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A31599 The second part of the present state of England together with divers reflections upon the antient state thereof / by Edward Chamberlayne ...; Angliae notitia. Part 2 Chamberlayne, Edward, 1616-1703. 1671 (1671) Wing C1848; ESTC R5609 117,915 324

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from the Sacraments or else offending against Justice as the delaying of Legacies given to the poor or pious uses Dilapidations of Buildings or Goods belonging to the Church taking of Usury beyond the rate allowed by Statute Simony Perjury c. or by offending against Sobriety as Drunkenness Incest Adultery Fornication filthy Speech tempting of any ones Chastity Clandestine Marriages as for want of thrice publishing the Banes the want of Parents consent the want of witnesses which must be above two or marrying in a private place in an undue time before Eight in the morning and after Twelve of the Clock in the day c. Now for the better executing of this Jurisdiction the Law of England hath furnished the Bishops with a power of Ecclesiastical Censures whereof some may be inflicted both upon Lay-men and Church-men as Suspension from entring into the Church or else from receiving the Sacrament or greater Excommunications c. Others may be inflicted only upon Ecclesiastical Persons as Sequestration of their Ecclesiastical Profits Suspension sometimes ab Officio sometimes à Beneficio Deprivation and Deposition which is sometimes verbal by sentence pronounced against them and sometimes real by Degradation Here note that of all these Censures Excommunication is never inflicted but only for Contumacy as when a person being duly summoned will not appear or appearing will not obey the Orders of the Bishop The solemn manner of making a Bishop in England is as followeth When any Bishops See becomes vacant the Dean and Chapter of that Cathedral giving notice thereof to the King who is Patron of all the Bishopricks in England and humbly requesting that His Majesty will give leave for them to chose another the King hereupon grants to the Dean his Congè d' Eslire which in French wherein it was antiently penned signifies leave to elect then the Dean summons a Chapter or assembly of the Prebendaries who either elect the person recommended by His Majesties Letters or shew cause to the contrary Next the Election is certified to the party Elected who doth modestly refuse it the first and second time and if he refuse it a third time then that being certifyed to His Majesty another is recommended when the Election is accepted by the party it is certifyed to the King and the Archbishop of that Province whereupon the King gives his Royal Assent under the Great Seal of England which is exhibited to the Archbishop of the Province with command to confirm and consecrate him hereto the Archbishop subscribes Fiat Confirmatio and gives Commission under his Archiepiscopal Seal to his Vicar-General to perform all the Acts required for perfecting his Confirmation The Vicar-General then in the name of the Archbishop sends forth a Citation summoning all Opposers of the said Election or Person Elected to appear at a certain time and place especially assigned to make their objections This is done by an Officer of the Arches usually at Bow Church in Cheapsid London by Proclamation three times and then affixing the said Citation on the Church door for all people to read the said Officer returns an Authentick Certificate thereof to the Archbishop and Vicar-General At the day and place assigned for the appearance of the Opposers the Vicar General sits then the Proctor for the said Dean and Chapter exhibits the Royal assent and the Commission of the Archbishop which read and accepted by the Vicar-General the Proctor exhibits the Proxy from the Dean and Chapter and then presents the Elected Bishop and returns the Citation and desires the Opposers to be publickly called three times which being done accordingly he accuseth their contumacy and for penalty thereof desires that the business may proceed which the Vicar-General in a Schedule by him read and subscribed doth order Next the Proctor giving a summary Petition wherein is deduced the whole Process of Election and Consent desires a time to be assigned to prove it which the Vicar-General admits and decrees After which the Proctor exhibits the Royal Assent with the Elected Bishops Assent and the Certificate to the Archbishop and desires a term presently to be assigned to hear final sentence which the Vicar-General decrees Then the Proctor desires that all Opposers should be again called which being thrice publickly done and none appearing nor opposing they are pronounced contumacious and a Decree made to proceed to Sentence by a Schedule read and subscribed by the said Vicar-General Then the Elect person takes the path of Supremacy Simony and Canonical Obedience Next the Judge of the Arches reads and subscribes the Sentence after which usually there is an entertainment made for the Officers and others there present which being once done at the Sign of the Nags Head in Cheapside near the said Bow Church gave