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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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England in some difficult cases were not wont to give Judgment until they had first consulted the King or his Privy Council Moreover the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament have oft-times transmitted matters of high moment to the King and his Privy Council as by long experience and wisdom better able to judge of and by secrecy and expedition better able to transact some State Affairs then all the Lords and Commons together At present the King and his Privy Council take Cognisance of few matters that may well be determined by the known Laws and ordinary Courts of Justice but onely as aforesaid consult for the Publick Good Honour Defence Safety and Benefit of the Realm not medling with matters that concern Freeholds but matters of Appeal and sudden Emergencies The Lords of the Privy Council are as it were a part of the King incorporate with him and his Cares bearing upon their Shoulders that great weight that otherwise would lye wholly upon His Majesty wherefore of such high value and esteem they have always been that if a man did but strike in the House of a Privy Counsellor or elsewhere in his presence he was grievously Fined for the same and to conspire the death of any of them was made Felony in any of the Kings servants within the Check Roll and to kill one of them was High Treason A Privy Councellor though but a Gentleman shall have precedence of all Knights Baronets and younger Sons of all Barons and Viscounts The Substance of their Oath is That they shall according to their power and discretion Truly Justly and Evenly Counsel and Advise the King in all matters to be Treated in His Majesties Council that they shall keep secret the Kings Counsel c. By Force of this Oath and the Custom of the Kingdom of England a Privy Counsellor is made without any Patent or Grant and to continue onely during the Life of the King that makes him nor so long unless the King pleaseth Heretofore there hath been usually a Lord President of the Kings Privy Council a Dignity of so high Repute that by a Statute of Henry the Eight he is to take place in publick next to the Lord High Treasurer of England His Office was to speak first to business to report to His Majesty the Passages and State of businesses transacted at Council Table The last Lord President was the Earl of Manchester Father of the present Lord Chamberlaine To his Privy Councellors the King of England may declare or conceal from them whatsoever he alone judgeth fit and expedient qua in re saith the Excellent Sir Tho. Smith absolutissimum est hoc Regnum Angliae prae Venetorum Ducatu aut Lacedaemoniorum Principatu The King with the advice of his Privy Council doth publish Proclamations binding to the Subject provided that they are not contrary to Statute or Common Law In cases where the publick peace honour or profit of the Kingdom may be endangered for want of speedy redress there the King with his Privy Council usually make use of an absolute power if need be The Members of this most Honorable Council are such as his own free Will and meer Motion shall please to choose and are commonly men of the highest rank eminent for Estates Wisdom Courage Integrity c. And because there are few cases of moment so temporal but that they may some way relate to spiritual affairs therefore according to the general Rules of Policy and Government which God himself ordained amongst his chosen people the Jews the Privy Council as well as the great Council of Parliament is composed of Spiritual as well as Temporal persons some of the principal Bishops of England have in all times been chosen by His Majesty to be of his Privy Council The Lords of His Majesties Privy Council are at present these that follow His Royal Highness the Duke of York His Highness Prince Rupert Gilbert Lord-Archbishop of Canterbury Sir Orlando Bridgman Knight and Baronet Lord Keeper of the Great Seal John Lord Roberts Lord Privy Seal George Duke of Buckingham Mr. of the Horse to His Majesty James Duke of Monmouth James Duke of Ormond Lord Great Steward of His Majesties Houshold Henry Marquis of Dorchester Henry Earl of Ogle Thomas Earl of Ossory Robert Earl of Lindsey Lord Great Chamberlain of England Edward Earl of Manchester Lord Chamberlain of His Majesties Houshold· Awbrey Earl of Oxford John Earl of Bridgwater Robert Earl of Leceister Henry Earl of S. Albans Edward Earl of Sandwich Arthur Earl of Anglesey John Earl of Bath Groom of the