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A06631 An historical treatise of the travels of Noah into Europe containing the first inhabitation and peopling thereof. As also a breefe recapitulation of the kings, governors, and rulers commanding in the same, even untill the first building of Troy by Dardanus. Done into English by Richard Lynche, Gent.; Auctores vetustissimi. English. Selections Nanni, Giovanni, 1432?-1502.; Linche, Richard. 1601 (1601) STC 17092; ESTC S108996 59,562 112

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a great troupe and companie of followers friends he embarked for the cost of Phrygia to see the greatnesse of Dardanus and the beautie and excellencie of his new built citie Dardania After some tedious and troublesome travels in this voyage at the last hee arrived at his wished and desired place where with all manner of ceremonie he was joyfully entertained by Dardanus whose reciprocall and mutuall love grew in the end to bee such as hee resolved and there set downe his rest for ever to remaine and not to returne againe into Italie but sent word thether of his purposes and commaunding them to create and establish Turrhenus in his absence king and sole ruler over all that countrey In few yeares Dardanus began to grow unto great mightinesse riches and power who had also a neighbour prince of mightie puissance wealthie and fortunate whose name was Te●●rus whereupon many writers call the Phrygians also Teucri and this Teucrus was the sonne of Scamander and Idea and had also himselfe a very beautifull and faire daughter which hee maried shortly after unto Dardanus and was called Batea of whome Dardanus begot a sonne called E●icthonius who succeeded after him and was inheritour unto the kingdome of Phrygia This Ericthonius in processe of time arose up unto a wonderfull greatnesse and large possessions who as many writers do affirme was accounted to bee one of the richest kings in those daies in that part of the world who as it is also said had at the least three thousand horses of his owne continually feeding in his pastures And this Ericthonius had also a sonne whom he named Tros whome after his death hee left as successour and inheritour unto him and of whose name afterwards the Dardanians were called Trojans This Tros very much obliged and beautified the cittie also of Dardania 〈…〉 which long time after it retained 〈…〉 had three sonnes which were Ilus Assaracus 〈…〉 hee brought up in the knowledge 〈…〉 warlicke sciences unto which kind of studie as it is written hee himselfe also was much addicted and had many yeares together maintained hostile warres with the king of Crete called Iupiter the fourth of that name there in which warres his sonne Ganimedes was taken prisoner even by the hands of Iupiter himselfe who for that in his ensigne and colours he gave an Eagle being his armes it should seeme the Poets for that cause have devised and feigne 〈…〉 as hee was on hunting was snatcht up from the 〈◊〉 unto heaven by Iupiter 〈…〉 Eagle find that hee is now taken for one of the twelve signes of the Zodiake called Aquarius Some other authors also write that one Tantalus king of high Phrygia and of Paphlagonia a most miserable covetous and auaricious prince had laid certaine sna●es and privie meanes to entrap this Ganimedes and to take him prisoner as hee used to sport himselfe in hunting thinking by that devise to get a mightie raunsome of his father Tros for the redeeming and enfranchising of his imprisoned and captivated sonne and that this Tantalus sent him to one Iupiter of the Isle of Crete for to safegard him and to have halfe the raunsome which should bee paied for his redeliverie and freedome And for such like causes belike the Poets also doe invent and say that Tantalus is plagued and tormented in hell standing up to the chin in water and apples hanging downe unto his lips and yet can neither drinke nor tast the one or the other and it is also more credibly written that he died most miserably and in great extremitie His sonne Pelops also banished and exiled his owne naturall countrey fled into Greece and there maried a wonderfull rich wife and great ladie by which meanes hee got unto himselfe and obtained the commaund of a whole countrey which he called after his own name Peloponnesus which is now the countrey of Mauritania and subject unto the Empire of the Turke And of this Pelops issued and came the two famous captaines Agamemnon and Menelaus Tros thus having lost his sonne on this fashion studied upon revenge and in the meane times comforted himselfe with his two other sonnes Ilus and Assaracus And this Ilus called Troy after that Ilion who begat a sonne named Laomedon the father of the renowmed Priamus and of Assaracus issued and came Anchises Aeneas father And the before written Tros ruled commaunded there in great power and puissance for the space of threescore yeares or neare thereabouts Archilochus as Archilochus in his booke of Times alloadgeth Laomedon the sonne of king Ilus as is beforesaid after the death of his father tooke upon him the rule and government of Troy in the two hundred and two and twentieth yeare after the first foundation therof by Dardanus and hee had five sonnes and two daughters which were these Priamus Titonus Lampus Clytion and Letaon and of these Homer in his Iliads maketh further mention his daughters were Antigone and Hesione Homer The Greeke Poets who indeed for the most part are full of such like fables doe say that the two gods Neptune and Apollo for a certaine summe of money promised them by him went with him about the circuit of the citie and there erected wonderfull strong and most huge high wals round about the same the which wals afterwards finished accordingly and no money received nor to bee got Apollo in great rage and anger infected the citie with a deadly and generall pestilence and Neptune in token of his wrath and displeasure also sent a monster of the sea among them unto which they must every day give and throw a young child or els that they all should perish and bee devoured by the ravenous maw and hunger thereof and that in the end it happened upon the daughter of Laomedon called Hesione to be given unto this marine beast which say they was rescued and releeved by great fortune by Hercules of Greece which came that way and who afterwards slew that monster and in gratification therof the ladie Hesione the daughter of Laomedon was promised unto him not long after in marriage but yet not married unto him by reason of the unwillingnesse afterward howsoever it fell out of her father for the breach of which promise Hercules afterwards slew Laomedon in open battell and spoyled and ruinated such his glorious citie And for that Thelamon his consort had that day behaved himselfe very valiantly in fight hee bestowed the young ladie Hesione upon him as his concubine and slave who carried her away with him into the countrey of Solamina whereof he was then king and ruler But it is most certaine that for the most part all those Greeke writers have erred infinitely and have delivered many most unlikely hystories for this Hercules as hath been before spoken was a notable and a famous pyrate and hee slew Laomedon by trecherie and surprised Troy on a suddaine and unawares and also hee was a common ravisher of maidens as of Hesione Medea and others as