occasion to our adversaries of the Romish Church to affirm that Fable that there our first Bishops after the Reformation were consecrated When a Bishop is Elected and the Election confirmed he may give Institution and do his ordinary Jurisdiction and may sit in Parliament as a Lord thereof according to Sir Ed. Coke 4. Institut p. 47. After the Confirmation then according to the Kings Mandate is the solemn Consecration of the Elected Bishop which is done by the Archbishop with the assistance of two other Bishops in manner following Upon some Sunday or Holy-day after Morning Service the Archbishop beginneth the Communion Service after a certain Prayer appointed for this occasion one of the Bishops there present readeth the Epistle 1 Tim. 3. another readeth the Gospel John 21. then after the Nicene Creed and some Sermon the Elected Bishop vested with his Rochet or Linnen Garment is by two Bishops presented to the Archbishop or some other Bishop commissioned by him sitting in his Chair who demands the Kings Mandate for the Consecration and causes it to be read then the Elect Bishop takes the Oath of Supremacy and of Canonical Obedience to the Archbishop and after divers prayers and several Interrogatories put to the Bishop and his Answers the rest of the Episcopal Habit is put upon him and after more prayers the Elect Bishop kneeleth down and the Archbishop and Bishops there present lay their hands on his head and by a certain pious grave form of words they consecrate him Afterward the Archbishop doth deliver to the Bishop Elect a Bible with an other set form of words and so all proceed to the Communion Service and having received the Sacrament and the Blessing they retire from Church to dinner which is at the charge of the Bishop Elect and is usually very splendid and magnificent the greatest the Nobility Clergy Judges Privy-Counsellors c. honouring it with their presence the expence hereof with Fees of Consecration commonly amounting to Six or Seven hundred pounds This form and manner of consecrating Bishops is accordingly to the rule laid down in the Fourth Council of Carthage about the year 470 generally received in all the Provinces of the Western Church Note that by
our Order of Consecrating Bishops it is evident that Bishops are lookt upon as a distinct Order of themselves and not only as a different degree from the rest of the Presbyters as some would have it Next goes forth a Mandate from the Archbishop to the Archdeacon of his Province to instal the Bishop Elected confirmed and consecrated Then the said Bishop is introduced into the Kings presence to do his Homage for his Temporalties or Barony by kneeling down and putting his hands between the hands of the King sitting in a Chair of State and by taking of a solemn Oath to be true and faithful to His Majesty and that he holds his Temporalties of him Lastly the new Bishop compounds for the first Fruits of his Bishoprick that is agrees for his first years profits to be paid to the King within two years or more if the King please The Translation of a Bishop from one Bishoprick to another differs onely in this from the manner of making a Bishop that there is no Cons●c●ation The Translation of a Bishop to be Archbishop differs only in the Commission which is directed by His Majesty to four or more Bishops to confirm him Note that the difference between an Archbishop and a Bishop is that the Archbishop with other Bishops doth consecrate a Bishop as a Bishop with other Priests doth ordain a Priest The Archbishop visits the whole Province the Bishop only his Diocess The Archbishop can convocate a Provincial Synod the Bishop only a Diocesan Synod The Archbishop is Ordinary to and hath Canonical Authority over all the Bishops of his Province as the Bishop hath over all the Priests of his Diocess Several Bishops of England having Dioceses of a large extent it was provided by Stat. 26 Henry 8. that they should have a power to nominate some to the King to be with his approbation Suffragan or Subsidiary Bishops whereof see more in the first Part of the Present State of England Of these there are none at present in the Church of England but the next to the Bishops are now the Deans of Cathedral Churches Dean Chapter Antiently Bishops did not ordinarily transact matters of moment sine consilio Presbyterorum principalium who were then called Senatores Ecclesiae and Collegues of the Bishops represented in some sort by our Cathedrals whereof the Dean and some of the Prebends are upon the Bishops summons to assist him in Ordinations in Deprivations ab Officio Beneficio in condemnation of obstinate Hereticks in the greater Excommunications and in such like weighty affairs of the Church Upon the Kings Writ of Congè d' Eslire as before mentioned the Dean and Prebendaries are to elect the Bishop of that Diocess Cathedral and Collegiate Churches are as it were Seminaries or Seed-plots whereout from time to time may be chosen fit persons to govern the Church for having left the Country and living herein a Society together they learn experience they read men they by little and little put off the familiarity of the inferiour Countrey Clergy