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A67922 Actes and monuments of matters most speciall and memorable, happenyng in the Church. [vol. 1] with an vniuersall history of the same, wherein is set forth at large the whole race and course of the Church, from the primitiue age to these latter tymes of ours, with the bloudy times, horrible troubles, and great persecutions agaynst the true martyrs of Christ, sought and wrought as well by heathen emperours, as nowe lately practised by Romish prelates, especially in this realme of England and Scotland. Newly reuised and recognised, partly also augmented, and now the fourth time agayne published and recommended to the studious reader, by the author (through the helpe of Christ our Lord) Iohn Foxe, which desireth thee good reader to helpe him with thy prayer.; Actes and monuments Foxe, John, 1516-1587. 1583 (1583) STC 11225; ESTC S122167 3,006,471 816

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Margaret the daughter of our progenitour Henry the third at our Citty of Yorke in the feast of Christmas at whiche tyme the sayd Alexander dyd hys homage to our sayd progenitour who reigned in this Realme 56. yeares And thereford betweene the homage made by the sayd Alexander king of Scotland and the homage done by Alexander sonne to the sayd king of Scots to vs at our coronation at Westminster there was about 50. yeares At which tyme the said Alexander kyng of Scottes repayred to the sayd feast of our coronation and there did he his duety as is aforesayd ¶ Besides these letters of the king the Lordes temporall also in the name of the whole communaltie and Parliment wrote an other letter to the pope answering to that where as the pope arrogated to hym to be iudge for the title of the realme of Scotland whiche the king of England claymed to hymselfe whiche letter I thought also here to annexe contayning as in the wordes of the same here foloweth to be read and seene * The Lordes temporall and the whole Baronie of England to the Pope THe holy mother Churche by whose ministery the Catholicke fee is gouerned in her deedes as we throughly beleeue and holde proceedeth with that ripenes in iudgement that she will be hurtfull to none but like a mother would euery mans right to be kept vnbroken as well in other as in her selfe Whereas therefore in a generall Parliament called at Lincoln of late by our most dread Lord Edward by the grace of God the noble kyng of England the same our Lorde caused certayne letters receaued from you to be read openly and to be declared seriously afore vs about certayne businesses touching the condition state of the realme of Scotland We did not a little muse and maruaile with our selues hearing the meaninges concerning the same so wondrous and straunge as the like we haue not heard at any time before For we know most holy father and it is well knowne as well in this realm of England as also not vnknowne to other persons besides that from the first beginning of the Realme of England the certayne and direct gouernement of the Realme of Scotland in all temporall causes from tyme to tyme belonged to the kynges of the same Realme of England and Realme of Scotland as well in the times both of the Brittaines as also of Englishmen Yea rather the same Realme of Scotland of olde tyme was in see to the Auncetours of our foresayd Lordes Kynges of England yea and to hymselfe Furthermore the Kynges of Scottes and the Realme haue not bene vnder any other then the kynges of England and the Kinges of England haue answered or ought to aunswere for theyr rightes in the foresayd Realme or for any hys temporalities afore anye Iudge Ecclesiasticall or secular by reason of free preheminence of the state of hys royall dignitie and custome kept without breach at all tymes Wherefore after treatie had and dilligent deliberation of the contentes in your foresayd letters this was the common agreeing and consent with one mynde and shall be without fayle in tyme to come by Gods grace that our foresayd Lord the Kyng ought by no meanes to aunswere in iudgement in any case or shoulde bring hys foresayd rightes into doubt nor ought not to send any proctors or messengers to your presence specially seeing that the premisses tend manifestly to the disheriting of the right of the Crowne of Englande and the playne ouerthrow of the state of the sayd Realme and also hurt of the liberties customes and lawes of our fathers For the keeping and defence of whiche we are bounde by the duety of the othe made And we will mayntayne them with all power and will defend them by Gods helpe with all strength And farther we will not suffer our foresayd Lord the king to doe or by anye meanes to attempt the premisses being so unacustomed vnwont and not heard of afore Wherefore we reuerently and humbly beseech your holines that ye would suffer the same our Lord king of Englande who among other Princes of the worlde sheweth himselfe Catholicke and deuour to the Romishe Churche quietly to enioye hys rightes liberties ' customes and lawes aforesayde without all empayring and trouble and let them continue vntouched In witnesse whereof we haue set our seales to these presentes aswell for vs as for the whole communaltie of the foresayd Réalme of England Dated at Lincolne in the yeare of our Sauiour 1031. anno Edwardi primi 28. The yeare following which was from Christ an 1303. the sayd Pope Boniface the eight of that name taking displeasure with Phillip the Frenche king did excite king Edward of Englad to warre against him promising hun great ayd thereunto But he as mine author sayth little trusting the Popes false vnstable affection toward him well proued before put him of with delayes Ex Rob. Auesb. wherupon the French king fearing the power of king Edward whom the Pope had set agaynst hys friendship restored vnto him agayn Wascone which he wrongfully had in his hands deteined Concerning this variaunce here mentioned between the Pope and the French kyng how it begā first and to what end it fell out the sequell hereof Christ willing shall declare after that first I haue finished the discourse begon betweene England and Scotland In the yeare 1303. the foresayd Willa Waleys which had done so many displeasures to the king before continuing still in his rebellion gathered great multitudes of the Scottes to wtstand the king til at length the yeare following he was taken and sent vp to Londō and there executed for the same After which thinges done the king thē held his Parliament at Westminster whether came out of Scotland the Bishop of S. Andrewes Robert Bruse aboue mentioned Earle of Dunbarre Earle of Acles and Syr Iohn comming with diuers other The which volūtarily were sworne to be true to the king of England and to keep the land of Scotland to his vse agaynst at persons But shortly after the sayd Robert Bruse who as is sayd maried the second daughter of Earle Dauid forgetting his othe before made vnto the king within a yeare or two after this by the counsell of the Abbot of Stone and Bishop of S. Andrewes sent vp vnto Pope Clement the 5. for a dispensation of his othe made unsinuating to him that King Edward vexed and greued the realme of Scotland wrōgfully Whereupon the pope wrote vnto the king to leaue of such doinges Notwithstanding whiche inhibition of the Pope the king prosecuting hys owne right after he had the vnderstanding of the doings of the Scots of the mischiefe of Robert Bruys who had slayne with hys owne handes Syr Iohn Comyng for not consenting with him and other Lordes at hys Parliament areared his power strength of men preparing himselfe toward Scotlād where he ioyning with the said Syr Robert and all the power of Scotland in a
vulgare tounge as in the Latine tounge manifestly and plainly without any curious implication the same hereticall and erronious conclusions so repugnant to the determination of holy Church as is aforesayd to haue bene be condemned and which conclusions also we declare by these our letters to be vtterly condemned And that farthermore you forbid and canonically admonish and cause to be admonished as we by the tenour of these presents doe forbid and admonish you once twise and thrise and that peremptorily that none hereafter hold teach preach or defende the heresies and errours aboue sayde or any of them eyther in schoole or out of schoole by any sophistical cauillation or otherwise or that any admit to preache heare or hearken vnto Iohn Wyckliffe Nicholas Hereford Philip Reppindon Chanon reguler or Iohn Ayshton or Laurence Readman which be vehemently and notoriously suspected of heresie or els any other whatsoeuer so suspected or defamed or that either priuely or publiquely they either aide or fauoure them or any of them but that incontinently they shunne and auoide the same as a Serpent which putteth foorth moste pestiferous poyson And farthermore we suspend the sayd suspected persons from al scholasticall acte till such time as they shall purge themselues before vs in that behalfe and that you denounce the same publiquely by vs to haue bene and be suspended and that yee diligently and faithfully inquire of all their fautours and fauourers and cause to be inquired throughout all the haules of the sayde vniuersitie And that when you shall haue intelligence of their names persons that yee compell all and euery of them to abiure their outragies by Ecclesiasticall Censures and other paines Canonicall whatsoeuer vnder paine of the greater curse the whych against al and singular the rebellious in thys behalfe and disobeying our monitions wee pronounce so that their fault deceit and offence in thys behalfe deserue the same the sayde monition of ours being first sent which in this behalfe we exteeme and allowe Canonicall that then and agayne accordyng to the effect of these our letters c. The Absolution of all and singular such whych shall incurre the sentence of thys instrument by vs sent foorth whych God forbidde Wee specially reserue vnto oure selues exhortyng you the Chauncellour by the aspersion of the bloud of IESVS CHRIST that to the vttermost of your power hereafter you doe your indeuoure that the Clergie and people being subiecte vnto you if there be whych haue strayed from the Catholique faith by such errours may be brought home againe to the laud and honour of his name that was crucified and preseruation of the true faith And further our will is that whatsoeuer you shal do in the premisses in maner forme of our processe in this behalfe to be had and done that you for your parte when you shal be required thereunto plainly distinctly do certifie vs by your letters patents hauing the tenour hereof The conclusions and articles here mentioned in thys letter are aboue prefixed Of which some were cōdemned for hereticall some for erroneous After this within fewe daies the foresayd Archbyshop W. Courtney directed down his letters of admonition to Robert Rigge commissary of Oxford for the repressing of thys doctrine Which yet notwithstanding both then and yet to this day God be praised doth remaine The copie of his monition to the Commissary here out of hys owne Register foloweth ¶ The monition of the Archbyshop vnto the foresayd Chauncellour IN Dei nomine Amen Where as we William by the permission of God Archbyshop of Canterbury Lorde Primate of England and Legate of the Apostolicall sea by the consent of our suffraganes haue caused to be assembled together diuers clerkes both secular and regular of the vniuersitie of Oxford wythin our prouince of Canterbury and other Catholicke persons to informe vs of and vpon certaine conclusions heretical and erroneous generally and commonly preached and published in diuers places of the sayd prouince of Canterbury to the subuersion of the whole state of the Church and our sayd prouince And also mature deliberation had vpon the same by the common counsaile of the said our suffraganes their conuocates it was declared that certain of the sayde conclusions to haue bene and be condemned some for heretical and some for erroneous and notoriously repugnāt to the determinatiō of the church which we also our selues haue declared to be damnable And haue vnderstode by credible information and partly by experience that thou Robert Rigge Chancelor of the vniuersity aforesaid hast doest incline partly to the foresaid damnable conclusions whome also we in thys part haue partly suspected doest intend to molest these our Clerkes aboue specified others adhering vnto vs in this behalf as they ought to do through thy subtill and sophisticall imaginations sondry manifold wayes therfore we admonish thee M. Robert Chauncelour aforesaid the first second and third time and peremptorily that thou doest not greue let or molest iudicially or extraiudicially apertly or priuely or cause to be greued let and molested or procure directly or indirectly by thy selfe or any other as much as in thee lieth to be greued the foresayd Clerks secular or regular or such as fauor them in the premisses in their scholastical acts or in any other condition whatsoeuer And that thou suffer none hereafter to teach maintaine preach or defend any such heresies or errours in the sayde Vniuersitie either within or wythout the scholes Neither that thou do admit I. Wickliffe Nicholas Herford Philip Repindon Iohn Ayshton or Laurēce Redman which are vehemently and notoriously suspected of heresie or any other so suspected or defamed vnto that office of preaching But that thou denounce the sayd persons to be suspended whom we haue suspended from all scholastical act whilest they cleare their innocencie in this part before vs vnder the paine of the greater curse which we here in these wrytings denounce against thy person if thou shalt not obey those our admonitions with effecte as thy crime subteltie and offence in this behalfe shal require according to this our admonition premised which we repute in thys parte for canonicall as well then as now and now as wel as then reseruing the absolution of this sentence excommunicatorie if it happen to light vpon thee as God forbid specially vnto our selues Testified with the handes of the Iurers aboue in the page 410. before specified ¶ The examination of Nicholas Herford Philip Repingdon and Iohn Ayshton THe 18. day of the month and yere aforesaid in the chamber of the preaching Friers afore mentioned before the foresayde Archb. in the presence of diuers Doctours and Bachelers of Diuinitie and many Lawyers both Canon and Ciuil whose names are vnder written appeared M. Nich. Herford Philip Repingdon Iohn Ayshton Bachelers of diuinity Who after a corporal oth taken to shew their iudgements vpon the cōclusions aforesayd were examined seuerally eache one by himselfe before the
Iohn Asheton what his iudgement opinion was touching the foresaid conclusions prefixed and assigned vnto the said Thomas for that time demaunding the same deliberation and day 8. dayes after that is to say the 28. of the said month that he appeare before the Bishop of Cant. wheresoeuer within his said prouince of Canterbury he should then happen to be to declare playnely and fully what his iudgement and opinion was touching the foresaid conclusions Ex Regist W. Courtney The names of Friers and Doctors assistent at the examination aforesaid Friers Obseruantes Botlesham B. of Nauaton frier Iohn Langley William Suard Friers of Dominickes order Iohn Kyngham Iohn Louey Peter Stokes Walter Dish Friers Carmelites Thomas Ashburn Baukine Robert Walbey Doctors and Fryers Augustines M. Iohn Barnet M. Thomas Backton M. Iohn Blanchard M. Iohn Shillingford M. Lydford M. Thomas Southam The Friday next following that is to say the 28. day of Iune the foresaid M. Nicholas Phillip and Thom. Hilman appeared before the said Archb. and lord Inquisitour of Canterbury in the chappell of his manor of Otfurd in the Dioces of Canterbury there sitting in his Tribunall seat To whom the sayd bishop of Canterbury saying that for because at that time he had not the presence assistence of the doctors in diuinitie and of the Canon and ciuil law He continued the sayd busines touching the sayd Nicholas Phillip and Thomas in the same state wherin thē it was till Tewesday next immediately ensuing that is to say the first day of Iuly the yeare of the Lord abouesayd and prefixed vnto the said Nicholas Phillip and Thomas Hilman the same day to appeare before him wheresoeuer within his prouince of Caunterb he should then chaunce to be to do that whiche vppon the sayd 28. day they were purposed to doe together or a part Which Tuesday being come the foresaid Archb. in the chiefe house of his Churche at Canterbury before the houre of 9. with the doctours whose names are vnder conteined and other Clerkes a great multitude Expected the foresaid Nicholas Phillip and Thomas long●ime by the bedle calling them and looking after them who neuerthelesse appeared not before two of the clocke after dinner the same day continuing the foresayd busines in the pristine state til the same houre At which houre the foresaid Archbishop of Cant. hauing assistentes the doctors clerkes vnder recited examined the foresayd maister Thomas Hilman thē and there iudicially appearing what his opiniō was touching the foresayd conclusions who at them and the meaning of them somewhat stammering at last to all and singuler the same conclusions then to him red and expounded thus aunswered I suppose and iudge all singuler those conclusions lately condemned by my Lord of Canterbury that now is together with the coūsaile and consent of hys clerkes to be hereticall and erroneous euē as the same my Lord of Caunterbury and other doctours of Diuinitie of the Canon and ciuill law by common consent counsaile haue supposed and thought And that the same being for hereesies and errours as before is sayd condemned doe as much as in me is condemne protesting that I will holde and affirme the contrary of those cōclusions in the same sayth liue and dye Then sayd the archbishop of Caunterbury then there sitting as Tribunall or iudge pronouncing the said maisters Nicholas and Phillip long in court called before and taried for and yet not appearing guilty of contumacy and disobedience excommunicated them for the penaltie of this their cōtumacie in tenor of these words following We William by the grace of God archbishop of Caunterbury Primate of Englande Legate of the Apostolicall see and thorough all our prouince of Canterbury of al hereticall prauitie chiefe Inquisitour Do pronounce maister Nicholas Herford and maister Phillip Repingdon professours of diuinitie hauing this day and place by our prefiction appoynted to heart decree in this busines of hereticall prauitie being in Court by our Bedle long called taried for and yet not appearing to be stubburne and disobedient persons and for the penalty of this their contumacie we do excommunicate them and either of them by these presentes * The denouncing of the excommunication agaynst Nicholas Herford and Phillip Reppington WIlliam by Gods permission Archb. of Caunterb c. To our beloued sonne in Christ whosoeuer he be that this instaunt sonday shall preach at Paules crosse in London Salutatiō grace and blessing For asmuch as we prefixed a certaine competent day and place to maister Nicholes Herford and maister Phillip Reppingtō Canon Regular of the Monastery of our Lady of Leicester beyng Doctours of Diuinitie and of heretical prauitie vehemētly suspected After certayne aunsweres not fully made but impertinently and nothing to the purpose as also hereticall and erroneous In diuers places of our said prouince commonly generally and publikely taught and preached and therfore that they should iudicially appeare before vs to doe to receaue peremtorily in that behalfe what thing soeuer the quallitie of that busines shoulde moue vnto vs and that we haue for their contumacie in not appearing before vs at that day and place iudicially appoynted as right therein required We by these presentes commaund commit vnto you firmely enioyning you that when all the multitude of people shal be gathered together to heare your sermō that in the day and place appoynted you publikely and solemnly denoūce the foresaid Nicholas Phillip holding vp a crosse and lighting vp a candle and then throwing downe the same vpon the ground to haue bene so and in such maner excommunicated and still be Fare ye well In our Manour house at Lambeth the 13. day of Iuly the yeare of our Lord. 1382. and first yeare of our translation * The Citation agaynst the sayd Nicholas and Phillip WIlliam by the grace of God c. To our welbeloued sonne M. Robbert Rigge chauncellour of the Vniuersitie of Oxford salutation c. For as muche as we haue prefixed a competent day and place to M Nicholas Heerford and M. Phillip Reppington c. as before We straightly charge and commaund you that you publiquely and solemnly denounce in the church of our Lady and in the scholes of the Vniuersity the foresayd Nicholas and Phillip to haue bene by vs excommunicated and still is And that you further cite or cause to be cited peremptorily the foresayd Nicholas and Phillip that they and euery of them appeare before vs within 15. dayes after the date of this citation wheresoeuer it shall fortune vs within our sayd prouince of Caunterbury then to be To heare and see how we meane to proceed against them and euery of them concerning the foresayd hereticall and erroneous conclusions according to the forme of retroactions and quallitie of the busines in this behalfe had and vsed And that both of the day of the receipt of this present citation of the maner and forme thereof or
Richard againe in the raigne of this king that many yeares after he was rumored to be aliue of them which desired belike that to be true which they knew to be false for the which diuers were executed For the space of sixe or vij yeares together almost no yeare passed without some conspiracy against the king Long it were here to recite the bloud of all such Nobles and other which was spilt in the raigne of this king as the Earle of Kent Earle of Salisbury Earle of Huntington named Iohn Holland c. as writeth the story of S. Albans But the English writers differ something in their names and make mention of 4. Earles of Surrey of Excester of Salisbury and Lord Spenser Earle of Gloucester Ex Lib. cui tit Calendarium Bruti And the next yeare following Syr Ihon Clarendon knight with two of his seruauntes the Priour of Laund with 8. friers were hanged and quartered And after these Henry Percy the younger the Earle of Worcester named Thomas Percy his vncle Lord of Kinderton and L. Richard de Uernoua The Earle of Northumberland scarce escaped with his pardon an 1403. In the which yeare the prison in Cornhill called the tonne was turned into the conduit there now standing To let passe other moe hanged and quartered the same time as Blount knight Benet Kely knight and Thomas Wintersel Esquier Also the same yeare was taken and executed sir Bernard Brokes knight sir Iohn Shilley knight Syr Iohn Mandelyn and William Frierby After all these L. Henry Earle of Northumberland and L. Bardolfe conspiring the kings death were taken in the North and beheaded which was in the 8. yere of this king Henry This ciuil rebellion of so many nobles other against the king declared what grudging heartes the people then bare towarde this king Henry Among whome I cannot pretermit heere also the Archb. of Yorke named Richarde Scrope who with the L. Moubrey Marshal of England gathered a great company in the North countrey against the foresaid king to whom also was adioyned the helpe of L. Bardolfe Henry Percy Earle of Northumberland Ex Chron. D. Albani And to stirre vp the people more willingly to take their partes they collected certaine Articles against the said king to the number of 10. and fastned them vpon the doores of Churches and Monasteries to be read of all men in English Which articles if any be disposed to vnderstand for somuch as the same also containe a great part of the doings betweene king Henry king Richard aforesayde I thought for the better opening of the matter heere vnder to inserte the same in such forme as I founde them in the historie of Scala mundi expressed ¶ Articles set vp on Church doores against king Henry the fourth IN the name of God Amen Before the Lorde Iesus Christ iudge of the quicke and dead c. We A.B.C.D. c. not long sithens became bounde by othe vppon the sacred Euangelicall booke vnto our soueraigne Lorde Richarde late king of England and France in the presente of many prelates potentates and nobilitie of the realme that wee so long as we liued should beare true allegeance and fidelity towardes hym and his heires succeding hym in the kingdom by iust title right and line accordyng to the statutes and custome of this realme of England By vertue wherof we are bound to foresee that no vices or hainous offences arise in the common weale do take effect or wyshed ende but that we ought to geue our selues and our goodes to wtstand the same without feare of sword or death whatsoeuer vpon paine of periurie which paine is euerlasting damnation Wherfore we seing perceiuing diuers horrible crimes and great enormities daily without ceassing to be committed by the children of the deuill and sathans soldiours against the supremacie of the Church of Rome the libertie of the church of England and the lawes of the realme against the person of king Rich. and his heires against the prelates noble men religion and comminaltie and finally against the whole weale publike of the realme of England to the great offence of the maiesty of almighty God and to the prouocation of his iust wrath and vēgeance towards the realme and people of the same And fearing also the destruction both of the Churche of Rome and England the ruine of our coūtry to be at hand hauing before our eyes the iustice the kingdom of God calling alwaies on the name of Iesus hauing an assured confidence in his clemency mercy and power haue here taken vnto vs certain articles subscribed in forme folowing to be proponed tried and heard before the iust iudge Iesus Christ and the whole world to his honour the deliuery of the church the cleargy and comminalty and to the utility profite of the weale publick But if which God forbid by force feare of violence of wicked persons we shal be cast in prison or by violent death preuented so as in this worlde we shall not be able to proue the saide articles as we would wish then do we apeale to the high celestiall iudge that he may iudge discerne the same in the day of his supreme iudgement 1. ¶ First we depose say except and entend to proue against the Lord Henry Derby sonne of the Lord Iohn of Gaunt late Duke of Lancaster and commonly called king of England himselfe pretending the same although without all right and title thereunto and against his adherents fautours and complices that euer they haue bene are and will be traytors inuaders and destroyers of Gods Church in Rome England Wales and Ireland and of our soueraigne Lord Richard late King of England his heires his kingdom and common wealth as shall hereafter mani●estly appeare 2. Secondarely we depose c. against the said Lord Hēry for that he had conceaued deutied conspired certaine hainous crimes and traiterous offences against his sayd soueraigne Lord Richard his state and dignitie as manifestly did appeare in the contention betwene the said Lord Henry and y● Lord Thomas Duke of Northfolke begon at Couentry but not finished throughly Afterwards he was sent in exile by sentence of the said king Richard by the agreement of his father the Lord Iohn Duke of Lancaster by the voice of diuers of the Lords temporall nobilitie of the realme and also by his owne consent there to remaine for a certaine time appointed vnto him by the said Lords and withall he was bound by othe not to returne into Englād before he had obteined fauour grace of the kyng Not long after when the king was departed into Ireland for reformation of that countrey apperteining to the crowne of England but as then rebelling agaynst the same the sayd Lord Henry in the meane time contrary to his oth and fidelitie and long before the time limited vnto him was expired with all his fautours and inuaders secretly entred into the Realme swearing
Turkes or Infidels or in their doctrine were any Idolatrous impitie or detestable iniquitie in their liues if they went about any deadly destruction or priuy conspiracies to oppresse your liues or by fraudulent dealing to circūuent you then had you some cause to cōplaine and also to reuenge Now seing in their doctrine ye haue neyther blasphemy idolatry superstition nor misbeliefe to obiect vnto them seing they are baptised in the same beliefe and beleue the same articles of the Crede as ye do hauing the same God the same Christ sauiour the same baptisme and are ready ●s con●erre with you in all kinde of Christen doctrine neyther do refuse to be tryed by any place of the scripture how then riseth this mortall malice of you agaynst them If you thinke them to be her●tickes then bring forth if ye can any one sentence which they arrogantly hold contrary to the minde of holy scripture expounded by the censure of most auncient Doctours Or what is there in all y● scripture to be required but they acknowledge confesse the same See try the order of their liues doinges what great fault find you They serue God they walke vnder his feare they obey his law as men may do and though they be transgressors toward him as other men are yet toward you what haue they done what haue they committed or deserued why you should be so bitter agaynst them What offended the poore habitants of Merindal Cabriers when the bishop of Aix the Cardinall of Turon and other Bishops of France wrasting from Fraunces the French king a commission sent Men●rius with his Captayne Iohn de Gay to destroy theyr countrey an 1530. who driuing the poore people there into a barn ful of straw set the barn on fire burned vp men women and children And likewise in a church exercised the like crueltie vpon them where were murdered the same time to the number of a thousand yong and old women children and yong infants besides vii whole townes with the most part of the dwellers thering being murdered burnt in the sayd country of Prouēce Also before that what offended the Cittizens of Tholouse and Auinion when Pope Gregory the ix set Lewes the French king to warre agaynst them and agaynst Raymundus their Earle without cause where also the sayd kyng died at the siege Or to speake of later yeres what hurt or harme did the poore Protestantes in the towne of Uassy who peaceably being at a Sermon were miserably slayne and cut men women and children by the Duke of Guyes and hys armed souldiours besides other infinite examples almost not to be numbred of like crueltie in Calabria Apulia Bohemia Fraunce and now of late in Flaunders and in other countryes moe But to let other countryes passe let vs turne now to the peaceable gouernment in this realme of England vnder this our so milde gracious Queene now presently reigning Under whome you see howe gently you are suffered what mercy is shewed vnto you how quietly ye liue What lacke you that you woulde haue hauing almost the best rowmes and offices in all the realme not onely without any losse of lyfe but also without anye feare of death And though a few of your Arch●lerkes be in custody yet in that custody so shrewdly are they hurt that many a good Protestant in the realme would be glad with all their hartes to chaunge rowmes and dyet with them if they might And albeit some other for their pleasure haue slipt ouer the seas if their courage to see countries abroade did so allure them who coulde let them yet this is certayne no dreade there was of death that draue them For what papist haue you seen in all this land to lose eyther life or limme for papistry during al these xii yeares hetherto since this Queenes reigne And yet all this notwithstāding hauing no cause to complayne so many causes to geue God thāks ye are not yet content ye fret and fume ye grudge and mutter and are not pleased with peace nor satisfied with safety but hope for a day and fayne would haue a chaunge And to preuent your desired day ye haue conspired and rise vpp in open rebellion agaynst your Prince whom the Lord hath set vp to be your gouernour And as you haue since that nowe of late disturbed the quiet and peaceable state of Scotland in murdering most trayterously the gentle and godly Regent of Scotland who in sparing the Queenes life there when he had her in his handes hath now therfore lost his own so with like fury as by your rebellion appeareth would disturbe the golden quiet and tranquilitie of this Realme of England if ye might haue your willes Which the mercifull grace of almightie for Christ his sonnes sake our Lord forfend and vtterly disapoynt Amen Wherfore these premises cōsidered my question is to aske of you know what iust or reasonable cause ye haue of these your vnreasonable doinges of this your so mortall and deadly hatred fury and malice you beare agaynst these your euenchristened of these your tumultes coniurations gaping and hoping rebellions mutteringes murders wherewith you trouble and disquiet the whole world Of all which mischiefes if the true cause were well known the truth would be found doubtles to be none other but onely the priuate cause of the Bishop of Rome that he is not receiued and the dignity of his Church exalted Touching which cause how vnreasonable and vniust it is more shal be sayd the Lord willing in reply according as I shal see theyr answere if it shall so please thē or any of thē to answere this question In the meane time this for a briefe note shall suffice that it standeth not with the scripture but contrary to the scripture that the Bishop of Rome should so reuenge his owne priuate cause If his title plantatiō be good of God why doth he not refer it vnto god And no doubt but if it be so God will maintein it though the whole world sayd no. If it be otherwise it will fall be rooted out though all the world sayd yea yea the greatest argument to proue this plantation of the Popes supremacy not to be of God is that the Pope fighting in his owne priuate cause by outward worldly force seeketh his owne glory Christ our sauior being here refused himselfe yet neither reuenged his cause nor sought his owne glory but only the glory will of his father thus speaking of himself Si ego glorifico meipsū gloria mea nihil est pater meus est qui glorificat me c. Ioan. 8. i. If I glorify my selfe my glory is nothing my father is he that glorifyeth me c. Euen so I saye with scripture that if the Popes proc●edings were planted of God he would not so wrastle for his glory as ●e doth But forsomuch as he seeketh by such cruelty and bloudshed to exalt himselfe