in the kingdome of Spaine he appointed one of his sonnes to reign called Sicorus which was now by just account the foureteenth king thereof When these things were thus done he went also into Sicilia as Galatheus before had done and there for a while he rested himselfe till at the length he returned againe backe into Italie wherin afterwards he lived many yeares This Italus Atlas by his descent was of the linage of Iaphet and of his sonne Comerus Gallus the first king of Italie and it was hee which according to the opinions of many excelled most of all men then living in the knowledge of Astrologie for which cause the busie Poets fained that he supported and upheld the heavens with his shoulders Altheus all this while was suppressed and kept under by the mightinesse of this ruler by reason whereof hystories cannot speake of any worthie matter done or performed by him onely it is written he builded and erected two very large and beautifull cities one of them called Alteta the other Althea with a castle also called after the same name And this Altheus the sonne of Tuscus before specified was uncle unto Dardanus the first builder and founder of Troy Hee had also a sonne called Blascon but it is not read that hee was afterward Coritus that is king of Italie or commanded in any extraordinary power and authoritie but that this Atlas Italus created and established one of his owne sonnes called Morges in the dignitie and office thereof wrongfully disinheriting the true heires that might lawfully have challenged the same so that by this unjust meanes of usurpation greatnesse the line and issue of Hercules was debarred from the possessing and enjoying of what rightfully belonged unto them Also he created and appointed his daughter called Rhoma as dutchesse and commaundresse of the people and nation called Aborigines of whome heretofore wee something spoke of And this Rhoma was afterward maried to a prince of Tuscane of whom she had a son called after her owne name Rhomanessos who was the first that ever laid the first foundation of the citie of Rome as Sempronius very confidently affirmeth condemning all those which attribute the first founding thereof unto Romulus who sayth hee indeed beautified and enlarged the same but was not the first that laid the foundation thereof and that his name Romulus being himselfe found hard by that cittie by wonderous accident tooke his name of Roma and not Roma of Romulus as the above written authour Sempronius a very sufficient writer and some others also of allowed authoritie have averred the same And the interpretation of this word Rhomanessos as S. Ierome the Talmudists and many others doe expound it is as much as Magna aut potens sublimitas a mightie or powerfull height or glorie beeing compounded of two severall words of the Aramean language Roma which interpreted signifies sublimitas and Nesson which is validum or magnum or as some understand it it signifieth validum augurium which is a strong and infallible prophecie which indeed the exceeding greatnesse all subjugating power mightinesse of that Empire did afterwards very fitly answer and make good being raised unto that infinit greatnesse and highest perfection of soveraignetie that it impelled almost the greater part of the world to sue unto her for favour and to become tributarie in great taxes and impositions unto her seat magnificence And this citie also was called long after by the name of Valentia of which now wee will cease further to entreat returning to the matter before handled of Atlas surnamed Italus now flourishing and commaunding over Italie in great puissance glorie and mightinesse who although as it is alreadie before specified he bore great affection favour and love unto his sonne Morges and had established him in the regaltie and kingdome of Italie as Coritus yet hee began in the end to thinke and meditat with himself how apparent and monstrous wrongs and indignities hee had offered to all the issue and posteritie of Hercules in expelling Altheus and depriving his sonne Blascon of his right in the principalitie of that countrey in those thoughts and humors hee caused to be called unto him Camboblascon the sonne of the beforementioned Blascon the sonne of Altheus and in lieu and recompence of all former and forepassed injuries hee gave unto him one of his owne daughters in mariage and matrimoniall association who was called Electra with whome in dowrie hee gave all those townes and countries lying about the Alpes and the hether mountaines nearest confining upon Italie and upon this presently after died After whose death his sonne Morges possessed belike with holy and religious cogitations acknowledging the mightie wrong and disparagement which his father had imposed on his brother in law Camboblascon in depriving him of his rightfull succession willingly and voluntarily despoiled himselfe of his crowne and commaund and transferred it upon Camboblascon whom presently hee caused to bee created and established in the dignitie of Coritus that is the Iupiter or king of Italie and so after that contented himselfe to live privately and obscurely with his brother in law and sister Electra with whome hee had not many yeares lived and conversed but hee died and paied Nature that debt which no sureties can put off or be bound for and so then Camboblascon was with more generall allowances of the people fully invested in his office and place of Coritus which is as much to say as Iupiter Coronatus as I have alreadie made known and which I cannot almost too often expound in that many have made so many and severall doubts and scrupules What these Iupiters Saturnes and Hercules might meane which names indeed are nothing else but titles of honour superioritie and dignitie and Iupiter was such as in Aegypt Pharoa and in Rome Caesar and as now their Pope for Iupiter is as much as Iuvans pater and Papa Pater patrium And whereas the superstitious people in those dayes honored and reverenced them as gods it was nothing else but for some excellencie and great dignitie they possessed or for some great vertue learning and knowledge they were then endued with as Fabius Pictor and Zenophon have delivered the same saying Principes quia iusti erant religionibus dediti iure habiti dij dicti Non enim arbitria illorum ab equo vel populis à iure innato discedebant Now then having satisfied that point we may the more boldly proceed with our intendment and with the matters of this Camboblascon king of Italie and Iupiter and Patriarke thereof and the great father as they say of the famous and renowmed Trojans And this king built the faire cittie of Montoblascon in Tuscania which by corruption is now called and knowne by the name of Montflascon and another also which hee named Coritus now called Cornete which is situated about some fortie miles from the now mightie cittie of Rome And this Camboblascon had by his wise Electra
Manethon Iohannes Annius and Iacques de Bergame have written and very plainely approved the same Laomedon beeing slaine Titonus succeeded next after him but he being of another disposition resigned his interrest therein and betooke himselfe to travell into straunge countries even unto the Indies where according to Diodorus Siculus hee maried a ladie called Ida and as the Poets write Aurora of whome hee afterwards had a sonne called Memnon who long after came unto the succour of Priamus in his cheefest warres and was there slaine by the hands of Achilles In the absence therfore of his brother Tython Priamus took upon him the government and charge of that kingdome being the second son unto Laomedon their father who in short time came to bee one of the greatest and most famous princes of the world for it is written that he was wondrous wise discreet and valiant and matcht his children with persons of great sort worth and dignitie And for to make him at the first the stronger and that he might have time to reedifie his late spoyled and fire perished cittie hee entered into alliance and fast kindred with a very mightie and powerfull prince neare adjoyning upon his country who was called by the name of Cypseus or as some hold Dymas king and sole commaunder of Thrace which is a province in Greece on this side of the sea Hellespont whereof the cheefe cittie is at this day Constantinople and with this Cypseus or Dymas his daughter called Hecuba hee maried a ladie accomplisht