and thereby render themselves the more fit to be set over them in Government The Dean and Prebendaries during their required residence in their Cathedral or Collegiate Churches are to keep Hospitallity upon all Festivals to read Divinity in their turns which is now turned to Sermons or set speeches in the Pulpit at due time to administer the Lords Supper to frequent the Publick Divine Service to instruct the Country Clergy and direct them how and what to preach whereby they may best profit their Auditors In a word as they excel others in dignity and are therefore stiled Prelats so by their more eminent piety and charity they are to be examples and paterns to the inferiour Clergy In every Cathedral or Bishops See there is a Dean and divers Prebendaries or Canons whose number is uncertain Deans of the old Foundations founded before the suppression of Monasteris are brought to their Dignities much like Bishops the King first sending forth his Congè d' eslire to the Chapter they electing and the King granting his Royal assent the Bishop confirms him and gives his Mandate to install him Deans of the new Foundations upon suppression of Abbyes or Prinries transformed by Henry 8. in to Dean and Chapter are by a shorter course installed by virtue of the Kings Letters Patents without either Election or Confirmation Among the Canons or Prebendaries in the old Foundations some are Canonici actu having Prebendam sedile in Choro jus suffragii in Capitulo others are Canonici in herbis as they are called having right to the next Prebend that shall become void and having already a Stall in the Quire but no Vote in the Chapter A Prebend is properly the portion which every Prebendary of a Cathedral or Collegiate Church receiveth in the right of his place for his maintenance quasi pars vel portio prebenda Next in the Government of the English Church may be reckoned Archdeacons whereof there are 60 in all England Their Office is to visit two years in three and to enquire of Reparations and Moveables belonging to Churches to reform abuses in Ecclesiastical matters and to bring the more weighty affairs before the B●shop of the Diocess and therefore he is called Alter Episcopi Oculus the other being the Dean as is mentioned in the first part of the Present State Moreover the Office of an Archdeacon is upon the Bishops Mandate to induct Clerks into their Benefices and thereby to give them possession of all the Profits beloging thereto Many Archdeacons have by Prescription their Courts and Officials as Bishops have whereof more hereafter After Archdeacons are the Archipresbyteri or Rural Deans so called perhaps at first for his oversight of some Ten Parish Priests their Office is now upon orders to convocate the Clergy to signifie to them sometimes by Letters the Bishops pleasure and to give induction for the Archdeacon living afar off Next are to be considered the Priests of every particular Parish who are commonly called the Rectors unless the predial Tythes are impropriated and then they are stiled Vicars quasi vice fungentes Rectorum Their Office is to take care of all their Parishioners Souls and like good Shepherds to handle every particular Sheep apart to Catechise the ignorant reduce the straying confirm the wavering convince the obstinate reprehend the wicked confute Schismaticks reconcile differences amongst Neighbours to exercise the power of binding and loosing of souls as occasion shall offer to read duly Divine Service to Administer the holy Sacraments to visit the Sick to Marry to Bury to render publick thanks after Child-bearing to keep a Register of all Marriages Christnings and Burials that shall happen within the Parish to read the Divine Sermons or Homilies appointed by Authority and if the Bishop think fit to read or speak by heart their own conceptions in the Pulpit Lastly Deacons whose Office is to take care of the Poor Baptise Read in
expedient to premise somewhat of the Ecclesiastical persons in England IN the Government of the Church of England among the Ecclesiastical persons governing in the Englih Church is First the King of England who is as the Lawyers say Personae sacra mixta cum sacerdote The King is the supreme Bishop of England and at his Coronation by a solemn Consecration and Unction he becomes a Spiritual Person Sacred and Ecclesiastical for as he hath put upon him Corona Regni as an Embleme of his King-ship and power in Temporals so hath he Stola Sacerdotis commonly called Vestis Dalmatica as a Levitical Ephod to signify his Priesthood and power in Spirituals He is Supreme Governor in all Causes Ecclesiastical as well as Civil is Patron Paramount of all Ecelesiastical Benefices in England to whom the last Appeal in Ecclesiastical Affaires are made who alone hath power to nominate persons for all Bishopricks and chief Dignities as Deaneries and some Prebends in the Church c as more at large may be seen in the First part of the Present State of England Next to the King in the Church Government are the Bishops whereof two are called Primats Metropolitans or Archbishops that is chief Bishops the one of Canterbury the other of York each of which have