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A16303 Tvvo letters or embassies The one sent by the states of Bohemia, to the Elector of Saxony: the other from the Popes Holines to the Emperour, concerning the troubles of Germany. Bohemia (Země). Sněm.; Paul V, Pope, 1552-1621. aut; Barlow, William, of Amsterdam.; Johann Georg I, Elector of Saxony, 1585-1656.; Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor, 1578-1637. 1620 (1620) STC 3215; ESTC S102769 21,755 45

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Nations and Liberty of all royall Prouinces So they had a Day of audience and the Duke for all his minde was intangled with an intricate businesse and farre reaching Proiects yet heard them the sooner the sooner to bee ridde of them and so the Secretary thus began FREDERICKE by the grace of God King of Bohemia Duke of Bauaria Palatine of the Rhine and so as followeth in his Maiesties iust Titles with the three States of the Common-wealth of Prague and Protectors of the Incorporated Prouinces sendeth greeting to the High and Mighty Prince IOHN GEORGIVS Duke of Saxony Iuliers and Cleues Elector of the Sacred Empire c. Most Mightie Illustrious Prince WEe cannot Coniecture except it please you to enlarge your selfe wherin any aspect of ours hath bene maleuolent toward you or occasion raised it selfe to such an height that you thinke it meete either with a rough hand to keepe it vnder or forcible arme to bring it to humiliation As for the particulars of the Kingdome all our suffrages in this so well contriued Election I hope you expect not more at our hands now then you haue receiued diuers times by priuate Letters or daily read out of iustifiable Treatises As for the secret of preseruation which comes from instinct of nature and glorious manumition of distracted subiects I hope you make no question of the lawfulnes necessitie of our well begun Courses As for the grieuances of the Commons and convulsions of the Prouinces wherin no man liued secure while the tyrannie of our Gouernours lasted The opening of our graues the disquieting of buried soules the displacing of setled offices the teares of Widowes the cryes of Orphanes the wringing hands of Matrons the rauishing of Virgins the outrages in euery Citie and in a worde the complaints of rich and poore haue long before this Ecchoed in your Eares drawne commiseration from your Hart. As for the secrets of Gouernment what can be more implyed out of all prescription then the glory of God 2. The honor of a Kingdome 3. The good of the People 4. And the renowne of the Prince In all which it is well knowne our Princes haue fayled As 1. dishonouring God by a manifest approbation of thinges contrary to his worde 2. Disgracing the Kingdome by violating her Lawes abrogating her Priuiledges threatning her Peace subiecting her to strangers and tying her as it were to the whipping-Poasts of crueltie and injustice 3. Abusing the People by affrighting them with the rages of exorbitant actions and suffring no man in the securitie benefit of his owne possessions 4. As defaming themselues by the scandalous Imperiousnesse of wicked Counsellors and weaknes of Iudgement to be ouer-awed in all their actions by the passionate wilfulnes of such as were enemies to God and men As for the cause of Religion Remember I pray you what the Statist Steephen King of Poland was wont to say That he was a King of men but not of Consciences A Commaunder of bodies but not of soules And what vnheard-of mischiefs haue the Iesuites bred the Inquisition procured the Pope contriued the Emperors continued and all long of that terrible Vow the Iesuites caused him to make rather to loose the Dignitie of his Tytle the benefit of his Diademe and the comfort of his Life then a Protestant should enioy the liberty of his Conscience or a Church publiquly opened for the exercise of true Religion As for the Emperor himselfe if your Loue were neuer so great or your passion transported beyond limitation what gouernment did euer admit of the Vsurpation of strangers and how dangerously haue the hartes of all Kingdomes beene eaten vpon by the hungry teeth of mercinary Souldiers Were not the Gothes and Vandales brought in as auxiliary to the Emperors of the East and when they learn'd their Discipline and had possession of their Armes they learn'd also to turne their Pikes into the brests of the weaker side and so was Europe subiected Thus againe was Brittany diuers times Conquered Spayne ouer-runne by the Mores and the rest brought vnto all vnrest by this course For what can we expect lesse then desolation and dissolution of Gouernment Religion If either the Emperors had continued in their former outragiousnes or Ferdinand who doth now attempt to fill your free Cities with Garisond Spanyards or allow of the vsurpation of such as would deride our miseries and tryumph to see vs feed vpon one an others bowels with a rauening desire of confusion As for reputing vs Rebels or the diminution of the Emperors Tytles and glory of the Austrian Famely we haue only from being slaues made our selues subjects of a Lawfull Prince wherein the proofes are extant from all times and authoritie and neither that nor any thing heere spoken need illustration from the Lawes of our Country or the credit of Authors who haue diuers