with all exteriour graces and inward vertuous dispositions at which espousals of Priamus and Hecuba great ceremonies and signes of joyfulnesse were showne foorth and observed and of this ladie it is writ that he begot nineteen children male and female and of other women and concubines which he dayly kept and maintained in his pallace according to the fashions and usances in those daies hee had one and thi●tie more so that onely nineteene of his fiftie sonnes and daughters were legitimate and lawfully begotten the rest bastards and illegitimate That Priamus in all had so many children which indeed hee publickely maintained and shamed not to acknowledge Virgil also in the second booke of his Aeneidos thus sayth Quinquaginta illi thalami spes tanta nepotum And Homer likewise in the last booke of his Iliads most plainely seemeth to confirm the same Troy now thus most gallantly flourishing newly fortified repaired enlarged enriched enpeopled throughly provided and stored of all manner of things which might bee necessarie either for the use of fatall warres and open hostillities or for the conservation of peace domesticke tranquillitie began to assume unto her selfe a mighty and glorious selfe-conceit and strong opinion of her owne power height and magnificence assuring her selfe of all victorious prevailements over her enemies whatsoever and of a never failing prosperitie glorie and felicitie and yet it is not writ that Priamus himselfe was puft up with any more extraordinarie pride or insolencie than became the greatnesse of so puissant a prince It is writ also that in the times of this his greatest power he was forewarned by certaine Oracles and false gods which they used to worship in those daies that so long as hee did preserve and safegard three things belonging unto the cittie the towne should bee inexpugnable and never to bee lost as Servius and Boccace have written of the same the things were these The image of Pallas called Paladium preserved undefaced The sepulchre or tombe of Laomedon which was under the great gate Scea kept undespoiled whole and so long as the life of Troylus lasted and did endure Priamus therefore very carefull to keep these three things with all diligentnesse and heed lived in the greatest pompe delicacie and state that ever any prince in the world in those times did or could so that he seemed not onely to bee king of Phrygia but also cheefe dominator and emperour of all Asia now called Natalia or Turkie and hee was called also in those times The king of kings as Strabo in the thirteenth booke of his Geographie to the same purpose thus sayth Priamus magno ex parvo Rex Regum effectus And these his powers and authorities not onely extended and stretcht themselves abroad throughout the maine continent and firme lands of all those countries thereabout round but in the end shewed themselves also and possessed their maister of many famous and great Islands lying farre in within the bosome and embracement of the uncivile and rude behaviored sea as the Island of Tenedos and the Island of Metelyn were subject and vassalized unto the governement of his imperious principallitie paying him yearely tributes taxes and impositions and many others also of great same adjoyning neare thereabout so that the infinite greatnesse and large commaund of this thrice mightie emperour Priamus possessed all the princes and rulers of countries neare that way with astonied admiration and wonderous maze of his so suddaine and unexpected puissancie And thereupon sent and dispatched messengers from all quarters to crave his amitie friendship and to be in league with him as also to bee nearer allied unto him in some matches and marriages of their children on both sides by reason whereof Priamus matched his children with great houses and of great power and possessions First hee married one of his legitimate and lawfully begotten daughters called Creusa unto a prince of great meanes named Aeneas the sonne of old Anchises his daughter Astyoche hee matched with one Telephus a mightie king of Mysia and his sonne Hector joyned in matrimonie with Andromacha the faire daughter of Ection the powerfull and famous king of Thebes and Silicia and Polydamas one of the sonnes of Anthenor married with one of Priamus daughters beeing a bastard and begotten of one of his concubines beeing of an excellent and singular beautie called Lycasta So also manie others of his children were linked and joyned in marriages with men of great rule power and commaund in those dayes the posteritie of which and of their deedes and mightinesse hereafter in some other place and oportunitie occasion may bee presented further to speake of And for this time beeing indeed forced by an extraordinarie occasion I must thus on the suddaine abruptly breake of desiring and wishing very earnestly that if this small peece of paines of mine shall fortune ever to bee publickely impressed which leaving behind mee it will not bee in my power to prevent it may indifferently passe uncensured till the returne of his fortune beaten father may aunswere for the innocencie of the child and bee able a little better to protect him in his afflictions And thus it hath beene with great care and diligence laboured to find out the truest Hystorians for the deriving of Dardanus and consequently this king Priamus from the race and line of the first prince and Patriarke Noe with the particular successions of kings and emperours of Europe as hath beene warranted by the authorities and writings of very learned and authenticke authours Tempo è figliuola di verita FINIS
in those countries destributing unto every number certaine quarters to remaine in and after this time in short space many countries were againe reinhabited and peopled afresh which since the floud were desolat and lay naked and depopulat About the one and twentieth yeare of this his returne from the above written voyage Noe began to divide kingdomes also to erect monarchies in the world of which the first was the monarchie of Babylon over the which Nembroth the Giant the sonne of his nephew Cus who was the sonne of Cham was first of all established in the hundred and one and thirtieth year after the inundation and hee was called the first Saturne or king over the Babylonians and Assyrians who afterward in a faire Campania called Sennaar laid the foundation and erected the great tower and citie of Babell which he had caused to be built even to the height of the highest mountaines but after by the confusion of languages it was given over and left unfinished Nembroth after this lived in peace and tranquilitie 56 yeares Not many years after the setting up of the monarchie of Babylon Noe divided foure particular kingdomes in Europe viz. the kingdome of Italie Spain Fraunce and of Almaigne for in Italie raigned Comerus Gallus the eldest sonne of Iaphet in Spaine ruled Tuball called also Iuball the fifteenth sonne of Iaphet in Fraunce Samothes surnamed Dis Iaphets fourth sonne and over Almaign now called Germanie governed the Giant Tuyscon one of the sonnes of Noe. And so likewise in many other places of the world were severall governements and kingdomes then erected which now to recite were tedious and impertinent to our purpose every one of them a long time kept and were contented with their quarters so allotted unto them and imposed lawes and edicts unto their people and they called the countrey after their own name as also many mountaines rivers and townes were so entearmed to the end that all succeeding posteritie might know by what meanes and by whome such citties and other monuments receaved their first ground and foundation After these kingdomes and governements erected and the earth now againe well peopled Noe now undertaketh his second voiage into Europe leaving Sabatius Saga his nephew and brother to Nembroth king of Babylon to governe and