besides their Peculiar Dioceses a Province consisting of several Dioceses and therein by Common Law a Prerogative of proving Wills and granting Administrations where the person dying had bona notabilia that is above 5 l. in Divers Dioceses or Jurisdictions Also by Grants of several Kings they have each one certain Priviledges Liberties and immunities in their own Estates Under these two Archbishops are 26 Bishopricks whereof 22 are reckoned in the Province of Canterbury and four in the Province of York So that there are besides the two Archbishops twenty four Bishops all which have the Title of Lords by reason of their Baronies annext to their Bishopricks and have precedence of all other Barons both in Parliament and other Assemblies amongst these precedes always the Bishop of London who by antient right is accounted Dean of the Episcopal Colledg of that Province and by vertue thereof is to signify the Pleasure of his Metropolitan to all the Bishops of the Province to execute his Mandates to disperse his Missives on all emergency of affaires to precide in Convocations or Provincial Synods during the necessary absence of the Metropolitan Next to London in Parliament precedes Durham and then Winchester all the rest of the Bishops take place according to the Seniority of their Consecrations The Function of an English Bishop consists in what he may act either by his Episcopal Order or by his Episcopal Jurisdiction By his Episcopal Order he may ordain Deacons and Priests he may Dedicate Churches and burying places may administer the Rite and Ceremony of Confirmation without whom none of these things may be done The Jurisdiction of a Bishop is either Ordinary or Delegated the Ordinary is what by the Law of the Land belongs to each Bishop in his own Diocess the Delegated is what the King is pleased to confer upon him not as a Bishop but as he is a Subject and a considerable Member of the Kingdom For all Clergymen are in England as antiently among Gods own People the Jews and amongst the Primitive Christians so soon as they were under Christian Emperors judged fit to enjoy divers temporal honours and employments as First to be in the Commission of the Peace for who so proper to make and keep Peace as they whose constant duty it is to preach Peace who so fit as they whose main business and study it is to reconcile those that are at variance and therefore since His Majesties happy Restauration as well as before divers grave discreet Divines have been made Justices of Peace and thereby not only the poor Clergy-men have been protected from the oppression of their causeless enemies but many differences have been composed without any Law-sute in a more Christian and less expensive way Secondly to be of His Majesties Privy Council where frequently Cases of Conscience may arise relating to State matters that will admit neither of delay nor publication and therefore after the pattern of that excellent Christian Emperor Constantine the Great our good Kings both before and since the Reformation have always admitted some spiritual persons to their Council Tables and Closet-debates Thirdly to be employed in publick Treaties and Negotiations of Peace and this both the Ancient and Modern practice will justify that none hath been more frequently and succesfully used in such Messages then the Ambassadors of Christ Fourthly to enjoy some of the great Offices of the Crown as to be Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer c. And it hath been observed that in the late Kings Raign when the Bishop of London was Lord Treasurer that Office was executed with as much diligence faithfulness dexterity and content to the Subject as well as to the King as ever it had been by any of his late lay-Predecessors In the ordinary Jurisdicton of a Bishop as a Bishop may be considered either the Jurisdiction it self or what is instated in him by the Law of the Land for the better execution of that Jurisdiction The Jurisdiction it self is established partly by Statute Law as to Licence Physitians Surgeons and School-Masters to unite and consolidiate small Parishes to assist the Civil Magistrates in the execution of some Statutes concerning Ecclesiastical affairs to compel the payment of Tenths and Subsidies due from the Clergy to the King Partly by Common Law as upon the Kings Writ to certify the Judges touching legitimate and illegetimate Births and Marriages to require upon the Kings Writ the burning of an obstinate Heretick also to require the Kings Writ for imprisoning the Body of one that obstinately stands excommunicated 40 dayes And partly by Common and Ecclesiastical Law together as to cause Wills of the Deceased to be proved to grant Administration of Goods of such as dye intestate to give order for the gathering and preserving of perishable Goods where none is willing to administer to cause Account to be given of Administrations to collate Benefices to grant Institutions to Benefices upon the Presentations of other Patrons to command Induction to be given to order the collecting and preserving of the Profits of vacant Benefices for the use of the Successors to defend the Franchises and Liberties of the Church to visit their particular Diocesses once in three years and therein to inquire of the Manners Carriages Delinquencies c. of Ministers of Church-wardens of the rest of the Parishoners and amongst them especially of those that profess themselves Physitians Surgeons School-masters Midwives of Wardens of Hospitals how they perform their several Duties and trusts also of all others professing Christianity and offending either against Piety as by Blasphemy Idolatry Superstition Perjury Heresie Errors against the 39 Articles Schism Conventicles absence from Divine Service unlawful abstinence