occupat ire polo. Hoc pater ipse to●ans flagranti distulit axe Imperia vertit Regna superba solo Saeua Silex quià nam flammantibus incita fundis Vrbium elatis peruiciosaminis Coctilibus muris Romana Semiramis audax Prospice iam Bobylon iam ruit illatua Saxeaiam rupes quantas dabit acta ruinas Quas strages miseris horrida Romulidis Vltimus hic labor est montis rapientis auari Puppicolasque papas papicolasque popas At vos foelices animae quibus aurea cordi Saecla pias puro funditis ore preces Aligeraeque ac●es ciues stellantis Olympi Plaudite Roma fuit Babela papa fuit In sanguisugas Papistas Philippus Stubbes QVi sacrum Christi satagit conuellere verbum Vulnificum contrà calcitrat hic stimulum Florida quae nimio compressa est pondere palma Fortius exurgit viribus aucta suis. Auricomansque crocus quo calcatur magis ex●● Hoc magis excrescit floret eoque magis Sic 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quantumuis turba papalis Conspuat exurat crescit vbique tamen FINIS Actes and Monumentes of Christian Martyrs and matters Ecclesiasticall passed in the Church of Christ from the Primitiue beginning to these our dayes as well in other Countreys as namely in this Realme of England and also of Scotland discoursed at large CHRIST our Sauiour in the Gospell of S. Mathew Cap. 16. hearing the confessiō of Simon Peter who first of all other openlye acknowledged him to be the sonne of God and perceauing the secret had of his father therin aunswered agayne and alludyng to his name called him a Rocke vpon which Rocke hee would buylde his Church so strōg that the gates of Hell should not preuaile against it c. In which wordes three things are to be noted First that Christ will haue a Churche in this world Secondly that the same Church should mightely be impugned not onely by the world but also by the vttermost strength powers of all hell And thirdly that the same Church notwithstādyng the vttermost of the deuill all his malice should continue Which Prophesie of Christ we see wōderfully to be verified In somuch that the whole course of the Churche to this day may seeme nothyng els but a verifying of the sayd Prophesie First that Christ hath set vp a Church needeth no declaration Secondly what force what sides and sortes of men of Princes Kynges Monarches Gouernours and rulers of this world with their subiectes publikely priuately with all their strength cunnyng haue bent them selues against this Church And thirdly how the sayd Church all this notwithstandyng hath yet endured holden his owne What stormes tempestes it hath ouerpast wonderous it is to behold For the more euident declaration wherof I haue addressed this present history entendyng by the fauorable ayde of Christ our Lord not so much to delight the eares of my countrey in readyng of newes as most especially to profite the harts of the godly in perusing antiquities of auncient times to the ende that the wonderfull workes of God first in his Church might appeare to his glory Also that the continuaunce and proceedings of the Church from tyme to tyme beyng set forth in these Actes and Monumentes more knowledge and experience may redound therby to the profite of the Reader and edification of Christian faith For the better accōplishyng wherof so to prosecute the matter as may best serue to the profite of the Reader I haue thought good first begynnyng from the tyme of the primitiue Church so continuyng by the Lordes grace to these latter yeares to runne ouer the whole state and course of the Church in generall in such order as digesting the whole tractation of this history into fiue sundry diuersities of tymes First I will entreat of the suffring tyme of the Church which continued from the Apostles age about .300 yeres Secondly of the florishyng time of the Church which lasted other 300. yeares Thirdly of the declinyng or backeslidyng tyme of the Church which comprehendeth other 300. yeares vntill the loosing out of Sathan which was about the thousand yeare after the ceasing of persecution During which space of tyme the Church although in ambition pride it was much altered from the simple sinceritie of the Primitiue tyme yet in outward profession of doctrine and religion it was somethyng tollerable had some face of a Church notwithstanding some corruption of doctrine with superstition and hypocrisie was then also crept in And yet in comparison of that as followed after it might seeme as I sayd somethyng sufferable Fourthly foloweth the tyme of Antichrist and loosing of Sathan or desolation of the Church whose full swyng conteineth the space of 400. yeares In which tyme both doctrine and sinceritie of life was vtterly almost extinguished namely in the chiefe heades and rulers of this West church through the meanes of the Romaine Byshops especially countyng from Gregory the vij called Hildebrand Innocentius the iij. and Friers which with him crept in til the tyme of Iohn Wickliffe Iohn Husse duryng 400. yeres Fiftly and lastly after this tyme of Antichrist raigning in the Church of God by violence and tyranny followeth the reformation purgyng of the church of God wherein Antichrist begynneth to be reuealed and to appeare in his coulors and his Antichristian doctrine to be detected the number of his Church decreasing and the number of the true Church increasing The durance of which tyme hath continued hetherto about the space of 280. yeres and how long shall continue more the Lord and gouernour of all tymes he onely knoweth For in these fiue diuersities alterations of tymes I suppose the whole course of the Church may well be comprised The which Church because it is vniuersall and sparsedly through all countreys dilated therfore in this history standing vpon such a generall argument I shall not be boūd to any one certaine nation more then an other yet notwithstandyng keepyng mine argument aforesayd I haue purposed principally to tary vpon such historicall actes and recordes as most appertaine to this my country of England and Scotland And for somuch as the Church of Rome in all these ages aboue specified hath chalenged to it selfe the supreme title and ringleadyng of the whole vniuersall Church on earth by whose direction all other Churches haue bene gouerned in writyng therfore of the Church of Christ I can not but partly also intermedle with the actes and proceedynges of the same Church for somuch as the doynges orderyngs of all other Churches from tyme to tyme as well here in England as in other nations haue this long season chiefly depended vpon the same Wherfore as it is much needefull and requisite to haue the doynges orderyngs of the sayd Church to be made manifest to all Christen congregations so haue I framed this history accordyng to the same purpose First in a generall description briefly to
wherein they haue made manifest defection from the old faith of Rome as in depriuing the Church of one kinde of the Sacrament in taking from the people the knowledge and reading of Gods word in praying and speaking to the people and administring sacramentes in a tongue vnknowne in mistaking the authoritie of the keyes in their vnwritten verities in making the authority of scripture insufficient in vntrue iudgement of the Churche and the wrong notes of the same in the supremacy of the sea of Rome in their wrong opinion of Antichrist But because these with all other partes of doctryne are more copiously and at large comprehended in other bookes both in Latine and Englishe set foorth in these our dayes I shall not need further herein to trauell especially seeing the contrariety betweene the Popes Church and the Church of Christ betweene the doctrine of the one and doctrine of the other is so euident that he is blind that seeth it not and hath no handes almost that feeleth it not For briefely in one note to comprehende which may suffice for all where as the doctrine of Christ is altogether spirituall consisting wholy in spirite and veritie and requireth no outwarde thing to make a true Christen man but onely Baptisme which is the outwarde profession of fayth and receauing the Lordes supper let vs now examine the whole religion of this latter Church of Rome and we shall finde it wholy from toppe to toe to consist in nothing els but altogether in outwarde and ceremoniall exercises as outward confession absolution at the Priests hand outward sacrifice of the Masse buying of pardons purchasing of obites externe worshipping of Images and reliques pilgrimage of this place or that building of Churches founding of Monasteries outward workes of the law outwarde gestures garments colours choise of meates difference of times and places peculiar rytes and obseruauncies set prayers and number of prayers prescribed fasting of vigiles keeping of holidayes comming to Church hearing of seruice externe succession of Bishops and of Peters sea externe forme and notes of the Church c. so that by this religion to make a true Christian and a good Catholike there is no working of the holy Ghost almost required As by example to make this matter more demonstrable let vs here define a Christen man after the Popes making whereby we may see the better what is to be iudged of the scope of his doctrine A Christen man after the Popes making defined AFter the Popes Catholike Religion a true Christen man is thus defined first to be baptised in the Latine tongue where the Godfathers professe they can not tell what then confirmed by the Byshop the Mother of the childe to be purified After he be growen in yeares then to come to the Church to keepe his fasting dayes to fast the Lent to come vnder benedicite that is to be confessed of the Priest to doe his penance at Easter to take his rites to heare Masse and diuine seruice to set vppe candels before Images to creepe to the Crosse to take holy bread and holy water to go on processiō to cary his palmes candle and to take ashes to fast the Ember daies Rogation daies vigiles to keepe the holy dayes to pay his tithes and offeringe daies to go on pilgrimage to buy pardons to worship his maker ouer the Priestes head to receaue the Pope for his supreame head and to obey his lawes to receaue S. Nicolas Clerks to haue his beades to giue to the high altar to take orders if he will be Priest to saye his Mattens to sing his Masse to lift vp fayre to keepe his vow and not to marry When he is sicke to be anneeld and take the rites of holy Church to be buried in the church yard to be rong for to be song for to be buried in a Fryers coule to finde a soule Priest c. All which pointes being obserued who can denie but this is a deuoute man and a perfecte Christian Catholike and sure to be saued as a true faithfull childe of the holye mother Church Now looke vpon this definition and tell me good reader what faith or spirite or what working of the holye Ghost in all this doctrine is to be required The grace of our Lord Iesus giue the true light of his Gospell to shine in our hartes Amen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ¶ The first booke contayning the 300. yeares next after Christ. THese things before premised hauing thus hitherto prepared the way vnto our story let vs nowe by the grace and speede of Christ our Lord enter into the matter that as we haue heretofore set forth in a generall descriptiō the whole state as wel of the primitiue as of the latter times of this Church of Rome so now consequently to discourse in particular sort the Actes and doings of euery age by it selfe in such order as is afore prefixed First to declare of the suffering time of the Church which conteineth about the time of three hundreth yeares after Christ. Secondly the florishing growing time of the same conteyning other 300. yeares Thirdly the declining time of the Church and of true Religion other 300. yeares Fourthly of the time of Antichrist raigning raging in the Church since the loosing of Sathan Lastly of the reforming time of Christes Church in these latter 300. yeares In the tractation of all which things our chiefe purpose and indenor shal be so neare as the Lord will giue vs grace not so much to intermedle with outward affaires of Princes or matters ciuile except somtime for example of life as specially minding by the helpe of the Lorde to prosecute such thinges which to the Ecclesiasticall state of the Church are appertaining as first to entreat of the stablishing of Christian faith then of the persecutions of tyraunts the constancy and patience of Gods Saintes the first conuersion of Christen Realmes to the faith of Christ namely of this Realme of England Scotland first beginning with king Lucius and so forwarde following the order of our English kings here in this land to declare the maintenaunce of true doctrine the false practise of Prelates the creping in of superstition and hipocrisie the manifold assaultes warres and tumults of the princes of this world against the people of God Wherein may appeare the wonderfull operation of Christes mightie hand euer working in his church neuer ceasing to defend the same against his enimies according to the verity of his owne word promising to be with his Church while the worlde shal stand so as by the proces of this story may welbe proued and be testified in the sequell thereof In the traction of all which things 2. especiall pointes I chiefly commend to the reader as most requisite and nenessary of euery Christen man to obserue to note for his owne experience and profite as first the disposition nature of this worlde secondly the nature
more griefe to me yet some solace it was to me that the brethren told me it was neare to a Citie named Paraetonium For as my being at Cephrō got me the acquaintaunce of manye brethren of Egypt so my hope was that the vicinitie of that place where I shoulde be to the Citie might procure the familiaritie and concourse of certaine louing brethren which would resort and assemble with vs and so it came to passe c. Moreouer the said Dionysius in his Epistle ad Domi●ium Dydymū making mention of them whiche were afflicted in this persecution of Valerian recordeth in these wordes saying it were superflous saith he here to recite the names peculiarly of all our brethren slaine in this persecution which both were manye and to me vnknowne But this is certaine that there were men wemen younge men maydens olde wiues souldiers simple innocentes and of all sortes and ages of men Of whome some with ●courginges and fire some with sworde obtained victorye and got the crowne Some continued a great time and yet haue bene reserued In the whiche number am I reserued hetherto to some other oportune tyme knowen vnto the Lord which sayth In the time accepted I haue he●rde thee and in the daye of saluation I haue helped thee c. Nowe as concerning my selfe in what state I am if thou desire to know first howe I and Caius and Faustus Petrus and Paulus being apprehended by the Centurion were taken away by certayne of the towne of Mareote I haue declared to you before Now I and Caius and Petrus alone are left here included in a west place of Libya distant the space of thre daies iou●ney from Paraetonium c. And in processe farther he addeth In the Citie saith he were certaine priuily which visite the brethren of Priestes Maximus Dioscorus Demetrius and Lucius For they which were more notable in the world Faustinus and Aquilla do wander abroade in Egipt Of the Deacons besides them whō sicknes hath consumed Faustus Eusebius Cheremon are yet alyue Eusebius hath God raised and stirred vp to minister to the confessours lying in bandes and to burye the bodies of the blessed Martirs not without great perill Neither doth the President cease yet to this day cruellye murderyng such as be brought afore him some tearynge with torments some imprisoning and keeping in custody commaunding that no man should come to them inquyring also who resorted vnto them Yet notwithstanding God with chearefulnes and dailye resorte of the brethren doth comfort the afficted Haec Dionysius Concerning these deacons aboue recited here is to be noted that Eusebius afterward was made Bishop of Laodicia in Syria Maximus the Priest aforesaide had the mynistration of the Church of Alexandria after Dionysius Faustus long after continued in great age vnto the latter persecution where he being a very old man at length was beheaded and died Martyr As touching Dionysius him selfe thus the stories report that he suruiuing all these troubles and persecutiōs by the prouidence of God continued after the death of Valerian vnto the xij yeare of the raigne of Galienus whiche was about the yeare of our Lord. 268. and so departed in peace in great age after that he had gouerned the Church of Alexandria the space of xvij yeares before that had taught the schole of the sayd Citie of Alexandria the terme of xvj yeares After whom succeeded Maximus as is aboue specified And thus much touching the full storie of Dionysius Alexandrinus and of other also Martyrs and Confessours of Alexandria In Caesaria Palestine suffered also the same time Priscus Malchus and Alexander the which three dwelling in the countrey and good men seing the valiaunt courage of the Christians so boldly to venter constantly to stand and patiently to suffer in this persecutiō as men being greued with them selues began to repent accuse their so great sluggishnes and cowardly negligence to see other so zealous valiant themselues so colde faint harted in laboring for the crowne of Christian martyrdome first consulting and agreing within themselues came to Cesarea there stepping to the Iudge declared thēselues what they were obtained the end they came for being giuen to the wilde beasts After which like maner also and in the same Citye of Cesarea a certaine woman whose name Eusebius expresseth not who had beene before of the secte of Marcion was brought before the President and likewise obtayned the same Martyrdome Euseb. Lib. 7. cap. 12. Neither was the citie of Carthage all this while free from the stroke of this persecution if credit should be giuē to the speculatiue glasse of Vincentius who cyting out of Hugo recordeth of 300. Martyrs of which 300. Martyrs the history saith thus that the President setting before the cooles and incense to doe sacryfice by a lyme kilne which was there neere at hand offred vnto them this condition either to set incense to the coales for sacrifice to Iupiter or els to go into the fornace of lyme wherupon they altogether with a generall motion sodenly rushed into the kilne and ther with the dusty smoke of the lime were smothered Vincent Erford In Aphrica also in the City of Tuburba the sayd Vincētius out of the Martyrologe inferreth mention of thre constaunt virgins Maxima Donatilla and Secunda who in the persecution of this Valerian and Galienus first had giuen for their drinke vinager and gaule then with scourges were tried after that vpon the gibbet were tormented rubbed with lime then were scorched vpon the fiery gridirō at last were cast to the wilde beastes who being not touched of them finally with the sword were beheaded Vincent Erfor In Symela a City in Italy vnder the Alpes one Pontius beyng there apprehended by the commaundement of Claudius the President was hanged first vppon the racke then was cast to the wilde beastes of whom he being nothing hurt was after cōmitted to the fire And finally neither touched therwith if the storye of Vincentius be true was headed by the ryuers side his body throwne into the floude where immediatlye the same houre the foresayde Claudius with his assistant Anabius were taken with wicked spirits by whom they were so miserablye vexed that they byt of their tongues and died Zenon also Byshop of Verona is saide also in the same persecution to sustayne Martyrdome Moreouer in the same Citie of Alexandria aforesayde Bergomensis in his 8. booke writing of the story of Valerianus Emperour maketh mention of Philippus bishoppe of the said sea of Alexandria who as he saith was vnder the sayd Valerian beheaded But that is not to be founde in any approued story nor stādeth with the truth of time that any such Philip then was bishop of Alexandria or any other except onely Dionysius After whom next succeeded Maximus who remained xviij yeares and after him Theonas c. So that by the auncient recordes of
or detract an other Moreouer it is signified to vs also that some there be of them which when they ought like good shepherds to giue their liues for the Lordes flocke yet are puffed vp with such pride that without all reason they presume to rent and teare the Lords flocke with whippings and beatings whose vnreasonable dooynges Saint Gregory bewailing thus saith Quid fiat de ouibus quando pastores lupi fiunt That is what shall become of the sheepe when the pastors themselues be Woolues But who is ouercome but he which exerciseth cruelty Or who shall iudge the persecutor but he which gaue patiently his backe to stripes And this is the frute which commeth to the Church by such persecutors also which commeth to the clergy by such despitefull handling of their Byshoppes or rather Infidels For why may ye not call them Infidels of whome Saint Paule thus speaketh and writeth to Tymothie that in the latter dayes there shall certaine depart from the faith geue heede to spirits of errour and doctrine of deuils of them that speake false through hypocrisie and hauing their consciences marked with an hote yron forbidding to marry and commaunding to abstaine from meates c. And this is if it be well marked the whole handfull of the darnell and cockell growing amongest the corne this is the couente of all madnes that whiles they of the Clergye be compelled to relinquish the cōpany of their own lawful wiues they become afterward fornicators and adulterers with other women and wicked ministers of other sinnefull filthinesse These bee they which bring into the Church of God this heresie as blinde guides leading the blinde that it might be fulfilled which the Psalme speaketh of as foreseeing the errors of such men accursing thē after this maner let their eyes be blinded that they see not bow down alwais their backe For as much then O Apostolical Sir as no man which knoweth you is ignorant that if you through the light of your discretion had vnderstanded and seene what poysoned pestilence might haue come into the Churche thorough the sentence of this your decree they would neuer haue consēted to the suggestions of certaine wicked persons Wherefore we counsell you by the fidelitie of our due subiection that wyth all diligence you would put away so great slaūder from the Church of God and through your discret discipline you will remooue this Pharisaicall doctryne from the flocke of God so that thys onely Sunanite of the Lords vsing no more adulterous husbāds do not separate the holy people and the kingly Priesthoode from her spouse which is Christ through an vnrecouerable diuorsement seing that no man without Chastitie not only in the virgines state but also in the state of matrimony shall see our Lord who with the father and the holy ghost lyueth and raigneth for euer Amen ¶ By this Epistle of Byshop Huldericke aboue prefixed the matter is plaine gentle Reader to conceiue what was then the sentence of learned men concerning the mariage of ministers but that here by the way the Reader is to be admoninished that this Epistle which by errour of the writer is referred to pope Nicholas the first in my mind is rather to bee attributed to the name and tune of Nicolas the 2. or 3. After this pope Nicolas succeded Hadrianus 2. Ioannes ix Martinus ij After these came Hadrian the third and Stephē the v. By this Hadrian it was first decred that no Emperour after that time should intermedle or haue any thing to do in the election of the Pope And thus began the Emperors fyrst to decay and the Papacie to swell and ryse aloft And thus much concerning Romish matters for this time Then to returne where we lefte touching the storye of King Ethelwolfe About the latter ende of his reigne the Danes which before had inuaded the Realme in the time of king Egbert as is aboue declared now made there reentre againe with 33. shippes arriuing aboute Hamshyre through the barbarous tyranny of whō much bloudshed and murther happened here among englishmen in Dorcet shire about Pourtchmouth in Kent in Eastangle in Lindesey at Rochester about London and in Wests●xe where Ethelwolfe the king was ouercome besides diuers other vnder kings and dukes whome the Danes dayly approching in great multitudes in dyuers victories had put to flight At length king Ethelwolfe with his sonne Ethelbaldus warring against them in Southrey at Oclea draue them to the sea where they houering a space after a while brast in againe with horrible rage and crueltie as hereafter Christ willing shall be declared so much as to our purpose shall serue professing in this history to write not of matters externe and politike but onely pertaining to the Church The cause of this great affliction sent of God vnto this realme thus I found expressed and collectlected in a certayne olde wrytten storye which hath noe name the wordes of which writer for the same cause as he thought to recite them writing as he saith ad cautelam futurorum I thought also for the same here not to be omitted albeit in all partes of his commendation I doe not fully with him accorde The wordes of the writer be these In Anglorum quidem Ecclesia primitiua religio clarissime respēduit ita vt Reges Reginae et Principes ac Duces Consules Barones c. In English thus In the primitiue Church saith he of the Englishmen Relygiō did most clerely shine in so much that kings Queenes Princes and Dukes Consuls Barons and Rulers of Churches incensed with the desire of the kingdome of heauen laboring and stryuing among themselues to enter into Monkery into voluntarye exile and solitary life forsoke all and followed the Lord. Where in processe of time all vertue so much decayed among them that in fraude and trechery none seemed like vnto them Neither was to them any thing odious or hatefull but pietie and iustice Neither any thing in price or honor but ciuill warre and sheddyng of innocent bloud Wherfore almighty God sent vpon them pagane and cruell nations like swarmes of Bees which neyther spared women nor children as Danes Norwagians Gothes Sueuians Vandals and Fresians Who from the beginning of the reigne of king Ethelwolfe till the comming of the Normandes by the space neere of 230. yeares destroyed their sinfull land from the one side of the sea to the other from man also to beast For why they inuading England oft times of euery side went not about to subdue and possesse it but onely to spoyle and destroy it And if it had chanced them at any time to be ouercome of Englishmen it auailed nothing when as other nauies still with greater power in other places were ready vpon a sodaine and vnawares to approche vpon them c. Historia Cariana Thus farre haue ye the wordes of mine author declaring the cause which prouoked Gods anger whereunto may be adioyned the wickednes not