Stole to His Majesty Charles Earl of Carlisle William Earl of Craven John Earl of Rothes His Majesties Commissioner in Scotland John Earl of Lotherdale Secretary of State in Scotland John Earl of Tweedale John Earl of Middleton Richard Earl of Carbury Lord President of Wales Roger Earl of Orrery Humphrey Lord Bishop of London Henry Lord Arlington one of His Majesties Principal Secretaries of State Francis Lord Newport Comptroler of His Majesties Houshold John Lord Berkley Lieutenant of Ireland Densel Lord Holles Anthony Lord Ashley Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir Thomas Clifford Knight Treasurer of His Majesties Houshold Sir George Carteret Knight Vice-Chamberlain to His Majesty Sir John Trevor Knight one of His Majesties Principal Secretaries of State Sir Thomas Ingram Knight Chancellor of the Dutchy Sir William Morice Knight Sir John Duncom Knight Sir Thomas Chicheley Knight Master of the Ordnance These are all to wait on his Majesty and at Council Board sit in their Order bare-headed when His Majesty presides At all Debates the lowest delivers his opinion first that so he may be the more free and the King last of all declares his Judgment and thereby determines the mater in Debate The Time and Place of holding this Council is wholly at the Kings pleasure but it is most commonly held in the morning on Wednesday and Friday out of Parliament time and Term time and in the Afternoon in time of Parliament and Term. A Council is seldom or never held without the Presence of one of the Secretaries of State of whose Office and Dignity much more considerable in England than in other Nations take here this brief Account The Kings of England had antiently but one Secretary of State until about the end of Henry the Eight his Reign it was thought fit that weighty and important Office should be discharged by two Persons both of equal authority and both stiled Principal Secretaries of State In those days and some while after they sate not at Council Board but having prepared their business in a Room adjoyning to the Council-Chamber they came in and stood on either hand of the King and nothing was debated at the Table until the Secretaries had gone through with their Proposals But Queen Elizabeth seldom coming to Council that Method was altered and the two Secretaries took their places as Privy Counsellors which Dignity they have retained and enjoyed ever since and a
Bench so called because anciently the King sometimes there sate in person on a high Bench and his Judges on a low Bench at his Feet to whom the Judicature belongs in the absence of the King In this Court are handled the Pleas of the Crown all things that concern loss of life or member of any Subject for then the King is concerned because the Life and Limbs of the Subject belong only to the King so that the Pleas here are between the King and the Subject Here are also handled all Treasons Felonies Breach of Peace Oppression Misgovernment c. This Court moreover hath power to examine and correct all Errors in facto in jure of all the Judges and Justices of England in their Judgements and Proceedings and this not only in Pleas of the Crown but in all Pleas Real Personal and mixt except only in the Exchequer In this High Court sit commonly Four Grave Reverend Judges whereof the First is stiled the Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench and is created not by Patent but by a short Writ thus Johanni Keeling Militi salutem Sciatis quod constituimus vos Justiciarium nostrum Capitalem ad placita coram nobis tenenda durante beneplacito nostro Teste me ipso apud Westm The rest of the Judges of the Kings Bench hold their places by Letters Patents in these words Rex omnibus ad quos praesentes literae pervenirint salutem Sciatis quod constituimus dilectum fidelem Richardum Rainsford Militem unum Justiciariorum ad placita coram nobis tenenda durante beneplacito nostro Teste c. These Judges and all the Officers belonging to this Court have all Salaries from the King and the chief of them have Robes and Liveries out of the great Wardrobe In this Court all young Lawyers that have been called to the Bar are allowed to plead and practice This Court may grant Prohibitions to keep other Courts both Ecclesiastical and Temporal within their Bounds and due Jurisdiction The Jurisdiction of this Court is general and extendeth to all England is more uncontroulable than any other Court for the Law presumes that the King is alwayes there in person None may be Judge in this Court unless he be a Serjeant of the Degree of the Coif that is a Serjeant at Law