Conde his army as his owne the which he protested hée gathered togyther to serue and obeye him And finally that for the establishing of this concord it would please the King and Quéene to gyue their fayth and that euery one of the Kings Counsell and Gouernour of any Prouince within the Realme might in lyke manner sweare to obserue and kéepe this peace These were the special condicions which the Prince of Conde required which were for certayne dayes sent abroad into diuers places the Guises for the nonce practising with the Quéen subtillie so to doo that they might haue the better hope of the ayde which was comminge and also that the Prince of Conde beginning now in the winter might fall into greater straytes For the Duke of Guise went about at no time to séeke peace concord fully perswading and assuring himselfe to haue the victorie of the Prince of Conde and his And herevpon it is reported that the Duke of Guise sayd to the Quéen whē shée went about to make peace If I thought that you would make any certayne and firme pacification with the Prince of Conde I would neuer agree to the same To the which the Quéene made aunswere agayne that shée neuer ment it This therefore was the aunswer that was made in the kings name to the peticions of the Prince of Conde First the libertie of religiō was graunted but with so many exceptions that it was no libertie at all For the king denyed any of his Counsell to vse the reformed religion in his Court hée depriued the Cities of warre which were in the vtmost partes of the Realme of the benefite of the Edict among which also hée put in Lions being no citie of warre Hée also exempted Paris the whole Territory of the same from the vse of the reformed Religion commaunding the armye of the Prince of Conde to breake vp and to depart home but the Army of the Duke of Guise which was called the Kings power to remayne at the kinges pleasure as it was hée denyed also leaue for those that had forsaken the Realme to come home agayne hauing not already enioyed that benefite Hée would not haue the Decrées and sentences pronounced to bée quite frustrated but for a tyme suspended He denyed any Protestantes too enioye his office sauing the Prince of Conde And finally he refused to allow that expence of his money vppon the warre Uppon this answere the Prince of Conde was out of all hope to haue peace The Guise would not go out of the Citie of Paris mynding by delay to weaken the pow er of the Prince of Conde While these thinges had this successe on both partes the Guises because they would loose no time went about to make Monsieur Genly a Noble man whose Brother was Monsieur de Iuoy which had forsaken the Prince of Conde after the yéelding vp of Burges to take their part also Monsieur Genly therfore being earnestly trauailed withall fell from the Prince of Conde to the contrary part and was receiued into Paris Whose departure made the Prince of Conde to alter his former purpose because he knew that he being one that had knowne al his secret and priuie Counsel would now bewray the same to the Guises So that when he should haue approched néerer Paris haue besieged the Citie he altered his purpose and remouing his Campe went from Paris with his whole power going through Normandy myndinge to ioyne him selfe to the English men who were now come to the Hauen le Grace being a Citie which bordered vppon the sea coast that then he might be the better able to ioyne battayle with the Guises IN the meane time there came Armies of Souldi ers out of Gascoyne and Spaine to aide the Guises the com ming of these men grealy incouraged the Guises for they were in number xxxii Ensignes of tall and well experienced souldiers Therefore now he fully determined to pursue the Prince of Conde before he ioyned vnto his Armie the English men which were sent with great stoore of money also to aide him by the Quéene of England least by the comming of that money he shoulde bée greatly holpen to mayntaine warre for he hoped that the Germanes at length wanting their paye because the Prince was bare of money wold come vnto him Ther fore to kéepe the Prince of Conde and the English men asunder the Duke of Guise remoued with his whole Armie and power from Paris and making great hast hée come to a towne in Normandy which is called the Teritory or playn of Dreux where also the Prince of Conde stayed and both Armies pitched their Campes with in two French Leagues one of another The Guise had chosen a very conuenient place to incampe hym selue on both for the néerenes of the towne of Dreux which was kept with their Garrisons and also because there were villages and woddes hard by them to flée vnto if néede were Betwéene both the Armies there ran a pleasant long playne hauing but a little valley only which lay on the side of them THE PRINCE OF CONDE when he sawe that his enemies were approched so néere after consultation with his fellowes determined to ioyne battayle with them leauing the euent to the prouidence of god Notwithstanding the Duke of Guise had a great number of footemen more on his part than the Prince of Conde had For he had XXVI thousand footemen where as the other had scarcely XI thousand footemen But of horsemen the Prince of Conde had IIII. thousand where as the Duke of Guise had but III. thousand THE Prince of Conde intending to ioyne battayle with his enemies earely in the morning by the breake of the daye set his souldiers in their arraye the horsemen in the first front which was deuided into diuers rankes In the first ranke or vauntgard he placed Monsieur Cure with a foure square troupe of shot on horse contayning sixe Cornets vppon eche side of the which vauntgard were two winges of Launces one wing of Frenchmen vnder the charge of Monsieur Moue and Monsieur Auerill and the other wing of Germanes After the French winge which was vppon the left hand of the battaile came the Prince of Conde and Rochfocaut with a Troupe of Launces to the number of 230. After the
sée the end the Admirall I saye séeinge these thinges made hast out of hand to recouer the Germane and French horsmen and when the French men saw that the Germanes returned out of the woode againe in their array with their Harguebutes charged they receyued such courage and boldnes that valeantly together they bid battayle to their enemies again both partes fighting with lyke courage Notwithstandinge the Guises part reculed by little and little and the battaile had bin more whot the minds of the Princes souldiers being fierce if so be the night had not caused the weried souldiers to stay and cease Therefore the retract was blowne on both partes ▪ and both armies retyred to their campes The Admirall for want of horses left behynde him fower fielde péeces In this last battaile the Marshal Santandre was taken and being wounded in the head with a shot dyed in the fielde and was dispoyled this man was of very wicked disposition and the cause of the troubles of Fraunce In this battaile also were slain Monsieur Mōbrun the Constables Sonne Monsieur Piennes Moncharne and one of the Guises called the Graund prior ther were sore wounded the two Brosses Monsieur Giury Annebauld and diuers others which notwithstanding lyued But D'aumall and the Duke of Neuers being sore wounded dyed and many others which were wounded and slayne Many also noble men that were Papistes were taken prysoners as the Lord Rotchford Beauuais diuers other Gentlemen to the nomber of 100. Of the Protestants side Monsieur de Mouy and diuers other Noblemen and Captaines were eyther taken or slaine God did so moderate this great battaile that neither part could be saide eyther to conquere or to be conquered thus ordered and appointed by God lest so great a Kingdome denided in it selfe should come to vtter ruine and destruction The Prince of Conde also the fa●…tor and defender of the cause of the faithful was taken And of the papistes the Constable was taken and the Marshall of Santandre slayne And as of the Papistes side many Swisers and Frenchmen were slayne so many Protestantes were slayne also by the Papistes The greater number of horsemen were slayne by the Guises part and of 22. Ensignes there were but a few left But for all this the Prince of Conde found more lacke of his men though they were the smaller number than did the Guise THE Admirall who now in the absence of the Prince of Conde had the whole gouernment of the Protestāts was very carefull for the preseruation of his Armie Therfore when he had gathered together so much as he could the remaynder of his horsemen and footemen and had increased and furnished his armie againe which was not a little weakened by the losse of the footemen he came to Orleans differring his purpose to ioyne with the Englishmen because it was now winter vntill a more conuenient time And the Constable was also brought with the rest of the Captiues to Orleans The syxt Booke of Commentaries concerning the state of Religion and of the common wealth of Fraunce vnder the Raigne of Charles the ninth THE Duke of Guise mynding to repayer his decayed armie came with the same to Paris then appoynted new troupes of horsemen new Captaynes also in the stéede of such as were wanting with a great number of common souldiers And to the end he might make the Kyng and the people thinke the losse of his men to be the lesse he sayd that he had gotten the victory and hoping to drawe many in these troublesome times from the Prince of Condes part he brought to passe that there was an Edict made and published in the Kynges name promising vnto thē peace and securitie which had and would forsake the Admirall and come vnto him The Edict was to this effect The Kyng being moued both with the due aduise and counsayle of his Counsaylers and also by his inclinable and naturall goodnes hath sought euen vntill this day all meanes wayes possible to appease these troubles in his Realme and to bring his subiectes to their accustomed peace and tranquillitie and to bring to passe that they which without his commaundement haue rashly put them selues in Armes might vnarme them selues againe The which his Maiesties good will he hath declared by many tokens writing Letters to to all places of his Realme and séeking a reconciliatiō againe by parleys and conference at sundry times with the chiefest of their Captaines the which touching diuers both with remorse of their offences and with the loue and desire of obedience which they owe vnto their naturall Prince hath done some good insomuch that many haue retourned from their wicked purpose and thewed themselues since good and faithfull subiectes Yet notwithstanding that remedy could not so much preuaile as he hoped for albeit he left nothing vndone that might preserue them and that might bring peace and concord the Quéene his mother also with certaine of the Princes that were of Royall bloud and indued with no lesse good wil riding to and fro at sundry times to conferre and talke with them and to declare vnto them her true intent and meaning to bring them into her fauour againe by pardoning their offences But they continuing still in their former euell enterprise God would haue the matter come to the very extreame and last remedy that is to say by bidding battayle against those which haue so obstinatly gone forward the triumphant victory wherof it hath pleased the same most holy and righteous god to giue vnto him by which he hoped to receiue that fruite which so greatly a long time he had wished for namely their retourne and acknowledging of their faultes which had erred and gone astraye at which time they shall vnderstand that although their offences are great yet he is ready to imbrace them with the armes of mercy and to receiue thē into his fauour againe for the which cause he thought good to signifie the same to all men And because he desireth nothing more than the reconciliation of his subiects and would vse this victory to the Glory of God to the peace and tranquillitie of the Realme to shewe his naturall clemency and goodnes in the beginning of his raigne he willeth and cōmaundeth all his subiects what condition state or degrée soeuer they be of which without his will and commaundement haue put them selues in Armour taken Cities incamped them selues against him haue bene at any battayle or skirmish or had done any other thing against him to vnarme them selues againe to leaue those places and assemblies to shew their obedience and to renounce their company fellowship In so doing they shall sustayne neyther losse nor perill in body or goodes for bearing Armour nor for their conscience what soeuer hath bene heretofore decréed notwithstanding but shall be receiued with all their families into his fauour and protection So that euer hereafter they shall liue obediently and quietly Catholiquely and without offence And vppon this
we were neuer kept by any maner of violence nor Captiued any maner of waye But haue alwayes enioyed bothe the fredome of our bodyes mindes and haue euer foūd those our subiectes which are accused in this behalfe to be most louing faythfull and obedient Furthermor we haue not cōmaūded or giuē leaue to those our seditious Subiectes to put themselues in armoure and to ioyne with for reyne Nations as we think now the Marshall Hess himself well perceyued so soone as he cam into the Realme both by the late successe of the battaile also by the infinite nomber of murders rapines and spoyles which that seditiouse sort do dayly commit against our poore subiectes whereby there cannot be a more firme and certain argument to declare what the purpose and mind of those seditious persones is In so much that we must néedes perswade our selues that those Souldiers of Germany by the admonition of these our letters will be certified of the truth and beware of that errour with the which those seditious persones go aboute to blinde them In so doing they shal both win ●…ame to thēselues and also deserue wel at our handes but especially main taine and defend the glory of God. To these letters subscribed Alexandre the Kinges brother Duke of Orleans Henry Borbon Prince of Nauar Charles Cardinall Borbon Lodowicke Borbon Duke of Monpenseir Fraunces Burbon countie de Alphine and Charles Borbon Prince Rochsurion the xxiiii day of Ianuarie After this the Duke of Guise beséeged Orleans wyth a great host of men and with aboundance of great guns which he planted against that 〈◊〉 of the Citie by which the Riuer of Loire ran 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the middest of the same by reason whereof the Guise perswaded hymselfe the more easely to win the same For on the other side of the Citie the ground lay leuell and playne which was very vnméete to incampe vppon and besides this the Citie had very stronge fortes and Towers on that parte to defend it selfe At the first therefore he to●…e the Suburbes called Porterell and the Germaine footemen that were set to kepe the same fled away at the receyuing of whom into the Citie ther were a great nomber of Gascoynes and inhabitantes of Languedoc slaine which made the Citizens sore afraide After this the Guise bent his ordinance for the battery against the citie and gaue a very whot assault to the same In the meane time th●… Andelot though he was sore troubled with a quartern ague toke great paynes in forte●…ing and defending the Citie At the length by treas●…n the Guise got the tower which standeth vppon the bridge foote by which the townesmen might haue bin greatly anoyed if so be they had not beat downe a great part of the bridge from the same at the commaundement of the Andelot the Iland being very well fortified and defended ¶ Whyle these thinges were thus in hand at Orleans the Admirall was in Normandy and had ioyned himself to the Englishe men ▪ whereby his army was not only much encreased but also he receyued a great summe of money whereby the Germanes were not a little encouraged The Duke of Guise dayly more and more vrged the men of Orleans and sought newe wayes to worke theyr destruction But behold as the Guise mused and de●…ised with himselfe to worke mischiefe there came a certain Souldier from Lions called Pultrot Merae carying letters of Monsieur Soubize to the Admirall being of body great taull and strong but in courage and stomacke a very coward This Pultrot when he had deliuered his letters to the Admirall declared vuto him that he knew an easie way to discomfite the Guises army yea if néede were to kill the Guise himselfe shewinge himselfe very ready and willing to bring the same to passe The Admirall wondered at the boldnesse of the man being to him a mere straunger and also had no great trust in him at the first Notwithstanding bycause he was commended vnto him by Monsieur Soubize he graunted vnto hym according to his owne request leaue to be a spye and secret beholder of the Guises doinges and commaunded him also to certifie him thereof so soone as he could deriding and little regarding that his immagination concer ning the killing of the Guise First of all therefore the Admirall gaue vnto Merae for to play the spye twenty french Crownes after the receyte whereof he went to the Guise in his campe at Orleans and made protestacion vnto him that he was very sory that he had borne armour against the king crauing pardon for his offence of the Guise and promising ●…uer after to shewe himselfe a true and faithfull subiecte towardes the king The Guise hearing this very louingly receyued and entertained Pultrot Merae Then from the Guise he went to the Admirall againe shewing vnto him how well he had sped and receyued of him againe a hundred crownes to by him a Horse Therefore he retourned againe to the Guises campe with a better horse and tarying there cerdayes he earnestly studyed in himselfe how hee myght bring to passe to slay the Duke of Guise and he made the more spéede to finish his purpose bicause he saw the Citie of Orleans lyke to come in perill Wherefore when he had fully determined with himselfe what hee would do he began to deuise with himselfe whether he were best to kill hym when he had many men or fewe about him When he had fully resolued himselfe how and after what maner he would accomplishe this enterprise he came to the Guise as he was vewing the strength of the Towne and the maner of his siege and wayted vppon him according as he had done before At the length the Guise being weary mounted on his horse intending to go home to his house with two men only waighting vppon him and Merae followed him also And when the Guise and the rest were come ouer a certain Ferry not far from his house Merae suffred the Guise to ride about six or seuē paces before him and then discharged at the shoulder of the Guise a pistolet which he had charged be-before with thre pellettes With the which hee being sore wounded within a fewe dayes after he dyed But Merae so soone as he had done the déed set ●…rres to his horse and fled with spéede And riding al the night from place to place the night being very foule and tempestious as it is commonly in the winter he came againe to the same place from whence he had ●…ed the daye before which was at a Uillage called Oliuet nere vnto the Riuer Ler●… the which village was the appointed place for the Army of the Switsers And runninge vppon the Switsers vnawares was by their outcry bewrayed Not withstanding he fled again but was taken within few miles of the Guise campe Now the death of the Guise for certaine dayes was kept from the knowledge of the men of Orleans the captaines slacking neuer a whit lesse
sodayne punishment of Merae which was so spéedy that hee had not leaue to come before the Iudges according to order of Law to haue the accused present before the accuser Now concerning the peace it was reported of euery where euery one reioyced because of the same yea the naming of peace was pleasant in the eares of all men euery one hoping that so great troubles and calamities were now at an end Notwithstanding the Protestants greatly m●…ruelled what the Prince of Conde ment to agrée vnto those slended conditions séeinge the principal heads of their enemyes were destroied some taken and the ●…ost 〈◊〉 discouraged whereas on the contrary part the Prince of Conde had now the lawfull gouernment of the Realme and many couragions captaines to take his part whereby they were like to haue ●…etter successe than euer they had Moreouer the Admirall in No●…ndy and Monsie●… Cu●…sol in Languedoc prospered very well notwithstanding by letters sent to him from the King and from the Prince of Conde concerning the Edicte and to Monsieur Cursol also which was then besieging of the Castell of Pyle they vnarmed themselues imbraced the peace And the Edicte was there by and by 〈◊〉 ●…ed and in al Townes also where the Protestants inhabited The Catholiques also were suffered fréely to go vnto their Cities and enioyed all thinges to them appertayning according to the benefit of the Kinges Edict Notwithstandinge at Bourdeux and Tholoze the Papistes made much a do about the receiuing of the Kinges Edicte in so much that the Protestants durst not go home to their houses but were faine to make often complaintes here of to the Kinge The English men by the sufferance of the Prince of Conde kept the Portele Grace which is a Citie bordering vppon the Sea in the edge of Normandy who refusing for certain causes of couenant betwéene them to go out of the Citie the Kinges armye remoued to besiege the same the Prince of Conde also himselfe being present with a great part of his army at the which the English men greatly marueiled thinking that he requited them not as they had deserued Notwithstandinge at theyr Quéenes commaundement they departed from thence vppon certaine conditions a League being made betwéene the King of France the Quéene of England Both Armies also of the Germanes went home almost in euery place men wholy vnarmed themselues notwithstanding certain of the Guises armye and of the Prince of Condes also wer reserued stil in their armour for another purpose as shal be hereafter declared The end of the second part ¶ The thirde parte of Commen taries Conteyning the whole discourse of the ciuill warres of Fraunce vnder the raigne of CHARLES the nynth Translated out of Latin into Englishe by Thomas Tymme Minister Seene and allowed Imprinted at London by Frances Coldock And are to be sold at his shop in Pawles churchyard at the signe of the greene Dragon 1574. The Table for the third part A ABbay of Saint Florent burnt page 201 Actes in the time of the Kyngs progresse 46 Admirall accused by the Cardinall of Loraine 11 Admiralls purgation 13 Admiral cleered of the Guises death by the Kings sentence 47 Affaires of the lowe Conntrey 77 Agreement betweene the king and the Duke of Orleans 40 Amanzi slaine 131 Answere of the faithfull to the oth which they should take 124 Andelot commeth to the Prince of Conde with a great armie 174 Andelot passeth ouer the Riuer of Loyer 176 Andelot ioyneth with the Admirall 176 B Battaile woone by the Protestants at Auuergnoys 107 Battaile in the which the Prince of Conde was slaine 208 Brotherhoodes of the Papistes 43 Brissiac slaine 215 Boysuerd slaine 175 C Cardinall accuseth the Admirall 11 Cardinall taketh foolishe and ●…ain journeyes 70 Cardinall of Loraine practiseth too take the principall protestās 118 Cardinall of Loraine practiseth too take the Prince of conde 121 Cardinall S●…astillion fleeth into England 162 Church of Lions diuersly vexed 50 Chartres besieged 108 Charite besieged and taken 221 Cities and Townes which tooke part with the Protestants 107 Cities yeelded to the Prince of Con de 174 Cipiere cruelly slaine 119 Conference betweene the Nobles and the Duches of Parme. 86 Conspiracie of the Papistes to destroy the Gospell 92 Constable slaine 102 Countie Panpadon slaine 215 Counsell of Trent traueileth to hi●… der the Gospell 23 Congregatiou of the Protestants at Pamiz 37 Craftie disposition of the Queene Mother 11 D Death of the Prince of Condes wife 41 Death of Ch●…els Sonne to Kyng Philip. 162 Death of the Lord of Morueile 227 Death of the Duke of Deuxpons page 223. Declaration of Rossilion gaue a great ouerthrow to the Edict 50 Descriptiō of the Dukes camp 223. Descriptiō of the princes army 224 Discipline appointed by the Prince of Conde 164. 165. Duches of Parme causeth an assembly of states 83. Duke of Alba commeth into Flaūders with the Spaniards 94. Duke of Aniou marcheth toward Loraine 106. Duke of Aniou put to the worse in fight 193. Duke of Deuxpons promiseth aide to the Prince 197. E Edict wrested by the Anuil 5. Edict falsely interpreted 27. Edict enterpreted 45. Edict against the Gospel 106. 177 Edict collerably made by the Catholiques 112. Edict not obserued 115. Edict of peace 300. England a fuccor to Fraunce 109. Endreau reuolteth 212. F Fortresse built at Lions 49. G Germans take both partes 196. Gouernment of D'anuil ouer the Churches of Languedoc 3. Gospell begynneth to florishe in ●…launders 77. Guyses seke to disturb the peace 20 I. Impunitie for the murder done at Towers 69 Images in Flanders go to wrack 85 Iniuries done to the Protestantes pag. 60. 113. Interdiction of Sermons 48. K Kinges progresse with the causes thereof 38. King commeth to Lions 48. King commeth to Languedoc 74. King Philip certified of the increse of the Protestantes in the Lowe countrey 79. King and Queene remoue to Paris 97. L Letters of the king to the Prince of Conde 67. Letters of the Prince to the K●…ng page 98. 132. Letters of the papistes intercepted page 130. Letters of the Queene of Nauar ●…o the Kinge 168. to the Queene mother 169. and to the Cardinal of Borbon 173 Lett es of the Queene of Nauar ●…o the Queene of England 187. Letters pattens from the Pope 184. Lord Boccard dyeth 216. Luzig surrendered 241. M Messenger sent by the Prince of Cō de taken 162. Merindol apointed for the exercise of the reformed religion 73 Monsuer Cure slaine 44. Monsuer Saltane displaced oute of his office and Monsuer Lossay succedeth him 50. Mons. Cochay taken and many of his men slaine 197. Mons Mouens and his souldiours slaine 186. Motton commaunded to be hanged by the Anuil 6. Murders most horrible 119. Musters of Souldier●… 130. N Niort besieged 237. Noyers wonne 198. O Oth of the prince of Nauar. 212. Oth collerably made 130. Order of gods f●…ruice in Nemaux ●… P Papistes brag of
attempte againste the Realme of Frannce or that they mynded to defende Callice against the Quéene of England They sought also other meanes and waies to quarell and contende with the Protestantes mynding to deale with them as giltie of the Edictes broken and to examine those which had done anye thing contrarye to the Edicte specially againste that which was made at Rossillon that is to saye which had gone to anye other places to beare Sermons than to those which were appoynted them by the Kings commaundement or if the Noble men had entertayned any other to the hearyng of the sayd Sermons beside those that were within the compasse of their Iurisdiction and suche like offences As these transgressions had anexed vnto them the pain and punishment of exile so their purpose was to seeke a reformation of these things by seuere putting the same punishmentes in execution according to the tenour of the Edict But least they might séeme to haue no regard to the Counsaile of the Duke of Alba which was It is better to haue one Salmons heade than the heades of a thousand Frogges they went about to snare and catch those Noble men which imbraced the reformed religion as the Prince of Conde the Admirall the Andelot the Rochfoucault and other Noble men And this séemed a present waye to bring the same to passe if so be the Kinge sent for them as standing in néede to haue their aduise in those thinges that concerned the gouernment of the Realme Nowe if they should haue refused to come vnto the King than had he good and iust cause to complaine of them as none of his friendes And if so be they shuld haue neede to vse any force they had at hande two and twentie Giddons of horsemen and certaine Switsers also of which they had already gotten six thousand In the meane time the Prince of Conde the Admiral and diuers other Noble men of the reformed religion were verye carefull For beside these flying rumours bothe the dayly newes of the comming of the Duke of Alba and of the ayde of the Switzers and also the manifest preparation of horsemen with the euident state of all things else caused them to haue a great care For concerning that Holy League made betwéene the kinge of Fraunce and Spayne to destroy the religiō The prince of Conde was fully certifyed by the Prince Rochsuryon the Prince of Condes néere kinsman and of the Kynges bloude of the house of Borbou who a little before hys death exhorted the Prince of Conde to prouide remedye in time for so greate troubles The Noble men aforesayde being very carefull and withall vncertain what to doe fearing least if they should obey the kinges commaundement whose name they perceiued their aduersaries to abuse they shoulde sodainely be oppressed or leaste they shoulde be accused of rebellion if so be they sought meanes to restite the force of their aduersaries they determined I say to séeke all wayes and meanes to appease and quallify these troubles and to certifie the King plainely of their will and mynde herein In the meane time bycause they perceyued their enemyes to be in a readynesse they sente diuers mesiangers to the reformed Churches within the Realme to prepare thēselues and to haue a diligent consideration of all theyr actions They certified diuers of the princes of Germany concerning their affaires requiring aide of them if neede should require This was in the monethes of Iuly and August of this yeare The Spanishe armies aryued at Nice a Citie of the Duke of Sauoy mynding to passe through Pedemont Sauoy and the Countie of Burgundy where the Prince of Orange hadde occasion offered him to finishe notable exploytes if he would haue taken his time but as he dyd in the lowe Countrey so did he nowe leaste he myghte séeme to attempt any thing against the king but within a while after he was very homely requighted by the Duke of Alba. Philbert Duke of Sanoy required of the inhabitantes of Bernoy a great parte of the territory which they had sometyme taken from his Dominion by war and the matter between them was oftentimes solemnly debated in an assembly of the Switzers the men of Bernoys affirming that the same Region was giuen vnto them by the Lawe of Armes and that they had lawfully receiued the same Notwithstanding at the same time when the Spanishe armyes were loked for which came with the Duke of Alba the men of Bernoys communed with the Duke of Sauoy and agréed with him vpon certain conditions and graunted vnto him the thrée Dominions or Lordships that were next to Geneua ▪ By reasō of this agréement the administration and vse of the reformed religion was vsed in those Dominions euen as the men of Bernoys themselues would desire Concerning the purpose and connfaile of the Prince of Conde of the Admirall and of others of the reformed religion we haue spoken before The Prince of Conde therefore by dyuers messengers prayed and intreated the Kinge concerninge the séeking of a reformation for those troubles which were lyke shortly to ensue Declaring vnto him that the comming of the Swirsors into the Realme againe was so perillouse that it would cause the people seditiously to rise The Admirall went often tymes to the Constable his vncle and talked with the Quéene whom he knew to be at Chantilly the Constables house and fréely declared vnto her that if the faithfull were so handled wherby they had iust cause to suspect that war was a preparing for him they could not any longer be kept in peace Notwithstandinge the Quéene and the Costable pretended a notable cause why it was néedefull to haue the aide of forreiners for say they the Spaniardes beare an olde grudge and hatred against the realme of Fraunce so that we haue good cause to feare least they hauing occasion set vppon vs but the King will reforme all thinges so for the faithfulles sake that all men shall sée that he will deale vprightly and iustly towardes all men After this also the Queen made these promises in her letters to the prince of Conde Notwithstanding there came sixe thousand Switsers in the beginning of September and a greate number of horsemen were armed and prepared And the Prince of Conde was fully certified that the Duke of Alba which was already come to Belgio had moued the King of Fraunce in the name of King Phillip to go forward with the holy league and withall had perswaded him to take present occasion to bring his purpose to passe At this time the Cardinall of Lorraine was with the King and a great number of his adherentes also Notwithstanding all thinges waxing dayly woorse and woorse the Prince of Conde and the rest of the péeres and Nobles which professed the reformed religion sawe that ther was no longer stay to be made but that they must of necessity when they could do no good by their letters come before the king themselues and declare vnto him the present daunger