commaund over the countrey of Armenia from whence hee now departeth with purpose to visit his children and to know of their estates And this Sabatius Saga called also Saturne had all the countrey even unto the land of Bactria lying towards India at this day called Tartaria under his rule and authoritie These things at home thus established Noe surnamed Ianus with his wife Titea and many multitudes of people besides began his voyage which was eight score and nine yeares after the floud and in the eight and thirtieth yeare of the raigne of Nembroth towards Hyrcania which he then peopled and called them after his owne name Ianij From thence he came to Mesopotamia where also he left behind him many people to inhabit and from thence he attained the countrey called Arabia Foelix where he erected two citties the one called Noa the other Ianinea furnishing them with inhabitants after hee passed from thence and came into Affrica which part of the world hee first assigned unto the governement and soveraignetie of his second sonne Cham but at that time there ruled Triton the sonne of Saba which was the son of Cus the eldest sonne of the same Cham. This Triton receaved Noe and his companie with great joy and gladnesse of hart and he staied there some halfe a year in which time Triton died and left his sonne Hammon inheritour to the kingdome of Affrica otherwise called Lybia After this Noe passed forward and at the length arrived in Spaine which was two hundred fiftie nine yeares after the floud and in the tenth yeare of the raigne of Ninus the third king of Babylon Iuball or Tuball the fift son of Iaphet and the first king of Spaine as all hystories do affirme received his grandfather Noe Ianus and his grandmother Tytea with honorable entertainement and all gladsome willingnesse who also were exceeding joyfull to see the prosperous estate of their nephew Iuball for so much as they found that hee governed his people with great justice policie and good lawes as Berosus in a certaine place alleadgeth saying Anno Nini quarto Tuyscon gigas Sarmatas legibus format apud Rhenum Idipsum agit Iubal apud Celtiberos hoc est Hispanos Samothes apud Celtas Noe therefore to helpe his nephew for the better peopling of his countrey founded there two great citties calling the one Noela and the other Noegla in remembrance and honour of those his two faire daughters so called beeing the wives of Iaphet and Cham after this departed for Italie to his nephew or grand child Comerus Gallus the first sonne of Iaphet whom before he had appointed to bee king of that countrey In this voyage and in his remaine in Spaine were spent nine yeares Now it is not written whether he went this journey into Italie by land or sea notwithstanding it is very likely and agreeth with good probabilitie that in this his voyage he would not passe by without visiting the wise prince his nephew Samothes the brother of Iuball king of Spaine who was by his appointment created the first king of Fraunce as is before touched and hee had raigned about this time sixe score yeares and lived after this in peace and tranquillitie five and thirtie yeares and upward The second time of the comming of Ianus thus into Italie was in the time of his age eight hundred and threescore yeares and now eight score since his last departure from thence where thinking to find Comerus Gallus hee now understood that he was dead and that his son Cham contrarie to the appointment of Noe not contented with the soveraigne domination of Affrica had there wrongfully usurped the siegnorie of Italie and had now commaunded over that countrey five and twentie yeares or therabouts and which was worse as all the other kings in Europe had instructed and governed their people in civilitie manners and education hee contrarie to such their good examples had most abhominably corrupted the youth of Italie with all manner of impieties vices and odious sinnes which he with the helpe of those people called Aborigines which he brought along with him to people the countrey made them to embrace entertain and live in Noe upon the knowledge of this waxt marvellous heavie and discontent as sorrowing for the ungodlinesse of his owne sonne and suffered him thus for the space of three years to continue therin hoping dayly to see some amendment or other in him but finding him to persever therin and rather to encrease in it than otherwise hee banisht him with a certaine number of people with him from out the confines of Italie from whence departed hee arrived in the Island of Sicilia where hee with his companie long after
writ many bookes and hee was called generally throughout the world Cam Esenuus id est Cam infamis impudicus propagator Some have thought That the Turke for those and such like causes is called in his letters patents le grand Cam de Tartaria It is written That Cham had one sister which was called Rhea maried to Hammon king of Lybia who also was enamoured of one other faire woman called Almanthea and had of her by adulterous meanes a son whose name afterwards was Dionysius which child was secretly broght up and nourished in a certaine citie of Arabia called Nysa notwithstanding the matter was not so closely cunningly handled but his wife Rhea had privie advertisements thereof Whereupon in despight and jealous discontent she forsooke her husband and went home to her brother Cham then abiding in the Island of Sicilia who presently maried and espoused her and as some writers hold his wife Noegla being alive but of this other he afterwards got many children as Cus the father of Nembroth the first king of Babylon Typhon the gyant and also many others Cham and his owne sister Rhea thus maried together they consulted and advised to be revenged of king Hammon of Lybia and to that effect raised a great armie of men and with the assistance and helpe of their brothers the sixteene gyants they set forwards from Sycilia and in the end arrived within the territories and confines of Lybia where they gave king Hammon battell and in the field overthrew and vanquisht him so that he was glad to flie into the Isle of Crete now called Candia not long after this Rhea had a sonne of her husband Cham called Osyris afterwards surnamed Iupiter Iustus who prooved a most noble and gallant prince far differing from the wicked humors and dispositions of his father After this about the three and fortieth yeare of the raigne of Nynus king of Babylon Dionysius the sonne of king Hammon and of the faire Almanthea now beeing come to age and of mans estate began now to think upon the wrong offered unto his father by Cham Rhea in usurping the commaund of Lybia and determined accordingly to bee revenged upon them which also hee afterwards performed and expulst them againe out of the countrey investing himselfe in the regaltie thereof Notwithstanding he used Osyris the yong sonne of Cham and Rhea with great clemencie and mercie and receaved him as his adopted child and in remembrance of his father called him also Hammon and Iupiter and brought him up very carefully in the studie of letters and other necessarie gifts over whom he appointed as schoolmaister and tutor a learned man called Olympus of whom afterwards Osyris took his name and was surnamed Olympicus After that Cham and his wife and sister Rhea were thus discomfited and overthrowne by Dionysius the new king of Lybia and now retired with such disgrace into the furthermost and obscurest corners of Aegypt Rhea was presently upon this delivered of a daughter called Iuno which was also called Isis the Great and this was in the first yeare of the raigne of Semyramis which was three hundred and two yeares after the floud and this Isis was accounted for the fairest as also the best disposed ladie of the world But her unfortunat wicked father Cham now remaining in Aegypt as hath beene alreadie specified was not contented with such his