the Church assist the Priest at the Lords Supper by giving the Cup only After this brief account of Ecclesiastical persons somewhat may here not unfitly be added touching those persons who though not in holy Orders yet have a peculiar Relation to the Church and are quasi semi Ecclesiastici as first Patrons of Churches who by first building of Churches or first endowing them with Lands have obtained for them and their Heirs a right of Advowson or Patronage whose office and duty is to present a fit Clerk when the Church is void to the Bishop to be by him Canonically instituted and to protect the said Church as far as he can from all wrong and in case his Clerk prove unfit for the place to give notice thereof to the Bishop Next are the Oeconomi vel Ecclesiae Guardiani the Church wardens whose Office is to see that the Church be in good repair fitly adorned and nothing wanting for Divine Service Sacrament and Sermons that the Church yard be sufficiently mounded or inclosed that there be an exact Terrier of the Glebe Lands and if any thing belonging to the Church be detained to sue for the same to observe that all Parishoners come duly to Divine Service to require the penalty for absence to enquire after to admonish and to present to the Bishop scandalous livers to collect the Charity of the Parishoners for poor Strangers to declare and to execute the orders of the Bishop to see that none presume to vent his own conceptions in the Pulpit unless he hath a special licence so to do The Churchwardens are elected every Easter Week usually by the Parson and Parishoners if they so agree if not then one by the Parson and the other by the Parishioners There are also in greater Parishes joyned with the Church wardens Testes Synodales anciently called Synods-men now corruptly called Sides-men who are to assist the Church-wardens in enquiries into the lives of inordinate livers and in presenting men at Visitations Lastly the Sacristan corruptly the Sexton or Clark who is ordinarily to be chosen by the Parson only he ought to be twenty years old or above of good life that can read write and sing his office is to serve at Church the Priest and Church-wardens In the Church of England there are as in the antient primitive times three Orders Bishops Priests and Deacons None may be admitted Deacon before the age of 23 years unless he hath a Dispensation to be admitted younger None may be made a Priest till he be completely 24 years old None may be admitted Bishop till full 30 years old The Ordination of Priests and Deacons is four times the year upon four several Sundayes in the Ember or Failing Weeks that so all the Nation may at once in their joynt Prayers to God recommend them that are to receive Ordination which is performed by a Bishop in a solemn grave devout manner thus for Deacons After Morning Prayer there is a Sermon declaring the Duty and Office of Deacons and Priests then they being decently habited are presented to the Bishop by the Archdeacon or his Deputy whom the Bishop askes if he hath made due inquiry of them and then askes the people if they know any notable impediment or crime in any one of them after follow certain godly Prayers then a Collect Epistle and Gospel but before the Gospel the Oath of Supremacy is administred to every one of them and the Bishop putteth divers godly questions to them which being answered they all kneel and he laying his hands upon them severally doth ordain them Deacons then delivers to every one of them the New Testament and gives them authority to read the same in the Church then one of them appointed by the Bishop reads the Gospel and then all with the Bishop proceed to the Communion and so are dismissed with the Blessing pronounced by the Bishop The Ordination of Priests is partly in the same manner only the Epistle and Gospel are different and after the questions and answers made the Bishop puts up a particular prayer for them and that ended he desires the Congregation to recommend them to God secretly in their prayers for doing of which there is a competent time of general silence then follows Vent Creator Spiritus in Meter to be sung then after another prayer they all kneeling the Bishop with the Priests present layeth his hands upon the head of every one severally and gives them Ordination in a grave set form of words different both from that of Bishops and that of Deacons the rest as in the ordaining of Deacons Of the Ecclesiastical Government of England and first of the Convocation FOr the Church legislative power or the making of