heere inserted though as yet we are not come to that yeare to the ende the reader might the better vnderstande the order of all the actes and affaires of the lowe Countrey After the foresayde slaughter of the Parrisians there courage was somwhat quailed that they durst no more so boldly set vpon the Prince of Conde But the Prince of Conde when he had soughte and intreated peace by messengers sent vnto the King and coulde not obtaine the same and beyng as yet vnable to giue any greater enterprise sent into Germany for aid to the princes For there were prepared great Armies both of horsemen and footemen Germanes their generall Captaine being C●…simire Duke of Bauire son of Frederike county Palatine And bycause the prince of Conde wanted great ordinaunce the princes of their owne proper charge prouided reasonable store of great gunnes for him At the length the prince went himself with his army to méete the Germanes that ioyning with them in time he might haue occasion to bring notable thinges to passe Goinge therefore from Sandionise he marched towardes Lorraine being the ready way into Germany The prince being absent the Catholikes armyes which men commonly called the Kings armie had the more libertie to increase their power to whom beside their domesticall ayde came certaine bandes of horsemen and foote●… men out of Italy The Catholikes chefetaine General was Alexander Duke of Anion a yong mā the kings brother but he had vnder him to guide him dyuers expert Captaines as Mons. Martigues 〈◊〉 Lessay and others They wanted greatly the Marshall Brissac who dyed before the troubles of this seconde warre and to whom the charge of the warre was principally committed The Kinges brother hauing gathered his whole Armie together determined to marche also towarde Loraine that he mighte either staye the Prince of Conde from ioyning with the Germans or else by meanes or other might anoy him and to the ende also he mighte ioyne with those Germans which came to ayde him vnder the charge and conduct of Captaine Saxon Baden Thus for space of certaine dayes whilest one of them laye in wayte for another there was nothing done but certaine small skirmishes made the kings brother alwayes refusing to ioyne battaile While these things thus procéeded on both parts by martiall affayres the Catholiques soughte also to preuaile by Edicts and with thundering threates Therfore the vse of the reformed religion was forbydden in all places of the Realme all Ministers were commaūded to depart the Realme within fiuetene dayes vpon paine of death notwithstanding leaue was graunted to such to abide still at home as coulde be contented to forsake the exercise of the reformed religion agayne it did not appoint any manner of punishment for any diuersitie of opinion concerning Religion so that the holders of them did kéepe their conscience secrete to themselues and did not publishe the saide opinions abroade nor ioyne with the fauourers of the Prince of Conde also all suche as bare anye office and fauoured not the Catholike religion were commaūded to forsake their offices ▪ and to liue as other priuate Subiectes And straite after this the Senate of Paris sent oute decrées by which they condemned the most parte of the nobles as guiltie of treason but specially the Admiral Whose office was taken from him and giuen to Mons. Martigues a very wicked and vngodlye man but yet a valiant Captaine The Armies pursued one another at Lorain while they wayted for the comming of the Germaine horsmē And the Kinges brothers Armie was dayly increased with newe aide to whome within a while after the Cermanes came and ioyned themselues they were in number a thousand and CC. horsemen But all thys while whiche continued the space of two monethes there was no notable attempte gyuen the more was behinde against winter By the sufferance and fauour of the Quéene of Nauar there were armies prest out of the Region of Foix which is within the dominion of the Quéene of Nauar and adioyning to the mountaines Pirenei and they came to Montanbane where other Armies also by the industry of Vicount Burniguet and other noble men were gathered together out of the Territory thereaboutes After this by the diligent trauaile of Monsiuer Monents Monbrune Ponsenac and of other Noble captaines there were diuers other bandes of souldiours footemen gathered out from among suche as were banished out of Prouance Forests Bourgondy Dolpheny and out of Languedoc the which were minded to go together and to ioyne with the Prince of Conde And when they were in Auuergne the Noble men of that region at the Kings commaundement and by the furtherance of the Liuetenant went about with all the power they were able to make too staye the Armyes of the protestantes Wherupon they méeting together ioyned battaile at Cognac a village néere vnto the towne of Gainat The faithfull vnderstanding of the lying in waite of their Aduersaries at the first drew backe Then being incouraged by their Captaynes but speciallye by Mons. Mouents they did not onely encounter with the enemie but also caused them to flée and slewe a greate number of them at which time the foresaide Gannat was a conuenient place of refuge for them Bicause the protestants wanted great gunnes and were lothe to linger their iourney taken in hande they left Gannat as they went to wrecke their anger they set fire on the house of Haulltefull a noble man and one of the chiefe of the Catholiques who was also slayne among the rest of the common souldiers Mons. Pezenac of the protestantes side was very sore wounded in that battaile in so much that he shortly after-died This happened the. viii of Ianuarye After this the protestantes Armye passed peaceably on their Iourney and came into the midest of Fraunce And while they wayted for the comming of the Prince of Conde with the whole armie they through the incouraging of Mouent●… wan a Noble Citie called Blays The protestants in Dolpheny were often times skirmished withall by Baron des Adrctz that traytour and Apostata but to small purpose THe Duke of Aniou lingering and delaying to ioyne battaile the Prince of Conde ioyned himselfe with the aide that Casimire brought out of Germany and then sought all occasions to encounter with the enemy And for this cause he determined to besiege Chartres a noble and faire Citie in the region of Belloge beyng rl Myles from Paris He began to besiege this Citie about the ende of February at what tyme he battered the walls of the citie with the great gonnes that came out of Ger many the citie was neyther well fortified nor yet well gouerned by any skilfull Captayn for the chief gouernour of the citie was the County Daulphin of the Kings linage and of the house of Borbon being a very yonge man and the sonne of Monpensier Therefore the King and Quéene were sore afrayd least this noble citie shold be wonne and Monpensier being
territorie of Bellouac of which he being certified fled and in fléeing was chased by souldiours till he came to the Sea In so much that he was constrayned to leaue the greatest part of his cariage behind him and to take Ship to passe ouer into England It was also commonly reported about this tyme that Charles Sonne to King Philip of Spayne was dead The causes were by diuers men diuersly reported but that which was most credible is That the Inquisitors suspecting him of certain things concerning religion ꝓuoked stirred vp the displeasure of the Father against the Sonne that he might depriue himselfe of his onely Sonne and of the lawfull heyre of Spayn Shortly after this also newes was brought concerning the death of Elizabeth wyfe to Philip Kinge of Spayne and Sister to Charles King of Fraunce Furthermore the Duke of Alba dayly more more played the tyrant in Flaunders straining no courtesie at the shedding of innocent bloud wherevpon the prince of Orange being moued partely to discharge his dutie being one of the Princes of the Empire and partely for the loue which hée bare to his Countrey caused a great Army to be in a readinesse that hée might withstand the cruell tyrannie of the said Duke of Alba. He had to ayde him great numbers of horsemen footemen which came out of Germany out of Fraunce and also out of the low Coūtrey County L●…dowike also his brother a valeāt captain came with a great number of good souldiours to ioyne with him COME LORD IESV COME QVICKLY The. ix Booke of Commentaries concerning the state of Religion and of the common wealth of Fraunce vnder the Raigne of Charles the ninth THus beganne the third ciuill war in Fraūce being more notable than the others goyng before both for the great attēpts and enterprises and also for the continuance of the same for it troubled the Noble Realme of Fraūce for the space of two yeres Therefore when newes was brought to the Courte of the departure of the Prince of Conde there was open prouision made on both partes for the warre but both their conditions were not alike For the Papistes had Cities Artillery money and all maner of prouision belonging to warre they had also the Kings name authoritie and power by which they preuailed more than by any other meane But as for the Prince of Conde and the Protestantes they had almost nothing but the goodnes●…e of their cause and couragious mindes to defende them●…elues who though to the perill of the losse of theyr lyues and goods were almost desperate to defende the same Moreouer they which should haue bene helpers and furtherers of their cause were hemde in and shut ●…p throughout the whole Realme in so muche that it was marueile that the Prince of Conde was able to holde warre and to withstand his enemies in so great extreamitie There were great and vrgent ca●…ses of newe contention ▪ as the di●…pleasure taken for the breaking of the oath solemnlye made the breaking of the Kings promise and common peace and the me●…itable necessitie of defending their consciences and liues But the Papistes beyng forward enough of themselues t●… destroy the godly were pricked forward by the bloudy ●…uriousnesse of the Cardinall of Loraine Therefore by the Kings commaund●…ment for vnder this name the Papistes did what they would the Armies that were dismi●…t were nowe called backe againe newe choyse and muste●…s of men were had and they were all commaunded to be at Staples the. x. day●… of September The whol●… ordering and charge of the warre was committed t●… Alexander Duke of Angewe the Kings brother being but a young man notwithstanding he had ioyned with him certaine valiant captaines as we sayde before Then were baytes and ●…nares subti●…ly layde and in the Kinges name the gouernours of the Prouinces published a decrée as thus The Kyng commaundeth that all the men of the reformed Religion be vnder his protection no lesse than anye other of his subiectes that they may haue leaue to complaine of iniuries done to them that they may haue remedies prouided out of hande as it is meete and conuenient for their defence and that all Magistrates should be vigilant to defend them In the meane tyme he that caryed the Prince of Condes letters to the King after the deliuerie of them was taken and committed prisoner to a certaine noble man and no answere made to the letters The Prince of Conde when he had stayed in the house of Rochfoucant certaine dayes wente wyth hys whole retinew to Rochel of whose inhabitantes he was very louingly receiued And thether came vnto him the inhabitantes of Xantonge of Poictou of Perigueux of Engolmoys and a great number of noble men of the Regions thereaboutes which embraced the reformed religion and as for the common sort of people they came vnto him out of all those quarters by beapes The C●…ties also called Sainctes Tifauge and Montagu offered themselues vnto him But for all this he sente letters to diuers partes of the Realme requiring ay●… of hys fellowes and forsomuch as the Protestantes were expulsed almost euery Citie it seemed good vnto him that they shoulde come with all spéede to hi●… to Rochel and then hauing greater power to ioy●… battaile wyth the enemie Notwithstanding in many places by the wonderfull prouidence of God there were diuers places of refuge reserued throughout the whole Realme as to the men of Francoys Sanferre and Uezelay to the men of Languedoe Montalban Castrealby and Milliaulde to the men of Dolpheny which at that time were in great perill the Cities of Uiuaretze were reserued as Albenac Priuac and many others But before the Prince of Conde began any warre he published a certaine solemne declaration of the causes of the same In manner and forme as followeth I protest before God and his Angels and before this holy assembly that ●…as I also declared in my last letters which I sent vnto the King my Lord intend to do nothing against his Maiestie which may either hurt his person or dignitie but taking him for my Kinge and supreme Lorde next vnder God by him so appoynted I protest that whatsoeuer I doe is for no other cause but to keepe and defende the liberties of our consciences the free vse of the reformed Religion our lyues honours and goods from the tyrannie and oppression of the Cardinall of Loraine and his fellowes ▪ the whiche tyrannie they haue alwayes hytherto shewed and minde still to vse towards the men of the reformed Religion contrary to our kings will whiche he hath openly declared by publique Edicts and decrees thereby breaking the common peace and tranqui●…itie And for this cause to the end I may defend their lyues honours goods and the libertie of their cons●…ences which professe the reformed religion I affir●…e that I wyll spende bothe my lyfe and whatso euer e●…se God hath giuen vnto me And b●…cause there came souldiers daye by daye vnto
sicke he was of no lesse councell in matters of consultation than of courage in the execution his estate of the great Maister of the artillerie was giuen to the Lorde Ianlis his sonne in law with his cornet of horsemen And nowe to ouerslip nothing that was executed in this last April ther eis in the mountayns of Daulphyne a Castell nere to Bryanson wherein the King keepes an ordinarie dead pay of certeyn numbers of souldiours A Captein called Colombyn borne in Grenoble vnderstā ding by certain of the borough of Oysans that most part of the sayd dead pay men were issued out of thir charge toke the sayde Castel and finding no resistaunce other than the very captaine of the place who yéelded beyng hurt with a shotte he made him selfe Lord of it where neglecting one first and most necessarie policie in a victor he rather laboured to deface the images thā to furnish place y with conuenient prouision which being not vnmarked of certein euill neighbours purlewing vpō the Castle they forthwith enuironed him with a siege ▪ and so cut off his vittaill whereof they knew the castle had but slender store Their siege continuing about xv dayes enforced him at last to render the place vpon cōposition and onely reseruation of lyfe whiche notwithstanding was not kept for that all his souldiours were cut in péeces and he only led on liue to Grenoble After the generall view and muster of the Princes footemen the Lord de Pilles returned nowe from Gascoygne was sent to sease vpon the I le of Medoc a riche Ile lying betwene Rochell and Bordeaux conteyning in length about xvi or xvii leagues and 4. or 5. leagues in breadth he prouided necessary boates to passe the riuer of Gironde and embarking himselfe with two thousand footemen discended into the sayde I le and tooke hauen without any let he made himselfe maister of the yle vpon the sodaine and vnlooked for finding great foyson of riches wherwith he and his souldiours loaded themselues plentifully By meane of this yle he besieged Bourg a towne in Berdelois but being spéedely called back by the princes he raysed his siege and came agayne to the Campe At this siege died of a shot in his shoulder the Lord Ualphe uiere Lieuetenant to the late Lord d' Andelot of his regiment of footemen whose regiment was translated to the Lord of Rouray a gentleman of Fraunce This was vpon the end of May. The Kinges Brother being now retourned into the countrey of Angoulmois and after he had somwhat reléeued his army on that side to Villebois sent to sommōthe town of Angoulesme by a trompet wherein he was refused and so tooke way towardes Berry to ioyne his force witht the Duke de Aumall being in the sayd countrey the Count Montgomery charged vpon the tayle of his campe and discomfited certen of them The Lady Marquise of Rottelin vnderstāding of the death of the prince of Conde hir sonne in law put her vpon the way to come to Rochell where was the widow princesse her daughter shée passed to S. Iean de Angely so to Thony vpon Boutonne where the said princesse met her and so returned into Fraunce without her daughter whom shée purposed to haue with her But the princes excused her vpon hir children which were then at Rochel whether she also returned it was thought the Lady Marquise came to entreate a peace which was not so because her occasion was onely as is aforesayde ▪ this was in the end of May ▪ 1569. In the firste kindling of these warres the Princes hauing true intelligence of diuers nūbers of strangers entered the Realm for the strength of the Catholiques determined also to fortifie their army by the like mean. And therefore knowing that the prince Wolfgange the Duke de deux Pons had erected great numbers of men of armes as well on foote as on horsebacke the better to defend his owne countreys sent to him with request to yéeld them succours in their so vrgent and extréeme necessitie both with his army presently in poynt also such other powers as he might possibly leuye whervnto the sayd Duke condescended with promise to reléeue them with al his forces which albeit at that tyme were not fully assembled yet he forgot not within short tyme after to put an army in readinesse to come into France whereof the Duke de Aumale lying in Lorayne béeing enformed by speciall Intelligencers dispatched forthwith a Gentleman of his by whom he aduertised the Duke of the common brute that passed of the diligence he vsed in the leuyes of men of warre in Almayne and all to assist the conspiracies of such as arme themselues against the Crowne of Fraunce with displayed warre against the King which for his parte as he neyther had nor woulde beléeue so looking néerer into his magnificence and partes of a Prince he iudged him of no inclination to fauour rebells against their soueraigne maiestie considering withall the auncient respect of amitie so long continued betwéen the house of the electors of the countie Palatines of Rhine the scepter of France Albeit his maiestie desiring to vnderstand an absolute truth gaue him speciall charge to dispatch this speciall Messanger he also hauing authoritie of his Maiestie to withstande the entrie of any straungers to reléeue the enterprise of the said rebelles which he hoped to accomplish or else to leaue his life in the charge The Duke forbare to answere spedily vntyll his army were fully in poynt albeit after that he had receyued hys Riestres he begā to marche towards the county of Burgogne and as he lay vpon the frontiers of France tarrying for his Launceknyghtes hee aunswered the d'Aumales letter which he sent forthwith to the Kinge In the beginning he layd afore him howe in the yéeres afore many Reistermaisters passing through his Duchy without leaue gréeued so his Countrey that the continuall complaintes of his people forced him to draw into companies of armed men as well on horsebacke as on foote to withstand further offence to his people And that nowe in respecte his cousins and dearely beloued Princes of Nauar and Conde haue lamentably imparted with him the vniust quarell vrged vppon them as well to enforce their lyues and goods as to depriue the exercise of their Religion contrary to the Kings fayth and playn proetstation of his Edictes and that not only they but all the Nobilitie and others professinge the same religion haue and doo endure miserable oppressions as estraunged from their owne houses thruste out of their charges and offices their possessions wealths confliked into the Kings hands lastly that there be raised huge companies of men of warr ayded with sundry sortes of straungers to cut them in péeces as in other tymes of open hostilitie in these respects togither with their earnest motion and request for succours and lastly vpon an vpright view and consideration of their present calamitie he could nor ought do no lesse than ayde them
And for their partes the better to auouche their integrities in refusing all attempts aspiring preiudicially to the crown of France as the d' Aumalles letters did smisterly suggest the said princes haue protested by letters which he kéepeth sealed with their own hands that if at his being in France he sée or knowe any inclination in them to conspire in any sorte agaynst the crown that he would not only draw awai his succours but conuert them to the enemie and contrary side the rather to reuenge their disloyaltie whiche makes hym iudge of the princes side beleeue that they are not only far from the slaunderous impositions of their enemies but also of vnfained desire rather to reast quietly in their houses than follow so hard doubtful a warre whereunto they haue ben drawen of force as to defend the violent oppression of their malicious ennemies hée alledged besides that when his Cosin the Duke Casimir erected his army in Almaign in the like cause he was also vntruly informed as of purpose to draw him from succouring the Prince of Conde that it was against the Maiestie royall that the said Prince did conspire which notwithstanding was found otherwayes as appeareth by his maiesties Edictes of peace both first and last approuing alwayes the actions of the said Prince as done for the seruice of his Maiestie And to take awaye all suspicion he declared that besides that his meaninge and purpose was to succoure the saide Princes of Nauarre and Conde his enterpryse in comminge intoo Fraunce stretched also to relieue the little ones of the Religion dispersed into their seuerall miseries to whō of very duty being a Christian Prince he could doe no lesse than offer and lend his hande to leade them to Iesus Christ. And to the end his maiestie may vnfainedly resolue in the integrety of his purpose that he vndertakes not this iorney to spoyl his subiects or make pray of their wealthes or for any other perticular profit he protested that if his maiestie would graunt them a safe vse of their religion with a frée exercise of the same without limitation and distinctiō of persons and places together with assurance of their goods honours charges and estates he would not onely returne and dismisse his armye but also defray the whole charges of the same and the sayde Reistremaisters in their passage amounting in all to aboue a hundred thousand crownes protesting for ende that if in refusing his iuste and reasonable offers the quarell doo aggrauate by his comming into Fraunce to wype his handes in innocencie of al imputations hereafter and the faulte to be layde vppon the authors and chiefe Councellers of the warre beyng about his maiestie The Duke hauing now receiued his Launceknightes entered into Fraunce and passyng by Bourgongue came to Charyte beyng coasted sundrye tymes both behinde and before by the armies of the Dukes d' Aumall and Nemors without attempting any thing vpon hym he arriued without let before Charyte the. xvi of Maye which he battred so vehemently that he enforced forthwith a breache in the meane while the Lorde of Mouy passing ouer Loere a little aboue the sayd towne wyth thrée hundred harquebuziers won the suburbes towards the bridge the same so occupying and amazing thē that were besieged that the Duke entred the breache and put the whole garrison to the sworde this towne was taken in good time bycause that if it had lingred neuer so little the Duke d' Aumall being verye néere wyth succours had endaungered the enterprise The towne was no sooner taken then he was discouered not far of with xviii hundred horsemen who comming to shorte to withstande the Dukes entrie returned in hope to hinder the Duke to ioyne with the Princes Armye by meanes that he mette and assembled with the Kinges brothers power who knit together for this purpose in the countrey of Berry In the ende of May the Princes informed of the approche of the Duke de deux Pons and the taking of Charyte began to marche to ioyne with his armye and leauing the Lorde de la Noue to gouerne in the countreys of Poycton and Sainctonge tooke their waye by Angoulmois directly to Perigueux and as they passed thorowe that countrey the Lord of Chaumontes lyght horsemen with certaine companyes of footemen toke the towne of Noutron belonging to the Quéene of Nauar wherin were killed about foure score men that defended it this was the seuenth of Iune 1569. The morrow after the sayde Princes dispatched the Countie Montgomery into Gasoyne to commaunde ouer the army of the Uicounts who otherwayes would not agrée as not acknowleging one aboue another he toke his way by Solliac where he passed the riuer of Dordone and so beneath Cadenat he passed also ouer Lot came to Montauban without any let They of the town of Perigueux fearing the comming of the Princes army desired the Lord Montluc to sende them succours to whome he dispatched immediatly the knight Montluc his sonne wyth xii Ensignes of footemen wyth the which he entred the towne the fourth of Iune In this meane while the Princes armye kepte the waye drawyng to Lymosyn and the Duke de deux Pons hasted by great iorneys to ioyne with them passyng the ryuer of Viene two leagues aboue Limoges The catholikes had sent thither two C. shot to defend the passage who were all cut in pieces by the Lorde de Mouy the ix of this moneth on which day the princes army arriued at Chalus a towne in Lymosyn departing the nexte day to ioyne with the armye of the Duke de deux Pons in a village within two leagues of Chalus belonging to the Lord de Escars Gouernour of the said countrey The Lord Admirall accompanied with two hundred horsemen went where the duke was to salute him the Duke enduring certayne fittes of an ague not manye dayes afore and not cured as yet dyed the xi of thys moneth 1569. in a village thrée leagues from Lymoges a fore his death he called before hym the chiefe and principals of his army with whō he cōmunicated in many pointes but chiefly in persuasion and request to pursue the purpose of their comming into Fraunce leauing for their generall leader in his place the Countie Wolrard de Mansfeld afore his Lieuetenant Generall his body was caryed to the Towne of Angoulesme to be there huryed In the army of the said late Duke were xxviii cornets of horsemen conteining viii thousand and v. hundreth Reistres whereof were Colonels Hans Bucq Reignold Grac Henry d'Estam and Hans de There 's sixe thousand Launceknightes will armed on foote and for the most part pikemen deuided into xxvii Ensignes wher of were Colonels the Lord de Grauillar and the Lorde Guteryn Gansgorffe baron of Grelezee besides ii M. horsemen and ten Ensignes of foote men of Frenche men whereof was Colonell touching the footemen one of the sonnes of the Lord de Bricquemau There were also in the said army diuers personages