times seene a King of Hungary a King of Bohemia and an Emperor of Germany in seuerall distinct Persons Nor doe we see why Austrias few yeares of possession should debarre all other Famelies from the Empire it selfe especially damme vp our encloasures that we shall not giue libertie to our owne immunities and Priuiledges And therfore is there neither such cause of repining in you nor cruelty in him For alas what must be the end of these dissentions but the pulling of Germaines peace prosperity in peeces and the filling our fields with the slaughtered Carkasses of Innocents whose Fatherlesse Children will crye for vengeance till the heauens powre it downe vpon the heads of the delinquents As for any thing else which either you haue or can obiect it hath bene long since answered and although Princes neede not giue an account of their actions yet haue wee published our iustifications and written both to your selfe the Emperour and Bauaria So that if the warre continue God knowes we are meere defendants and our King is his substitute for Religion and the Common-wealth and would bee loath to see you bring fuell to the flames of this disturbance or make the tyranny and ambition of another a pitt to praecipitate your selfe in without recouery Therefore Most Illustrious Prince seeing these thinges are so and autentically approued by all sufficiency why should your disallowance either manifest a willingnes to infringe the amity and Confederation with the Bohemian State or show a tumor of some priuate passion against an immaculate Prince and louing Neighbour or the Vnion of other Princes who haue combined themselues to withstand a publicke Enemy So that if neither the generall cause of the Empires peace the blessed worke of the Propagation of the Gospell the priuate respect of our grieuances the auncient combination of the Prouinces the extraordinary worth of our King nor any other motiue bee the threed to leade you out of the Laberinth of this disquiet yea manifest seduction to eternal confusion Remember your owne Ancestors and the glorious actions whereby they haue shined like faire mouing Planets in
TWO LETTERS OR EMBASSIES The one Sent by the States of Bohemia to the Elector of Saxony The other from the Popes Holines to the Emperour concerning the Troubles of Germany Printet at Amsterdam 1620. To his assured Friend H C. at his Lodging neere Bishops-Gate in London Sr. If I should send you ouer the Relations both in Latin Dutch and French which come to this Towne concerning the variety of Newes about the troubles of Europe I should weary you with the multiplicity of Bookes and my selfe with the cunning of transportation Besides I am sure to bee preuented in sending you Newes because it will bee stale ere it come to your handes by my meanes Therefore I desist from either troubling you or my selfe in that kinde and yet haue I chanced on something which I am sure none can helpe you to but by my meanes So it is then that there came to my hands two seuerall Coppies of seuerall Letters one from Wittenberg as the summe of an Embacy from the States of Bohemia to the Duke of Saxony concerning his Desertion of the King in these tumultuous times another from Mr. Fodringham in Vienna written by the Pope to the Emperour concerning the pacification of the Troubles and admission of a Peace if the motiue might bee correspondent to his Honour rather then aduenture to bee terrified with so much effusion of Blood or hazard the Dignity of the Empire by letting the Warres goe forward And these as you see I haue Printed heere in Amsterdam and they are so pleasing to the Inhabitants heere that I presume they will bee as acceptable there to all the welwillers of the Bohemian Affaires and so wishing your Contentment in the ouer-reading bee bolde that whensoeuer any thing comes worthy of you you shall not fayle of it For I am still your Friend WILLIAM BARLOW The Introduction RVmor hauing played a true womans part through the Citty of Prague concerning the Duke of Bauaria's comming to Lintz and the Duke of Saxonyes declaratiue Letters to the Emperour that the Marquesse Spinola was approaching with a formidable preparation to assist him and hee himselfe would not be behinde in any duty which belonged to his obseruation or the Dignity of the Empire thrust herselfe at last into the presence of the King and the greatest Councellors of Estate but in such a manner as if she durst iustifie her lauish tongue and tooke a pleasure in the ampliation which yet briefly had these maine passages 1 First that Saxony and Bauaria combined themselues to illustrate the glory of the House of Austria and by no meanes to leaue either Emperour or Empire in the cruell hands of reuolters if either they could procure their deliuery or by any prouidence conserue their renowne 2 That the Marquesse Spinola had more forcible reasons in his approaches as resoluing to reduce the Subiects of Bohemia whom hee termed Rebels to the Emperour to their pristinate obedience wherein if hee found any retardance hee would shew them the angry faces of 20000. men so prouided out of the storehouse of Power and Pollicy that the world should record it as a remarkable president and they be confounded to vnderstand what their wilfulnes had incurred 3 That presently Don Lewis de Velasco hauing fortified