Ecclesiastical Laws and consulting of the more weighty affairs of the Church the King by the advise of his Privy Council usually convokes a National Synod commonly called the Convocation which is summoned in manner following The King directeth his Writ to the Archbishops of each Province for summoning all Bishops Deans Arch-deacons Cathedrals and Collegiate Churches according to their best discretion and judgment assigning them the time and place in the said Writ whereupon the Archbishop of Canterbury directs his Letters to the Bishop of London as his Dean Provincial first citing himself peremptorily and then willing him to cite in like manner all the Bishops Deans Archdeacons Cathedral and Collegiate Churches and all the Clergy of his Province to that place and at the day prefixt in the Writ but directeth withal that one Proctor sent for each Cathedral and Collegiate Churche and two for the body of the inferiour Clergy of each Diocess may suffice The Bishop of London accordingly directs his letters to the Bishops of every Diocess of the Province citing them in like manner to appear and to admonish the Deans and Archdeacons to appear personally and the Cathedrals Collegiate Churches and inferiour Clergy of the Diocess to send their Proctors to the place and at the day appointed also to certifie to the Archbishop the names of all so summoned by them The place where the Convocation of Clergy in the Province of Canterbury hath usually been held was St. Pauls Church in London but of later times at St. Peters in Westminster in the Chappel of Henry the Seventh where there is as in Parliament a Higher and a Lower House or a House of Lords Spiritual and a House of Commons Spiritual The Higher House of Convocation in the Province of Canterbury consists of 22 Bishops whereof the Archbishop is President sittting in a Chair at the upper end of a great Table and the Bishops on each side of the same Table all in their Scarlet Robes The Lower House consists of all the Deans Archdeacons one Proctor for every Chapter and two Proctors for all the Clergy of each Diocess in all 166 persons viz. 22 Deans 24 Prebendaries 54 Archdeacons and 44 Clerks representing the Diocesan-Clergy The first day both houses being assembled the Higher chooseth
but for avoiding of tumults and trouble it was enacted by H. VI. that none should have any suffrage in the election of Knights of the Shire but such as were Freeholders did reside in the County and had yearly Revenue 40 s. which till the discovery of the Gold and Silver in America was as much as 30 or 40 l. now whence it came to pass that the Lay-Commons were then elected as the Clergy-Commons the Procuratores Cleri were and ever have been viz. sine Prece sine Pretio sine Poculo c. The persons elected for each County are to be Milites Notabiles or at least Esquires or Gentlemen fit to be made Knights as it is in the Statutes of H. VI. They ought to be de discretioribus Militibus ad laborandum potentioribus as the words in some Writs have been they ought not to be of younger years for then it would be Juvena●us si sic loqui liceat potiús quam Senatus not lazy Epicures but men of years vigorous active and abstemious men that will be content to give their constant attendance in Parliament or else to enjoy neither Priviledge nor Expences allowed to every Member of the Commons House They ought to be native English men or at least such as have been Naturalized by Act of of Parliament No Alien or Denizon none of the Twelve Judges no Sheriff of a County no Ecclesiastical person that hath cure of souls may be chosen a Parliament man to serve for any County City or Burrough Two things are said to be requisite to the legality of sitting in Parliament first that a man should be of full age that is 21 years old at the least for if no man under that age can dispose of his Estate nor make one legal Act to that purpose then much less may he bear any part in the supreme power of the Nation to Judge Vote or Dispose of the Estate of the whole Realm yet the practice in the House of Commons though never in the House of Lords hath sometimes been otherwise All Members of Parliament both Lords and Commons that they may attend the publick Service of their Countrey are priviledged with their menial Servants attending on their persons together with all their necessary Goods brought along with them from all Attachments and Imprisonments for Debts Trespasses Account or Covenant all the time that they are on the way to the place of Parliament all the time they are at Parliament and all the time they are on the way home again Eundo Morando ad propria redeundo for so were the old words but they are not priviledged from Arrests for Treason Felony or breach of the peace The place of meeting for the High and Honourable Assembly is in whatsoever City Town or House the King pleaseth but of latter times it hath been usually held at the Kings antient Palace and usual Residence at Westminster all the Lords in a fair Room by themselves and the Commons not far from them in another fair Room which was heretofore the antient free Chappel of S. Stephen The manner of sitting in the Lords House