kepe them to our vse and also at two yeeres ende to restore them agayne without any delay In the meane time the vse of the catholique Religion shall abyde in those Cities and all Churchmen and catholiques shal peaceably enioy their goods and landes 40 Furthermore vvee will and commaunde that so soone as this Edict is proclaymed in the two camps that all men by and by lay aside their armor weapons and neuer after to arme themselues again without our consent and the consent of our deare brother the Duke of Aniou 41 VVe wil that there be free traffyke in all places of our Realme after the proclamation of this our Edict 42 And to the ende this our Edict maye not be broken we commaund those which shall haue charge to see the execution of this our Edict that they cause the Magistrates of euery citie of both religions to sweare that they will diligently looke to the obseruation of this Edict And if any offence be committed against the same we protest that we will punishe the Magistrates themselues except they bring such offenders before vs. 43 Moreouer to the ende all our officers may plainly vnderstand our will and meaning to the end there may hereafter no ambiguitie or scruple by the pretence of the former Edictes we protest that we do abrogate disanull all other Edictes rescriptes decrees interpretations sentences of parliamentes and priuy commentaries contrary to this our Edict concerning religion and do commaund them all to be voyde frustrate and of none effecte And we plainely declare that we would haue all men faithfully to obserue and keepe this our Edict 44 And for the more sure confirmation of this our will and meaning we commaund that all our officers and Magistrates of Cities be made to sweare faithfully and truly to obserue and keepe this our Edict 45 Finally we will and commaund that all Courtes of Parliament take the same othe and that without delay they proclaime this Edict solemly so soone as it shall come to their handes And also that so soone as it shall be proclaymed in both Camps the forreine souldiours on both partes be dismist Also we commaund the Lief tenants of euery Prouince to see that this Edict be forth with proclaymed throughout all their Circuits The Edict being once proclaymed if any man put himselfe in armor seditiously let him be well assured that hee shall loose his life without all hope of pardon or fauour Know all men for a suretie that this our Edict shall abide firme and irrcuocable among all our subiects for the obseruation wherof I charge them to loke diligently This Edict thus made was by and by proclaymed at Paris and in both Campes both partes vnarmed them selues the straunger was dismist and the Protestants came from diuers places after long and pitifull tariance to their owne desolate houses but yet not quight and cleane healed of the woundes of the iniuries and hatred conceiued ¶ But thou O God most mightie the Gouernour and preseruer of thy Church restore and build vp the decayed Kingdome after so long calamities of Ciuill dissentions and desolations of warres that at the last O Lorde Thy Church may attaine to rest and peace Yea come Lord Iesu come quickly ¶ FINIS Imprinted at London by Henry Middelton for Frauncis Coldocke and are to be sold at his shoppe in Powles Church-yard at the signe of the Greene Dragon Anno 1574. The tenth Booke treating of the furious outrages of Fraunce vvith the slaughter of the Admirall and diuers other Noble and excellent men committed the. 24. August ANNO. 1572. IT vvere to be vvished that the memorie of the freshe slaughters of that butcherly murthering that hath lately bin cōmitted in a manner in all the townes of Fraunce were vtterly put out of the mindes of men for so great dishonour and so great infamie hath thereby stained the whole French nation that the moste part of them are nowe ashamed of their owne countrey defiled with two most filthy spottes falsehod and crueltie of the which whether hath bin the greater it is hard to say But forasmuch as there flée euery where abroade Pamphlets written by flatterers of the Courte and men corruptly hired for reward which doe moste shamefully set out things fained and falsely imagined in stead of truth I thought my selfe bound to do this seruice to posteritie to put the matter in writing as it was truely done in déede being well enabled to haue knowledge thereof both by mine owne calamitie and by those that with their owne eyes beheld a great part of the same slaughters In the yeare of our Lorde 1561. when there séemed to bée some perill of troubles to arise by reason of the multitude of such as embraced the Religion which they call reformed for before that time the vsuall manner of punishing such as durst professe that Religion was besides losse and forfeiture of all their goods to the Kings vse to burne their bodies at the request of the great Lordes and Nobilitie there was holden an assemblie of the estates in the Kings house at Saint Germaines in Lay neare to the towne of Paris at which assemblie in presence and with the royall assente of King Charles the ninthe which now raigneth it was decreed that from thencefoorth it should not be preiudiciall to any man to professe the said Religion and that it should bée léefull for them to haue publike metings and preachings for the exercise thereof but in the suburbs of townes only At this assemblie Francis Duke of Guise being descended of the house of Loraine at that time Grandmaister of the kings houshold was not present But when he was enformed of this decrée he boyled with incredible sorrowe and anger and within fewe dayes after at a little towne in Champaigne called Vassey while the professors of the said Religion were there at a Sermon he accompanied with a band of souldiers set vppon them and siewe men and women to the number of two hundreth There was among these of the Religiō for so hereafter according to the vsuall phrase of the frenche tong we intende to call them Lewes of Burbon of the bloud royall commonly called Prince of Conde after the name of a certaine towne a man of great power by reason of his kinred to the king Therfore when the Duke of Guise most vehemently striued against that lawe and as much as in him lay did vtterly ouerthrowe it and troubled the common quiet thereby stablished Gaspar de Coligni Admirall of Fraunce and Francis d' Andelot his brother Captaine of the Fantarie and other Princes Noble men and Gentlemen of the same Religion come daily by heapes to the Prince of Conde to complaine of the outrageous boldnesse and vntemperate violence of the Duke of Guise At that time Catherine de Medices Pope Clements brothers daughter and mother of king Charles borne in Florence a citie of Italie had the gouernance of
of cōmētaries The conditions offered by the Prince of Conde at the first par ley The reasōs that staied the Prince of Con de from going into exile The forme of the gouernement of the Realme in Kinges minoritie The Prince of Conde remoued from Paris to Ioyne to him the Englishmē The Duke of Guise se keth to stay the Prince of Conde frō ioyninge himselfe with the Englishmē Anno 1572 Decem. 19. If that ge●… tle Reader thou loke in the printed battailes and descriptions of the skirmishes of the Ciuill warres of Fraunce this shal be much more plaine vnto thee for in them thou shalt haue a liuely vew The first battaile in the which the Consta ble was taken and the Swisers dispersed and slaine The second battaile The third battaile The Prince of Conde taken prisoner The fourth battaile The Kings Edict Nemours winneth Vienna Soubize Liefetenāt of Lions Nemours deceiued of his purpose The winning of Sanstephen and Nonays Nonay cruelly spoiled The Admi rall goeth into Normandy The siege of Orlean ▪ The Kings letters to win from the Prince the Germanes Pultrotse●…t from Lions to the Admirall Pultrot killeth the Guise Pultrot taken Peace takē Cane in Normandi wonne The state of the com mō wealth of the church after peace was taken ▪ The state of the chur ch at Orlcaunce Odet Cardi nall of Cha stillon the state of the church at Lions Petrus Vire ●…us the state of the church in Dolpheny the state of the church in Burgun dy and Pro uance the gouern ment of M. Anuil ouer the Churches in Lan guedoc Albanoys The order of calling vppon god his name in Nemaux The Edict violently corrected by the Anuille Monsieur Anuille cō maundeth Moton to be hanged the state of the church of Venais The state of the chur ches of Orange The state of the churches of Paris The state of the chur ches of Picardie The churches of Brit tanny and Normandy The Churches of Gas coigne and of al Guian The Churches in the dominion of Bearne The Churches in the Cuntrey of Metz. The Churches of Pie mont The Papists brag of abolishing the Edict an D. 1563. The fetches of the Guises to disturbe the peace The craftie wi●… of the Quene the Kings mother The Cardinals sharp accusation against the Admirall The Admirall publisheth a wri ting wher in hee cleareth himselfe The words of Merae Monsieur Granmon●… Scoutes Monsieur Tranuie The Marshal Hesse The trauell of the Coū cell of Trent to hinder and stop religiō in Fraunce The King being of the age of 14. yeares i●… declared to be of ful lawfull ag●… The su●…til and craftie deuises of the aduersari●…s against Religion violent and false interp̄tations of the Edict set ●…orth by the Kings commaundement New sleights put in practise to entice the Prince of Conde frō the reformed Religion The spoyle wasting of the congregation at Paniez by d'Anuille The Kings progresse causes therof Montaubā Montaubā agrements made betwene the King his brother the Duke of Orleans The Prince of Conde eseapeth the papists snares and baytes The death of the prin ces wife The slaugh ters of the faithfull Brother hodes of the papiste Monsieur Cure that famous valeant cap taine is slaine And yet scaped vnpunished Mo●… interpretations of the Edict The Kings progresse The sūme of all that was don in the time of the Kinges Progresse The Admirall adiudged free of the Dukes murther by the kings own iudgement The Guises and the Chastillon are charged to be reconciled The Kings comminge to Lions and what he did there An enterdiction for Sermones A fortresse built at Lyons Monfieur Saltane remoued frō the gouern ment of Ly ons mon suer Lossay succeded him The sundry troubles of the church at Lions The declaclaration of Rossillon a great ouerthrow to the Edict Restraine of Sinodes Protestāts cōmanded to returne to Monachisme The great slaughter of the faith full at Tours The Prince of Conde complaineth of these iniuries The gre●…ous ini●…ries cōmitted against the Protestantes The Kings letters to the Prince of Conde New proclamatiōs for the obserua tion of the Edict The punnishment appointed for the mur ther done at Tours made frustrate The fond and foolish iorne●…s of the Cardynall the bloudy suruay that the Marshial of Burdillo made thorough out all Guian Merindol a place appointed for the reformed religion The kinge commeth to Langue do●… an do 1566 〈◊〉 do 1566 The affairs of the low Countrey ▪ The beginning en●… of the church of Flaunders King Philip certified of the increase of the protestantes in the lowe countrey a●… do 156●… The supplication of the nobles of the confederacy The Duches of Par me causeth ▪ an assembly of States 〈◊〉 Ser●…ones Images in Flaunders went to wracke The conference betweene the nobles the Duches of Parme. The Prince of Orange commeth to Antwerpe Valleucia besieged Valence surrendred an do 1567 The last cō spiracy of the Catholiqnes concerning the ruine of the Church of Fraunce The comming of the spanish army with the Duke of Alba. The King Quene remoue to Paris Letters of the Prince to the king The last pe tition of the Prince of Conde The state of the faith full in the beginning of this second war. The Cities townes that tooke part with the protestantes the slaugh rer of the Parisians at Sandio●…yse The Cōsta ble wounded to the death The state of the chur ches of the low countrey after the comming of Duke de Alba. The Prince of Conde marcheth to Lorain The Duke of Aniou marcheth towarde Loraine The Kings Edict against the faithfull A battayle in Auuergne the pro testants ha uing the victory an do 1568 Chartres besieged Peace concluded and the summe of the kings Edict The deceit of the Catholiks by this Edict Greate iniures done to the Protestants VVatch ward at hauens bridges Violation ▪ of the Edict Violations of the Edict Troubles ●…t Lions Troubles at Paris 〈◊〉 Sermones Practise of the Cardinal to take the principall profes sors of the Religion Horrible murthers Cipiere cruelly slaine Ten thousand protestantes slain with in the com passe of three Monethes The prince of Conde remoueth to Noyers The Card ▪ of Lorrain practiseth to take the Prince of Conde The Spye taken 90000. Frankes is in our coin foure score and eightteen thousand and nyne hundred and seuen and thirtye poundes ten shillings Victor Vticensis lib. 3 pers Afric the answer of the faith full The coulered deceit in this oth Rochel cō maunded to be besie ged Musters of Souldiers Letters of the Catholikes soūd out Amanzi a noble man slaine The Prince of Conde in greate perill Letters of the Prince of Conde sent to the Kyng The Prince of Conde goeth to Noyers The Cardi nall Chastillō fleeeth into England The death of Charles sonne to King Philip Anno Domini 1568. in the moneth of Au gust The state and condition of both parts The Kings ▪ Decree The messē●…er sent frō the Prince of Conde 〈◊〉 ▪ Discipline appointed by the Prince of Conde A descrip●… on of t●…e disciplin of warre A practis●… to draw away the Prince of Nauar frō the Prince of Conde Letters of the Quene of Nauar to the Kinge Letters of the Quene of Nauar to the Quene Mother Cities yeelded to the Prince of Conde The Ande lot cōmeth to the Prince of Conde with a great Army Boysuerd slayne The Andelot passeth ouer the forde of Loyre The Andelot ioyneth with the Admirall An Edict prohibiting the vse of the reformed religion ▪ The Kinge was xii ye●… old when his broth●… Frances dyed Letters pat●…es from the Pope Mouents and his souldiers slaine Lettees of the Quene o●… Nauar to the Quene of England England a succour to Fraunce The Prince of Conde seeketh to encounter with Monpensier The Duke of Ang●…we put to the worse The Duke of Aniou by Pollicy delayeth to loyne battaile Du●…e Dau ma●… in Loraine Prince of Orange in the lowe countrey Prince of Orenge seketh to ioyn with the Prince of Conde Tiranny of the Duke of Alba. The Germane●… take both parts Duke of Deuxpous promiseth to helpe the Prince of Cond Mon sieur Cochao taken many of his men slaine Noyers wonne an D. 1569. the Abbay of Saintflo rent won spoyled Sancer besieged The batail in which the Prince of Conde Was slaine The oathe of the Prince of Nauar. l'Endureau reuoltes Brissac slaine Conte P●… padon slaine The Lord Boccarde dead Charite besieged and taken The Duke de Deux Pons dead Description of the Dukes Campe. description of the princes army Snccours from the Pope ▪ the Quene mother en courageth the Souldiours The Lorde Strossi takē Strossies men flame ▪ The death of ●…e lord of Moruill The siege of Niort The Lord pluneau succours it The protes tants request to the king for peace To whom the troubles ought to be imputed Luzig rendered Lordes Captains within po●… tyers Poicti●… 〈◊〉 ●…esieged Battry against Poyt●…ers Battery against Poie Three assaults giuē to the suburbes of Roell Assault of Italians The Edict of peace Concord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Noble men that are 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 Noble men of 〈◊〉 calling The Queene of 〈◊〉 All 〈◊〉 Places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Kinges Cour●… ▪ Paris 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ▪ Hospitals and Colleges The good will of the king toward ●…he prince of Conde and the rest The Duke of Sweburge other Princes The Queene of 〈◊〉 Priuiledges of Cities Offices Payments to be indifferent Deliuery of prisoners Raunsomes All vnder the Kings protecon Mouables restored Reuenewes Of houses castles cities Princes of Nassau Writings of Landes Iudgementes Abrogation of Sentences ▪ Obseruaaion of dollitique Lawes Instice equal ly ministred Appeales frō Parliaments ▪ Refusall of Iudges Foure Citties graunted for Securities sake Concerning this Edict Trafike Punishments for breaking this Edict Disanulling of all former Edictes The othe of Magistrates Solem proclamation of this Edict
that vnder the pain of death confiscation of all their goods which offended herein Also that the knowledge and examination of heresie should be left to Ecclesiasticall persons and that whosoeuer was found guiltie therof should be committed to the secular power and susteine no other punishement than exile All these thinges to continue vntill the determination of a generall or Nationall counsell Pardon and full forgiuenesse of all crimes for religions sake being graunted to those that hadde offended vpon condition that they woulde euer afterwarde liue peaceably and catholikely Besides there was in this Edicte seuere punishments appoynted for false accusers And last of all strayte commaundement that no man shoulde weare armour It was also agréed and concluded in this assemblie that the Prelacie or Clergie shoulde be forthe with gathered togither and also the ministers of the reformed Religion being waranted from the king to come withoute harme in peace to that assemblie The Cardinall of Lorrain bragged that he would confute them by the authoritie of the auncient fathers and so made many men to hope to sée wonders Therefore the Quéene seeking to hasten this triumphe and fearing least the States of the realme woulde once againe make request to haue Temples gaue forthe commaundement that the Clergie of the Churche of Fraunce shoulde be at the towne of Possiac neere to Sangerman the tenth day of August following Fraunce béeyng in the middest of these troubles there was warr●… also aboute that tyme occasioned by the meanes of Religion betweene the Duke of Sabaudi●… and the Inhabitauntes of the Ualleys of Pedemount of the whiche to make relation béeing occasioned for one and the selfe same cause and in the nexte region it shall not be greately beside our purpose Pedamount néere vnto the mountayne Vesulus is called the valey of Lucern of a little towne called Lucerna néere adioyning to the same To this there is also an other adioyning called Angronia so called of the Riuer Angrone néere to the which the valeys of Perossa and Samnartine doe lye Those valleys haue dwelling in them fiftene thousande inhabitants Of which number the greatest part professe the Gospell also there were some in those places long agoe which abhorring the Pope and his doctrin had some knowledge and taste of true religion But after that the lyght of the truth in our tyme brast forthe and more cléerely appeared than it had done before it began also more cléerely to shine in those valeys Therfore when they were better instructed in the doctrine of the Gospell then did they more vehemently professe the truthe and that specially in two little townes aboue the rest where the same was openly professed These men of the valleys had many noble men appoynted to rule and gouerne them but among the reste they acknowledge the duke of Sabaudia their chiefe Prince and gouernour Therfore these inhabitauntes being hated for religions sake of the noble men that dwelt about them were diuers and sundrie wayes by them vexed And their chiefe Prince the duke of Sabaudia was sore agréeued that Religion began to flourish among them in somuch that he oftentimes cōmanded them to forsake the religion and to warne their ministers to receyue the Masse and the auncient religion otherwise he threatned them cruelly to punish them as rebels They being carefull by reason of these new commaundements sende at lengthe their Ambassadour to the Prince with a supplication and confession of their faith protesting that they beléeue all things conteyned in the old and newe Testament the articles of the Christian fayth called Symbolum Apostolorum the Nicene Créede and the Creede of Athanasius also the foure firste Councelles and the doctrine of the auncient Fathers so farre forth as they with the word of god Humbly beseching him to giue them leaue to liue according to the rule of Gods word and not to constraine them to doe any thing against their conscience affirming that they were readie not onelye to giue an account of their Religion but also to acknowledge and confesse their error if they might be brought vnto it by the word of god Adding herevnto that this doctrine had continued a long time among them as they coulde well approue by great testimonyes receiued from their ancetors Desiring him also to inquire how they behaued them selues towards their gouerners and in what order they liued protesting that their only desire was to render vnto him all obedience as vnto their chiefe Lord and Prince and that if they should be founde otherwise to be sharpely and seuerely punished This was the effecte of their ambassage to the Duke but it did nothing at all preuaile For the Duke gaue strait commaundement that no man should come or resort to those sermons which the Ministers of the inhabitantes of the valleys made if any did resorte vnto them their first punishment was the losse or forfeiture of 100. Crownes and the seconde punishment was to be a Gally slaue He commaunded also all the Nobles and Magistrates that had authoritie to punishe seuerely to execute the same againste the offenders Therfore the Noble men began to waxe fierce against the inhabitantes of the valleys in so much that when they had taken certaine of them they burnte them among whome were two preachers of Gods worde All men vsed violence against the mē of the valleys euen as if they had béen mortall enimyes great damage and hurte was done to them and those which dwelt about them making an armie made hauocke of them and spoyled them The men of the valleys were contented with all this iniurie and by the exhortations of their Ministers and preachers bare these things paciently for a time But at the length being ouerladen and wearied with these troubles they purposed to defend themselues in so much that they flew many of them which came to pray and spoile them Wherevpon the Duke gaue forth a commaundement that they shuld leaue off to spoile them anye more and sent vnto them Ranconensis and Trini●…aeus two of his gentlemen to intreate them friendly Notwithstanding they retourned home agayne as they came bycause they woulde haue bounde them to sende away their Ministers and Preaches The Duke beyng angrye wyth this intended to make open warre against them Wherevpon he sente agaynst them Trinitaeus with fiue thousands soulders the greatest parte whereof were gunners and some horsemen commaundyng hym that excepte the men of the valleys woulde doe as they were commaunded he shoulde deale with them as with mortall enimyes to spoile their goods and to put them to fire and sworde First of all therefore Trinitaeus assaulted Agronia with a thousand and a halfe of gunners certayne of the Townsmen to the number of thirtie being slenderly armed wyth flyngs and Crosbowes straighte waye went against them and withstandyng the firste fronte of the Armie were straite way rescued with two hundered oute of the valleys adioyning vnto them and so by and by they put their enimyes to flight
read it is Page 51. line 20. for do read to The fourth Booke of Commentaries concerning the state of the common wealth and Religion of Fraunce in the raigne of Kyng Charles IX THe Edict of Ia nuary whereof mention is made in the end of the third Booke goinge before being at the last after the delayes of the Senate of Paris published proclaymed at Paris and in the whole Kingdome made a ioyful and prosperous end of all troubles the Gospell had peaceable passage throughout all the dominions all most of Fraunce and the faythfull according to the tenure and prescript of the Edict gladly leauing the Churches and places which were within the cities flocked together in great assemblies without the Cities insomuch that all men greatly delighted to looke vppon them But Sathan enuying that peace and tranquillitie caused after a while not only priuate perturbations and troubles betwéene man and man but also open and Ciuill warres by the deuises and practises of the aduersaries to the great hurt of the Realme The which things as briefely euen so truely will we declare in this historie In penning whereof we know into what sundry hap and hazard of iudgements we are in what a large scope wée haue to set forth diuers matters and also what hatred and perill we bring vnto our selues But the truth shal defend it selfe and shall also take away all sclaunder reproche Many gréeued and repined at the increase and good successe of the reformed Churches greatly misliking of the Edict of January for that it tended much for their peace and quietnes which fauored the Religion Of these repyning enemies there were two sortes The first sort were such as had their liuing by the Benefices reuenewes and spirituall promotions of Priestes and of these many were gentlemen and men of high calling who perceiuing that the greatest part of their substance came vnto them by the sayd Benefices thought that they should sustaine great hinderance and losse if so be they of the reformed Religion should obtaine and enioye the benefite of the Edict The second sort were such noble men as being inriched not onely with those great and huge sommes of money which came to them by the yerely reuenewes of those Benefices the fatte wherof they reserued to them and theirs but also with the innumerable giftes of King Henry the second and Fraunces the second feared least they being called to giue vp their accompts according to the custome of the Realme should be found giltie of extorcion Among these latter sort the chiefe were the Guises the fatall destruction of the kingdome of Fraunce who also as yet were to make their accoūt for great sommes of money taken out of the Kings Treasury for common affaires and other waightie matters in the time of King Fraunces the second and also of their euill demeynor wherof they were playnely accused vnder the raigne of Kyng Henry the second Also the great losse of that high auctho ritie which almost they alone had during the minority of King Fraunces the second and with the same losse the feare foreséeing the great euilles to come pinched them euen to the hart and gréeued them to the very gall To these also was ioyned the Martiall of S. Andrew a man full of all subtiltie guile and mischief who being out of measure riche with the great giftes which he receyued of Kyng Henry for his euill and cruell seruice was pricked in conscience for spoyling by sinister meanes diuers noble men of his familiar acquayntāce By the practise and endeuour of this Martiall the Constable Momorentius as we sayd in our other Booke a little before a mortall enemie to the Guises hauing diuers times experience of their hatred was brought to the familiaritie and friendship of the Guises And to the intent they might winne the Constable wholely vnto them by a new benefite they graunted franckly vnto him the dominion of Dammartine for the which afore time there had bene great contencion betwéene them Therefore the daily adhortations of the Martiall of S. Andrew and the Duches of Valence beside the domesticall and daily perswasions of his wife and of the Earle of Uillars greatly vrged and pressed the Constable as that the ancient and catholique doctrine was abolyshed that the common wealth was disturbed that they of the reformed Religion did plainly threaten to bring such as had bene officers of the kings afore time to giue vp their accoūts that those mē sought only by lit tle and little to place them selues in authoritye and to abase those that serued and had borne office vnder the kings in time past and to haue the spoil of their goods that the Queene Mother was led away with their perswasions and that shée being an effeminate weake woman would incline to that parte which was moste strong also that it was manifest that shée did fauoure those of the reformed Religion for the king of Nauar hys sake who séeketh all that he can to haue the Religion altered being thervnto prouoked by the Prince of Conde to spight those which are suspected to be the authors that he was cast into prison And therfore that they if they might bring al things to passe after their owne desire as to haue their enemies subdued and the state of the kingdome and of Religion altered would bring the Constable him selfe to their owne bent and wil wold in like manner call him to account These perswasions being oftentimes inculcated and beaten into the Constables eares being rather an enemy to Religion drewe him quite away at the last to the contrary part and so by little and little for saking the king of Nauar and the Prince of Conde he openly shewed his displeasure and choller against the Chastilions Therfore now began to be manifest familiarity and frendship betwéene the Constable and the Guises in so much that they bāketted one another and had oftentimes secreate conference betwéene them selues Wherfore at y last they conspired together namely that the Duke of Guise as a Prince of aliance to the king and Lord great master of Fraunce the Constable as chéefe officer vnder the king and the Martiall of S. Andrew as head Martiall should bend their whole endeuors in this that no parte of the ancient and Catholique Religion might be altered And because notwithstanding the constitutions and Edictes of the former kings a new Religion was brought in they would indeuor them selues with all their force and might that those hereticall doctrines might be quite abolished and destroyed And also that they would not suffer newe Decrées to be made concerning the state of the realme and the willes of the former Kings to be disproued that they would openly declare them selues to be enemies to all those which would go about this thing And finally that in this cause they wold do what they could euen to the spending of their goods and liues To performe the which they swore solemnely one to