maintaining of Monkery falsly being perswaded that remission of theyr sinnes remedy of their soules therein did lie in building monasteries erecting churches and cloysters and in placing monks in the same and such other almes deedes and workes of deuotion Wherin appeareth how ignorāt that time was of the true doctrine of Christes faith and of free grace of the Gospell which promiseth life remedy and iustification not by any deuout merits of oures nor by any workes either of the lawe of God or of the inuentions of man but onely and freely by our faith vpon Christ Iesus the sonne of God in whom only consisteth al the promises of God Amen Nowe remaineth as in the former booke before so in this likewise to prosecute the order race of Archbishops of Canterbury as we haue done the race of kings beginning with Etheredus who succeded next after Celnocke the seuententh Archbishop of that Sea mentioned where we last left before Pag. 131. The names and order of the Archbishops of Caunterburie from the time of king Egbert to William Conquerour 18. Ethelredus 18   19 Pleimūdus 29 This Pleimundus was scholemaster to king Altrede 20. Athelmus 12. 21. Vlfelmus 23   22. Odo 20. By the players of thys Oddo the Monkish stories say that the sworde of King Ethelstane was brought again into his scabberd As touching the Epistle of thys Odo sent to other Byshoppes vide pag. 251. 23. Elfius or Elfinus 1 This Elfius first bishop of Winchester came to the sea of Cant. by the commaundement of King Edgar some say by bribes contrary to the mind of Odo Wherupon in the first day of hys consecration he insulting vppon the tomb of Odo with despite shortly after wēt to Rome for his pal where in his iorny vpon the alps he died for colde in so much that his horses being killed he put in their warme bellies yet could get no heate Malms 24 Dunstan 20. Of this Dunstane many monkish miracles be fained as of the harpe vpon the wall playing by it self Gaudent in Coelis c. of our ladie with her companie appearing to him singing Cantemus domino sociae Cantemus honorem Dulcis amor christi personet ore pio Also of the Angels singing Kyrieleyson c. Item of holding the Deuill by the nose with a paire of tonges tempting him with women Malmes Item of seeing the holy Ghost at his masse in likenesse of a Doue Item in deliuering the soule of Edwine from the Deuill Item in foreseeing the death of King Edred by the death and falling of his horse Item of his mother being great with Dustane when all the candels of others went out her onely candle remained light many other like fables c. ¶ Polydorus maketh Dunstane to be the 23. archb 25. Ethelgarus 1 This Siricus was the counseller to king Egelred to redeme peace of the Danes with a great tribute 26. Elfricus 11 27. Siricius 5 28. Elphegus 6 Elphegus because he denied to paye to the Danes a tribute was stoned to death at Greenewich of some is called a martyr 29. Liuingus 7 30. Egenoldus 17 31. Edsius 11 32. Robertus 2 This Robertus caused Godwine and his sonnes to be banished accusing them of Treason But afterward they being restored he went to Rome and at his returne died 33. Stigandus 17 Stigandus being an English man in the time of W. Conquerour the Normane was by the craft of the sayd William conueied into Normandie where a while with great honour he was entertained At length the sayde William procured secreately the popes letters to depose him that hee might place Lanfrancus in his roume This Stigandus died at length in prison 34 Lanfrancus 19 The ende of the thirde Booke THE FOVRTH BOOKE CONTEINING other 300. yeares from William Conquerour to the tyme of Iohn Wickliffe wherein is described the proude and misordered raigne of Antichrist beginning to stirre in the Church of Christ. WILLIAM Duke of Normandie surnamed Conqueror base sonne of Duke Robert the sixth Duke of Normandie nephew vnto king Edward after the foresaid victorie against Harold the Englishmen obtained was receiued king ouer the Realme of Englande not so much by the assent as for feare and necessitie of time For els the Londiners had promised their assistance to Edgar Atheling to the vttermost of their power But being weakened wasted so greatly in battailes before and the Duke comming so fast vppon them fearing not to make their partie good submitted themselues Whereupon the saide William of a Duke made a King was crowned vpon Christmas day the yeare of our Lorde 1067. by the handes of Aldredus Archb. of Yorke Forsomuch as at that time Stigandus Archb. of Canterb. was absent or els durst not or woulde not come in the presence of the king A litle before the comming in of this Duke a terrible blasing starre was seene the space of 7. daies which was the yere before In record wherof as well of the conquest of the Duke as of the blasing starre these verses yet remaine Sexagenus erat sextus millesimus annus Cum pereunt Angli stella monstrante cometa Which king thus being crowned did reigne ouer the realme of England the space of 21. yeres and one moneth with great seuerity cruelnes towarde the Englishmen burdening them with great tribute and exactions which was to pay of euery hide of grounde containing 20. acres 6. shillings By meane wherof certaine parties of the land rebelled and specially the citie of Exceter But at last William ouercame them and wan the city and punished them grieuously But for that for other sterne deedes of William diuers of the Lordes departed to Scotland wherfore he kept the other Lordes that taried the straiter and exalted the Normanes geuing to them the chiefe possessions of the land And for so much as he obteyned the kingdome by force and dent of sword he chaunged the whole state of the gouernance of this common weale and ordeined new lawes at his owne pleasure profitable to himself but greuous hurtful to the people abolishing the lawes of king Edward Wherunto notwtstanding he was sworn before to obserue maintaine For the which great commotions and rebellions remained long after among the people as hystories record to haue the sayd lawes of king Edwarde reuiued againe Ouer and besides this he builded 4. strong castles 2. at Yorke one at Notingham another at Lincolne which garrisons he furnished with Normanes About the third yere of his reigne Harold Canutus sonnes of Suanus King of Denmarke entered into the North countrey The Normanes wythin Yorke fearing that the Englishmen woulde aide the Danes fired the suburbes of the towne wherof the flame was so big and the winde so strong that it tooke into the city and brent a great part therof with the minster of S. Peter Where no doubt many worthy workes and
doings of whom you as a beardles boy of smal knowledge haue not rightly conceiued who in dede despising Princes comandements haue deserued euerlasting reward Wherby is to be noted what difference is to be sent betweene the hose of Princes then and the hose of seruingmen now There is a certaine Chronicle in olde English meter which among other matters speaking of William Rufus declareth him to be so sumptuous excessiue in poinpous apparel that he being not contented with a paire of hose of a lowe price which was iii. shillings caused a paire to be bought of a marke whereupon his chamberlaine procuring a paire much worse then the other before sayd That they costenid a marke and vnneth he them so bought Ye belamy quoth the king these are well bought Appendix Historiae After the tune of this king William the name of kings ceased in the country of Wales among the Britaines since king Ris. who in the raigne of this king the yeare of oure Lorde 1093. was slaine in Wales Ex continuatione Roger. Houeden King Henry the first HEnry first of that name the third sonne of W. Conquerour succeeding his brother Rufus began his raigne in England the yere of our Lord 1100. who tor his knowledge science in the 7. liberal arts was surnamed Clerke or bewclerke In whome may wel appeare howe knowledge and learning doth greatly conduce to the gouernement and administration of any realme or country At the beginning he reformed the state and condition of the clergie released the grieuous paiments reduced againe king Edwards laws with emendation therof he reformed the old and vntrue measures made a measure after the length of his arme he greatly abhorred excesse of meats drinks many things misused before his time he reformed and vsed to vanquish more by counsaile then by sworde Suche persons as were nice and wanton he secluded from hys court This man as appeareth litle fauoured the vsurped power of the Bishop of Rome Soone after he was King he maried Matilde or Maude daughter of Malcolin king of Scots and of Margaret his wife daughter of Edward the Dutlaw as is before specified being a profesied Nunne in Winchester whom notwithstanding wont the popes dispensation he maried by the consent of Anselme By the which Maude he receaued 2. sonnes William and Richard 2. daughters Maude Mary which Maude afterward was maried to Henry the v. Emperour c. In the second yere of his reigne Robert his elder brother Duke of Normādy who being occupied in the Christen warres against the Turkes and being elect as yee heard king of Hierusalem hearing of the death of Rufus refused the kingdom therof For the which as is thought he neuer sped wel after Thus the saide Robert leauing of the Lordes busines and returning into Normandy made there his preparation and came ouer into England with a great hoste to chalenge the Crowne But by mediation of the Lordes it was agreed that Robert shoulde haue yearely during his life iij. M. markes as was likewise promised him before by R. Rufus his brother And whether of them ouer liued the other to be others heyre And thus Robert departed again vnto Normādy to the great discontentation of his Lords there But in few yeares after the forenamed tribute of iij. M. Markes through the meanes of Queene Maude was released to the King his brother In proces of time variance falling betwene king Henry and the sayd Robert his brother at length Robert in his warre was taken prisonner and brought ouer into England was put into the Castel of Cardise in Wales where he continued as prisoner while he liued In this time as about the iij. yeare of this king the hospitall of S. Bartholomewe in Smithfield was founded by meanes of a minstrell belonging to the King named Rayer And after was finished by Richard Whittyngton Alderman and Maior of London This place of Smithfield was at that day a lay stowe of all ordure or filth the place where the felones other transgressors of the kings lawes were put to execution Diuers strait lawes were by this king prouided especially against theeues and felones that who so were taken in that fault no money should saue him from hanging Item that who so did counterfait false money shoulde haue both his eyes and nether partes of his body cut off Item in the same Councell was decreed an order for Priestes to be sequestred from their wiues whych before were not forbidden according as the wordes of mine author doe purporte whose wordes be these Anselmus prohibuit vxores sacerdotibus Anglorum ante non prohibitas Quod quibusdam mundissimum visum est quibusdam periculosum ne dutrimundicias viribus maiores appeterent in immundicias horrib●les ad Christiani nominis summum dedecus inciderent c. Hen. Hunt Item it was then decreed that Monkes and Priests should beare no rule ouer lay persons Item it was then decreed concerning broydering of heare and wearing of garments Item that the secrete 〈◊〉 act betwene a yong lad and a yong maid should not stand with other things mo concerning the excommunication of Sodomites c. In the storie of William Rūfus before was declared how Anselmus Archbishop of Canterbury departing out of the realme went vnto the Pope who after the death of King William was sent for againe by the foresayde King Henrie and so returned againe and was at the Councell of the King at Westminster where the king in the presence of the Lordes as well temporall as spiritual ordeined and inuested 2. Bishops Roger Bishop of Salisburie Roger bishop of Hereford During which parliament or coūcel of the king Anselmus in his conuocation deposed and displaced diuers Abbots and other Prelates from their roumes and dignitics eitherfor that they lawfully came not by them or vprightly did not administer the same After this councel and the other before set forth by Anselmus Herbert bishop of Norwich had much adoe with the priests of his diocesse For they would neither leaue their wiues nor yet geue ouer their benefices Whereupon hee wrote to Anselme the Archbishop for counsaile what was to be done therein Which Anselme required him as he did other mo the same time by wryting to perswade the people of Norfolke and Southfolke that as they professed Christianitie they shoulde subdue them as rebels against the church and vtterly to driue both them and their wiues out of the countrey placing Monkes in their rowmes as by the Epistles of the said Anselme doth appeare Whereof certaine parcels shall hereafter by the grace of Christ ensue for the better euidence of this and the other his actes aboue recited The like businesse also had Gerarde the Archbishop of Yorke in depriuing the priestes of his prouince from their wiues which thing with all his excommunications and thundrings he coulde hardly bring about Upon this ruffeling of
fayn to post to Rome and there to bring the Archb. in hatred in the Court of Rome made his Abbay tributary to Pope Alexander The Pope well contented with this not onely graunteth the Abbot his desire but also in cōtumely of the archbishop dubbeth the Abbot with all such ornaments as to a Prelate apperteined and so in the yeare 1178. sent home the Abbot triumphantly with his ring and mitre and other ensignes of victory with letters also to the Archbishop inioyning him immediatly vpon the sight thereof to consecrate the Abbot in his own Church without making any profession Although with these letters the archbishop was shrewedly pressed yet notwithstanding hys stout hart would not stoupe for this but layd his appeale against the same and so the consecratiō for that time was suspended Then Roger for his more defence getting the kings letters trauailed vp the second time to Rome where greuously he complayned to Pope Alexander of the Archbyshop At the same time a generall councell was summoned to be kept at Lateran where Richard the foresayd arch bishop was also looked for amongst other Bishops to be present Who thē came as farre as Paris but being there durst approch no further so retyred home again Wherupon the Pope being offended with his contēpt without any more delay exalted the Abbot with his own consecration and inuested him with all pompe and glory howbeit prouiding before that the sayd consecration should redoūd to no preiudice agaynst the liberties of the mother church of Canterbury and so vpon the same wrot to the Archbishop his letters of certificate with this additiō annexed Saluo iure dignitate Cant. Ecclesiae that is to say Sauing the liberties and dignity of the Church of Cant. c. After the counsell ended Roger the Abbot returneth home although with an empty purse yet full of victory triūph The Archbishop againe thinking to worke some greuaunce to the Austen Monkes had procured in this meane time letters from Pope Alexander to the Bishop of Durhā and Abbot of S. Albons that they should cause the sayd Roger Abbot of the Austen monks to shew vnto the Archbishop at y● old priuiledges of his house which in deed being shewed seemed to be rased new written with Bulles of lead not after the maner nor stile of that age nor pretending no such antiquity as should seeme to reach frō the time of Austen but rather newly coūterfeit All this notwithstanding the Abbot bearing him bold vpon the Popes fauour ceased not stil to disquiet ouercrow the Archbishop by all wayes he could in exempting all his Priestes and laimen belonging to his iurisdiction from the archb obedience forbidding also that none of his should come to his Chapters or Sinods nor to feare any sentence of his curse or excommunication Wherupon the Archbishop about the month of Nouember the same yere sayling ouer to Normandy where the king was thought to take his iourney to the pope to complain of the Abbot but being stayd by the king was not suffered to passe any further the king labouring what he could to bring them to agreement neuerthelesse the Pope and his Romaines sayth my story Aurum argentum magis quàm iusticiam sitientes seditiones inter eos litigia commouebant that is caring more for golde and siluer then for iustice still stirred coales of sedition and debate betweene them Ex Historia Geruasij The next yere after this insuing which was the yeare of our Lord 1184. dyed Richard the Archbishop aforesaid in the 38 yere of king Henry 2. After whose dicease much trouble happened about the election of a new Archb. betwene the king and monkes of Canterbury And now to enter here into the story of Baldwin aboue mētioned first the king sēt to the monks that they should consider with themselues about the election of their Archbishop and to be ready agaynst the time that he would send for them to the court Vpon this the Couent gladly assembling together agreed in themselues vpon one whom they thought chiefly to preferre yet naming foure moe that if the king would refuse one the other yet might stand Now the practise in the monkes was first to keepe the election only in their owne handes as much as they could And secondly euer to geue the election either to some Prior or Monk of their own house or to some Abbot or Bishop which some time had bene of theyr company Wherby as much inconuenience and blind superstition was bred in the church of England so the same disliked both the king and the Byshops not a litle As this past on the king when he saw his time willed the monks of Canterbury to be cited or sent for to vnderstand what they had concluded in their election Wherupō the Monkes sent vp their Prior called Alanus with certaine other Monks to Reding where the king thē lay about the moneth of August Who at first were curtuously enterteined but after the king had intelligēce whom they had nominated elected they were sēt home agayne with cold cheare the king willing thē to pray better and to aduise more earnestly vpon the matter amongst themselues Alanus the Prior with his felowes thus departed who comming home in conclusion so concluded amongst them selues that they would remitt no iote of their liberties to the king without the popes consent and knowledge The king vnderstanding hereof sent his Ambassadours likewise to the Pope for the fortefying of his cause being in that mean time grieuously offēded with the Prior saying that he was proud would make archbishop whom he listed and would be the second Pope in England c. Not long after this as these letters were sent vp to Rome the king sent for Alanus the Prior and moe of the monks to come to him Whom he entreateth desiring thē in gentle speech that they would shew so much gentlenes fauor to him being their Lord King as becōmeth hys frendes and subiects to doe as to conferre with the Byshops of the Realme about this matter and to take some better councel so as might redoūd to Gods glory his honor wealth of the publicke state with other like words to the same effect To whom when the Prior agayne had answered with thankes due reuerence according to the kinges request the Bishops and Monks went to confer together about the matter And first the Bishoppes maruelled why the monks should exclude them out of the election seing they were professed Suffraganes to the sayd church of Canterbury Neither is there any Prince quoth the bishop of Bathe that will refuse our counsell There be some counsels sayd the Monkes whereat you may be called but as touching the doing of this electiō it pertaineth nothing vnto you further then to publish onely and denounce y● party whō we haue chosen The bishop of London then asked if
by s. Peter thou shalt not so soone at my hande obteine the benefite of absolution for why thou hast not only done harme to the K. of Englād but also thou hast in a great many of thinges iniured the church of Rome here therfore thou shalt tary my leyser The archb was also at that time suspended out of the Church and commanded to say no masse at all neither yet to exercise any other ecclesiasticall office because he would not at time cōuenient execute the popes curse vpon the rebellious Barons With them the said pope had ben so depely offended angred a litle before that the great charter of the liberties of England with great indignation countenance most terrible he rent and destroyed by sentence definitiue condemning it for euer And by and by therupon cursed all the other rebels with booke bel and candle The greater captaines of them with the citizens of London for that assay were pronounced excōmunicate by name remained still interdicted They appealed then to the councel general In the same yere 1215. were those great men also summoned to appear at Rome in that general Sinode which would not consent to their kings expulsion nor yet tirannical deposing Though they were called they sayd therunto by the Archb. of Cant. and others and required by othe to subscribe to the same yet coulde they not of conscience do it because he had humbled himselfe and also granted to keepe peace with all men Thus was the whole realme miserably then deuided into two factions through malice of the clergie so strifes encreased in the lande euery where Yet were there of the Lordes gentlemen a great number at that time that followed the king and alowed his doings But they which were on the otherside not a little suspecting the state that they were in fled speedely to the French K. Phillip desiring him that he would graunt to them his eldest sonne Ludowike and they would elect him to be their K. and that without much tariance They besought him moreouer that he would sende with him a strong and mighty power as were able to subdue him vtterly that they might they said be deliuered of such a wicked tyrant Such was the reporte that those most wicked papists gaue their christian gouernor appoynted to them of God whome they ought to haue obeyed though he had bene euill euen for very conscience sake Rom. 13. And as certaine of the Lords and Barons were busie to chuse the sayde Ludowike for their king the Pope sent thether one Gualo the Cardinal of S. Martin to those rash and cruel attempts charging the French king vpon his allegeance that he with all power possible should fauour maintaine and defend king Iohn of England his feudary or tenant The French king therto made answer as one not cōtented with that arrogant precept The realme of Englande sayd he was neuer yet any part of S. Peters patrimony neither is it now nor yet any time shal be hereafter Thys spake he for that he was in hope to obtain it for his sonne by treason of the Barons No prince of potentate said Phillip the French king may pledge or geue away his kingdome which is beside the realme the gouernment of his whole cōmon wealth wtout the lawful consent of his Barons which are bound to defend the same If the pope shal introduce or set vp such a president in christianitie he shall at his pleasure bring all christian kings and their kingdoms to naught I like not this example in these daies begon I cānot therfore allow this fact of king Iohn of England though he be my vtter aduersarie yet I much lament that he hath so endamaged his realme hath brought that noble ground and Duene of prouinces vnder miserable tribute The chiefe Lordes and men of his nobilitie stāding by when he vttred these wordes being as it were in a fury cried with one voyce By the blud of God in whom we trust to be saued we wil sticke in this article to the loosing of our heads Let the K. of England do therein what him liketh no king may put his land vnder tribute so make his nobility captiue seruants with that came in Ludowike the kings eldest sonne and so sayd vnto them all there present I beseeche you let not my purposed iourney The Barons of England haue elected me for theyr Lorde and king and I will not surely lose my right but I wil fight for it euen to the very death yea so long as hart shall stir within my brest and I doubt not but I shall well obtaine it for I haue frendes among them Hys father the king stoode still as he had bene in a dompe answered neuer a word but fared as though he had dissembled the matter Be like he mistrusted some thing therein as he might well inough for all was procured by the priestes that they might liue licentiously in all wealth and fredome from the kings yoke About the same time were such treasons and conspiracies wrought by the Bishops Priestes and Monkes throughout all the realme that the king knew not where to become or finde trusty frendes he was then compelled by the vncertaintie of his subiectes to trauaile from place to place but not without a great armie of men looking euery day when his Barons their confederates would cruelly set vpon him At last he came to Douer and there looked for aide from other quarters which loued him better then did hys owne people And thether to him resorted from Flaunders Brabant Holland on the one side and from Guiane Gascoine Poitiers on the other side and from other countries more a wonderfull number of men The report then went that the pope had wrytten to those countreis mightely to assist him for diuers cōsiderations one was for that he had both submitted himselfe and hys dominion to his protection An other was because he had taken on him a little before the liuery of the crosse to win againe Hierusalem The third was for that he had gotten by him the dominion of England and Ireland and feared to lose both if he should chance to decay For the space of 3. moneths he remained in the Isle of Wight abroade in the aire to quiet himself for a time from al manar of tumults and led there a solitary life among riuers and watermen where as hee rather counted to die then to liue being so traiterously handled of his Bishops and Barons and not knowing howe to be iustly aduenged of them Uppon the Purification day of our Lady therfore he tooke vpon him the crosse or viage against the Turks for recouery of Hierusalem mooued therunto rather for the doubts which he had of his people then for any other deuotion else And thus he said to his familiar seruāts since I submitted my selfe and my lands England and Ireland to the church of Rome sorow come to it neuer thing
sending playne word to the king by solemne message that his grace without all delay should seclude frō him Peter B. of Winchester and other aliens of Pictauia or if he would not they with the common assent of the realme would displace him with his wicked councellours from his kingdome and haue within themselues tractation for choosing a new king The king at the hearing of this message being mightely moued partly to feare partly to indignation especally hauing the late example of king Iohn his father before his eyes was cast in great perplexity doubting what was best to be done But Winchester with his wicked councell so wrought with the king that he proceeded with all seuerity agaynst them In so much that in short time the sparkles of poisoued coūcell kindling more and more grew to a sharpe battayle betweene the king and Richard Earle Marshall with other nobles to the great disquietnesse of the whole Realme The which warre before was presignified by terrible thundering and lightning heard al england ouer in the moneth of march with such aboundaūee of raine and flouds growing vpon the same as cast down milnes ouercouered the fields threw downe houses and did much harine through the whole Realme To prosecute here at large the whole discourse of thys warre betwene the king and Earl Marshall which continued neare the space of two yeares to declare all the parts and circumstances thereof what trouble it brought what damage it wrought to the whole realm what traines were layd what slanghter of men what waste of whole countryes ensued from Wales vnto Shrewsbery how the marshall ioyned himselfe with Leoline Prince of Walles how the Pictauians were almost all slayne destroyd how the king was distressed what forgery wily wint wrought by the kings letters to entrap the Marshall to betray him to the Irishmen among whom he was at length slayne all this I referr to other authors Who at large do entreat of the same as Math. Parisiens Florilegus such other This is to be noted and obserued whithe rather perteineth to our Ecclesiasticall history to see what sedition and continuall disquietnes was in those dayes among all Christen people almost being vnder the popes Catholick obediēce But especially to marke the corrupt doctrine then reigning it is to be maruelled or rather lamented to see the king and the people then so blinded in the principall point and article of their saluation as we finde in storyes which making mention of a house or Monastery of Conuertes builded the same yeare by the king at London do expres in playne wordes that he then did it Pro redemptione animae suae Regis Ioannis patris sui omnium antecessorum suorum i. For the redemptiō of his soule of the soule of king Iohn his father for the soules of all his auncieers c. Whereby may be vnderstand in what palpable darknes of blind ignoraunce the sely soules redeined by Christ were then inwrapped which did not know nor yet wee taught the right doctrine and first principles of their redemption Ex Math. Parisien sipag 86. Mention was made a litle before pag. 275. of dissoluing the election of Iohn Prior of Cāterbury which was chosen by the Monkes to be Archbishop of the sayd churche of Canterbury but by the pope was defeited After whom one Iohn Blūd was elected who trauelling vp to Rome this yeare an 1233. to be confirmed of the Pope was also repealed and vnetected agayne for that it was thought in England so complayned of to the Pope that he had receiued of Peter Bishop of Winchester a thousand markes and had another thousand promised him of the sayd Winchester who by his mony thought to make him of his side and also wrote to the Emperor to helpe forward his promotion in the court of Rome Notwithstanding both he with his geuing and the other with his taking of bribes were both detected and disapoynted of theyr purpose For the Pope hating then the Emperour for the same cause admitted not the election pretending the cause for that he was proued to holde to benefices without his dispensation After whom by the commaundement of the Pope one Edmund Chanon of Salisbury was ordeyned Archbyshop and had his Palle sent to him from the Pope which Edmunde after for his vertues was Canonised of the Popishe Monkes there for a Saynte and called S. Edmund About which time also Robert Brosted was made B. of Lincolne This Edmund accompanied with other Byshoppes during this trouble betwene the king and his nobles being in councell at Westminster in the yeare next ensuing which was 1234. came vetering their minde boldely in the name of the Lords declaring vnto the king as became his saythfull seruantes that his councell which then he folowed was not found nor safe but cruell and daungerous both to him and to the state of the Realme meaning the councell of Peter Winchester and of Peter Riuall with other adherentes 1. FIrst and in primis for that they hate and contemne the English nation calling them traitours and rebels and turning the kings heart from the loue of hys naturall subiectes and the hartes of them from hym as appeareth by the Earle Marschal and other sowing discorde among them 2. Item by the sayd Counsaile to wit by the foresaid bishop and his fellowes king Iohn the kings father lost first the heartes of his Barons after that lost Normandy and afterward other landes also and in the end wasted all hys treasure so that since that tyme the regiment of England had neuer no quiet after 3. By the sayd Counsayle also in their time and memorye the kingdome of England had bene troubled and suspended and in conclusion became tributary she that was before the Prince of Prouincies and so warre insuing vpon the same the sayd Kyng Iohn his father incurred great daunger of death and at last was extinguished lacking both peace of hys kingdome and of his own heart 4. Item by the sayd counsayle the Castle of Bedford was kept long tyme agaynst the king to the great losse both of men treasure beside the losse of Rupella to the shame of the Realme of England 5. Moreouer through their wicked counsayle at this present great perturbation seemed to hang ouer the whole realme for els if it had not bene for their counsayle and that true iustice and iudgement might haue bene ministred vnto the kinges subiects these tumultes had neuer bene stirred and the king might haue had his land vnwasted and his treasure vnconsumed 6. Item in that sayth and alleageance wherwith they were obliged vnto him they protested vnto him that the sayd his councell was not a councell of peace but of deuision and disquietnesse to the end that they which otherwise by peace could not aspire by disturbing and disheriting other might be exalted 7. Item for that all the castles fortes munitions also all the offices of the