habitation there but seeking further as over ambitiously enclined arrived in the countrey of Bactria not far from Persia where he so wrought and prevailed with his diabolicall skill of Negromancie that he subjugated and brought under all those people thereabouts insomuch as hee there raigned in great puissance pride and mightinesse and yet not with this satisfied gathereth great troupes and armies of men and invadeth the Assyrians against whome marcheth their king called Nynus the young the sonne of the before mentioned Semyramis whose fortune was such as hee victoriously triumphed over his enemy Cham suppressing his glory rule and haughtinesse he himselfe being in that battell slaine and all the armie shamefully discomfited Many writers have affirmed That this Cham was a man of singular ingenuitie and sharpe capacitie and that hee first found out the seven liberall Sciences and had wrote many bookes of great worth among which his cheefest were of Negromancie of which most part of them were burned by the beforesaid Nynus Some also say That hee onely in the world came out of his mothers womb laughing and with a smiling countenance which is an uncouth thing and as most hold prognosticating no good Vnto this Cham Tiphon the Gyant his eldest sonne by Noegla was heire and also succeeded him in humors and malicious dispositions who was brought up in Aegypt there continued And now also it shall bee fit to revert our hystorie unto the two yongest children of Cham Zoroastes which excelled in all good parts and vertuous inclination as their father abounded in the contrary that was that Osyris before spoken of the adopted sonne of Dionysius king of Lybia and Isis his sister the fairest best accomplisht damosell in the world whom afterward he tooke to wife and maried with whome hee had also the kingdome and principalitie of Aegypt These two now newly espoused he being of threescore yeares of age and shee about fiftie and yet our author Berosus tearms them very youthfull began to applie themselves to the studie of the nature of hearbes and to the finding out of planting tilling and sowing of corne which afterwards they instructed their people in and shewed the use to their neighbors dwelling in Palestina of which ruled king and governour Sem surnamed Melchisedech who was the first that ever offered bread and wine unto God From thence Osyris passed into Aegypt and there also very painefully shewed them the manner of tilling and agriculture as likewise the Poet Tibullus speaketh of Tibullus saying Primus aratra manu solerti fecit Osyris Et tenerum ferro sollicitavit humum Afterward he travelled into many other countries alwaies learning them then living by acornes nuts and water in the knowledge of such his new invention and by these gentle and mild courses hee gained the love of all people and by that meanes almost possest himselfe of all the world with the regalities and principalities thereof the Empire of Babylon onely excepted whose conquests victories prevailements and powers we wil something more amplie hereafter remember following as wel our owne authour Berosus as also Diodorus Siculus the learned Catasthenes and many other authenticke authors herein in their bookes and writings of matters of elder times and subiects of antiquity Osyris therfore surnamed Iupiter Iustus having by his wife and sister Isis otherwise called Iuno and also of many other ladies which here shal bee needlesse to recite many children as Hercules the great Anubis Macedon Lidus Meon Neptune Oros and also many others hee assembleth a mightie armie of all sorts of people both puissant and
speake of more than that hee begat a son called Iupiter Celtes the ninth king of Fraunce and father to the faire and beautious gyantesse Galathea whom before wee so largely spoke of and remembred And it is by computation and due reckoning found that since the first Saturn and king of Fraunce called Samothes surnamed Dis unto the raign of Iupiter Celtes were about four hundred years And now having thus lineally drawne the succession of every king of this countrey since the first inhabitation thereof untill this Iupiter Celtes and so consequently unto his sonne in law Hercules of Lybia now the tenth king of Fraunce we will proceed with him now employed about his affaires in Italie and with his issue and posteritie as it is delivered by authours of great worth learning and authoritie It hath been before somewhat touched how Hercules passing through those mountainous places of the countrey of Savoy at length arrived in Italie where having a puissant armie hee presently fell to wars with the Gyants called Lestrigones most bloudie cruell and oppressive tyrants and the murderers or consenting aidants unto the death of his father Osyris surnamed Iupiter Iustus With these powerfull commaunders in that countrey he entertained many fights and found them very resolute prepared to endure the uttermost of his mightinesse and strength yet in the end after a ten yeares wars he victoriously triumphed over them and utterly razed out all their issue and posteritie whatsoever and the place wherein his last battell against these Gyants was fought in retaineth still his old name and is yet called The valley of the Gyants which is hard adjoyning unto the cittie called Tuscanella in Tuscania These civile intestine broiles being thus valiantly and successefully appeased Hercules remained a quiet and peaceable possessor of all the countrey of Italie wherein he raigned and continued for the space of twenty yeares much about the time that his father Osyris his grandfather Cham and his great grandfather Noe had there commaunded in which time hee bestowed many gracious and commodious good turnes upon the people of that countrey and built and erected many gallant and famous cities although the most part of them bee at this day by the all consuming tyrannie of Time ruinated spoiled and decayed He also at this time caused the Island of Sardinia to be peopled frequented and inhabited which untill that time lay wast depopulate and barbarous and in this place hee appointed a ruler called Iolaus to commaund as under him that countrey and those people so committed unto him Hee likewise caused through most part of Italie especially in the moorish wettest places thereof many ditches and trenches to bee cast up that thereby the palludious meres and standing lakes might find passages to emptie their flouds and that the fields and bastures by that meanes might be preserved drie and be made more fit for agriculture tillage and other necessarie encreases for the generall profit and good of all the whole countrey thereabouts and of him the river Arnus taketh name for Hercules was also surnamed Musarnus and he lived for the most part of the time that he spent in that countrey in a cittie called Fesula in Tuscania which citie even at this day though not in that glory as heretofore giveth the armes of Hercules Italie being thus freed from the servitude wherein it lived of those ungodly and uncivile Gyants and beeing now brought to a generall quietnesse ease and prosperous estate Hercules determined with himselfe to send for both of his eldest sonnes to establish the one in the principalitie of Italie the other in the kingdome of France and hee to take his journey once againe into Spaine to which countrey hee was much addicted there to live privately and to spend the rest of his yeares to come in peace pleasantnesse and in all content Whereupon hee dispatched messengers to his wife Galathea then remaining in Fraunce as hath been before spoken of to send him presently his sonne Galatheus being now of mans estate and very able to beare armes Other messengers were dispatched into Scythia now called Tartaria there to seek out his eldest sonne Tuscus then remaining with the queene Araxa queene of Scythia inhabiting those countries which lie