Wesell and left a sufficient Garrison both in it and other Townes subiect to surprises vpon the aduantage of his absence should follow him as a second in the prosecution of greater Designes 4 That the Catholicke Bishops and other secular Princes would fill vp this well bound sheafe with their Arrowes and make the Hierogliphick an absolute resemblance of indissolluble and vnresistable strength 5 That these free Cittyes of the Empire would open their Gates yea breake downe their walles rather then this Sinons Horse should stand without and not offer sacrifice in the Temple of Pallas Thus was this Mattachene of report danced euen in the Kings Castle and Pallace and if mischiefe had had a tricke to affright them indeed or startle their resolutions from standing in their firmnesse it so fell out that it ranne like a voyce of Thunder and meant to follow one another in sequence But it should seeme no arme of Flesh could turne the frame of Heauen about and there was a stronger hand ready to throw a stone to strike Nabuchadnezars Image in peeces For they were all so farre from being daunted or terrified with imposturing apparitions that they were rather exasperated and encouraged to Opposition Yea it is saide that the inuincible and Heroyick Queene kneeled downe with lifted handes to Heauen desiring God to accept of her as a propitiary Sacrifice rather then his Iustice might not haue her prosperous course in the punishment of sinnes or the now glory of her Husband suffer diminution or so much as a controll from the Enemies of the Gospell and aduersaries of the Kingdomes prosperity To this besides the admiration at her magnanimity both King and Nobles Cittizens and Commons Gent. and Souldiers Protestants and Papists Priests and Cleargie men yea all that had participated with the particulars combined themselues to shake off these drops of threatning rumor and be sheltred from the greater storme of a publike Enemy Notwithstanding it was thought conuenient to send an Embacy to Iohn George Duke of Saxony and Prince Elector to put him in minde of the auncient League and amitie which euer continued betweene the Bohemian State and the House of Saxony and to knowe from a personall information how he stood affected in this Warre or disposed to the assignation of his Forces or what might bee the cause of his desertion in this so great a busines which concurred with the propagation of the Gospell and the Liberty of oppressed people Whereupon there were two out of each of the three States of Bohemia deligated to this imployment with an orderly proportion of attendants besides a Secretary of eminency who came in good time to Presula and there found the Duke It is said that at the first there was some difficulty in their entertainment and admission as from a King indeed For 1. whether priuate emulation against the Palsgraues aduancement whom before hee held in equall rancke with himselfe 2. Or sinister occasions like vntoward weedes choked vp the growth of better Corne 3. Or neernesse of Consanguinity drawing his loue to the Emperour 4. Or a iealousie concerning the diminution of the greatnesse of the Common-wealth beeing thus dilacerated and diuided 5. Or a superstitious blindnes in the case of the Roman Religion wrought him out of the possession of better thoughts or diuerted him from that respect so meritorious a Prince excited I will not now dispute onely I am sure hee would neither willingly allow them the titles of such a Kings Ambassadors nor affoord them that audience which their message both imported and deserued till at last his Councell beeing most of them well affected to the King and his Religion ouer wrought him to condiscend to the Law of
perspicuous Orbes from whose influence could proceed nothing but sweet presages O what a Story is registred of your FREDERICKE Duke of Saxony about the yeare 1520. for Luthers security and defence against the then malicious aduersaries of the Ghospell euen when the Popes indulgences and Pardons brought remission of sinnes and plenary freedome out of Purgatory when the Dragon watched the woman that her birth might bee deuoured when fire and vengeance was threatned against the Heretickes and the Emperour himselfe proued the Churches Champion and tooke vpon him for Romes sake to Curse and fulminate against Zealous professors or any innouators of the Papisticall Hierarchy Then did the Noble Fredericke guard Luther to Wormes and in the presence of the Emperour demaunded of Erasmus whether his reasons and arguments were consonant to the word of Truth and they might as the Bereans did try the Doctrine by the Scriptures Then were the Prophesies of Hierom of Prague Iohn Hus remembred and Disputed vpon as if euen now they had their time of expiration Then was Iohn Hilton a Monck imprisoned for discouering the abuses of the Roman Clergie and released againe for continuing constant in the case of the reformed Religion both against the will of the Pope and Emperour and all by a Duke of Saxony Then was Veselus Picus Mirandula Laurentius Valla Erasmus of Roterdam and many others acceptable to your Ancesters and they gloried in nothing more then the protection and patronizing of such Saints of God Then could that worthy Prince hearing of a storme that strucke the Angell on the top of the Popes Pallace to