and bridle him withall that peace thereby and loue might dwell vppon the face of the earth But alas the B. of Rome sitting in the chaire of peruerse doctrine or pestilence that Pharisee anoynted wyth the oyle of iniquitie aboue the rest of his consortes in this our time which for his abhominable pride is fallen from heauen indeuoureth with his power to destroy and vndoe all and thinketh I beleeue to stellifie againe himselfe there from whence hee fell Hys purpose is to darken and to shadowe the light of our vnspotted life whilest that altering the veritie into lies his Papall letters stuft with all vntruthes are sent into sondry partes of the world of his owne corrupt humor and vpon no reasonable cause blemishing the sinceritie of our Religion The Lord Pope hath compared vs vnto the beast rising out of the sea full of names of blasphemy and spotted like a Lyberd But we say that he is that mōstrous beast of whom it is sayd and of whome we thus read And there shall come an other red horse out of the sea and hee that shall sit on him shall take peace away out of the earth let them therefore that dwell vpon the earth destroy him For since the tyme of hys promotiō he hath not ben the father of mercy but of discord A dilligent steward of desolation in stead of consolation and hath intised all the worlde to commit offence And to take the wordes in right sense and interpretation he is that great Dragon that dath deceiued the whole worlde hee is that Antichrist of whom he hath called vs the forerunner he is that other Balaam hired for money to curse vs the Prince of darcknes which hath abused the Prophetes This is the Aungel leaping out of the sea hauing his Phials fild with bitternes that he may both hurt the sea and the lande the counterfait Vicar of Christ that setteth forth hys owne imaginations He sayth that we doe not rightly beleue in the Christen fayth and that the world is deceiued with three maner of deceiuers which to name God forbid we should open our mouth seeing that openly we cōfesse onely Iesus Christ our Lord and Sauiour to be the euerlasting sonne of God coequall with hys father and the holy Ghost begotten before all worldes and in processe of tyme sent downe vpon the earth for the saluation of mankinde Conceaued not by the seede of man but by the holy Ghost which was borne of the glorious virgin Mary after that suffered and dyed as touching the flesh and by hys Godhead the third day he raysed from death that other nature which he assumpted in the wombe of his mother But we haue learned that the body of Machomet hangeth in the ayre and that his soule is buryed in hell whose works are damnable contrary to the law of the most highest We affirme also that Moyses was the faythfull seruant of God and a true teacher of the law and that he talked with God in mount Sinay vnto whō the Lord sayd Rubrum c. By whō also God wrought miracles in Egipt and deliuered the law written to the Israelites that afterwards with the elect he was called to glory In these and other thinges our enemy and enuier of our state causing our mother the church to accuse her sonne hath written agaynst vs venemous and lying sclaunder and sent the same to the whole worlde If hee had rightly vnderstoode the Apostles meaning he woulde not haue preferred his violent will before reason which beareth such sway with him neither would he haue sēt out his Mandates to the suggestion of those which call light darcknes and euill good whiche suspect hony to be gall for the great good opinion they haue cōceaued of that holy place which in deed is both weak infirm cōuerteth al truth into falshood affirmeth that to be that is not Truly my opinion so indifferent on euery side ought not in any case to be infringed and auerted from the fayth to such enemies of so corrupt a conscience Wherefore we greatly are inforced not a little to meruaile which thing also doth much disquyet vs to see that you which be the pillers and assistentes in office of righteous dealing the Senators of Peters Citie and the principal beames in Gods building haue not quallified the perturbation of so fierce a Iudge as doth the planets of heauē in their kynd which to mittigate the passing swift course of the great orbe or sphere of heauen draw a contrary way by theyr opposite mouinges In very deed our Imperial felicitie hath bene almost euen from the beginning spurned agaynst and enueied at of the papall see and dignitie As Simonides being demanded why he had no mo enemies and enuiers of hys state answered and sayd quia nibil falsciter gessi for because sayth he I haue had no good successe in any thing that euer I tooke in hand And so for that we haue had prosperous successe in all our enterprises the Lordes name be blessed therefore especially in the ouerthrow of late of our rebellious enemies the Lombardes to whom in their good quarrell he promised life and absolution and remission of their sinnes is the cause wherefore this Apostolicall bishop mourneth and lamenteth And now not by your councels I suppose he laboureth to impugne this our felicitie but of hys owne power of bynding losing wherof he glorieth so much he impugneth it But presently where power and habilitie wanteth to redresse there doth abuse take place We see in hym which was so mighty a king and the worthiest prince amongst all the Prophetes to desire craue the restitution of Gods holy spirit when he had polluted the dignitie of hys office But the prouerbe is Vti indissolubilia non solnuntur ita inligabilia non ligantur As thinges indissoluble are not to be losed so thinges that cannot be bound are not to be bound Which thing manifestly is proued in him For why the scriptures of God doe instruct men how to liue they mortifie our soules whiche are immortall and quicken the same whiche are dead for want of lyfe And doubtles he is able to humble and bring downe those that are vnworthy of dignitie as much as him pleaseth and when him pleaseth Doubtlesse if the Byshop of Rome were a true Byshop indeed innocent impolute and not associate with wicked liuers and euill men his life should declare him so to be He would not then be an offerer of dissentious sacrifice but a peaceable offerer of loue charity would cense not with the incense of griefe hatred but with the sweet smelling incense of concord and vnity neither yet would alter suum pontificium in maleficium That is make of a sanctified office an execrable abuse If he were such a Byshoppe as he ought to be he would not wrest or abuse the preaching of the word into the fruite and gayne of his owne dissention neither
declareth to extoll himselfe aboue measure and to oppresse y● few that be godly and to haue many fal●e prophets about him which neglecting the word and the name of Christ do preach extoll him only obscuring the name of Christ. The church of Rome and the Pope he describeth in these words I was praying sayd he on my knees looking vpward to heauen nere to the aulter of S. Iames in Paris on the right side of the aultar saw in the ayre before me the body of a certain high bishop all clothed in white silke who turning his backe on the East lift vp his hand toward the west as the Priestes are wont in theyr Masse turning to the people but his head was not seene And as I was considering aduisedly whether he had any head or no I perceiued a certayne head in him all dry leane withered as though it had bene a head of wood And the spirit of the Lord sayd to me This signifieth the state of the Church of Rome Moreouer the same author in his visions well describing the maner of the schole sophisters and Sorbonists addeth in this wise An other day as I was in like contēplation as before I beheld in spirit and beholde I saw a man apparelled like to the other before which wēt about hauing fine bread and excellent wine that hanged about him on both sides And the same hauing in his hand a lōg and an hard flint stone was gnawing hungerly vpon the same as one being hungry is wont to bite vpon a loafe of bread Out of the which stone came two heads of two serpentes the spirit of the Lord instructing me and saying This stone purporteth the friuilous intricate curious questions wherein the hungry do trauaile and labor leauing the substauntiall foode of their soules And I asked what these two heads did meane And he sayd The name of the one is vaine glory the name of the other is the marring and dissipation of religion Also concerning reformation of the church this vision he declareth It happened as I was sayth he in the same City in the house of a certaine noble man a Britaine and was there speaking with certayne I saw a crosse of siluer very bright much like to the Crosse of the Earle of Tholouse But the 12. apples which did hang beside in the armes of the crosse were very vile like the apples which the sea is wont to cast vp And I sayd what is this Lord Iesu and the spirit answered me This crosse which thou seest is the church which shal be cleare and bright in purenes of life and shall be heard and known all ouer through the shrill voice of the preaching of sincere verity Then being troubled with the apples I asked what these apples so vile did signify and he said it is the humiliation of the Church c. This godly man did forewarne as in a certain chro●ticle is declared how God would punish the simony and auarice of the clergy with such a plague that riuers should runne with bloud c. It is sayd that there is remayning a great volume of his visions whiche are not yet abroad for these that be abroad are but a briefe extract out of hys visions and reuelations After y● we haue thus lōg straid in these forrein stories of Fredericke and in the tractation of other matters pertayning to other countreys Now after this sufficient disgression it is time that we returne to our own country agayne where in folowing the continuatiō of time course of the Church we will now adioyne to these good fathers and writers the history of the learned Bishop of Lincolne named Robert Grosted a man famously learned as that time serued in the three toungs both Latin Greeke and Hebrue also in all liberall sciences whose works Sermons yet this day are extant which I haue seene in the Queenes Maiestyes Library at Westminster wherin is one speciall Sermon writtē and exhibited in foure sundry skrolles to the pope and to other foure Cardinals beginning Dominus noster Iesus Christus c. Nicolas Triuet in his chronicle writing of this bishop affirmeth that he was borne in Suffolke in the Dioces of Northfolke who geuing him the prayse to be a man of excellent wisedome of profound doctrine an example of all vertue witnesseth that he being maister of Arte wrote first a Commentary in librum posteriorum of Aristotle Also that he wrote Tractations de sphera de arte comput And that he set forth diuers books concerning Philosophy Afterward being Doctor in Diuinity and expertly seene in all the 3. tongues drew out sundry Treatises out of the Hebrue gloses also translated diuers works out of the Greeke as namely the Testamentes of the xij Patriarches the bookes of Dionisius commenting vpon the new translation with hys owne glose Haec ille Many other workes and volumes besides were written by the said Grosted as De oculo morali de Dotibus De cessatione legalium paruus Cato Annotationes in Suidam in Boetium De potestate pastorali expositiones in Genes in Lucam with a number mo● besides diuers Epistles Sermons and Inuections sent to the Pope for his vnmeasurable exactions wherwith he ouercharged oppressed the Church of England This godly and learned Bishop after diuers conflicts and agonies sustayned agaynst the Bishop of Rome after the example of Fredericke of Guiliel de sancto amore of Nico Gallus and other after minded at length after great labors and trauells of life finished his course departed at Buckdone in the moneth of Octob. an 1253. Of his decease thus writeth Mat. Parisiens pag. 278. Out of the prison and banishmēt of this world which he neuer loued was takē the holy bishop of Lincolne Robert at his manor of Buck●one in the euen of S. Dionise who was an open reprouer of the Pope and of the King a rebuker of the prelats a corrector of the Monkes director of the Priestes instructor of the clerkes fau●or of scholers a preacher to the people persecutor to the incontinent a diligent searcher of the Scriptures A malle to the Romaines and a contemner of theyr doings c. Haec Mat. what a malle hee was to the Romaines in the sequele hereof Christ willing shall better appeare The story is this It so befell among other dayly and intollerable exactions wherein Pope Innocēt was greuous and iniurious manifold wayes to the Realme of England he had a certaine cosin or nephew so Popes were wont to call theyr sonnes named Fredericke being yet yoūg vnder yeres whom the said Innocent the Pope would needs preferre to be a Canon or Prebendary in the church of Lincolne in this time of Robert Bishop of the sayd Church And vpō the same directed down letters to certayn his factors here in England for the execution thereof The copy of which letter by chaunce yet not by chaunce
the city by the Barons and Citizens for the space of 40. dayes And Octobonus the Legate who for feare was fled into the Tower they narowly layd for that he shoulde not escape At length by the intreaty of the Earle of Gloucester and other Earles that were his friendes both the Barons and Cittizens were pardoned and admitted to the kinges fauour And 4. Byshops and 8. other noble men were chosen such as were at Couentry first nominated that they should order and dispose all matters betweene the King and suche as had lost theyr inheritaunce as also the forme of theyr peace and raunsome And proclamation was made vppon the feast of all Sainctes of perfect peace and record throughout al the Realme The 52. yeare of this king Henries raigue 8. daies after the feast of S. Martin he held a parliament at Marlberge in the yeare of our Lord aboue recited where by the aduise of wise and discrete men with all the consentes of the nobles he ordeined and enacted diuers good and profitable statutes for the reformation and bettering of the state of the realme execution of common iustice which are called the statutes of Marleberge The same yeare vpon S. Gregoryes day Octobonus the Legate called a Councell at London where were fine Archbishops and a great number of Byshops Abbots other Prelates which Councell also within three dayes brake vp agayne The same yeare vpon S. Iohns day the Baptist Edward the kinges sonne diuers other noble men of England took vpon thē the crosse by the legates hands at Northhampton to the reliefe of the holy land and the subuersion of the enemies of the crosse of Christ which done the legate that same yeare wēt out of England not purposing after that to returne agayne This holy Legate sayth mine author whiche might well bee resembled to Lynx the monstrous beast whose quicke sight penetrateth euery thing enrolled to perpetuall memorye the valuation of all the churches in the realme of England so narowly as by any meanes possible be might enquire the certainty thereof The same was he that made all the Cathedral Conuentuall Churches to pay pencions so that those Churches whiche gaue not the vacancie of their benefices to their Clerkes and straungers should pay vnto them a certein yearly pencion during the vacācy of the benefices which they should haue The same yeare died Pope Clement 4. after whose death the Church of Rome was two yeares vacant then was chosen an archdeacon Cardinall whose name was Theardus as hee was taking hys iourny into the holy lande and called hym Gregory the 10. Then also dyd Edmunde Earle of Lancaster and Leicester and seconde sonne of king Henry take to wife the Earle of Albemark his daughter and the Niece of y● Earle of Gloucester at whiche maryage was the king and the Queene and all the Nobilitie of England The same yeare was the body of S. Edward the king Confessour by Walter Gifford Archbishop of Yorke and other Bishops intombed in a new rich Schrine of golde and siluer beset with precious stones in the presēce of Hēry the king of Englād In which yeare also fel great rayne and inundation of waters suche as hath not lightly bene seene which increased and continued the space of 40. dayes and more The same yeare died Walter de Lawile Bishop of Sarum the third day before the nones of Ianuary After whō succeeded Robert of Northampton the Deane of the same Church And because the see of Cant. was then vacant he was confirmed by the Chapter of Canterbury whiche Chapter had alwayes the iurisdiction in spirituall causes during the vacancy of that see in as ample maner as the Byshop hymselfe had beyng aliue After thys the Byshop elect comming thither thinking to haue had hys consecration was notwithstanding put backe for two causes one was for that there was present then no more but one Byshop the other was for that all the other Bishops had appealed that he might not be consecrated to their preiudice that is by the authoritie of the Chapter of Cant. saying that they would not be vnder the obedience of the monks After this solempne Messengers were for this cause sent to the Cardinals of Rome for that then that see of Rome was vacant who receiued aunswere that during the vacation of that see the confirmation and consecration of the Byshop elect pertayned to the foresayd Chapter of Caunterbury The same yeare also was the Lord Henry the sonne heyre of the Lord Richard king of Almayne and brother to king Henry 2. slayne at Uiterbium in a certayne Chappel hearing Masse by the Lord Simō and Buido the sonnes of the Lord Simon Mountfort Earle of Leister During this kinges raigne there was made a great generall expedition of diuers and sondry Christian princes to Ierusalem taking vpon them the Lords character that is the Crosse among whome was also Edward the kings sonne one to the which expeditiō was graunted him a subsidie throughout al the realme And the month of May the yeare of our Lord. 1270. or as sayth Florilogus an 1269. he set forward on his iourny About the time when Prince Edward was preparing his iourny toward Asia Boniface the Archbishop of Canterbury ended his life in the country of Sebaudia goyng belike to Rome or comming thence After whose death the Monks of Canterbury proceeding to a new election grāted by the king agreed vppon the Prior of their house named Adam Chelendene But the king his sonne Prince Edward consenting and speaking in the behalfe of Robert Burnell theyr Chauncellour did sollicite the matter with the Monkes partly intreating partly threatning them to chuse the said Robert to be Archbishop Notwithstanding the Monkes being stoute woulde neyther relent to their curteous request nor yet bow to theyr boystrous threates but constantly persisting in their former election appealed from the king and prince to the Pope Prince Edward being now on his iourny and seing himselfe thus frustrated of the Monkes writeth backe to the king his father deuoutly praying and beseching in no wise to admit the election of the foresayd Monks And so passing to Douer with Hēry the sonne of Rich. his vncle king of Romanes with their wiues tooke their passage in the month of August After this the Prior thus elected as is foretold but not admitted by the king to be Archbishop went vp to Rome In the meane tyme the Monkes in the absence of their elect ordayned one Geoffrey Pomenall to be theyr Official who seing himself aduaunced to that dignity bearing belike some old grudge agaynst the Prior of Douer caused him to be cited vp to appeare in the Chapter house of Canterbury The Prior of Douer seing this citation to be preiudiciall to him and to the Church of Douer whereas the Monkes of Cant. haue no such iurisdiction the see of
it is manifest that he defiled by adultery her first husband yet liuing she beyng worthy to haue the promise of mariage kept vnto her Therefore because that whiche is done agaynst the Lord turneth to the wrong of all men and specially in so great a mischiefe by reason of the consequence by which she is iudged of the people both a woman adultres or defamed I like a bridle Asse by the power of the Lord and not by the voyce of a perfect mā being not able to bear so great a burdé take in hand to rebuke the madnes of the sayd false Prophet Balaam whiche at the instaunce of kyng Balaac 1. of the Prince of deuils whom he serueth and ready to cursie the people blessed of the Lord I beseeche you most excellent Prince and Lord Phillip by the grace of God king of Fraunce that like as the Aungell of God in tyme past mette in the way with a sword drawne the prophet Balaam goyng to curse Gods people so you whiche are vnwilling to execute iustice and therefore like the Aungell of the Lorde and minister of power and office woulde meete with a naked sworde this sayde wicked man whiche is farre worse then Balaam that he performe not that euill whiche he intendeth to the people First I propound that the foresayd man that nameth himselfe Boniface is no Pope but wrongfully keepeth the fear which he hath in deede to the great damage of all the soules of Gods holy Church I say also that his entring was many waies faulty and he entred not in at the doore but otherwaies and therfore is to be iudged a theefe a robber 2. I propound also that the sayde Boniface is a manifest hereticke and vtterly cut off from the body of the holy Church because of many kindes of heresies whiche are to be declared in conuenient tyme and place 3. I propound also that the sayde Boniface is an horrible simoniacall such a one as hath not bin sithens the beginning of the world and the mischiefe of this sinne in him is so notorious to all the world whiche thing is manifest to all that will playnly vnderstand in so much that he beyng openly slaūdered said openly that he could not commit simony 4. I propound also that the sayd Boniface being wrapt in infinite manifest haynous sinnes is so hardened in thē that he is vtterly not possible to be corrected and lying in doungeon of mischiefe so deepe that he may not be suffered any longer without the ouerthrow of the state of the church His mouth is full of cursing his feete and steps are swift to shed bloud He vtterly teareth in peeces the Churches which he ought to cherishe wasting wickedly the goodes of the poore making much of wicked men that geue hym rewardes persecuting the righteous and among the people not gathering but scattering bringing in new sectes of destruction that haue not bene heard of Blaspheming the way of truth and by robbery thinking himselfe equall to that Lord Iesus Christ which is blessed for euer And he beyng most couetous thirsteth for gold couereth gold by some deuise getteth gold of euery people vtterly not regardig the worshipping of God with sayned wordes sometimes by flattering sometimes by threatning sometime by false teaching and all to get mony withall he maketh marchādise of vs all enuying all thinges but hys owne louing no man nourishing warre persecuting hating the peace of his subiectes He is rooted in all vnspeakeable sinnes contrarying and striuing against all the wayes doctrines of the Lord. He is truly the abhomination of the people which Daniel the Lordes Prophet described Therfore I answere that lawes weapons and all the elemēts ought to rise against him which thus ouerthroweth the state of the Church for whose sinnes God plagueth the whole world And finally nothing remaineth to hym being so vnsatiable to satisfie him wtall but onely the vnsatiable mouth of hell and the fire that cannot be quenched continuing for euer Therfore seing that in a generall coūcel it so becommeth and I see this wicked man to be damned which offendeth both God and al men I aske and require as instantly as I can and beseech you my Lord and King aforesaid that ye would declare to the prelates doctours people princes your brethren in Christ chiefly to the Cardinals and all Prelates and call a Councell In the which when this foresaid wicked man is condemned by the worshipfull Cardinals the church may be prouided of a shephearde for that Councell I offer my selfe ready lawfully to pursue the foresaide things And where as the saide man being in highest dignity in the meane time cannot be suspended of hys superiour therefore he ought to be taken suspended in deede for the things aforesaid seing his state is called into iudgement by the meanes aforesaid I beseech and require the said Cardinals by you and I presently require them the church of God that this wicked man being put in prison the Church of Rome may be prouided of a Vicar which may minister those things that shall appertaine vntil the Church of God be prouided of a bishop vtterly to take away all occasion of a schisme And least the saide wicked man should let and hinder the prosecuting therof I require these things of you my Lord king aforesaid affirming you to be bounde to doe this for many causes First for faithes sake Secondly for your kingly dignitie to whose office it belongeth to roote out such wicked men Thirdly for your oth sake which ye made for the defence of the Churches of your Realme which the foresaid rauener vtterly teareth in peeces Fourthly because ye be the patron of the Churches therfore ye are not bound onely to the defence of them but to the calling for againe of their goodes which the foresaide man hath wasted Fiftly ye following the footesteps of your auncetors ought to deliuer your mother the Romish church from so wicked a hand wherein by oppression shee is tied bound I require that a publike instrument may be made of these requestes by the notaries here present vnder the witnes of the worshipfull men that be here present These things were done and spoken as is aforesayd at Paris in the Kings hous● of Lupara After this protestation of master Nagareta immediatly insued the appeale of the king pronoūced and published against the sayd Boniface in forme as foloweth The appeale made by the king and the louers of the Realme against Boniface IN the name of God Amen In the yeare of our Lorde 1303 Indictione prima 13. day of Iune and the 9 yeare of the Popedom of Boniface Pope the 8. By the tenour of this publique instrumēt be it vnto all men knowen that the most noble prince and Lorde Philip by the grace of God king of Fraunce the famous and reuerend fathers in Christ Archbishops Bishops religious men Abbots and Priors here vndernamed in
honour of him and the realme and sayde that hee was certaine that it was knowen to the whole worlde and that hee did maintaine in this matter a iust cause as hee had learned by the agreeable sentence of doctours in Diuinitie and maisters of both Lawes that were borne within his Realme and others which among the Doctors and cunning men of the world were counted of the learned sort and more famous Therefore he required vs all and euery one both Prelates and Barons and other earnestly as our Lord he prayed and gently begged as a friend to consult and take diligent paine that he might ordeine wholsome things both for the keeping of their olde libertie the honour and state of the realme and of the inhabitants therof for the easing of the griefes aforesaid for redressing of the realme and the French Church by our counsaile and his Barons to the praise of Gods name the encrease of the Catholike faith the honour of the vniuersall church and promoting of Gods religion specially seing such griefs were done by his officers others of the Realme to the Churches and churchmen for the which hee purposed a remedy of wholesome correction afore the comming of the foresaid Cardinall would nowe haue put it in execution effectually but that hee might be thought to haue done that for feare or at your commandement which thing ye cannot ascribe to your self Furthermore he wold spend not onely his goodes but also his realme yea his children if the case required and therfore we should regard to be ready with counsell and helpe in season as we are bounde by the duety of fidelitie in these things wherein it is manifest that as all and euery mannes case is handled generally and particularly their cause is promoted and euery mannes owne interest is touched And then hee demaunded by and by to be answered plainely and finally in these things of all and euery one Then the Barons sitting aside with the officers and Proctors aforesaid at the length after they had taken counsell comming to our foresaid Lord the king and praising greatly and hartely thanking him for his laudable purpose and good will answered wyth one voice that for those things they were ready not only to spēd their goods but offered the same goods riches also their persons to death and not to flee any kinde of torment And sayd further with one voice that if our foresaid Lord the king woulde as God forbid suffer or els willingly passe ouer those they thēselues would in no case suffer it Then when answere was asked of vs afterward although we desired longer respite of deliberatiō of the king himself our Lord and of the greatest of the forsayd Barons and that for this intent that in the meane while the Popes letters might haue comen to our Lord the king we answered that we would not offend against the libertie of the realme or by some meanes to innouate thinges contrary to the kings honour in this behalfe We went about also to informe him with many godly words with earnest persuasions and with many kindes of helpe and by sundry wayes to bring him to keepe the speciall bande of vnitie which is knowen to haue continued to these present dayes betwixt the holy Romish church and his predecessours But when we were denied any longer delay and it was plainely and openly tolde to all men that if any man were of a contrary minde from thenceforth he should be manifestly counted for an enemie of the king the realme We considering warely seeing plainely that except our lord the king and the Barons aforesaide were content with our aunswere beside other dangers great offences wherof there could neither be number nor end and that the deuotion both of the Romish and French church and also the whole obedience of the laitie and all the people from thence foorth should be taken away without recouerie not without great feare doubt we thought good to aunswer thus That we would helpe our Lorde the king with due counsaile and conuenient helpe for the preseruing of his person and of his earthly honour and the liberty and lawes of the sayd realme like as we were certaine of vs by the duetie of allegiaunce bound to him which hold of him Dukedomes Earledomes Baronies fees and other noble partes of the saide Realme by the fourme of the othe as all other doe yet wee made humble sute to the same our Lord the king that seeing we were bound to obey the Popes holinesse and your holy feete he would suffer vs to go according to the tenour of your foresaid calling Then on the Kings and Barons behalfe followeth aunswere that in no case they would suffer vs to go out of the Realme and that by no meanes they woulde beare to be handled so daungerously yea rather to be altogether wasted Then we considering so great an anger trouble so ieopardous so great that none could be greater both of the King the Barons other lay people of the realme now knowing plainely that the olde enemie of peace which goeth about from the beginning of his fall with sowing of Darnel to breake the vnitie of the Church by troubling of peace would breake charitie and infect the sweetnesse of good workes with the poyson of bitter enuie and would ouerthrow mankinde vtterly and woulde trouble with wickednesse the band of louely vnitie singular frendship which hitherto haue had a happie encrease betwixt the Romish Church and our Lorde the King and his predecessours and the realme to the praise of the highest God the encrease of Christian faith and the setting foorth the honour of the Church of the king and the realme But nowe alas a dore was open to the lamentable breaking and pitifull separating of great offences to rise on euery side dangers are attempted against Churches and Church-men to spoyle their goods and richesse with ieoperdie of life seeing that the laitie nowe doe abhorre and vtterly flee the obedience of clearkes vtterly banishing them from their counsails and doings and haue taken courage to condemne the Ecclesiasticall censure and processe All which ieoperdies with other sundry and diuers daungers which neither toung is able to tell nor wryting can declare wee seeing at hand● thought good in this poynt of greatest necessity to run with weping voyce lamentable sighes to the circumspect wisdome of your holinesse Beseeching your fatherly mildenes and humbly praying you that some wholesome remedy may be prouided in the premisses By which the sounde profitable agreement and mutuall loue which hath continued so long time betwixt the church the king and the realme myght be maintained in that olde sweete concord the state of the Frenche church might continue in godly and quiet peace that ye woulde vouchsafe to foresee how to withstand the daungers and offences aforesaid that we and our states may be prouided for by the foresaid commaundement of your calling by the studie of your Apostolicall