Religion and of the professors therof but also was angry and sore offended with them Insomuch that he cōmaunded the Ministers of Gods word which were with him in house to depart from him and went him selfe oftentimes to the Popish Churches heard Masse and earnestly cōmaunded his wife which was a very honest vertuous Lady who also refused to do the like gaue him selfe to filthy pleasures of wemen and was also very familiarly conuersant with the Guises the Constable the Martiall of S. Andrew and with the Cardinals Notwithstanding all this the reformed Religion so preuailed that new reportes and rumors were daily brought into the Court concerning the same The Prince of Conde the Admiral and many of the Nobles diligently séeking to haue the same preferred The Quéene mother also was ruled by good coūsell And as for the king of Nauar he was vncertain what to doe in the middest of these troubles and was like vnto an vnskilfull marriner destitute of counsell hauing diuers cogitations in hys minde vncertaine whether to go and yet neuertheles standing stil as one amased In the meane time the Edict of Ianuary wherof mencion is made before toke place and was put in execution But then were the minds of the Guises of the Constable and of the Marshall of S. Andrewe so vexed gréeued that they thought good not to delay the time any longer they being encouraged to procéede wyth their purpose for that they might rule the king of Nauar as them list Therfore euery man being appoynted what to do the Duke of Guise departed from the court The Constable went home to his house and sent for his retainers and fréendes to see if they woulde s●…icke vnto hym and such as he doubted of he sought to win The Marshal of S. Andrew did euen the like The Guises as is sayde before had taken vpon them to winne the Princes of Germanie to take their parte and therfore they wrote letters oftentimes to diuers of them And to further their busynes they vsed the helpe of the Rokendolfe and the Rheingraue the Cardinall trimly countenancesing and dissembling that he imbraced the Ausburgue Confession And that he minded not long agoe to establishe the same in Fraunce but he sayde that the men of the newe Religion did greatly gainsay let the same whome he blamed in all things as vngodly men and the vpholders of all monsterous opinions Moreouer he sayd that the Prince of Conde by the meanes and counsel of the Admiral went about to aspire to the kingdome and that vnder the pretence of Religion he liued a licentious and voluptuous life After these practises the Duke of Guise him selfe came to Sauerne a towne bordering vppon Germanie and there he talked wyth the Duke of Wirtemberge fained that he embraced the Confession of Ausburge slādered and falsly accused the prince of Conde and the reformed churches and craued his aide against them and vnder the pretence of that communication the Duke of Guise vaunted and bragged muche of the fréendship of the Duke of Wirtemberge saying that he was sure that he would wythout all doubt take his parte and also alleaging that he had taken these enterprises in hand by the Dukes aduise and counsell For the which the Duke of Wirtemberge afterward blamed hym and proued that he perswaded him selfe to haue more frendship at hys hands than euer he meant vnto him and did falsly dissēble wherfore he earnestly exhorted the Guises to cease from persecuting the reformed churches After this the Duke of Guise hauing gotten to take his parte certaine valea●…t captaines by the meanes of the Rokendolfe and the Reingraue came to Jnuille there in the townes thereabouts he chose out armed horse men when he had so done vpon occasion of letters sent from the king of Nauar he intended straighte way in all hast to come to the Court with an army of mē and after deliberation had he began hys voyage with a lamentable slaughter as you shall heare There is a certen Town bordering vpon Champaigne nere to Jnuille the Lordship of the house of Guises called Vassi within the dominion of Fraunce but no parte thereof In thys towne there was a certen number of the faithful but because the Guises bordered so néere vnto them they durst not professe the reformed religion so frankely as they wold haue done Notwithstanding they being at the last prouoked and incouraged héerevnto by the mē of Troy●… their neighbors were fully bent to vse the benefit of the kings Edictes procured of the congregation of Troy●… a minister of Gods worde to attend vpon them so after the disputation in the Conu●…cation at Possi they had a church established among them wherby the nomber of the faithful wonderfully increased more ●…ore The Guises hearing of this greatly gr●…dged againste it were much displeased therwith and sent thē worde that they should euill fauoredly enioy their liberty Therfore the Duke of Guise returning from Sauern and making hast into Frau●…ce to the King fully determined to set vppon the enhabitantes of Uassi which earnestly folowed the reformed Religion with force of armes as he went So that he charged all his retainers whych dwelt in the villages about Uassi to be in a readinesse against his comming to Uassi by the which he meant to take hys iorney withall spéede into Fraunce The which commaundement of his was fulfilled Therfore the Duke of Guise vpon the first day of the moneth of Marche being the Saboth day on the which he knewe the faithfull would chéefely assemble them selues together came by the breake of the daye to a village called Dammartine from whence after he had heard Masse he went to Uassi And when he was entred the citye be heard that the Huguenotes were assembled together to heare a sermone to the which place he went in 〈◊〉 Nowe the people whych were assembled together were in nomber a thousand and fiue hundred persons and the Preacher had begonne hys Sermon Therefore the Duke of Guise hauyng hys Brother the Cardinall wayting vppon hym sent for manye of the townes men and for the chéefe parishe priest as they call him the gouernor of the citie to come vnto him Wyth these men he entred into a popish church which was not farre from the congregation of the faithfull And after that he had disclosed vnto them hys purpose he went out again and commaunded hys men to make haste to go to the Huguenotes sermon The soldiers being come to the place where the sermon was made began to cast their dartes among them At the first the faithfull maruelled what the matter was but incontinently many of them were slaine and the soldiers of the Guise in great number rushed and fell vpon the congregation and thus they being hemmed in on euerye side and hauing no waye to escape the Duke of Guise himselfe stode at the doore wyth his sworde drawne in hys hand ready to receiue such vpon the same as
mole●…eth or troubleth them in their Religion or that doth hinder their Clergie by any maner of meanes And if there were any of vs that would so do or that would behaue our selues otherwise than we ought there are lawes and punishments to punish vs But truely vnder the coullor and pretence of Religion they séeke another thing We denie not but that they hate the truth of the Gospell as they haue of late declared by fyer and sword but this is the speciall thing they séeke for to trap and snare those that before tyme miraculously haue escaped their handes to be reuenged of others whome they haue alwayes hated and to enrich themselues by the spole of others The whic●… to bring to passe they care for no Religion And such as go about to resist their practises by which they séeke both the p●…rill of our kyng and the destruction of his subiecte●… by Ciuill warre they call open enemies to the kyng THese and many other things which time will reueale being way●…d and considered the Prince of Conde testified before the kyng and Quéen these things also following and wished all kyngs Princes Nobles and all others of the Realme of Fraunce and all Christi an Nations ▪ truely to vnderstand these thinges First of all therfore he testifieth that he is not moued by desire of his owne profite but only with loue of the glory of God and of the profite of the whole common wealth to séeke the which he thought him selfe specially bound vnder the Quéenes auethoritie So that for conscience sake to do his dutie and for the loue hée beareth to his Countrey he sayth he is constrayned compelled to séeke all lawfull meanes to set the Quéen and the kinges Sonnes at libertie and to mayntaine and defend the kyngs Edictes and the Edict of Ianuary which was made for the ordering of Religion And he prayeth and beseecheth all the kynges true lawfull subiects waying and considering the matter as is before sayd that they would ayd and assist him in so good and godly a cause And because the king in the beginning of his raigne found him selfe oppressed with a great burthen of debt and hauing but little any maner of waye to discharge the same many of his faithfull subiects gaue vnto him a great summe of money both to discharge the same also to recouer his patrimony but there is no doubt but that they which are the auethors of this Ciuill warre will now laye holde and catch vnto them that sum of money which was giuen to the kyng for those causes and will spend and bestowe the same to o●…her vses Whereby both the people shall receiue great hurt and losse and also the hope which the Quéene and the kyng of Nauar had for the paiment and discharge of all the kynges debtes that the people might be brought into the same state in the which they were in the time of kyng Lodowi●… the xij that hope I saye by the wasting and consuming of that money should be 〈◊〉 and quight taken awaye For these causes the Prince of Conde affirmeth that they which shall get vn to them that money shal be bound to restore the same againe and at the length shall giue an accompt for the bestowing therof But he testifieth that he and all those that fight vnder his banner shall mayntayne furnish themselues with their owne proper costes and charges And God sayth he will heare from heauen the ●…rie of his poore oppressed people against those which begin warres and refuse all reasonable order which séeke trouble and constrayne vs to defend our selues wyth force of Armes And because all men do vnderstand and knowe that the kyng and Quéene being beset on euery side wyth souldiours and captiued and ruled and that the greater part of the Counsell are so quayled wyth feare that they dare not resist the au●…thors of this warre The Prince of Conde would haue all men certefied that hée myndeth and will shew towards the kyng and Quéene all obedience in the which he will giue place to none and that he will not suffer him selfe to be so deceiued mocked vnder the pretence of rescriptes of commaundements and of Letters vnder the kinges name and seale but will warre against them vntill the Kyng and Quéene do recouer their former libertie and authoritie and may declare their willes by their owne méere gouernement Concerninge the kyng of Nauar his brother the Prince of Conde beside the naturall bond of brotherly loue the particuler cause of obedience which he ought and will giue vnto him he testifieth that he doth consider of him according to his worthines and will giue vnto him next vnto the King and Quéene al ob●…dience And h●… trusteth that he wil giue an accompt of his dealing whensoeuer it shal be required at his handes To be short the Prince of Conde and a great multitude of Earles Lordes and Nobles and other estates to declare that they speake simply and in good earnest and that they séeke for nothing more than the glory of God and the excellency and dignitie of their kyng Do earnestly pray and beséech the Queene Mother with all reuerence that setting the feare of men aside whych gard her after a straunge fashion with force of Armes as if she were a captiue that she would according to hir iudgement and mind fréely declare whether part were to be blanted and that she would goe vnto that Citie whererevnto she had most mind that from thence shée might cōmaund both parts by the meanest seruant she hath to put of their Armour so they would shew that dew obedience which shoulde become loyall subiectes to shew vnto their soueraigne Lord and would also mo destly answere to their doings according to the lawe The Prince promiseth that he will obey her law●…ull commaundements vppon the condition that others would shew themselues ready to do their duties But if they refuse he testifieth that he with fiftie thousand men more which are of the same mynd will spend their liues And if it please not the Quéene to go to another place to do these thinges then let her first of all seeke that they by whom she is garded and captiued may goe to another place pu●…tting of their Armour namely the Duke of Guise and his bretherne the Constable and the Marshiall of S. Andrew And although he being a Prince and the kynges néere kinsmen were their superior yet notwithstanding to the intēt it might apéere that he is in no poynt the cause of trouble and vnquietn●…s he promiseth that he and his whole armie will depart euery man home to his owne house vppon those conditions before spoken of Also hee sayth that hee hath a speciall care for this that the Kynges Counsellers may haue their accustomed libertie and that the kyngs lawes and the Edict of January may be obserued and kept vntill the kyng comming vnto his Maioritie may iudge of the matter him selfe and may punish
to vse in stéede of blowes woordes and writings omitting all force warres sheding of blood The which peraduenture will so prouoke God and his vengeance to fal that the papists and priests thēselues which might quietly enioye their offices liuings shal be the first that shal féele the furour and madnesse of the people To be short the protection of the Suppliantes cannot chuse but bring great trouble and garboyle vnto them But when they may be assured of this that they néed not without they will themselues be endāmaged neyther in body office nor goods haue they iust cause to complayne except peraduēture they will say that they were carefull and sory for the losse of our soules But what hath made them so sodenly so carefull when as neyther any one Bishop Curate or popish priest hath laboured or takē any maner of paines to that end Séeing therfore we neuer intended to hurt any of thē what néed was there to bring them into this contention and to pretende the name of the Church Is not this too set one against another and to cause the people whiche before could not abyde those priests to hate thē the more Was there euer a more sorowfull sight séene in thys Realme Can there be any profit benefite or good turn so great that it maye make a sufficient mennes for so great destruction Can the Popes pardones and Indulgences restore the bloud that ▪ is shed for this cause These Suppliantes maye one day say vnto the Kinge that they to defend that which no man gainsayed and to preserue the Romish religion which no man wente about to hinder haue lost or went about to loose the one half of his nobilitie and chiefest of his subiectes Then and that truely it shal be obiected vnto them that as by their fayned and dissembled opinions concerning Religion they had brought the Realme of Scotland into great perill of destruction and caused much bloud too bée shed euen so by the same opinions counsayles and Instruments great discord hath ben sowen in this realm and ▪ both sortes of men set togither as it were by the eares in such sort that they may iustly hereafter amōg all posterities be sayd to be the authours and causes of all mischéeues and calamities which shall happen to the men both of the reformed also of the Romish Religiō And to cause more trouble they would haue all the Kings officers and all Ecclesiasticall persones to professe the confession of their faith and that such as should denie or refuse so to do should be depriued if they were temporall men of their offices if they were priests then to loose their benefices For this is the other Edicte of those thrée Suppliants against the receyued approued lawes of the king For there is no man that can remēber neither hath it ben heard of that any king that hath ben heretofore hathe constrayned hys true Subiectes to receiue any other confession of faith than that which is in the Apostels Créede Let that Lawmaker by whose craftie and subtill witte these their supplications were made bring forth but one only example The which truely he cannot do except hee will bring into this Realme the Inquisition of Spaine the which by the iudgement of all other Nations is counted so wicked that they all reiect the same These are the very same trappes and snares which they layd at Aurelias otherwise called Orleans a little before the death of Kyng Fraunces the second and which cannot chuse but bring the extreame ruine and destruction of the kyngs subiectes For those Suppliants know that there are ten thousand Noble men and a hundered thousand souldiours which neither by authority nor by force will forsake that Religion which they haue receiued and wyll not suffer the preaching of the woord and the administration of the Sacraments according to the forme of Religion which they professe to be taken from them and will defend themselues with the sword against them which abuse the aucthoritie of the Kings name That great number cannot be ouercome and destroyed which God forbid without the anoyance and ruine of those that shall set vppon them And to conclude the matter briefely I saye and affirme in the name of the Noble men Gentlemen and of many others which are here with me that this Decrée is made by thrée priuate men which by their authoritie peruert the kynges Edictes and make no accompt of them and to put their decrée in execution before they made the Kyng and Quéene acquaynted with their doinges they put themselues in armour and tooke them both captiue I say and affirme that the same Decrée is against the lawes of this Realme against all Christian order against the State against the Edict of January which was only made for this cause against the dignitie safetie of many of the kings subiects whose enemies they openly shew themselues to be whose goods and life they séeke to take away and all vnder the pretence of Religion conscience This decrée also taketh away the liberty of going to a Counsaile the which should haue ben considered by that subtill counsayler For if it be decréed that the same confession which they call the confession of the Faith shal be receiued of all the inhabitants of this Realme that is to say if all men be constrained to receiue the Popes doctrine and ceremonies this must néedes be a plaine sentence of condemnation against the reformed church neither is it then lawfull for our Ministers or for the Ministers of forreine Nations imbracing the same doctrine to go vnto a Counsaile when as they being not heard are condem ned But before the Duke of Guise and the Cardinall of Loraine his brother bring forth the decrée concerning the confession of the Romish faith let them renounce denie many speciall poynts of the confession made at Ausburge which when they were at Sauern they said thei imbraced promised to one of the Princes of Germany that they would cause them to be obserued in Fraunce It is néedfull also that the Cardinall of Loraine should declare by open writing whether he do persist in that opinion which sometime he said to the Quéene before a great many witnesses concerning Transubstantiatiō concerning the carying about of the Sacrament concer ning Iustification Inuocation of Saints Purgatory Images and concerning many other speciall points also of which he spake plainely against the iudgment of the Catholique and Apostolique church of Roome 6 ▪ Furthermore in that supplication straight after this they call to mind the throwing downe of Images require that the same Images be repayred and the breakers of them be punished But thervnto I make this answere The punishments wherwith I punish them which brake downe Images first in diuers places at the last in Orleans shall witnesse before God men that this misdemeanor of the rash multitude al wayes displease me both for that it was contrary to the Edict of
beloued Brother when he shall come vnto that age that he shall be able with equity to Iudge of these matters It wil serue also for the lawful protection and preseruation of me and of my people And to be short by the great goodnes of God it shal be an occasion of more firme and sure peace betwéene me and my well beloued Brother the King of Fraunce that eyther of vs may peaceably vse our libertys And this one thing also I most earnestly say and affirme to my beloued Brother the King of Fraunce to the Quene his mother to the King of Nauar and to all his faithfull Counsaylers and seruantes That I whatsoeuer any mallicious person hereafter shall report will deale in this matter with such sincerity and integritye as both the thing it selfe and the tyme shall require and will vsurpe nothing to my selfe nor offer iniury and violence to any one of his subiectes And this I protest before God his Angelles and before all men in the vniuersall world that my full mind intent is in these extreame and perillouse times to deliuer the subiectes of my brother the Kyng of Fraunce from the destruction lyke to come by these Ciuil warres séeing that I imbrace the peace and concord made betwéene me and my Brother the Kinge I will omitte no occasion to set him in hys former lyberty and to restore peace and tranquilitye to his people The which shall come to passe when it shall please God to giue a better mind to the authors of these troubles and to make them content with that which is their owne that they may both kepe them within the limites of their duty also as good subiectes to be louers of peace The which at this time ought specially to be sought for namely rather peace and concord by the con sent and agrement of the Christian Princes and states than to sturre vp lamentable warre among Christians by fier and swerd About this time there was a certaine writinge of all the Princes of Germany that were protestantes sent to those armies of horsemen and footemen which seruid the Guise vnder the conduct and charge of the Rokendolph to this effect following All the Princes Electores protestants of the sacred Empire will and commaund this thinge to be notified and declared to all the Germaines which serue the Duke of Guise vnder the conducte of the Rokendolph ▪ being by him dereyued which Guise abusing the age and authority of the king of France would abuse your handes and power to be instrumentes to ertyrpe and destroy all those which professe the Gospell And although the horrible murthers cruelties of the Duke of Guise of his Brother the Cardinall and of the rest of his fellowes haue ben openly shewed vppon al Christians louers of the truth yet notwithstāding you which we heard of to our great griefe are ready to helpe aide the Duke of Guise And besides this it is euidently knowen to all men that the Rokendolph your Captaine is banished discredited and openly proclaymed a traitour by the publique iudgement and solemne decrée of the Emperour and of al the states of the Empire for his false betraying of the Germanes into the handes of the Turke notwithstandinge ye beinge deceyued by their wonted guiles and subtill wordes haue agréed to go with him into France and at this time also are ready to obey him and to do whatsoeuer he will haue you whereby it is plaine that ye wil forsake al christian faith and charity and loue of vertue and praise for the Duke of Guise and for the Rokendolph your captaines sake such an example gyuen hereby as hath not bin heard of heretofore amōg the Germanes For these causes we will and commaund you being admonished by this writing and do exhorte earnestly require all and euery of you which haue anie regard to your good name and fame and haue hitherto bin deceiued by the fraud and subtilty of the Rokendolph that ye take héede and haue regard to the great infamie and reproch which you shall sustaine hereafter that you forsake out of hand your Captaine the Rokendolph and the Army of the Duke of Guise whose principal purpose and intent is to roote out and destroy Christians whom we mind to defend with all our might and power And therefore whatsoeuer he be that shal refuse to obey this our commaundement let him be well assured that hée shal haue the same punishment of ignominy and shame that the Rokendolph hath Let all men knowe this for a suertie ¶ These letters greatly troubled the mindes of the Germanes of which the greatest part of the Guises armie consisted but the vnder Captaines and Centurions being corrupted for the most part with money they litle or nothing preuailed Notwithstandinge a fewe vnder the charge and conduct of Countie Waldech forsakinge the Guises armie came to Orleans to the Prince of Conde The Duke of Guise hauing good successe in his busines according to his mind and contrariwise the Prince of Conde comminge daylye more and more into farther extremity many forsoke the prince of Conde amōg which were many noble men who by the Guises commaundement were peaceably receyued notwithstanding with the reprochful name of Quillebedouius which signifieth a Trayterous coward These startawaies had the Kings letters of warrant giuen to euery one of them in maner and forme as followeth Thomas R. or J. B. or els such a one hath declared vnto vs that he was perswaded to put himself in armour thinking it to be done vpon his allegance and obedience towards vs bicause he was tolde that we the Quene my Mother were captiued and to this end he hath followed those which haue taken many of our Cities And for these causes he is condemned by the sentence of our Iudges to dye and his goods allready brought into our treasury and his house straightly watched and warded to the which he dare not come but by our gratious benefit and helpe the which he moste humbly requireth We therefore vppon consideration of his mind and pur pose which he saith and of the which we are certyfied also shal be to liue euer hereafter in our obedience and also to the end we may gratefie the requestes of certain of our faithfull seruantes For these causes and for dyuers other great and waighty causes also mouinge vs herevnto we haue permitted and graūted and by these presentes do permi●… and graunt to the sayde T. R. although he hath borne armour and hath contributed money to ayde those which as enemies haue armed themselues in this our Realme against vs and for the establishing of the new Religion or hath otherwyse holpen and furthered seditious persons with their aduise and counsaile and hath gone to besiege Cities without and contrary to my will and pleasure that it may notwithstanding be lawful for him to go home to his house and peaceably to enioy his goodes and for none of all those faultes to be