upon the floud Tanais and by the moores and water-lakes called Meotides Vpon the commandement of king Hercules Galathea his wife presently sent unto him his son Galatheus into Italie accompanied with the greatest men of Fraunce who was very joyously welcommed unto his father with great feasts and signes of gladnesse for he was now growne up unto a gallant big proportion of bodie and comely feature and was also of a very gentle and gracious disposition mild in his demeanures and yet majesticall and of a spirit-promising aspect throughout all his countenance Not long after him arrived his elder brother Tuscus from Tartaria who also was of a mightie corpulencie and extraordinarie large stature whom indeed Hercules had begot in the very prime of his youth and vigorous lustinesse Vpon the meeting of these two a great court or assembly of great lords and princes was held in all pompe glorie and magnificence where in the presence of all the noble Lords and Barons of diverse countries and governments as of Aegypt Lybia now called Affrica Spaine Fraunce Italie and Tartaria with great solemnities rites and ceremonies Tuscus was created and established the sole king Saturne and commaunder of all the countrey of Italie and hee was there invested in the dignitie of Ceritus that is as much to say as Iupiter crowned or Patriarke of Tuscania the yonger brother Galatheus aged about six and thirtie yeares or thereabouts was preferred also at that time unto the rule and governement of the kingdome of Fraunce All which ceremonies were performed with great triumph state and royaltie and kept in the citie of Viterba in the yeare after the universall inundation of the world six hundred and five and twentie before the foundation of Troy ninescore and one yeares and before the incarnation of Christ a thousand six hundred fortie eight These things thus solemnely consummated and Hercules voluntarily dispossessing himselfe of these two such imperiall crowns After he had delivered some instructions principles of good government to these new erected kings Tuscus and Galatheus after a generall conge of them all he took his journey towards Spaine to the great discontent and greese of all the cheefe Barons and also of the Plebeians throughout all the countrey of Italie but beeing now arrived in Spaine he found his son H●spalus which hee himselfe had before established in that kingdome to be dead who had reigned onely seventeene yeares and that after him succeeded his nephew Hispanus the seventeenth king of Spaine and the first of that name who called the country after his owne name Hispania which name it ever since hath retained for before that time it was called H●beria This Hispanus raigned afterwards some two and thirtie yeares
they are among the rest of the fables which the Grecians used inserted for it is nothing likely that the use of yron beeing in those times found out he would have used any such inferiour meanes of defence for the safetie of his bodie This assertion also maketh cleane contrarie against him for Hercules of Lybia was borne before the destruction of Troy according to the computation of the Aegyptian yeares above tenne thousand yeares but Alceus not fully two thousand as Diodorus in his first booke of Time alleadgeth which manner of computation and reckoning of the Aegyptians if we wil reduce to the order and rule observed by the Chaldeans Scythians Hebrewes and Ianigenae which is by the circular circumference and revolution of the Sunne accounting it as we now reckon we shall find that he was borne presently after the king of Babylon called Ninus which is according to our latter observation some eight hundred yeares before the overthrow and ruine of Troy which maketh up the number proportion of ten thousand yeares held and observed among the Aegyptians by which we may perceive the great distance of time that was betweene these two famous personages Hercules Egiptius or Libicus the sonne of Osyris surnamed Iupiter Iustus and Hercules Graecus or Alceus or as some hold the son of Amphitrio and Alcmena or the son by adulterous meanes as some others doe thinke of one called Iupiter Graecus But having now thus farre digressed from the maine entendement wee will returne to the prosecuting thereof The continuance of the raigne of the above written Iubalda king of Spaine dured from the foure and thirtith yeare of the raigne of Semiramis the Babylonian Empresse untill the eighteenth yeare of Arius which is in the whole about the time of threescore and foure yeares as by the diligent carefull collections both of Eusebius and Berosus is clearely approoved And about this time the Patriarke Abraham beeing about the age of a hundred yeares is borne his son Isaack Isaack born as all hystories for the most part give record and mention In the governement of this king Iubalda no memorable act done in that countrey is left written by hystorians Vnto the kingdome of Spaine next after him succeeded Brygus which was in the eighteenth yeare of the late specified Arius the Babylonians sixt king which is from the first inhabitation of Spaine two hundred threescore and seven yeares and before the foundation of Troy four hundred and thirtie This word Brygus with the Arameans and Armenians is called Castellum And the Etruscians at this day with whome many words of the Aramen language remaine call a castle Bricola by changing the letter g into c. This king Brygus as Berosus other writers affirme founded and erected many townes and great castles in the kingdome of Spaine as Ptolomie also copiously hath delivered as in the countrey of Lusitania there are castles called at this day Laccobryga Mirobryga and others And in the province of Taracona a towne called Brygantum Volubryga and many others sounding and ending after the name of the king Brygus Plinie sayth in his fift booke of naturall hystorie Plinie that many old writers do affirme That a certain people called Brygi in Europe travelled into Asia and there builded a citie and called it Brygios which afterwards by chaunging the letter B into P was called Phrygios and that the Phrygians afterwards from these people tooke their first originall and being of whome issued that famous progenie of the Trojanes so gloriously renowmed throughout the world and this king Brygus reigned in all securitie and peace untill the first yeare of the reigne of Balaneus the eight king of Babylon which was about two and fiftie yeares or near therabouts The fift king of Spaine was Tagus as Berosus and Diodorus deliver and he began his rule and government before the nativitie of Christ a thousand eight hundred threescore and five yeares before the building of Troy threescore and eighteene yeares after the first peopling of Spaine three hundred and nine yeares And of this kings name that far-famed river Tagus taketh her name in which as Plinie and Solynus report were found many golden sands heaped together in many places of that river This king with many authours is called also Tagum Orma and Moyses by synoereicall composition tearmeth him Tagorma as Ptolomie and many other writers of great worth and credite more particularly have spoken of the same and this Tagus reigned in the kingdome of Spain about the time of thirtie yeares by all due computation and conferring of consent of times and as Berosus affirmeth the same In the first yeare of the reigne of Armatritis the ninth king of the Babylonians and Assyrians the rule and governement of the kingdome of Spaine fell and came unto Betus of whom afterwards a great part of that country tooke her name and was knowne by the name of Baetica The Etruscians by transposition and division of ae cal him Beatus which with the Latines signifies happie or blessed The Hebrewes derive this word Betus from Behin which as S. Ierome interprets it meaneth as much as locus vitae meae id est foelic tatis ●ptatae and