gouernement of both the states as well secular as also ecclesiasticall The king therfore not suffering the excessiue proceedinges of Pope Clement the 5. aboue specified directeth his letters mandatory to the Prelates and Barons of the realme of Fraūce to connēt assemble themselues together at Paris about the beginning of December the yeare aboue prefixed The tenor of which letters of the king directed to the Prelates followeth in this forme and maner ¶ The Sommons of a Parliament by Philip the French king PHilip by the grace of God king of Fraunce to our welbeloued Bishop of Eduens greeting and salutation Reuerend Father in God right trusty and welbeloued we greete you well The more sight and knowledge you haue in diuinitye and the holye Scriptures of God with the practise and experience of other good qualityes and vertues you know the better a great deale how that the Clergy and layty of this our Realme as members of one body ought to cleaue and sticke together and how by theyr helping hand vnity and peace should bee maynetayned of all and the contrary eschued and auoyded euery state contēting it selfe not incroching one vpon another And because we are aduertised how that our Barons and officers as well in time past as of late haue diuersly in diuers poyntes iniuried you as semblably you and yours in many causes haue wrongfullye damaged them by occasion wherof the knot of vnitie and concord which ought to haue florished among you is quite loosed and vndone To the end therefore by Gods grace some good reformation and redresse may be had herein We most studious of vnity and concord requere you and by these our letters commaūd you to appeare personally before vs at Paris the 15. day of Decēber next ensuing the dare hereof and there before vs to make relation of such wrong as ye haue receiued at the laities hāds And wee likewise straightly charge and commaund you our Barons Bailiffes and officers not to fayle but to make your personall appearaunces before vs the day and place aboue written there to exhibite before vs a bill of such complayntes wherewith you burden our Prelats and Clergy with their officials that we with our counsell consulting thereupon with due regard may see redresse therin wherby perpetuall loue and charity may euer hereafter raigne and remayne among them for euer Geuen at Paris the first day of September an 1329. At the day in the letters aboue specified the Prelates and Clergy assembled themselues before the King at hys palace in Paris that is to witte The L. Baturicen the L. of Auxitan the L. Turonen the L. Rothom and the L. Senon all Archbishops The L. Beluaren the L. Cathalan the L. Laudun the L. of Paris the L. Nousonon the L. Carnoten the L. Constan the L. Andegauen the L. Pictauen the L. Melden the L. of Cameracen the L. of S. Feri the L. Brioce the L. of Cabition the L. of Eduen all Byshops Where after due reuerence done vnto the Kinges grace there sitting in his owne person wyth his Barons and counsell about him a certayne noble and wise person Lord Peter de Cugnerijs being one of the kinges counsell rose vp and openly in the Parliament house spake in the kinges behalfe on this wise taking for hys Theame Reddite quae sunt Caesaris Caesari quae sunt Dei Deo which is to say geue and render vnto Cesar whiche is his and vnto God which is Gods which he uery artificially prosecuted and applyed deuiding it into 2. partes First that obedience and reuerence is due vnto the king Secondly that there ought to be a difference betweene the iurisdiction of the clergy and laity so that spirituall matters should be defined and ordered by the Prelats and spirituall men and temporall causes ruled and determined by the king his Barons and temporall men Which all he proued by many reasōs both of fact and law as more fully appeareth beneath in the answere of the Byshop of Eduen finally he concluded that the Clergy ought onely to deale and haue to doe with spirituall matters in defence whereof the kings highnes would stand their good Lord and maintayner His Oration being ended he repeated certayn wordes in the French toung which imported that the kinges will and pleasure was in some poyntes to renew the temporall state and iurisdiction therewith exhibited a certaine bill in French whereof also he gaue a copy to the Prelates contayning certaine pointes and articles vnder writtē the contentes wherof he affirmed not to appertaine to the order iurisdiction of the spiritualty but onely to the temporalty complayning that the Clergy had wrōgfully proceeded in y● same But notwithstanding the premisses for all this his complaint he sayd that y● Prelates should haue time to consult and deliberate thereupō with the king The copy of which articles with answers ensuing vpon the same and the grieuaunces of the kingdome of Fraunce wrought by the clergy and exhibited to the king hereafter foloweth 1. First the cognition of causes reall whether they touch possession or their propriety or not by commō law apperteineth to y● iurisdicion temporall But the Prelates wyth their officials to y● end to infringe the tēporall iurisdiction take vpon them the determination of such causes reall especially concerning possession and all other interdictes 2. Item when a temporall man is sued by any Clerke or spirituall man for the possession of his land obtayning an adiornament of the secular power in the cause of nouite or otherwise The prelates officials stopping hereby the tēporall iurisdiction at the instaunce of the Clerke calleth by proces before them both the secular iudge and the party inhibiting them to proceed any farther in the cause vnder payne of excommunication and forfeiture of a certayne summe 3. Item although the secular iudge haue the cognition of all lay mens matters except in spirituall causes yet wil y● Bishops Officials at the instaunce of any partye call such before them And if the tēporall mē do except against their iurisdiction alleadging the incompitency of the iudge or els if they require the cause to be remitted to them vnder whom they are as the right iudges yet doth the Officials refuse this to do yea and by excommunication compell the parties to proceed before them 4. Item the Byshoppes Officials at the instaunce of the clerks alledging that they are iniuried in matters of inheritance by a lay man call by proces the laity And if it be alledged that those causes stand vpō reality being so indeed for that consideration the cause to be remitted to the tēporall law This notwithstanding the Officials prohibit them vnder payne of excommunication or some great forfeit not to proceed but before them 5. Item the Bishops Officials take vpon them to heare the plea of such contractes as either be conceiued in writings or made by word of mouth in the temporall law
memory brother Germaine to our Lady mother is fallen vnto vs by playn and manifest law And for somuch that Lord Phillip de Valoys being the sonne of the Vncle of the foresayd king and so being farre from the crowne by a farther degree of consanguinitie through force and vsurpation hath intruded himselfe in the foresayd kingdome whilest we were yet in our Minoritie so contrary both to God and to iustice doth detayne and occupye the same And least we shoulde seeme to neglect our owne right and the gifte geuen vs of God or not to submit our will to Gods diuine ordinance We haue thought good to acknowledge the title of France and by supportation of the almighty king haue taken vppon vs the defence and regiment of the sayd kingdome Firmely purposing with our selues as euery good man ought to doe graciously to minister iustice to euery one according to the rites and laudable custome of the foresayd kingdome Also to renue the good lawes and customes whiche haue bene in the time of Ludouicke our progenitour adding to moreouer that which shall seeme expedient according to the condition and qualiitie of the time As by any chaunge of coyne or any other inordinate exactions we intend not to seeke our profites by your detrimentes when as the almighty bee praised therefore we abounde and haue inough And as concerning the affayres of the Realme our purpose is not to proceede rashely or by our owne will but by the discreete aduise and Counsell of the Pieres Prelates Nobles and other our faythfull subiects of the kingdome so farre forth as shall make for the honour of God the defence and aduauncement of the Church which in all fulnes of deuotion we doe reuerence and to the profite both publicke and priuate of all the subiectes thereof with full execution of iustice by the grace of God to be executed vpon al and singular persons being earnestly careful for the honour profite and tranquillitie of you all For as the Lorde knoweth nothing shall be more gratefull to vs then that by our carefull solicitude peace may be engendered specially betwixt vs and vniuersally among all Christen men so that by our concorde the force and strength of all Christen Princes may be ioyned together for the recouery of the holy land whiche our Sauiour and redemer hath dedicated with hys owne proper bloud whereunto we wil indeuour our selues through the grace of the holy ghost And for asmuch as we haue offered to the foresayd Lorde Phillip diuers friendly and reasonable conditions of peace whereunto he would neyther condescend neyther agree to any conformation yea rather moueth against vs vniust warre to the vtter subuersion of our state we are enforced of necessitie to the vttermost of our power for the defence both of vs and recouery of our right to defend our selues by force of battaile not seeking any slaughter of good and humble subiectes but desiring theyr safegarde and profite For the whiche cause all and singular such subiectes of the kingdome of Fraunce which shall submit themselues to vs as the true king of Fraunce within the feast of Easter next ensuing professing vnto vs theyr fealtie and doing to vs as to the Kyng of Fraunce by duety appertayneth so as our beloued subiectes of Flaunders haue done alredy or be ready to offer themselues so to do all such we willingly admit and receaue to our peace grace vnder our protection to be defended them to mayntayne as is conuenient from all molestation and disquietnes whatsoeuer in person or goodes hereafter to be inforced eyther by vs or by our officers vpon what soeuer occasion of rebellion afore passed And for as much as the premisses cannot easely be intimated to all and singular persons we haue prouided the same to be fixed vpon Church doores and other publicke places whereby the manifest notice thereof may come to all men to the comfort of you that be to vs deuout and to the true information of them whiche through sinister surmises of our enemies otherwise informed of vs. Dated at Gaunt the 8. day of February the yeare of our kingdome of Fraunce the first of England the 14. This done for that the winter then drew on neyther was there any hope as the time serued of farther doyng good the kyng thought best for a season to returne againe to Englande with his company geuing ouer the warres vntill the next spring and so did taking shipping and so ariued at Douer When he came to London it was declared vnto him of the great spoyle the Frenchmen had made at Southampton who answered agayne that within one yeare he doubted not the same to be well payd for recompenced And according to the same purpose of hys he lingered no time but calling a Parliament at Westminster with much grudge euill will of his subiects was for the mayntenance of hys warres graunted to him a great subsidie which was the 5. euery mans goodes and also the customes of his woolles 2. yeares before hand and the 9. these of euery mans corne At the spring the K. agayn prepared his army rigged hys nauy purposing to land in Flaūders But the Archb. of Canterb. then Lord Chauncellour hauing vnderstanding of the Frenche power vpon the Sea lying for the k. gaue him aduertisement there of willing him more stronglier to go or els not to venture But the king not crediting the Archbish. and being angry with him therefore sayd that he would go forward whereupon the bishop resigned the Chauncellorship remoued himselfe from his Counsayle then the k. consulting hereupon farther with the Lord Morley his Admirall and others hearing also the same of them furnished himselfe with stronger power and committed him to his ship and did so much that a few dayes before midsommer he was vpō the Sea with a great fleete Before the town of Sluse the french king to stop hys passage had layd ready a great nauy well neare to that number of 20. score sayle and had made the Christopher of England which before the French men took at Southamptō theyr Admirall betwixt which two nauies was a lōg and terrible fight But in the end the victory by Gods grace fell to the king of England in which fight he himselfe was personally So that of the number of thirtye thousand Frenchmē few or none were left escaped aliue and two hundreth sayle of shippes taken in one of the which were found 400. dead bodyes After this great slaughter of the Frenchmen of whom many for feare of the sword lept into the sea when no man durst bring tidinges thereof to the Frenche king They which were next about the king did subborne his foole to insinuate the vnderstanding thereof by subtiltie of couert words which was thus As the foresayd foole being in the kinges presence and was talking of many things among other talke he sodenly brast out being prompt by others into a vehement rayling of
is a mannour of worshipping of false Gods to breake thy hestes For who that loueth thee ouer all thinges and dreadeth thee also he nole for nothing breake thyne hestes O Lord gif breaking of thine hestes be heryeng of false gods I trow that he maketh the people breake thyne hestes and commaundeth that his hestes ben kept of the people maketh himselfe a false GOD on earth as Nabuchodonosor did some tyme that was king of Babilon But Lord we forsaken such false Gods and beleuen that ther ne ben no mo Gods then thou And though thou suffer vs a while to bene in disease for knowledging of thee we thanken thee wyth our hart for it is a token that thou louest vs to ●●uen vs in thys world some penaunce for our trespas Lord in the old law thy true seruauntes tooke the death for they would not eaten swynes fleshe that thou haddest forbid them to eat O Lord what truth is in vs to eaten vncleene mete of the soule that thou hast forbid Lord thou sayst he that doth sinne is seruaunt of sinne and then he that lyeth in forswearing hymselfe is seruaunt of lesing and then he is seruaunt to the deuill that is a lyer and father of lesinges And Lord thou sayst no man may serue two Lordes at ones O Lord then euery lyer for the tyme that he lyeth other forsweareth himselfe and forsaketh thy seruice for drede of hys bodyly death and becommeth the deuils seruaunte O Lord what truth is in him that clepeth himselfe seruaunt of thy seruantes in his doing he maketh him a Lord of thy seruauntes Lord thou were both Lord and maister and so thou sayd thy selfe but yet in thy warkes thou were as a seruaunt Lord this was a great truth and a great meeknes but Lord bid thou thy seruaunts that they should not haue Lordship ouer theyr brethren Lord thou saydst kings of the heathē men han Lordship ouer their subiectes and they that vse their power be cleped well doers But Lord thou saydst it shoulde not be so amongest thy seruantes But he that were most should be as a seruaunt Thou Lorde thou taughtest thy disciples to be meeke Lord in the old law thy seruauntes durst haue no Lordship of theyr brethren but if that thou bid them And yet they should not doe to theyr brethren as they did to thrailes that serued them But they should doe to theyr brethren that were theyr seruauntes as to theyr owne brethren For all they were Abrahams Children And at a certaine tyme they should let theyr brethren passe from them in all freedome but if they would wilfullich abiden still in seruice O Lord thou gaue vs in thy comming a law of perfect loue is token of loue thou clepedst thy selfe our brother And to make vs perfect in loue thou bid that we shoulde clepe to vs no father vpon earth but thy father of heauen we should cleape our father Alas Lord how violently our brethren and thy childrē ben now put in bodily thraldome and in despite as beastes euermore in greeuous trauell to finde proude men in ease But Lord if we take this defoule and this disease in pacience and in meeknes and kepe thine hests we hope to be free And Lord geue our brethren grace to come out of thraldome of sinne that they fal in through the desiring and vsage of Lordship vpon theyr brethren And Lord thie priestes in the old law had no Lordships among theyr brethren but houses and pastures for theyr beastes but Lord our priestes nowe haue great Lordship and put theyr brethren in greater thraldome then lewed men that be Lordes Thus is meekenesse forsaken Lord thou biddest in the Gospell that when a man is bid to the feast he should sit in the lowest place and then he may be set hyer with worship when the Lord of the feast beholdeth how his gestes fitteth Lord it is drede that they that sit now in the hyest place should be bidd in tyme comming fit beneath And that will be shame and vileny for them And it is they saying those that hyeth himselfe shuld be lowed and those that loweth themselues should be an heyghed O Lord thou biddest in thy Gospell to beware of the Pharaseis for it is a poynt of pryde contrary to meekenesse And Lord thou sayst that they loue the first sittinges at supper and also the principall chaires in churches and greetings in cheeping and to be cleped maysters of men And Lord thou sayest be ye not cleped maisters for one is your maister and that is Christ and all ye be brethren And clepe ye to you no father vpon earth for one is your father that is in heauen O Lord this is a blessed lesson to teach men to be meke But Lord he that clepeth himself thy vicar on earth he clepeth himselfe father of fathers agaynst thy forbidding And all those worships thou hast forbad He approueth them and maketh them maisters to many that teach thy people their owne teaching and leaue thy teaching that is nedefull and hiden it by quainte gloses from thy lewd people and feede thy people with sweuens that they mete and tales that doth little profit but much harme to the people But Lorde these glosers obiecte that they desire not the state of mastry to be worshipped therby but to profit the more to thy people whē they preach thy word For as they seggē the people will beleue more the preaching of a maister that hath taken a state of schole then the preaching of an other man that hath not take the state of maistry ¶ Lorde whether it bee any neede that maysters beren witnes to thy teaching that it is true and good O Lord whether may any maister mowe by his estate of maisterie that thou hast forboden drawe any man from his sinne rather then an other man that is not a maister ne wole bee none for it is forboden him in thy Gospell Lord thou sendest to maysters to preach thy people and thou knowledgist in the Gospel to thy father that he hath hid his wisedome from wise men and redy men and shewed it to litle Children And Lord maisters of the law hylden thy teaching foly and seiden that thou wouldest destroy the people with thy teaching Trulich Lord so these maisters seggeth now for they haue written many bookes agaynst thy teaching that is truth so the prophecie of Ieremy is fulfilled when he sayth Truelich the false points maisters of the law hath wrought leasing And now is the time come that S. Paul speaketh of where he sayth time shal come when men shall not susteine wholesome teaching But they shullen gather to hepe maisters with hutching eares and from trueth they shullen turnen away their hearing and turnen them to tales that maisters haue maked to showne their maistry and their wisedome ¶ And Lord a man shall beleue more a mans workes then hys words the dede sheweth well of these
in like maner they were disapoynted of their cruell purpose In that meane while as this was doyng cōmeth one of the Dukes men rūning post hast to that Duke to the Lord Percy declaring what was done The Duke being then at his oysters without anye further tarying and also breaking both his shinnes at the forme for haste tooke boate with the Lord Percy and by water went to Kingstone where then the princesse with Richard the yong Prince did lye Who there declared vnto the Princesse all the whole matter cōcerning the outrage of the Londiners as it was To whom she promised againe such an order to be taken in the matter as shoulde be to his contentation At what time the commons of London thus as is sayd were about the Dukes house at Sauoy me●teth with thē a certain priest who marueling at the sodain rage concourse asked what they sought To whome aunswere was geuen agayne of some that they sought for the Duke and Lorde Marshall to haue of them the Lord Peter de la Mare whom they wrongfully had deteined in prison To this the Priest aunswered agayne more boldly then oportunely That Peter sayd he is a false traytour to the king and worthy long since to be hanged At the hearing of these words the furious people with a terrible shoute cryed out vpon him that he was a traytour and one that tooke the Dukes part and so falling vpon him with theyr weapons striued who might first strike at him Who after they had wounded him very sore so being wounded they had him into prison where within few dayes vpon the sorenes of his wounds he dyed Neither would the rage of the people thus haue ceased had not the bishop of London leauing his dinner come to them at Sauoy and putting them in remembraunce of the blessed tyme as they terme it of Leut had perswaded them to cease and to be quyet The Londiners seeing that they could get no vantage against the Duke who was without theyr reach To bewreke theyr anger they tooke hys armes whiche in most despitefull wise they hanged vp in the open places of the city in signe of reproch as for a traitour In so much that when one of his gentlemen came through the Citty with a plate conteyning the Dukes armes hanging by a lace about his necke the cittizens not abiding the sight therof cast him frō his horse and pluckt his scutchine from him had were about to work the extremitie against him and not the mayor rescued him out of theyr handes and sent him home safe vnto the Duke his mayster In such hatred was then the Duke among the vulgar people of London After thys the princesse vnderstanding the hartes and broyle of the Londiners set against the foresaid Duke sent vnto London 3. Knightes syr Albred Lewer sir Symon Burle and sir Lewes Cliffort to entreat the citizens to be reconciled with the Duke The Londiners answered that they for the honour of the princesse would obey and do with all reuerēce what she would require But this they required enioyned the messēgers to say to the Duke by word of mouth that he should suffer the byshop of Winchester afore mentioned and also the Lord Peter de la Mare to come to their aunswere to be iudged by theyr pieres Wherby eyther they might be quite if they were giltles or otherwise if they be found culpable they might receaue occording to theyr desertes after the lawes of the realme What griefe and displeasure the Duke conceiued and reteyned in his minde hereof Agayne what meanes sute the Londiners for their part made to the old king for their liberties What rymes and songes in London were made agaynst the Duke Howe the Bishops at the Dukes request were mooued to excōmunicate those malicious slaunderers And moreouer howe the Duke at last was reuenged of those contumelies iniuries How he caused them to be brought before the king How sharply they were rebuked for their misdemeanour by the worthy oration of the Lord Chamberlayne Robert Aston in the presence of the king Archbishops Byshops with diuers other states the Kinges children and other nobilities of the realme In conclusion how the Londiners were compelled to this at length by the common assent and publike charges of that citty to make a great taper of waxe whiche with the Dukes armes set vpon it shoulde be brought with solemne procession to the church of S. Paule there to burne continually before the Image of our Lady And at last how both the sayd Duke and the Londiners were reconciled together in the beginning of the new king with the kisse of peace in the same reconcilement publikely denounced in the church of Westminster and what ioy was in the whole citty therof These because they are impertinent and make to long a digressiō from the matter of Wickliffe I cut off with breuitie referring the reader to other historyes namely of S. Albones where they are to be found at large As these aforesayd for breuitie sake I passe ouer so will I not be long and yet cannot omitte that which happened the same tyme and yeare to the Bishop of Norwich to the intent that this posteritie now may see to what pryde the clergy then of the Popes Church was growne to The same time as this broyle was at Lōdon the Bish. of Norwich a litle after the time af Easter comming to the towne of Lennam belonging to his Lordship being not contented with the olde accustomed honour due vnto him vsed of his predecessours before in the same town required moreouer with a nue and vnused kind of magnificence to be exalted In so much that when he saw the chiefe Magistrate or Mayor of that towne to go in the streetes with his officer going before him holding a certayne wand in his hand tipped at both endes with black horne as the maner was He reputing himselfe to be Lord of that towne as he was and thinking to be higher then the highest commaunded the honour of that staffe due to the Mayor to be yelded born before his Lordly personage The Mayor or Bailiffe with other the townesmen courtuously answered to him again that they were right willing and contented with all theyr hartes to exhibite that reuerence vnto him and woulde to do if he first of the king and counsaile coulde obtayne the iustome and if the same might be induced after any peaceable way with the good willes of the commons and body of the town Other els sayd they as the matter was dangerous so they durst not take in hand any such newe alteration of ancient customes and liberties least the people whiche is alwayes inclinable and prone to euill do fall vpon them with stones driue them out of the towne Wherefore kneeling on theyr knees before hym and humbly they besought him that he would require no such thing of them that he would saue his owne
retractation whereunto they by force compelled him wherby it may likewise be coniectured what credite is to be geuen to the articles and conclusions which these caueling Fryers wrasting all thinges to the worst haue obiected and imputed both to Wickliffe all other of that sort whō they so falsly do infame so slannderously doe bely and so maliciously doe persecute After these thinges thus done and wrought in the diocesse of Lincolne it so befell the sayd W. Swinderby to remoue to the diocesse and countery of Herford where he was as much or more molested by the friers again by Ioh. Tresnant B. of Herford as by the processe story here ensuing set out at large out of their owne registers may appeare Here followeth the processe of Iohn Tresnant Bishop of Herford had against the aforesaid William Swinderby in the cause of hereticall prauitie as the popishe heretickes cal it THe glorious name of the prince of peace and his counsaile whose counsailour no man is whose prouidēce in his disposition is neuer deceaued being inuocated To all and singuler beleuers of Christ which shall see or heare this our processe vnderwritten Iohn by the sub●erance of God B. of Herford greeting and peaceable charitie in the Lord. Forasmuch as God the creator of all things the keper of iustice the louer of right and the hater of malice beholding from the high throne of his prouidence the sonnes of men now through the fall of their first father prone and and declining to dishonest and filthy detestable mischifes and to keep vnder their malice which wicked transgressiō did first gender hath appoynted diuers presidentes of the world stablished in sundry degrees by whome and theyr circumspect prouidence mans audacitie should be restrayned innocency should be nourished amongst the good terror should be striken into the wicked not to deceiue also that their power to hurt theyr insolency should be brydled in all places And whereas amongst many kindes of cares whiche come to our thoughtes by the duety of the office committed vnto us we are specially bound to extend our strēgth chiefly that the catholicke fayth may prosper in our tymes and hereticall prauity may be rooted from out of the borders of the faythfull we therfore being excited through the information of many credible and faythfull Christians of our dioces to roote out pestiferous plantes as sheep diseased with an incurable sicknes going about to infect the whole and sound flocke are by the care of the shepheard to be remoued from the flock that is to say Preachers or more truely execrable offendours of the new sect vulgarly called lollardes which vnder a certayn cloked shew of holynes running abroad through diuers places of our diocesse endeuoring to cut a sunder the Lords vnsowed coat that is to say to rent the vnity of the holy Church of the Catholicke fayth and also to teare in peeces with their tēpestious blasts the power of S. Peter that is to say to weaken the strēgth of the ecclesiasticall states and degrees and the determination of the same holy church haue wickedly presumed do presume from day to day to speak to teach to mayntayne and that which is more horrible to be vttered to preach openly many things hereticall blasphemies schismes and sclaunderous diffaminges euen quite contrary to the sacred Canons and decrees of the holy fathers so that they knowe not to direct their pathes in the wayes of righteousnes and trueth in that that they expounde to the people the holy scripture as the letter soundeth after a Iudiciall sort otherwise then the holy Ghost will needs haue it wheras the words wander from their proper significations and appeare to bryng in by gessing new meanings whereas the wordes must not be iudged by the sense that they make but by the sense whereby they be made where as the constructiōs is not bound to Donates rules where as fayth is farre placed from the capacitie of reason But they labour by their pernitious doctrines teachings pu● like and priuy to boyle out the poysō of schismes betwene the clergie and the people We to encounter agaynst suche kinde of preachers nay rather deceauers and horrible seducers amongest the people aduauncing and rowzing vp ourselues in Gods behalfe and holy mother Churche with the spirituall sword whiche may strike them wisely and wounde them medicinably for theyr health and welfare and namely William Swynderby Priest so pretending himselfe to be as a teacher of suche kinde of pernicious doctrine and an horrible seducer amongst the people to whom personally appearing before vs on the wednesday to wit the 14. of the month of Iune in the parishe Church of Kington of our diocesse in the yeare of our Lord. 1391. he being vehemently diffamed to vs of heresie schisme and his peruerse doctrines both manifest and priuy we therefore haue caused many cases and articles cōcerning the catholicke fayth to be ministred vnto him that he should answere to the same at a day and place for him meet and conuenient of his owne choyse and freewill that is to say on the Friday being the last of the same month of Iune next following assigned to him at the Churche of Bodenhame of the same our diocesse Of whiche cases and articles exhibited vnto vs by many of Christes faythfull people zelous followers of the catholike fayth to make information to our office which cases and articles also were by vs administred as is before sayd to the same William Swinderby the tenor therof followeth and is thus ¶ Reuerend father and high Lord Lord Iohn by gods sufferance bishop of Hereford It is lamentably declared to your reuerend fatherhood on the behalf of Christs faythful people your deuout children of your diocesse of Herford that notwithstāding the misbeliefe of very many lollards which hath to long a time sprong vp here in your diocesse there is newly come a certayn child of wickednes named William Swinderby who by his horrible perswasions mischieuous endeuours and also by his open preachings and priuate teachinges doth peruert as much as in him is the whole ecclesiasticall state and stirreth vp with all hys possible power schisme betwene the clergy and the people And that your reuerend fatherhood may be the more fully informed who and what maner of man the same William Swinderby is there be proposed and exhibited herafter to the same your fatherhood on the behalf of the same faithful people of Christ against the same William Swinderby cases and articles Which if the same William shall deny thē shall the same cases and articles most euidently be prooued against him by credible witnesse worthy of beliefe by other lawfull proofe and euidences to the end that those being proued the same fatherhood of yours may do and ordeine therin as to your pastorall office belongeth ¶ In primis the same William Swinderby pretending himselfe priest was opēly and publiquely