in no perell hereafter by any maner of meanes eyther for wearing armour or for Religion commaundinge that all sentences pronounced againste him for these causes to be voyde and of none effect and that his goodes substance which hath bin brought into our treasury be giuen restored to him again and commanding also the watch ward about his house to cease whatsoeuer hath bin ordeyned and decréed in our Parlements for this matter notwithstanding Also that it shal not be nedefull for the said T. R. our suppliant to haue any other argument or proofe to declare our will and pleasure herin but these our letters only Notwith standing prouided that he be no author of seditions of rapines or of spoyling of Churches nor that he secretly conuey to our enemis either money or armour and also vpon this condition that he liue euer hereafter Catholicly and come not to the seruice or rytes of the new Religion that he neuer hereafter beare armour against vs nor do ayde and assiste those that are our enemyes any maner of way But as by these meanes snares were layed to trap entangle the simple and héedelesse sort as shortly after appeared in many when they were come home so there was no staye of excommunications thoondered out at Paris at Tbolouze and at Bordeaulx and in other places where the papistes ruled against such as were counted Huguenotes strayt charge being geuen to al mē to detect such persones the payne appointed threatened to suche as should conceale any such so suspected and a rewarde promised to him that would detect any such person the Kings Attorney being commaunded to inquire and ●…nd out such causes and to bring them with all spéede before the Senate Then after the publishing of those letters of warrant from the King whereof we spake before the Senate or Parliament of Paris decréed that all those men which came from Burges Poytiers Meaulx Roane Lions and from other Cities which were kepte by the Prince of Conde to Paris should be taken and that they should be punished according to the prescript of the Kings Edicte which commaundeth al men of the new Religion to goe out of Paris notwithstandinge that they had gotten the Kinges letters of warrant and had made a Catholique confession as they terme it of their fayth Roane being wonne as we declared before the army of the Guise came to Paris about the beginning of Nouember the rumour increasing more and more concerning the ayde of the Germanes and of the Englishe men which should come to the Priuce of Conde very shortly Therefore Roan being fortified agayne the breaches of the walles being builded vp and a Garrison left in the towne the Duke of Guise retourned backe agayn with his armie to Paris In the meane tyme came the armies out of Germanie to Orleans sent by the protestant Princes vnder the conduct and charge of the Marshall of Hessen They were thirtéen enseignes of horsemen contayning in iust number 2600 and eleuen enseignes of footemen contayning thrée thousand souldiours Then the Prince of Conde when hée had gathered togyther an armye mynded to remoue from Orleans and to goe to Paris But before his departure from thence hée published a writing in the which he cleareth himselfe from being the author of the first motions and of the ciuill warre deryuing and laying the same vpon the Guises his fellowes and protesteth that dutie moueth him too enter into warre to deliuer the Kinge and the whole Realme from those iniuries and violence This which followeth is the summe of his letter I haue hitherto sufficiently sayeth he by many writings published and sent abroad euidently declared that the Guises the Constable and the Marshiall of S. Andrew are the authours and the first and true causes of those troubles which we sée at this tyme to be so hote outra giouse in the Realme because they tooke disdayne that they should be remoued from the gouernement whiche they vsurped in the dayes of King Fraunces the seconde and were offended at the decrée of the States of the Realme in which thei are commaunded to make an accompt of the excéeding number of giftes which they had receyued in the former Kings dayes and of the ordering and bestowing of the Kings money greatly refusinge not onely to be deliuered from this account but also vsing their former subtilties to enriche and set vp them selues by the ruine and decay of others After that I shewed the diuers Counselles and secret deliberations had they couering their conspiracies with the cloake of Religion and how they began to arme them selues by their owne prinate authoritie contrary to the expresse commaundements of the Quéene and the Decrée of the States breaking the common peace how they contemning the Quéenes authoritie the decree of the States by which they were commaunded to goe home to their owne houses came with an army ofmen and tooke the King and Quéene into their handes perforce with so much grief to the King that hée declared the same with teares openly I haue also declared and will euer euidently declare that I haue for iust and necessary causes and by the expresse commaundements of the Quéen her selfe as may appeare by letters sealed with her owne hand armed my selfe and haue ben nominated and elected by her to take vpon me the defence of this cause as can testifie Monsure Jarnac Monsure Soubize and mōsieur Pordillan to whō shée expresly declared that it was her will that the Kings faithfull subiectes should obeye mée and that they should at my commaundement withstand the counselles and practises of the Kinges aduersaries to restrayne their licenciouse willes And as for me if I should not take the sword in hand the King and Quéenes Maiesties and the Realme cannot choose but be ruled by the wills of the aduersaries whom experience hath shewed of late to be the tyraunts of Fraunce And now although I haue the testimonie of a good conscience towardes God and the Quéen who hath power and authoritie to gouerne the Realme and although I haue already declared all my actions and the trueth of my cause by diuers writings yet neuerthelesse because my aduersaries according to their wonted wicked custome do send abroad into forreyne nations many false reportes and sclaunders in writing impudently burthening mée with false lyes making mée the authour and cause of all these troubles I which desire to haue a good name and report among all Christian Princes Nobles and among the Kinges faythfull subiectes which desire to kéepe my honor and dignity thought good after many other to publishe this writing also To the ende all men may vnderstand how carefully euen vntill this present daye I haue laboured sought by al meanes possible to mitigat and pacefie those troubles raysed by their wickednesse not onely because I know what great destruction will come thereby but also because I haue a singular care and desire both to stablish the
the siege that the Guise had begon Notwithstanding the army being herewith much discouraged ▪ and the Queene and the Prince of Conde geuing commaundement that truce might be taken on both partes they raysed their siéege and departed Then a peace was intreated the Constable faithfully as it might séeme promising the same to the men of Orleans Therefore there was oftentymes mutuall conference betwéene both partes frée communication had also euen among the common Souldiers In the meane time the Admirall prospered very well and had good successe in Normandy and hauing wonne Cane a noble Citie in Normandy and hauing great store and aboundance of money had no doubt brought greater things to passe within a short tyme if the peace had not bin a stay vnto him Therefore the peace was now in question betwéene the Quéene and the Prince of Conde the Constable earnestly soliciting the same by his letters The Quéene although she sawe her parte to be in worst cace two of her principall Captaines being destroyed and the third taken and on the contrary part although the Prince of Conde were taken yet that the rest of the Captaines florished and preuayled although I saye she sawe these things yet notwithstanding she dissembling with a double hart made the Prince of Conde beleue and hope for greate matters and made him bende vnto her will so much as she could Therfore certain cōditions of peace were propounded to the Prince of Conde but not indifferent in the which conditions many thinges were discided concerning the Edict of Ianuary by which Edicte the Prince of Conde would haue had the peace formed and framed Then the Quene the Prince of Conde the Constable and the Andelot came togyther to Parley in a certaine Ileland called Boum neare to Orleans the Admirall which at that tyme was in Normandy being aduertised of the same And after much communication to and fro the peace was at the last concluded the xiii day of March in manner and forme following ALL men see and knowe with what troubles seditions and tumultes this our kingdome for certayne yeres by the iust iudgement of God hath ben tormoyled and tossed our subiectes being the occasion and cause therof through the diuersitie of opinions concerning religion To prouide a remedie for the which there haue ben hytherto had many conuocations of the most singular and wyse men of the whole realme by whose aduise and coun saile many Edictes and decrees haue ben made as the necessity of the tyme required meaninge thereby to preuent a mischief and stop greater inconueniences like to ensue Neuerthelesse the iniquitie of tyme by little and little hath so preuayled and the Lorde by his secrete and iust iudgement prouoked by our sinnes and wickednes hath not restrayned but suffered those outragiouse trou bles to haue their course and that so far forth that an infinite sorte of murders bloudshed rapine spoyle and destruction of Cities haue come thereof beside the violating of temples the ioyning of battayles and an infinite number of mischeeues mo in diuers places In so muche that if this mischief proceed any further seeing there are so many straungers in our Realme and more dayly lyke to come we may playnly see and beholde the ineuitable ruyne and destruction of the whole Realme beside the great losse of so many Princes and noble men and valeaunt Captaynes already made by the authours of these troubles which Noble men vnder the mighty hande of God are the onely strength and true defence and protection of this our Crowne The which things we haue diligently considered and deuised alwaies and remedies to helpe in time yet notwithstanding seeing we see that all the inconueniences whiche come of this warre doe redownde to the diminution and detriment of this our realm and haue felt by experience to our great hurt and losse that this remedy is not sufficient for this purpose we haue thought that there can be no better way thā first of all for vs to flee vnto the infinite grace and goodnesse of our Lord God by his help to seeke for peaceable quiet remedies to cure the soarenesse of this great and mischeuous disease in the eyes of man almost incurable to bring the willes of our subiects to vnitie and concord and to the acknowledging of that obedience and duety which belongeth vnto vs being speedy remedies to kepe our subiectes in peace trusting that the frute of a generall or nationall Counsell will bring suche assured peace and certayne tranquillity to the honor and glory of God that wee shall haue all great cause to ioye in the same In the which matter we wil haue the good and wholesome Counsayle of the Queene our most louing and reuerend mother of our most louing Cosynes the Cardinall of Borbon of the Prince of Conde of the Duke of Monpensier and of the Prince Rochsuryon of the Princes that are of the Kings bloud of our beloued Cosines also the Cardinall Guise Duke de Aumall Momorencius the Constable of the Duke Estamp of the Marishalls Brissac and Burdillon of the Lords the Andelots and of other peeres of the Realme and men of the Kings counsail All the which with one consent and mynde haue thought meete and necessary that these thinges following should bee ordayned and decreed for the common wealth and profit of our realme the which wee will and commaund to abyde firme and immutable that is to say THAT all noble men hereafter hauing the rule and go uernement of Prouinces may peaceably and with the libertye of their consciences liue in those houses in the which they shall dwell with their families and seruaunts and enioy the vse of the reformed religion so called with out any impediment or trouble And it shal be lawefull for all noble men and their families what iurisdiction soeuer they haue to vse the same religion at home and in their houses so that they dwell not in those villages and townes that are subiect to the greater Iurisdiction In which places they cannot haue the vse of the Religion without the leaue and licence of the higher powers VVe appoint to euery Office Senate or Court whose first appeale belongeth vnto the higher courts a citie at the peti ciō of the mē of reformed religion to the which citie the men of those offices and Courtes may come and haue the vse of the reformed religion and no otherwyse nor any where else Notwithstanding all men may liue euery where peaceably at home without any perill or harme for the vse of religion and their cōscience Furthermore all men in those cities in the which that religion was exercised the vii day of this moneth of March beside those cities which shal be specially appointed to euery Court shall haue leaue to vse the administration of that religion still in one or two Cities which shal be appointed vnto them Notwithstanding it shall not be lawfull for the men of the reformed religion to occupie the churches
but newly ended Frances the Duke of Guise being murdered the chiefe and most expert Captaines dead finally the Constable hymselfe a man of a most spightful and cankered stomack against the Protestantes was afraid and trembled at the remēbrance of the bloudy slaughters that were before committed and was very loth to fight againe a fresh any new battailes Wherefore they take another way and deuysed new fetches and sleightes to compasse that which by open force they could not atchieue Of which deuises the Cardinall of Lorraine an olde enemie of the reformed Churches had coined great store and put them foorth to be practised The Counsaile at Trent that had bin often before renewed by great diligence was now again summoned Thither went the Cardinal●… of Lorraine in the name of all the Popishe Prelates of Fraunce hauinge before he tooke his iourney by the helpe and counsaile of some of the counsailours of Paris deuised and protested a grenous and sharpe accusation againste the Admirall as though he had commaunded Merae to kill the Duke of Guise and giuen him money for that purpose Mere was now already dispached out of the waye with extreame punnishment as we haue before declared and a wryting published abrode in the tyme of war of his examination wherein the Admirall was called the aucthor and procurer of that murder The Admirall as also is exprest in the former booke had made aunswere to that wryting in which his aunswere he first requested that Merae might bee kept a liue to the entent the accuser mighte appeare face to face with the accused accordinge to order of Lawe and iustice But after that execution was done vppon Merae he complained that the same was done in such poste haste to the end all meanes to purge himselfe by the accuser beinge taken from him preiudicat and hurtfull opinions of false accusations mighte be conceyued against him But the Cardinall laboured by all meanes possible vnder pretence of that accusation to procure hatred againste the Admirall and had replenyshed many mennes mindes with displeasure and malice against him alwaies laying abrode and shewing the horror and vnwoorthines of that murther so shamefully committed by treason vppon so woorthy and noble a man. And besides a great number that were welwillers and followers of the dead Duke he stirred vp the harts of forrein Princes against him and wrote to the Emperour Ferdinando of the same matter and to diuers other Princes of Germany And this was the cause and beginning of many and great troubles ▪ The Kinge of Spaine also being moued thereunto by the often letters of the Cardinal did write vnto the King that there was no peace to be obserued and kept with such betrayinge Traitores that had defiled themselues with the bloud of a man so notable and famouse The Admirall wrote to the King to the Quéene his mother and as much as he can purgeth himselfe and shifteth of his accusations complaininge that they were but iniuries offered vnto him by the Cardinall of Lorreine and publisheth abrode for his owne defence a certaine writinge as hereafter followeth Those thinges saith he which I aunswered to the accusation of Merae in my former writing gyuen vp to the Queene the Kinges mother and published abroade throughout the whole kingdome ought to be sufficient to discharge and free me of all kinde of blame with all men of wisdome and discreation and not before them only which haue had triall and knowledge howe I haue led my lyfe heretofore but with them also which knowe and vnderstand howe naturall and vnfayned the hewe and colour of truth is and how simplye and plainly she vseth to tell her tale Especially seeinge I did so earnestly request that my accuser Merae might be reserued to appeare against me VVhich certainly I would neuer haue done had I not bin therto moued by an assured cleare conscience of my iust cause and innocencie This my request was not in vaine nor to cloke the matter for I did not aske it by violence forcibly nor yet for a fashion slightly but only for this one end and purpose that the truthe mighte be knowen and made manifeste to all the world But this request beeinge denied me I did verely thinke with my selfe and esteeme all the iudgementes that the parliamente of Paris had giuen againste me as void and of none effect vvhose entent was as by the hasty and spedy execution of my aduersary it did appeare to pres me with false and preiudicial surmises al meanes of reprouing conuincing mine accuser being quight cut of I haue therefore done that which my duty requyred and requested that the matter might be handled and knowen according to order of law And whereas besides the letters I sēt to the Quene of this matter I haue newpublished this writing abroad I haue not done it with out great and waighty cause and the aduise and counsaile of wyse and pollitique men For by that my request I was in good hope to haue stayed the spedy expedition of the execution which the Iudges being very sore bent against me did hasten and helpe forward all that they could Also by this meanes I thought the end of the broiles and troubles that were then being vncertaine to haue satisfied the desires of many men which desired to know the matter especially of forreiners and straungers amongst whom I was euill spoken of by infamous Libelles and false malicious sclaunders vntill such time as I hauing my aduersarie before me might haue better occasion more clearely to purge my selfe Moreouer I did know for a certainty not only that Merae had vtterly denyed and renounced his former accusation against me whereby it was manifeste that he did that which he did by plaine force and threatninges but also that his priuy and secret confessions were in my ememies handes by which ●…e did declare me to be innocent and guiltles of the matter All other accusations therefore wherewith Merae did charge me and yet if he had flatly and without all doubt pronounced me as guiltie my aunswer all men know might be ready ▪ that forasmuch as I could not bee suffered to talke with him all these thinges which are obiected against me were violently extorted and wringed out of him eyther in hope to escape death or els to moderate and lessen the torment and furie of his punnishment I hold and take as forged and faigned seeing that it may appeare by the testimony of many good and very worthy men that Merae had often tymes said that he had declared before the Iudges that I was cleare and free from all maner blame in that matter and that when he was drawen and had to execution he expresly and openly said that those accusations against me were written and penned downe by my enemies before them only who had left no way in this cause vntried that might seeme to further my accusation and for their sakes in winning of whose fauour al men might
which were not entered into the cities More ouer when the Inhabitants of the Churche of Lions made request vnto the Kinge that they might haue liberty to exercise the reformed Religiō answere was geuen them that the Kinge would not haue the administrati●… of that Religion in the city but woulde shortly app●…int thē a place without the citye But not only the liberty of the Religion was taken from them but also leaue to go home to theire owne houses Yea bloudy murther Rapines were cōmitted throughout the city of Liōs the people she winge theire outragiouse madnes euen vpon the very houses of the faithfull At Paris by the comminge of the Kinges letters the Garrisons of warders and wachemē were increased in diuers places throughout the city vpon the bridges watchmē were set to warde the people also had leaue to arme them selues whereby it manifestly appered that the deathe of protestants with in the city was conspired In the meane tyme the popishe Prelates in theire Sermones on the other parte encouraged theire mē to warre but specially the Iesuites of which there were greate nōbers in euery principall city of the Realme these were pestiferouse Locustes procedinge out of the bottomles pyt and sent abroade to be troublesome vnto men in his laste age These I saye in theire Sermones tohght that there ought to be no faith kepte with here●…iques nor any agrement made that it was a godly and meritoriouse dede to laye violent hādes vpō suche vngodly men and that al Christian people ought to arme them selues against them Beside this they brought also examples of suche as were killed by the Leuites at the cōmaundement of Moses of those which had woorshipped the golden Cal●…e of Iehu which by dissimulation shut vp the Preistes of Baale and shewe them Thus the people beinge styrred vp and pricked forward boath with the vngodly persuasions of suche preachers and also with the wordes of mighty men were dayly more more inflamed to ●…uror madnes Moreouer it was geuē for the that it was the Kings will and pleasure that the Huguenotes shoulde be vtterly destroyed and that it woulde please him very well if the Catholikes would do what they coulde too hinder the execution of the Edicte and also that all his subiectes might be brought to one vniformity of Religion Whereby the people were prouoked a freshe sought nothinge more than to arme thē selues again●… the faithful who were now as naked mē by the meanes of the Edicte Thus the people were brought to tumult and not only by the meanes aforesayd ▪ but also by societies and cōfraternities made in diuers places which they called the Confraternities of the holy Ghost ▪ By these Fraternities which confirmed and moderated by consistories did they prouide money and souldiers for the warre Therfore whē a great number of men were gathered togither at Diuinion for this confraternitie the common sort of people began to cast forth sedicious words threatening the faithfull that they should haue only thrée monethes vse of their goods to liue by after that haruest and grape gathering was done affirming that the Kyng himselfe if he would should not alter there purpose and if he once sought to hinder it they would make a Moonke their king Therfore the raynes of impudent boldnes being losed all things began to war out of order throughout the whole Realme The faithfull wanted both armour and Cities all passage both by hill and dale by water and by land were restrained the Catholiques were very strong in each condition with all thinges in a readines for the warre so that the faithful being thus h●…mmed in on euery side might continually loke for nothing but sodaine death and destruction And in déede al meanes waies were sought to bring this thing to passe and as the Cardinall sought diligent ly to bring this to effect so wanted he no necessary seruants and wayters to fulfill his commaundements throughout all partes of the Realme Also to the end his purpose might haue the better successe he thought good to followe the counsaile of the Duke of Alba with whom he consulted oftentimes by messengers which was That the principall heades of those that professed the said Religion should bee taken and then the rest would bee tamed well inough Wherfore hée sought diligently by al waies possible to take the prince of Conde the Admirall the Andelot and Cardinall Odet his brother Rochfoucalt and diuers other noble men of the reformed Religion In the meane time notwithstanding very louing and fréendly letters were sent to the prince of Conde in the Kyng and Quéenes names But so great libertie wherof we spake before being giuen to the furious and outragious people was not Idell It would abhor any Christian mind to heare the declaration of so many horrible murthers which happened in so short a time I meane not to repeate al if I would I cannot Straite after the proclamation of the Edict the people of Ambian a faire citie in Picardie ▪ assembled themselues togither and conspiring the death of the faithfull slew of them to the number of a hundered and forty ▪ At Altisiodor otherwise called Auxer a citie of Borgondy which was rendered vp by the faithfull there were fiftie slayne and their dead bodies cast openly into cannells of the streates ▪ At Rhane at Orleans at Bery at Sanleonard and at diuers other cities horrible murthers were committed vppon the faithful as they went to their churches to diuine seruice Also Monsure Cipiere the sonne of County de Tande Lieuetenant of Prouance a young man about the age of twentie yeres was also cruelly slaine at Forū-Iuly a citie of Prouance It was reported that commaundemēt came from the court that this Monsure Cipiere should be slaine The manner of this slaughter was this Monsure Cipiere was retorned from Nice whether he went to sée how the Duke of Sauoy his kinsman did of whom he was very honorably entertayned but whē he came nere to the towne of Forum-Iuly he perceiued that some laye in a bushe in the wood hard by for him wheruppon he fled with all spéede into the citie with his whole traine which were in number thirtie and fiue Then they which lay in waite being three hundered armed men hauing Baron de Arsi their captaine en tered also into the citie and crying Toxcin or Alleyum a great number of people were gathered togither by by to the number of a thousand and two hundred who beset the house in the which Cipiere was round about But the Consulls and Magistrates of the citie being carefull for Monsure Cipiere made intreatie to the peo ple and at the length brought to passe that Baron de Ar si promised that he would depart with the whole multitude if so be Cipiere would yéeld vnto them his men armour The which being graunted he departed but the people were scarse gone out of sight when Baron de
sory that your subiects would not perswade themselues of that securitie and peace which they should receiue from you and that they wold not obey you as it became them Truly I protest that there is nothing more gréeuous vnto me than that I cannot be with you and obey and serue you alone as I haue alwaies wished and do also at this present most earnestly desire But I pray and beséech you consider that if spies be dayly sent vnto me to vew my doinges and my house to sée if they can hurt me by any maner of meanes what peace and securitie should I haue if I were with you when my enemy hath in his owne hād the ordering of your power and authoritie Therfore if it be certaine as I neither ought nor can doubt that it is your will that your Edicts should be obserued and that the publique peace which you haue graunted and confirmed with an othe should also be of all men imbraced but contrary to your highnes pleasure your subiects are cruelly slaine and murthered throughout your whole kyngdome that fréely without redresse Againe if flat against your Maiesties commaundemēt Leagues be concluded Societies and Fraternities assembled souldiers mustered armour and harnesse made readie money leuied and all other things that belong to open and manifest warre be prepared if for law and Iustice Rapine and iniustice raigne and your Maiesty with contempt of all estates disobeyed and that which is more compelled to violate and breake your publique promise made to all your subiects vppon whom I say shall al these tormoyles be fathered but vpon the Cardinal of Loraine author mainteiner of al dissentions disorders which do so furiously rage thorow all this Realme And although your Maiestie and all those that are not wedded to the Cardinall do know this matter to be so as I haue said yet because it tendeth to the defacing ouerthrow of your graces honour in maintenance wherof I am more earnest because I perceiue the Cardinall hath long ago purposed to ouerthrow it he doth accuse both me and all other of the reformed religion and would with his wiles charge vs with treason and rebellion whereof hée him selfe is guiltie Wherefore séeing we cannot suffer so great iniurie any longer we are determined to dissemble no further in so great and so waightie matters for our longe and almost incredible patience and sufferance of wronges doth but puffe vp the Cardinall and make him to croe ouer vs And therefore to be short I beséeche yeur highnesse to consider what marke he shot at when he hys familie made claime and title to the Dukedome of Aniou and the Countie of Prouance what he ment so curiously to searche out his petigrée whereby he purposed to proue that he was of the bloud Royall of the lawefull Kings of France and that our Auncetours had wrongefully taken the Crowne from his house and vsurped it ▪ likewise I humbly des●…re your Grace to marke for what end and purpose they vsed such outrage and tyrāme in the time of King Fraunces the second to destroy raze out the houses of Burbon Momorencie and Chastillon whose destruction they had sworne and vowed long before with al other the Princes and Noble mē which they thought would set themselues to withstande their wicked attemptes and that this was their intent their dooinges of late sufficiently proued For as soone as it was talked abroad that the Quéen your highnesse mother was not like to liue here any longer foorthwith they tooke counsel and deuised how to murther the Cardinall of Burbon the Chauncelour the Marshalles and diuers other Noble men of your Counsaill and sente moreouer letters thoroughout the whole kingdome too their friendes to raise vp and gather togither souldiers to destroy all such as did in any respect disallow of their d●…inges But because this en●…prise could not be done vnder pretence of Religion for with that cloake they vse to hide all their mischiefs because they whose bloud they sought professed the same religion that they dyd they deuised a new snare to entray them in and charge them as earnest fauourers of the protestantes therefore to be expedient yea and necessarie to dispatch them out of the way for so might they with lesse laboure destroy the protestantes them selues Wherefore they terme them Neuters and say that they are worse and more hurtfull then the Huguenotes And if so bee the Cardinall could which God forbid bring his purpose to effect both against the princes and Noble men of the reformed religiō also against them which professe the Romish religion and yet fauour not their procéedings whom they call Neuters because they loue peace and hate trouble and dissention is there any that eyther would or could defend your maiestie from their cruell handes Is there any that could stay them frō rending your Crown of your Graces head which they say your progenitours haue vsurped vnlawfully against their auncetours Can your Maiestie require a more liuely representation or sufficient proofe of the Cardinals saucie ambitious boldnesse then that he shewed when hée tooke yoūr grace and your highnesse mother the Quéen wéeping and lamenting as captiues prisoners with open force of armes from Fountainblean to Melune from thence in tumultuouse hast to Paris and caused your Maiesties entrance into that famouse Citie to bée as dishonorable to your highnesse as it was wont to bée honorable and glorious to your noble progenitours Which his doinges haue ben the onely and true causes of the former wars other dissentions that haue euer since raged thoroughout your Maiesties Realme And may it not be easely proued how gréeuous your graces authoritie hath ben alwaies to the Cardinall and how continuallie he hath repyned at it and done what possible he could to draw your faithfull and loyall subiectes from their duefifull obedience towards your maiestie as may appeare in that his sute wherein he sought too haue Fraunces Duke of Guyse made one of the Princes of the Empire and got for that purpose a warrant frō the Emperour which he would haue proclaimed thorough all your Kingdome had not Monsieur Ausant Monsieur Halsede staied him who although they wer of one religion with him yet could they no longer dissemble or see so great in●…urie done to youre highnesse as though your maiestie could not protecte and defendea Cardinall as well as other your subiectes vnlesse he●… fled to the Emperour for succour by whom or of whom he hath I am sure nothing vnlesse it be a cankred Imperiall and not a true French hart towardes your maiestie whereof he gaue sufficient profe in the Councell of Trent where in stéede that according to his duetie he ought to haue kept and mainteined those prerogatiues that tyme out of mind haue ben giuen and graunted to the Kings of Fraunce your auncetours He I saye in steed of this his loyall duetie called them in doubt and question séeking by all meanes