who upon taking this high Degree is obliged to wear a Lawn Coif under his Cap for ever after A List of the several Officers belonging to His Majesties Court of Kings-Bench LOrd Chief Justice Sir John Keeling Knight Justices are Sir Thomas Twisden Knight and Baronet Sir Richard Rainsford Knight Sir William Morton Knight Clerk of the Crown Sir Thomas Fanshaw Knight his Secondary Jasper Waterhouse Esquire Protonotary Sir Robert Henley Knight his Secondary William Livesay Esquire Marshal or Keeper of the Kings Bench Prison Stephen Mosedell Esquire Custos Brevium Justinian Paget Esquire Andrew Vivean and Francis Woodward Clerks of the Paper Office Sealer of the Writs Edward Coleman Gilbert Barrel Clark of the Rules Clerk of the Errors Henry Field George Bradford Clerk for Filing Declarations a Cryer Porter and some other inferiour Officers Then there are Filacers for the several Counties of England whose Office is in this Court to make out all Process upon original Writs as well real as personal and mixt They were lately these that follow Humphrey Ironmonger Edward Parnel James Buck Samuel Astrey Francis Greg John Hynde Thomas Stone Thomas Leach Gilbert Eveleigh Henry Ewin Joshua Langrige William Oglethorp John Philips William Osborn Rob. Hyde and Anthony Rouse The manner of Tryals in this and all other Common Law Courts in England being different from that of all other Countries and peculiar to England shall be at large described apart in a Chapter with other peculiars Of the Court of Common Pleas. THe next Court for execution of Laws is the Court of Common-Pleas so called because there are debated the usual Pleas between Subject and Subject Some say this Court as well as other Courts were at first held in the Kings House wheresoever he resided but by the Statute of Magna Charta it was ordained that this Court should not be ambulatory but be held at a certain place and that hath ever since been in Westminster-Hall None but Serjeants at Law may plead in this Court and so many of them as the King shall appoint are bound by oath to assist all that have any Cause depending in that Court This Court may grant prohibitions as the Court of the Kings Bench doth The chief Judge in this Court is called the Lord Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas or of the Common-Bench holdeth his place by Letters Patent durante bene placite and so do the other inferiour Judges of this Court whereof there are commonly three In this Court all Civil Causes Real and Personal are usually tryed according to the strict Rule of the Law Real Actions are pleadable in no other Court nor Fines levyed or Recoveries suffered but only in this Court at Westminster The King allows to the Lord Chief Justice of this Court a Fee Reward Robes and two Tun of Wine ●s is done to the Lord Chief Justice of the other Bench also to the other Judges of this Court and to four Serjeants is allowed Fees Reward and Robes to each one In the 11th and 12th of Edward 3. there were eight Judges belonging to the Common Pleas at other times seven six and five and so in the time of Henry 6. and Edward 4. but since usually but four as at this day Before the Reign of Queen Mary these and the rest or the twelve Judges rode upon Mules and not upon Horses as they now do in great State a● the beginning of the Term. A List of the several Officers belonging to His Majesties Court of Common-pleas LOrd Chief Justice Sir John Vaughan Kt. Sir Thomas Tyrrel Kt. Sir John Archer Kt. Sir William Wylde Kt. and Bar. these are the present Judges of that Tribunal Then there is an Officer called Custos Brevium the first Clerk of the Court whose Office it is to receive and keep all Writs returnable in that Court to receive of the Protonotaries all the Records of Nisi Prius called Postea's He holdeth his Place by Patent from the King and hath the Gift of the second Protonotary's Place and of the Clerk of the Juries· Sir Joseph Ash hath this Office and doth execute it by his Deputy Thursby Esquire There are three Protonotaries a word compounded of Greek and Latin which with the Antients was usual and signifies the first Notaries they are chief Clerks of this Court and by their Office are to enter and inroll all Declarations Pleadings which the Filazers did formerly promiscuously do Assises Judgments and Actions to make out Judicial Writs c. These considerable Offices are in the hands of Thomas Robinson Alan Lockhart and Humphrey Wirley Esquires The Chirographer also from two Greek words signifying to acknowledge a Debt by setting ones
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