priesthood if al I be vnworthy to the worship of God helpe of christen soules freely without gathering of her goods for my preaching If I erred in this I will be amended And sir touching your maundement that ye sendē to me there was sēt none And sir I made neuer yet disobediēce vnto you ne to your ministers yef all I had me owes more to obeyche to God thou to you in that that ye bidden contrary to Christes bid ding And sir as ye sayne that I had no minde of my hele it is to lightly demet for God forbid but yef there lye hele more then in your bidding For God w●t for hele I did it of mine and of the people and that was in any minde But sir it semes me that ye charge not by euidence of the punishing so greatly the breaking of Gods hests as ye done of your own And sir if it be your wil in default that the people wanted you to teache hem and her curates did not by the desire of the people that weren hungry and thirsty after gods word ichone to beare vp others charge as gods law bids I preached not for disobedience to you but sir in fulfilling of the obediēce that Gods law bids me do in excusing of my selfe to you of that ye blame me of in opē shewing to holy Church with y p protestation that I first made I aunswere thus to the Articles that ye haue put to me The first is this that I William of Swinderby the Monday the first of August the yeare of our Lorde 1390. preaching to the people in the Church of Whitney of your Dioces held and affirmed as ye sayne that no Prelate of the world of what state or degree that he be hauing cure of soules being in deadly sinne and hearing confession of his suget does nought in assoyling him ne he assoiles him not of his sinne and also in amending his suget opēly sinning and him for his desertes cursing his sentence byndes nor but if that Prelate be as cleane out of deadly sinne as was S. Peter to whom our Lord gaue power of binding and vnbinding I neuer thought this ne spake this ne heard it to the time that I saw it written in our booke and that will witnes the Lord of the towne that has the same sermon written and many gentiles and other that heardē me that day But thus I said and thus I say with protestation put before that there is no man Pope ne bishop prelate ne Curate that bindes soothly verily and ghostly but in as much as his binding or vnbinding accordes with the keyes of heauen that God gaue to Peter And as S. Gregory saies that power han they only that hold together the ensample of the apostles with heere teaching Illi soli in hac carne positiligandi atque soluendi potestatem habent sicut sancti Apostoli qui eorum exempla simul cum doctrina tenent gg li. quarto sententiarum The second article that is put vpon me is this that I should haue sayd preached affirmed in many places before many true men of Christ that after the Sacramentall wordes sayd of the priest hauing entention of consecratiō That in the Sacrament of Gods body is not very Gods body This sayd I neuer God wote and true men that haue heard me The third article is this that our bishop puts vpō me that I should haue sayd in many places and affirmed that accidents mow not be in the sacrament of the aultar without subiect and that material bread leues not therwith Gods body in the sacrament This conclusion I haue not holdē ne taught ne preached for I haue not medled me of that matter my wit suffiseth not thereto But here I tell my beliefe with protestation put before that the Sacrament of the aultar made by vertue of heauenly wordes that Christ himselfe sayd in the Cene when he made this sacrament that it is bread christes bodye so as Christ himselfe sayes in the Gospell S. Paul sayes and as Doctors in the common law haue determined to this sentēce Math. 26. Mar. 14. Lu. 22. Pa. 1. Cor. 10. 11. de con distinct 2. panis de consecra dist 2. Corpus Iohn 6 verus panis The 4. article is this that our Bishop accuseth me of that I should haue preached about and sayd that a Priest being in deadly sinne may not by the strength of the Sacramentall words make gods body or none other Sacrament of the Churche either performe to minister them to members of the same Thus I neuer said thought it preached it ne taught it for well I wot the wickednesse of a Priest may appaire no very sacrament but the wickednes of the Priest appayres himselfen and all that boldnes example of his sinne causen the people to liuen the worse agaynst Gods law Vnde Greg. Et si sacerdos in peccatis fuerit totus populus ad peccandum conuertitur The 5. article is this that our bishop puts vnto me that all priestes ben of euē power in all things not withstāding that some of this world bene of higher dignity or more passing in highnes of degree Certes no man would say thus as I suppose no more did I ne neuer heard it that I wot of But this I say with protestation made before that what Priest liues most holily next following the law of God he is most louer of God and most profitable to the Church If men speakē of world ly power and Lordships and worships with other vices that raignen therin what Priest that desires and has most hereof in what degree so he be he is most Antichrist of all the priestes that ben in earth Vnde Augustinus ad Valerium scribens ait Nihil est in hac vita maximè hoc tempore facilius leuius hominibus acceptabilius Episcopi praēsbiteri aut decani officijs sed si profunctoriè aut adulatoriè nihil apud Deum miserabilius aut tristius damnabilius The sixt Article is this that onely contrition does away sinne if a man be duely contrite and all outward cōfession by word is superfluous and not requiret of need of health This conclusiō said I neuer that I know of But thus I say with protestation put before that veray contrition of hart that is neuer without charity and grace dos away al sinnes before done of that man that is verely contrite And all true confessiō made by mouth outward to a wise priest and a good profiteth much to man and it is needfull helping that men shew their life to such trusting full to gods mercy and that he forgeues thy sinne Vnde August de conse distict 4. Nemo tollit peccata mundi nisi solus Christus qui est agnus tollens peccata mundi The 7. article is this that I should say
6. Item that euery Priest may absolue euery sinner being contrite and is bound to preach the Gospell vnto the people notwithstanding the prohibition of the Bishops pag. 467. 7. Item that a priest receiuing by bargaine any thing of yearely annuity is in so doing a schismaticke and excommunicate pag. 467. 8. Item he doth assuredly beleeue as he auoucheth that euery priest being in deadly sinne if he dispose himselfe to make the body of Christ doth rather commit idolatry thē make Christes body pag. 467. 9. Item that no priest doth enter into any house but to handle ill the wife the daughter or the mayd and therfore c. pag. 467. 10. Item that the child is not rightly baptised if the priest c. ibid. 11. Item that no maner of person if he liue agaynst Gods law c. ibid. 12. Item the same William agaynst the thinges premised and his reuocation and abiuration not to his hart cōuerting but from euill to worse peruerting did turne aside into our dioces where running to and fro in diuers places hath of his owne rash head presumed to preach or rather to peruert c. 467. 13. Item after that we had heard diuers rumors slaunders of very many we directed diuers monitions and cōmaundementes comminatorye to be sent abroade by our Commissaries to sundry places of our dioces that no person of what estate degree or condition so euer he were of should presume to preach or to teach the sacred scripture to the people in places holy or prophane within our dioces c. page 466. 14. Item that the same sort of monitions inhibitions and precepts confirmed by our seale came to the true vndouted knowledge of the sayd William 15. Item the same William vnmindefull of his owne saluation hath sithens agaynst those monitions inhibitiōs and preceptes and that which is more abhominable to be spoken in contempt of the high Bishops dignity to the slaūder offence of many people presumed in diuers places of our sayd dioces to preach or rather to peruert to teach the forementioned other heretical erroneous and schismaticall deuises 16 Item the same William in preaching to the people on monday to wit the first of August in the yere of our Lord 1390. in the Church of Whitney in our dioces held and affirmed that no Prelate of the world of what state preheminēce or degree soeuer he were of hauing cure of soule being in deadly sinne c. pag. 466. 17. Item the same William in many places sayd affirmed in the presence of many faythfull ●hristian people after the sacramentall words vttered by the priest hauing the intent to consecrate there is not made the very bodye of Christ in the sacrament of the Eucharist pag. 466. 18. Item that accidences cannot be in the sacramēt of the aulter without theyr subiect that there remayneth materiall bread Concomitanter with the body of Christ in the sacrament Vide supra pag. 466. 19. Item that a priest being in deadly sinne cannot by the power of the sacramētall words make the body of Christ c. pag. 466. 20. Item that all priests are of like power in all poynts notwithstanding that some of them are in this worlde of higher dignity degree or preheminence pag. 466. 21. Item that contrition onely putteth away sinne if a man shall be duely contrite and that all vocall confession and exercise is superfluous and not requisite of necessitye to saluation Ibidem 22. Item that inferior Curates haue not theyr power of binding and loosing mediatly from the pope or bishop but immediately of Christ. c. pag. 466. 23. Item that the pope cannot graunt such kind of annuall pardons because there shall not be so many yeares to the day of iudgement as is conteyned in the popes buls or pardons Whereby it followeth that pardons are not so much worth as they are noysed and praysed to be Ibid. 24. Item that it is not in the Popes power to graunt to any penitent body forgeuenes of the paine or of the trespasse pag. 466. 25 Item that one geuing his almes to any bodye which as he iudgeth hath no neede thereof doth sinne in so geeuyng it pag. 466. 26 Item that it standes not in the power of any prelate of what priuate religion soeuer he bee to geue by letters benefites of their order Neither do such kind of benefits geuen profit them to whom they be geuen for the saluatiō of soules Vide supra pag. 466. 27 Item that the same William vnmindfull of his owne saluation hath many times and often resorted to a certain desert wood called Derwalswood of our dioces and there in a certayne vnhallowed Chappell nay a prophane cottage hath presumed of his owne propre rashnesse to celebrate c. pag. 466. 28 Item the same William hath also presumed to do the like thinges in a certayne prophane chappel situate in the parke of Newton nigh to the towne of Leyntwardyn in the same our dioces pag. 466. ¶ Which thinges being done the same faithful Christen people and specially sir Walter Pride the penitentiarie of our Cathedrall Church of Hereforde personally appearing before vs sittyng in our iudgement seate in the parish Church of Whiteborne of our diocesse brought forth and exhibited two publique instruments against the same Walter Brute in the case of cursed heresie aforsaid of which instrumentes here followeth the tenours and Articles in this sort In the name of God Amen Be it euidently knowē to all persōs by this presēt publike instrumēt the in the yeare frō the incarnatiō after the course and cōputation of the church of England 1391. the indiction xv of the pontifical office of our most holy father and Lord in Christ Lord Boniface the ix by Gods Wisedome Pope the second yeare the xv day of the month of October in the dwelling house of the worshipful mā maister Iohn Godemoston Chanon of the Cathedral Church of Hereford in the presence of me the publique Notary vnder written and of witnesses subscribed Walter Brute lay man learned of Hereford dioces personally appearing sayde auouched and stifly maintayned that the sayde Bishop of Hereforde and his assistaunces which were with him the third day of the foresayde month of October the yeare of our Lord aforesayd in the Church of Hereford did naughtely wickedly peruersly and vniustly condemne the aunsweres of sir William Swinderby Chaplaine geuen by the same sir William to the same Lord byshop in wryting and also the articles ministred by the same sir William And furthermore he sayd held and aduouched that the same conclusions geuen by the same sir Williā euen as they were geuen are true and Catholike Item as touching the matters obiected agaynst hym by them that stoode by concerning the sacrament of the aulter he sayd that after the sacramentall words there doth remaine very bread and the substance therof after the cōsecration of the body of Christ and
goodnesse sake that he will wholy reforme our Church now altogether out of frame vnto the perfection of his first beginning and original Ex Archiuis Regijs ¶ These verses following were annexed vnto the conclusions Plangunt Anglorum gentes crimen Sodomorum Paulus fert horum sunt idola causa malorum Surgunt ingrati Gyerzite Simone nati Nomine praelati hoc defensare parati Qui Reges estis populis quicunque praeestis Qualiter his gestis gladios prohibere potestis ¶ The which verses are thus Englished The English nation doth lament of Sodomites their sinne Which Paule doth plainely signifie by Idoles to begin But Giersitis full ingrate from sinfull Symon sprong This to defende though Priests is name make bulwarkes greed and strong Ye Princes therefore which to rule the people God hath placed With iustice sword why see ye not this euill great defaced After these conclusions were thus proposed in the Parliament the king not long after returned home from Dubline into England toward the latter ende of the Parliament Who at his return called certaine of his nobles vnto him Richard Stury Lewes Clifforde Thomas Latimer Iohn Mountacute c. whom he did sharply rebuke and did terribly threaten for that hee heard them to be fauourers of that side charging them straightly neuer to hold maintaine nor fauour any more those opinyons and conclusions And namely of Richarde Stury he tooke an othe that he should neuer from that day fauoure or defende any such opinions which othe being taken the king then answered And I sweare sayth he againe to thee that if thou doest euer breake thine oth thou shalt die for it a shameful death c. Ex Chron. D. Albani All this while W. Courtney Archbyshop of Caunterbury was yet aliue who was a great stirrer in these matters But yet Pope Urbane the great maister of the Catholicke secte was deade and buried 6. yeare before After whom succeeded in the schismatical sea of Rome pope Boniface 9. who nothing inferiour to hys predecessour in all kinde of cruelties left no diligence vnattempted to set forward that which Urbane had begon in suppressing them that were the setters foorth of the light of the Gospell and had wrytten sundry times to king Richard as well for the repealing of the Actes of Parliament against his prouisions Quare impedit and premunire facias as also that hee should assist the Prelates of Englande in the cause of God as he pretended against such whom he falsly suggested to be Lollardes and traytors to the Church to the king and the Realme c. Thus the curteous pope whom he coulde not reach with his sword at least with cruel slander of hys malitious toung would worke his poyson agaynst them which letter he wrote to the king in the yeare of our Lord. 1396. Which was the yeare before the death of W. Courtney Archbishop of Caunterbury After whom succeded in that see Thomas Arundel brother to the Earle of Arundel being first Byshop of Ely afterwarde Archbyshop of Yorke and Lord Chancelor of England and at last made Archbyshop of Caunterbury about the yeare of our Lorde 1397. The next yeare following which was the yeare of our Lord 1398. and the 9. yeare of the Pope I finde in certaine recordes of the Bishop of Duresme a certaine letter of K. Richard 2. written to the said pope Boniface Which because I iudged not vnworthy to be sene I thought here to annexe the same proceeding in forme as foloweth ¶ To the moste holy father in Christ and Lorde Lorde Boniface the 9. by the grace of God high Pope of the most holy Romish and vniuersall Churche hys humble and deuout sonne Richard by the grace of God king of England and Fraunce Lord of Irelande greeting and desiring to help the miseries of the afflicted Church and kissing of that his blessed feete WHo wil giue my head water mine eyes streaming teares that I may bewaile the decay and manifold troubles of our mother which haue chaunced to her by her owne children in the distresse of this present schisme and diuision For the sheepe haue forgotten the proper voyce of their shepherds and hirelings haue thrust in themselues to feede the Lordes flocke who are clothed with the apparell of the true shephearde chalenging the name of honour dignity resembling so the true shepheard that the pore sheepe can scarse know whome they ought to folow or what pastour as a straunger they ought to flee and whom they shuld shun as an hireling Wherefore we are afraid least the holy standard of the Lord beforsaken of his host and so that Citye being full of riches become solitary and desolate and the land or people whych was so●t to say flourishing in her prosperities I sate as a Quene and am not a widowe least it be destitute of the presence of her husband and as it were so bewitched that shee shall not be able to discerne his face and so wrapped in mases that she shal hot know where to turne her that she might more easily finde him and that she shall with weeping speake that saying of the spouse I sought him whom my soule loueth I sought him and found him not For now we are compelled so to wander that if any man say beholde here is Christ or there we may not beleeue him so saying and so many shepheards haue destroyed the Lordes vineyarde and made his amiable portion a waste wildernesse This multitude of shepherdes is become very burdenous to the Lords flocke For when two striue to be chief the state of both their dignities standes in doubt and in so doing they geue occasion to all the faithfull of Christ of a schisme and diuision of the Churche And although both parties goe about to subdue vnto their power the whole Church militant yet cōtrary to both their purpose by working this way there beginneth to rise nowe a diuision in the body of the Church Like as when the diuision of the quicke innocent body was asked when the two harlots did striue afore Salomon like as the ten tribes of Israel folowed ●eroboham the intruder and were withdrawne from the kingdome for Salomons sinnes euen so of olde time the desire of ruling hath drawne the great power of the world from the vnitie of the Churche Let your selues remember we beseeche you how that all Greece did fall from the obedience of the Romish Churche in the time of the faction of the primarche of Constantinople and howe Mahome with his felowes by occasion of the supremacie in Ecclesiasticall dignitie deceiued a great part of Christians and withdrewe them from the Empire and ruling of Christ. And nowe in these dayes where as the same supremacie hathe wythdrawen it selfe from the obedience of it in so muche that nowe in very fewe realmes the candle that burnes afore the Lord remaineth and that for Dauids sake his seruaunt And although nowe remaine fewe countreys professing
geuen credible relation of y● sonne both to the printer to me Furthermore the sayd maister Tindall albeit he did somewhat alter amend the English therof and frame it after our manner yet not fully in al words but that something doth remain fauouring of the old speach of that time What the causes were why this good man seruaunt of Christ W. Thorp did write it● and pen it out himselfe it is sufficiently declared in hys owne preface set before his booke whiche here is prefixed in maner as followeth ¶ The preface of William Thorpe THe Lord God that knoweth all thinges woreth well that I am right sorrowful for to write to make known this sentence beneath written whereby of mine euē christē set in high state dignitie so great blindnes malice may be knowne that they which doe presume of themselues to destroy vices and to plant in men vertues neither dreade to offend God nor lust to please him as their workes doe shew For certes the bidding of God and hys law whiche in the praysing of his most holy name he commaundeth to be known kept of all men and women yong and old after the cunning power that he hath geuen to them The Prelates of this lande and their ministers with the couent of priests chiefly consenting to them enforce them most busily to withstand and destroy the holy ordinaunce of God And there through God is greatly wroth and moued to take hard vengeance not onely vpon them that do the euil but also on them that consent to these Antichristes limnes which know or might know their malice and falshoode dresse them not to withstand their mallice and theyr great pride Neuertheles 4. things moueth me to write this sētence beneath The first thing that moueth me hereto is this that where as it was knowne to certayn frendes that I came from that prison of Shrewsbury and as it befell in deed that I shold to the prison of Caunterbury thē diuers friends in diuers places spake to me full hartily and full tenderly and commaunded me then if it so were that I should be examined before the Archb. of Cant. that if I might in any wife I should write mine apposing and mine aunswering And I promised to my special frendes that if I might I wold gladly doe their bidding as I might The second thing that moueth me to write this sentēce is this diuers frendes which haue heard that I haue bene examined before the Archbyshop haue come to me in prison and counsayled mee busily and coueted greatly that I should doe the same thing And other brethren haue sent to me and required on Gods behalfe that I should write out and make knowne both mine apposing mine aunswering for the profite that as they say vppon my knowledging may come thereof But this they had me that I should be busie in all my wits to go as neare the sentence and the wordes as I could both that were spoken to me that I spake Upauēture this writing may come an other time before the archbishop and hys counsaile And of thys counselling I was right glad for in my conscience I was moued to doe this thing to aske hitherto the speciall help of God And so then I considering the great desire of dyuers frendes of sondry places according all in one I occupyed all my minde my wits so busily that through gods grace I perceaued by theyr meaning and their charitable desire some profite might come there through For southfastnes and trueth hath these conditions where euer it is impugned it hath asweete smell and thereof commeth a sweet fauour And the more violently the enemies dresse themselues to oppresse and to withstand the trueth the greater and the sweeter smell commeth therof And therefore this heauenly find of Gods word wil not as a smoke passe away with the winde but it will descende and rest in some cleane soule that thirsteth thereafter And thus some deale by this writing may be perceaued thorough Gods grace how that the enemies of the trueth standing boldly in their malice inforce them to withstand the fredome of Christes Gospell for which freedome Christ became man shed his hart bloud And therefore it is great pitty sorrow that many men women do their own weyward will nor busy thē not to know nor to do that pleasant wil of God The men women that heare the truth and southfastnes and heare or know of this perceauing what is nowe in y● churche ought here through to be the more moued in all their wits to able them to grace to set lesser price by themselues that they without ta●ieng forsake wilfully bodely all the wrethednes of this life since they know not how soon nor whē nor where nor by whō God wil teach them assay their pacience For no doubt who that euer will liue pittiously that is charitably in Christ Iesu shall suffer now here in this life persecution in one wife or an other That is if we shal be saued it behoueth vs to imagin ful busily the vility and soulnes of sinne and how y● Lord God is displeased therfore so of this vility of bidiousnes of sinne it behoueth vs to busy vs in al our wits for to abhorre and hold in our mind a great shame of sinne euer so then we owe to sorrow hartely therfore and euer fleing all occasion therof And then behoueth vs to take vpon vs sharpe penāce continuing therin for to obtayne of that Lord forgeuenes of our foredone sinnes and grace to abstain vs hereafter from sinne And but if we enforce vs to do thys wilfully and in conueniēt time the Lord if he will not vtterly destroy and cast vs awaye will in diuers manners moue tyrantes agaynst vs for to constrayne vs violentlye to do penance which we would not do wilfully And trust that this doing is a special grace of the Lord a great token of life mercy And no doubt who euer will not apply him selfe as is sayd before to punish himself wilfully neither wil suffer paciently meekely and gladly the rod of the Lord howsoeuer that he will punish him their wayward willes and their impacience are vnto them earnest of euelasting damnation But because there are but few in number that do able them thus faythfully to grace for to liue here so simply and purely and without gall of malice and of grudging herefore the louers of this worlde hate pursue them that they knowe patient meek chaste wilfully poore hating and fleing all worldly vanities fleshly lusts For surely their verteous conditions are euen cōtrary to the manners of this world The third thing that moueth me to wryte this sentēce is this I thought I shall busie me in my selfe to do faythfully that all men and women occupying all their busines in knowing and in keeping of Gods commaundements able them so