Maiestie and make you beléeue that we séeke not him but you seyng we protest before God that we desire to haue no man but him onely and his confederates and why we ●…o so we haue declared both iust necessarie causes How long shall credit be giuen to his olde Iuglings and lyes I most hartily beseche the Quéenes Maiestie to remember his former talke at Chantelliere where she tolde the Constable and the Admirall that the Cardinall was borne to sowe strife discention wheresoeuer he was and that he was the chiefe and onelye cause of all the broyles and factions that were fostred through out all the Realme Let hir cal to hir minde the purpose of that wise and prudent king Henrie who perceiuing the ambitions and wicked dispositions of the Cardinall and al his brethren was fully bente a little before he dyed to haue banished them all from his Court to Loraine But here note the iudgement that the Emperour Maximilianus that nowe is gaue of him when he wrote to your Maiestie That all the warres and dissentions that trouble the state of Christians were both begon and maintained by a couple of Cardinals the Cardinal Granuellā and him of Loraine notwithstanding al this he abideth with your Maiestie a great armie is maintained to gard and defende him that subtill Serpente at your charges is maintained to sucke your owne bloud who tarieth for nothing but onely to spie out fit occasion and oportunitie to spit out his venemous poysō against your grace What blyndnesse hath bewitched vs that straungers and forreyners can sée the destruction that hangs ouer our heades and yet we cannot perceiue it hauing it amongst vs as it were in our lappes Is there any man so ignoraunt that doth not sée him practise his olde and I●…neterate treacheries to the entent he mighte thrust out and depose the lawful true hie●…e frō the crowne and then giue it to a straunger what doth he make of Religion but a cloke and a veyle to couer his villanie Can any man thinke that he setteth by or beareth any zeale to that Religion which he willingly of his owne accord would haue forsaken and in stead of it haue embraced the confession of Ausburge onely vpon this condition that Francis the Duke of Guise might be chosen one of the Princes electors of the Empire If any man say vnto him that it is very perilous likely that the Spanishe King triumphing at our destruction will to our grea●… griefe set vppon and inuade the Kingdome such is his shamlesse impudencie that he will not stick to say openly that the Quéene doth not muche care for that bycause she loueth her daughters as well as her sonnes And although God would graunt your Maiestie both might and power to pacifie all controuersies amongest vs for Religion yet surely there is no hope euer to extinguishe the engraffed grudges and hatred that the Cardinall and his companions do dayly sowe amongst your subiectes For what salue what remedie can be deuised for that woūd which through murthers and spoyles is made euerie daye more and more incurable Is there any hope to reconcile your subiec●…s and set them at one againe whose st●…macke are with these furious and bloudy cruelties set on fire with inquen●…h able flame of hatred Nay sure it is past all doubt that these olde displeasures and hatefull harthurnings will last from one generatiō to another and passe from one to another eu●… by succession and heritage as lands and ●…ubstance doe yea it is to be feared that the same miserie and destruction will ouer whelm●… vs that hathe fallen vpon the Quéene of Scots throughe the wicked and diuelishe counsell of the Cardinall If we sée the Cōmons to ri●…e vp and ●…ebell for custome and tribut●… of salte and for vnreasonable taxes that there Princes lay vpon them which causes be vnlawfull and feditious what then shall they doe that haue iust and necessarie causes to alledge forthemselues who are not only spoyled and bere●…ed of there goods but also of there consciences dignitie honor and life that by this meane he might more easle compasse his long desired wishe to depose your Maiestie and hathe for this purpose full craftely raised ciuill broyles as more fitte for his purpose then foreme warres Is there anye iniurie that can driue a man sooner into desperation then when he séeth his conscience his honor honestie and life affaulted wherfore if I whom it hath pleased God to place in néere degrée of bl●…d to your Grace am besides that natural coniunction bound by other great occasions to be carefull for the preseruation of your honor and dignitie together with the Admirall one of your chiefe and most●… no●…le officers and many other Noble men who are your highnes●… naturall liege and loyall subiectes doe sée the enemie euen before your gates shall not we hazarde and spende both life and goods to chase him away shall we be such traitors both to our selues and our Cou●…ey that when we sée the ●…atter mani●… we shall hold our tounges and suffer our enemyes furiou●…y withoute r●…sistance to i●…ade v●… shall we your Princes and subiectes so behaue our selues that it may worthily and iustly another day be cast in oure téeth and sayd That we without regarde of our allegiance which by 〈◊〉 he w●… 〈◊〉 promised to your Grace ●…ue suff●…ed our lawfu●…l Prince and appoyn●…ed by God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of his throne shall we suffer our selues to b●… 〈◊〉 noted with such rep●…oche of periurie and trecherie as to haue séene the scepter and Crowne of ●…ur countrey rent from the right and true heire and giuen to an vsurping straunger but admitte the Cardinals doings tende not to the vtter destruction of your Maiestie yet no man can denie but that councell which he giueth vn to your grace is not only disordered and vniust but also very pernicious and intollerable There is nothing more acceptable before God or that draweth néerer too his diuine puritie then for a Kyng to gouerne his subiects and people with Iustice and equitie againe there is nothing more beseeming the office and dutie of a King then to loue promote and further peace and tranquillitie and to defend his subiects committed to his charge from all calamities and anoy What hath bene the cause that so many common welthes haue ben preserued in florishing estate so lōg but only the peaceable and quiet gouernment of the commons without any violence or iniuries But amongst all those counselles which that wicked Cardinall hath and doth giue to your Maiestie can one word bee found that did or doth tend too the maintenance of peace and quietnes Nay rather at your graces great cost and charge he maintaineth an armie that there by he may engender and norish suspicions in your Maiesties brest against those who couet nothing so much as to shew the dutifull obedience they owe to your high nes Is it not thorough him that you suffer
and the reste of his fellowes haue shewed the boldnes of those homicides increaseth insomuch that thei dare giue attēpts against the princes of the Kings bloud which are no lesse ornaments vnto him than are the braunches to the trée of the which notwithstanding they séeke to dispoyle the king It is not zeale of Religion that moueth them God prosper you O Quéene you knowe well enough that when you were sick of late the Cardinal of Borbō my brother escaped not altogither the snares which thei laid for him and yetnotwithstāding he is a Catholike It is therfore the bloud and house of Borbon that doth so gréeue them as they haue euidently declared by persecuting my brother the Prince of Conde his children whose defence my Sonne and I will neuer neglect Neyther do I forget the practise of Monsieur Lossae against my Sonne the which was done by the tirannicall counsaile of the Cardinal of Lorain and his fellowes I know O Quene it wil come to passe that many which shal heare my letters will say that they are written by the forme coppy of those which are dayly brought vnto you from dyuers places that they come not from me But I pray you to consider that we which professe the reformed religion vse not only one argument but also almoste one forme of words and also that it cannot be but that true and sincere fidelitie muste come from so noble a house as the house of Borbon is There are thrée reasōs which haue broughte me hether The firste is the obedience which I owe vnto god séeyng that I sée the Cardinal of Loraine goyng aboute with the reste of his fellowes to destroye those which serue the Lorde and embrace the true religion The seconde is the obedience of my king that I may best owe my lyfe and goods for the obseruation of the Edict of pacifiation made by the kings will and consent and least this Fraunce our Countrey the mother and Nource of so many good men shoulde be vtterly destroyed with hir childrē The third is consanguinitie the which as I haue saide ▪ calleth vs to helpe our brother the Prince of Conde all that we can whom we sée manifestly to be afflicted and assaulted by thē which are in y authoritie with you the King which they little deserue who blinde your eyes least you shoulde sée their euill dealing and stop your eares least ye shoulde heare our complaintes But I wold to God O Quene that your eyes and eares beyng at the laste opened ye may both sée and heare what good will and loue euerye one of vs beareth to your Maiesties But nowe as concerning those letters whiche you sente vnto me I perceyue by them very well howe greatly you are incensed against me Wherefore by this Messenger I haue sent vnto you my mind more at large whom I haue cō maunded to signifie vnto you in my name howe necessarie it is for you if you meane to keepe your authority to seperate them from you which séeke to diminish the same and to destroy those also which loue you Iudge of vs rightly and put a d●…fference betwéene the good and the euill and perswade your selfe this one thing of me that I haue a singular care and desire to preserue peace the whiche is so firme in me that the Cardinall of Lorayne and his fellowes can neuer take the same from me For the establishing of the which peace if I myght anye thing preuaile I woulde thinke my selfe moste happie Hir letters to the Cardinall of Borbon were more vehement to whom after discourse made of hir letters sente to the King and Queene and of the occasion of hir Iourney she wrote in manner and forme following How long sayeth shée wil you be suffragane to the Cardinall of Lorrayne shall hée make you ashamed of your brother sisters and kinsfolkes and harden your harte agaynst them Truly if you wil not be moued for their sakes which are so néere of your bloud but wil bée an ennemie to the reformed Religion yet remember what destruction he went about to bring vpon you the Quene being sicke After the which for a while you wer ware and tooke héede least you should fall into the lyke perill but quickly you forgot the same ageyn you were so blinded with the perswasions of the Cardinall because you are seperated from vs by religion shall therfore the bonde of consanguinitie and nature be broken Take héede take héed what you doe They séeke for the death of your naturall brother whose defence if you séeke not I and my Sonne will doe it our selues But if you cannot defende him by force of armes shew your good will otherwise For these haue allured vs God the King and Consanguinitie The Quéene of Nauar came to Cogn●… with hir Armies whether the Prince of Conde went from Rochell to meete hir with a greate number of Noble men A great number of men came dayly out of the hither part of Guian to the Prince of Conde But it was maruaile that the Papistes did not stop their passage seyng that they had great Armies of men in a readinesse and had alreadie stopt vp all passage by water In the meane time the Duke of Aniou was at Orleans gathering his dispersed Armie together but there arising a contention betwéene the chiefe captaines he was much hindred and the Prince of Conde therby had the better occasion to procéede in his affaires At the rumor of the comming of the Queene of Nauars Armies the Citie of San Iand Angely a wel fenced copio●…s Citie in the territorie of Xantonge the strong Castell of Blay and diuers other Cities yelded themselues to the Prince of Conde as F●…ntenay and Sainmexant in the territorie of Poictou When the Prince of Conde wente from Noyers th●… Andelot was in Britaine And beyng certified of his departure he gathered together a greate number of souldiers oute of Brittanie Normandy Touraine and oute of the countreys thereaboutes the Noble men of the reformed religion taking greate paines therein So that within a few dayes they gathered togither to the number of one thousand and a halfe of horsemen and more than two thousand and a halfe of footemen And to come to ioyne himselfe wyth the Prince of Conde he mynded to passe ouer the ryuer of Loyre Now the purpose of the Andelot was to take a certain towne called Saulmur néere vnto the ryuer of Loyre that he the Protestants the euer after might haue the more easie passage ouer the riuer This thing Duke Mopensier one of the Princes the kings néere kinsman and one of the house of Borbon feared and therefore hauing the chiefe gouernment in those partes he gaue commaundement to Martiques Lieuftenaunt of Brittanie a man very expert in the warres to win Saulmur The Andelot little mistrusting that the enemye was so nigh deuided his army into thrée partes that they might be the better vittailed by the villages townes One
to be certifyed and persuaded and to assist vs with your aide and fauour In the meane time the mother and hir children commend themselues to your Maiestie to whom thei wishe most happy preseruation This letter was written the xv of October Certainly England did greatly fauour the cause of the faythfull as may appeare by the second demonstration of their good will in time of extreame perill binding the Frenchemen vnto them for euer by the great benefits and good turnes bestowed vppon them For they gaue liberally to such as were exiles and banished mē places to dwell in and very much comforted succoured the poore néedy and oppressed in these tumultes and garboyles of ciuill warres But to returne to our former purpose The Prince of Conde ioyned himself with the Army of Monsieur Acier the first day of Nouember at Aulbeterre and then out of hand they consulted concerninge the pursuing of Monpensier of which when they had agréed they tooke certain troupes of horsemen of the first Armie and the greatest parte of harquebuziers whiche came out of Languedoc and then the Admirall went toward a certain village called Bertrizi where it was reported the enemie aboade but when they had diligently enquired out the matter it was founde that hée was departed from thence with great spéed and so with losse of that iorney the Admirall retourned backe agayn to 〈◊〉 to the Prince of Conde To whom when hée was come agayn they determined and decréed togither to séeke all occasions of battail and s●… straightway they pursue●… Monpensier who with great expedition traueiled toward the Duke of Aniou For the Duke of Aniou with the reste of the army was at Chastelleraud in the territorie of Poictou who had also with him greate store of great Gunnes Therefore the Admirall wyth the first Army pursued Monpensier who was not farre from the Duke of Aniou in so muche that the Duke of Aniou béeing moued with so greate celeritie remoued his Campe néerer the Citie and more strongly encamped himself his souldiers the Admirall not bidding him battaile but extending his army and displayng his Ensignes in great quantitie of ground Notwithstanding this day there was nothing don The day following he marched his army more néere but first of all he gaue knowledge thereof to the Prince of Conde who sending before him his footemen came vnto him with the troupes of horsemen of the seconde Army but as he was comming on from the Admirall met hym and tolde him that he coulde not cause the Duke of Aniou to ioyne battaile with him bycause he had incāped his souldiers within certaine valleys inuironed with hils and also by reason of a thicke myste which was so foggie that one of them coulde scarsly discerne and knowe another Therfore this day also was spent with charge and discharge of thundering shotte one agaynste another The Prince of Conde had taken a very strong castle called Ca●…uigny by surrender which was situate near to the riuer of Vienna This castel he battered downe to the hard ground bycause it should not afterward stand the enemy in any stéede Then the Prince of Conde to the end he might entice the lingering Duke of Aniou to battail after deliberation had of the matter retired backe agayne with the Admirall and went asyde passing ouer the riuer agayn In the meane tyme Monsieur Bocard was comming to the Prince of Conde with the rest of the army and with good stoa●…e of great Ordinance when he had takē Pont a strong and well fenced citie The Duke of Aniou vnderstanding of this determined to set vpon Monsieur Bocard he being yet a good way of from the Prince of Conde and passing ouer the riuer of Uienua he came to a certain Towne called Pamprui where Monpensier taried for him with the first army The Prince of Conde also was mynded to ioyne himselfe with Monsieur Bocard that if it were possible by this occasion hee might procure and allure the Duke of Anion to battaile Therfore the Prince of Conde came to that place the xvii of November was no farther then half a league from Monpensiers camp And by and by ther was a smal skirmish betwéen them which was but short by reason that night approched The Duke of Aniou was frō thence aboute a league Monpensier as though he had encamped himselfe made certaine fiers to deceiue the enemy and in the dead tyme of the night came towardes the Duke of Aniou at Iazenail By the breake of the day the Admirall sent Monsieur Briguemauld with certaine Troupes of Horsemen as scoutes to view the coste and hee himselfe aboade there still the Prince of Conde being not far from him Then Monsieur Briguemauld when he came to the place frō whence the enemy was fled found certain tentes empty and horses tyed with cariage which they had left behinde them and riding a little farther he might discern the enemy going forward then he sent Monsieur la Loe with twenty Horsemen to take a better and more certaine viewe of them who when he had ridden more neare gaue knowledge to Briguemauld that they were their enemies who straighte way with the rest of the horsemen rode against them at the sighte where of the Souldiers of Monpensier were so terrefied that thei forso●…ke their cariage and fled towarde Mongontour hee leauinge his purpose to ioyne with the Duke of Aniou And it séemed now that they had occasion offered them to giue notable attemptes if so be the Admirall had not altered his purpose fearinge least the Prince of Conde on the other part should be troubled with the Duke of Aniou because hee hard oftentymes the sounde of the gonnes For the Prince of Conde fought with the Duke of Aniou with whom hee skirmished diuers tymes euen at his campe Notwithstanding this was not done without sheadinge of bloud six hundred of the Duke of Anious Souldiers being wanting and of them fiueteen captains And if they had not bene preuented by night it was to be feared least the battaile had bin more blou dy by the rescue of the Admirall The next day again the Prince of Conde came with his whole power to the same place but in vain The Duke of Aniou marched with his army to Poictiers and the Prince of Conde with his army to a towne called Mirebell within foure miles of Poictiers which straight way was yelded to the Prince of Conde where he taried eyght dayes Then the Admiral when he hard that certain bands of Souldiers taried at the citie Pontauzane tooke all his horsemen both with lawnce and shotte and trauailed in the night set vppon the whole Legion of the which the Brissac was Captaine and slewe thrée hundred of them There was also the greatest part of the enemyes horsemen whom he durst not set vpon both for that he knew not where the Prince of Conde was and also because there were great showers of rayne which muche anoyed them Therefore
returning backe againe they met with the Prince of Conde who on the other parte went to pursue the enemy And thus for the space of certain monethes the time was spent with skirmishes of horsemen For this was the pollicie of the chiefe Captaines of the Duke of Aniou to deferre ioyning of battaile therby to alaye the force of the Prince of Condes Army that his power being deminished by delay which the Prince of Conde could not easily repaire againe they mighte so at the last oppresse him While these things were thus wroughte in Guian the Duke de Aumall was with another Armye in Loraine mynding there to reseyne the Germanes whyche were loked for to come and aide the Papistes and also to stop the passage of such as should come to ayde the Protestantes as we will declare when we come to the same While the Prince of Conde was at Mirebell there came a Messenger from the Quéene to the Prince of Conde who in the Quéenes name exhorted and perswaded him to peace To this the Prince of Conde made answere before a great multitude that he was cōstrained to take the sworde in hande to resist those iniuries offered vnto him and not to enterprise any thing againste the Kings Maiestie I and my friends sayth he séeke onely to inuade the Cardinall of Loraine and hys fellowes from whose tyrannie we will deliuer our consciences our liues and our goods for they are open and sworne enemyes to the King and the Realme All men know how greatly I haue wished sought for peace as of late may appeare by my tractable facillitie But sayth he bicause the king is compassed about beset with his enemies I meane godwilling to make my petitions before the King himself And so with this answere the Messenger was dismist whom fame reported to be sent onely as a Spie to vewe what power he had and also to feede hym wyth the vayne hope of peace that thereby they myghte make hym the more secure Concerninge the prince of Orange wée spake somewhat before Therfore when he had gathered together great bandes of Souldies some oute of Germauie some out of the low Countrey and some out of Fraunce and when Mons. Genly a Noble man had brought vnto hym for ayde a great Army of Frenchmen out of Picardy ●…e passed ouer the ryuer of Mense and came into Belgio otherwise called the lowe Countrey where he taryed certayne monethes and made onely certain small skirmishes with the Duke of Albas souldiers and toke 〈◊〉 ō the Papistes a fewe small Townes And hauing no occasions offered him to giue any notable attemp●…e the Duke of Alba hauing the chiefe Townes in possession toward the ende of the Moneth of Nouember he came by Liege to Picardy and so came to Saint Remi and R●…bemont with his whole Armye mynding as it was reported to ioyne with the Prince of Conde By reason of the cōming of the Prince of Orange all the Cities theraboutes were afrayde and Paris it selfe also trembled neyther had they anye hope of ayde and strength the Duke of Aniou beyng in the Region of Poictou and the Aumall in Loraine sufficiently occupied For thys matter the Cardinall of Loraine so prouided that what they coulde not doe by might that they brought to passe by fraude and deceyte and soughte to drawe awaye the myndes of the Germanes by whom the chiefe strength of the Army consisted And they had the better occasion offered them to bring their purpose to passe bycause the myndes of the Germanes were offended by nonpayment of their wages One Schomberg which had accesse to the Prince of Oranges Campe by the meanes of the chiefe Captaine whome they call the Marshall of the Army to whom he was of kinne soughte to bring thys thing to passe Therefore when the Prince of Orange was mynded to March furder into Fraunce the Armies of the Germanes refused required with angry moode to be paied for y time past their wages The captaines made excuse that they made no promyse to the Prince of Orange to come to warre in Fraunce that they could not so doe bycause they were the Kings friendes And thus the myndes of the Captaines beyng distracted the whole armie was dispersed also the Germans saying that they would after so much loste labour returne into their owne countrey The French men also by reason of this distraction went dayly away by heapes And bycause there was no passage into Fraunce by that parte the Prince of Orange with certain French Captaines mynded to returne into Germany againe with the remnant of the armie that he might ●…oyne himself with the Duke of Deuxpons whiche made prouision to ayde the Protestantes The Duke of Alba beinge encouraged wyth this successe pursued and persecuted the remnant of the faithfull throughout all the lowe Countrey and laying new ta●…es and tributes vppon the people hee prouided also new kindes of torment bringing those forth to execution whom before he had put in prysō Euery where horrible and cruel murthering sightes were to be séen but specially at Tornay and Ualencia where fifty Citizens to the terrible feare of all the rest were executed by the common hangman Concerning the Duke D'aumall we haue spoken before and haue shewed for what causes hee was in Lorayne for the papistes to destroy the truth of the Gospel went about to win Germany to take part with them pro mising to the Germanes great rewards of money which is a ●…oble pe●…swader and can bring mighty thinges to passe Besi●…e this also they vsed false perswasions saying that they d●…d not warre against religion which the King maintained by his Edicte but rather against Rebelles which without the Kinges commaundemente haue put themselues in armour to trouble the state the people for the most part beinge drawen to mischeuous sedition vnder the prefence of religion On the contrary part the Quéene of Nauar and the Prince of Conde vrged and declared to the Princes that the Gospell was specially assaulted and that with their accustomed guiles they went about to couer their wickednesse and the breaking of the Edict for that all men might sée both by the breaking of the Edict and also by the manyfest denouncinge of warre againste the truth by those laste Edictes published in the moneth of September that they are mere sclaunders of the papistes Therefore Wolphang Duke of Deuxpous knowing and wysely waying the cause of the faithful promised helpe liberally to the Prince of Conde and did so in déede as wee will here after declare In the meane tyme while Duke Daumall wayted for the comming of certain Germanes to serue the king he heard say that there were certain bandes of the faith full in the territory of Strausburg Their Captaine was Monsieur Cochay of Dolpheny a good warrier he had charge of eyght Ensignes of footemen and of certaine troupes of horsmen which he had gathered oute of the remnants of the men of Dolpheny of