the ground praesage it was an ominous signe of the fall of Babilon and decay of the Popes glory and when not long after hee heard of 31. Cardinals made at a time yea in such a time when a Lightning Thunder struck the Childe out of the Virgins armes and the Keyes out of Peters handes being both Images in the Church his Zeale and deuotion burst out that sure God was offended with them and would reduce their ambition and prophane Ceremonies to a better humiliation and conformity And this was Fredericke of Saxony After him succeeded Iohn Fredericke of whom the Emperour was as suspitious as the other and therefore as it were to serue him into the amity and league of Spaine and Austria they contriued to marry him to Lady Katherine the Emperours sister and so thought themselues secure of him Notwithstanding when he was sent for to beare the Sword before the Emperour at Masse he would not goe till hee was resolued of diuers Diuines whether hee might or no with a safe Conscience I will not saith he make a president of immitation of Naamans the Syrians going into the Temple of Rimmon with the King to pollute my selfe with an vnlawfull mixture whereupon they resolued him that he might goe because he was sent for but not endure Masse because it was so grosse a sinne and filthy an Idoll I will not name the release of the Lantsgraue of Hesse nor other disceptations against the Emperour and all wrought by the House of Saxony euen to make sad againe the hearts of elated men who at last grew disaffected with their owne glory So that when Charles the 5. saw their resolutions to deny him a succession in the Empire for his Sonne Phillip he tooke a calmer course and left his Brother Ferdinand to wrastle with the Germane Protestant Princes and went himselfe directly into a Monastery With what a faire and euen course were the affaires of Rodulphus Emperour carryed as aduised by your Princes to proclayme the Confession of Auspurg which they had bought out with great summes of money of Maximilian and Ferdinand his predecessors whereby the Protestants had many sweet entercourses to heare the worde of God and thought no pleasure of the world comparable to the blessed society of Gods people but to neerer times How carefull was your Brother Christian the 2. late Elector of Saxony of the peace of the Empire and in a manner iealious of the liberty of the Protestants least it might fall into the handes of Violence This made him write to Mathias King of Hungary concerning the eleuation of the House of Austria that sure hee tooke a wrong course both with the Church and Common-welth especially our selues whome he found startling frō the obedience of a tyrannous Gouernment and affrightings of vnconscionable Vsurpation For said he what will you get by your Spanish Garisons and Spanish factions in those Kingdomes but an vnwilling enforced obedience to your present Authority and vtter rejection to your future Posterity what will the tyranny of the Inquisitiue Iesuites come to but a plaine infatuating and imposturing of your Zeale and Deuotion and the peoples manifestation of murmurings and grudges against so fearefull a worke what will the bringing in of the Inquisition it selfe contriue but in the beginning cursses and repinings from euery mans mouth and in the end hate and rebellion in euery mans heart To this effect were your Brothers Letters and what hath followed I neede not enlarge seeing now the clamours of Warre on euery side eccho out the same and our iustifications haue beene as a Bonarges or the sound of many waters Nay did not Duke Iohn Ernestus not long a goe send to his owne Vniuersitie of Iena and then they of Iena to the Vniuersitie of Wittenberg and therein to persons of name Iohn Maior Superintendent and Iohn Gerrard Doctors of Diuinitie for the sollution of certaine difficulties in 〈…〉 Designes especially the waging of 〈…〉 of Forces who returned answers that 〈…〉 to the worde of God either to assist the Papists against the Protestants and professors of true Religion or according to your owne State positions which you would now haue the busines of the Empire to bring in Strangers to tyrannize ouer the peace of contracted Neighbours wherin the Law of Nations haue beene alwayes so preualent and the Customes of Germany so powerfull that euen opposite Princes haue laide aside for the time all ill will and vnkindnes to vnite their Forces against a common Enemy or propulse vnusuall innouation This act was played by the Triumuiri at Ierusalem against the Romans by the dissentious Brittons against Caesar by your owne Prouinces against the Gothes and Vandalls till they were quite driuen into Italy and Spaine And what vnkinde hand hath now throwne filthines or durt into the pure streame of your former resolutions or what fearefull incantation hath vnbound you from the mast of constancy to hearken to the Syrens song of ambitious deceiuers who are resolued to shed the blood of Innocents and vnder the colour of reuenging the wrongs wherein wee are supposed delinquents and foraging the Palatinate with pretence to diuert the Warre thither as by Spinola's formidable approaches may appeare lye in waite for nothing but the generall diminution of Germaines happines and particular pollution of Gods altar with the trumperies of mens inuentions Oh hearken not