this despight and reproofe Christ suffered most meekely in his owne person for to geue example of all meekenesse and pacience to all his faythfull folowers Certayne this world is now so full of proud beggers which are named Priestes but the very office of working of Priesthood which Christ approueth true and accepteth is farre from the multitude of Priests that now reigne in this world For from the highest Priest to the lowest all as who say study that is they imagine and trauell busilye how they may please this world and theyr flesh This sentence and many such other dependeth vpon them if it be well considered other God the father of heauen hath deceiued all mankinde by the liuing specially and teaching of Iesu Christ and by the liuing and teaching of his Apostles and Prophetes or els all the Popes that haue bene since I had any knowledge or discretion with all the Colledge of Cardinals Archbishops and Bishops Monks Canons and Friers with all the contagious flock of the communalty of Priesthood which haue all my life time and mikle lenger reigned and yet reigne increase damnably from sinne into sinne haue bene and yet bee proud obstinate heretickes couetous simoners and defouled adulterers in the ministering of the Sacramentes and specially in the ministring of the Sacrament of the aultar For as their workes sheweth whereto Christ biddeth vs take heed the highest Priestes and Prelates of this Priesthood chalenge and occupy vnlefull tēporall Lordships And for temporall fauour and meed they sell geue benefices to vnworthy and vnable persons yea these simoners sell sinne suffering men and women in euery degree and estate to lye and continue from yeare to yere in diuers vices slaūderously And thus by euil example of high priests in the church lower Priestes vnder them are not onely suffered but they are mayntayned to sell full deare to the people for temporall meed all the Sacraments And thus all this foresayd Priesthoode is blowne so high and borne vp in pride and vaine glory of their estate and dignity so blinded with worldly couetousnes That they disdayne to follow Christ in very meekenesse and wilfull pouerty liuing holylye and preaching Gods word truely freely and continually taking theyr liuelihood at the free will of the people of their pure almes where and when they suffice not for theyr true and busy preaching to get their sustenaunce with their handes To this true sentence grounded on Christes owne liuing and teaching of his Apostles these foresaid worldly fleshly Priests wil not consent effectually But as theyr workes and also their wordes shew boldly and vnshamefastly these forenamed Priestes and Prelates couet and enforce them mightely and busily that all holy scripture were expounded and drawne accordingly to their maners and to theyr vngrounded vsages and findinges For they will not since they hold it but folly and madnesse conforme their maners to the pure and simple liuing of Christ and his Apostles nor they will not followe freely their learning Wherefore all the Emperours and Kinges and all other Lordes and Ladyes and all the common people in euery degree and state which haue before time knowne or might haue knowne and also all they that now yet know or might know this foresayde witnes of Priesthood and would not nor yet will enforce them after theyr cunning and power to withstand charitably the foresayd enemies and traytors of Christ and of his churche all these striue with Antichrist agaynst Iesu. And they shall heare the indignation of God almighty without end if in conuenient time they amend them not and repent them verelye doing therefore due mourning and sorow after their cunning power For through presumtuousnesse and negligence of Priestes Prelates not of the Churche of Christ but occupying theyr prelacye vnduely in the Church and also flattering and false couetousnes of other diuers named Priestes Lousengers and lounderers are wrōgfully made and named Heremites and haue leaue to defraud poore and needy creatures of their liuelode and to liue by theyr false winning and begging in slouth and in other diuers vices And also of these Prelates these coker noses are suffered to liue in pride and hipocrisy and to defoule themselues both bodelye and ghostly Also by the suffering and counsell of these foresayde Prelates and of other Priestes are made both vayne brotherhoodes and sisterhoodes full of pride and enuye which are full contrary to the brotherhood of Christ since they are cause of mickle dissetion and they multiply and susteyne it vncharitably for in lustye eating and drinking vnmeasurably and out of time they exercise themselues Also this vaine confederacy of brotherhoodes is permitted to be of one clothing and to hold together And in all these vngrounded and vnlefull doinges priests are parteners and great medlers and counsellers And ouer this viciousnesse Heremites and Pardoners Ankers and straūge beggers are licensed and admitted of Prelates and Priestes for to beguile the people with flatteringes and leasinges slaunderously agaynst all good reason and true beleue and so to encrease diuers vyces in themselues and also among all them that accept them or consent to them And thus the viciousnesse of these foresayd named Priestes Prelates haue bene long time and yet is and shal be cause of wars both within the Realme and without And in the same wise these vnable Priestes haue bene and yet are and shal be chiefe cause of pestilence of men and morein of beastes and of barrennesse of the earth and of all other mischiefes to the tyme that Lordes and cōmons able them through grace for to know and to keepe the cōmaundements of God inforcing them than faythfully and charitably by one assent for to redresse and make one this foresayde Priesthood to the wilfull poore meeke and innocent liuing and teaching specially of Christ and his Apostles Therefore all they that know or might know the viciousnes that raigneth now cursedly in these Priests and in theyr learning if they suffice not to vnderstand this contagious viciousnesse let them pray to the Lord hartily for the health of his Church absteining them prudently from these indurate enemyes of Christ and of his people and from all their Sacraments since to them all that know them or may know they are but fleshly deedes and false as S. Cyprian witnesseth in the first question of decrees and in the first cause Ca. Si quis inquit For as this Saynt and great Doctour witnesseth there that not onely vicious Priestes but also all they that fauour them or consent to them in their viciousnesse shall together perish with them if they amend them not duely as all they perished that cōsented to Dathan and Abiron For nothing were more confusion to these foresayd vicious Priestes than to eschew them prudently in all theyr vnlefull Sacramentes while they cōtinue in their sinnefull liuing slaunderously as they haue lōg time done and yet do And no
noted and accused of Nicromancie wrote a booke in purgation of himselfe intituled de Innocentia sua Also an other booke intituled Contra vulgi superstitiones recorded in Centu 8. Bale cap. 4. Whereupon it is not credible that he which wrote professedly agaynst the superstitions of the people was ouertaken with that filth of Nicromancie himselfe The fourth coniecture because this accusation against the Duches of Glocester Duke Humfries wife began not before but after the grudge kindled betweene the Cardinall of Wint. and Duke Humfrey her Husband An other coniecture may be hereof for that if the Duches had entended any suche haynous treason against the kings life as by burning of a waxe candle to consume him it is not like neyther was there anye such neede that she would haue made so many priuy to such a pernicious coucell as the Witch of Eye M. Rog. Bolingbroke M. Tho. Southwest and Iohn Hume Sixtly it is not to be supposed if anye such hie treason had bene wrought or pretended agaynst the kinges person by these that eyther the Duches should so escape with bearing a taper and banishment or that Iohn Hume shoulde be pardoned hys life the fact being so haynous that neyther any durst aske hys pardon nor if it had bene asked it had not bene like to be graunted To these we may also adde an other supposall rising vpon the wordes and forme of theyr accusation as it standeth in Harding Polychronicon and other moe wherein they were accused for working sorcery and inchantmentes agaynst the church and the king Now what sorcery can be wronght agaynst the church that is the whole multitude of Christians let the reader iudge and by the truth of this consider also the truth of the other which was agaynst the king Furthermore if by this Church is ment the Cardinall of Wint as like it is then it may be coniecturall that all this matter rose of that Cardinall who was then a mortall enemy to the house of Gloucester c. Eightly And that all this was done and wrought by the sayd Cardinall of Wint. the witch concerning Eye maketh the matter the more suspitious seeing that towne of Eye as Fabian witnesseth was neare beside Wintchester and sea of that Byshop Moreouer for so much as Polydore Virgill among other story authors being a mā as may be supposed rather fauouring the Cardinalls parte then the Dukes made no mention at all touching this treason hys licence therof may minister matter not also to muse but onely to coniecture that he had found something whiche made hym to miststrust the matter Otherwise it is vnlike that he wold haue so mewed vp the matter and passed it ouer without some mention Finally and briefly The frequent practises and examples of other times may make this also more doubtfull cōsidering howe many subtile pretences after like forte haue bene sought and wrongfull accusations brought agaynst many innocent persons For not to repeate the like forgeries agaynst the Lord Cobham and syr Roger Acron c. why may not this accusation of the Duches and Onley be as false as that in the time of king Edward the 5. whiche was layd to the charge of the Queene and Shores wife by the Protectours for inchaunting bewitching of his withered arme which to be false all the world doth know and but a quarell made only to oppresse the life of the L. Hastings the L. standley c. And thus mayest thou see gentle reader according to the wise mans saying Nihil nouú es●e sub sole● Nihil que dictum quod non sit dictum prius xc Althoughe these with many mo coniectures may be alledged in some part of Defence of this Duches and of her Chaplaines and Priestes yet because it may be not vnpossible againe the matter laide against them to be true I leaue it therfore at large as I finde it saying as I saide before that if it be true which the stories say in this matter thinke I beseech thee gentle Reader that I haue saide nothing hereof Onely because the matter may bedisputable and not vnpossible to be false I haue but moued thereof a questiō and brought my coniectures leauing the determi natiō and iudgement hereof to thy indifferent and free arbitrement And if M. Cope be so highly offended with me because in my first edition of Actes and Monumentes I durst name the Lady Eleanor Cobham and Roger Onely let him take this for a short aūswer because my leisure serueth not to make long braules with him that if I had thought no imperfectiōs to haue passed in my former editiō before I would neuer haue taken in hand the recognition thereof now that secōd time wherby to sponge away such motes as I thought would seeme great stombling blockes in suche mens walkes which walke with no charitie to edefie but with malice to carpe and reprehend neither admonishing what they see amisse in others neither tarying while other men reforme themselues finally finding quarels where no great cause is iustly geuen And here an end with M. Cope for this time Forsomuch as in the processe before mentiō was touched concerning the grudge betweene the Cardinall cal●ed the rich Cardinal of Wintchester and the good duke Humfrey duke of Glocester the kings vncle and protector of that realme order of story now requireth to open some parte of that matter more at large Wherein this first is to be vnderstand that long before great flames of grudge and discorde did burst out betweene these two For as the noble hart of the Duke could not abide the proud doinges of the Cardinall so much againe the Cardinall in like maner sore enuied disdayned at the rule of the Duke of Glocester Notwithstanding by the meanes of the Duke of Bedford the brasting out betweene them was before appealed cured yet not so but that vnder imperfect amitie priuy hatred as sparcles vnder the imbers did still remaine So that the Cardinal ioyning with the Archbishop of Yorke attempted many thinges of their owne presumption contrary to the consent not onely of the king being then vnder age but also of the protectour gouernor of the realme Wherwith the Duke like a true harted prince being not without iust cause offended declared in writing to the king certaine complaintes contained in 21. Articles wherein the Cardinall and Archbishop had transgressed both against the king his lawes The tenour whereof more at large is in other stories expressed the briefe abstract therof followeth in a short summarie here to be seene ¶ Certaine pointes or articles obiected by the Duke Humfrey against the Cardinall of Winchester FIrst complayned to his soueraigne Prince his right redoubted Lord duke Humfrey his vncle and protector of the realm that the bishop of Winchester in the dayes of his father king Henry the 5. took vppon him the state of a cardinall being denyed
maruell considering that he had slaine his brother Theodosius before at home moreouer liued in incestious matrimony also being inclined to certayne new sects could not abide the cōtrary teachers but slew thē which admonished him thereof The sayd Constans going afterward to Italy was also ouercome of the Lumbardes c. the Saracens after this victory spoyled also Rhodes Although these cursed Saracens in these theyr greate victories conquests were not without domesticall seditions and deuisions among themselues yet the princes of the Saracens being called then Sultans had in theyr possession the gouernment of Syria Egypt Affrike of a great part of Asia about the terme of 400. yeares till at length the Saracen king which ruled in Persia fighting agaynst the Saracene of Babilon sought ayde of the Turkes to fight with him agaynst the Sultane of Babilon The which Turks by litle and litle surprised vpō the Sultan of Persia not long after putting him out of place vsurped the king dome of Persia which afterward went further as ye shall heare the Lord willing And this is the first beginning of the Turkes dominion These Turkes after they had thus ouercome great coūtryes and prouinces and made their power large mighty both in Asia and Europa begā to deuide theyr kingdōes countryes amongest themselues But when they coulde not agree but with deadly war contended for the boundes of those kingdomes and dominions in the meane tyme 4. of the principall families conquering and subduing all the rest parted the whole Empyre amongst thēselues And yet they also not so contented fell to such cruell hatred contētion warre and slaughter no doubt by the iust iudgement of God against his blasphemous enemies that there was no end thereof vntill the remnant of the auncient Turkes was vtterly rooted out For it is euident that there are fewe nowe remayning which are Turkes in deed by birth and bloud and that the state of that great empyre is not upholdē but by the strength an● power of souldyors which haue bene Christians and now are turned to Mahumetes Religion so that euen theyr owne naturall language is now out of vse amongest them sauing in certayne families of theyr nobility and gētlemen These foure familyes aboue mentioned with theyr Captaynes and armyes about the yeare of our Lorde 1330 went raging throughout all Asia and Europa and euery one of them conquered some parte of the countryes where they passed The causes of these great inuasiōs and victoryes were the dissention and discorde falsehoode idlenesse vnconstancy greedy auarice lacke of trueth and fidelity among Christian men of al states and degrees both high and low For by the wilfull defection and backesliding of the Christians the Turkish power did exceedingly encrease in that many ●rsiring the licentious life liberty of war allured with the prosperous successe of thynges forsooke the Churche of God and made themselues bond slaues to Mahumet and his deuilish sect b●th because that fleshly liberty is delighting to all men and partly also because as fortune fauoreth so commonly the willes of men enclyne And agayne suche as be prophane and without the feare of God whereof there is an infinite number in the Church in all ages are wont commonlye to iudge of Religion according to the successe of realmes and kingdomes For if any not onelye for the variety of opinions but also for the diuersitye of euentes and fortune amongest men haue inquired and doe inquire whether there be any Churche of God distyncte from other nations what it is and where it is especially for so muche as the greatest part of men bothe in the olde time when as the foure Monarchyes flourished in order was ignoraunt of this doctrine whiche is peculier to the Churche alone and nowe also the barbarity of Mahumet preuayleth raigneth in the moste part of the worlde And how standeth this with mans reason that a small number both miserable and also feebled and broken with manye battayles shoulde be regarded and loued of God and the other flourishing in all wealth prosperity victoryes authority and power should be reiected and despised of God seing there is no power and authoritye but by the ordynaunce of God Albeit therefore the power of the Turkes hath bene for these two hundreth yeares of greater force then any other Monarchy of the world besides yet is there no Imperiall dignity to be estemed in that Turkish tyrāny but amongest those nations onely where the heauenly doctrine of the Gospell is preached other disciplines necessary for the Churche of God the common life of man mayntayned and regarded where the lawes of God other honest and ciuil ordinaunces agreable to the same doe flourish and reigne where lawful iudgement is exercised where vertue is honoured and rewarded where sinne and wickednes is punished where honest familyes are mayntayned and defended These thinges are not regarded amongest the Turkes the enemies of the sonne of God and all lawfull Empyres because they dissolue and reiect all godly focietyes honest discipline good lawes policyes righteous iudgemēts the ordinaunce of matrimony and godly familyes For what hath the Empyre of the Turkes bene hetherto but moste deadly cruell and perpetuall warre to worke all mischief destruction and desolation to subuert good lawes Cityes kingdomes policies and to enlarge theyr cruell power dominion The stay and strength whereof is not loue and fauour proceeding of vertue and iustice as in lawefull and well gouerned Empyres but feare violence oppression swarmes and infinite thousandes of barbarous and most wicked people ministers of Satans malice fury Whiche kinde of dominion and tyranny hath bene condēned by the voyce of God many yeares agoe the ●●stimonyes wherof the Lord would haue to remayne in the Church least the godly being moued with the power successe therof should fall away and forsake the sonne of God Wherefore let vs not se●ke for any Imperiall state in that barbarity but let vs be thankefull acknowledge the great benefite of God for that he hath reserued to vs certayne remnaunts of the Romayn Empyre And let vs call vpon him dayly with harty petitions and grones wyth zeale and loue to the house of God that this Turkish power ioined with the malice of Sathan against the sonne of God preuayle not agaynst the poore congregations litle remnant of his Churche as it hath hitherto done agaynste those strong and noble christian kingdoms and churches were now we see the Turkish tyranny to raigne Sathā to haue taken full possession Whose state was once farre better then ours is now and more like to continue without such horrible ouerthrowes and desolation Oh that we might foresee a litle the great daunger that hangeth ouer our heades For though the Turke semeth to be farre of yet doe we nourishe within our brestes at home that maye soone cause vs to feele his cruell hand and worse if worse may be
Metropolis Bulgaria Bulgaria was wonne of Baiazetes the Turk from the crowne of Hungarye through the vnprosperous warre of Sigismundus at the fielde of Nicopolis an 1395. This Sigismund was the burner of Iohn Hus and the persecutor of his doctrine Wallachia Tergouistus or Teruis Huniad where Ioannes Huniades was borne Transyluania or Septē castra Hermenstat Cronestat Saltzburg Alba Iulia or Weissenburg Seruia Gyula Samandria Columbetz Rascia Walpo Vid. sup pag. 740 Nouigradum Varna Moldauia   Hungaria Buda or Osen Alba regalis Belgradum or Taurinum Strigonium Varadinum Neapolis Maior Minor Austria Pestum ¶ As I was writing hereof a certayne soūd of lamentable newes was brought vnto vs howe the Turke whome wee had hoped before to haue bene repulsed by the Emperour Maximilian out of Christendome hath now of late this present yeare 1566. got the towne of Gyula about Transyluania after they had susteined 16 of his most forceable assaultes destroying in the same most cruelly many thousand of our chisten brethren men women and children but because we haue no full certaynty we will referre the story therof to further information ¶ The Prophecyes of the holy Scriptures considered touching the comming vp and finall ruine and destruction of this wicked kingdome of the Turkes with the Reuelations and foreshewinges also of other authours concerning the same FOr so muche as you haue hitherto sufficiently heard to what quantity largenes the dominon of the Turkes hath encreased doe vnderstand what cruell tyranny these wretched miscreants haue and do dayly practise most haynously wheresoeuer they come agaynst the seruaunts and professors of Christ it shall not be vnprofitable but rather necessary and to our great comfort to cōsider and examine in the Scriptures with what prophesyes the holy spirit of the Lord hath premonished and forewarned vs before of these heauy persecutions to come vpon his people by thys horrible Antichrist For as the gouernment and constitution of times and states of monarchies pollicies fall not to vs by blind chaūce but be administred and alotted vnto vs from aboue so it is not to be supposed that such a great alteration and mutation of kingdomes such a terrible generall persecutiō of Gods people almost through all Christēdome and such a terrour of the whole earth as is now moued and gendred by these Turkes cōmeth without the knowledge sufferaūce and determination of the Lord before for such endes and purposes as his deuine wisedome doth best know For the better euidēce testimony wherof he hath left in his Scriptures sufficiēt instructiō declaration whereby we may plainly see to our great cōfort how these greeuous afflictions troubles of the Church though they be sharpe heauy vnto vs yet they come not by chaūce or by mās working onely but euen as the Lord himselfe hath appointed it and doth permit the same And first to begin with the tyme of the old Testament let vs seriously aduise ponder not onely the Scriptures Prophecies therein conteined but also let vs cōsider the whole state order and regimēt of that people the Church I meane of the Israelites For although the Scriptures and Prophetes of the old Testament were properly sent to that people haue their relatiō properly to things done or thāt should be done in that cōmōwealth of which prophetes Iohn Baptist was the last made an end as our Sauiour himselfe witnesseth saying The law and Prophets be vnto the tyme of Iohn c. Yet notwithstāding the sayd people of that old Testamēt beareth a liuely Image resemblaunce of the vniuersall Church which should folow plāted by the sonne of God through the whole earth So that as the Prophetes of God speaking to them from the mouth word of God prophecied what should come to passe in that people so likewise the whole course Hystory of those Israelites exemplifieth beareth a Prophetical image to vs declaring what is to be looked for in the vniuersall Church of God dispersed through the world plāted in Christ Iesus his sonne according as Phil. Melan●thon grauely gathering vpon the same testifieth in diuers places in his Commentary vpon the Prophete Daniell As first the History of godly Abell slayne by wicked Cain what doth it importe or Prophecie but the conditiō of the people and seruauntes of God which commonly go to wracke in this world and are oppressed by the contrary part which belongeth not to God The like may be said also of Isaac and Ismaell of Iacob and Esau. Of whō those two which were the children of promise and belonged to the election of God were persecuted in this world of the other whiche were reiected Where moreouer is to be noted cōcerning Ismaell that of his stocke after the fleshe came the Saracens whose sect the Turkes do now professe mainteine And as Ismaell had but xii sonnes so it were to be wished of God that this Solyman which is the twelfe of the Turkish generation may be the last But of this better occasion shall folow the Lord willyng hereafter Furthermore of the xii tribes of Israel the sacrate history so reporteth that after they had a long season cōtinued together by the space of 8. or 9. C. yeares at length for their idolatrie transgression of their forefathers x. tribes of them were cut of and dispersed amōg the Gentiles 130. yeares before the captiuitie of Babilon so that but ij tribes onely remayned free and they also at last after a. 130. yeares were captiued vnder the Babylonians for a certaine time No otherwise hath it happened with the Church of Christ almost in the vniuersall world of which Church the greatest part both in Asia in Africa almost in Europe where the holy Apostles so laboured and trauailed we see now to be disparcled among the Turkes and their cādlestickes remoued the Lord of his great grace reduce them agayne Amen So that of xij partes of Christendome which was once planted in Christ scarse ij partes remayne cleare and they how long they shall so continue the Lord knoweth And albeit thorough the mercy of the Lord they escape the daūger of the Turkes yet haue they bene so beaten with the Pope that they had bene better almost to haue bene in the Turkes handes Agayne after the sayd Israelites returned being restored of Cyrus let vs consider well their story the continuance of tyme the maner of their regimentes and what afflictions they susteined in the tyme of the Machabees and we shall see a liuely representation of these our dayes expressed in that Propheticall people accordyng as S. Paul writyng of them sheweth how all thynges happened to them in figures that is the actiōs and doynges of that one nation be as figures and types of greater matters what shall happen in the latter times of the whole Church vniuersally in Christ collected So the transmigration deliueraunce agayne of those two tribes
first beast heere in this prophesy of the Apocalypse described Fourthly it foloweth more And he causeth the earth and all the inhabitants therein to worship and honour the first beast which had a deadly wound and was cured c. The interpretation of this part as also of all the other parts of the same chapter standeth vpon the definition of the first beast for being graunted as it can not be denied that the first beast signifieth the Citie and Empire of Rome it must consequently follow that the Bishop whome we call the Pope of the same Citie of Rome must be vnderstoode by the second beast for somuch as neither Turke nor any other but only the Bishop of Rome hath holden vp the estimation and dignity of that Citie which began to be in ruine and decay by the Uandalians Gothes Herulians and Lombards about the yeare of our Lord 456. but afterward by the Bishop of Rome the pristine state and honor of that Citie reuiued againe and flourished in as great veneration as euer it did before And that is it which the holy Ghost seemeth heere to meane of the first beast saieng That he had a wound of the sword and was cured For so it followeth Fiftly And he caused all the inhabitants of the earth to make the image of the beast which had the stripe of the sword and liued And it was geuen to him to giue life to the image of the beast and to make the image thereof to speake and to cause all them that worshipped not the image of the beast to be killed forcing all persons both little and great rich and poore bond and free to take the marke of the beast in their right hand or in their forheads and that none might buy or sell but they which had the marke or the name of the beast or the number of his name c. By geuing life to the image of the beast and making it to speake is to be presupposed that the beast was at a neare point of death and lay speachles before insomuch that the Citie of Rome began to lose and change his name was called a while Odacrie of Odacer King of the Herulians which by dent of sword surprised the Romans and yet notwithstanding by the meanes of this Romane Prelate the said Citie of Rome which was then ready to geue the Ghost so recouered his maiestie and strength againe that it is hard to say whether Rome did euer ruffle and rage in his tirannie before in the time of Nero Domitian Diocletian and other Emperors more tragically then it hath done vnder the Pope or whether that Rome had al Kings Queenes Princes Dukes Lords and all subiects more vnder obedience and subiection whē the Emperors raigned or now in the raigne of the Pope And therefore it is said not without cause of the holy Ghost That it is geuen to him to geue life and speach to the image of the beast causing all them to be slaine which will not worship the image of the beast c. As for example heereof who seeth not what numbers and multitudes of Christian men women and children in all Countreys haue bene put to the fire and sword Stories of all times will declare what hauocke hath bene made of Christen bloud about the preheminence and maioritie of the Sea of Rome what Churches and Countreys both Greekes and Latin haue bene excommunicated what Kings haue bene deposed and Emperors stripped from their Imperiall seate and all because they would not stoupe and bend to the Image of the beast that is to the maiesty and title of Rome aduanced vp so highly now by the Bishop thereof as it was neuer higher before in the raigne of Nero or Dyoclesian Wherefore taking the first beast to signifie the Empyre of Rome which can not be denyed it is playne that the second beast must necessarily be applied to the Pope and not to the Turke for as much as the Turke seeketh nothing lesse then the aduancement of that Empire but rather striueth against it to plucke it downe The sixt and last argument is grounded vpon the number of the name of the beast expressed by the holy Ghost in the same Prophecie by the letters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In which letters a though there lyeth great darcknesse and difficultie to be vnderstoode yet certaine auncient Fathers whiche were Disciples and hearers of them which heard S. Iohn himselfe as Irenaeus and other do expound the sayd letters coniecturally to containe the name of the beast and to be the name of a man vnder this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where as els no other name lightly of any person either in Greeke or Latine will agree to the same saue onely the foresayd name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Although some latter writers geuing their coniectures vpon the same doe finde the name of Lateranus in Hebrew Letters to aunswere to the same number Some fayne other names as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made wordes which signifie nothyng as Diclux or Luduuic by Romane letters c. But of all names properly signifying any mā none commeth so neare to the number of this mistery if it go by order of letters as doth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aforesayd And this much by the way and occasion of Nicolaus de Lyra Paulus Burgen Matthias Dorinkus the author of Fortalilium fidei and other Cōmentaries moe o● the same faction who writyng vpon this xiij Chapter of the Apocalipse and not considering the circumstaunces thereof both are deceaued themselues and deceaue many other applying that to the Turke which can not otherwise be verified but onely vpon the Pope as may appeare sufficiently by the premisses Not that I write this of any incode or malice either to the Citie of Rome or to the person of the Byshop as beyng Gods creature but beyng occasioned here to entreate of the Prophecies agaynst the Turkes would wishe the Readers not to be deceaued but rightly to vnderstand the simple Scriptures according as they lye to the entent that the true meanyng therof beyng boolted out it may be the better knowen what Prophecies directly make agaynst these Turkes what otherwise In the which Prophecies agaynst the Turkes now to proceede let vs come to the 20. Chapter of the Apocalipse wherein the holy Scripture seemeth playnly and directly to notifie the said Turkes The wordes of the Prophecie be these And I saw an Angell descendyng from heauen hauyng the key of the bottomlesse pit and a great chayne in his hand and he tooke the Dragon the old Serpent which is the deuill and Satanas and bound him vp for a thousand yeares and cast him in the pit and sealed him vp that he should not seduce the people any more til the thousand yeares were expired and after that he must be let loose for a litle while c. And it followeth after And