Lions and from among the remnante of the Borgondians and he trauayled this way bycause there was no other passage to the Prince of Conde all other wayes beyng s●…opt vp The Duke D'aumall went with his power thyther and béeing prepared to fight met with the bandes of footemen and horsemen trauailing without order or raye Then Mon. Cochay beyng thervnto constrayned sought to defende himselfe against the Aumall as tyme and place would suffer him and that manfully Notwithstanding the Aumall thoughe to the losse and spoyle of manye of his men gat at the last the victory and toke Monsieur Cochay and certaine of his Captaines and slewe of hys men 120. The reste of the armie which were gone before Mons. Cochay and met not with the enemy escaped in safetie without any sight of the enemy Then Mons. Cochay was brought to Ments beyng within a while after brought for the of the Citie as thoughe he shoulde haue bene exchaunged was slaine without the Citie Noyers a Towne of Burgundy from whence we said before the Prince of Conde was gone was notwithstan dinge kepte in the Prince of Condes name with a small Garrison Aboute this tyme this towne was besieged and wonne by Monsieur Barbezieux the souldiers with in the towne hauing very valeantly defended thēselues so long as possibly they could The Castle also was yéelded vp on these conditions that the Souldiours should passe in safety with their lyues and carrye away wyth them bag and baggage and that Monsieur Barbezieux should giue his ●…aith for the performance hereof But these conditions were kept in no pointe For so soone as the gates were set open they cruelly slewe the Townsmen so faste as they met them only a fewe after they were ransacked spoyled escaped all manner of household stuffe was giuen to the souldier for a praye but the rest was caryed to Troy. The Germanes which were vnder the Kinges paye were by this time come ouer the riuer of Rhein wel ny to Mogunce about the latter end of December There were of them fiue thousand and sixe hundred horsmen whose principal captains were these Philbert Marques of Bade Diere Hess Leuineng Countie Rhingraue and Bassompere Duke D'aumall was so proude of this news that openly he threatned the Duke of Deuxpons and his Region Notwithstanding the Duke prouided so well for the matter that this threateninges turned to bare wordes and nothing else But let vs come now to the affaires and exploites of Poictou After those skirmishes by horsemen agaynst the Duke of Aniou wée saide that the Prince of Conde tooke the towne of Mirebell and there aboade and the Duke of Aniou at Poictiers Within certaine dayes after the Prince of Conde brought forth his armies and wonne the castle of Champiniac in the territory of Mōpenser and after this he tooke the Castle of Sauuigniae and beat downe the same to the ground In the meane time the Duke of Anious army being increased and fortified with fresh bandes of Souldiers both horsemen and footemen which were brought vnto him by Monsieur Ioyse Lieuetenant of Languedoc hée determined to besiege Mirebell because it would stand him in good stéede being so néere Poictiers the Prince of Conde being gone with his army to the same And when by battery he had made the towne sautable the souldiers being not able to defende the same any longer for want of vittaile other prouision they surrendered the same howbeit the Souldious that were in the Castell stood still in the defence thereof But the Duke of Aniou leauing there the Lieuetenant of Poictou called Mō sieur Lude to besiege the same went with the rest of his army to a towne called Lodun which was kept by Mōsieur Acier Who being summoned by a Heralt to surrender the same at the commaundement of the Duke of Aniou aunswered that the citie was committed vnto him by the Prince of Nauar the kings general President of Guian to whom agayne he sayd he would restore the same to none other if any man would goe about to take the same by force he wold by force again make resistance and if he could giue him the repulse And then hee certified the Prince of Conde of euerye thing as it fell out In the meane tyme the Castell of Mirebell was taken certayne souldiers being let into the same vnder the coulour of parley The Duke of Aniou hearing the aunswer of Monsieur Acier brought his army neerer the citie The prince of Conde also came thither in so much that both armies being in their battayle araye and their Ensignes displayed might sée one another very plaine Then they discharged shot one at another with their great gonns spending all that day with shot and certaine small skirmishes and when the night came both partes encamped themselues This was done the sixtéene day of December The xvii xviii dayes following were spente as the other day before The xix day the Duke of Aniou toward the euening gaue place and went to Chinon the Princes souldiours pursuing the armie at which time there were on the Princes syde two hundred Switzers slayne and on the Dukes side thrée Ensignes of footemen About this time the cold of the winter wared verye eager in so much that it was wonderfull that the Armies would lye in the fieldes vnder the colde ayer ▪ but such was the burning heat of hatred that many of both Armies by reason of the extreme cold fel into greuous diseases of the which many dyed Therefore both Armies for this tyme of winter retired The Duke of Aniou brought his Armie to Poictiers to Salmure to Chinon other places thereabouts and the Prince of Conde brought his armie to Tuars to Montriuibellay And he made Monsieur de Iuoy which in the time of the first ciuill warre was Lieuetenant of Burges Lieuetenant of Lodune And these were the exploites of this yere Notwithstanding the troublesomnesse of the tyme the coldnesse of the winter these garboyles of warre were not quite ceassed So that this yéere also was spēt and ouerpassed with lamentable troubles There was sent into Gascoyne Monsieur de Pilles man very expert in the warres which shold make new collections and Moisters of souldiours and carry them with hym For there what with the aid of the town of Mōtaulbane what with the help of the armies of the which the Uicountes had the charge the faithful were of no smal power yea they had also many townes in their possession although the inhabitants of Toloze and Monsieur Monluce went about still to anoye them So soone as Monsieur Pilles was come thyther he tooke the towns of Beegerac and Saintfoy by surrender and when he had gathered togither ban●…es of horsemen and footmen hée retourned to the Prince of Conde And by the waye as he retourned by that place in the which as we said before Monsieur de Mouents his men wer ouerthrowē he wounded and flew
troupes whiche taryed behynde at Iarnac with Briguemauld came to Beauuoire besyde the ryuer of Mate where the Duke of Aniou was with hys armie So soone as the prince of Conde sawe him he set his army in aray and commaunded certaine drummes to stricke vp behynde a lyttle hill harde by them in couert as if an Armye of footemen had bene there Notwithstandyng all that daye was spent wyth certayn●… small skirmishes The Duke of Aniou beyng driuen frō th●…nce which is a place of passage ouer the ryuer sought another way and certayne miles beyonde Engolesme he passed ouer the ryuer Charente with hys whole armie and in hys iourney he sodenly gaue assault vpon the citie of Mele and on the castell of Ruffec slewe the garrisons tok●… the same and after this also he toke ●…y surrender th●… citie of Chasteau neufe and there passed ouer the riuer ▪ Report hereof being brought to the Prince of Conde he perceiued well that there was no lingering of time he went therfore with his maine battaile from Saintes to Cognac and the Admirall came with the vaunt garde ●…o Iarnac The eleuenth day of this moneth the Duke of Aniou hauing commaunded a strong bridge to be made at Chaste●…uneuf came neare in the meane tyme vnto Cognac with the greatest part of his armies makinge a counten●…unce as though he would presently besiege the Citie The princes of Nauar and of Coude were then at Cognac their Armies being distributed lodged among the Uillages there aboutes Then by and by they sente word to the Admirall commaundinge him to come vnto them with al spéede The Admiral bicause it was nedefull for them to be at Iarnac sente his brother the Andelot to the princes to the ende they might both vnderstand the necessitie of his abiding still and also to deliberate with them what was néedeful to be done The Andelot was not so s●…ne gone but the Duke of Aniou with his whole army which was at Cognac rushed with great violence mindinge to recouer and get the bridge of Iarnac But beinge forced to retire by the Admiral they turned their backes and many of them and of the other part also at this con●…ict were slaine In the meane time the prince of Conde deliberating of the matter minded on the day followinge to remoue his army and he on the xii day came to Iarnac the Admirall remoued to Bassac And the same day the Admirall came with the Uauntgard before Chasteauneuf to viewe the place He knew that the enemy had made another Bridge of woode neare vnto the stone Bridge of Ghasteaun●…f that he might passe and repasse ouer them with his whol●… army the more spéedely And then hée ●…eturned to Bassac againe leauing there certain bandes for defence till he came backe againe But bycause of the incōmodiousnes of the place which caused the army to be dispersed abroade the prince of Conde sent to the Admirall willing him to be with hym 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 day earely in the morning and to bring wyth hi●… all his bandes and his ordinance and to sée that the horsemen were with him euen at the breake of the day So soone as the Admiral had receiued the message he sent word that night to euery captaine hereof But many of them were so slacke that they had the nexte day in the morning scarsly taken their iorney by nine of the clock The Admirall taryed their comminge at the Riuer to kepe the same with certaine bandes of Harguabuziers In the meane tyme the Catholiques Campe passed ouer the riuer of Charente all the night with as great spéede as myght be and were come before Bassac in the sight of the prince of Conde But bycause the said prince lacked the Lord Pluueaus horsemen and his regimen of footemen leaft as you haue heard behinde and were nowe comminge he had no intent as yet to fight The morrow after being the xiii of March the prince with his horsmen that were already arryued presented himselfe in the morning in order of battaile before the enemy aboue the Uillage of Bassac When all was arryued the said prince returned with the battaile drue to Matt● neare Saint Iean de Angelie which the Admirall did also leauing behinde to direct the retracte the Lord de la Noue who retiring a reasonable pase and yet not far of was charged with a great hoste of horsmen which forced him to take the charge and chased hym to Bassac where the Admirall was ready to resist and repulsed the catholiques vnto the other side of the Uillage In the meane while certayne troupes of shot of the Catholiques entered the said village sought to skirmishe with the Admirall who likewise droue them out of the village Notwithstanding they were reléeued by the reste of the Campe that folowed at hand and returned to the village The Lord Admirall séeing that the Catholiques were so nye sent a Gentleman with spéede to the Prince to aduertise him that the whole campe of the cōtrary side was there and almost at his héeles so that séeinge no meane to retire without fightinge desired him to aduaunce such powers as he had of the battaile Immediatly the prince reculed till he was very néere the Admiral ringing himselfs in battaile at the foote of a hill on the left hand The Admirall was in battaile raye on the right hand along a little Coppies lookings towarde Bassac He had about him the Lord Pluueaus regimen of fiue Enseignes of footemē who made a long skirmish and séeing that the Catholiques in the meane while were readie to charge him comming betwéene the Prince him turned his face right vpon them and with certain Cornets which were with him pressed vppon them so whotly that he brought to the ground a great number and so passed further At the same instant the Prince when hée had mads his praiers vnto God went to battail with great corage vpon whō rushed a great Squadron of Reisters or Germanes and set vpon him on the syde at which charge his horse was killed and fell vppon him and his horsemen put to the chase whom the Catholiques pursued Albeit as they passed further a French Gentleman named the Lord of S. Iean knew the Prince of Conde and also the Lord de Argence both which promised him to saue his life or else to leaue theirs in aduenture Where vppon as an Archer being descended on foote to helpe to shifte the prince of Conde from vnder his horse and had set him on his féete one named Montesquion who was thought to be the captain of the garde to the Kings brother knowing the Prince shot him thorough the head with a pistolet the shot entering behinde came forth vnder his eye of which he presently dyed They which were present were very sore offended for this deed but specially they which had giuen vnto him their faith to saue his lyfe This was the ende of the Prince of Conde a Noble Prince ▪ who hath left behind him
of highe estate as the prince of Orange his Sonne the Countes Lodouike and Henry de Nassau his Bretherne the Lord d' Moruilliers the Marques of Renell the Lordes of Mouy and Esterney besides many others there were also xix péeces of artillery they either main péeces or field péeces with others somewhat lesse whereof he left two of the grea test at Charitie There were in the princes army about thirtene thousand harguebuzers besides pikes whereof were great nombers aboute iiii thousand horsemen sixe cannons and two mean péeces The Kinges brother now hauing receiued from the Pope two thousand horsemen and foure thousand foote men Italians vnder the conduit of the countie de Saint Fiour came to Lymoges with his army fronting alwais as néere as he could the Almaignes but not medlinge with them About this time the Quéene Mother accompanyed withe the Cardinalls of Bourbon and Loraine came to Lymoges and there desirous to sée in battaile the army of the Duke her son she visited the ▪ battayls and squadrons of his horsemen one after an other perswadinge them to omitte no dutie to continue their seruice to his maiestie and so departed the campe and went to Limoges where she remained certain daies and then retired to the courte The same day the Lord la Loue marshall of the prin ces campe with his regiment of horsemen was sent to Aesse vppon Vienne to garde the passage whereof the Kinges brother hauing intelligence came the next day beeinge the eleuenth of Iune and encamped with in a league of the said Aesse makinge out the same day certaine nombers of shot to vndertake the skirmishe who being repulsed taried not long there but retourned to the campe the twelfth day arriued at the said Aesse the footemen of the vauntegarde of the Princes and thither came also other supplies of shotte from the Catholiques campe and that in great nombers they at the first comming repulsed certaine shotte which were with in the Subburbes on the other side Vienne albeit they were forthwith reskued and the other driuen to retire the skirmish endured long whot deuouring of the catholique side about CC. men and of the Princes part only xx or thirtie Within two dayes after the Princes army marched toward S. Tirier la perche in the said countrey of Limosin of purpose to refresh there the Launceknights weried with so long trauaile the Kinges brother followed thē albeit so far of as it was the xxii of Iune afore he came néere the Princes and then lodged thrée leagues from the said S. Tirier where the said princes were who sent for their armye as well footemen as horsemen to come and campe ther. The twentie thrée of the same moneth he aduaūced more néere them lodging within a league and an halfe of S. Tirier in a village called la Roche the same arguing to the Princes that he would giue them battaile the next morrow whereof they attended to sée if he would come any néerer which he did not albeit the princes sent for their army to be ready at the first shew of the day who accordingly marched in good order to the said place de la Roche where forthwith they bestowed themselues in squares the forlorne hope were appoynted to marche both on the right and lefte hand they of the right hand were led by the lord de Pilles whose regiment made the first winge the others of the lefte hand were guided by the Lord de Rouray the Lord de Mouy with his regiment of horsemen kept the left hand and the lord de Bricqueman ▪ and de la Loue with theyr regimentes of horsemen the right hand making the winge of the vauntegarde the Launceknightes were ringed in two battailes the one a vauntgarde and the other a battell the vauntgarde caried viii field péeces whyche were planted before their battell The skirmishe began of the Lord of Pilles side against the Lord de Strossi who with two thousand shot was behinde a close pale and sent thether for the defence of the passage he had a greate aduantage vppon the Lorde de Pilles bycause his harquebushears shot in couert from behynde the sayd close pale and the sayd Lorde de Pilles was opē and in a high place Besides the Lord of Strossi had to backe him in tyme of néede foure Cornettes of Italians who séeyng that the forlorne hope of the Lorde de Pilles coulde not discharge their péeces by reason of the raine charged so hotly vpon him as they forced him to retire a hundreth pase within y woode ▪ killing at that charge about ten of his souldiours albeit being rescued by two Cornets of light horsemen of the Captaynes la Motte and Brilliam Gascones repulsed wyth equall violence the Italians put them to flighte in which meane while the said forlorne hope renued more hotly the skirmishe and yet did neither hurte nor amaze greatly the sayd Lord Strossi which caused the Admirall to draw thitherward who assone as he had surueted the place caused to come to him the shot led by the Lord de Rouray They began to skirmishe on the lette hand againste the Lorde de Strossi beating him on the side with constraint at last to habandon his shade and recule whervpon the Captaines la Motte and Brilliam with manie other companies of horsemen gaue vpon his troupes and put them to the chase wherein the lorde Strossi was taken and led to the Admirall who caused the victorie to be pursued to a little ryuer running fast by and many souldiers followed the fortune of this chase euen within the tentes of the Catholikes camp and hard to their ensignes On the left hand the lorde de Mouy offred to charge certaine Cornets of Italian horsmen who refused to abide him and so he returned backe It rayned so vehemently that there coulde be no vse of anye har●…uebushe ▪ so that without anye other thing done the army retired the Strossi loste and left dead on the place about fiue or sixe hundred Amongst others of accompt was slaine his Lieuetenant called the Lord de Sainct Loup with thirtie aswell Captaines in chiefe as Lieuetenantes and ensigne bearers whose Targets remained also vpon the place Ofthem of the Religion were slaine and hurt of all sortes onely fiftie whereof were two Captaynes of footemen called Peyrol and la Merie Dauphynois this was the. xxv of Iune 1569. The morow after foure hundreth Italian horsemen wyth certayne Pikemen of the men of Armes of the Duke de Nemors came to sée if the Princes army were discamped as the Kinges brother was aduertised as they approched néere the campe they were discouered by the watche and so hotly set vpon as they were enforced to retire out of order some slaine and some takē prisoners The. xxvii of this moneth the sayde Princes armye were driuen to discamp for want of vittailes drawing toward Perigueux to reléeue themselues The lorde de Moruillier comen out of Almayne as you haue heard
Protestants lost an hundreth or sixe score souldieurs with certaine numbers hurt The Lord de Pilles was hurt in the thigh with a small shot wherof he was spéedely cured The Lorde Briquemaux Sonne Colonell of the footemen was also hurte with a harquebush whereof after certain dayes dyed The Lord de S. Marie Dolphinoys with others of mark were also killed On the Catholiques part were killed Captain Passac and the Lorde de Montall with a good number of footmen Before these assaultes the Catholiques sent two mē to the King and his brother for succours with charge to reueale the estate of the towne and penurie of vittails The Kings brother hauing assembled as much force as he could came to la Haye and to Port de Pilles determining to beset Chastelleraut to the end to drawe the siege from Poytiers and therefore made to march his vauntgarde right to Chastelleraut lodging the monday being the v. of Septēber a quarter of a league from the town The morrow after his horsemen and part of his footemen presented in order of battaill before the towne to view it all that day being spent in skirmishinge on the other side the riuer of Vienne The towne was gouerned by the Lorde de la Louë Marshall of the Campe of the vauntgarde to the princes He had first for the defence of it his owne companie of light horsemen and then the Lordes of Ualauoire Bressay la Motte and de Royesses with vii companies of footemen and captayn Normantes companie of harquebusiers on horsebacke The suburbes defaced by fier was no place for the catholikes to lodge in so that they were constrained to encampe further off which they began to do the same day they viewed the Towne The artillery brought by the Swizers arriued at midnight and immediatly appro ches were made and the Cannons ringed in batterye in two seuerall places beating notwithstanding al one breach It beganne the wednesday the vii of the sayde moneth very early neare the gate S. Catherine betwéene a tower of the said gate and an other tower more near drawing to the temple S. Iean Such was the furie of the battery as by two of the clocke in the after noone a breach was forced of thrée or foure score foote wyde the chaunce fell vppon the Italians to giue the assault which they did being backed followed with certain Frenchmen They mounted vpon the breach wher albeit they presented xvii Ensignes yet found they such sharp and spéedy repulse as they were enforced in a moment to turne their faces receyuing great losse by the vaulte of the said gate wherein were bestowed vi score harquebuzears well appointed The Italians lost at this assault v. of their Ensignes which the Protestants tooke from them by force After this the assault and the catholikes retired from the breach Captaine Bernier d' Auphinoys came to succour the towne wyth foure hundreth harquebuzears be ing backt with the horsemen of the Princes uauntgard led by the L. de la Loue and Teligny The Italians were so crushed at this assault as they had no will to make it good again neyther was any other thing worthy of memory done that day The same day the siéege of Poitiers raised to come to xeskue Ch. stellerant marching no further that daye than thrée leagues by reason one of the cannons miscaried and was leste on the place The morrow after the army approched within halfe a league of Chastellerant which made the catholikes raise their siéege and retire to Port de Pille hauing loste in this siéege fiue hundreth menne and almost all Italians whereof the Colonell Fabiano de Rome was one The nexte morninge the Princes vauntgard pursued the catholikes cuttinge of from the taile of their campe about two hundreth footemen and killed them all The same day the Lorde de Sanzay entred Poytiers with x. or xii companyes of footemen almost all Italians and two hundreth horsemen Immediatly after whose comming the Duke of Guise and the Marques du Meine his brother accompanied with xv hundreth horsemen departed the Towne to relieue themselues with freshe aire The morrow after being the x. of September began a skirmish on the hither side the said Port de Pille against two thousand harquebuzears which the catholikes had left ther within the trenches They were at laste enforced to passe spéedily ouer Creuse leauing about iiii or v. hundreth of their company dead on the place The Princes armie drewe to la Haye to passe the sayd Ryuer the next morning being the xi day of the sayd moneth There was no worthy matter performed other than certaine light skirmishes The monday followinge the Princes army ready ringed in battaile very early presented afore the catholikes to giu●… them battaile Albeit bycause there was betwéene the two Armies a little Ryuer with maryse shoares which neyther the Princes could passe themselues nor yet cōuey ouer their artillery after the two armies had long remained one within view of another they retired into their seueral quarters The princes army for want of vittailes and seing with all the Catholiques had small disposition to fighte passed againe ouer Creuse and also Vienne the twelth of September retiring so to Faye la Vineuse in Poyctou of purpose chiefly to refresh them The catholiques drewe to Chynon expecting not only forses to be brought from many places in France but also such companyes of men of armyes as had leaue till the first of October as hath bin saide The Prince of Orange departed frō Faye to returne into Almaigne with a very small company he passed by Charyte and Uezelay and from thence by manye countreyes withoute anye let till he came into Almaigne The brute went that he vndertooke his iourney to hast certaine succours of Reistres As the Admirall laye at Fay vineuse there was one Dominike Dalbe a Gascoine executed by sentence the xxi of this moneth These were the causes proued against hym First that he beyng of the Admirals chamber sent by him to the Duke de deux Pons with letters as well from the sayde Admirall hys maister as other Princes was taken at Brissac a Countrey in the Marches vpon the ende of May last by the Lorde la Riuiere Captaine of the Garde to the Catholikes and being by him earnestly sollicited he reuealed to the Quéene mother Duke d'Aniow hir sonne and Cardinall of Loraine his iourney with the purpose with further promyse that vnder colour to go and deliuer to the sayde Duke his letters of charge to espie hys campe and sounde his secrete determinations and so being presented frō that tyme with an hundred crownes and an estate or office roomth in the chamber of the sayd Duke d'Aniow he put him on the way to effect his promyse touching the view and report of the Dukes campe from whome hauing spéedie dispatche he returned to the sayd la Riuiere and imparted his full expedition not forgetting to describe at large what he had learned of the state of the Dukes
French as Italian who charged altogyther so violently vpon the Lord de Mouy and de la Loue that they were enforced to endure and take the charge retiring thorow the battel of the Lanceknights which gréeued them sore notwithstanding the Admirall supplyed the charge and gaue with such furie vpon the Catholke Reisters that he cut great numbers of them in péeces and immediatly with the remainder of his horsmen of the Uauntgard repulsed with force the vauntgarde of the enemie whereupon was raised a crye on the Admi rals side Uictory victory the same sounding with such noyse of comfort in the eares of the maine battell that diuers ranne thither to follow the victorie when loe the Catholique mayne battell aduaunced bending directly vpon the Princes battell where they were in person To the Catholiquas battell ioyned a wing of horsemen which came from the vauntgarde At the beginninge the battell of the Princes sustayned the charge albeit finding and féeling their owne weaknesse as being not able to fight togyther as the Catholiques did were enforced to disorder and fel out of aray the horsmen of the vauntgarde dispersed héere and there without order not drawne as yet into any safe pollicie or gard of war followed also the others whereby both the Frenche and Almaine footemen were left naked whereof the French men were first forced to breake aray and then the Papistes horsemen on the one side and the Suyzers on the other side began to buckle with the Launceknightes who séeing themselues enuironed on all sides neyther present helpe nor cause of further hope the rather for that the artillery was planted euen at their féete let fal their pykes and prostrat themselues vpon their knées amongst whom rushed with no small fury the horsmen and certayne Swizers ▪ vsing butchers mercy cut them all in péeces The Counte Mansfeld and Lodowike retired alwayes in order of battell a thing worthy to bee noted in so generall disorder hauing about them xiii cornets of Reisters which had not followed the others with whom they gathered togyther certayn cornets of Frenchmen and so retired and neuer were charged After the ouerthrow and spoyle of the Launceknights the Kings brother pursued the victory half a league and no further and so encamped in the playn of Cron wher the battell was gyuen he was farre stronger in horssemen and footmen than the Princes who had not aboue vi thousand horsemen of all sortes as well straungers as others viii thousand footmen French and most har quebuziers and lastly thrée thousand launceknights In this battaile the Princes lost their launceknightes a thousand or xii hundred French footemen and about an hundred horses vi Canons two Coluerines three little field pieces The lord de Autricour Captayne of a hundred light horsemen a very foreward and galland Gentleman was there killed the lorde de Acier and la Noue taken prisoners and the lorde Admirall lightly hurt in the chéeke In the Catholiques army were viii or ix thousand horsemen and xvi or xviii thousand footmen with great store of artillery They lost few footemen because they fought not so that their greatest losse consisted in horsemen which what with the chaunce of that day the encounter before touched grew to great numbers with diuers of no small estate as the Counte Mansfield and the Ringraue the Marques of Baden the yong Counte Cieremont Daulphinoys with many other Lordes and Knightes of the Order the Duke of Guyse and the Ringraues brother hurt The retraite of the Princes and their army was to Partenay about vii leagues frō the place of the battell where as they arriued the night folowing at midnight so the next morning the iiii of this moneth they departed from thence with the Admirall Counte Mansfelde the Counte Lodowike and Henry de Nassau bretheren with other great numbers of Lordes Gentlemen and Capteynes cōming the same day to Nyort where they found the Queene of Nauarre remayning there euer since they departed In the meane time they layde the wayes and quarters by the Marshals of the campe to the ende the dispersed sorte might eftsoones resorte to their Enseignes which was performed the same daye by the most part of the horssemen Notwithstanding this laste successe losse at Mont-gontour dyd both gréeue and amaze the princes yet they were not vnmindfull to reassemble their forces wherof the most part of the horsemen was forthwith vnder their stāderds which the footmē could not do with such spéede in respect of their long retrait and therefore the vauntgarde of the battell were disposed seuerally into sondry quarters villages néere to Nyort by the which meane the Frenche footemen who in respecte of theyr good order were not much distressed in this conflict resorted readily to their Ensignes and companies In the meane while the Prince●… deliberated in the said town vpon the sequell of their affaires to whome albeit the losse seemed great yet considering that in a generall calamitie euery one hath his fortune they couered theyr present gréete and as the necessitie of their state required with ioyfull countenaunce they assured ●…tsoones the remaynder of their dispersed companyes In the euening the Quéene of Nauarre departing from Nyort wente to Rochereul and the Princes the nexte morning toke their way to Saintonge leauing within Nyort both to make head against the catholikes let them to passe further the Lord of Mouy with his regimen of horsemē and. ii regimens of footemen beside the ordinarie garrison being perhaps iii. hundred shot Such was the brute and heauy noyse of this battell that many cōpanies of the Princes armie as wel footemen as horsemen bestowed in seuerall charges in sundry castles and townes as well in Poyctou as Touraine determined to leaue their garrisons as not able to endure a spéedy siege in respect they were weake within themselues and also had small hope to be succoured in sufficient time As they which were wythin Chauigny vppon Vien at Roch●…ose Captayne Belon within the Castle de Angle with Chesnebru●…le his ensign bearer which was at Pru ly together with captaine Teil captaine of the Castle of Cleruaut with his cornet of shot on horsebacke departed and abandoned their seueral charges taking their way to Charyte captaine Lornay gouernour of Chastelleraut assone as the s●…ege was raised left the towne the vii of October at xi of the clocke before noone with hys owne company of footemen and two others wherof one was vnder captaine Mor●…s beyng in all about thrée hūdred footemen and two hundred horsemen and tooke theyr way towardes Charyte passing by la blanc in Berry and from thence came to Bourgdien a towne belonging to the Byshop of Bourges and heretofore taken by skaling by the Lord de Bournay there they ioyned with the rest aforesayde and also the Lorde Bricquemau the Elder who taried there with his companyes in respec●… of hys sicknesse In the meane while the kings brother following his victorie came to Partnay which he