from hence it is likely that in this countrey some supposed the Elesian fields to be and so also thereby many other such like suppositions arose which to decide would here bee tedious and too much digression from the matter entended This king Betus raigned seven and thirtie yeares as Berosus and other authors doe alleadge After him in the eight and thirtith yeare of Armatritis above mentioned Gerion surnamed Aser challenged unto him the rule and domination of the countrey of Spain wherein it is written he governed with great tyrannie and oppression of the inhabitants thereof intruding himselfe by violent and forcible means into the possession and governement of that kingdome This word Gerion signifies in the Hebrew tongue as much as advena in Latin which he manifested more plainely by comming from Mauritania into this kingdome of Spaine and ruling there like a straunger according to his owne will desire and mightinesse Berosus as also Diodorus Siculus doth affirme That he had another name also which in the Aramen Mauritanian language was Deabo in the Greeke Chryseo in Latine Aureo which first of all came of his great wealth and store of gold in which he most wonderously abounded in those daies and this Gerion reigned thus in this his usurped authoritie untill the eight and twentith yeare of the raigne of Belochus the tenth king and ruler of Babylonia which was about the time of three thirtie years or near therabouts Immediatly after him three brethren together tooke the rule and government of this countrey of Spaine into their hands which were called Deabi Lomnimi which word as S. Ierome expoundeth it signifieth the cheefes or rulers of armies and which wee call by the name of the three Gerions beeing indeed the sons of the
beforementioned Gerion the last king and ruler of Spain In the time when these three brethren thus reigned and ruled together happened that generally known accident which afterward the world so universally entertained from the report of loud-tongued Fame which was the untimely and unfortunat death of Osyris surnamed Iupiter Iustus who was most traiterously and vilely murdred by his brother Typhaeus Egiptius whose all-lamented death was afterward highly revenged by his sonne Hercules Lybicus who instantly took up armes and scoured almost all the countries of the world untill hee had found out the authour of the murther of his father Osyris upon whose bodie his angrie and wrathfull mind tooke in the end direfull and cruell revenge at which time also hee beeing in the pride and fulnesse of furie and choller searcht out all corners and places of abode where any such like bloudie and impious gyants rulers and commaunders kept their tyrannicall and uncivile governments among the rest he slew Busyris in Phoenicia Typhaeus the younger in Phrygia Mylinus a great commaunder on the sea in Crete Antheus in Lybia the Lestrigones in Italie and afterwards these three bretheren called Geriones in Spaine and also many others in many other places as hath alreadie heretofore beene spoken of After the overthrow thus of these late specified Geriones hee established and appointed to succeed them one called Hispalus who now after these instantly tooke upon him the government thereof Hispalus therefore according to the report and affirmation of Berosus now entered to take possession of the regaltie and principalitie of Spaine which was from the floud five hundred fourescore and nine yeares before the erection of Troy two hundred one fortie years before the birth of Christ a thousand seven hundred twentie seven and after the first finding out and peopling of Spain three hundred seven and fortie yeares Of this Hispalus the citie Hispalis first was erected and so entearmed and he was the sonne of Hercules Lybicus as many authours and writers of fame and great antiquitie have given in report unto the posteritie of time Hee reigned and commaunded over Spaine untill the very end of the reigne and governement of Baleus the Babylonians eleventh king which was by just reckoning and account the time of seventeene yeares In the first yeare of the raigne of Altades the twelfth king of Babylonia Hispanus the nephew of Hercules was established king and sole ruler over the dominions of Spaine of whome the countrey then generally was called Hispania which the mallice of time hath not yet worne out but still it is knowne and called after the same name After him Hercules comming out of Italie fraught with yeares and many victories tooke upon him by the election and suffrages of all the people the rule government thereof And thus hath been lineally drawne foorth the first inhabitation of the countrey of Spaine with the particular and right successions of the kings and commaunders thereof as hath been warranted and allowed by writers of great antiquitie and industrious Chronographers of Spain where we will now surcease to wade any further having brought it unto the very times where wee last left our cheefe purpose and matter and will goe forward and proceed from hence untill wee shall nearer arrive at the time wherein Troy was first erected and founded following herein the same manner of method and forme with which wee first set forth and meane to continue unto the end by the favourable permission and allowance of the divine Majestie Hercules therefore ruling thus in Spaine built and erected many goodly cities and faire castles in that countrey wherupon at this day in some auncient records and monumentall schedules of Spaine you may read of another title given unto him which is Hercules edificator He was called also by these names as Her Hercol Arno Musarno and they thus signifie and are englished from the Hebrew tongue as S. Ierome and others expound it Her signifieth hairie Hercol all covered over with haire Arno signifieth a Lion and Musarno the portraiture or effigies of a Lyon and these names were thus ascribed unto him for that he alwaies wore for his upper garment the hairie skins of Lyons Beares Leopards and other such like beasts and for that on his shield or targuet was depainted and drawne the shape and forme of a Lyon and which in all his wars and attempts hee alwaies caried about him with some he was called the knight of the ramping Lyon The town of Vetulonia called also Viterbe caused the picture of Hercules to bee stamped and imprinted on their coine which continued unto the time of the raigne and governement of the last king of the Lumbards who then abollished the remembrance therof by any such representation or means of memorie After the time of some nineteene yeares or thereabouts as most writers doe alleadge having governed with all love and obedience of the people Hercules died leaving all those countries thereabouts heavily lamenting the losse and departure of so noble and gallant a conqueror which was about the time of his owne age three hundred and fiftie yeares and after he had reigned and commaunded in Fraunce Italie and Spaine threescore and seven yeares In solemne remembrance of whose generally deplored death the people of Spaine erected many must sumptuous and costly monuments and bestowed upon him a wonderfull rich and stately tombe which as some hold was built hard by that place which as wee now call them the Gades pillars or columns of Hercules are seated upon being not far from the famous streights of Gibraltar Vnto him also after his death they attributed very godlike honors and tearms of veneration and reverence so was hee possessed while hee lived among mortals with the love and opinion of all those people therabouts and wheresoever else he had governed and commanded And more of this so far renowmed conquerour Hercules shall not at this time bee declared whose victories triumphes exploits would indeed require a small volume of themselves being so many so glorious so worthie deserving in the perfection of their owne merit to be insculpt in the brasse leaved booke of time-resisting and endlesse perpetuitie And now we will revert our pen to speake of his two famous sons Tuscus king of Italie and Galatheus king of Fraunce and of their issue and posteritie But first is to be understood that unto the kingdome of Spaine next after Hercules succeeded Hesperus beeing the twelfth king and governor thereof who was brother unto the renoumed Atlas whome hereafter occasion will bee presented to speake and entreat of It hath been before declared and mentioned how that the great Monarch and Emperour Hercules dispossessing himselfe voluntarily of two royall mighty kingdomes placed and instituted therein his two sons Tuscus and Galatheus who long time after lived reciprocally reigned together in their severall commaunds and governement in all peace quiet and tranquilitie And to shew and manifest this their love