is thus The King as oft as he comes which hath usually been only at the opening of Parliaments or at the passing of Bills or at some solemn debates as the present King hath frequently done is placed at the upper end of the room in a Chair of State under a Cloth of State under which on either hand none but the Kings Children On the Kings right hand is a seat antiently for the King of Scotland when he was summoned to Parliament as he sometimes was in side legiantia but now it is for the Prince of Wales On the Kings left hand is a Seat for the Duke of York On the Kings right hand and next the wall are placed on a Form the two Archbishops next below on another Form the Bishops of London Durham and Winchester all the rest of the Bishops sit according to the priority of their Consecration On the Kings left hand upon Forms are placed the Lords Chancellor Treasurer President of the Kings Council and Lord Privy Seal if they are Barons above all Dukes except those of the Royal Family if they are not Barons then they sit uppermost on the Woolsacks On the same side sit the Dukes Marquisses and Earls according to their Creations Upon the first Form a cross the House below the Woolsacks sit the Viscounts and upon the next Forms the Barons all in Order The Lord Chancellor or Keeper if the King be present stands behind the Cloth of Estate otherwise sits on the first Woolsack thwart the Chair of State his Great Seal and Mace by him He is Lord Speaker of the Lords House Upon other Woolsacks sit the Judges the Privy Counsellors and Secretaries of State the Kings Council at Law the Masters of Chancery Th●se being not Barons have no suffrage in Parliament onely sit to give their advice when it is required The reason why these Sages are placed upon Woolsacks may probably be to mind them of the great importance of Wooll and Sheep to the Nation that it-never be neglected On the lowermost Woolsack are placed the Clerk of the Crown now Henry Barker Esquire and Clerk of the Parliament at present John Brown Esquire whereof the former is concerned in all Writs of Parliament and Pardons in Parliament the other recordeth all things done in Parliament and keepeth the Records of the same This Clerk hath also two Clerks under him who kneel behind the same Woolsack and write thereon Without the Bar of the Lords House sits the Kings first Gentleman Usher called the Black Rod from a black sttaff he carries in his hand under whom is a Yeoman Usher that waits at the door within a Cryer without and a Sergeant at Mace always attending the Lord Keeper When the King is present with his Crown on his head none of the Lords are covered The Judges stand till the King gives them leave to sit When the King is absent the Lords at their entrance do reverence to the Chair of State as is or should be done by all that enter into the Kings Presence-Chamber The Judges then may sit but may not be covered till the Chancellor or Keeper signify unto them the leave of the Lords The Kings Council and Masters of Chancery sit also but may not be covered at all The Commons in their House sit promiscuously onely the Speaker hath a Chair placed in the middle and the Clerk of that House near him at the Table They never had any Robes as the Lords ever had but wear every one what he fancieth most which to strangers seems very unbecoming the Gravity and Authority of the Great Council of England and that during their attendance on Parliament a Robe or grave vestment would as well become the Honourable Members of the House of Commons as it doth all the Noble Venetians both young and old who have right to sit in the Great Council
hand is an Officer who ingrosseth Fines acknowledged c. He holdeth his Place also by Patent and is at present Mr. Sparks in trust for Sir William Drake who doth execute it by a Deputy Mr. Wayt. All these Officers aforementioned sit in the Court covered with black round knit Caps according to the mode immediately before the invention of Hats which was since the beginning of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth Moreover they are all sworn and have their Offices for life as a Freehold There are in this Court 3 Officers unsworn and hold their Places durante bene placito One Clerk of the Treasury Mr. George Ingram who hath the charge of keeping the Records of this Court and makes out all Records of Nisi Prius and divers other things This Office is in the Gift of the Lord Chief Justice 2. Clerk of the Inrolements of Fines and Recoveries who is by Statute under the three puisne Judges of this Court and removeable at their pleasure Note that the Inrolement of Fines and Recoveries or any part thereof by Stat 23 Eliz. cap. 3. is of as good force and validity in Law to all intents and purposes for so much of any of them so inrolled as the same being extant and remaining were or ought by Law to be The general neglect whereof in this Kingdom hath occasioned many Law Suits and hath proved in process of time exceeding dangerous to many mens Estates 3. The Clerk of the Outlawries Mr. Annuel who makes out the Writs of Capias Utlagatum after the Outlawry in the name of the Kings Atturney whose Deputy he is pro