riches and shall treade downe pride with his owne death In the night he shall rise vp and be changed he shall liue and raigne and all these things shall be consummated and regeneration or newe things be made at last hee shall iudge both good and euill c. And thus much briefly collected out of Sybilia Erythrea concerning Christ our Lord. Furthermore touching the state and course of the Church and of Antichrist it foloweth in the sayde Sybille saying Then shall 4 Winged beastes rise vp in testimonie they shal soūd out with trumpets the name of the lambe sowing righteousnes the law irreprehensible Against which law the beast shal gainstand the abhomination froth of the dragon But a maruelous star shal rise hauing the image of the 4. beasts shal be in a maruelous multitude he shal bring light to the Greekes and shal illustrate the world The lake of the fisher shall bring the name of the lambe with power into the Citie of Eneas vnto the end of the worlde or time Then in the city of Eneas the starre ioyned shall loose such as were bound of the deuill and thereof hee shall reioyce and glory and glorious shal be his end c. After this Sybilia wryting as it semeth of Antichrist importeth these words And it shall come to passe that an horrible beast shal come out of the East whose roaring shall be heard to Aphrike to the people of Carthage Which hath 7. heades and scepters innumerable feete 663. He shall gainstande the lambe to blaspheme his Testamēt encreasing the waters of the dragon The kings princes of the world he shall burne in intolerable sweat they shal not diminish his feete And then two starres like to the first starre shall rise against the beast and shal not preuaile till the abhomination shall be come and the wil of the Lord shall be consummate And again speaking of the same matter he inferreth these words of the foresaid 2. starres aboue mētioned And toward the latter dayes two bright starres shall arise raising vp men lying dead in their sinnes being like to the first starre hauing the face of the 4. beasts which shall resist the beast the waters of the dragon testifying or preaching the name and lawe of the lambe the destruction of abhomination and iudgement and shal diminish his waters but they shal be weakened in the bread of affliction and they shall rise againe in stronger force c. And it foloweth moreouer After the abhomination then shal truth be reuealed the lambe shal be known to whom regions and countreis shal submit their necks all earthly men shal agree together in one to come into one fold and to be ruled vnder one discipline and after this shal be but a small time c. And shortly after the saide Sybilia speaking of the latter iudgement to come declareth how all the abhominations of sinnes shall come before the lambe and that terrible fire shall fall frō heauen which shall consume al carthly things created vnto the top of heauen c. And thus muche out of Sybilla touching her prophesies of Christ Antichrist according a● I founde them alleaged of a certaine catholike Romish wryter in his booke entituled Onus ecclesiae excerped as he sayeth out of the library of S. George in the citie of Uenice Philip Melancthon in his preface vpon Bartholomaeus Georgienitz Peregrinus wryting of the Origene and manners of the Turks alledgeth a certaine prophesy of Hikenus mentioned hereafter which foresaid that the Turkes should beare rule in Italy and in Germany An. 1600. Now it remaineth in conclusion of these prophesies of the Turks something to say of the Turks owne prophesies concerning the enduring ending of their own kingdom whose propheticall prognostication being taken out of their owne language and their own bookes I thought here to insert as I finde it alleaged in the booke of the forsayd Bartholomaeus Georgienitz as followeth A Turkish prophecie in the Persian toung of the raigne and ruine of the Turkes PAtissahomoz ghelu Ciaferum memleketi alur keuzul almai alur Kapzeiler iedi y ladegh Gyaur keleci csikmasse on ikiyladegh onlaron beghlig eder eusi iapar baghi diker bahesai baghlar oglikezi olur onichi yldensora Hristianon Keleci csichar ol Turchi gerestine tus chure The Latine of the same IMperator noster veniet ethnici Principis regnum capiet rubrū quoque pomum capiet in suam potestatem rediget quod si septimum vsque annum Christianorum gladius non insurrexit vsque ad duodecimum annum els dominabitur Domos ae dificabit vineas plantabit hortos sepibus muniet liberos procreabit post duodecimum annum apparebit Christianorum gladius qui Turcam quaqua versum in fugam aget The same in English OUr Emperour shal come he shal get the kingdome of the Gentiles prince also he shal take the red apple and shall bring it vnder his subiection and if the sworde of the Christians shall not rise vnto the vij yeare hee shall haue dominion ouer them vnto the xii yere He shal build houses plant vineyardes shal hedge about his orchards shall procreate children and after the xij yeare shal appeare the sworde of the Christians whych shall putte the Turke to flight euery where They whych make declaration of thys Turkishe prophesie do expound this xij yeare to signify the xij yeare after the winning of Constantinople which Constantinople they say is ment by the redde apple And after that xij yeare say they shall rise the sworde of the Christians c. and this prophesie being wrytten and translated out of the Persian tounge with this exposition vpon the same is to be found in the boke of Bartholomeus Georgienitz Albeit concerning the exposition therof it semeth not to be true which is there spoken of the xij yeare after the wynning of Constantinople being nowe 100. yeares since the wynning thereof Wherefore it may rather seme probable that by the vij yeare and xii yeare of the Turkes this to be the meaning that if the vij of the Ottaman Turks do scape the sworde of the Christians they shall continue builde and plant c. vntill the xij Turke which is thys Solymannus then after that shall rise the Christians sworde whych shall put them to flight and vanquish them in al quarters And this exposition may seeme to accord with the place of Genesis wherin is wrytten of Ismael that he had xij sonnes no mo So that this Solymannus being the xij Turke after Ottomannus may by the grace of Christ be the last whō we heard credibly to be reported at the printing heereof to be dead But howsoeuer this prophecy is to be takē it appeareth by their owne Oracles that at length they shal be ouercome by the Christians A Table describing the times and yeares of the Saracens Turkes and Tartarlans for the better explaining
in England as by these stories abone past may be apparent Now these things declared which to the Church matters be apperteining cōsequently it remaineth something to entreate of the state likewise of the cōmon wealth which commonly doth follow the state of the Church Where the Church is quietly and moderately gouerned and the flock of Christ defended by godly Princes in peace safety frō deuouring and violence of bloudy wolues the successe of ciuile estate for the most part there doth florishe and the Princes long cōtinue through Gods preseruation in prosperous rest trāquillitie Contrariwise where the church of Christ either through the negligence of Princes or thorough their setting on the poore members of Christ be persecuted and deuoured shortly after ensueth some iust recompence of the Lord vpon those Princes that eyther their liues do not long continue or else they finde not that quiet in the common wealth which they looke for Examples heereof as in all other ages be aboundant so in this present time be not lacking whether we consider the state and condition of other countreys farre off or else of our owne countrey neare at home And heere not to wander in our story farther then to Fraunce onely let vs a little behold the example of Kyng Charles the viij who liuing in this Kings time died also not long before him This Charles is commended of Philippus Cominaeus to be a moderate valiant and victorious Prince adorned with many speciall vertues to a Prince apperteining And yet the same king because he was flack and remisse in defence of Christes Church neither did vse his authority nor tooke his occasion offered to him of God to amend and refourme the state of the Bishop and Cleargy of Rome when he might he was therefore himselfe punished and cut off of the Lord as by his story ensuing may right well appeare For so it is of him recorded that being maruelously excited and prouoked of his owne minde cōtrary to the counsaile of most of his Nobles he tooke hys viage into Italy neither being furnished with money nor the season of the yeare being cōuenient therunto And that this may appeare the better to proceede of the Lords doing to the entent he woulde haue the Church and Cleargy of Rome reformed by the Princes sword which so vexed all Christendome at that time we shall heare what is testified in the Commentaries of the foresaid Philip. Cominaeus Lib. 3. De bello Neapolit writing in this wise There was saith he in the City of Florence the same time a Dominicke Frier Dominicke Frier named Hieronimus Sauonarola of whom mētion was made before pag. 731. a man of a right godly and approoued life who in the said City of Florence preached and prophecied long before that the French King should come with an army into Italy being stirred vp of God to suppresse the tiraunts of Italy and none should withstand him He should also come to the Citie of Pisae and the state of Florence should be altered all which hapned true He affirmed moreouer to be signified to him of the Lord that the Ecclesiasticall state of the Churche must bee redressed Per vim a●morum●● by the sword or force of armes Many things also he prophesied of the Venetians of the French King saieng that the King with some danger difficultie should passe that iourney yet notwithstanding shoulde ouercome it and escape albeit his strength were neuer so slender for God woulde safely conduct him in that iourney and safely bring him home againe But because he had not done his office in amending the state of the Churche and in defending his people from iniurie and from deuouring therefore it shoulde come to passe said hee and that shortly that some incommoditie or detriment shoulde happen to the King or if hee shoulde escape that danger of hys sicknesse and recouer health then if he did resist the cruelty of the wicked and procure the safety of the poore and miserable God would shew merc●●nto him c. And this the saide Hieronymus declared before to Cominaeus one of the Kings counsaylours whych was the writer of the story and required him to signifie the same vnto the King which so did and he moreouer himselfe comming to the presence of the king declared no lesse All which things as he had foretold came directly to effect For the King being but easely accompanied wyth a small power entred into Italy where first he came to As●a then to Gemia● and to Pisae from thence proceeded to Florence which also he obteined displacing there Petrus Medices the Duke who had vsed great tyrannie vpon the subiects From thence he remoued toward Rome where a great part of the Citie wall at the comming of the french King fell downe Afterward when the King was entred into the Citie and the Pope who then tooke part with Alphonsus King of Neaples against the French King had immured himselfe within the mount of Adrian the wall of the Castell fell downe of it selfe whereby when the King was both occasioned and exhorted also by his Captaines to inuade the Pope and to depose him to reforme the Church of Rome which he might then easely haue done as it had pleased him yet all these occasions offered so opportunely of God moued not the king to do his duty to help the poore church of Christ wherefore shortly after returning home into France from Neapolis either the same yeare or the next yeare folowing he was strooken with a sodeine sicknes at Amboise as he was looking on thē that played at tennes and that in the stinkingest place in all the Castle where he fell downe died within twelue houres according to the forewarning of Hieronimus who wrote vnto him a little before both of his sonnes death and of his owne which was about the yeare of our Lord 1498. Ex Philip. Cominaeo Lib. 5. Like examples we haue many heere also in this our realme of England So long as king Iohn kept out of the realme the Popes authority and power he continued safe and quiet with his nobles but so soone as he brought the realme vnder tribute and subiectiō to that foreine Bishop God stirred vp his Nobles against him whereby he had much disquiet and trouble and soone thereupon decayed Of all the Kings of England from William Conquerour to this king Henry vij were none which either longer continued or more prosperously flourished then King Henry the second King Henry the third King Edward the first King Edward the third of whome the first how stout he was in withstāding Tho. Becket and Pope Alexander the iij. is sufficiently before comprehended pag. 206. The second which was sonne of King Iohn albeit through the wretchednes of that time his power was not sufficient to repulse the Popes usurped iurisdiction out of the Realme yet his will was good at least he so defended prouided for his subiects that
they tooke no great wrong at the Popes handes who reigned one yeare longer then Augustus Caesar which hath not commonly bene seene in any Prince The third which was King Edward the first so vigilantly behaued himselfe for the publique cōmoditie safetie of his people that he defended thē frō all foraine power and hostilitie both of the Scottes then our enemies now our frendes and also from the Bishop of Rome takyng part with them against vs as may appeare aboue page 340. Furthermore of the same King and of his woorthy Nobles and house of Parliament how valiantly they stoode in deniall of the Popes subsidies and also how the sayd King secluded out of his protection the Bishops and especially the Archbishop Peecham for standing wyth the Pope reade pag. 352. Now as touching King Edward the third how little he regarded how princely he with his Nobles likewise resisted the Popes reseruations and prouisions how hee brideled the Archbishop Iohn S●ratford and reiected the ●a●●e authority of the Bishop of Rome both in ●efe●ise of his subiects and also in defence of claiming his right title in the Realme of France reade pag. 383. Not that I do heere affirme or define as in a generall rule that worldly successe and prosperitie of life alwayes followeth the godly which we see rather to be geuen more often to the wicked sort but speaking of the duty of Princes I note and obserue by examples of histories that such Princes as haue most defended the Church of Christ committed to their gouernance from iniurie and violence of the Bishop of Rome haue not lacked at Gods hand great blessing and felicitie whereas contrarywise they whiche either themselues haue bene persecutours of Christes mēbers or haue not shielded thē by their protection from foreine tiranny and iniuries haue lacked at Gods hand that protection which the other had as may appeare by King Edward the second Richard the third King Henry the fourth King Henry the v. king Henry the vj. c. who because either negligētly they haue suffered or cruelly caused such persecuting lawes to be made so much Christē blood iniuriously to be deuoured therefore haue they bene the lesse prospered of the Lord so that either they were deposed or if they florished for a while yet they did not long continue almost not halfe the time of the other kings before named And therefore as the state of the common wealth doth commonly folow the state of the Church as ye hard before so it had bene to be wished that this King Henry the vij beyng otherwise a prudent temperaunt Prince had not permitted the vntemperaūt rage of the Popes Clergy so much to haue their willes ouer the poore flocke of Christ as then they had accordyng as by these persecutiōs aboue mētioned may appeare The which king Henry vij albeit he had a sufficiēt continuaunce who had now raigned 24. yeares yet notwithstāding here commeth the same thyng to be noted wherof I speake before that whē the Church of Christ begynneth to be iniuried with violēce to go to wracke through misorder negligēce the state of the common wealth can not there long endure without some alteration stroke of Gods correction But howsoeuer this marke is to be takē thus lyeth the story that after the burnyng vexyng of these poore seruauntes of Christ aboue recited when the persecution begā now in the Church to be hoate God called away the kyng the same yeare aboue mentioned which was 1509. after he had raigned the terme of yeares 24. Who if he had adioyned a litle more pitifull respect in protectyng Christes poore mēbers from the fire of the Popes tyrāny to his other great vertues of singular wisedome excellent tēperaunce moderate frugalitic somuch had he bene cōparable with the best of those Princes aboue comprehended as hee had bene interiour but to a few but this defect which lacked in him was supplyed most luckely blessed be the Lord by his posteritie succeding after him Of whom in the next volume folowing Christ thereunto assisting vs we haue to specifie more at large Among many other thynges incident in the raigne of this kyng Henry vij I haue ouerpassed the history of certaine godly persons persecuted in the Diocesse of Couentry and Lichfield as we finde them in the Registers of the Diocesse recorded here folowyng The yeare of our Lord. 1485. March 9. amongest diuers and sundry other good men in Couētry these ix here vnder named were examined before Iohn Bishop of Couentry and Lichfield in S. Michaels Church vpon these Articles folowyng in order FIrst Iohn Blomston was openly and publikely infamed accused reported appeached that he was a very hereticke because he had preached taught holden affirmed that the power attributed to S. Peter in the Church of God by our Sauiour Iesus Christ immediatly did not flit or passe frō him to remaine with his successours Item that there was as much vertue in an herbe as in the Image of the Uirgine Mary Item that prayer and almes auayle not the dead for incontinent after death he goeth either to heauen 〈◊〉 held whereupon he concludeth there is no Purgatory Item that it was foolishnesse to go on Pilgrimage to the Image of our Lady of Dancaster Walsingham or of the Tower of the Citie of Couentry for a man might as well worship the blessed Uirgin by the fire 〈◊〉 in the ●itchin as in the foresayd places and as well might a man worship the blessed Uirgin when he seeth his mother or sister as in visityng the Images because they be no more but dead stockes and stones Item that he sayd in English with a frowning countenaunce as it appeared a vengeaūce on all such horson Priestes for they haue great enuy that a poore man should get his liuyng among them RIchard Hegham of the same Citie was accused c. to be a very hereticke because he did hold that a Christen man beyng at the point of death should 〈◊〉 all his owne workes good and ●●l and submitte him to the mercy of God Item that it was fondnesse to worship the Images of our Lady of Tower in the foresayd Citie or of other Saintes for they are but stockes and stones Item that if the Image of our Lady of Tower were put into the fire it would make a good fire Item that it were better to deale money vnto poore folkes then to offer to the Images of Christ and other Saintes which are but dead stockes and stones RObert Crowther of the same Citie was accused that he was an hereticke because he did hold that who so receiueth the Sacramēt of the altar in deadly sinne or out of charitie receiueth nothyng but bread and wine Item that neither Byshop nor Priestes or Curates of Churches haue power in the market of penaunce to bynde and loose Item that Pilgrimage to the Image of our
fruites for 2. yeares graunted to the kyng Ex vetusto Chronico Albanensi A parliament in Fraunce assembled wherein is discussed the iurisdiction ecclesiastical how farre it extendeth Anno. 1329. The letter of Philip king of Fraunce to the byshops prelates The Parliament conuented Lord Peter speakes in the Parliament The thea●e of his oration The oration deuided in two partes Obedience to the kyng Difference betweene the iurisdiction of the state temporall and ecclesiasticall Articles in the Parliament propounded contayning the iust complaints of the laitie against the clergie Causes real Prelates intermedle in temporall mens matters Ex Officio Imprisonment pertaineth not to the Clergie Action reall personall No mā may appeale frō a spirituall iudge to the temporall law by the Popes diuinitie Deanes of the Clergie Maryed clear Gynnes to g●● money Resortum The clergie preiudiciall to common iustice Ex Officio Vsury craftely obiected by the clergie against laye men The prelates make the church a denne of theeues Note the practise of officials to get money B. Eduen and Archb. of Se●●● elect Prolocutor for prelates Repetition of the L. Peters oration aboue touched page 358. Luke 22. Math. 17. Two gifts giue Priesthood Empyre Prouerb 22. Dif 10. 1. Peter 2. Actes 5. 2. Mach 7. 11. quast 1. Feare of God stādeth in three pointes Num. 18. 1. Paral. cap. vlt. What benefite commeth by geuing to the church Luke 6. Time of warre 1. Mach. 3. Exod. 17. 2. Mach. Time of peace Prouerb 16. 1. Esdras 6. Eccle. 2. The 2. part of fearing God Hebr. 12. Honouring of spiritu●●● fathers 4. Keg 6. Luke 10. 1. Thess. 4. 11. q. cap. ● Sacerd●●●bus Exod. 22. Malach. 2. Honour to be giuen to priestes Two powers temporall and spirituall and what difference betwene them both De mai obed cap. Solit. Double subiection vpon merite of vertue and vpon duetie of necessitie The authoritie of a byshop and a king compared The pride of the prelacye Si●upekings Eccle. 4. Eccle. 4. The third part of fearing God Eccle. 18. A thing made myne diuers wayes 6. Proofes 1. Diuine lawe 2. by the law of nature 3. by canon lawe 4. by ciuill lawe 5. by custom 6. by priuiledge Formes being dislike not contrary may be compatible in one subiect Proofes out of the olde Testament Melchisedech was both kyng and Priest Ergo the P. may haue both iurisdictions Gene. 14. Deut. 17. Samuell was iudge in temporall matters Ergo the Pope may haue both iurisdictions 1. Mach. ● Ierem. 1. Proofes taken out of the new Testament Apoc. 19. Christ by his humaine nature had both powers Psal. 8. Hebr. 2. Phil. 2. Act. 10. Acts. 5. Math. 8. Omnia terminus distributiuus Luke 22. 1. Cor. 6. 22. q. 1. cap. futuram Esay 13. Probation by ciuil lawe and reason 1. Peter 2. Probation by the Canon lawe Custome Iudicium contradictorium Three things pertayning to prescription 1. Titulus 2. bonafides 3. Temporīs continuatio Ius fisci The church not subiect to the kyng Obiection Answere The French 〈◊〉 more blessed then other in 3 thinges 1. Faith to God 2 Honour to the Church 3. Iustice to the people 5. thinges doth nobilate the realme of Fraunce The bloud of Fraunce came out of Priamus king of Troy 1. Reg. 2.1 Daniel 5. Ambrose in case denieth to obey the Emperour 3. Reg. 21. Nabaoth denyeth to the kyng his Vineyard Gene. 48. Math. 17. Offence how it ought to be auoyded Rom. 14. Math. 16. The 3. note of the feare of God Eccle. 15. Honour of the kyng Eccle. 10. Two kinde of honour Math. 17. Double honour with lippes and with heart A prince ●●ther to be beloued 〈◊〉 feared Seneca de clementia ad Ger●●●● A sentence Prouerb 22 In alteration what is to be cōsidered 3. Reg. 11. Math. 20. 25. Quaest●●● cap. Si. Marke here a fable A dreaming fable Iohn 8. Eccle. 4. Rom. 11. Who honoreth the K. Prouer. 22. Conscience and good name Eccle. 4. 24. q. 5 cap. Regnum Eccle. 37. Eccle. 3. The 4. honoring of the kyng Mat. 6. 1. Reg. 15. The oth of the French kinges A●g by the possessions of the church many brethren and kinsmen of the nobles be maintayned Ergo such possessions are not to be grudged at To beleeue in the Church is not in our faith 1. Reg. 21. To the bill of articles exhibited An other dayes sitting in the parliament Bishop of Eduen againe speaketh Math. 12. Marke 12. 11. q. 1. cap. 1. 2. 22. q. 4. cap. Si vero Math. 26. Why Christ payd tribute 16. Dist. cap. Constanti●●● 35. Dist. cap. ab exordio Eccle. 6. Speciall answeres to the articles premised by B. Eduen An other dayes sitting in the Parliament ●● Dist. cap. sum ad vetum Shauing of Priestes crownes wherefore 11. quest 2. The B. findeth fault with the kings answere The gentle answere of the king to Bishope The finall answere of the kyng to the Prelates Notes vpon the bishops answer● Pag. 36● col 2. Feare of God consisting in three thinges 1. In geuing 2. In honoring 3. In restoring Honour to the kyng double In word flattering in deede effectuall Honour effectuall standeth in foure pointes 1. in maintayning the kings loue 2. in maintayning his dignitie 3. in maintayning his good name 4. in maintayning his conscience Pag. 361. col 2. Pag. 361. col 2. Religio peperit diuitias nunc filia deuorauit matrem 4. incommodities that come in geuing to the church Pag. 361. col 2. 3. Things to be noted in offering to God and to the church Rom. 12. Pag. 361. col 1. Pag. 362. col 1. 1. Tim. 5. 2. Things ●● be noted ● geuing honour wh●●in consi●●● honour geuing to Priestes 1. Tim. 5. Titus 2. Qui benè praesunt How far honour giuen to priestes extendeth Marke 7. Pag. 362. col 1. Tit. 2. Pag. 362. col 1. 2. formes not contrary maybe compatible in one subiect Pag. 363. col 1. Rom. 13. Pag. 363. col 1. Noe was a priest and had both iurisdiction in the Arke Pag. 363. col 1. A. Pag. 363. col B. Page 363. col 1. C. Pag. 363. col 1. D. E. Pag. 363. col 1. Pag. 364. col 1. Pag. 364. col 1. Pag. 364. col 1. Anno. 1307. The sicknes and death of K Edward Godly lessōs and precepts geuen to the yong prince The kyng cōmaundeth his bones to be caryed in the field against the Scottes The fatherly care of kyng Edward in excluding wicked cōpany frō his sonne A rashe vow of kyng Edward The kyngs heart to be car●ed to the holy land The Epitaph of kyng Edward King Edward the second Anno. 1308. King Edward led by wicked counsaile Peter Gaueston or Gauerston a wicked doer about the kyng Anno. 1310. Peter Gaueston The vnordinate affection of the kyng to Peter Gaueston The pride of Peter Gaueston Peter Gaueston spoileth the kynges treasure The queene complaineth to the frēch kyng her Father of Peter Gaueston Gaueston againe
the Cardinall The Card. a deceauer of the king a briber The Card. purchaseth a pardon against his premuniri Prelates holde one with an other Malice burst out Paules steepleset on fire by lightning Anno. 1445 The death of Henry Chichesley Archb. of Cant. The buil●ing of Alsolne Colledge and Barnard Colledge in Oxforde Anno. 1447 The storie death of Humfrey Duke of Gloucester Duke Humfrey cōm●nded for his learning Petrus de Monte. De Virtutum et Vitrorum differentia ad D. Humfredum Lapiscastellius De compatatione Audiorum etrei militarus ad D. D. Humfredum A false miracle espied Dissimulat●on wel punished Commen-dation of Duke Hum-frey The good Duke of Glocester Polyd. Hist lib. 23 Hal● in 25. H●n 6. The enemies to the Duke of Glocester The malicious working of the cardinall against the Duke of Glocester W. De la Pole Duke of Suffolke the cause of the Duke of Glocesters death The vnprofitable mariage betweene K. Hen. 6. and Queene Margaret Queene Margaret mortall enemy to the Duke of Glocester The malice of a woman A snare to catch the innocent Anno. 1447. A parliament at Bery The cruel death or martyrdome of the good Duke of Glocester The iudgement of god vpon thē which persecuted the Duke of Glocester Anno. 1448. The death of the Cardinall and maner of the same The wordes of the Cardinall of Winchester at his de●th Will. Wanflet Bishop of Wint. Magdalen Colledge in Oxford builded Gods punishment vpon the Marques of Suffolke The 〈◊〉 glory of mans 〈◊〉 fo●geth●●g himselfe in honour The commons vncō stant The Duke of Suffolke accu●ed by the cōmon● The Duke of Suffolke againe accused Example of Gods iudgement and of bloud reuenged The Duke of Suffolke beheaded Publicam inst●umentum nomine Regis An instru ment by the thing against the admitting the Popes legate Anno. 1450. The arte of printing inuented Ex Tipographia per Matsheum Iudi●em Carmen An● Campani Printing cam● of God Printing likened to the giftes of tongues The time considered when Printing was founde Double confusi●● vpon the Pope by printing The fruit profite of printing Good counsaile to the Pope So preached the vicar of Croydē in K. Henry the 8. dayes at Paules crosse saying that either we must roote out printing or else printing will roote out v 8. Triple commodity by printing When Gunnes were first inuented Anno. 1458. The losing of Constantinople The tirannie of the Turke toward his owne men The cowardnes of Duke Iustinian The Emperour of Cōstantinople flaine Cōstātinople wonne of the Turkes The bloudy victory of the Turkes The horrible in āny of the Turkes Constantinople called new Rome A warning to all Christendome by Constantinople The story of Reinold Pecocke The citatiō of the Arch. Tho. Bowcher alias Bour●chet Pecocke appeareth at Lambeth before the Archb. Great labour to reduce Pecocke from his opiniōs The retractation of B. Pecocke Ex regist His Articles The articles of Reynolde Pecocke mentioned by Thomas Gascoigne Ex Tho. Gascoig lib. De Dictionario Theolog part 3. B. Pecocke deteyned in prison Polydo●e noted Eugenius warred against S●ortia and diuers other Pope F●●●x Pope Nicholas 5. Emperours are but kinges of Romaines before they be crowned by the Pope Ex Platina de vitis The example of Idolatrie punished The fruit of Idolatry Mat. Palmerius a Florentine martyr Toling of Aues S. Edmund of Cant. canonised Pope Pius 2. Promotion choketh religion The Prouerbes of Pius Mariage of priestes allowed by Aeneas Syluius Ex epist. 54. Pii s●cund ad Gasparum Schlick The way to exclude schisme is concord of princ●s The Popes Clergie wil not abyde the fyre eyther for prince or pope The breath of this pestilent seate corrupteth all that sit in it whatsoeuer they were before Aeneas Syluius now puffed vp with worldly pompe and glorie impugneth the trueth whiche he did before both know and professe D●scord betwene Pope Pius the Archbishop of Mentz Anno. 1458. Pope Paulus 2. Ex Stanislao Rutheno Vide Cent. 8. Bal. The feast of the conception and presentation of our Lady Beades brought in Wesellus Groningensis The pope licenseth the whole familie of a certaine Cardinall to play the Sodomites three monethes in the yeare Pope Innocentius 8. 8. men and 6. we men condemned of heresie by Pope Innocentius 8. George king of Boheme condemned of heresie Mischieues to England after the death of the Duke of Glocester Angeow Main Normandy and Gascoyne recoue●ed of the Frenchmen Iacke Cade The Duke of Yorke aga●●st kyng Henry Anno. 1459. The Northern men intended the subuersion of London Ex historia manuscripta cui titulus Scala mundi London rescued by prince Edw. Anno. 1461. The title of Edward to the crowne proued at Paules crosse K. Edward taketh possession of the crown The fierce and cruell battaile betweene king Henry 6. K. Edward 4. King Henry 6. conquered Barwicke geuen to the Scottes by K. Henry 6. The title of the house of Yorke Rich. Plantagenet Ex Scala mundi Leaden Hall bilded The Standard in Chepe The Conduite in Fletstrete New gate builded The Colledge of Eton and the kings Colledge in Cambridge founded The king reiecteth the popes Bulles Ex Getuslo codic cu● initium Nom●na custodum c. et ex Fabiano Example of Gods rodde and iudgement Anno. 1461. King Edward 4. Queene Margaret fledde the lande Anno. 1462. K. Edward sitteth his own person in the kings bench iudging Anno. 1463. K. Henry 6. againe repulsed in the battaile of Exham K. Henry 6. taken arested committed to the Tower Anno. 1465. The kyngs lodeine mariage with Queene Elizabeth The first falling out betweene K. Edwarde the Earle of Warwick Conspiracie against king Edward K. Edward take prisoner by the Earle of Warwicke The rebellion in Lincolnshire repressed The Earle of Warwicke and the Duke of Clarence fly into Fraunce The Earle of Warwick the Duke of Clarence returne into England The receiuing of the Earle of Warwicke into England K. Henry againe proclaymed kyng The inconstant leuitie of the people of England The constant hart and ●●nth of the Lord Hastinges K. Edward forsaken of his people in his neede The weake state of king Edward Whether godly simplicitie or mans policie be stronger The double case of these two kings considered K. Edward taketh the Washes God prouideth K. Edward taketh shipping K. Edward near taken of the Esterlings God againe prouideth K. Edward deliuered from the Esterlinges Charles Duke of Burgoyne K. Edwardes brother in law Queene Elizabeth taketh sanctuary Prince Edward borne in sanctuary K. Henry 6. brought out of the tower K. Henry restored again to his kingdome K. Edward returneth againe into England K. Edward onely with 2000. souldiours commeth to Rauenspurre alias Rauensport The dissembling policy of king Edward K. Edward commeth to Yorke K. Edward repelled by the citizens of Yorke K. Edward chaungeth his title The gentle and fayre wordes of K. Edward Two conditions put to K.