shee caused her selfe a mightie and stately columne to be erected wherein she caused also these words to bee insculped and inserted Ego sum Isis Egipti Regina à Mercurio erudita Que ego legibus statui nullus soluet ego sum Osyrides ego sum prima frugum inventrix ego sum Oriregis mater But to omit many other like authorities and approvements which might conduce to the clearer manifesting and unclouding of what was first proposed wee will now goe forward with this royall mariage of Iasius that we with more speed may attaine to the complete accomplishment and effectuating of my purposed entendment This great king and ruler Iasius Ianigena had of this his wife Cibeles a sonne called Corybantus so that now there wanted not any terrene or earth-born delight or felicitie which might make this happie-seeming potentate more fortunat mightie or contentfull but it is a common humor of fortune that amidst the thickest and most abundances of her graces and favours shee in some angrie or fantasticke imagination suddainely snatcheth away her so liberally bestowed gifts and leaveth the late possessors thereof involved and wrapt in a world of the miserablest unhappinesse and soule vexations that may be invented as by the fatall successe and end of this kings life most plainely appeareth For when as Dardanus his younger brother a man indeed of a proud heart great courage and inward ambition saw his brother Iasius thus to float as it were on the calme seas of joyous prosperitie and to tast of the sweet cup of Nectar which Fortune oftentimes administreth unto her favourites and thus to live famous in such abundant measure of grace and happinesse hee infinitely repined and malliciously stomacked such the greatnesse and height of his power and authoritie he beeing himselfe so suppressed and obscured by the spight of Fortune and living privately and without commaund as an inferiour or some base born person or slave These things oftentimes revolving and studying within himselfe he could not now any longer depresse or quench the overfurious heat of his aspiring spirit but in a disdainefull and scorning kind of fashion went unto his brother the king to demaund leave and licence That upon some occasions of discontent pretended he might depart out of the countrey to seeke out his better fortunes which request Iasius refused to condiscend unto and would by no meanes allow of his brothers purposes in that behalfe intended whereupon Dardanus taking it in great dislike and disparagement unto his greatnesse began secretly to enter into deadly hostilitie with him and to gather many factions and parties together on his side which by reason that he was exceedingly well beloved throughout most of those countries grew to a great number and multitude of men especially of those people then inhabiting on the other side of the river Tybre which we called since the Latines besides the countrey of Naples Povilla Calabria and others thereabouts all these conjoyned and consorted with the faction of Dardanus and with Iasius all those on this side of Tybre beeing them of Tuscania Fraunce and other particular provinces thereabouts At this very time as many writers doe deliver happened in the world many uncouth straunge and wonderfull portents as fearefull earthquakes lightening blazing comets and ougly visions as also throughout all Thessalie a generall overflow and deluge of waters in another part of Greece a strange combustion of houses and townes and miserable effects of fire throughout most part of that countrey In the same time also Pharao king of Aegypt following Moyses and the children of Israel through the red sea with all his armie perished and were overwhelmed with the churlish buffetings of the angrie and wrathfull billowes All which signes and extraordinarie accidents did manifestly pretoken prefigure the suddain approch of some great alteration of estates and troubles of mightie kingdomes The fire of discontent and enmitie betweene the two brothers beeing thus wholly set on flame and diverse attempts and meetings of wrath passed betweene them it happened that Dardanus received the worst and upon many encounters still was put unto his shifts especially by the fresh supplie and aid which Siceleus king of the isle of Sicilia the sixteenth king of Spain had then brought unto his brother Iasius so that continually being weakened more and more both in numbers of men and in the courages of them that staied he was enforced for his own securitie to give over those such publicke meanes of oppression and revenge and to betake his thoughts unto contriving and plotting of some more inward and therefore more daungerous stratagems So that in the end to avoid prolixitie and tedious circumstance he so wrought that he awaited a time when the king his brother then all suspectlesse of any intended mischeefe went privately to a fountaine or spring to wash himselfe which occasion and oportunitie so fairely presenting it selfe Dardanus most traiterously and vilely murdered him And upon that not daring to adventure his stay or to engage himselfe so far in those cases of perill he presently tooke shipping in the next haven and with all his jewels what else riches portable he could cary with him away with many of his freinds followers and servitors he secretly and closely set saile and departed The right noble and trespuissant king of Fraunce thus cruelly murdered by the bloudie hands of his owne naturall though in that unnaturall brother in the fiftith year of his raigne and mightie governement and in the fourscore and fourth yeare of his owne age all the people and inhabitants thereabouts began mightily to bewaile his untimely and miserable end which was before the foundation of Troy eight and twentie yeares or much thereabouts In generall deploration and laments of this kings death not only Italy and France but all parts of the world unto whome the shrill voiced trumpet of Fame had sounded forth this report conjoyned and bemoned together for that hee kept peace and amitie with all princes whatsoever in all unitie love and concord and carried himselfe so upright and so wise in the troublesome managing of affaires belonging unto two kingdomes that hee gained and woon unto him the hearts and affections of almost all people whatsoever After his death his sonne Coribantus succeeded in the governement of the kingdome of Italie but not of Fraunce so that the people thereof were a good while after without a cheefe or ruler but in the end they chose and elected one that was nearest unto the linage and line of Hercules as they might and his name was Allobrox now the sixteenth king therof The which king afterward for the most part kept and remained at the foot of the mountaines Apennini afronting upon Italie and there commaunded even unto the hils Pyrenei which divide the countrey of Spaine from France and from the Mediterranean sea unto the maine Ocean and unto the river of Rhyne and he there builded and erected many famous townes and