such as were specially chosen to be of our counsel I thought good to decree and establish these things that followe with a perpetuall and irreuocable Edict which we will commaund all our subiectes faithfully to obserue and keepe for euer 1 First of all that after these troubles and tumults of warres all things that hetherto haue ben doon of both parts be quite forgottē also whatsoeuer was brought to passe by reason therof and that it shall not be lawful for any to moue any strife or controuersie or any waies to be troublesome for the same either publikely or priuatly in any publique place or els where 2 VVe straitly forbid and charge that no man rip vp a fresh those thinges done and past or doe offend one another with woord or deede or that they do dispute or contend about any thing done and past but rather that they liue togither peaceably and quietly as it becōmeth Citizens and friends Then ye which shall do otherwise we will accompt as breakers of the common peace 3 VVe will that the Catholique and Romish Religion be presently restored to those places of our realme out of the which it hath bene banished and that all thinges belonging to the Ministers therof which haue bene taken away be restored againe and that they may quietly enioye with their Religion their goods and landes 4 And least there be any occasion of controuersie dissension left hereafter we will that men liue peaceably and quietly in all places of our Realme and that they sustaine no perill or hurt for Religions sake or that they be molested and troubled any where so that they liue ac cording too the prescript of our Edicts 5 It shal be lawfull for all Noble men whether they dwell within the Realme or without to vse the reformed Religion in one place only of the iurisdiction and the same also to appertaine to their seruants and to all others of their iurisdiction that will come to the same so long as they or any of their seruants are present I will that they signifie vnto our Lieftenants what place they will chuse before they vse the same according to the benefit of the sayd Edict 6 VVe also permit such Noblemen as are of inferior calling to vse for them selues and their families only the reformed Religion And if so bee there resort any of their friends to their houses to the number of ten to celebrate Baptisme or for any other busines our wil is not that they should be in any peril for the same so that the●… exceede not the number of ten 7 And this we graunt to the Queene of Nauarre our Aunt that beside the benefit generally graunted to all those that are in chiefe authoritie it shal be lawfull for her within her Duchy of Albrel Armiguac Foix of Bigorre so that it be but within one speciall place of euery of those Lordships to haue the free vse of the said Religion that whosoeuer will shall go vnto that place without al perill or harme the said Queen being absent to heare and see the administration of the foresayd Reli gion 8 VVe do also appoynt these Cities to euery Lieftetenantship by name The which cataloge for breuities sake we do omit as not necessary 9 And furthermore we do permit and suffer by these presents that the vse of the reformed Religion shall con tinue in all those places in the which it shal be found to haue bene vsed the first day of this moneth of August 10 But we seuerely forbid the administration and vse of that Religion either in ministering the Sacraments in preaching the word in discipline or in open chatechising and instructing of children ●…o bee in any other places than in those in which wee haue permitted the same to be 11 VVe will also that this Religion be in no wise exercised within our Court nor within two miles of the same 12 Neither is it our pleasure that the same Religion should be exercised at Paris nor within the liberties of the same nor in any place within ten miles of the Citie 13 At the Buriall of the dead I commaund my Lieutenants of my Cities and all other my officers to suffer the men of the sayde religion to haue leaue to vse those places which they haue already or shall hereafter prouide for the same notwithstanding so that whē any of them shall die the Lieutenant may haue warning who shall giue his seruaunts commaundement to attende followe the coorse which shal be broughte forth in the night and that with ten persons of his friendes kinsfolkes onely following the deade corpes to the funerall least there should be any t●…mult by these occasions 14 It shall not be lawfull for the men of the said religion to Marry within the degrees of Consanguinitie by my lawes forbidden 15 I will that all poore people and sicke persons without respect be receiued into hospitals and colledges 16 And least any man shoulde doubt of my good intent and meaning towardes the Queene of Nauar my Aunte the Prince of Conde and towarde the Prince of Nauar I plainely affirme that I acknowledge and take them for my faithfull kinsfolkes subiects and seruantes 17 As also I protest that I account and take all those Noble men for my true and louing subiectes and all others whatsoeuer which haue followed my saide kinsfolkes or by any maner of meanes haue ayded them 18 I do also account the Duke of Deuxpons and his childrē the Prince of Orange the coūty Lodouic his brethren the countie VVolrade Mansfeld and al other strangers which haue ayded my kinsfolkes for my good neighbors and friendes 19 I will and commaund that my said Aunte and my Cosyns all others which haue done any thing at their commaundement be free from making of any account of all that money which by thē or by any other at their commaundement hath bene taken out of our treasury out of our cities and out of the sale of our Churchlands so that she or they giue vnto me a bill of their accounts made I do also pardon forgiue whatsoeuer hath bene about the affaires in the warre as the mustering of souldiers the coyning of money the casting of great gūnes and such like prouision the besieging of Cities the battering down of the walles the entering into league with straungers the bringing of them into my Realme and to be short I pardon and forgiue all those things which haue bene done and committed both in this last war in the warres before time and that so certainely as if I did perticularly name them by name 20 Notwithstanding I will that the men of the sayd Religion do forthwith after the proclayming of this Edict breake and let fall those leagues into the which they haue entred either within or without the Realme neither shall they make collections of money musterings of men or any
10. Symoniakes Pope Paulus the thirde Contarenus Sadoletus Cardinall Poole Math. 27. The thirde remedie Olde accustomed remedies The fourth remedie The seconde principall point The state of the kingdome which consisteth of these three namely of the n●…bilitie clergy and communa●…tie Tributes The commēdation of the generall assēbly of the States Slaunderous bookes A lesson for Kinges and Queenes Lodouicus xii pater patriae The ende of this oration The sentēce of the Admirall The sentence of the Duke of Guise The sentence of the Cardinall of Lorain The Cardinall of Loraine hopeth to get honor fame by keeping libels that were scattered abroade The reformation wished for by the Cardinall of Leraine A Nationall counsell is as much to say as a counsell gathered onely cute of the French nation which I gasle we maye call a conuocatiō of the clergy whereas a generall counsell consisteth of diuers nations A tumulte against the Prince of Conde Letters sent to the Prince of Conde taken Monsier Vidā apprehended The king of Nauar and the prince of Cōde are sent for to the king A new Edicte against the reformed Religion The king cōmeth to Aurelias The prince of Conde taken at Aurelias The death of king Frances the seconde 1 2 3 4 A wonderfull alteration after the death of King Frances the seconde The priuy displeasure of the Queene against the Prince of Nauarre The King of Nauar yeldeth authoritie to the Queene to gouerne the Realme The peace of the Church after long affliction The death of Monsieur Vidame A conuocation of States or of a Parliament in king Charles the. ix days The oration made by the Chauncelour Sedition what it is and wher of it commeth The force of Religion in the 〈◊〉 of men Bellona is the Goddesse of vvarre Factious names The accusatiō of forreine Princes The oratiō of the cōmenaltie made by Angell The ignorāce of prelates Couetousnes The oration for the nobilitye The oratiō of the Clergy The faultes of persons Ecclesiasticall Churches Euse booke 51. 〈◊〉 the lyfe o●… Constantin Shauē crowns the badges of Christes an●… The death of Quintinus orator for the Clergy The parliamēt breaketh vp Trent in Italy The letters of Paulus virglus to the Bishops of Italy Augusta is ●… citie in Germanie called Ausburgh The Pope iuuiteth the Princes of Germanie to the generall Councell The answere of the Princes of Germany to the Popes Legates Persecutious in Prouince The Prince of Conde sent for to the Court. The contentiō and ●…lling out be●…weene the Queene the king of Nauar●…e Deliberation●… of the particular assemblie of states at Paris Reconciliation betweene the Queen and the king of Nauar The Constable is drawn away frō the p●…nce of 〈◊〉 and from others o●… the reformed Churche The kings Letters The oration of Petrus Robertus the man of law for the Prince The conclusion of the Senate of Paris The decree of the senate con cerning the innocencie of the Prince The complaint of the Cardinal of Lorrayn 1. 2. 3. An Edict called of the Moneth of Iuly The summe of the Edict Warres betwene the duke of Sabaudia and the inhabitants of the valeys The Edict a-against the inhabitants of the valleys Ranconensis Trinitaeus The slaughter of Truchetus The agrement an●…●…uce betweene the Duke of Sabaudia the inhabitants of the valleys Persecution in Spaine He might rather be called Granvillan or greate villane The confessiō of the Church of Flanders offered to the King. 〈◊〉 New●…rs The reconciliation of the Prince of Cōde the Duke of Guise Certaine Ciuil actes worthy to be noted Cardinal Ferrer sent from Rome to hinder the Nationall Counsell in Fraunce The effect of the Queenes letters sent to Pope Pius the fourth Multitude Qualitie Concorde The increase and force of the faithful Doctrine Diuersitie of rites The remedy The fyrste poynte of offence Worshipping of images Sacraments Baptisme Catechismes The holie communion The custome of the auncient Church The second poynt that is misl●…ked The sun●…ie r●…ceiuing of the Sacrament Tymes to re●…eiue the cōmunion The thirde point that is misselyked Spirituall worship The Masse 〈◊〉 of greate offence In the substāce of the Masse In the forme of the Masse A straunge language Singing of Psalmes The begining of the ●…putation at 〈◊〉 Concerning our co●…muniion with Christ and of the fathers vnder the lawe Iohn 8. 1. Cor. 10. 1. Corin. 10. Iohn 1. 1. Sacramentall signes 2. The th●…ng sign●…fied 3. The co●…nction of signes and the ●…ing signifi●…d 4. The participation of the signes of the the thing signified The ministers desire to haue the disputatiō and obtaine it The first session o●…●…is disputation The proposition of king Charles the ix The proposition of the Chauncelor Generall Coūsell a vaine remedie Ariminum o therwise called Remino an old citie in Flaminia in Italy The exception of Frances Cardinall of Turnon The oratiō of Beza in the name of the protestantes Beza his prayer ▪ Beza directeth his speache to the king ▪ Howe greate a benefite it is for subiects to be hard sene of their Prince Troubles fo ▪ Religion In what thinges the Papists and Protestants do agree and in what they do disagree In the manner of obtaining Saluation In the matter of faythe and good works Rom. 5. The authoritie Gods word of the Fathers He speaketh to the Prelates 1. Timo. 4. Act. 20. Aust. ad Fortunatus The opinion of the reformed Churches cōcerning the Sacrament Coinonian 1. Cor. 10. Transubstantiation Consubstantiation August ad Dardanum Confirmation Ecclesiasticall discipline Obedience to Magistrates The Queene answereth the Cardinall of Turnon The seconde session The oration of the Cardinal of Loraine Note here the subiection of Papistes The opiniō of the Cardinall of Loraine concerning the Sacrament 1 2 3 4 The protestation of the Prelates The thirde Session in another order What is the Church Rom. 8. 1. Cor. 12. August contra Crescō cap 21. Lib. 7. cap. 51. Question Answere True notes of the Church 1. Cor. 3. 1. Cor. 3. Ephe. 2. Succession in the Church Successors of the Apostles Obiection 1. Cor. 14. Vocation in the Churche ordinarie and extraordinary 1 2 3 Act. 1. Act. 6. 1. Timo. 3. Titus 1. Exod. 28. Esay 6. 9. Dom. 1. 17. Amos. 7. 14. Esay 28. Iere. 7. Ezechiel 22. Soph. 3. 1. Samuel 7. 1. King. 18. Authoritie of the Church Hebt 11. 1. Cor. 14. Ephe. 4. Galathians 5. Ephe. 5. 1. Cor. 13. Whether the Church may erre 1. Cor. 13. 1. hon 1. General counselles Bernar. in lib. de consider in sermone 33 in Cantica in sermo de conuersione Pauli Cayphas prophecied ●…hon 18. Esay 56. Ieremie 6. Ieremie 14. Esay Ezechiel 7. Actes 20. 2. Thes. 4. Aust. lib. 2. de bap cōtra Donat cap. 31. Aust. lib. 2. ca. 4. ad Arrianū 1. Cor. ●… 2. Peter 1. Ihon. 5. Ihon. 20. 2. Timo. 3. Act. 15 16. 18 Things indifferent Actes 15. The worde of God more ancient than
baggage and the Souldiours with their liues and only sword dagger wythin the castell were found foure canons two fiéelde péeces with great store of munition and as some say huge summes of money They established there ▪ as gouernor the lord de Mirambeau a gentleman of the countrey of Sainctong with vi hundreth harquebusheares to garde it The Baron of Adretz who had bin at the D'aumals camp and sene his ensignes but euill folowed in respect of his slender nombers of men in his regiment tooke way to Dauphine very slenderly accompanyed without displaying any banner Against his returne the lorde de Gordes gouernour there had put in readynesse two Ensignes of footemen to send into Languedoc whereof hée presented the conduction to the saide Baron of Adretz who refusinge such charge the expedition was vsed by Captaine Mestrall who led them thyther vppon the beginning of Iuly About this tyme the Quéene of Nauar the Prince her Sonne the Prince of Conde the lordes Knightes Gentlemen with others that accompanied them presented a request to the king entreating an assured peace of the present troubles which for the importance of the matter is heare contayned in euery singular word and point as followeth Sir it is a thing no lesse strange than almost incredible that amongest so many people put vnder your obedience by the resolute will and prouision of God as a blessed pawne and witnesse of his bountifull regard towardes you and the same contending in ordinary vaūt to be so dearely inclyned to the vpright procéedinge of your affaires and preseruation of your crowne ther is not one no not on amongst so many nombers that once offereth to put himselfe in indeuour to quench or qualifie this vnnaturall fier so burninge dayly with in your Realme as there lackes little of the vtter confusion of the same It is also no lesse true than the other marueilous that of the contrary infinite nombers do trauaile infinitely not only to kindle that which is already burst into flame but also by sōdry sortes of artificial sle●…ghts do study to entertaine aggrauate and increase it And albeit it ought first rather to moue from such who of a galantnesse of stomacke and to satisfie some particuler respecte in themselues haue incensed these troubles against the wil of your maiestie making both peace and warre at their pleasure then from those who besides they are iustely assayled pursued in their consciences honours lyues and liuelyhoodes haue no other purpose meaning than to defend their lyues againste such heauie and violente tyrannies lothing alwayes troubles and emotions louing with a singular zeale both peace it selfe and suche as labour to entertaine it yet the Quéene of Nauarre the Prince her sonne the Prince of Conde with the Lordes Knightes and Gentlemen that accompanye them moued afore the rest with a naturall bonde and affection to your Maiestie and preseruation of your Crowne and Realme neither can nor will suspende or deferre any longer to searche and apply for their partes as alwayes they haue done suche moste proper and conuenient remedies as they thought most apt to warant defend this your realme from a lamentable subuersiō where with it both hath bene and is presently threatned And as in respect to establishe a peace and publike tranquilitie they haue hetherto more forwardly enclined then the rest happening by that meanes into such straunge perils and aduentures as if God had not kepte an eye vppon them there had nowe remayned but a lamentable remembrance of their generall confusion so these things well considered with their seueral circumstances they haue small reason of hope and lesse cause of expectation to effect that which so earnestly they desire if God the incliner of all hartes change not the myndes of their enimyes that gouerne you and giue them a disposition to desire and embrace peace The sayd Princes Lords Knightes with others parties to this humble request persuading rather y in place to allow this their franke and liberall will with their duetifull indeuor to aduaunce a perfect vnitie and peace amongest your subiectes they shall be charged with slaunders and sinister interpretatiō of their godly purpose as heretofore they haue bene vsed by those who neither hate nor feare any thing more than to sée this reconcilment And as the sayde Princes with the other parties to this motion haue neither had nor holden any thing in more deare regard than the publication to your maiestie from time to time of their actions and procéedings the same as impressions and witnesses of their singular desire to liue and die in the naturall ●…bedience and awe of your maiestie and withall to make kn●…wne afore the whole face of the world both howe farre theyr hartes willes be from the slaundrous impositions of the Cardinall of Loraine and his adherentes pensionarie ministers and naturall enemyes to your Crowne and also that by their forces whervnto they haue bene drawne wyth their great euill will and griefe they intende no other than to maintaine their religion lyues honors and such portions of goods as God hath appointed to their shares in this world Euen so they persuade that such considerations neither can nor ought to hinder their vttermost end●…uoure to pursue and purchase the effect of so blessed necessary a peace to this realme and yéelding withall vn●…ayned testimonie of the humble and reuerente respecte they owe to your maiestie which they had long ere this put in practise and proofe were not that their enemyes would thinke persuade others to beléeue that the onely necessitie of their case haue induced them to it séeing first their vntrue persuasion to your maiestie that there were no leuies of men of warre in Almaigne for the succours of the Princes Secondly that if any such were yet the Realme was of sufficient meane and force to withstande their entrie Thirdly if they dyd enter it was impossible to ioyne with the princes in respect of so many déepe riuers and passages of daunger betwene the one and other camp Fourthlye albeit their armyes dyd knitte and ioyne yet the princes pouertie considered the charges could not be long defrayed nor the plentifully long contented séemyng by these reasons to attende temporise till they had bothe ioyned and payed their sayd forces assembled others whiche were dispersed and as the world knoweth of such nūbers and facultie as besides their habilitie to resist easily their enemies they wanted neither waye nor meane to execute any wicked attempt if they had had any will as is suggested and imposed vpon them If then in the former troubles the late prince of Conde with the Lords knights gentlemen of his part receyued the conditions of peace concernyng onely the matter of religion libertie of theyr consciences and that immediatly after the death of the Duke of Guyse and Marshall Saint Andre and the late Constable of Fraunce taken prisoner being thrée principall leaders of the armye if
also in the laste rising as soone as was offered to the sayd prince and other Lords and gentlemen of his company the reestablishment of the exercise of religion notwithstanding their greate troupes and strength of straungers ioyned with them and vpon the very point to assaulte the towne of Chartres in the view and face of the enemyes campe which was for the most disordered if at the onely sounde and pronouncing of peace made by a Trumpet sent vnder the name of your maiestie the sayde prince did not onely forbeare y assault but also raised forthwith his siege and retired his army reping notwithstanding of so readie obedience but a bloudy peace and promise full of infidelitie if also during the same sturre the morrow after the battaile at Sainct Denys where both the prince had the better and the Constable principall leader of the army was slaine The sayde Prince dispatched to your maiestie the Lord de Theliguy aswell to warne you of the ruine and desolation threatning from the instaunt your Realme if the straungers were suffered to enter houering there vpon the frontiers as also to mediate and sollicite in meanes and remedyes to knit an absolute peace only in the cause of religion if in short your Edicts haue bene alwayes published and the peace accorded at suche tymes as they of the religion if they would haue abused the opinion of your purpose might in respect of their forces persuade and beléeue that aswell in all your parleyes and treaties of peace there was no other mention than of the matter of religion as also that their enemyes haue not bene brought to it but by necessitie being vnable by open force to mayntaine any longer against them in what conscience or with what face or countenance may it be sayd that these troubles moue continue for the matter and cause of religion And yit neuerthelesse the more to choke and conuince the Cardinall of Lorraine and other his adherentes of their lies and slaunderous impositions which they publish daily the said Princes Lordes Knightes gentlemen and others of their companies forgetting the infidelitie and all disloyall attemptes heretofore conspired agaynst them declare and protest this daye both before God and your Maiestie that what so euer hath ben don or offered to them in euill from the beginninge to thys houre thei neither haue nor wil once impute it to your Maiestie as knowing your nature to be nothing touched with such iniust seuerities whereof you haue gyuen so many publique experiences that there is nowe no cause of doubte neyther haue or do they thinke to chaunge or diminish in any respect their duetye and naturall regard which they haue alwayes bent to the true aduauncement of your greatnesse and Royall estate wherein and also in so many effectes aforesaid if it bée both knowne and séene that they entertayne no other purpose nor meaning than vnder the obedience and authoritie of your Edictes to serue God according too his will and as they are instructed by his holy woorde with desire to be maintayned with equall care as your other subiectes in their honours liues and goods they are now ready to giue such further manifest proofe and witnesse as their most enemies shall haue least cause henceforth to doubt them And that neither to enter into any iustification of their actions passed as their inn●…cencie and iustice of their cause béeing sufficientlye known to your maiestie and all other Kings princes and potentates what straungers so euer they be if they be not of the faction and partie of Spaine much lesse to séeke to capitulate with your maiestie knowing god be praysed what is the dutie of good and faythfull subiectes to their soueraigne Prince and naturall Lorde But Sir in respect of the large peny worthes and cōmon marchandise which heretofore hath bene made of the faith and word of your maiestie which aboue all ought to be holy sacred inuiolable and withall with what vnséeming boldnesse your authoritie and name hath ben abused to the extréeme peri●… of all your people of the reformed profession it néed not séeme straunge if the said Princes with their consociates doe humbly beséeche you to declare by an Edict solemn perpetual and irreuocable your resolute will in a libertie exercise of their Religion to the ende that by the same suche as heretofore at two seuerall times both rashly and with all impunitie haue infringed and violated your former constitution in that cause may by this thirde be more brideled and restrayned wherein because such as were not able to endure the vnitie and vniuersall rest maintayned amongst your people by the good obseruation of your Edictes haue taken occasion to alter and corrupt them by new constructions and modifications contrary to the true substāce of the same and sincere meaning of your maiestie And that also the sayde Princes with the reste of their faction confesse to haue borne a most iust iudgement of God in more sortes of afflictions in tyme of peace than when it was open ▪ warre as in con senting too easely to the treatises of peace whiche haue ben made the same prouiding a generall contentment on all sides that God should be serued onely in certayn places of the Realme and by certain persons as though in a sound conscience there belonged no other thing to the seruice of God. They most humbly beséeche your maiestie to accord and graunt generally to all your subiectes of what qualitie and condicion so euer frée vse of the sayd Religion in all Cities villages and boroughes all other places and corners of your Realm and countreys within your obedience and protection without any exception reseruacion modification or restraint of persons tymes or places and that with suerties necessary in so hyghe a cause and besides to ordeyne and enioyne to make manifest profession of the one or other religion to the ende to cut of hereafter all meanes and occasions to many who abusing such benefite and grace are flipt into Atheisme and carnall libertie and who standing vpon no exercise and profession of religion desire nothing more than to sée an vniuersall confusion in this Realme and all order pollicie and Ecclesiasticall discipline reuersed and abolished a thing so daungerous as not to be tollerated in any Christian state And because Sir wée doubt not at al that those who hetherunto haue pitched the foundation of their deuises vppon slaunderous reproches impudently published to make vs hatefull euē to such as God be prays●…d be frée from the seruitude tyrannie of Antichrist will not sticke to impose vppon vs an inciui●…e obstinacy rather to defend without reason that we haue once resolued to beléeue touching the Articles of Christian religion than to correct or retract our erroures We declare and protest as herevnto we haue done that if in any pointe of the confession of faith heretofore presented to your maiestie by the reformed Churches of your Realme it may be founde by the word