tempore There are five Clerks more 1. Clerk of the Kings Silver Henry Nurse Esquire unto whom every Fine or Final Agreement in sale of Lands is brought after it hath been with the Custos Brevium and to whom Money is paid for the Kings use 2. Clerk of the Warrants Mr· Thomas Brown executed by a Deputy Mr. James Mayo who entreth all Warrants of Atturney for Plaintiff and Defendant 3. Clerk of the Juries Mr. John Green who makes out the Writs called Habeas Corpora and Distringas for appearance of the Jury either in this Court or at the Assises in the Country 4. Clerk of the Essoins or Excuses for lawful cause of absence Mr. Townley 5. Clerk of the Super sedeas Mr. Abbot which is held by Patent but before King James time made by the Exchequer In this Court are also Filazers for the several Counties of England so called from the French Fil a Thred because they file their Writs These make out all Process upon Original Writs and do many other things too long to be here set down of these there are 14. viz. Fabian Philips Esquire who hath London Middlesex Huntington and Cambridge Shires The rest of the Counties are divided amongst these that follow Sir Roger Hill Henry Dutton Spicer Grey Fr. Hill Robert Child Charles Clare Sir Thomas Stringer Thomas Child Bennet Mark Hildesley Herbert Matthews and Hughes who is Protonatory Filazer and Exigenter of Monmouth by Patent the rest in the Gift of the Lord Chief Justice and hold for life There are also four Exigenters whose Office it is to make all Exigents and Proclamations in all Actions where process of Outlawry doth lye This Writ is called an Exigent because it exacteth the Party that is requireth his appearance to answer the Law and lies against a Transgressor of the Law that cannot be found nor any of his Goods within the County so that after summons by the Sheriff at five several County Courts if he appear not he is outlawed The four Exigenters at present are William Petty John Dawling Charles Clare and Silvester Petty all in the Gift of the Lord Chief Justice and are for life There are also belonging to this Court four Cryers and a Porter Of the Court called the Exchequer THe next Court for Execution of Laws is that called the Exchequer so called as some think from a Chequer-wrought Carpet covering the great Table in that Court as the Court of Green Cloth in the Kings house is so called from the Green Carpet or else from the French word Eschequier a Chess board because the Accomptants in that Office were wont to use such Boards in their Calculation Here are tryed all causes which belong to the Kings Treasury or Revenue as touching Accounts Disbursements Customs and all Fines imposed upon any man In this Court may sit the Lord Treasurer the Chancellor of the Exchequer the Lord Chief Baron and four other Learned Judges called Barons of the Exchequer and one other Cursitor Baron but the two first seldom sit and the five last Seldom fail The first of these five is the Principal Judge of this Court and answers the Bar or the Baristers who direct their Speech to him takes Recognizances for the Kings Debts c. It is an Office of High Honour and Profit he is styled Lord Chief Baron is Created by Letters Patents to hold this Dignity Quam dieu bene se gesserit wherein he hath a more fixed estate then the Chief Justices of either Bench for the Law intends this an Estate for Life in the absence of the Lord Chief Baron the other three Barons supply his place according to their Seniority but the fifth is said to be a Cursitor of the Court and administers the Oaths to the Sheriffs Under-Sheriffs Baylifs Searchers Surveyors c. of the Custom-house In the Exchequer are held two Courts one of Law another of Equity All Judicial Proceedings according to Law are coram Baronibus but the Court of Equity held in the Exchequer Chamber is coram Thesaurario Cancellario Baronibus This Court had its beginning primo Ph. Mar. The Authority of this Court is of original jurisdiction without any Commission Note also that all the other forementioned Courts were not Instituted by any Statute or written Law but have their Original from the antient Custom of the Kingdom For a long time after the Conquest there sat in the Exchequer both Spiritual and Temporal Barons of the Realm and in later times there sate in their places others that were not Peers of the Realm yet stiled Barons quia ibi sedere solebant Barones All the Twelve Judges belonging to these High Tribunals sit in Robes and Square Caps like those Doctors of Divinity because as some say they were antiently most commonly Clergy-men and Doctors Bishops or Prelates A List of the several Officers belonging to His Majesties Court of Exchequer In the Vpper Exchequer THe Kings Remembrancer Thomas Lord Vicount Fanshaw in whose Office are 8 sworn Clerks whereof John Payn and Thomas Hall Esquires at present are the two Secondaries the rest are Ansel Beaumont Hugh Frankland Butler Buggin George Wats Nicholas Sanders c. In this Office pass all the Accounts concerning the Kings Revenue for Customs Excise Hearth-money Subsidies and all Ayds granted to the King in Parliament and all other Accounts of what nature soever